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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of
+the Dead, Volume I (of 3), by Sir James George Frazer
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume I (of 3)
+ The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia
+
+
+Author: Sir James George Frazer
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 15, 2006 [eBook #20116]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE
+WORSHIP OF THE DEAD, VOLUME I (OF 3)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, David King, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from
+page images generously made available by the Humanities Text Initiative
+(http://www.hti.umich.edu/), a unit of the University of Michigan's
+Digital Library Production Service
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through
+ the Humanities Text Initiative, a unit of the University
+ of Michigan's Digital Library Production Service. See
+ http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=AFL0522.0001.001
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD
+
+by
+
+J. G. FRAZER, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.
+
+Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge
+Professor of Social Anthropology in the University of Liverpool.
+
+VOL. I
+
+The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits
+Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia
+
+The Gifford Lectures, St. Andrews 1911-1912
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MacMillan and Co., Limited
+St. Martin's Street, London
+1913
+
+
+ _Itaque unum illud erat insitum priscis illis, quos cascos
+ appellat Ennius, esse in morte sensum neque excessu vitae sic
+ deleri hominem, ut funditus interiret; idque cum multis aliis
+ rebus; tum e pontificio jure et e caerimoniis sepulchrorum
+ intellegi licet, quas maxumis ingeniis praediti nec tanta cura
+ coluissent nec violatas tam inexpiabili religione sanxissent,
+ nisi haereret in corum mentibus mortem non interitum esse omnia
+ tollentem atque delentem, sed quandam quasi migrationem
+ commutationemque vitae._
+
+ Cicero, _Tuscul. Disput._ i. 12.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+MY OLD FRIEND
+
+JOHN SUTHERLAND BLACK, LL.D.
+
+I DEDICATE AFFECTIONATELY
+
+A WORK
+
+WHICH OWES MUCH TO HIS ENCOURAGEMENT
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+The following lectures were delivered on Lord Gifford's Foundation
+before the University of St. Andrews in the early winters of 1911 and
+1912. They are printed nearly as they were spoken, except that a few
+passages, omitted for the sake of brevity in the oral delivery, have
+been here restored and a few more added. Further, I have compressed the
+two introductory lectures into one, striking out some passages which on
+reflection I judged to be irrelevant or superfluous. The volume
+incorporates twelve lectures on "The Fear and Worship of the Dead" which
+I delivered in the Lent and Easter terms of 1911 at Trinity College,
+Cambridge, and repeated, with large additions, in my course at St.
+Andrews.
+
+The theme here broached is a vast one, and I hope to pursue it hereafter
+by describing the belief in immortality and the worship of the dead, as
+these have been found among the other principal races of the world both
+in ancient and modern times. Of all the many forms which natural
+religion has assumed none probably has exerted so deep and far-reaching
+an influence on human life as the belief in immortality and the worship
+of the dead; hence an historical survey of this most momentous creed and
+of the practical consequences which have been deduced from it can hardly
+fail to be at once instructive and impressive, whether we regard the
+record with complacency as a noble testimony to the aspiring genius of
+man, who claims to outlive the sun and the stars, or whether we view it
+with pity as a melancholy monument of fruitless labour and barren
+ingenuity expended in prying into that great mystery of which fools
+profess their knowledge and wise men confess their ignorance.
+
+J. G. FRAZER.
+Cambridge,
+_9th February 1913._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+Dedication
+
+Preface
+
+Table of Contents
+
+Lecture I.--Introduction
+
+Natural theology, three modes of handling it, the dogmatic, the
+philosophical, and the historical, pp. 1 _sq._; the historical method
+followed in these lectures, 2 _sq._; questions of the truth and moral
+value of religious beliefs irrelevant in an historical enquiry, 3 _sq._;
+need of studying the religion of primitive man and possibility of doing
+so by means of the comparative method, 5 _sq._; urgent need of
+investigating the native religion of savages before it disappears, 6
+_sq._; a portion of savage religion the theme of these lectures, 7
+_sq._; the question of a supernatural revelation dismissed, 8 _sq._;
+theology and religion, their relations, 9; the term God defined, 9
+_sqq._; monotheism and polytheism, 11; a natural knowledge of God, if it
+exists, only possible through experience, 11 _sq._; the nature of
+experience, 12 _sq._; two kinds of experience, an inward and an outward,
+13 _sq._; the conception of God reached historically through both kinds
+of experience, 14; inward experience or inspiration, 14 _sq._;
+deification of living men, 16 _sq._; outward experience as a source of
+the idea of God, 17; the tendency to seek for causes, 17 _sq._; the
+meaning of cause, 18 _sq._; the savage explains natural processes by the
+hypothesis of spirits or gods, 19 _sq._; natural processes afterwards
+explained by hypothetical forces and atoms instead of by hypothetical
+spirits and gods, 20 _sq._; nature in general still commonly explained
+by the hypothesis of a deity, 21 _sq._; God an inferential or
+hypothetical cause, 22 _sq._; the deification of dead men, 23-25; such a
+deification presupposes the immortality of the human soul or rather its
+survival for a longer or shorter time after death, 25 _sq._; the
+conception of human immortality suggested both by inward experience,
+such as dreams, and by outward experience, such as the resemblances of
+the living to the dead, 26-29; the lectures intended to collect evidence
+as to the belief in immortality among certain savage races, 29 _sq._;
+the method to be descriptive rather than comparative or philosophical,
+30.
+
+Lecture II.--The Savage Conception of Death
+
+The subject of the lectures the belief in immortality and the worship of
+the dead among certain of the lower races, p. 31; question of the nature
+and origin of death, 31 _sq._; universal interest of the question, 32
+_sq._; the belief in immortality general among mankind, 33; belief of
+many savages that death is not natural and that they would never die if
+their lives were not cut prematurely short by sorcery, 33 _sq._;
+examples of this belief among the South American Indians, 34 _sqq._;
+death sometimes attributed to sorcery and sometimes to demons, practical
+consequence of this distinction, 37; belief in sorcery as the cause of
+death among the Indians of Guiana, 38 _sq._, among the Tinneh Indians of
+North America, 39 _sq._, among the aborigines of Australia, 40-47, among
+the natives of the Torres Straits Islands and New Guinea, 47, among the
+Melanesians, 48, among the Malagasy, 48 _sq._, and among African tribes,
+49-51; effect of such beliefs in thinning the population by causing
+multitudes to die for the imaginary crime of sorcery, 51-53; some
+savages attribute certain deaths to other causes than sorcery, 53;
+corpse dissected to ascertain cause of death, 53 _sq._; the possibility
+of natural death admitted by the Melanesians and the Caffres of South
+Africa, 54-56; the admission marks an intellectual advance, 56 _sq._;
+the recognition of ghosts or spirits, apart from sorcery, as a cause of
+disease and death also marks a step in moral and social progress, 57
+_sq._
+
+Lecture III.--Myths of the Origin of Death
+
+Belief of savages in man's natural immortality, p. 59; savage stories of
+the origin of death, 59 _sq._; four types of such stories:--
+
+(1) _The Story of the Two Messengers_.--Zulu story of the chameleon and
+the lizard, 60 _sq._; Akamba story of the chameleon and the thrush, 61
+_sq._; Togo story of the dog and the frog, 62 _sq._; Ashantee story of
+the goat and the sheep, 63 _sq._
+
+(2) _The Story of the Waxing and Waning Moon_.--Hottentot story of the
+moon, the hare, and death, 65; Masai story of the moon and death, 65
+_sq._; Nandi story of the moon, the dog, and death, 66; Fijian story of
+the moon, the rat, and death, 67; Caroline, Wotjobaluk, and Cham stories
+of the moon, death, and resurrection, 67; death and resurrection after
+three days suggested by the reappearance of the new moon after three
+days, 67 _sq._
+
+(3) _The Story of the Serpent and his Cast Skin_.--New Britain and
+Annamite story of immortality, the serpent, and death, 69 _sq._; Vuatom
+story of immortality, the lizard, the serpent, and death, 70; Nias story
+of immortality, the crab, and death, 70; Arawak and Tamanchier stories
+of immortality, the serpent, the lizard, the beetle, and death, 70
+_sq._; Melanesian story of the old woman and her cast skin, 71 _sq._;
+Samoan story of the shellfish, two torches, and death, 72.
+
+(4) _The Story of the Banana_.--Poso story of immortality, the stone,
+the banana, and death, 72 _sq._; Mentra story of immortality, the
+banana, and death, 73.
+
+Primitive philosophy in the stories of the origin of death, 73 _sq._;
+Bahnar story of immortality, the tree, and death, 74; rivalry for the
+boon of immortality between men and animals that cast their skins, such
+as serpents and lizards, 74 _sq._; stories of the origin of death told
+by Chingpaws, Australians, Fijians, and Admiralty Islanders, 75-77;
+African and American stories of the fatal bundle or the fatal box, 77
+_sq._; Baganda story how death originated through the imprudence of a
+woman, 78-81; West African story of Death and the spider, 81-83;
+Melanesian story of Death and the Fool, 83 _sq._
+
+Thus according to savages death is not a natural necessity, 84; similar
+view held by some modern biologists, as A. Weismann and A. R. Wallace,
+84-86.
+
+Lecture IV.--The Belief in Immortality among the Aborigines of Central
+Australia
+
+In tracing the evolution of religious beliefs we must begin with those
+of the lowest savages, p. 87; the aborigines of Australia the lowest
+savages about whom we possess accurate information, 88; savagery a case
+of retarded development, 88 _sq._; causes which have retarded progress
+in Australia, 89 _sq._; the natives of Central Australia on the whole
+more primitive than those of the coasts, 90 _sq._; little that can be
+called religion among them, 91 _sq._; their theory that the souls of the
+dead survive and are reborn in their descendants, 92 _sq._; places where
+the souls of the dead await rebirth, and the mode in which they enter
+into women, 93 _sq._; local totem centres, 94 _sq._; totemism defined,
+95; traditionary origin of the local totem centres (_oknanikilla_) where
+the souls of the dead assemble, 96; sacred birth-stones or birth-sticks
+(_churinga_) which the souls of ancestors are thought to have dropped at
+these places, 96-102; elements of a worship of the dead, 102 _sq._;
+marvellous powers attributed to the remote ancestors of the _alcheringa_
+or dream times, 103 _sq._; the Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake,
+ancestor of a totemic clan of the Warramunga tribe, 104-106; religious
+character of the belief in the Wollunqua, 106.
+
+Lecture V.--The Belief in Immortality among the Aborigines of Central
+Australia (_continued_)
+
+Beliefs of the Central Australian aborigines concerning the
+reincarnation of the dead, p. 107; possibility of the development of
+ancestor worship, 107 _sq._; ceremonies performed by the Warramunga in
+honour of the Wollunqua, the mythical ancestor of one of their totem
+clans, 108 _sqq._; union of magic and religion in these ceremonies, 111
+_sq._; ground drawings of the Wollunqua, 112 _sq._; importance of the
+Wollunqua in the evolution of religion and art, 113 _sq._; how totemism
+might develop into polytheism through an intermediate stage of ancestor
+worship, 114 _sq._; all the conspicuous features of the country
+associated by the Central Australians with the spirits of their
+ancestors, 115-118; dramatic ceremonies performed by them to commemorate
+the deeds of their ancestors, 118 _sq._; examples of these ceremonies,
+119-122; these ceremonies were probably in origin not merely
+commemorative or historical but magical, being intended to procure a
+supply of food and other necessaries, 122 _sq._; magical virtue actually
+attributed to these dramatic ceremonies by the Warramunga, who think
+that by performing them they increase the food supply of the tribe, 123
+_sq._; hence the great importance ascribed by these savages to the due
+performance of the ancestral dramas, 124; general attitude of the
+Central Australian aborigines to their dead, and the lines on which, if
+left to themselves, they might have developed a regular worship of the
+dead, 124-126.
+
+Lecture VI.--The Belief in Immortality among the other Aborigines of
+Australia
+
+Evidence for the belief in reincarnation among the natives of other
+parts of Australia than the centre, p. 127; beliefs of the Queensland
+aborigines concerning the nature of the soul and the state of the dead,
+127-131; belief of the Australian aborigines that their dead are
+sometimes reborn in white people, 131-133; belief of the natives of
+South-Eastern Australia that their dead are not born again but go away
+to the sky or some distant country, 133 _sq._; beliefs and customs of
+the Narrinyeri concerning the dead, 134 _sqq._; motives for the
+excessive grief which they display at the death of their relatives, 135
+_sq._; their pretence of avenging the death of their friends on the
+guilty sorcerer, 136 _sq._; magical virtue ascribed to the hair of the
+dead, 137 _sq._; belief that the dead go to the sky, 138 _sq._;
+appearance of the dead to the living in dreams, 139; savage faith in
+dreams, 139 _sq._; association of the stars with the souls of the dead,
+140; creed of the South-Eastern Australians touching the dead, 141;
+difference of this creed from that of the Central Australians, 141; this
+difference probably due in the main to a general advance of culture
+brought about by more favourable natural conditions in South-Eastern
+Australia, 141 _sq._; possible influence of European teaching on native
+beliefs, 142 _sq._; vagueness and inconsistency of native beliefs as to
+the state of the dead, 143; custom a good test of belief, 143 _sq._;
+burial customs of the Australian aborigines as evidence of their beliefs
+concerning the state of the dead, 144; their practice of supplying the
+dead with food, water, fire, weapons, and implements, 144-147; motives
+for the destruction of the property of the dead, 147 _sq._; great
+economic loss entailed by developed systems of sacrificing to the dead,
+149.
+
+Lecture VII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Aborigines of
+Australia (_concluded_)
+
+Huts erected on graves for the use of the ghosts, pp. 150-152; the
+attentions paid by the Australian aborigines to their dead probably
+spring from fear rather than affection, 152; precautions taken by the
+living against the dangerous ghosts of the dead, 152 _sq._; cuttings and
+brandings of the flesh of the living in honour of the dead, 154-158; the
+custom of allowing the blood of mourners to drip on the corpse or into
+the grave may be intended to strengthen the dead for a new birth,
+158-162; different ways of disposing of the dead according to the age,
+rank, manner of death, etc., of the deceased, 162 _sq._; some modes of
+burial are intended to prevent the return of the spirit, others are
+designed to facilitate it, 163-165; final departure of the ghost
+supposed to coincide with the disappearance of the flesh from his bones,
+165 _sq._; hence a custom has arisen in many tribes of giving the bones
+a second burial or otherwise disposing of them when the flesh is quite
+decayed, 166; tree-burial followed by earth-burial in some Australian
+tribes, 166-168; general conclusion as to the belief in immortality and
+the worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines, 168 _sq._
+
+Lecture VIII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of the Torres
+Straits Islands
+
+Racial affinities of the Torres Straits Islanders, pp. 170 _sq._; their
+material and social culture, 171 _sq._; no developed worship of the dead
+among them, 172 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 173-175; home of the dead a
+mythical island in the west, 175 _sq._; elaborate funeral ceremonies of
+the Torres Straits Islanders characterised by dramatic representations
+of the dead and by the preservation of their skulls, which were
+consulted as oracles, 176.
+
+Funeral ceremonies of the Western Islanders, 177-180; part played by the
+brothers-in-law of the deceased at these ceremonies, 177 _sq._; removal
+of the head and preparation of the skull for use in divination, 178
+_sq._; great death-dance performed by masked men who personated the
+deceased, 179 _sq._
+
+Funeral ceremonies of the Eastern Islanders, 180-188; soul of the dead
+carried away by a masked actor, 181 _sq._; dramatic performance by
+disguised men representing ghosts, 182 _sq._; blood and hair of
+relatives offered to the dead, 183 _sq._; mummification of the corpse,
+184; costume of mourners, 184; cuttings for the dead, 184 _sq._;
+death-dance by men personating ghosts, 185-188; preservation of the
+mummy and afterwards of the head or a wax model of it to be used in
+divination, 188.
+
+Images of the gods perhaps developed out of mummies of the dead, and a
+sacred or even secular drama developed out of funeral dances, 189.
+
+Lecture IX.--The Belief in Immortality Among the Natives Of British New
+Guinea
+
+The two races of New Guinea, the Papuan and the Melanesian, pp. 190
+_sq._; beliefs and customs of the Motu concerning the dead, 192; the
+Koita and their beliefs as to the human soul and the state of the dead,
+193-195; alleged communications with the dead by means of mediums, 195
+_sq._; fear of the dead, especially of a dead wife, 196 _sq._; beliefs
+of the Mafulu concerning the dead, 198; their burial customs, 198 _sq._;
+their use of the skulls and bones of the dead at a great festival,
+199-201; worship of the dead among the natives of the Aroma district,
+201 _sq._; the Hood Peninsula, 202 _sq._; beliefs and customs concerning
+the dead among the natives of the Hood Peninsula, 203-206; seclusion of
+widows and widowers, 203 _sq._; the ghost-seer, 204 _sq._; application
+of the juices of the dead to the persons of the living, 205; precautions
+taken by manslayers against the ghosts of their victims, 205 _sq._;
+purification for homicide originally a mode of averting the angry ghost
+of the slain, 206; beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the
+Massim of south-eastern New Guinea, 206-210; Hiyoyoa, the land of the
+dead, 207; purification of mourners by bathing and shaving, 207 _sq._;
+foods forbidden to mourners, 208 _sq._; fires on the grave, 209; the
+land of the dead, 209 _sq._; names of the dead not mentioned, 210;
+beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the Papuans of Kiwai,
+211-214; Adiri, the land of the dead, 211-213; appearance of the dead to
+the living in dreams, 213 _sq._; offerings to the dead, 214; dreams as a
+source of the belief in immortality, 214.
+
+Lecture X.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea
+
+Andrew Lang, pp. 216 _sq._; review of preceding lectures, 217 _sq._
+
+The Papuans of Tumleo, their material culture, 218-220; their temples,
+220 _sq._; their bachelors' houses containing the skulls of the dead,
+221; spirits of the dead as the causes of sickness and disease, 222
+_sq._; burial and mourning customs, 223 _sq._; fate of the human soul
+after death, 224; monuments to the dead, 225; disinterment of the bones,
+225; propitiation of ghosts and spirits, 226; guardian-spirits in the
+temples, 226 _sq._
+
+The Monumbo of Potsdam Harbour, 227 _sq._; their beliefs concerning the
+spirits of the dead, 228 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 229; their
+treatment of manslayers, 229 _sq._
+
+The Tamos of Astrolabe Bay, 230; their ideas as to the souls of the
+dead, 231 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 232 _sqq._; their Secret Society
+and rites of initiation, 233; their preservation of the jawbones of the
+dead, 234 _sq._; their sham fights after a death, 235 _sq._; these
+fights perhaps intended to throw dust in the eyes of the ghost, 236
+_sq._
+
+Lecture XI.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea (_continued_)
+
+The Papuans of Cape King William, pp. 238 _sq._; their ideas as to
+spirits and the souls of the dead, 239 _sq._; their belief in sorcery as
+a cause of death, 240 _sq._; their funeral and mourning customs, 241
+_sq._; the fate of the soul after death, 242.
+
+The Yabim of Finsch Harbour, their material and artistic culture, 242
+_sq._; their clubhouses for men, 243; their beliefs as to the state of
+the dead, 244 _sq._; the ghostly ferry, 244 _sq._; transmigration of
+human souls into animals, 245; the return of the ghosts, 246; offerings
+to ghosts, 246; ghosts provided with fire, 246 _sq._; ghosts help in the
+cultivation of land, 247 _sq._; burial and mourning customs, 248 _sq._;
+divination to discover the sorcerer who has caused a death, 249 _sq._;
+bull-roarers, 250; initiation of young men, 250 _sqq._; the rite of
+circumcision, the novices supposed to be swallowed by a monster, 251
+_sq._; the return of the novices, 253; the essence of the initiatory
+rites seems to be a simulation of death and resurrection, 253 _sqq._;
+the new birth among the Akikuyu of British East Africa, 254.
+
+Lecture XII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea (_continued_)
+
+The Bukaua of Huon Gulf, their means of subsistence and men's
+clubhouses, pp. 256 _sq._; their ideas as to the souls of the dead, 257;
+sickness and death caused by ghosts and sorcerers, 257 _sq._; fear of
+the ghosts of the slain, 258; prayers to ancestral spirits on behalf of
+the crops, 259; first-fruits offered to the spirits of the dead, 259;
+burial and mourning customs, 259 _sq._; initiation of young men, novices
+at circumcision supposed to be swallowed and afterwards disgorged by a
+monster, 260 _sq._
+
+The Kai, a Papuan tribe of mountaineers inland from Finsch Harbour, 262;
+their country, mode of agriculture, and villages, 262 _sq._;
+observations of a German missionary on their animism, 263 _sq._; the
+essential rationality of the savage, 264-266; the Kai theory of the two
+sorts of human souls, 267 _sq._; death commonly thought to be caused by
+sorcery, 268 _sq._; danger incurred by the sorcerer, 269; many hurts and
+maladies attributed to the action of ghosts, 269 _sq._; capturing lost
+souls, 270 _sq._; ghosts extracted from the body of a sick man or
+scraped from his person, 271; extravagant demonstrations of grief at the
+death of a sick man, 271-273; hypocritical character of these
+demonstrations, which are intended to deceive the ghost, 273; burial and
+mourning customs, preservation of the lower jawbone and one of the lower
+arm bones, 274; mourning costume, seclusion of widow or widower, 274
+_sq._; widows sometimes strangled to accompany their dead husbands, 275;
+house or village deserted after a death, 275.
+
+Lecture XIII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea (_continued_)
+
+The Kai (continued), their offerings to the dead, p. 276; divination by
+means of ghosts to detect the sorcerer who has caused a death, 276-278;
+avenging the death on the sorcerer and his people, 278 _sq._;
+precautions against the ghosts of the slain, 279 _sq._; attempts to
+deceive the ghosts of the murdered, 280-282; pretence of avenging the
+ghost of a murdered man, 282; fear of ghosts by night, 282 _sq._;
+services rendered by the spirits of the dead to farmers and hunters,
+283-285; the journey of the soul to the spirit land, 285 _sq._; life of
+the dead in the other world, 286 _sq._; ghosts die the second death and
+turn into animals, 287; ghosts of famous people invoked long after their
+death, 287-289; possible development of ghosts into gods, 289 _sq._;
+lads at circumcision supposed to be swallowed and disgorged by a
+monster, 290 _sq._
+
+The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf, 291; their theory of a double human
+soul, a long one and a short one, 291 _sq._; departure of the short soul
+for Lamboam, the nether world of the dead, 292; offerings to the dead,
+292; appeasing the ghost, 292 _sq._; funeral and mourning customs,
+dances in honour of the dead, offerings thrown into the fire, 293 _sq._;
+bones of the dead dug up and kept in the house for a time, 294 _sq._
+
+Lecture XIV.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German and
+Dutch New Guinea
+
+The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf (continued), their doctrine of souls and
+gods, pp. 296 _sq._; dances of masked men representing spirits, 297;
+worship of ancestral spirits and offerings to them, 297 _sq._; life of
+the souls in Lamboam, the nether world, 299 _sq._; evocation of ghosts
+by the ghost-seer, 300; sickness caused by ghosts, 300 _sq._; novices at
+circumcision supposed to be swallowed and disgorged by a monster, 301
+_sq._; meaning of the bodily mutilations inflicted on young men at
+puberty obscure, 302 _sq._ The natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303-323; the
+Noofoors of Geelvink Bay, their material culture and arts of life,
+303-305; their fear and worship of the dead, 305-307; wooden images
+(_korwar_) of the dead kept in the houses and carried in canoes to be
+used as oracles, 307 _sq._; the images consulted in sickness and taken
+with the people to war, 308-310; offerings to the images, 310 _sq._;
+souls of those who have died away from home recalled to animate the
+images, 311; skulls of the dead, especially of firstborn children and of
+parents, inserted in the images, 312 _sq._; bodies of young children
+hung on trees, 312 _sq._; mummies of dead relatives kept in the houses,
+313; seclusion of mourners and restrictions on their diet, 313 _sq._;
+tattooing in honour of the dead, 314; teeth and hair of the dead worn by
+relatives, 314 _sq._; rebirth of parents in their children, 315.
+
+The natives of islands off the west coast of New Guinea, their wooden
+images of dead ancestors and shrines for the residence of the ancestral
+spirits, 315 _sq._; their festivals in honour of the dead, 316; souls of
+ancestors supposed to reside in the images and to protect the house and
+household, 317.
+
+The natives of the Macluer Gulf, their images and bowls in honour of the
+dead, 317 _sq._
+
+The natives of the Mimika district, their burial and mourning customs,
+their preservation of the skulls of the dead, and their belief in
+ghosts, 318.
+
+The natives of Windessi, their burial customs, 318 _sq._; divination
+after a death, 319; mourning customs, 319 _sq._; festival of the dead,
+320 _sq._; wooden images of the dead, 321; doctrine of souls and of
+their fate after death, 321 _sq._; medicine-men inspired by the souls of
+the dead, 322 _sq._; ghosts of slain enemies driven away, 323.
+
+Lecture XV.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Southern
+Melanesia (New Caledonia)
+
+The Melanesians in general, their material culture, p. 324; Southern
+Melanesia, the New Caledonians, and Father Lambert's account of them,
+325; their ideas as to the spirit land and the way thither, 325 _sq._;
+burial customs, 326; cuttings and brandings for the dead, 326 _sq._;
+property of the dead destroyed, 327; seclusion of gravediggers and
+restrictions imposed on them, 327; sham fight in honour of the dead, 327
+_sq._; skulls of the dead preserved and worshipped on various occasions,
+such as sickness, fishing, and famine, 328-330; caves used as
+charnel-houses and sanctuaries of the dead in the Isle of Pines,
+330-332; prayers and sacrifices to the ancestral spirits, 332 _sq._;
+prayer-posts, 333 _sq._; sacred stones associated with the dead and used
+to cause dearth or plenty, madness, a good crop of bread-fruit or yams,
+drought, rain, a good catch of fish, and so on, 334-338; the religion of
+the New Caledonians mainly a worship of the dead tinctured with magic,
+338.
+
+Evidence as to the natives of New Caledonia collected by Dr. George
+Turner, 339-342; material culture of the New Caledonians, 339; their
+burial customs, the skulls and nails of the dead preserved and used to
+fertilise the yam plantations, 339 _sq._; worship of ancestors and
+prayers to the dead, 340; festivals in honour of the dead, 340 _sq._;
+making rain by means of the skeletons of the dead, 341; execution of
+sorcerers, 341 _sq._; white men identified with the spirits of the dead,
+342.
+
+Lecture XVI.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Central
+Melanesia
+
+Central Melanesia divided into two archipelagoes, the religion of the
+Western Islands (Solomon Islands) characterised by a worship of the
+dead, the religion of the Eastern Islands (New Hebrides, Banks' Islands,
+Torres Islands, Santa Cruz Islands) characterised by a worship of
+non-human spirits, pp. 343 _sq._; Central Melanesian theory of the soul,
+344 _sq._; the land of the dead either in certain islands or in a
+subterranean region called Panoi, 345; ghosts of power and ghosts of no
+account, 345 _sq._; supernatural power (_mana_) acquired through ghosts,
+346 _sq._
+
+Burial customs in the Western Islands (Solomon Islands), 347 _sqq._;
+land-burial and sea-burial, land-ghosts and sea-ghosts, 347 _sq._;
+funeral feasts and burnt-offerings to the dead, 348 _sq._; the land of
+the dead and the ghostly ferry, 350 _sq._; ghosts die the second death
+and turn into the nests of white ants, 350 _sq._; preservation of the
+skull and jawbone in order to ensure the protection of the ghost, 351
+_sq._; human heads sought in order to add fresh spiritual power (_mana_)
+to the ghost of a dead chief, 352.
+
+Beliefs and customs concerning the dead in the Eastern Islands (New
+Hebrides, Banks' Islands, Torres Islands), 352 _sqq._; Panoi, the
+subterranean abode of the dead, 353 _sq._; ghosts die the second death,
+354; different fates of the souls of the good and bad, 354 _sq._;
+descent of the living into the world of the dead, 355; burial customs of
+the Banks' Islanders, 355 _sqq._; dead sometimes temporarily buried in
+the house, 355; display of property beside the corpse and funeral
+oration, 355 _sq._; sham burial of eminent men, 356; ghosts driven away
+from the village, 356-358; deceiving the ghosts of women who have died
+in child-bed, 358; funeral feasts, 358 _sq._; funeral customs in the
+New Hebrides, 359 _sqq._; the aged buried alive, 359 _sq._; seclusion of
+mourners and restrictions on their diet, 360; sacrifice of pigs, 360
+_sq._; the journey of the ghost to the spirit land, 361 _sq._;
+provisions made by the living for the welfare of the dead, 362.
+
+Only ghosts of powerful men worshipped, 362 _sq._; institution of the
+worship of a martial ghost, 363 _sq._; offerings of food and drink to
+the dead, 364 _sq._; sacrifice of pigs to ghosts in the Solomon Islands,
+365 _sq._
+
+Lecture XVII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Central
+Melanesia (_concluded_)
+
+Public sacrifices to ghosts in the Solomon Islands, pp. 367 _sq._;
+offering of first-fruits to ghosts, 368 _sq._; private ghosts as
+distinguished from public ghosts, 369 _sq._; fighting ghosts kept as
+spiritual auxiliaries, 370; ghosts employed to make the gardens grow,
+370 _sq._; human sacrifices to ghosts, 371 _sq._; vicarious and other
+sacrifices to ghosts at Saa in Malanta, 372 _sq._; offerings of
+first-fruits to ghosts at Saa, 373 _sq._; vicarious sacrifices offered
+for the sick to ghosts in Santa Cruz, 374; the dead represented by
+stocks in the houses, 374; native account of sacrifices in Santa Cruz,
+374 _sq._; prayers to the dead, 376 _sq._; sanctuaries of ghosts in the
+Solomon Islands, 377-379; ghosts lodged in animals, birds, and fish,
+especially in sharks, 379 _sq._
+
+The belief in ghosts underlies the Melanesian conception of magic, 380
+_sq._; sickness commonly caused by ghosts and cured by ghost-seers,
+381-384; contrast between Melanesian and European systems of medicine,
+384; weather regulated by ghosts and spirits and by weather-doctors who
+have the ear of ghosts and spirits, 384-386; witchcraft or black magic
+wrought by means of ghosts, 386-388; prophets inspired by ghosts, 388
+_sq._; divination operating through ghosts, 389 _sq._; taboos enforced
+by ghosts, 390 _sq._; general influence which a belief in the survival
+of the soul after death has exercised on Melanesian life, 391 _sq._
+
+Lecture XVIII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Northern
+and Eastern Melanesia
+
+The natives of Northern Melanesia or the Bismarck Archipelago (New
+Britain, New Ireland, etc.), their material culture, commercial habits,
+and want of regular government, pp. 393-395; their theory of the soul,
+395 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 396; offerings to the dead, 396 _sq._;
+burial customs, 397 _sq._; preservation of the skulls, 398; customs and
+beliefs concerning the dead among the Sulka of New Britain, 398-400,
+among the Moanus of the Admiralty Islands, 400 _sq._ and among the
+natives of the Kaniet Islands, 401 _sq._; natural deaths commonly
+attributed to sorcery, 402; divination to discover the sorcerer who
+caused the death, 402; death customs in the Duke of York Island, cursing
+the sorcerer, skulls preserved, feasts and dances, 403; prayers to the
+dead, 403 _sq._; the land of the dead and the fate of the departed
+souls, hard lot of impecunious ghosts, 404-406.
+
+The natives of Eastern Melanesia (Fiji), their material culture and
+political constitution, 406-408; means of subsistence, 408; moral
+character, 408 _sq._; scenery of the Fijian islands, 409 _sq._; the
+Fijian doctrine of souls, 410-412; souls of rascals caught in scarves,
+412 _sq._; fear of sorcery and precautions against it, 413 _sq._;
+beneficial effect of the fear in enforcing habits of personal
+cleanliness, 414; fear of ghosts and custom of driving them away, 414
+_sq._; killing a ghost, 415 _sq._; outwitting grandfather's ghost, 416;
+special relation of grandfather to grandchild, 416; grandfather's soul
+reborn in his grandchild, 417 _sq._
+
+Lecture XIX.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Eastern
+Melanesia (Fiji) (_continued_)
+
+Indifference of the Fijians to death, p. 419; their custom of killing
+the sick and aged with the consent of the victims, 419-424; their
+readiness to die partly an effect of their belief in immortality, 422
+_sq._; wives strangled or buried alive to accompany their husbands to
+the spirit land, 424-426; servants and dependants killed to attend their
+dead lords, 426; sacrifices of foreskins and fingers in honour of dead
+chiefs, 426 _sq._; boys circumcised in order to save the lives of their
+fathers or fathers' brothers, 427; saturnalia attending such rites of
+circumcision, 427 _sq._; the _Nanga_, or sacred enclosure of stones,
+dedicated to the worship of ancestors, 428 _sq._; first-fruits of the
+yams offered to the ancestors in the _Nanga_, 429; initiation of young
+men in the _Nanga_, drama of death and resurrection, sacrament of food
+and water, 429-432; the initiation followed by a period of sexual
+licence, 433; the initiatory rites apparently intended to introduce the
+novices to the ancestral spirits and endow them with the powers of the
+dead, 434 _sq._; the rites seem to have been imported into Fiji by
+immigrants from the west, 435 _sq._; the licence attending these rites
+perhaps a reversion to primitive communism for the purpose of
+propitiating the ancestral spirits, 436 _sq._; description of the
+_Nanga_ or sacred enclosure of stones, 437 _sq._; comparison with the
+cromlechs and other megalithic monuments of Europe, 438.
+
+Lecture XX.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Eastern
+Melanesia (Fiji) (_concluded_)
+
+Worship of parents and other dead relations in Fiji, pp. 439 _sq._;
+Fijian notion of divinity (_kalou_), 440; two classes of gods, namely,
+divine gods and human gods or deified men, 440 _sq._; temples (_bures_)
+441 _sq._; worship at the temples, 443; priests (_betes_), their
+oracular inspiration by the gods, 443-446; human sacrifices on various
+occasions, such as building a house or launching a new canoe, 446 _sq._;
+high estimation in which manslaughter was held by the Fijians, 447
+_sq._; consecration of manslayers and restrictions laid on them,
+probably from fear of the ghosts of their victims, 448 _sq._; certain
+funeral customs based apparently on the fear of ghosts, 450 _sqq._;
+persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food with their
+hands, 450 _sq._; seclusion of gravediggers, 451; mutilations,
+brandings, and fasts in honour of the dead, 451 _sq._; the dead carried
+out of the house by a special opening to prevent the return of the
+ghost, 452-461; the other world and the way thither, 462 _sqq._; the
+ghostly ferry, 462 _sq._; the ghost and the pandanus tree, 463 _sq._;
+hard fate of the unmarried dead, 464; the Killer of Souls, 464 _sq._;
+ghosts precipitated into a lake, 465 _sq._; Murimuria, an inferior sort
+of heaven, 466; the Fijian Elysium, 466 _sq._; transmigration and
+annihilation, the few that are saved, 467.
+
+Concluding observations, 467-471; strength and universality of the
+belief in immortality among savages, 468; the state of war among savage
+and civilised peoples often a direct consequence of the belief in
+immortality, 468 _sq._; economic loss involved in sacrifices to the
+dead, 469; how does the savage belief in immortality bear on the truth
+or falsehood of that belief in general? 469; the answer depends to some
+extent on the view we take of human nature, 469-471; the conclusion left
+open, 471.
+
+Note.--Myth of the Continuance of Death
+
+Index
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE I
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+[Sidenote: Natural theology, and the three modes of handling it, the
+dogmatic, the philosophical, and the historical.]
+
+The subject of these lectures is a branch of natural theology. By
+natural theology I understand that reasoned knowledge of a God or gods
+which man may be supposed, whether rightly or wrongly, capable of
+attaining to by the exercise of his natural faculties alone. Thus
+defined, the subject may be treated in at least three different ways,
+namely, dogmatically, philosophically, and historically. We may simply
+state the dogmas of natural theology which appear to us to be true: that
+is the dogmatic method. Or, secondly, we may examine the validity of the
+grounds on which these dogmas have been or may be maintained: that is
+the philosophic method. Or, thirdly, we may content ourselves with
+describing the various views which have been held on the subject and
+tracing their origin and evolution in history: that is the historical
+method. The first of these three methods assumes the truth of natural
+theology, the second discusses it, and the third neither assumes nor
+discusses but simply ignores it: the historian as such is not concerned
+with the truth or falsehood of the beliefs he describes, his business is
+merely to record them and to track them as far as possible to their
+sources. Now that the subject of natural theology is ripe for a purely
+dogmatic treatment will hardly, I think, be maintained by any one, to
+whatever school of thought he may belong; accordingly that method of
+treatment need not occupy us further. Far otherwise is it with the
+philosophic method which undertakes to enquire into the truth or
+falsehood of the belief in a God: no method could be more appropriate at
+a time like the present, when the opinions of educated and thoughtful
+men on that profound topic are so unsettled, diverse, and conflicting. A
+philosophical treatment of the subject might comprise a discussion of
+such questions as whether a natural knowledge of God is possible to man,
+and, if possible, by what means and through what faculties it is
+attainable; what are the grounds for believing in the existence of a
+God; and, if this belief is justified, what may be supposed to be his
+essential nature and attributes, and what his relations to the world in
+general and to man in particular. Now I desire to confess at once that
+an adequate discussion of these and kindred questions would far exceed
+both my capacity and my knowledge; for he who would do justice to so
+arduous an enquiry should not only be endowed with a comprehensive and
+penetrating genius, but should possess a wide and accurate acquaintance
+with the best accredited results of philosophic speculation and
+scientific research. To such qualifications I can lay no claim, and
+accordingly I must regard myself as unfitted for a purely philosophic
+treatment of natural theology. To speak plainly, the question of the
+existence of a God is too deep for me. I dare neither affirm nor deny
+it. I can only humbly confess my ignorance. Accordingly, if Lord Gifford
+had required of his lecturers either a dogmatic or a philosophical
+treatment of natural theology, I could not have undertaken to deliver
+the lectures.
+
+[Sidenote: The method followed in these lectures is the historical.]
+
+But in his deed of foundation, as I understand it, Lord Gifford left his
+lecturers free to follow the historical rather than the dogmatic or the
+philosophical method of treatment. He says: "The lecturers shall be
+under no restraint whatever in their treatment of their theme: for
+example, they may freely discuss (and it may be well to do so) all
+questions about man's conceptions of God or the Infinite, their origin,
+nature, and truth." In making this provision the founder appears to have
+allowed and indeed encouraged the lecturers not only to discuss, if they
+chose to do so, the philosophical basis of a belief in God, but also to
+set forth the various conceptions of the divine nature which have been
+held by men in all ages and to trace them to their origin: in short, he
+permitted and encouraged the lecturers to compose a history of natural
+theology or of some part of it. Even when it is thus limited to its
+historical aspect the theme is too vast to be mastered completely by any
+one man: the most that a single enquirer can do is to take a general but
+necessarily superficial survey of the whole and to devote himself
+especially to the investigation of some particular branch or aspect of
+the subject. This I have done more or less for many years, and
+accordingly I think that without being presumptuous I may attempt, in
+compliance with Lord Gifford's wishes and directions, to lay before my
+hearers a portion of the history of religion to which I have paid
+particular attention. That the historical study of religious beliefs,
+quite apart from the question of their truth or falsehood, is both
+interesting and instructive will hardly be disputed by any intelligent
+and thoughtful enquirer. Whether they have been well or ill founded,
+these beliefs have deeply influenced the conduct of human affairs; they
+have furnished some of the most powerful, persistent, and far-reaching
+motives of action; they have transformed nations and altered the face of
+the globe. No one who would understand the general history of mankind
+can afford to ignore the annals of religion. If he does so, he will
+inevitably fall into the most serious misconceptions even in studying
+branches of human activity which might seem, on a superficial view, to
+be quite unaffected by religious considerations.
+
+[Sidenote: An historical enquiry into the evolution of religion
+prejudices neither the question of the ethical value of religious
+practice nor the question of the truth or falsehood of religious
+belief.]
+
+Therefore to trace theological and in general religious ideas to their
+sources and to follow them through all the manifold influences which
+they have exerted on the destinies of our race must always be an object
+of prime importance to the historian, whatever view he may take of their
+speculative truth or ethical value. Clearly we cannot estimate their
+ethical value until we have learned the modes in which they have
+actually determined human conduct for good or evil: in other words, we
+cannot judge of the morality of religious beliefs until we have
+ascertained their history: the facts must be known before judgment can
+be passed on them: the work of the historian must precede the work of
+the moralist. Even the question of the validity or truth of religious
+creeds cannot, perhaps, be wholly dissociated from the question of their
+origin. If, for example, we discover that doctrines which we had
+accepted with implicit faith from tradition have their close analogies
+in the barbarous superstitions of ignorant savages, we can hardly help
+suspecting that our own cherished doctrines may have originated in the
+similar superstitions of our rude forefathers; and the suspicion
+inevitably shakes the confidence with which we had hitherto regarded
+these articles of our faith. The doubt thus cast on our old creed is
+perhaps illogical, since even if we should discover that the creed did
+originate in mere superstition, in other words, that the grounds on
+which it was first adopted were false and absurd, this discovery would
+not really disprove the beliefs themselves, for it is perfectly possible
+that a belief may be true, though the reasons alleged in favour of it
+are false and absurd: indeed we may affirm with great probability that a
+multitude of human beliefs, true in themselves, have been accepted and
+defended by millions of people on grounds which cannot bear exact
+investigation for a moment. For example, if the facts of savage life
+which it will be my duty to submit to you should have the effect of
+making the belief in immortality look exceedingly foolish, those of my
+hearers who cherish the belief may console themselves by reflecting
+that, as I have just pointed out, a creed is not necessarily false
+because some of the reasons adduced in its favour are invalid, because
+it has sometimes been supported by the despicable tricks of vulgar
+imposture, and because the practices to which it has given rise have
+often been in the highest degree not only absurd but pernicious.
+
+[Sidenote: Yet such an enquiry may shake the confidence with which
+traditional beliefs have been held.]
+
+Thus an historical enquiry into the origin of religious creeds cannot,
+strictly speaking, invalidate, still less refute, the creeds themselves,
+though it may, and doubtless often does weaken the confidence with which
+they are held. This weakening of religious faith as a consequence of a
+closer scrutiny of religious origins is unquestionably a matter of great
+importance to the community; for society has been built and cemented to
+a great extent on a foundation of religion, and it is impossible to
+loosen the cement and shake the foundation without endangering the
+superstructure. The candid historian of religion will not dissemble the
+danger incidental to his enquiries, but nevertheless it is his duty to
+prosecute them unflinchingly. Come what may, he must ascertain the facts
+so far as it is possible to do so; having done that, he may leave to
+others the onerous and delicate task of adjusting the new knowledge to
+the practical needs of mankind. The narrow way of truth may often look
+dark and threatening, and the wayfarer may often be weary; yet even at
+the darkest and the weariest he will go forward in the trust, if not in
+the knowledge, that the way will lead at last to light and to rest; in
+plain words, that there is no ultimate incompatibility between the good
+and the true.
+
+[Sidenote: To discover the origin of the idea of God we must study the
+beliefs of primitive man.]
+
+Now if we are indeed to discover the origin of man's conception of God,
+it is not sufficient to analyse the ideas which the educated and
+enlightened portion of mankind entertain on the subject at the present
+day; for in great measure these ideas are traditional, they have been
+handed down with little or no independent reflection or enquiry from
+generation to generation; hence in order to detect them in their
+inception it becomes necessary to push our analysis far back into the
+past. Large materials for such an historical enquiry are provided for us
+in the literature of ancient nations which, though often sadly mutilated
+and imperfect, has survived to modern times and throws much precious
+light on the religious beliefs and practices of the peoples who created
+it. But the ancients themselves inherited a great part of their religion
+from their prehistoric ancestors, and accordingly it becomes desirable
+to investigate the religious notions of these remote forefathers of
+mankind, since in them we may hope at last to arrive at the ultimate
+source, the historical origin, of the whole long development.
+
+[Sidenote: The beliefs of primitive man can only be understood through a
+comparative study of the various races in the lower stages of culture.]
+
+But how can this be done? how can we investigate the ideas of peoples
+who, ignorant of writing, had no means of permanently recording their
+beliefs? At first sight the thing seems impossible; the thread of
+enquiry is broken off short; it has landed us on the brink of a gulf
+which looks impassable. But the case is not so hopeless as it appears.
+True, we cannot investigate the beliefs of prehistoric ages directly,
+but the comparative method of research may furnish us with the means of
+studying them indirectly; it may hold up to us a mirror in which, if we
+do not see the originals, we may perhaps contemplate their reflections.
+For a comparative study of the various races of mankind demonstrates, or
+at least renders it highly probable, that humanity has everywhere
+started at an exceedingly low level of culture, a level far beneath that
+of the lowest existing savages, and that from this humble beginning all
+the various races of men have gradually progressed upward at different
+rates, some faster and some slower, till they have attained the
+particular stage which each of them occupies at the present time.
+
+[Sidenote: Hence the need of studying the beliefs and customs of
+savages, if we are to understand the evolution of culture in general.]
+
+If this conclusion is correct, the various stages of savagery and
+barbarism on which many tribes and peoples now stand represent, broadly
+speaking, so many degrees of retarded social and intellectual
+development, they correspond to similar stages which the ancestors of
+the civilised races may be supposed to have passed through at more or
+less remote periods of their history. Thus when we arrange all the known
+peoples of the world according to the degree of their savagery or
+civilisation in a graduated scale of culture, we obtain not merely a
+comparative view of their relative positions in the scale, but also in
+some measure an historical record of the genetic development of culture
+from a very early time down to the present day. Hence a study of the
+savage and barbarous races of mankind is of the greatest importance for
+a full understanding of the beliefs and practices, whether religious,
+social, moral, or political, of the most civilised races, including our
+own, since it is practically certain that a large part of these beliefs
+and practices originated with our savage ancestors, and has been
+inherited by us from them, with more or less of modification, through a
+long line of intermediate generations.
+
+[Sidenote: The need is all the more urgent because savages are rapidly
+disappearing or being transformed.]
+
+That is why the study of existing savages at the present day engrosses
+so much of the attention of civilised peoples. We see that if we are to
+comprehend not only our past history but our present condition, with all
+its many intricate and perplexing problems, we must begin at the
+beginning by attempting to discover the mental state of our savage
+forefathers, who bequeathed to us so much of the faiths, the laws, and
+the institutions which we still cherish; and more and more men are
+coming to perceive that the only way open to us of doing this
+effectually is to study the mental state of savages who to this day
+occupy a state of culture analogous to that of our rude progenitors.
+Through contact with civilisation these savages are now rapidly
+disappearing, or at least losing the old habits and ideas which render
+them a document of priceless historical value for us. Hence we have
+every motive for prosecuting the study of savagery with ardour and
+diligence before it is too late, before the record is gone for ever. We
+are like an heir whose title-deeds must be scrutinised before he can
+take possession of the inheritance, but who finds the handwriting of the
+deeds so fading and evanescent that it threatens to disappear entirely
+before he can read the document to the end. With what keen attention,
+what eager haste, would he not scan the fast-vanishing characters? With
+the like attention and the like haste civilised men are now applying
+themselves to the investigation of the fast-vanishing savages.
+
+[Sidenote: Savage religion is to be the subject of these lectures.]
+
+Thus if we are to trace historically man's conception of God to its
+origin, it is desirable, or rather essential, that we should begin by
+studying the most primitive ideas on the subject which are accessible to
+us, and the most primitive ideas are unquestionably those of the lowest
+savages. Accordingly in these lectures I propose to deal with a
+particular side or aspect of savage religion. I shall not trench on the
+sphere of the higher religions, not only because my knowledge of them is
+for the most part very slight, but also because I believe that a
+searching study of the higher and more complex religions should be
+postponed till we have acquired an accurate knowledge of the lower and
+simpler. For a similar reason the study of inorganic chemistry naturally
+precedes the study of organic chemistry, because inorganic compounds are
+much simpler and therefore more easily analysed and investigated than
+organic compounds. So with the chemistry of the mind; we should analyse
+the comparatively simple phenomena of savage thought into its
+constituent elements before we attempt to perform a similar operation on
+the vastly more complex phenomena of civilised beliefs.
+
+[Sidenote: But only a part of savage religion will be dealt with.]
+
+But while I shall confine myself rigidly to the field of savage
+religion, I shall not attempt to present you with a complete survey even
+of that restricted area, and that for more reasons than one. In the
+first place the theme, even with this great limitation, is far too large
+to be adequately set forth in the time at my disposal; the sketch--for
+it could be no more than a sketch--would be necessarily superficial and
+probably misleading. In the second place, even a sketch of primitive
+religion in general ought to presuppose in the sketcher a fairly
+complete knowledge of the whole subject, so that all the parts may
+appear, not indeed in detail, but in their proper relative proportions.
+Now though I have given altogether a good deal of time to the study of
+primitive religion, I am far from having studied it in all its branches,
+and I could not trust myself to give an accurate general account of it
+even in outline; were I to attempt such a thing I should almost
+certainly fall, through sheer ignorance or inadvertence, into the
+mistake of exaggerating some features, unduly diminishing others, and
+omitting certain essential features altogether. Hence it seems to me
+better not to commit myself to so ambitious an enterprise but to confine
+myself in my lectures, as I have always done in my writings, to a
+comparatively minute investigation of certain special aspects or forms
+of primitive religion rather than attempt to embrace in a general view
+the whole of that large subject. Such a relatively detailed study of a
+single compartment may be less attractive and more tedious than a
+bird's-eye view of a wider area; but in the end it may perhaps prove a
+more solid contribution to knowledge.
+
+[Sidenote: Introductory observations. The question of a supernatural
+revelation excluded.]
+
+But before I come to details I wish to make a few general introductory
+remarks, and in particular to define some of the terms which I shall
+have occasion to use in the lectures. I have defined natural theology as
+that reasoned knowledge of a God or gods which man may be supposed,
+whether rightly or wrongly, capable of attaining to by the exercise of
+his natural faculties alone. Whether there ever has been or can be a
+special miraculous revelation of God to man through channels different
+from those through which all other human knowledge is derived, is a
+question which does not concern us in these lectures; indeed it is
+expressly excluded from their scope by the will of the founder, who
+directed the lecturers to treat the subject "as a strictly natural
+science," "without reference to or reliance upon any supposed special
+exceptional or so-called miraculous revelation." Accordingly, in
+compliance with these directions, I dismiss at the outset the question
+of a revelation, and shall limit myself strictly to natural theology in
+the sense in which I have defined it.
+
+[Sidenote: Theology and religion, how related to each other.]
+
+I have called natural theology a reasoned knowledge of a God or gods to
+distinguish it from that simple and comparatively, though I believe
+never absolutely, unreasoning faith in God which suffices for the
+practice of religion. For theology is at once more and less than
+religion: if on the one hand it includes a more complete acquaintance
+with the grounds of religious belief than is essential to religion, on
+the other hand it excludes the observance of those practical duties
+which are indispensable to any religion worthy of the name. In short,
+whereas theology is purely theoretical, religion is both theoretical and
+practical, though the theoretical part of it need not be so highly
+developed as in theology. But while the subject of the lectures is,
+strictly speaking, natural theology rather than natural religion, I
+think it would be not only difficult but undesirable to confine our
+attention to the purely theological or theoretical part of natural
+religion: in all religions, and not least in the undeveloped savage
+religions with which we shall deal, theory and practice fuse with and
+interact on each other too closely to be forcibly disjoined and handled
+apart. Hence throughout the lectures I shall not scruple to refer
+constantly to religious practice as well as to religious theory, without
+feeling that thereby I am transgressing the proper limits of my subject.
+
+[Sidenote: The term God defined.]
+
+As theology is not only by definition but by etymology a reasoned
+knowledge or theory of a God or gods, it becomes desirable, before we
+proceed further, to define the sense in which I understand and shall
+employ the word God. That sense is neither novel nor abstruse; it is
+simply the sense which I believe the generality of mankind attach to the
+term. By a God I understand a superhuman and supernatural being, of a
+spiritual and personal nature, who controls the world or some part of it
+on the whole for good, and who is endowed with intellectual faculties,
+moral feelings, and active powers, which we can only conceive on the
+analogy of human faculties, feelings, and activities, though we are
+bound to suppose that in the divine nature they exist in higher degrees,
+perhaps in infinitely higher degrees, than the corresponding faculties,
+feelings, and activities of man. In short, by a God I mean a beneficent
+supernatural spirit, the ruler of the world or of some part of it, who
+resembles man in nature though he excels him in knowledge, goodness, and
+power. This is, I think, the sense in which the ordinary man speaks of a
+God, and I believe that he is right in so doing. I am aware that it has
+been not unusual, especially perhaps of late years, to apply the name of
+God to very different conceptions, to empty it of all implication of
+personality, and to reduce it to signifying something very large and
+very vague, such as the Infinite or the Absolute (whatever these hard
+words may signify), the great First Cause, the Universal Substance, "the
+stream of tendency by which all things seek to fulfil the law of their
+being,"[1] and so forth. Now without expressing any opinion as to the
+truth or falsehood of the views implied by such applications of the name
+of God, I cannot but regard them all as illegitimate extensions of the
+term, in short as an abuse of language, and I venture to protest against
+it in the interest not only of verbal accuracy but of clear thinking,
+because it is apt to conceal from ourselves and others a real and very
+important change of thought: in particular it may lead many to imagine
+that the persons who use the name of God in one or other of these
+extended senses retain certain theological opinions which they may in
+fact have long abandoned. Thus the misuse of the name of God may
+resemble the stratagem in war of putting up dummies to make an enemy
+imagine that a fort is still held after it has been evacuated by the
+garrison. I am far from alleging or insinuating that the illegitimate
+extension of the divine name is deliberately employed by theologians or
+others for the purpose of masking a change of front; but that it may
+have that effect seems at least possible. And as we cannot use words in
+wrong senses without running a serious risk of deceiving ourselves as
+well as others, it appears better on all accounts to adhere strictly to
+the common meaning of the name of God as signifying a powerful
+supernatural and on the whole beneficent spirit, akin in nature to man;
+and if any of us have ceased to believe in such a being we should
+refrain from applying the old word to the new faith, and should find
+some other and more appropriate term to express our meaning. At all
+events, speaking for myself, I intend to use the name of God
+consistently in the familiar sense, and I would beg my hearers to bear
+this steadily in mind.
+
+[Sidenote: Monotheism and polytheism.]
+
+You will have observed that I have spoken of natural theology as a
+reasoned knowledge of a God or gods. There is indeed nothing in the
+definition of God which I have adopted to imply that he is unique, in
+other words, that there is only one God rather than several or many
+gods. It is true that modern European thinkers, bred in a monotheistic
+religion, commonly overlook polytheism as a crude theory unworthy the
+serious attention of philosophers; in short, the champions and the
+assailants of religion in Europe alike for the most part tacitly assume
+that there is either one God or none. Yet some highly civilised nations
+of antiquity and of modern times, such as the ancient Egyptians, Greeks,
+and Romans, and the modern Chinese and Hindoos, have accepted the
+polytheistic explanation of the world, and as no reasonable man will
+deny the philosophical subtlety of the Greeks and the Hindoos, to say
+nothing of the rest, a theory of the universe which has commended itself
+to them deserves perhaps more consideration than it has commonly
+received from Western philosophers; certainly it cannot be ignored in an
+historical enquiry into the origin of religion.
+
+[Sidenote: A natural knowledge of God can only be acquired by
+experience.]
+
+If there is such a thing as natural theology, that is, a knowledge of a
+God or gods acquired by our natural faculties alone without the aid of a
+special revelation, it follows that it must be obtained by one or other
+of the methods by which all our natural knowledge is conveyed to us.
+Roughly speaking, these methods are two in number, namely, intuition and
+experience. Now if we ask ourselves, Do we know God intuitively in the
+same sense in which we know intuitively our own sensations and the
+simplest truths of mathematics, I think most men will acknowledge that
+they do not. It is true that according to Berkeley the world exists only
+as it is perceived, and that our perceptions of it are produced by the
+immediate action of God on our minds, so that everything we perceive
+might be described, if not as an idea in the mind of the deity, at least
+as a direct emanation from him. On this theory we might in a sense be
+said to have an immediate knowledge of God. But Berkeley's theory has
+found little acceptance, so far as I know, even among philosophers; and
+even if we regarded it as true, we should still have to admit that the
+knowledge of God implied by it is inferential rather than intuitive in
+the strict sense of the word: we infer God to be the cause of our
+perceptions rather than identify him with the perceptions themselves. On
+the whole, then, I conclude that man, or at all events the ordinary man,
+has, properly speaking, no immediate or intuitive knowledge of God, and
+that, if he obtains, without the aid of revelation, any knowledge of him
+at all, it can only be through the other natural channel of knowledge,
+that is, through experience.
+
+[Sidenote: The nature of experience.]
+
+In experience, as distinct from intuition, we reach our conclusions not
+directly through simple contemplation of the particular sensations,
+emotions, or ideas of which we are at the moment conscious, but
+indirectly by calling up before the imagination and comparing with each
+other our memories of a variety of sensations, emotions, or ideas of
+which we have been conscious in the past, and by selecting or
+abstracting from the mental images so compared the points in which they
+resemble each other. The points of resemblance thus selected or
+abstracted from a number of particulars compose what we call an abstract
+or general idea, and from a comparison of such abstract or general ideas
+with each other we arrive at general conclusions, which define the
+relations of the ideas to each other. Experience in general consists in
+the whole body of conclusions thus deduced from a comparison of all the
+particular sensations, emotions, and ideas which make up the conscious
+life of the individual. Hence in order to constitute experience the mind
+has to perform a more or less complex series of operations, which are
+commonly referred to certain mental faculties, such as memory,
+imagination, and judgment. This analysis of experience does not pretend
+to be philosophically complete or exact; but perhaps it is sufficiently
+accurate for the purpose of these lectures, the scope of which is not
+philosophical but historical.
+
+[Sidenote: Two kinds of experience, the experience of our own mind and
+the experience of an external world.]
+
+Now experience in the widest sense of the word may be conveniently
+distinguished into two sorts, the experience of our own mind and the
+experience of an external world. The distinction is indeed, like the
+others with which I am dealing at present, rather practically useful
+than theoretically sound; certainly it would not be granted by all
+philosophers, for many of them have held that we neither have nor with
+our present faculties can possibly attain to any immediate knowledge or
+perception of an external world, we merely infer its existence from our
+own sensations, which are as strictly a part of our mind as the ideas
+and emotions of our waking life or the visions of sleep. According to
+them, the existence of matter or of an external world is, so far as we
+are concerned, merely an hypothesis devised to explain the order of our
+sensations; it never has been perceived by any man, woman, or child who
+ever lived on earth; we have and can have no immediate knowledge or
+perception of anything but the states and operations of our own mind. On
+this theory what we call the world, with all its supposed infinitudes of
+space and time, its systems of suns and planets, its seemingly endless
+forms of inorganic matter and organic life, shrivels up, on a close
+inspection, into a fleeting, a momentary figment of thought. It is like
+one of those glass baubles, iridescent with a thousand varied and
+delicate hues, which a single touch suffices to shatter into dust. The
+philosopher, like the sorcerer, has but to wave his magic wand,
+
+ "And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,
+ The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces,
+ The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
+ Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve
+ And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
+ Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made on, and our little life
+ Is rounded with a sleep."
+
+[Sidenote: The distinction rather popular and convenient than
+philosophically strict.]
+
+It would be beyond my province, even if it were within my power, to
+discuss these airy speculations, and thereby to descend into the arena
+where for ages subtle dialecticians have battled with each other over
+the reality or unreality of an external world. For my purpose it
+suffices to adopt the popular and convenient distinction of mind and
+matter and hence to divide experience into two sorts, an inward
+experience of the acts and states of our own minds, and an outward
+experience of the acts and states of that physical universe by which we
+seem to be surrounded.
+
+[Sidenote: The knowledge or conception of God has been attained both by
+inward and by outward experience.]
+
+Now if a natural knowledge of God is only possible by means of
+experience, in other words, by a process of reasoning based on
+observation, it will follow that such a knowledge may conceivably be
+acquired either by the way of inward or of outward experience; in other
+words, it may be attained either by reflecting on the processes of our
+own minds or by observing the processes of external nature. In point of
+fact, if we survey the history of thought, mankind appears to have
+arrived at a knowledge, or at all events at a conception, of deity by
+both these roads. Let me say a few words as to the two roads which lead,
+or seem to lead, man to God.
+
+[Sidenote: The conception of God is attained by inward experience, that
+is, by the observation of certain remarkable thoughts and feelings which
+are attributed to the inspiration of a deity. Practical dangers of the
+theory of inspiration.]
+
+In the first place, then, men in many lands and many ages have
+experienced certain extraordinary emotions and entertained certain
+extraordinary ideas, which, unable to account for them by reference to
+the ordinary forms of experience, they have set down to the direct
+action of a powerful spirit or deity working on their minds and even
+entering into and taking possession of their bodies; and in this excited
+state--for violent excitement is characteristic of these
+manifestations--the patient believes himself to be possessed of
+supernatural knowledge and supernatural power. This real or supposed
+mode of apprehending a divine spirit and entering into communion with
+it, is commonly and appropriately called inspiration. The phenomenon is
+familiar to us from the example of the Hebrew nation, who believed that
+their prophets were thus inspired by the deity, and that their sacred
+books were regularly composed under the divine afflatus. The belief is
+by no means singular, indeed it appears to be world-wide; for it would
+be hard to point to any race of men among whom instances of such
+inspiration have not been reported; and the more ignorant and savage the
+race the more numerous, to judge by the reports, are the cases of
+inspiration. Volumes might be filled with examples, but through the
+spread of information as to the lower races in recent years the topic
+has become so familiar that I need not stop to illustrate it by
+instances. I will merely say that among savages the theory of
+inspiration or possession is commonly invoked to explain all abnormal
+mental states, particularly insanity or conditions of mind bordering on
+it, so that persons more or less crazed in their wits, and particularly
+hysterical or epileptic patients, are for that very reason thought to be
+peculiarly favoured by the spirits and are therefore consulted as
+oracles, their wild and whirling words passing for the revelations of a
+higher power, whether a god or a ghost, who considerately screens his
+too dazzling light under a thick veil of dark sayings and mysterious
+ejaculations.[2] I need hardly point out the very serious dangers which
+menace any society where such theories are commonly held and acted upon.
+If the decisions of a whole community in matters of the gravest
+importance are left to turn on the wayward fancies, the whims and
+vagaries of the insane or the semi-insane, what are likely to be the
+consequences to the commonwealth? What, for example, can be expected to
+result from a war entered upon at such dictation and waged under such
+auspices? Are cattle-breeding, agriculture, commerce, all the arts of
+life on which a people depend for their subsistence, likely to thrive
+when they are directed by the ravings of epilepsy or the drivellings of
+hysteria? Defeat in battle, conquest by enemies, death by famine and
+widespread disease, these and a thousand other lesser evils threaten the
+blind people who commit themselves to such blind guides. The history of
+savage and barbarous tribes, could we follow it throughout, might
+furnish us with a thousand warning instances of the fatal effects of
+carrying out this crude theory of inspiration to its logical
+conclusions; and if we hear less than might be expected of such
+instances, it is probably because the tribes who consistently acted up
+to their beliefs have thereby wiped themselves out of existence: they
+have perished the victims of their folly and left no record behind. I
+believe that historians have not yet reckoned sufficiently with the
+disastrous influence which this worship of insanity,--for it is often
+nothing less--has exercised on the fortunes of peoples and on the
+development or decay of their institutions.
+
+[Sidenote: The belief in inspiration leads to the worship of living men
+as gods. Outward experience as a source of the idea of God.]
+
+To a certain extent, however, the evil has provided its own remedy. For
+men of strong heads and ambitious temper, perceiving the exorbitant
+power which a belief in inspiration places in the hands of the
+feeble-minded, have often feigned to be similarly afflicted, and trading
+on their reputation for imbecility, or rather inspiration, have acquired
+an authority over their fellows which, though they have often abused it
+for vulgar ends, they have sometimes exerted for good, as for example by
+giving sound advice in matters of public concern, applying salutary
+remedies to the sick, and detecting and punishing crime, whereby they
+have helped to preserve the commonwealth, to alleviate suffering, and to
+cement that respect for law and order which is essential to the
+stability of society, and without which any community must fall to
+pieces like a house of cards. These great services have been rendered to
+the cause of civilisation and progress by the class of men who in
+primitive society are variously known as medicine-men, magicians,
+sorcerers, diviners, soothsayers, and so forth. Sometimes the respect
+which they have gained by the exercise of their profession has won for
+them political as well as spiritual or ghostly authority; in short, from
+being simple medicine-men or sorcerers they have grown into chiefs and
+kings. When such men, seated on the throne of state, retain their old
+reputation for being the vehicles of a divine spirit, they may be
+worshipped in the character of gods as well as revered in the capacity
+of kings; and thus exerting a two-fold sway over the minds of men they
+possess a most potent instrument for elevating or depressing the
+fortunes of their worshippers and subjects. In this way the old savage
+notion of inspiration or possession gradually develops into the doctrine
+of the divinity of kings, which after a long period of florescence
+dwindles away into the modest theory that kings reign by divine right, a
+theory familiar to our ancestors not long ago, and perhaps not wholly
+obsolete among us even now. However, inspired men need not always
+blossom out into divine kings; they may, and often do, remain in the
+chrysalis state of simple deities revered by their simple worshippers,
+their brows encircled indeed with a halo of divinity but not weighted
+with the more solid substance of a kingly crown. Thus certain
+extraordinary mental states, which those who experience and those who
+witness them cannot account for in any other way, are often explained by
+the supposed interposition of a spirit or deity. This, therefore, is one
+of the two forms of experience by which men attain, or imagine that they
+attain, to a knowledge of God and a communion with him. It is what I
+have called the road of inward experience. Let us now glance at the
+other form of experience which leads, or seems to lead, to the same
+goal. It is what I have called the road of outward experience.
+
+[Sidenote: Tendency of the mind to search for causes, and the necessity
+for their discovery.]
+
+When we contemplate the seemingly infinite variety, the endless
+succession, of events that pass under our observation in what we call
+the external world, we are led by an irresistible tendency to trace what
+we call a causal connexion between them. The tendency to discover the
+causes of things appears indeed to be innate in the constitution of our
+minds and indispensable to our continued existence. It is the link that
+arrests and colligates into convenient bundles the mass of particulars
+drifting pell-mell past on the stream of sensation; it is the cement
+that binds into an edifice seemingly of adamant the loose sand of
+isolated perceptions. Deprived of the knowledge which this tendency
+procures for us we should be powerless to foresee the succession of
+phenomena and so to adapt ourselves to it. We should be bewildered by
+the apparent disorder and confusion of everything, we should toss on a
+sea without a rudder, we should wander in an endless maze without a
+clue, and finding no way out of it, or, in plain words, unable to avoid
+a single one of the dangers which menace us at every turn, we should
+inevitably perish. Accordingly the propensity to search for causes is
+characteristic of man in all ages and at all levels of culture, though
+without doubt it is far more highly developed in civilised than in
+savage communities. Among savages it is more or less unconscious and
+instinctive; among civilised men it is deliberately cultivated and
+rewarded at least by the applause of their fellows, by the dignity, if
+not by the more solid recompenses, of learning. Indeed as civilisation
+progresses the enquiry into causes tends to absorb more and more of the
+highest intellectual energies of a people; and an ever greater number of
+men, renouncing the bustle, the pleasures, and the ambitions of an
+active life, devote themselves exclusively to the pursuit of abstract
+truth; they set themselves to discover the causes of things, to trace
+the regularity and order that may be supposed to underlie the seemingly
+irregular, confused, and arbitrary sequence of phenomena. Unquestionably
+the progress of civilisation owes much to the sustained efforts of such
+men, and if of late years and within our own memory the pace of progress
+has sensibly quickened, we shall perhaps not err in supposing that some
+part at least of the acceleration may be accounted for by an increase in
+the number of lifelong students.
+
+[Sidenote: The idea of cause is simply that of invariable sequence
+suggested by the observation of many particular cases of sequence.]
+
+Now when we analyse the conception of a cause to the bottom, we find as
+the last residuum in our crucible nothing but what Hume found there long
+ago, and that is simply the idea of invariable sequence. Whenever we say
+that something is the cause of something else, all that we really mean
+is that the latter is invariably preceded by the former, so that
+whenever we find the second, which we call the effect, we may infer that
+the first, which we call the cause, has gone before it. All such
+inferences from effects to causes are based on experience; having
+observed a certain sequence of events a certain number of times, we
+conclude that the events are so conjoined that the latter cannot occur
+without the previous occurrence of the former. A single case of two
+events following each other could not of itself suggest that the one
+event is the cause of the other, since there is no necessary link
+between them in the mind; the sequence has to be repeated more or less
+frequently before we infer a causal connexion between the two; and this
+inference rests simply on that association of ideas which is established
+in our mind by the reiterated observation of the things. Once the ideas
+are by dint of repetition firmly welded together, the one by sheer force
+of habit calls up the other, and we say that the two things which are
+represented by those ideas stand to each other in the relation of cause
+and effect. The notion of causality is in short only one particular case
+of the association of ideas. Thus all reasoning as to causes implies
+previous observation: we reason from the observed to the unobserved,
+from the known to the unknown; and the wider the range of our
+observation and knowledge, the greater the probability that our
+reasoning will be correct.
+
+[Sidenote: The savage draws his ideas of natural causation from
+observation of himself. Hence he explains the phenomena of nature by
+supposing that they are produced by beings like himself. These beings
+may be called spirits or gods of nature to distinguish them from living
+human gods.]
+
+All this is as true of the savage as of the civilised man. He too
+argues, and indeed can only argue on the basis of experience from the
+known to the unknown, from the observed to the hypothetical. But the
+range of his experience is comparatively narrow, and accordingly his
+inferences from it often appear to civilised men, with their wider
+knowledge, to be palpably false and absurd. This holds good most
+obviously in regard to his observation of external nature. While he
+often knows a good deal about the natural objects, whether animals,
+plants, or inanimate things, on which he is immediately dependent for
+his subsistence, the extent of country with which he is acquainted is
+commonly but small, and he has little or no opportunity of correcting
+the conclusions which he bases on his observation of it by a comparison
+with other parts of the world. But if he knows little of the outer
+world, he is necessarily somewhat better acquainted with his own inner
+life, with his sensations and ideas, his emotions, appetites, and
+desires. Accordingly it is natural enough that when he seeks to discover
+the causes of events in the external world, he should, arguing from
+experience, imagine that they are produced by the actions of invisible
+beings like himself, who behind the veil of nature pull the strings that
+set the vast machinery in motion. For example, he knows by experience
+that he can make sparks fly by knocking two flints against each other;
+what more natural, therefore, than that he should imagine the great
+sparks which we call lightning to be made in the same way by somebody up
+aloft, and that when he finds chipped flints on the ground he should
+take them for thunder-stones dropped by the maker of thunder and
+lightning from the clouds?[3] Thus arguing from his limited experience
+primitive man creates a multitude of spirits or gods in his own likeness
+to explain the succession of phenomena in nature of whose true causes he
+is ignorant; in short he personifies the phenomena as powerful
+anthropomorphic spirits, and believing himself to be more or less
+dependent on their good will he woos their favour by prayer and
+sacrifice. This personification of the various aspects of external
+nature is one of the most fruitful sources of polytheism. The spirits
+and gods created by this train of thought may be called spirits and gods
+of nature to distinguish them from the human gods, by which I mean the
+living men and women who are believed by their worshippers to be
+inspired or possessed by a divine spirit.
+
+[Sidenote: In time men reject polytheism as an explanation of natural
+processes and substitute certain abstract ideas of ethers, atoms,
+molecules, and so on.]
+
+But as time goes on and men learn more about nature, they commonly
+become dissatisfied with polytheism as an explanation of the world and
+gradually discard it. From one department of nature after another the
+gods are reluctantly or contemptuously dismissed and their provinces
+committed to the care of certain abstract ideas of ethers, atoms,
+molecules, and so forth, which, though just as imperceptible to human
+senses as their divine predecessors, are judged by prevailing opinion to
+discharge their duties with greater regularity and despatch, and are
+accordingly firmly installed on the vacant thrones amid the general
+applause of the more enlightened portion of mankind. Thus instead of
+being peopled with a noisy bustling crowd of full-blooded and
+picturesque deities, clothed in the graceful form and animated with the
+warm passions of humanity, the universe outside the narrow circle of our
+consciousness is now conceived as absolutely silent, colourless, and
+deserted. The cheerful sounds which we hear, the bright hues which we
+see, have no existence, we are told, in the external world: the voices
+of friends, the harmonies of music, the chime of falling waters, the
+solemn roll of ocean, the silver splendour of the moon, the golden
+glories of sunset, the verdure of summer woods, and the hectic tints of
+autumn--all these subsist only in our own minds, and if we imagine them
+to have any reality elsewhere, we deceive ourselves. In fact the whole
+external world as perceived by us is one great illusion: if we gave the
+reins to fancy we might call it a mirage, a piece of witchery, conjured
+up by the spells of some unknown magician to bewilder poor ignorant
+humanity. Outside of ourselves there stretches away on every side an
+infinitude of space without sound, without light, without colour, a
+solitude traversed only in every direction by an inconceivably complex
+web of silent and impersonal forces. That, if I understand it aright, is
+the general conception of the world which modern science has substituted
+for polytheism.
+
+[Sidenote: But while they commonly discard the hypothesis of a deity as
+an explanation of all the particular processes of nature, they retain it
+as an explanation of nature in general.]
+
+When philosophy and science by their combined efforts have ejected gods
+and goddesses from all the subordinate posts of nature, it might perhaps
+be expected that they would have no further occasion for the services of
+a deity, and that having relieved him of all his particular functions
+they would have arranged for the creation and general maintenance of the
+universe without him by handing over these important offices to an
+efficient staff of those ethers, atoms, corpuscles, and so forth, which
+had already proved themselves so punctual in the discharge of the minor
+duties entrusted to them. Nor, indeed, is this expectation altogether
+disappointed. A number of atheistical philosophers have courageously
+come forward and assured us that the hypothesis of a deity as the
+creator and preserver of the universe is quite superfluous, and that all
+things came into being or have existed from eternity without the help of
+any divine spirit, and that they will continue to exist without it to
+the end, if end indeed there is to be. But on the whole these daring
+speculators appear to be in a minority. The general opinion of educated
+people at the present day, could we ascertain it, would probably be
+found to incline to the conclusion that, though every department of
+nature is now worked by impersonal material forces alone, the universe
+as a whole was created and is still maintained by a great supernatural
+spirit whom we call God. Thus in Europe and in the countries which have
+borrowed their civilisation, their philosophy, and their religion from
+it, the central problem of natural theology has narrowed itself down to
+the question, Is there one God or none? It is a profound question, and I
+for one profess myself unable to answer it.
+
+[Sidenote: Whether attained by inward or outward experience, the idea of
+God is regularly that of a cause inferred, not perceived.]
+
+If this brief sketch of the history of natural theology is correct, man
+has by the exercise of his natural faculties alone, without the help of
+revelation, attained to a knowledge or at least to a conception of God
+in one of two ways, either by meditating on the operations of his own
+mind, or by observing the processes of external nature: inward
+experience and outward experience have conducted him by different roads
+to the same goal. By whichever of them the conception has been reached,
+it is regularly employed to explain the causal connexion of things,
+whether the things to be explained are the ideas and emotions of man
+himself or the changes in the physical world outside of him. In short, a
+God is always brought in to play the part of a cause; it is the
+imperious need of tracing the causes of events which has driven man to
+discover or invent a deity. Now causes may be arranged in two classes
+according as they are perceived or unperceived by the senses. For
+example, when we see the impact of a billiard cue on a billiard ball
+followed immediately by the motion of the ball, we say that the impact
+is the cause of the motion. In this case we perceive the cause as well
+as the effect. But, when we see an apple fall from a tree to the ground,
+we say that the cause of the fall is the force of gravitation exercised
+by the superior mass of the earth on the inferior mass of the apple. In
+this case, though we perceive the effect, we do not perceive the cause,
+we only infer it by a process of reasoning from experience. Causes of
+the latter sort may be called inferential or hypothetical causes to
+distinguish them from those which are perceived. Of the two classes of
+causes a deity belongs in general, if not universally, to the second,
+that is, to the inferential or hypothetical causes; for as a rule at all
+events his existence is not perceived by our senses but inferred by our
+reason. To say that he has never appeared in visible and tangible form
+to men would be to beg the question; it would be to make an assertion
+which is incapable of proof and which is contradicted by a multitude of
+contrary affirmations recorded in the traditions or the sacred books of
+many races; but without being rash we may perhaps say that such
+appearances, if they ever took place, belong to a past order of events
+and need hardly be reckoned with at the present time. For all practical
+purposes, therefore, God is now a purely inferential or hypothetical
+cause; he may be invoked to explain either our own thoughts and
+feelings, our impulses and emotions, or the manifold states and
+processes of external nature; he may be viewed either as the inspirer of
+the one or the creator and preserver of the other; and according as he
+is mainly regarded from the one point of view or the other, the
+conception of the divine nature tends to beget one of two very different
+types of piety. To the man who traces the finger of God in the workings
+of his own mind, the deity appears to be far closer than he seems to the
+man who only infers the divine existence from the marvellous order,
+harmony, and beauty of the external world; and we need not wonder that
+the faith of the former is of a more fervent temper and supplies him
+with more powerful incentives to a life of active devotion than the calm
+and rational faith of the latter. We may conjecture that the piety of
+most great religious reformers has belonged to the former rather than to
+the latter type; in other words, that they have believed in God because
+they felt, or imagined that they felt, him stirring in their own hearts
+rather than because they discerned the handiwork of a divine artificer
+in the wonderful mechanism of nature.
+
+[Sidenote: Besides the two sorts of gods already distinguished, namely
+natural gods and living human gods, there is a third sort which has
+played an important part in history, namely, the spirits of deified dead
+men. Euhemerism.]
+
+Thus far I have distinguished two sorts of gods whom man discovers or
+creates for himself by the exercise of his unaided faculties, to wit
+natural gods, whom he infers from his observation of external nature,
+and human gods or inspired men, whom he recognises by virtue of certain
+extraordinary mental manifestations in himself or in others. But there
+is another class of human gods which I have not yet mentioned and which
+has played a very important part in the evolution of theology. I mean
+the deified spirits of dead men. To judge by the accounts we possess not
+only of savage and barbarous tribes but of some highly civilised
+peoples, the worship of the human dead has been one of the commonest and
+most influential forms of natural religion, perhaps indeed the commonest
+and most influential of all. Obviously it rests on the supposition that
+the human personality in some form, whether we call it a soul, a spirit,
+a ghost, or what not, can survive death and thereafter continue for a
+longer or shorter time to exercise great power for good or evil over the
+destinies of the living, who are therefore compelled to propitiate the
+shades of the dead out of a regard for their own safety and well-being.
+This belief in the survival of the human spirit after death is
+world-wide; it is found among men in all stages of culture from the
+lowest to the highest; we need not wonder therefore that the custom of
+propitiating the ghosts or souls of the departed should be world-wide
+also. No doubt the degree of attention paid to ghosts is not the same in
+all cases; it varies with the particular degree of power attributed to
+each of them; the spirits of men who for any reason were much feared in
+their lifetime, such as mighty warriors, chiefs, and kings, are more
+revered and receive far more marks of homage than the spirits of common
+men; and it is only when this reverence and homage are carried to a very
+high pitch that they can properly be described as a deification of the
+dead. But that dead men have thus been raised to the rank of deities in
+many lands, there is abundant evidence to prove. And quite apart from
+the worship paid to those spirits which are admitted by their
+worshippers to have once animated the bodies of living men, there is
+good reason to suspect that many gods, who rank as purely mythical
+beings, were once men of flesh and blood, though their true history has
+passed out of memory or rather been transformed by legend into a myth,
+which veils more or less completely the real character of the imaginary
+deity. The theory that most or all gods originated after this fashion,
+in other words, that the worship of the gods is little or nothing but
+the worship of dead men, is known as Euhemerism from Euhemerus, the
+ancient Greek writer who propounded it. Regarded as a universal
+explanation of the belief in gods it is certainly false; regarded as a
+partial explanation of the belief it is unquestionably true; and perhaps
+we may even go further and say, that the more we penetrate into the
+inner history of natural religion, the larger is seen to be the element
+of truth contained in Euhemerism. For the more closely we look at many
+deities of natural religion, the more distinctly do we seem to perceive,
+under the quaint or splendid pall which the mythical fancy has wrapt
+round their stately figures, the familiar features of real men, who once
+shared the common joys and the common sorrows of humanity, who trod
+life's common road to the common end.
+
+[Sidenote: The deification of dead men presupposes the immortality of
+the human soul, or rather its survival for a longer or shorter time
+after death.]
+
+When we ask how it comes about that dead men have so often been raised
+to the rank of divinities, the first thing to be observed is that all
+such deifications must, if our theory is correct, be inferences drawn
+from experience of some sort; they must be hypotheses devised to explain
+the unperceived causes of certain phenomena, whether of the human mind
+or of external nature. All of them imply, as I have said, a belief that
+the conscious human personality, call it the soul, the spirit, or what
+you please, can survive the body and continue to exist in a disembodied
+state with unabated or even greatly increased powers for good or evil.
+This faith in the survival of personality after death may for the sake
+of brevity be called a faith in immortality, though the term immortality
+is not strictly correct, since it seems to imply eternal duration,
+whereas the idea of eternity is hardly intelligible to many primitive
+peoples, who nevertheless firmly believe in the continued existence, for
+a longer or shorter time, of the human spirit after the dissolution of
+the body. Now the faith in the immortality of the soul or, to speak more
+correctly, in the continued existence of conscious human personality
+after death, is, as I remarked before, exceedingly common among men at
+all levels of intellectual evolution from the lowest upwards; certainly
+it is not peculiar to adherents of the higher religions, but is held as
+an unquestionable truth by at least the great majority of savage and
+barbarous peoples as to whose ideas we possess accurate information;
+indeed it might be hard to point to any single tribe of men, however
+savage, of whom we could say with certainty that the faith is totally
+wanting among them.
+
+[Sidenote: The question of immortality is a fundamental problem of
+natural theology in the wider sense.]
+
+Hence if we are to explain the deification of dead men, we must first
+explain the widespread belief in immortality; we must answer the
+question, how does it happen that men in all countries and at all stages
+of ignorance or knowledge so commonly suppose that when they die their
+consciousness will still persist for an indefinite time after the decay
+of the body? To answer that question is one of the fundamental problems
+of natural theology, not indeed in the full sense of the word theology,
+if we confine the term strictly to a reasoned knowledge of a God; for
+the example of Buddhism proves that a belief in the existence of the
+human soul after death is quite compatible with disbelief in a deity.
+But if we may use, as I think we may, the phrase natural theology in an
+extended sense to cover theories which, though they do not in themselves
+affirm the existence of a God, nevertheless appear to be one of the
+deepest and most fruitful sources of the belief in his reality, then we
+may legitimately say that the doctrine of human immortality does fall
+within the scope of natural theology. What then is its origin? How is it
+that men so commonly believe themselves to be immortal?
+
+[Sidenote: If there is any natural knowledge of immortality, it must be
+acquired either by intuition or experience; it is apparently not given
+by intuition; hence it must be acquired, if at all, by experience.]
+
+If there is any natural knowledge of human immortality, it must be
+acquired either by intuition or by experience; there is no other way.
+Now whether other men from a simple contemplation of their own nature,
+quite apart from reasoning, know or believe themselves intuitively to be
+immortal, I cannot say; but I can say with some confidence that for
+myself I have no such intuition whatever of my own immortality, and that
+if I am left to the resources of my natural faculties alone, I can as
+little affirm the certain or probable existence of my personality after
+death as I can affirm the certain or probable existence of a personal
+God. And I am bold enough to suspect that if men could analyse their own
+ideas, they would generally find themselves to be in a similar
+predicament as to both these profound topics. Hence I incline to lay it
+down as a probable proposition that men as a rule have no intuitive
+knowledge of their own immortality, and that if there is any natural
+knowledge of such a thing it can only be acquired by a process of
+reasoning from experience.[4]
+
+[Sidenote: The idea of immortality seems to have been suggested to man
+both by his inward and his outward experience, notably by dreams, which
+are a case of inward experience.]
+
+What then is the kind of experience from which the theory of human
+immortality is deduced? Is it our experience of the operations of our
+own minds? or is it our experience of external nature? As a matter of
+historical fact--and you will remember that I am treating the question
+purely from the historical standpoint--men seem to have inferred the
+persistence of their personality after death both from the one kind of
+experience and from the other, that is, both from the phenomena of their
+inner life and from the phenomena of what we call the external world.
+Thus the savage, with whose beliefs we are chiefly concerned in these
+lectures, finds a very strong argument for immortality in the phenomena
+of dreams, which are strictly a part of his inner life, though in his
+ignorance he commonly fails to discriminate them from what we popularly
+call waking realities. Hence when the images of persons whom he knows to
+be dead appear to him in a dream, he naturally infers that these persons
+still exist somewhere and somehow apart from their bodies, of the decay
+or destruction of which he may have had ocular demonstration. How could
+he see dead people, he asks, if they did not exist? To argue that they
+have perished like their bodies is to contradict the plain evidence of
+his senses; for to the savage still more than to the civilised man
+seeing is believing; that he sees the dead only in dreams does not shake
+his belief, since he thinks the appearances of dreams just as real as
+the appearances of his waking hours. And once he has in this way gained
+a conviction that the dead survive and can help or harm him, as they
+seem to do in dreams, it is natural or necessary for him to extend the
+theory to the occurrences of daily life, which, as I have said, he does
+not sharply distinguish from the visions of slumber. He now explains
+many of these occurrences and many of the processes of nature by the
+direct interposition of the spirits of the departed; he traces their
+invisible hand in many of the misfortunes and in some of the blessings
+which befall him; for it is a common feature of the faith in ghosts, at
+least among savages, that they are usually spiteful and mischievous, or
+at least testy and petulant, more apt to injure than to benefit the
+survivors. In that they resemble the personified spirits of nature,
+which in the opinion of most savages appear to be generally tricky and
+malignant beings, whose anger is dangerous and whose favour is courted
+with fear and trembling. Thus even without the additional assurance
+afforded by tales of apparitions and spectres, primitive man may come in
+time to imagine the world around him to be more or less thickly peopled,
+influenced, and even dominated by a countless multitude of spirits,
+among whom the shades of past generations of men and women hold a very
+prominent, often apparently the leading place. These spirits, powerful
+to help or harm, he seeks either simply to avert, when he deems them
+purely mischievous, or to appease and conciliate, when he supposes them
+sufficiently good-natured to respond to his advances. In some such way
+as this, arguing from the real but, as we think, misinterpreted
+phenomena of dreams, the savage may arrive at a doctrine of human
+immortality and from that at a worship of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: It has also been suggested by the resemblance of the living
+to the dead, which is a case of outward experience.]
+
+This explanation of the savage faith in immortality is neither novel nor
+original: on the contrary it is perhaps the commonest and most familiar
+that has yet been propounded. If it does not account for all the facts,
+it probably accounts for many of them. At the same time I do not doubt
+that many other inferences drawn from experiences of different kinds
+have confirmed, even if they did not originally suggest, man's confident
+belief in his own immortality. To take a single example of outward
+experience, the resemblances which children often bear to deceased
+kinsfolk appear to have prompted in the minds of many savages the notion
+that the souls of these dead kinsfolk have been born again in their
+descendants.[5] From a few cases of resemblances so explained it would
+be easy to arrive at a general theory that all living persons are
+animated by the souls of the dead; in other words, that the human spirit
+survives death for an indefinite period, if not for eternity, during
+which it undergoes a series of rebirths or reincarnations. However it
+has been arrived at, this doctrine of the transmigration or
+reincarnation of the soul is found among many tribes of savages; and
+from what we know on the subject we seem to be justified in conjecturing
+that at certain stages of mental and social evolution the belief in
+metempsychosis has been far commoner and has exercised a far deeper
+influence on the life and institutions of primitive man than the actual
+evidence before us at present allows us positively to affirm.
+
+[Sidenote: The aim of these lectures is to collect a number of facts
+illustrative of the belief in immortality and of the customs based on it
+among some of the lower races.]
+
+Be that as it may--and I have no wish to dogmatise on so obscure a
+topic--it is certain that a belief in the survival of the human
+personality after death and the practice of a propitiation or worship of
+the dead have prevailed very widely among mankind and have played a very
+important part in the development of natural religion. While many
+writers have duly recognised the high importance both of the belief and
+of the worship, no one, so far as I know, has attempted systematically
+to collect and arrange the facts which illustrate the prevalence of this
+particular type of religion among the various races of mankind. A large
+body of evidence lies to hand in the voluminous and rapidly increasing
+literature of ethnology; but it is dispersed over an enormous number of
+printed books and papers, to say nothing of the materials which still
+remain buried either in manuscript or in the minds of men who possess
+the requisite knowledge but have not yet committed it to writing. To
+draw all those stores of information together and digest them into a
+single treatise would be a herculean labour, from which even the most
+industrious researcher into the dusty annals of the human past might
+shrink dismayed. Certainly I shall make no attempt to perform such a
+feat within the narrow compass of these lectures. But it seems to me
+that I may make a useful, if a humble, contribution to the history of
+religion by selecting a portion of the evidence and submitting it to my
+hearers. For that purpose, instead of accumulating a mass of facts from
+all the various races of mankind and then comparing them together, I
+prefer to limit myself to a few races and to deal with each of them
+separately, beginning with the lowest savages, about whom we possess
+accurate information, and gradually ascending to peoples who stand
+higher in the scale of culture. In short the method of treatment which I
+shall adopt will be the descriptive rather than the comparative. I shall
+not absolutely refrain from instituting comparisons between the customs
+and beliefs of different races, but for the most part I shall content
+myself with describing the customs and beliefs of each race separately
+without reference to those of others. Each of the two methods, the
+comparative and the descriptive, has its peculiar advantages and
+disadvantages, and in my published writings I have followed now the one
+method and now the other. The comparative method is unquestionably the
+more attractive and stimulating, but it cannot be adopted without a good
+deal of more or less conscious theorising, since every comparison
+implicitly involves a theory. If we desire to exclude theories and
+merely accumulate facts for the use of science, the descriptive method
+is undoubtedly the better adapted for the arrangement of our materials:
+it may not stimulate enquiry so powerfully, but it lays a more solid
+foundation on which future enquirers may build. It is as a collection of
+facts illustrative of the belief in immortality and of all the momentous
+consequences which have flowed from that belief, that I desire the
+following lectures to be regarded. They are intended to serve simply as
+a document of religious history; they make no pretence to discuss
+philosophically the truth of the beliefs and the morality of the
+practices which will be passed under review. If any inferences can
+indeed be drawn from the facts to the truth or falsehood of the beliefs
+and to the moral worth or worthlessness of the practices, I prefer to
+leave it to others more competent than myself to draw them. My sight is
+not keen enough, my hand is not steady enough to load the scales and
+hold the balance in so difficult and delicate an enquiry.
+
+[Footnote 1: Matthew Arnold, _Literature and Dogma_, ch. i., p. 31
+(Popular Edition, London, 1893).]
+
+[Footnote 2: For a single instance see L. Sternberg, "Die Religion der
+Giljaken," _Archiv für Religionswissenschaft_, viii. (1905) pp. 462
+_sqq._, where the writer tells us that the Gilyaks have boundless faith
+in the supernatural power of their shamans, and that the shamans are
+nearly always persons who suffer from hysteria in one form or another.]
+
+[Footnote 3: As to the widespread belief that flint weapons are
+thunderbolts see Sir E. B. Tylor, _Researches into the Early History of
+Mankind_, Third Edition (London, 1878), pp. 223-227; Chr. Blinkenberg,
+_The Thunderweapon in Religion and Folklore_ (Cambridge, 1911); W. W.
+Skeat "Snakestones and Thunderbolts," _Folk-lore_, xxiii. (1912) pp. 60
+_sqq._; and the references in _The Magic Art and the Evolution of
+Kings_, ii. 374.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Wordsworth, who argues strongly, almost passionately, for
+"the consciousness of a principle of Immortality in the human soul,"
+admits that "the sense of Immortality, if not a coexistent and twin
+birth with Reason, is among the earliest of her offspring." See his
+_Essay upon Epitaphs_, appended to _The Excursion_ (_Poetical Works_,
+London, 1832, vol. iv. pp. 336, 338). This somewhat hesitating admission
+of the inferential nature of the belief in immortality carries all the
+more weight because it is made by so warm an advocate of human
+immortality.]
+
+[Footnote 5: For instance, the Kagoro of Northern Nigeria believe that
+"a spirit may transmigrate into the body of a descendant born
+afterwards, male or female; in fact, this is common, as is proved by the
+likeness of children to their parents or grand-parents, and it is lucky,
+for the ghost has returned, and has no longer any power to frighten the
+relatives until the new body dies, and it is free again" (Major A. J. N.
+Tremearne, "Notes on some Nigerian Head-hunters," _Journal of the R.
+Anthropological Institute_, xlii. (1912) p. 159). Compare _Taboo and the
+Perils of the Soul_, pp. 88 _sq._; _The Dying God_, p. 287 (p. 288,
+Second Impression).]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE II
+
+THE SAVAGE CONCEPTION OF DEATH
+
+
+[Sidenote: The subject of these lectures is the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead.]
+
+Last day I explained the subject of which I propose to treat and the
+method which I intend to follow in these lectures. I shall describe the
+belief in immortality, or rather in the continued existence of the human
+soul after death, as that belief is found among certain of the lower
+races, and I shall give some account of the religion which has been
+based upon it. That religion is in brief a propitiation or worship of
+the human dead, who according to the degree of power ascribed to them by
+the living are supposed to vary in dignity from the humble rank of a
+mere common ghost up to the proud position of deity. The elements of
+such a worship appear to exist among all races of men, though in some
+they have been much more highly developed than in others.
+
+[Sidenote: Preliminary account of savage beliefs concerning the nature
+and origin of death.]
+
+But before I address myself to the description of particular races, I
+wish in this and the following lecture to give you some general account
+of the beliefs of savages concerning the nature and origin of death. The
+problem of death has very naturally exercised the minds of men in all
+ages. Unlike so many problems which interest only a few solitary
+thinkers this one concerns us all alike, since simpletons as well as
+sages must die, and even the most heedless and feather-brained can
+hardly help sometimes asking themselves what comes after death. The
+question is therefore thrust in a practical, indeed importunate form on
+our attention; and we need not wonder that in the long history of human
+speculation some of the highest intellects should have occupied
+themselves with it and sought to find an answer to the riddle. Some of
+their solutions of the problem, though dressed out in all the beauty of
+exquisite language and poetic imagery, singularly resemble the rude
+guesses of savages. So little, it would seem, do the natural powers even
+of the greatest minds avail to pierce the thick veil that hides the end
+of life.
+
+[Sidenote: The problem of death is one of universal interest.]
+
+In saying that the problem is thrust home upon us all, I do not mean to
+imply that all men are constantly or even often engaged in meditating on
+the nature and origin of death. Far from it. Few people trouble
+themselves about that or any other purely abstract question: the common
+man would probably not give a straw for an answer to it. What he wants
+to know, what we all want to know, is whether death is the end of all
+things for the individual, whether our conscious personality perishes
+with the body or survives it for a time or for eternity. That is the
+enigma propounded to every human being who has been born into the world:
+that is the door at which so many enquirers have knocked in vain. Stated
+in this limited form the problem has indeed been of universal interest:
+there is no race of men known to us which has not pondered the mystery
+and arrived at some conclusions to which it more or less confidently
+adheres. Not that all races have paid an equal attention to it. On some
+it has weighed much more heavily than on others. While some races, like
+some individuals, take death almost lightly, and are too busy with the
+certainties of the present world to pay much heed to the uncertainties
+of a world to come, the minds of others have dwelt on the prospect of a
+life beyond the grave till the thought of it has risen with them to a
+passion, almost to an obsession, and has begotten a contempt for the
+fleeting joys of this ephemeral existence by comparison with the
+hoped-for bliss of an eternal existence hereafter. To the sceptic,
+examining the evidence for immortality by the cold light of reason, such
+peoples and such individuals may seem to sacrifice the substance for the
+shadow: to adopt a homely comparison, they are like the dog in the fable
+who dropped the real leg of mutton, from his mouth in order to snap at
+its reflection in the water. Be that as it may, where such beliefs and
+hopes are entertained in full force, the whole activity of the mind and
+the whole energy of the body are apt to be devoted to a preparation for
+a blissful or at all events an untroubled eternity, and life becomes, in
+the language of Plato, a meditation or practising of death. This
+excessive preoccupation with a problematic future has been a fruitful
+source of the most fatal aberrations both for nations and individuals.
+In pursuit of these visionary aims the few short years of life have been
+frittered away: wealth has been squandered: blood has been poured out in
+torrents: the natural affections have been stifled; and the cheerful
+serenity of reason has been exchanged for the melancholy gloom of
+madness.
+
+ "Oh threats of Hell and Hopes of Paradise!
+ One thing at least is certain--_This_ Life flies;
+ One thing is certain and the rest is Lies;
+ The Flower that once has blown for ever dies."
+
+[Sidenote: The belief in immortality general among mankind.]
+
+The question whether our conscious personality survives after death has
+been answered by almost all races of men in the affirmative. On this
+point sceptical or agnostic peoples are nearly, if not wholly, unknown.
+Accordingly if abstract truth could be determined, like the gravest
+issues of national policy, by a show of hands or a counting of heads,
+the doctrine of human immortality, or at least of a life after death,
+would deserve to rank among the most firmly established of truths; for
+were the question put to the vote of the whole of mankind, there can be
+no doubt that the ayes would have it by an overwhelming majority. The
+few dissenters would be overborne; their voices would be drowned in the
+general roar. For dissenters there have been even among savages. The
+Tongans, for example, thought that only the souls of noblemen are saved,
+the rest perish with their bodies.[6] However, this aristocratic view
+has never been popular, and is not likely to find favour in our
+democratic age.
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of many savages that they would never die if their
+lives were not cut short by sorcery. Belief of the Abipones.]
+
+But many savage races not only believe in a life after death; they are
+even of opinion that they would never die at all if it were not for the
+maleficent arts of sorcerers who cut the vital thread prematurely short.
+In other words, they disbelieve in what we call a natural death; they
+think that all men are naturally immortal in this life, and that every
+death which takes place is in fact a violent death inflicted by the hand
+of a human enemy, though in many cases the foe is invisible and works
+his fell purpose not by a sword or a spear but by magic. Thus the
+Abipones, a now extinct tribe of horse Indians in Paraguay, used to
+allege that they would be immortal and that none of them would ever die
+if only the Spaniards and the sorcerers could be banished from America;
+for they were in the habit of attributing every death, whatever its
+cause, either to the baleful arts of sorcerers or to the firearms of the
+Spaniards. Even if a man died riddled with wounds, with his bones
+smashed, or through the exhaustion of old age, these Indians would all
+deny that the wounds or old age was the cause of his death; they firmly
+believed that the death was brought about by magic, and they would make
+careful enquiries to discover the sorcerer who had cast the fatal spell
+on their comrade. The relations of the deceased would move every stone
+to detect and punish the culprit; and they imagined that they could do
+this by cutting out the heart and tongue of the dead man and throwing
+them to a dog to be devoured. They thought that this in some way killed
+the wicked magician who had killed their friend. For example, it
+happened that in a squabble between two men about a horse a third man
+who tried to make peace between the disputants was mortally wounded by
+their spears and died in a few days. To us it might seem obvious that
+the peacemaker was killed by the spear-wounds which he had received, but
+none of the Abipones would admit such a thing for a moment. They stoutly
+affirmed that their comrade had been done to death by the magical arts
+of some person unknown, and their suspicions fell on a certain old
+woman, known to be a witch, to whom the deceased had lately refused to
+give a water-melon, and who out of spite had killed him by her spells,
+though he appeared to the European eye to have died of a spear-wound.[7]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Araucanians.]
+
+Similarly the warlike Araucanians of Chili are said to disbelieve in
+natural death. Even if a man dies peaceably at the age of a hundred,
+they still think that he has been bewitched by an enemy. A diviner or
+medicine-man is consulted in order to discover the culprit. Some of
+these wizards enjoy a great reputation and the Indians will send a
+hundred miles or more to get the opinion of an eminent member of the
+profession. In such cases they submit to him some of the remains of the
+dead man, for example, his eyebrows, his nails, his tongue, or the soles
+of his feet, and from an examination of these relics the man of skill
+pronounces on the author of the death. The person whom he accuses is
+hunted down and killed, sometimes by fire, amid the yells of an enraged
+crowd.[8]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Bakaïri.]
+
+When the eminent German anthropologist was questioning a Bakaïri Indian
+of Brazil as to the language of his tribe, he gave the sentence, "Every
+man must die" to be translated into the Bakaïri language. To his
+astonishment, the Indian remained long silent. The same long pause
+always occurred when an abstract proposition, with which he was
+unfamiliar, was put before the Indian for translation into his native
+tongue. On the present occasion the enquirer learned that the Indian has
+no idea of necessity in the abstract, and in particular he has no
+conception at all of the necessity of death. The cause of death, in his
+opinion, is invariably an ill turn done by somebody to the deceased. If
+there were only good men in the world, he thinks that there would be
+neither sickness nor death. He knows nothing about a natural end of the
+vital process; he believes that all sickness and disease are the effects
+of witchcraft.[9]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Indians of Guiana in sorcery as the cause of
+sickness and death.]
+
+Speaking of the Indians of Guiana, an English missionary, who knew them
+well, says that the worst feature in their character is their proneness
+to blood revenge, "by which a succession of retaliatory murders may be
+kept up for a long time. It is closely connected with their system of
+sorcery, which we shall presently consider. A person dies,--and it is
+supposed that an enemy has secured the agency of an evil spirit to
+compass his death. Some sorcerer, employed by the friends of the
+deceased for that purpose, pretends by his incantations to discover the
+guilty individual or family, or at any rate to indicate the quarter
+where they dwell. A near relative of the deceased is then charged with
+the work of vengeance. He becomes a _kanaima_, or is supposed to be
+possessed by the destroying spirit so called, and has to live apart,
+according to strict rule, and submit to many privations, until the deed
+of blood be accomplished. If the supposed offender cannot be slain, some
+innocent member of his family--man, woman, or little child--must suffer
+instead."[10] The same writer tells us that these Indians of Guiana
+attribute sickness and death directly to the agency of certain evil
+spirits called _yauhahu_, who delight in inflicting miseries upon
+mankind. Pain, in the language of the Arawaks (one of the best-known
+tribes of Guiana), is called _yauhahu simaira_ or "the evil spirit's
+arrow."[11] It is these evil spirits whom wicked sorcerers employ to
+accomplish their fell purpose. Thus while the demon is the direct cause
+of sickness and death, the sorcerer who uses him as his tool is the
+indirect cause. The demon is thought to do his work by inserting some
+alien substance into the body of the sufferer, and a medicine-man is
+employed to extract it by chanting an invocation to the maleficent
+spirit, shaking his rattle, and sucking the part of the patient's frame
+in which the cause of the malady is imagined to reside. "After many
+ceremonies he will produce from his mouth some strange substance, such
+as a thorn or gravel-stone, a fish-bone or bird's claw, a snake's tooth,
+or a piece of wire, which some malicious _yauhahu_ is supposed to have
+inserted in the affected part. As soon as the patient fancies himself
+rid of this cause of his illness his recovery is generally rapid, and
+the fame of the sorcerer greatly increased. Should death, however,
+ensue, the blame is laid upon the evil spirit whose power and malignity
+have prevailed over the counteracting charms. Some rival sorcerer will
+at times come in for a share of the blame, whom the sufferer has
+unhappily made his enemy, and who is supposed to have employed the
+_yauhahu_ in destroying him. The sorcerers being supposed to have the
+power of causing, as well as of curing diseases, are much dreaded by the
+common people, who never wilfully offend them. So deeply rooted in the
+Indian's bosom is this belief concerning the origin of diseases, that
+they have little idea of sickness arising from other causes. Death may
+arise from a wound or a contusion, or be brought on by want of food, but
+in other cases it is the work of the _yauhahu_"[12] or evil spirit.
+
+[Sidenote: Some deaths attributed to sorcery and others to evil spirits:
+practical consequence of this distinction.]
+
+In this account it is to be observed that while all natural deaths from
+sickness and disease are attributed to the direct action of evil
+spirits, only some of them are attributed to the indirect action of
+sorcerers. The practical consequences of this theoretical distinction
+are very important. For whereas death by sorcery must, in the opinion of
+savages, be avenged by killing the supposed sorcerer, death by the
+action of a demon cannot be so avenged; for how are you to get at the
+demon? Hence, while every death by sorcery involves, theoretically at
+least, another death by violence, death by a demon involves no such
+practical consequence. So far, therefore, the faith in sorcery is far
+more murderous than the faith in demons. This practical distinction is
+clearly recognised by these Indians of Guiana; for another writer, who
+laboured among them as a missionary, tells us that when a person dies a
+natural death, the medicine-man is called upon to decide whether he
+perished through the agency of a demon or the agency of a sorcerer. If
+he decides that the deceased died through the malice of an evil spirit,
+the body is quietly buried, and no more is thought of the matter. But if
+the wizard declares that the cause of death was sorcery, the corpse is
+closely inspected, and if a blue mark is discovered, it is pointed out
+as the spot where the invisible poisoned arrow, discharged by the
+sorcerer, entered the man. The next thing is to detect the culprit. For
+this purpose a pot containing a decoction of leaves is set to boil on a
+fire. When it begins to boil over, the side on which the scum first
+falls is the quarter in which the supposed murderer is to be sought. A
+consultation is then held: the guilt is laid on some individual, and one
+of the nearest relations of the deceased is charged with the duty of
+finding and killing him. If the imaginary culprit cannot be found, any
+other member of his family may be slain in his stead. "It is not
+difficult to conceive," adds the writer, "how, under such circumstances,
+no man's life is secure; whilst these by no means unfrequent murders
+must greatly tend to diminish the number of the natives."[13]
+
+[Sidenote: Among the Indians of Guiana death is oftener attributed to
+sorcery than to demons.]
+
+However, it would seem that among the Indians of Guiana sickness and
+death are oftener ascribed to the agency of sorcerers than to the agency
+of demons acting alone. For another high authority on these Indians, Sir
+Everard F. im Thurn, tells us that "every death, every illness, is
+regarded not as the result of natural law, but as the work of a
+_kenaima_" or sorcerer. "Often indeed," he adds, "the survivors or the
+relatives of the invalid do not know to whom to attribute the deed,
+which therefore perforce remains unpunished; but often, again, there is
+real or fancied reason to fix on some one as the _kenaima_, and then the
+nearest relative of the injured individual devotes himself to retaliate.
+Strange ceremonies are sometimes observed in order to discover the
+secret _kenaima_. Richard Schomburgk describes a striking instance of
+this. A Macusi boy had died a natural death, and his relatives
+endeavoured to discover the quarter to which the _kenaima_ who was
+supposed to have slain him belonged. Raising a terrible and monotonous
+dirge, they carried the body to an open piece of ground, and there
+formed a circle round it, while the father, cutting from the corpse both
+the thumbs and little fingers, both the great and the little toes, and a
+piece of each heel, threw these pieces into a new pot, which had been
+filled with water. A fire was kindled, and on this the pot was placed.
+When the water began to boil, according to the side on which one of the
+pieces was first thrown out from the pot by the bubbling of the water,
+in that direction would the _kenaima_ be. In thus looking round to see
+who did the deed, the Indian thinks it by no means necessary to fix on
+anyone who has been with or near the injured man. The _kenaima_ is
+supposed to have done the deed, not necessarily in person, but probably
+in spirit."[14] For these Indians believe that each individual man has a
+body and a spirit within it, and that sorcerers can despatch their
+spirits out of their bodies to harm people at a distance. It is not
+always in an invisible form that these spirits of sorcerers are supposed
+to roam on their errands of mischief. The wizard can put his spirit into
+the shape of an animal, such as a jaguar, a serpent, a sting-ray, a
+bird, an insect, or anything else he pleases. Hence when an Indian is
+attacked by a wild beast, he thinks that his real foe is not the animal,
+but the sorcerer who has transformed himself into it. Curiously enough
+they look upon some small harmless birds in the same light. One little
+bird, in particular, which flits across the savannahs with a peculiar
+shrill whistle at morning and evening, is regarded by the Indians with
+especial fear as a transformed sorcerer. They think that for every one
+of these birds that they shoot they have an enemy the less, and they
+burn its little body, taking great care that not even a single feather
+escapes to be blown about by the wind. On a windy day a dozen men and
+women have been seen chasing the floating feathers of these birds about
+the savannah in order utterly to extinguish the imaginary wizard. Even
+the foreign substance, the stick, bone, or whatever it is, which the
+good medicine-man pretends to suck from the body of the sufferer "is
+often, if not always, regarded not simply as a natural body, but as the
+materialised form of a hostile spirit."[15]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Tinneh Indians in sorcery as the cause of
+death.]
+
+Beliefs and practices of the same general character are reported to have
+formerly prevailed among the Tinneh or Déné Indians of North-west
+America. When any beloved or influential person died, nobody, we are
+told, would think of attributing the death to natural causes; it was
+assumed that the demise was an effect of sorcery, and the only
+difficulty was to ascertain the culprit. For that purpose the services
+of a shaman were employed. Rigged out in all his finery he would dance
+and sing, then suddenly fall down and feign death or sleep. On awaking
+from the apparent trance he would denounce the sorcerer who had killed
+the deceased by his magic art, and the denunciation generally proved the
+death-warrant of the accused.[16]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Australian aborigines in sorcery as the cause
+of death.]
+
+Again, similar beliefs and customs in regard to what we should call
+natural death appear to have prevailed universally amongst the
+aborigines of Australia, and to have contributed very materially to thin
+the population. On this subject I will quote the words of an observer.
+His remarks apply to the Australian aborigines in general but to the
+tribes of Victoria in particular. He says: "The natives are much more
+numerous in some parts of Australia than they are in others, but nowhere
+is the country thickly peopled; some dire disease occasionally breaks
+out among the natives, and carries off large numbers.... But there are
+two other causes which, in my opinion, principally account for their
+paucity of numbers. The first is that infanticide is universally
+practised; the second, that a belief exists that no one can die a
+natural death. Thus, if an individual of a certain tribe dies, his
+relatives consider that his death has been caused by sorcery on the part
+of another tribe. The deceased's sons, or nearest relatives, therefore
+start off on a _bucceening_ or murdering expedition. If the deceased is
+buried, a fly or a beetle is put into the grave, and the direction in
+which the insect wings its way when released is the one the avengers
+take. If the body is burnt, the whereabouts of the offending parties is
+indicated by the direction of the smoke. The first unfortunates fallen
+in with are generally watched until they encamp for the night; when they
+are buried in sleep, the murderers steal quietly up until they are
+within a yard or two of their victims, rush suddenly upon and butcher
+them. On these occasions they always abstract the kidney-fat, and also
+take off a piece of the skin of the thigh. These are carried home as
+trophies, as the American Indians take the scalp. The murderers anoint
+their bodies with the fat of their victims, thinking that by that
+process the strength of the deceased enters into them. Sometimes it
+happens that the _bucceening_ party come suddenly upon a man of a
+strange tribe in a tree hunting opossums; he is immediately speared, and
+left weltering in his blood at the foot of the tree. The relatives of
+the murdered man at once proceed to retaliate; and thus a constant and
+never-ending series of murders is always going on.... I do not mean to
+assert that for every man that dies or is killed another is murdered;
+for it often happens that the deceased has no sons or relatives who care
+about avenging his death. At other times a _bucceening_ party will
+return without having met with any one; then, again, they are sometimes
+repelled by those they attack."[17]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the natives of Western Australia in sorcery as a
+cause of death. Beliefs of the tribes of Victoria and South Australia.]
+
+Again, speaking of the tribes of Western Australia, Sir George Grey
+tells us that "the natives do not allow that there is such a thing as a
+death from natural causes; they believe, that were it not for murderers
+or the malignity of sorcerers, they might live for ever; hence, when a
+native dies from the effect of an accident, or from some natural cause,
+they use a variety of superstitious ceremonies, to ascertain in what
+direction the sorcerer lives, whose evil practices have brought about
+the death of their relative; this point being satisfactorily settled by
+friendly sorcerers, they then attach the crime to some individual, and
+the funeral obsequies are scarcely concluded, ere they start to revenge
+their supposed wrongs."[18] Again, speaking of the Watch-an-die tribe of
+Western Australia, another writer tells us that they "possess the
+comfortable assurance that nearly all diseases, and consequently deaths,
+are caused by the enchantments of hostile tribes, and that were it not
+for the malevolence of their enemies they would (with a few exceptions)
+live for ever. Consequently, on the first approach of sickness their
+first endeavour is to ascertain whether the _boollia_ [magic] of their
+own tribe is not sufficiently potent to counteract that of their foes.
+Should the patient recover, they are, of course, proud of the
+superiority of their enchantment over that of their enemies: but should
+the _boollia_ [magical influence] within the sick man prove stronger
+than their own, as there is no help for it, he must die, the utmost they
+can do in this case is to revenge his death."[19] But the same writer
+qualifies this general statement as follows: "It is not true," he says,
+"that the New Hollanders impute _all_ natural deaths to the _boollia_
+[magic] of inimical tribes, for in most cases of persons wasting visibly
+away before death, they do not entertain the notion. It is chiefly in
+cases of sudden death, or when the body of the deceased is fat and in
+good condition, that this belief prevails, and it is only in such
+contingencies that it becomes an imperative duty to have revenge."[20]
+Similarly, speaking of the tribes of Victoria in the early days of
+European settlement among them, the experienced observer Mr. James
+Dawson says that "natural deaths are generally--but not
+always--attributed to the malevolence and the spells of an enemy
+belonging to another tribe."[21] Again, with regard to the Encounter Bay
+tribe of South Australia we read that "there are but few diseases which
+they regard as the consequences of natural causes; in general they
+consider them the effects of enchantment, and produced by
+sorcerers."[22] Similarly of the Port Lincoln tribes in South Australia
+it is recorded that "in all cases of death that do not arise from old
+age, wounds, or other equally palpable causes, the natives suspect that
+unfair means have been practised; and even where the cause of death is
+sufficiently plain, they sometimes will not content themselves with it,
+but have recourse to an imaginary one, as the following case will
+prove:--A woman had been bitten by a black snake, across the thumb, in
+clearing out a well; she began to swell directly, and was a corpse in
+twenty-four hours; yet, another woman who had been present when the
+accident occurred, stated that the deceased had named a certain native
+as having caused her death. Upon this statement, which was in their
+opinion corroborated by the circumstance that the snake had drawn no
+blood from the deceased, her husband and other friends had a fight with
+the accused party and his friends; a reconciliation, however, took place
+afterwards, and it was admitted on the part of the aggressors that they
+had been in error with regard to the guilty individual; but nowise more
+satisfied as to the bite of the snake being the true cause of the
+woman's death, another party was now suddenly discovered to be the real
+offender, and accordingly war was made upon him and his partisans, till
+at last the matter was dropped and forgotten. From this case, as well as
+from frequent occurrences of a similar nature, it appears evident that
+thirst for revenge has quite as great a share in these foul accusations
+as superstition."[23]
+
+[Sidenote: Other testimonies as to the belief of the natives of South
+Australia and Victoria.]
+
+However, other experienced observers of the Australian aborigines admit
+no such limitations and exceptions to the native theory that death is an
+effect of sorcery. Thus in regard to the Narrinyeri tribe of South
+Australia the Rev. George Taplin, who knew them intimately for years,
+says that "no native regards death as natural, but always as the result
+of sorcery."[24] Again, to quote Mr. R. Brough Smyth, who has collected
+much information on the tribes of Victoria: "Mr. Daniel Bunce, an
+intelligent observer, and a gentleman well acquainted with the habits of
+the blacks, says that no tribe that he has ever met with believes in the
+possibility of a man dying a natural death. If a man is taken ill, it is
+at once assumed that some member of a hostile tribe has stolen some of
+his hair. This is quite enough to cause serious illness. If the man
+continues sick and gets worse, it is assumed that the hair has been
+burnt by his enemy. Such an act, they say, is sufficient to imperil his
+life. If the man dies, it is assumed that the thief has choked his
+victim and taken away his kidney-fat. When the grave is being dug, one
+or more of the older men--generally doctors or conjurors
+(_Buk-na-look_)--stand by and attentively watch the laborers; and if an
+insect is thrown out of the ground, these old men observe the direction
+which it takes, and having determined the line, two of the young men,
+relations of the deceased, are despatched in the path indicated, with
+instructions to kill the first native they meet, who they are assured
+and believe is the person directly chargeable with the crime of causing
+the death of their relative. Mr. John Green says that the men of the
+Yarra tribe firmly believe that no one ever dies a natural death. A man
+or a woman dies because of the wicked arts practised by some member of a
+hostile tribe; and they discover the direction in which to search for
+the slayer by the movements of a lizard which is seen immediately after
+the corpse is interred."[25] Again, speaking of the aborigines of
+Victoria, another writer observes: "All deaths from natural causes are
+attributed to the machinations of enemies, who are supposed to have
+sought for and burned the excrement of the intended victim, which,
+according to the general belief, causes a gradual wasting away. The
+relatives, therefore, watch the struggling feet of the dying person, as
+they point in the direction whence the injury is thought to come, and
+serve as a guide to the spot where it should be avenged. This is the
+duty of the nearest male relative; should he fail in its execution, it
+will ever be to him a reproach, although other relatives may have
+avenged the death. If the deceased were a chief, then the duty devolves
+upon the tribe. Chosen men are sent in the direction indicated, who kill
+the first persons they meet, whether men, women, or children; and the
+more lives that are sacrificed, the greater is the honour to the
+dead."[26] Again, in his account of the Kurnai tribe of Victoria the
+late Dr. A. W. Howitt remarks: "It is not difficult to see how, among
+savages, who have no knowledge of the real causes of diseases which are
+the common lot of humanity, the very suspicion even of such a thing as
+death from disease should be unknown. Death by accident they can
+imagine; death by violence they can imagine; but I question if they can,
+in their savage condition, imagine death by mere disease. Rheumatism is
+believed to be produced by the machinations of some enemy. Seeing a
+Tatungolung very lame, I asked him what was the matter? He said, 'Some
+fellow has put _bottle_ in my foot.' I asked him to let me see it. I
+found he was probably suffering from acute rheumatism. He explained that
+some enemy must have found his foot track, and have buried in it a piece
+of broken bottle. The magic influence, he believed, caused it to enter
+his foot.... Phthisis, pneumonia, bowel complaints, and insanity are
+supposed to be produced by an evil spirit--Brewin--'who is like the
+wind,' and who, entering his victims, can only be expelled by suitable
+incantations.... Thus the belief arises that death occurs only from
+accident, open violence, or secret magic; and, naturally, that the
+latter can only be met by counter-charms."[27]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the aborigines of New South Wales in sorcery as the
+cause of sickness and death.]
+
+The beliefs and practices of the aborigines of New South Wales in
+respect of death were similar. Thus we are told by a well-informed
+writer that "the natives do not believe in death from natural causes;
+therefore all sickness is attributed to the agency of sorcery, and
+counter charms are used to destroy its effect.... As a man's death is
+never supposed to have occurred naturally, except as the result of
+accident, or from a wound in battle, the first thing to be done when a
+death occurs is to endeavour to find out the person whose spells have
+brought about the calamity. In the Wathi-Wathi tribe the corpse is asked
+by each relative in succession to signify by some sign the person who
+has caused his death. Not receiving an answer, they watch in which
+direction a bird flies, after having passed over the deceased. This is
+considered an indication that the sorcerer is to be found in that
+direction. Sometimes the nearest relative sleeps with his head on the
+corpse, which causes him, they think, to dream of the murderer. There
+is, however, a good deal of uncertainty about the proceedings, which
+seldom result in more than a great display of wrath, and of vowing of
+vengeance against some member of a neighbouring tribe. Unfortunately
+this is not always the case, the man who is supposed to have exercised
+the death-spell being sometimes waylaid and murdered in a most cruel
+manner."[28] With regard to the great Kamilaroi tribe of New South Wales
+we read that "in some parts of the country a belief prevails that death,
+through disease, is, in many, if not in all cases, the result of an
+enemy's malice. It is a common saying, when illness or death comes, that
+some one has thrown his belt (_boor_) at the victim. There are various
+modes of fixing upon the murderer. One is to let an insect fly from the
+body of the deceased and see towards whom it goes. The person thus
+singled out is doomed."[29]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the aborigines of Central Australia in sorcery as
+the cause of death.]
+
+Speaking of the tribes of Central Australia, Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+observe that "in the matter of morality their code differs radically
+from ours, but it cannot be denied that their conduct is governed by it,
+and that any known breaches are dealt with both surely and severely. In
+very many cases there takes place what the white man, not seeing beneath
+the surface, not unnaturally describes as secret murder, but, in
+reality, revolting though such slaughter may be to our minds at the
+present day, it is simply exactly on a par with the treatment accorded
+to witches not so very long ago in European countries. Every case of
+such secret murder, when one or more men stealthily stalk their prey
+with the object of killing him, is in reality the exacting of a life for
+a life, the accused person being indicated by the so-called medicine-man
+as one who has brought about the death of another man by magic, and
+whose life must therefore be forfeited. It need hardly be pointed out
+what a potent element this custom has been in keeping down the numbers
+of the tribe; no such thing as natural death is realised by the native;
+a man who dies has of necessity been killed by some other man, or
+perhaps even by a woman, and sooner or later that man or woman will be
+attacked. In the normal condition of the tribe every death meant the
+killing of another individual."[30]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the natives of the Torres Straits Islands and New
+Guinea in sorcery as the cause of death.]
+
+Passing from Australia to other savage lands we learn that according to
+the belief of the Torres Straits Islanders all sickness and death were
+due to sorcery.[31] The natives of Mowat or Mawatta in British New
+Guinea "do not believe in a natural death, but attribute even the
+decease of an old man to the agency of some enemy known or unknown."[32]
+In the opinion of the tribes about Hood Peninsula in British New Guinea
+no one dies a natural death. Every such death is caused by the evil
+magic either of a living sorcerer or of a dead relation.[33] Of the
+Roro-speaking tribes of British New Guinea Dr. Seligmann writes that
+"except in the case of old folk, death is not admitted to occur without
+some obvious cause such as a spear-thrust. Therefore when vigorous and
+active members of the community die, it becomes necessary to explain
+their fate, and such deaths are firmly believed to be produced by
+sorcery. Indeed, as far as I have been able to ascertain, the Papuasian
+of this district regards the existence of sorcery, not, as has been
+alleged, as a particularly terrifying and horrible affair, but as a
+necessary and inevitable condition of existence in the world as he knows
+it."[34] Amongst the Yabim of German New Guinea "every case of death,
+even though it should happen accidentally, as by the fall of a tree or
+the bite of a shark, is laid at the door of the sorcerers. They are
+blamed even for the death of a child. If it is said that a little child
+never hurt anybody and therefore cannot have an enemy, the reply is that
+the intention was to injure the mother, and that the malady had been
+transferred to the infant through its mother's milk."[35]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Melanesians in sorcery as the cause of sickness
+and death.]
+
+Again, in the island of Malo, one of the New Hebrides, a Catholic
+missionary reports that according to a belief deeply implanted in the
+native mind every disease is the effect of witchcraft, and that nobody
+dies a natural death but only as a consequence of violence, poison, or
+sorcery.[36] Similarly in New Georgia, one of the Solomon Islands, when
+a person is sick, the natives think that he must be bewitched by a man
+or woman, for in their opinion nobody can be sick or die unless he is
+bewitched; what we call natural sickness and death are impossible. In
+case of illness suspicion falls on some one who is supposed to have
+buried a charmed object with intent to injure the sufferer.[37] Of the
+Melanesians who inhabit the coast of the Gazelle Peninsula in New
+Britain it is said that all deaths by sickness or disease are attributed
+by them to the witchcraft of a sorcerer, and a diviner is called in to
+ascertain the culprit who by his evil magic has destroyed their
+friends.[38] "Amongst the Melanesians few, if any, are believed to die
+from natural causes only; if they are not killed in war, they are
+supposed to die from the effects of witchcraft or magic. Whenever any
+one was sick, his friends made anxious inquiries as to the person who
+had bewitched (_agara'd_) him. Some one would generally be found to
+admit that he had buried some portion of food or something belonging to
+the sick man, which had caused his illness. The friends would pay him to
+dig it up, and after that the patient would generally get well. If,
+however, he did not recover, it was assumed that some other person had
+also _agara'd_ him."[39]
+
+[Sidenote: The belief of the Malagasy in sorcery as a cause of death.]
+
+Speaking of the Malagasy a Catholic missionary tells us that in
+Madagascar nobody dies a natural death. With the possible exception of
+centenarians everybody is supposed to die the victim of the sorcerer's
+diabolic art. If a relation of yours dies, the people comfort you by
+saying, "Cursed be the sorcerer who caused his death!" If your horse
+falls down a precipice and breaks its back, the accident has been caused
+by the malicious look of a sorcerer. If your dog dies of hydrophobia or
+your horse of a carbuncle, the cause is still the same. If you catch a
+fever in a district where malaria abounds, the malady is still ascribed
+to the art of the sorcerer, who has insinuated some deadly substances
+into your body.[40] Again, speaking of the Sakalava, a tribe in
+Madagascar, an eminent French authority on the island observes: "They
+have such a faith in the power of talismans that they even ascribe to
+them the power of killing their enemies. When they speak of poisoning,
+they do not allude, as many Europeans wrongly suppose, to death by
+vegetable or mineral poisons; the reference is to charms or spells. They
+often throw under the bed of an enemy an _ahouli_ [talisman], praying it
+to kill him, and they are persuaded that sooner or later their wish will
+be accomplished. I have often been present at bloody vendettas which had
+no other origin but this. The Sakalava think that a great part of the
+population dies of poison in this way. In their opinion, only old people
+who have attained the extreme limits of human longevity die a natural
+death."[41]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of African tribes in sorcery as the cause of sickness
+and death.]
+
+In Africa similar beliefs are widely spread and lead, as elsewhere, to
+fatal consequences. Thus the Kagoro of Northern Nigeria refuse to
+believe in death from natural causes; all illnesses and deaths, in their
+opinion, are brought about by black magic, however old and decrepit the
+deceased may have been. They explain sickness by saying that a man's
+soul wanders from his body in sleep and may then be caught, detained,
+and even beaten with a stick by some evil-wisher; whenever that happens,
+the man naturally falls ill. Sometimes an enemy will abstract the
+patient's liver by magic and carry it away to a cave in a sacred grove,
+where he will devour it in company with other wicked sorcerers. A
+witch-doctor is called in to detect the culprit, and whomever he
+denounces is shut up in a room, where a fire is kindled and pepper
+thrown into it; and there he is kept in the fumes of the burning pepper
+till he confesses his guilt and returns the stolen liver, upon which of
+course the sick man recovers. But should the patient die, the miscreant
+who did him to death by kidnapping his soul or his liver will be sold as
+a slave or choked.[42] In like manner the Bakerewe, who inhabit the
+largest island in the Victoria Nyanza lake, believe that all deaths and
+all ailments, however trivial, are the effect of witchcraft; and the
+person, generally an old woman, whom the witch-doctor accuses of having
+cast the spell on the patient is tied up, severely beaten, or stabbed to
+death on the spot.[43] Again, we are told that "the peoples of the Congo
+do not believe in a natural death, not even when it happens through
+drowning or any other accident. Whoever dies is the victim of witchcraft
+or of a spell. His soul has been eaten. He must be avenged by the
+punishment of the person who has committed the crime." Accordingly when
+a death has taken place, the medicine-man is sent for to discover the
+criminal. He pretends to be possessed by a spirit and in this state he
+names the wretch who has caused the death by sorcery. The accused has to
+submit to the poison ordeal by drinking a decoction of the red bark of
+the _Erythrophloeum guiniense_. If he vomits up the poison, he is
+innocent; but if he fails to do so, the infuriated crowd rushes on him
+and despatches him with knives and clubs. The family of the supposed
+culprit has moreover to pay an indemnity to the family of the supposed
+victim.[44] "Death, in the opinion of the natives, is never due to a
+natural cause. It is always the result either of a crime or of sorcery,
+and is followed by the poison ordeal, which has to be undergone by an
+innocent person whom the fetish-man accuses from selfish motives."[45]
+
+[Sidenote: Effect of such beliefs in thinning the population by causing
+multitudes to die for the imaginary crime of sorcery.]
+
+Evidence of the same sort could be multiplied for West Africa, where the
+fear of sorcery is rampant.[46] But without going into further details,
+I wish to point out the disastrous effects which here, as elsewhere,
+this theory of death has produced upon the population. For when a death
+from natural causes takes place, the author of the death being of course
+unknown, suspicion often falls on a number of people, all of whom are
+obliged to submit to the poison ordeal in order to prove their
+innocence, with the result that some or possibly all of them perish. A
+very experienced American missionary in West Africa, the Rev. R. H.
+Nassau, the friend of the late Miss Mary H. Kingsley, tells us that for
+every person who dies a natural death at least one, and often ten or
+more have been executed on an accusation of witchcraft.[47] Andrew
+Battel, a native of Essex, who lived in Angola for many years at the end
+of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth century, informs us
+that "in this country none on any account dieth, but they kill another
+for him: for they believe they die not their own natural death, but that
+some other has bewitched them to death. And all those are brought in by
+the friends of the dead whom they suspect; so that there many times come
+five hundred men and women to take the drink, made of the foresaid root
+_imbando_. They are brought all to the high-street or market-place, and
+there the master of the _imbando_ sits with his water, and gives every
+one a cup of water by one measure; and they are commanded to walk in a
+certain place till they make water, and then they are free. But he that
+cannot urine presently falls down, and all the people, great and small,
+fall upon him with their knives, and beat and cut him into pieces. But I
+think the witch that gives the water is partial, and gives to him whose
+death is desired the strongest water, but no man of the bye-standers can
+perceive it. This is done in the town of Longo, almost every week
+throughout the year."[48] A French official tells us that among the
+Neyaux of the Ivory Coast similar beliefs and practices were visibly
+depopulating the country, every single natural death causing the death
+of four or five persons by the poison ordeal, which consisted in
+drinking the decoction of a red bark called by the natives _boduru_. At
+the death of a chief fifteen men and women perished in this way. The
+French Government had great difficulty in suppressing the ordeal; for
+the deluded natives firmly believed in the justice of the test and
+therefore submitted to it willingly in the full consciousness of their
+innocence.[49] In the neighbourhood of Calabar the poison ordeal, which
+here consists in drinking a decoction of a certain bean, the
+_Physostigma venenosum_ of botanists, has had similar disastrous
+results, as we learn from the testimony of a missionary, the Rev. Hugh
+Goldie. He tells us that the people have firm faith in the ordeal and
+therefore not only accept it readily but appeal to it, convinced that it
+will demonstrate their innocence. A small tribe named Uwet in the
+hill-country of Calabar almost swept itself off the face of the earth by
+its constant use of the ordeal. On one occasion the whole population
+drank the poison to prove themselves pure, as they said; about half
+perished, "and the remnant," says Mr. Goldie, "still continuing their
+superstitious practice, must soon become extinct"[50] These words were
+written a good many years ago, and it is probable that by this time
+these poor fanatics have actually succeeded in exterminating themselves.
+So fatal may be the practical consequences of a purely speculative
+error; for it is to be remembered that these disasters flow directly
+from a mistaken theory of death.
+
+[Sidenote: General conclusion as to the belief in sorcery as the great
+cause of death.]
+
+Much more evidence of the same kind could be adduced, but without
+pursuing the theme further I think we may lay it down as a general rule
+that at a certain stage of social and intellectual evolution men have
+believed themselves to be naturally immortal in this life and have
+regarded death by disease or even by accident or violence as an
+unnatural event which has been brought about by sorcery and which must
+be avenged by the death of the sorcerer. If that has been so, we seem
+bound to conclude that a belief in magic or sorcery has had a most
+potent influence in keeping down the numbers of savage tribes; since as
+a rule every natural death has entailed at least one, often several,
+sometimes many deaths by violence. This may help us to understand what
+an immense power for evil the world-wide faith in magic or sorcery has
+been among men.
+
+[Sidenote: But some savages have attributed death to other causes than
+sorcery.]
+
+But even savages come in time to perceive that deaths are sometimes
+brought about by other causes than sorcery. We have seen that some of
+them admit extreme old age, accidents, and violence as causes of death
+which are independent of sorcery. The admission of these exceptions to
+the general rule certainly marks a stage of intellectual progress. I
+will give a few more instances of such admissions before concluding this
+part of my subject.
+
+[Sidenote: Some savages dissect the corpse to ascertain whether death
+was due to natural causes or to sorcery.]
+
+In the first place, certain savage tribes are reported to dissect the
+bodies of their dead in order to ascertain from an examination of the
+corpse whether the deceased died a natural death or perished by magic.
+This is reported by Mr. E. R. Smith concerning the Araucanians of Chili,
+who according to other writers, as we saw,[51] believe all deaths to be
+due to sorcery. Mr. Smith tells us that after death the services of the
+_machi_ or medicine-man "are again required, especially if the deceased
+be a person of distinction. The body is dissected and examined. If the
+liver be found in a healthy state, the death is attributed to natural
+causes; but if the liver prove to be inflamed, it is supposed to
+indicate the machinations of some evil-intentioned persons, and it rests
+with the medicine-man to discover the conspirator. This is accomplished
+by much the same means that were used to find out the nature of the
+disease. The gall is extracted, put in the magic drum, and after various
+incantations taken out and placed over the fire, in a pot carefully
+covered; if, after subjecting the gall to a certain amount of roasting,
+a stone is found in the bottom of the pot, it is declared to be the
+means by which death was produced. These stones, as well as the frogs,
+spiders, arrows, or whatever else may be extracted from the sick man,
+are called _Huecuvu_--the 'Evil One.' By aid of the _Huecuvu_ the
+_machi_ [medicine-man] throws himself into a trance, in which state he
+discovers and announces the person guilty of the death, and describes
+the manner in which it was produced."[52]
+
+Again, speaking of the Pahouins, a tribe of the Gaboon region in French
+Congo, a Catholic missionary writes thus: "It is so rare among the
+Pahouins that a death is considered natural! Scarcely has the deceased
+given up the ghost when the sorcerer appears on the scene. With three
+cuts of the knife, one transverse and two lateral, he dissects the
+breast of the corpse and turns down the skin on the face. Then he
+grabbles in the breast, examines the bowels attentively, marks the last
+muscular contractions, and thereupon pronounces whether the death was
+natural or not." If he decides that the death was due to sorcery, the
+suspected culprit has to submit to the poison ordeal in the usual manner
+to determine his guilt or innocence.[53]
+
+[Sidenote: The possibility of natural death admitted by the
+Melanesians.]
+
+Another savage people who have come to admit the possibility of merely
+natural death are the Melanesians of the New Hebrides and other parts of
+Central Melanesia. Amongst them "any sickness that is serious is
+believed to be brought about by ghosts or spirits; common complaints
+such as fever and ague are taken as coming in the course of nature. To
+say that savages are never ill without supposing a supernatural cause is
+not true of Melanesians; they make up their minds as the sickness comes
+whether it is natural or not, and the more important the individual who
+is sick, the more likely his sickness is to be ascribed to the anger of
+a ghost whom he has offended, or to witchcraft. No great man would like
+to be told that he was ill by natural weakness or decay. The sickness is
+almost always believed to be caused by a ghost, not by a spirit....
+Generally it is to the ghosts of the dead that sickness is ascribed in
+the eastern islands as well as in the western; recourse is had to them
+for aid in causing and removing sickness; and ghosts are believed to
+inflict sickness not only because some offence, such as a trespass, has
+been committed against them, or because one familiar with them has
+sought their aid with sacrifice and spells, but because there is a
+certain malignity in the feeling of all ghosts towards the living, who
+offend them by being alive."[54] From this account we learn, first, that
+the Melanesians admit some deaths by common diseases, such as fever and
+ague, to be natural; and, second, that they recognise ghosts and spirits
+as well as sorcerers and witches, among the causes of death; indeed they
+hold that ghosts are the commonest of all causes of sickness and death.
+
+[Sidenote: The possibility of natural death admitted by the Caffres of
+South Africa.]
+
+The same causes of death are recognised also by the Caffres of South
+Africa, as we learn from Mr. Dudley Kidd, who tells us that according to
+the beliefs of the natives, "to start with, there is sickness which is
+supposed to be caused by the action of ancestral spirits or by fabulous
+monsters. Secondly, there is sickness which is caused by the magical
+practices of some evil person who is using witchcraft in secret.
+Thirdly, there is sickness which comes from neither of these causes, and
+remains unexplained. It is said to be 'only sickness, and nothing more.'
+This third form of sickness is, I think, the commonest. Yet most writers
+wholly ignore it, or deny its existence. It may happen that an attack of
+indigestion is one day attributed to the action of witch or wizard;
+another day the trouble is put down to the account of ancestral spirits;
+on a third occasion the people may be at a loss to account for it, and
+so may dismiss the problem by saying that it is merely sickness. It is
+quite common to hear natives say that they are at a loss to account for
+some special case of illness. At first they thought it was caused by an
+angry ancestral spirit; but a great doctor has assured them that it is
+not the result of such a spirit. They then suppose it to be due to the
+magical practices of some enemy; but the doctor negatives that theory.
+The people are, therefore, driven to the conclusion that the trouble has
+no ascertainable cause. In some cases they do not even trouble to
+consult a diviner; they speedily recognise the sickness as due to
+natural causes. In such a case it needs no explanation. If they think
+that some friend of theirs knows of a remedy, they will try it on their
+own initiative, or may even go off to a white man to ask for some of his
+medicine. They would never dream of doing this if they thought they were
+being influenced by magic or by ancestral spirits. The Kafirs quite
+recognise that there are types of disease which are inherited, and have
+not been caused by magic or by ancestral spirits. They admit that some
+accidents are due to nothing but the patient's carelessness or
+stupidity. If a native gets his leg run over by a waggon, the people
+will often say that it is all his own fault through being clumsy. In
+other cases, with delightful inconsistency, they may say that some one
+has been working magic to cause the accident. In short, it is impossible
+to make out a theory of sickness which will satisfy our European
+conception of consistency."[55]
+
+[Sidenote: The admission that death may be due to natural causes, marks
+an intellectual advance. The recognition of ghosts or spirits as a cause
+of disease, apart from sorcery, also marks a step in intellectual,
+moral, and social progress.]
+
+From the foregoing accounts we see that the Melanesians and the Caffres,
+two widely different and widely separated races, agree in recognising at
+least three distinct causes of what we should call natural death. These
+three causes are, first, sorcery or witchcraft; second, ghosts or
+spirits; and third, disease.[56] That the recognition of disease in
+itself as a cause of death, quite apart from sorcery, marks an
+intellectual advance, will not be disputed. It is not so clear, though I
+believe it is equally true, that the recognition of ghosts or spirits as
+a cause of disease, quite apart from witchcraft, marks a real step in
+intellectual, moral, and social progress. In the first place, it marks a
+step in intellectual and moral progress; for it recognises that effects
+which before had been ascribed to human agency spring from superhuman
+causes; and this recognition of powers in the universe superior to man
+is not only an intellectual gain but a moral discipline: it teaches the
+important lesson of humility. In the second place it marks a step in
+social progress because when the blame of a death is laid upon a ghost
+or a spirit instead of on a sorcerer, the death has not to be avenged by
+killing a human being, the supposed author of the calamity. Thus the
+recognition of ghosts or spirits as the sources of sickness and death
+has as its immediate effect the sparing of an immense number of lives of
+men and women, who on the theory of death by sorcery would have perished
+by violence to expiate their imaginary crime. That this is a great gain
+to society is obvious: it adds immensely to the security of human life
+by removing one of the most fruitful causes of its destruction.
+
+It must be admitted, however, that the gain is not always as great as
+might be expected; the social advantages of a belief in ghosts and
+spirits are attended by many serious drawbacks. For while ghosts or
+spirits are commonly, though not always, supposed to be beyond the reach
+of human vengeance, they are generally thought to be well within the
+reach of human persuasion, flattery, and bribery; in other words, men
+think that they can appease and propitiate them by prayer and sacrifice;
+and while prayer is always cheap, sacrifice may be very dear, since it
+can, and often does, involve the destruction of an immense deal of
+valuable property and of a vast number of human lives. Yet if we could
+reckon up the myriads who have been slain in sacrifice to ghosts and
+gods, it seems probable that they would fall far short of the untold
+multitudes who have perished as sorcerers and witches. For while human
+sacrifices in honour of deities or of the dead have been for the most
+part exceptional rather than regular, only the great gods and the
+illustrious dead being deemed worthy of such costly offerings, the
+slaughter of witches and wizards, theoretically at least, followed
+inevitably on every natural death among people who attributed all such
+deaths to sorcery. Hence if natural religion be defined roughly as a
+belief in superhuman spiritual beings and an attempt to propitiate them,
+we may perhaps say that, while natural religion has slain its thousands,
+magic has slain its ten thousands. But there are strong reasons for
+inferring that in the history of society an Age of Magic preceded an Age
+of Religion. If that was so, we may conclude that the advent of religion
+marked a great social as well as intellectual advance upon the preceding
+Age of Magic: it inaugurated an era of what might be described as mercy
+by comparison with the relentless severity of its predecessor.
+
+[Footnote 6: W. Martin, _An Account of the Natives of the Tonga
+Islands_, Second Edition (London, 1818), ii. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 7: M. Dobrizhoffer, _Historia de Abiponibus_ (Vienna, 1784),
+ii. 92 _sq._, 240 _sqq._ The author of this valuable work lived as a
+Catholic missionary in the tribe for eighteen years.]
+
+[Footnote 8: C. Gay, "Fragment d'un Voyage dans le Chili et au Cusco,"
+_Bulletin de la Société de Géographie_ (Paris), Deuxième Série, xix.
+(1843) p. 25; H. Delaporte, "Une visite chez les Araucaniens," _Bulletin
+de la Société de Géographie_ (Paris), Quatrième Série, x. (1855) p. 30.]
+
+[Footnote 9: K. von den Steinen, _Unter den Naturvölkern
+Zentral-Brasiliens_ (Berlin, 1894), pp. 344, 348.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Rev. W. H. Brett, _The Indian Tribes of Guiana_ (London,
+1868), p. 357.]
+
+[Footnote 11: W. H. Brett, _op. cit._ pp. 361 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 12: Rev. W. H. Brett, _op. cit._ pp. 364 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 13: Rev. J. H. Bernau, _Missionary Labours in British Guiana_
+(London, 1847), pp. 56 _sq._, 58.]
+
+[Footnote 14: (Sir) E. F. im Thurn, _Among the Indians of Guiana_
+(London, 1883), pp. 330 _sq._ For the case described see R. Schomburgk,
+_Reisen in Britisch-Guiana_, i. (Leipsic, 1847) pp. 324 _sq._ The boy
+died of dropsy. Perhaps the mode of divination adopted, by boiling some
+portions of him in water, had special reference to the nature of the
+disease.]
+
+[Footnote 15: (Sir) E. F. im Thurn, _op. cit._ pp. 332 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 16: Father A. G. Morice, "The Canadian Dénés," _Annual
+Archaeological Report, 1905_ (Toronto, 1906), p. 207.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Albert A. C. Le Souëf, "Notes on the Natives of
+Australia," in R. Brough Smyth's _Aborigines of Victoria_ (Melbourne and
+London, 1878), ii. 289 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 18: (Sir) George Grey, _Journals of two Expeditions of
+Discovery in Northwest and Western Australia_ (London, 1841), ii. 238.]
+
+[Footnote 19: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. iii. (1865) p. 236.]
+
+[Footnote 20: A. Oldfield, _op. cit._ p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 21: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_ (Melbourne, Sydney and
+Adelaide, 1881), p. 63.]
+
+[Footnote 22: H. E. A. Meyer, "Manners and Customs of the Aborigines of
+the Encounter Bay Tribe," _Native Tribes of South Australia_ (Adelaide,
+1879), p. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 23: C. W. Schürmann, "The Aboriginal Tribes of Port Lincoln in
+South Australia," _Native Tribes of South Australia_, pp. 237 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 24: Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," _Native Tribes of South
+Australia_ (Adelaide, 1879), p. 25.]
+
+[Footnote 25: R. Brough Smyth, _The Aborigines of Victoria_ (Melbourne
+and London, 1878) i. 110.]
+
+[Footnote 26: W. E. Stanbridge, "Some Particulars of the General
+Characteristics, Astronomy, and Mythology of the Tribes in the Central
+Part of Victoria, Southern Australia," _Transactions of the Ethnological
+Society of London_, New Series, i. (1861) p. 299.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Lorimer Fison and A. W. Howitt, _Kamilaroi and Kurnai_
+(Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide, and Brisbane, 1880), pp. 250 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 28: A. L. P. Cameron, "Notes on some Tribes of New South
+Wales," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_ xiv. (1885) pp. 361,
+362 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 29: Rev. W. Ridley, _Kamilaroi_, Second Edition (Sydney,
+1875), p. 159.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Native Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1899), pp. 46-48.]
+
+[Footnote 31: _Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to
+Torres Straits_, v. (Cambridge, 1904) pp. 248, 323.]
+
+[Footnote 32: E. Beardmore, "The Natives of Mowat, British New Guinea,"
+_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xix. (1890) p. 461.]
+
+[Footnote 33: R. E. Guise, "On the Tribes inhabiting the Mouth of the
+Wanigela River, New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
+xxviii. (1899) p. 216.]
+
+[Footnote 34: C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_
+(Cambridge, 1910), p. 279.]
+
+[Footnote 35: K. Vetter, _Komm herüber und hilf uns! oder die Arbeit der
+Neuen-Dettelsauer Mission_, iii. (Barmen, 1898) pp. 10 _sq._; _id._, in
+_Nachrichten über Kaiser-Wilhelms-Land und den Bismarck-Archipel, 1897_,
+pp. 94, 98. Compare B. Hagen, _Unter den Papuas_ (Wiesbaden, 1899), p.
+256; _Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie,
+Ethnologie, und Urgeschichte, 1900_, p. (415).]
+
+[Footnote 36: Father A. Deniau, "Croyances religieuses et moeurs des
+indigènes de l'Ile Malo," _Missions Catholiques_, xxxiii. (1901) pp. 315
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 37: C. Ribbe, _Zwei Jahre unter den Kannibalen der
+Salomo-Inseln_ (Dresden-Blasewitz, 1903), p. 268.]
+
+[Footnote 38: P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Küstenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Münster, N.D.), p. 344. As to beliefs of
+this sort among the Sulka of New Britain, see _P._ Rascher, "Die Sulka,"
+_Archiv für Anthropologie_, xxix. (1904) pp. 221 _sq._; R. Parkinson,
+_Dreissig Jahre in der Südsee_ (Stuttgart, 1907), pp. 199-201.]
+
+[Footnote 39: G. Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), p. 176. Dr. Brown's account, of the Melanesians applies to the
+natives of New Britain and more particularly of the neighbouring Duke of
+York islands.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Father Abinal, "Astrologie Malgache," _Missions
+Catholiques_, xi. (1879) p. 506.]
+
+[Footnote 41: A. Grandidier, "Madagascar," _Bulletin de la Société de
+Géographie_ (Paris), Sixième Série, iii. (1872) pp. 399 _sq._ The
+talismans (_ahouli_) in question consist of the horns of oxen stuffed
+with a variety of odds and ends, such as sand, sticks, nails, and so
+forth.]
+
+[Footnote 42: Major A. J. N. Tremearne, _The Tailed Head-hunters of
+Nigeria_ (London, 1912), pp. 171 _sq._; _id._, "Notes on the Kagoro and
+other Headhunters," _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute_,
+xlii. (1912) pp. 160, 161.]
+
+[Footnote 43: E. Hurel, "Religion et vie domestique des Bakerewe,"
+_Anthropos_, vi. (1912) pp. 85-87.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Father Campana, "Congo Mission Catholique de Landana,"
+_Missions Catholiques_, xxvii. (1895) pp. 102 _sq_.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Th. Masui, _Guide de la Section de l'État Indépendant du
+Congo à l'Exposition de Bruxelles--Tervueren en 1874_ (Brussels, 1897),
+p. 82.]
+
+[Footnote 46: See for example O. Lenz, _Skizzen aus Westafrika_ (Berlin,
+1878), pp. 184 _sq._; C. Cuny, "De Libreville au Cameroun," _Bulletin de
+la Société de Géographie_ (Paris), Septième Série, xvii. (1896) p. 341;
+Ch. Wunenberger, "La mission et le royaume de Humbé, sur les bords du
+Cunène," _Missions Catholiques_, xx. (1888) p. 262; Lieut. Herold,
+"Bericht betreffend religiöse Anschauungen und Gebräuche der deutschen
+Ewe-Neger," _Mittheilungen aus den deutschen Schutzgebieten_, v. (1892)
+p. 153; Dr. R. Plehn, "Beiträge zur Völkerkunde des Togo-Gebietes,"
+_Mittheilungen des Seminars für Orientalische Sprachen zu Berlin_, ii.
+Dritte Abtheilung (1899), p. 97; R. Fisch, "Die Dagbamba,"
+_Baessler-Archiv_, iii. (1912) p. 148. For evidence of similar beliefs
+and practices in other parts of Africa, see Brard, "Der
+Victoria-Nyanza," _Petermann's Mittheilungen_, xliii. (1897) pp. 79
+_sq._; Father Picarda, "Autour du Mandéra," _Missions Catholiques_,
+xviii. (1886) p. 342.]
+
+[Footnote 47: Rev. R. H. Nassau, _Fetichism in West Africa_ (London,
+1904), pp. 241 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 48: "Strange Adventures of Andrew Battel," in John Pinkerton's
+_Voyages and Travels_, xvi. (London, 1814) p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 49: _Gouvernement Général de l'Afrique Occidentale Française,
+Notices publiées par le Gouvernement Central à l'occasion de
+l'Exposition Coloniale de Marseille, La Côte d'Ivoire_ (Corbeil, 1906),
+pp. 570-572.]
+
+[Footnote 50: Hugh Goldie, _Calabar and its Mission_, New Edition
+(Edinburgh and London, 1901), pp. 34 _sq._, 37 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 51: Above, p. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 52: E. R. Smith, _The Araucanians_ (London, 1855), pp. 236
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 53: Father Trilles, "Milles lieues dans l'inconnu; à travers
+le pays Fang, de la côte aux rives du Djah," _Missions Catholiques_,
+xxxv. (1903) pp. 466 _sq._, and as to the poison ordeal, _ib._ pp. 472
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 54: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), p.
+194.]
+
+[Footnote 55: Dudley Kidd, _The Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), pp. 133
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 56: In like manner the Baganda generally ascribed natural
+deaths either to sorcery or to the action of a ghost; but when they
+could not account for a person's death in either of these ways they said
+that Walumbe, the God of Death, had taken him. This last explanation
+approaches to an admission of natural death, though it is still mythical
+in form. The Baganda usually attributed any illness of the king to
+ghosts, because no man would dare to practise magic on him. A
+much-dreaded ghost was that of a man's sister; she was thought to vent
+her spite on his sons and daughters by visiting them with sickness. When
+she proved implacable, a medicine-man was employed to catch her ghost in
+a gourd or a pot and throw it away on waste land or drown it in a river.
+See Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 98, 100, 101
+_sq._, 286 _sq._, 315 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE III
+
+MYTHS OF THE ORIGIN OF DEATH
+
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of savages in man's natural immortality.]
+
+In my last lecture I shewed that many savages do not believe in what we
+call a natural death; they imagine that all men are naturally immortal
+and would never die, if their lives were not cut prematurely short by
+sorcery. Further, I pointed out that this mistaken view of the nature of
+death has exercised a disastrous influence on the tribes who entertain
+it, since, attributing all natural deaths to sorcery, they consider
+themselves bound to discover and kill the wicked sorcerers whom they
+regard as responsible for the death of their friends. Thus in primitive
+society as a rule every natural death entails at least one and often
+several deaths by violence; since the supposed culprit being unknown
+suspicion may fall upon many persons, all of whom may be killed either
+out of hand or as a consequence of failing to demonstrate their
+innocence by means of an ordeal.
+
+[Sidenote: Savage stories of the origin of death.]
+
+Yet even the savages who firmly believe in man's natural immortality are
+obliged sorrowfully to admit that, as things are at the present day, men
+do frequently die, whatever explanation we may give of so unexpected and
+unnatural an occurrence. Accordingly they are hard put to it to
+reconcile their theory of immortality with the practice of mortality.
+They have meditated on the subject and have given us the fruit of their
+meditation in a series of myths which profess to explain the origin of
+death. For the most part these myths are very crude and childish; yet
+they have a value of their own as examples of man's early attempts to
+fathom one of the great mysteries which encompass his frail and
+transient existence on earth; and accordingly I have here collected, in
+all their naked simplicity, a few of these savage guesses at truth.
+
+[Sidenote: Four types of such stories.]
+
+Myths of the origin of death conform to several types, among which we
+may distinguish, first, what I will call the type of the Two Messengers;
+second, the type of the Waxing and Waning Moon; third, the type of the
+Serpent and his Cast Skin; and fourth, the type of the Banana-tree. I
+will illustrate each type by examples, and will afterwards cite some
+miscellaneous instances which do not fall under any of these heads.
+
+[Sidenote: I. The tale of the Two Messengers. Zulu story of the
+chameleon and the lizard. The same story among other Bantu tribes.]
+
+First, then, we begin with the type of the Two Messengers. Stories of
+this pattern are widespread in Africa, especially among tribes belonging
+to the great Bantu family, which occupies roughly the southern half of
+the continent. The best-known example of the tale is the one told by the
+Zulus. They say that in the beginning Unkulunkulu, that is, the Old Old
+One, sent the chameleon to men with a message saying, "Go, chameleon, go
+and say, Let not men die." The chameleon set out, but it crawled very
+slowly, and it loitered by the way to eat the purple berries of the
+_ubukwebezane_ tree, or according to others it climbed up a tree to bask
+in the sun, filled its belly with flies, and fell fast asleep. Meantime
+the Old Old One had thought better of it and sent a lizard posting after
+the chameleon with a very different message to men, for he said to the
+animal, "Lizard, when you have arrived, say, Let men die." So the lizard
+went on his way, passed the dawdling chameleon, and arriving first among
+men delivered his message of death, saying, "Let men die." Then he
+turned on his heel and went back to the Old Old One who had sent him.
+But after he was gone, the chameleon at last arrived among men with his
+glad tidings of immortality, and he shouted, saying, "It is said, Let
+not men die!" But men answered, "O! we have heard the word of the
+lizard; it has told us the word, 'It is said, Let men die.' We cannot
+hear your word. Through the word of the lizard, men will die." And died
+they have ever since from that day to this. That is why some of the
+Zulus hate the lizard, saying, "Why did he run first and say, 'Let
+people die?'" So they beat and kill the lizard and say, "Why did it
+speak?" But others hate the chameleon and hustle it, saying, "That is
+the little thing which delayed to tell the people that they should not
+die. If he had only brought his message in time we should not have died;
+our ancestors also would have been still living; there would have been
+no diseases here on the earth. It all comes from the delay of the
+chameleon."[57] The same story is told in nearly the same form by other
+Bantu tribes, such as the Bechuanas,[58] the Basutos,[59] the
+Baronga,[60] and the Ngoni.[61] To this day the Baronga and the Ngoni
+owe the chameleon a grudge for having brought death into the world, so
+when children find a chameleon they will induce it to open its mouth,
+then throw a pinch of tobacco on its tongue, and watch with delight the
+creature writhing and changing colour from orange to green, from green
+to black in the agony of death; for thus they avenge the wrong which the
+chameleon has done to mankind.[62]
+
+[Sidenote: Akamba story of the chameleon and the thrush.]
+
+A story of the same type, but with some variations, is told by the
+Akamba, a Bantu tribe of British East Africa; but in their version the
+lizard has disappeared from the legend and has been replaced by the
+_itoroko_, a small bird of the thrush tribe, with a black head, a
+bluish-black back, and a buff-coloured breast. The tale runs thus:--Once
+upon a time God sent out the chameleon, the frog, and the thrush to find
+people who died one day and came to life again the next. So off they
+set, the chameleon leading the way, for in those days he was a very
+important personage. Presently they came to some people lying like dead,
+so the chameleon went up to them and said, _Niwe, niwe, niwe_. The
+thrush asked him testily what he was making that noise for, to which the
+chameleon replied mildly, "I am only calling the people who go forward
+and then came back again," and he explained that the dead people would
+come to life again. But the thrush, who was of a sceptical turn of mind,
+derided the idea. Nevertheless, the chameleon persisted in calling to
+the dead people, and sure enough they opened their eyes and listened to
+him. But here the thrush broke in and told them roughly that dead they
+were and dead they must remain. With that away he flew, and though the
+chameleon preached to the corpses, telling them that he had come from
+God on purpose to bring them to life again, and that they were not to
+believe the lies of that shallow sceptic the thrush, they obstinately
+refused to pay any heed to him; not one of those dead corpses would
+budge. So the chameleon returned crestfallen to God and reported to him
+how, when he preached the gospel of resurrection to the corpses, the
+thrush had roared him down, so that the corpses could not hear a word he
+said. God thereupon cross-questioned the thrush, who stated that the
+chameleon had so bungled his message that he, the thrush, felt it his
+imperative duty to interrupt him. The simple deity believed the thrush,
+and being very angry with the chameleon he degraded him from his high
+position and made him walk very slow, lurching this way and that, as he
+does down to this very day. But the thrush he promoted to the office of
+wakening men from their slumber every morning, which he still does
+punctually at 2 A.M. before the note of any other bird is heard in the
+tropical forest.[63]
+
+[Sidenote: Togo story of the dog and the frog.]
+
+In this version, though the frog is sent out by God with the other two
+messengers he plays no part in the story; he is a mere dummy. But in
+another version of the story, which is told by the negroes of Togoland
+in German West Africa, the frog takes the place of the lizard and the
+thrush as the messenger of death. They say that once upon a time men
+sent a dog to God to say that when they died they would like to come to
+life again. So off the dog trotted to deliver the message. But on the
+way he felt hungry and turned into a house, where a man was boiling
+magic herbs. So the dog sat down and thought to himself, "He is cooking
+food." Meantime the frog had set off to tell God that when men died they
+would like not to come to life again. Nobody had asked him to give that
+message; it was a piece of pure officiousness and impertinence on his
+part. However, away he tore. The dog, who still sat watching the
+hell-broth brewing, saw him hurrying past the door, but he thought to
+himself, "When I have had something to eat, I will soon catch froggy
+up." However, froggy came in first and said to the deity, "When men die,
+they would like not to come to life again." After that, up comes the
+dog, and says he, "When men die, they would like to come to life again."
+God was naturally puzzled and said to the dog, "I really do not
+understand these two messages. As I heard the frog's request first, I
+will comply with it. I will not do what you said." That is the real
+reason why men die and do not come to life again. If the frog had only
+minded his own business instead of meddling with other people's, the
+dead would all have come to life again to this day.[64] In this version
+of the story not only are the persons of the two messengers different,
+the dog and the frog having replaced the chameleon and the lizard of the
+Bantu version, but the messengers are sent from men to God instead of
+from God to men.
+
+[Sidenote: Ashantee story of the goat and the sheep.]
+
+In another version told by the Ashantees of West Africa the persons of
+the messengers are again different, but as in the Bantu version they are
+sent from God to men. The Ashantees say that long ago men were happy,
+for God dwelt among them and talked with them face to face. For example,
+if a child was roasting yams at the fire and wanted a relish to eat with
+the yams, he had nothing to do but to throw a stick in the air and say,
+"God give me fish," and God gave him fish at once. However, these happy
+days did not last for ever. One unlucky day it happened that some women
+were pounding a mash with pestles in a mortar, while God stood by
+looking on. For some reason they were annoyed by the presence of the
+deity and told him to be off; and as he did not take himself off fast
+enough to please them, they beat him with their pestles. In a great huff
+God retired altogether from the world and left it to the direction of
+the fetishes; and still to this day people say, "Ah, if it had not been
+for that old woman, how happy we should be!" However, after he had
+withdrawn to heaven, the long-suffering deity sent a kind message by a
+goat to men upon earth to say, "There is something which they call
+Death. He will kill some of you. But even if you die, you will not
+perish completely. You will come to me in heaven." So off the goat set
+with this cheering intelligence. But before he came to the town he saw a
+tempting bush by the wayside and stopped to browse on it. When God in
+heaven saw the goat thus loitering by the way, he sent off a sheep with
+the same message to carry the glad tidings to men without delay. But the
+sheep did not give the message aright. Far from it: he said, "God sends
+you word that you will die and that will be an end of you." Afterwards
+the goat arrived on the scene and said, "God sends you word that you
+will die, certainly, but that will not be the end of you, for you will
+go to him." But men said to the goat, "No, goat, that is not what God
+said. We believe that the message which the sheep brought us is the one
+which God sent to us." That was the beginning of death among men.[65]
+However, in another Ashantee version of the tale the parts played by the
+sheep and the goat are reversed. It is the sheep who brings the tidings
+of immortality from God to men, but the goat overruns him and offers
+them death instead. Not knowing what death was, men accepted the seeming
+boon with enthusiasm and have died ever since.[66]
+
+[Sidenote: II. The story of the Waxing and Waning Moon. Hottentot story
+of the Moon, the hare, and death.]
+
+So much for the tale of the Two Messengers. In the last versions of it
+which I have quoted, a feature to be noticed is the perversion of the
+message by one of the messengers, who brings tidings of death instead of
+life eternal to men. The same perversion of the message reappears in
+some examples of the next type of story which I shall illustrate, namely
+the type of the Waxing and Waning Moon. Thus the Namaquas or Hottentots
+say that once the Moon charged the hare to go to men and say, "As I die
+and rise to life again, so shall you die and rise to life again." So the
+hare went to men, but either out of forgetfulness or malice he reversed
+the message and said, "As I die and do not rise to life again, so you
+shall also die and not rise to life again." Then he went back to the
+Moon, and she asked him what he had said. He told her, and when she
+heard how he had given the wrong message, she was so angry that she
+threw a stick at him and split his lip, which is the reason why the
+hare's lip is still split. So the hare ran away and is still running to
+this day. Some people, however, say that before he fled he clawed the
+Moon's face, which still bears the marks of the scratching, as anybody
+may see for himself on a clear moonlight night. So the Hottentots are
+still angry with the hare for bringing death into the world, and they
+will not let initiated men partake of its flesh.[67] There are traces of
+a similar story among the Bushmen.[68] In another Hottentot version two
+messengers appear, an insect and a hare; the insect is charged by the
+Moon with a message of immortality or rather of resurrection to men, but
+the hare persuades the insect to let him bear the tidings, which he
+perverts into a message of annihilation.[69] Thus in this particular
+version the type of the Two Messengers coincides with the Moon type.
+
+[Sidenote: Masai story of the moon and death.]
+
+A story of the same type, though different in details, is told by the
+Masai of East Africa. They say that in the early days a certain god
+named Naiteru-kop told a man named Le-eyo that if a child were to die he
+was to throw away the body and say, "Man, die, and come back again;
+moon, die, and remain away." Well, soon afterwards a child died, but it
+was not one of the man's own children, so when he threw the body away he
+said, "Man, die, and remain away; moon, die, and return." Next one of
+his own children died, and when he threw away the body he said, "Man,
+die, and return; moon, die, and remain away." But the god said to him,
+"It is of no use now, for you spoilt matters with the other child." That
+is why down to this day when a man dies he returns no more, but when the
+moon dies she always comes to life again.[70]
+
+[Sidenote: Nandi story of the moon, the dog, and death.]
+
+Another story of the origin of death which belongs to this type is told
+by the Nandi of British East Africa. They say that when the first people
+lived upon the earth a dog came to them one day and said: "All people
+will die like the moon, but unlike the moon you will not return to life
+again unless you give me some milk to drink out of your gourd, and beer
+to drink through your straw. If you do this, I will arrange for you to
+go to the river when you die and to come to life again on the third
+day." But the people laughed at the dog, and gave him some milk and beer
+to drink off a stool. The dog was angry at not being served in the same
+vessels as a human being, and though he put his pride in his pocket and
+drank the milk and the beer from the stool, he went away in high
+dudgeon, saying, "All people will die, and the moon alone will return to
+life." That is the reason why, when people die, they stay away, whereas
+when the moon goes away she comes back again after three days'
+absence.[71] The Wa-Sania of British East Africa believe that in days
+gone by people never died, till one unlucky day a lizard came and said
+to them, "All of you know that the moon dies and rises again, but human
+beings will die and rise no more." They say that from that day people
+began to die and have persisted in dying ever since.[72]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian story of the moon, the rat, and death. Caroline
+Islands story of the moon, death, and resurrection. Wotjobaluk story of
+the moon, death, and resurrection. Cham story of the moon, death, and
+resurrection.]
+
+With these African stories of the origin of death we may compare one
+told by the Fijians on the other side of the world. They say that once
+upon a time the Moon contended that men should be like himself (for the
+Fijian moon seems to be a male); that is, he meant that just as he grows
+old, disappears, and comes in sight again, so men grown old should
+vanish for a while and then return to life. But the rat, who is a Fijian
+god, would not hear of it. "No," said he, "let men die like rats." And
+he had the best of it in the dispute, for men die like rats to this
+day.[73] In the Caroline Islands they say that long, long ago death was
+unknown, or rather it was a short sleep, not a long, long one, as it is
+now. Men died on the last day of the waning moon and came to life again
+on the first appearance of the new moon, just as if they had awakened
+from a refreshing slumber. But an evil spirit somehow contrived that
+when men slept the sleep of death they should wake no more.[74] The
+Wotjobaluk of south-eastern Australia relate that, when all animals were
+men and women, some of them died and the moon used to say, "You
+up-again," whereupon they came to life again. But once on a time an old
+man said, "Let them remain dead"; and since then nobody has ever come to
+life again except the moon, which still continues to do so down to this
+very day.[75] The Chams of Annam and Cambodia say that the goddess of
+good luck used to resuscitate people as fast as they died, till the
+sky-god, tired of her constant interference with the laws of nature,
+transferred her to the moon, where it is no longer in her power to bring
+the dead to life again.[76]
+
+[Sidenote: Cycle of death and resurrection after three days, like the
+monthly disappearance and reappearance of the moon.]
+
+These stories which associate human immortality with the moon are
+products of a primitive philosophy which, meditating on the visible
+changes, of the lunar orb, drew from the observation of its waning and
+waxing a dim notion that under a happier fate man might have been
+immortal like the moon, or rather that like it he might have undergone
+an endless cycle of death and resurrection, dying then rising again from
+the dead after three days. The same curious notion of death and
+resurrection after three days is entertained by the Unmatjera and
+Kaitish, two savage tribes of Central Australia. They say that long ago
+their dead used to be buried either in trees or underground, and that
+after three days they regularly rose from the dead. The Kaitish tell how
+this happy state of things came to an end. It was all through a man of
+the Curlew totem, who finding some men of the Little Wallaby totem
+burying a Little Wallaby man, fell into a passion and kicked the body
+into the sea. Of course after that the dead man could not come to life
+again, and that is why nowadays nobody rises from the dead after three
+days, as everybody used to do long ago.[77] Although no mention is made
+of the moon in this Australian story, we may conjecture that these
+savages, like the Nandi of East Africa, fixed upon three days as the
+normal interval between death and resurrection simply because three days
+is the interval between the disappearance of the old and the
+reappearance of the new moon. If that is so, the aborigines of Central
+Australia may be added to the many races of mankind who have seen in the
+waning and waxing moon an emblem of human immortality. Nor does this
+association of ideas end with a mere tradition that in some former age
+men used to die with the old moon and come to life again with the new
+moon. Many savages, on seeing the new moon for the first time in the
+month, observe ceremonies which seem to be intended to renew and
+increase their life and strength with the renewal and the increase of
+the lunar light. For example, on the day when the new moon first
+appeared, the Indians of San Juan Capistrano in California used to call
+together all the young men and make them run about, while the old men
+danced in a circle, saying, "As the moon dieth and cometh to life again,
+so we also having to die will again live."[78] Again, an old writer
+tells us that at the appearance of every new moon the negroes of the
+Congo clapped their hands and cried out, sometimes falling on their
+knees, "So may I renew my life as thou art renewed."[79]
+
+[Sidenote: III. Story of the Serpent and his Cast Skin. New Britain
+story of immortality, the serpent, and death. Annamite story of
+immortality, the serpent, and death. Vuatom story of immortality, the
+lizard, the serpent, and death.]
+
+Another type of stories told to explain the origin of death is the one
+which I have called the type of the Serpent and his Cast Skin. Some
+savages seem to think that serpents and all other animals, such as
+lizards, which periodically shed their skins, thereby renew their life
+and so never die. Hence they imagine that if man also could only cast
+his old skin and put on a new one, he too would be immortal like a
+serpent. Thus the Melanesians, who inhabit the coast of the Gazelle
+Peninsula in New Britain, tell the following story of the origin of
+death. They say that To Kambinana, the Good Spirit, loved men and wished
+to make them immortal; but he hated the serpents and wished to kill
+them. So he called his brother To Korvuvu and said to him, "Go to men
+and take them the secret of immortality. Tell them to cast their skin
+every year. So will they be protected from death, for their life will be
+constantly renewed. But tell the serpents that they must thenceforth
+die." But To Korvuvu acquitted himself badly of his task; for he
+commanded men to die and betrayed to the serpents the secret of
+immortality. Since then all men have been mortal, but the serpents cast
+their skins every year and are immortal.[80] In this story we meet again
+with the incident of the reversed message; through a blunder or through
+the malice of the messenger the glad tidings of immortality are
+perverted into a melancholy message of death. A similar tale, with a
+similar incident, is told in Annam. They say that Ngoc hoang sent a
+messenger from heaven to men to say that when they had reached old age
+they should change their skins and live for ever, but that when serpents
+grew old they must die. The messenger came down to earth and said,
+rightly enough, "When man is old, he shall cast his skin; but when
+serpents are old, they shall die and be laid in coffins." So far, so
+good. But unfortunately there happened to be a brood of serpents within
+hearing, and when they heard the doom pronounced on their kind they fell
+into a fury and said to the messenger, "You must say it over again and
+just the contrary, or we will bite you." That frightened the messenger
+and he repeated his message, changing the words thus: "When he is old,
+the serpent shall cast his skin; but when he is old, man shall die and
+be laid in the coffin." That is why all creatures are now subject to
+death, except the serpent, who, when he is old, casts his skin and lives
+for ever.[81] The natives of Vuatom, an island in the Bismarck
+Archipelago, say that a certain To Konokonomiange bade two lads fetch
+fire, promising that if they did so they should never die, but that if
+they refused their bodies would perish, though their shades or souls
+would survive. They would not hearken to him, so he cursed them, saying,
+"What! You would all have lived! Now you shall die, though your soul
+shall live. But the iguana (_Goniocephalus_) and the lizard (_Varanus
+indicus_) and the snake (_Enygrus_), they shall live, they shall cast
+their skin and they shall live for evermore." When the lads heard that,
+they wept, for bitterly they rued their folly in not going to fetch the
+fire for To Konokonomiange.[82]
+
+[Sidenote: Nias story of immortality, the crab, and death. Arawak and
+Tamanachier stories of immortality, the serpent, the lizard, the beetle,
+and death.]
+
+Other peoples tell somewhat different stories to explain how men missed
+the boon of immortality and serpents acquired it. Thus the natives of
+Nias, an island off the coast of Sumatra, say that, when the earth was
+created, a certain being was sent down by God from heaven to put the
+last touches to the work of creation. He should have fasted for a month,
+but unable to withstand the pangs of hunger he ate some bananas. The
+choice of food was most unlucky, for had he only eaten river-crabs
+instead of bananas men would have cast their skins like crabs and would
+never have died.[83] The Arawaks of British Guiana relate that once upon
+a time the Creator came down to earth to see how his creature man was
+getting on. But men were so wicked that they tried to kill him so he
+deprived them of eternal life and bestowed it on the animals which renew
+their skin, such as serpents, lizards, and beetles.[84] A somewhat
+different version of the story is told by the Tamanachiers, an Indian
+tribe of the Orinoco. They say that after residing among them for some
+time the Creator took boat to cross to the other side of the great salt
+water from which he had come. Just as he was shoving off from the shore,
+he called out to them in a changed voice, "You will change your skins,"
+by which he meant to say, "You will renew your youth like the serpents
+and the beetles." But unfortunately an old woman, hearing these words,
+cried out "Oh!" in a tone of scepticism, if not of sarcasm, which so
+annoyed the Creator that he changed his tune at once and said testily,
+"Ye shall die." That is why we are all mortal.[85]
+
+[Sidenote: Melanesian story of the old woman who renewed her youth by
+casting her skin.]
+
+The natives of the Banks' Islands and the New Hebrides believe that
+there was a time in the beginning of things when men never died but cast
+their skins like snakes and crabs and so renewed their youth. But the
+unhappy change to mortality came about at last, as it so often does in
+these stories, through an old woman. Having grown old, this dame went to
+a stream to change her skin, and change it she did, for she stripped off
+her wizened old hide, cast it upon the waters, and watched it floating
+down stream till it caught on a stick. Then she went home a buxom young
+woman. But the child whom she had left at home did not know her and set
+up such a prodigious squalling that to quiet it the woman went straight
+back to the river, fished out her cast-off old skin, and put it on
+again. From that day to this people have ceased to cast their skins and
+to live for ever.[86] The same legend of the origin of death has been
+recorded in the Shortlands Islands[87] and among the Kai of German New
+Guinea.[88] It is also told with some variations by the natives of the
+Admiralty Islands. They say that once on a time there was an old woman
+and she was frail. She had two sons, and they went a-fishing, and she
+herself went to bathe. She stripped off her wrinkled old skin and came
+forth as young as she had been long ago. Her sons came home from the
+fishing, and very much astonished were they to see her. The one said,
+"It is our mother," but the other said, "She may be your mother, but she
+shall be my wife." Their mother heard them and said, "What were you two
+saying?" The two said, "Nothing! We only said that you are our mother."
+"You are liars," said she, "I heard you both. If I had had my way, we
+should have grown to be old men and women, and then we should have cast
+our skin and been young men and young women. But you have had your way.
+We shall grow old men and old women and then we shall die." With that
+she fetched her old skin, and put it on, and became an old woman again.
+As for us, her descendants, we grow up and we grow old. And if it had
+not been for those two young men there would have been no end of our
+days, we should have lived for ever and ever.[89]
+
+[Sidenote: Samoan story of the shellfish, two torches, and death.]
+
+The Samoans tell how the gods held a council to decide what was to be
+done with men. One of them said, "Bring men and let them cast their
+skin; and when they die, let them be turned to shellfish or to a
+coco-nut leaf torch, which when shaken in the wind blazes out again."
+But another god called Palsy (_Supa_) rose up and said, "Bring men and
+let them be like the candle-nut torch, which when it is once out cannot
+be blown up again. Let the shellfish change their skin, but let men
+die." While they were debating, a heavy rain came on and broke up the
+meeting. As the gods ran for shelter to their houses, they cried, "Let
+it be according to the counsel of Palsy! Let it be according to the
+counsel of Palsy!" So men died, but shellfish cast their skins.[90]
+
+[Sidenote: IV. The Banana Story. Poso story of immortality, the stone,
+the banana, and death. Mentra story of immortality, the banana, and
+death.]
+
+The last type of tales of the origin of death which I shall notice is
+the one which I have called the Banana type. We have already seen that
+according to the natives of Nias human mortality is all due to eating
+bananas instead of crabs.[91] A similar opinion is entertained by other
+people in that region of the world. Thus the natives of Poso, a district
+of Central Celebes, say that in the beginning the sky was very near the
+earth, and that the Creator, who lived in it, used to let down his good
+gifts to men at the end of a rope. One day he thus lowered a stone; but
+our first father and mother would have none of it and they called out to
+their Maker, "What have we to do with this stone? Give us something
+else." The Creator complied and hauled away at the rope; the stone
+mounted up and up till it vanished from sight. Presently the rope was
+seen coming down from heaven again, and this time there was a banana at
+the end of it instead of a stone. Our first parents ran at the banana
+and took it. Then there came a voice from heaven, saying: "Because ye
+have chosen the banana, your life shall be like its life. When the
+banana-tree has offspring, the parent stem dies; so shall ye die and
+your children shall step into your place. Had ye chosen the stone, your
+life would have been like the life of the stone changeless and
+immortal." The man and his wife mourned over their fatal choice, but it
+was too late; that is how through the eating of a banana death came into
+the world.[92] The Mentras or Mantras, a shy tribe of savages in the
+jungles of the Malay Peninsula, allege that in the early days of the
+world men did not die, but only grew thin at the waning of the moon and
+then waxed fat again as she waxed to the full. Thus there was no check
+whatever on the population, which increased to a truly alarming extent.
+So a son of the first man brought this state of things to his father's
+notice and asked him what was to be done. The first man said, "Leave
+things as they are"; but his younger brother, who took a more Malthusian
+view of the situation, said, "No, let men die like the banana, leaving
+their offspring behind." The question was submitted to the Lord of the
+Underworld, and he decided in favour of death. Ever since then men have
+ceased to renew their youth like the moon and have died like the
+banana.[93]
+
+[Sidenote: Primitive philosophy in the stories of the origin of death.]
+
+Thus the three stories of the origin of death which I have called the
+Moon type, the Serpent type, and the Banana type appear to be products
+of a primitive philosophy which sees a cheerful emblem of immortality in
+the waxing and waning moon and in the cast skins of serpents, but a sad
+emblem of mortality in the banana-tree, which perishes as soon as it has
+produced its fruit. But, as I have already said, these types of stories
+do not exhaust the theories or fancies of primitive man on the question
+how death came into the world. I will conclude this part of my subject
+with some myths which do not fall under any of the preceding heads.
+
+[Sidenote: Bahnar story of immortality, the tree, and death. Rivalry for
+the boon of immortality between men and animals that cast their skins,
+such as serpents and lizards.]
+
+The Bahnars of eastern Cochinchina say that in the beginning when people
+died they used to be buried at the foot of a tree called Lông Blô, and
+that after a time they always rose from the dead, not as infants but as
+full-grown men and women. So the earth was peopled very fast, and all
+the inhabitants formed but one great town under the presidency of our
+first parents. In time men multiplied to such an extent that a certain
+lizard could not take his walks abroad without somebody treading on his
+tail. This vexed him, and the wily creature gave an insidious hint to
+the gravediggers. "Why bury the dead at the foot of the Lông Blô tree?"
+said he; "bury them at the foot of Lông Khung, and they will not come to
+life again. Let them die outright and be done with it." The hint was
+taken, and from that day the dead have not come to life again.[94] In
+this story there are several points to be noticed. In the first place
+the tree Lông Blô would seem to have been a tree of life, since all the
+dead who were buried at its foot came to life again. In the second place
+the lizard is here, as in so many African tales, the instrument of
+bringing death among men. Why was that so? We may conjecture that the
+reason is that the lizard like the serpent casts its skin periodically,
+from which primitive man might infer, as he infers with regard to
+serpents, that the creature renews its youth and lives for ever. Thus
+all the myths which relate how a lizard or a serpent became the
+maleficent agent of human mortality may perhaps be referred to an old
+idea of a certain jealousy and rivalry between men and all creatures
+which cast their skin, notably serpents and lizards; we may suppose that
+in all such cases a story was told of a contest between man and his
+animal rivals for the possession of immortality, a contest in which,
+whether by mistake or by guile, the victory always remained with the
+animals, who thus became immortal, while mankind was doomed to
+mortality.
+
+[Sidenote: Chingpaw story of the origin of death. Australian story of
+the tree, the bat, and death. Fijian story of the origin of death.]
+
+The Chingpaws of Upper Burma say that death originated in a practical
+joke played by an old man who pretended to be dead in the ancient days
+when nobody really died. But the Lord of the Sun, who held the threads
+of all human lives in his hand, detected the fraud and in anger cut
+short the thread of life of the practical joker. Since then everybody
+else has died; the door for death to enter into the world was opened by
+the folly of that silly, though humorous, old man.[95] The natives about
+the Murray River in Australia used to relate how the first man and woman
+were forbidden to go near a tree in which a bat lived, lest they should
+disturb the creature. One day, however, the woman was gathering firewood
+and she went near the tree. The bat flew away, and after that death came
+into the world.[96] Some of the Fijians accounted for human mortality as
+follows. When the first man, the father of the human race, was being
+buried, a god passed by the grave and asked what it meant, for he had
+never seen a grave before. On learning from the bystanders that they had
+just buried their father, "Do not bury him," said he, "dig the body up
+again." "No," said they, "we cannot do that. He has been dead four days
+and stinks." "Not so," pleaded the god; "dig him up, and I promise you
+that he will live again." Heedless of the divine promise, these
+primitive sextons persisted in leaving their dead father in the grave.
+Then said the god to these wicked men, "By disobeying me you have sealed
+your own fate. Had you dug up your ancestor, you would have found him
+alive, and you yourselves, when you passed from this world, should have
+been buried, as bananas are, for the space of four days, after which you
+should have been dug up, not rotten, but ripe. But now, as a punishment
+for your disobedience, you shall die and rot." And still, when they hear
+this sad tale told, the Fijians say, "O that those children had dug up
+that body!"[97]
+
+[Sidenote: Admiralty Islanders' stories of the origin of death.]
+
+The Admiralty Islanders tell various stories to explain why man is
+mortal. One of them has already been related. Here is another. A Souh
+man went once to catch fish. A devil tried to devour him, but he fled
+into the forest and took refuge in a tree. The tree kindly closed on him
+so that the devil could not see him. When the devil was gone, the tree
+opened up and the man clambered down to the ground. Then said the tree
+to him, "Go to Souh and bring me two white pigs." He went and found two
+pigs, one was white and one was black. He took chalk and chalked the
+black pig so that it was white. Then he brought them to the tree, but on
+the way the chalk fell off the black pig. And when the tree saw the
+white pig and the black pig, he chid the man and said, "You are
+thankless. I was good to you. An evil will overtake you; you will die.
+The devil will fall upon you, and you will die." So it has been with us
+as it was with the man of Souh. An evil overtakes us or a spirit falls
+upon us, and we die. If it had been as the tree said, we should not have
+died.[98] Another story told by the Admiralty Islanders to account for
+the melancholy truth of man's mortality runs thus. Kosi, the chief of
+Moakareng, was in his house. He was hungry. He said to his two sons, "Go
+and climb the breadfruit trees and bring the fruit, that we may eat them
+together and not die." But they would not. So he went himself and
+climbed the breadfruit tree. But the north-west wind blew a storm, it
+blew and threw him down. He fell and his body died, but his ghost went
+home. He went and sat in his house. He tied up his hair and he painted
+his face with red ochre. Now his wife and his two sons had gone after
+him into the wood. They went to fetch home the breadfruits. They came
+and saw Kosi, and he was dead. The three returned home, and there they
+saw the ghost of Kosi sitting in his house. They said, "You there! Who's
+that dead at the foot of the breadfruit tree? Kosi, he is dead at the
+foot of the breadfruit tree." Kosi, he said, "Here am I. I did not fall.
+Perhaps somebody else fell down. I did not. Here I am." "You're a liar,"
+said they. "I ain't," said he. "Come," said they, "we'll go and see."
+They went. Kosi, he jumped into his body. He died. They buried him. If
+his wife had behaved well, we should not die. Our body would die, but
+our ghost would go about always in the old home.[99]
+
+[Sidenote: Stories of the origin of death: the fatal bundle or the fatal
+box.]
+
+The Wemba of Northern Rhodesia relate how God in the beginning created a
+man and a woman and gave them two bundles; in one of them was life and
+in the other death. Most unfortunately the man chose "the little bundle
+of death."[100] The Cherokee Indians of North America say that a number
+of beings were engaged in the work of creation. The Sun was made first.
+Now the creators intended that men should live for ever. But when the
+Sun passed over them in the sky, he told the people that there was not
+room enough for them all and that they had better die. At last the Sun's
+own daughter, who was with the people on earth, was bitten by a snake
+and died. Then the Sun repented him and said that men might live always;
+and he bade them take a box and go fetch his daughter's spirit in the
+box and bring it to her body, that she might live. But he charged them
+straitly not to open the box until they arrived at the dead body.
+However, moved by curiosity, they unhappily opened the box too soon;
+away flew the spirit, and all men have died ever since.[101] Some of the
+North American Indians informed the early Jesuit missionaries that a
+certain man had received the gift of immortality in a small packet from
+a famous magician named Messou, who repaired the world after it had been
+seriously damaged by a great flood. In bestowing on the man this
+valuable gift the magician strictly enjoined him on no account to open
+the packet. The man obeyed, and so long as the packet was unopened he
+remained immortal. But his wife was both curious and incredulous; she
+opened the packet to see what was in it, the precious contents flew
+away, and mankind has been subject to death ever since.[102]
+
+[Sidenote: Baganda story how death came into the world through the
+forgetfulness and imprudence of a woman.]
+
+As these American Indians tell how death came through the curiosity and
+incredulity of one woman, the Baganda of Central Africa relate how it
+came through the forgetfulness and imprudence of another. According to
+the Baganda the first man who came to earth in Uganda was named Kintu.
+He brought with him one cow and lived on its milk, for he had no other
+food. But in time a woman named Nambi, a daughter of Gulu, the king of
+heaven, came down to earth with her brother or sister, and seeing Kintu
+she fell in love with him and wished to have him for her husband. But
+her proud father doubted whether Kintu was worthy of his daughter's
+hand, and accordingly he insisted on testing his future son-in-law
+before he would consent to the marriage. So he carried off Kintu's cow
+and put it among his own herds in heaven. When Kintu found that the cow
+was stolen, he was in a great rage, but hunger getting the better of
+anger, he made shift to live by peeling the bark of trees and gathering
+herbs and leaves, which he cooked and ate. In time his future wife Nambi
+happened to spy the stolen cow among her father's herds and she told
+Kintu, who came to heaven to seek and recover the lost animal. His
+future father-in-law Gulu, Lord of Heaven, obliged him to submit to many
+tests designed to prove his fitness for marriage with the daughter of so
+exalted a being as the Lord of Heaven. All these tests Kintu
+successfully passed through. At last Gulu was satisfied, gave him his
+daughter Nambi to wife, and allowed him to return to earth with her.
+
+[Sidenote: The coming of Death.]
+
+But Nambi had a brother and his name was Death (_Walumbe_). So before
+the Lord of Heaven sent her away with her husband he called them both to
+him and said, "You must hurry away before Death comes, or he will wish
+to go with you. You must not let him do so, for he would only cause you
+trouble and unhappiness." To this his daughter agreed, and she went to
+pack up her things. She and her husband then took leave of the Lord of
+Heaven, who gave them at parting a piece of advice. "Be sure," said he,
+"if you have forgotten anything, not to come back for it; because, if
+you do, Death will wish to go with you, and you must go without him." So
+off they set, the man and his wife, taking with them his cow and its
+calves, also a sheep, a goat, a fowl, and a banana tree. But on the way
+the woman remembered that she had forgotten the grain to feed the fowl,
+so she said to her husband, "I must go back for the grain to feed the
+fowl, or it will die." Her husband tried to dissuade her, but in vain.
+She said, "I will hurry back and get it without any one seeing me." So
+back she went in an evil hour and said to her father the Lord of Heaven,
+"I have forgotten the grain for the fowl and I am come back to fetch it
+from the doorway where I put it." Her father said sadly, "Did I not tell
+you that you were not to return if you had forgotten anything, because
+your brother Death would wish to go with you? Now he will accompany
+you." The woman fled, but Death saw her and followed hard after her.
+When she rejoined her husband, he was angry, for he saw Death and said,
+"Why have you brought your brother with you? Who can live with him?"
+
+[Sidenote: The importunity of Death.]
+
+When they reached the earth, Nambi planted her garden, and the bananas
+sprang up quickly and formed a grove. They lived happily for a time till
+one day Death came and asked for one of their daughters, that she might
+go away with him and be his cook. But the father said, "If the Lord of
+Heaven comes and asks me for one of my children, what am I to say? Shall
+I tell him that I have given her to you to be your cook?" Death was
+silent and went away. But he came back another day and asked again for a
+child to be his cook. When the father again refused, Death said, "I will
+kill your children." The father did not know what that meant, so he
+asked Death, "What is that you will do?" However, in a short time one of
+the children fell ill and died, and then another and another. So the man
+went to the Lord of Heaven and complained that Death was taking away his
+children one by one. The Lord of Heaven said, "Did I not tell you, when
+you were going away, to go at once with your wife and not to return if
+you had forgotten anything, but you let your wife return to fetch the
+grain? Now you have Death living with you. If you had obeyed me, you
+would have been free from him and not lost any of your children."
+
+[Sidenote: The hunt for Death.]
+
+However, the man pleaded with him, and the Lord Heaven at last consented
+to send Death's brother Kaikuzi to help the woman and to prevent Death
+from killing her children. So down came Kaikuzi to earth, and when he
+met his brother Death they greeted each other lovingly. Then Kaikuzi
+told Death that he had come to fetch him away from earth to heaven.
+Death was willing to go, but he said, "Let us take our sister too."
+"Nay," said his brother, "that cannot be, for she is a wife and must
+stay with her husband." The dispute waxed warm, Death insisting on
+carrying off his sister, and his brother refusing to allow him to do so.
+At last the brother angrily ordered Death to do as he was bid, and so
+saying he made as though he would seize him. But Death slipped from
+between his hands and fled into the earth. For a long time after that
+there was enmity between the two brothers. Kaikuzi tried in every way to
+catch Death, but Death always escaped. At last Kaikuzi told the people
+that he would have one final hunt for Death, and while the hunt was
+going on they must all stay in their houses; not a man, a woman, a
+child, nor even an animal was to be allowed to pass the threshold; and
+if they saw Death passing the window, they were not to utter a cry of
+terror but to keep still. Well, for some days his orders were obeyed.
+Not a living soul, not an animal, stirred abroad. All without was
+solitude, all within was silence. Encouraged by the universal stillness
+Death emerged from his lair, and his brother was just about to catch
+him, when some children, who had ventured out to herd their goats, saw
+Death and cried out. Death's good brother rushed to the spot and asked
+them why they had cried out. They said, "Because we saw Death." So his
+brother was angry because Death had again made good his escape into the
+earth, and he went to the first man and told him that he was weary of
+hunting Death and wished to return home to heaven. The first man thanked
+him kindly for all he had done, and said, "I fear there is nothing more
+to be done. We must only hope that Death will not kill all the people."
+It was a vain hope. Since then Death has lived on earth and killed
+everybody who is born into the world; and always, after the deed of
+murder is done, he escapes into the earth at Tanda in Singo.[103]
+
+[Sidenote: In the preceding story Death is distinctly personified. Death
+personified in a West African story of the origin of death. Death and
+the spider and the spider's daughter.]
+
+If this curious tale of the origin of death reveals no very deep
+philosophy, it is at least interesting for the distinctness with which
+Death is conceived as a personal being, the son of the Lord of Heaven,
+the brother of the first man's wife. In this personification of Death
+the story differs from all the others which we have examined and marks
+an intellectual advance upon them; since the power of picturing abstract
+ideas to the mind with all the sharpness of outline and vividness of
+colour which are implied by personification is a faculty above the reach
+of very low intelligences. It is not surprising that the Baganda should
+have attained to this power, for they are probably the most highly
+cultured and intellectual of all the many Bantu tribes of Africa. The
+same conception of Death as a person occurs in a story of the origin of
+death which is told by the Hos, a negro tribe in Togoland, a district of
+West Africa. These Hos belong to the Ewe-speaking family of the true
+negroes, who have reached a comparatively high level of barbarism in the
+notorious kingdom of Dahomey. The story which the Hos tell as to the
+origin of death is as follows. Once upon a time there was a great famine
+in which even the hunters could find no flesh to eat. Then Death went
+and made a road as broad as from here to Sokode, and there he set many
+snares. Every animal that tried to pass that way fell into a snare. So
+Death had much flesh to eat. One day the Spider came to Death and said
+to him, "You have so much meat!" and she asked if she might have some to
+take home with her. Death gave her leave. So the Spider made a basket as
+long as from Ho to Akoviewe (a distance of about five miles), crammed it
+full of meat, and dragged it home. In return for this bounty the Spider
+gave Death her daughter Yiyisa to wife. So when Death had her for his
+wife, he gave her a hint. He said, "Don't walk on the broad road which I
+have made. Walk on the footpath which I have not made. When you go to
+the water, be sure to take none but the narrow way through the wood."
+Well, some time afterwards it had rained a little; the grass was wet,
+and Yiyisa wished to go to the watering-place. When she tried to walk on
+the narrow path through the forest, the tall damp grass wet her through
+and through, so she thought to herself, "In future I will only go on the
+broad road." But scarce had she set foot on the beautiful broad road
+when she fell into a snare and died on the spot. When Death came to the
+snare and saw his wife in it dead, he cut her up into bits and toasted
+them on the fire. One day the Spider paid a visit to her son-in-law
+Death, and he set a good meal before her. When she had eaten and drunk
+her fill and had got up to go home, she asked Death after her daughter.
+"If you take that meat from the fire," said Death, "you will see her."
+So the Spider took the flesh from the fire and there, sure enough, she
+found her dead daughter. Then she went home in great wrath and whetted
+her knife till it was so sharp that a fly lighting on the edge was cut
+in two. With that knife she came back to attack Death. But Death shot an
+arrow at her. She dodged it, and the arrow whizzed past her and set all
+the forest on fire. Then the Spider flung her sharp knife at Death, but
+it missed him and only sliced off the tops of the palms and all the
+other trees of the wood. Seeing that her stroke had failed, the Spider
+fled away home and shut herself up in her house. But Death waited for
+her on the edge of the town to kill her as soon as she ventured out.
+Next morning some women came out of the town to draw water at the
+watering-place, and as they went they talked with one another. But Death
+shot an arrow among them and killed several. The rest ran away home
+and said, "So and so is dead." Then Death came and looked at the bodies
+and said, "That is my game. I need go no more into the wood to hunt."
+That is how Death came into the world. If the Spider had not done what
+she did, nobody would ever have died.[104]
+
+[Sidenote: Death personified in a Melanesian story of the origin of
+death.]
+
+Again, the Melanesians of the Banks Islands tell a story of the origin
+of Death, in which that grim power is personified. They say that Death
+(_Mate_) used to live underground in a shadowy realm called Panoi, while
+men on earth changed their skins like serpents and so renewing their
+youth lived for ever. But a practical inconvenience of immortality was
+that property never changed hands; newcomers had no chance, everything
+was monopolised by the old, old stagers. To remedy this state of things
+and secure a more equitable distribution of property Death was induced
+to emerge from the lower world and to appear on earth among men; he came
+relying on an assurance that no harm would be done him. Well, when they
+had him, they laid him out on a board, covered him with a pall as if he
+were a corpse, and then proceeded with great gusto to divide his
+property and eat the funeral feast. On the fifth day they blew the conch
+shell to drive away the ghost, as usual, and lifted the pall to see what
+had become of Death. But there was no Death there; he had absconded
+leaving only his skeleton behind. They naturally feared that he had made
+off with an intention to return to his home underground, which would
+have been a great calamity; for if there were no Death on earth, how
+could men die and how could other people inherit their property? The
+idea was intolerable; so to cut off the retreat of the fugitive, the
+Fool was set to do sentinel duty at the parting of the ways, where one
+road leads down to the underworld, Death's home, and the other leads up
+to the upper world, the abode of the living. Here accordingly the Fool
+was stationed with strict orders to keep his eye on Death if he should
+attempt to sneak past him and return to the nether world. However, the
+Fool, like a fool as he was, sat watching the road to the upper world,
+and Death slipped behind him and so made good his retreat. Since then
+all men have followed Death down that fatal path.[105]
+
+[Sidenote: Thus according to savages death is not a necessary part of
+the order of nature. A similar view is held by some eminent modern
+biologists.]
+
+So much for savage stories of the origin of death. They all imply a
+belief that death is not a necessary part of the order of nature, but
+that it originated in a pure mistake or misdeed of some sort on
+somebody's part, and that we should all have lived happy and immortal if
+it had not been for that disastrous blunder or crime. Thus the tales
+reflect the same frame of mind which I illustrated in the last lecture,
+when I shewed that many savages still to this day believe all men to be
+naturally immortal and death to be nothing but an effect of sorcery. In
+short, whether we regard the savage's attitude to death at the present
+day or his ideas as to its origin in the remote past, we must conclude
+that primitive man cannot reconcile himself to the notion of death as a
+natural and necessary event; he persists in regarding it as an
+accidental and unnecessary disturbance of the proper order of nature. To
+a certain extent, perhaps, in these crude speculations he has
+anticipated certain views of modern biology. Thus it has been maintained
+by Professor August Weissmann that death is not a natural necessity,
+that many of the lowest species of living animals do in fact live for
+ever; and that in the higher animals the custom of dying has been
+introduced in the course of evolution for the purpose of thinning the
+population and preventing the degeneration of the species, which would
+otherwise follow through the gradual and necessary deterioration of the
+immortal individuals, who, though they could not die, might yet sustain
+much bodily damage through hard knocks in the hurly-burly of eternal
+existence on earth.
+
+[Sidenote: Weissmann's view that death is not a natural necessity but an
+adaptation acquired in the course of evolution for the advantage of the
+race.]
+
+On this subject I will quote some sentences from Professor Weissmann's
+essay on the duration of life. He says, "The necessity of death has been
+hitherto explained as due to causes which are inherent in organic
+nature, and not to the fact that it may be advantageous. I do not
+however believe in the validity of this explanation; I consider that
+death is not a primary necessity, but that it has been secondarily
+acquired as an adaptation. I believe that life is endowed with a fixed
+duration, not because it is contrary to its nature to be unlimited, but
+because the unlimited existence of individuals would be a luxury without
+any corresponding advantage. The above-mentioned hypothesis upon the
+origin and necessity of death leads me to believe that the organism did
+not finally cease to renew the worn-out cell material because the nature
+of the cells did not permit them to multiply indefinitely, but because
+the power of multiplying indefinitely was lost when it ceased to be of
+use.... John Hunter, supported by his experiments on _anabiosis_, hoped
+to prolong the life of man indefinitely by alternate freezing and
+thawing; and the Veronese Colonel Aless. Guaguino made his
+contemporaries believe that a race of men existed in Russia, of which
+the individuals died regularly every year on the 27th of November, and
+returned to life on the 24th of the following April. There cannot
+however be the least doubt, that the higher organisms, as they are now
+constructed, contain within themselves the germs of death. The question
+however arises as to how this has come to pass; and I reply that death
+is to be looked upon as an occurrence which is advantageous to the
+species as a concession to the outer conditions of life, and not as an
+absolute necessity, essentially inherent in life itself. Death, that is
+the end of life, is by no means, as is usually assumed, an attribute of
+all organisms. An immense number of low organisms do not die, although
+they are easily destroyed, being killed by heat, poisons, etc. As long,
+however, as those conditions which are necessary for their life are
+fulfilled, they continue to live, and they thus carry the potentiality
+of unending life in themselves. I am speaking not only of the Amoebae
+and the low unicellular Algae, but also of far more highly organized
+unicellular animals, such as the Infusoria."[106]
+
+[Sidenote: Similar view expressed by Alfred Russel Wallace.]
+
+A similar suggestion that death is not a natural necessity but an
+innovation introduced for the good of the breed, has been made by our
+eminent English biologist, Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace. He says: "If
+individuals did not die they would soon multiply inordinately and would
+interfere with each other's healthy existence. Food would become scarce,
+and hence the larger individuals would probably decompose or diminish in
+size. The deficiency of nourishment would lead to parts of the organism
+not being renewed; they would become fixed, and liable to more or less
+slow decomposition as dead parts within a living body. The smaller
+organisms would have a better chance of finding food, the larger ones
+less chance. That one which gave off several small portions to form each
+a new organism would have a better chance of leaving descendants like
+itself than one which divided equally or gave off a large part of
+itself. Hence it would happen that those which gave off very small
+portions would probably soon after cease to maintain their own existence
+while they would leave a numerous offspring. This state of things would
+be in any case for the advantage of the race, and would therefore, by
+natural selection, soon become established as the regular course of
+things, and thus we have the origin of _old age, decay, and death_; for
+it is evident that when one or more individuals have provided a
+sufficient number of successors they themselves, as consumers of
+nourishment in a constantly increasing degree, are an injury to their
+successors. Natural selection therefore weeds them out, and in many
+cases favours such races as die almost immediately after they have left
+successors. Many moths and other insects are in this condition, living
+only to propagate their kind and then immediately dying, some not even
+taking any food in the perfect and reproductive state."[107]
+
+[Sidenote: Savages and some men of science agree that death is not a
+natural necessity.]
+
+Thus it appears that two of the most eminent biologists of our time
+agree with savages in thinking that death is by no means a natural
+necessity for all living beings. They only differ from savages in this,
+that whereas savages look upon death as the result of a deplorable
+accident, our men of science regard it as a beneficent reform instituted
+by nature as a means of adjusting the numbers of living beings to the
+quantity of the food supply, and so tending to the improvement and
+therefore on the whole to the happiness of the species.
+
+[Footnote 57: H. Callaway, _The Religious System of the Amazulu_, Part
+i. pp. 1, 3 _sq._, Part ii. p. 138; Rev. L. Grout, _Zululand, or Life
+among the Zulu-Kafirs_ (Philadelphia, N.D.), pp. 148 _sq._; Dudley Kidd,
+_The Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), pp. 76 _sq._ Compare A. F.
+Gardiner, _Narrative of a Journey to the Zoolu Country_ (London, 1836),
+pp. 178 _sq._, T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, _Relation d'un voyage
+d'Exploration au Nord-Est de la Colonie du Cap de Bonne-Espérance_
+(Paris, 1842), p. 472; Rev. J. Shooter, _The Kafirs of Natal and the
+Zulu Country_ (London, 1857), p. 159; W. H. I. Bleek, _Reynard the Fox in
+South Africa_ (London, 1864), p. 74; D. Leslie, _Among the Zulus and
+Amatongas_, Second Edition (Edinburgh, 1875), p. 209; F. Speckmann, _Die
+Hermannsburger Mission in Afrika_ (Hermannsburg, 1876), p. 164.]
+
+[Footnote 58: J. Chapman, _Travels in the Interior of South Africa_
+(London, 1868), i. 47.]
+
+[Footnote 59: E. Casalis, _The Basutos_ (London, 1861), p. 242; E.
+Jacottet, _The Treasury of Ba-suto Lore_, i. (Morija, Basutoland, 1908),
+pp. 46 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 60: H. A. Junod, _Les Ba-Ronga_ Neuchâtel (1898), pp. 401
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 61: W. A. Elmslie, _Among the Wild Ngoni_ (Edinburgh and
+London, 1899), p. 70.]
+
+[Footnote 62: H. A. Junod and W. A. Elmslie, _ll.cc._]
+
+[Footnote 63: C. W. Hobley, _Ethnology of A-Kamba and other East African
+Tribes_ (Cambridge, 1910), pp. 107-109.]
+
+[Footnote 64: Fr. Müller, "Die Religionen Togos in Einzeldarstellungen,"
+_Anthropos_, ii. (1907) p. 203. In a version of the story reported from
+Calabar a sheep appears as the messenger of mortality, while a dog is
+the messenger of immortality or rather of resurrection. See "Calabar
+Stories," _Journal of the African Society_, No. 18 (January 1906), p.
+194.]
+
+[Footnote 65: E. Perregaux, _Chez les Achanti_ (Neuchâtel, 1906), pp.
+198 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 66: E. Perregaux, _op. cit._ p. 199.]
+
+[Footnote 67: Sir J. E. Alexander, _Expedition of Discovery into the
+Interior of Africa_ (London, 1838), i. 169; C. J. Andersson, _Lake
+Ngami_, Second Edition (London, 1856), pp. 328 _sq._; W. H. I. Bleek,
+_Reynard the Fox in South Africa_ (London, 1864), pp. 71-73; Th. Hahn,
+_Tsuni-Goam, the Supreme Being of the Khoi-Khoi_ (London, 1881), p. 52.]
+
+[Footnote 68: W. H. I. Bleek, _A Brief Account of Bushman Folk-lore_
+(London, 1875), pp. 9 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 69: W. H. I. Bleek, _Reynard the Fox in South Africa_, pp. 69
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 70: A. C. Hollis, _The Masai_ (Oxford, 1905), pp. 271 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 71: A. C. Hollis, _The Nandi_ (Oxford, 1909), p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 72: Captain W. E. H. Barrett, "Notes on the Customs and
+Beliefs of the Wa-Giriama, etc., British East Africa," _Journal of the
+R. Anthropological Institute_, xli. (1911) p. 37.]
+
+[Footnote 73: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 74: _Lettres Édifiantes et Curieuses_, Nouvelle Édition, xv.
+(Paris, 1781) pp. 305 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 75: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_
+(London, 1904), pp. 428 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 76: Antoine Cabaton, _Nouvelles Recherches sur les Chams_
+(Paris, 1901), pp. 18 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 77: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Northern Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1904), pp. 513 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 78: Father G. Boscana, "Chinigchinich," in _Life in
+California, by an American_ [A. Robinson] (New York, 1846), pp. 298
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 79: Merolla, "Voyage to Congo," in J. Pinkerton's _Voyages and
+Travels_, xvi. (London, 1814) p. 273.]
+
+[Footnote 80: P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Küstenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Münster, N.D.), p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 81: A. Landes, "Contes et Légendes Annamites," _Cochinchine
+française, Excursions et Reconnaissances_, No. 25 (Saigon, 1886), pp.
+108 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 82: Otto Meyer, "Mythen und Erzählungen von der Insel Vuatom
+(Bismarck-Archipel, Südsee)," _Anthropos_, v. (1910) p. 724.]
+
+[Footnote 83: H. Sundermann, "Die Insel Nias und die Mission daselbst,"
+_Allgemeine Missions-Zeitschrift_, xi. (1884) p. 451; E. Modigliani, _Un
+Viaggio a Nías_ (Milan, 1890), p. 295.]
+
+[Footnote 84: R. Schomburgk, _Reisen in Britisch-Guiana_ (Leipsig,
+1847-1848), ii. 319.]
+
+[Footnote 85: R. Schomburgk, _op. cit._ ii. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 86: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), p.
+265; W. Gray, "Some Notes on the Tannese," _Internationales Archiv für
+Ethnographie_, vii. (1894) p. 232.]
+
+[Footnote 87: C. Ribbe, _Zwei Jahre unter den Kannibalen der
+Salomo-Inseln_ (Dresden-Blasowitz, 1903), p. 148.]
+
+[Footnote 88: Ch. Keysser, "Aus dem Leben der Kaileute," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_ (Berlin, 1911), iii. 161 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 89: Josef Meier, "Mythen und Sagen der Admiralitätsinsulaner,"
+_Anthropos_, iii. (1908) p. 193.]
+
+[Footnote 90: George Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), p. 365; George Turner, LL.D., _Samoa_ (London, 1884), pp. 8
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 91: See above, p. 70.]
+
+[Footnote 92: A. C. Kruijt, "De legenden der Poso-Alfoeren aangaande de
+erste menschen," _Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche
+Zendelinggenootschap_, xxxviii. (1894) p. 340.]
+
+[Footnote 93: D. F. A. Hervey, "The Mêntra Traditions," _Journal of the
+Straits Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society_, No. 10 (December 1882), p.
+190; W. W. Skeat and C. O. Blagden, _Pagan Races of the Malay Peninsula_
+(London, 1906), ii. 337 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 94: Guerlach, "Moeurs et Superstitions des sauvages Ba-hnars,"
+_Missions Catholiques_, xix. (1887) p. 479.]
+
+[Footnote 95: (Sir) J. G. Scott and J. P. Hardiman, _Gazetteer of Upper
+Burma and the Shan States_, Part i. vol. i. (Rangoon, 1900) pp. 408
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 96: R. Brough Smyth, _The Aborigines of Victoria_ (Melbourne
+and London, 1878), i. 428. On this narrative the author remarks: "This
+story appears to bear too close a resemblance to the Biblical account of
+the Fall. Is it genuine or not? Mr. Bulmer admits that it may have been
+invented by the aborigines after they had heard something of Scripture
+history."]
+
+[Footnote 97: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 204 _sq._ For another Fijian story of the origin of
+death, see above, p. 67.]
+
+[Footnote 98: Josef Meier, "Mythen und Sagen der Admiralitätsinsulaner,"
+_Anthropos_, iii. (1908) p. 194.]
+
+[Footnote 99: Josef Meier, _op. cit._ pp. 194 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 100: C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _The Great Plateau of
+Northern Rhodesia_ (London, 1911), pp. 80 _sq._ A like tale is told by
+the Balolo of the Upper Congo. See _Folk-lore_, xii. (1901) p. 461; and
+below, p. 472.]
+
+[Footnote 101: J. Mooney, "Myths of the Cherokee," _Nineteenth Annual
+Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology_, Part i. (Washington, 1900)
+p. 436, quoting "the Payne manuscript, of date about 1835." Compare
+_id._, pp. 252-254, 436 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 102: _Relations des Jésuites_, 1634, p. 13 (Canadian reprint,
+Quebec, 1858).]
+
+[Footnote 103: Sir Harry Johnston, _The Uganda Protectorate_ (London,
+1904), ii. 700-705 (the story was taken down by Mr. J. F. Cunningham);
+Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 460-464. The story is
+briefly told by Mr. L. Decle, _Three Years in Savage Africa_ (London,
+1898), pp. 439 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 104: J. Spieth, _Die Ewe-Stämme_ (Berlin, 1906), pp. 590-593.]
+
+[Footnote 105: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp.
+265 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 106: A. Weissmann, _Essays upon Heredity and Kindred
+Biological Problems_, vol. i. (Oxford, 1891) pp. 25 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 107: A. R. Wallace, quoted in A. Weissmann's _Essays upon
+Heredity_, i. (Oxford, 1891) p. 24 note.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE IV
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES OF CENTRAL AUSTRALIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Proposed survey of the belief in immortality and the worship
+of the dead, as these are found among the various races of men,
+beginning with the lowest savages.]
+
+In previous lectures we have considered the ideas which savages in
+general entertain of death and its origin. To-day we begin our survey of
+the beliefs and practices of particular races in regard to the dead. I
+propose to deal separately with some of the principal races of men and
+to shew in detail how the belief in human immortality and the worship of
+the dead, to which that belief naturally gives rise, have formed a more
+or less important element of their religion. And in order to trace as
+far as possible the evolution of that worship in history I shall begin
+with the lowest savages about whom we possess accurate information, and
+shall pass from them to higher races until, if time permitted, we might
+come to the civilised nations of antiquity and of modern times. In this
+way, by comparing the ideas and practices of peoples on different planes
+of culture we may be able approximately to reconstruct or represent to
+ourselves with a fair degree of probability the various stages through
+which this particular phase of religion may be supposed to have passed
+in the great civilised races before the dawn of history. Of course all
+such reconstructions must be more or less conjectural. In the absence of
+historical documents that is inevitable; but our reconstruction will be
+more or less probable according to the degree in which the corresponding
+stages of evolution are found to resemble or differ from each other in
+the various races of men. If we find that tribes at approximately the
+same level of culture in different parts of the world have approximately
+the same religion, we may fairly infer that religion is in a sense a
+function of culture, and therefore that all races which have traversed
+the same stages of culture in the past have traversed also the same
+stages of religion; in short that, allowing for many minor variations,
+which flow inevitably from varying circumstances such as climate, soil,
+racial temperament, and so forth, the course of religious development
+has on the whole been uniform among mankind. This enquiry may be called
+the embryology of religion, in as much as it seeks to do for the
+development of religion what embryology in the strict sense of the word
+attempts to do for the development of life. And just as biology or the
+science of life naturally begins with the study of the lowest sorts of
+living beings, the humble protozoa, so we shall begin our enquiry with a
+study of the lowest savages of whom we possess a comparatively full and
+accurate record, namely, the aborigines of Australia.
+
+[Sidenote: Savagery a case not of degeneracy but of arrested or rather
+retarded development.]
+
+At the outset I would ask you to bear in mind that, so far as evidence
+allows us to judge, savagery in all its phases appears to be nothing but
+a case of arrested or rather retarded development. The old view that
+savages have degenerated from a higher level of culture, on which their
+forefathers once stood, is destitute alike of evidence and of
+probability. On the contrary, the information which we possess as to the
+lower races, meagre and fragmentary as it unfortunately is, all seems to
+point to the conclusion that on the whole even the most savage tribes
+have reached their low level of culture from one still lower, and that
+the upward movement, though so slow as to be almost imperceptible, has
+yet been real and steady up to the point where savagery has come into
+contact with civilisation. The moment of such contact is a critical one
+for the savages. If the intellectual, moral, and social interval which
+divides them from the civilised intruders exceeds a certain degree, then
+it appears that sooner or later the savages must inevitably perish; the
+shock of collision with a stronger race is too violent to be withstood,
+the weaker goes to the wall and is shattered. But if on the other hand
+the breach between the two conflicting races is not so wide as to be
+impassable, there is a hope that the weaker may assimilate enough of the
+higher culture of the other to survive. It was so, for example, with our
+barbarous forefathers in contact with the ancient civilisations of
+Greece and Rome; and it may be so in future with some, for example, of
+the black races of the present day in contact with European
+civilisation. Time will shew. But among the savages who cannot
+permanently survive the shock of collision with Europe may certainly be
+numbered the aborigines of Australia. They are rapidly dwindling and
+wasting away, and before very many years have passed it is probable that
+they will be extinct like the Tasmanians, who, so far as we can judge
+from the miserably imperfect records of them which we possess, appear to
+have been savages of an even lower type than the Australians, and
+therefore to have been still less able to survive in the struggle for
+existence with their vigorous European rivals.
+
+[Sidenote: Physical causes which have retarded progress in Australia.]
+
+The causes which have retarded progress in Australia and kept the
+aboriginal population at the lowest level of savagery appear to be
+mainly two; namely, first, the geographical isolation and comparatively
+small area of the continent, and, second, the barren and indeed desert
+nature of a great part of its surface; for the combined effect of these
+causes has been, by excluding foreign competitors and seriously
+restricting the number of competitors at home, to abate the rigour of
+competition and thereby to restrain the action of one of the most
+powerful influences which make for progress. In other words, elements of
+weakness have been allowed to linger on, which under the sterner
+conditions of life entailed by fierce competition would long ago have
+been eliminated and have made way for elements better adapted to the
+environment. What is true of the human inhabitants of Australia in this
+respect is true also of its fauna and flora. It has long been recognised
+that the animals and plants of Australia represent on the whole more
+archaic types of life than the animals and plants of the larger
+continents; and the reason why these antiquated creatures have survived
+there rather than elsewhere is mainly that, the area of competition
+being so much restricted through the causes I have mentioned, these
+comparatively weak forms of animal and vegetable life have not been
+killed off by stronger competitors. That this is the real cause appears
+to be proved by the rapidity with which many animals and plants
+introduced into Australia from Europe tend to overrun the country and to
+oust the old native fauna and flora.[108]
+
+[Sidenote: In the centre of Australia the natural conditions of life are
+most unfavourable; hence the central aborigines have remained in a more
+primitive state than those of the coasts, where food and water are more
+plentiful.]
+
+I have said that among the causes which have kept the aborigines of
+Australia at a very low level of savagery must be reckoned the desert
+nature of a great part of the country. Now it is the interior of the
+continent which is the most arid, waste, and barren. The coasts are
+comparatively fertile, for they are watered by showers condensed from an
+atmosphere which is charged with moisture by the neighbouring sea; and
+this condensation is greatly facilitated in the south-eastern and
+eastern parts of the continent by a high range of mountains which here
+skirts the coast for a long distance, attracting the moisture from the
+ocean and precipitating it in the form of snow and rain. Thus the
+vegetation and hence the supply of food both animal and vegetable in
+these well-watered portions of the continent are varied and plentiful.
+In striking contrast with the fertility and abundance of these favoured
+regions are the stony plains and bare rocky ranges of the interior,
+where water is scarce, vegetation scanty, and animal life at certain
+seasons of the year can only with difficulty be maintained. It would be
+no wonder if the natives of these arid sun-scorched wildernesses should
+have lagged behind even their savage brethren of the coasts in respect
+of material and social progress; and in fact there are many indications
+that they have done so, in other words, that the aborigines of the more
+fertile districts near the sea have made a greater advance towards
+civilisation than the tribes of the desert interior. This is the view of
+men who have studied the Australian savages most deeply at first hand,
+and, so far as I can judge of the matter without any such first-hand
+acquaintance, I entirely agree with their opinion. I have given my
+reasons elsewhere and shall not repeat them here. All that I wish to
+impress on you now is that in aboriginal Australia a movement of social
+and intellectual progress, slow but perceptible, appears to have been
+setting from the coast inwards, and that, so far as such things can be
+referred to physical causes, this particular movement in Australia would
+seem to have been initiated by the sea acting through an abundant
+rainfall and a consequent abundant supply of food.[109]
+
+[Sidenote: Backward state of the Central Australian aborigines. They
+have no idea of a moral supreme being.]
+
+Accordingly, in attempting to give you some account of the belief in
+immortality and the worship of the dead among the various races of
+mankind, I propose to begin with the natives of Central Australia,
+first, because the Australian aborigines are the most primitive savages
+about whom we have full and accurate information, and, second, because
+among these primitive savages the inhabitants of the central deserts are
+on the whole the most primitive. Like their brethren in the rest of the
+continent they were in their native condition absolutely ignorant of
+metals and of agriculture; they had no domestic animals except the dog,
+and they subsisted wholly by the products of the chase and the natural
+fruits, roots, and seeds, which the ground yielded without cultivation
+of any sort. In regard to their intellectual outlook upon the world,
+they were deeply imbued, as I shewed in a former lecture, with a belief
+in magic, but it can hardly be said that they possessed any religion in
+the strict sense of the word, by which I mean a propitiation of real or
+imaginary powers regarded as personal beings superior to man: certainly
+the Australian aborigines appear to have believed in no beings who
+deserve to be called gods. On this subject Messrs. Spencer and Gillen,
+our best authorities on these tribes, observe as follows: "The Central
+Australian natives--and this is true of the tribes extending from Lake
+Eyre in the south to the far north and eastwards across to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria--have no idea whatever of the existence of any supreme being
+who is pleased if they follow a certain line of what we call moral
+conduct and displeased if they do not do so. They have not the vaguest
+idea of a personal individual other than an actual living member of the
+tribe who approves or disapproves of their conduct, so far as anything
+like what we call morality is concerned. Any such idea as that of a
+future life of happiness or the reverse, as a reward for meritorious or
+as a punishment for blameworthy conduct, is quite foreign to them.... We
+know of no tribe in which there is a belief of any kind in a supreme
+being who rewards or punishes the individual according to his moral
+behaviour, using the word moral in the native sense."[110]
+
+[Sidenote: Central Australian theory that the souls of the dead survive
+and are afterwards reborn as infants.]
+
+But if the aborigines of Central Australia have no religion properly so
+called, they entertain beliefs and they observe practices out of which
+under favourable circumstances a religion might have been developed, if
+its evolution had not been arrested by the advent of Europeans. Among
+these elements of natural religion one of the most important is the
+theory which these savages hold as to the existence and nature of the
+dead. That theory is a very remarkable one. With a single exception,
+which I shall mention presently, they unanimously believe that death is
+not the end of all things for the individual, but that the human
+personality survives, apparently with little change, in the form of a
+spirit, which may afterwards be reborn as a child into the world. In
+fact they think that every living person without exception is the
+reincarnation of a dead person who lived on earth a longer or shorter
+time ago. This belief is held universally by the tribes which occupy an
+immense area of Australia from the centre northwards to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria.[111] The single exception to which I have referred is
+furnished by the Gnanji, a fierce and wild-looking tribe who eat their
+dead enemies and perhaps also their dead friends.[112] These savages
+deny that women have spirits which live after death; when a woman dies,
+that, they say, is the end of her. On the other hand, the spirit of a
+dead man, in their opinion, survives and goes to and fro on the earth
+visiting the places where his forefathers camped in days of old and
+destined to be born again of a woman at some future time, when the rains
+have fallen and bleached his bones.[113] But why these primitive
+philosophers should deny the privilege of immortality to women and
+reserve it exclusively for men, is not manifest. All other Central
+Australian tribes appear to admit the rights of women equally with the
+rights of men in a life beyond the grave.
+
+[Sidenote: Central Australian theory as to the state of the dead.
+Certain conspicuous features of the landscape supposed to be tenanted by
+the souls of the dead waiting to be born again.]
+
+With regard to the state of the souls of the dead in the intervals
+between their successive reincarnations, the opinions of the Central
+Australian savages are clear and definite. Most civilised races who
+believe in the immortality of the soul have found themselves compelled
+to confess that, however immortal the spirits of the departed may be,
+they do not present themselves commonly to our eyes or ears, nor meddle
+much with the affairs of the living; hence the survivors have for the
+most part inferred that the dead do not hover invisible in our midst,
+but that they dwell somewhere, far away, in the height of heaven, or in
+the depth of earth, or in Islands of the Blest beyond the sea where the
+sun goes down. Not so with the simple aborigines of Australia. They
+imagine that the spirits of the dead continue to haunt their native land
+and especially certain striking natural features of the landscape, it
+may be a pool of water in a deep gorge of the barren hills, or a
+solitary tree in the sun-baked plains, or a great rock that affords a
+welcome shade in the sultry noon. Such spots are thought to be tenanted
+by the souls of the departed waiting to be born again. There they lurk,
+constantly on the look-out for passing women into whom they may enter,
+and from whom in due time they may be born as infants. It matters not
+whether the woman be married or unmarried, a matron or a maid, a
+blooming girl or a withered hag: any woman may conceive directly by the
+entrance into her of one of these disembodied spirits; but the natives
+have shrewdly observed that the spirits shew a decided preference for
+plump young women. Hence when such a damsel is passing near a plot of
+haunted ground, if she does not wish to become a mother, she will
+disguise herself as an aged crone and hobble past, saying in a thin
+cracked voice, "Don't come to me. I am an old woman." Such spots are
+often stones, which the natives call child-stones because the souls of
+the dead are there lying in wait for women in order to be born as
+children. One such stone, for example, may be seen in the land of the
+Arunta tribe near Alice Springs. It projects to a height of three feet
+from the ground among the mulga scrub, and there is a round hole in it
+through which the souls of dead plum-tree people are constantly peeping,
+ready to pounce out on a likely damsel. Again, in the territory of the
+Warramunga tribe the ghosts of black-snake people are supposed to gather
+in the rocks round certain pools or in the gum-trees which border the
+generally dry bed of a water-course. No Warramunga woman would dare to
+strike one of these trees with an axe, because she is firmly convinced
+that in doing so she would set free one of the lurking black-snake
+spirits, who would immediately dart into her body. They think that the
+spirits are no larger than grains of sand and that they make their way
+into women through the navel. Nor is it merely by direct contact with
+one of these repositories of souls, nor yet by passing near it, that
+women may be gotten with child against their wish. The Arunta believe
+that any malicious man may by magic cause a woman or even a child to
+become a mother: he has only to go to one of the child-stones and rub it
+with his hands, muttering the words, "Plenty of young women. You look
+and go quickly."[114]
+
+[Sidenote: As a rule, only the souls of persons of one particular
+totemic clan are thought to congregate in one place.]
+
+A remarkable feature in these gathering-places of the dead remains to be
+noticed. The society at each of them is very select. The ghosts are very
+clannish; as a rule none but people of one particular totemic clan are
+supposed to for-gather at any one place. For example, we have just seen
+that in the Arunta tribe the souls of dead people of the plum-tree totem
+congregate at a certain stone in the mulga scrub, and that in the
+Warramunga tribe the spirits of deceased persons who had black snakes
+for their totem haunt certain gum-trees. The same thing applies to most
+of the other haunts of the dead in Central Australia. Whether the totem
+was a kangaroo or an emu, a rat or a bat, a hawk or a cockatoo, a bee or
+a fly, a yam or a grass seed, the sun or the moon, fire or water,
+lightning or the wind, it matters not what the totem was, only the
+ghosts of people of one totemic clan meet for the most part in one
+place; thus one rock will be tenanted by the spirits of kangaroo folk
+only, and another by spirits of emu folk only; one water-pool will be
+the home of dead rat people alone, and another the haunt of none but
+dead bat people; and so on with most of the other abodes of the souls.
+However, in the Urabunna tribe the ghosts are not so exclusive; some of
+them consent to share their abode with people of other totems. For
+example, a certain pool of water is haunted by the spirits of folk who
+in their lifetime had for their totems respectively the emu, rain, and a
+certain grub. On the other hand a group of granite boulders is inhabited
+only by the souls of persons of the pigeon totem.[115]
+
+[Sidenote: Totemism defined.]
+
+Perhaps for the sake of some of my hearers I should say a word as to the
+meaning of totems and totemism. The subject is a large one and is still
+under discussion. For our present purpose it is not necessary that I
+should enter into details; I will therefore only say that a totem is
+commonly a class of natural objects, usually a species of animals or
+plants, with which a savage identifies himself in a curious way,
+imagining that he himself and his kinsfolk are for all practical
+purposes kangaroos or emus, rats or bats, hawks or cockatoos, yams or
+grass-seed, and so on, according to the particular class of natural
+objects which he claims as his totem. The origin of this remarkable
+identification of men with animals, plants, or other things is still
+much debated; my own view is that the key to the mystery is furnished by
+the Australian beliefs as to birth and rebirth which I have just
+described to you; but on that subject I will not now dwell.[116] All
+that I ask you to remember is that in Central Australia there is no
+general gathering-place for the spirits of the departed; the souls are
+sorted out more or less strictly according to their totems and dwell
+apart each in their own little preserve or preserves, on which ghosts of
+other totems are supposed seldom or never to trespass. Thus the whole
+country-side is dotted at intervals with these spiritual parks or
+reservations, which are respected by the natives as the abodes of their
+departed kinsfolk. In size they vary from a few square yards to many
+square miles.[117]
+
+[Sidenote: Traditionary origin of the local totem centres
+(_oknanikilla_) where the souls of the dead are supposed to assemble.
+The sacred sticks or stones (_churinga_) which the totemic ancestors
+carried about with them.]
+
+The way in which these spiritual preserves originated is supposed to be
+as follows. In the earliest days of which the aborigines retain a
+tradition, and to which they give the name of the _alcheringa_ or dream
+times, their remote ancestors roamed about the country in bands, each
+band composed of people of the same totem. Thus one band would consist
+of frog people only, another of witchetty grub people only, another of
+Hakea flower people only, and so on. Now in regard to the nature of
+these remote totemic ancestors of the _alcheringa_ or dream times, the
+ideas of the natives are very hazy; they do not in fact clearly
+distinguish their human from their totemic nature; in speaking, for
+example, of a man of the kangaroo totem they seem unable to discriminate
+sharply between the man and the animal: perhaps we may say that what is
+before their mind is a blurred image, a sort of composite photograph, of
+a man and a kangaroo in one: the man is semi-bestial, the kangaroo is
+semi-human. And similarly with their ancestors of all other totems: if
+the particular ancestors, for example, had the bean-tree for their
+totem, then their descendants in thinking of them might, like the blind
+man in the Gospel, see in their mind's eye men walking like trees and
+trees perambulating like men. Now each of these semi-human ancestors is
+thought to have carried about with him on his peregrinations one or more
+sacred sticks or stones of a peculiar pattern, to which the Arunta give
+the name of _churinga_: they are for the most part oval or elongated and
+flattened stones or slabs of wood, varying in length from a few inches
+to over five feet, and inscribed with a variety of patterns which
+represent or have reference to the totems. But the patterns are purely
+conventional, consisting of circles, curved lines, spirals, and dots
+with no attempt to represent natural objects pictorially. Each of these
+sacred stones or sticks was intimately associated with the spirit part
+of the man or woman who carried it; for women as well as men had their
+_churinga_. When these semi-human ancestors died, they went into the
+ground, leaving their sacred stones or sticks behind them on the spot,
+and in every case some natural feature arose to mark the place, it might
+be a tree, a rock, a pool of water, or what not. The memory of all such
+spots has been carefully preserved and handed down from generation to
+generation by the old men, and it is to these spots that down to the
+present day the souls of all the dead regularly repair in order to await
+reincarnation. The Arunta call the places _oknanikilla_, and we may call
+them local totem centres, because they are the centres where the spirits
+of the departed assemble according to their totems.[118]
+
+[Sidenote: Every living person has also his or her sacred stick or stone
+(_churinga_), with which his or her spirit is closely bound up.]
+
+But it is not merely the remote forefathers of the Central Australian
+savages who are said to have been possessed of these sacred sticks or
+stones: every man and woman who is born into the world has one of them,
+with which his or her spirit is believed to be closely bound up. This is
+intelligible when we remember that every living person is believed to be
+simply the reincarnation of an ancestor; for that being so he naturally
+comes to life with all the attributes which belonged to him in his
+previous state of existence on earth. The notion of the natives is that
+when a spirit child enters into a woman to be born, he immediately drops
+his sacred stick or stone on the spot, which is necessarily one of what
+we have called the local totem centres, since in the opinion of the
+natives it is only at or near them that a woman can conceive a child.
+Hence when her child is born, the woman tells her husband the place
+where she fancies that the infant entered into her, and he goes with
+some old men to find the precious object, the stick or stone dropped by
+the spirit of the infant when it entered into the mother. If it cannot
+be found, the men cut a wooden one from the nearest hard-wood tree, and
+this becomes the sacred stick or _churinga_ of the newborn child. The
+exact spot, whether a tree or a stone or what not, in which the child's
+spirit is supposed to have tarried in the interval between its
+incarnations, is called its _nanja_ tree or stone or what not. A
+definite relation is supposed to exist between each individual and his
+_nanja_ tree or stone. The tree or stone and any animal or bird that
+lights upon it is sacred to him and may not be molested. A native has
+been known earnestly to intercede with a white man to spare a tree
+because it was his _nanja_ or birth-tree, and he feared that evil would
+befall him if it were cut down.[119]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctity of the _churinga_.]
+
+Thus in these Central Australian tribes every man, woman, and child has
+his or her sacred birth-stone or stick. But though every woman, like
+every man, has her sacred birth-stone or stick, she is never allowed to
+see it under pain of death or of being blinded with a fire-stick. Indeed
+none but old women are aware even of the existence of such things.
+Uninitiated men are likewise forbidden under the same severe penalties
+ever to look upon these most sacred objects.[120] The sanctity ascribed
+to the sticks and stones is intelligible when we remember that the
+spirits of all the people both living and dead are believed to be
+intimately associated with them. Each of them, we are told, is supposed
+to be so closely bound up with a person's spirit that it may be regarded
+as his or her representative, and those of dead people are believed to
+be endowed with the attributes of their former owners and actually to
+impart them to any one who happens to carry them about with him. Hence
+these apparently insignificant sticks and stones are, in the opinion of
+the natives, most potent instruments for conveying to the living the
+virtues and powers of the dead. For example, in a fight the possession
+of one of these holy sticks or stones is thought to endow the possessor
+with courage and accuracy of aim and also to deprive his adversary of
+these qualities. So firmly is this belief held, that if two men were
+fighting and one of them knew that the other carried a sacred
+birth-stone or stick while he himself did not, he would certainly lose
+heart and be beaten. Again, when a man is sick, he will sometimes have
+one of these sacred stones brought to him and will scrape a little dust
+off it, mix the dust with water, and drink it. This is supposed to
+strengthen him. Clearly he imagines that with the scrapings of the stone
+he absorbs the strength and other qualities of the person to whom the
+stone belonged.[121]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacred store-houses (_ertnatulunga_) of the _churinga_.]
+
+All the birth-stones or sticks (_churinga_) belonging to any particular
+totemic group are kept together, hidden away from the eyes of women and
+uninitiated men, in a sacred store-house or _ertnatulunga_, as the
+Arunta and Unmatjera call it. This store-house is always situated in one
+of the local totem centres or _oknanikilla_, which, as we have seen,
+vary in size from a few yards to many square miles. In itself the sacred
+treasure-house is usually a small cave or crevice in some lonely spot
+among the rugged hills. The entrance is carefully blocked up with stones
+arranged so artfully as to simulate nature and to awake no suspicion in
+the mind of passing strangers that behind these tumbled blocks lie
+concealed the most prized possessions of the tribe. The immediate
+neighbourhood of any one of these sacred store-houses is a kind of haven
+of refuge for wild animals, for once they have run thither, they are
+safe; no hunter would spear a kangaroo or opossum which cowered on the
+ground at one of these hallowed spots. The very plants which grow there
+are sacred and may not be plucked or broken or interfered with in any
+way. Similarly, an enemy who succeeds in taking refuge there, is safe
+from his pursuer, so long as he keeps within the sacred boundaries: even
+the avenger of blood, pursuing the murderer hot-foot, would not dare to
+lift up his hand against him on the holy ground. Thus, these places are
+sanctuaries in the strict sense of the word; they are probably the most
+primitive examples of their class and contain the germ out of which
+cities of refuge for manslayers and others might be developed. It is
+instructive, therefore, to observe that these rudimentary sanctuaries in
+the heart of the Australian wilderness derive their sacredness mainly,
+it would seem, from their association with the spirits of the dead,
+whose repose must not be disturbed by tumult, violence, and bloodshed.
+Even when the sacred birth-stones and sticks have been removed from the
+store-house in the secret recesses of the hills and have been brought
+into the camp for the performance of certain solemn ceremonies, no
+fighting may take place, no weapons may be brandished in their
+neighbourhood: if men will quarrel and fight, they must take their
+weapons and go elsewhere to do it.[122] And when the men go to one of
+the sacred store-houses to inspect the treasures which it contains, they
+must each of them put his open hand solemnly over the mouth of the rocky
+crevice and then retire, in order to give the spirits due notice of the
+approach of strangers; for if they were disturbed suddenly, they would
+be angry.[123]
+
+[Sidenote: Exhibition of the _churinga_ to young men.]
+
+It is only after a young man has passed through the severe ceremonies of
+initiation, which include most painful bodily mutilations, that he is
+deemed worthy to be introduced to the tribal arcana, the sacred sticks
+and stones, which repose in their hallowed cave among the mountain
+solitudes. Even when he has passed through all the ordeals, many years
+may elapse before he is admitted to a knowledge of these mysteries, if
+he shews himself to be of a light and frivolous disposition. When at
+last by the gravity of his demeanour he is judged to have proved himself
+indeed a man, a day is fixed for revealing to him the great secret. Then
+the headman of his local group, together with other grave and reverend
+seniors, conducts him to the mouth of the cave: the stones are rolled
+away from the entrance: the spirits within are duly warned of the
+approach of visitors; and then the sacred sticks and stones, tied up in
+bundles, are brought forth. The bundles are undone, the sticks and
+stones are taken out, one by one, reverently scrutinised, and exhibited
+to the novice, while the old men explain to him the meaning of the
+patterns incised on each and reveal to him the persons, alive or dead,
+to whom they belong. All the time the other men keep chanting in a low
+voice the traditions of their remote ancestors in the far-off dream
+times. At the close the novice is told the secret and sacred name which
+he is thenceforth to bear, and is warned never to allow it to pass his
+lips in the hearing of anybody except members of his own totemic
+group.[124] Sometimes this secret name is that of an ancestor of whom
+the man or woman is supposed to be a reincarnation: for women as well as
+men have their secret and sacred names.[125]
+
+[Sidenote: Number of _churinga_ in a store-house. Significance of the
+_churinga_. Use of the _churinga_ in magic.]
+
+The number of sacred birth-stones and sticks kept in any one store-house
+naturally varies from group to group; but whatever their number, whether
+more or less, in any one store-house they all normally belong to the
+same totem, though a few belonging to other totems may be borrowed and
+deposited for a time with them. For example, a sacred store-house of the
+honey-ant totem was found to contain sixty-eight birth-sticks of that
+totem with a few of the lizard totem and two of the wild-cat totem.[126]
+Any store-house will usually contain both sticks and stones, but as a
+rule perhaps the sticks predominate in number.[127] Time after time
+these tribal repositories are visited by the men and their contents
+taken out and examined. On each examination the sacred sticks and stones
+are carefully rubbed over with dry and powdered red ochre or charcoal,
+the sticks being rubbed with red ochre only, but the stones either with
+red ochre or charcoal.[128] Further, it is customary on these occasions
+to press the sacred objects against the stomachs and thighs of all the
+men present; this is supposed to untie their bowels, which are thought
+to be tightened and knotted by the emotion which the men feel at the
+sight of these venerated sticks and stones. Indeed, the emotion is
+sometimes very real: men have been seen to weep on beholding these
+mystic objects for the first time after a considerable interval.[129]
+Whenever the sacred store-house is visited and its contents examined,
+the old men explain to the younger men the marks incised on the sticks
+and stones, and recite the traditions associated with the dead men to
+whom they belonged;[130] so that these rude objects of wood and stone,
+with the lines and dots scratched on them, serve the savages as
+memorials of the past; they are in fact rudimentary archives as well as,
+we may almost say, rudimentary idols; for a stone or stick which
+represents a revered ancestor and is supposed to be endowed with some
+portion of his spirit, is not far from being an idol. No wonder,
+therefore, that they are guarded and treasured by a tribe as its most
+precious possession. When a group of natives have been robbed of them by
+thoughtless white men and have found the sacred store-house empty, they
+have tried to kill the traitor who betrayed the hallowed spot to the
+strangers, and have remained in camp for a fortnight weeping and wailing
+for the loss and plastering themselves with pipeclay, which is their
+token of mourning for the dead.[131] Yet, as a great mark of friendship,
+they will sometimes lend these sacred sticks and stones to a
+neighbouring group; for believing that the sticks and stones are
+associated with the spiritual parts of their former and present owners,
+they naturally wish to have as many of them as possible and regard their
+possession as a treasure of great price, a sort of reservoir of
+spiritual force,[132] which can be turned to account not only in battle
+by worsting the enemy, but in various other ways, such as by magically
+increasing the food supply. For instance, when a man of the grass-seed
+totem wishes to increase the supply of grass-seed in order that it may
+be eaten by people of other totems, he goes to the sacred store-house,
+clears the ground all around it, takes out a few of the holy sticks and
+stones, smears them with red ochre and decorates them with birds' down,
+chanting a spell all the time. Then he rubs them together so that the
+down flies off in all directions; this is supposed to carry with it the
+magical virtue of the sticks or stones and so to fertilise the
+grass-seed.[133]
+
+[Sidenote: Elements of a worship of the dead. Marvellous powers
+attributed by the Central Australians to their remote ancestors of the
+_alcheringa_ or dream time.]
+
+On the whole, when we survey these practices and beliefs of the Central
+Australian aborigines, we may perhaps conclude that, if they do not
+amount to a worship of the dead, they at least contain the elements out
+of which such a worship might easily be developed. At first sight, no
+doubt, their faith in the transmigration of souls seems and perhaps
+really is a serious impediment to a worship of the dead in the strict
+sense of the word. For if they themselves are the dead come to life
+again, it is difficult to see how they can worship the spirits of the
+dead without also worshipping each other, since they are all by
+hypothesis simply these worshipful spirits reincarnated. But though in
+theory every living man and woman is merely an ancestor or ancestress
+born again and therefore should be his or her equal, in practice they
+appear to admit that their forefathers of the remote _alcheringa_ or
+dream time were endowed with many marvellous powers which their modern
+reincarnations cannot lay claim to, and that accordingly these ancestral
+spirits were more to be reverenced, were in fact more worshipful, than
+their living representatives. On this subject Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+observe: "The Central Australian native is firmly convinced, as will be
+seen from the accounts relating to their _alcheringa_ ancestors, that
+the latter were endowed with powers such as no living man now possesses.
+They could travel underground or mount into the sky, and could make
+creeks and water-courses, mountain-ranges, sand-hills, and plains. In
+very many cases the actual names of these natives are preserved in their
+traditions, but, so far as we have been able to discover, there is no
+instance of any one of them being regarded in the light of a 'deity.'
+Amongst the Central Australian natives there is never any idea of
+appealing for assistance to any one of these Alcheringa ancestors in any
+way, nor is there any attempt made in the direction of propitiation,
+with one single exception in the case of the mythic creature called
+Wollunqua, amongst the Warramunga tribe, who, it may be remarked, is
+most distinctly regarded as a snake and not as a human being."[134] Thus
+far Messrs. Spencer and Gillen. From their testimony it appears that
+with a single possible exception, to which I will return immediately,
+the Central Australian aborigines are not known to worship any of their
+dead ancestors; they indeed believe their remote forefathers of the
+_alcheringa_ age to have been endowed with marvellous powers which they
+themselves do not possess; but they do not regard these ancestral
+spirits as deities, nor do they pray and sacrifice to them for help and
+protection. The single possible exception to this general rule known to
+Messrs. Spencer and Gillen is the case of the mythical water-snake
+called Wollunqua, who is in a sense revered and propitiated by the
+Warramunga tribe. The case is interesting and instructive as indicative
+of an advance from magic towards religion in the strict sense of the
+word. Accordingly I propose to consider it somewhat fully.
+
+[Sidenote: The Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake, one of the Warramunga
+totems.]
+
+The Wollunqua is one of the many totems of the Warramunga tribe. It is
+to be borne in mind that, though every Australian tribe has many totems
+which are most commonly animals or plants and more rarely other natural
+objects, all the totems are not respected by all the members of the
+tribe; each totem is respected only by a particular group of men and
+women in the tribe, who believe themselves to be descended from the same
+totemic ancestor. Thus the whole tribe is broken up into many groups or
+bodies of men and women, each group knit together by a belief in a
+common descent from the totem, by a common respect for the totemic
+species, whether it be a species of animals or plants, or what not, and
+finally by the possession of a common name derived from the totem. Thus,
+for example, we have a group of men and women who believe themselves
+descended from an ancestor who had the bandicoot for his totem; they all
+respect bandicoots; and they are all called bandicoot people. Similarly
+with all the other totemic groups within the tribe. It is convenient to
+have a name for these totemic groups or tribal subdivisions, and
+accordingly we may call them clans, provided we remember that a totemic
+clan in this sense is not an independent political community such as the
+Scottish Highland clans used to be; it is merely a subdivision of the
+tribe, and the members of it do not usually keep to themselves but live
+more or less interfused with members of all the other totemic clans
+which together compose the tribe. Now amongst the Warramunga the
+Wollunqua or mythical water-snake is the totem of such a clan or tribal
+subdivision, the members of which believe themselves to be descended
+from the creature and call themselves by its name. So far, therefore,
+the Wollunqua is merely a totem of the ordinary sort, an object of
+respect for a particular section of the tribe. Like other totemic
+ancestors the Wollunqua is supposed to have wandered about the country
+leaving supplies of spirit individuals at various points, individuals
+who are constantly undergoing reincarnation. But on the other hand the
+Wollunqua differs from almost all other Australian totems in this, that
+whereas they are real objects, such as animals, plants, water, wind, the
+sun and moon, and so on, the Wollunqua is a purely mythical creature,
+which exists only in the imagination of the natives; for they believe it
+to be a water-snake so huge that if it were to stand up on its tail, its
+head would reach far up into the sky. It now lives in a large pool
+called Thapauerlu, hidden away in a lonely valley of the Murchison
+Range; but the Warramunga fear that it may at any moment sally out and
+do some damage. They say that it actually killed a number of them on one
+of its excursions, though happily they at last succeeded in beating it
+off. So afraid are they of the creature, that in speaking of it amongst
+themselves they will not use its proper name of Wollunqua but call it
+instead _urkulu nappaurinnia_, because, as they told Messrs. Spencer and
+Gillen, if they were to name it too often by its real name they would
+lose control over the beast and it would rush forth and devour
+them.[135] Thus the natives do not distinguish the Wollunqua from the
+rest of their actually existing totems, as we do: they have never beheld
+him with their bodily eyes, yet to them he is just as real as the
+kangaroos which they see hopping along the sands, as the flies which
+buzz about their heads in the sunshine, or as the cockatoos which flap
+screaming past in the thickets. How real this belief in the mythical
+snake is with these savages, was brought vividly home to Messrs. Spencer
+and Gillen when they visited, in company with some natives, the deep and
+lonely pool among the rocky hills in which the awful being is supposed
+to reside. Before they approached the spot, the natives had been talking
+and laughing freely, but when they drew near the water their voices were
+hushed and their demeanour became solemn. When all stood silent on the
+brink of the deep still pool, enclosed by a sandy margin on one side and
+by a line of red rocks on the other, two old men, the leaders of the
+totemic group of the Wollunqua, went down to the edge of the water and,
+with bowed heads, addressed the Wollunqua in whispers, asking him to
+remain quiet and do them no harm, for they were mates of his, and had
+brought two great white men to see where he lived and to tell them all
+about him. "We could plainly see," add Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, "that
+it was all very real to them, and that they implicitly believed that the
+Wollunqua was indeed alive beneath the water, watching them, though they
+could not see him."[136]
+
+[Sidenote: Religious character of the belief in the Wollunqua.]
+
+I need hardly point out what a near approach all this is to religion in
+the proper sense of the word. Here we have a firm belief in a purely
+imaginary being who is necessarily visible to the eye of faith alone,
+since I think we may safely assume that a water-snake, supposed to be
+many miles long and capable of reaching up to the sky, has no real
+existence either on the earth or in the waters under the earth. Yet to
+these savages this invisible being is just as real as the actually
+existing animals and men whom they perceive with their bodily senses;
+they not only pray to him but they propitiate him with a solemn ritual;
+and no doubt they would spurn with scorn the feeble attempts of shallow
+sceptics to question the reality of his existence or the literal truth
+of the myths they tell about him. Certainly these savages are far on the
+road to religion, if they have not already passed the Rubicon which
+divides it from the common workaday world. If an unhesitating faith in
+the unseen is part of religion, the Warramunga people of the Wollunqua
+totem are unquestionably religious.
+
+[Footnote 108: On the zoological peculiarities of Australia regarded as
+effects of its geographical isolation, see Alfred Newton, _Dictionary of
+Birds_ (London, 1893-96), pp. 317-319. He observes (p. 318) that "the
+isolation of Australia is probably the next oldest in the world to that
+of New Zealand, having possibly existed since the time when no mammals
+higher than marsupials had appeared on the face of the earth."]
+
+[Footnote 109: For details see _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 314 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 110: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Northern Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1904), p. 491.]
+
+[Footnote 111: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. xi.]
+
+[Footnote 112: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 545.]
+
+[Footnote 113: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 546.]
+
+[Footnote 114: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Native Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1899), pp. 119-127, 335-338, 552; _id.,
+Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, pp. 145-153, 162, 271, 330 _sq._,
+448-451, 512-515. Compare _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 188 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 115: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 116: See _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 155 _sqq._, iv. 40 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 117: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 123, 126.]
+
+[Footnote 118: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 119-127, 128 _sqq._, 513; _id., Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 145 _sqq._, 257 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 119: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 132-135; _id._, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, pp. 258, 268
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 120: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 128, 134.]
+
+[Footnote 121: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 134 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 122: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 133, 135; _id._, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 269.]
+
+[Footnote 123: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 267.]
+
+[Footnote 124: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 139 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 125: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 273.]
+
+[Footnote 126: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 141.]
+
+[Footnote 127: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 140]
+
+[Footnote 128: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, pp. 144, 145.]
+
+[Footnote 129: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, pp. 164, _sq._;
+_id._, _Northern Tribes_, pp. 261, 264.]
+
+[Footnote 130: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 145.]
+
+[Footnote 131: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 136.]
+
+[Footnote 132: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, pp. 158 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 133: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes_, pp. 271 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 134: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 490 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 135: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 226 _sq._ Another mythical being in which the Warramunga
+believe is _the pau-wa_, a fabulous animal, half human and somewhat
+resembling a dog. See Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 195, 197, 201,
+210 _sq._ But the creature seems not to be a totem, for it is not
+included in the list of totems given by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen (_op.
+cit._ pp. 768-773).]
+
+[Footnote 136: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 252 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE V
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES
+OF CENTRAL AUSTRALIA (_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Central Australian aborigines concerning the
+reincarnation of the dead. The mythical water-snake Wollunqua.]
+
+In the last lecture we began our survey of the belief in immortality and
+the practices to which it has given rise among the aboriginal tribes of
+Central Australia. I shewed that these primitive savages hold a very
+remarkable theory of birth and death. They believe that the souls of the
+dead do not perish but are reborn in human form after a longer or
+shorter interval. During that interval the spirits of the departed are
+supposed to congregate in certain parts of the country, generally
+distinguished by some conspicuous natural feature, which accordingly the
+natives account sacred, believing them to be haunted by the souls of the
+dead. From time to time one of these disembodied spirits enters into a
+passing woman and is born as an infant into the world. Thus according to
+the Central Australian theory every living person without exception is
+the reincarnation of a dead man, woman, or child. At first sight the
+theory seems to exclude the possibility of any worship of the dead,
+since it appears to put the living on a footing of perfect equality with
+the dead by identifying the one with the other. But I pointed out that
+as a matter of fact these savages do admit, whether logically or not,
+the superiority of their remote ancestors to themselves: they
+acknowledge that these old forefathers of theirs did possess many
+marvellous powers to which they themselves can lay no claim. In this
+acknowledgment, accordingly, we may detect an opening or possibility for
+the development of a real worship of ancestors. Indeed, as I said at the
+close of last lecture, something closely approaching to ancestor worship
+has actually grown up in regard to the mythical ancestor of the
+Wollunqua clan in the Warramunga tribe. The Wollunqua is a purely
+fabulous water-snake, of gigantic dimensions, which is supposed to haunt
+the waters of a certain lonely pool called Thapauerlu, in the Murchison
+Range of mountains. Unlike the ancestors of the other totemic clans,
+this mythical serpent is never reborn in human form; he always lives in
+his solitary pool among the barren hills; but the natives think that he
+has it in his power to come forth and do them an injury, and accordingly
+they pray to him to remain quiet and not to harm them. Indeed so afraid
+of him are they that speaking of the creature among themselves they
+avoid using his proper name of Wollunqua and call him by a different
+name, lest hearing himself called by his true name he should rush forth
+and devour them. More than that they even endeavour to propitiate him by
+the performance of certain rites, which, however childish and absurd
+they may seem to us, are very solemn affairs for these simple folk. The
+rites were witnessed by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, whose description I
+will summarise. It offers an interesting and instructive example of a
+ritual observed by primitive savages, who are clearly standing on, if
+they have not already crossed, the threshold of religion.
+
+[Sidenote: Wanderings of the Wollunqua. Dramatic ceremonies in honour of
+the Wollunqua.]
+
+Like all other totemic ancestors the Wollunqua is said to have arisen at
+a particular spot, to have wandered about the country, and finally to
+have gone down into the ground. Starting from the deep rocky pool in the
+Murchison Range he travelled at first underground, coming up, however,
+at various points where he performed ceremonies and left many spirit
+children, who issued from his body and remained behind, forming local
+totemic centres when he had passed on. It is these spirit children who
+have formed the Wollunqua clan ever since, undergoing an endless series
+of reincarnations. Now the ceremonies which the clan perform in honour
+of their mythical ancestor the Wollunqua all refer to his wanderings
+about the country. Thus there is a particular water-hole called
+Pitingari where the great old water-snake is said to have emerged from
+the ground and looked about him. Here, accordingly, two men performed a
+ceremony. Each of them was decorated with a broad band of red down,
+which curved round both the front and the back of the performer and
+stood sharply out from the mass of white down with which all the rest of
+the upper part of his body was covered. These broad red bands
+represented the Wollunqua. Each man also wore a tall, conical helmet
+adorned with a curved band of red down, which, no doubt, likewise
+symbolised the mythical serpent. When the two actors in the little drama
+had been attired in this quaint costume of red and white down, they
+retired behind a bush, which served for the side scenes of a theatre.
+Then, when the orchestra, composed of adult men, struck up the music on
+the ceremonial ground by chanting and beating boomerangs and sticks
+together, the performers ran in, stopping every now and then to shake
+themselves in imitation of the snake. Finally, they sat down close
+together with their heads bowed down on a few green branches of
+gum-trees. A man then stepped up to them, knocked off their
+head-dresses, and the simple ceremony came to an end.[137]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony in honour of the Wollunqua.]
+
+The next ceremony was performed on the following day at another place
+called Antipataringa, where the mythical snake is said to have halted in
+his wanderings. The same two men acted as before, but this time one of
+them carried on his head a curious curved bundle shaped like an enormous
+boomerang. It was made of grass-stalks bound together with human
+hair-string and decorated with white down. This sacred object
+represented the Wollunqua himself.[138] From this spot the snake was
+believed to have travelled on to another place called Tjunguniari, where
+he popped up his head among the sand-hills, the greater part of his body
+remaining underground. Indeed, of such an enormous length was the
+serpent, that though his head had now travelled very many miles his tail
+still remained at the starting-point and had not yet begun to take part
+in the procession. Here accordingly the third ceremony, perhaps we may
+say the third act in the drama, was performed on the third day. In it
+one of the actors personated the snake himself, while the other stood
+for a sand-hill.[139]
+
+[Sidenote: Further ceremony in honour of the Wollunqua: the white mound
+with the red wavy band to represent the mythical snake.]
+
+After an interval of three days a fourth ceremony was performed of an
+entirely different kind. A keel-shaped mound was made of wet sand, about
+fifteen feet long by two feet high. The smooth surface of the mound was
+covered with a mass of little dots of white down, except for a long wavy
+band of red down which ran all along both sides of the mound. This wavy
+red band represented the Wollunqua, his head being indicated by a small
+round swelling at one end and his tail by a short prolongation at the
+other. The mound itself represented a sand-hill beside which the snake
+is said to have stood up and looked about. The preparation of this
+elaborate emblem of the Wollunqua occupied the greater part of the day,
+and it was late in the afternoon before it was completed. When darkness
+fell, fires were lighted on the ceremonial ground, and as the night grew
+late more fires were kindled, and all of the men sat round the mound
+singing songs which referred to the mythical water-snake. This went on
+for hours. At last, about three o'clock in the morning, a ring of fires
+was lit all round the ceremonial ground, in the light of which the white
+trunks of the gum-trees and the surrounding scrub stood out weird and
+ghastly against the blackness of darkness beyond. Amid the wildest
+excitement the men of the Wollunqua totem now ranged themselves in
+single file on their knees beside the mound which bore the red image of
+their great mythical forefather, and with their hands on their thighs
+surged round and round it, every man bending in unison first to one side
+and then to the other, each successive movement being accompanied by a
+loud and simultaneous shout, or rather yell, while the other men, who
+were not of the Wollunqua totem, stood by, clanging their boomerangs
+excitedly, and one old man, who acted as a sort of choregus, walked
+backwards at the end of the kneeling procession of Wollunqua men,
+swaying his body about and lifting high his knees at every step. In this
+way, with shouts and clangour, the men of the totem surged twice round
+the mound on their knees. After that, as the fires died down, the men
+rose from their knees, and for another hour every one sat round the
+mound singing incessantly. The last act in the drama was played at four
+o'clock in the morning at the moment when the first faint streaks of
+dawn glimmered in the east. At sight of them every man jumped to his
+feet, the smouldering fires were rekindled, and in their blaze the long
+white mound stood out in strong relief. The men of the totem, armed with
+spears, boomerangs, and clubs, ranged themselves round it, and
+encouraged by the men of the other totems attacked it fiercely with
+their weapons, until in a few minutes they had hacked it to pieces, and
+nothing was left of it but a rough heap of sandy earth. The fires again
+died down and for a short time silence reigned. Then, just as the sun
+rose above the eastern horizon, the painful ceremony of subincision was
+performed on three youths, who had recently passed through the earlier
+stages of initiation.[140]
+
+[Sidenote: The rite aims both at pleasing and at coercing the mythical
+snake.]
+
+This remarkable rite is supposed, we are informed, "in some way to be
+associated with the idea of persuading, or almost forcing, the Wollunqua
+to remain quietly in his home under the water-hole at Thapauerlu, and to
+do no harm to any of the natives. They say that when he sees the mound
+with his representation drawn upon it he is gratified, and wriggles
+about underneath with pleasure. The savage attack upon the mound is
+associated with the idea of driving him down, and, taken altogether, the
+ceremony indicates their belief that, at one and the same time, they can
+both please and coerce the mythic beast. It is necessary to do things to
+please him, or else he might grow sulky and come out and do them harm,
+but at the same time they occasionally use force to make him do what
+they want."[141] In fact the ritual of the mound with its red image of
+the snake combines the principles of religion and magic. So far as the
+rite is intended to please and propitiate the mythical beast, it is
+religious; so far as it is intended to constrain him, it is magical. The
+two principles are contradictory and the attempt to combine them is
+illogical; but the savage is heedless, or rather totally unaware, of the
+contradiction and illogicality: all that concerns him is to accomplish
+his ends: he has neither the wish nor the ability to analyse his
+motives. In this respect he is in substantial agreement with the vast
+majority of mankind. How many of us scrutinise the reasons of our
+conduct with the view of detecting and eliminating any latent
+inconsistencies in them? And how many, or rather how few of us, on such
+a scrutiny would be so fortunate as to discover that there were no such
+inconsistencies to detect? The logical pedant who imagines that men
+cannot possibly act on inconsistent and even contradictory motives only
+betrays his ignorance of life. It is not therefore for us to cast stones
+at the Warramunga men of the Wollunqua totem for attempting to
+propitiate and constrain their mythical serpent at the same time. Such
+contradictions meet us again and again in the history of religion: it is
+interesting but by no means surprising to find them in one of its
+rudimentary stages.
+
+[Sidenote: Thunder the voice of the Wollunqua.]
+
+On the evening of the day which succeeded the construction of the
+emblematic mound the old men who had made the emblem said they had heard
+the Wollunqua talking, and that he was pleased with what had been done
+and was sending them rain. What they took for the voice of the Wollunqua
+was thunder rumbling in the distance. No rain fell, but a few days later
+thunder was again heard rolling afar off and a heavy bank of clouds lay
+low on the western horizon. The old men now said that the Wollunqua was
+growling because the remains of the mound had been left uncovered; so
+they hastily cut down branches and covered up the ruins. After that the
+Wollunqua ceased to growl: there was no more thunder.[142]
+
+[Sidenote: Ground drawings of the Wollunqua.]
+
+On the four following days ceremonies of an entirely different kind from
+all the preceding were performed in honour of the Wollunqua. A space of
+sandy ground was smoothed down, sprinkled with water, and rubbed so as
+to form a compact surface. The smooth surface was then overlaid with a
+coat of red or yellow ochre, and on this coloured background a number of
+designs were traced, one after the other, by a series of white dots,
+which together made up a pattern of curved lines and concentric circles.
+These patterns represented the Wollunqua and some of his traditionary
+adventures. The snake himself was portrayed by a broad wavy band, but
+all the other designs were purely conventional; for example, trees,
+ant-hills, and wells were alike indicated by circles. Altogether there
+were eight such drawings on the earth, some of them very elaborate and
+entailing, each of them, not less than six or seven hours' labour: one
+of them was ten feet long. Each drawing was rubbed out before the next
+one was drawn. Moreover, the drawings were accompanied by little dramas
+acted by decorated men. In one of these dramas no fewer than eight
+actors took part, some of whom wore head-dresses adorned with a long
+wavy band to represent the Wollunqua. The last drawing of all was
+supposed to portray the mythical snake as he plunged into the earth and
+returned to his home in the rocky pool called Thapauerlu among the
+Murchison Ranges.[143]
+
+[Sidenote: Religious importance of the Wollunqua.]
+
+I have dwelt at some length on these ceremonies of the Wollunqua totem,
+because they furnish a remarkable and perhaps unique instance in
+Australia of a totemic ancestor in the act of developing into something
+like a god. In the Warramunga tribe there are other snake totems besides
+the Wollunqua; for example, there is the black snake totem and the deaf
+adder totem. But this purely mythical water-snake, the Wollunqua, is the
+most important of them all and is regarded as the great father of all
+the snakes. "It is not easy," say Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, "to
+express in words what is in reality rather a vague feeling amongst the
+natives, but after carefully watching the different series of ceremonies
+we were impressed with the feeling that the Wollunqua represented to the
+native mind the idea of a dominant totem."[144] Thus he is at once a
+fabulous animal and the mythical ancestor of a human clan, but his
+animal nature apparently predominates over his semi-human nature, as
+shewn by the drawings and effigies of him, all of which are in serpent
+form. The prayers offered to him at the pool which he is supposed to
+haunt, and the attempt to please him by drawing his likeness can only be
+regarded as propitiatory rites and therefore as rudimentary forms of
+worship. And the idea that thunder is his voice, and that the rain is a
+gift sent by him in return for the homage paid to him by the people,
+appears to prove that in course of time, if left to himself, he might
+easily have been elevated to the sky and have ranked as a celestial
+deity, who dwells aloft and sends down or withholds the refreshing
+showers at his good pleasure. Thus the Wollunqua, a rude creation of the
+savage Australian imagination, possesses a high interest for the
+historian of religion, since he combines elements of ancestor worship
+and totem worship with a germ of heaven worship; while on the purely
+material side his representation, both in plastic form by a curved
+bundle of grass-stalks and in graphic form by broad wavy bands of red
+down, may be said in a sense to stand at the starting-point of that long
+development of religious art, which in so many countries and so many
+ages has attempted to represent to the bodily eye the mysteries of the
+unseen and invisible, and which, whatever we may think of the success or
+failure of that attempt, has given to the world some of the noblest
+works of sculpture and painting.
+
+[Sidenote: Possible religious evolution of totemism.]
+
+I have already pointed out the difficulty of seeing how a belief in the
+reincarnation of the dead, such as prevails universally among the
+aborigines of Central Australia, could ever be reconciled with or
+develop into a worship of the dead; for by identifying the living with
+the dead, the theory of reincarnation seems to abolish that distinction
+between the worshipper and the worshipped which is essential to the
+existence of worship. But, as I also indicated, what seems a loophole or
+mode of escape from the dilemma may be furnished by the belief of these
+savages, that though they themselves are nothing but their ancestors
+come to life again, nevertheless in their earliest incarnations of the
+_alcheringa_ or dream times their ancestors possessed miraculous powers
+which they have admittedly lost in their later reincarnations; for this
+suggests an incipient discrimination or line of cleavage between the
+living and the dead; it hints that perhaps after all the first
+ancestors, with their marvellous endowments, may have been entirely
+different persons from their feebler descendants, and if this vague hint
+could only grow into a firm conviction of the essential difference
+between the two, then the course would be clear for the development of
+ancestor worship: the dead forefathers, viewed as beings perfectly
+distinct from and far superior to the living, might easily come to
+receive from the latter the homage of prayer and sacrifice, might be
+besought by their descendants to protect them in danger and to succour
+them in all the manifold ills of life, or at least to abstain from
+injuring them. Now, this important step in religious evolution appears
+to have been actually taken by the Wollunqua, the mythical water-snake,
+who is the totem of one of the Warramunga clans. Unlike all the other
+totems he is supposed to exist only in his invisible and animal form and
+never to be reincarnated in a man.[145] Hence, withdrawn as he is from
+the real world of sense, the imagination is free to play about him and
+to invest him more and more with those supernatural attributes which men
+ascribe to their deities. And what has actually happened to this
+particular totemic ancestor might under favourable circumstances happen
+to many others. Each of them might be gradually detached from the line
+of his descendants, might cease to be reincarnated in them, and might
+gradually attain to the lonely pre-eminence of godhead. Thus a system of
+pure totemism, such as prevails among the aborigines of Central
+Australia, might develop through a phase of ancestor worship into a
+pantheon of the ordinary type.
+
+[Sidenote: Conspicuous features of the landscape associated with
+ancestral spirits.]
+
+Although none of the other totemic ancestors of the Central Australian
+aborigines appears to have advanced so far on the road to religion as
+the Wollunqua, yet they all contain in germ the elements out of which a
+religion might have been developed. It is difficult for us civilised men
+to conceive the extent to which the thoughts and lives of these savages
+are dominated by the memories and traditions of the dead. Every
+conspicuous feature in the landscape is not only associated with the
+legendary doings of some ancestors but is commonly said to have arisen
+as a direct result of their actions. The mountains, the plains, the
+rivers, the seas, the islands of ancient Greece itself were not more
+thickly haunted by the phantoms of a fairy mythology than are the barren
+sun-scorched steppes and stony hills of the Australian wilderness; but
+great indeed is the gulf which divides the beautiful creations of Greek
+fancy from the crude imaginings of the Australian savage, whose
+legendary tales are for the most part a mere tissue of trivial
+absurdities unrelieved by a single touch of beauty or poetry.
+
+[Sidenote: A journey through the Warramunga country.]
+
+To illustrate at once the nature and the abundance of these legends I
+will quote a passage in which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen describe a
+journey they took in company with some Warramunga natives over part of
+their country:--"For the first two days our way lay across miserable
+plain country covered with poor scrub, with here and there low ranges
+rising. Every prominent feature of any kind was associated with some
+tradition of their past. A range some five miles away from Tennant Creek
+arose to mark the path traversed by the great ancestor of the Pittongu
+(bat) totem. Several miles further on a solitary upstanding column of
+rock represented an opossum man who rested here, looked about the
+country, and left spirit children behind him; a low range of remarkably
+white quartzite hills indicated a large number of white ant eggs thrown
+here in the _wingara_[146] by the Munga-munga women as they passed
+across the country. A solitary flat-topped hill arose to mark the spot
+where the Wongana (crow) ancestor paused for some time to pierce his
+nose; and on the second night we camped by the side of a waterhole where
+the same crow lived for some time in the _wingara_, and where now there
+are plenty of crow spirit children. All the time, as we travelled along,
+the old men were talking amongst themselves about the natural features
+associated in tradition with these and other totemic ancestors of the
+tribe, and pointing them out to us. On the third day we travelled, at
+first for some hours, by the side of a river-bed,--perfectly dry of
+course,--and passed the spot where two hawks first made fire by rubbing
+sticks together, two fine gum-trees on the banks now representing the
+place where they stood up. A few miles further on we came to a
+water-hole by the side of which the moon-man met a bandicoot woman, and
+while the two were talking together the fire made by the hawks crept
+upon them and burnt the woman, who was, however, restored to life again
+by the moon-man, with whom she then went up into the sky. Late in the
+afternoon we skirted the eastern base of the Murchison Range, the rugged
+quartzite hills in this part being associated partly with the crow
+ancestor and partly with the bat. Following up a valley leading into the
+hills we camped, just after sunset, by the side of a rather picturesque
+water-pool amongst the ranges. A short distance before reaching this the
+natives pointed out a curious red cliff, standing out amongst the low
+hills which were elsewhere covered with thin scrub. This, which is
+called Tjiti, represents the spot where an old woman spent a long time
+digging for yams, the latter being indicated by great heaps of stones
+lying all around. On the opposite side of the valley a column of stone
+marks the spot where the woman went into the earth. The water-hole by
+which we were camped was called Wiarminni. It was in reality a deep pool
+in the bed of a creek coming down from the hills. Behind it the rocks
+rose abruptly, and amongst them there was, or rather would have been if
+a stream had been flowing, a succession of cascades and rocky
+water-holes. Two of the latter, just above Wiarminni, are connected with
+a fish totem, and represent the spot where two fish men arose in the
+_alcheringa_, fought one another, left spirit children behind, and
+finally went down into the ground. We were now, so to speak, in the very
+midst of _mungai_ [i.e. of places associated with the totems], for the
+old totemic ancestors of the tribe, who showed a most commendable
+fondness for arising and walking about in the few picturesque spots
+which their country contained, had apparently selected these rocky
+gorges as their central home. All around us the water-holes, gorges, and
+rocky crags were peopled with spirit individuals left behind by one or
+other of the following totemic ancestors:--Wollunqua, Pittongu (bat),
+Wongana (crow), wild dog, emu, bandicoot, and fish, whose lines of
+travel in the _alcheringa_ formed a regular network over the whole
+countryside."[147]
+
+[Sidenote: Dramatic ceremonies to commemorate the doings of ancestors.]
+
+Similar evidence could be multiplied, but this may suffice to teach us
+how to the minds of these Central Australian savages the whole country
+is haunted, in the literal sense, not merely by the memories of their
+dead, but by the spirits which they left behind them and which are
+constantly undergoing reincarnation. And not only are the minds of the
+aborigines preoccupied by the thought of their ancestors, who are
+recalled to them by all the familiar features of the landscape, but they
+spend a considerable part of their time in dramatically representing the
+legendary doings of their rude forefathers of the remote past. It is
+astonishing, we are told, how large a part of a native's life is
+occupied with the performance of these dramatic ceremonies. The older he
+grows, the greater is the share he takes in them, until at last they
+actually absorb the greater part of his thoughts. The rites which seem
+so trivial to us are most serious matters to him. They are all connected
+with the great ancestors of the tribe, and he is firmly convinced that
+when he dies his spirit will rejoin theirs and live in communion with
+them until the time comes for him to be born again into the world. With
+such solemnity does he look on the celebration of these commemorative
+services, as we may call them, that none but initiated men are allowed
+to witness them; women and children are strictly excluded from the
+spectacle. These sacred dramas are often, though by no means always,
+associated with the rites of initiation which young men have to pass
+through before they are admitted to full membership of the tribe and to
+participation in its deepest mysteries. The rites of initiation are not
+all undergone by a youth at the same time; they succeed each other at
+longer or shorter intervals of time, and at each of them he is
+privileged to witness some of the solemn ceremonies in which the
+traditions of the tribal ancestors are dramatically set forth before
+him, until, when he has passed through the last of the rites and
+ordeals, he is free to behold and to take part in the whole series of
+mystery plays or professedly historical dramas. Sometimes the
+performance of these dramas extends over two or three months, during
+which one or more of them are acted daily.[148] For the most part, they
+are very short and simple, each of them generally lasting only a few
+minutes, though the costumes of the actors are often elaborate and may
+have taken hours to prepare. I will describe a few of them as samples.
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of the Hakea flower totem.]
+
+We will begin with a ceremony of the Hakea flower totem in the Arunta
+tribe, as to which it may be premised that a decoction of the Hakea
+flower is a favourite drink of the natives. The little drama was acted
+by two men, each of whom was decorated on his bare body by broad bands
+of pearly grey edged with white down, which passed round his waist and
+over his shoulders, contrasting well with the chocolate colour of his
+skin. On his head each of them wore a kind of helmet made of twigs, and
+from their ears hung tips of the tails of rabbit-bandicoots. The two sat
+on the ground facing each other with a shield between them. One of them
+held in his hand some twigs representing the Hakea flower in bloom;
+these he pretended to steep in water so as to brew the favourite
+beverage of the natives, and the man sitting opposite him made believe
+to suck it up with a little mop. Meantime the other men ran round and
+round them shouting _wha! wha!_ This was the substance of the play,
+which ended as usual by several men placing their hands on the shoulders
+of the performers as a signal to them to stop.[149]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of a fish totem.]
+
+Again, to take another Arunta ceremony of a fish totem called
+_interpitna_. The fish is the bony bream (_Chatoessus horni_), which
+abounds in the water-holes of the country. The play was performed by a
+single actor, an old man, whose face was covered with a mass of white
+down contrasting strongly with a large bunch of black eagle-hawk
+feathers which he wore on his head. His body was decorated with bands of
+charcoal edged with white down. Squatting on the ground he moved his
+body and extended his arms from his sides, opening and closing them as
+he leaned forwards, so as to imitate a fish swelling itself out and
+opening and closing its gills. Then, holding twigs in his hands, he
+moved along mimicking the action of a man who drives fish before him
+with a branch in a pool, just as the natives do to catch the fish.
+Meantime an orchestra of four men squatted beside him singing and
+beating time with a stick on the ground.[150]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of a plum-tree totem.]
+
+Again, another Arunta ceremony of the plum-tree totem was performed by
+four actors, who simply pretended to knock down and eat imaginary plums
+from an imaginary plum-tree.[151] An interesting point in this very
+simple drama is that in it the men of the plum-tree totem are
+represented eating freely of their totem, which is quite contrary to the
+practice of the present day, but taken along with many similar
+ceremonies it goes far to prove that in the ancient days, to which all
+these dramatic ceremonies refer, it was the regular practice for men and
+women of a totem to eat their totemic animals or plants. As another
+example of a drama in which the performers are represented eating their
+totem we may take a ceremony of the ant totem in the Warramunga tribe.
+The legendary personages who figure in it are two women of the ant
+totem, ancestresses of the ant clan, who are said to have devoted all
+their time to catching and eating ants, except when they were engaged in
+the performance of ceremonies. The two men who personated these women in
+the drama (for no woman is allowed to witness, much less to act in,
+these sacred dramas) had the whole of the upper parts of their bodies,
+including their faces and the cylindrical helmets which they wore on
+their heads, covered with a dense mass of little specks of red down.
+These specks stood for the ants, alive or dead, and also for the stones
+and trees on the spots where the two women encamped. In the drama the
+two actors thus arrayed walked about the ground as if they were
+searching for ants to eat. Each of them carried a wooden trough and
+stooping down from time to time he turned over the ground and picked up
+small stones which he placed in the trough till it was full. The stones
+represented the masses of ants which the women gathered for food. After
+carrying on this pantomime for a time the two actors pretended to
+discover each other with surprise and to embrace with joy, much to the
+amusement of the spectators.[152]
+
+[Sidenote: In these ceremonies the action is appropriate to the totem.
+Ceremony of the witchetty grub totem.]
+
+In all these ceremonies you will observe that the action of the drama is
+strictly appropriate to the totem. In the drama of the Hakea flower
+totem the actors pretend to make and drink the beverage brewed from
+Hakea flowers; in the ceremony of the fish totem the actor feigns to be
+a fish and also to catch fish; in the ceremony of the plum-tree totem
+the actors pretend to knock down and eat plums; and in the ceremony of
+the ant totem the actors make believe to gather ants for food.
+Similarly, to take a few more examples, in a ceremony of the witchetty
+grub totem of the Arunta tribe the body of the actor was decorated with
+lines of white and red down, and he had a shield adorned with a number
+of concentric circles of down. The smaller circles represented the bush
+on which the grub lives first of all, and the larger circles represented
+the bush on which the adult insect lays its eggs. When all was ready,
+the performer seated himself on the ground and imitated the grub,
+alternately doubling himself up and rising on his knees, while he
+extended his arms and made them quiver in imitation of the insect's
+wings; and every now and then he would bend over the shield and sway to
+and fro, and up and down, in imitation of the insect hovering over the
+bushes on which it lays its eggs.[153] In another ceremony of the
+witchetty grub totem, which followed immediately the one I have just
+described, the actor had two shields beside him. The smaller of the
+shields was ornamented with zigzag lines of white pipe-clay which were
+supposed to indicate the tracks of the grub; the larger shield was
+covered with larger and smaller series of concentric circles, the larger
+representing the seeds of a bush on which the insect feeds, while the
+smaller stood for the eggs of the adult insect. As before, the actor
+wriggled and flapped his arms in imitation of the fluttering of the
+insect when it first leaves its chrysalis case in the ground and
+attempts to fly. In acting thus he was supposed to represent a
+celebrated ancestor of the witchetty grub totem.[154]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of the emu totem.]
+
+The last example of such ceremonies which I shall cite is one of the emu
+totem in the Arunta tribe. The body of the actor was decorated with
+perpendicular lines of white down reaching from his shoulders to his
+knees; and on his head he supported a towering head-piece tipped with a
+bunch of emu feathers in imitation of the neck and head of an emu. Thus
+arrayed he stalked backwards and forwards in the aimless fashion of the
+bird.[155]
+
+[Sidenote: These dramatic ceremonies were probably at first magical
+rites intended to supply the people with food and other necessaries.]
+
+What are we to think of the intention of these little dramas which the
+Central Australian aborigines regard as sacred and to the performance of
+which they devote so much time and labour? At first sight they are
+simply commemorative services, designed to represent the ancestors as
+they lived and moved in the far-past times, to recall their adventures,
+of which legend has preserved the memory, and to set them dramatically
+before the eyes of their living descendants. So far, therefore, the
+dramas might be described as purely historical in intention, if not in
+reality. But there are reasons for thinking that in all cases a deeper
+meaning underlies, or formerly underlay, the performance of all these
+apparently simple historical plays; in fact, we may suspect that
+originally they were all magical ceremonies observed for the practical
+purpose of supplying the people with food, water, sunshine, and
+everything else of which they stand in need. This conclusion is
+suggested first of all by the practice of the Arunta and other Central
+Australian tribes, who observe very similar ceremonies with the avowed
+intention of thereby multiplying the totemic animals and plants in order
+that they may be eaten by the tribe, though not by the particular clan
+which has these animals or plants for its totem. It is true that the
+Arunta distinguish these magical ceremonies for the multiplication of
+the totems from what we may call the more purely commemorative or
+historical performances, and they have a special name for the former,
+namely _intichiuma_, which they do not bestow on the latter. Yet these
+_intichiuma_ or magical ceremonies resemble the commemorative ceremonies
+so closely that it is difficult to suppose they can always have been
+wholly distinct. For example, in the magical ceremonies for the
+multiplication of witchetty grubs the performers pretend to be the
+insects emerging from their chrysalis cases,[156] just as the actors do
+in the similar commemorative ceremony which I have described; and again
+in a magical ceremony for the multiplication of emus the performers wear
+head-dresses to represent the long neck and small head of the bird, and
+they mimic its gait,[157] exactly as the actors do in the commemorative
+ceremony. It seems reasonable, therefore, to conjecture that the
+ceremonies which now are, or seem to be, purely commemorative or
+historical were originally magical in intention, being observed for the
+practical purpose of multiplying edible animals and plants or supplying
+other wants of the tribe.
+
+[Sidenote: Among the Warramunga these dramatic ceremonies are avowedly
+performed as magical rites.]
+
+Now this conjecture is strongly confirmed by the actual usage of the
+Warramunga tribe, amongst whom the commemorative or historical dramas
+are avowedly performed as magical rites: in other words, the Warramunga
+attribute a magical virtue to the simple performance of such dramas:
+they think that by merely acting the parts of their totemic ancestors
+they thereby magically multiply the edible animals or plants which these
+ancestors had for their totems. Hence in this tribe the magical
+ceremonies and the dramatic performances practically coincide: with
+them, as Messrs. Spencer and Gillen say, the _intichiuma_ or magical
+ceremonies (called by the Warramunga _thalamminta_) "for the most part
+simply consist in the performance of a complete series representing the
+_alcheringa_ history of the totemic ancestor. In this tribe each totemic
+group has usually one great ancestor, who arose in some special spot and
+walked across the country, making various natural features as he did
+so,--creeks, plains, ranges, and water-holes,--and leaving behind him
+spirit individuals who have since been reincarnated. The _intichiuma_
+[or magical] ceremony of the totem really consists in tracking these
+ancestors' paths, and repeating, one after the other, ceremonies
+commemorative of what are called the _mungai_ spots, the equivalent of
+the _oknanikilla_ amongst the Arunta--that is, the places where he left
+the spirit children behind."[158] Apparently the Warramunga imagine that
+by imitating a totemic ancestor at the very place where he left spirit
+children of the same totem behind him, they thereby enable these spirit
+children to be born again and so increase the food supply, whenever
+their totem is an edible animal or plant; for we must always remember
+that in the mind of these savages the idea of a man or woman is
+inextricably confused with the idea of his or her totem; they seem
+unable to distinguish between the two, and therefore they believe that
+in multiplying human beings at their local totemic centres (_mungai_ or
+_oknanikilla_) they simultaneously multiply their totems; and as the
+totems are commonly edible animals and plants, it follows that in the
+opinion of the Warramunga the general effect of performing these
+ancestral plays is to increase the supply of food of the tribe. No
+wonder, therefore, that the dramas are sacred, and that the natives
+attribute the most serious significance to their performance: the
+neglect to perform them might, in their judgment, bring famine and ruin
+on the whole tribe. As Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, speaking of these
+ceremonies, justly observe: "Their proper performance is a matter of
+very great importance in the eyes of the natives, because, not only do
+they serve to keep alive and hand down from generation to generation the
+traditions of the tribe, but they are, at least amongst the Warramunga,
+intimately associated with the most important object of maintaining the
+food supply, as every totemic group is held responsible for the
+maintenance of the material object the name of which it bears."[159]
+
+[Sidenote: General view of the attitude of the Central Australian
+natives towards their dead.]
+
+To sum up the attitude of the Central Australian natives towards their
+dead. They believe that their dead are constantly undergoing
+reincarnation by being born again of women into the world, in fact that
+every living man, woman, and child is nothing but a dead person come to
+life again, that so it has been from the beginning and that so it will
+be to the end. Of a special world of the departed, remote and different
+from the material world in which they live and from the familiar scenes
+to which they have been accustomed from infancy, they have no
+conception; still less, if that is possible, have they any idea of a
+division of the world of the dead into a realm of bliss and a realm of
+woe, where the spirits of the good live ineffably happy and the spirits
+of the bad live unspeakably miserable. To their simple minds the spirits
+of the dead dwell all about them in the rocky gorges, the barren plains,
+the wooded dells, the rustling trees, the still waters of their native
+land, haunting in death the very spots where they last entered into
+their mothers' wombs to be born, and where in future they will again
+enter into the wombs of other women to be born again as other children
+into the world. And so, they think, it will go on for ever and ever.
+Such a creed seems at first sight, as I have pointed out, irreconcilable
+with a worship of the dead in the proper sense of the word; and so
+perhaps it would be, if these savages were strictly consistent and
+logical in their theories. But they are not. They admit that their
+remote ancestors, in other words, that they themselves in former
+incarnations, possessed certain marvellous powers to which in the
+present degenerate days they can lay no claim; and in this significant
+admission we may detect a rift, a real distinction of kind, between the
+living and the dead, which in time might widen out into an impassable
+gulf. In other words, we may suppose that the Central Australians, if
+left to themselves, might come to hold that the dead return no more to
+the land of the living, and that, acknowledging as they do the vast
+superiority of their remote ancestors to themselves, they might end by
+worshipping them, at first simply as powerful ancestral spirits, and
+afterwards as supernatural deities, whose original connexion with
+humanity had been totally forgotten. In point of fact we saw that among
+the Warramunga the mythical water-snake Wollunqua, who is regarded as an
+ancestor of a totemic clan, has made some progress towards deification;
+for while he is still regarded as the forefather of the clan which bears
+his name, it is no longer supposed that he is born again of women into
+the world, but that he lives eternal and invisible under the water of a
+haunted pool, and that he has it in his power both to help and to harm
+his people, who pray to him and perform ceremonies in his honour. This
+awful being, whose voice is heard in the peal of thunder and whose
+dreadful name may not be pronounced in common life, is not far from
+godhead; at least he is apparently the nearest approach to it which the
+imagination of these rude savages has been able to conceive. Lastly, as
+I have pointed out, the reverence which the Central Australians
+entertain for their dead ancestors is closely bound up with their
+totemism; they fail to distinguish clearly or at all between men and
+their totems, and accordingly the ceremonies which they perform to
+commemorate the dead are at the same time magical rites designed to
+ensure an abundant supply of food and of all the other necessaries and
+conveniences which savage life requires or admits of; indeed, we may
+with some probability conjecture that the magical intention of these
+ceremonies is the primary and original one, and that the commemorative
+intention is secondary and derivative. If that could be proved to be so
+(which is hardly to be expected), we should be obliged to conclude that
+in this as in so many enquiries into the remote human past we detect
+evidence of an Age of Magic preceding anything that deserves to be
+dignified with the name of religion.
+
+That ends what I have to say at present as to the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead among the Central Australian aborigines. In
+my next lecture I propose to pursue the enquiry among the other tribes
+of Australia.
+
+[Footnote 137: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 228 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 138: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 229 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 139: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 230 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 140: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 231-238.]
+
+[Footnote 141: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 238.]
+
+[Footnote 142: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 238 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 143: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 239-247.]
+
+[Footnote 144: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 145: "On the other hand there is a great difference between
+the Wollunqua and any other totem, inasmuch as the particular animal is
+purely mythical, and except for the one great progenitor of the totemic
+group, is not supposed to exist at the present day" (Spencer and Gillen,
+_Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 248).]
+
+[Footnote 146: The _wingara_ is the equivalent of the Arunta
+_alcheringa_, that is, the earliest legendary or mythical times of which
+the natives profess to have knowledge.]
+
+[Footnote 147: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 249 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 148: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 33 _sq._, 177 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 149: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 297 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 150: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 316 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 151: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 152: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 199-204.]
+
+[Footnote 153: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 179 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 154: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 179 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 155: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 358 _sq._, and p. 343, fig 73.]
+
+[Footnote 156: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 176.]
+
+[Footnote 157: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 182 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 158: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 297.]
+
+[Footnote 159: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 197.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE VI
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE OTHER ABORIGINES OF AUSTRALIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Customs and beliefs concerning the dead in the other tribes
+of Australia.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded my account of the beliefs and practices
+of the Central Australian aborigines in regard to the dead. To-day I
+propose to consider the customs and beliefs concerning the dead which
+prevail among the native tribes in other parts of Australia. But at the
+outset I must warn you that our information as to these other tribes is
+far less full and precise than that which we possess as to the tribes of
+the centre, which have had the great advantage of being observed and
+described by two highly qualified scientific observers, Messrs. Spencer
+and Gillen. Our knowledge of all other Australian tribes is
+comparatively fragmentary, and accordingly it is impossible to give even
+an approximately complete view of their notions concerning the state of
+the human spirit after death, and of the rites which they observe for
+the purpose of disarming or propitiating the souls of the departed. We
+must therefore content ourselves with more or less partial glimpses of
+this side of native religion.
+
+[Sidenote: Belief in the reincarnation of the dead among the natives of
+Queensland. The _ngai_ spirits.]
+
+The first question we naturally ask is whether the belief in the
+reincarnation of the dead, which prevails universally among the Central
+tribes, reappears among tribes in other parts of the continent. It
+certainly does so, and although the evidence on this subject is very
+imperfect it suffices to raise presumption that a similar belief in the
+rebirth or reincarnation of the dead was formerly universal among the
+Australian aborigines. Unquestionably the belief is entertained by some
+of the natives of Queensland, who have been described for us by Mr. W.
+E. Roth. Thus, for example, the aborigines on the Pennefather River
+think that every person's spirit undergoes a series of reincarnations,
+and that in the interval between two reincarnations the spirit resides
+in one or other of the haunts of Anjea, a mythical being who causes
+conception in women by putting mud babies into their bodies. Such spots,
+haunted by the fabulous being Anjea and by the souls of the dead
+awaiting rebirth, may be a tree, a rock, or a pool of water; they
+clearly correspond to the local totem centres (_oknanikilla_ among the
+Arunta, _mungai_ among the Warramunga) of the Central Australian tribes
+which I described in former lectures. The natives of the Pennefather
+River observe a ceremony at the birth of a child in order to ascertain
+the exact spot where its spirit tarried in the interval since its last
+incarnation; and when they have discovered it they speak of the child as
+obtained from a tree, a rock, or a pool of water, according to the place
+from which its spirit is supposed to have passed into its mother.[160]
+Readers of the classics can hardly fail to be reminded of the Homeric
+phrase to be "born of an oak or a rock,"[161] which seems to point to a
+similar belief in the possibility of human souls awaiting reincarnation
+in the boughs of an oak-tree or in the cleft of a rock. In the opinion
+of the Pennefather natives all disembodied human spirits or _choi_, as
+they call them, are mischief-makers and evildoers, for they make people
+sick or crazy; but the medicine-men can sometimes control them for good
+or evil. They wander about in the bush, but there are certain hollow
+trees or clumps of trees with wide-spreading branches, which they most
+love to haunt, and they can be heard in the rustling of the leaves or
+the crackling of the boughs at night. Anjea himself, who puts babies
+into women, is never seen, but you may hear him laughing in the depths
+of the forest, among the rocks, in the lagoons, and along the mangrove
+swamps; and when you hear his laugh you may be sure that he has got a
+baby.[162] If a native happens to hurt himself near a tree, he imagines
+that the spirit of some dead person is lurking among the branches, and
+he will never cut that tree down lest a worse thing should befall him at
+the hands of the vengeful ghost.[163] A curious feature in the beliefs
+of these Pennefather natives is that apart from the spirit called
+_choi_, which lives in a disembodied state between two incarnations,
+every person is supposed to have a spirit of a different sort called
+_ngai_, which has its seat in the heart; they feel it beating within
+their breast; it talks to them in sleep and so is the cause of dreams.
+At death a man's _ngai_ spirit does not go away into the bush to await
+reincarnation like his _choi_ spirit; on the contrary, it passes at once
+into his children, boys and girls alike; for before their father's death
+children are supposed not to possess a _ngai_ spirit; if a child dies
+before its father, they think that it never had a _ngai_ spirit at all.
+And the _ngai_ spirit may leave a man in his lifetime as well as at
+death; for example, when a person faints, the natives think that he does
+so because his _ngai_ spirit has departed from him, and they will stamp
+on the ground to make it return. On the other hand the _choi_ spirit is
+supposed never to quit a man during life; it is thought to be in some
+undefined way related to the shadow, whereas the _ngai_ spirit, as we
+saw, manifests itself in the beating of the heart. When a woman dies,
+her _ngai_ spirit goes not into her children but into her sisters, one
+after the other; and when all the sisters are dead, the woman's _ngai_
+spirit goes away among the mangroves and perishes altogether.[164]
+
+Thus these savages explain the phenomena of birth and death, of
+conscious and unconscious life, by a theory of a double human spirit,
+one associated with the heart and the other with the shadow. The
+psychology is rudimentary, still it is interesting as an attempt to
+solve problems which still puzzle civilised man.
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the natives of Cape Bedford in Queensland.]
+
+Other Queensland aborigines associate the vital principle not with the
+heart but with the breath. For example, at Cape Bedford the natives call
+it _wau-wu_ and think that it never leaves the body sleeping or waking
+till death, when it haunts its place of burial for a time and may
+communicate with the living. Thus, like the ghost of Hamlet's father, it
+will often appear to a near kinsman or intimate friend, tell him the
+pitiful tale how he was done to death by an enemy, and urge him to
+revenge. Again, the soul of a man's dead father or friend may bear him
+company on a journey and, like the beryl-stone in Rossetti's poem _Rose
+Mary_, warn him of an ambuscade lurking for him in a spot where the man
+himself sees nothing. But the spirits of the dead do not always come
+with such friendly intent; they may drive the living distracted; a
+peculiar form of mental excitement and bewilderment is attributed to
+their action. Further, these aborigines at Cape Bedford, in Queensland,
+believe that all spirits of nature are in fact souls of the dead. Such
+spirits usually leave their haunts in the forests and caves at night.
+Stout-hearted old men can see and converse with them and receive from
+them warnings of danger; but women and children fear these spirits and
+never see them. But some spirits of the dead, when they have ceased to
+haunt their places of burial, go away eastward and are reincarnated in
+white people; hence these savages often look for a resemblance to some
+deceased tribesman among Europeans, and frequently wonder why it is that
+the white man, on whom their fancy has pitched, remembers nothing about
+his former life as a black man among blacks.[165]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the natives of the Tully River in Queensland.]
+
+The natives of the Tully River in Queensland associate the principle of
+life both with the breath and with the shadow. It departs from the body
+temporarily in sleep and fainting-fits and permanently in death, after
+which it may be heard at night tapping on the top of huts or creaking in
+the branches of trees. It is everlasting, so far as these savages have
+any idea of eternity, and further it is intangible; hence in its
+disembodied state it needs no food, and none is set out for it. The
+disposition of these disembodied spirits of the dead is good or bad,
+according to their disposition in life. Yet when a man is alone by
+himself, the spirit even of one of his own dead kinsfolk will sometimes
+come and do him a mischief. On the other hand it can do nothing to
+several people together; there is safety in numbers. They may all see
+and hear the ghost, but he will not attack them. Hence these savages
+have been taught from childhood to beware of going alone: solitary
+people are liable at any moment to be assailed by the spirits of the
+dead. The only means they know of warding off these ghostly assailants
+is by lighting good fires.[166]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Australian aborigines that their dead are
+reborn in white people.]
+
+I have mentioned the belief of the Cape Bedford natives that the spirits
+of their dead are sometimes reincarnated in white people. A similar
+notion is reported from other and widely separated parts of Australia,
+and wherever it exists may be taken as evidence of a general belief as
+to the rebirth or reincarnation of the dead, even where such a belief is
+not expressly recorded. This superstition has sometimes proved of
+service to white people who have been cast among the blacks, for it has
+ensured them a hospitable and even affectionate welcome, where otherwise
+they might have encountered suspicion and hostility, if not open
+violence. Thus, for example, the convict Buckley, who escaped from the
+penal settlement on Port Phillip Bay in 1803, was found by some of the
+Wudthaurung tribe carrying a piece of a broken spear, which he had
+abstracted from the grave of one of their people. So they took him to be
+the dead man risen from the grave; he received the name of the deceased,
+was adopted by his relations, and lived with the tribe for thirty-two
+years without ever conversing with a white man; when at last he met one,
+he had forgotten the English language.[167] Again, a Mr. Naseby, who
+lived in the Kamilaroi country for fifty years, happened to have the
+marks of cupping on his back, and the natives could not be persuaded
+that he was not one of themselves come to life again with the family
+scars on his body,[168] for the Australian aborigines commonly raise
+scars on the bodies of young men at initiation. The late Sir George Grey
+was identified by an old Australian woman as her dead son come to life
+again. It may be worth while to quote his account of this unlooked-for
+meeting with his long-lost mother; for it will impress on you, better
+than any words of mine could do, the firmness of the faith which these
+savages repose in the resurrection of the body, or at all events in the
+reincarnation of the soul. Grey writes as follows:--
+
+[Sidenote: Experience of Sir George Grey.]
+
+"After we had tethered the horses, and made ourselves tolerably
+comfortable, we heard loud voices from the hills above us: the effect
+was fine,--for they really almost appeared to float in the air; and as
+the wild cries of the women, who knew not our exact position, came by
+upon the wind, I thought it was well worth a little trouble to hear
+these savage sounds under such circumstances. Our guides shouted in
+return, and gradually the approaching cries came nearer and nearer. I
+was, however, wholly unprepared for the scene that was about to take
+place. A sort of procession came up, headed by two women, down whose
+cheeks tears were streaming. The eldest of these came up to me, and
+looking for a moment at me, said,--'_Gwa, gwa, bundo, bal_,'--'Yes, yes,
+in truth it is him'; and then throwing her arms round me, cried
+bitterly, her head resting on my breast; and although I was totally
+ignorant of what their meaning was, from mere motives of compassion, I
+offered no resistance to her caresses, however disagreeable they might
+be, for she was old, ugly, and filthily dirty; the other younger one
+knelt at my feet, also crying. At last the old lady, emboldened by my
+submission, deliberately kissed me on each cheek, just in the manner a
+Frenchwoman would have done; she then cried a little more, and at length
+relieving me, assured me that I was the ghost of her son, who had some
+time before been killed by a spear-wound in his breast. The younger
+female was my sister; but she, whether from motives of delicacy, or from
+any imagined backwardness on my part, did not think proper to kiss me.
+My new mother expressed almost as much delight at my return to my
+family, as my real mother would have done, had I been unexpectedly
+restored to her. As soon as she left me, my brothers, and father (the
+old man who had previously been so frightened), came up and embraced me
+after their manner,--that is, they threw their arms round my waist,
+placed their right knee against my right knee, and their breast against
+my breast, holding me in this way for several minutes. During the time
+that the ceremony lasted, I, according to the native custom, preserved a
+grave and mournful expression of countenance. This belief, that white
+people are the souls of departed blacks, is by no means an uncommon
+superstition amongst them; they themselves never having an idea of
+quitting their own land, cannot imagine others doing it;--and thus, when
+they see white people suddenly appear in their country, and settling
+themselves down in particular spots, they imagine that they must have
+formed an attachment for this land in some other state of existence; and
+hence conclude the settlers were at one period black men and their own
+relations. Likenesses, whether real or imagined, complete the delusion;
+and from the manner of the old woman I have just alluded to, from her
+many tears, and from her warm caresses, I feel firmly convinced that she
+really believed I was her son, whose first thought, upon his return to
+earth, had been to re-visit his old mother, and bring her a
+present."[169]
+
+[Sidenote: In South-eastern Australia the natives believed that the
+souls of the dead were not reborn but went up to the sky.]
+
+On the whole then we may conclude that a belief in the reincarnation of
+the dead has not been confined to the tribes of Central Australia, but
+has been held by the tribes in many, perhaps at one time in all, other
+parts of the continent. Yet, if we may judge from the imperfect records
+which we possess, this faith in the return of the dead to life in human
+form would seem to have given way and been replaced to some extent by a
+different creed among many tribes of South-eastern Australia. In this
+part of the continent it appears to have been often held by the natives
+that after death the soul is not born again among men, but goes away for
+ever to some distant country either in the sky or beyond the sea, where
+all the spirits of the dead congregate. Thus Lieutenant-Colonel Collins,
+who was Governor of New South Wales in the early days of the colony, at
+the end of the eighteenth century, reports that when the natives were
+often questioned "as to what became of them after their decease, some
+answered that they went either on or beyond the great water; but by far
+the greater number signified, that they went to the clouds."[170] Again,
+the Narrinyeri tribe of South Australia believed that all the dead went
+up to the sky and that some of them at least became stars. We possess an
+excellent description of the beliefs and customs of this tribe from the
+pen of a missionary, the Rev. George Taplin, who lived among them for
+many years. His account of their theory of the state of the dead is
+instructive. It runs thus:--
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Narrinyeri concerning the dead.]
+
+"The Narrinyeri point out several stars, and say that they are deceased
+warriors who have gone to heaven (_Wyirrewarre_). There are Wyungare,
+and Nepalle, and the Manchingga, and several others. Every native
+expects to go to _Wyirrewarre_ after death. They also believe that the
+dead descend from thence, and walk the earth; and that they are able to
+injure those whom they dislike. Consequently, men who have been
+notorious in life for a domineering and revengeful disposition are very
+much dreaded after death. For instance, there is Karungpe, who comes in
+the dead of night, when the camp fire has burned low, and like a rushing
+wind scatters the dying embers, and then takes advantage of the darkness
+to rob some sleeper of life; and it is considered dangerous to whistle
+in the dark, for Karungpe is especially attracted by a whistle. There is
+another restless spirit--the deceased father of a boy whom I well
+know--who is said to rove about armed with a rope, with which he catches
+people. All the Narrinyeri, old and young, are dreadfully afraid of
+seeing ghosts, and none of them will venture into the scrub after dark,
+lest he should encounter the spirits which are supposed to roam there. I
+have heard some admirable specimens of ghost stories from them. In one
+case I remember the ghost was represented to have set fire to a _wurley_
+[hut], and ascended to heaven in the flame. The Narrinyeri regard the
+disapprobation of the spirits of the dead as a thing to be dreaded; and
+if a serious quarrel takes place between near relatives, some of the
+friends are sure to interpose with entreaties to the contentious parties
+to be reconciled, lest the spirits of the dead should be offended at
+unseemly disputes between those who ought to be at peace. The name of
+the dead must not be mentioned until his body has decayed, lest a want
+of sorrow should seem to be indicated by the common and flippant use of
+his name. A native would have the deceased believe that he cannot hear
+or speak his name without weeping."[171]
+
+[Sidenote: Narrinyeri fear of the dead. Mourning customs.]
+
+From this account it would appear that the Narrinyeri have no belief in
+the reincarnation of the dead; they suppose that the souls of the
+departed live up aloft in the sky, from which they descend at night in
+the form of ghosts to haunt and trouble the living. On the whole the
+attitude of the Narrinyeri towards their dead kinsfolk seems to be
+dominated by fear; of affection there is apparently little or no trace.
+It is true that like most Australian tribes they indulge in extravagant
+demonstrations of grief at the death of their kinsfolk. A great
+lamentation and wailing is made by all the relations and friends of the
+deceased. They cut off their hair close to the head and besmudge
+themselves with oil and pounded charcoal. The women besmear themselves
+with the most disgusting filth. All beat and cut themselves and make a
+violent show of sorrow; and all the time that the corpse, rubbed over
+with grease and red ochre, is being dried over a slow fire in the hut,
+the women take it by turns to weep and wail before it, so that the
+lamentation never ceases for days. Yet Mr. Taplin was persuaded "that
+fear has more to do with most of these exhibitions than grief"; and he
+tells us that "for one minute a woman will appear in the deepest agony
+of grief and tears; a few minutes after, the conventional amount of
+weeping having been accomplished, they will laugh and talk with the
+merriest."[172] The principal motive, in fact, for all this excessive
+display of sorrow would seem to be a fear lest the jealous ghost should
+think himself slighted and should avenge the slight on the cold-hearted
+relatives who do not mourn sufficiently for the irreparable loss they
+have sustained by his death. We may conjecture that the same train of
+thought explains the ancient and widespread custom of hiring
+professional mourners to wail over the dead; the tears and lamentations
+of his kinsfolk are not enough to soothe the wounded feelings of the
+departed, they must be reinforced by noisier expressions of regret.
+
+[Sidenote: Deaths attributed by the Narrinyeri to sorcery.]
+
+But there is another powerful motive for all these violent
+demonstrations of grief, into the secret of which we are let by Mr.
+Taplin. He says that "all the relatives are careful to be present and
+not to be wanting in the proper signs of sorrow, lest they should be
+suspected of complicity in causing the death."[173] In fact the
+Narrinyeri, like many other savages, attribute all, or most, natural
+deaths to sorcery. When a person dies, they think that he or she has
+been killed by the evil magic of some ill-wisher, and one of the first
+things to be done is to discover the culprit in order that his life may
+be taken in revenge. For this purpose the Narrinyeri resort to a form of
+divination. On the first night after the death the nearest relation of
+the deceased sleeps with his head on the corpse, hoping thus to dream of
+the sorcerer who has done the mischief. Next day the corpse is placed on
+a sort of bier supported on men's shoulders. The friends of the deceased
+gather round and call out the names of suspected persons to see whether
+the corpse will give any sign. At last the next of kin calls out the
+name of the person of whom he has dreamed, and if at the sound the
+corpse makes a movement towards him, which the bearers say they cannot
+resist, it is regarded as a clear token that the man so named is the
+malefactor. It only remains for the kinsfolk of the dead to hunt down
+the culprit and kill him.[174] Thus not only the relations but everybody
+in the neighbourhood has the strongest motive for assuming at least an
+appearance of sorrow at a death, lest the suspicion of having caused it
+by sorcery should fall upon him.
+
+[Sidenote: Pretence made by the Narrinyeri of avenging the death of
+their friends on the guilty sorcerer.]
+
+It deserves to be noted, that while the Narrinyeri nominally
+acknowledged the duty of killing the sorcerer who in their opinion had
+caused the death of their friend, they by no means always discharged the
+duty, but sometimes contented themselves with little more than a
+pretence of revenge. Mr. Taplin's account of the proceedings observed on
+such an occasion is instructive. It runs thus: "The spirit of the dead
+is not considered to have been appeased until his relatives have avenged
+his death. They will kill the sorcerer who has caused it if they can
+catch him; but generally they cannot catch him, and often do not wish
+it. Most probably he belongs to some other tribe of the Narrinyeri.
+Messengers pass between the tribes relative to the affair, and the
+friends of the accused person at last formally curse the dead man and
+all his dead relatives. This constitutes a _casus belli_. Arrangements
+are forthwith made for a pitched battle, and the two tribes meet in
+company with their respective allies. The tribe to which the dead man
+belongs weep and make a great lamentation for him, and the opposing
+tribe sets some fellows to dance about and play antics in derision of
+their enemies. Then the whole tribe will set up a great laugh by way of
+further provocation. If there is any other cause of animosity between
+the tribes besides the matter of avenging the dead there will now be a
+pretty severe fight with spears. If, however, the tribes have nothing
+but the dead man to fight about, they will probably throw a few spears,
+indulge in considerable abuse of each other, perhaps one or two will get
+slightly wounded, and then some of the old men will declare that enough
+has been done. The dead man is considered to have been appeased by the
+efforts of his friends to avenge his death by fighting, and the two
+tribes are friendly again. In such a case the fight is a mere
+ceremony."[175] Thus among the Narrinyeri the duty of blood revenge was
+often supposed to be sufficiently discharged by a sham fight performed
+apparently for the satisfaction of the ghost, who was supposed to be
+looking on and to be gratified by the sight of his friends hurling
+spears at the author of his death. Merciful pretences of the same sort
+have been practised by other savages in order to satisfy the vengeful
+ghost without the effusion of blood. Examples of them will come before
+us later on.[176]
+
+[Sidenote: Magical virtue ascribed to the hair of the dead.]
+
+However, the attitude of the Narrinyeri towards their dead was not
+purely one of fear and aversion. They imagined that they could derive
+certain benefits from their departed kinsfolk, and the channel through
+which these benefits flowed was furnished by their hair. They cut off
+the hair of the dead and spun it into a cord, and this cord was commonly
+worn by the men as a head-band. They said that thereby they "smelled the
+dead," and that the smell made their eyes large and their sight keen, so
+that in a fight they could see the spears coming and could parry or
+avoid them.[177] Similar magical virtues are ascribed to the hair of the
+dead by the Arunta. Among them the hair of a dead man is cut off and
+made into a magic girdle, which is a valued possession and is only worn
+when a man is going out to engage in a tribal fight or to stalk a foe
+for the purpose of destroying him by witchcraft. The girdle is supposed
+to be endowed with magic power and to impart to its possessor all the
+warlike qualities of the dead man from whose hair it was made; in
+particular, it is thought to ensure accuracy of aim in the wearer, while
+at the same time it destroys that of his adversary.[178] Hence the
+girdle is worn by the man who takes the lead in avenging the death of
+the deceased on his supposed murderer; the mere sight of it, they think,
+so terrifies the victim that his legs tremble under him, he becomes
+incapable of fighting, and is easily speared.[179]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief that the souls of the dead go up to the sky.]
+
+Among the tribes of South-eastern Australia the Narrinyeri were not
+alone in holding the curious belief that the souls of the dead go up
+into the sky to live there for ever, but that their ghosts come down
+again from time to time, roam about their old haunts on earth, and
+communicate with the living. This, for example, was the belief of the
+Dieri, the Buandik, the Kurnai, and the Kulin tribes.[180] The Buandik
+thought that everything in skyland was better than on earth; a fat
+kangaroo, for example, was compared to a kangaroo of heaven, where, of
+course, the animals might be expected to abound.[181] The Kulin imagined
+that the spirits of the dead ascended to heaven by the bright rays of
+the setting sun.[182] The Wailwun natives in New South Wales used to
+bury their dead in hollow trees, and when they dropped the body into its
+place, the bearers and the bystanders joined in a loud whirring sound,
+like the rush of the wind. They said that this represented the upward
+flight of the soul to the sky.[183]
+
+[Sidenote: Appearance of the dead to the living, especially in dreams.]
+
+With regard to the ghosts on earth, some tribes of South-eastern
+Australia believe that they can be seen by the living, can partake of
+food, and can warm themselves at a fire. It is especially the graves,
+where their mouldering bodies are deposited, that these restless spirits
+are supposed to haunt; it is there that they shew themselves either to
+people generally or to such as have the second sight.[184] But it is
+most commonly in dreams that they appear to the living and hold
+communication with them. Often these communications are believed to be
+helpful. Thus the tribes of the Wotjobaluk nation thought that the
+ghosts of their dead relations could visit them in sleep to protect
+them. A Mukjarawaint man told Dr. Howitt that his father came to him in
+a dream and warned him to beware or he would be killed. This, the man
+believed, was the saving of his life; for he afterwards came to the
+place which he had seen in his dream; whereupon, instead of going on, he
+turned back, so that his enemies, who might have been waiting for him
+there, did not catch him.[185] Another man informed Dr. Howitt that his
+dead uncle appeared to him in sleep and taught him charms against
+sickness and other evils; and the Chepara tribe similarly believed that
+male ancestors visited sleepers and imparted to them charms to avert
+evil magic.[186]
+
+[Sidenote: Savage faith in the truth of dreams. Association of the stars
+with the souls of the dead.]
+
+Such notions follow naturally from the savage theory of dreams. Almost
+all savages appear to believe firmly in the truth of dreams; they fail
+to draw the distinction, which to us seems obvious, between the
+imaginary creations of the mind in sleep and the waking realities of the
+physical world. Whatever they dream of must, they think, be actually
+existing; for have they not seen it with their own eyes? To argue that
+the visions of sleep have no real existence is, therefore, in their
+opinion, to argue against the plain evidence of their senses; and they
+naturally treat such exaggerated scepticism with incredulity and
+contempt. Hence when they dream of their dead friends and relations they
+necessarily conclude that these persons are still alive somewhere and
+somehow, though they do not commonly appear by daylight to people in
+their waking hours. Unquestionably this savage faith in the reality of
+dreams has been one of the principal sources of the widespread, almost
+universal, belief in the survival of the human soul after death. It
+explains why ghosts are supposed to appear rather by night than by day,
+since it is chiefly by night that men sleep and dream dreams. Perhaps it
+may also partly account for the association of the stars with the souls
+of the dead. For if the dead appear to the living mainly in the hours of
+darkness, it seems not unnatural to imagine that the bright points of
+light which then bespangle the canopy of heaven are either the souls of
+the departed or fires kindled by them in their home aloft. For example,
+the Central Australian aborigines commonly suppose the stars to be the
+camp-fires of natives who live on the banks of the great river which we
+civilised men, by a survival of primitive mythology, call the Milky Way.
+However, these rude savages, we are told, as a general rule "appear to
+pay very little attention to the stars in detail, probably because they
+enter very little into anything which is connected with their daily
+life, and more especially with their food supply."[187] The same
+observation which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen here make as to the natives
+of Central Australia might be applied to most savages who have remained
+in the purely hunting stage of social development. Such men are not much
+addicted to star-gazing, since the stars have little or nothing to tell
+them that they wish to know. It is not till people have betaken
+themselves to sowing and reaping crops that they begin to scan the
+heavens more carefully in order to determine the season of sowing by
+observation of the great celestial time-keepers, the rising and setting
+of certain constellations, above all, apparently, of the Pleiades.[188]
+In short, the rise of agriculture favours the rise of astronomy.
+
+[Sidenote: Creed of the South-eastern Australians touching the dead.]
+
+But to return to the ideas of the Australian aborigines concerning the
+dead, we may say of the natives of the south-eastern part of the
+continent, in the words of Dr. Howitt, that "there is a universal belief
+in the existence of the human spirit after death, as a ghost, which is
+able to communicate with the living when they sleep. It finds its way to
+the sky-country, where it lives in a land like the earth, only more
+fertile, better watered, and plentifully supplied with game."[189] This
+belief is very different from that of the Central Australian natives,
+who think that the souls of the dead tarry on earth in their old
+familiar haunts until the time comes for them to be born again into the
+world. Of the two different creeds that of the south-eastern tribes may
+be regarded as the more advanced, since it admits that the dead do not
+return to life, and that their disembodied spirits do not haunt
+perpetually a multitude of spiritual parks or reservations dotted over
+the face of the country.
+
+[Sidenote: The creed seems to form part of a general advance of culture
+in this part of the continent.]
+
+But how are we to account for this marked difference of belief between
+the natives of the Centre and the natives of the South-east? Perhaps the
+most probable explanation is that the creed of the south-eastern tribes
+in this respect is part of a general advance of culture brought about by
+the more favourable natural conditions under which they live as compared
+with the forlorn state of the rude inhabitants of the Central deserts.
+That advance of culture manifests itself in a variety of ways. On the
+material side it is seen in more substantial and permanent dwellings and
+in warmer and better clothing. On the social side it is seen in an
+incipient tendency to the rise of a regular chieftainship, a thing which
+is quite unknown among the democratic or rather oligarchic savages of
+the Centre, who are mainly governed by the old men in council.[190] But
+the rise of chieftainship is a great step in political progress; since a
+monarchical government of some sort appears to be essential to the
+emergence of mankind from savagery. On the whole, then, the beliefs of
+the South-eastern Australian aborigines seem to mark a step on the
+upward road towards civilisation.
+
+[Sidenote: Possible influence of European teaching on native beliefs.]
+
+At the same time we must not forget that these beliefs may have been
+influenced by the lessons which they have learned from white settlers
+with whom in this part of Australia they have been so long in contact.
+The possibility of such a transfusion of the new wine of Europe into the
+old bottles of Australia did not escape the experienced Mr. James
+Dawson, an early settler in Victoria, who has given us a valuable
+account of the natives of that region in the old days when they were
+still comparatively little contaminated by intercourse with the whites.
+He describes as follows the views which prevailed as to the dead among
+the tribes of Western Victoria:--"After the disposal of the body of a
+good person, its shade walks about for three days; and although it
+appears to people, it holds no communication with them. Should it be
+seen and named by anyone during these three days, it instantly
+disappears. At the expiry of three days it goes off to a beautiful
+country above the clouds, abounding with kangaroo and other game, where
+life will be enjoyed for ever. Friends will meet and recognize each
+other there; but there will be no marrying, as the bodies have been left
+on earth. Children under four or five years have no souls and no future
+life. The shades of the wicked wander miserably about the earth for one
+year after death, frightening people, and then descend to Ummekulleen,
+never to return." After giving us this account of the native creed Mr.
+Dawson adds very justly: "Some of the ideas described above may possibly
+have originated with the white man, and been transmitted from Sydney by
+one tribe to another."[191] The probability of white influence on this
+particular doctrine of religion is increased by the frank confession
+which these same natives made of the religious deterioration (as they
+regarded it) which they had suffered in another direction through the
+teaching of the missionaries. On this subject, to quote again from Mr.
+Dawson, the savages are of opinion that "the good spirit, Pirnmeheeal,
+is a gigantic man, living above the clouds; and as he is of a kindly
+disposition, and harms no one, he is seldom mentioned, but always with
+respect. His voice, the thunder, is listened to with pleasure, as it
+does good to man and beast, by bringing rain, and making grass and roots
+grow for their benefit. But the aborigines say that the missionaries and
+government protectors have given them a dread of Pirnmeheeal; and they
+are sorry that the young people, and many of the old, are now afraid of
+a being who never did any harm to their forefathers."[192]
+
+[Sidenote: Vagueness and inconsistency of native beliefs as to the state
+of the dead. Custom or ritual as the interpreter of belief.]
+
+However, it is very difficult to ascertain the exact beliefs of savages
+as to the dead. The thought of the savage is apt to be vague and
+inconsistent; he neither represents his ideas clearly to his own mind
+nor can he express them lucidly to others, even if he wishes to do so.
+And his thought is not only vague and inconsistent; it is fluid and
+unstable, liable to shift and change under alien influence. For these
+and other reasons, such as the distrust of strangers and the difficulty
+of language, which often interposes a formidable barrier between savage
+man and the civilised enquirer, the domain of primitive beliefs is beset
+by so many snares and pitfalls that we might almost despair of arriving
+at the truth, were it not that we possess a clue to guide us on the dark
+and slippery way. That clue is action. While it is generally very
+difficult to ascertain what any man thinks, it is comparatively easy to
+ascertain what he does; and what a man does, not what he says, is the
+surest touchstone to his real belief. Hence when we attempt to study the
+religion of backward races, the ritual which they practise is generally
+a safer indication of their actual creed than the loudest profession of
+faith. In regard to the state of the human soul after death the beliefs
+of the Australian aborigines are clearly reflected in many of the
+customs which they observe at the death and burial of their friends and
+enemies, and it is accordingly with an account of some of these customs
+that I propose to conclude this part of my subject.
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the Australian aborigines as evidence of
+their beliefs concerning the state of the soul after death. Food placed
+on the grave for the use of the ghost and fires kindled to warm him.]
+
+Now some of the burial customs observed by the Australian savages reveal
+in the clearest manner their belief that the human soul survives the
+death of the body, that in its disembodied state it retains
+consciousness and feeling, and can do a mischief to the living; in
+short, they shew that in the opinion of these people the departed live
+in the form of dangerous ghosts. Thus, for example, when the deceased is
+a person of importance, the Dieri place food for many days on the grave,
+and in winter they kindle a fire in order that the ghost may warm
+himself at it. If the food remains untouched on the grave, they think
+that the dead is not hungry.[193] The Blanch-water section of that tribe
+fear the spirits of the dead and accordingly take steps to prevent their
+resurrection. For that purpose they tie the toes of the corpse together
+and the thumbs behind the back, which must obviously make it difficult
+for the dead man to arise in his might and pursue them. Moreover, for a
+month after the death they sweep a clear space round the grave at dusk
+every evening, and inspect it every morning. If they find any tracks on
+it, they assume that they have been made by the restless ghost in his
+nocturnal peregrinations, and accordingly they dig up his mouldering
+remains and bury them in some other place, where they hope he will sleep
+sounder.[194] The Kukata tribe think that the ghost may be thirsty, so
+they obligingly leave a drinking vessel on the grave, that he may slake
+his thirst. Also they deposit spears and other weapons on the spot,
+together with a digging-stick, which is specially intended to ward off
+evil spirits who may be on the prowl.[195] The ghosts of the natives on
+the Maranoa river were also thirsty souls, so vessels full of water were
+sometimes suspended for their use over the grave.[196] A custom of
+lighting a fire on the grave to warm the poor shivering ghost seems to
+have been not uncommon among the aboriginal Australians. The Western
+Victorians, for example, kept up large fires all night for this
+purpose.[197] In the Wiimbaio tribe two fires were kept burning for a
+whole month on the grave, one to the right and the other to the left, in
+order that the ghost might come out and warm himself at them in the
+chill night air. If they found tracks near the grave, they inferred,
+like the Dieri, that the perturbed spirit had quitted his narrow bed to
+pace to and fro in the long hours of darkness; but if no footprints were
+visible they thought that he slept in peace.[198] In some parts of
+Western Australia the natives maintained fires on the grave for more
+than a month for the convenience of the ghost; and they clearly expected
+him to come to life again, for they detached the nails from the thumb
+and forefinger of the corpse and deposited them in a small hole beside
+the grave, in order that they might know their friend at his
+resurrection.[199] The length of time during which fires were maintained
+or kindled daily on the grave is said to have varied, according to the
+estimation in which the man was held, from a few days to three or four
+years.[200] We have seen that the Dieri laid food on the grave for the
+hungry ghost to partake of, and the same custom was observed by the
+Gournditch-mara tribe.[201] However, some intelligent old aborigines of
+Western Victoria derided the custom as "white fellow's gammon."[202]
+
+[Sidenote: Property of the dead buried with them.]
+
+Further, in some tribes of South-eastern Australia it was customary to
+deposit the scanty property of the deceased, usually consisting of a few
+rude weapons or implements, on the grave or to bury it with him. Thus
+the natives of Western Victoria buried all a dead man's ornaments,
+weapons, and property with him in the grave, only reserving his stone
+axes, which were too valuable to be thus sacrificed: these were
+inherited by the next of kin.[203] The Wurunjerri also interred the
+personal property of the dead with him; if the deceased was a man, his
+spear-thrower was stuck in the ground at the head of the grave; if the
+deceased was a woman, the same thing was done with her digging-stick.
+That these implements were intended for the use of the ghost and not
+merely as headstones to mark the situation of the tomb and the sex of
+the departed, is clear from a significant exception to the custom. When
+the departed brother was a man of violent temper, who had been
+quarrelsome and a brawler in his life, no weapons were buried with him,
+obviously lest in a fit of ill-temper he should sally from the grave and
+assault people with them.[204] Similarly the Turrbal tribe, who
+deposited their dead in the forks of trees, used to leave a spear and
+club near the corpse "that the spirit of the dead might have weapons
+wherewith to kill game for his sustenance in the future state. A
+yam-stick was placed in the ground at a woman's grave, so that she might
+go away at night and seek for roots."[205] The Wolgal tribe were very
+particular about burying everything that belonged to a dead man with
+him; spears and nets, though valuable articles of property, were thus
+sacrificed; even a canoe has been known to be cut up in order that the
+pieces of it might be deposited in the grave. In fact "everything
+belonging to a dead man was put out of sight."[206] Similarly in the
+Geawe-gal tribe all the implements and inanimate property of a warrior
+were interred with him.[207] In the Gringai country not only was all a
+man's property buried with him, but every native present at the burial
+contributed something, and these contributions were piled together at
+the head of the corpse before the grave was filled in.[208] Among the
+tribes of Southern Victoria, when the grave has been dug and lined with
+fresh leaves and twigs so as to make a soft bed, the dead man's property
+is brought in two bags, and the sorcerer shakes out the contents. They
+consist of such small articles as pieces of hard stone suitable for
+cutting or paring skins, bones for boring holes, twine made of opossum
+wool, and so forth. These are placed in the grave, and the bags and rugs
+of the deceased are torn up and thrown in likewise. Then the sorcerer
+asks whether the dead man had any other property, and if he had, it is
+brought forward and laid beside the torn fragments of the bags and rugs.
+Everything that a man owned in life must be laid beside him in
+death.[209] Again, among the tribes of the Lower Murray, Lachlan, and
+Darling rivers in New South Wales, all a dead man's property, including
+his weapons and nets, was buried with his body in the grave.[210]
+Further, we are told that among the natives of Western Australia the
+weapons and personal property of the deceased are placed on the grave,
+"so that when he rises from the dead they may be ready to his
+hand."[211] In the Boulia district of Queensland the things which
+belonged to a dead man, such as his boomerangs and spears, are either
+buried with him, destroyed by fire, or sometimes, though rarely,
+distributed among his tribal brothers, but never among his
+children.[212]
+
+[Sidenote: Intention of destroying the property of the dead. The
+property of the dead not destroyed in Central Australia.]
+
+Thus among certain tribes of Australia, especially in the south-eastern
+part of the continent, it appears that the custom of burying or
+destroying a dead man's property has been very common. That the
+intention of the custom in some cases is to supply the supposed needs of
+the ghost, seems to be fairly certain; but we may doubt whether this
+explanation would apply to the practice of burning or otherwise
+destroying the things which had belonged to the deceased. More probably
+such destruction springs from an overpowering dread of the ghost and a
+wish to sever all connexion with him, so that he may have no excuse for
+returning and haunting the survivors, as he might do if his property
+were either kept by them or deposited in the grave. Whatever the motive
+for the burial or destruction of a dead man's property may be, the
+custom appears not to prevail among the tribes of Central Australia. In
+the eastern Arunta tribe, indeed, it is said that sometimes a little
+wooden vessel used in camp for holding small objects may be buried with
+the man, but this is the only instance which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+could hear of in which any article of ordinary use is buried in the
+grave. Far from wasting property in that way, these economical savages
+preserve even a man's personal ornaments, such as his necklaces,
+armlets, and the fur string which he wore round his head; indeed, as we
+have seen, they go so far as to cut off the hair from the head of the
+deceased and to keep it for magical uses.[213] In the Warramunga tribe
+all the belongings of a dead man go to the tribal brothers of his
+mother.[214]
+
+[Sidenote: Property of the dead hung up on trees, then washed and
+distributed. Economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the dead.]
+
+The difference in this respect between the practice of the Central
+tribes and that of the tribes nearer the sea, especially in Victoria and
+New South Wales, is very notable. A custom intermediate between the two
+is observed by some tribes of the Darling River, who hang up the
+weapons, nets, and other property of the deceased on trees for about two
+months, then wash them, and distribute them among the relations.[215]
+The reason for hanging the things up and washing them is no doubt to rid
+them of the infection of death in order that they may be used with
+safety by the survivors. Such a custom points clearly to a growing fear
+of the dead; and that fear or reverence comes out still more clearly in
+the practice of either burying the property of the dead with them or
+destroying it altogether, which is observed by the aborigines of
+Victoria and other parts of Australia who live under more favourable
+conditions of life than the inhabitants of the Central deserts. This
+confirms the conclusion which we have reached on other grounds, that
+among the aboriginal population of Australia favourable natural
+conditions in respect of climate, food, and water have exercised a most
+important influence in stimulating social progress in many directions,
+and not least in the direction of religion. At the same time, while we
+recognise that the incipient tendency to a worship of the dead which may
+be detected in these regions marks a step forward in religious
+development, we must acknowledge that the practice of burying or
+destroying the property of the dead, which is one of the ways in which
+the tendency manifests itself, is, regarded from the side of economic
+progress, a decided step backward. It marks, in fact, the beginning of a
+melancholy aberration of the human mind, which has led mankind to
+sacrifice the real interests of the living to the imaginary interests of
+the dead. With the general advance of society and the accompanying
+accumulation of property these sacrifices have at certain stages of
+evolution become heavier and heavier, as the demands of the ghosts
+became more and more exacting. The economic waste which the belief in
+the immortality of the soul has entailed on the world is incalculable.
+When we contemplate that waste in its small beginnings among the rude
+savages of Australia it appears insignificant enough; the world is not
+much the poorer for the loss of a parcel of boomerangs, spears, fur
+string, and skin rugs. But when we pass from the custom in this its
+feeble source and follow it as it swells in volume through the nations
+of the world till it attains the dimensions of a mighty river of wasted
+labour, squandered treasure, and spilt blood, we cannot but wonder at
+the strange mixture of good and evil in the affairs of mankind, seeing
+in what we justly call progress so much hardly earned gain side by side
+with so much gratuitous loss, such immense additions to the substantial
+value of life to be set off against such enormous sacrifices to the
+shadow of a shade.
+
+[Footnote 160: W. E. Roth, _North Queensland Ethnography, Bulletin No.
+5, Superstition, Magic, and Medicine_ (Brisbane, 1903), pp. 18, 23, §§
+68, 83.]
+
+[Footnote 161: Homer, _Odyssey_, xix. 163.]
+
+[Footnote 162: W. E. Roth, _ll. cc._]
+
+[Footnote 163: W. E. Roth, _North Queensland Ethnography, Bulletin No.
+5_ (Brisbane, 1903), p. 29. § 116.]
+
+[Footnote 164: W. E. Roth. _op. cit._ p. 18, § 68.]
+
+[Footnote 165: W. E. Roth, _op. cit._ pp. 17, 29, §§ 65, 116.]
+
+[Footnote 166: W. E. Roth, _op. cit._ p. 17, § 65.]
+
+[Footnote 167: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_ (Melbourne, Sydney,
+and Adelaide, 1881), pp. 110 _sq._; A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of
+South-East Australia_ (London, 1904), p. 442.]
+
+[Footnote 168: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 445.]
+
+[Footnote 169: (Sir) George Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery in North-West and Western Australia_ (London, 1841), i.
+301-303.]
+
+[Footnote 170: Lieutenant-Colonel David Collins, _An Account of the
+English Colony in New South Wales_, Second Edition (London, 1804), p.
+354.]
+
+[Footnote 171: Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," in _Native Tribes of
+South Australia_ (Adelaide, 1879), pp. 18 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 172: Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," _op. cit._ pp. 20
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 173: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ p. 20.]
+
+[Footnote 174: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ pp. 19 _sq._, 21.]
+
+[Footnote 175: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ p. 21.]
+
+[Footnote 176: See below, pp. 235 _sqq._, 327 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 177: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ p. 21.]
+
+[Footnote 178: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 538 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 179: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 544 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 180: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_,
+pp. 434, 436, 437, 438. Compare E. J. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of
+Discovery into Central Australia_ (London, 1845), ii. 357.]
+
+[Footnote 181: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 434.]
+
+[Footnote 182: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 438.]
+
+[Footnote 183: Rev. W. Ridley, _Kamilaroi_ (Sydney, 1875), p. 160.]
+
+[Footnote 184: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_,
+pp. 434, 438, 439; J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 185: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 435.]
+
+[Footnote 186: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 437.]
+
+[Footnote 187: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 628.]
+
+[Footnote 188: As to the place occupied by the Pleiades in primitive
+calendars, see _Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, i. 309-319.]
+
+[Footnote 189: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_,
+pp. 439 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 190: See _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 314 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 191: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 51. A man of the
+Ta-ta-thi tribe in New South Wales informed Mr. A. L. P. Cameron that
+the natives believed in a pit of fire where bad men were roasted after
+death. This reported belief, resting apparently on the testimony of a
+single informant, may without doubt be ascribed to the influence of
+Christian teaching. See A. L. P. Cameron, "Notes on some Tribes of New
+South Wales," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xiv. (1885)
+pp. 364 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 192: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 49.]
+
+[Footnote 193: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+448.]
+
+[Footnote 194: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._. p. 449. Compare E. M. Curr,
+_The Australian Race_, i. 87: "The object sought in tying up the remains
+of the dead is to prevent the deceased from escaping from the tomb and
+frightening or injuring the survivors."]
+
+[Footnote 195: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 451.]
+
+[Footnote 196: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 467.]
+
+[Footnote 197: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 198: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+452.]
+
+[Footnote 199: R. Salvado, _Mémoires historiques sur l' Australie_
+(Paris, 1854), p. 261; _Missions Catholiques_, x. (1878) p. 247. For
+more evidence as to the lighting of fires for this purpose see A. W.
+Howitt, _op. cit._ pp. 455, 470.]
+
+[Footnote 200: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, New Series, iii. (1865) p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 201: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 455.]
+
+[Footnote 202: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, pp. 50 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 203: J. Dawson, _op. cit._ p. 63.]
+
+[Footnote 204: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+458.]
+
+[Footnote 205: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 470.]
+
+[Footnote 206: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ pp. 461 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 207: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 464.]
+
+[Footnote 208: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 464.]
+
+[Footnote 209: R. Brough Smyth, _The Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 104.]
+
+[Footnote 210: P. Beveridge, "Of the Aborigines Inhabiting the Great
+Lacustrine and Riverine Depression of the Lower Murray, Lower
+Murrumbidgee, Lower Lachlan, and Lower Darling," _Journal and
+Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales_, xvii. (1883) p.
+29.]
+
+[Footnote 211: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, New Series, iii. (1865) p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 212: W. E. Roth, _Ethnological Studies among the
+North-West-Central Queensland Aborigines_ (Brisbane and London, 1897),
+p. 164.]
+
+[Footnote 213: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 466, 497 _sq._, 538 _sq._ See above, p. 138.]
+
+[Footnote 214: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 524.]
+
+[Footnote 215: F. Bonney, "On some Customs of the Aborigines of the
+River Darling, New South Wales," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiii. (1884) p. 135.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE VII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES OF AUSTRALIA
+(_concluded_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Attention to the comfort of the dead. Huts erected on graves
+for the use of the ghosts.]
+
+In the last lecture I shewed that in the maritime regions of Australia,
+where the conditions of life are more favourable than in the Central
+deserts, we may detect the germs of a worship of the dead in certain
+attentions which the living pay to the spirits of the departed, for
+example by kindling fires on the grave for the ghost to warm himself at,
+by leaving food and water for him to eat and drink, and by depositing
+his weapons and other property in the tomb for his use in the life after
+death. Another mark of respect shewn to the dead is the custom of
+erecting a hut on the grave for the accommodation of the ghost. Thus
+among the tribes of South Australia we are told that "upon the mounds,
+or tumuli, over the graves, huts of bark, or boughs, are generally
+erected to shelter the dead from the rain; they are also frequently
+wound round with netting."[216] Again, in Western Australia a small hut
+of rushes, grass, and so forth is said to have been set up by the
+natives over the grave.[217] Among the tribes of the Lower Murray, Lower
+Lachlan, and Lower Darling rivers, when a person died who had been
+highly esteemed in life, a neat hut was erected over his grave so as to
+cover it entirely. The hut was of oval shape, about five feet high, and
+roofed with thatch, which was firmly tied to the framework by cord many
+hundreds of yards in length. Sometimes the whole hut was enveloped in a
+net. At the eastern end of the hut a small opening was left just large
+enough to allow a full-grown man to creep in, and the floor was covered
+with grass, which was renewed from time to time as it became withered.
+Each of these graves was enclosed by a fence of brushwood forming a
+diamond-shaped enclosure, within which the tomb stood exactly in the
+middle. All the grass within the fence was neatly shaved off and the
+ground swept quite clean. Sepulchres of this sort were kept up for two
+or three years, after which they were allowed to fall into disrepair,
+and when a few more years had gone by the very sites of them were
+forgotten.[218] The intention of erecting huts on graves is not
+mentioned in these cases, but on analogy we may conjecture that they are
+intended for the convenience and comfort of the ghost. This is confirmed
+by an account given of a native burial on the Vasse River in Western
+Australia. We are told that when the grave had been filled in, the
+natives piled logs on it to a considerable height and then constructed a
+hut upon the logs, after which one of the male relations went into the
+hut and said, "I sit in his house."[219] Thus it would seem that the hut
+on the grave is regarded as the house of the dead man. If only these
+sepulchral huts were kept up permanently, they might develop into
+something like temples, in which the spirits of the departed might be
+invoked and propitiated with prayer and sacrifice. It is thus that the
+great round huts, in which the remains of dead kings of Uganda are
+deposited, have grown into sanctuaries or shrines, where the spirits of
+the deceased monarchs are consulted as oracles through the medium of
+priests.[220] But in Australia this development is prevented by the
+simple forgetfulness of the savages. A few years suffice with them to
+wipe out the memory of the deceased and with it his chance of developing
+into an ancestral deity. Like most savages, the Australian aborigines
+seem to fear only the ghosts of the recently departed; one writer tells
+us that they have no fear of the ghost of a man who has been dead say
+forty years.[221]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the dead and precautions taken by the living against
+them.]
+
+The burial customs of the Australian aborigines which I have described
+betray not only a belief in the existence of the ghost, but also a
+certain regard for his comfort and convenience. However, we may suspect
+that in most, if not in all, cases the predominant motive of these
+attentions is fear rather than affection. The survivors imagine that any
+want of respect for the dead, any neglect of his personal comforts in
+the grave, would excite his resentment and draw down on them his
+vengeance. That these savages are really actuated by fear of the dead is
+expressly affirmed of some tribes. Thus we are told that the Yuin "were
+always afraid that the dead man might come out of the grave and follow
+them."[222] After burying a body the Ngarigo were wont to cross a river
+in order to prevent the ghost from pursuing them;[223] obviously they
+shared the common opinion that ghosts for some reason are unable to
+cross water. The Wakelbura took other measures to throw the poor ghost
+off the scent. They marked all the trees in a circle round the place
+where the dead man was buried; so that when he emerged from the grave
+and set off in pursuit of his retiring relations, he would follow the
+marks on the trees in a circle and always come back to the point from
+which he had started. And to make assurance doubly sure they put coals
+in the dead man's ears, which, by bunging up these apertures, were
+supposed to keep his ghost in the body till his friends had got a good
+start away from him. As a further precaution they lit fires and put
+bushes in the forks of trees, with the idea that the ghost would roost
+in the bushes and warm himself at the fires, while they were hastening
+away.[224] Here, therefore, we see that the real motive for kindling
+fires for the use of the dead is fear, not affection. In this respect
+the burial customs of the tribes at the Herbert River are still more
+significant. These savages buried with the dead man his weapons, his
+ornaments, and indeed everything he had used in life; moreover, they
+built a hut on the grave, put a drinking-vessel in the hut, and cleared
+a path from it down to the water for the use of the ghost; and often
+they placed food and water on the grave. So far, these measures might be
+interpreted as marks of pure and disinterested affection for the soul of
+the departed. But such an interpretation is totally excluded by the
+ferocious treatment which these savages meted out to the corpse. To
+frighten the spirit, lest he should haunt the camp, the father or
+brother of the deceased, or the husband, if it was a woman, took a club
+and mauled the body with such violence that he often smashed the bones;
+further, he generally broke both its legs in order to prevent it from
+wandering of nights; and as if that were not enough, he bored holes in
+the stomach, the shoulders, and the lungs, and filled the holes with
+stones, so that even if the poor ghost should succeed by a desperate
+effort in dragging his mangled body out of the grave, he would be so
+weighed down by this ballast of stones that he could not get very far.
+However, after roaming up and down in this pitiable condition for a time
+in their old haunts, the spirits were supposed at last to go up aloft to
+the Milky Way.[225] The Kwearriburra tribe, on the Lynd River, in
+Queensland, also took forcible measures to prevent the resurrection of
+the dead. Whenever a person died, they cut off his or her head, roasted
+it in a fire on the grave, and when it was thoroughly charred they
+smashed it in bits and left the fragments among the hot coals. They
+calculated that when the ghost rose from the grave with the view of
+following the tribe, he would miss his head and go groping blindly about
+for it till he scorched himself in the embers of the fire and was glad
+to shrink back into his narrow bed.[226]
+
+Thus even among those Australian tribes which have progressed furthest
+in the direction of religion, such approaches as they have made towards
+a worship of the dead appear to be determined far more by fear than by
+affection and reverence. And we are told that it is the nearest
+relations and the most influential men whose ghosts are most
+dreaded.[227]
+
+[Sidenote: Cuttings and brandings of the flesh of the living in honour
+of the dead.]
+
+There is another custom observed by the Australian aborigines in
+mourning which deserves to be mentioned. We all know that the Israelites
+were forbidden to make cuttings in their flesh for the dead.[228] The
+custom was probably practised by the heathen Canaanites, as it has been
+by savages in various parts of the world. Nowhere, perhaps, has the
+practice prevailed more generally or been carried out with greater
+severity than in aboriginal Australia. For example, with regard to the
+tribes in the central part of Victoria we are told that "the parents of
+the deceased lacerate themselves fearfully, especially if it be an only
+son whose loss they deplore. The father beats and cuts his head with a
+tomahawk until he utters bitter groans. The mother sits by the fire and
+burns her breasts and abdomen with a small fire-stick till she wails
+with pain; then she replaces the stick in the fire, to use again when
+the pain is less severe. This continues for hours daily, until the time
+of lamentation is completed; sometimes the burns thus inflicted are so
+severe as to cause death."[229] It is especially the women, and above
+all the widows, who torture themselves in this way. Speaking of the
+tribes of Victoria, a writer tells us that on the death of her husband a
+widow, "becoming frantic, seizes fire-sticks and burns her breasts,
+arms, legs, and thighs. Rushing from one place to another, and intent
+only on injuring herself, and seeming to delight in the self-inflicted
+torture, it would be rash and vain to interrupt her. She would fiercely
+turn on her nearest relative or friend and burn him with her brands.
+When exhausted, and when she can scarcely walk, she yet endeavours to
+kick the embers of the fire, and to throw them about. Sitting down, she
+takes the ashes in her hands, rubs them into her wounds, and then
+scratches her face (the only part not touched by the fire-sticks) until
+the blood mingles with the ashes which partly hide her cruel
+wounds."[230] Among the Kurnai of South-eastern Victoria the relations
+of the dead would cut and gash themselves with sharp stones and
+tomahawks until their heads and bodies streamed with blood.[231] In the
+Mukjarawaint tribe, when a man died, his kinsfolk wept over him and
+slashed themselves with tomahawks and other sharp instruments for about
+a week.[232] In the tribes of the Lower Murray and Lower Darling rivers
+mourners scored their backs and arms, sometimes even their faces, with
+red-hot brands, which raised hideous ulcers; afterwards they flung
+themselves prone on the grave, tore out their hair by handfuls, rubbed
+earth over their heads and bodies in great profusion, and ripped up
+their green ulcers till the mingled blood and grime presented a ghastly
+spectacle. These self-inflicted sores remained long unhealed.[233] Among
+the Kamilaroi, a large tribe of eastern New South Wales, the mourners,
+and especially the women, used to cut their heads with tomahawks and
+allow the blood to dry on them.[234] Speaking of a native burial on the
+Murray River, a writer says that "around the bier were many women,
+relations of the deceased, wailing and lamenting bitterly, and
+lacerating their thighs, backs, and breasts, with shells or flint, until
+the blood flowed copiously from the gashes."[235] In the Boulia district
+of Queensland women in mourning score their thighs, both inside and
+outside, with sharp stones or bits of glass, so as to make a series of
+parallel cuts; in neighbouring districts of Queensland the men make much
+deeper cross-shaped cuts on their thighs.[236] In the Arunta tribe of
+Central Australia a man is bound to cut himself on the shoulder in
+mourning for his father-in-law; if he does not do so, his wife may be
+given away to another man in order to appease the wrath of the ghost at
+his undutiful son-in-law. Arunta men regularly bear on their shoulders
+the raised scars which shew that they have done their duty by their dead
+fathers-in-law.[237] The female relations of a dead man in the Arunta
+tribe also cut and hack themselves in token of sorrow, working
+themselves up into a sort of frenzy as they do so; yet in all their
+apparent excitement they take care never to wound a vital part, but vent
+their fury on their scalps, their shoulders, and their legs.[238]
+
+[Sidenote: Cuttings for the dead among the Warramunga.]
+
+In the Warramunga tribe of Central Australia Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+witnessed the mourning for a dead man. Even before the sufferer had
+breathed his last the lamentations and self-inflicted wounds began. When
+it was known that the end was near, all the native men ran at full speed
+to the spot, and Messrs. Spencer and Gillen followed them to see what
+was to be seen. What they saw, or part of what they saw, was this. Some
+of the women, who had gathered from all directions, were lying prostrate
+on the body of the dying man, while others were standing or kneeling
+around, digging the sharp ends of yam-sticks into the crown of their
+heads, from which the blood streamed down over their faces, while all
+the time they kept up a loud continuous wail. Many of the men, rushing
+up to the scene of action, flung themselves also higgledy-piggledy on
+the sufferer, the women rising and making way for them, till nothing was
+to be seen but a struggling mass of naked bodies all mixed up together.
+Presently up came a man yelling and brandishing a stone knife. On
+reaching the spot he suddenly gashed both his thighs with the knife,
+cutting right across the muscles, so that, unable to stand, he dropped
+down on the top of the struggling bodies, till his mother, wife, and
+sisters dragged him out of the scrimmage, and immediately applied their
+mouths to his gaping wounds, while he lay exhausted and helpless on the
+ground. Gradually the struggling mass of dusky bodies untwined itself,
+disclosing the unfortunate sick man, who was the object, or rather the
+victim, of this well-meant demonstration of affection and sorrow. If he
+had been ill before, he was much worse when his friends left him: indeed
+it was plain that he had not long to live. Still the weeping and wailing
+went on; the sun set, darkness fell on the camp, and later in the
+evening the man died. Then the wailing rose louder than before, and men
+and women, apparently frantic with grief, rushed about cutting
+themselves with knives and sharp-pointed sticks, while the women
+battered each other's heads with clubs, no one attempting to ward off
+either cuts or blows. An hour later a funeral procession set out by
+torchlight through the darkness, carrying the body to a wood about a
+mile off, where it was laid on a platform of boughs in a low gum-tree.
+When day broke next morning, not a sign of human habitation was to be
+seen in the camp where the man had died. All the people had removed
+their rude huts to some distance, leaving the place of death solitary;
+for nobody wished to meet the ghost of the deceased, who would certainly
+be hovering about, along with the spirit of the living man who had
+caused his death by evil magic, and who might be expected to come to the
+spot in the outward form of an animal to gloat over the scene of his
+crime. But in the new camp the ground was strewed with men lying
+prostrate, their thighs gashed with the wounds which they had inflicted
+on themselves with their own hands. They had done their duty by the dead
+and would bear to the end of their life the deep scars on their thighs
+as badges of honour. On one man Messrs. Spencer and Gillen counted the
+dints of no less than twenty-three wounds which he had inflicted on
+himself at various times. Meantime the women had resumed the duty of
+lamentation. Forty or fifty of them sat down in groups of five or six,
+weeping and wailing frantically with their arms round each other, while
+the actual and tribal wives, mothers, wives' mothers, daughters,
+sisters, mothers' mothers, sisters' husbands' mothers, and
+grand-daughters, according to custom, once more cut their scalps open
+with yam-sticks, and the widows afterwards in addition seared the scalp
+wounds with red-hot fire-sticks.
+
+[Sidenote: Cuttings for the dead strictly regulated by custom.]
+
+In these mourning customs, wild and extravagant as the expression of
+sorrow appears to be, everything is regulated by certain definite rules;
+and a woman who did not thus maul herself when she ought to do so would
+be severely punished, or even killed, by her brother. Similarly with the
+men, it is only those who stand in certain relationships to the deceased
+who must cut and hack themselves in his honour, and these relationships
+are determined by the particular exogamous class to which the dead man
+happened to belong. Of such classes there are eight in the Warramunga
+tribe. On the occasion described by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen it was a
+man of the Tjunguri class who died; and the men who gashed their thighs
+stood to him in one or other of the following relationships: grandfather
+on the mother's side, mother's brother, brother of the dead man's wife,
+and her mother's brother.[239]
+
+[Sidenote: The cuttings and brandings which mourners inflict on
+themselves may be intended to convince the ghost of the sincerity of
+their sorrow.]
+
+We naturally ask, What motive have these savages for inflicting all this
+voluntary and, as it seems to us, wholly superfluous suffering on
+themselves? It can hardly be that these wounds and burns are merely a
+natural and unfeigned expression of grief. We have seen that by
+experienced observers such extravagant demonstrations of sorrow are set
+down rather to fear than to affection. Similarly Messrs. Spencer and
+Gillen suggest that at least one motive is a fear entertained by the
+native lest, if he does not make a sufficient display of grief, the
+ghost of the dead man will be offended and do him a mischief.[240] In
+the Kaitish tribe of Central Australia it is believed that if a woman
+does not keep her body covered with ashes from the camp fire during the
+whole time of mourning, the spirit of her deceased husband, who
+constantly follows her about, will kill her and strip all the flesh from
+her bones.[241] Again, in the Arunta tribe mourners smear themselves
+with white pipeclay, and the motive for this custom is said to be to
+render themselves more conspicuous, so that the ghost may see and be
+satisfied that he is being properly mourned for.[242] Thus the fear of
+the ghost, who, at least among the Australian aborigines, is commonly of
+a jealous temper and stands very firmly on his supposed rights, may
+suffice to explain the practice of self-mutilation at mourning.
+
+[Sidenote: Custom of allowing the blood of mourners to drip on the
+corpse or into the grave.]
+
+But it is possible that another motive underlies the drawing of blood on
+these occasions. For it is to be observed that the blood of the mourners
+is often allowed to drop directly either on the dead body or into the
+grave. Thus, for example, among the tribes on the River Darling several
+men used to stand by the open grave and cut each other's heads with a
+boomerang; then they held their bleeding heads over the grave so that
+the blood dripped on the corpse lying in it. If the deceased was highly
+esteemed, the bleeding was repeated after some earth had been thrown on
+the body.[243] Among the Arunta it is customary for the women kinsfolk
+of the dead to cut their own and each other's heads so severely with
+clubs and digging-sticks that blood streams from them on the grave.[244]
+Again, at a burial on the Vasse River, in Western Australia, a writer
+describes how, when the grave was dug, the natives placed the corpse
+beside it, then "gashed their thighs, and at the flowing of the blood
+they all said, 'I have brought blood,' and they stamped the foot
+forcibly on the ground, sprinkling the blood around them; then wiping
+the wounds with a wisp of leaves, they threw it, bloody as it was, on
+the dead man."[245] With these Australian practices we may compare a
+custom observed by the civilised Greeks of antiquity. Every year the
+Peloponnesian lads lashed themselves on the grave of Pelops at Olympia,
+till the blood ran down their backs as a libation in honour of the dead
+man.[246]
+
+[Sidenote: The blood intended to strengthen the dead.]
+
+Now what is the intention of thus applying the blood of the living to
+the dead or pouring it into the grave? So far as the ancient Greeks are
+concerned the answer is not doubtful. We know from Homer that the ghosts
+of the dead were supposed to drink the blood that was offered to them
+and to be strengthened by the draught.[247] Similarly with the
+Australian savages, their object can hardly be any other than that of
+strengthening the spirit of the dead; for these aborigines are in the
+habit of giving human blood to the sick and the aged to drink for the
+purpose of restoring them to health and strength;[248] hence it would be
+natural for them to imagine that they could refresh and fortify the
+feeble ghost in like manner. Perhaps the blood was intended specially to
+strengthen the spirits of the dead for the new birth or reincarnation,
+to which so many of these savages look forward.
+
+[Sidenote: Custom of burying people in the place where they were born.
+The custom perhaps intended to facilitate the rebirth of the soul.]
+
+The same motive may possibly explain the custom observed by some
+Australian tribes of burying people, as far as possible, at the place
+where they were born. Thus in regard to the tribes of Western Victoria
+we are informed that "dying persons, especially those dying from old
+age, generally express an earnest desire to be taken to their
+birthplace, that they may die and be buried there. If possible, these
+wishes are always complied with by the relatives and friends. Parents
+will point out the spot where they were born, so that when they become
+old and infirm, their children may know where they wish their bodies to
+be disposed of."[249] Again, some tribes in the north and north-east of
+Victoria "are said to be more than ordinarily scrupulous in interring
+the dead. If practicable, they will bury the corpse near the spot where,
+as a child, it first drew breath. A mother will carry a dead infant for
+weeks, in the hope of being able to bury it near the place where it was
+born; and a dead man will be conveyed a long distance, in order that the
+last rites may be performed in a manner satisfactory to the tribe."[250]
+Another writer, speaking of the Australian aborigines in general, says:
+"By what I could learn, it is considered proper by many tribes that a
+black should be buried at or near the spot where he or she was born, and
+for this reason, when a black becomes seriously ill, the invalid is
+carried a long distance to these certain spots to die, as in this case.
+They apparently object to place a body in strange ground." The same
+writer mentions the case of a blackfellow, who began digging a grave
+close beside the kitchen door of a Mr. Campbell. When Mr. Campbell
+remonstrated with him, the native replied that he had no choice, for the
+dead man had been born on that very spot. With much difficulty Mr.
+Campbell persuaded him to bury his deceased friend a little further off
+from the kitchen door.[251] A practice of this sort would be
+intelligible on the theory of the Central Australians, who imagine that
+the spirits of all the dead return to the very spots where they entered
+into their mothers' wombs, and that they wait there until another
+opportunity presents itself to them of being born again into the world.
+For if people really believe, as do many Australian tribes, that when
+they die they will afterwards come to life again as infants, it is
+perfectly natural that they should take steps to ensure and facilitate
+the new birth. The Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes of Central Australia do
+this in the case of dead children. These savages draw a sharp
+distinction between young children and very old men and women. When very
+old people die, their bodies are at once buried in the ground, but the
+bodies of children are placed in wooden troughs and deposited on
+platforms of boughs in the branches of trees, and the motive for
+treating a dead child thus is, we are informed, the hope "that before
+very long its spirit may come back again and enter into the body of a
+woman--in all probability that of its former mother."[252] The reason
+for drawing this distinction between the young and the old by disposing
+of their bodies in different fashions, is explained with great
+probability by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen as follows: "In the Unmatjera
+and Kaitish tribes, while every old man has certain privileges denied to
+the younger men, yet if he be decidedly infirm and unable to take his
+part in the performance of ceremonies which are often closely
+concerned--or so at least the natives believe them to be--with the
+general welfare of the tribe, then the feeling undoubtedly is that there
+is no need to pay any very special respect to his remains. This feeling
+is probably vaguely associated with the idea that, as his body is
+infirm, so to a corresponding extent will his spirit part be, and
+therefore they have no special need to consider or propitiate this, as
+it can do them no harm. On the other hand they are decidedly afraid of
+hurting the feelings of any strong man who might be capable of doing
+them some mischief unless he saw that he was properly mourned for.
+Acting under much the same feeling they pay respect to the bodies of
+dead children and young women, in the hope that the spirit will soon
+return and undergo reincarnation. It is also worth noticing that they do
+not bury in trees any young man who has violated tribal law by taking as
+wife a woman who is forbidden to him; such an individual is always
+buried directly in the ground."[253] Apparently these law-abiding
+savages are not anxious that members of the criminal classes should be
+born again and should have the opportunity of troubling society once
+more.
+
+[Sidenote: Different modes of disposing of the dead adopted in the same
+tribe.]
+
+I would call your attention particularly to the different modes of
+burial thus accorded by these two tribes to different classes of
+persons. It is too commonly assumed that each tribe has one uniform way
+of disposing of all its dead, say either by burning or by burying, and
+on that assumption certain general theories have been built as to the
+different views taken of the state of the dead by different tribes. But
+in point of fact the assumption is incorrect. Not infrequently the same
+tribe disposes of different classes of dead people in quite different
+ways; for instance, it will bury some and burn others. Thus amongst the
+Angoni of British Central Africa the corpses of chiefs are burned with
+all their household belongings, but the bodies of commoners are buried
+with all their belongings in caves.[254] In various castes or tribes of
+India it is the custom to burn the bodies of married people but to bury
+the bodies of the unmarried.[255] With some peoples of India the
+distinction is made, not between the married and the unmarried, but
+between adults and children, especially children under two years old; in
+such cases the invariable practice appears to be to burn the old and
+bury the young. Thus among the Malayalis of Malabar the bodies of men
+and women are burned, but the bodies of children under two years are
+buried, and so are the bodies of all persons who have died of cholera or
+small-pox.[256] The same distinctions are observed by the Nayars,
+Kadupattans, and other castes or tribes of Cochin.[257] The old rule
+laid down in the ancient Hindoo law-book _The Grihya-Sutras_ was that
+children who died under the age of two should be buried, not burnt.[258]
+The Bhotias of the Himalayas bury all children who have not yet obtained
+their permanent teeth, but they burn all other people.[259] Among the
+Komars the young are buried, and the old cremated.[260] The Coorgs bury
+the bodies of women and of boys under sixteen years of age, but they
+burn the bodies of men.[261] The Chukchansi Indians of California are
+said to have burned only those who died a violent death or were bitten
+by snakes, but to have buried all others.[262] The Minnetaree Indians
+disposed of their dead differently according to their moral character.
+Bad and quarrelsome men they buried in the earth that the Master of Life
+might not see them; but the bodies of good men they laid on scaffolds,
+that the Master of Life might behold them.[263] The Kolosh or Tlingit
+Indians of Alaska burn their ordinary dead on a pyre, but deposit the
+bodies of shamans in large coffins, which are supported on four
+posts.[264] The ancient Mexicans thought that all persons who died of
+infectious diseases were killed by the rain-god Tlaloc; so they painted
+their bodies blue, which was the rain-god's colour, and buried instead
+of burning them.[265]
+
+[Sidenote: Special modes of burial adopted to prevent or facilitate the
+return of the spirit.]
+
+These examples may suffice to illustrate the different ways in which the
+same people may dispose of their dead according to the age, sex, social
+rank, or moral character of the deceased, or the manner of his death. In
+some cases the special mode of burial adopted seems clearly intended to
+guard against the return of the dead, whether in the form of ghosts or
+of children born again into the world. Such, for instance, was obviously
+the intention of the old English custom of burying a suicide at a
+cross-road with a stake driven through his body. And if some burial
+customs are plainly intended to pin down the dead in the earth, or at
+least to disable him from revisiting the survivors, so others appear to
+be planned with the opposite intention of facilitating the departure of
+the spirit from the grave, in order that he may repair to a more
+commodious lodging or be born again into the tribe. For example, the
+Arunta of Central Australia always bury their dead in the earth and
+raise a low mound over the grave; but they leave a depression in the
+mound on the side which faces towards the spot where the spirit of the
+deceased is supposed to have dwelt in the intervals between his
+successive reincarnations; and we are expressly told that the purpose of
+leaving this depression is to allow the spirit to go out and in easily;
+for until the final ceremony of mourning has been performed at the
+grave, the ghost is believed to spend his time partly in watching over
+his near relations and partly in the company of its _arumburinga_ or
+spiritual double, who lives at the old _nanja_ spot, that is, at the
+place where the disembodied soul tarries waiting to be born again.[266]
+Thus the Arunta imagine that for some time after death the spirit of the
+deceased is in a sort of intermediate state, partly hovering about the
+abode of the living, partly visiting his own proper spiritual home, to
+which on the completion of the mourning ceremonies he will retire to
+await the new birth. The final mourning ceremony, which marks the close
+of this intermediate state, takes place some twelve or eighteen months
+after the death. It consists mainly in nothing more or less than a ghost
+hunt; men armed with shields and spear-throwers assemble and with loud
+shouts beat the air, driving the invisible ghost before them from the
+spot where he died, while the women join in the shouts and buffet the
+air with the palms of their hands to chase away the dead man from the
+old camp which he loves to haunt. In this way the beaters gradually
+advance towards the grave till they have penned the ghost into it, when
+they immediately dance on the top of it, beating the air downwards as if
+to drive the spirit down, and stamping on the ground as if to trample
+him into the earth. After that, the women gather round the grave and cut
+each other's heads with clubs till the blood streams down on it. This
+brings the period of mourning to an end; and if the deceased was a man,
+his widow is now free to marry again. In token that the days of her
+sorrow are over, she wears at this final ceremony the gay feathers of
+the ring-neck parrot in her hair. The spirit of her dead husband, lying
+in the grave, is believed to know the sign and to bid her a last
+farewell. Even after he has thus been hunted into the grave and trampled
+down in it, his spirit may still watch over his friends, guard them from
+harm, and visit them in dreams.[267]
+
+[Sidenote: Departure of the ghost supposed to coincide with the
+disappearance of the flesh from his bones.]
+
+We may naturally ask, Why should the spirit of the dead be supposed at
+first to dwell more or less intermittently near the spot where he died,
+and afterwards to take up his abode permanently at his _nanja_ spot till
+the time comes for him to be born again? A good many years ago I
+conjectured[268] that this idea of a change in the abode of the ghost
+may be suggested by a corresponding change which takes place, or is
+supposed to take place, about the same time in the state of the body; in
+fact, that so long as the flesh adheres to the bones, so long the soul
+of the dead man may be thought to be detained in the neighbourhood of
+the body, but that when the flesh has quite decayed, the soul is
+completely liberated from its old tabernacle and is free to repair to
+its true spiritual home. In confirmation of this conjecture I pointed to
+the following facts. Some of the Indians of Guiana bring food and drink
+to their dead so long as the flesh remains on the bones; but when it has
+mouldered away, they conclude that the man himself has departed.[269]
+The Matacos Indians of the Gran Chaco in Argentina believe that the soul
+of a dead man does not pass down into the nether world until his body is
+decomposed or burnt. Further, the Alfoors of Central Celebes
+suppose that the spirits of the departed cannot enter the spirit-land
+until all the flesh has been removed from their bones; for until that
+has been done, the gods (_lamoa_) in the other world could not bear the
+stench of the corpse. Accordingly at a great festival the bodies of all
+who have died within a certain time are dug up and the decaying flesh
+scraped from the bones. Comparing these ideas, I suggested that
+they may explain the widespread custom of a second burial, that is, the
+practice of disinterring the dead after a certain time and disposing of
+their bones otherwise.
+
+[Sidenote: Second burial of the bones among the tribes of Central
+Australia. Final burial ceremony among the Warramunga.]
+
+Now so far as the tribes of Central Australia are concerned, my
+conjecture has been confirmed by the subsequent researches of Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen in that region. For they have found that the tribes
+to the north of the Arunta regularly give their dead a second burial,
+that a change in the state of the ghosts is believed to coincide with
+the second burial, and apparently also, though this is not so definitely
+stated, that the time for the second burial is determined by the
+disappearance of the flesh from the bones. Amongst the tribes which
+practise a second burial the custom is first to deposit the dead on
+platforms among the branches of trees, till the flesh has quite
+mouldered away, and then to bury the bones in the earth: in short, they
+practise tree-burial first and earth-burial afterwards.[270] For
+example, in the Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes, when a man dies, his body
+is carried by his relations to a tree distant a mile or two from the
+camp. There it is laid on a platform by itself for some months. When the
+flesh has disappeared from the bones, a kinsman of the deceased, in
+strictness a younger brother (_itia_), climbs up into the tree,
+dislocates the bones, places them in a wooden vessel, and hands them
+down to a female relative. Then the bones are laid in the grave with the
+head facing in the direction in which his mother's brother is supposed
+to have camped in days of old. After the bones have been thus interred,
+the spirit of the dead man is believed to go away and to remain in his
+old _alcheringa_ home until such time as he once more undergoes
+reincarnation.[271] But in these tribes, as we saw, very old men and
+women receive only one burial, being at once laid in an earthy grave and
+never set up on a platform in a tree; and we have seen reason to think
+that this difference in the treatment of the aged springs from the
+indifference or contempt in which their ghosts are held by comparison
+with the ghosts of the young and vigorous. In the Warramunga tribe, who
+regularly deposit their dead in trees first and in the earth afterwards,
+so long as the corpse remains in the tree and the flesh has not
+completely disappeared from the bones, the mother of the deceased and
+the women who stand to him or her in the relation of tribal motherhood
+are obliged from time to time to go to the tree, and sitting under the
+platform to allow its putrid juices to drip down on their bodies, into
+which they rub them as a token of sorrow. This, no doubt, is intended to
+please the jealous ghost; for we are told that he is believed to haunt
+the tree and even to visit the camp, in order, if he was a man, to see
+for himself that his widows are mourning properly. The time during which
+the mouldering remains are left in the tree is at least a year and may
+be more.[272] The final ceremony which brings the period of mourning to
+an end is curious and entirely different from the one observed by the
+Arunta on the same occasion. When the bones have been taken down from
+the tree, an arm-bone is put carefully apart from the rest. Then the
+skull is smashed, and the fragments together with all the rest of the
+bones except the arm-bone, are buried in a hollow ant-hill near the
+tree. Afterwards the arm-bone is wrapt up in paper-bark and wound round
+with fur-string, so as to make a torpedo-shaped parcel, which is kept by
+a tribal mother of the deceased in her rude hovel of branches, till,
+after the lapse of some days or weeks, the time comes for the last
+ceremony of all. On that day a design emblematic of the totem of the
+deceased is drawn on the ground, and beside it a shallow trench is dug
+about a foot deep and fifteen feet long. Over this trench a number of
+men, elaborately decorated with down of various colours, stand
+straddle-legged, while a line of women, decorated with red and yellow
+ochre, crawl along the trench under the long bridge made by the
+straddling legs of the men. The last woman carries the arm-bone of the
+dead in its parcel, and as soon as she emerges from the trench, the bone
+is snatched from her by a kinsman of the deceased, who carries it to a
+man standing ready with an uplifted axe beside the totemic drawing. On
+receiving the bone, the man at once smashes it, hastily buries it in a
+small pit beside the totemic emblem of the departed, and closes the
+opening with a large flat stone, signifying thereby that the season of
+mourning is over and that the dead man or woman has been gathered to his
+or her totem. The totemic design, beside which the arm-bone is buried,
+represents the spot at which the totemic ancestor of the deceased
+finally went down into the earth. When once the arm-bone has thus been
+broken and laid in its last resting-place, the soul of the dead person,
+which they describe as being of about the size of a grain of sand, is
+supposed to go back to the place where it camped long ago in a previous
+incarnation, there to remain with the souls of other men and women of
+the same totem until the time comes for it to be born again.[273]
+
+[Sidenote: General conclusion as to the belief in immortality and the
+worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines.]
+
+This must conclude what I have to say as to the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead among the aborigines of Australia. The
+evidence I have adduced is sufficient to prove that these savages firmly
+believe both in the existence of the human soul after death and in the
+power which it can exert for good or evil over the survivors. On the
+whole the dominant motive in their treatment of the dead appears to be
+fear rather than affection. Yet the attention which many tribes pay to
+the comfort of the departed by providing them with huts, food, water,
+fire, clothing, implements and weapons, may not be dictated by purely
+selfish motives; in any case they are clearly intended to please and
+propitiate the ghosts, and therefore contain the germs of a regular
+worship of the dead.
+
+[Footnote 216: E. J. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into
+Central Australia_ (London, 1845), ii. 349.]
+
+[Footnote 217: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Victoria," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. iii. (1865) p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 218: P. Beveridge, in _Journal and Proceedings of the Royal
+Society of New South Wales_, xvii. (1883) pp. 29 _sq._ Compare R. Brough
+Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 100 note.]
+
+[Footnote 219: (Sir) G. Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery_, ii. 332 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 220: Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 109
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 221: E. M. Curr, _The Australian Race_ (Melbourne and London,
+1886-1887), i. 87.]
+
+[Footnote 222: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+463.]
+
+[Footnote 223: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 461.]
+
+[Footnote 224: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 473.]
+
+[Footnote 225: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 474.]
+
+[Footnote 226: F. C. Urquhart, "Legends of the Australian Aborigines,"
+_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xiv. (1885) p. 88.]
+
+[Footnote 227: E. M. Curr, _The Australian Race_, i. 87.]
+
+[Footnote 228: Leviticus xix. 28; Deuteronomy xiv. 1.]
+
+[Footnote 229: W. Stanbridge, "Tribes in the Central Part of Victoria,"
+_Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. i. (1861) p.
+298.]
+
+[Footnote 230: R. Brough Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 105.]
+
+[Footnote 231: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+459.]
+
+[Footnote 232: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit_. p. 453.]
+
+[Footnote 233: P. Beveridge, in _Journal and Proceedings of the Royal
+Society of New South Wales_, xvii. (1883) pp. 28, 29.]
+
+[Footnote 234: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit_. p. 466.]
+
+[Footnote 235: E. J. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into
+Central Australia_ (London, 1845), ii. 347.]
+
+[Footnote 236: W. E. Roth, _Studies among the North-West-Central
+Queensland Aborigines_ (Brisbane and London, 1897), p. 164; compare p.
+165.]
+
+[Footnote 237: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 500.]
+
+[Footnote 238: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 510.]
+
+[Footnote 239: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 516-552.]
+
+[Footnote 240: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 510.]
+
+[Footnote 241: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes_, p. 507.]
+
+[Footnote 242: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 511.]
+
+[Footnote 243: F. Bonney, "On some Customs of the Aborigines of the
+River Darling," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xiii. (1884)
+pp. 134 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 244: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 507, 509 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 245: (Sir) G. Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery_, ii. 332, quoting Mr. Bussel.]
+
+[Footnote 246: Scholiast on Pindar, _Olymp._ i. 146.]
+
+[Footnote 247: Homer, _Odyssey_, xi. 23 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 248: _The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, i. 91 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 249: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 62.]
+
+[Footnote 250: R. Brough Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 108.]
+
+[Footnote 251: J. F. Mann, "Notes on the Aborigines of Australia,"
+_Proceedings of the Geographical Society of Australasia_, i. (Sydney,
+1885) p. 48.]
+
+[Footnote 252: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 506.]
+
+[Footnote 253: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes_, p. 512.]
+
+[Footnote 254: R. Sutherland Rattray, _Some Folk-lore Stories and Songs
+in Chinyanja_ (London, 1907), pp. 99-101, 182.]
+
+[Footnote 255: F. Fawcett, "The Kondayamkottai Maravars, a Dravidian
+Tribe of Tinnevelly, Southern India," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xxxiii. (1903) p. 64; Captain Wolsley Haig, "Notes on the
+Rangari Caste in Barar," _Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal_,
+lxx. Part iii. (1901) p. 8; E. Thurston, _Castes and Tribes of Southern
+India_ (Madras, 1909), iv. 226 (as to the Lambadis), vi. 244 (as to the
+Raniyavas); compare _id._, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_
+(Madras, 1906), p. 155.]
+
+[Footnote 256: E. Thurston, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_, p.
+207.]
+
+[Footnote 257: L. K. Anantha Krishna Iyer, _The Cochin Tribes and
+Castes_ (Madras, 1909-1912), ii. 91, 112, 157, 360, 378.]
+
+[Footnote 258: _The Grihya Sutras_, translated by H. Oldenberg, Part i.
+p. 355 (_Sacred Books of the East_, vol. xxix.). Compare W. Crooke,
+_Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern India_ (Westminster, 1896),
+i. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 259: Ch. A. Sherring, _Western Tibet and the British
+Borderland_ (London, 1906), pp. 123 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 260: P. N. Bose, "Chhattisgar," _Journal of the Asiatic
+Society of Bengal_, lix., Part i. (1891) p. 290.]
+
+[Footnote 261: E. Thurston, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_, p.
+205.]
+
+[Footnote 262: S. Powers, _Tribes of California_ (Washington, 1877), p.
+383.]
+
+[Footnote 263: Maximilian Prinz zu Wied, _Reise in das Innere
+Nord-America_ (Coblenz, 1839-1841), ii. 235.]
+
+[Footnote 264: T. de Pauly, _Description Ethnographique des Peuples de
+la Russie, Peuples de l'Amérique Russe_ (St. Petersburg, 1862), p. 13.]
+
+[Footnote 265: E. Seler, _Altmexikanische Studien_, ii. (Berlin, 1899)
+p. 42 (_Veröffentlichungen aus dem Königlichen Museum für Völkerkunde_,
+vi. 2/4).]
+
+[Footnote 266: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 497; _id._, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 506.]
+
+[Footnote 267: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 503-508. The name of the final mourning ceremony among the Arunta is
+_urpmilchima_.]
+
+[Footnote 268: _The Golden Bough_, Second Edition (London, 1900), i. 434
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 269: A. Biet, _Voyage de la France Equinoxiale en l'Isle de
+Cayenne_ (Paris, 1664), p. 392.]
+
+[Footnote 270: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 505 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 271: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 506-508.]
+
+[Footnote 272: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 530.]
+
+[Footnote 273: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 530-543.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE VIII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF THE TORRES STRAITS
+ISLANDS
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Islanders of Torres Straits. The Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded my account of the belief in immortality
+and worship of the dead, or rather of the elements out of which such a
+worship might have grown, among the aborigines of Australia. To-day we
+pass to the consideration of a different people, the islanders of Torres
+Straits. As you may know, Torres Straits are the broad channel which
+divides Australia on the south from the great island of New Guinea on
+the north. The small islands which are scattered over the strait fall
+roughly into two groups, a Western and an Eastern, of which the eastern
+is at once the more isolated and the more fertile. In appearance,
+character, and customs the inhabitants of all these islands belong to
+the Papuan family, which inhabits the western half of New Guinea, but in
+respect of language there is a marked difference between the natives of
+the two groups; for while the speech of the Western Islanders is akin to
+that of the Australians, the speech of the Eastern Islanders is akin to
+that of the Papuans of New Guinea. The conclusion to be drawn from these
+facts appears to be that the Western Islands of Torres Straits were
+formerly inhabited by aborigines of the Australian family, and that at a
+later time they were occupied by immigrants from New Guinea, who adopted
+the language of the aboriginal inhabitants, but gradually extinguished
+the aboriginal type and character either by peaceful absorption or by
+conquest and extermination.[274] Hence the Western Islanders of Torres
+Straits form a transition both geographically and ethnographically
+between the aborigines of Australia on the one side and the aborigines
+of New Guinea on the other side. Accordingly in our survey of the belief
+in immortality among the lower races we may appropriately consider the
+Islanders of Torres Straits immediately after the aborigines of
+Australia and before we pass onward to other and more distant races.
+These Islanders have a special claim on the attention of a Cambridge
+lecturer, since almost all the exact knowledge we possess of them we owe
+to the exertions of Cambridge anthropologists and especially to Dr. A.
+C. Haddon, who on his first visit to the islands in 1888 perceived the
+urgent importance of procuring an accurate record of the old beliefs and
+customs of the natives before it was too late, and who never rested till
+that record was obtained, as it happily has been, first by his own
+unaided researches in the islands, and afterwards by the united
+researches of a band of competent enquirers. In the history of
+anthropology the Cambridge Expedition to Torres Straits in 1898 will
+always hold an honourable place, to the credit of the University which
+promoted it and especially to that of the zealous and devoted
+investigator who planned, organised, and carried it to a successful
+conclusion. Practically all that I shall have to tell you as to the
+beliefs and practices of the Torres Straits Islanders is derived from
+the accurate and laborious researches of Dr. Haddon and his colleagues.
+
+[Sidenote: Social culture of the Torres Straits Islanders.]
+
+While the natives of Torres Straits are, or were at the time of their
+discovery, in the condition which we call savagery, they stand on a far
+higher level of social and intellectual culture than the rude aborigines
+of Australia. To indicate roughly the degree of advance we need only say
+that, whereas the Australians are nomadic hunters and fishers, entirely
+ignorant of agriculture, and destitute to a great extent not only of
+houses but even of clothes, the natives of Torres Straits live in
+settled villages and diligently till the soil, raising a variety of
+crops, such as yams, sweet potatoes, bananas, sugar-cane, and
+tobacco.[275] Of the two groups of islands the eastern is the more
+fertile and the inhabitants are more addicted to agriculture than are
+the natives of the western islands, who, as a consequence of the greater
+barrenness of the soil, have to eke out their subsistence to a
+considerable extent by fishing.[276] And there is other evidence to shew
+that the Eastern Islanders have attained to a somewhat higher stage of
+social evolution than their Western brethren;[277] the more favourable
+natural conditions under which they live may possibly have contributed
+to raise the general level of culture. One of the most marked
+distinctions in this respect between the inhabitants of the two groups
+is that, whereas a regular system of totemism with its characteristic
+features prevails among the Western Islanders, no such system nor even
+any very clear evidence of its former existence is to be found among the
+Eastern Islanders, whether it be that they never had it or, what is more
+likely, that they once had but have lost it.[278]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Torres Straits Islanders in the existence of
+the human spirit after death.]
+
+On the other hand, so far as regards our immediate subject, the belief
+in immortality and the worship of the dead, a general resemblance may be
+traced between the creed and customs of the Eastern and Western tribes.
+Both of them, like the Australian aborigines, firmly believe in the
+existence of the human spirit after death, but unlike the Australians
+they seem to have no idea that the souls of the departed are ever born
+again into the world; the doctrine of reincarnation, so widespread among
+the natives of Australia, appears to have no place in the creed of their
+near neighbours the Torres Straits Islanders, whose dead, like our own,
+though they may haunt the living for a time, are thought to depart at
+last to a distant spirit-land and to return no more. At the same time
+neither in the one group nor in the other is there any clear evidence of
+what may be called a worship of the dead in the strict sense of the
+word, unless we except the cults of certain more or less mythical
+heroes. On this point the testimony of Dr. Haddon is definite as to the
+Western Islanders. He says: "In no case have I obtained in the Western
+Islands an indication of anything approaching a worship of deceased
+persons ancestral or otherwise, with the exception of the heroes shortly
+to be mentioned; neither is there any suggestion that their own
+ancestors have been in any way apotheosized."[279]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghosts of the recently departed.]
+
+But if these savages have not, with the possible exception of the cult
+of certain heroes, any regular worship of the dead, they certainly have
+the germ out of which such a worship might be developed, and that is a
+firm belief in ghosts and in the mischief which they may do to the
+living. The word for a ghost is _mari_ in the West and _mar_ in the
+East: it means also a shadow or reflection,[280] which seems to shew
+that these savages, like many others, have derived their notion of the
+human soul from the observation of shadows and reflections cast by the
+body on the earth or on water. Further, the Western Islanders appear to
+distinguish the ghosts of the recently departed (_mari_) from the
+spirits of those who have been longer dead, which they call
+_markai_;[281] and if we accept this distinction "we may assert,"
+according to Dr. Haddon, "that the Torres Straits Islanders feared the
+ghosts but believed in the general friendly disposition of the spirits
+of the departed."[282] Similarly we saw that the Australian aborigines
+regard with fear the ghosts of those who have just died, while they are
+either indifferent to the spirits of those who have died many years ago
+or even look upon them as beings of higher powers than their
+descendants, whom they can benefit in various ways. This sharp
+distinction between the spirits of the dead, according to the date at
+which they died, is widespread, perhaps universal among mankind. However
+truly the dead were loved in their lifetime, however bitterly they were
+mourned at their death, no sooner have they passed beyond our ken than
+the thought of their ghosts seems to inspire the generality of mankind
+with an instinctive fear and horror, as if the character of even the
+best friends and nearest relations underwent a radical change for the
+worse as soon as they had shuffled off the mortal coil. But among
+savages this belief in the moral deterioration of ghosts is certainly
+much more marked than among civilised races. Ghosts are dreaded both by
+the Western and the Eastern tribes of Torres Straits. Thus in Mabuiag,
+one of the Western Islands, the corpse was carried out of camp feet
+foremost, else it was thought that the ghost would return and trouble
+the survivors. Further, when the body had been laid upon a stage or
+platform on clear level ground away from the dwelling, the remains of
+any food and water of which the deceased might have been partaking in
+his last moments were carried out and placed beside the corpse lest the
+ghost should come back to fetch them for himself, to the annoyance and
+terror of his relations. This is the reason actually alleged by the
+natives for what otherwise might have been interpreted as a delicate
+mark of affection and thoughtful care for the comfort of the departed.
+If next morning the food was found scattered, the people said that the
+ghost was angry and had thrown it about.[283] Further, on the day of the
+death the mourners went into the gardens, slashed at the taro, knocked
+down coco-nuts, pulled up sweet potatoes, and destroyed bananas. We are
+told that "the food was destroyed for the sake of the dead man, it was
+'like good-bye.'"[284] We may suspect that the real motive for the
+destruction was the same as that for laying food and water beside the
+corpse, namely, a wish to give the ghost no excuse for returning to
+haunt and pester his surviving relatives. How could he have the heart to
+return to the desolated garden which in his lifetime it had been his
+pride and joy to cultivate?
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghosts of the recently departed among the Murray
+Islanders.]
+
+In Murray Island, also, which belongs to the Eastern group, the ghost of
+a recently deceased person is much dreaded; it is supposed to haunt the
+neighbourhood for two or three months, and the elaborate funeral
+ceremonies which these savages perform appear to be based on this belief
+and to be intended, in fact, to dismiss the ghost from the land of the
+living, where he is a very unwelcome visitor, to his proper place in the
+land of the dead.[285] "The Murray Islanders," says Dr. Haddon, "perform
+as many as possible of the necessary ceremonies in order that the ghost
+of the deceased might not feel slighted, for otherwise it was sure to
+bring trouble on the relatives by causing strong winds to destroy their
+gardens and break down their houses."[286] These islanders still believe
+that a ghost may feel resentment when his children are neglected or
+wronged, or when his lands or goods are appropriated by persons who have
+no claim to them. And this fear of the wrath of the ghost, Dr. Haddon
+tells us, no doubt in past times acted as a wholesome deterrent on
+evil-doers and helped to keep the people from crime, though now-a-days
+they look rather to the law than to ghosts for the protection of their
+rights and the avenging of their wrongs.[287] Yet here, as in so many
+places, it would seem that superstition has proved a useful crutch on
+which morality can lean until it is strong enough to walk alone. In the
+absence of the police the guardianship of law and morality may be
+provisionally entrusted to ghosts, who, if they are too fickle and
+uncertain in their temper to make ideal constables, are at least better
+than nothing. With this exception it does not appear that the moral code
+of the Torres Straits Islanders derived any support or sanction from
+their religion. No appeal was made by them to totems, ancestors, or
+heroes; no punishment was looked for from these quarters for any
+infringement of the rules and restraints which hold society
+together.[288]
+
+[Sidenote: The island home of the dead.]
+
+The land of the dead to which the ghosts finally depart is, in the
+opinion of the Torres Straits Islanders, a mythical island in the far
+west or rather north-west. The Western Islanders name it Kibu; the
+Eastern Islanders call it Boigu. The name Kibu means "sundown." It is
+natural enough that islanders should place the home of the dead in some
+far island of the sea to which no canoe of living men has ever sailed,
+and it is equally natural that the fabulous island should lie to
+westward where the sun goes down; for it seems to be a common thought
+that the souls of the dead are attracted by the great luminary, like
+moths by a candle, and follow him when he sinks in radiant glory into
+the sea. To take a single example, in the Maram district of Assam it is
+forbidden to build houses facing westward, because that is the direction
+in which the spirits of the dead go to their long home.[289] But the
+Torres Straits Islanders have a special reason, as Dr. Haddon has well
+pointed out, for thinking that the home of the dead is away in the
+north-west; and the reason is that in these latitudes the trade wind
+blows steady and strong from the south-east for seven or eight months of
+the year; so that for the most part the spirits have only to let
+themselves go and the wind will sweep them away on its pinions to their
+place of rest. How could the poor fluttering things beat up to windward
+in the teeth of the blast?[290]
+
+[Sidenote: Elaborate funeral ceremonies observed by the Torres Straits
+Islanders.]
+
+The funeral ceremonies observed by the Torres Straits Islanders were
+numerous and elaborate, and they present some features of special
+interest. They succeeded each other at intervals, sometimes of months,
+and amongst the Eastern Islanders in particular there were so many of
+them that, were it not that the bodies of the very young and the very
+old were treated less ceremoniously, the living would have been
+perpetually occupied in celebrating the obsequies of the dead.[291] The
+obsequies differed somewhat from each other in the East and the West,
+but they had two characteristics in common: first, the skulls of the
+dead were commonly preserved apart from the bodies and were consulted as
+oracles; and, second, the ghosts of the recently deceased were
+represented in dramatic ceremonies by masked men, who mimicked the gait
+and gestures of the departed and were thought by the women and children
+to be the very ghosts themselves. But in details there were a good many
+variations between the practice of the Eastern and the Western
+Islanders. We will begin with the customs of the Western Islanders.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral ceremonies observed by the Western Islanders. Removal
+and preservation of the skull. Skulls used in divination.]
+
+When a death had taken place, the corpse was carried out of the house
+and set on a staging supported by four forked posts and covered by a
+roof of mats. The office of attending to the body devolved properly on
+the brothers-in-law (_imi_) of the deceased, who, while they were
+engaged in the duties of the office, bore the special title of _mariget_
+or "ghost-hand." It deserves to be noticed that these men were always of
+a different totem from the deceased; for if the dead person was a man,
+the _mariget_ were his wife's brothers and therefore had the same totem
+as the dead man's wife, which, on account of the law of exogamy, always
+differed from the totem of her husband. And if the dead person was a
+woman, the _mariget_ were her husband's brothers and therefore had his
+totem, which necessarily differed from hers. When they had discharged
+the preliminary duties to the corpse, the brothers-in-law went and
+informed the relations and friends. This they did not in words but by a
+prescribed pantomime. For example, if the deceased had had the crocodile
+for his totem, they imitated the ungainly gait of crocodiles waddling
+and resting, if the deceased had the snake for his totem, they in like
+manner mimicked the crawling of a snake. The relations then painted
+their bodies with white coral mud, cut their hair, plastered mud over
+their heads, and cut off their ear ornaments or severed the distended
+lobe of the ear as a sign of mourning. Then, armed with bows and arrows,
+they came out to the stage where the corpse was lying and let fly arrows
+at the men who were in attendance on it, that is, at the brothers-in-law
+of the deceased, who warded off the shafts as best they could.[292] The
+meaning of this sham attack on the men who were discharging the last
+offices of respect to the dead comes out clearly in another ceremony
+which was performed some time afterwards, as we shall see presently. For
+five or six days the corpse remained on the platform or bier watched by
+the brothers-in-law, who had to prevent certain large lizards from
+devouring it and to frighten away any prowling ghosts that might be
+lured to the spot by the stench. After the lapse of several days the
+relations returned to the body, mourned, and beat the roof of the bier,
+while they raised a shout to drive off any part of the dead man's spirit
+that might be lingering about his mouldering remains. The reason for
+doing so was, that the time had now arrived for cutting off the head of
+the corpse, and they thought that the head would not come off easily if
+the man's spirit were still in the body; he might reasonably be expected
+to hold on tight to it and not to resign, without a struggle, so
+valuable a part of his person. When the poor ghost had thus been chased
+away with shouts and blows, the principal brother-in-law came forward
+and performed the amputation by sawing off the head. Having done so, he
+usually placed it in a nest of termites or white ants in order that the
+insects might pick it clean; but sometimes for the same purpose he
+deposited it in a creek. When it was thoroughly clean, the grinning
+white skull was painted red all over and placed in a decorated basket.
+Then followed the ceremony of formally handing over this relic of the
+dead to the relations. The brothers-in-law, who had been in attendance
+on the body, painted themselves black all over, covered their heads with
+leaves, and walked in solemn procession, headed by the chief
+brother-in-law, who carried the skull in the basket. Meantime the male
+relatives were awaiting them, seated on a large mat in the ceremonial
+ground, while the women grouped themselves in the background. As the
+procession of men approached bearing the skull, the mourners shot arrows
+over their heads as a sign of anger at them for having decapitated their
+relation. But this was a mere pretence, probably intended to soothe and
+flatter the angry ghost: the arrows flew over the men without hurting
+them.[293] Similarly in ancient Egypt the man who cut open a corpse for
+embalmment had no sooner done his office than he fled precipitately,
+pursued by the relations with stones and curses, because he had wounded
+and mangled the body of their kinsman.[294] Sometimes the skull was made
+up to resemble the head of a living man: an artificial nose of wood and
+beeswax supplied the place of a nose of flesh; pearl-shells were
+inserted in the empty eye-balls; and any teeth that might be missing
+were represented by pieces of wood, while the lower jaw was lashed
+firmly to the cranium.[295] Whether thus decorated or not, the skulls of
+the dead were preserved and used in divination. Whenever a skull was to
+be thus consulted, it was first cleaned, repainted, and either anointed
+with certain plants or placed upon them. Then the enquirer enjoined the
+skull to speak the truth, and placing it on his pillow at night went to
+sleep. The dream which he dreamed that night was the answer of the
+skull, which spoke with a clappering noise like that of teeth chattering
+together. When people went on voyages, they used to take a divining
+skull with them in the stern of the canoe.[296]
+
+[Sidenote: Great death-dance of the Western Islanders. The dead
+personated by masked actors.]
+
+The great funeral ceremony, or rather death-dance, of the Western
+Islanders took place in the island of Pulu. When the time came for it, a
+few men would meet and make the necessary preparations. The ceremony was
+always performed on the sacred or ceremonial ground (_kwod_), and the
+first thing to do was to enclose this ground, for the sake of privacy,
+with a screen of mats hung on a framework of wood and bamboos. When the
+screen had been erected, the drums which were to be used by the
+orchestra were placed in position beside it. Then the relations were
+summoned to attend the performance. The ceremony might be performed for
+a number of recently deceased people at once, and it varied in
+importance and elaboration according to the importance and the number of
+the deceased whose obsequies were being celebrated. The chief
+differences were in the number of the performers and the greater or less
+display of scenic apparatus. The head-dresses or leafy masks worn by the
+actors in the sacred drama were made secretly in the bush; no woman or
+uninitiated man might witness the operation. When all was ready, and the
+people were assembled, the men being stationed in front and the women
+and children in the background, the disguised actors appeared on the
+scene and played the part of the dead, each one of them mimicking the
+gait and actions of the particular man or woman whom he personated; for
+all the parts were played by men, no woman might act in these
+ceremonies. The order in which the various ghosts were to appear on the
+scene was arranged beforehand; so that when the actors came forward from
+behind the screen, the spectators knew which of the dead they were
+supposed to have before them. The performers usually danced in pairs,
+and vanished behind the screen when their dance was finished. Thus one
+pair would follow another till the play was over. Besides the actors who
+played the serious and solemn part of the dead, there was usually a
+clown who skipped about and cut capers, tumbling down and getting up
+again, to make the spectators laugh and so to relieve the strain on
+their emotions, which were deeply stirred by this dance of death. The
+beat of the drums proclaimed that the sacred drama was at an end. Then
+followed a great feast, at which special portions of food were assigned
+by the relatives of the deceased to the actors who had personated
+them.[297]
+
+[Sidenote: Intention of the ceremonies.]
+
+As to the intention of these curious dramatic performances we have no
+very definite information. Dr. Haddon says: "The idea evidently was to
+convey to the mourners the assurance that the ghost was alive and that
+in the person of the dancer he visited his friends; the assurance of his
+life after death comforted the bereaved ones."[298]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral ceremonies observed by the Eastern Islanders. The
+soul of the dead carried away by a masked actor.]
+
+In the Eastern Islands of Torres Straits the funeral ceremonies seem to
+have been even more numerous and elaborate. The body was at first laid
+on the ground on a mat outside the house, if the weather were fine.
+There friends wept and wailed over it, the nearest relations, such as
+the wife and mother, sitting at the head of the corpse. About an hour
+after the sun had set, the drummers and singers arrived. All night the
+drums beat and the people sang, but just as the dawn was breaking the
+wild music died away into silence. The wants of the living were now
+attended to: the assembled people breakfasted on green coco-nuts; and
+then, about an hour after sunrise, they withdrew from the body and took
+up a position a little further off to witness the next act of the drama
+of death. The drums now struck up again in quicker time to herald the
+approach of an actor, who could be heard, but not seen, shaking his
+rattle in the adjoining forest. Faster and faster beat the drums, louder
+and louder rose the singing, till the spectators were wound up to a
+pitch of excitement bordering on frenzy. Then at last a strange figure
+burst from the forest and came skipping and posturing towards the
+corpse. It was Terer, a spirit or mythical being who had come to fetch
+the soul of the departed and to bear it far away to its place of rest in
+the island beyond the sea. On his head he wore a wreath of leaves: a
+mask made of the mid-ribs of coco-nut leaves or of croton leaves hid his
+face: a long feather of the white tern nodded on his brow; and a mantle
+of green coco-nut leaves concealed his body from the shoulders to the
+knees. His arms were painted red: round his neck he wore a crescent of
+pearl-shell: in his left hand he carried a bow and arrows, and in his
+mouth a piece of wood, to which were affixed two rings of green coco-nut
+leaf. Thus attired he skipt forwards, rattling a bunch of nuts in his
+right hand, bending his head now to one side and now to another, swaying
+his body backwards and forwards, but always keeping time to the measured
+beat of the drums. At last, after a series of rapid jumps from one foot
+to the other, he ended his dance, and turning round fled away westward
+along the beach. He had taken the soul of the dead and was carrying it
+away to the spirit-land. The excitement of the women now rose to the
+highest pitch. They screamed and jumped from the ground raising their
+arms in air high above their heads. Shrieking and wailing all pursued
+the retreating figure along the beach, the mother or widow of the dead
+man casting herself again and again prostrate on the sand and throwing
+it in handfuls over her head. Among the pursuers was another masked man,
+who represented Aukem, the mother of Terer. She, or rather he, was
+dressed in dried banana leaves: long tufts of grass hung from her head
+over her face and shoulders; and in her mouth she carried a lighted
+bundle of dry coco-nut fibre, which emitted clouds of smoke. With an
+unsteady rickety gait the beldame hobbled after her rapidly retreating
+son, who turned round from time to time, skipping and posturing
+derisively as if to taunt her, and then hurrying away again westward.
+Thus the two quaint figures retreated further and further, he in front
+and she behind, till they were lost to view. But still the drums
+continued to beat and the singers to chant their wild song, when nothing
+was to be seen but the deserted beach with the sky and the drifting
+clouds above and the white waves breaking on the strand. Meantime the
+two actors in the sacred drama made their way westward till their
+progress was arrested by the sea. They plunged into it and swimming
+westward unloosed their leafy envelopes and let them float away to the
+spirit-land in the far island beyond the rolling waters. But the men
+themselves swam back to the beach, resumed the dress of ordinary
+mortals, and quietly mingled with the assembly of mourners.[299]
+
+[Sidenote: Personation of ghosts by masked men.]
+
+Such was the first act of the drama. The second followed immediately
+about ten o'clock in the morning. The actors in it were twenty or thirty
+men disguised as ghosts or spirits of the dead (_zera markai_). Their
+bodies were blackened from the neck to the ankles, but the lower part of
+their faces and their feet were dyed bright red, and a red triangle was
+painted on the front of their bodies. They wore head-dresses of grass
+with long projecting ribs of coco-nut leaves, and a long tail of grass
+behind reaching down to the level of the knees. In their hands they held
+long ribs of coco-nut leaf. They were preceded by a curious figure
+called _pager_, a man covered from head to foot with dry grass and dead
+banana leaves, who sidled along with an unsteady rolling gait in a
+zigzag course, keeping his head bowed, his red-painted hands clasped in
+front of his face, and his elbows sticking out from both sides of his
+body. In spite of his erratic course and curious mode of progression he
+drew away from the troop of ghosts behind him and came on towards the
+spectators, jerking his head from side to side, his hands shaking, and
+wailing as he went. Behind him marched the ghosts, with their hands
+crossed behind their backs and their faces looking out to sea. When they
+drew near to the orchestra, who were singing and drumming away, they
+halted and formed in two lines facing the spectators. They now all
+assumed the familiar attitude of a fencer on guard, one foot and arm
+advanced, the other foot and arm drawn back, and lunged to right and
+left as if they were stabbing something with the long ribs of the
+coco-nut leaves which they held in their hands. This manoeuvre they
+repeated several times, the orchestra playing all the time. Then they
+retreated into the forest, but only to march out again, form in line,
+stand on guard, and lunge again and again at the invisible foe. This
+appears to have been the whole of the second act of the drama. No
+explanation of it is given. We can only conjecture that the band of men,
+who seem from their name (_zera markai_) to have represented the ghosts
+or spirits of the dead, came to inform the living that the departed
+brother or sister had joined the majority, and that any attempt to
+rescue him or her would be vain. That perhaps was the meaning of the
+solemn pantomime of the lines of actors standing on guard and lunging
+again and again towards the spectators. But I must acknowledge that this
+is a mere conjecture of my own.[300]
+
+[Sidenote: Blood and hair offered to the dead.]
+
+Be that as it may, when this act of the drama was over, the mourners
+took up the body and with weeping and wailing laid it on a wooden
+framework resting on four posts at a little distance from the house of
+the deceased. Youths who had lately been initiated, and girls who had
+attained to puberty, now had the lobes of their ears cut. The blood
+streamed down over their faces and bodies and was allowed to drip on the
+feet of the corpse as a mark of pity or sorrow.[301] The other relatives
+cut their hair and left the shorn locks in a heap under the body. Blood
+and hair were probably regarded as offerings made to the departed
+kinsman or kinswoman. We saw that the Australian aborigines in like
+manner cut themselves and allow the blood to drip on the corpse; and
+they also offer their hair to the dead, cutting off parts of their
+beards, singeing them, and throwing them on the corpse.[302] Having
+placed the body on the stage and deposited their offerings of hair under
+it, the relatives took some large yams, cut them in pieces, and laid the
+pieces beside the body in order to serve as food for the ghost, who was
+supposed to eat it at night.[303] This notion seems inconsistent with
+the belief that the soul of the departed had already been carried off to
+Boigu, the island of the dead; but consistency in such matters is as
+little to be looked for among savages as among ourselves.
+
+[Sidenote: Mummification of the corpse.]
+
+When the body had remained a few days on the stage in the open air,
+steps were taken to convert it into a mummy. For this purpose it was
+laid in a small canoe manned by some young people of the same sex as the
+deceased. They paddled it across the lagoon to the reef and there rubbed
+off the skin, extracted the bowels from the abdomen and the brain from
+the skull, and having sewed up the hole in the abdomen and thrown the
+bowels into the sea, they brought the remains back to land and lashed
+them to the wooden framework with string, while they fixed a small stick
+to the lower jaw to keep it from drooping. The framework with its
+ghastly burden was fastened vertically to two posts behind the house,
+where it was concealed from public view by a screen of coco-nut leaves.
+Holes were pricked with an arrow between the fingers and toes to allow
+the juices of decomposition to escape, and a fire was kindled and kept
+burning under the stage to dry up the body.[304]
+
+[Sidenote: Garb of mourners. Cuttings for the dead.]
+
+About ten days after the death a feast of bananas, yams, and germinating
+coco-nuts was partaken of by the relations and friends, and portions
+were distributed to the assembled company, who carried them home in
+baskets. It was on this occasion that kinsfolk and friends assumed the
+garb of mourners. Their faces and bodies were smeared with a mixture of
+greyish earth and water: the ashes of a wood fire were strewn on their
+heads; and fringes of sago leaves were fastened on their arms and legs.
+A widow wore besides a special petticoat made of the inner bark of the
+fig-tree; the ends of it were passed between her legs and tucked up
+before and behind. She had to leave her hair unshorn during the whole
+period of her widowhood; and in time it grew into a huge mop of a light
+yellow colour in consequence of the ashes with which it was smeared.
+This coating of ashes, as well as the grey paint on her face and body,
+she was expected to renew from time to time.[305] It was also on the
+occasion of this feast, on or about the tenth day after death, that
+young kinsfolk of the deceased had certain patterns cut in their flesh
+by a sharp shell. The persons so operated on were young adults of both
+sexes nearly related to the dead man or woman. Women generally operated
+on women and men on men. The patients were held down during the
+operation, which was painful, and they sometimes fainted under it. The
+patterns were first drawn on the skin in red paint and then cut in with
+the shell. They varied a good deal in shape. Some consisted of
+arrangements of lines and scrolls; a favourite one, which was only
+carved on women, represented a centipede. The blood which flowed from
+the wounds was allowed to drip on the corpse, thus forming a sacrifice
+or tribute to the dead.[306]
+
+[Sidenote: The Dance of Death. The nocturnal dance.]
+
+When the body had remained some time, perhaps four or six months, on the
+scaffold, and the process of mummification was far advanced, a dance of
+death was held to celebrate the final departure of the spirit for its
+long home. Several men, seldom exceeding four in number, were chosen to
+act the part of ghosts, including the ghost of him or her in whose
+honour the performance was specially held. Further, about a dozen men
+were selected to form a sort of chorus; their business was to act as
+intermediaries between the living and the dead, summoning up the shades,
+serving as their messengers, and informing the people of their presence.
+The costume of the ghosts was simple, consisting of nothing but a
+head-dress and shoulder-band of leaves. The chorus, if we may call them
+so, wore girdles of leaves round their waists and wreaths of leaves on
+their heads. When darkness had fallen, the first act of the drama was
+played. The chorus stood in line opposite the mummy. Beyond them stood
+or sat the drummers, and beyond them again the audience was crowded on
+the beach, the women standing furthest from the mummy and nearest to the
+sea. The drummers now struck up, chanting at the same time to the beat
+of the drums. This was the overture. Then a shrill whistle in the forest
+announced the approach of a ghost. The subdued excitement among the
+spectators, especially among the women, was intense. Meantime the
+chorus, holding each other's hands, advanced sidelong towards the mummy
+with strange gestures, the hollow thud of their feet as they stamped on
+the ground being supposed to be the tread of the ghosts. Thus they
+advanced to the red-painted mummy with its grinning mouth. Behind it by
+this time stood one of the ghosts, and between him and the chorus a
+dialogue ensued. "Whose ghost is there?" called out the chorus; and a
+strident voice answered from the darkness, "The ghost of so and so is
+here." At that the chorus retreated in the same order as they had
+advanced, and again the hollow thud of their feet sounded in the ears of
+the excited spectators as the tramp of the dead. On reaching the
+drummers in their retreat the chorus called out some words of uncertain
+meaning, which have been interpreted, "Spirit of so-and-so, away at sea,
+loved little." At all events, the name of a dead person was pronounced,
+and at the sound the women, thrilled with excitement, leaped from the
+ground, holding their hands aloft; then hurled themselves prone on the
+sand, throwing it over their heads and wailing. The drums now beat
+faster and a wild weird chant rose into the air, then died away and all
+was silent, except perhaps for the lapping of the waves on the sand or
+the muffled thunder of the surf afar off on the barrier reef. Thus one
+ghost after another was summoned from the dusty dead and vanished again
+into the darkness. When all had come and gone, the leader of the chorus,
+who kept himself invisible behind the screen save for a moment when he
+was seen by the chorus to glide behind the mummy on its stage, blew a
+whistle and informed the spectators in a weird voice that all the ghosts
+that had been summoned that night would appear before them in broad day
+light on the morrow. With that the audience dispersed. But the men who
+had played the parts of the ghosts came forward and sat down with the
+chorus and the drummers on mats beside the body. There they remained
+singing to the beat of the drums till the first faint streaks of dawn
+glimmered in the east.
+
+[Sidenote: The noonday dance. The ghosts represented by masked actors.]
+
+Next morning the men assembled beside the body to inspect the actors who
+were to personate the ghosts, in order to make sure that they had
+learned their parts well and could mimick to the life the figure and
+gait of the particular dead persons whom they represented. By the time
+that these preparations were complete, the morning had worn on to noon.
+The audience was already assembled on the beach and on the long stretch
+of sand left by the ebbing tide; for the hour of the drama was always
+fixed at low water so as to allow ample space for the spectators to
+stand at a distance from the players, lest they should detect the
+features of the living under the masks of the dead. All being ready, the
+drummers marched in and took up their position just above the beach,
+facing the audience. The overture having been concluded, the first ghost
+was seen to glide from the forest and come dancing towards the beach. If
+he represented a woman, his costume was more elaborate than it had been
+under the shades of evening the night before. His whole body was painted
+red. A petticoat of leaves encircled his waist: a mask of leaves,
+surmounted by tufts of cassowary and pigeon feathers, concealed his
+head; and in his hands he carried brooms of coco-nut palm leaf. If he
+personated a man, he held a bow in one hand and an arrow in the other,
+and his costume was the usual dress of a dancer, with the addition of a
+head-dress of leaves and feathers and a diamond-shaped ornament of
+bamboo, which he held in his teeth and which entirely concealed his
+features. He approached dancing and mimicking the gestures of the person
+whom he represented. At the sight the women wailed, and the widow would
+cry out, "That's my husband," the mother would cry out, "That's my son."
+Then suddenly the drummers would call out, "Ah! Ah! Ai! Ai!" at which
+the women would fall to the ground, while the dancer retreated into the
+forest. In this way one ghost after the other would make his appearance,
+play his part, and vanish. Occasionally two of them would appear and
+dance together. The women and children, we are told, really believed
+that the actors were the ghosts of their dead kinsfolk. When the first
+dancer had thus danced before the people, he advanced with the drummers
+towards the framework on which the mummy was stretched, and there he
+repeated his dance before it. But the people were not allowed to witness
+this mystery; they remained wailing on the beach, for this was the
+moment at which the ghost of the dead man or woman was supposed to be
+departing for ever to the land of shades.[307]
+
+[Sidenote: Preservation of the mummy.]
+
+Some days afterwards the mummy was affixed to a new framework of bamboo
+and carried into the hut. In former times the huts were of a beehive
+shape, and the framework which supported the mummy was fastened to the
+central post on which the roof rested. The body thus stood erect within
+the house. Its dried skin had been painted red. The empty orbits of the
+eyes had been filled with pieces of pearl-shell of the nautilus to
+imitate eyes, two round spots of black beeswax standing for the pupils.
+The ears were decorated with shreds of the sago-palm or with grey seeds.
+A frontlet of pearl-shell nautilus adorned the head, and a crescent of
+pearl-shell the breast. In the darkness of the old-fashioned huts the
+body looked like a living person. In course of time it became almost
+completely mummified and as light as if it were made of paper. Swinging
+to and fro with every breath of wind, it turned its gleaming eyes at
+each movement of the head. The hut was now surrounded by posts and ropes
+to prevent the ghost from making his way into it and taking possession
+of his old body. Ghosts were supposed to appear only at night, and it
+was imagined that in the dark they would stumble against the posts and
+entangle themselves in the ropes, till in despair they desisted from the
+attempt to penetrate into the hut. In time the mummy mouldered away and
+fell to pieces. If the deceased was a male, the head was removed and a
+wax model of it made and given to the brother, whether blood or tribal
+brother, of the dead man. The head thus prepared or modelled in wax,
+with eyes of pearl-shell, was used in divination. The decaying remains
+of the body were taken to the beach and placed on a platform supported
+by four posts. That was their last resting-place.[308]
+
+[Sidenote: General summary. Dramas of the dead.]
+
+To sum up the foregoing evidence, we may say that if the beliefs and
+practices of the Torres Straits Islanders which I have described do not
+amount to a worship of the dead, they contain the elements out of which
+such a worship might easily have been developed. The preservation of the
+bodies of the dead, or at least their skulls, in the houses, and the
+consultation of them as oracles, prove that the spirits of the dead are
+supposed to possess knowledge which may be of great use to the living;
+and the custom suggests that in other countries the images of the gods
+may perhaps have been evolved out of the mummies of the dead. Further,
+the dramatic representation of the ghosts in a series of striking and
+impressive performances indicates how a sacred and in time a secular
+drama may elsewhere have grown out of a purely religious celebration
+concerned with the souls of the departed. In this connexion we are
+reminded of Professor Ridgeway's theory that ancient Greek tragedy
+originated in commemorative songs and dances performed at the tomb for
+the purpose of pleasing and propitiating the ghost of the mighty
+dead.[309] Yet the mortuary dramas of the Torres Straits Islanders can
+hardly be adduced to support that theory by analogy so long as we are
+ignorant of the precise significance which the natives themselves
+attached to these remarkable performances. There is no clear evidence
+that the dramas were acted for the amusement and gratification of the
+ghost rather than for the edification of the spectators. One important
+act certainly represented, and might well be intended to facilitate, the
+final departure of the spirit of the deceased to the land of souls. But
+the means taken to effect that departure might be adopted in the
+interests of the living quite as much as out of a tender regard for the
+welfare of the dead, since the ghost of the recently departed is
+commonly regarded with fear and aversion, and his surviving relations
+resort to many expedients for the purpose of ridding themselves of his
+unwelcome presence.
+
+[Footnote 274: S. H. Ray, in _Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological
+Expedition to Torres Straits_, iii. (Cambridge, 1907) pp. 509-511; A. C.
+Haddon, "The Religion of the Torres Straits Islanders," _Anthropological
+Essays presented to E. B. Tyler_ (Oxford, 1907), p. 175.]
+
+[Footnote 275: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+iv. 92 _sqq._, 144 _sqq._, v. 346, vi. 207 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 276: A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays presented to E.
+B. Tylor_, p. 186.]
+
+[Footnote 277: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 254 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 278: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 254 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 279: A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays presented to E.
+B. Tylor_, p. 181.]
+
+[Footnote 280: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 355 _sq._, vi. 251; A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays
+presented to E. B. Tylor_, p. 179.]
+
+[Footnote 281: For authorities see the references in the preceding
+note.]
+
+[Footnote 282: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 253.]
+
+[Footnote 283: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 248, 249.]
+
+[Footnote 284: _Id._, p. 250.]
+
+[Footnote 285: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 253; A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays presented to E. B.
+Tylor_, p. 180.]
+
+[Footnote 286: A. C. Haddon, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 287: A. C. Haddon, _op. cit._ pp. 182 _sq._; _Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_, vi. 127.]
+
+[Footnote 288: A. C. Haddon, _op. cit._ p. 183.]
+
+[Footnote 289: T. C. Hodson, _The Naga Tribes of Manipur_ (London,
+1911), p. 43.]
+
+[Footnote 290: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 355 _sq._, vi. 252. In the former passage Dr. Haddon seems to
+identify Boigu with the island of that name off the south coast of New
+Guinea; in the latter he prefers to regard it as mythical.]
+
+[Footnote 291: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 127.]
+
+[Footnote 292: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 248 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 293: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 250 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 294: Diodorus Siculus, i. 91.]
+
+[Footnote 295: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 258.]
+
+[Footnote 296: _Id._, p. 362.]
+
+[Footnote 297: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 252-256.]
+
+[Footnote 298: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 256.]
+
+[Footnote 299: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 129-133.]
+
+[Footnote 300: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 133 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 301: _Id._, pp. 135, 154.]
+
+[Footnote 302: (Sir) George Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery in North-West and Western Australia_ (London, 1841), ii. 335.]
+
+[Footnote 303: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 135.]
+
+[Footnote 304: _Op. cit._ p. 136.]
+
+[Footnote 305: _Op. cit._ pp. 138, 153, 157 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 306: _Op. cit._ pp. 154 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 307: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 139-141.]
+
+[Footnote 308: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 148 _sq._ As to divination with skulls or waxen models, see _id._,
+pp. 266 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 309: W. Ridgeway, _The Origin of Tragedy, with special
+reference to the Greek Tragedians_ (Cambridge, 1910), pp. 26 _sqq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE IX
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF BRITISH NEW GUINEA
+
+
+[Sidenote: The two races of New Guinea, the Papuan and the Melanesian.]
+
+In my last lecture I dealt with the islanders of Torres Straits, and
+shewed that these savages firmly believe in the existence of the human
+soul after death, and that if their beliefs and customs in this respect
+do not always amount to an actual worship of the departed, they contain
+at least the elements out of which such a worship might easily be
+developed. To-day we pass from the small islands of Torres Straits to
+the vast neighbouring island, almost continent, of New Guinea, the
+greater part of which is inhabited by a race related by physical type
+and language to the Torres Straits Islanders, and exhibiting
+approximately the same level of social and intellectual culture. New
+Guinea, roughly speaking, appears to be occupied by two different races,
+to which the names of Papuan and Melanesian are now given; and it is to
+the Papuan race, not to the Melanesian, that the Torres Straits
+Islanders are akin. The Papuans, a tall, dark-skinned, frizzly-haired
+race, inhabit apparently the greater part of New Guinea, including the
+whole of the western and central portions of the island. The
+Melanesians, a smaller, lighter-coloured, frizzly-haired race, inhabit
+the long eastern peninsula, including the southern coast from about Cape
+Possession eastward,[310] and tribes speaking a Melanesian language are
+also settled about Finsch Harbour and Huon Gulf in German New
+Guinea.[311] These Melanesians are most probably immigrants who have
+settled in New Guinea from the north and east, where the great chain of
+islands known as Melanesia stretches in an immense semicircle from New
+Ireland on the north to New Caledonia on the south-east. The natives of
+this chain of islands or series of archipelagoes are the true
+Melanesians; their kinsmen in New Guinea have undergone admixture with
+the Papuan aborigines, and accordingly should rather be called
+Papuo-Melanesians than Melanesians simply. Their country appears to be
+wholly comprised within the limits of British and German New Guinea; so
+far as I am aware, the vast area of Dutch New Guinea is inhabited solely
+by tribes of the Papuan race. In respect of material culture both races
+stand approximately on the same level: they live in settled villages,
+they practise agriculture, they engage in commerce, and they have a
+fairly developed barbaric art. Thus they have made some progress in the
+direction of civilisation; certainly they have far outstripped the
+wandering savages of Australia, who subsist entirely on the products of
+the chase and on the natural fruits of the earth.
+
+[Sidenote: Scantiness of our information as to the natives of New
+Guinea.]
+
+But although the natives of New Guinea have now been under the rule of
+European powers, Britain, Germany, and Holland, for many years, we
+unfortunately possess little detailed information as to their mental and
+social condition. It is true that the members of the Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits visited some parts of the
+southern coasts of British New Guinea, and several years later, in 1904,
+Dr. Seligmann was able to devote somewhat more time to the investigation
+of the same region and has given us the results of his enquiries in a
+valuable book. But the time at his disposal did not suffice for a
+thorough investigation of this large region; and accordingly his
+information, eked out though it is by that of Protestant and Catholic
+missionaries, still leaves us in the dark as to much which we should
+wish to know. Among the natives of British New Guinea our information is
+especially defective in regard to the Papuans, who occupy the greater
+part of the possession, including the whole of the western region; for
+Dr. Seligmann's book, which is the most detailed and systematic work yet
+published on the ethnology of British New Guinea, deals almost
+exclusively with the Melanesian portion of the population. Accordingly I
+shall begin what I have to say on this subject with the Melanesian or
+rather Papuo-Melanesian tribes of south-eastern New Guinea.
+
+[Sidenote: The Motu, their beliefs and customs concerning the dead.]
+
+Amongst these people the best known are the Motu, a tribe of fishermen
+and potters, who live in and about Port Moresby in the Central District
+of British New Guinea. Their language conforms to the Melanesian type.
+They are immigrants, but the country from which they came is
+unknown.[312] In their opinion the spirits of the dead dwell in a happy
+land where parted friends meet again and never suffer hunger. They fish,
+hunt, and plant, and are just like living men, except that they have no
+noses. When they first arrive in the mansions of the blest, they are
+laid out to dry on a sort of gridiron over a slow fire in order to purge
+away the grossness of the body and make them ethereal and light, as
+spirits should be. Yet, oddly enough, though they have no noses they
+cannot enter the realms of bliss unless their noses were pierced in
+their lifetime. For these savages bore holes in their noses and insert
+ornaments, or what they regard as such, in the holes. The operation is
+performed on children about the age of six years; and if children die
+before it has been performed on them, the parents will bore a hole in
+the nose of the corpse in order that the spirit of the child may go to
+the happy land. For if they omitted to do so, the poor ghost would have
+to herd with other whole-nosed ghosts in a bad place called Tageani,
+where there is little food to eat and no betelnuts to chew. The spirits
+of the dead are very powerful and visit bad people with their
+displeasure. Famine and scarcity of fish and game are attributed to the
+anger of the spirits. But they hearken to prayer and appear to their
+friends in dreams, sometimes condescending to give them directions for
+their guidance in time of trouble.[313]
+
+[Sidenote: The Koita or Koitapu.]
+
+Side by side with the Motu live the Koita or Koitapu, who appear to be
+the aboriginal inhabitants of the country and to belong to the Papuan
+stock. Their villages lie scattered for a distance of about forty miles
+along the coast, from a point about seven miles south-east of Port
+Moresby to a point on Redscar Bay to the north-west of that settlement.
+They live on friendly terms with the Motu and have intermarried with
+them for generations. The villages of the two tribes are usually built
+near to or even in direct continuity with each other. But while the Motu
+are mainly fishers and potters, the Koita are mainly tillers of the
+soil, though they have learned some arts or adopted some customs from
+their neighbours. They say to the Motu, "Yours is the sea, the canoes,
+the nets; ours the land and the wallaby. Give us fish for our flesh, and
+pottery for our yams and bananas." The Motu look down upon the Koita,
+but fear their power of sorcery, and apply to them for help in sickness
+and for the weather they happen to require; for they imagine that the
+Koita rule the elements and can make rain or sunshine, wind or calm by
+their magic. Thus, as in so many cases, the members of the immigrant
+race confess their inability to understand and manage the gods or
+spirits of the land, and have recourse in time of need to the magic of
+the aboriginal inhabitants. While the Koita belong to the Papuan stock
+and speak a Papuan language, most of the men understand the Motu tongue,
+which is one of the Melanesian family. Altogether these two tribes, the
+Koita and the Motu, may be regarded as typical representatives of the
+mixed race to which the name of Papuo-Melanesian is now given.[314]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Koita concerning the human soul.]
+
+The Koita believe that the human spirit or ghost, which they call _sua_,
+leaves the body at death and goes away to live with other ghosts on a
+mountain called Idu. But they think that the spirit can quit the body
+and return to it during life; it goes away, for example, in dreams, and
+if a sleeper should unfortunately waken before his soul has had time to
+return, he will probably fall sick. Sneezing is a sign that the soul has
+returned to the body, and if a man does not sneeze for many weeks
+together, his friends look on it as a grave symptom; his soul, they
+imagine, must be a very long way off.[315] Moreover, a man's soul may be
+enticed from his body and detained by a demon or _tabu_, as the Koita
+call it. Thus, when a man who has been out in the forest returns home
+and shakes with fever, it is assumed that he has fallen down and been
+robbed of his soul by a demon. In order to recover that priceless
+possession, the sufferer and his friends repair to the exact spot in the
+forest where the supposed robbery was perpetrated. They take with them a
+long bamboo with some valuable ornaments tied to it, and two men support
+it horizontally over a pot which is filled with grass. A light is put to
+the grass, and as it crackles and blazes a number of men standing round
+the pot strike it with stones till it breaks, whereat they all groan.
+Then the company returns to the village, and the sick man lies down in
+his house with the bamboo and its ornaments hung over him. This is
+supposed to be all that is needed to effect a perfect cure; for the
+demon has kindly accepted the soul of the ornaments and released the
+soul of the sufferer, who ought to recover accordingly.[316]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Koita concerning the state of the dead.
+Alleged communications with the dead by means of mediums.]
+
+However, at death the soul goes away for good and all; at least there
+appears to be no idea that it will ever return to life in the form of an
+infant, as the souls of the Central Australian aborigines are supposed
+to do. All Koita ghosts live together on Mount Idu, and their life is
+very like the one they led here on earth. There is no distinction
+between the good and the bad, the righteous and the wicked, the strong
+and the weak, the young and the old; they all fare alike in the
+spirit-land, with one exception. Like the Motu, the Koita are in the
+habit of boring holes in their noses and inserting ornaments in the
+holes; and they think that if any person were so unfortunate as to be
+buried with his nose whole and entire, his ghost would have to go about
+in the other world with a creature like a slow-worm depending from his
+nostrils on either side. Hence, when anybody dies before the operation
+of nose-boring has been performed on him or her, the friends take care
+to bore a hole in the nose of the corpse in order that the ghost may not
+appear disfigured among his fellows in dead man's land. There the ghosts
+dwell in houses, cultivate gardens, marry wives, and amuse themselves
+just as they did here on earth. They live a long time, but not for ever;
+for they grow weaker and weaker and at last die the second death, never
+to revive again, not even as ghosts. The exact length of time they live
+in the spirit-land has not been accurately ascertained; but there seems
+to be a notion that they survive only so long as their names and their
+memories survive among the living. When these are utterly forgotten, the
+poor ghosts cease to exist. If that is so, it is obvious that the dead
+depend for their continued existence upon the recollection of the
+living; their names are in a sense their souls, so that oblivion of the
+name involves extinction of the soul.[317] But though the spirits of the
+dead go away to live for a time on Mount Idu, they often return to their
+native villages and haunt the place of their death. On these visits they
+shew little benevolence or lovingkindness to their descendants. They
+punish any neglect in the performance of the funeral rites and any
+infringement of tribal customs, and the punishment takes the form of
+sickness or of bad luck in hunting or fishing. This dread of the ghost
+commonly leads the Koita to desert a house after a death and to let it
+fall into decay; but sometimes the widow, or in rare cases a brother or
+sister, will continue to inhabit the house of the deceased. Children who
+play near dwellings which have been deserted on account of death may
+fall sick; and if people who are not members of the family partake of
+food which has been hung up in such houses, they also may sicken. It is
+in dreams that the ghosts usually appear to the survivors; but
+occasionally they may be seen or at least felt by people in the waking
+state. Some years ago four Motuan girls persuaded many natives of Port
+Moresby that they could evoke the spirit of a youth named Tamasi, who
+had died three years before. The mother and other sorrowing relatives of
+the deceased paid a high price to the principal medium, a young woman
+named Mea, for an interview with the ghost. The meeting took place in a
+house by night. The relations and friends squatted on the ground in
+expectation; and sure enough the ghost presented himself in the darkness
+and went round shaking hands most affably with the assembled company.
+However, a sceptic who happened to assist at this spiritual sitting, had
+the temerity to hold on tight to the proffered hand of the ghost, while
+another infidel assisted him to obtain a sight as well as a touch of the
+vanished hand by striking a light. It then turned out that the supposed
+apparition was no spirit but the medium Mea herself. She was brought
+before a magistrate, who sentenced her to a short term of imprisonment
+and relieved her of the property which she had amassed by the exercise
+of her spiritual talents.[318] It is hardly for us, or at least for some
+of us, to cast stones at the efforts of ignorant savages to communicate
+by means of such intermediaries with their departed friends. Similar
+attempts have been made in our own country within our lifetime, and I
+believe that they are still being made, in perfect good faith, by
+educated ladies and gentlemen, who like their black brethren and sisters
+in the faith are sometimes made the dupes of designing knaves. If New
+Guinea has its Meas, Europe has its Eusapias. Human credulity and vulgar
+imposture are much the same all the world over.
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the dead.]
+
+The fear of the dead is strongly marked in some funeral customs which
+are observed by the Roro-speaking tribes who occupy a territory at the
+mouth of the St. Joseph river in British New Guinea.[319] When a death
+takes place, the female relations of the deceased lacerate their skulls,
+faces, breasts, bellies, arms, and legs with sharp shells, till they
+stream with blood and fall down exhausted. Moreover, a fire is kindled
+on the grave and kept up almost continually for months for the purpose,
+we are told, of warming the ghost.[320] These attentions might be
+interpreted as marks of affection rather than of fear; but in other
+customs of these people the dread of the ghost is unmistakable. For when
+the corpse has been placed in the grave a near kinsman strokes it twice
+with a branch from head to foot in order to drive away the dead man's
+spirit; and in Yule Island, when the ghost has thus been brushed away
+from the body, he is pursued by two men brandishing sticks and torches
+from the village to the edge of the forest, where with a last curse they
+hurl the sticks and torches after him.[321]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghost of dead wife feared by widower.]
+
+Among these people the visits of ghosts, though frequent, are far from
+welcome, for all ghosts are supposed to be mischievous and to take no
+delight but in injuring the living. Hence, for example, a widower in
+mourning goes about everywhere armed with an axe to defend himself
+against the spirit of his dead wife, who might play him many an ill turn
+if she caught him defenceless and off his guard. And he is subject to
+many curious restrictions and has to lead the life of an outcast from
+society, apparently because people fear to come into contact with a man
+whose steps are dogged by so dangerous a spirit.[322] This account of
+the terrors of ghosts we owe to a Catholic missionary. But according to
+the information collected by Dr. Seligmann among these people the dread
+inspired by the souls of the dead is not so absolute. He tells us,
+indeed, that ghosts are thought to make people ill by stealing their
+souls; that the natives fear to go alone outside the village in the dark
+lest they should encounter a spectre; and that if too many quarrels
+occur among the women, the spirits of the dead may manifest their
+displeasure by visiting hunters and fishers with bad luck, so that it
+may be necessary to conjure their souls out of the village. On the other
+hand, it is said that if the ghosts abandoned a village altogether, the
+luck of the villagers would be gone, and if such a thing is supposed to
+have happened, measures are taken to bring back the spirits of the
+departed to the old home.[323]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Mafulu concerning the dead.]
+
+Inland from the Roro-speaking tribes, among the mountains at the head of
+the St. Joseph River, there is a tribe known to their neighbours as the
+Mafulu, though they call themselves Mambule. They speak a Papuan
+language, but their physical characteristics are believed to indicate a
+strain of Negrito blood.[324] The Mafulu hold that at death the human
+spirit leaves the body and becomes a malevolent ghost. Accordingly they
+drive it away with shouts. It is supposed to go away to the tops of the
+mountains there to become, according to its age, either a shimmering
+light on the ground or a large sort of fungus, which is found only on
+the mountains. Hence natives who come across such a shimmering light or
+such a fungus are careful not to tread on it; much less would they eat
+the fungus. However, in spite of their transformation into these things,
+the ghosts come down from the mountains and prowl about the villages and
+gardens seeking what they may devour, and as their intentions are always
+evil their visits are dreaded by the people, who fill up the crevices
+and openings, except the doors, of their houses at night in order to
+prevent the incursions of these unquiet spirits. When a mission station
+was founded in their country, the Mafulu were amazed that the
+missionaries should sleep alone in rooms with open doors and windows,
+through which the ghosts might enter.[325]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the Mafulu.]
+
+Common people among the Mafulu are buried in shallow graves in the
+village, and pigs are killed at the funeral for the purpose of appeasing
+the ghost. Mourners wear necklaces of string and smear their faces,
+sometimes also their bodies, with black, which they renew from time to
+time. Instead of wearing a necklace, a widow, widower, or other near
+relative may abstain during the period of mourning from eating a
+favourite food of the deceased. A woman who has lost a child, especially
+a first-born or dearly loved child, will often amputate the first joint
+of one of her fingers with an adze; and she may repeat the amputation if
+she suffers another bereavement. A woman has been seen with three of her
+fingers mutilated in this fashion.[326] The corpses of chiefs, their
+wives, and other members of their families are not buried in graves but
+laid in rude coffins, which are then deposited either on rough platforms
+in the village or in the fork of a species of fig-tree. This sort of
+tree, called by the natives _gabi_, is specially used for such burials;
+one of them has been seen supporting no less than six coffins, one above
+the other. The Mafulu never cut down these trees, and in seeking a new
+site for a village they will often choose a place where one of them is
+growing. So long as the corpse of a chief is rotting and stinking on the
+platform or the tree, the village is deserted by the inhabitants; only
+two men, relatives of the deceased, remain behind exposed to the stench
+of the decaying body and the blood of the pigs which were slaughtered at
+the funeral feast. When decomposition is complete, the people return to
+the village. Should the coffin fall to the ground through the decay of
+the platform or the tree on which it rests, the people throw away all
+the bones except the skull and the larger bones of the arms and legs;
+these they bury in a shallow grave under the platform, or put in a box
+on a burial tree, or hang up in the chief's house.[327]
+
+[Sidenote: Use made of the skulls and bones at a great festival.]
+
+The skulls and leg and arm bones of chiefs, their wives, and other
+members of their families, which have thus been preserved, play a
+prominent part in the great feasts which the inhabitants of a Mafulu
+village celebrate at intervals of perhaps fifteen or twenty years. Great
+preparations are made for such a celebration. A series of tall posts,
+one for each household, is erected in the open space which intervenes
+between the two rows of the village houses. Yams and taro are fastened
+to the upper parts of the posts; and below them are hung in circles the
+skulls and arm and leg bones of dead chiefs, their wives, and kinsfolk,
+which have been preserved in the manner described. Any skulls and bones
+that remain over when all the posts have been thus decorated are placed
+on a platform, which has either served for the ordinary exposure of a
+chief's corpse or has been specially erected for the purpose of the
+festival. At a given moment of the ceremony the chief of the clan cuts
+down the props which support the platform, so that the skulls and bones
+roll on the ground. These are picked up and afterwards distributed,
+along with some of the skulls and bones from the posts, by the chief of
+the clan to the more important of the invited guests, who wear them as
+ornaments on their arms in a great dance. None but certain of the male
+guests take part in the dance; the villagers themselves merely look on.
+All the dancers are arrayed in full dancing costume, including heavy
+head-dresses of feathers, and they carry drums and spears, sometimes
+also clubs or adzes. The dance lasts the whole night. When it is over,
+the skulls and bones are hung up again on the tall posts. Afterwards the
+fruits and vegetables which have been collected in large quantities are
+divided among the guests. On a subsequent morning a large number of pigs
+are killed, and certain of the hosts take some of the human bones from
+the posts and dip them in the blood which flows from the mouths of the
+slaughtered pigs. With these blood-stained bones they next touch the
+skulls and all the other bones on the posts, which include all the
+skulls and arm and leg bones of all the chiefs and members of their
+families and other prominent persons who have been buried in the village
+or in any other village of the community since the last great feast was
+held. These relics of mortality may afterwards be kept in the chief's
+house, or hung on a tree, or simply thrown away in the forest; but in no
+case are they ever again used for purposes of ceremony. The slaughtered
+pigs are cut up and the portions distributed among the guests, who carry
+them away for consumption in their own villages.[328]
+
+[Sidenote: Trace of ancestor worship among the Mafulu.]
+
+This preservation of the skulls and bones of chiefs and other notables
+for years, and the dipping of them in the blood of pigs at a great
+festival, must apparently be designed to propitiate or influence in some
+way the ghosts of the persons to whom the skulls and bones belonged in
+their lifetime. But Mr. R. W. Williamson, to whom we are indebted for
+the description of this interesting ceremony, was not able to detect any
+other clear indications of ancestor worship among the people.[329]
+
+[Sidenote: Worship of the dead among the natives of the Aroma district.]
+
+However, a real worship of the dead, or something approaching to it, is
+reported to exist among some of the natives of the Aroma district in
+British New Guinea. Each family is said to have a sacred place, whither
+they carry offerings for the spirits of dead ancestors, whom they
+terribly fear. Sickness in the family, death, famine, scarcity of fish,
+and so forth, are all set down to the anger of these dreadful beings,
+who must accordingly be propitiated. On certain occasions the help of
+the spirits is especially invoked and their favour wooed by means of
+offerings. Thus, when a house is being built and the central post has
+been erected, sacrifices of wallaby, fish, and bananas are presented to
+the souls of the dead, and a prayer is put up that they will be pleased
+to keep the house always full of food and to prevent it from falling
+down in stormy weather. Again, when the natives begin to plant their
+gardens, they first take a bunch of bananas and sugar-cane and standing
+in the middle of the garden call over the names of dead members of the
+family, adding, "There is your food, your bananas and sugar-cane; let
+our food grow well, and let it be plentiful. If it does not grow well
+and plentifully, you all will be full of shame, and so shall we." Again,
+before the people set out on a trading expedition, they present food to
+the spirits at the central post of the house and pray them to go before
+the traders and prepare the people, so that the trade may be good. Once
+more, when there is sickness in the family, a pig is killed and its
+carcase carried to the sacred place, where the spirits are asked to
+accept it. Sins, also, are confessed, such as that people have gathered
+bananas or coco-nuts without offering any of them to their dead
+ancestors. In presenting the pig they say, "There is a pig; accept it,
+and remove the sickness." But if prayers and sacrifices are vain, and
+the patient dies, then, while the relatives all stand round the open
+grave, the chief's sister or cousin calls out in a loud voice: "You have
+been angry with us for the bananas or the coco-nuts which we have
+gathered, and in your anger you have taken away this child. Now let it
+suffice, and bury your anger." So saying they lower the body into the
+grave and shovel in the earth on the top of it. The spirits of the
+departed, on quitting their bodies, paddle in canoes across the lagoon
+and go away to the mountains, where they live in perfect bliss, with no
+work to do and no trouble to vex them, chewing betel, dancing all night
+and resting all day.[330]
+
+[Sidenote: The Hood Peninsula. The town of Kalo.]
+
+Between the Aroma District in the south-east and Port Moresby on the
+north-west is situated the Hood Peninsula in the Central District of
+British New Guinea. It is inhabited by the Bulaa, Babaka, Kamali, and
+Kalo tribes, which all speak dialects of one language.[331] The village
+or town of Kalo, built at the base of the peninsula, close to the mouth
+of the Vanigela or Kemp Welch River, is said to be the wealthiest
+village in British New Guinea. It includes some magnificent native
+houses, all built over the water on piles, some of which are thirty feet
+high. The sight of these great houses perched on such lofty and massive
+props is very impressive. In front of each house is a series of large
+platforms like gigantic steps. Some of the posts and under-surfaces of
+the houses are carved with figures of crocodiles and so forth. The
+labour of cutting the huge planks for the flooring of the houses and the
+platforms must be immense, and must have been still greater in the old
+days, when the natives had only stone tools to work with. Many of the
+planks are cut out of the slab-like buttresses of tall forest trees
+which grow inland. So hard is the wood that the boards are handed down
+as heirlooms from father to son, and the piles on which the houses are
+built last for generations. The inhabitants of Kalo possess gardens,
+where the rich alluvial soil produces a superabundance of coco-nuts,
+bananas, yams, sweet potatoes, and taro. Areca palms also flourish and
+produce the betel nuts, which are in great demand for chewing with
+quick-lime and so constitute a source of wealth. Commanding the mouth of
+the Vanigela River, the people of Kalo absorb the trade with the
+interior; and their material prosperity is said to have rendered them
+conceited and troublesome.[332]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the natives of
+the Hood Peninsula. Seclusion of the widow or widower.]
+
+The tribes inhabiting the Hood Peninsula are reported to have no belief
+in any good spirit but an unlimited faith in bad spirits, amongst whom
+they include the souls of their dead ancestors. At death the ghosts join
+their forefathers in a subterranean region, where they have splendid
+gardens, houses, and so forth. Yet not content with their life in the
+underworld, they are always on the watch to deal out sickness and death
+to their surviving friends and relations, who may have the misfortune to
+incur their displeasure. So the natives are most careful to do nothing
+that might offend these touchy and dangerous spirits. Like many other
+savages, they do not believe that anybody dies a natural death; they
+think that all the deaths which we should call natural are brought about
+either by an ancestral ghost (_palagu_) or by a sorcerer or witch
+(_wara_). Even when a man dies of snake-bite, they detect in the
+discoloration of the body the wounds inflicted upon him by the fell art
+of the magician.[333] On the approach of death the house of the sick man
+is filled by anxious relatives and friends, who sit around watching for
+the end. When it comes, there is a tremendous outburst of grief. The men
+beat their faces with their clenched fists; the women tear their cheeks
+with their nails till the blood streams down. They usually bury their
+dead in graves, which among the inland tribes are commonly dug near the
+houses of the deceased. The maritime tribes, who live in houses built on
+piles over the water, sometimes inter the corpse in the forest. But at
+other times they place it in a canoe, which they anchor off the village.
+Then, when the body has dried up, they lay it on a platform in a tree.
+Finally, they collect and clean the bones, tie them in a bundle, and
+place them on the roof of the house. When the corpse is buried, a
+temporary hut is erected over the grave, and in it the widow or widower
+lives in seclusion for two or three months. During her seclusion the
+widow employs herself in fashioning her widow's weeds, which consist of
+a long grass petticoat reaching to the ankles. She wears a large
+head-dress made of shells; her head is shaved, and her body blackened.
+Further, she wears round her neck the waistband of her deceased husband
+with his lower jaw-bone attached to it. The costume of a widower is
+somewhat similar, though he does not wear a long grass petticoat.
+Instead of it he has a graceful fringe, which hangs from his waist half
+way to the knees. On his head he wears an elaborate head-dress made of
+shells, and on his arms he has armlets of the same material. His hair is
+cut off and his whole skin blackened. Round his neck is a string, from
+which depends his dead wife's petticoat. It is sewn up into small bulk
+and hangs under his right arm. While the widow or widower is living in
+seclusion on the grave, he or she is supplied with food by relations. At
+sundown on the day of the burial, a curious ceremony is performed. An
+old woman or man, supposed to be gifted with second-sight, is sent for.
+Seating herself at the foot of the grave she peers into the deepening
+shadows under the coco-nut palms. At first she remains perfectly still,
+while the relations of the deceased watch her with painful anxiety. Soon
+her look becomes more piercing, and lowering her head, while she still
+gazes into the depth of the forest, she says in low and solemn tones, "I
+see coming hither So-and-So's grandfather" (mentioning the name of the
+dead person). "He says he is glad to welcome his grandson to his abode.
+I see now his father and his own little son also, who died in infancy."
+Gradually, she grows more and more excited, waving her arms and swaying
+her body from side to side. "Now they come," she cries, "I can see all
+our forefathers in a fast-gathering crowd. They are coming closer and
+yet closer. Make room, make room for the spirits of our departed
+ancestors." By this time she has worked herself up into a frenzy. She
+throws herself on the ground, beating her head with her clenched fists.
+Foam flies from her lips, her eyes become fixed, and she rolls over
+insensible. But the fit lasts only a short time. She soon comes to
+herself; the vision is past, and the visionary is restored to common
+life.[334]
+
+[Sidenote: Application of the juices of the dead to the persons of the
+living.]
+
+Some of the inland tribes of this district have a peculiar way of
+disposing of their dead. A double platform about ten feet high is
+erected near the village. On the upper platform the corpse is placed,
+and immediately below it the widow or widower sleeps on the lower
+platform, allowing juices of the decaying body to stream down on her or
+him. This application of the decomposing juices of a corpse to the
+persons of the living is not uncommon among savages; it appears to be a
+form of communion with the dead, the survivors thus in a manner
+identifying themselves with their departed kinsfolk by absorbing a
+portion of their bodily substance. Among the tribes in question a
+widower marks his affection for his dead wife by never washing himself
+during the period of mourning; he would not rid himself of those
+products of decomposition which link him, however sadly, with her whom
+he has lost. Every day, too, reeking with these relics of mortality, he
+solemnly stalks through the village.[335]
+
+[Sidenote: Precautions taken by man-slayers against the ghosts of their
+victims.]
+
+But there is a distinction between ghosts. If all of them are feared,
+some are more dreadful than others, and amongst the latter may naturally
+be reckoned the ghosts of slain enemies. Accordingly the slayer has to
+observe special precautions to guard against the angry and vengeful
+spirit of his victim. Amongst these people, we are told, a man who has
+taken life is held to be impure until he has undergone certain
+ceremonies. As soon as possible after the deed is done, he cleanses
+himself and his weapon. Then he repairs to his village and seats himself
+on the logs of sacrificial staging. No one approaches him or takes any
+notice whatever of him. Meantime a house is made ready, in which he must
+live by himself for several days, waited on only by two or three small
+boys. He may eat nothing but toasted bananas, and only the central parts
+of them; the ends are thrown away. On the third day a small feast is
+prepared for him by his friends, who also provide him with some new
+waistbands. Next day, arrayed in all his finery and wearing the badges
+which mark him as a homicide, he sallies forth fully armed and parades
+the village. Next day a hunt takes place, and from the game captured a
+kangaroo is selected. It is cut open, and with its spleen and liver the
+back of the homicide is rubbed. Then he walks solemnly down to the
+nearest water and standing straddle-legs in it washes himself. All young
+untried warriors then swim between his legs, which is supposed to impart
+his courage and strength to them. Next day at early dawn he dashes out
+of his house fully armed and calls aloud the name of his victim. Having
+satisfied himself that he has thoroughly scared the ghost of the dead
+man, he returns to his house. Further, floors are beaten and fires
+kindled for the sake of driving away the ghost, lest he should still be
+lingering in the neighbourhood. A day later the purification of the
+homicide is complete and he is free to enter his wife's house, which he
+might not do before.[336] This account of the purification of a homicide
+suggests that the purificatory rites, which have been observed in
+similar cases by many peoples, including the ancient Greeks, are
+primarily intended to free the slayer from the dangerous ghost of his
+victim, which haunts him and seeks to take his life. Such rites in fact
+appear designed, not to restore the homicide to a state of moral
+innocence, but merely to guard him against a physical danger; they are
+protective, not reformatory, in character; they are exorcisms, not
+purifications in the sense which we attach to the word. This
+interpretation of the ceremonies observed by manslayers among many
+peoples might be supported by a large array of evidence; but to go into
+the matter fully would lead me into a long digression. I have collected
+some of the evidence elsewhere.[337]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the Massim of
+south-eastern New Guinea. Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead. Mourners bathe
+and shave their heads. Food deposited in the grave. Dietary restrictions
+imposed on mourners.]
+
+We now pass to that branch of the Papuo-Melanesian race which occupies
+the extreme south-eastern part of British New Guinea, and to which Dr.
+Seligmann gives the name of Massim. These people have been observed more
+especially at three places, namely Bartle Bay, Wagawaga, and Tubetube, a
+small island of the Engineer group lying off the south-eastern extremity
+of New Guinea. Among them the old custom was to bury the dead on the
+outskirts of the hamlet and sometimes within a few yards of the houses,
+and apparently the remains were afterwards as a rule left undisturbed;
+there was no general practice of exhuming the bones and depositing them
+elsewhere.[338] At Wagawaga the name for the spirit or soul of a dead
+person is _arugo_, which also signifies a man's shadow or reflection in
+a glass or in water; and though animals and trees are not supposed to
+have spirits, their reflections bear the same name _arugo_.[339] The
+souls of the dead are believed to depart to the land of Hiyoyoa, which
+is under the sea, near Maivara, at the head of Milne Bay. The land of
+the dead, as usual, resembles in all respects the land of the living,
+except that it is day there when it is night at Wagawaga, and the dead
+speak of the upper world in the language of Milne Bay instead of in that
+of Wagawaga. A certain being called Tumudurere receives the ghosts on
+their arrival and directs them where to make their gardens. The souls of
+living men and women can journey to the land of the dead and return to
+earth; indeed this happens not unfrequently. There is a man at Wagawaga
+who has often gone thither and come back; whenever he wishes to make the
+journey, he has nothing to do but to smear himself with a magical stuff
+and to fall asleep, after which he soon wakes up in Hiyoyoa. At first
+the ghosts whom he met in the other world did not invite him to partake
+of their food, because they knew that if he did so he could not return
+to the land of the living; but apparently practice has rendered him
+immune to the usually fatal effects of the food of the dead.[340] Though
+Hiyoyoa, at the head of Milne Bay, lies to the west of Wagawaga, the
+dead are buried in a squatting posture with their faces turned to the
+east, in order that their souls may depart to the other world.[341]
+Immediately after the funeral the relations who have taken part in the
+burial go down to the sea and bathe, and so do the widow and children of
+the deceased because they supported the dying husband and father in his
+extremity. After bathing in the sea the widow and children shave their
+heads.[342] Both the bathing and the shaving are doubtless forms of
+ceremonial purification; in other words, they are designed to rid the
+survivors of the taint of death, or perhaps more definitely to remove
+the ghost from their persons, to which he may be supposed to cling like
+a burr. At Bartle Bay the dead are buried on their sides with their
+heads pointing in the direction from which the totem clan of the
+deceased is said to have come originally; and various kinds of food, of
+which the dead man had partaken in his last illness, are deposited,
+along with some paltry personal ornaments, in the grave. Apparently the
+food is intended to serve as provision for the ghost on his journey to
+the other world. Curiously enough, the widow is forbidden to eat of the
+same kinds of food of which her husband ate during his last illness, and
+the prohibition is strictly observed until after the last of the funeral
+feasts.[343] The motive of the prohibition is not obvious; perhaps it
+may be a fear of attracting the ghost back to earth through the savoury
+food which he loved in the body. At Wagawaga, after the relatives who
+took part in the burial have bathed in the sea, they cut down several of
+the coco-nut trees which belonged to the deceased, leaving both nuts and
+trees to rot on the ground. During the first two or three weeks after
+the funeral these same relatives may not eat boiled food, but only
+roast; they may not drink water, but only the milk of young coco-nuts
+made hot, and although they may eat yams they must abstain from bananas
+and sugar-cane.[344] A man may not eat coco-nuts grown in his dead
+father's hamlet, nor pigs and areca-nuts from it during the whole
+remainder of his life.[345] The reasons for these dietary restrictions
+are not mentioned, but no doubt the abstinences are based on a fear of
+the ghost, or at all events on a dread of the contagion of death, to
+which all who had a share in the burial are especially exposed.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral customs at Tubetube. The fire on the grave. The happy
+land.]
+
+At Tubetube, in like manner, immediately after a funeral a brother of
+the deceased cuts down two or three of the dead man's coco-nut trees.
+There, also, the children of the deceased may not eat any coco-nuts from
+their father's trees nor even from any trees grown in his hamlet; nay,
+they may not partake of any garden produce grown in the vicinity of the
+hamlet; and similarly they must abstain from the pork of all pigs
+fattened in their dead father's village. But these prohibitions do not
+apply to the brothers, sisters, and other relatives of the departed. The
+relations who have assisted at the burial remain at the grave for five
+or six days, being fed by the brothers or other near kinsfolk of the
+deceased. They may not quit the spot even at night, and if it rains they
+huddle into a shelter built over the grave. During their vigil at the
+tomb they may not drink water, but are allowed a little heated coco-nut
+milk; they are supposed to eat only a little yam and other vegetable
+food.[346] On the day when the body is buried a fire is kindled at the
+grave and kept burning night and day until the feast of the dead has
+been held. "The reason for having the fire is that the spirit may be
+able to get warm when it rises from the grave. The natives regard the
+spirit as being very cold, even as the body is when the life has
+departed from it, and without this external warmth provided by the fire
+it would be unable to undertake the journey to its final home. The feast
+for the dead is celebrated when the flesh has decayed, and in some
+places the skull is taken from the grave, washed and placed in the
+house, being buried again when the feast is over. At Tubetube this
+custom of taking the skull from the grave is not regularly followed, in
+some instances it is, but the feast is always held, and on the night of
+the day on which the feast takes place, the fire, which has been in some
+cases kept burning for over a month, is allowed to burn out, as the
+spirit, being now safe and happy in the spirit-land, has no further need
+of it."[347] "In this spirit-land eternal youth prevails, there are no
+old men nor old women, but all are in the full vigour of the prime of
+life, or are attaining thereto, and having reached that stage never grow
+older. Old men and old women, who die as such on Tubetube, renew their
+youth in this happy place, where there are no more sickness, no evil
+spirits, and no death. Marriage, and giving in marriage, continue; if a
+man dies, his widow, though she may have married again, is at her death
+re-united to her first husband in the spirit-land, and the second
+husband when he arrives has to take one of the women already there who
+may be without a mate, unless he marries again before his death, in
+which case he would have to wait until his wife joins him. Children are
+born, and on arriving at maturity do not grow older. Houses are built,
+canoes are made but they are never launched, and gardens are planted and
+yield abundantly. The spirits of their animals, dogs, pigs, etc., which
+have died on Tubetube, precede and follow them to the spirit-land.
+Fighting and stealing are unknown, and all are united in a common
+brotherhood."[348]
+
+[Sidenote: The names of the dead not mentioned.]
+
+In the south-eastern part of New Guinea the fear of the dead is further
+manifested by the common custom of avoiding the mention of their names.
+If their names were those of common objects, the words are dropped from
+the language of the district so long as the memory of the departed
+persists, and new names are substituted for them. For example, when a
+man named Binama, which means the hornbill, died at Wagawaga, the name
+of the bird was changed to _ambadina_, which means "the plasterer."[349]
+In this way many words are either permanently lost or revived with
+modified or new meanings. Hence the fear of the dead is here, as in many
+other places, a fertile source of change in language. Another indication
+of the terror inspired by ghosts is the custom of abandoning or
+destroying the house in which a death has taken place; and this custom
+used to be observed in certain cases at Tubetube and Wagawaga.[350]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs concerning the dead in the island of
+Kiwai.]
+
+Thus far I have dealt mainly with the beliefs and practices of the
+Papuo-Melanesians in the eastern part of British New Guinea. With regard
+to the pure Papuan population in the western part of the possession our
+information is much scantier. However, we learn that in Kiwai, a large
+island at the mouth of the Fly River, the dead are buried in the
+villages and the ghosts are supposed to live in the ground near their
+decaying bodies, but to emerge from time to time into the upper air and
+look about them, only, however, to return to their abode beneath the
+sod. Nothing is buried with the corpse; but a small platform is made
+over the grave, or sticks are planted in the ground along its sides, and
+on these are placed sago, yams, bananas, coco-nuts, and cooked crabs and
+fish, all for the spirit of the dead to eat. A fire is also kindled
+beside the grave and kept up by the friends for nine days in order that
+the poor ghost may not shiver with cold at night. These practices prove
+not merely a belief in the survival of the soul after death but a desire
+to make it comfortable. Further, when the deceased is a man, his bow and
+arrows are stuck at the head of the grave; when the deceased is a woman,
+her petticoat is hung upon a stick. No doubt the weapons and the garment
+are intended for the use of the ghost, when he or she revisits the upper
+air. On the ninth day after the burial a feast is prepared, the drum is
+beaten, the conch shell blown, and the chief mourner declares that no
+more fires need be lighted and no more food placed on the grave.[351]
+
+[Sidenote: Adiri, the land of the dead, and Sido, the first man who went
+thither. The fear of ghosts.]
+
+According to the natives of Kiwai the land of the dead is called Adiri
+or Woibu. The first man to go thither and to open up a road for others
+to follow him, was Sido, a popular hero about whom the people tell many
+tales. But whereas in his lifetime Sido was an admired and beneficent
+being, in his ghostly character he became a mischievous elf who played
+pranks on such as he fell in with. His adventures after death furnish
+the theme of many stories. However, it is much to his credit that,
+finding the land of the dead a barren region without vegetation of any
+sort, he, by an act of generation, converted it into a garden, where
+bananas, yams, taro, coco-nuts and other fruits and vegetables grew and
+ripened in a single night. Having thus fertilised the lower region, he
+announced to Adiri, the lord of the subterranean realm, that he was the
+precursor of many more men and women who would descend thereafter into
+the spirit world. His prediction has been amply fulfilled; for ever
+since then everybody has gone by the same road to the same place.[352]
+However, when a person dies, his or her spirit may linger for a few days
+in the neighbourhood of its old home before setting out for the far
+country. During that time the spirit may occasionally be seen by
+ordinary people, and accordingly the natives are careful not to go out
+in the dark for fear of coming bolt on the ghost; and they sometimes
+adopt other precautions against the prowling spectre, who might
+otherwise haunt them and carry them off with him to deadland. Some
+classes of ghosts are particularly dreaded on account of their
+malignity; such, for example, are the spirits of women who have died in
+childbed, and of people who have hanged themselves or been devoured by
+crocodiles. Such ghosts loiter for a long time about the places where
+they died, and they are very dangerous, because they are for ever luring
+other people to die the same death which they died themselves. Yet
+another troop of evil ghosts are the souls of those who were beheaded in
+battle; for they kill and devour people, and at night you may see the
+blood shining like fire as it gushes from the gaping gashes in their
+throats.[353]
+
+[Sidenote: The path of the ghosts to Adiri. Adiri, the land of the
+dead.]
+
+The road to Adiri or deadland is fairly well known, and the people can
+point to many landmarks on it. For example, in the island of Paho there
+is a tree called _dani_, under which the departing spirits sit down and
+weep. When they have cried their fill and rubbed their poor
+tear-bedraggled faces with mud, they make little pellets of clay and
+throw them at the tree, and anybody can see for himself the pellets
+sticking to the branches. It is true that the pellets resemble the nests
+of insects, but this resemblance is only fortuitous. Near the tree is a
+rocking stone, which the ghosts set in motion, and the sound that they
+make in so doing is like the muffled roll of a drum. And while the stone
+rocks to and fro with a hollow murmur, the ghosts dance, the men on one
+side of the stone and the women on the other. Again at Mabudavane, where
+the Mawata people have gardens, you may sometimes hear, in the stillness
+of night, the same weird murmur, which indicates the presence of a
+ghost. Then everybody keeps quiet, the children are hushed to silence,
+and all listen intently. The murmur continues for a time and then ends
+abruptly in a splash, which tells the listeners that the ghost has
+leaped over the muddy creek. Further on, the spirits come to Boigu,
+where they swim in the waterhole and often appear to people in their
+real shape. But after Boigu the track of the ghosts is lost, or at least
+has not been clearly ascertained. The spirit world lies somewhere away
+in the far west, but the living are not quite sure of the way to it, and
+they are somewhat vague in their accounts of it. There is no difference
+between the fate of the good and the fate of the bad in the far country;
+the dead meet the friends who died before them; and people who come from
+the same village probably live together in the same rooms of the long
+house of the ghosts. However, some native sceptics even doubt whether
+there is such a place as Adiri at all, and whether death may not be the
+end of consciousness to the individual.[354]
+
+[Sidenote: Appearance of the dead to the living in dreams.]
+
+The dead often appear to the living in dreams, warning them of danger or
+furnishing them with useful information with regard to the cultivation
+of their gardens, the practice of witchcraft, and so on. In order to
+obtain advice from his dead parents a man will sometimes dig up their
+skulls from the grave and sleep beside them; and to make sure of
+receiving their prompt attention he will not infrequently provide
+himself with a cudgel, with which he threatens to smash their skulls if
+they do not answer his questions. Some persons possess a special faculty
+of communicating with the departing spirit of a person who has just
+died. Should they desire to question it they will lurk beside the road
+which ghosts are known to take; and in order not to be betrayed by their
+smell, which is very perceptible to a ghost, they will chew the leaf or
+bark of a certain tree and spit the juice over their bodies. Then the
+ghost cannot detect them, or rather he takes them to be ghosts like
+himself, and accordingly he may in confidence impart to them most
+valuable information, such for example as full particulars with regard
+to the real cause of his death. This priceless intelligence the
+ghost-seer hastens to communicate to his fellow tribesmen.[355]
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to the dead.]
+
+When a man has just died and been buried, his surviving relatives lay
+some of his weapons and ornaments, together with presents of food, upon
+his grave, no doubt for the use of the ghost; but some of these things
+they afterwards remove and bring back to the village, probably
+considering, with justice, that they will be more useful to the living
+than to the dead. But offerings to the dead may be presented to them at
+other places than their tombs. "The great power," says Dr. Landtman,
+"which the dead represent to the living has given rise to a sort of
+simple offering to them, almost the only kind of offering met with among
+the Kiwai Papuans. The natives occasionally lay down presents of food at
+places to which spirits come, and utter some request for assistance
+which the spirits are supposed to hear."[356] In such offerings and
+prayers we may detect the elements of a regular worship of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Dreams as a source of the belief in immortality.]
+
+With regard to the source of these beliefs among the Kiwai people Dr.
+Landtman observes that "undoubtedly dreams have largely contributed in
+supplying the natives with ideas about Adiri and life after death. A
+great number of dreams collected by me among the Kiwai people tell of
+wanderings to Adiri or of meetings with spirits of dead men, and as
+dreams are believed to describe the real things which the soul sees
+while roaming about outside the body, we understand that they must
+greatly influence the imagination of the people."[357]
+
+That concludes what I have to say as to the belief in immortality and
+the worship of the dead among the natives of British New Guinea. In the
+following lectures I shall deal with the same rudimentary aspect of
+religion as it is reported to exist among the aborigines of the vast
+regions of German and Dutch New Guinea.
+
+[Footnote 310: C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_
+(Cambridge, 1910), pp. 1 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 311: See below, pp. 242, 256, 261 _sq._, 291.]
+
+[Footnote 312: A. C. Haddon, _Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown_
+(London, 1901), pp. 249 _sq._ As to the Motu and their Melanesian or
+Polynesian affinities, see Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the
+Motu," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, vii. (1878) pp. 470
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 313: Rev. J. Chalmers, _Pioneering in New Guinea_ (London,
+1887), pp. 168-170. Compare Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the
+Motu," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, vii. (1878) pp. 484
+_sqq._; Rev. W. G. Lawes, "Ethnological Notes on the Motu, Koitapu and
+Koiari Tribes of New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, viii. (1879) pp. 370 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 314: A. C. Haddon, _Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown_, pp.
+249 _sq._; C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_, pp.
+16, 41. As to the Koita (or Koitapu) and the Motu, see further the Rev.
+W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the Motu," _Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute_, vii. (1878) pp. 470 _sqq._; Rev. W. G.
+Lawes, "Ethnological Notes on the Motu, Koitapu and Koiari Tribes of New
+Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, viii. (1879) pp.
+369 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 315: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 189-191.]
+
+[Footnote 316: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 185 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 317: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 192.]
+
+[Footnote 318: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 190-192. As to the
+desertion of the house after death, see _id._, pp. 89 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 319: The territory of the Roro-speaking tribes extends from
+Kevori, east of Waimatuma (Cape Possession), to Hiziu in the
+neighbourhood of Galley Reach. Inland of these tribes lies a region
+called by them Mekeo, which is inhabited by two closely related tribes,
+the Biofa and Vee. Off the coast lies Yule Island, which is commonly
+called Roro. See C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 320: V. Jouet, _La Société des Missionaires du Sacré Coeur
+dans les Vicariats Apostoliques de la Mélanésie et de la Micronésie_
+(Issoudun, 1887), p. 30; Father Guis, "Les Canaques: Mort-deuil,"
+_Missions Catholiques_, xxxiv. (1902) pp. 186, 200.]
+
+[Footnote 321: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 274 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 322: Father Guis, "Les Canaques: Mort-deuil," _Missions
+Catholiques_, xxxiv. (1902) pp. 208 _sq._ See _Psyche's Task_, pp. 75
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 323: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 310.]
+
+[Footnote 324: R. W. Williamson, _The Mafulu Mountain People of British
+New Guinea_ (London, 1912), pp. 2 _sq._, 297 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 325: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 243 _sq._, 246,
+266-269.]
+
+[Footnote 326: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 245-250.]
+
+[Footnote 327: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 256-258, 261-263.]
+
+[Footnote 328: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 125-152.]
+
+[Footnote 329: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 270 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 330: J. Chalmers and W. Wyatt Gill, _Work and Adventure in New
+Guinea_ (London, 1885), pp. 84-86.]
+
+[Footnote 331: R. E. Guise, "On the Tribes inhabiting the Mouth of the
+Wanigela River, New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
+xxviii. (1899) p. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 332: A. C. Haddon, _Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown_, p.
+213.]
+
+[Footnote 333: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ pp. 216 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 334: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ pp. 210 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 335: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ p. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 336: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ pp. 213 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 337: _Psyche's Task_, pp. 52 _sqq._; _Taboo and the Perils of
+the Soul_, pp. 167 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 338: C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_,
+p. 607.]
+
+[Footnote 339: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 655.]
+
+[Footnote 340: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 655 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 341: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 610.]
+
+[Footnote 342: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 611.]
+
+[Footnote 343: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 616 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 344: C. G. Seligmann. _op. cit._ p. 611.]
+
+[Footnote 345: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 618 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 346: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 613 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 347: The Rev. J. T. Field of Tubetube (Slade Island), quoted
+by George Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London, 1910), pp.
+442 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 348: Rev. J. T. Field, _op. cit._ pp. 443 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 349: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 629-631. Dr. Seligmann
+seems to think that the custom is at present dictated by courtesy and a
+reluctance to grieve the relatives of the deceased; but the original
+motive can hardly have been any other than a fear of the ghost.]
+
+[Footnote 350: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 631 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 351: Rev. J. Chalmers, "Notes on the Natives of Kiwai Island,
+Fly River, British New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xxxiii. (1903) pp. 119, 120.]
+
+[Footnote 352: G. Landtman, "Wanderings of the Dead in the Folk-lore of
+the Kiwai-speaking Papuans," _Festskrift tillägnad Edvard Westermarck_
+(Helsingfors, 1912), pp. 59-66.]
+
+[Footnote 353: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 67 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 354: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 68-71.]
+
+[Footnote 355: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 77 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 356: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 78 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 357: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ p. 71.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE X
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Andrew Lang.]
+
+I feel that I cannot begin my second course of lectures without
+referring to the loss which the study of primitive religion has lately
+sustained by the death of one of my predecessors in this chair, one who
+was a familiar and an honoured figure in this place, Mr. Andrew Lang.
+Whatever may be the judgment of posterity on his theories--and all our
+theories on these subjects are as yet more or less tentative and
+provisional--there can be no question but that by the charm of his
+writings, the wide range of his knowledge, the freshness and vigour of
+his mind, and the contagious enthusiasm which he brought to bear on
+whatever he touched, he was a great power in promoting the study of
+primitive man not in this country only, but wherever the English
+language is spoken, and that he won for himself a permanent place in the
+history of the science to which he devoted so much of his remarkable
+gifts and abilities. As he spent a part of every winter in St. Andrews,
+I had thought that in the course on which I enter to-day I might perhaps
+be honoured by his presence at some of my lectures. But it was not to
+be. Yet a fancy strikes me to which I will venture to give utterance.
+You may condemn, but I am sure you will not smile at it. It has been
+said of Macaulay that if his spirit ever revisited the earth, it might
+be expected to haunt the flagged walk beside the chapel in the great
+court of Trinity College, Cambridge, the walk which in his lifetime he
+loved to pace book in hand. And if Andrew Lang's spirit could be seen
+flitting pensively anywhere, would it not be just here, in "the college
+of the scarlet gown," in the "little city worn and grey," looking out on
+the cold North Sea, the city which he knew and loved so well? Be that as
+it may, his memory will always be associated with St. Andrews; and if
+the students who shall in future go forth from this ancient university
+to carry St. Andrew's Cross, if I may say so, on their banner in the
+eternal warfare with falsehood and error,--if they cannot imitate Andrew
+Lang in the versatility of his genius, in the variety of his
+accomplishments, in the manifold graces of his literary art, it is to be
+hoped that they will strive to imitate him in qualities which are more
+within the reach of us all, in his passionate devotion to knowledge, in
+his ardent and unflagging pursuit of truth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: Review of preceding lectures.]
+
+In my last course of lectures I explained that I proposed to treat of
+the belief in immortality from a purely historical point of view. My
+intention is not to discuss the truth of the belief or to criticise the
+grounds on which it has been maintained. To do so would be to trench on
+the province of the theologian and the philosopher. I limit myself to
+the far humbler task of describing, first, the belief as it has been
+held by some savage races, and, second, some of the practical
+consequences which these primitive peoples have deduced from it for the
+conduct of life, whether these consequences take the shape of religious
+rites or moral precepts. Now in such a survey of savage creed and
+practice it is convenient to begin with the lowest races of men about
+whom we have accurate information and to pass from them gradually to
+higher and higher races, because we thus start with the simplest forms
+of religion and advance by regular gradations to more complex forms, and
+we may hope in this way to render the course of religious evolution more
+intelligible than if we were to start from the most highly developed
+religions and to work our way down from them to the most embryonic. In
+pursuance of this plan I commenced my survey with the aborigines of
+Australia, because among the races of man about whom we are well
+informed these savages are commonly and, I believe, justly supposed to
+stand at the foot of the human scale. Having given you some account of
+their beliefs and practices concerning the dead I attempted to do the
+same for the islanders of Torres Straits and next for the natives of
+British New Guinea. There I broke off, and to-day I shall resume the
+thread of my discourse at the broken end by describing the beliefs and
+practices concerning the dead, as these beliefs are entertained and
+these practices observed by the natives of German New Guinea.
+
+[Sidenote: German New Guinea.]
+
+As you are aware, the German territory of New Guinea skirts the British
+territory on the north throughout its entire length and comprises
+roughly a quarter of the whole island, the British and German
+possessions making up together the eastern half of New Guinea, while the
+western half belongs to Holland.
+
+[Sidenote: Information as to the natives of German New Guinea.]
+
+Our information as to the natives of German New Guinea is very
+fragmentary, and is confined almost entirely to the tribes of the coast.
+As to the inhabitants of the interior we know as yet very little.
+However, German missionaries and others have described more or less
+fully the customs and beliefs of the natives at various points of this
+long coast, and I shall extract from their descriptions some notices of
+that particular aspect of the native religion with which in these
+lectures we are specially concerned. The points on the coast as to which
+a certain amount of ethnographical information is forthcoming are, to
+take them in the order from west to east, Berlin Harbour, Potsdam
+Harbour, Astrolabe Bay, the Maclay Coast, Cape King William, Finsch
+Harbour, and the Tami Islands in Huon Gulf. I propose to say something
+as to the natives at each of these points, beginning with Berlin
+Harbour, the most westerly of them.
+
+[Sidenote: The island of Tumleo.]
+
+Berlin Harbour is formed by a group of four small islands, which here
+lie off the coast. One of the islands bears the name of Tumleo or
+Tamara, and we possess an excellent account of the natives of this
+island from the pen of a Catholic missionary, Father Mathias Josef
+Erdweg,[358] which I shall draw upon in what follows. We have also a
+paper by a German ethnologist, the late Mr. R. Parkinson, on the same
+subject,[359] but his information is in part derived from Father Erdweg
+and he appears to have erred by applying too generally the statements
+which Father Erdweg strictly limited to the inhabitants of Tumleo.[360]
+
+[Sidenote: The natives of Tumleo, their material and artistic culture.]
+
+The island of Tumleo lies in 142° 25" of East Longitude and 3° 15" of
+South Latitude, and is distant about sixty sea-miles from the
+westernmost point of German New Guinea. It is a coral island, surrounded
+by a barrier reef and rising for the most part only a few feet above the
+sea.[361] In stature the natives fall below the average European height;
+but they are well fed and strongly built. Their colour varies from black
+to light brown. Their hair is very frizzly. Women and children wear it
+cut short; men wear it done up into wigs. They number less than three
+hundred, divided into four villages. The population seems to have
+declined through wars, disease, and infanticide.[362] Like the Papuans
+generally, they live in settled villages and engage in fishing,
+agriculture, and commerce. The houses are solidly built of wood and are
+raised above the ground upon piles, which consist of a hard and durable
+timber, sometimes iron-wood.[363] The staple food of the people is sago,
+which they obtain from the sago-palm. These stately palms, with their
+fan-like foliage, are rare on the coral island of Tumleo, but grow
+abundantly in the swampy lowlands of the neighbouring mainland.
+Accordingly in the months of May and June, when the sea is calm, the
+natives cross over to the mainland in their canoes and obtain a supply
+of sago in exchange for the products of their island. The sago is eaten
+in the form both of porridge and of bread.[364] Other vegetable foods
+are furnished by sweet potatoes, taro, yams, bananas, sugar-cane, and
+coco-nuts, all of which the natives cultivate.[365] Fishing is a
+principal industry of the people; it is plied by both sexes and by old
+and young, with nets, spears, and bows and arrows.[366] Pottery is
+another flourishing industry. As among many other savages, it is
+practised only by women, but the men take the pots to market; for these
+islanders do a good business in pots with the neighbouring tribes.[367]
+They build large outrigger canoes, which sail well before the wind, but
+can hardly beat up against it, being heavy to row. In these canoes the
+natives of Tumleo make long voyages along the coast; but as the craft
+are not very seaworthy they never stand out to sea, if they can help it,
+but hug the shore in order to run for safety to the beach in stormy
+weather.[368] In regard to art the natives display some taste and skill
+in wood-carving. For example, the projecting house-beams are sometimes
+carved in the shape of crocodiles, birds, and grotesque human figures;
+and their canoes, paddles, head-rests, drums, drum-sticks, and vessels
+are also decorated with carving. Birds, fish, crocodiles, foliage, and
+scroll-work are the usual patterns.[369]
+
+[Sidenote: The temples (_paraks_) of Tumleo.]
+
+A remarkable feature in the villages of Tumleo and the neighbouring
+islands and mainland consists of the _paraks_ or temples, the high
+gables of which may be seen rising above the bushes in all the villages
+of this part of the coast. No such buildings exist elsewhere in this
+region. They are set apart for the worship of certain guardian spirits,
+and on them the native lavishes all the resources of his elementary arts
+of sculpture and painting. They are built of wood in two storeys and
+raised on piles besides. The approach to one of them is always by one or
+two ladders provided on both sides with hand-rails or banisters. These
+banisters are elaborately decorated with carving, which is always of the
+same pattern. One banister is invariably carved in the shape of a
+crocodile holding a grotesque human figure in its jaws, while on the
+other hand the animal's tail is grasped by one or more human figures.
+The other banister regularly exhibits a row of human or rather ape-like
+effigies seated one behind the other, each of them resting his arms on
+the shoulders of the figure in front. Often there are seven such figures
+in a row. The natives are so shy in speaking of these temples that it is
+difficult to ascertain the meaning of the curious carvings by which they
+are adorned. Mr. Parkinson supposed that they represent spirits, not
+apes. He tells us that there are no apes in New Guinea. The interior of
+the temple (_parak_) is generally empty. The only things to be seen in
+its two rooms, the upper and lower, are bamboo flutes and drums made out
+of the hollow trunks of trees. On these instruments men concealed in the
+temple discourse music in order to signify the presence of the
+spirit.[370]
+
+[Sidenote: The bachelors' houses (_alols_) of Tumleo.]
+
+Different from these _paraks_ or temples are the _alols_, which are
+bachelors' houses and council-houses in one. Like the temples, they are
+raised above the ground and approached by a ladder, but unlike the
+temples they have only one storey. In them the unmarried men live and
+the married men meet to take counsel and to speak of things which may
+not be mentioned before women. On a small stand or table in each of
+these _alols_ or men's clubhouses are kept the skulls of dead men. And
+as the temple (_parak_) is devoted to the worship of spirits, so the
+men's clubhouse (_alol_) is the place where the dead ancestors are
+worshipped. Women and children may not enter it, but it is not regarded
+with such superstitious fear as the temple. The dead are buried in their
+houses or beside them. Afterwards the bones are dug up and the skulls of
+grown men are deposited, along with one of the leg bones, on the stand
+or table in the men's clubhouse (_alol_). The skulls of youths, women,
+and children are kept in the houses where they died. When the table in
+the clubhouse is quite full of grinning trophies of mortality, the old
+skulls are removed to make room for the new ones and are thrown away in
+a sort of charnel-house, where the other bones are deposited after they
+have been dug up from the graves. Such a charnel-house is called a
+_tjoll páru_. There is one such place for the bones of grown men and
+another for the bones of women and children. Some bones, however, are
+kept and used as ornaments or as means to work magic with. For the dead
+are often invoked, for example, to lay the wind or for other useful
+purposes; and at such invocations the bones play a part.[371]
+
+[Sidenote: Spirits of the dead thought to be the causes of sickness and
+disease.]
+
+But while the spirits of the dead are thus invited to help their living
+relations and friends, they are also feared as the causes of sickness
+and disease. Any serious ailment is usually attributed to magic or
+witchcraft, and the treatment which is resorted to aims rather at
+breaking the spell which has been cast on the sick man than at curing
+his malady by the application of physical remedies. In short the remedy
+is exorcism rather than physic. Now the enchantment under which the
+patient is supposed to be labouring is often, though not always,
+ascribed to the malignant arts of the spirits of the dead, or the _mõs_,
+as the natives of Tumleo call them. In such a case the ghosts are
+thought to be clinging to the body of the sufferer, and the object of
+the medical treatment is to detach them from him and send them far away.
+With this kindly intention some men will go into the forest and collect
+a number of herbs, including a kind of peppermint. These are tied into
+one or more bundles according to the number of the patients and then
+taken to the men's clubhouse (_alol_), where they are heated over a
+fire. Then the patient is brought, and two men strike him lightly with
+the packet of herbs on his body and legs, while they utter an
+incantation, inviting the ancestral spirits who are plaguing him to
+leave his body and go away, in order that he may be made whole. One such
+incantation, freely translated, runs thus: "Spirit of the
+great-grandfather, of the father, come out! We give thee coco-nuts,
+sago-porridge, fish. Go away (from the sick man). Let him be well. Do no
+harm here and there. Tell the people of Leming (O spirit) to give us
+tobacco. When the waves are still, we push off from the land, sailing
+northward (to Tumleo). It is the time of the north-west wind (when the
+surf is heavy). May the billows calm down in the south, O in the south,
+on the coast of Leming, that we may sail to the south, to Leming! Out
+there may the sea be calm, that we may push off from the land for home!"
+In this incantation a prayer to the spirit of the dead to relax his hold
+on the sufferer appears to be curiously combined with a prayer or spell
+to calm the sea when the people sail across to the coast of Leming to
+fetch a cargo of tobacco. When the incantation has been recited and the
+patient stroked with the bundle of herbs, one of his ears and both his
+arm-pits are moistened with a blood-red spittle produced by the chewing
+of betel-nut, pepper, and lime. Then they take hold of his fingers and
+make each of them crack, one after the other, while they recite some of
+the words of the preceding incantation. Next three men take each of them
+a branch of the _volju_ tree, bend it into a bow, and stroke the sick
+man from head to foot, while they recite another incantation, in which
+they command the spirit to let the sick man alone and to go away into
+the water or the mud. Often when a man is seriously ill he will remove
+from his own house to the house of a relation or friend, hoping that the
+spirit who has been tormenting him will not be able to discover him at
+his new address.[372]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs in Tumleo.]
+
+If despite of all these precautions the patient should die, he or she is
+placed in a wooden coffin and buried with little delay in a grave, which
+is dug either in the house or close beside it. The body is smeared all
+over with clay and decked with many rings or ornaments, most of which,
+however, are removed in a spirit of economy before the lid of the coffin
+is shut down. Sometimes arrows, sometimes a rudder, sometimes the bones
+of dead relations are buried with the corpse in the grave. When the
+grave is dug outside of the house, a small hut is erected over it, and a
+fire is kept burning on it for a time. In the house of mourning the
+wife, sister, or other female relative of the deceased must remain
+strictly secluded for a period which varies from a few weeks to three
+months. In token of mourning the widow's body is smeared with clay, and
+from time to time she is heard to chant a dirge in a whining, melancholy
+tone. This seclusion lasts so long as the ghost is supposed to be still
+on his way to the other world. When he has reached his destination, the
+fire is suffered to die down on the grave, and his widow or other female
+relative is free to quit the house and resume her ordinary occupations.
+Through her long seclusion in the shade her swarthy complexion assumes a
+lighter tint, but it soon deepens again when she is exposed once more to
+the strong tropical sunshine.[373]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Tumleo people as to the fate of the human soul
+after death.]
+
+The people of Tumleo firmly believe in the existence of the human soul
+after death, though their notions of the disembodied soul or _mõs_, as
+they call it, are vague. They think that on its departure from the body
+the soul goes to a place deep under ground, where there is a great
+water. Over that water every soul must pass on a ladder to reach the
+abode of bliss. The ladder is in the keeping of a spirit called _Su asin
+tjakin_ or "the Great Evil," who takes toll of the ghosts before he lets
+them use his ladder. Hence an ear-ring and a bracelet are deposited with
+every corpse in the grave in order that the dead man may have
+wherewithal to pay the toll to the spirit at the great water. When the
+ghost arrives at the place of passage and begs for the use of the
+ladder, the spirit asks him, "Shall I get my bracelet if I let you
+pass?" If he receives it and happens to be in a good humour, he will let
+the ghost scramble across the ladder to the further shore. But woe to
+the stingy ghost, who should try to sneak across the ladder without
+paying toll. The ghostly tollkeeper detects the fraud in an instant and
+roars out, "So you would cheat me of my dues? You shall pay for that."
+So saying he tips the ladder up, and down falls the ghost plump into the
+deep water and is drowned. But the honest ghost, who has paid his way
+like a man and arrived on the further shore, is met by two other ghosts
+who ferry him in a canoe across to Sisano, which is a place on the
+mainland a good many miles to the north of Tumleo. A great river flows
+there and in the river are three cities of the dead, in one of which the
+newly arrived ghost takes up his abode. Then it is that the fire on his
+grave is allowed to go out and his widow may mingle with her fellows
+again. However, the ghosts are not strictly confined to the spirit-land.
+They can come back to earth and roam about working good or evil for the
+living and especially for their friends and relations.[374]
+
+[Sidenote: Monuments to the dead in Tumleo. Disinterment of the bones.]
+
+It is perhaps this belief not only in the existence but in the return of
+the spirits of the dead which induces the survivors to erect monuments
+or memorials to them. In Tumleo these monuments consist for the most
+part of young trees, which are cut down, stripped of their leaves, and
+set up in the ground beside the house of the deceased. The branches of
+such a memorial tree are hung with fruits, coco-nuts, loin-cloths, pots,
+and personal ornaments, all of which we may suppose are intended for the
+comfort and convenience of the ghost when he returns from deadland to
+pay his friends a visit.[375] But the remains of the dead are not
+allowed to rest quietly in the grave for ever. After two or three years
+they are dug up with much ceremony at the point of noon, when the sun is
+high overhead. The skull of the deceased, if he was a man, is then
+deposited, as we saw, with one of the thigh bones in the men's
+clubhouse, while of the remaining bones some are kept by the relations
+and the others thrown away in a charnel-house. Among the relics which
+the relations preserve are the lower arm bones, the shoulder-blades, the
+ribs, and the vertebra. The vertebra is often fastened to a bracelet; a
+couple of ribs are converted into a necklace; and the shoulder-blades
+are used to decorate baskets. The lower arm bones are generally strung
+on a cord, which is worn on solemn occasions round the neck so that the
+bones hang down behind. They are especially worn thus in war, and they
+are made use of also when their owner desires to obtain a favourable
+wind for a voyage. No doubt, though this is not expressly affirmed, the
+spirit of the departed is supposed to remain attached in some fashion to
+his bones and so to help the possessor of these relics in time of need.
+When the bones have been dug up and disposed of with all due ceremony,
+several men who were friends or relations of the deceased must keep
+watch and ward for some days in the men's clubhouse, where his grinning
+skull now stands amid similar trophies of mortality on a table or shelf.
+They may not quit the building except in case of necessity, and they
+must always speak in a whisper for fear of disturbing the ghost, who is
+very naturally lurking in the neighbourhood of his skull. However, in
+spite of these restrictions the watchers enjoy themselves; for baskets
+of sago and fish are provided abundantly for their consumption, and if
+their tongues are idle their jaws are very busy.[376]
+
+[Sidenote: Propitiation of the souls of the dead and other spirits.]
+
+The people think that if they stand on a good footing with the souls of
+the departed and with other spirits, these powerful beings will bring
+them good luck in trade and on their voyages. Now the time when trade is
+lively and the calm sea is dotted with canoes plying from island to
+island or from island to mainland, is the season when the gentle
+south-east monsoon is blowing. On the other hand, when the waves run
+high under the blast of the strong north-west monsoon, the sea is almost
+deserted and the people stay at home;[377] the season is to these
+tropical islanders what winter is to the inhabitants of northern
+latitudes. Accordingly it is when the wind is shifting round from the
+stormy north-west to the balmy south-east that the natives set
+themselves particularly to win the favour of ghosts and spirits, and
+this they do by repairing the temples and clubhouses in which the
+spirits and ghosts are believed to dwell, and by cleaning and tidying up
+the open spaces around them. These repairs are the occasion of a
+festival accompanied by dances and games. Early in the morning of the
+festive day the shrill notes of the flutes and the hollow rub-a-dub of
+the drums are heard to proceed from the interior of the temple,
+proclaiming the arrival of the guardian spirit and his desire to partake
+of fish and sago. So the men assemble and the feast is held in the
+evening. Festivals are also held both in the temples and in the men's
+clubhouses on the occasion of a successful hunt or fishing. Out of
+gratitude for the help vouchsafed them by the ancestral spirits, the
+hunters or fishers bring the larger game or fish to the temples or
+clubhouses and eat them there; and then hang up some parts of the
+animals or fish, such as the skeletons, the jawbones of pigs, or the
+shells of turtles, in the clubhouses as a further mark of homage to the
+spirits of the dead.[378]
+
+[Sidenote: Guardian spirits (_tapum_) in Tumleo.]
+
+So far as appears, the spirits who dwell in the temples are not supposed
+to be ancestors. Father Erdweg describes them as guardian spirits or
+goddesses, for they are all of the female sex. Every village has several
+of them; indeed in the village of Sapi almost every family has its own
+guardian spirit. The name for these guardian spirits is _tapum_, which
+seems to be clearly connected with the now familiar word _tapu_ or
+taboo, in the sense of sacred, which is universally understood in the
+islands of the Pacific. On the whole the _tapum_ are kindly and
+beneficent spirits, who bring good luck to such as honour them. A hunter
+or a fisherman ascribes his success in the chase or in fishing to the
+protection of his guardian spirit; and when he is away from home trading
+for sago and other necessaries of life, it is his guardian spirit who
+gives him favour in the eyes of the foreigners with whom he is dealing.
+Curiously enough, though these guardian spirits are all female, they
+have no liking for women and children. Indeed, no woman or child may set
+foot in a temple, or even loiter in the open space in front of it. And
+at the chief festivals, when the temples are being repaired, all the
+women and children must quit the village till the evening shadows have
+fallen and the banquet of their husbands, fathers, and brothers at the
+temple is over.[379]
+
+On the whole, then, we conclude that a belief in the continued existence
+of the spirits of the dead, and in their power to help or harm their
+descendants, plays a considerable part in the life of the Papuans of
+Tumleo. Whether the guardian spirits or goddesses, who are worshipped in
+the temples, were originally conceived as ancestral spirits or not, must
+be left an open question for the present.
+
+[Sidenote: The Monumbo of Potsdam Harbour.]
+
+Passing eastward from Tumleo along the northern coast of German New
+Guinea we come to Monumbo or Potsdam Harbour, situated about the 145th
+degree of East Longitude. The Monumbo are a Papuan tribe numbering about
+four hundred souls, who inhabit twelve small villages close to the
+seashore. Their territory is a narrow but fertile strip of country, well
+watered and covered with luxuriant vegetation, lying between the sea and
+a range of hills. The bay is sheltered by an island from the open sea,
+and the natives can paddle their canoes on its calm water in almost any
+weather. The villages, embowered on the landward side in groves of trees
+of many useful sorts and screened in front by rows of stately coco-nut
+palms, are composed of large houses solidly built of timber and are kept
+very clean and tidy. The Monumbo are a strongly-built people, of the
+average European height, with what is described as a remarkably Semitic
+type of features. The men wear their hair plaited about a long tube,
+decorated with shells and dogs' teeth, which sticks out stiffly from the
+head. The women wear their hair in a sort of mop, composed of countless
+plaits, which hang down in tangle. In disposition the Monumbo are
+cheerful and contented, proud of themselves and their country; they
+think they are the cleverest and most fortunate people on earth, and
+look down with pity and contempt on Europeans. According to them the
+business of the foreign settlers in their country is folly, and the
+teaching of the missionaries is nonsense. They subsist by agriculture,
+hunting, and fishing. Their well-kept plantations occupy the level
+ground and in some places extend up the hill-sides. Among the plants
+which they cultivate are taro, yams, sweet potatoes, bananas, various
+kinds of vegetables, and sugar-cane. Among their fruit-trees are the
+sago-palm, the coco-nut palm, and the bread-fruit tree. They make use
+both of earthenware and of wooden vessels. Their dances, especially
+their masked dances, which are celebrated at intervals of four or five
+years, have excited the warm admiration of the despised European.[380]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Monumbo concerning the spirits of the dead.
+Dread of ghosts.]
+
+With regard to their religion and morality I will quote the evidence of
+a Catholic missionary who has laboured among them. "The Monumbo are
+acquainted with no Supreme Being, no moral good or evil, no rewards, no
+place of punishment or joy after death, no permanent immortality....
+When people die, their souls go to the land of spirits, a place where
+they dwell without work or suffering, but which they can also quit.
+Betel-chewing, smoking, dancing, sleeping, all the occupations that they
+loved on earth, are continued without interruption in the other world.
+They converse with men in dreams, but play them many a shabby trick,
+take possession of them and even, it may be, kill them. Yet they also
+help men in all manner of ways in war and the chase. Men invoke them,
+pray to them, make statues in their memory, which are called _dva_
+(plural _dvaka_), and bring them offerings of food, in order to obtain
+their assistance. But if the spirits of the dead do not help, they are
+rated in the plainest language. Death makes no great separation. The
+living converse with the dead very much as they converse with each
+other. Time alone brings with it a gradual oblivion of the departed.
+Falling stars and lightning are nothing but the souls of the dead, who
+stick dry banana leaves in their girdles, set them on fire, and then fly
+through the air. At last when the souls are old they die, but are not
+annihilated, for they are changed into animals and plants. Such animals
+are, for example, the white ants and a rare kind of wild pig, which is
+said not to allow itself to be killed. Such a tree, for example, is the
+_barimbar_. That, apparently, is the whole religion of the Monumbo. Yet
+they are ghost-seers of the most arrant sort. An anxious superstitious
+fear pursues them at every step. Superstitious views are the motives
+that determine almost everything that they do or leave undone."[381]
+Their dread of ghosts is displayed in their custom of doing no work in
+the plantations for three days after a death, lest the ghost, touched to
+the quick by their heartless indifference, should send wild boars to
+ravage the plantations. And when a man has slain an enemy in war, he has
+to remain a long time secluded in the men's clubhouse, touching nobody,
+not even his wife and children, while the villagers celebrate his
+victory with song and dance. He is believed to be in a state of
+ceremonial impurity (_bolobolo_) such that, if he were to touch his wife
+and children, they would be covered with sores. At the end of his
+seclusion he is purified by washings and other purgations and is clean
+once more.[382] The reason of this uncleanness of a victorious warrior
+is not mentioned, but analogy makes it nearly certain that it is a dread
+of the vengeful ghost of the man whom he has slain. A similar fear
+probably underlies the rule that a widower must abstain from certain
+foods, such as fish and sauces, and from bathing for a certain time
+after the death of his wife.[383]
+
+[Sidenote: The Tamos of Astrolabe Bay. Mistake of attempting to combine
+descriptive with comparative anthropology.]
+
+Leaving Potsdam Harbour and the Monumbo, and moving still eastward along
+the coast of German New Guinea, we come to a large indentation known as
+Astrolabe Bay. The natives of this part of the coast call themselves
+Tamos. The largest village on the bay bears the name of Bogadyim and in
+1894 numbered about three hundred inhabitants.[384] Our principal
+authority on the natives is a German ethnologist, Dr. B. Hagen, who
+spent about eighteen months at Stefansort on Astrolabe Bay.
+Unfortunately he has mixed up his personal observations of these
+particular people not merely with second-hand accounts of natives of
+other parts of New Guinea but with discussions of general theories of
+the origin and migrations of races and of the development of social
+institutions; so that it is not altogether easy to disentangle the facts
+for which he is a first-hand witness, from those which he reports at
+second, third, or fourth hand. Scarcely anything, I may observe in
+passing, more impairs the value and impedes the usefulness of personal
+observations of savage races than this deplorable habit of attempting to
+combine the work of description with the work of comparison and
+generalisation. The two kinds of work are entirely distinct in their
+nature, and require very different mental qualities for their proper
+performance; the one should never be confused with the other. The task
+of descriptive anthropology is to record observations, without any
+admixture of theory; the task of comparative anthropology is to compare
+the observations made in all parts of the world, and from the comparison
+to deduce theories, more or less provisional, of the origin and growth
+of beliefs and institutions, always subject to modification and
+correction by facts which may afterwards be brought to light. There is
+no harm, indeed there is great positive advantage, in the descriptive
+anthropologist making himself acquainted with the theories of the
+comparative anthropologist, for by so doing his attention will probably
+be called to many facts which he might otherwise have overlooked and
+which, when recorded, may either confirm or refute the theories in
+question. But if he knows these theories, he should keep his knowledge
+strictly in the background and never interlard his descriptions of facts
+with digressions into an alien province. In this way descriptive
+anthropology and comparative anthropology will best work hand in hand
+for the furtherance of their common aim, the understanding of the nature
+and development of man.
+
+[Sidenote: The religion of the Tamos. Beliefs of the Tamos as to the
+souls of the dead.]
+
+Like the Papuans in general, the Tamos of Astrolabe Bay are a settled
+agricultural people, who dwell in fixed villages, subsist mainly by the
+produce of the ground which they cultivate, and engage in a commerce of
+barter with their neighbours.[385] Their material culture thus does not
+differ essentially from that of the other Papuans, and I need not give
+particulars of it. With regard to their religious views Dr. Hagen tells
+us candidly that he has great hesitation in expressing an opinion.
+"Nothing," he says very justly, "is more difficult for a European than
+to form an approximately correct conception of the religious views of a
+savage people, and the difficulty is infinitely increased when the
+enquirer has little or no knowledge of their language." Dr. Hagen had,
+indeed, an excellent interpreter and intelligent assistant in the person
+of a missionary, Mr. Hoffmann; but Mr. Hoffmann himself admitted that he
+had no clear ideas as to the religious views of the Tamos; however, in
+his opinion they are entirely destitute of the conception of God and of
+a Creator. Yet among the Tamos of Bogadyim, Dr. Hagen tells us, a belief
+in the existence of the soul after death is proved by their assertion
+that after death the soul (_gunung_) goes to _buka kure_, which seems to
+mean the village of ghosts. This abode of the dead appears to be
+situated somewhere in the earth, and the Tamos speak of it with a
+shudder. They tell of a man in the village of Bogadyim who died and went
+away to the village of the ghosts. But as he drew near to the village,
+he met the ghost of his dead brother who had come forth with bow and
+arrows and spear to hunt a wild boar. This boar-hunting ghost was very
+angry at meeting his brother, who had just died, and drove him back to
+the land of the living. From this narrative it would seem that in the
+other world the ghosts are thought to pursue the same occupations which
+they followed in life. The natives are in great fear of ghosts (_buka_).
+Travelling alone with them in the forest at nightfall you may mark their
+timidity and hear them cry anxiously, "Come, let us be going! The ghost
+is roaming about." The ghosts of those who have perished in battle do
+not go to the Village of Ghosts (_buka kure_); they repair to another
+place called _bopa kure_. But this abode of the slain does not seem to
+be a happy land or Valhalla; the natives are even more afraid of it than
+of the Village of Ghosts (_buka kure_). They will hardly venture at
+night to pass a spot where any one has been slain. Sometimes fires are
+kindled by night on such spots; and the sight of the flames flickering
+in the distance inspires all the beholders with horror, and nothing in
+the world would induce them to approach such a fire. The souls of men
+who have been killed, but whose death has not been avenged, are supposed
+to haunt the village. For some time after death the ghost is believed to
+linger in the neighbourhood of his deserted body. When Mr. Hoffmann went
+with some Tamos to another village to bring back the body of a fellow
+missionary, who had died there, and darkness had fallen on them in the
+forest, his native companions started with fear every moment, imagining
+that they saw the missionary's ghost popping out from behind a
+tree.[386]
+
+[Sidenote: Treatment of the corpse. Secret Society called _Asa_.]
+
+When death has taken place, the corpse is first exposed on a scaffold in
+front of the house, where it is decked with ornaments and surrounded
+with flowers. If the deceased was rich, a dog is hung on each side of
+the scaffold, and the souls of the animals are believed to accompany the
+ghost to the spirit-land. Taros, yams, and coco-nuts are also suspended
+from the scaffold, no doubt for the refreshment of the ghost. Then the
+melancholy notes of a horn are heard in the distance, at the sound of
+which all the women rush away. Soon the horn-blower appears, paints the
+corpse white and red, crowns it with great red hibiscus roses, then
+blows his horn, and vanishes.[387] He is a member of a secret society,
+called _Asa_, which has its lodge standing alone in the forest. Only men
+belong to the society; women and children are excluded from it and look
+upon it with fear and awe. If any one raises a cry, "_Asa_ is coming,"
+or the sound of the musical instruments of the society is heard in the
+distance, all the women and children scamper away. The natives are very
+unwilling to let any stranger enter one of the lodges of the society.
+The interior of such a building is usually somewhat bare, but it
+contains the wooden masks which are worn in the ceremonial dances of the
+society, and the horns and flutes on which the members discourse their
+awe-inspiring music. In construction it scarcely differs from the
+ordinary huts of the village; if anything it is worse built and more
+primitive. The secrets of the society are well kept; at least very
+little seems to have been divulged to Europeans. The most important of
+its ceremonies is that of the initiation of the young men, who on this
+occasion are circumcised before they are recognised as full-grown men
+and members of the secret society. At such times the men encamp and
+feast for weeks or even months together on the open space in front of
+the society's lodge, and masked dances are danced to the accompaniment
+of the instrumental music. These initiatory ceremonies are held at
+intervals of about ten or fifteen years, when there are a considerable
+number of young men to be initiated together.[388] Although we are still
+in the dark as to the real meaning of this and indeed of almost all
+similar secret societies among savages, the solemn part played by a
+member of the society at the funeral rites seems very significant. Why
+should he come mysteriously to the melancholy music of the horn, paint
+the corpse red and white, crown it with red roses, and then vanish again
+to music as he had come? It is scarcely rash to suppose that this
+ceremony has some reference to the state of the dead man's soul, and we
+may conjecture that just as the fruits hung on the scaffold are
+doubtless intended for the consumption of the ghost, and the souls of
+the dogs are expressly said to accompany him to the spirit-land, so the
+painting of the corpse and the crown of red roses may be designed in
+some way to speed the parting spirit on the way to its long home. In the
+absence of exact information as to the beliefs of these savages touching
+the state of the dead we can only guess at the meaning which they attach
+to these symbols. Perhaps they think that only ghosts who are painted
+red and white and who wear wreaths of red roses on their heads are
+admitted to the Village of the Ghosts, and that such as knock at the
+gate with no paint on their bodies and no wreath of roses on their brows
+are refused admittance and must turn sorrowfully away, to haunt their
+undutiful friends on earth who had omitted to pay the last marks of
+respect and honour to the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the Tamos. Removal of the lower jawbone.]
+
+When the corpse has lain in all its glory, with its ornaments, its paint
+and its flowers, for a short time on the scaffold, it is removed and
+buried. The exposure never lasts more than a day. If the man died in the
+morning, he is buried at night. The grave is dug in the house itself. It
+is only about three feet deep and four feet long. If the corpse is too
+long for the grave, as usually happens, the legs are remorselessly
+doubled up and trampled in. It is the relations on the mother's side who
+dig the grave and lower the body, shrouded in mats or leaves, into its
+narrow bed. Before doing so they take care to strip it of its ornaments,
+its rings, necklaces, boar's teeth, and so forth, which no doubt are
+regarded as too valuable to be sacrificed. Yet a regard for the comfort
+of the dead is shewn by the custom of covering the open grave with wood
+and then heaping the mould on the top, in order, we are told, that the
+earth may not press heavy on him who sleeps below. _Sit tibi terra
+levis!_ After some months the grave is opened and the lower jaw removed
+from the corpse and preserved. This removal of the jaw is the occasion
+of solemnities and ceremonial washings, in which the whole male
+population of the village takes part. But as to the meaning of these
+ceremonies, and as to what is done with the jawbone, we have no exact
+information.[389] According to the Russian traveller, Baron N. von
+Miklucho-Maclay, who has also given us an account of the Papuans of
+Astrolabe Bay,[390] though not apparently of the villages described by
+Dr. Hagen, the whole skull is dug up and separated from the corpse after
+the lapse of about a year, but only the lower jawbone is carefully kept
+by the nearest kinsman as a memorial of the deceased. Baron
+Miklucho-Maclay had great difficulty in inducing a native to part with
+one of these memorials of a dead relation.[391] In any case the
+preservation of this portion of the deceased may be supposed to have for
+its object the maintenance of friendly relations between the living and
+the dead. Similarly in Uganda the jawbone is the only part of the body
+of a deceased king which, along with his navel-string, is carefully
+preserved in his temple-tomb and consulted oracularly.[392] We may
+conjecture that the reason for preserving this part of the human frame
+rather than any other is that the jawbone is an organ of speech, and
+that therefore it appears to the primitive mind well fitted to maintain
+intercourse with the dead man's spirit and to obtain oracular
+communications from him.
+
+[Sidenote: Sham fight as a funeral ceremony at Astrolabe Bay.]
+
+The Russian traveller, Baron Miklucho-Maclay, has described a curious
+funeral ceremony which is observed by some of the Papuans of Astrolabe
+Bay. I will give the first part of his description in his own words,
+which I translate from the German. He says: "The death of a man is
+announced to the neighbouring villages by a definite series of beats on
+the drum. On the same day or the next morning the whole male population
+assembles in the vicinity of the village of the deceased. All the men
+are in full warlike array. To the beat of drum the guests march into the
+village, where a crowd of men, also armed for war, await the new-comers
+beside the dead man's hut. After a short parley the men divide into two
+opposite camps, and thereupon a sham fight takes place. However, the
+combatants go to work very gingerly and make no use of their spears. But
+dozens of arrows are continually discharged, and not a few are wounded
+in the sham fight, though not seriously. The nearest relations and
+friends of the deceased appear especially excited and behave as if they
+were frantic. When all are hot and tired and all arrows have been shot
+away, the pretended enemies seat themselves in a circle and in what
+follows most of them act as simple spectators." Thereupon the nearest
+relations bring out the corpse and deposit it in a crouching position,
+with the knees drawn up to the chin, on some mats and leaves of the
+sago-palm, which had previously been spread out in the middle of the
+open space. Beside the corpse are laid his things, some presents from
+neighbours, and some freshly cooked food. While the men sit round in a
+circle, the women, even the nearest relatives of the deceased, may only
+look on from a distance. When all is ready, some men step out from the
+circle to help the nearest of kin in the next proceedings, which consist
+in tying the corpse up tightly into a bundle by means of rattans and
+creepers. Then the bundle is attached to a stout stick and carried back
+into the house. There the corpse in its bundle is fastened under the
+roof by means of the stick, and the dead man's property, together with
+the presents of the neighbours and the food, are left beside it. After
+that the house is abandoned, and the guests return to their own
+villages. A few days later, when decomposition is far advanced, the
+corpse is taken down and buried in a grave in the house, which continues
+to be inhabited by the family. After the lapse of about a year, the body
+is dug up, the skull separated from it, and the lower jawbone preserved
+by the nearest relation, as I have already mentioned.[393]
+
+[Sidenote: The sham fight perhaps intended to deceive the ghost.]
+
+What is the meaning of this curious sham fight which among these people
+seems to be regularly enacted after a death? The writer who reports the
+custom offers no explanation of it. I would conjecture with all due
+caution that it may possibly be intended as a satisfaction to the ghost
+in order to make him suppose that his death has been properly avenged.
+In a former lecture I shewed that natural deaths are regularly imagined
+by many savages to be brought about by the magical practices of enemies,
+and that accordingly the relations of the deceased take vengeance on
+some innocent person whom for one reason or another they regard as the
+culprit. It is possible that these Papuans of Astrolabe Bay, instead of
+actually putting the supposed sorcerer to death, have advanced so far as
+to abandon that cruel and unjust practice and content themselves with
+throwing dust in the eyes of the ghost by a sham instead of a real
+fight. But that is only a conjecture of my own, which I merely suggest
+for what it is worth.
+
+Altogether, looking over the scanty notices of the beliefs and practices
+of these Papuans of Astrolabe Bay concerning the departed, we may say in
+general that while the fear of ghosts is conspicuous enough among them,
+there is but little evidence of anything that deserves to be called a
+regular worship of the dead.
+
+[Footnote 358: P. Mathias Josef Erdweg, "Die Bewohner der Insel Tumleo,
+Berlin-hafen, Deutsch-Neu-Guinea," _Mittheilungen der Anthropologischen
+Gesellschaft in Wien_, xxxii. (1902) pp. 274-310, 317-399.]
+
+[Footnote 359: R. Parkinson, "Die Berlinhafen Section, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographie der Neu-Guinea-Küste," _Internationales Archiv für
+Ethnographie_, xiii. (1900) pp. 18-54.]
+
+[Footnote 360: See the note of Father P. W. Schmidt on Father Erdweg's
+paper, _op. cit._ p. 274.]
+
+[Footnote 361: Erdweg, _op. cit._ p. 274.]
+
+[Footnote 362: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 277 _sq_. The frizzly character of
+the hair is mentioned by Mr. R. Parkinson, _op. cit._]
+
+[Footnote 363: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 355 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 364: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 342-346.]
+
+[Footnote 365: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 335 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 366: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 330 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 367: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 350 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 368: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 363 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 369: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 374.]
+
+[Footnote 370: R. Parkinson, "Die Berlinhafen Section, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographie der Neu-Guinea-Küste," _Internationales Archiv für
+Ethnographie_, xiii. (1900) pp. 33-35. Father Erdweg speaks of the
+_parak_ as a spirit-temple or spirit-house in which the deities of the
+Tumleo dwell (_op. cit._ p. 377): he tells us that as a rule each
+village has only one _parak_. As to the spirits which dwell in these
+temples, see below, pp. 226 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 371: R. Parkinson, _op. cit._ pp. 35, 42 _sq._; Erdweg, _op.
+cit._ pp. 292 _sq._, 306.]
+
+[Footnote 372: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 284-287.]
+
+[Footnote 373: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 288-291.]
+
+[Footnote 374: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 297 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 375: Erdweg, _op. cit._ p. 291.]
+
+[Footnote 376: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 291-293.]
+
+[Footnote 377: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 298, 371.]
+
+[Footnote 378: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 295 _sqq._, 299 _sq._, 334 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 379: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 295-297.]
+
+[Footnote 380: P. Franz Vormann, "Dorf und Hausanlage beiden Monumbo,
+Deutsch-Neuguinea," _Anthropos_, iv. (1909) pp. 660 _sqq._; _id._, "Zur
+Psychologie, Religion, Soziologie und Geschichte der Monumbo-Papua,
+Deutsch-Neuguinea," _Anthropos_, v. (1910) pp. 407-409.]
+
+[Footnote 381: P. Franz Vormann, in _Anthropos_, v. (1910) pp. 409
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 382: P. Franz Vormann, in _Anthropos_, v. (1910) pp. 410,
+411.]
+
+[Footnote 383: P. Franz Vormann, _ibid._, p. 412.]
+
+[Footnote 384: B. Hagen, _Unter den Papua's_ (Wiesbaden, 1899), pp. 143,
+221.]
+
+[Footnote 385: For the evidence see B. Hagen, _op. cit._ pp. 193 _sqq._
+As to barter he tells us (p. 216) that all articles in use at Bogadyim
+are imported, nothing is made on the spot.]
+
+[Footnote 386: B. Hagen, _Unter den Papua's_ (Wiesbaden, 1899), pp.
+264-266.]
+
+[Footnote 387: B. Hagen, _op. cit._ pp. 258 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 388: B. Hagen, _op. cit._ pp. 270 _sq._ As to the period and
+details of the circumcision ceremonies see _id._, pp. 234-238.]
+
+[Footnote 389: B. Hagen, _op. cit._ p. 260.]
+
+[Footnote 390: N. von Miklucho-Maclay, "Ethnologische Bemerkungen über
+die Papuas der Maclay-Küste in Neu-Guinea," _Natuurkundig Tijdschrift
+voor Nederlandsch Indie_, xxxv. (1875) pp. 66-93; _id._, xxxvi. (1876)
+pp. 294-333.]
+
+[Footnote 391: N. von Miklucho-Maclay, _op. cit._ xxxvi. (1876) p. 302.]
+
+[Footnote 392: Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 109
+_sqq._; _Totemism and Exogamy_, ii. 470.]
+
+[Footnote 393: N. von Miklucho-Maclay, _op. cit._ xxxvi. (1876) pp.
+300-302.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XI
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Papuans of Cape King William.]
+
+In my last lecture I gave you some account of the beliefs and practices
+concerning the dead which have been recorded among the Papuans of German
+New Guinea. To-day I resume the subject and shall first speak of the
+natives on the coast about Cape King William, at the foot of Mount
+Cromwell. We possess an account of their religion and customs from the
+pen of a German missionary, Mr. Stolz, who has lived three years among
+them and studied their language.[394] His description applies to the
+inhabitants of two villages only, namely Lamatkebolo and Quambu, or
+Sialum and Kwamkwam, as they are generally called on the maps, who
+together number about five hundred souls. They belong to the Papuan
+stock and subsist chiefly by the cultivation of yams, which they plant
+in April or May and reap in January or February. But they also cultivate
+sweet potatoes and make some use of bananas and coco-nuts. They clear
+the land for cultivation by burning down the grass and afterwards
+turning up the earth with digging-sticks, a labour which is performed
+chiefly by the men. The land is not common property; each family tills
+its own fields, though sometimes one family will aid another in the
+laborious task of breaking up the soil. Moreover they trade with the
+natives of the interior, who, inhabiting a more fertile and
+better-watered country, are able to export a portion of their
+superfluities, especially taro, sweet potatoes, betel-nuts, and tobacco,
+to the less favoured dwellers on the sea-coast, receiving mostly dried
+fish in return. Curiously enough the traffic is chiefly in the hands of
+old women.[395]
+
+[Sidenote: Propitiation of ghosts and spirits. The spirit Mate. Spirits
+called _Nai_.]
+
+With regard to the religion of these people Mr. Stolz tells us that they
+know nothing of a deity who should receive the homage of his
+worshippers; they recognise only spirits and the souls of the dead. To
+these last they bring offerings, not because they feel any need to do
+them reverence, but simply out of fear and a desire to win their favour.
+The offerings are presented at burials and when they begin to cultivate
+the fields. Their purpose is to persuade the souls of the dead to ward
+off all the evil influences that might thwart the growth of the yams,
+their staple food. The ghosts are also expected to guard the fields
+against the incursions of wild pigs and the ravages of locusts. At a
+burial the aim of the sacrifice is to induce the soul of the departed
+brother or sister to keep far away from the village and to do no harm to
+the people. Sacrifices are even offered to the souls of animals, such as
+dogs and pigs, to prevent them from coming back and working mischief.
+However, the ghosts of these creatures are not very exacting; a few
+pieces of sugar-cane, a coco-nut shell, or a taro shoot suffice to
+content their simple tastes and to keep them quiet. Amongst the spirits
+to whom the people pay a sort of worship there is one named Mate, who
+seems to be closely akin to Balum, a spirit about whom we shall hear
+more among the Yabim further to the east. However, not very much is
+known about Mate; his worship, if it can be called so, flourishes
+chiefly among the inland tribes, of whom the coast people stand so much
+in awe that they dare not speak freely on the subject of this mysterious
+being. Some of them indeed are bold enough to whisper that there is no
+such being as Mate at all, and that the whole thing is a cheat devised
+by sly rogues for the purpose of appropriating a larger share of roast
+pork at their religious feasts, from which women are excluded. Whatever
+may be thought of these sceptical views, it appears to be certain that
+the name of Mate is also bestowed on a number of spirits who disport
+themselves by day in open grassy places, while they retire by night to
+the deep shades of the forest; and the majority of these spirits are
+thought to be the souls of ancestors or of the recently departed. Again,
+there is another class of spirits called _Nai_, who unlike all other
+spirits are on friendly terms with men. These are the souls of dead
+villagers, who died far away from home. They warn people of danger and
+very obligingly notify them of the coming of trading steamers. When a
+man dies in a foreign land, his soul appears as a _Nai_ to his sorrowing
+relatives and announces his sad fate to them. He does so always at
+night. When the men are gathered round the fire on the open square of
+the village, the ghost climbs the platform which usually serves for
+public meetings and banquets, and from this coin of vantage, plunged in
+the deep shadow, he lifts up his voice and delivers his message of
+warning, news, or prediction, as the case may be.[396]
+
+[Sidenote: The creator Nemunemu. Sickness and death often regarded as
+the effects of sorcery.]
+
+However, ghosts of the dead are not the only spiritual beings with whom
+these people are acquainted. They know of a much higher being, of the
+name of Nemunemu, endowed with superhuman power, who made the heaven and
+the earth with the assistance of two brothers; the elder brother
+constructed the mainland of New Guinea, while the younger fashioned the
+islands and the sea. When the natives first saw a steamer on the horizon
+they thought it was Nemunemu's ship, and the smoke at the funnel they
+took to be the tobacco-smoke which he puffed to beguile the tedium of
+the voyage.[397] They are also great believers in magic and witchcraft,
+and cases of sickness and death, which are not attributed to the
+malignity of ghosts and spirits, are almost invariably set down to the
+machinations of sorcerers. Only the deaths of decrepit old folks are
+regarded as natural. When a man has died, and his death is believed to
+have been caused by magic, the people resort to divination in order to
+discover the wicked magician who has perpetrated the crime. For this
+purpose they place the corpse on a bier, cover it with a mat, and set it
+on the shoulders of four men, while a fifth man taps lightly with an
+arrow on the mat and enquires of the departed whether such and such a
+village has bewitched him to death. If the bier remains still, it means
+"No"; but if it rocks backward and forward, it means "Yes," and the
+avengers of blood must seek their victim, the guilty sorcerer, in that
+village. The answer is believed to be given by the dead man's ghost, who
+stirs his body at the moment when his murderer's village is named. It is
+useless for the inhabitants of that village to disclaim all knowledge of
+the sickness and death of the deceased. The people repose implicit faith
+in this form of divination. "His soul itself told us," they say, and
+surely he ought to know. Another form of divination which they employ
+for the same purpose is to put the question to the ghost, while two men
+hold a bow which belonged to him and to which some personal articles of
+his are attached. The answer is again yes or no according as the bow
+moves or is still.[398]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral and mourning customs.]
+
+When the author of the death has been discovered in one way or another,
+the corpse is decked with all the ornaments that can be collected from
+the relatives and prepared for burial. A shallow grave is dug under the
+house and lined with mats. Then the body is lowered into the grave: one
+of the sextons strikes up a lament, and the shrill voices of the women
+in the house join in the melancholy strain. When he lies in his narrow
+bed, the ornaments are removed from his person, but some of his tools,
+weapons, and other belongings are buried with him, no doubt for his use
+in the life hereafter. The funeral celebration, in which the whole
+village commonly takes part, lasts several days and consists in the
+bringing of offerings to the dead and the abstinence from all labour in
+the fields. Yams are brought from the field of the departed and cooked.
+A small pot filled with yams and a vessel of water are placed on the
+grave; the rest of the provisions is consumed by the mourners. The next
+of kin, especially the widow or widower, remain for about a week at the
+grave, watching day and night, lest the body should be dug up and
+devoured by a certain foul fiend with huge wings and long claws, who
+battens on corpses. The mourning costume of men consists in smearing the
+face with black and wearing a cord round the neck and a netted cap on
+the head. Instead of such a cap a woman in mourning wraps herself in a
+large net and a great apron of grass. While the other ensigns of woe are
+soon discarded or disappear, the cord about the neck is worn for a
+longer time, generally till next harvest. The sacrifice of a pig brings
+the period of mourning to an end and after it the cord may be laid
+aside. If any one were so hard-hearted as not to wear that badge of
+sorrow, the people believe that the angry ghost would come back and
+fetch him away. He would die.[399] Thus among these savages the mourning
+costume is regarded as a protection against the dangerous ghost of the
+departed; it soothes his wounded feelings and prevents him from making
+raids on the living.
+
+[Sidenote: Fate of the souls of the dead.]
+
+As to the place to which the souls of the dead repair and the fate that
+awaits them there, very vague and contradictory ideas prevail among the
+natives of this district. Some say that the ghosts go eastward to Bukaua
+on Huon Gulf and there lead a shadowy life very like their life on
+earth. Others think that the spirits hover near the village where they
+lived in the flesh. Others again are of opinion that they transmigrate
+into animals and prolong their life in one or other of the bodies of the
+lower creatures.[400]
+
+[Sidenote: The Yabim and Bukaua tribes.]
+
+Leaving Cape King William we pass eastward along the coast of German New
+Guinea and come to Finsch Harbour. From a point some miles to the north
+of Finsch Harbour as far as Samoa Harbour on Huon Gulf the coast is
+inhabited by two kindred tribes, the Yabim and the Bukaua, who speak a
+Melanesian language. I shall deal first with the Yabim tribe, whose
+customs and beliefs have been described for us with a fair degree of
+fulness by two German missionaries, Mr. Konrad Vetter and Mr. Heinrich
+Zahn.[401] The following account is based chiefly on the writings of Mr.
+Vetter, whose mission station is at the village of Simbang.
+
+[Sidenote: Material and artistic culture of the Yabim.]
+
+Like the other natives of New Guinea the Yabim build permanent houses,
+live in settled villages, and till the ground. Every year they make a
+fresh clearing in the forest by cutting down the trees, burning the
+fallen timber, and planting taro, bananas, sugar-cane, and tobacco in
+the open glade. When the crops have been reaped, the place is abandoned,
+and is soon overgrown again by the rank tropical vegetation, while the
+natives move on to another patch, which they clear and cultivate in like
+manner. This rude mode of tillage is commonly practised by many savages,
+especially within the tropics. Cultivation of this sort is migratory,
+and in some places, though apparently not in New Guinea, the people
+shift their habitations with their fields as they move on from one part
+of the forest to another. Among the Yabim the labour of clearing a patch
+for cultivation is performed by all the men of a village in common, but
+when the great trees have fallen with a crash to the ground, and the
+trunks, branches, foliage and underwood have been burnt, with a roar of
+flames and a crackling like a rolling fire of musketry, each family
+appropriates a portion of the clearing for its own use and marks off its
+boundaries with sticks. But they also subsist in part by fishing, and
+for this purpose they build outrigger canoes. They display considerable
+skill and taste in wood-carving, and are fond of ornamenting their
+houses, canoes, paddles, tools, spears, and drums with figures of
+crocodiles, fish, and other patterns.[402]
+
+[Sidenote: Men's clubhouses (_lum_).]
+
+The villages are divided into wards, and every ward contains its
+clubhouse for men, called a _lum_, in which young men and lads are
+obliged to pass the night. It consists of a bedroom above and a parlour
+with fireplaces below. In the parlour the grown men pass their leisure
+hours during the day, and here the councils are held. The wives cook the
+food at home and bring it for their husbands to the clubhouse. The
+bull-roarers which are used at the initiatory ceremonies are kept in the
+principal clubhouse of the village. Such a clubhouse serves as an
+asylum; men fleeing from the avenger of blood who escape into it are
+safe. It is said that the spirit (_balum_) has swallowed or concealed
+them. But if they steal out of it and attempt to make their way to
+another village, they carry their life in their hand.[403] Among the
+Yabim, according to Mr. Zahn, religion in the proper sense does not
+exist, but on the other hand the whole people is dominated by the fear
+of witchcraft and of the spirits of the dead.[404] The following is the
+account which Mr. Vetter gives of the beliefs and customs of these
+people concerning the departed.
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Yabim concerning the state of the dead. The
+ghostly ferry.]
+
+They do not believe that death is the end of all things for the
+individual; they think that his soul survives and becomes a spirit or
+ghost, which they call a _balum_. The life of human spirits in the other
+world is a shadowy continuation of the life on earth, and as such it has
+little attraction for the mind of the Papuan. Of heaven and hell, a
+place of reward and a place of punishment for the souls of the good and
+bad respectively, he has no idea. However, his world of the dead is to
+some extent divided into compartments. In one of them reside the ghosts
+of people who have been slain, in another the ghosts of people who have
+been hanged, and in a third the ghosts of people who have been devoured
+by a shark or a crocodile. How many more compartments there may be for
+the accommodation of the souls, we are not told. The place is in one of
+the islands of Siasi. No living man has ever set foot in the island, for
+smoke and mist hang over it perpetually; but from out the mist you may
+hear the sound of the barking of dogs, the grunting of swine, and the
+crowing of cocks, which seems to shew that in the opinion of these
+people animals have immortal souls as well as men. The natives of the
+Siasi islands say that the newly arrived ghosts may often be seen
+strolling on the beach; sometimes the people can even recognise the
+familiar features of friends with whom they did business in the flesh.
+The mode in which the spirits of the dead arrive at their destination
+from the mainland is naturally by a ferry: indeed, the prow of the
+ghostly ferry-boat may be seen to this day in the village of Bogiseng.
+The way in which it came to be found there was this. A man of the
+village lay dying, and on his deathbed he promised to give his friends a
+sign of his continued existence after death by appearing as a ghost in
+their midst. Only he stipulated that in order to enable him to do so
+they would place a stone club in the hand of his corpse. This was done.
+He died, the club was placed in his cold hand, and his sorrowing but
+hopeful relations awaited results. They had not very long to wait. For
+no sooner had the ghost, armed with the stone club, stepped down to the
+sea-shore than he called imperiously for the ferry-boat. It soon hove in
+sight, with the ghostly ferryman in it paddling to the beach to receive
+the passenger. But when the prow grated on the pebbles, the artful
+ghost, instead of stepping into it as he should have done, lunged out at
+it with the stone club so forcibly that he broke the prow clean off. In
+a rage the ferryman roared out to him, "I won't put you across! You and
+your people shall be kangaroos." The ghost had gained his point. He
+turned back from the ferry and brought to his friends as a trophy the
+prow of the ghostly canoe, which is treasured in the village to this
+day. I should add that the prow in question bears a suspicious
+resemblance to a powder-horn which has been floating about for some time
+in the water; but no doubt this resemblance is purely fortuitous and
+without any deep significance.
+
+[Sidenote: Transmigration of human souls into animals.]
+
+From this veracious narrative we gather that sometimes the souls of the
+dead, instead of going away to the spirit-land, transmigrate into the
+bodies of animals. The case of the kangaroos is not singular. In the
+village of Simbang Mr. Vetter knows two families, of whom the ghosts
+pass at death into the carcases of crocodiles and a species of fabulous
+pigs respectively. Hence members of the one family are careful not to
+injure crocodiles, lest the souls of their dead should chance to be
+lodged in the reptiles; and the members of the other family would be
+equally careful not to hurt the fabulous pigs if ever they fell in with
+them. However, the crocodile people, not to be behind their neighbours,
+assert that after death their spirits can also roam about the wood as
+ghosts and go to the spirit-land. In explanation they say that every
+human being has two souls; one of them is his reflection on the water,
+the other is his shadow on the land. No doubt it is the water-soul which
+goes to the island of Siasi, while the land-soul is free to occupy the
+body of a crocodile, a kangaroo, or some other animal.[405]
+
+[Sidenote: Return of the ghosts.]
+
+But even when the ghosts have departed to their island home, they are by
+no means strictly confined to it. They can return, especially at night,
+to roam about the woods and the villages, and the living are very much
+afraid of them, for the ghosts delight in doing mischief. It is
+especially in the first few days after a death that the ghost is an
+object of terror, for he is then still loitering about the village.
+During these days everybody is afraid to go alone into the forest for
+fear of meeting him, and if a dog or a pig strays in the wood and is
+lost, the people make sure that the ghost has made off with the animal,
+and the aggrieved owners roundly abuse the sorrowing family, telling
+them that their old father or mother, as the case may be, is no better
+than a thief. They are also very unwilling to mention the names of dead
+persons, imagining that were the ghost to hear his name pronounced he
+might fancy he was being called for and might accordingly suspend his
+habitual occupation of munching sour fruits in the forest to come and
+trouble the living.
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to ghosts.]
+
+Hence in order to keep the short-tempered ghost in good humour by
+satisfying his wants, lest he should think himself neglected and wreak
+his vexation on the survivors, the people go a-fishing after a death, or
+they kill a pig or a dog; sometimes also they cut down a fruit-tree. But
+it is only the souls of the animals which are destined for the
+consumption of the ghost; their bodies are roasted and eaten by the
+living. On a grave you may sometimes see a small basket suspended from a
+stick; but if you look into it you will find nothing but a little soot
+and some fish scales, which is all that remains of the fried fish.
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts provided with fire.]
+
+The Yabim also imagine that the ghost has need of fire to guide him to
+the door of the man who has done him to death by sorcery. Accordingly
+they provide the spirit with this necessary as follows. On the evening
+of the day on which the body has been buried, they kindle a fire on a
+potsherd and heap dry leaves on it. As they do so they mention the names
+of all the sorcerers they can think of, and he at whose name the
+smouldering leaves burst into a bright flame is the one who has done the
+deed. Having thus ascertained the true cause of death, beyond reach of
+cavil, they proceed to light up the ghost to the door of his murderer.
+For this purpose a procession is formed. A man, holding the smouldering
+fire in the potsherd with one hand and a bundle of straw with the other,
+leads the way. He is followed by another who draws droning notes from a
+water-bottle of the deceased, which he finally smashes. After these two
+march a number of young fellows who make a plumping sound by smacking
+their thighs with the hollow of their hands. This solemn procession
+wends its way to a path in the neighbouring forest. By this time the
+shades of night have fallen. The firebearer now sets the fire on the
+ground and calls on the ghost to come and take it. They firmly believe
+that he does so and that having got it he hies away to cast the glowing
+embers down at the door of the man who has done him to death. They even
+fancy they see the flickering light carried by the invisible hand
+retreating through the shadows into the depth of the forest; and in
+order to follow it with their eyes they will sometimes climb tall trees
+or launch a canoe and put out to sea, gazing intently at the glimmering
+ray till it vanishes from their sight in the darkness. Perhaps the gleam
+of fire-flies, which abound in these tropical forests, or the flashing
+of a meteor, as it silently drops from the starry heaven into the sea,
+may serve to feed this superstitious fancy.[406]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts thought to help in the cultivation of the land.]
+
+But the spirits of the dead are supposed to be able to help as well as
+harm the living. Good crops and a successful hunt are attributed to
+their influence. It is especially the spirits of the ancient owners of
+the land who are credited with the power of promoting the growth of the
+crops. Hence when a clearing has been made in the forest and planted
+with taro, and the plants are shewing a good head of leaves,
+preparations are made to feast the ghosts of the people to whom the land
+belonged in days gone by. For this purpose a sago-palm is cut down,
+sago-porridge made, and a wild boar killed. Then the men arrayed in all
+their finery march out in solemn procession by day to the taro field;
+and the leader invites the spirits in a loud voice to come to the
+village and partake of the sago-porridge and pork that have been made
+ready for them. But the invisible guests content themselves as usual
+with snuffing up the fragrant smell of the roast pork and the steam of
+the porridge; the substance of these dainties is consumed by the living.
+Yet the help which the ghosts give in the cultivation of the land would
+seem to be conceived as a purely negative one; the offerings are made to
+them for the purpose of inducing them to keep away and not injure the
+growing crops. It is also believed that the ghosts of the dead make
+communications to the living in dreams or by whistling, and even that
+they can bring things to their friends and relations. But on the whole,
+Mr. Vetter tells us, the dominant attitude of the living to the dead is
+one of fear; the power of the ghosts is oftener exerted for evil than
+for good.[407] The ghost of a murdered man in particular is dreaded,
+because he is believed to haunt his murderer and to do him a mischief.
+Hence they drive away such a dangerous ghost with shouts and the beating
+of drums; and by way of facilitating his departure they launch a model
+of a canoe, laden with taro and tobacco, in order to transport him with
+all comfort to the land of souls.[408]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs among the Yabim.]
+
+Among the Yabim the dead are usually buried in shallow graves close to
+the houses where they died. Some trifles are laid with the body in the
+grave, in order that the dead man or woman may have the use of them in
+the other world. But any valuables that may be deposited with the corpse
+are afterwards dug up and appropriated by the survivors. If the deceased
+was the householder himself or his wife, the house is almost always
+deserted, however solidly it may be built. The reason for thus
+abandoning so valuable a piece of property is not mentioned; but we may
+assume that the motive is a fear of the ghost, who is supposed to haunt
+his old home. A temporary hut is built on the grave, and in it the
+family of the deceased take up their abode for six weeks or more; here
+they cook, eat, and sleep. A widower sits in a secluded corner by
+himself, invisible to all and unwashed; during the period of full
+mourning he may not shew himself in the village. When he does come forth
+again, he wears a mourning hat made of bark in the shape of a cylinder
+without crown or brim; a widow wears a great ugly net, which wraps her
+up almost completely from the head to the knees. Sometimes in memory of
+the deceased they wear a lock of his hair or a bracelet. Other relations
+wear cords round their necks in sign of mourning. The period of mourning
+varies greatly; it may last for months or even years. Sometimes the
+bodies of beloved children or persons who have been much respected are
+not buried but tied up in bundles and set up in a house until the flesh
+has quite mouldered away; then the skull and the bones of the arms and
+legs are anointed, painted red, and preserved for a time. Mr. Vetter
+records the case of a chief whose corpse was thus preserved in the
+assembly-house of the village, after it had been dried over a fire. When
+it had been reduced to a mummy, the skull and the arm-bones and
+leg-bones were detached, oiled, and reddened, and then kept for some
+years in the house of the chief's eldest son, till finally they were
+deposited in the grave of a kinsman. In some of the inland villages of
+this part of New Guinea the widow is sometimes throttled by her
+relations at the death of her husband, in order that she may accompany
+him to the other world.[409]
+
+[Sidenote: Deaths attributed by the Yabim to sorcery.]
+
+The Yabim believe that except in the case of very old people every death
+is caused by sorcery; hence when anybody has departed this life, his
+relations make haste to discover the wicked sorcerer who has killed
+their kinsman. For that purpose they have recourse to various forms of
+divination. One of them has been already described, but they have
+others. For example, they put a powder like sulphur in a piece of bamboo
+tube and kindle a fire under it. Then an old man takes a bull-roarer and
+taps with it on the bamboo tube, naming all the sorcerers in the
+neighbouring villages. He at the mention of whose name the fire catches
+the powder and blazes up is the guilty man. Another way of detecting the
+culprit is to attach the feather of a bird of paradise to a staff and
+give the staff to two men to hold upright between the palms of their
+right hands. Then somebody names the sorcerers, and he at whose name the
+staff turns round and the feather points downwards is the one who caused
+the death. When the avengers of blood, wrought up to a high pitch of
+fury, fall in with the family of the imaginary criminal, they may put
+the whole of them to death lest the sons should afterwards avenge their
+father's murder by the black art. Sometimes a dangerous and dreaded
+sorcerer will be put out of the way with the connivance of the chief of
+his own village; and after a few days the murderers will boldly shew
+themselves in the village where the crime was perpetrated and will
+reassure the rest of the people, saying, "Be still. The wicked man has
+been taken off. No harm will befall you."[410]
+
+[Sidenote: Bull-roarers (_balum_). Initiation of young men.]
+
+It is very significant that the word _balum_, which means a ghost, is
+applied by the Yabim to the instrument now generally known among
+anthropologists as a bull-roarer. It is a small fish-shaped piece of
+wood which, being tied to a string and whirled rapidly round, produces a
+humming or booming sound like the roaring of a bull or the muttering of
+distant thunder. Instruments of this sort are employed by savages in
+many parts of the world at their mysteries; the weird sound which the
+implement makes when swung is supposed by the ignorant and uninitiated
+to be the voice of a spirit and serves to impress them with a sense of
+awe and mystery. So it is with the Papuans about Finsch Harbour, with
+whom we are at present concerned. At least one such bull-roarer is kept
+in the _lum_ or bachelors' clubhouse of every village, and the women and
+uninitiated boys are forbidden to see it under pain of death. The
+instrument plays a great part in the initiation of young men, which
+takes place at intervals of several years, when there are a number of
+youths ready to be initiated, and enough pigs can be procured to furnish
+forth the feasts which form an indispensable part of the ceremony. The
+principal initiatory rite consists of circumcision, which is performed
+on all youths before they are admitted to the rank of full-grown men.
+The age of the candidates varies considerably, from four years up to
+twenty. Many are married before they are initiated. The operation is
+performed in the forest, and the procession of the youths to the place
+appointed is attended by a number of men swinging bull-roarers. As the
+procession sets out, the women look on from a distance, weeping and
+howling, for they are taught to believe that the lads, their sons and
+brothers, are about to be swallowed up by a monster called a _balum_ or
+ghost, who will only release them from his belly on condition of
+receiving a sufficient number of roast pigs. How, then, can the poor
+women be sure that they will ever see their dear ones again? So amid the
+noise of weeping and wailing the procession passes into the forest, and
+the booming sound of the bull-roarers dies away in the distance.
+
+[Sidenote: The rite of circumcision; the lads supposed to be swallowed
+by a monster (_balum_). The sacred flutes.]
+
+The place where the operation is performed on the lads is a long hut,
+about a hundred feet in length, which diminishes in height towards the
+rear. This represents the belly of the monster which is to swallow up
+the candidates. To keep up the delusion a pair of great eyes are painted
+over the entrance, and above them the projecting roots of a betel-palm
+represent the monster's hair, while the trunk of the tree passes for his
+backbone. As the awe-struck lads approach this imposing creature, he is
+heard from time to time to utter a growl. The growl is in fact no other
+than the humming note of bull-roarers swung by men, who are concealed
+within the edifice. When the procession has come to a halt in front of
+the artificial monster, a loud defiant blast blown on shell-trumpets
+summons him to stand forth. The reply follows in the shape of another
+muffled roar of the bull-roarers from within the building. At the sound
+the men say that "Balum is coming up," and they raise a shrill song like
+a scream and sacrifice pigs to the monster in order to induce him to
+spare the lives of the candidates. When the operation has been performed
+on the lads, they must remain in strict seclusion for three or four
+months, avoiding all contact with women and even the sight of them. They
+live in the long hut, which represents the monster's belly, and their
+food is brought them by elder men. Their leisure time is spent in
+weaving baskets and playing on certain sacred flutes, which are never
+used except at such seasons. The instruments are of two patterns. One is
+called the male and the other the female, and they are supposed to be
+married to each other. No woman may see these mysterious flutes; if she
+did she would die. Even if she hears their shrill note in the distance,
+she will hasten to hide herself in a thicket. When the initiatory
+ceremonies are over, the flutes are carefully kept in the men's
+clubhouse of the village till the next time they are wanted for a
+similar occasion. On the other hand, if the women are obliged to go near
+the place where the lads are living in seclusion, they beat on certain
+bamboo drums in order to warn them to keep out of the way. Sometimes,
+though perhaps rarely, one of the lads dies under the operation; in that
+case the men explain his disappearance to the women by saying that the
+monster has a pig's stomach as well as a human stomach, and that
+unfortunately the deceased young man slipped by mistake into the wrong
+stomach and so perished miserably. But as a rule the candidates pass
+into the right stomach and after a sufficient period has been allowed
+for digestion, they come forth safe and sound, the monster having kindly
+consented to let them go free in consideration of the roast pigs which
+have been offered to him by the men. Indeed he is not very exacting, for
+he contents himself with devouring the souls of the pigs, while he
+leaves their bodies to be consumed by his worshippers. This is a kindly
+and considerate way of dealing with sacrifice, which our New Guinea
+ghost or monster shares with many deities of much higher social
+pretensions. However, lest he should prove refractory and perhaps run
+away with the poor young men in his inside, or possibly make a dart at
+any women or children who might be passing, the men take the precaution
+of tying him down tight with ropes. When the time of seclusion is up,
+one of the last acts in the long series of ceremonies is to cast off the
+ropes and let the monster go free. He avails himself of his liberty to
+return to his subterranean abode, and the young men are brought back to
+the village with much solemnity.
+
+[Sidenote: The return of the novices to the village.]
+
+An eye-witness has described the ceremony. The lads, now ranking as
+full-grown men, were first bathed in the sea and then elaborately
+decorated with paint and so forth. In marching back to the village they
+had to keep their eyes tightly shut, and each of them was led by a man
+who acted as a kind of god-father. As the procession moved on, an old
+bald-headed man touched each boy solemnly on the chin and brow with a
+bull-roarer. In the village preparations for a banquet had meanwhile
+been made, and the women and girls were waiting in festal attire. The
+women were much moved at the return of the lads; they sobbed and tears
+of joy ran down their cheeks. Arrived in the village the newly-initiated
+lads were drawn up in a row and fresh palm leaves were spread in front
+of them. Here they stood with closed eyes, motionless as statues. Then a
+man passed behind them, touching each of them in the hams with the
+handle of an axe and saying, "O circumcised one, sit down." But still
+the lads remained standing, stiff and motionless. Not till another man
+had knocked repeatedly on the ground with the stalk of a palm-leaf,
+crying, "O circumcised ones, open your eyes!" did the youths, one after
+another, open their eyes as if awaking from a profound stupor. Then they
+sat down on the mats and partook of the food brought them by the men.
+Young and old now ate in the open air. Next morning the circumcised lads
+were bathed in the sea and painted red instead of white. After that they
+might talk to women. This was the end of the ceremony.[411]
+
+[Sidenote: The essence of the initiatory rites seems to be a simulation
+of death and resurrection; the novice is supposed to be killed and to
+come to life or be born again. The new birth among the Akikuyu of
+British East Africa.]
+
+The meaning of these curious ceremonies observed on the return of the
+lads to the village is not explained by the writer who describes them;
+but the analogy of similar ceremonies observed at initiation by many
+other races allows us to divine it with a fair degree of probability. As
+I have already observed in a former lecture, the ceremony of initiation
+at puberty is very often regarded as a process of death and
+resurrection; the candidate is supposed to die or to be killed and to
+come to life again or be born again; and the pretence of a new birth is
+not uncommonly kept up by the novices feigning to have forgotten all the
+most common actions of life and having accordingly to learn them all
+over again like newborn babes. We may conjecture that this is why the
+young circumcised Papuans, with whom we are at present concerned, march
+back to their village with closed eyes; this is why, when bidden to sit
+down, they remain standing stiffly, as if they understood neither the
+command nor the action; and this, too, we may surmise, is why their
+mothers and sisters receive them with a burst of emotion, as if their
+dead had come back to them from the grave. This interpretation of the
+ceremony is confirmed by a curious rite which is observed by the Akikuyu
+of British East Africa. Amongst them every boy or girl at or about the
+age of ten years has solemnly to pretend to be born again, not in a
+moral or religious, but in a physical sense. The mother of the child,
+or, if she is dead, some other woman, goes through an actual pantomime
+of bringing forth the boy or girl. I will spare you the details of the
+pantomime, which is very graphic, and will merely mention that the
+bouncing infant squalls like a newborn babe. Now this ceremony of the
+new birth was formerly enacted among the Akikuyu at the rite of
+circumcision, though the two ceremonies are now kept distinct.[412]
+Hence it is not very rash to conjecture that the ceremony performed by
+the young Papuans of Finsch Harbour on their return to the village after
+undergoing circumcision is merely a way of keeping up the pretence of
+being born again and of being therefore as ignorant and helpless as
+babes.
+
+[Sidenote: The mock death of the novices as a preliminary to the mock
+birth.]
+
+But if the end of the initiation is a mock resurrection, or rather new
+birth, as it certainly seems to be, we may infer with some confidence
+that the first part of it, namely the act of circumcision, is a mock
+death. This is borne out by the explicit statement of a very good
+authority, Mr. Vetter, that "the circumcision is designated as a process
+of being swallowed by the spirit, out of whose stomach (represented by a
+long hut) the release must take place by means of a sacrifice of
+pigs."[413] And it is further confirmed by the observation that both the
+spirit which is supposed to operate on the lads, and the bull-roarer,
+which apparently represents his voice, are known by the name of _balum_,
+which means the ghost or spirit of a dead person. Similarly, among the
+Tugeri or Kaya-Kaya, a large Papuan tribe on the south coast of Dutch
+New Guinea, the name of the bull-roarer, which they call _sosom_, is
+given to a mythical giant, who is supposed to appear every year with the
+south-east monsoon. When he comes, a festival is held in his honour and
+bull-roarers are swung. Boys are presented to the giant, and he kills
+them, but brings them to life again.[414] Thus the initiatory rite of
+circumcision, to which all lads have to submit among the Yabim, seems to
+be closely bound up with their conception of death and with their belief
+in a life after death; since the whole ceremony apparently consists in a
+simulation of dying and coming to life again. That is why I have touched
+upon these initiatory rites, which at first sight might appear to have
+no connexion with our immediate subject, the belief in immortality and
+the worship of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: General summary as to the Yabim.]
+
+On the whole we may say that the Yabim have a very firm and practical
+belief in a life after death, and that while their attitude to the
+spirits of the departed is generally one of fear, they nevertheless look
+to these spirits also for information and help on various occasions.
+Thus their beliefs and practices contain at least in germ the elements
+of a worship of the dead.
+
+[Footnote 394: Stolz, "Die Umgebung von Kap König Wilhelm," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch New-Guinea_ (Berlin, 1911), iii. 243-286.]
+
+[Footnote 395: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 252-254.]
+
+[Footnote 396: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 245-247.]
+
+[Footnote 397: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 247 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 398: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 248-250.]
+
+[Footnote 399: Stolz, _op. cit._ p. 258.]
+
+[Footnote 400: Stolz, _op. cit._ p. 259.]
+
+[Footnote 401: K. Vetter, in _Komm herüber und hilf uns! oder die Arbeit
+der Neuen-Dettelsauer Mission_, Nos. 1-4 (Barmen, 1898); _id._, in
+_Nachrichten über Kaiser Wilhelms-Land_, 1897, pp. 86-102; _id._, in
+_Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_, xi. (Jena, 1892)
+pp. 102-106; _id._, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu
+Jena_, xii. (Jena, 1893) pp. 95-97; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_, iii (Berlin, 1911) pp. 287-394.]
+
+[Footnote 402: K. Vetter, _Komm herüber und hilf uns!_ ii. (Barmen,
+1898) pp. 6-12.]
+
+[Footnote 403: K. Vetter, _op. cit._ ii. 8; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_, iii. 291, 308, 311.]
+
+[Footnote 404: H. Zahn, _op. cit._ iii. 291.]
+
+[Footnote 405: K. Vetter, _Komm herüber und hilf uns!_ iii. 21 _sq._
+According to Mr. H. Zahn (_op. cit._ p. 324) every village has its own
+entrance into the spirit-land.]
+
+[Footnote 406: K. Vetter, _Komm herüber und hilf uns!_ iii. 19-24;
+_id._, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_, xii.
+(1893) pp. 96 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 407: K. Vetter, _Komm herüber und hilf uns!_ ii. 7, iii. 24;
+_id._, in _Nachrichten über Kaiser Wilhelms-Land und den
+Bismarck-Archipel_, 1897, p. 94.]
+
+[Footnote 408: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten über Kaiser Wilhelms-Land_,
+1897, p. 94.]
+
+[Footnote 409: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten über Kaiser Wilhelms-Land_,
+1897, pp. 94 _sq._; _id._, _Komm herüber und hilf uns!_ iii. 15-19.
+Compare H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_,
+iii. 320 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 410: H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. 318-320.]
+
+[Footnote 411: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten über Kaiser Wilhelms-Land und
+den Bismarck-Archipel_, 1897, pp. 92 _sq._; _id._, in _Mitteilungen der
+Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_, xi. (1892) p. 105; _id._, _Komm
+herüber und hilf uns!_ ii. (1898) p. 18; _id._, cited by M. Krieger,
+_Neu-Guinea_, pp. 167-170; O. Schellong, "Das Barlum (_sic_)-fest der
+Gegend Finsch-hafens (Kaiserwilhelmsland), ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der
+Beschneidung der Melanesier," _Internationales Archiv für Ethnographie_,
+ii. (1889) pp. 145-162; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. 296-298.]
+
+[Footnote 412: W. S. Routledge and K. Routledge, _With a Prehistoric
+People, the Akikuyu of British East Africa_ (London, 1910), pp. 151
+_sq._ Compare _Totemism and Exogamy_, iv. 228; C. W. Hobley, "Kikuyu
+Customs and Beliefs," _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute_,
+xl. (1910) pp. 440 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 413: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten über Kaiser Wilhelmsland und
+den Bismarck-Archipel_, 1897, p. 93.]
+
+[Footnote 414: R. Pöch, "Vierter Bericht über meine Reise nach
+Neu-Guinea," _Sitzungsberichte der mathematisch-naturwissenschaftlichen
+Klasse der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften_ (Vienna), cxv.
+(1906) Abteilung 1, pp. 901, 902.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Bukaua of German New Guinea.]
+
+In the last lecture I described the beliefs and practices concerning the
+dead as they are to be found among the Yabim of German New Guinea.
+To-day we begin with the Bukaua, a kindred and neighbouring tribe, which
+occupies the coast lands of the northern portion of Huon Gulf from
+Schollenbruch Point to Samoa Harbour. The language which the Bukaua
+speak belongs, like the language of the Yabim, to the Melanesian, not to
+the Papuan family. Their customs and beliefs have been reported by a
+German missionary, Mr. Stefan Lehner, whose account I follow.[415] In
+many respects they closely resemble those of their neighbours the Yabim.
+
+[Sidenote: Means of subsistence of the Bukaua. Men's clubhouses.]
+
+The Bukaua are an agricultural people who subsist mainly on the crops of
+taro which they raise. But they also cultivate many kinds of bananas and
+vegetables, together with sugar-cane, sago, and tobacco. From time to
+time they cut down and burn the forest in order to obtain fresh fields
+for cultivation. The land is not held in common. Each family has its own
+fields and patches of forest, and would resent the intrusion of others
+on their hereditary domain. Hunting and fishing supply them with animal
+food to eke out the vegetable nourishment which they draw from their
+fields and plantations.[416] Every village contains one or more of the
+men's clubhouses which are a common feature in the social life of the
+tribes on this coast. In these clubhouses the young men are obliged to
+sleep, and on the platforms in front of them the older men hold their
+councils. Such a clubhouse is called a _lum_.[417]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Bukaua concerning the souls of the dead.
+Sickness and disease attributed to ghostly agency.]
+
+The Bukaua have a firm belief in the existence of the human soul after
+death. They think that a man's soul can even quit his body temporarily
+in his lifetime during sleep or a swoon, and that in its disembodied
+state it can appear to people at a distance; but such apparitions are
+regarded as omens of approaching death, when the soul will depart for
+good and all. The soul of a dead man is called a _balum_. The spirits of
+the departed are believed to be generally mischievous and spiteful to
+the living, but they can be appeased by sacrifice, and other measures
+can be taken to avert their dangerous influence.[418] They are very
+touchy, and if they imagine that they are not honoured enough by their
+kinsfolk, and that the offerings made to them are insufficient, they
+will avenge the slight by visiting their disrespectful and stingy
+relatives with sickness and disease. Among the maladies which the
+natives ascribe to the anger of ghosts are epilepsy, fainting fits, and
+wasting decline.[419] When a man suffers from a sore which he believes
+to have been inflicted on him by a ghost, he will take a stone from the
+fence of the grave and heat it in the fire, saying: "Father, see, thou
+hast gone, I am left, I must till the land in thy stead and care for my
+brothers and sisters. Do me good again." Then he dips the hot stone in a
+puddle on the grave, and holds his sore in the steam which rises from
+it. His pain is eased thereby and he explains the alleviation which he
+feels by saying, "The spirit of the dead man has eaten up the
+wound."[420]
+
+[Sidenote: Sickness and death often ascribed by the Bukaua to sorcery.]
+
+But like most savages the Bukaua attribute many illnesses and many
+deaths not to the wrath of ghosts but to the malignant arts of
+sorcerers; and in such cases they usually endeavour by means of
+divination to ascertain the culprit and to avenge the death of their
+friend by taking the life of his imaginary murderer.[421] If they fail
+to exact vengeance, the ghost is believed to be very angry, and they
+must be on their guard against him. He may meet them anywhere, but is
+especially apt to dog the footsteps of the sorcerer who killed him.
+Hence when on the occasion of a great feast the sorcerer comes to the
+village of his victim, the surviving relatives of the dead man are at
+particular pains to protect themselves and their property against the
+insidious attacks of the prowling ghost. For this purpose they bury a
+creeper with white blossoms in the path leading to the village; the
+ghost is thought to be filled with fear at the sight of it and to turn
+back, leaving his kinsfolk, their dogs, and pigs in peace.[422]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghosts of the slain.]
+
+Another class of ghosts who are much dreaded are the spirits of slain
+foes. They are believed to pursue their slayers to the village and to
+blind them so that sooner or later they fall an easy prey to their
+enemies. Hence when a party of warriors has returned home from a
+successful attack on a village, in which they have butchered all on whom
+they could lay their hands, they kindle a great fire, dance wildly about
+it, and hurl burning brands in the direction of the battlefield in order
+to keep the ghosts of their slaughtered foes at bay. Phosphorescent
+lights seen under the houses throw the inmates into great alarm, for
+they are thought to be the souls of the slain. Sometimes the vanquished
+in battle resort to a curious ruse for the purpose of avenging
+themselves on the victors by means of a ghost. They take the
+sleeping-mat of one of the slain, roll it up in a bundle along with his
+loin-cloth, apron, netted bag, or head-rest, and give the bundle to two
+cripples to carry. Then they steal quietly to the landing-place of their
+foes, peering warily about lest they should be observed. The bundle
+represents the dead man, and the cripples who carry it reel to and fro,
+and finally sink to the ground with their burden. In this way the ghost
+of the victim, whose things are carried in the bundle, is supposed to
+make their enemies weak and tottery. Strong young men are not given the
+bundle to carry, lest the ghost should spoil their manly figures;
+whereas if he should wound or maim a couple of poor cripples, no great
+harm is done.[423]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of ancestors appealed to for help, especially in the
+cultivation of the ground. First-fruits offered to the spirits of the
+dead.]
+
+However, the Bukaua also look on the ghosts of their ancestors in a more
+amiable light as beings who, if properly appealed to, can and will help
+them in the affairs of life, especially by procuring for them good
+crops. Hence when they are planting their fields, which are formed in
+clearings of the forest, they take particular care to insert shoots of
+all their crops in the ground near the tree stumps which remain
+standing, because the souls of their dead grandfathers and
+great-grandfathers are believed to be sitting on the stumps watching
+their descendants at their work. Accordingly in the act of planting they
+call out the names of these forefathers and pray them to guard the field
+in order that their living children may have food and not suffer from
+hunger. And at harvest, when the first-fruits of the taro, bananas,
+sugar-cane, and so forth have been brought back from the fields, a
+portion of them is offered in a bowl to the spirits of the forefathers
+in the house of the landowner, and the spirits are addressed in prayer
+as follows: "O ye who have guarded our field as we prayed you to do,
+there is something for you; now and henceforth behold us with favour."
+While the family are feasting on the rest of the first-fruits, the
+householder will surreptitiously stir the offerings in the bowl with his
+finger, and will then shew the bowl to the others as a proof that the
+souls of the dead have really partaken of the good things provided for
+them.[424] A hunter will also pray to his dead father to drive the wild
+pigs into his net.[425]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs of the Bukaua.]
+
+The Bukaua bury their dead in shallow graves, which are sometimes dug
+under the houses but more usually in front of or beside them. Along with
+the corpses are deposited bags of taro, nuts, drinking-vessels, and
+other articles of daily use. Only the stone axes are too valuable to be
+thus sacrificed. Over the grave is erected a rude hut in which the
+widower, if the deceased was a married woman, remains for a time in
+seclusion. A widow on the death of her husband remains in the house.
+Widow and widower may not shew themselves in public until they have
+prepared their mourning costume. The widower wears a black hat made of
+bark, cords round his neck, wicker work on his arms and feet, and a torn
+old bracelet of his wife in a bag on his breast. A widow is completely
+swathed in nets, one over the other, and she carries about with her the
+loincloth of her deceased husband. The souls of the dead dwell in a
+subterranean region called _lamboam_, and their life there seems to
+resemble life here on earth; but the ideas of the people on the subject
+are very vague.[426]
+
+[Sidenote: Initiation of young men among the Bukaua. Lads at
+circumcision supposed to be swallowed by a monster.]
+
+The customs and beliefs of the Bukaua in regard to the initiation of
+young men are practically identical with those of their neighbours the
+Yabim. Indeed the initiatory ceremonies are performed by the tribes
+jointly, now in the territory of the Bukaua, now in the territory of the
+Yabim, or in the land of the Kai, a tribe of mountaineers, or again in
+the neighbouring Tami islands. The intervals between the ceremonies vary
+from ten to eighteen years.[427] The central feature of the initiatory
+rites is the circumcision of the novices. It is given out that the lads
+are swallowed by a ferocious monster called a _balum_, who, however, is
+induced by the sacrifice of many pigs to vomit them up again. In spewing
+them out of his maw he bites or scratches them, and the wound so
+inflicted is circumcision. This explanation of the rite is fobbed off on
+the women, who more or less believe it and weep accordingly when their
+sons are led away to be committed to the monster's jaws. And when the
+time for the ceremony is approaching, the fond mothers busy themselves
+with rearing and fattening young pigs, so that they may be able with
+them to redeem their loved ones from the belly of the ravenous beast;
+for he must have a pig for every boy. When a lad bleeds to death from
+the effect of the operation, he is secretly buried, and his sorrowful
+mother is told that the monster swallowed him and refused to bring him
+up again. What really happens is that the youths are shut up for several
+months in a house specially built for the purpose in the village. During
+their seclusion they are under the charge of guardians, usually two
+young men, and must observe strictly a rule of fasting and chastity.
+When they are judged to be ready to undergo the rite, they are led forth
+and circumcised in front of the house amid a prodigious uproar made by
+the swinging of bull-roarers. The noise is supposed to be the voice of
+the monster who swallows and vomits up the novice at circumcision. The
+bull-roarer as well as the monster bears the name of _balum_, and the
+building in which the novices are lodged before and after the operation
+is called the monster's house (_balumslum_). After they have been
+circumcised the lads remain in the house for several months till their
+wounds are healed; then, painted and bedizened with all the ornaments
+that can be collected, they are brought back and restored to their
+joyful mothers. Women must vacate the village for a long time while the
+initiatory ceremonies are being performed.[428]
+
+[Sidenote: Novices at circumcision supposed to be killed and then
+restored to a new and higher life.]
+
+The meaning of the whole rite, as I pointed out in dealing with the
+similar initiatory rite of the Yabim, appears to be that the novices are
+killed and then restored to a new and better life; for after their
+initiation they rank no longer as boys but as full-grown men, entitled
+to all the privileges of manhood and citizenship, if we can speak of
+such a thing as citizenship among the savages of New Guinea. This
+interpretation of the rite is supported by the notable fact that the
+Bukaua, like the Yabim, give the name of _balum_ to the souls of the
+dead as well as to the mythical monster and to the bull-roarer; this
+shews how intimately the three things are associated in their minds.
+Indeed not only is the bull-roarer in general associated with the souls
+of the dead by a community of name, but among the Bukaua each particular
+bull-roarer bears in addition the name of a particular dead man and
+varies in dignity and importance with the dignity and importance of the
+deceased person whom it represents. The most venerated of all are
+curiously carved and have been handed down for generations; they bear
+the names of famous warriors or magicians of old and are supposed to
+reproduce the personal peculiarities of the celebrated originals in
+their shape and tones. And there are smaller bull-roarers which emit
+shriller notes and are thought to represent the shrill-voiced wives of
+the ancient heroes.[429]
+
+[Sidenote: The Kai tribe of Saddle Mountain in German New Guinea. The
+land of the Kai. Their mode of cultivation. Their villages.]
+
+The Bukaua and the Yabim, the two tribes with which I have been dealing
+in this and the last lecture, inhabit, as I have said, the coast about
+Finsch Harbour and speak a Melanesian language. We now pass from them to
+the consideration of another people, belonging to a different stock and
+speaking a different language, who inhabit the rugged and densely wooded
+mountains inland from Finsch Harbour. Their neighbours on the coast call
+these mountaineers by the name of Kai, a word which signifies forest or
+inland in opposition to the seashore; and this name of the tribe we may
+adopt, following the example of a German missionary, Mr. Ch. Keysser,
+who has laboured among them for more than eleven years and has given us
+an excellent description of their customs and beliefs. His account
+applies particularly to the natives of what is called Saddle Mountain,
+the part of the range which advances nearest to the coast and rises to
+the height of about three thousand feet. It is a rough, broken country,
+cleft by many ravines and covered with forest, bush, or bamboo thickets;
+though here and there at rare intervals some brown patches mark the
+clearings which the sparse inhabitants have made for the purpose of
+cultivation. Water is plentiful. Springs gush forth everywhere in the
+glens and valleys, and rushing streams of crystal-clear water pour down
+the mountain sides, and in the clefts of the hills are lonely tarns, the
+undisturbed haunts of wild ducks and other water fowl. During the wet
+season, which extends from June to August, the rain descends in sheets
+and the mountains are sometimes covered for weeks together with so thick
+a mist that all prospect is cut off at the distance of a hundred yards.
+The natives are then loth to leave their huts and will spend the day
+crouching over a fire. They are a shorter and sturdier race than the
+tribes on the coast; the expression of their face is less frank and
+agreeable, and their persons are very much dirtier. They belong to the
+aboriginal Papuan stock, whereas the Yabim and Bukaua on the coast are
+probably immigrants from beyond the sea, who have driven the indigenous
+population back into the mountains.[430] Their staple foods are taro and
+yams, which they grow in their fields. A field is cultivated for only
+one year at a time; it is then allowed to lie fallow and is soon
+overgrown with rank underwood. Six or eight years may elapse before it
+is again cleared and brought under cultivation. Game and fish abound in
+the woods and waters, and the Kai make free use of these natural
+resources. They keep pigs and dogs, and eat the flesh of both. Pork is
+indeed a favourite viand, figuring largely in the banquets which are
+held at the circumcision festivals.[431] The people live in small
+villages, each village comprising from two to six houses. The houses are
+raised on piles and the walls are usually constructed of pandanus
+leaves, though many natives now make them of boards. After eighteen
+months or two years the houses are so rotten and tumble-down that the
+village is deserted and a new one built on another site. Assembly-houses
+are erected only for the circumcision ceremonies, and the bull-roarers
+used on these occasions are kept in them. Husband and wife live
+together, often two couples in one hut; but each family has its own side
+of the house and its own fireplace. In times of insecurity the Kai used
+to build their huts for safety among the spreading boughs of great
+trees. A whole village, consisting of three or four huts, might thus be
+quartered on a single tree. Of late years, with the peace and protection
+for life introduced by German rule, these tree-houses have gone out of
+fashion.[432]
+
+[Sidenote: Observations of a German missionary on the animistic beliefs
+of the Kai.]
+
+After describing the manners and customs of the Kai people at some
+length, the German missionary, who knows them intimately, proceeds to
+give us a very valuable account of their old native religion or
+superstition. He prefaces his account with some observations, the fruit
+of long experience, which deserve to be laid to heart by all who attempt
+to penetrate into the inner life, the thoughts, the feelings, the
+motives of savages. As his remarks are very germane to the subject of
+these lectures, I will translate them. He says: "In the preceding
+chapters I have sketched the daily life of the Kai people. But I have
+not attempted to set forth the reasons for their conduct, which is often
+very peculiar and unintelligible. The explanation of that conduct lies
+in the animistic view which the Papuan takes of the world. It must be
+most emphatically affirmed that nobody can judge the native aright who
+has not gained an insight into what we may call his religious opinions.
+The native must be described as very religious, although his ideas do
+not coincide with ours. His feelings, thoughts, and will are most
+intimately connected with his belief in souls. With that belief he is
+born, he has sucked it in with his mother's milk, and from the
+standpoint of that belief he regards the things and occurrences that
+meet him in life; by that belief he regulates his behaviour. An
+objective way of looking at events is unknown to him; everything is
+brought by him into relation to his belief, and by it he seeks to
+explain everything that to him seems strange and rare."[433] "The
+labyrinth of animistic customs at first sight presents an appearance of
+wild confusion to him who seeks to penetrate into them and reduce them
+to order; but on closer inspection he will soon recognise certain
+guiding lines. These guiding lines are the laws of animism, which have
+passed into the flesh and blood of the Papuan and influence his thought
+and speech, his acts and his omissions, his love and hate, in short his
+whole life and death. When once we have discovered these laws, the whole
+of the superstitious nonsense falls into an orderly system which compels
+us to regard it with a certain respect that increases in proportion to
+the contempt in which we had previously held the people. We need not
+wonder, moreover, that the laws of animism partially correspond to
+general laws of nature."[434]
+
+[Sidenote: The essential rationality of the savage.]
+
+Thus according to Mr. Keysser, who has no theory to maintain and merely
+gives us in this passage the result of long personal observation, the
+Kai savages are thinking, reasoning men, whose conduct, however strange
+and at first sight unintelligible it may appear to us, is really based
+on a definite religious or if you please superstitious view of the
+world. It is true that their theory as well as their practice differs
+widely from ours; but it would be false and unjust to deny that they
+have a theory and that on the whole their practice squares with it.
+Similar testimony is borne to other savage races by men who have lived
+long among them and observed them closely;[435] and on the strength of
+such testimony I think we may lay it down as a well-established truth
+that savages in general, so far as they are known to us, have certain
+more or less definite theories, whether we call them religious or
+philosophical, by which they regulate their conduct, and judged by which
+their acts, however absurd they may seem to the civilised man, are
+really both rational and intelligible. Hence it is, in my opinion, a
+profound mistake hastily to conclude that because the behaviour of the
+savage does not agree with our notions of what is reasonable, natural,
+and proper, it must therefore necessarily be illogical, the result of
+blind impulse rather than of deliberate thought and calculation. No
+doubt the savage like the civilised man does often act purely on
+impulse; his passions overmaster his reason, and sweep it away before
+them. He is probably indeed much more impulsive, much more liable to be
+whirled about by gusts of emotion than we are; yet it would be unfair to
+judge his life as a whole by these occasional outbursts rather than by
+its general tenour, which to those who know him from long observation
+reveals a groundwork of logic and reason resembling our own in its
+operations, though differing from ours in the premises from which it
+sets out. I think it desirable to emphasise the rational basis of savage
+life because it has been the fashion of late years with some writers to
+question or rather deny it. According to them, if I understand them
+aright, the savage acts first and invents his reasons, generally very
+absurd reasons, for so doing afterwards. Significantly enough, the
+writers who argue in favour of the essential irrationality of savage
+conduct have none of them, I believe, any personal acquaintance with
+savages. Their conclusions are based not on observation but on purely
+theoretical deductions, a most precarious foundation on which to erect a
+science of man or indeed of anything. As such, they cannot be weighed in
+the balance against the positive testimony of many witnesses who have
+lived for years with the savage and affirm emphatically the logical
+basis which underlies and explains his seeming vagaries. At all events I
+for one have no hesitation in accepting the evidence of such men to
+matters of fact with which they are acquainted, and I unhesitatingly
+reject all theories which directly contradict that evidence. If there
+ever has been any race of men who invariably acted first and thought
+afterwards, I can only say that in the course of my reading and
+observation I have never met with any trace of them, and I am apt to
+suppose that, if they ever existed anywhere but in the imagination of
+bookish dreamers, their career must have been an exceedingly short one,
+since in the struggle for existence they would surely succumb to
+adversaries who tempered and directed the blind fury of combat with at
+least a modicum of reason and sense. The myth of the illogical or
+prelogical savage may safely be relegated to that museum of learned
+absurdities and abortions which speculative anthropology is constantly
+enriching with fresh specimens of misapplied ingenuity and wasted
+industry. But enough of these fantasies. Let us return to facts.
+
+[Sidenote: The Kai theory of the soul.]
+
+The life of the Kai people, according to Mr. Keysser, is dominated by
+their conception of the soul. That conception differs greatly from and
+is very much more extensive than ours. The Kai regards his reflection
+and his shadow as his soul or parts of it; hence you should not tread on
+a man's shadow for fear of injuring his soul. The soul likewise dwells
+in his heart, for he feels it beating. Hence if you give a native a
+friendly poke in the ribs, he protests, saying, "Don't poke me so; you
+might drive my soul out of my body, and then I should die." The soul
+moreover resides in the eye, where you may see it twinkling; when it
+departs, the eye grows dim and vacant. Moreover, the soul is in the foot
+as much as in the head; it lurks even in the spittle and the other
+bodily excretions. The soul in fact pervades the body just as warmth
+does; everything that a man touches he infects, so to say, with his
+soul; that mysterious entity exists in the very sound of his voice. The
+sorcerer catches a man's soul by his magic, shuts it up tight, and
+destroys it. Then the man dies. He dies because the sorcerer has killed
+his soul. Yet the Kai believes, whether consistently or not, that the
+soul of the dead man continues to live. He talks to it, he makes
+offerings to it, he seeks to win its favour in order that he may have
+luck in the chase; he fears its ill-will and anger; he gives it food to
+eat, liquor to drink, tobacco to smoke, and betel to chew. What could a
+reasonable ghost ask for more?[436]
+
+[Sidenote: Two kinds of human souls.]
+
+Thus, according to Mr. Keysser, whose exposition I am simply
+reproducing, the Kai believes not in one nor yet in many souls belonging
+to each individual; he implicitly assumes that there are two different
+kinds of souls. One of these is the soul which survives the body at
+death; in all respects it resembles the man himself as he lived on
+earth, except that it has no body. It is not indeed absolutely
+incorporeal, but it is greatly shrunken and attenuated by death. That is
+why the souls of the dead are so angry with the living; they repine at
+their own degraded condition; they envy the full-blooded life which the
+living enjoy and which the dead have lost. The second kind of soul is
+distinguished by Mr. Keysser from the former as a spiritual essence or
+soul-stuff, which pervades the body as sap pervades the tree, and which
+diffuses itself like corporeal warmth over everything with which the
+body is brought into contact.[437] In these lectures we are concerned
+chiefly with the former kind of soul, which is believed to survive the
+death of the body, and which answers much more nearly than the second to
+the popular European conception of the soul. Accordingly in what follows
+we shall confine our attention mainly to it.
+
+[Sidenote: Death thought by the Kai to be commonly caused by sorcery.]
+
+Like many other savages, the Kai do not believe in the possibility of a
+natural death; they think that everybody dies through the maleficent
+arts of sorcerers or ghosts. Even in the case of old people, we are
+told, they assume the cause of death to be sorcery, and to sorcery all
+misfortunes are ascribed. If a man falls on the path and wounds himself
+to death, as often happens, on the jagged stump of a bamboo, the natives
+conclude that he was bewitched. The way in which the sorcerer brought
+about the catastrophe was this. He obtained some object which was
+infected with the soul-stuff or spiritual essence of his victim; he
+stuck a pile in the ground, he spread the soul-stuff on the pile; then
+he pretended to wound himself on the pile and to groan with pain.
+Anybody can see for himself that by a natural and necessary
+concatenation of causes this compelled the poor fellow to stumble over
+that jagged bamboo stump and to perish miserably. Again, take the case
+of a hunter in the forest who is charged and ripped up by a wild boar.
+On a superficial view of the circumstances it might perhaps occur to you
+that the cause of death was the boar. But you would assuredly be
+mistaken. The real cause of death was again a sorcerer, who pounded up
+the soul-stuff of his victim with a boar's tooth. Again, suppose that a
+man is bitten by a serpent and dies. A shallow rationalist might say
+that the man died of the bite; but the Kai knows better. He is aware
+that what really killed him was the sorcerer who took a pinch of his
+victim's soul and bunged it up tight in a tube along with the sting of a
+snake. Similarly, if a woman dies in childbed, or if a man hangs
+himself, the cause of death is still a sorcerer operating with the
+appropriate means and gestures. Thus to make a man hang himself all that
+the sorcerer has to do is to get a scrap of his victim's soul--and the
+smallest scrap is quite enough for his purpose, it may be a mere shred
+or speck of soul adhering to a hair of the man's head, to a drop of his
+sweat, or to a crumb of his food,--I say that the sorcerer need only
+obtain a tiny little bit of his victim's soul, clap it in a tube, set
+the tube dangling at the end of a string, and go through a pantomime of
+gurgling, goggling and so forth, like a man in the last stage of
+strangulation, and his victim is thereby physically compelled to put his
+neck in the noose and hang himself in good earnest.[438]
+
+[Sidenote: Danger incurred by the sorcerer.]
+
+Where these views of sorcery prevail, it is no wonder that the sorcerer
+is an unpopular character. He naturally therefore shrinks from publicity
+and hides his somewhat lurid light under a bushel. Not to put too fine a
+point on it, he carries his life in his hand and may be knocked on the
+head at any moment without the tedious formality of a trial. Once his
+professional reputation is established, all the deaths in the
+neighbourhood may be set down at his door. If he gets wind of a plot to
+assassinate him, he may stave off his doom for a while by soothing the
+angry passions of his enemies with presents, but sooner or later his
+fate is sealed.[439]
+
+[Sidenote: Many hurts and maladies attributed by the Kai to the action
+of ghosts. In other cases the sickness is traced to witchcraft.
+Capturing a lost soul.]
+
+However, the Kai savage is far from attributing all deaths without
+distinction to sorcerers.[440] In many hurts and maladies he detects the
+cold clammy hand of a ghost. If a man, for example, wounds himself in
+the forest, perhaps in the pursuit of a wild beast, he may imagine that
+he has been speared or clubbed by a malignant ghost. And when a person
+falls ill, the first thing to do is naturally to ascertain the cause of
+the illness in order that it may be treated properly. In all such
+enquiries, Mr. Keysser tells us, suspicion first falls on the ghosts;
+they are looked upon as even worse than the sorcerers.[441] So when a
+doctor is called in to see a patient, the only question with him is
+whether the sickness is caused by a sorcerer or a ghost. To decide this
+nice point he takes a boiled taro over which he has pronounced a charm.
+This he bites, and if he finds a small stone in the fruit, he decides
+that ghosts are the cause of the malady; but if on the other hand he
+detects a minute roll of leaves, he knows that the sufferer is
+bewitched. In the latter case the obvious remedy is to discover the
+sorcerer and to induce him, for an adequate consideration, to give up
+the magic tube in which he has bottled up a portion of the sick man's
+soul. If, however, the magician turns a deaf ear alike to the voice of
+pity and the allurement of gain, the resources of the physician are not
+yet exhausted. He now produces his whip or scourge for souls. This
+valuable instrument consists, like a common whip, of a handle with a
+lash attached to it, but what gives it the peculiar qualities which
+distinguish it from all other whips is a small packet tied to the end of
+the lash. The packet contains a certain herb, and the sick man and his
+friends must all touch it in order to impregnate it with the volatile
+essence of their souls. Armed with this potent implement the doctor goes
+by night into the depth of the forest; for the darkness of night and the
+solitude of the woods are necessary for the success of the delicate
+operation which this good physician of souls has now to perform. Finding
+himself alone he whistles for the lost soul of the sufferer, and if only
+the sorcerer by his infernal craft has not yet brought it to death's
+door, the soul appears at the sound of the whistle; for it is strongly
+attracted by the soul-stuff of its friends in the packet. But the doctor
+has still to catch it, a feat which is not so easily accomplished as
+might be supposed. It is now that the whip of souls comes into play.
+Suddenly the doctor heaves up his arm and lashes out at the truant soul
+with all his might. If only he hits it, the business is done, the soul
+is captured, the doctor carries it back to the house in triumph, and
+restores it to the body of the poor sick man, who necessarily
+recovers.[442]
+
+[Sidenote: Extracting ghosts from a sick man.]
+
+But suppose that the result of the diagnosis is different, and that on
+mature consideration the doctor should decide that a ghost and not a
+sorcerer is at the bottom of the mischief. The question then naturally
+arises whether the sick man has not of late been straying on haunted
+ground and infected himself with the very dangerous soul-stuff or
+spiritual essence of the dead. If he remembers to have done so, some
+leaves are fetched from the place in the forest where the mishap
+occurred, and with them the whole body of the sufferer or the wound, as
+the case may be, is stroked or brushed down. The healing virtue of this
+procedure is obvious. The ghosts who are vexing the patient are
+attracted by the familiar smell of the leaves which come from their old
+home; and yielding in a moment of weakness to the soft emotions excited
+by the perfume they creep out of the body of the sick man and into the
+leaves. Quick as thought the doctor now whisks the leaves away with the
+ghosts in them; he belabours them with a cudgel, he hangs them up in the
+smoke, or he throws them into the fire. Such powerful disinfectants have
+their natural results; if the ghosts are not absolutely destroyed they
+are at least disarmed, and the sick is made whole.
+
+[Sidenote: Scraping ghosts from the patient's body.]
+
+Another equally effective cure for sickness caused by ghosts is this.
+You take a stout stick, cleave it down the middle so that the two ends
+remain entire, and give it to two men to hold. Then the sick man pokes
+his head through the cleft; after that you rub him with the stick from
+the crown of his head to the soles of his feet. In this way you
+obviously scrape off the bloodsucking ghosts who are clinging like flies
+or mosquitoes to his person, and having thus transferred them to the
+cleft stick you throw it away or otherwise destroy it. The cure is now
+complete, and if the patient does not recover, he cannot reasonably
+blame the doctor, who has done all that humanly speaking could be done
+to bring back the bloom of health to the poor sick man.[443]
+
+[Sidenote: Extravagant demonstrations of grief at the death of a sick
+man.]
+
+If, however, the sick man obstinately persists in dying, there is a
+great uproar in the village. For the fear of his ghost has now fallen
+like a thunderclap on all the people. His disembodied spirit is believed
+to be hovering in the air, seeing everything that is done, hearing every
+word that is spoken, and woe to the unlucky wight who does not display a
+proper degree of sorrow for the irreparable loss that has just befallen
+the community. Accordingly shrieks of despair begin to resound, and
+crocodile tears to flow in cataracts. The whole population assemble and
+give themselves up to the most frantic demonstrations of grief. Cries
+are raised on all sides, "Why must he die?" "Wherefore did they bewitch
+him?" "Those wicked, wicked men!" "I'll do for them!" "I'll hew them in
+pieces!" "I'll destroy their crops!" "I'll fell all their palm-trees!"
+"I'll stick all their pigs!" "O brother, why did you leave me?" "O
+friend, how can I live without you?" To make good these threats one man
+will be seen prancing wildly about and stabbing with a spear at the
+invisible sorcerers; another catches up a cudgel and at one blow shivers
+a water-pot of the deceased into atoms, or rushes out like one demented
+and lays a palm-tree level with the ground. Some fling themselves
+prostrate beside the corpse and sob as if their very hearts would break.
+They take the dead man by the hand, they stroke him, they straighten out
+the poor feet which are already growing cold. They coo to him softly,
+they lift up the languid head, and then lay it gently down. Then in a
+frenzy of grief one of them will leap to his feet, shriek, bellow, stamp
+on the floor, grapple with the roof beams, shake the walls, as if he
+would pull the house down, and finally hurl himself on the ground and
+roll over and over howling as if his distress was more than he could
+endure. Another looks wildly about him. He sees a knife. He grasps it.
+His teeth are set, his mind is made up. "Why need he die?" he cries,
+"he, my friend, with whom I had all things in common, with whom I ate
+out of the same dish?" Then there is a quick movement of the knife, and
+down he falls. But he is not dead. He has only slit the flap of one of
+his ears, and the trickling blood bedabbles his body. Meantime with the
+hoarse cries of the men are mingled the weeping and wailing, the shrill
+screams and lamentations of the women; while above all the din and
+uproar rises the booming sound of the shell trumpets blown to carry the
+tidings of death to all the villages in the neighbourhood. But gradually
+the wild tumult dies away into silence. Grief or the simulation of it
+has exhausted itself: the people grow calm; they sit down, they smoke or
+chew betel, while some engage in the last offices of attention to the
+dead.[444]
+
+[Sidenote: Hypocritical character of these demonstrations, which are
+intended to deceive the ghost.]
+
+A civilised observer who witnessed such a scene of boisterous
+lamentation, but did not know the natives well, might naturally set down
+all these frantic outbursts to genuine sorrow, and might enlarge
+accordingly on the affectionate nature of savages, who are thus cut to
+the heart by the death of any one of their acquaintance. But the
+missionary who knows them better assures us that most of these
+expressions of mourning and despair are a mere blind to deceive and
+soothe the dreaded ghost of the deceased into a comfortable persuasion
+that he is fondly loved and sadly missed by his surviving relatives and
+friends. This view of the essential hypocrisy of the lamentations is
+strongly confirmed by the threats which sick people will sometimes utter
+to their attendants. "If you don't take better care of me," a man will
+sometimes say, "and if you don't do everything you possibly can to
+preserve my valuable life, my ghost will serve you out." That is why
+friends and relations are so punctilious in paying visits of respect and
+condolence to the sick. Sometimes the last request which a dying man
+addresses to his kinsfolk is that they will kill this or that sorcerer
+who has killed him; and he enforces the injunction by threats of the
+terrible things he will do to them in his disembodied state if they fail
+to avenge his death on his imaginary murderer. As all the relatives of a
+dead man stand in fear of his ghost, the body may not be buried until
+all of them have had an opportunity of paying their respects to it. If,
+as sometimes happens, a corpse is interred before a relative can arrive
+from a distance, he will on arrival break out into reproaches and
+upbraidings against the grave-diggers for exposing him to the wrath of
+the departed spirit.[445]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs of the Kai. Preservation of the
+lower jawbone.]
+
+When all the relations and friends have assembled and testified their
+sorrow, the body is buried on the second or third day after death. The
+grave is usually dug under the house and is so shallow that even when it
+has been closed the stench is often very perceptible. The ornaments
+which were placed on the body when it was laid out are removed before it
+is lowered into the grave, and the dead takes his last rest wrapt in a
+simple leaf-mat. Often a dying man expresses a wish not to be buried. In
+that case his corpse, tightly bandaged, is deposited in a corner of the
+house, and the products of decomposition are allowed to drain through a
+tube into the ground. When they have ceased to run, the bundle is opened
+and the bones taken out and buried, except the lower jawbone, which is
+preserved, sometimes along with one of the lower arm bones. The lower
+jawbone reminds the possessor of the duty of blood revenge which he owes
+to the deceased, and which the dying man may have inculcated on him with
+his last breath. The lower arm bone brings luck in the chase, especially
+if the departed relative was a mighty hunter. However, if the hunters
+have a long run of bad luck, they conclude that the ghost has departed
+to the under world and accordingly bury the lower arm bone and the lower
+jawbone with the rest of the skeleton. The length of the period of
+mourning is similarly determined by the good or bad fortune of the
+huntsmen. If the ghost provides them with game in abundance for a long
+time after his death, the days of mourning are proportionately extended;
+but when the game grows scarce or fails altogether, the mourning comes
+to an end and the memory of the deceased soon fades away.[446] The
+savage is a thoroughly practical man and is not such a fool as to waste
+his sorrow over a ghost who gives him nothing in return. Nothing for
+nothing is his principle. His relations to the dead stand on a strictly
+commercial basis.
+
+[Sidenote: Mourning costume. Widows strangled to accompany their dead
+husbands.]
+
+The mourning costume consists of strings round the neck, bracelets of
+reed on the arms, and a cylindrical hat of bark on the head. A widow is
+swathed in nets. The intention of the costume is to signify to the ghost
+the sympathy which the mourner feels for him in his disembodied state.
+If the man in his lifetime was wont to crouch shivering over the fire, a
+little fire will be kept up for a time at the foot of the grave in order
+to warm his homeless spirit.[447] The widow or widower has to discharge
+the disagreeable duty of living day and night for several weeks in a
+hovel built directly over the grave. Not unfrequently the lot of a widow
+is much harder. At her own request she is sometimes strangled and buried
+with her husband in the grave, in order that her soul may accompany his
+on the journey to the other world. The other relations have no interest
+in encouraging the woman to sacrifice herself, rather the contrary; but
+if she insists they fear to balk her, lest they should offend the ghost
+of her husband, who would punish them in many ways for keeping his wife
+from him. But even such voluntary sacrifices, if we may believe Mr. Ch.
+Keysser, are dictated rather by a selfish calculation than by an impulse
+of disinterested affection. He mentions the case of a man named Jabu,
+both of whose wives chose thus to attend their husband in death. The
+deceased was an industrious man, a skilful hunter and farmer, who
+provided his wives with abundance of food. As such men are believed to
+work hard also in the other world, tilling fields and killing game just
+as here, the widows thought they could not do better than follow him as
+fast as possible to the spirit land, since they had no prospect of
+getting such another husband here on earth. "How firmly convinced," adds
+the missionary admiringly, "must these people be of the reality of
+another world when they sacrifice their earthly existence, not for the
+sake of a better life hereafter, but merely in order to be no worse off
+there than they have been on earth." And he adds that this consideration
+explains why no man ever chooses to be strangled at the death of his
+wife. The labour market in the better land is apparently not recruited
+from the ranks of women.[448]
+
+[Sidenote: House or village deserted after a death.]
+
+The house in which anybody has died is deserted, because the ghost of
+the dead is believed to haunt it and make it unsafe at night. If the
+deceased was a chief or a man of importance, the whole village is
+abandoned and a new one built on another site.[449]
+
+[Footnote 415: Stefan Lehner, "Bukaua," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. (Berlin, 1911) pp. 395-485.]
+
+[Footnote 416: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 399, 433 _sq._, 437 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 417: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 399.]
+
+[Footnote 418: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 414.]
+
+[Footnote 419: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 466, 468.]
+
+[Footnote 420: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 469.]
+
+[Footnote 421: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 462 _sqq._, 466, 467, 471
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 422: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 462.]
+
+[Footnote 423: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 444 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 424: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 434 _sqq._; compare _id._, pp.
+478 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 425: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 462.]
+
+[Footnote 426: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 430, 470, 472 _sq._, 474 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 427: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 403.]
+
+[Footnote 428: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 402-410.]
+
+[Footnote 429: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 410-414.]
+
+[Footnote 430: Ch. Keysser, "Aus dem Leben der Kaileute," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_, iii. 3-6.]
+
+[Footnote 431: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 12 _sq._, 17-20.]
+
+[Footnote 432: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 9-12.]
+
+[Footnote 433: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 111.]
+
+[Footnote 434: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 113.]
+
+[Footnote 435: Compare Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of
+Borneo_ (London, 1912), ii. 221 _sq._: "It has often been attempted to
+exhibit the mental life of savage peoples as profoundly different from
+our own; to assert that they act from motives, and reach conclusions by
+means of mental processes, so utterly different from our own motives and
+processes that we cannot hope to interpret or understand their behaviour
+unless we can first, by some impossible or at least by some hitherto
+undiscovered method, learn the nature of these mysterious motives and
+processes. These attempts have recently been renewed in influential
+quarters. If these views were applied to the savage peoples of the
+interior of Borneo, we should characterise them as fanciful delusions
+natural to the anthropologist who has spent all the days of his life in
+a stiff collar and a black coat upon the well-paved ways of civilised
+society. We have no hesitation in saying that, the more intimately one
+becomes acquainted with these pagan tribes, the more fully one realises
+the close similarity of their mental processes to one's own. Their
+primary impulses and emotions seem to be in all respects like our own.
+It is true that they are very unlike the typical civilised man of some
+of the older philosophers, whose every action proceeded from a nice and
+logical calculation of the algebraic sum of pleasures and pains to be
+derived from alternative lines of conduct; but we ourselves are equally
+unlike that purely mythical personage. The Kayan or the Iban often acts
+impulsively in ways which by no means conduce to further his best
+interests or deeper purposes; but so do we also. He often reaches
+conclusions by processes that cannot be logically justified; but so do
+we also. He often holds, and upon successive occasions acts upon,
+beliefs that are logically inconsistent with one another; but so do we
+also." For further testimonies to the reasoning powers of savages, which
+it would be superfluous to affirm if it were not at present a fashion
+with some theorists to deny, see _Taboo and the Perils of the Soul_, pp.
+420 _sqq._ And on the tendency of the human mind in general, not of the
+savage mind in particular, calmly to acquiesce in inconsistent and even
+contradictory conclusions, I may refer to a note in _Adonis, Attis,
+Osiris_, Second Edition, p. 4. But indeed to observe such contradictions
+in practice the philosopher need not quit his own study.]
+
+[Footnote 436: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 111 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 437: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 112.]
+
+[Footnote 438: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 140. As to the magical tubes
+in which the sorcerer seals up some part of his victim's soul, see
+_id._, p. 135.]
+
+[Footnote 439: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 140 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 440: Mr. Keysser indeed affirms that in the mind of the Kai
+sorcery "is regarded as the cause of all deaths" (_op. cit._ p. 102),
+and again that "all men without exception die in consequence of the
+baneful acts of these sorcerers and their accomplices" (p. 134); and
+again that "even in the case of old people they assume sorcery to be the
+cause of death; to sorcery, too, all misfortunes whatever are ascribed"
+(p. 140). But that these statements are exaggerations seems to follow
+from Mr. Keysser's own account of the wounds, sicknesses, and deaths
+which these savages attribute to ghosts and not to sorcerers.]
+
+[Footnote 441: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 141.]
+
+[Footnote 442: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 133 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 443: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 141 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 444: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 80 _sq._, 142.]
+
+[Footnote 445: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 142.]
+
+[Footnote 446: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 82, 83.]
+
+[Footnote 447: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 82, 142 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 448: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 83 _sq._, 143.]
+
+[Footnote 449: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 83.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XIII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to appease ghosts.]
+
+In the last lecture I gave you some account of the fear and awe which
+the Kai of German New Guinea entertain for the spirits of the dead.
+Believing that the ghost is endowed with all the qualities and faculties
+which distinguished the man in his lifetime, they naturally dread most
+the ghosts of warlike, cruel, violent, and passionate men, and take the
+greatest pains to soothe their anger and win their favour. For that
+purpose they give the departed spirit all sorts of things to take with
+him to the far country. And in order that he may have the use of them it
+is necessary to smash or otherwise spoil them. Thus the spear that is
+given him must be broken, the pot must be shivered, the bag must be
+torn, the palm-tree must be cut down. Fruits are offered to the ghost by
+dashing them in pieces or hanging a bunch of them over the grave.
+Objects of value, such as boars' tusks or dogs' teeth, are made over to
+him by being laid on the corpse; but the economical savage removes these
+precious things from the body at burial. All such offerings and
+sacrifices, we are told, are made simply out of fear of the ghost. It is
+no pleasure to a man to cut down a valuable palm-tree, which might have
+helped to nourish himself and his family for years; he does it only lest
+a worse thing should befall him at the hands of the departed
+spirit.[450]
+
+[Sidenote: Mode of discovering the sorcerer who caused a death.]
+
+But the greatest service that the Kai can render to a dead man is to
+take vengeance on the sorcerer who caused his death by witchcraft. The
+first thing is to discover the villain, and in the search for him the
+ghost obligingly assists his surviving kinsfolk. Sometimes, however, it
+is necessary to resort to a stratagem in order to secure his help. Thus,
+for example, one day while the ghost, blinded by the strong sunlight, is
+cowering in a dark corner or reposing at full length in the grave, his
+relatives will set up a low scaffold in a field, cover it with leaves,
+and pile up over it a mass of the field fruits which belonged to the
+dead man, so that the whole erection may appear to the eye of the
+unsuspecting ghost a heap of taro, yams, and so forth, and nothing more.
+But before the sun goes down, two or three men steal out from the house,
+and ensconce themselves under the scaffold, where they are completely
+concealed by the piled-up fruits. When darkness has fallen, out comes
+the ghost and prowling about espies the heap of yams and taro. At sight
+of the devastation wrought in his field he flies into a passion, and
+curses and swears in the feeble wheezy whisper in which ghosts always
+speak. In the course of his fluent imprecations he expresses a wish that
+the miscreants who have wasted his substance may suffer so and so at the
+hands of the sorcerer. That is just what the men in hiding have been
+waiting for. No sooner do they hear the name of the sorcerer than they
+jump up with a great shout; the startled ghost takes to his heels; and
+all the people in the village come pouring out of the houses. Very glad
+they are to know that the murderer has been found out, and sooner or
+later they will have his blood.[451]
+
+[Sidenote: Another way of detecting the sorcerer.]
+
+Another mode of eliciting the requisite information from the ghost is
+this. In order to allow him to communicate freely with his mouldering
+body, his relations insert a tube through the earth of the grave down to
+the corpse; then they sprinkle powdered lime on the grave. At night the
+ghost comes along, picks up the powdered lime, and makes off in a bee
+line for the village where the sorcerer who bewitched him resides. On
+the way he drops some of the powder here and there, so that next
+morning, on the principle of the paper-chase, his relatives can trace
+his footsteps to the very door of his murderer. In many districts the
+people tie a packet of lime to the knee of a corpse so that his ghost
+may have it to hand when he wants it.[452]
+
+[Sidenote: Cross-questioning the ghost by means of fire.]
+
+But the favourite way of cross-questioning the ghost on subject of his
+decease is by means of fire. A few men go out before nightfall from the
+village and sit down in a row, one behind the other, on the path. The
+man in front has a leaf-mat drawn like a hood over his head and back in
+order that the ghost may not touch him from behind unawares. In his hand
+he holds a glowing coal and some tinder, and as he puts the one to the
+other he calls to the ghost, "Come, take, take, take; come, take, take,
+take," and so on. Meantime his mates behind him are reckoning up the
+names of all the men near and far who are suspected of sorcery, and a
+portion of the village youth have clambered up trees and are on the
+look-out for the ghost. If they do not see his body they certainly see
+his eye twinkling in the gloom, though the uninstructed European might
+easily mistake it for a glow-worm. No sooner do they catch sight of it
+than they bawl out, "Come hither, fetch the fire, and burn him who burnt
+thee." If the tinder blazes up at the name of a sorcerer, it is flung
+towards the village where the man in question dwells. And if at the same
+time a glow-worm is seen to move in the same direction, the people
+entertain no doubt that the ghost has appeared and fetched the soul of
+the fire.[453]
+
+[Sidenote: Necessity of destroying the sorcerer who caused a death.]
+
+In whichever way the author of the death may be detected, the avengers
+of blood set out for the village of the miscreant and seek to take his
+life. Almost all the wars between villages or tribes spring from such
+expeditions. The sorcerer or sorcerers must be extirpated, nay all their
+kith and kin must be destroyed root and branch, if the people are to
+live in peace and quiet. The ghost of the dead calls, nay clamours for
+vengeance, and if he does not get it, he will wreak his spite on his
+negligent relations. Not only will he give them no luck in the chase,
+but he will drive the wild swine into the fields to trample down and
+root up the crops, and he will do them every mischief in his power. If
+rain does not fall, so that the freshly planted root crops wither; or if
+sickness is rife, the people recognise in the calamity the wrath of the
+ghost, who can only be appeased by the slaughter of the wicked magician
+or of somebody else. Hence the avengers of blood often do not set out
+until a fresh death, an outbreak of sickness, failure in the chase, or
+some other misfortune reminds the living of the duty they owe to the
+dead. The Kai is not by nature warlike, and he might never go to war if
+it were not that he dreads the vengeance of ghosts more than the wrath
+of men.[454]
+
+[Sidenote: Slayers dread the ghosts of the slain.]
+
+If the expedition has been successful, if the enemy's village has been
+surprised and stormed, the men and old women butchered, and the young
+women taken prisoners, the warriors beat a hasty retreat with their
+booty in order to be safe at home, or at least in the shelter of a
+friendly village, before nightfall. Their reason for haste is the fear
+of being overtaken in the darkness by the ghosts of their slaughtered
+foes, who, powerless by day, are very dangerous and terrible by night.
+Restlessly through the hours of darkness these unquiet spirits follow
+like sleuth-hounds in the tracks of their retreating enemies, eager to
+come up with them and by contact with the bloodstained weapons of their
+slayers to recover the spiritual substance which they have lost. Not
+till they have done so can they find rest and peace. That is why the
+victors are careful not at first to bring back their weapons into the
+village but to hide them somewhere in the bushes at a safe distance.
+There they leave them for some days until the baffled ghosts may be
+supposed to have given up the chase and returned, sad and angry, to
+their mangled bodies in the charred ruins of their old home. The first
+night after the return of the warriors is always the most anxious time;
+all the villagers are then on the alert for fear of the ghosts; but if
+the night passes quietly, their terror gradually subsides and gives
+place to the dread of their surviving enemies.[455]
+
+[Sidenote: Seclusion of man-slayers from fear of their victims' ghosts.]
+
+As the victors in a raid are supposed to have more or less of the
+soul-stuff or spiritual essence of their slain foes adhering to their
+persons, none of their friends will venture to touch them for some time
+after their return to the village. Everybody avoids them and goes
+carefully out of their way. If during this time any of the villagers
+suffers from a pain in his stomach, he thinks that he must have
+inadvertently sat down where one of the warriors had sat before him. If
+somebody endures the pangs of toothache, he makes sure that he must have
+eaten a fruit which had been touched by one of the slayers. All the
+refuse of the meals of these gallant men must be most carefully put away
+lest a pig should devour it; for if it did do so, the animal would
+certainly die, which would be a serious loss to the owner. Hence when
+the warriors have satisfied their hunger, any food that remains over is
+burnt or buried. The fighting men themselves are not very seriously
+incommoded, or at all events endangered, by the ghosts of their victims;
+for they have taken the precaution to disinfect themselves by the sap of
+a certain creeper, which, if it does not render them absolutely immune
+to ghostly influence, at least fortifies their constitution to a very
+considerable extent.[456]
+
+[Sidenote: Feigned indignation of a man who has connived at the murder
+of a relative.]
+
+Sometimes, instead of sending forth a band of warriors to ravage, burn,
+and slaughter the whole male population of the village in which the
+wicked sorcerer resides, the people of one village will come to a secret
+understanding with the people of the sorcerer's village to have the
+miscreant quietly put out of the way. A hint is given to the scoundrel's
+next of kin, it may be his brother, son, or nephew, that if he will only
+wink at the slaughter of his obnoxious relative, he will receive a
+handsome compensation from the slayers. Should he privately accept the
+offer, he is most careful to conceal his connivance at the deed of
+blood, lest he should draw down on his head the wrath of his murdered
+kinsman's ghost. So, when the deed is done and the murder is out, he
+works himself up into a state of virtuous sorrow and indignation, covers
+his head with the leaves of a certain plant, and chanting a dirge in
+tones of heart-rending grief, marches straight to the village of the
+murderers. There, on the public square, surrounded by an attentive
+audience, he opens the floodgates of his eloquence and pours forth the
+torrent of an aching heart. "You have slain my kinsman," says he, "you
+are wicked men! How could you kill so good a man, who conferred so many
+benefits on me in his lifetime? I knew nothing of the plot. Had I had an
+inkling of it, I would have foiled it. How can I now avenge his death? I
+have no property with which to hire men of war to go and punish his
+murderers. Yet in spite of everything my murdered kinsman will not
+believe in my innocence! He will be angry with me, he will pay me out,
+he will do me all the harm he can. Therefore do you declare openly
+whether I had any share whatever in his death, and come and strew lime
+on my head in order that he may convince himself of my innocence." This
+appeal of injured innocence meets with a ready response. The people dust
+the leaves on his head with powdered lime; and so, decorated with the
+white badge of spotless virtue, and enriched with a boar's tusk or other
+valuable object as the price of his compliance, he returns to his
+village with a conscience at peace with all the world, reflecting with
+satisfaction on the profitable transaction he has just concluded, and
+laughing in his sleeve at the poor deluded ghost of his murdered
+relative.[457]
+
+[Sidenote: Comedy acted to deceive the ghost of a murdered kinsman.]
+
+Sometimes the worthy soul who thus for a valuable consideration consents
+to waive all his personal feelings, will even carry his self-abnegation
+so far as to be present and look on at the murder of his kinsman. But
+true to his principles he will see to it that the thing is done decently
+and humanely. When the struggle is nearly over and the man is down,
+writhing on the ground with the murderers busy about him, his loving
+kinsman will not suffer them to take an unfair advantage of their
+superior numbers to cut him up alive with their knives, to chop him with
+their axes, or to smash him with their clubs. He will only allow them to
+stab him with their spears, repeating of course the stabs again and
+again till the victim ceases to writhe and quiver, and lies there dead
+as a stone. Then begins the real time of peril for the virtuous kinsman
+who has been a spectator and director of the scene; for the ghost of the
+murdered man has now deserted its mangled body, and, still blinded with
+blood and smarting with pain, might easily and even excusably
+misunderstand the situation. It is essential, therefore, in order to
+prevent a painful misapprehension, that the kinsman should at once and
+emphatically disclaim any part or parcel in the murder. This he
+accordingly does in language which leaves no room for doubt or
+ambiguity. He falls into a passion: he rails at the murderers: he
+proclaims his horror at their deed. All the way home he refuses to be
+comforted. He upbraids the assassins, he utters the most frightful
+threats against them; he rushes at them to snatch their weapons from
+them and dash them in pieces. But they easily wrench the weapons from
+his unresisting hands. For the whole thing is only a piece of acting.
+His sole intention is that the ghost may see and hear it all, and being
+convinced of the innocence of his dear kinsman may not punish him with
+bad crops, wounds, sickness, and other misfortunes. Even when he has
+reached the village, he keeps up the comedy for a time, raging, fretting
+and fuming at the irreparable loss he has sustained by the death of his
+lamented relative.[458]
+
+[Sidenote: Pretence of avenging the ghost of a murdered sorcerer.]
+
+Similarly when a chief has among his subjects a particular sorcerer whom
+he fears but with whom he is professedly on terms of friendship, he will
+sometimes engage a man to murder him. No sooner, however, is the murder
+perpetrated than the chief who bespoke it hastens in seeming indignation
+with a band of followers to the murderer's village. The assassin, of
+course, has got a hint of what is coming, and he and his friends take
+care not to be at home when the chief arrives on his mission of
+vengeance. Balked by the absence of their victim the avengers of blood
+breathe out fire and slaughter, but content themselves in fact with
+smashing an old pot or two, knocking down a deserted hut, and perhaps
+felling a banana-tree or a betel-palm. Having thus given the ghost of
+the murdered man an unequivocal proof of the sincerity of their
+friendship, they return quietly home.[459]
+
+[Sidenote: The Kai afraid of ghosts.]
+
+The habits of Kai ghosts are to some extent just the contrary of those
+of living men. They sleep by day and go about their business by night,
+when they frighten people and play them all kinds of tricks. Usually
+they appear in the form of animals. As light has the effect of blinding
+or at least dazzling them, they avoid everything bright, and hence it is
+easy to scare them away by means of fire. That is why no native will go
+even a short way in the dark without a bamboo torch. If it is absolutely
+necessary to go out by night, which he is very loth to do, he will hum
+and haw loudly before quitting the house so as to give notice to any
+lurking ghost that he is coming with a light, which allows the ghost to
+scuttle out of his way in good time. The people of a village live in
+terror above all so long as a corpse remains unburied in it; after
+nightfall nobody would then venture out of sight of the houses. When a
+troop of people go by night to a neighbouring village with flaring
+torches in their hands, nobody is willing to walk last on the path; they
+all huddle together for safety in the middle, till one man braver than
+the rest consents to act as rearguard. The rustling of a bush in the
+evening twilight startles them with the dread of some ghastly
+apparition; the sight of a pig in the gloaming is converted by their
+fears into the vision of a horrible spectre. If a man stumbles, it is
+because a ghost has pushed him, and he fancies he perceives the
+frightful thing in a tree-stump or any chance object. No wonder a Kai
+man fears ghosts, since he believes that the mere touch of one of them
+may be fatal. People who fall down in fits or in faints are supposed to
+have been touched by ghosts; and on coming to themselves they will tell
+their friends with the most solemn assurance how they felt the
+death-cold hand of the ghost on their body, and how a shudder ran
+through their whole frame at contact with the uncanny being.[460]
+
+[Sidenote: Services rendered to the living by ghosts of the dead.]
+
+But it would be a mistake to imagine that the ghosts of the dead are a
+source of danger, annoyance, and discomfort, and nothing more. That is
+not so. They may and do render the Kai the most material services in
+everyday life, particularly by promoting the supply of food both
+vegetable and animal. I have said that these practical savages stand
+towards their departed kinsfolk on a strictly commercial footing; and I
+will now illustrate the benefits which the Kai hope to receive from the
+ghosts in return for all the respect and attention lavished on them. In
+the first place, then, so long as a ghost remains in the neighbourhood
+of the village, it is expected of him that he shall make the crops
+thrive and neither tread them down himself nor allow wild pigs to do so.
+The expectation is reasonable, yet the conduct of the ghost does not
+always answer to it. Occasionally, whether out of sheer perverseness or
+simple absence of mind, he will sit down in a field; and wherever he
+does so, he makes a hollow where the fruits will not grow. Indeed any
+fruit that he even touches with his foot in passing, shrivels up. Where
+these things have happened, the people offer boiled taro and a few crabs
+to the ghosts to induce them to keep clear of the crops and to repose
+their weary limbs elsewhere than in the tilled fields.[461]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts help Kai hunters to kill game.]
+
+But the most important service which the dead render to the living is
+the good luck which they vouchsafe to hunters. Hence in order to assure
+himself of the favour of the dead the hunter hangs his nets on a grave
+before he uses them. If a man was a good and successful hunter in his
+lifetime, his ghost will naturally be more than usually able to assist
+his brethren in the craft after his death. For that reason when such a
+man has just died, the people, to adopt a familiar proverb, hasten to
+make hay while the sun shines by hunting very frequently, in the
+confident expectation of receiving ghostly help from the deceased
+hunter. In the evening, when they return from the chase, they lay a
+small portion of their bag near his grave, scatter a powder which
+possesses the special virtue of attracting ghosts, and call out,
+"So-and-so, come and eat; here I set down food for you, it is a part of
+all we have." If after such an offering and invocation the night wind
+rustles the tops of the trees or shakes the thatch of leaves on the
+roofs, they know that the ghost is in the village. The twinkle of a
+glow-worm near his grave is the glitter of his eye. In the morning, too,
+before they sally forth to the woods, one of the next of kin to the dead
+huntsman will go betimes to his grave, stamp on it to waken the sleeper
+below, and call out, "So-and-so, come! we are now about to go out
+hunting. Help us to a good bag!" If they have luck, they praise the
+deceased as a good spirit and in the evening supply his wants again with
+food, tobacco, and betel. The sacrifice, as usually happens in such
+cases, does not call for any great exercise of self-denial; since the
+spirit consumes only the spiritual essence of the good things, while he
+leaves their material substance to be enjoyed by the living.[462]
+
+[Sidenote: Ill-treatment of a ghost who fails to help hunters.]
+
+However, it sometimes happens that the ghost disappoints them, and that
+the hunters return in the evening hungry and empty-handed. This may even
+be repeated day after day, and still the people will not lose hope. They
+think that the ghost is perhaps busy working in his field, or that he
+has gone on a visit and will soon come home. To give him time to do his
+business or see his friends at leisure, they will remain in the village
+for several days. Then, when they imagine that he must surely have
+returned, they go out into the woods and try their luck again. But
+should there still be no ghost and no game, they begin to be seriously
+alarmed. They think that some evil must have befallen him. But if time
+goes on and still he gives no sign and the game continues scarce and
+shy, their feelings towards the ghost undergo a radical alteration.
+Passion getting the better of prudence, they will even reproach him with
+ingratitude, taunt him with his uselessness, and leave him to starve.
+Should he after that still remain deaf to their railing and regardless
+of the short commons to which they have reduced him, they will discharge
+a volley of abuse at his grave and trouble themselves about him no more.
+However, if, not content with refusing his valuable assistance in the
+chase, the ghost should actually blight the crops or send wild boars
+into the fields to trample them down, the patience of the long-suffering
+people is quite exhausted: the vials of their wrath overflow; and
+snatching up their cudgels in a fury they belabour his grave till his
+bones ache, or even drive him with blows and curses altogether from the
+village.[463]
+
+[Sidenote: The journey of ghosts to the spirit land.]
+
+Such an outcast ghost, if he does not seek his revenge by prowling in
+the neighbourhood and preying on society at large, will naturally
+bethink himself of repairing to his long home in the under world. For
+sooner or later the spirits of the dead congregate there. It is
+especially when the flesh has quite mouldered away from his bones that
+the ghost packs up his little traps and sets out for the better land.
+The entrance to the abode of bliss is a cave to the west of Saddle
+Mountain. Here in the gully there is a projecting tree-stump on which
+the ghosts perch waiting for a favourable moment to jump into the mouth
+of the cavern. When a slight earthquake is felt, a Kai man will often
+say, "A ghost has just leaped from the tree into the cave; that is why
+the earth is shaking." Down below the ghosts are received by Tulmeng,
+lord of the nether world. Often he appears in a canoe to ferry them over
+to the further shore. "Blood or wax?" is the laconic question which he
+puts to the ghost on the bank. He means to say, "Were you killed or were
+you done to death by magic?" For it is with wax that the sorcerer stops
+up the fatal little tubes in which he encloses the souls of his enemies.
+And the reason why the lord of the dead puts the question to the
+newcomer is that the ghosts of the slain and the ghosts of the bewitched
+dwell in separate places. Right in front of the land of souls rises a
+high steep wall, which cannot be climbed even by ghosts. The spirits
+have accordingly to make their way through it and thereupon find
+themselves in their new abode. According to some Kai, before the ghosts
+are admitted to ghost land they must swing to and fro on a rope and then
+drop into water, where they are washed clean of bloodstains and all
+impurity; after which they ascend, spick and span, the last slope to the
+village of ghosts.
+
+[Sidenote: Life of ghosts in the other world.]
+
+Tulmeng has the reputation of being a very stern ruler in his weird
+realm, but the Kai really know very little about him. He beats
+refractory souls, and it is essential that every ghost should have his
+ears and nose bored. The operation is very painful, and to escape it
+most people take the precaution of having their ears and noses bored in
+their lifetime. Life in the other world goes on just like life in this
+one. Houses are built exactly like houses on earth, and there as here
+pigs swarm in the streets. Fields are tilled and crops are got in;
+ghostly men marry ghostly women, who give birth to ghostly children. The
+same old round of love and hate, of quarrelling and fighting, of battle,
+murder and sudden death goes on in the shadowy realm below ground just
+as in the more solid world above ground. Sorcerers are there also, and
+they breed just as bad blood among the dead as among the living. All
+things indeed are the same except for their shadowy unsubstantial
+texture.[464]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts die and turn into animals.]
+
+But the ghosts do not live for ever in the nether world. They die the
+second death and turn into animals, generally into cuscuses. In the
+shape of animals they haunt the wildest, deepest, darkest glens of the
+rugged mountains. No one but the owner has the right to set foot on such
+haunted ground. He may even kill the ghostly animals. Any one else who
+dared to disturb them in their haunts would do so at the peril of his
+life. But even the owner of the land who has killed one of the ghostly
+creatures is bound to appease the spirit of the dead beast. He may not
+cut up the carcase at once, but must leave it for a time, perhaps for a
+whole night, after laying on it presents which are intended to mollify
+and soothe the injured spirit. In placing the gifts on the body he says,
+"Take the gifts and leave us that which was a game animal, that we may
+eat it." When the animal's ghost has appropriated the spiritual essence
+of the offerings, the hunter and his family may eat the carcase. Should
+one of these ghostly creatures die or be killed, its spirit turns either
+into an insect or into an ant-hill. Children who would destroy such an
+ant-hill or throw little darts at it, are warned by their elders not to
+indulge in such sacrilegious sport. When the insect also dies, the
+series of spiritual transformations is at an end.[465]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of persons eminent for good or evil in their lives are
+remembered and appealed to for help long after their deaths. Prayers to
+ghosts for rain, a good crop of yams, and so forth.]
+
+The ghosts whose help is invoked by hunters and farmers are commonly the
+spirits of persons who have lately died, since such spirits linger for a
+time in the neighbourhood, or rather in the memory of the people. But
+besides these spirits of the recent dead there are certain older ghosts
+who may be regarded as permanent patrons of hunting and other
+departments of life and nature, because their fame has survived long
+after the men or women themselves were gathered to their fathers. For
+example, men who were bold and resolute in battle during their life will
+be invoked long after their death, whenever a stout heart is needed for
+some feat of daring. And men who were notorious thieves and villains in
+the flesh will be invited, long after their bodies have mouldered in the
+grave, to lend their help when a deed of villainy is to be done. The
+names of men or women who were eminent for good or evil in their lives
+survive indefinitely in the memory of the tribe. Thus before a battle
+many a Kai warrior will throw something over the enemy's village and as
+he does so he will softly call on two ghosts, "We and Gunang, ye two
+heroes, come and guard me and keep the foes from me, that they may not
+be able to hurt me! But stand by me that I may be able to riddle them
+with spears!" Again, when a magician wishes to cause an earthquake, he
+will take a handful of ashes, wrap them in certain leaves, and pronounce
+the following spell over the packet: "Thou man Sâiong, throw about
+everything that exists; houses, villages, paths, fields, bushes and tall
+forest trees, yams, and taro, throw them all hither and thither; break
+and smash everything, but leave me in peace!" While he utters this
+incantation or prayer, the sorcerer's body itself twitches and quivers
+more and more violently, till the hut creaks and cracks and his strength
+is exhausted. Then he throws the packet of ashes out of the hut, and
+after that the earthquake is sure to follow sooner or later. So when
+they want rain, the Kai call upon two ghostly men named Balong and Batu,
+or Dinding and Bojang, to drive away a certain woman named Yondimi, so
+that the rain which she is holding up may fall upon the earth. The
+prayer for rain addressed to the ghosts is combined with a magical spell
+pronounced over a stone. And when rain has fallen in abundance and the
+Kai wish to make it cease, they strew hot ashes on the stone or lay it
+in a wood fire. On the principle of homoeopathic magic the heat of the
+ashes or of the fire is supposed to dry up the rain. Thus in these
+ceremonies for the production or cessation of rain we see that religion,
+represented by the invocation of the ghosts, goes hand in hand with
+magic, represented by the hocus-pocus with the stone. Again, certain
+celebrated ghosts are invoked to promote the growth of taro and yams.
+Thus to ensure a good crop of taro, the suppliant will hold a bud of
+taro in his hand and pray, "O Mrs. Zewanong, may my taro leaves unfold
+till they are as broad as the petticoat which covers thy loins!" When
+they are planting yams, they pray to two women named Tendung and Molewa
+that they would cause the yams to put forth as long suckers as the
+strings which the women twist to make into carrying-nets. Before they
+dig up the yams, they take a branch and drive with it the evil spirits
+or ghosts from the house in which the yams are to be stored. Having
+effected this clearance they stick the branch in the roof of the house
+and appoint a certain ghostly man named Ehang to act as warden. Again,
+fowlers invoke a married pair of ghosts called Mânze and Tâmingoka to
+frighten the birds from the trees and drive them on the limed twigs. Or
+they pray to a ghostly woman named Lâne, saying, "In all places of the
+neighbourhood shake the betel-nuts from the palms, that they may fall
+down to me on this fruit-tree and knock the berries from the boughs!"
+But by the betel-nuts the fowler in veiled language means the birds,
+which are to come in flocks to the fruit-tree and be caught fast by the
+lime on the branches. Again, when a fisherman wishes to catch eels, he
+prays to two ghosts called Yambi and Ngigwâli, saying: "Come, ye two
+men, and go down into the holes of the pool; smite the eels in them, and
+draw them out on the bank, that I may kill them!" Once more, when a
+child suffers from enlarged spleen, which shews as a swelling on its
+body, the parent will pray to a ghost named Aidolo for help in these
+words: "Come and help this child! It is big with a ball of sickness. Cut
+it up and squeeze and squash it, that the blood and pus may drain away
+and my child may be made whole!" To give point to the prayer the
+petitioner simultaneously pretends to cut a cross on the swelling with a
+knife.[466]
+
+[Sidenote: Possible development of departmental gods out of ghosts.]
+
+From this it appears that men and women who impressed their
+contemporaries by their talents, their virtues, or their vices in their
+lifetime, are sometimes remembered long after their death and continue
+to be invoked by their descendants for help in the particular department
+in which they had formerly rendered themselves eminent either for good
+or for evil. Such powerful and admired or dreaded ghosts might easily
+grow in time into gods and goddesses, who are worshipped as presiding
+over the various departments of nature and of human life. There is good
+reason to think that among many tribes and nations of the world the
+history of a god, if it could be recovered, would be found to be the
+history of a spirit who served his apprenticeship as a ghost before he
+was promoted to the rank of deity.
+
+[Sidenote: Kai lads at circumcision supposed to be swallowed by a
+monster. Bull-roarers.]
+
+Before quitting the Kai tribe I will mention that they, like the other
+tribes on this coast, practise circumcision and appear to associate the
+custom more or less vaguely with the spirits of the dead. Like their
+neighbours, they impress women with the belief that at circumcision the
+lads are swallowed by a monster, who can only be induced to disgorge
+them by the bribe of much food and especially of pigs, which are
+accordingly bred and kept nominally for this purpose, but really to
+furnish a banquet for the men alone. The ceremony is performed at
+irregular intervals of several years. A long hut, entered through a high
+door at one end and tapering away at the other, is built in a lonely
+part of the forest. It represents the monster which is to swallow the
+novices in its capacious jaws. The process of deglutition is represented
+as follows. In front of the entrance to the hut a scaffold is erected
+and a man mounts it. The novices are then led up one by one and passed
+under the scaffold. As each comes up, the man overhead makes a gesture
+of swallowing, while at the same time he takes a great gulp of water
+from a coco-nut flask. The trembling novice is now supposed to be in the
+maw of the monster; but a pig is offered for his redemption, the man on
+the scaffold, as representative of the beast, accepts the offering, a
+gurgling sound is heard, and the water which he had just gulped descends
+in a jet on the novice, who now goes free. The actual circumcision
+follows immediately on this impressive pantomime. The monster who
+swallows the lads is named Ngosa, which means "Grandfather"; and the
+same name is given to the bull-roarers which are swung at the festival.
+The Kai bull-roarer is a lance-shaped piece of palm-wood, more or less
+elaborately carved, which being swung at the end of a string emits the
+usual droning, booming sound. When they are not in use, the instruments
+are kept, carefully wrapt up, in the men's house, which no woman may
+enter. Only the old men have the right to undo these precious bundles
+and take out the sacred bull-roarers. Women, too, are strictly excluded
+from the neighbourhood of the circumcision ground; any who intrude on it
+are put to death. The mythical monster who is supposed to haunt the
+ground is said to be very dangerous to the female sex. When the novices
+go forth to be swallowed by him in the forest, the women who remain in
+the village weep and wail; and they rejoice greatly when the lads come
+back safe and sound.[467]
+
+[Sidenote: The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf.]
+
+The last tribe of German New Guinea to which I shall invite your
+attention are the Tami. Most of them live not on the mainland but in a
+group of islands in Huon Gulf, to the south-east of Yabim. They are of a
+purer Melanesian stock than most of the tribes on the neighbouring coast
+of New Guinea. The German missionary Mr. G. Bamler, who lived amongst
+them for ten years and knows the people and their language intimately,
+thinks that they may even contain a strong infusion of Polynesian
+blood.[468] They are a seafaring folk, who extend their voyages all
+along the coast for the purpose of trade, bartering mats, pearls, fish,
+coco-nuts, and other tree-fruits which grow on their islands for taro,
+bananas, sugar-cane, and sago, which grow on the mainland.[469]
+
+[Sidenote: The long soul and the short soul.]
+
+In the opinion of these people every man has two souls, a long one and a
+short one. The long soul is identified with the shadow. It is only
+loosely attached to its owner, wandering away from his body in sleep and
+returning to it when he wakes with a start. The seat of the long soul is
+in the stomach. When the man dies, the long soul quits his body and
+appears to his relations at a distance, who thus obtain the first
+intimation of his decease. Having conveyed the sad intelligence to them,
+the long soul departs by way of Maligep, on the west coast of New
+Britain, to a village on the north coast, the inhabitants of which
+recognise the Tami ghosts as they flit past.[470]
+
+[Sidenote: Departure of the short soul to Lamboam, the nether world.]
+
+The short soul, on the other hand, never leaves the body in life but
+only after death. Even then it tarries for a time in the neighbourhood
+of the body before it takes its departure for Lamboam, which is the
+abode of the dead in the nether world. The Tami bury their dead in
+shallow graves under or near the houses. They collect in a coco-nut
+shell the maggots which swarm from the decaying corpse; and when the
+insects cease to swarm, they know that the short soul has gone away to
+its long home. It is the short soul which receives and carries away with
+it the offerings that are made to the deceased. These offerings serve a
+double purpose; they form the nucleus of the dead man's property in the
+far country, and they ensure him a friendly reception on his arrival.
+For example, the soul shivers with cold, when it first reaches the
+subterranean realm, and the other ghosts, the old stagers, obligingly
+heat stones to warm it up.[471]
+
+[Sidenote: Dilemma of the Tami.]
+
+However, the restless spirit returns from time to time to haunt and
+terrify the sorcerer, who was the cause of its death. But its threats
+are idle; it can really do him very little harm. Yet it keeps its
+ghostly eye on its surviving relatives to see that they do not stand on
+a friendly footing with the wicked sorcerer. Strictly speaking the Tami
+ought to avenge his death, but as a matter of fact they do not. The
+truth of it is that the Tami do a very good business with the people on
+the mainland, among whom the sorcerer is usually to be found; and the
+amicable relations which are essential to the maintenance of commerce
+would unquestionably suffer if a merchant were to indulge his resentment
+so far as to take his customer's head instead of his sago and bananas.
+These considerations reduce the Tami to a painful dilemma. If they
+gratify the ghost they lose a customer; if they keep the customer they
+must bitterly offend the ghost, who will punish them for their
+disrespect to his memory. In this delicate position the Tami endeavour
+to make the best of both worlds. On the one hand, by loudly professing
+their wrath and indignation against the guilty sorcerer they endeavour
+to appease the ghost; and on the other hand, by leaving the villain
+unmolested they do nothing to alienate their customers.[472]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral and mourning customs of the Tami.]
+
+But if they do not gratify the desire for vengeance of the blood-thirsty
+ghost, they are at great pains to testify their respect for him in all
+other ways. The whole village takes part in the mourning and lamentation
+for a death. The women dance death dances, the men lend a hand in the
+preparations for the burial. All festivities are stopped: the drums are
+silent. As the people believe that when anybody has died, the ghosts of
+his dead kinsfolk gather in the village and are joined by other ghosts,
+they are careful not to leave the mourners alone, exposed to the too
+pressing attentions of the spectral visitors; they keep the bereaved
+family company, especially at night; indeed, if the weather be fine, the
+whole population of the village will encamp round the temporary hut
+which is built on the grave. This watch at the grave lasts about eight
+days. The watchers are supported and comforted in the discharge of their
+pious duty by a liberal allowance of food and drink. Nor are the wants
+of the ghost himself forgotten. Many families offer him taro broth at
+this time. The period of mourning lasts two or three years. During the
+first year the observances prescribed by custom are strictly followed,
+and the nearest relations must avoid publicity. After a year they are
+allowed more freedom; for example, the widow may lay aside the heavy
+net, which is her costume in full mourning, and may replace it by a
+lighter one; moreover, she may quit the house. At the end of the long
+period of mourning, dances are danced in honour of the deceased. They
+begin in the evening and last all night till daybreak. The mourners on
+these occasions smear their heads, necks, and breasts with black earth.
+A great quantity of food, particularly of pigs and taro broth, has been
+made ready; for the whole village, and perhaps a neighbouring village
+also, has been invited to share in the festivity, which may last eight
+or ten days, if the provisions suffice. The dances begin with a gravity
+and solemnity appropriate to a memorial of the dead; but towards the
+close the performers indulge in a lighter vein and act comic pieces,
+which so tickle the fancy of the spectators, that many of them roll on
+the ground with laughter. Finally, the temporary hut erected on the
+grave is taken down and the materials burned. As the other ghosts of the
+village are believed to be present in attendance on the one who is the
+guest of honour, all the villagers bring offerings and throw them into
+the fire. However, persons who are not related to the ghosts may snatch
+the offerings from the flames and convert them to their own use.
+Precious objects, such as boars' tusks and dogs' teeth, are not
+committed to the fire but merely swung over it in a bag, while the name
+of the person who offers the valuables in this economical fashion is
+proclaimed aloud for the satisfaction of the ghost. With these dances,
+pantomimes, and offerings the living have discharged the last duties of
+respect and affection to the dead. Yet for a while his ghost is thought
+to linger as a domestic or household spirit; but the time comes when he
+is wholly forgotten.[473]
+
+[Sidenote: Bones of the dead dug up and kept in the house for a time.]
+
+Many families, however, not content with the observance of these
+ordinary ceremonies, dig up the bodies of their dead when the flesh has
+mouldered away, redden the bones with ochre, and keep them bundled up in
+the house for two or three years, when these relics of mortality are
+finally committed to the earth. The intention of thus preserving the
+bones for years in the house is not mentioned, but no doubt it is to
+maintain a closer intimacy with the departed spirit than seems possible
+if his skeleton is left to rot in the grave. When he is at last laid in
+the ground, the tomb is enclosed by a strong wooden fence and planted
+with ornamental shrubs. Yet in the course of years, as the memory of the
+deceased fades away, his grave is neglected, the fence decays, the
+shrubs run wild; another generation, which knew him not, will build a
+house on the spot, and if in digging the foundations they turn up his
+bleached and mouldering bones, it is nothing to them: why should they
+trouble themselves about the spirit of a man or woman whose very name is
+forgotten?[474]
+
+[Footnote 450: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 142 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 451: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 143.]
+
+[Footnote 452: Ch. Keysser, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 453: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 143 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 454: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 62 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 455: Ch. Keysser, pp. 64 _sqq._, 147 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 456: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 132.]
+
+[Footnote 457: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 148.]
+
+[Footnote 458: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 148 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 459: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 149.]
+
+[Footnote 460: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 461: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 145.]
+
+[Footnote 462: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 145.]
+
+[Footnote 463: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 145 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 464: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 149 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 465: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 112, 150 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 466: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 151-154. In this passage the
+ghosts are spoken of simply as spirits (_Geister_); but the context
+proves that the spirits in question are those of the dead.]
+
+[Footnote 467: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 34-40.]
+
+[Footnote 468: G. Bamler, "Tami," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_,
+iii. (Berlin, 1911) p. 489; compare _ib._ p. vii.]
+
+[Footnote 469: H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. 315 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 470: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ p. 518.]
+
+[Footnote 471: G. Bamler, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 472: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 518 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 473: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 519-522.]
+
+[Footnote 474: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ p. 518.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XIV
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN AND DUTCH NEW
+GUINEA
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Tami doctrine of souls and gods. The Tago spirits,
+represented by masked men.]
+
+At the close of the last lecture I dealt with the Tami, a people of
+Melanesian stock who inhabit a group of islands off the mainland of New
+Guinea. I explained their theory of the human soul. According to them,
+every man has two distinct souls, a long one and a short one, both of
+which survive his death, but depart in different directions, one of them
+repairing to the lower world, and the other being last sighted off the
+coast of New Britain. But the knowledge which these savages possess of
+the spiritual world is not limited to the souls of men; they are
+acquainted with several deities (_buwun_), who live in the otherwise
+uninhabited island of Djan. They are beings of an amorous disposition,
+and though their real shape is that of a fish's body with a human head,
+they can take on the form of men in order to seduce women. They also
+cause epidemics and earthquakes; yet the people shew them no respect,
+for they believe them to be dull-witted as well as lecherous. At most,
+if a fearful epidemic is raging, they will offer the gods a lean little
+pig or a mangy cur; and should an earthquake last longer than usual they
+will rap on the ground, saying, "Hullo, you down there! easy a little!
+We men are still here." They also profess acquaintance with a god named
+Anuto, who created the heaven and the earth together with the first man
+and woman. He is a good being; nobody need be afraid of him. At
+festivals and meat markets the Tami offer him the first portion in a
+little basket, which a lad carries away into the wood and leaves there.
+As usual, the deity consumes only the soul of the offering; the bearer
+eats the material substance.[475] The Tami further believe in certain
+spirits called Tago which are very old, having been created at the same
+time as the village. Every family or clan possesses its own familiar
+spirits of this class. They are represented by men who disguise their
+bodies in dense masses of sago leaves and their faces in grotesque masks
+with long hooked noses. In this costume the maskers jig it as well as
+the heavy unwieldy disguise allows them to do. But the dance consists in
+little more than running round and round in a circle, with an occasional
+hop; the orchestra stands in the middle, singing and thumping drums.
+Sometimes two or three of the masked men will make a round of the
+village, pelting the men with pebbles or hard fruits, while the women
+and children scurry out of their way. When they are not in use the masks
+are hidden away in a hut in the forest, which women and children may not
+approach. Their secret is sternly kept: any betrayal of it is punished
+with death. The season for the exhibition of these masked dances recurs
+only once in ten or twelve years, but it extends over a year or
+thereabout. During the whole of the dancing-season, curiously enough,
+coco-nuts are strictly tabooed; no person may eat them, so that the
+unused nuts accumulate in thousands. As coco-nuts ordinarily form a
+daily article of diet with the Tami, their prohibition for a year is
+felt by the people as a privation. The meaning of the prohibition and
+also of the masquerades remains obscure.[476]
+
+[Sidenote: The superhuman beings with whom the Tami are chiefly
+concerned are the souls of the dead. Offerings to the dead.]
+
+But while the Tami believe in gods and spirits of various sorts, the
+superhuman beings with whom they chiefly concern themselves are the
+souls of the dead. On this subject Mr. Bamler writes: "All the spirits
+whom we have thus far described are of little importance in the life and
+thought of the Tami; they are remembered only on special occasions. The
+spirits who fill the thoughts and attract the attention of the Tami are
+the _kani_, that is, the souls of the departed. The Tami therefore
+practise the worship of ancestors. Yet the memory of ancestors does not
+reach far back; people occupy themselves only with the souls of those
+relatives whom they have personally known. Hence the worship seldom
+extends beyond the grandfather, even when a knowledge of more remote
+progenitors survives. An offering to the ancestors takes the form of a
+little dish of boiled taro, a cigar, betel-nuts, and the like; but the
+spirits partake only of the image or soul of the things offered, while
+the material substance falls to the share of mankind. There is no fixed
+rule as to the manner or time of the offering. It is left to the caprice
+or childlike affection of the individual to decide how he will make it.
+With most natives it is a simple matter of business, the throwing of a
+sprat to catch a salmon; the man brings his offering only when he needs
+the help of the spirits. There is very little ceremony about it. The
+offerer will say, for example, 'There, I lay a cigar for you; smoke it
+and hereafter drive fish towards me'; or, 'Accompany me on the journey,
+and see to it that I do good business.' The place where the food is
+presented is the shelf for pots and dishes under the roof. Thus they
+imagine that the spirits exert a tolerably far-reaching influence over
+all created things, and it is their notion that the spirits take
+possession of the objects. In like manner the spirits can injure a man
+by thwarting his plans, for example, by frightening away the fish,
+blighting the fruits of the fields, and so forth. If the native is
+forced to conclude that the spirits are against him, he has no
+hesitation about deceiving them in the grossest manner. Should the
+requisite sacrifices be inconvenient to him, he flatly refuses them, or
+gives the shabbiest things he can find. In all this the native displays
+the same craft and cunning which he is apt to practise in his dealings
+with the whites. He fears the power which the spirit has over him, yet
+he tries whether he cannot outwit the spirit like an arrant
+block-head."[477]
+
+[Sidenote: Crude motives for sacrifice.]
+
+This account of the crude but quite intelligible motives which lead
+these savages to sacrifice to the spirits of their dead may be commended
+to the attention of writers on the history of religion who read into
+primitive sacrifice certain subtle and complex ideas which it never
+entered into the mind of primitive man to conceive and which, even if
+they were explained to him, he would in all probability be totally
+unable to understand.
+
+[Sidenote: Lamboam, the land of the dead.]
+
+According to the Tami, the souls of the dead live in the nether world.
+The spirit-land is called Lamboam; the entrance to it is by a cleft in a
+rock. The natives of the mainland also call Hades by the name of
+Lamboam; but whereas according to them every village has its own little
+Lamboam, the Tami hold that there is only one big Lamboam for everybody,
+though it is subdivided into many mansions, of which every village has
+one to itself. In Lamboam everything is fairer and more perfect than on
+earth. The fruits are so plentiful that the blessed spirits can, if they
+choose, give themselves up to the delights of idleness; the villages are
+full of ornamental plants. Yet on the other hand we are informed that
+life beneath the ground is very like life above it: people work and
+marry, they squabble and wrangle, they fall sick and even die, just as
+people do on earth. Souls which die the second death in Lamboam are
+changed into vermin, such as ants and worms; however, others say that
+they turn into wood-spirits, who do men a mischief in the fields. It is
+not so easy as is commonly supposed to effect an entrance into the
+spirit-land. You must pass a river, and even when you have crossed it
+you will be very likely to suffer from the practical jokes which the
+merry old ghosts play on a raw newcomer. A very favourite trick of
+theirs is to send him up a pandanus tree to look for fruit. If he is
+simple enough to comply, they catch him by the legs as he is swarming up
+the trunk and drag him down, so that his whole body is fearfully
+scratched, if not quite ripped up, by the rough bark. That is why people
+put valuable things with the dead in the grave, in order that their
+ghosts on arrival in Lamboam may have the wherewithal to purchase the
+good graces of the facetious old stagers.[478]
+
+[Sidenote: Return of the ghosts to earth, sometimes in the form of
+serpents.]
+
+However, even when the ghosts have succeeded in effecting a lodgment in
+Lamboam, they are not strictly confined to it. They can break bounds at
+any moment and return to the upper air. This they do particularly when
+any of their surviving relations is at the point of death. Ghosts of
+deceased kinsfolk and of others gather round the parting soul and attend
+it to the far country. Yet sometimes, apparently, the soul sets out
+alone, for the anxious relatives will call out to it, "Miss not the
+way." But ghosts visit their surviving friends at other times than at
+the moment of death. For example, some families possess the power of
+calling up spirits in the form of serpents from the vasty deep. The
+spirits whom they evoke are usually those of persons who have died quite
+lately; for such ghosts cannot return to earth except in the guise of
+serpents. In this novel shape they naturally feel shy and hide under a
+mat. They come out only in the dusk of the evening or the darkness of
+night and sit on the shelf for pots and dishes under the roof. They have
+lost the faculty of speech and can express themselves only in whistles.
+These whistles the seer, who is generally a woman, understands perfectly
+and interprets to his or her less gifted fellows. In this way a
+considerable body of information, more or less accurate in detail, is
+collected as to life in the other world. More than that, it is even
+possible for men, and especially for women, to go down alive into the
+nether world and prosecute their enquiries at first hand among the
+ghosts. Women who possess this remarkable faculty transmit it to their
+daughters, so that the profession is hereditary. When anybody wishes to
+ascertain how it fares with one of his dead kinsfolk in Lamboam, he has
+nothing to do but to engage the services of one of these professional
+mediums, giving her something which belonged to his departed friend. The
+medium rubs her forehead with ginger, muttering an incantation, lies
+down on the dead man's property, and falls asleep. Her soul then goes
+down in a dream to deadland and elicits from the ghosts the required
+information, which on waking from sleep she imparts to the anxious
+enquirer.[479]
+
+[Sidenote: Sickness caused by a spirit.]
+
+Sickness accompanied by fainting fits is ascribed to the action of a
+spirit, it may be the ghost of a near relation, who has carried off the
+"long soul" of the sufferer. The truant soul is recalled by a blast
+blown on a triton-shell, in which some chewed ginger or _massoi_ bark
+has been inserted. The booming sound attracts the attention of the
+vagrant spirit, while the smell of the bark or of the ginger drives away
+the ghost.[480]
+
+[Sidenote: Tami lads supposed to be swallowed by a monster at
+circumcision; the monster and the bull-roarer are both called _kani_.]
+
+The name which the Tami give to the spirits of the dead is _kani_; but
+like other tribes in this part of New Guinea they apply the same term to
+the bull-roarer and also to the mythical monster who is supposed to
+swallow the lads at circumcision. The identity of the name for the three
+things seems to prove that in the mind of the Tami the initiatory rites,
+of which circumcision is the principal feature, are closely associated
+with their conception of the state of the human soul after death, though
+what the precise nature of the association may be still remains obscure.
+Like their neighbours on the mainland of New Guinea, the Tami give out
+that the novices at initiation are swallowed by a monster or dragon, who
+only consents to disgorge his prey in consideration of a tribute of
+pigs, the rate of the tribute being one novice one pig. In the act of
+disgorging the lad the dragon bites him, and the bite is visible to all
+in the cut called circumcision. The voice of the monster is heard in the
+hum of the bull-roarers, which are swung at the ceremony in such numbers
+and with such force that in still weather the booming sound may be heard
+across the sea for many miles. To impress women and children with an
+idea of the superhuman strength of the dragon deep grooves are cut in
+the trunks of trees and afterwards exhibited to the uninitiated as the
+marks made by the monster in tugging at the ropes which bound him to the
+trees. However, the whole thing is an open secret to the married women,
+though they keep their knowledge to themselves, fearing to incur the
+penalty of death which is denounced upon all who betray the mystery.
+
+[Sidenote: The rite of circumcision. Seclusion and return of the newly
+circumcised lads.]
+
+The initiatory rites are now celebrated only at intervals of many years.
+When the time is come for the ceremony, women are banished from the
+village and special quarters prepared for them elsewhere; for they are
+strictly forbidden to set foot in the village while the monster or
+spirit who swallows the lads has his abode in it. A special hut is then
+built for the accommodation of the novices during the many months which
+they spend in seclusion before and after the operation of circumcision.
+The hut represents the monster; it consists of a framework of thin poles
+covered with palm-leaf mats and tapering down at one end. Looked at from
+a distance it resembles a whale. The backbone is composed of a betel-nut
+palm, which has been grubbed up with its roots. The root with its fibres
+represents the monster's head and hair, and under it are painted a pair
+of eyes and a great mouth in red, white, and black. The passage of the
+novices into the monster's belly is represented by causing them to
+defile past a row of men who hold bull-roarers aloft over the heads of
+the candidates. Before this march past takes place, each of the
+candidates is struck by the chief with a bull-roarer on his chin and
+brow. The operation of circumcising the lads is afterwards performed
+behind a screen set up near the monster-shaped house. It is followed by
+a great feast on swine's flesh. After their wounds are healed the
+circumcised lads have still to remain in seclusion for three or four
+months. Finally, they are brought back to the village with great pomp.
+For this solemn ceremony their faces, necks, and breasts are whitened
+with a thick layer of chalk, while red stripes, painted round their
+mouths and eyes and prolonged to the ears, add to the grotesqueness of
+their appearance. Their eyes are closed with a plaster of chalk, and
+thus curiously arrayed and blindfolded they are led back to the village
+square, where leave is formally given them to open their eyes. At the
+entrance to the village they are received by the women, who weep for joy
+and strew boiled field-fruits on the way. Next morning the newly
+initiated lads wash off the crust of chalk, and have their hair, faces,
+necks, and breasts painted bright red. This ends their time of
+seclusion, which has lasted five or six months; they now rank as
+full-grown men.[481]
+
+[Sidenote: Simulation of death and resurrection.]
+
+In these initiatory rites, as in the similar rites of the neighbouring
+tribes on the mainland of New Guinea, we may perhaps detect a simulation
+of death and of resurrection to a new and higher life. But why
+circumcision should form the central feature of such a drama is a
+question to which as yet no certain or even very probable answer can be
+given. The bodily mutilations of various sorts, which in many savage
+tribes mark the transition from boyhood to manhood, remain one of the
+obscurest features in the life of uncultured races. That they are in
+most cases connected with the great change which takes place in the
+sexes at puberty seems fairly certain; but we are far from understanding
+the ideas which primitive man has formed on this mysterious subject.
+
+[Sidenote: The natives of Dutch New Guinea.]
+
+That ends what I have to say as to the notions of death and a life
+hereafter which are entertained by the natives of German New Guinea. We
+now turn to the natives of Dutch New Guinea, who occupy roughly speaking
+the western half of the great island. Our information as to their
+customs and beliefs on this subject is much scantier, and accordingly my
+account of them will be much briefer.
+
+[Sidenote: Geelvink Bay and Doreh Bay. The Noofoor or Noomfor people.
+Their material culture and arts of life.]
+
+Towards the western end of the Dutch possession there is on the northern
+coast a deep and wide indentation known as Geelvink Bay, which in its
+north-west corner includes a very much smaller indentation known as
+Doreh Bay. Scattered about in the waters of the great Geelvink Bay are
+many islands of various sizes, such as Biak or Wiak, Jappen or Jobi, Run
+or Ron, Noomfor, and many more. It is in regard to the natives who
+inhabit the coasts or islands of Geelvink Bay that our information is
+perhaps least imperfect, and it is accordingly with them that I shall
+begin. In physical appearance, expression of the face, mode of wearing
+the hair, and still more in manners and customs these natives of the
+coast and islands differ from the natives of the mountains in the
+interior. The name given to them by Dutch and German writers is Noofoor
+or Noomfor. Their original home is believed to be the island of Biak or
+Wiak, which lies at the northern entrance of the bay, and from which
+they are supposed to have spread southwards and south-westwards to the
+other islands and to the mainland of New Guinea.[482] They are a
+handsomely built race. Their colour is usually dark brown, but in some
+individuals it shades off to light-brown, while in others it deepens
+into black-brown. The forehead is high and narrow; the eye is dark brown
+or black with a lively expression; the nose broad and flat, the lips
+thick and projecting. The cheekbones are not very high. The facial angle
+agrees with that of Europeans. The hair is abundant and frizzly. The
+people live in settled villages and subsist by agriculture, hunting, and
+fishing. Their large communal houses are raised above the ground on
+piles; on the coast they are built over the water. Each house has a long
+gallery, one in front and one behind, and a long passage running down
+the middle of the dwelling, with the rooms arranged on either side of
+it. Each room has its own fireplace and is occupied by a single family.
+One such communal house may contain from ten to twenty families with a
+hundred or more men, women, and children, besides dogs, fowls, parrots,
+and other creatures. When the house is built over the water, it is
+commonly connected with the shore by a bridge; but in some places no
+such bridge exists, and at high water the inmates can only communicate
+with the shore by means of their canoes. The staple food of the people
+is sago, which they extract from the sago-palm; but they also make use
+of bread-fruit, together with millet, rice, and maize, whenever they can
+obtain these cereals. Their flesh diet includes wild pigs, birds, fish,
+and trepang. While some of them subsist mainly by fishing and commerce,
+others devote themselves almost exclusively to the cultivation of their
+gardens, which they lay out in clearings of the dense tropical forest,
+employing chiefly axes and chopping-knives as their instruments of
+tillage. Of ploughs they, like most savages, seem to know nothing. The
+rice and other plants which they raise in these gardens are produced by
+the dry method of cultivation. In hunting birds they employ chiefly bows
+and arrows, but sometimes also snares. The arrows with which they shoot
+the birds of paradise are blunted so as not to injure the splendid
+plumage of the birds. Turtle-shells, feathers of the birds of paradise,
+and trepang are among the principal articles which they barter with
+traders for cotton-goods, knives, swords, axes, beads and so forth. They
+display some skill and taste in wood-carving. The art of working in iron
+has been introduced among them from abroad and is now extensively
+practised by the men. They make large dug-out canoes with outriggers,
+which seem to be very seaworthy, for they accomplish long voyages even
+in stormy weather. The making of pottery, basket-work, and weaving,
+together with pounding rice and cooking food, are the special business
+of women. The men wear waistbands or loin-cloths made of bark, which is
+beaten till it becomes as supple as leather. The women wear petticoats
+or strips of blue cotton round their loins, and as ornaments they have
+rings of silver, copper, or shell on their arms and legs.[483] Thus the
+people have attained to a fair degree of barbaric culture.
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of ghosts. Ideas of the spirit-world.]
+
+Now it is significant that among these comparatively advanced savages
+the fear of ghosts and the reverence entertained for them have developed
+into something which might almost be called a systematic worship of the
+dead. As to their fear of ghosts I will quote the evidence of a Dutch
+missionary, Mr. J. L. van Hasselt, who lived for many years among them
+and is the author of a grammar and dictionary of their language. He
+says: "That a great fear of ghosts prevails among the Papuans is
+intelligible. Even by day they are reluctant to pass a grave, but
+nothing would induce them to do so by night. For the dead are then
+roaming about in their search for gambier and tobacco, and they may also
+sail out to sea in a canoe. Some of the departed, above all the
+so-called _Mambrie_ or heroes, inspire them with especial fear. In such
+cases for some days after the burial you may hear about sunset a
+simultaneous and horrible din in all the houses of all the villages, a
+yelling, screaming, beating and throwing of sticks; happily the uproar
+does not last long: its intention is to compel the ghost to take himself
+off: they have given him all that befits him, namely, a grave, a funeral
+banquet, and funeral ornaments; and now they beseech him not to thrust
+himself on their observation any more, not to breathe any sickness upon
+the survivors, and not to kill them or 'fetch' them, as the Papuans put
+it. Their ideas of the spirit-world are very vague. Their usual answer
+to such questions is, 'We know not.' If you press them, they will
+commonly say that the spirit realm is under the earth or under the
+bottom of the sea. Everything there is as it is in the upper world, only
+the vegetation down below is more luxuriant, and all plants grow faster.
+Their fear of death and their helpless wailing over the dead indicate
+that the misty kingdom of the shades offers but little that is
+consolatory to the Papuan at his departure from this world."[484]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of ghosts in general and of the ghosts of the slain in
+particular.]
+
+Again, speaking of the natives of Doreh, a Dutch official observes that
+"superstition and magic play a principal part in the life of the Papuan.
+Occasions for such absurdities he discovers at every step. Thus he
+cherishes a great fear of the ghosts of slain persons, for which reason
+their bodies remain unburied on the spot where they were murdered. When
+a murder has taken place in the village, the inhabitants assemble for
+several evenings in succession and raise a fearful outcry in order to
+chase away the soul, in case it should be minded to return to the
+village. They set up miniature wooden houses here and there on trees in
+the forest for the ghosts of persons who die of disease or through
+accidents, believing that the souls take up their abode in them."[485]
+The same writer remarks that these savages have no priests, but that
+they have magicians (_kokinsor_), who practise exorcisms, work magic,
+and heal the sick, for which they receive a small payment in articles of
+barter or food.[486] Speaking of the Papuans of Dutch New Guinea in
+general another writer informs us that "they honour the memory of the
+dead in every way, because they ascribe to the spirits of the departed a
+great influence on the life of the survivors.... Whereas in life all
+good and evil comes from the soul, after death, on the other hand, the
+spirit works for the most part only evil. It loves especially to haunt
+by night the neighbourhood of its old dwelling and the grave; so the
+people particularly avoid the neighbourhood of graves at night, and when
+darkness has fallen they will not go out except with a burning brand....
+According to the belief of the Papuans the ghosts cause sickness, bad
+harvests, war, and in general every misfortune. From fear of such evils
+and in order to keep them in good humour, the people make provision for
+the spirits of the departed after death. Also they sacrifice to them
+before every important undertaking and never fail to ask their
+advice."[487]
+
+[Sidenote: Papuan ideas as to the state of the dead.]
+
+A Dutch writer, who has given us a comparatively full account of the
+natives of Geelvink Bay, describes as follows their views in regard to
+the state of the dead: "According to the Papuans the soul, which they
+imagine to have its seat in the blood, continues to exist at the bottom
+of the sea, and every one who dies goes thither. They imagine the state
+of things there to be much the same as that in which they lived on
+earth. Hence at his burial the dead man is given an equipment suitable
+to his rank and position in life. He is provided with a bow and arrow,
+armlets and body-ornaments, pots and pans, everything that may stand him
+in good stead in the life hereafter. This provision must not be
+neglected, for it is a prevalent opinion that the dead continue always
+to maintain relations with the world and with the living, that they
+possess superhuman power, exercise great influence over the affairs of
+life on earth, and are able to protect in danger, to stand by in war, to
+guard against shipwreck at sea, and to grant success in fishing and
+hunting. For such weighty reasons the Papuans do all in their power to
+win the favour of their dead. On undertaking a journey they are said
+never to forget to hang amulets about themselves in the belief that
+their dead will then surely help them; hence, too, when they are at sea
+in rough weather, they call upon the souls of the departed, asking them
+for better weather or a favourable breeze, in case the wind happens to
+be contrary."[488]
+
+[Sidenote: Wooden images of the dead (_korwar_).]
+
+In order to communicate with these powerful spirits and to obtain their
+advice and help in time of need, the Papuans of Geelvink Bay make wooden
+images of their dead, which they keep in their houses and consult from
+time to time. Every family has at least one such ancestral image, which
+forms the medium whereby the soul of the deceased communicates with his
+or her surviving relatives. These images or Penates, as we may call
+them, are carved of wood, about a foot high, and represent the deceased
+person in a standing, sitting, or crouching attitude, but commonly with
+the hands folded in front. The head is disproportionately large, the
+nose long and projecting, the mouth wide and well furnished with teeth;
+the eyes are formed of large green or blue beads with black dots to
+indicate the pupils. Sometimes the male figures carry a shield in the
+left hand and brandish a sword in the right; while the female figures
+are represented grasping with both hands a serpent which stands on its
+coiled tail. Rags of many colours adorn these figures, and the hair of
+the deceased, whom they represent, is placed between their legs. Such an
+ancestral image is called a _korwar_ or _karwar_. The natives identify
+these effigies with the deceased persons whom they portray, and
+accordingly they will speak of one as their father or mother or other
+relation. Tobacco and food are offered to the images, and the natives
+greet them reverentially by bowing to the earth before them with the two
+hands joined and raised to the forehead.
+
+[Sidenote: Such images carried on voyages and consulted as oracles. The
+images consulted in sickness.]
+
+Such images are kept in the houses and carried in canoes on voyages, in
+order that they may be at hand to help and advise their kinsfolk and
+worshippers. They are consulted on many occasions, for example, when the
+people are going on a journey, or about to fish for turtles or trepang,
+or when a member of the family is sick, and his relations wish to know
+whether he will recover. At these consultations the enquirer may either
+take the image in his hands or crouch before it on the ground, on which
+he places his offerings of tobacco, cotton, beads, and so forth. The
+spirit of the dead is thought to be in the image and to pass from it
+into the enquirer, who thus becomes inspired by the soul of the deceased
+and acquires his superhuman knowledge. As a sign of his inspiration the
+medium shivers and shakes. According to some accounts, however, this
+shivering and shaking of the medium is an evil omen; whereas if he
+remains tranquil, the omen is good. It is especially in cases of
+sickness that the images are consulted. The mode of consultation has
+been described as follows by a Dutch writer: "When any one is sick and
+wishes to know the means of cure, or when any one desires to avert
+misfortune or to discover something unknown, then in presence of the
+whole family one of the members is stupefied by the fumes of incense or
+by other means of producing a state of trance. The image of the deceased
+person whose advice is sought is then placed on the lap or shoulder of
+the medium in order to cause the soul to pass out of the image into his
+body. At the moment when that happens, he begins to shiver; and,
+encouraged by the bystanders, the soul speaks through the mouth of the
+medium and names the means of cure or of averting the calamity. When he
+comes to himself, the medium knows nothing of what he has been saying.
+This they call _kor karwar_, that is, 'invoking the soul;' and they say
+_karwar iwos_, 'the soul speaks.'" The writer adds: "It is sometimes
+reported that the souls go to the underworld, but that is not true. The
+Papuans think that after death the soul abides by the corpse and is
+buried with it in the grave; hence before an image is made, if it is
+necessary to consult the soul, the enquirer must betake himself to the
+grave in order to do so. But when the image is made, the soul enters
+into it and is supposed to remain in it so long as satisfactory answers
+are obtained from it in consultation. But should the answers prove
+disappointing, the people think that the soul has deserted the image, on
+which they throw the image away as useless. Where the soul has gone,
+nobody knows, and they do not trouble their heads about it, since it has
+lost its power."[489] The person who acts as medium in consulting the
+spirit may be either the house-father himself or a magician
+(_konoor_).[490]
+
+[Sidenote: Example of the consultation of an ancestral image.]
+
+As an example of these consultations we may take the case of a man who
+was suffering from a painful sore on his finger and wished to ascertain
+the cause of the trouble. So he set one of the ancestral images before
+him and questioned it closely. At first the image made no reply; but at
+last the man remembered that he had neglected his duty to his dead
+brother by failing to marry his widow, as, according to native custom,
+he should have done. Now the natives believe that the dead can punish
+them for any breach of customary law; so it occurred to our enquirer
+that the ghost of his dead brother might have afflicted him with the
+sore on his finger for not marrying his widow. Accordingly he put the
+question to the image, and in doing so the compunction of a guilty
+conscience caused him to tremble. This trembling he took for an answer
+of the image in the affirmative, wherefore he went off and took the
+widow to wife and provided for her maintenance.[491]
+
+[Sidenote: Ancestral images consulted as to the cause of death.
+Offerings to the images.]
+
+Again, the ancestral images are often consulted to ascertain the cause
+of a death; and if the image attributes the death to the evil magic of a
+member of another tribe, an expedition will be sent to avenge the wrong
+by slaying the supposed culprit. For the souls of the dead take it very
+ill and wreak their spite on the survivors, if their death is not
+avenged on their enemies. Not uncommonly the consultation of the images
+merely furnishes a pretext for satisfying a grudge against an individual
+or a tribe.[492] The mere presence of these images appears to be
+supposed to benefit the sick; a woman who was seriously ill has been
+seen to lie with four or five ancestral figures fastened at the head of
+her bed. On enquiry she explained that they did not all belong to her,
+but that some of them had been kindly lent to her by relations and
+friends.[493] Again, the images are taken by the natives with them to
+war, because they hope thereby to secure the help of the spirits whom
+the images represent. Also they make offerings from time to time to the
+effigies and hold feasts in their honour.[494] They observe, indeed,
+that the food which they present to these household idols remains
+unconsumed, but they explain this by saying that the spirits are content
+to snuff up the savour of the viands, and to leave their gross material
+substance alone.[495]
+
+[Sidenote: Images of persons who have died away from home.]
+
+In general, images are only made of persons who have died at home. But
+in the island of Ron or Run they are also made of persons who have died
+away from home or have fallen in battle. In such cases the difficulty is
+to compel the soul to quit its mortal remains far away and come to
+animate the image. However, the natives of Ron have found means to
+overcome this difficulty. They first carve the wooden image of the dead
+person and then call his soul back to the village by setting a great
+tree on fire, while the family assemble round it and one of them,
+holding the image in his hand, acts the part of a medium, shivering and
+shaking and falling into a trance after the approved fashion of mediums
+in many lands. After this ceremony the image is supposed to be animated
+by the soul of the deceased, and it is kept in the house with as much
+confidence as any other.[496]
+
+[Sidenote: Sometimes the head of the image is composed of the skull of
+the deceased.]
+
+Sometimes the head of the image consists of the skull of the deceased,
+which has been detached from the skeleton and inserted in a hole at the
+top of the effigy. In such cases the body of the image is of wood and
+the head of bone. It is especially men who have distinguished themselves
+by their bravery or have earned a name for themselves in other ways who
+are thus represented. Apparently the notion is that as a personal relic
+of the departed the skull is better fitted to retain his soul than a
+mere head of wood. But in the island of Ron or Run, and perhaps
+elsewhere, skull-topped images of this sort are made for all firstborn
+children, whether male or female, young or old, at least for all who die
+from the age of twelve years and upward. These images have a special
+name, _bemar boo_, which means "head of a corpse." They are kept in the
+room of the parents who have lost the child.[497]
+
+[Sidenote: Mode of preparing such skull-headed images.]
+
+The mode in which such images are prepared is as follows. The body of
+the firstborn child, who dies at the age of years or upwards, is laid in
+a small canoe, which is deposited in a hut erected behind the
+dwelling-house. Here the mother is obliged to keep watch night and day
+beside the corpse and to maintain a blazing fire till the head drops off
+the body, which it generally does about twenty days after the death.
+Then the trunk is wrapped in leaves and buried, but the head is brought
+into the house and carefully preserved. Above the spot where it is
+deposited a small opening is made in the roof, through which a stick is
+thrust bearing some rags or flags to indicate that the remains of a dead
+body are in the house. When, after the lapse of three or four months,
+the nose and ears of the head have dropped off, and the eyes have
+mouldered away, the relations and friends assemble in the house of
+mourning. In the middle of the assembly the father of the child crouches
+on his hams with downcast look in an attitude of grief, while one of the
+persons present begins to carve a new nose and a new pair of ears for
+the skull out of a piece of wood. The kind of wood varies according as
+the deceased was a male or a female. All the time that the artist is at
+work, the rest of the company chant a melancholy dirge. When the nose
+and ears are finished and have been attached to the skull, and small
+round fruits have been inserted in the hollow sockets of the eyes to
+represent the missing orbs, a banquet follows in honour of the deceased,
+who is now represented by his decorated skull set up on a block of wood
+on the table. Thus he receives his share of the food and of the cigars,
+and is raised to the rank of a domestic idol or _korwar_. Henceforth the
+skull is carefully kept in a corner of the chamber to be consulted as an
+oracle in time of need. The bodies of fathers and mothers are treated in
+the same way as those of firstborn children. On the other hand the
+bodies of children who die under the age of two years are never buried.
+The remains are packed in baskets of rushes covered with lids and
+tightly corded, and the baskets are then hung on the branches of tall
+trees, where no more notice is taken of them. Four or five such baskets
+containing the mouldering bodies of infants may sometimes be seen
+hanging on a single tree.[498] The reason for thus disposing of the
+remains of young children is said to be as follows. A thick mist hangs
+at evening over the top of the dense tropical forest, and in the mist
+dwell two spirits called Narwur and Imgier, one male and the other
+female, who kill little children, not out of malice but out of love,
+because they wish to have the children with them. So when a child dies,
+the parents fasten its little body to the branches of a tall tree in the
+forest, hoping that the spirit pair will take it and be satisfied, and
+will spare its small brothers and sisters.[499]
+
+[Sidenote: Mummification of the dead.]
+
+In some parts of Geelvink Bay, however, the bodies of the dead are
+treated differently. For example, on the south coast of the island of
+Jobi or Jappen and elsewhere the corpses are reduced to mummies by being
+dried on a bamboo stage over a slow fire; after which the mummies, wrapt
+in cloth, are kept in the house, being either laid along the wall or
+hung from the ceiling. When the number of these relics begins to
+incommode the living inmates of the house, the older mummies are removed
+and deposited in the hollow trunks of ancient trees. In some tribes who
+thus mummify their dead the juices of corruption which drip from the
+rotting corpse are caught in a vessel and given to the widow to drink,
+who is forced to gulp them down under the threat of decapitation if she
+were to reject the loathsome beverage.[500]
+
+[Sidenote: Restrictions observed by mourners. Tattooing in honour of the
+dead. Teeth of the dead worn by relatives.]
+
+The family in which a death has taken place is subject for a time to
+certain burdensome restrictions, which are probably dictated by a fear
+of the ghost. Thus all the time till the effigy of the deceased has been
+made and a feast given in his honour, they are obliged to remain in the
+house without going out for any purpose, not even to bathe or to fetch
+food and drink. Moreover they must abstain from the ordinary articles of
+diet and confine themselves to half-baked cakes of sago and other
+unpalatable viands. As these restrictions may last for months they are
+not only irksome but onerous, especially to people who have no slaves to
+fetch and carry for them. However, in that case the neighbours come to
+the rescue and supply the mourners with wood, water, and the other
+necessaries of life, until custom allows them to go out and help
+themselves. After the effigy of the dead has been made, the family go in
+state to a sacred place to purify themselves by bathing. If the journey
+is made by sea, no other canoe may meet or sail past the canoe of the
+mourners under pain of being confiscated to them and redeemed at a heavy
+price. On their return from the holy place, the period of mourning is
+over, and the family is free to resume their ordinary mode of life and
+their ordinary victuals.[501] That the seclusion of the mourners in the
+house for some time after the death springs from a fear of the ghost is
+not only probable on general grounds but is directly suggested by a
+custom which is observed at the burial of the body. When it has been
+laid in the earth along with various articles of daily use, which the
+ghost is supposed to require for his comfort, the mourners gather round
+the grave and each of them picks up a leaf, which he folds in the shape
+of a spoon and holds several times over his head as if he would pour out
+the contents upon it. As they do so, they all murmur, "_Rur i rama_,"
+that is, "The spirit comes." This exclamation or incantation is supposed
+to prevent the ghost from troubling them. The gravediggers may not enter
+their houses till they have bathed and so removed from their persons the
+contagion of death, in order that the soul of the deceased may have no
+power over them.[502] Mourners sometimes tattoo themselves in honour of
+the dead. For a father, the marks are tattooed on the cheeks and under
+the eyes; for a grandfather, on the breast; for a mother, on the
+shoulders and arms; for a brother, on the back. On the death of a father
+or mother, the eldest son or, if there is none such, the eldest daughter
+wears the teeth and hair of the deceased. When the teeth of old people
+drop out, they are kept on purpose to be thus strung on a string and
+worn by their sons or daughters after their death. Similarly, a mother
+wears as a permanent mark of mourning the teeth of her dead child strung
+on a cord round her neck, and as a temporary mark of mourning a little
+bag on her throat containing a lock of the child's hair.[503] The
+intention of these customs is not mentioned. Probably they are not
+purely commemorative but designed in some way either to influence for
+good the spirit of the departed or to obtain its help and protection for
+the living.
+
+[Sidenote: Rebirth of parents in their children.]
+
+Thus far we have found no evidence among the natives of New Guinea of a
+belief that the dead are permanently reincarnated in their human
+descendants. However, the inhabitants of Ayambori, an inland village
+about an hour distant to the east of Doreh, are reported to believe that
+the soul of a dead man returns in his eldest son, and that the soul of a
+dead woman returns in her eldest daughter.[504] So stated the belief is
+hardly clear and intelligible; for if a man has several sons, he must
+evidently be alive and not dead when the eldest of them is born, and
+similarly with a woman and her eldest daughter. On the analogy of
+similar beliefs elsewhere we may conjecture that these Papuans imagine
+every firstborn son to be animated by the soul of his father, whether
+his father be alive or dead, and every firstborn daughter to be animated
+by the soul of her mother, whether her mother be alive or dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Customs concerning the dead observed in the islands off the
+western end of New Guinea.]
+
+Beliefs and customs concerning the dead like those which we have found
+among the natives of Geelvink Bay are reported to prevail in other parts
+of Dutch New Guinea, but our information about them is much less full.
+Thus, off the western extremity of New Guinea there is a group of small
+islands (Waaigeoo, Salawati, Misol, Waigama, and so on), the inhabitants
+of which make _karwar_ or wooden images of their dead ancestors. These
+they keep in separate rooms of their houses and take with them as
+talismans to war. In these inner rooms are also kept miniature wooden
+houses in which their ancestors are believed to reside, and in which
+even Mohammedans (for some of the natives profess Islam) burn incense on
+Fridays in honour of the souls of the dead. These souls are treated like
+living beings, for in the morning some finely pounded sago is placed in
+the shrines; at noon it is taken away, but may not be eaten by the
+inmates of the house. Curiously enough, women are forbidden to set food
+for the dead in the shrines: if they did so, it is believed that they
+would be childless. Further, in the chief's house there are shrines for
+the souls of all the persons who have died in the whole village. Such a
+house might almost be described as a temple of the dead. Among the
+inhabitants of the Negen Negorijen or "Nine Villages" the abodes of the
+ancestral spirits are often merely frameworks of houses decorated with
+coloured rags. These frameworks are called _roem seram_. On festal
+occasions they are brought forth and the people dance round them to
+music. The mountain tribes of these islands to the west of New Guinea
+seldom have any such little houses for the souls of the dead. They think
+that the spirits of the departed dwell among the branches of trees, to
+which accordingly the living attach strips of red and white cotton,
+always to the number of seven or a multiple of seven. Also they place
+food on the branches or hang it in baskets on the boughs,[505] no doubt
+in order to feed the hungry ghosts. But among the tribes on the coast,
+who make miniature houses for the use of their dead, these little
+shrines form a central feature of the religious life of the people. At
+festivals, especially on the occasion of a marriage or a death, the
+shrines are brought out from the side chamber and are set down in the
+central room of the house, where the people dance round them, singing
+and making music for days together with no interruption except for
+meals.[506]
+
+[Sidenote: Wooden images of the dead.]
+
+According to the Dutch writer, Mr. de Clercq, whose account I am
+reproducing, this worship of the dead, represented by wooden images
+(_karwar_) and lodged in miniature houses, is, together with a belief in
+good and bad spirits, the only thing deserving the name of religion that
+can be detected among these people. It is certain that the wooden images
+represent members of the family who died a natural death at home; they
+are never, as in Ansoes and Waropen, images of persons who have been
+murdered or slain in battle. Hence they form a kind of Penates, who are
+supposed to lead an invisible life in the family circle. The natives of
+the Negen Negorijen, for example, believe that these wooden images
+(_karwar_), which are both male and female, contain the souls of their
+ancestors, who protect the house and household and are honoured at
+festivals by having portions of food set beside their images.[507] The
+Seget Sélé, who occupy the extreme westerly point of New Guinea, bury
+their dead in the island of Lago and set up little houses in the forest
+for the use of the spirits of their ancestors. But these little houses
+may never be entered or even approached by members of the family.[508] A
+traveller, who visited a hut occupied by members of the Seget tribe in
+Princess Island, or Kararaboe, found a sick man in it and observed that
+before the front and back door were set up double rows of roughly hewn
+images painted with red and black stripes. He was told that these images
+were intended to keep off the sickness; for the natives thought that it
+would not dare to run the gauntlet between the double rows of figures
+into the house.[509] We may conjecture that these rude images
+represented ancestral spirits who were doing sentinel duty over the sick
+man.
+
+[Sidenote: Customs concerning the dead among the natives of the Macluer
+Gulf.]
+
+Among the natives of the Macluer Gulf, which penetrates deep into the
+western part of Dutch New Guinea, the souls of dead men who have
+distinguished themselves by bravery or in other ways are honoured in the
+shape of wooden images, which are sometimes wrapt in cloth and decorated
+with shells about the neck. In Sekar, a village on the south side of the
+gulf, small bowls, called _kararasa_ after the spirits of ancestors who
+are believed to lodge in them, are hung up in the houses; on special
+occasions food is placed in them. In some of the islands of the Macluer
+Gulf the dead are laid in hollows of the rocks, which are then adorned
+with drawings of birds, hands, and so forth. The hands are always
+painted white or yellowish on a red ground. The other figures are drawn
+with chalk on the weathered surface of the rock. But the natives either
+cannot or will not give any explanation of the custom.[510]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs in the Mimika district.]
+
+The Papuans of the Mimika district, on the southern coast of Dutch New
+Guinea, sometimes bury their dead in shallow graves near the huts;
+sometimes they place them in coffins on rough trestles and leave them
+there till decomposition is complete, when they remove the skull and
+preserve it in the house, either burying it in the sand of the floor or
+hanging it in a sort of basket from the roof, where it becomes brown
+with smoke and polished with frequent handling. The people do not appear
+to be particularly attached to these relics of their kinsfolk and they
+sell them readily to Europeans. Mourners plaster themselves all over
+with mud, and sometimes they bathe in the river, probably as a mode of
+ceremonial purification. They believe in ghosts, which they call
+_niniki_; but beyond that elementary fact we have no information as to
+their beliefs concerning the state of the dead.[511]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs at Windessi.]
+
+The natives of Windessi in Dutch New Guinea generally bury their dead
+the day after the decease. As a rule the corpse is wrapt in mats and a
+piece of blue cloth and laid on a scaffold; few are coffined. All the
+possessions of the dead, including weapons, fishing-nets, wooden bowls,
+pots, and so forth, according as the deceased was a man or a woman, are
+placed beside him or her. If the death is attributed to the influence of
+an evil spirit, they take hold of a lock of hair of the corpse and
+mention various places. At the mention of each place, they tug the hair;
+and if it comes out, they conclude that the death was caused by somebody
+at the place which was mentioned at the moment. But if the hair does not
+come out, they infer that evil spirits had no hand in the affair. Before
+the body is carried away, the family bathes, no doubt to purify
+themselves from the contagion of death. Among the people of Windessi it
+is a common custom to bury the dead in an island. At such a burial the
+bystanders pick up a fallen leaf, tear it in two, and stroke the corpse
+with it, in order that the ghost of the departed may not kill them. When
+the body has been disposed of either in a grave or on a scaffold, they
+embark in the canoe and sit listening for omens. One of the men in a
+loud voice bids the birds and the flies to be silent; and all the others
+sit as still as death in an attitude of devotion. At last, after an
+interval of silence, the man who called out tells his fellows what he
+has heard. If it was the buzz of the blue flies that he heard, some one
+else will die. If it was the booming sound of a triton shell blown in
+the distance, a raid must be made in that direction to rob and murder.
+Why it must be so, is not said, but we may suppose that the note of the
+triton shell is believed to betray the place of the enemy who has
+wrought the death by magic, and that accordingly an expedition must be
+sent to avenge the supposed crime on the supposed murderer. If the note
+of a bird called _kohwi_ is heard, then the fruit-trees will bear fruit.
+Though all the men sit listening in the canoe, the ominous sounds are
+heard only by the man who called out.[512]
+
+[Sidenote: Mourning customs at Windessi.]
+
+When the omens have thus been taken, the paddles again dip in the water,
+and the canoe returns to the house of mourning. Arrived at it, the men
+disembark, climb up the ladder (for the houses seem to be built on piles
+over the water) and run the whole length of the long house with their
+paddles on their shoulders. Curiously enough, they never do this at any
+other time, because they imagine that it would cause the death of
+somebody. Meantime the women have gone into the forest to get bark,
+which they beat into bark-cloth and make into mourning caps for
+themselves. The men busy themselves with plaiting armlets and leglets of
+rattan, in which some red rags are stuck. Large blue and white beads are
+strung on a red cord and worn round the neck. Further, the hair is shorn
+in sign of mourning. Mourners are forbidden to eat anything cooked in a
+pot. Sago-porridge, which is a staple food with some of the natives of
+New Guinea, is also forbidden to mourners at Windessi. If they would eat
+rice, it must be cooked in a bamboo. The doors and windows of the house
+are closed with planks or mats, just as with us the blinds are lowered
+in a house after a death. The surviving relatives make as many long
+sago-cakes as there are houses in the village and send them to the
+inmates; they also prepare a few for themselves. All who do not belong
+to the family now leave the house of mourning. Then the eldest brother
+or his representative gets up and all follow him to the back verandah,
+where a woman stands holding a bow and arrows, an axe, a paddle, and so
+forth. Every one touches these implements. Since the death, there has
+been no working in the house, but this time of inactivity is now over
+and every one is free to resume his usual occupations. This ends the
+preliminary ceremonies of mourning, which go by the name of _djawarra_.
+
+A month afterwards round cakes of sago are baked on the fire, and all
+the members of the family, their friends, and the persons who assisted
+at the burial receive three such cakes each. Only very young children
+are now allowed to eat sago-porridge. This ceremony is called _djawarra
+baba_.
+
+[Sidenote: Festival of the dead. Wooden images of the dead.]
+
+When a year or more has elapsed, the so-called festival of the dead
+takes place. Often the festival is held for several dead at the same
+time, and in that case the cost is borne in common. From far and near
+the people have collected sago, coco-nuts, and other food. For two
+nights and a day they dance and sing, but without the accompaniment of
+drums (_tifa_) and gongs. The first night, the signs of mourning are
+still worn, hence no sago-porridge may be eaten; only friends who are
+not in mourning are allowed to partake of it. The night is spent in
+eating, drinking, smoking, singing and dancing. Next day many people
+make _korwars_ of their dead, that is, grotesque wooden images carved in
+human form, which are regarded as the representatives of the departed.
+Some people fetch the head of the deceased person, and having made a
+wooden image with a large head and a hole in the back of it, they insert
+the skull into the wooden head from behind. After that friends feed the
+mourners with sago-porridge, putting it into their mouths with the help
+of the chopsticks which are commonly used in eating sago. When that is
+done, the period of mourning is at an end, and the signs of mourning are
+thrown away. A dance on the beach follows, at which the new wooden
+images of the dead make their appearance. But still the drums and gongs
+are silent. Dancing and singing go on till the next morning, when the
+whole of the ceremonies come to an end.[513]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghost.]
+
+The exact meaning of all these ceremonies is not clear, but we may
+conjecture that they are based in large measure on the fear of the
+ghost. That fear comes out plainly in the ceremony of stroking the
+corpse with leaves in order to prevent the ghost from killing the
+survivors. The writer to whom we are indebted for an account of these
+customs tells us in explanation of them that among these people death is
+ascribed to the influence of evil spirits called _manoam_, who are
+supposed to be incarnate in some human beings. Hence they often seek to
+avenge a death by murdering somebody who has the reputation of being an
+evil spirit incarnate. If they succeed in doing so, they celebrate the
+preliminary mourning ceremonies called _djawarra_ and _djawarra baba_,
+but the festival of the dead is changed into a memorial festival, at
+which the people dance and sing to the accompaniment of drums (_tifa_),
+gongs, and triton shells; and instead of carving a wooden image of the
+deceased, they make marks on the fleshless skull of the murdered
+man.[514]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the natives of Windessi as to the life after
+death. Medicine-men inspired by the spirits of the dead.]
+
+The natives of Windessi are said to have the following belief as to the
+life after death, though we are told that the creed is now known to very
+few of them; for their old beliefs and customs are fading away under the
+influence of a mission station which is established among them.
+According to their ancient creed, every man and every woman has two
+spirits, and in the nether world, called _sarooka_, is a large house
+where there is room for all the people of Windessi. When a woman dies,
+both her spirits always go down to the nether world, where they are
+clothed with flesh and bones, need do no work, and live for ever. But
+when a man dies, only one of his spirits must go to the under world; the
+other may pass or transmigrate into a living man or, in rare cases, into
+a living woman; the person so inspired by a dead man's spirit becomes an
+_inderri_, that is, a medicine-man or medicine-woman and has power to
+heal the sick. When a person wishes to become a medicine-man or
+medicine-woman, he or she acts as follows. If a man has died, and his
+friends are sitting about the corpse lamenting, the would-be
+medicine-man suddenly begins to shiver and to rub his knee with his
+folded hands, while he utters a monotonous sound. Gradually he falls
+into an ecstasy, and if his whole body shakes convulsively, the spirit
+of the dead man is supposed to have entered into him, and he becomes a
+medicine-man. Next day or the day after he is taken into the forest;
+some hocus-pocus is performed over him, and the spirits of lunatics, who
+dwell in certain thick trees, are invoked to take possession of him. He
+is now himself called a lunatic, and on returning home behaves as if he
+were half-crazed. This completes his training as a medicine-man, and he
+is now fully qualified to kill or cure the sick. His mode of cure
+depends on the native theory of sickness. These savages think that
+sickness is caused by a malicious or angry spirit, apparently the spirit
+of a dead person; for a patient will say, "The _korwar_" (that is, the
+wooden image which represents a particular dead person) "is murdering
+me, or is making me sick." So the medicine-man is called in, and sets to
+work on the sufferer, while the _korwar_, or wooden image of the spirit
+who is supposed to be doing all the mischief, stands beside him. The
+principal method of cure employed by the doctor is massage. He chews a
+certain fruit fine and rubs the patient with it; also he pinches him all
+over the body as if to drive out the spirit. Often he professes to
+extract a stone, a bone, or a stick from the body of the sufferer. At
+last he gives out that he has ascertained the cause of the sickness; the
+sick man has done or has omitted to do something which has excited the
+anger of the spirit.[515]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of slain enemies dreaded.]
+
+From all this it would seem that the souls of the dead are more feared
+than loved and reverenced by the Papuans of Windessi. Naturally the
+ghosts of enemies who have perished at their hands are particularly
+dreaded by them. That dread explains some of the ceremonies which are
+observed in the village at the return of a successful party of
+head-hunters. As they draw near the village, they announce their
+approach and success by blowing on triton shells. Their canoes also are
+decked with branches. The faces of the men who have taken a head are
+blackened with charcoal; and if several have joined in killing one man,
+his skull is divided between them. They always time their arrival so as
+to reach home in the early morning. They come paddling to the village
+with a great noise, and the women stand ready to dance in the verandahs
+of the houses. The canoes row past the _roem sram_ or clubhouse where
+the young men live; and as they pass, the grimy-faced slayers fling as
+many pointed sticks or bamboos at the house as they have killed enemies.
+The rest of the day is spent very quietly. But now and then they drum or
+blow on the conch, and at other times they beat on the walls of the
+houses with sticks, shouting loudly at the same time, to drive away the
+ghosts of their victims.[516]
+
+That concludes what I have to say as to the fear and worship of the dead
+in Dutch New Guinea.
+
+[Footnote 475: G. Bamler, "Tami," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_,
+iii. (Berlin, 1911) pp. 489-492.]
+
+[Footnote 476: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 507-512.]
+
+[Footnote 477: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 513 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 478: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 514 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 479: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 515 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 480: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ p. 516.]
+
+[Footnote 481: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 493-507.]
+
+[Footnote 482: J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuastämme an der Geelvinkbai
+(Neu-guinea)," _Mitteilungen der geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_,
+ix. (1890) p. 1; F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," _Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) pp. 587 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 483: J. L. van Hasselt, _op. cit._ pp. 2, 3, 5 _sq._; A.
+Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_ (Schiedam, 1863), pp. 28
+_sqq._, 33 _sqq._, 42 _sq._, 47 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 484: J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuastämme an der Geelvinkbai
+(Neu-guinea)," _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_,
+ix. (1891) p. 101.]
+
+[Footnote 485: H. van Rosenberg, _Der Malayische Archipel_ (Leipsic,
+1878), p. 461.]
+
+[Footnote 486: H. van Rosenberg, _op. cit._ p. 462.]
+
+[Footnote 487: M. Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_ (Berlin, N.D., preface dated
+1899), pp. 401, 402.]
+
+[Footnote 488: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_
+(Schiedam, 1863), p. 77. Compare O. Finsch, _Neu-Guinea und seine
+Bewohner_ (Bremen, 1865), p. 105.]
+
+[Footnote 489: F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West- en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," _Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) p. 631. On these
+_korwar_ or _karwar_ (images of the dead) see further A. Goudswaard, _De
+Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp. 72 _sq._, 77-79; O. Finsch,
+_Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner_, pp. 104-106; H. von Rosenberg, _Der
+Malayische Archipel_, pp. 460 _sq._; J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuastämme
+an der Geelvinkbaai (Neu-Guinea)" _Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena_, ix. (1891) p. 100; M. Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_, pp.
+400 _sq._, 402 _sq._, 498 _sqq._ In the text I have drawn on these
+various accounts.]
+
+[Footnote 490: J. L. van Hasselt, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 491: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp.
+78 _sq._; O. Finsch, _Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner_, pp. 105 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 492: A. Goudswaard, _op. cit._ p. 79; O. Finsch, _op. cit._ p.
+106.]
+
+[Footnote 493: J. L. van Hasselt, _op. cit._ p. 100.]
+
+[Footnote 494: A. Goudswaard, _op. cit._ p. 78.]
+
+[Footnote 495: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 632.]
+
+[Footnote 496: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 632.]
+
+[Footnote 497: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 632.]
+
+[Footnote 498: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp.
+70-73; O. Finsch, _Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner_ pp. 104 _sq._; M.
+Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_, p. 398.]
+
+[Footnote 499: J. L. van Hasselt, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena_, iv. (1886) pp. 118 _sq._ As to the spirit or
+spirits who dwell in tree tops and draw away the souls of the living to
+themselves, see further "Eenige bijzonderheden betreffende de Papoeas
+van de Geelvinksbaai van Nieuw-Guinea," _Bijdragen tot de Taal- Landen
+Volkenkunde van Neêrlandsch-Indië_, ii. (1854) pp. 375 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 500: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, p.
+73; J. L. van Hasselt, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft
+zu Jena_, iv. (1886) p. 118; M. Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_, pp. 398. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 501: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp.
+75 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 502: J. L. van Hasselt, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena_, iv. (1886) 117 _sq._; M. Krieger, _op. cit._ pp.
+397 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 503: A. Goudswaard, _op. cit._ pp. 74 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 504: _Nieuw Guinea ethnographisch en natuurkundig onderzocht
+en beschreven_ (Amsterdam, 1862), p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 505: F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West- en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," _Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) pp. 198 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 506: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 201.]
+
+[Footnote 507: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ pp. 202, 205.]
+
+[Footnote 508: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 509: J. W. van Hille, "Reizen in West-Nieuw-Guinea,"
+_Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_,
+Tweede Serie, xxiii. (1906) p. 463.]
+
+[Footnote 510: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ pp. 459 _sq._, 461 _sq._ A
+German traveller, Mr. H. Kühn, spent some time at Sekar and purchased a
+couple of what he calls "old heathen idols," which are now in the
+ethnological Museum at Leipsic. One of them, about a foot high,
+represents a human head and bust; the other, about two feet high,
+represents a squat sitting figure. They are probably ancestral images
+(_korwar_ or _karwar_). The natives are said to have such confidence in
+the protection of these "idols" that they leave their jewellery and
+other possessions unguarded beside them, in the full belief that nobody
+would dare to steal anything from spots protected by such mighty beings.
+See H. Kühn, "Mein Aufenthalt in Neu-Guinea," _Festschrift des
+25jährigen Bestehens des Vereins für Erdkunde zu Dresden_ (Dresden,
+1888), pp. 143 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 511: A. F. R. Wollaston, _Pygmies and Papuans_ (London, 1912),
+pp. 132 _sq._, 136-140.]
+
+[Footnote 512: J. L. D. van der Roest, "Uit the leven der bevolking van
+Windessi," _Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal- Landen Volkenkunde_, xl.
+(1898) pp. 159 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 513: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ pp. 161 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 514: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 515: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ pp. 164-166.]
+
+[Footnote 516: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ pp. 157 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XV
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF SOUTHERN MELANESIA (NEW
+CALEDONIA)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Melanesia and the Melanesians.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded our survey of the beliefs and practices
+concerning death and the dead which are reported to prevail among the
+natives of New Guinea. We now pass to the natives of Melanesia, the
+great archipelago or rather chain of archipelagoes, which stretches
+round the north-eastern and eastern ends of New Guinea and southward,
+parallel to the coast of Queensland, till it almost touches the tropic
+of Capricorn. Thus the islands lie wholly within the tropics and are for
+the most part characterised by tropical heat and tropical luxuriance of
+vegetation. Only New Caledonia, the most southerly of the larger
+islands, differs somewhat from the rest in its comparatively cool
+climate and scanty flora.[517] The natives of the islands belong to the
+Melanesian race. They are dark-skinned and woolly-haired and speak a
+language which is akin to the Polynesian language. In material culture
+they stand roughly on the same level as the natives of New Guinea, a
+considerable part of whom in the south-eastern part of the island, as I
+pointed out before, are either pure Melanesians or at all events exhibit
+a strong infusion of Melanesian blood. They cultivate the ground, live
+in settled villages, build substantial houses, construct
+outrigger-canoes, display some aptitude for art, possess strong
+commercial instincts, and even employ various mediums of exchange, of
+which shell-money is the most notable.[518]
+
+[Sidenote: The New Caledonians.]
+
+We shall begin our survey of these islands with New Caledonia in the
+south, and from it shall pass northwards through the New Hebrides and
+Solomon Islands to the Bismarck Archipelago, which consists chiefly of
+the two great islands of New Britain and New Ireland with the group of
+the Admiralty Islands terminating it to the westward. For our knowledge
+of the customs and religion of the New Caledonians we depend chiefly on
+the evidence of a Catholic missionary, Father Lambert, who has worked
+among them since 1856 and has published a valuable book on the
+subject.[519] To be exact, his information applies not to the natives of
+New Caledonia itself, but to the inhabitants of a group of small
+islands, which lie immediately off the northern extremity of the island
+and are known as the Belep group. Father Lambert began to labour among
+the Belep at a time when no white man had as yet resided among them. At
+a later time circumstances led him to transfer his ministry to the Isle
+of Pines, which lies off the opposite or southern end of New Caledonia.
+A comparative study of the natives at the two extremities of New
+Caledonia revealed to him an essential similarity in their beliefs and
+customs; so that it is not perhaps very rash to assume that similar
+customs prevail among the aborigines of New Caledonia itself, which lies
+intermediate between the two points observed by Father Lambert.[520] The
+assumption is confirmed by evidence which was collected by Dr. George
+Turner from the mainland of New Caledonia so long ago as 1845.[521]
+Accordingly in what follows I shall commonly speak of the New
+Caledonians in general, though the statements for the most part apply in
+particular to the Belep tribe.
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the New Calendonians as to the land of the dead.]
+
+The souls of the New Caledonians, like those of most savages, are
+supposed to be immortal, at least to survive death for an indefinite
+period. They all go, good and bad alike, to dwell in a very rich and
+beautiful country situated at the bottom of the sea, to the north-east
+of the island of Pott. The name of the land of souls is Tsiabiloum. But
+before they reach this happy land they must run the gauntlet of a grim
+spirit called Kiemoua, who has his abode on a rock in the island of
+Pott. He is a fisherman of souls; for he catches them as they pass in a
+net and after venting his fury on them he releases them, and they pursue
+their journey to Tsiabiloum, the land of the dead. It is a country more
+fair and fertile than tongue can tell. Yams, taros, sugar-canes, bananas
+all grow there in profusion and without cultivation. There are forests
+of wild orange-trees, also, and the golden fruits serve the blessed
+spirits as playthings. You can tell roughly how long it is since a
+spirit quitted the upper world by the colour of the orange which he
+plays with; for the oranges of those who have just arrived are green;
+the oranges of those who have been longer dead are ripe; and the oranges
+of those who died long ago are dry and wizened. There is no night in
+that blessed land, and no sleep; for the eyes of the spirits are never
+weighed down with slumber. Sorrow and sickness, decrepitude and death
+never enter; even boredom is unknown. But it is only the nights, or
+rather the hours corresponding to nights on earth, which the spirits
+pass in these realms of bliss. At daybreak they revisit their old home
+on earth and take up their posts in the cemeteries where they are
+honoured; then at nightfall they flit away back to the spirit-land
+beneath the sea, there to resume their sport with oranges, green,
+golden, or withered, till dawn of day. On these repeated journeys to and
+fro they have nothing to fear from the grim fisherman and his net; it is
+only on their first passage to the nether world that he catches and
+trounces them.[522]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the New Calendonians.]
+
+The bodies of the dead are buried in shallow graves, which are dug in a
+sacred grove. The corpse is placed in a crouching attitude with the head
+at or above the surface of the ground, in order to allow of the skull
+being easily detached from the trunk, at a subsequent time. In token of
+sorrow the nearest relations of the deceased tear the lobes of their
+ears and inflict large burns on their arms and breasts. The houses,
+nets, and other implements of the dead are burnt; his plantations are
+ravaged, his coco-nut palms felled with the axe. The motive for this
+destruction of the property of the deceased is not mentioned, but the
+custom points to a fear of the ghost; the people probably make his old
+home as unattractive as possible in order to offer him no temptation to
+return and haunt them. The same fear of the ghost, or at all events of
+the infection of death, is revealed by the stringent seclusion and
+ceremonial pollution of the grave-diggers. They are two in number; no
+other persons may handle the corpse. After they have discharged their
+office they must remain near the corpse for four or five days, observing
+a rigorous fast and keeping apart from their wives. They may not shave
+or cut their hair, and they are obliged to wear a tall pyramidal and
+very cumbersome head-dress. They may not touch food with their hands. If
+they help themselves to it, they must pick it up with their mouths alone
+or with a stick, not with their fingers. Oftener they are fed by an
+attendant, who puts the victuals into their mouths as he might do if
+they were palsied. On the other hand they are treated by the people with
+great respect; common folk will not pass near them without
+stooping.[523]
+
+[Sidenote: Sham fight as a mourning ceremony.]
+
+A curious ceremony which the New Caledonians observe at a certain period
+of mourning for the dead is a sham fight. Father Lambert describes one
+such combat which he witnessed. A number of men were divided into two
+parties; one party was posted on the beach, the other and much larger
+party was stationed in the adjoining cemetery, where food and property
+had been collected. From time to time a long piercing yell would be
+heard; then a number of men would break from the crowd in the cemetery
+and rush furiously down to the beach with their slings and stones ready
+to assail their adversaries. These, answering yell with yell, would then
+plunge into the sea, armed with battle-axes and clubs, while they made a
+feint of parrying the stones hurled at them by the other side. But
+neither the shots nor the parries appeared to be very seriously meant.
+Then when the assailants retired, the fugitives pretended to pursue
+them, till both parties had regained their original position. The same
+scene of alternate attack and retreat was repeated hour after hour, till
+at last, the pretence of enmity being laid aside, the two parties joined
+in a dance, their heads crowned with leafy garlands. Father Lambert, who
+describes this ceremony as an eye-witness, offers no explanation of it.
+But as he tells us that all deaths are believed by these savages to be
+an effect of sorcery, we may conjecture that the sham fight is intended
+to delude the ghost into thinking that his death is being avenged on the
+sorcerer who killed him.[524] In former lectures I shewed that similar
+pretences are made, apparently for a similar purpose, by some of the
+natives of Australia and New Guinea.[525] If the explanation is correct,
+we can hardly help applauding the ingenuity which among these savages
+has discovered a bloodless mode of satisfying the ghost's craving for
+blood.
+
+[Sidenote: Preservation of the skulls of the dead.]
+
+About a year after the death, when the flesh of the corpse is entirely
+decayed, the skull is removed and placed solemnly in another
+burying-ground, or rather charnel-house, where all the skulls of the
+family are deposited. Every family has such a charnel-house, which is
+commonly situated near the dwelling. It appears to be simply an open
+space in the forest, where the skulls are set in a row on the
+ground.[526] Yet in a sense it may be called a temple for the worship of
+ancestors; for recourse is had to the skulls on various occasions in
+order to obtain the help of the spirits of the dead. "The true worship
+of the New Caledonians," says Father Lambert, "is the worship of
+ancestors. Each family has its own; it religiously preserves their name;
+it is proud of them and has confidence in them. Hence it has its
+burial-place and its pious hearth for the sacrifices to be offered to
+their ghosts. It is the most inviolable piece of property; an
+encroachment on such a spot by a neighbour is a thing unheard of."[527]
+
+[Sidenote: Examples of ancestor-worship among the New Caledonians.]
+
+A few examples may serve to illustrate the ancestor-worship of the New
+Caledonians. When a person is sick, a member of the family, never a
+stranger, is appointed to heal him by means of certain magical
+insufflations. To enable him to do so with effect the healer first
+repairs to the family charnel-house and lays some sugar-cane leaves
+beside the skulls, saying, "I lay these leaves on you that I may go and
+breathe upon our sick relative, to the end that he may live." Then he
+goes to a tree belonging to the family and lays other sugar-cane leaves
+at its foot, saying, "I lay these leaves beside the tree of my father
+and of my grandfather, in order that my breath may have healing virtue."
+Next he takes some leaves of the tree or a piece of its bark, chews it
+into a mash, and then goes and breathes on the patient, his breath being
+moistened with spittle which is charged with particles of the leaves or
+the bark.[528] Thus the healing virtue of his breath would seem to be
+drawn from the spirits of the dead as represented partly by their skulls
+and partly by the leaves and bark of the tree which belonged to them in
+life, and to which their souls appear in some manner to be attached in
+death.
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers for fish.]
+
+Again, when a shoal of fish has made its appearance on the reef, a
+number of superstitious ceremonies have to be performed before the
+people may go and spear them in the water. On the eve of the fishing-day
+the medicine-man of the tribe causes a quantity of leaves of certain
+specified plants to be collected and roasted in the native ovens. Next
+day the leaves are taken from the ovens and deposited beside the
+ancestral skulls, which have been arranged and decorated for the
+ceremony. All the fishermen, armed with their fishing-spears, repair to
+the holy ground or sacred grove where the skulls are kept, and there
+they draw themselves up in two rows, while the medicine-man chants an
+invocation or prayer for a good catch. At every verse the crowd raises a
+cry of approval and assent. At its conclusion the medicine-man sets an
+example by thrusting with his spear at a fish, and all the men
+immediately plunge into the water and engage in fishing.[529]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers for sugar-cane.]
+
+Again, in order that a sugar plantation may flourish, the medicine-man
+will lay a sugar-cane beside the ancestral skulls, saying, "This is for
+you. We beg of you to ward off all curses, all tricks of wicked people,
+in order that our plantations may prosper."[530]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers for yams.]
+
+Again, when the store of yams is running short and famine is beginning
+to be felt, the New Caledonians celebrate a festival called _moulim_ in
+which the worship of their ancestors is the principal feature. A staff
+is wreathed with branches, apparently to represent a yam, and a hedge of
+coco-nut leaves is made near the ancestral skulls. The decorated staff
+is then set up there, and prayers for the prosperity of the crops are
+offered over and over again. After that nobody may enter a yam-field or
+a cemetery or touch sea-water for three days. On the third day a man
+stationed on a mound chants an invocation or incantation in a loud
+voice. Next all the men go down to the shore, each of them with a
+firebrand in his hand, and separating into two parties engage in a sham
+fight. Afterwards they bathe and repairing to the charnel-house deposit
+coco-nut leaves beside the skulls of their ancestors. They are then free
+to partake of the feast which has been prepared by the women.[531]
+
+[Sidenote: Caverns used by the natives as charnel-houses in the Isle of
+Pines.]
+
+While the beliefs and customs of the New Caledonians in regard to the
+dead bear a general resemblance to each other, whether they belong to
+the north or to the south of the principal island, a special feature is
+introduced into the mortuary customs of the natives of the Isle of Pines
+by the natural caves and grottoes with which the outer rim of the
+island, to the distance of several miles from the shore, is riddled; for
+in these caverns the natives in the old heathen days were wont to
+deposit the bones and skulls of their dead and to use the caves as
+sanctuaries or chapels for the worship of the spirits of the departed.
+Some of the caves are remarkable both in themselves and in their
+situation. Most of those which the natives turned into charnel-houses
+are hidden away, sometimes at great distances, in the rank luxuriance of
+the tropical forests. Some of them open straight from the level of the
+ground; to reach others you must clamber up the rocks; to explore others
+you must descend into the bowels of the earth. A glimmering twilight
+illumines some; thick darkness veils others, and it is only by
+torchlight that you can explore their mysterious depths. Penetrating
+into the interior by the flickering gleam of flambeaus held aloft by the
+guides, and picking your steps among loose stones and pools of water,
+you might fancy yourself now in the great hall of a ruined castle, now
+in the vast nave of a gothic cathedral with its chapels opening off it
+into the darkness on either hand. The illusion is strengthened by the
+multitude of stalactites which hang from the roof of the cavern and,
+glittering in the fitful glow of the torches, might be taken for burning
+cressets kindled to light up the revels in a baronial hall, or for holy
+lamps twinkling in the gloom of a dim cathedral aisle before holy
+images, where solitary worshippers kneel in silent devotion. In the
+shifting play of the light and shadow cast by the torches the fantastic
+shapes of the incrustations which line the sides or rise from the floor
+of the grotto appear to the imagination of the observer now as the
+gnarled trunks of huge trees, now as statues or torsos of statues, now
+as altars, on which perhaps a nearer approach reveals a row of blanched
+and grinning skulls. No wonder if such places, chosen for the last
+resting-places of the relics of mortality, have fed the imagination of
+the natives with weird notions of a life after death, a life very
+different from that which the living lead in the glowing sunshine and
+amid the rich tropical verdure a few paces outside of these gloomy
+caverns. It is with a shiver and a sense of relief that the visitor
+escapes from them to the warm outer air and sees again the ferns and
+creepers hanging over the mouth of the cave like a green fringe against
+the intense blue of the sky.[532]
+
+[Sidenote: Sea-caves.]
+
+While this is the general character of the caves which are to be found
+hidden away in the forests, many of those near the shore consist simply
+of apertures hollowed out in the face of the cliffs by the slow but
+continuous action of the waves in the course of ages. On the beach
+itself sea-caves are found in which the rising tide precipitates itself
+with a hollow roar as of subterranean thunder; and at a point, some way
+back from the strand, where the roof of one of these caves has fallen
+in, the salt water is projected into the air in the form of intermittent
+jets of spray, which vary in height with the force of the wind and
+tide.[533]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers and sacrifices offered to the dead by the New
+Caledonians.]
+
+With regard to the use which the natives make of these caves as
+charnel-houses and mortuary chapels, Father Lambert tells us that any
+one of them usually includes three compartments, a place of burial, a
+place of skulls, and a place of sacrifice. But often the place of skulls
+is also the place of sacrifice; and in no case is the one far from the
+other. The family priest, who is commonly the senior member of the
+family, may address his prayers to the ancestors in the depth of the
+cavern, in the place of skulls, or in the place of sacrifice, whenever
+circumstances call for a ritual of unusual solemnity. Otherwise with the
+help of his amulets he may pray to the souls of the forefathers
+anywhere; for these amulets consist of personal and portable relics of
+the dead, such as locks of hair, teeth, and so forth; or again they may
+be leaves or other parts of plants which are sacred to the family; so
+that a wizard who is in possession of them can always and anywhere
+communicate with the ancestral spirits. The place of sacrifice would
+seem to be more often in the open air than in a cave, for Father Lambert
+tells us that in the centre of it a shrub, always of the same species,
+is planted and carefully cultivated. Beside it may be seen the pots and
+stones which are used in cooking the food offered to the dead. In this
+worship of the dead a certain differentiation of functions or division
+of labour obtains between the various families. All have not the same
+gifts and graces. The prayers of one family offered to their ancestral
+ghosts are thought to be powerful in procuring rain in time of drought;
+the prayers of another will cause the sun to break through the clouds
+when the sky is overcast; the supplications of a third will produce a
+fine crop of yams; the earnest entreaties of a fourth will ensure
+victory in war; and the passionate pleadings of a fifth will guard
+mariners against the perils and dangers of the deep. And so on through
+the whole gamut of human needs, so far as these are felt by savages. If
+only wrestling in prayer could satisfy the wants of man, few people
+should be better provided with all the necessaries and comforts of life
+than the New Caledonians. And according to the special purpose to which
+a family devotes its spiritual energies, so will commonly be the
+position of its oratory. For example, if rain-making is their strong
+point, their house of prayer will be established near a cultivated
+field, in order that the crops may immediately experience the benefit to
+be derived from their orisons. Again, if they enjoy a high reputation
+for procuring a good catch of fish, the family skulls will be placed in
+the mouth of a cave looking out over the great ocean, or perhaps on a
+bleak little wind-swept isle, where in the howl of the blast, the
+thunder of the waves on the strand, and the clangour of the gulls
+overhead, the fancy of the superstitious savage may hear the voices of
+his dead forefathers keeping watch and ward over their children who are
+tossed on the heaving billows.[534] Thus among these fortunate islanders
+religion and industry go hand in hand; piety has been reduced to a
+co-operative system which diffuses showers of blessings on the whole
+community.
+
+[Sidenote: Prayer-posts.]
+
+As it is clearly impossible even for the most devout to pray day and
+night without cessation, the weakness of the flesh requiring certain
+intervals for refreshment and repose, the New Caledonians have devised
+an ingenious method of continuing their orisons at the shrine in their
+own absence. For this purpose they make rods or poles of various
+lengths, carve and paint them rudely, wind bandages of native cloth
+about them, and having fastened large shells to the top, set them up
+either in the sepulchral caves or in the place of skulls. In setting up
+one of these poles the native will pray for the particular favour which
+he desires to obtain from the ancestors for himself or his family; and
+he appears to think that in some way the pole will continue to recite
+the prayer in the ears of the ghosts, when he himself has ceased to
+speak and has returned to his customary avocations. And when members of
+his family visit the shrine and see the pole, they will be reminded of
+the particular benefit which they are entitled to expect from the souls
+of the departed. A certain rude symbolism may be traced in the materials
+and other particulars of these prayer-posts. A hard wood signifies
+strength; a tall pole overtopping all the rest imports a wish that he
+for whose sake it was erected may out-top all his rivals; and so
+on.[535]
+
+[Sidenote: Religion combined with magic in the ritual of the New
+Caledonians. Sacred stones endowed with special magical virtues. The
+"stone of famine."]
+
+We may assume with some probability that in the mind of the natives such
+resemblances are not purely figurative or symbolic, but that they are
+also magical in intention, being supposed not merely to represent the
+object of the supplicant's prayer, but actually, on the principle of
+homoeopathic or imitative magic, to contribute to its accomplishment. If
+that is so, we must conclude that the religion of these savages, as
+manifested in their prayers to the spirits of the dead, is tinctured
+with an alloy of magic; they do not trust entirely to the compassion of
+the spirits and their power to help them; they seek to reinforce their
+prayers by a certain physical compulsion acting through the natural
+properties of the prayer-posts. This interpretation is confirmed by a
+parallel use which these people make of certain sacred stones, which
+apart from their possible character as representatives of the ancestors,
+seem to be credited with independent magical virtues by reason of their
+various shapes and appearances. For example, there is a piece of
+polished jade which is called "the stone of famine," because it is
+supposed capable of causing either dearth or abundance, but is oftener
+used by the sorcerer to create, or at least to threaten, dearth, in
+order thereby to extort presents from his alarmed fellow tribesmen. This
+stone is kept in a burial-ground and derives its potency from the dead.
+The worshipper or the sorcerer (for he combines the two characters) who
+desires to cause a famine repairs to the burial-ground, uncovers the
+stone, rubs it with certain plants, and smears one half of it with black
+pigment. Then he makes a small hole in the ground and inserts the
+blackened end of the stone in the hole. Next he prays to the ancestors
+that nothing may go well with the country. If this malevolent rite
+should be followed by the desired effect, the sorcerer soon sees
+messengers arriving laden with presents, who entreat him to stay the
+famine. If his cupidity is satisfied, he rubs the stone again, inserts
+it upside down in the ground, and prays to his ancestors to restore
+plenty to the land.[536]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to drive people mad.]
+
+Again, certain rough unhewn stones, which are kept in the sacred places,
+are thought to possess the power of driving people mad. To effect this
+purpose the sorcerer has only to strike one of them with the branches of
+a certain tree and to pray to the ancestral spirits that they would
+deprive so-and-so of his senses.[537]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to blight coco-nut palms. Stones to make bread-fruit
+trees bear fruit.]
+
+Again, there is a stone which they use in cursing a plantation of
+coco-nut palms. The stone resembles a blighted coco-nut, and no doubt it
+is this resemblance which is supposed to endow it with the magical power
+to blight coco-nut trees. In order to effect his malicious purpose the
+sorcerer rubs the stone in the cemetery with certain leaves and then
+deposits it in a hole at the foot of a coco-nut tree, covers it up, and
+prays that all the trees of the plantation may be barren. This ceremony
+combines the elements of magic and religion. The prayer, which is no
+doubt addressed to the spirits of the dead, though this is not expressly
+affirmed, is purely religious; but the employment of a stone resembling
+a blighted coco-nut for the purpose of blighting the coco-nut palms is a
+simple piece of homoeopathic or imitative magic, in which, as usual, the
+desired effect is supposed to be produced by an imitation of it.
+Similarly, in order to make a bread-fruit tree bear fruit they employ
+two stones, one of which resembles the unripe and the other the ripe
+fruit. These are kept, as usual, in a cemetery; and when the trees begin
+to put forth fruit, the small stone resembling the unripe fruit is
+buried at the foot of one of the trees with the customary prayers and
+ceremonies; and when the fruits are more mature the small stone is
+replaced by the larger stone which resembles the ripe fruit. Then, when
+the fruits on the tree are quite ripe, the two stones are removed and
+deposited again in the cemetery: they have done their work by bringing
+to maturity the fruits which they resemble. This again is a piece of
+pure homoeopathic or imitative magic working by means of mimicry; but
+the magical virtue of the stones is reinforced by the spiritual power of
+the dead, for the stones have been kept in a cemetery and prayers have
+been addressed to the souls of the departed.[538]
+
+[Sidenote: The "stone of the sun."]
+
+Again, the natives have two disc-shaped stones, each with a hole in the
+centre, which together make up what they call "the stone of the sun." No
+doubt it is regarded as a symbol of the sun, and as such it is employed
+to cause drought in a ceremony which, like the preceding, combines the
+elements of magic and religion. The sun-stone is kept in one of the
+sacred places, and when a sorcerer wishes to make drought with it, he
+brings offerings to the ancestral spirits in the sacred place. These
+offerings are purely religious, but the rest of the ceremony is purely
+magical. At the moment when the sun rises from the sea, the magician or
+priest, whichever we choose to call him (for he combines both
+characters), passes a burning brand in and out of the hole in the
+sun-stone, while he says, "I kindle the sun, in order that he may eat up
+the clouds and dry up our land, so that it shall no longer bear fruit."
+Here the putting of fire to the sun-stone is a piece of pure
+homoeopathic or imitative magic, designed to increase the burning heat
+of the sun by mimicry.[539]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to make rain.]
+
+On the contrary, when a wizard desires to make rain, he proceeds as
+follows. The place of sacrifice is decorated and enclosed with a fence,
+and a large quantity of provisions is deposited in it to be offered to
+the ancestors whose skulls stand there in a row. Opposite the skulls the
+wizard places a row of pots full of a medicated water, and he brings a
+number of sacred stones of a rounded form or shaped like a skull. Each
+of these stones, after being rubbed with the leaves of a certain tree,
+is placed in one of the pots of water. Then the wizard recites a long
+litany or series of invocations to the ancestors, which may be
+summarised thus: "We pray you to help us, in order that our country may
+revive and live anew." Then holding a branch in his hand he climbs a
+tree and scans the horizon if haply he may descry a cloud, be it no
+larger than a man's hand. Should he be fortunate enough to see one, he
+waves the branch to and fro to make the cloud mount up in the sky, while
+he also stretches out his arms to right and left to enlarge it so that
+it may hide the sun and overcast the whole heaven.[540] Here again the
+prayers and offerings are purely religious; while the placing of the
+skull-shaped stones in pots full of water, and the waving of the branch
+to bring up the clouds, are magical ceremonies designed to produce rain
+by mimicry and compulsion.
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to make or mar sea-voyages.]
+
+Again, the natives have a stone in the shape of a canoe, which they
+employ in ceremonies for the purpose of favouring or hindering
+navigation. If the sorcerer desires to make a voyage prosperous, he
+places the canoe-shaped stone before the ancestral skulls with the right
+side up; but if he wishes to cause his enemy to perish at sea, he places
+the canoe-shaped stone bottom upwards before the skulls, which, on the
+principles of homoeopathic or imitative magic, must clearly make his
+enemy's canoe to capsize and precipitate its owner into the sea.
+Whichever of these ceremonies he performs, the wizard accompanies the
+magical rite, as usual, with prayers and offerings of food to the
+ancestral spirits who are represented by the skulls.[541]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to help fishermen.]
+
+The natives of the Isle of Pines subsist mainly by fishing; hence they
+naturally have a large number of sacred stones which they use for the
+purpose of securing the blessing of the ancestral spirits on the
+business of the fisherman. Indeed each species of fish has its own
+special sacred stone. These stones are kept in large shells in a
+cemetery. A wizard who desires to make use of one of them paints the
+stone with a variety of colours, chews certain leaves, and then breathes
+on the stone and moistens it with his spittle. After that he sets up the
+stone before the ancestral skulls, saying, "Help us, that we may be
+successful in fishing." The sacrifices to the spirits consist of
+bananas, sugar-cane, and fish, never of taros or yams. After the fishing
+and the sacrificial meal, the stone is put back in its place, and
+covered up respectfully.[542]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to make yams grow.]
+
+Lastly, the natives of the Isle of Pines cultivate many different kinds
+of yams, and they have a correspondingly large number of sacred stones
+destined to aid them in the cultivation by ensuring the blessing of the
+dead upon the work. In shape and colour these stones differ from each
+other, each of them bearing a resemblance, real or fanciful, to the
+particular species of yam which it is supposed to quicken. But the
+method of operating with them is much the same for all. The stone is
+placed before the skulls, wetted with water, and wiped with certain
+leaves. Yams and fish, cooked on the spot, are offered in sacrifice to
+the dead, the priest or magician saying, "This is your offering in order
+that the crop of yams may be good." So saying he presents the food to
+the dead and himself eats a little of it. After that the stone is taken
+away and buried in the yam field which it is designed to fertilise.[543]
+Here, again, the prayer and sacrifice to the dead are purely religious
+rites intended to propitiate the spirits and secure their help; while
+the burying of the yam-shaped stone in the yam-field to make the yams
+grow is a simple piece of homoeopathic or imitative magic. Similarly in
+order to cultivate taros and bananas, stones resembling taros and
+bananas are buried in the taro field or the banana grove, and their
+magical virtue is reinforced by prayers and offerings to the dead.[544]
+
+[Sidenote: The religion of the New Caledonians is mainly a worship of
+the dead tinctured with magic.]
+
+On the whole we may conclude that among the natives of New Caledonia
+there exists a real worship of the dead, and that this worship is indeed
+the principal element in their religion. The spirits of the dead, though
+they are supposed to spend part of their time in a happy land far away
+under the sea, are nevertheless believed to be near at hand, hovering
+about in the burial-grounds or charnel-houses and embodied apparently in
+their skulls. To these spirits the native turns for help in all the
+important seasons and emergencies of life; he appeals to them in prayer
+and seeks to propitiate them by sacrifice. Thus in his attitude towards
+his dead ancestors we perceive the elements of a real religion. But, as
+I have just pointed out, many rites of this worship of ancestors are
+accompanied by magical ceremonies. The religion of these islanders is in
+fact deeply tinged with magic; it marks a transition from an age of pure
+magic in the past to an age of more or less pure religion in the future.
+
+[Sidenote: Evidence as to the religion of the New Caledonians furnished
+by Dr. G. Turner.]
+
+Thus far I have based my account of the beliefs and customs of the New
+Caledonians concerning the dead on the valuable information which we owe
+to the Catholic missionary Father Lambert. But, as I pointed out, his
+evidence refers not so much to the natives of the mainland as to the
+inhabitants of certain small islands at the two extremities of the great
+island. It may be well, therefore, to supplement his description by some
+notes which a distinguished Protestant missionary, the Rev. Dr. George
+Turner, obtained in the year 1845 from two native teachers, one a Samoan
+and the other a Rarotongan, who lived in the south-south-eastern part of
+New Caledonia for three years.[545] Their evidence, it will be observed,
+goes to confirm Father Lambert's view as to the general similarity of
+the religious beliefs and customs prevailing throughout the island.
+
+[Sidenote: Material culture of the New Caledonians.]
+
+The natives of this part of New Caledonia were divided into separate
+districts, each with its own name, and war, perpetual war, was the rule
+between the neighbouring communities. They cultivated taro, yams,
+coco-nuts, and sugar-cane; but they had no intoxicating _kava_ and kept
+no pigs. They cooked their food in earthenware pots manufactured by the
+women. In former days their only edge-tools were made of stone, and they
+felled trees by a slow fire smouldering close to the ground. Similarly
+they hollowed out the fallen trees by means of a slow fire to make their
+canoes. Their villages were not permanent. They migrated within certain
+bounds, as they planted. A village might comprise as many as fifty or
+sixty round houses. The chiefs had absolute power of life and death.
+Priests did not meddle in political affairs.[546]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs; preservation of the skulls and teeth.]
+
+At death they dressed the corpse with a belt and shell armlets, cut off
+the nails of the fingers and toes, and kept them as relics. They spread
+the grave with a mat, and buried all the body but the head. After ten
+days the friends twisted off the head, extracted the teeth to be kept as
+relics, and preserved the skull also. In cases of sickness and other
+calamities they presented offerings of food to the skulls of the dead.
+The teeth of the old women were taken to the yam plantations and were
+supposed to fertilise them; and their skulls were set up on poles in the
+plantations for the same purpose. When they buried a chief, they erected
+spears at his head, fastened a spear-thrower to his forefinger, and laid
+a club on the top of his grave,[547] no doubt for the convenience of the
+ghost.
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers to ancestors.]
+
+"Their gods," we are told, "were their ancestors, whose relics they kept
+up and idolised. At one place they had wooden idols before the chiefs'
+houses. The office of the priest was hereditary. Almost every family had
+its priest. To make sure of favours and prosperity they prayed not only
+to their own gods, but also, in a general way, to the gods of other
+lands. Fishing, planting, house-building, and everything of importance
+was preceded by prayers to their guardian spirits for success. This was
+especially the case before going to battle. They prayed to one for the
+eye, that they might see the spear as it flew towards them. To another
+for the ear, that they might hear the approach of the enemy. Thus, too,
+they prayed for the feet, that they might be swift in pursuing the
+enemy; for the heart, that they might be courageous; for the body, that
+they might not be speared; for the head, that it might not be clubbed;
+and for sleep, that it might be undisturbed by an attack of the enemy.
+Prayers over, arms ready, and equipped with their relic charms, they
+went off to battle."[548]
+
+[Sidenote: "Grand concert of spirits."]
+
+The spirits of the dead were believed to go away into the forest. Every
+fifth month they had a "spirit night" or "grand concert of spirits."
+Heaps of food were prepared for the occasion. The people assembled in
+the afternoon round a certain cave. At sundown they feasted, and then
+one stood up and addressed the spirits in the cave, saying, "You spirits
+within, may it please you to sing a song, that all the women and men out
+here may listen to your sweet voices." Thereupon a strange unearthly
+concert of voices burst on their ears from the cave, the nasal squeak of
+old men and women forming the dominant note. But the hearers outside
+listened with delight to the melody, praised the sweet voices of the
+singers, and then got up and danced to the music. The singing swelled
+louder and louder as the dance grew faster and more furious, till the
+concert closed in a nocturnal orgy of unbridled license, which, but for
+the absence of intoxicants, might compare with the worst of the ancient
+bacchanalia. The singers in the cave were the old men and women who had
+ensconced themselves in it secretly during the day; but the hoax was not
+suspected by the children and young people, who firmly believed that the
+spirits of the dead really assembled that night in the cavern and
+assisted at the sports and diversions of the living.[549]
+
+[Sidenote: Making rain by means of the bones of the dead.]
+
+The souls of the departed also kindly bore a hand in the making of rain.
+In order to secure their co-operation for this beneficent purpose the
+human rain-maker proceeded as follows. He blackened himself all over,
+exhumed a dead body, carried the bones to a cave, jointed them, and
+suspended the skeleton over some taro leaves. After that he poured water
+on the skeleton so that it ran down and fell on the leaves underneath.
+They imagined that the soul of the deceased took up the water, converted
+it into rain, and then caused it to descend in refreshing showers. But
+the rain-maker had to stay in the cavern fasting till his efforts were
+crowned with success, and when the ghost was tardy in executing his
+commission, the rain-maker sometimes died of hunger. As a rule, however,
+they chose the showery months of March and April for the operation of
+rain-making, so that the wizard ran little risk of perishing a martyr to
+the cause of science. When there was too much rain, and they wanted fine
+weather, the magician procured it by a similar process, except that
+instead of drenching the skeleton with water he lit a fire under it and
+burned it up,[550] which naturally induced or compelled the ghost to
+burn up the clouds and let the sun shine out.
+
+[Sidenote: Execution of maleficent sorcerers. Reincarnation of the dead
+in white people.]
+
+Another class of magicians were the maleficent sorcerers who caused
+people to fall ill and die by burning their personal rubbish. When one
+of these rascals was convicted of repeated offences of that sort, he was
+formally tried and condemned. The people assembled and a great festival
+was held. The condemned man was decked with a garland of red flowers;
+his arms and legs were covered with flowers and shells, and his face and
+body painted black. Thus arrayed he came dashing forward, rushed through
+the people, plunged from the rocks into the sea, and was seen no more.
+The natives also ascribed sickness to the arts of white men, whom they
+identified with the spirits of the dead; and assigned this belief as a
+reason for their wish to kill the strangers.[551]
+
+[Footnote 517: F. H. H. Guillemard, _Australasia_, II. _Malaysia and the
+Pacific Archipelagoes_ (London, 1894), p. 458.]
+
+[Footnote 518: J. Deniker, _The Races of Man_ (London, 1900), pp. 498
+_sq._ As to the mediums of exchange, particularly the shell-money, see
+R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp. 323 _sqq._; R.
+Parkinson, _Dreissig Jähre in der Südsee_ (Stuttgart, 1907), pp. 82
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 519: Le Père Lambert, _Moeurs et Superstitions des
+Néo-Calédoniens_ (Nouméa, 1900). This work originally appeared as a
+series of articles in the Catholic missionary journal _Les Missions
+Catholiques_.]
+
+[Footnote 520: Lambert, _Moeurs et Superstitions des Néo-Calédoniens_,
+pp. ii., iv. _sq._; 255.]
+
+[Footnote 521: George Turner, LL.D., _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before_ (London, 1884), pp. 340 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 522: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 13-16.]
+
+[Footnote 523: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 235-239.]
+
+[Footnote 524: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 238, 239 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 525: Above, pp. 136 _sq._, 235 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 526: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 24, 240.]
+
+[Footnote 527: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 274.]
+
+[Footnote 528: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 24, 26.]
+
+[Footnote 529: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 530: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 218.]
+
+[Footnote 531: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 224 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 532: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 275 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 533: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 276.]
+
+[Footnote 534: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 288 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 535: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 290, 292.]
+
+[Footnote 536: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 292 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 537: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 293 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 538: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 294.]
+
+[Footnote 539: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 296 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 540: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 297 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 541: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 298.]
+
+[Footnote 542: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 300.]
+
+[Footnote 543: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 301 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 544: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 217 _sq._, 300.]
+
+[Footnote 545: George Turner, LL.D., _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before_ (London, 1884), pp. 340 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 546: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 340, 341, 343, 344.]
+
+[Footnote 547: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 342 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 548: G. Turner, _op. cit._ p. 345.]
+
+[Footnote 549: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 346 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 550: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 345 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 551: G. Turner, _op. cit._ p. 342.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XVI
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF CENTRAL MELANESIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: The islands of Central Melanesia. Distinction between the
+religion of the Eastern and Western Islanders.]
+
+In our survey of savage beliefs and practices concerning the dead we now
+pass from New Caledonia, the most southerly island of Melanesia, to the
+groups of islands known as the New Hebrides, the Banks' Islands, the
+Torres Islands, the Santa Cruz Islands, and the Solomon Islands, which
+together constitute what we may call Central Melanesia. These groups of
+islands may themselves be distinguished into two archipelagoes, a
+western and an eastern, of which the Western comprises the Solomon
+Islands and the Eastern includes all the rest. Corresponding to this
+geographical distinction there is a religious distinction; for while the
+religion of the Western islanders (the Solomon Islanders) consists
+chiefly in a fear and worship of the ghosts of the dead, the religion of
+the Eastern islanders is characterised mainly by the fear and worship of
+spirits which are not supposed ever to have been incarnate in human
+bodies. Both groups of islanders, the Western and the Eastern, recognise
+indeed both classes of spirits, namely ghosts that once were men and
+spirits who never were men; but the religious bias of the one group is
+towards ghosts rather than towards pure spirits, and the religious bias
+of the other group is towards pure spirits rather than towards ghosts.
+It is not a little remarkable that the islanders whose bent is towards
+ghosts have carried the system of sacrifice and the arts of life to a
+higher level than the islanders whose bent is towards pure spirits; this
+applies particularly to the sacrificial system, which is much more
+developed in the west than in the east.[552] From this it would seem to
+follow that if a faith in ghosts is more costly than a faith in pure
+spirits, it is at the same time more favourable to the evolution of
+culture.
+
+[Sidenote: Dr. R. H. Codrington on the Melanesians.]
+
+For the whole of this region we are fortunate in possessing the evidence
+of the Rev. Dr. R. H. Codrington, one of the most sagacious, cautious,
+and accurate of observers, who laboured as a missionary among the
+natives for twenty-four years, from 1864 to 1887, and has given us a
+most valuable account of their customs and beliefs in his book _The
+Melanesians_, which must always remain an anthropological classic. In
+describing the worship of the dead as it is carried on among these
+islanders I shall draw chiefly on the copious evidence supplied by Dr.
+Codrington; and I shall avail myself of his admirable researches to
+enter into considerable details on the subject, since details recorded
+by an accurate observer are far more instructive than the vague
+generalities of superficial observers, which are too often all the
+information we possess as to the religion of savages.
+
+[Sidenote: Melanesian theory of the soul.]
+
+In the first place, all the Central Melanesians believe that man is
+composed of a body and a soul, that death is the final parting of the
+soul from the body, and that after death the soul continues to exist as
+a conscious and more or less active being.[553] Thus the creed of these
+savages on this profound subject agrees fundamentally with the creed of
+the average European; if my hearers were asked to state their beliefs as
+to the nature of life and death, I imagine that most of them would
+formulate them in substantially the same way. However, when the Central
+Melanesian savage attempts to define the nature of the vital principle
+or soul, which animates the body during life and survives it after
+death, he finds himself in a difficulty; and to continue the parallel I
+cannot help thinking that if my hearers in like manner were invited to
+explain their conception of the soul, they would similarly find
+themselves embarrassed for an answer. But an examination of the Central
+Melanesian theory of the soul would lead us too far from our immediate
+subject; we must be content to say that, "whatever word the Melanesian
+people use for soul, they mean something essentially belonging to each
+man's nature which carries life to his body with it, and is the seat of
+thought and intelligence, exercising therefore power which is not of the
+body and is invisible in its action."[554] However the soul may be
+defined, the Melanesians are universally of opinion that it survives the
+death of the body and goes away to some more or less distant region,
+where the spirits of all the dead congregate and continue for the most
+part to live for an indefinite time, though some of them, as we shall
+see presently, are supposed to die a second death and so to come to an
+end altogether. In Western Melanesia, that is, in the Solomon Islands,
+the abode of the dead is supposed to be in certain islands, which differ
+in the creed of different islanders; but in Eastern Melanesia the abode
+of the dead is thought to be a subterranean region called Panoi.[555]
+
+[Sidenote: Distinction between ghosts of power and ghosts of no
+account.]
+
+But though the souls of the departed go away to the spirit land,
+nevertheless, with a seeming or perhaps real inconsistency, their ghosts
+are also supposed to haunt their graves and their old homes and to
+exercise great power for good or evil over the living, who are
+accordingly often obliged to woo their favour by prayer and sacrifice.
+According to the Solomon Islanders, however, among whom ghosts are the
+principal objects of worship, there is a great distinction to be drawn
+among ghosts. "The distinction," says Dr. Codrington, "is between ghosts
+of power and ghosts of no account, between those whose help is sought
+and their wrath deprecated, and those from whom nothing is expected and
+to whom no observance is due. Among living men there are some who stand
+out distinguished for capacity in affairs, success in life, valour in
+fighting, and influence over others; and these are so, it is believed,
+because of the supernatural and mysterious powers which they have, and
+which are derived from communication with those ghosts of the dead gone
+before them who are full of those same powers. On the death of a
+distinguished man his ghost retains the powers that belonged to him in
+life, in greater activity and with stronger force; his ghost therefore
+is powerful and worshipful, and so long as he is remembered the aid of
+his powers is sought and worship is offered him; he is the _tindalo_ of
+Florida, the _lio'a_ of Saa. In every society, again, the multitude is
+composed of insignificant persons, '_numerus fruges consumeri nati_,' of
+no particular account for valour, skill, or prosperity. The ghosts of
+such persons continue their insignificance, and are nobodies after death
+as before; they are ghosts because all men have souls, and the souls of
+dead men are ghosts; they are dreaded because all ghosts are awful, but
+they get no worship and are soon only thought of as the crowd of the
+nameless population of the lower world."[556]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of the great and of the recently dead are chiefly
+regarded. Supernatural power (_mana_) acquired through ghosts.]
+
+From this account of Dr. Codrington we see that it is only the ghosts of
+great and powerful people who are worshipped; the ghosts of ordinary
+people are indeed feared, but no worship is paid to them. Further, we
+are told that it is the ghosts of those who have lately died that are
+deemed to be most powerful and are therefore most regarded; as the dead
+are forgotten, their ghosts cease to be worshipped, their power fades
+away,[557] and their place in the religion of the people is taken by the
+ghosts of the more recently departed. In fact here, as elsewhere, the
+existence of the dead seems to be dependent on the memory of the living;
+when they are forgotten they cease to exist. Further, it deserves to be
+noticed that in the Solomon Islands what we should call a man's natural
+powers and capacities are regarded as supernatural endowments acquired
+by communication with a mighty ghost. If a man is a great warrior, it is
+not because he is strong of arm, quick of eye, and brave of heart; it is
+because he is supported by the ghost of a dead warrior, whose power he
+has drawn to himself through an amulet of stone tied round his neck, or
+a tuft of leaves in his belt, or a tooth attached to one of his fingers,
+or a spell by the recitation of which he can enlist the aid of the
+ghost.[558] And similarly with all other pre-eminent capacities and
+virtues; in the mind of the Solomon Islanders, they are all supernatural
+gifts and graces bestowed on men by ghosts. This all-pervading
+supernatural power the Central Melanesian calls _mana_.[559] Thus for
+these savages the whole world teems with ghostly influences; their minds
+are filled, we may almost say, obsessed, with a sense of the unseen
+powers which encompass and determine even in its minute particulars the
+life of man on earth: in their view the visible world is, so to say,
+merely a puppet-show of which the strings are pulled and the puppets
+made to dance by hands invisible. Truly the attitude of these savages to
+the universe is deeply religious.
+
+We may now consider the theory and practice of the Central Melanesians
+on this subject somewhat more in detail; and in doing so we shall begin
+with their funeral customs, which throw much light on their views of
+death and the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in the Solomon Islands. Land burial and sea
+burial. Land-ghosts and sea-ghosts.]
+
+Thus, for example, in Florida, one of the Solomon Islands, the corpse is
+usually buried. Common men are buried in their gardens or plantations,
+chiefs sometimes in the village, a chief's child sometimes in the house.
+If the ghost of the deceased is worshipped, his grave becomes a
+sanctuary (_vunuhu_); the skull is often dug up and hung in the house.
+On the return from the burial the mourners take a different road from
+that by which they carried the corpse to the grave; this they do in
+order to throw the ghost off the scent and so prevent him from following
+them home. This practice clearly shews the fear which the natives feel
+for the ghosts of the newly dead. A man is buried with money, porpoise
+teeth, and some of his personal ornaments; but, avarice getting the
+better of superstition, these things are often secretly dug up again and
+appropriated by the living. Sometimes a dying man will express a wish to
+be cast into the sea; his friends will therefore paddle out with the
+corpse, tie stones to the feet, and sink it in the depths. In the island
+of Savo, another of the Solomon Islands, common men are generally thrown
+into the sea and only great men are buried.[560] The same distinction is
+made at Wango in San Cristoval, another of the same group of islands;
+there also the bodies of common folk are cast into the sea, but men of
+consequence are buried, and some relic of them, it may be a skull, a
+tooth, or a finger-bone, is preserved in a shrine at the village. From
+this difference in burial customs flows a not unimportant religious
+difference. The souls of the great people who are buried on land turn
+into land-ghosts, and the souls of commoners who are sunk in the sea
+turn into sea-ghosts. The land-ghosts are seen to hover about the
+villages, haunting their graves and their relics; they are also heard to
+speak in hollow whispers. Their aid can be obtained by such as know
+them. The sea-ghosts have taken a great hold on the imagination of the
+natives of the south-eastern Solomon Islands; and as these people love
+to illustrate their life by sculpture and painting, they shew us clearly
+what they suppose these sea-ghosts to be like. At Wango there used to be
+a canoe-house full of sculptures and paintings illustrative of native
+life; amongst others there was a series of scenes like those which are
+depicted on the walls of Egyptian tombs. One of the scenes represented a
+canoe attacked by sea-ghosts, which were portrayed as demons compounded
+partly of human limbs, partly of the bodies and tails of fishes, and
+armed with spears and arrows in the form of long-bodied garfish and
+flying-fish. If a man falls ill on returning from a voyage or from
+fishing on the rocks, it is thought that one of these sea-ghosts has
+shot him. Hence when men are in danger at sea, they seek to propitiate
+the ghosts by throwing areca-nuts and fragments of food into the water
+and by praying to the ghosts not to be angry with them. Sharks are also
+supposed to be animated by the ghosts of the dead.[561] It is
+interesting and instructive to find that in this part of the world
+sea-demons, who might be thought to be pure spirits of nature, are in
+fact ghosts of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Burnt offerings in honour of the dead.]
+
+In the island of Florida, two days after the death of a chief or of any
+person who was much esteemed, the relatives and friends assemble and
+hold a funeral feast, at which they throw a bit of food into the fire
+for the ghost, saying, "This is for you."[562] In other of the Solomon
+Islands morsels of food are similarly thrown on the fire at the
+death-feasts as the dead man's share.[563] Thus, in the Shortlands
+Islands, when a famous chief named Gorai died, his body was burnt and
+his relatives cast food, beads, and other property into the fire. The
+dead chief had been very fond of tea, so one of his daughters threw a
+cup of tea into the flames. Women danced a funeral dance round the pyre
+till the body was consumed.[564] Why should the dead man's food and
+property be burnt? No explanation of the practice is given by our
+authorities, so we are left to conjecture the reason of it. Is it that
+by volatilising the solid substance of the food you make it more
+accessible to the thin unsubstantial nature of the ghost? Is it that you
+destroy the property of the ghost lest he should come back in person to
+fetch it and so haunt and trouble the survivors? Is it that the spirits
+of the dead are supposed to reside in the fire on the hearth, so that
+offerings cast into the flames are transmitted to them directly? Whether
+it is with any such ideas that the Solomon Islanders throw food into the
+fire for ghosts, I cannot say. The whole question of the meaning of
+burnt sacrifice is still to a great extent obscure.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral customs in the island of Florida. The ghostly ferry.]
+
+At the funeral feast of a chief in the island of Florida the axes,
+spears, shield and other belongings of the deceased are hung up with
+great lamentations in his house; everything remains afterwards untouched
+and the house falls into ruins, which as time goes on are thickly
+mantled with the long tendrils of the sprouting yams. But we are told
+that the weapons are not intended to accompany the ghost to the land of
+souls; they are hung up only as a memorial of a great and valued man.
+"With the same feeling they cut down a dead man's fruit-trees as a mark
+of respect and affection, not with any notion of these things serving
+him in the world of ghosts; he ate of them, they say, when he was alive,
+he will never eat again, and no one else shall have them." However, they
+think that the ghost benefits by burial; for if a man is killed and his
+body remains unburied, his restless ghost will haunt the place.[565] The
+ghosts of such Florida people as have been duly buried depart to
+Betindalo, which seems to be situated in the south-eastern part of the
+great island of Guadalcanar. A ship waits to ferry them across the sea
+to the spirit-land. This is almost the only example of a ferry-boat used
+by ghosts in Melanesia. On their way to the ferry the ghosts may be
+heard twittering; and again on the shore, while they are waiting for the
+ferry-boat, a sound of their dancing breaks the stillness of night; but
+no man can see the dancers. It is not until they land on the further
+shore that they know they are dead. There they are met by a ghost, who
+thrusts a rod into their noses to see whether the cartilage is pierced
+as it should be; ghosts whose noses have been duly bored in life follow
+the onward path with ease, but all others have pain and difficulty in
+making their way to the realm of the shades. Yet though the souls of the
+dead thus depart to Betindalo, nevertheless their ghosts as usual not
+only haunt their burial-places, but come to the sacrifices offered to
+them and may be heard disporting themselves at night, playing on pipes,
+dancing, and shouting.[566]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Solomon Islanders that the souls of the dead
+live in islands. The second death.]
+
+Similarly at Bugotu in the island of Ysabel (one of the Solomon Islands)
+the ghosts of the dead are supposed to go away to an island, and yet to
+haunt their graves and shew themselves to the survivors by night. In the
+island of the dead there is a pool with a narrow tree-trunk lying across
+it. Here is stationed Bolafagina, the ghostly lord of the place. Every
+newly arrived ghost must appear before him, and he examines their hands
+to see whether they bear the mark of the sacred frigate-bird cut on
+them; if they have the mark, the ghosts pass across the tree-trunk and
+mingle with the departed spirits in the world of the dead. But ghosts
+who have not the mark on their hands are cast into the gulf and perish
+out of their ghostly life: this is the second death.[567] The same
+notion of a second death meets us in a somewhat different form among the
+natives of Saa in Malanta, another of the Solomon Islands. All the
+ghosts of these people swim across the sea to two little islands called
+Marapa, which lie off Marau in Guadalcanar. There the ghosts of children
+live in one island and the ghosts of grown-up people in another; for the
+older people would be plagued by the chatter of children if they all
+dwelt together in one island. Yet in other respects the life of the
+departed spirits in these islands is very like life on earth. There are
+houses, gardens, and canoes there just as here, but all is thin and
+unsubstantial. Living men who land in the islands see nothing of these
+things; there is a pool where they hear laughter and merry cries, and
+where the banks are wet with invisible bathers. But the life of the
+ghosts in these islands is not eternal. The spirits of common folk soon
+turn into the nests of white ants, which serve as food for the more
+robust ghosts. Hence a living man will say to his idle son, "When I die,
+I shall have ants' nests to eat, but then what will you have?" The
+ghosts of persons who were powerful on earth last much longer. So long
+as they are remembered and worshipped by the living, their natural
+strength remains unabated; but when men forget them, and turn to worship
+some of the more recent dead, then no more food is offered to them in
+sacrifice, so they pine away and change into white ants' nests just like
+common folk. This is the second death. However, while the ghosts survive
+they can return from the islands to Saa and revisit their village and
+friends. The living can even discern them in the form of dim and
+fleeting shadows. A man who wishes for any reason to see a ghost can
+always do so very simply by taking a pinch of lime from his betel-box
+and smearing it on his forehead. Then the ghost appears to him quite
+plainly.[568]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in Saa. Preservation of the skull and jawbone.
+Burial customs in Santa Cruz. Burial customs in Ysabel.]
+
+In Saa the dead are usually buried in a common cemetery; but when the
+flesh has decayed the bones are taken up and heaped on one side. But if
+the deceased was a very great man or a beloved father, his body is
+preserved for a time in his son's house, being hung up either in a canoe
+or in the carved effigy of a sword-fish. Very favourite children are
+treated in the same way. The corpse may be kept in this way for years.
+Finally, there is a great funeral feast, at which the remains are
+removed to the common burial-ground, but the skull and jawbone are
+detached from the skeleton and kept in the house enclosed in the hollow
+wooden figure of a bonito-fish. By means of these relics the survivors
+think that they can secure the aid of the powerful ghost. Sometimes the
+corpse and afterwards the skull and jawbone are preserved, not in the
+house of the deceased, but in the _oha_ or public canoe-house, which so
+far becomes a sort of shrine or temple of the dead.[569] At Santa Cruz
+in the Solomon Islands the corpse is buried in a very deep grave in the
+house. Inland they dig up the bones again to make arrow-heads; also they
+detach the skull and keep it in a chest in the house, saying that it is
+the man himself. They even set food before the skull, no doubt for the
+use of the ghost. Yet they imagine that the ghosts of the dead go to the
+great volcano Tamami, where they are burnt in the crater and thus being
+renewed stay in the fiery region. Nevertheless the souls of the dead
+also haunt the forests in Santa Cruz; on wet and dark nights the natives
+see them twinkling in the gloom like fire-flies, and at the sight they
+are sore afraid.[570] So little consistent with itself is the creed of
+these islanders touching the state of the dead. At Bugotu in the island
+of Ysabel (one of the Solomon Islands) a chief is buried with his head
+near the surface and a fire is kept burning over the grave, in order
+that the skull may be taken up and preserved in the house of his
+successor. The spirit of the dead chief has now become a worshipful
+ghost, and an expedition is sent out to cut off and bring back human
+heads in his honour. Any person, not belonging to the place, whom the
+head-hunters come across will be killed by them and his or her skull
+added to the collection, which is neatly arranged on the shore. These
+ghastly trophies are believed to add fresh spiritual power (_mana_) to
+the ghost of the dead chief. Till they have been procured, the people of
+the place take care not to move about. The grave of the chief is built
+up with stones and sacrifices are offered upon it.[571]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs of the Eastern islanders concerning the
+dead. Panoi, the subterranean abode of the dead.]
+
+Thus far we have been considering the beliefs and practices concerning
+the dead which prevail among the Western Melanesians of the Solomon
+Islands and Santa Cruz. We now turn to those of the Eastern Melanesians,
+who inhabit the Torres Islands, the Banks' Islands, and the New
+Hebrides. A broad distinction exists between the ghosts of these two
+regions in as much as the ghosts of the Western Melanesians all live in
+islands, but the ghosts of all Eastern Melanesians live underground in a
+subterranean region which commonly bears the name of Panoi. The exact
+position of Panoi has not been ascertained; all that is regarded as
+certain is that it is underground. However, there are many entrances to
+it and some of them are well known. One of them, for example, is a rock
+on the mountain at Mota, others are at volcanic vents which belch flames
+on the burning hill of Garat over the lake at Gaua, and another is on
+the great mountain of Vanua Lava. The ghosts congregate on points of
+land before their departure, as well as at the entrances to the
+underworld, and there on moonlight nights you may hear the ghostly crew
+dancing, singing, shouting, and whistling on the claws of land-crabs. It
+is not easy to extract from the natives a precise and consistent account
+of the place of the dead and the state of the spirits in it; nor indeed,
+as Dr. Codrington justly observes, would it be reasonable to expect full
+and precise details on a subject about which the sources of information
+are perhaps not above suspicion. However, as far as can be made out,
+Panoi or the abode of the dead is on the whole a happy region. In many
+respects it resembles the land of the living; for there are houses there
+and villages, and trees with red leaves, and day and night. Yet all is
+hollow and unreal. The ghosts do nothing but talk and sing and dance;
+there is no clubhouse there, and though men and women live together,
+there is no marrying or giving in marriage. All is very peaceful, too,
+in that land; for there is no war and no tyrant to oppress the people.
+Yet the ghost of a great man goes down like a great man among the
+ghosts, resplendent in all his trinkets and finery; but like everything
+else in the underworld these ornaments, for all the brave show they
+make, are mere unsubstantial shadows. The pigs which were killed at his
+funeral feast and the food that was heaped on his grave cannot go down
+with him into that far country; for none of these things, not even pigs,
+have souls. How then could they find their way to the spirit world? It
+is clearly impossible. The ghosts in the nether world do not mix
+indiscriminately. There are separate compartments for such as died
+violent deaths. There is one compartment for those who were shot, there
+is another for those who were clubbed, and there is another for those
+who were done to death by witchcraft. The ghosts of those who were shot
+keep rattling the reeds of the arrows which dealt them their fatal
+wounds. Ghosts in the nether world have no knowledge of things out of
+their sight and hearing; yet the living call upon them in time of need
+and trouble, as if they could hear and help. Life, too, in the kingdom
+of shadows is not eternal. The ghosts die the second death. Yet some say
+that there are two such kingdoms, each called Panoi, the one over the
+other; and that when the dead die the second death in the upper realm
+they rise again from the dead in the nether realm, where they never die
+but only turn into white ants' nests.[572]
+
+[Sidenote: Distinction between the fate of the good and the fate of the
+bad in the other world.]
+
+It is interesting and not unimportant to observe that some of these
+islanders make a distinction between the fate of good people and the
+fate of bad people after death. The natives of Motlav, one of the Banks'
+Islands, think that Panoi is a good place and that only the souls of the
+good can enter it. According to them the souls of murderers, sorcerers,
+thieves, liars, and adulterers are not suffered to enter the happy land.
+The ghost of a murderer, for example, is met at the entrance by the
+ghost of his victim, who withstands him and turns him back. All the bad
+ghosts go away to a bad place, where they live, not indeed in physical
+pain, but in misery: they quarrel, they are restless, homeless,
+pitiable, malignant: they wander back to earth: they eat the foulest
+food, their breath is noisome: they harm the living out of spite, they
+eat men's souls, they haunt graves and woods. But in the true Panoi the
+souls of the good live in peace and harmony.[573] Thus these people
+believe that the state of the soul after death depends on the kind of
+life a man led on earth; if he was good, he will be happy; if he was
+bad, he will be miserable. If this creed is of purely native origin, and
+Dr. Codrington seems to entertain no doubt that it is so, it marks a
+considerable ethical advance among those who accept it.
+
+[Sidenote: Descent of the living to the world of the dead.]
+
+The Eastern Melanesians think that living people can go down to the land
+of the dead and return alive to the upper world. Sometimes they do this
+in the body, but at other times only in the spirit, when they are asleep
+or in a faint; for at such times their souls quit their bodies and can
+wander away down to Panoi. When the living thus make their way to the
+spirit land, they are sometimes cautioned by friendly ghosts to eat
+nothing there, no doubt lest by partaking of ghostly food they should be
+turned to ghosts and never return to the land of the living.[574]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead among the Eastern islanders. Burial
+customs of the Banks' Islanders.]
+
+We will now consider the various modes in which the Eastern Melanesians
+dispose of their dead; for funeral customs commonly furnish some
+indication of the ideas which a people entertain as to the state of the
+soul after death. The Banks' Islanders generally buried their dead in
+the forest not far from the village; but if the deceased was a great man
+or died a remarkable death, they might inter him in the village near the
+men's clubhouse (_gamal_). A favourite son or child might be buried in
+the house itself; but in such cases the grave would be opened after
+fifty or a hundred days and the bones taken up and hidden in the forest,
+though some of them might be hung up in the house. However, in some
+places there was, and indeed still is, a custom of keeping the
+putrefying corpse unburied in the house as a mark of affection. At Gaua,
+in Santa Maria, the body was dried over slow fires for ten days or more,
+till nothing but skin and bones remained; and the women who watched over
+it during these days drank the juices of putrefaction which dripped from
+the decaying flesh. The same thing used formerly to be done in Mota,
+another of the Banks' Islands. The corpses of great men in these islands
+were adorned in all their finery and laid out on the open space in the
+middle of the village. Here bunches of coco-nuts, yams, and other food
+were heaped up beside the body; and an orator of fluent speech addressed
+the ghost telling him that when he had gone down to Panoi, the spirit
+land, and the ghosts asked him after his rank, he was to give them a
+list of all the things heaped beside his dead body; then the ghosts
+would know what a great man he was and would treat him with proper
+deference. The orator dealt very candidly with the moral character of
+the deceased. If he had been a bad man, the speaker would say, "Poor
+ghost, will you be able to enter Panoi? I think not." The food which is
+piled up beside the body while the orator is pronouncing the eulogium or
+the censure of the departed is afterwards heaped up on the grave or
+buried in it. At Gaua they kill pigs and hang up the carcases or parts
+of them at the grave. The object of all this display is to make a
+favourable impression on the ghosts in the spirit land, in order that
+they may give the newly deceased man a good reception. When the departed
+was an eminent warrior or sorcerer, his friends will sometimes give him
+a sham burial and hide his real grave, lest people should dig up his
+bones and his skull to make magic with them; for the relics of such a
+man are naturally endowed with great magical virtue.[575]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts driven away from the village. Expulsion of the ghosts
+of persons who suffered from sores and ulcers.]
+
+In these islands the ghost does not at once leave the neighbourhood of
+his old body; he shews no haste to depart to the nether world. Indeed he
+commonly loiters about the house and the grave for five or ten days,
+manifesting his presence by noises in the house and by lights upon the
+grave. By the fifth day his relations generally think that they have had
+quite enough of him, and that it is high time he should set out for his
+long home. Accordingly they drive him away with shouts and the blowing
+of conch-shells or the booming sound of bull-roarers.[576] At
+Ureparapara the mode of expelling the ghost from the village is as
+follows. Missiles to be hurled at the lingering spirit are collected in
+the shape of small stones and pieces of bamboo, which have been charmed
+by wizards so as to possess a ghost-expelling virtue. The artillery
+having been thus provided, the people muster at one end of the village,
+armed with bags of enchanted stones and pieces of enchanted bamboos. The
+signal to march is given by two men, who sit in the dead man's house,
+one on either side, holding two white stones in their hands, which they
+clink together. At the sound of the clinking the women begin to wail and
+the men to march; tramp, tramp they go like one man through the village
+from end to end, throwing stones into the houses and all about and
+beating the bamboos together. Thus they drive the reluctant ghost step
+by step from the village into the forest, where they leave him to find
+his own way down to the land of the dead. Till that time the widow of
+the deceased was bound to remain on his bed without quitting it for a
+moment except on necessity; and if she had to leave it for a few minutes
+she always left a coco-nut on the bed to represent her till she came
+back. The reason for this was that her husband's ghost was believed to
+be lingering in the house all these days, and he would naturally expect
+to see his wife in the nuptial chamber. At Motlav the people are not so
+hard upon the poor ghosts: they do not drive away all ghosts from their
+old homes, but only the ghosts of such as had in their lifetime the
+misfortune to be afflicted with grievous sores and ulcers. The expulsion
+of such ghosts may therefore be regarded as a sanitary precaution
+designed to prevent the spirits from spreading the disease. When a man
+who suffers severely from sores or ulcers lies dying, the people of his
+village, taking time by the forelock, send word to the inhabitants of
+the next village westwards, warning them to be in readiness to give the
+ghost a warm reception. For it is well known that at their departure
+from the body ghosts always go westward towards the setting sun. So when
+the poor man is dead, they bury his diseased body in the village and
+devote all their energies to the expulsion of his soul. By blowing
+blasts on shell-trumpets and beating the ground with the stalks of
+coco-nut fronds they chase the ghost clean away from their own village
+and on to the next. The inhabitants of that village meantime are ready
+to receive their unwelcome visitor, and beating their bounds in the most
+literal sense they soon drive him onwards to the land of their next
+neighbours. So the chase goes on from village to village, till the ghost
+has been finally hunted into the sea at the point of the shore which
+faces the setting sun. There at last the beaters throw away the stalks
+which have served to whack the ghost, and return home in the perfect
+assurance that he has left the island and gone to his own place down
+below, so that he cannot afflict anybody with the painful disease from
+which he suffered. But as for his ulcerated corpse rotting in the grave,
+they do not give a thought to it. Their concern is with the spiritual
+and the unseen; they do not stoop to regard the material and
+carnal.[577]
+
+[Sidenote: Special treatment of the ghosts of women who died in
+childbed.]
+
+A special treatment is accorded to the ghosts of women who died in
+childbed. If the mother dies and the child lives, her ghost will not go
+away to the nether world without taking the infant with her. Hence in
+order to deceive the ghost, they wrap a piece of a banana-trunk loosely
+in leaves and lay it on the bosom of the dead mother when they lower her
+into the grave. The ghost clasps the bundle to her breast, thinking it
+is her baby, and goes away contentedly to the spirit land. As she walks,
+the banana-stalk slips about in the leaves and she imagines it is the
+infant stirring; for she has not all her wits about her, ghosts being
+naturally in a dazed state at first on quitting their familiar bodies.
+But when she arrives in deadland and finds she has been deceived, and
+when perhaps some heartless ghosts even jeer at her wooden baby, back
+she comes tearing to earth in grief and rage to seek and carry off the
+real infant. However, the survivors know what to expect and have taken
+the precaution of removing the child to another house where the mother
+will never find it; but she keeps looking for it always, and a sad and
+angry ghost is she.[578]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral feasts.]
+
+After the funeral follows a series, sometimes a long series, of funeral
+feasts, which form indeed one of the principal institutions of these
+islands. The number of the feasts and the length of time during which
+they are repeated vary much in the different islands, and depend also on
+the consideration in which the deceased was held. The days on which the
+feasts are celebrated are the fifth and the tenth after the death, and
+afterwards every tenth day up to the hundredth or even it may be, in the
+case of a father, a mother, or a wife, up to the thousandth day. These
+feasts appear now to be chiefly commemorative, but they also benefit the
+dead; for the ghost is naturally gratified by seeing that his friends
+remember him and do their duty by him so handsomely. At these banquets
+food is put aside for the dead with the words "This is for thee." The
+practice of thus setting aside food for the ghost at a series of funeral
+feasts appears at first sight, as Dr. Codrington observes, inconsistent
+with the theory that the ghosts live underground.[579] But the objection
+thus suggested is rather specious than real; for we must always bear in
+mind that, to judge from the accounts given of them in all countries,
+ghosts experience no practical difficulty in obtaining temporary leave
+of absence from the other world and coming to this one, so to say, on
+furlough for the purpose of paying a surprise visit to their sorrowing
+friends and relations. The thing is so well known that it would be at
+once superfluous and tedious to illustrate it at length; many examples
+have incidentally met us in the course of these lectures.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral customs in Vaté or Efat. Old people buried alive.]
+
+The natives of Vaté or Efat, one of the New Hebrides, set up a great
+wailing at a death and scratched their faces till they streamed with
+blood. Bodies of the dead were buried. When a corpse was laid in the
+grave, a pig was brought to the place and its head was chopped off and
+thrown into the grave to be buried with the body. This, we are told,
+"was supposed to prevent disease spreading to other members of the
+family." Probably, in the opinion of the natives, the pig's head was a
+sop thrown to the ghost to keep him from coming and fetching away other
+people to deadland. With the same intention, we may take it, they buried
+with the dead the cups, pillows, and other things which he had used in
+his lifetime. On the top of the grave they kindled a fire to enable the
+soul of the deceased to rise to the sun. If that were not done, the soul
+went to the wretched regions of Pakasia down below. The old were buried
+alive at their own request. It was even deemed a disgrace to the family
+of an aged chief if they did not bury him alive. When an old man felt
+sick and weak and thought that he was dying, he would tell his friends
+to get all ready and bury him. They yielded to his wishes, dug a deep
+round pit, wound a number of fine mats round his body, and lowered him
+into the grave in a sitting posture. Live pigs were then brought to the
+brink of the grave, and each of them was tethered by a cord to one of
+the old man's arms. When the pigs had thus, as it were, been made over
+to him, the cords were cut, and the animals were led away to be killed,
+baked, and eaten at the funeral feast; but the souls of the pigs the old
+man took away with him to the spirit land, and the more of them he took
+the warmer and more gratifying was the reception he met with from the
+ghosts. Having thus ensured his eternal welfare by the pig strings which
+dangled at his arms, the old man was ready; more mats were laid over
+him, the earth was shovelled in, and his dying groans were drowned amid
+the weeping and wailing of his affectionate kinsfolk.[580]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs in Aurora, one of the New
+Hebrides. Behaviour of the soul at death.]
+
+At Maewo in Aurora, one of the New Hebrides, when a death has taken
+place, the body is buried in a grave near the village clubhouse. For a
+hundred days afterwards the female mourners may not go into the open and
+their faces may not be seen; they stay indoors and in the dark and cover
+themselves with a large mat reaching to the ground. But the widow goes
+every day, covered with her mat, to weep at the grave; this she does
+both in the morning and in the afternoon. During this time of mourning
+the next of kin may not eat certain succulent foods, such as yams,
+bananas, and caladium; they eat only the gigantic caladium, bread-fruit,
+coco-nuts, mallows, and so forth; "and all these they seek in the bush
+where they grow wild, not eating those which have been planted." They
+count five days after the death and then build up great heaps of stones
+over the grave. After that, if the deceased was a very great man, who
+owned many gardens and pigs, they count fifty days and then kill pigs,
+and cut off the point of the liver of each pig; and the brother of the
+deceased goes toward the forest and calls out the dead man's name,
+crying, "This is for you to eat." They think that if they do not kill
+pigs for the benefit of their departed friend, his ghost has no proper
+existence, but hangs miserably on tangled creepers. After the sacrifice
+they all cry again, smear their bodies and faces all over with ashes,
+and wear cords round their necks for a hundred days in token that they
+are not eating good food.[581] They imagine that as soon as the soul
+quits the body at death, it mounts into a tree where there is a bird's
+nest fern, and sitting there among the fronds it laughs and mocks at the
+people who are crying and making great lamentations over his deserted
+tabernacle. "There he sits, wondering at them and ridiculing them. 'What
+are they crying for?' he says; 'whom are they sorry for? Here am I.' For
+they think that the real thing is the soul, and that it has gone away
+from the body just as a man throws off his clothes and leaves them, and
+the clothes lie by themselves with nothing in them."[582] This estimate
+of the comparative value of soul and body is translated from the words
+of a New Hebridean native; it singularly resembles that which is
+sometimes held up to our admiration as one of the finest fruits of
+philosophy and religion. So narrow may be the line that divides the
+meditations of the savage and the sage.
+
+When a Maewo ghost has done chuckling at the folly of his surviving
+relatives, who sorrow as those who have no hope, he turns his back on
+his old home and runs along the line of hills till he comes to a place
+where there are two rocks with a deep ravine between them. He leaps the
+chasm, and if he lands on the further side, he is dead indeed; but if he
+falls short, he returns to life. At the land's end, where the mountains
+descend into the sea, all the ghosts of the dead are gathered to meet
+him. If in his lifetime he had slain any one by club or arrow, or done
+any man to death by magic, he must now run the gauntlet of the angry
+ghosts of his victims, who beat and tear him and stab him with daggers
+such as people stick pigs with; and as they do so, they taunt him,
+saying, "While you were still in the world you thought yourself a
+valiant man; but now we will take our revenge on you." At another point
+in the path there is a deep gully, where if a ghost falls he is
+inevitably dashed to pieces; and if he escapes this peril, there is a
+ferocious pig waiting for him further on, which devours the ghosts of
+all persons who in their life on earth omitted to plant pandanus trees,
+from which mats are made. But the wise man, who planted pandanus
+betimes, now reaps the fruit of his labours; for when the pig makes a
+rush at his departed spirit, the ghost nimbly swarms up the pandanus
+tree and so escapes his pursuer. That is why everybody in Maewo likes to
+plant pandanus trees. And if a man's ears were not pierced in his life,
+his ghost will not be allowed to drink water; if he was not tattooed,
+his ghost may not eat good food. A thoughtful father will provide for
+the comfort of his children in the other world by building a miniature
+house for each of them in his garden when the child is a year old; if
+the infant is a boy, he puts a bow, an arrow, and a club in the little
+house; if the child is a girl, he plants pandanus for her beside the
+tiny dwelling.[583]
+
+[Sidenote: Only ghosts of powerful men are worshipped.]
+
+So much for the fate of common ghosts in Central Melanesia. We have now
+to consider the position of the more powerful spirits, who after death
+are believed to exercise great influence over the living, especially
+over their surviving relations, and who have accordingly to be
+propitiated with prayer and sacrifice. This worship of the dead, as we
+saw, forms the principal feature in the religion of the Solomon
+Islanders. "But it must not be supposed," says Dr. Codrington, "that
+every ghost becomes an object of worship. A man in danger may call upon
+his father, his grandfather, or his uncle: his nearness of kin is
+sufficient ground for it. The ghost who is to be worshipped is the
+spirit of a man who in his lifetime had _mana_ [supernatural or magical
+power] in him; the souls of common men are the common herd of ghosts,
+nobodies alike before and after death. The supernatural power abiding in
+the powerful living man abides in his ghost after death, with increased
+vigour and more ease of movement. After his death, therefore, it is
+expected that he should begin to work, and some one will come forward
+and claim particular acquaintance with the ghost; if his power should
+shew itself, his position is assured as one worthy to be invoked, and to
+receive offerings, till his cultus gives way before the rising
+importance of one newly dead, and the sacred place where his shrine once
+stood and his relics were preserved is the only memorial of him that
+remains; if no proof of his activity appears, he sinks into oblivion at
+once."[584]
+
+[Sidenote: Worship paid chiefly to the recent and well-remembered dead.]
+
+From this instructive account we learn that worship is paid chiefly to
+the recent and well-remembered dead, to the men whom the worshippers
+knew personally and feared or respected in their lifetime. On the other
+hand, when men have been long dead, and all who knew them have also been
+gathered to their fathers, their memory fades away and with it their
+worship gradually falls into complete desuetude. Thus the spirits who
+receive the homage of these savages were real men of flesh and blood,
+not mythical beings conjured up by the fancy of their worshippers, which
+some legerdemain of the mind has foisted into the shrine and encircled
+with the halo of divinity. Not that the Melanesians do not also worship
+beings who, so far as we can see, are purely mythical, though their
+worshippers firmly believe in their reality. But "they themselves make a
+clear distinction between the existing, conscious, powerful disembodied
+spirits of the dead, and other spiritual beings that never have been men
+at all. It is true that the two orders of beings get confused in native
+language and thought, but their confusion begins at one end and the
+confusion of their visitors at another; they think so much and
+constantly of ghosts that they speak of beings who were never men as
+ghosts; Europeans take the spirits of the lately dead for gods; less
+educated Europeans call them roundly devils."[585]
+
+[Sidenote: Way in which a dead warrior came to be worshipped as a
+martial ghost.]
+
+As an example of the way in which the ghost of a real man who has just
+died may come to be worshipped Dr. Codrington tells us the story of
+Ganindo, which he had from Bishop Selwyn. This Ganindo was a great
+fighting man of Honggo in Florida, one of the Solomon Islands. He went
+with other warriors on a head-hunting expedition against Gaeta; but
+being mortally wounded with an arrow near the collar-bone he was brought
+back by his comrades to the hill of Bonipari, where he died and was
+buried. His friends cut off his head, put it in a basket, built a house
+for it, and said that he was a worshipful ghost (_tindalo_). Afterwards
+they said, "Let us go and take heads." So they embarked on their canoe
+and paddled away to seek the heads of enemies. When they came to quiet
+water, they stopped paddling and waited till they felt the canoe rock
+under them, and when they felt it they said, "That is a ghost." To find
+out what particular ghost it was they called out the names of several,
+and when they came to the name of Ganindo, the canoe rocked again. So
+they knew that it was he who was making the canoe to rock. In like
+manner they learned what village they were to attack. Returning
+victorious with the heads of the foe they threw a spear into the roof of
+Ganindo's house, blew conch-shells, and danced round it, crying, "Our
+ghost is strong to kill!" Then they sacrificed fish and other food to
+him. Also they built him a new house, and made four images of him for
+the four corners, one of Ganindo himself, two of his sisters, and
+another. When it was all ready, eight men translated the relics to the
+new shrine. One of them carried Ganindo's bones, another his betel-nuts,
+another his lime-box, another his shell-trumpet. They all went into the
+shrine crouching down, as if burdened by a heavy weight, and singing in
+chorus, "Hither, hither, let us lift the leg!" At that the eight legs
+went up together, and then they sang, "Hither, hither!" and at that the
+eight legs went down together. In this solemn procession the relics were
+brought and laid on a bamboo platform, and sacrifices to the new martial
+ghost were inaugurated. Other warlike ghosts revered in Florida are
+known not to have been natives of the island but famous warriors of the
+western isles, where supernatural power is believed to be stronger.[586]
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to the dead.]
+
+Throughout the islands of Central Melanesia prayers and offerings are
+everywhere made to ghosts or spirits or to both. The simplest and
+commonest sacrificial act is that of throwing a small portion of food to
+the dead; this is probably a universal practice in Melanesia. A morsel
+of food ready to be eaten, for example of yam, a leaf of mallow, or a
+bit of betel-nut, is thrown aside; and where they drink kava, a libation
+is made of a few drops, as the share of departed friends or as a
+memorial of them with which they will be pleased. At the same time the
+offerer may call out the name of some one who either died lately or is
+particularly remembered at the time; or without the special mention of
+individuals he may make the offering generally to the ghosts of former
+members of the community. To set food on a burial-place or before some
+memorial image is a common practice, though in some places, as in Santa
+Cruz, the offering is soon taken away and eaten by the living.[587]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrificial ritual in the Solomon Islands.]
+
+In the Solomon Islands the sacrificial ritual is more highly developed.
+It may be described in the words of a native of San Cristoval. "In my
+country," he wrote, "they think that ghosts are many, very many indeed,
+some very powerful, and some not. There is one who is principal in war;
+this one is truly mighty and strong. When our people wish to fight with
+any other place, the chief men of the village and the sacrificers and
+the old men, and the elder and younger men, assemble in the place sacred
+to this ghost; and his name is Harumae. When they are thus assembled to
+sacrifice, the chief sacrificer goes and takes a pig; and if it be not a
+barrow pig they would not sacrifice it to that ghost, he would reject it
+and not eat of it. The pig is killed (it is strangled), not by the chief
+sacrificer, but by those whom he chooses to assist, near the sacred
+place. Then they cut it up; they take great care of the blood lest it
+should fall upon the ground; they bring a bowl and set the pig in it,
+and when they cut it up the blood runs down into it. When the cutting up
+is finished, the chief sacrificer takes a bit of flesh from the pig, and
+he takes a cocoa-nut shell and dips up some of the blood. Then he takes
+the blood and the bit of flesh and enters into the house (the shrine),
+and calls that ghost and says, 'Harumae! Chief in war! we sacrifice to
+you with this pig, that you may help us to smite that place; and
+whatsoever we shall carry away shall be your property, and we also will
+be yours.' Then he burns the bit of flesh in a fire upon a stone, and
+pours down the blood upon the fire. Then the fire blazes greatly upwards
+to the roof, and the house is full of the smell of pig, a sign that the
+ghost has heard. But when the sacrificer went in he did not go boldly,
+but with awe; and this is the sign of it; as he goes into the holy house
+he puts away his bag, and washes his hands thoroughly, to shew that the
+ghost shall not reject him with disgust." The pig was afterwards eaten.
+It should be observed that this Harumae who received sacrifices as a
+martial ghost, mighty in war, had not been dead many years when the
+foregoing account of the mode of sacrificing to him was written. The
+elder men remembered him alive, nor was he a great warrior, but a kind
+and generous man, believed to be plentifully endowed with supernatural
+power. His shrine was a small house in the village, where relics of him
+were preserved.[588] Had the Melanesians been left to themselves, it
+seems possible that this Harumae might have developed into the war-god
+of San Cristoval, just as in Central Africa another man of flesh and
+blood is known to have developed into the war-god of Uganda.[589]
+
+[Footnote 552: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp.
+122, 123, 124, 180 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 553: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp.
+247, 253.]
+
+[Footnote 554: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 555: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 255 _sqq_., 264 _sqq_.]
+
+[Footnote 556: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ 253 _sq_.]
+
+[Footnote 557: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 254, 258, 261; compare
+_id._, pp. 125, 130.]
+
+[Footnote 558: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 120, 254.]
+
+[Footnote 559: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 118 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 560: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 254 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 561: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 258 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 562: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 255.]
+
+[Footnote 563: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 259.]
+
+[Footnote 564: G. Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), pp. 214, 217.]
+
+[Footnote 565: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 255.]
+
+[Footnote 566: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 255 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 567: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 256 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 568: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 260 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 569: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 261 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 570: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 263 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 571: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 257.]
+
+[Footnote 572: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 264, 273 _sq._,
+275-277.]
+
+[Footnote 573: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 274 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 574: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 266, 276, 277, 286.]
+
+[Footnote 575: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 267-270.]
+
+[Footnote 576: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 269.]
+
+[Footnote 577: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 270 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 578: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 275.]
+
+[Footnote 579: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 271 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 580: G. Turner, _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long before_
+(London, 1884), pp. 335 _sq._ This account is based on information
+furnished by Sualo, a Samoan teacher, who lived for a long time on the
+island. The statement that the fire kindled on the grave was intended
+"to enable the soul of the departed to rise to the sun" may be doubted;
+it may be a mere inference of Dr. Turner's Samoan informant. More
+probably the fire was intended to warm the shivering ghost. I do not
+remember any other evidence that the souls of the Melanesian dead ascend
+to the sun; certainly it is much more usual for them to descend into the
+earth.]
+
+[Footnote 581: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 281 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 582: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 278 _sq._]
+
+[Sidenote: Journey of the ghost to the other world.]
+
+[Footnote 583: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 279 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 584: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 124 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 585: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 121.]
+
+[Footnote 586: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 125 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 587: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 127, 128.]
+
+[Footnote 588: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 129 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 589: Rev. J. Roscoe, "Kibuka, the War God of the Baganda,"
+_Man_, vii. (1907) pp. 161-166; _id._, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp.
+301 _sqq._ The history of this African war-god is more or less mythical,
+but his personal relics, which are now deposited in the Ethnological
+Museum at Cambridge, suffice to prove his true humanity.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XVII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF CENTRAL MELANESIA
+(_concluded_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Public sacrifices to ghosts in the Solomon Islands.]
+
+At the close of last lecture I described the mode in which sacrifices
+are offered to a martial ghost in San Cristoval, one of the Solomon
+Islands. We saw that the flesh of a pig is burned in honour of the ghost
+and that the victim's blood is poured on the flames. Similarly in
+Florida, another of the Solomon Islands, food is conveyed to worshipful
+ghosts by being burned in the fire. Some ghosts are known by name to
+everybody, others may be known only to individuals, who have found out
+or been taught how to approach them, and who accordingly regard such
+ghosts as their private property. In every village a public ghost is
+worshipped, and the chief is the sacrificer. He has learned from his
+predecessor how to throw or heave the sacrifice, and he imparts this
+knowledge to his son or nephew, whom he intends to leave as his
+successor. The place of sacrifice is an enclosure with a little house or
+shrine in which the relics are kept; it is new or old according as the
+man whose ghost is worshipped died lately or long ago. When a public
+sacrifice is performed, the people assemble near but not in the sacred
+place; boys but not women may be present. The sacrificer alone enters
+the shrine, but he takes with him his son or other person whom he has
+instructed in the ritual. Muttering an incantation he kindles a fire of
+sticks, but may not blow on the holy flame. Then from a basket he takes
+some prepared food, such as a mash of yams, and throws it on the fire,
+calling out the name of the ghost and bidding him take his food, while
+at the same time he prays for whatever is desired. If the fire blazes up
+and consumes the food, it is a good sign; it proves that the ghost is
+present and that he is blowing up the flame. The remainder of the food
+the sacrificer takes back to the assembled people; some of it he eats
+himself and some of it he gives to his assistant to eat. The people
+receive their portions of the food at his hands and eat it or take it
+away. While the sacrificing is going on, there is a solemn silence. If a
+pig is killed, the portion burned in the sacrificial fire is the heart
+in Florida, but the gullet at Bugotu. One ghost who is commonly known
+and worshipped is called Manoga. When the sacrificer invokes this ghost,
+he heaves the sacrifice round about and calls him, first to the east,
+where rises the sun, saying, "If thou dwellest in the east, where rises
+the sun, Manoga! come hither and eat thy _tutu_ mash!" Then turning he
+lifts it towards where sets the sun, and says, "If thou dwellest in the
+west, where sets the sun, Manoga! come hither and eat thy _tutu_!" There
+is not a quarter to which he does not lift it up. And when he has
+finished lifting it he says, "If thou dwellest in heaven above, Manoga!
+come hither and eat thy _tutu_! If thou dwellest in the Pleiades or
+Orion's belt; if below in Turivatu; if in the distant sea; if on high in
+the sun, or in the moon; if thou dwellest inland or by the shore,
+Manoga! come hither and eat thy _tutu_!"[590]
+
+[Sidenote: First-fruits of the canarium nuts sacrificed to ghosts.]
+
+Twice a year there are general sacrifices in which the people of a
+village take part. One of these occasions is when the canarium nut, so
+much used in native cookery, is ripe. None of the nuts may be eaten till
+the first-fruits have been offered to the ghost. "Devil he eat first;
+all man he eat behind," is the lucid explanation which a native gave to
+an English enquirer. The knowledge of the way in which the first-fruits
+must be offered is handed down from generation to generation, and the
+man who is learned in this lore has authority to open the season. He
+observes the state of the crop, and early one morning he is heard to
+shout. He climbs a tree, picks some nuts, cracks them, eats, and puts
+some on the stones in his sacred place for the ghost. Then the rest of
+the people may gather the nuts for themselves. The chief himself
+sacrifices the new nuts, mixed with other food, to the public ghost on
+the stones of the village sanctuary; and every man who has a private
+ghost of his own does the same in his own sacred place. About two months
+afterwards there is another public sacrifice when the root crops
+generally have been dug; pig or fish is then offered; and a man who digs
+up his yams, or whatever it may be, offers his private sacrifice
+besides.[591]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifice of first-fruits to ancestral spirits in Tanna.]
+
+In like manner the natives of Tanna, one of the Southern New Hebrides,
+offered the first-fruits to the deified spirits of their ancestors. On
+this subject I will quote the evidence of the veteran missionary, the
+Rev. Dr. George Turner, who lived in Tanna for seven months in 1841. He
+says: "The general name for gods seemed to be _aremha_; that means a
+_dead man_, and hints alike at the origin and nature of their religious
+worship. The spirits of their departed ancestors were among their gods.
+Chiefs who reach an advanced age were after death deified, addressed by
+name, and prayed to on various occasions. They were supposed especially
+to preside over the growth of the yams and the different fruit trees.
+The first-fruits were presented to them, and in doing this they laid a
+little of the fruit on some stone, or shelving branch of the tree, or
+some more temporary altar of a few rough sticks from the bush, lashed
+together with strips of bark, in the form of a table, with its four feet
+stuck in the ground. All being quiet, the chief acted as high priest,
+and prayed aloud thus: 'Compassionate father! here is some food for you;
+eat it; be kind to us on account of it.' And, instead of an _amen_, all
+united in a shout. This took place about mid-day, and afterwards those
+who were assembled continued together feasting and dancing till midnight
+or three in the morning."[592]
+
+[Sidenote: Private ghosts. Fighting ghosts kept as auxiliaries.]
+
+In addition to the public ghosts, each of whom is revered by a whole
+village, many a man keeps, so to say, a private or tame ghost of his own
+on leash. The art of taming a ghost consists in knowing the leaves,
+bark, and vines in which he delights and in treating him accordingly.
+This knowledge a man may acquire by the exercise of his natural
+faculties or he may learn it from somebody else. However he may obtain
+the knowledge, he uses it for his own personal advantage, sacrificing to
+the ghost in order to win his favour and get something from him in
+return. The mode of sacrificing to a private ghost is the same as to a
+public ghost. The owner has a sacred place or private chapel of his own,
+where he draws near to the ghost in prayer and burns his bit of food in
+the fire. A man often keeps a fighting ghost (_keramo_), who helps him
+in battle or in slaying his private enemy. Before he goes out to commit
+homicide, he pulls up his ginger-plant and judges from the ease or
+difficulty with which the plant yields to or resists his tug, whether he
+will succeed in the enterprise or not. Then he sacrifices to the ghost,
+and having placed some ginger and leaves on his shield, and stuffed some
+more in his belt and right armlet, he sallies forth. He curses his enemy
+by his fighting ghost, saying, "Siria (if that should be the name of the
+ghost) eats thee, and I shall slay thee"; and if he kills him, he cries
+to the ghost, "Thine is this man, Siria, and do thou give me
+supernatural power!" No prudent Melanesian would attempt to commit
+manslaughter without a ghost as an accomplice; to do so would be to
+court disaster, for the slain man's ghost would have power over the
+slayer; therefore before he imbrues his hands in blood he deems it
+desirable to secure the assistance of a valiant ghost who can, if need
+be, overcome the ghost of his victim in single combat. If he cannot
+procure such a useful auxiliary in any other way, he must purchase him.
+Further, he fortifies himself with some personal relic, such as a tooth
+or lock of hair of the deceased warrior, whose ghost he has taken into
+his service; this relic he wears as an amulet in a little bag round the
+neck, when he is on active service; at other times it is kept in the
+house.[593]
+
+[Sidenote: Garden ghosts.]
+
+Different from these truculent spirits are the peaceful ghosts who cause
+the garden to bear fruit. If the gardener happens to know such a ghost,
+he can pray and sacrifice to him on his own account; but if he has no
+such friend in the spirit world, he must employ an expert. The man of
+skill goes into the midst of the garden with a little mashed food in his
+left hand, and smiting it with his right hand he calls on the ghost to
+come and eat. He says: "This produce thou shall eat; give supernatural
+power (_mana_) to this garden, that food may be good and plentiful." He
+digs holes at the four corners of the garden, and in them he buries such
+leaves as the ghost loves, so that the garden may have ghostly power and
+be fruitful. And when the yams sprout, he twines them with the
+particular creeper and fastens them with the particular wood to which
+the ghost is known to be partial. These agricultural ghosts are very
+sensitive; if a man enters the garden, who has just eaten pork or cuscus
+or fish or shell-fish, the ghost of the garden manifests his displeasure
+by causing the produce of the garden to droop; but if the eater lets
+three or four days go by after his meal, he may then enter the garden
+with impunity, for the food has left his stomach. For a similar reason,
+apparently, when the yam vines are being trained, the men sleep near the
+gardens and never approach their wives; for should they tread the garden
+after conjugal intercourse, the yams would be blighted.[594]
+
+[Sidenote: Human sacrifices to ghosts.]
+
+Sometimes the favour of a ghost is obtained by human sacrifices. On
+these occasions the flesh of the victim does not, like the flesh of a
+pig, furnish the materials of a sacrificial banquet; but little bits of
+it are eaten by young men to improve their fighting power and by elders
+for a special purpose. Such sacrifices are deemed more effectual than
+the sacrifices of less precious victims; and advantage was sometimes
+taken of a real or imputed crime to offer the criminal to some ghost.
+So, for example, within living memory Dikea, chief of Ravu, convicted a
+certain man of stealing tobacco, and sentenced him to be sacrificed; and
+the grown lads ate pieces of him cooked in the sacrificial fire. Again,
+the same chief offered another human sacrifice in the year 1886. One of
+his wives had proved false, and he sent her away vowing that she should
+not return till he had offered a human sacrifice to Hauri. Also his son
+died, and he vowed to kill a man for him. The vow was noised abroad, and
+everybody knew that he would pay well for somebody to kill. Now the Savo
+people had bought a captive boy in Guadalcanar, but it turned out a bad
+bargain, for the boy was lame and nearly blind. So they brought him to
+Dikea, and he gave them twenty coils of shell money for the lad. Then
+the chief laid his hand on the victim's breast and cried, "Hauri! here
+is a man for you," and his followers killed him with axes and clubs. The
+cripple's skull was added to the chief's collection, and his legs were
+sent about the country to make known what had been done. In Bugotu of
+Ysabel, when the people had slain an enemy in fight, they used to bring
+back his head in triumph, cut slices off it, and burn them in sacrifice.
+And if they took a prisoner alive, they would bring him to the sacred
+place, the grave of the man whose ghost was to be honoured. There they
+bound him hand and foot and buffeted him till he died, or if he did not
+die under the buffets they cut his throat. As they beat the man with
+their fists, they called on the ghost to take him, and when he was dead,
+they burned a bit of him in the fire for the ghost.[595]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices to ghosts in Saa.]
+
+At Saa in Malanta, one of the Solomon Islands, sacrifices are offered to
+ghosts on various occasions. Thus on his return from a voyage a man will
+put food in the case which contains the relics of his dead father; and
+in the course of his voyage, if he should land in a desert isle, he will
+throw food and call on father, grandfather, and other deceased friends.
+Again, when sickness is ascribed to the anger of a ghost, a man of skill
+is sent for to discover what particular ghost is doing the mischief.
+When he has ascertained the culprit, he is furnished by the patient's
+relatives with a little pig, which he is to sacrifice to the ghost as a
+substitute for the sick man. Provided with this vicarious victim he
+repairs to the haunt of the ghost, strangles the animal, and burns it
+whole in a fire along with grated yam, coco-nut, and fish. As he does
+so, he calls out the names of all the ghosts of his family, his
+ancestors, and all who are deceased, down even to children and women,
+and he names the man who furnished the pig for the ghostly repast. A
+portion of the mixed food he preserves unburnt, wraps it in a dracaena
+leaf, and puts it beside the case which contains the relics of the man
+to whose ghost the sacrifice has been offered. Sometimes, however,
+instead of burning a pig in the fire, which is an expensive and wasteful
+form of sacrifice, the relatives of the sick man content themselves with
+cooking a pig or a dog in the oven, cutting up the carcase, and laying
+out all the parts in order. Then the sacrificer comes and sits at the
+animal's head, and calls out the names of all the dead members of the
+ghost's family in order downwards, saying, "Help, deliver this man, cut
+short the line that has bound him." Then the pig is eaten by all present
+except the women; nothing is burnt.[596]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices of first-fruits to ghosts in Saa.]
+
+The last sort of sacrifices to ghosts at Saa which we need notice is the
+sacrifice of first-fruits. Thus, when the yams are ripe the people fetch
+some of them from each garden to offer to the ghosts. All the male
+members of the family assemble at the holy place which belongs to them.
+Then one of them enters the shrine, lays a yam beside the skull which
+lies there, and cries with a loud voice to the ghost, "This is yours to
+eat." The others call quietly on the names of all the ancestors and give
+their yams, which are very many in number, because one from each garden
+is given to each ghost. If any man has besides a relic of the dead, such
+as a skull, bones, or hair, in his house, he takes home a yam and sets
+it beside the relic. Again, the first flying-fish of the season are
+sacrificed to ghosts, who may take the form of sharks; for we shall see
+presently that Melanesian ghosts are sometimes supposed to inhabit the
+bodies of these ferocious monsters. Some ghost-sharks have sacred places
+ashore, where figures of sharks are set up. In that case the first
+flying-fish are cooked and set before the shark images. But it may be
+that a shark ghost has no sacred place on land, and then there is
+nothing for it but to take the flying-fish out to sea and shred them
+into the water, while the sacrificer calls out the name of the
+particular ghost whom he desires to summon to the feast.[597]
+
+[Sidenote: Vicarious sacrifices for the sick.]
+
+Vicarious sacrifices for the sick are offered in San Cristoval to a
+certain malignant ghost called Tapia, who is believed to seize a man's
+soul and tie it up to a banyan tree. When that has happened, a man who
+knows how to manage Tapia intercedes with him. He takes a pig or fish to
+the sacred place and offers it to the grim ghost, saying, "This is for
+you to eat in place of that man; eat this, don't kill him." With that he
+can loose the captive soul and take it back to the sick man, who
+thereupon recovers.[598]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices to ghosts in Santa Cruz. The dead represented by a
+stock.]
+
+In Santa Cruz the sacrifices offered to ghosts are very economical; for
+if the offering is of food, the living eat it up after a decent
+interval; if it is a valuable, they remove it and resume the use of it
+themselves. The principle of this spiritual economy probably lies in the
+common belief that ghosts, being immaterial, absorb the immaterial
+essence of the objects, leaving the material substance to be enjoyed by
+men. When a man of mark dies in Santa Cruz, his relations set up a stock
+of wood in his house to represent him. This is renewed from time to
+time, till after a while the man is forgotten or thrown into the shade
+by the attractions of some newer ghost, so that the old stock is
+neglected. But when the stock is first put up, a pig is killed and two
+strips of flesh from the back bone are set before the stock as food for
+the ghost, but only to be soon taken away and eaten by the living.
+Similar offerings may be repeated from time to time, as when the stock
+is renewed. Again, when a garden is planted, they spread feather-money
+and red native cloth round it for the use of the ghost; but his
+enjoyment of these riches is brief and precarious.[599]
+
+[Sidenote: Native account of sacrifices to ghosts in Santa Cruz.]
+
+To supplement the foregoing account of sacrifices to ghosts in Santa
+Cruz, I will add a description of some of them which was given by a
+native of Santa Cruz in his own language and translated for us by a
+missionary. It runs thus: "When anyone begins to fall sick he seeks a
+doctor (_meduka_), and when the doctor comes near the sick man he
+stiffens his body, and all those in the house think a ghost has entered
+into the doctor, and they are all very quiet. Some doctors tell the sick
+man's relatives to kill a pig for the ghost who has caused the sickness.
+When they have killed the pig they take it into the ghost-house and
+invite some other men, and they eat with prayers to the ghost; and the
+doctor takes a little piece and puts it near the base of the ghost-post,
+and says to it: 'This is thy food; oh, deliver up again the spirit of
+thy servant, that he may be well again.' The little portion they have
+offered to the ghost is then eaten; but small boys may not eat of
+it."[600] "Every year the people plant yams and tomagos; and when they
+begin to work and have made ready the place and begun to plant, first,
+they offer to the ghost who they think presides over foods. There is an
+offering place in the bush, and they go there and take much food, and
+also feather money. Men, women, and children do this, and they think the
+ghost notices if there are many children, and gives much food at
+harvest; and the ghost to whom they offer is named Ilene. When the
+bread-fruit begins to bear they take great care lest anyone should light
+a fire near the bole of the tree, or throw a stone at the tree. The
+ghost, who they think protects the bread-fruit, is called Duka-Kane or
+Kae Tuabia, who has two names; they think this ghost has four
+eyes."[601] "The heathen thinks a ghost makes the sun to shine and the
+rain. If it is continual sunshine and the yams are withering the people
+assemble together and contribute money, and string it to the man with
+whom the rain-ghost abides, and food also, and beseech him not to do the
+thing he was doing. That man will not wash his face for a long time, he
+will not work lest he perspire and his body be wet, for he thinks that
+if his body be wet it will rain. Then this man, with whom the rain-ghost
+is, takes water and goes into the ghost-house and sprinkles it at the
+head of the ghost-post (_duka_), and if there are many ghost-posts in
+the house he pours water over them all that it may rain."[602]
+
+[Sidenote: Combination of magic with religion.]
+
+In these ceremonies for the making of rain we see a combination of magic
+with religion. The appeal to the rain-ghost is religious; but the
+pouring of the water on the ghost-post is magical, being an imitation of
+the result which the officiating priest or magician, whichever we choose
+to call him, desires to produce. The taboos observed by the owner of the
+rain-ghost so long as he wishes to prevent the rain from falling are
+also based on the principle of homoeopathic or imitative magic: he
+abstains from washing his face or working, lest the water or the sweat
+trickling down his body should mimick rain and thereby cause it to
+fall.[603]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers to the dead.]
+
+The natives of Aneiteum, one of the Southern New Hebrides, worshipped
+the spirits of their ancestors, chiefly on occasions of sickness.[604]
+Again, the people of Vaté or Efat, another of the New Hebrides,
+worshipped the souls of their forefathers and prayed to them over the
+_kava_-bowl for health and prosperity.[605] As an example of prayers
+offered to the dead we may take the petition which the natives of
+Florida put up at sea to Daula, a well-known ghost, who is associated
+with the frigate-bird. They say: "Do thou draw the canoe, that it may
+reach the land; speed my canoe, grandfather, that I may quickly reach
+the shore whither I am bound. Do thou, Daula, lighten the canoe, that it
+may quickly gain the land and rise upon the shore." They also invoke
+Daula to help them in fishing. "If thou art powerful, O Daula," they
+say, "put a fish or two into this net and let them die there." After a
+good catch they praise him, saying, "Powerful is the ghost of the net."
+And when the natives of Florida are in danger on the sea, they call upon
+their immediate forefathers; one will call on his grandfather, another
+on his father, another on some dead friend, calling with reverence and
+saying, "Save us on the deep! Save us from the tempest! Bring us to the
+shore!" In San Cristoval people apply to ghosts for victory in battle,
+health in sickness, and good crops; but the word which they use to
+signify such an application conveys the notion of charm rather than of
+prayer. However, in the Banks' Islands what may be called prayer is
+strictly speaking an invocation of the dead; indeed the very word for
+prayer (_tataro_) seems to be identical with that for a powerful ghost
+(_'ataro_ in San Cristoval). A man in peril on the sea will call on his
+dead friends, especially on one who was in his lifetime a good sailor.
+And in Mota, when an oven is opened, they throw in a leaf of cooked
+mallow for a ghost, saying to him, "This is a lucky bit for your eating;
+they who have charmed your food or clubbed you (as the case may be),
+take hold of their hands, drag them away to hell, let them be dead." So
+when they pour water on the oven, they pray to the ghost, saying, "Pour
+it on the head of him down there who has laid plots against me, has
+clubbed me, has shot me, has stolen things of mine (as the case may be),
+he shall die." Again, when they make a libation before drinking, they
+pray, saying, "Grandfather! this is your lucky drop of kava; let boars
+come in to me; the money I have spent, let it come back to me; the food
+that is gone, let it come back hither to the house of you and me." And
+on starting for a voyage they will say, "Uncle! father! plenty of boars
+for you, plenty of money; kava for your drinking, lucky food for your
+eating in the canoe. I pray you with this, look down upon me, let me go
+on a safe sea." Or when the canoe labours with a heavy freight, they
+will pray, "Take off your burden from us, that we may speed on a safe
+sea."[606]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctuaries of ghosts in Florida.]
+
+In the island of Florida, the sanctuary of a powerful ghost is called a
+_vunuhu_. Sometimes it is in the village, sometimes in the
+garden-ground, sometimes in the forest. If it is in the village, it is
+fenced about, lest the foot of any rash intruder should infringe its
+sanctity. Sometimes the sanctuary is the place where the dead man is
+buried; sometimes it merely contains his relics, which have been
+translated thither. In some sanctuaries there is a shrine and in some an
+image. Generally, if not always, stones may be seen lying in such a holy
+place. The sight of one of them has probably struck the fancy of the man
+who founded the worship; he thought it a likely place for the ghost to
+haunt, and other smaller stones and shells have been subsequently added.
+Once a sanctuary has been established, everything within it becomes
+sacred (_tambu_) and belongs to the ghost. Were a tree growing within it
+to fall across the path, nobody would step over it. When a sacrifice is
+to be offered to the ghost on the holy ground, the man who knows the
+ghost, and whose duty it is to perform the sacrifice, enters first and
+all who attend him follow, treading in his footsteps. In going out no
+one will look back, lest his soul should stay behind. No one would pass
+such a sanctuary when the sun was so low as to cast his shadow into it;
+for if he did the ghost would seize his shadow and so drag the man
+himself into his den. If there were a shrine in the sanctuary, nobody
+but the sacrificer might enter it. Such a shrine contained the weapons
+and other properties which belonged in his lifetime to the man whose
+ghost was worshipped on the spot.[607]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctuaries of ghosts in Malanta.]
+
+At Saa in Malanta, another of the Solomon Islands, all burial-grounds
+where common people are interred are so far sacred that no one will go
+there without due cause; but places where the remains of nobles repose,
+and where sacrifices are offered to their ghosts, are regarded with very
+great respect, they may indeed be called family sanctuaries. Some of
+them are very old, the powerful ghosts who are worshipped in them being
+remote ancestors. It sometimes happens that the man who used to
+sacrifice in such a place dies without having instructed his son in the
+proper chant of invocation with which the worshipful ghost should be
+approached. In such a case the young man who succeeds him may fear to go
+to the old sanctuary, lest he should commit a mistake and offend the
+ghost; so he will take some ashes from the old sacrificial fire-place
+and found a new sanctuary. It is not common in that part of Malanta to
+build shrines for the relics of the dead, but it is sometimes done. Such
+shrines, on the other hand, are common in the villages of San Cristoval
+and in the sacred places of that island where great men lie buried. To
+trespass on them would be likely to rouse the anger of the ghosts, some
+of whom are known to be of a malignant disposition.[608]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctuaries which are not burial-grounds.]
+
+But burial-grounds are not the only sanctuaries in the Solomon Islands.
+There are some where no dead man is known to be interred, though in Dr.
+Codrington's opinion there are probably none which do not derive their
+sanctity from the presence of a ghost. In the island of Florida the
+appearance of something wonderful will cause any place to become a
+sanctuary, the wonder being accepted as proof of a ghostly presence. For
+example, in the forest near Olevuga a man planted some coco-nut and
+almond trees and died not long afterwards. Then there appeared among the
+trees a great rarity in the shape of a white cuscus. The people took it
+for granted that the animal was the dead man's ghost, and therefore they
+called it by his name. The place became a sanctuary; no one would gather
+the coco-nuts and almonds that grew there, till two Christian converts
+set the ghost at defiance and appropriated his garden, with the
+coco-nuts and almonds. Through the same part of the forest ran a stream
+full of eels, one of which was so big that the people were quite sure it
+must be a ghost; so nobody would bathe in that stream or drink from it,
+except at one pool, which for the sake of convenience was considered not
+to be sacred. Again, in Bugotu, a district of Ysabel, which is another
+of the Solomon Islands, there is a pool known to be the haunt of a very
+old ghost. When a man has an enemy whom he wishes to harm he will obtain
+some scraps of his food and throw them into the water. If the food is at
+once devoured by the fish, which swarm in the pool, the man will die,
+but otherwise his life may be saved by the intervention of a man who
+knows the habits of the ghost and how to propitiate him. In these sacred
+places there are stones, on which people place food in order to obtain
+good crops, while for success in fishing they deposit morsels of cooked
+fish. Such stones are treated with reverence and seem to be in a fair
+way to develop into altars. However, when the old ghost is superseded,
+as he often is, by younger rivals, the development of an altar out of
+the stones is arrested.[609]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts in animals, such as sharks, alligators, snakes,
+bonitos, and frigate-birds.]
+
+From some of these instances we learn that Melanesian ghosts can
+sometimes take up their abode in animals, such as cuscuses, eels, and
+fish. The creatures which are oftenest used as vehicles by the spirits
+of the dead are sharks, alligators, snakes, bonitos, and frigate-birds.
+Snakes which haunt a sacred place are themselves sacred, because they
+belong to or actually embody the ghost. Sharks, again, in all these
+islands are very often thought to be the abode of ghosts; for men before
+their death will announce that they will appear as sharks, and
+afterwards any shark remarkable for size or colour which haunts a
+certain shore or coast is taken to be somebody's ghost and receives the
+name of the deceased. At Saa certain food, such as coco-nuts from
+particular trees, is reserved to feed such a ghost-shark; and men of
+whom it is known for certain that they will be sharks after their death
+are allowed to anticipate the posthumous honours which await them by
+devouring such food in the sacred place, just as if they were real
+sharks. Sharks are very commonly believed to be the abode of ghosts in
+Florida and Ysabel, and in Savo, where they are particularly numerous;
+hence, though all sharks are not venerated, there is no living creature
+so commonly held sacred by the Central Melanesians as a shark; and
+shark-ghosts seem even to form a class of powerful supernatural beings.
+Again, when a lizard was seen frequenting a house after a death, it
+would be taken for the ghost returning to its old home; and many ghosts,
+powerful to aid the mariner at sea, take up their quarters in
+frigate-birds.[610]
+
+[Sidenote: The belief in ghosts underlies the Melanesian conception of
+magic.]
+
+Again, a belief in powerful ghosts underlies to a great extent the
+Melanesian conception of magic, as that conception is expounded by Dr.
+Codrington. "That invisible power," he tells us, "which is believed by
+the natives to cause all such effects as transcend their conception of
+the regular course of nature, and to reside in spiritual beings, whether
+in the spiritual part of living men or in the ghosts of the dead, being
+imparted by them to their names and to various things that belong to
+them, such as stones, snakes, and indeed objects of all sorts, is that
+generally known as _mana_. Without some understanding of this it is
+impossible to understand the religious beliefs and practices of the
+Melanesians; and this again is the active force in all they do and
+believe to be done in magic, white or black. By means of this men are
+able to control or direct the forces of nature, to make rain or
+sunshine, wind or calm, to cause sickness or remove it, to know what is
+far off in time and space, to bring good luck and prosperity, or to
+blast and curse. No man, however, has this power of his own; all that he
+does is done by the aid of personal beings, ghosts or spirits."[611]
+
+[Sidenote: Illness generally thought to be caused by ghosts.]
+
+Thus, to begin with the medical profession, which is a branch of magic
+long before it becomes a department of science, every serious sickness
+is believed to be brought about by ghosts or spirits, but generally it
+is to the ghosts of the dead that illness is ascribed both by the
+Eastern and by the Western islanders. Hence recourse is had to ghosts
+for aid both in causing and in curing sickness. They are thought to
+inflict disease, not only because some offence, such as trespass, has
+been committed against them, or because one who knows their ways has
+instigated them thereto by sacrifice and spells, but because there is a
+certain malignity in the feeling of all ghosts towards the living, who
+offend them simply by being alive. All human faculties, apart from the
+mere bodily functions, are supposed to be enhanced by death; hence the
+ghost of a powerful and ill-natured man is only too ready to take
+advantage of his increased powers for mischief.[612] Thus in the island
+of Florida illness is regularly laid at the door of a ghost; the only
+question that can arise is which particular ghost is doing the mischief.
+Sometimes the patient imagines that he has offended his dead father,
+uncle, or brother, who accordingly takes his revenge by stretching him
+on a bed of sickness. In that case no special intercessor is required;
+the patient himself or one of his kinsfolk will sacrifice and beg the
+ghost to take the sickness away; it is purely a family affair. Sometimes
+the sick man thinks that it is his own private or tame ghost who is
+afflicting him; so he will leave the house in order to escape his
+tormentor. But if the cause of sickness remains obscure, a professional
+doctor or medicine-man will be consulted. He always knows, or at least
+can ascertain, the ghost who is causing all the trouble, and he takes
+his measures accordingly. Thus he will bind on the sick man the kind of
+leaves that the ghost loves; he will chew ginger and blow it into the
+patient's ears and on that part of the skull which is soft in infants;
+he will call on the name of the ghost and entreat him to remove the
+sickness. Should all these remedies prove vain, the doctor is by no
+means at the end of his resources. He may shrewdly suspect that
+somebody, who has an ill-will at the patient, has set his private ghost
+to maul the sick man and do him a grievous bodily injury. If his
+suspicions are confirmed and he discovers the malicious man who is
+egging on the mischievous ghost, he will bribe him to call off his
+ghost; and if the man refuses, the doctor will hire another ghost to
+assault and batter the original assailant. At Wango in San Cristoval
+regular battles used to be fought by the invisible champions above the
+sickbed of the sufferer, whose life or death depended on the issue of
+the combat. Their weapons were spears, and sometimes more than one ghost
+would be engaged on either side.[613]
+
+[Sidenote: Diagnosis of ghosts who have caused illness.]
+
+In Ysabel the doctor employs an ingenious apparatus for discovering the
+cause of sickness and ascertaining its cure. He suspends a stone at one
+end of a string while he holds the other end in his hand. Then he
+recites the names of all the people who died lately, and when the stone
+swings at anybody's name, he knows that the ghost of that man has caused
+the illness. It remains to find out what the ghost will take to relax
+his clutch on the sick man, it may be a mash of yams, a fish, a pig, or
+perhaps a human substitute. The question is put and answered as before;
+and whatever the oracle declares to be requisite is offered on the dead
+man's grave. Thus the ghost is appeased and the sufferer is made
+whole.[614] In these islands a common cause of illness is believed to be
+an unwarrantable intrusion on premises occupied by a ghost, who punishes
+the trespasser by afflicting him with bodily pains and ailments, or it
+may be by carrying off his soul. At Maewo in Aurora, one of the New
+Hebrides, when there is reason to think that a sickness is due to
+ghostly agency, the friends of the sick man send for a professional
+dreamer, whose business it is to ascertain what particular ghost has
+been offended and to make it up with him. So the dreamer falls asleep
+and in his sleep he dreams a dream. He seems to himself to be in the
+place where the patient was working before his illness; and there he
+spies a queer little old man, who is really no other than the ghost. The
+dreamer falls into conversation with him, learns his name, and winning
+his confidence extracts from him a true account of the whole affair. The
+fact is that in working at his garden the man encroached, whether
+wittingly or not is no matter, on land which the ghost regards as his
+private preserve; and to punish the intrusion the ghost carried off the
+intruder's soul and impounded it in a magic fence in his garden, where
+it still languishes in durance vile. The dreamer at once tenders a frank
+and manly apology on behalf of his client; he assures the ghost that the
+trespass was purely inadvertent, that no personal disrespect whatever
+was intended, and he concludes by requesting the ghost to overlook the
+offence for this time and to release the imprisoned soul. This appeal to
+the better feelings of the ghost has its effect; he pulls up the fence
+and lets the soul out of the pound; it flies back to the sick man, who
+thereupon recovers. Sometimes an orphan child is made sick by its dead
+mother, whose ghost draws away the soul of the infant to keep her
+company in the spirit land. In such a case, again, a dreamer is employed
+to bring back the lost soul from the far country; and if he can persuade
+the mother's ghost to relinquish the tiny soul of her baby, the child
+will be made whole.[615] Once more certain long stones in the Banks'
+Islands are inhabited by ghosts so active and robust that if a man's
+shadow so much as falls on one of them, the ghost in the stone will
+clutch the shadow and pull the soul clean out of the man, who dies
+accordingly. Such stones, dangerous as they unquestionably are to the
+chance passer-by, nevertheless for that very reason possess a valuable
+property which can be turned to excellent account. A man, for example,
+will put one of these stones in his house to guard it like a watch-dog
+in his absence; and if he sends a friend to fetch something out of it
+which he has forgotten, the messenger, on approaching the house, will
+take good care to call out the owner's name, lest the ghost in the
+stone, mistaking him for a thief and a robber, should pounce out on him
+and do him a mischief before he had time to explain.[616]
+
+[Sidenote: Contrast between Melanesian and European medicine.]
+
+Thus it appears that for a medical practitioner in Melanesia the first
+requisite is an intimate acquaintance, not with the anatomy of the human
+frame and the properties of drugs, but with ghosts, their personal
+peculiarities, habits, and haunts. Only by means of the influence which
+such a knowledge enables him to exert on these powerful and dangerous
+beings can the good physician mitigate and assuage the sufferings of
+poor humanity. His professional skill, while it certainly aims at the
+alleviation of physical evils, attains its object chiefly, if not
+exclusively, by a direct appeal to those higher, though invisible,
+powers which encompass the life of man, or at all events of the
+Melanesian. The firm faith in the spiritual and the unseen which these
+sable doctors display in their treatment of the sick presents a striking
+contrast to the procedure of their European colleagues, who trust
+exclusively to the use of mere physical remedies, such as drugs and
+lancets, now carving the body of the sufferer with knives, and now
+inserting substances, about which they know little, into places about
+which they know nothing. Has not science falsely so called still much to
+learn from savagery?
+
+[Sidenote: The weather believed to be regulated by ghosts and spirits.
+Weather-doctors.]
+
+But it is not the departments of medicine and surgery alone, important
+as these are to human welfare, which in Melanesia are directed and
+controlled by spiritual forces. The weather in those regions is also
+regulated by ghosts and spirits. It is they who cause the wind to blow
+or to be still, the sun to shine forth or to be overcast with clouds,
+the rain to descend or the earth to be parched with drought; hence
+fertility and abundance or dearth and famine prevail alternately at the
+will of these spiritual directors. From this it follows that men who
+stand on a footing of intimacy with ghosts and spirits can by judicious
+management induce them to adapt the weather to the varying needs of
+mankind. But it is to be observed that the supernatural beings, who are
+the real sources of atmospheric phenomena, have delegated or deputed a
+portion of their powers not merely to certain material objects, such as
+stones or leaves, but to certain set forms of words, which men call
+incantations or spells; and accordingly all such objects and formulas
+do, by virtue of this delegation, possess in themselves a real and we
+may almost say natural influence over the weather, which is often
+manifested in a striking congruity or harmony between the things
+themselves and the effects which they are calculated to produce. This
+adaptation of means to end in nature may perhaps be regarded as a
+beautiful proof of the existence of spirits and ghosts working their
+purposes unseen behind the gaily coloured screen or curtain of the
+physical universe. At all events men who are acquainted with the ghostly
+properties of material objects and words can turn them to account for
+the benefit of their friends and the confusion of their foes, and they
+do so very readily if only it is made worth their while. Hence it comes
+about that in these islands there are everywhere weather-doctors or
+weather-mongers, who through their familiarity with ghosts and spirits
+and their acquaintance with the ghostly or spiritual properties of
+things, are able to control the weather and to supply their customers
+with wind or calm, rain or sunshine, famine or abundance, at a
+reasonable rate and a moderate figure.[617] The advantages of such a
+system over our own blundering method of managing the weather, or rather
+of leaving it to its own devices, are too obvious to be insisted on. To
+take a few examples. In the island of Florida, when a calm is wanted,
+the weather-doctor takes a bunch of leaves, of the sort which the ghost
+loves, and hides the bunch in the hollow of a tree where there is water,
+at the same time invoking the ghost with the proper charm. This
+naturally produces rain and with the rain a calm. In the seafaring life
+of the Solomon Islanders the maker of calms is a really valuable
+citizen.[618] The Santa Cruz people are also great voyagers, and their
+wizards control the weather on their expeditions, taking with them the
+stock or log which represents their private or tame ghost and setting it
+up on a stage in the cabin. The presence of the familiar ghost being
+thus secured, the weather-doctor will undertake to provide wind or calm
+according to circumstances.[619] We have already seen how in these
+islands the wizard makes rain by pouring water on the wooden posts which
+represent the rain-ghosts.[620]
+
+[Sidenote: Black magic working through personal refuse or rubbish of the
+victim.]
+
+Such exercises of ghostly power for the healing of the sick and the
+improvement of the weather are, when well directed and efficacious,
+wholly beneficial. But ghostly power is a two-edged weapon which can
+work evil as well as good to mankind. In fact it can serve the purpose
+of witchcraft. The commonest application of this pernicious art is one
+which is very familiar to witches and sorcerers in many parts of the
+world. The first thing the wizard does is to obtain a fragment of food,
+a bit of hair, a nail-clipping, or indeed anything that has been closely
+connected with the person of his intended victim. This is the medium
+through which the power of the ghost or spirit is brought to bear; it
+is, so to say, the point of support on which the magician rests the
+whole weight of his infernal engine. In order to give effect to the
+charm it is very desirable, if not absolutely necessary, to possess some
+personal relic, such as a bone, of the dead man whose ghost is to set
+the machinery in motion. At all events the essential thing is to bring
+together the man who is to be injured and the ghost or spirit who is to
+injure him; and this can be done most readily by placing the personal
+relics or refuse of the two men, the living and the dead, in contact
+with each other; for thus the magic circuit, if we may say so, is
+complete, and the fatal current flows from the dead to the living. That
+is why it is most dangerous to leave any personal refuse or rubbish
+lying about; you never can tell but that some sorcerer may get hold of
+it and work your ruin by means of it. Hence the people are naturally
+most careful to hide or destroy all such refuse in order to prevent it
+from falling into the hands of witches and wizards; and this sage
+precaution has led to habits of cleanliness which the superficial
+European is apt to mistake for what he calls enlightened sanitation, but
+which a deeper knowledge of native thought would reveal to him in their
+true character as far-seeing measures designed to defeat the nefarious
+art of the sorcerer.[621]
+
+[Sidenote: Black magic working without any personal relic of the victim.
+The ghost-shooter.]
+
+Unfortunately, however, an adept in the black art can work his fell
+purpose even without any personal relic of his victim. In the Banks'
+Islands, for example, he need only procure a bit of human bone or a
+fragment of some lethal weapon, it may be a splinter of a club or a chip
+of an arrow, which has killed somebody. This he wraps up in the proper
+leaves, recites over it the appropriate charm, and plants it secretly in
+the path along which his intended victim is expected to pass. The ghost
+of the man who owned the bone in his life or perished by the club or the
+arrow, is now lurking like a lion in the path; and if the poor fellow
+strolls along it thinking no evil, the ghost will spring at him and
+strike him with disease. The charm is perfectly efficient if the man
+does come along the path, but clearly it misses fire if he does not. To
+remedy this defect in the apparatus a sorcerer sometimes has recourse to
+a portable instrument, a sort of pocket pistol, which in the Banks'
+Islands is known as a ghost-shooter. It is a bamboo tube, loaded not
+with powder and shot, but with a dead man's bone and other magical
+ingredients, over which the necessary spell has been crooned. Armed with
+this deadly weapon the sorcerer has only to step up to his unsuspecting
+enemy, whip out the pocket pistol, uncork the muzzle by removing his
+thumb from the orifice, and present it at the victim; the fatal
+discharge follows in an instant and the man drops to the ground. The
+ghost in the pistol has done his work. Sometimes, however, an accident
+happens. The marksman misses his victim and hits somebody else. This
+occurred, for example, not very many years ago in the island of Mota. A
+man named Isvitag was waiting with his ghost-shooter to pop at his
+enemy, but in his nervous excitement he let fly too soon, just as a
+woman with a child on her hip stepped across the path. The shot, or
+rather the ghost, hit the child point-blank, and it was his sister's
+child, his own next of kin! You may imagine the distress of the
+affectionate uncle at this deplorable miscarriage. To prevent
+inflammation of the wound he, with great presence of mind, plunged his
+pocket pistol in water, and this timely remedy proved so efficacious
+that the child took no hurt.[622]
+
+[Sidenote: Prophecy inspired by ghosts.]
+
+Another department of Melanesian life in which ghosts figure very
+prominently is prophecy. The knowledge of future events is believed to
+be conveyed to the people by a ghost or spirit speaking with the voice
+of a man, who is himself unconscious while he speaks. The predictions
+which emanate from the prophet under these circumstances are in the
+strictest sense inspired. His human personality is for the time being in
+abeyance, and he is merely the mouthpiece of the powerful spirit which
+has temporarily taken possession of his body and speaks with his voice.
+The possession is indeed painfully manifest. His eyes glare, foam bursts
+from his mouth, his limbs writhe, his whole body is convulsed. These are
+the workings of the mighty spirit shaking and threatening to rend the
+frail tabernacle of flesh. This form of inspiration is not clearly
+distinguishable from what we call madness; indeed the natives do not
+attempt to distinguish between the two things; they regard the madman
+and the prophet as both alike inspired by a ghost or spirit, and a man
+will sometimes pretend to be mad in order that he may get the reputation
+of being a prophet. At Saa a man will speak with the voice of a powerful
+man deceased, while he twists and writhes under the influence of the
+ghost; he calls himself by the name of the deceased who speaks through
+him, and he is so addressed by others; he will eat fire, lift enormous
+weights, and foretells things to come. When the inspiration, or
+insanity, is particularly violent, and the Banks' Islanders think they
+have had quite enough of it, the friends of the prophet or of the madman
+will sometimes catch him and hold him struggling and roaring in the
+smoke of strong-smelling leaves, while they call out the names of the
+dead men whose ghosts are most likely to be abroad at the time, for as
+soon as the right name is mentioned the ghost departs from the man, who
+then returns to his sober senses. But this method of smoking out a ghost
+is not always successful.[623]
+
+[Sidenote: Divination by means of ghosts.]
+
+There are many methods by which ghosts and spirits are believed to make
+known to men who employ them the secret things which the unassisted
+human intelligence could not discover; and some of them hardly perhaps
+need the intervention of a professional wizard. These methods of
+divination differ very little in the various islands. In the Solomon
+Islands, for instance, when an expedition has started in a fleet of
+canoes, there is sometimes a hesitation whether they shall proceed, or a
+doubt as to what direction they should take. Thereupon a diviner may
+declare that he has felt a ghost step on board; for did not the canoe
+tip over to the one side? Accordingly he asks the invisible passenger,
+"Shall we go on? Shall we go to such and such a place?" If the canoe
+rocks, the answer is yes; if it lies on an even keel, the answer is no.
+Again, when a man is sick and his friends wish to know what ghost is
+vexing or, as they say, eating him, a diviner or wizard is sent for. He
+comes bringing an assistant, and the two sit down, the wizard in front
+and the assistant at his back, and they hold a stick or bamboo by the
+two ends. The wizard then begins to slap the end of the bamboo he holds,
+calling out one after another the names of men not very long deceased,
+and when he names the one who is afflicting the sick man the stick of
+itself becomes violently agitated.[624] We are not informed, but we may
+probably assume, that it is the ghost and not the man who really
+agitates the stick. A somewhat different mode of divination was
+occasionally employed at Motlav in the Banks' Islands in order to
+discover a thief or other criminal. After a burial they would take a
+bag, put some Tahitian chestnut and scraped banana into it, and tie it
+to the end of a hollow bamboo tube about ten feet long in such a way
+that the end of the tube was inserted in the mouth of the bag. Then the
+bag was laid on the dead man's grave, and the diviners grasped the other
+end of the bamboo. The names of the recently dead were then called over,
+and while this was being done the men felt the bamboo grow heavy in
+their hands, for a ghost was scrambling up from the bag into the hollow
+of the bamboo. Having thus secured him they carried the imprisoned ghost
+in the bamboo into the village, where the roll of the recent dead was
+again called over in order to learn whose ghost had been caught in the
+trap. When wrong names were mentioned, the free end of the bamboo moved
+from side to side, but at the mention of the right name it revolved
+briskly. Having thus ascertained whom they had to deal with, they
+questioned the entrapped ghost, "Who stole so and so? Who was guilty in
+such a case?" Thereupon the bamboo, moved no doubt by the ghost inside,
+pointed at the culprit, if he was present, or made signs as before when
+the names of the suspected evildoers were mentioned.[625]
+
+[Sidenote: Taboo based on a fear of ghosts.]
+
+Of the many departments of Central Melanesian life which are permeated
+by a belief in ghostly power the last which I shall mention is the
+institution of taboo. In Melanesia, indeed, the institution is not so
+conspicuous as it used to be in Polynesia; yet even there it has been a
+powerful instrument in the consolidation of the rights of private
+property, and as such it deserves the attention of historians who seek
+to trace the evolution of law and morality. As understood in the Banks'
+Islands and the New Hebrides the word taboo (_tambu_ or _tapu_)
+signifies a sacred and unapproachable character which is imposed on
+certain things by the arbitrary will of a chief or other powerful man.
+Somebody whose authority with the people gives him confidence to make
+the announcement will declare that such and such an object may not be
+touched, that such and such a place may not be approached, and that such
+and such an action may not be performed under a certain penalty, which
+in the last resort will be inflicted by ghostly or spiritual agency. The
+object, place, or action in question becomes accordingly taboo or
+sacred. Hence in these islands taboo may be defined as a prohibition
+with a curse expressed or implied. The sanction or power at the back of
+the taboo is not that of the man who imposes it; rather it is that of
+the ghost or spirit in whose name or in reliance upon whom the taboo is
+imposed. Thus in Florida a chief will forbid something to be done or
+touched under a penalty; he may proclaim, for example, that any one who
+violates his prohibition must pay him a hundred strings of shell money.
+To a European such a proclamation seems a proof of the chief's power;
+but to the native the chiefs power, in this and in everything, rests on
+the persuasion that the chief has his mighty ghost at his back. The
+sense of this in the particular case is indeed remote, the fear of the
+chiefs anger is present and effective, but the ultimate sanction is the
+power of the ghost. If a common man were to take upon himself to taboo
+anything he might do so; people would imagine that he would not dare to
+make such an announcement unless he knew he could enforce it; so they
+would watch, and if anybody violated the taboo and fell sick afterwards,
+they would conclude that the taboo was supported by a powerful ghost who
+punished infractions of it. Hence the reputation and authority of the
+man who imposed the taboo would rise accordingly; for it would be seen
+that he had a powerful ghost at his back. Every ghost has a particular
+kind of leaf for his badge; and in imposing his taboo a man will set the
+leaf of his private ghost as a mark to warn trespassers of the spiritual
+power with which they have to reckon; when people see a leaf stuck, it
+may be, on a tree, a house, or a canoe, they do not always know whose it
+is; but they do know that if they disregard the mark they have to deal
+with a ghost and not with a man,[626] and the knowledge is a more
+effectual check on thieving and other crimes than the dread of mere
+human justice. Many a rascal fears a ghost who does not fear the face of
+man.
+
+[Sidenote: The life of the Central Melanesians deeply influenced by
+their belief in the survival of the human soul after death.]
+
+What I have said may suffice to impress you with a sense of the deep
+practical influence which a belief in the survival of the human soul
+after death exercises on the life and conduct of the Central Melanesian
+savage. To him the belief is no mere abstract theological dogma or
+speculative tenet, the occasional theme of edifying homilies and pious
+meditation; it is an inbred, unquestioning, omnipresent conviction which
+affects his thoughts and actions daily and at every turn; it guides his
+fortunes as an individual and controls his behaviour as a member of a
+community, by inculcating a respect for the rights of others and
+enforcing a submission to the public authorities. With him the fear of
+ghosts and spirits is a bulwark of morality and a bond of society; for
+he firmly believes in their unseen presence everywhere and in the
+punishments which they can inflict on wrongdoers. His whole theory of
+causation differs fundamentally from ours and necessarily begets a
+fundamental difference of practice. Where we see natural forces and
+material substances, the Melanesian sees ghosts and spirits. A great
+gulf divides his conception of the world from ours; and it may be
+doubted whether education will ever enable him to pass the gulf and to
+think and act like us. The products of an evolution which has extended
+over many ages cannot be forced like mushrooms in a summer day; it is
+vain to pluck the fruit of the tree of knowledge before it is ripe.
+
+[Footnote 590: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 130-132.]
+
+[Footnote 591: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 132 _sq._; C. M.
+Woodford, _A Naturalist among the Head-hunters_ (London, 1890), pp.
+26-28.]
+
+[Footnote 592: G. Turner, LL.D., _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before_ (London, 1884), pp. 318 _sq._ Yams are the principal fruits
+cultivated by the Tannese, who bestow a great deal of labour on the
+plantation and keep them in fine order. See G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp.
+317 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 593: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 133 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 594: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 134.]
+
+[Footnote 595: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 135 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 596: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 137 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 597: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 138.]
+
+[Footnote 598: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 138 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 599: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 139.]
+
+[Footnote 600: "Native Stories of Santa Cruz and Reef Islands,"
+translated by the Rev. W. O'Ferrall, _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xxxiv. (1904) p. 223.]
+
+[Footnote 601: "Native Stories from Santa Cruz and Reef Islands," _op.
+cit._ p. 224.]
+
+[Footnote 602: "Native Stories from Santa Cruz and Reef Islands," _op.
+cit._ p. 225.]
+
+[Footnote 603: Compare _The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, i.
+269 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 604: G. Turner, _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long before_
+(London, 1884), p. 326.]
+
+[Footnote 605: G. Turner, _op. cit._ p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 606: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 145-148.]
+
+[Footnote 607: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 175 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 608: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 176 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 609: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 177 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 610: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 178-180.]
+
+[Footnote 611: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 612: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 194.]
+
+[Footnote 613: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 194-196.]
+
+[Footnote 614: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 196.]
+
+[Footnote 615: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 208 _sq._ As to
+sickness supposed to be caused by trespass on the premises of a ghost
+see further _id._, pp. 194, 195, 218.]
+
+[Footnote 616: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 184.]
+
+[Footnote 617: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 200.]
+
+[Footnote 618: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 200, 201. The
+spirit whom the Florida wizard appeals to for good or bad weather is
+called a _vigona_; and the natives believe it to be always the ghost of
+a dead man. But it seems very doubtful whether this opinion is strictly
+correct. See R. H. Codrington, _op cit._ pp. 124, 134.]
+
+[Footnote 619: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 201. The Santa Cruz name
+for such a ghost is _duka_ (_ibid._ p. 139).]
+
+[Footnote 620: Above, p. 375.]
+
+[Footnote 621: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 202-204.]
+
+[Footnote 622: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 205 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 623: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 209 _sq._,
+218-220.]
+
+[Footnote 624: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 210.]
+
+[Footnote 625: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 211 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 626: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 215 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XVIII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF NORTHERN AND EASTERN
+MELANESIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Northern Melanesia. Material culture of the North
+Melanesians.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded my account of the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead among the natives of Central Melanesia.
+To-day we pass to what may be called Northern Melanesia, by which is to
+be understood the great archipelago lying to the north-east of New
+Guinea. It comprises the two large islands of New Britain and New
+Ireland, now called New Pomerania and New Mecklenburg, with the much
+smaller Duke of York Island lying between them, and the chain of New
+Hanover and the Admiralty Islands stretching away westward from the
+north-western extremity of New Ireland. The whole of the archipelago,
+together with the adjoining island of Bougainville in the Solomon
+Islands, is now under German rule. The people belong to the same stock
+and speak the same language as the natives of Central and Southern
+Melanesia, and their level of culture is approximately the same. They
+live in settled villages and subsist chiefly by the cultivation of the
+ground, raising crops of taro, yams, bananas, sugar-cane, and so forth.
+Most of the agricultural labour is performed by the women, who plant,
+weed the ground, and carry the produce to the villages. The ground is,
+or rather used to be, dug by sharp-pointed sticks. The men hunt
+cassowaries, wallabies, and wild pigs, and they catch fish by both nets
+and traps. Women and children take part in the fishing and many of them
+become very expert in spearing fish. Among the few domestic animals
+which they keep are pigs, dogs, and fowls. The villages are generally
+situated in the midst of a dense forest; but on the coast the natives
+build their houses not far from the beach as a precaution against the
+attacks of the forest tribes, of whom they stand greatly in fear. A New
+Britain village generally consists of a number of small communities or
+families, each of which dwells in a separate enclosure. The houses are
+very small and badly built, oblong in shape and very low. Between the
+separate hamlets which together compose a village lie stretches of
+virgin forest, through which run irregular and often muddy foot-tracks,
+scooped out here and there into mud-holes where the pigs love to wallow
+during the heat of the tropical day. As the people of any one district
+used generally to be at war with their neighbours, it was necessary that
+they should live together for the sake of mutual protection.[627]
+
+[Sidenote: Commercial habits of the North Melanesians. Their
+backwardness in other respects.]
+
+Nevertheless, in spite of their limited intercourse with surrounding
+villages, the natives of the New Britain or the Bismarck Archipelago
+were essentially a trading people. They made extensive use of shell
+money and fully recognised the value of any imported articles as mediums
+of exchange or currency. Markets were held on certain days at fixed
+places, where the forest people brought their yams, taro, bananas and so
+forth and exchanged them for fish, tobacco, and other articles with the
+natives of the coast. They also went on long trading expeditions to
+procure canoes, cuscus teeth, pigs, slaves, and so forth, which on their
+return they generally sold at a considerable profit. The shell which
+they used as money is the _Nassa immersa_ or _Nassa calosa_, found on
+the north coast of New Britain. The shells were perforated and threaded
+on strips of cane, which were then joined together in coils of fifty to
+two hundred fathoms.[628] The rights of private property were fully
+recognised. All lands belonged to certain families, and husband and wife
+had each the exclusive right to his or her goods and chattels. But while
+in certain directions the people had made some progress, in others they
+remained very backward. Pottery and the metals were unknown; no metal or
+specimen of metal-work has been found in the archipelago; on the other
+hand the natives made much use of stone implements, especially adzes and
+clubs. In war they never used bows and arrows.[629] They had no system
+of government, unless that name may be given to the power wielded by the
+secret societies and by chiefs, who exercised a certain degree of
+influence principally by reason of the reputation which they enjoyed as
+sorcerers and magicians. They were not elected nor did they necessarily
+inherit their office; they simply claimed to possess magical powers, and
+if they succeeded in convincing the people of the justice of their
+claim, their authority was recognised. Wealth also contributed to
+establish their position in the esteem of the public.[630]
+
+[Sidenote: The Rev. George Brown on the Melanesians.]
+
+With regard to the religious ideas and customs of the natives we are not
+fully informed, but so far as these have been described they appear to
+agree closely with those of their kinsfolk in Central Melanesia. The
+first European to settle in the archipelago was the veteran missionary,
+the Rev. George Brown, D.D., who resided in the islands from 1875 to
+1880 and has revisited them on several occasions since; he reduced the
+language to writing for the first time,[631] and is one of our best
+authorities on the people. In what follows I shall make use of his
+valuable testimony along with that of more recent observers.
+
+[Sidenote: North Melanesian theory of the soul. Fear of ghosts,
+especially the ghosts of persons who have been killed and eaten.]
+
+The natives of the archipelago believe that every person is animated by
+a soul, which survives his death and may afterwards influence the
+survivors for good or evil. Their word for soul is _nio_ or _niono_,
+meaning a shadow. The root is _nio_, which by the addition of personal
+suffixes becomes _niong_ "my soul or shadow," _niom_ "your soul or
+shadow," _niono_ "his soul or shadow." They think that the soul is like
+the man himself, and that it always stays inside of his body, except
+when it goes out on a ramble during sleep or a faint. A man who is very
+sleepy may say, "My soul wants to go away." They believe, however, that
+it departs for ever at death; hence when a man is sick, his friends will
+offer prayers to prevent its departure. There is only one kind of soul,
+but it can appear in many shapes and enter into animals, such as rats,
+lizards, birds, and so on. It can hear, see, and speak, and present
+itself in the form of a wraith or apparition to people at the moment of
+or soon after death. On being asked why he thought that the soul does
+not perish with the body, a native said, "Because it is different; it is
+not of the same nature at all." They believe that the souls of the dead
+occasionally visit the living and are seen by them, and that they haunt
+houses and burial-places. They are very much afraid of the ghosts and do
+all they can to drive or frighten them away. Above all, being cannibals,
+they stand in great fear of the ghosts of the people whom they have
+killed and eaten. The man who is cutting up a human body takes care to
+tie a bandage over his mouth and nose during the operation of carving in
+order to prevent the enraged soul of the victim from entering into his
+body by these apertures; and for a similar reason the doors of the
+houses are shut while the cannibal feast is going on inside. And to keep
+the victim's ghost quiet while his body is being devoured, a cut from a
+joint is very considerately placed on a tree outside of the house, so
+that he may eat of his own flesh and be satisfied. At the conclusion of
+the banquet, the people shout, brandish spears, beat the bushes, blow
+horns, beat drums, and make all kinds of noises for the purpose of
+chasing the ghost or ghosts of the murdered and eaten men away from the
+village. But while they send away the souls, they keep the skulls and
+jawbones of the victims; as many as thirty-five jawbones have been seen
+hanging in a single house in New Ireland. As for the skulls, they are,
+or rather were placed on the branch of a dead tree and so preserved on
+the beach or near the house of the man who had taken them.[632]
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to the souls of the dead.]
+
+With regard to the death of their friends they deem it very important to
+obtain the bodies and bury them. They offer food to the souls of their
+departed kinsfolk for a long time after death, until all the funeral
+feasts are over; but they do not hold annual festivals in honour of dead
+ancestors. The food offered to the dead is laid every day on a small
+platform in a tree; but the natives draw a distinction between offerings
+to the soul of a man who died a natural death and offerings to the soul
+of a man who was killed in a fight; for whereas they place the former on
+a living tree, they deposit the latter on a dead tree. Moreover, they
+lay money, weapons, and property, often indeed the whole wealth of the
+family, near the corpse of their friend, in order that the soul of the
+deceased may carry off the souls of these valuables to the spirit land.
+But when the body is carried away to be buried, most of the property is
+removed by its owners for their own use. However, the relations will
+sometimes detach a few shells from the coils of shell money and a few
+beads from a necklace and drop them in a fire for the behoof of the
+ghost. But when the deceased was a chief or other person of importance,
+some of his property would be buried with him. And before burial his
+body would be propped up on a special chair in front of his house,
+adorned with necklaces, wreaths of flowers and feathers, and gaudy with
+war-paint. In one hand would be placed a large cooked yam, and in the
+other a spear, while a club would be put on his shoulder. The yam was to
+stay the pangs of hunger on his long journey, and the weapons were to
+enable him to fight the foes who might resist his entrance into the
+spirit land. In the Duke of York Island the corpse was usually disposed
+of by being sunk in a deep part of the lagoon; but sometimes it was
+buried in the house and a fire kept burning on the spot.[633]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in New Ireland and New Britain. Preservation
+of the skull.]
+
+In New Ireland the dead were rolled up in winding-sheets made of
+pandanus leaves, then weighted with stones and buried at sea. However,
+at some places they were deposited in deep underground watercourses or
+caverns. Towards the northern end of New Ireland corpses were burned on
+large piles of firewood in an open space of the village. A number of
+images curiously carved out of wood or chalk were set round the blazing
+pyre, but the meaning of these strange figures is uncertain. Men and
+women uttered the most piteous wailings, threw themselves on the top of
+the corpse, and pulled at the arms and legs. This they did not merely to
+express their grief, but because they thought that if they saw and
+handled the dead body while it was burning, the ghost could not or would
+not haunt them afterwards.[634] Amongst the natives of the Gazelle
+Peninsula in New Britain the dead are generally buried in shallow graves
+in or near their houses. Some of the shell money which belonged to a man
+in life is buried with him. Women with blackened bodies sleep on the
+grave for weeks.[635] When the deceased was a great chief, his corpse,
+almost covered with shell money, is placed in a canoe, which is
+deposited in a small house. Thereupon the nearest female relations are
+led into the house, and the door being walled up they are obliged to
+remain there with the rotting body until all the flesh has mouldered
+away. Food is passed in to them through a hole in the wall, and under no
+pretext are they allowed to leave the hut before the decomposition of
+the corpse is complete. When nothing of the late chief remains but a
+skeleton, the hut is opened and the solemn funeral takes place. The
+bones of the dead are buried, but his skull is hung up in the taboo
+house in order, we are told, that his ghost may remain in the
+neighbourhood of the village and see how his memory is honoured. After
+the burial of the headless skeleton feasting and dancing go on, often
+for more than a month, and the expenses are defrayed out of the riches
+left by the deceased.[636] Even in the case of eminent persons who have
+been buried whole and entire in the usual way, a special mark of respect
+is sometimes paid to their memory by digging up their skulls after a
+year or more, painting them red and white, decorating them with
+feathers, and setting them up on a scaffold constructed for the
+purpose.[637]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead among the Sulka of New Britain.]
+
+Somewhat similar is the disposal of the dead among the Sulka, a tribe of
+New Britain who inhabit a mountainous and well-watered country to the
+south of the Gazelle Peninsula. When a Sulka dies, his plantation is
+laid waste, and the young fruit-trees cut down, but the ripe fruits are
+first distributed among the living. His pigs are slaughtered and their
+flesh in like manner distributed, and his weapons are broken. If the
+deceased was a rich man, his wife or wives will sometimes be killed. The
+corpse is usually buried next morning. A hole is dug in the house and
+the body deposited in it in a sitting posture. The upper part of the
+corpse projects from the grave and is covered with a tower-like
+structure of basket-work, which is stuffed with banana-leaves. Great
+care is taken to preserve the body from touching the earth. Stones are
+laid round about the structure and a fire kindled. Relations come and
+sleep for a time beside the corpse, men and women separately. Some while
+afterwards the soul of the deceased is driven away. The time for
+carrying out the expulsion is settled by the people in whispers, lest
+the ghost should overhear them and prepare for a stout resistance. The
+evening before the ceremony takes place many coco-nut leaves are
+collected. Next morning, as soon as a certain bird (_Philemon
+coquerelli_) is heard to sing, the people rise from their beds and set
+up a great cry. Then they beat the walls, shake the posts, set fire to
+dry coco-nut leaves, and finally rush out into the paths. At that
+moment, so the people think, the soul of the dead quits the hut. When
+the flesh of the corpse is quite decayed, the bones are taken from the
+grave, sewed in leaves, and hung up. Soon afterwards a funeral feast is
+held, at which men and women dance. For some time after a burial taro is
+planted beside the house of death and enclosed with a fence. The Sulka
+think that the ghost comes and gathers the souls of the taro. The ripe
+fruit is allowed to rot. Falling stars are supposed to be the souls of
+the dead which have been hurled up aloft and are now descending to bathe
+in the sea. The trail of light behind them is thought to be a tail of
+coco-nut leaves which other souls have fastened to them and set on fire.
+In like manner the phosphorescent glow on the sea comes from souls
+disporting themselves in the water. Persons who at their death left few
+relations, or did evil in their life, or were murdered outside of the
+village, are not buried in the house. Their corpses are deposited on
+rocks or on scaffolds in the forest, or are interred on the spot where
+they met their death. The reason for this treatment of their corpses is
+not mentioned; but we may conjecture that their ghosts are regarded with
+contempt, dislike, or fear, and that the survivors seek to give them a
+wide berth by keeping their bodies at a distance from the village. The
+corpses of those who died suddenly are not buried but wrapt up in leaves
+and laid on a scaffold in the house, which is then shut up and deserted.
+This manner of disposing of them seems also to indicate a dread or
+distrust of their ghosts.[638]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead among the Moanus of the Admiralty
+Islands. Prayers offered to the skull of a dead chief.]
+
+Among the Moanus of the Admiralty Islands the dead are kept in the
+houses unburied until the flesh is completely decayed and nothing
+remains but the bones. Old women then wash the skeleton carefully in
+sea-water, after which it is disjointed and divided. The backbone,
+together with the bones of the legs and upper arms, is deposited in one
+basket and put away somewhere; the skull, together with the ribs and the
+bones of the lower arms, is deposited in another basket, which is sunk
+for a time in the sea. When the bones are completely cleaned and
+bleached in the water, they are laid with sweet-smelling herbs in a
+wooden vessel and placed in the house which the dead man inhabited
+during his life. But the teeth have been previously extracted from the
+skull and converted into a necklace for herself by the sister of the
+deceased. After a time the ribs are distributed by the son among the
+relatives. The principal widow gets two, other near kinsfolk get one
+apiece, and they wear these relics under their arm-bands. The
+distribution of the ribs is the occasion of a great festival, and it is
+followed some time afterwards by a still greater feast, for which
+extensive preparations are made long beforehand. All who intend to be
+present at the ceremony send vessels of coco-nut oil in advance; and if
+the deceased was a great chief the number of the oil vessels and of the
+guests may amount to two thousand. Meantime the giver of the feast
+causes a scaffold to be erected for the reception of the skull, and the
+whole art of the wood-carver is exhausted in decorating the scaffold
+with figures of turtles, birds, and so forth, while a wooden dog acts as
+sentinel at either end. When the multitude has assembled, and the
+orchestra of drums, collected from the whole neighbourhood, has sent
+forth a far-sounding crash of music, the giver of the feast steps
+forward and pronounces a florid eulogium on the deceased, a warm
+panegyric on the guests who have honoured him by their presence, and a
+fluent invective against his absent foes. Nor does he forget to throw in
+some delicate allusions to his own noble generosity in providing the
+assembled visitors with this magnificent entertainment. For this great
+effort of eloquence the orator has been primed in the morning by the
+sorcerer. The process of priming consists in kneeling on the orator's
+shoulders and tugging at the hair of his head with might and main, which
+is clearly calculated to promote the flow of his rhetoric. If none of
+the hair comes out in the sorcerer's hands, a masterpiece of oratory is
+confidently looked forward to in the afternoon. When the speech, for
+which such painful preparations have been made, is at last over, the
+drums again strike up. No sooner have their booming notes died away over
+land and sea, than the sorcerer steps up to the scaffold, takes from it
+the bleached skull, and holds it in both his hands. Then the giver of
+the feast goes up to him, dips a bunch of dracaena leaves in a vessel of
+oil, and smites the skull with it, saying, "Thou art my father!" At that
+the drums again beat loudly. Then he strikes the skull a second time
+with the leaves, saying, "Take the food that has been made ready in
+thine honour!" And again there is a crash of drums. After that he smites
+the skull yet again and prays saying, "Guard me! Guard my people! Guard
+my children!" And every prayer of the litany is followed by the solemn
+roll of the drums. When these impressive invocations to the spirit of
+the dead chief are over, the feasting begins. The skull is thenceforth
+carefully preserved.[639]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead in the Kaniet Islands. Preservation of
+the skull.]
+
+In the Kaniet Islands, a small group to the north-west of the Admiralty
+Islands, the dead are either sunk in the sea or buried in shallow
+graves, face downward, near the house. All the movable property of the
+deceased is piled on the grave, left there for three weeks, and then
+burnt. Afterwards the skull is dug up, placed in a basket, and having
+been decorated with leaves and feathers is hung up in the house. Thus
+adorned it not only serves to keep the dead in memory, but is also
+employed in many conjurations to defeat the nefarious designs of other
+ghosts, who are believed to work most of the ills that afflict
+humanity.[640] Apparently these islanders employ a ghost to protect them
+against ghosts on the principle of setting a thief to catch a thief.
+
+[Sidenote: Death attributed to witchcraft.]
+
+Amongst the natives of the Bismarck Archipelago few persons, if any, are
+believed to die from natural causes alone; if they are not killed in war
+they are commonly supposed to perish by witchcraft or sorcery, even when
+the cause of death might seem to the uninstructed European to be
+sufficiently obvious in such things as exposure to heavy rain, the
+carrying of too heavy a burden, or remaining too long a time under
+water. So when a man has died, his friends are anxious to discover who
+has bewitched him to death. In this enquiry the ghost is expected to
+lend his assistance. Thus on the night after the decease the friends
+will assemble outside the house, and a sorcerer will address the ghost
+and request him to name the author of his death. If the ghost, as
+sometimes happens, makes no reply, the sorcerer will jog his memory by
+calling out the name of some suspected person; and should the ghost
+still be silent, the wizard will name another and another, till at the
+mention of one name a tapping sound is heard like the drumming of
+fingers on a board or on a mat The sound may proceed from the house or
+from a pearl shell which the sorcerer holds in his hand; but come from
+where it may, it is taken as a certain proof that the man who has just
+been named did the deed, and he is dealt with accordingly. Many a poor
+wretch in New Britain has been killed and eaten on no other evidence
+than that of the fatal tapping.[641]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in the Duke of York Island. Preservation of
+the skull.]
+
+When a man of mark is buried in the Duke of York Island, the masters of
+sorcery take leaves, spit on them, and throw them, with a number of
+poisonous things, into the grave, uttering at the same time loud
+imprecations on the wicked enchanter who has killed their friend. Then
+they go and bathe, and returning they fall to cursing again; and if the
+miscreant survived the first imprecations, it is regarded as perfectly
+certain that he will fall a victim to the second. Sometimes, when the
+deceased was a chief distinguished for bravery and wisdom, his corpse
+would be exposed on a high platform in front of his house and left there
+to rot, while his relatives sat around and inhaled the stench,
+conceiving that with it they absorbed the courage and skill of the
+departed worthy. Some of them would even anoint their bodies with the
+drippings from the putrefying corpse for the same purpose. The women
+also made fires that the ghost might warm himself at them. When the head
+became detached from the trunk, it was carefully preserved by the next
+of kin, while the other remains were buried in a shallow grave in the
+house. All the female relatives blackened their dusky faces for a long
+time, after which the skull was put on a platform, a great feast was
+held, and dances were performed for many nights in its honour. Then at
+last the spirit of the dead man, which till that time was supposed to be
+lingering about his old abode, took his departure, and his friends
+troubled themselves about him no more.[642]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers to the spirits of the dead.]
+
+The souls of the dead are always regarded by these people as beings
+whose help can be invoked on special occasions, such as fighting or
+fishing or any other matter of importance; and since the spirits whom
+they invoke are always those of their own kindred they are presumed to
+be friendly to the petitioners. The objects for which formal prayers are
+addressed to the souls of ancestors appear to be always temporal
+benefits, such as victory over enemies and plenty of food; prayers for
+the promotion of moral virtue are seemingly unknown. For example, if a
+woman laboured hard in childbirth, she was thought to be bewitched, and
+prayers would be offered to the spirits of dead ancestors to counteract
+the spell. Again, young men are instructed by their elders in the useful
+art of cursing the enemies of the tribe; and among a rich variety of
+imprecations an old man will invoke the spirit of his brother, father,
+or uncle, or all of them, to put their fingers into the ears of the
+enemy that he may not hear, to cover his eyes that he may not see, and
+to stop his mouth that he may not cry for help, but may fall an easy
+prey to the curser and his friends.[643] More amiable and not less
+effectual are the prayers offered to the spirits of the dead over a sick
+man. At the mention of each name in the prayer the supplicants make a
+chirping or hissing sound, and rub lime over the patient. Before
+administering medicine they pray over it to the spirits of the dead;
+then the patient gulps it down, thus absorbing the virtue of the
+medicine and of the prayer in one. In New Britain they reinforce the
+prayers to the dead in time of need by wearing the jawbone of the
+deceased; and in the Duke of York Island people often wear a tooth or
+some hair of a departed relative, not merely as a mark of respect, but
+as a magical means of obtaining supernatural help.[644]
+
+[Sidenote: North Melanesian views as to the land of the dead.]
+
+Sooner or later the souls of all the North Melanesian dead take their
+departure for the spirit land. But the information which has reached the
+living as to that far country is at once vague and inconsistent. They
+call it _Matana nion_, but whereabout it lies they cannot for the most
+part precisely tell. All they know for certain is that it is far away,
+and that there is always some particular spot in the neighbourhood from
+which the souls take their departure; for example, the Duke of York
+ghosts invariably start from the little island of Nuruan, near Mioko.
+Wherever it may be, the land of souls is divided into compartments;
+people who have died of sickness or witchcraft go to one place, and
+people who have been killed in battle go to another. They do not go
+unattended; for when a man dies two friends sleep beside his corpse the
+first night, one on each side, and their spirits are believed to
+accompany the soul of the dead man to the spirit land. They say that on
+their arrival in the far country, betel-nut is presented to them all,
+but the two living men refuse to partake of it, because they know that
+were they to eat it they would return no more to the land of the living.
+When they do return, they have often, as might be expected, strange
+tales to tell of what they saw among the ghosts. The principal personage
+in the other world is called the "keeper of souls." It is said that once
+on a time the masterful ghost of a dead chief attempted to usurp the
+post of warden of the dead; in pursuance of this ambitious project he
+attacked the warden with a tomahawk and cut off one of his legs, but the
+amputated limb immediately reunited itself with the body; and a second
+amputation was followed by the same disappointing result. Life in the
+other world is reported to be very like life in this world. Some people
+find it very dismal, and others very beautiful. Those who were rich here
+will be rich there, and those who were poor on earth will be poor in
+Hades. As to any moral retribution which may overtake evil-doers in the
+life to come, their ideas are very vague; only they are sure that the
+ghosts of the niggardly will be punished by being dumped very hard
+against the buttress-roots of chestnut-trees. They say, too, that all
+breaches of etiquette or of the ordinary customs of the country will
+meet with certain appropriate punishments in the spirit land. When the
+soul has thus done penance, it takes possession of the body of some
+animal, for instance, the flying-fox. Hence a native is much alarmed if
+he should be sitting under a tree from which a flying-fox has been
+frightened away. Should anything drop from the bat or from the tree on
+which it was hanging, he would look on it as an omen of good or ill
+according to the nature of the thing which fell on or near him. If it
+were useless or dirty, he would certainly apprehend some serious
+misfortune. Sometimes when a man dies and his soul arrives in the spirit
+land, his friends do not want him there and drive him back to earth, so
+he comes to life again. That is the explanation which the natives give
+of what we call the recovery of consciousness after a faint or
+swoon.[645]
+
+[Sidenote: The land of the dead. State of the dead in the other world
+supposed to depend on the amount of money they left in this one.]
+
+Some of the natives of the Gazelle Peninsula in New Britain imagine that
+the home of departed spirits is in Nakanei, the part of the coast to
+which they sail to get their shell money. Others suppose that it is in
+the islands off Cape Takes. So when they are sailing past these islands
+they dip the paddles softly in the water, and observe a death-like
+stillness, cowering down in the canoes, lest the ghosts should spy them
+and do them a mischief. At the entrance to these happy isles is posted a
+stern watchman to see that no improper person sneaks into them. To every
+ghost that arrives he puts three questions, "Who are you? Where do you
+come from? How much shell money did you leave behind you?" On his
+answers to these three questions hangs the fate of the ghost. If he left
+much money, he is free to enter the realm of bliss, where he will pass
+the time with other happy souls smoking and eating and enjoying other
+sensual delights. But if he left little or no money, he is banished the
+earthly paradise and sent home to roam like a wild beast in the forest,
+battening on leaves and filth. With bitter sighs and groans he prowls
+about the villages at night and seeks to avenge himself by scaring or
+plaguing the survivors. To stay his hunger and appease his wrath
+relatives or friends will sometimes set forth food for him to devour.
+Yet even for such an impecunious soul there is hope; for if somebody
+only takes pity on him and gives a feast in his honour and distributes
+shell money to the guests, the ghost may return to the islands of the
+blest, and the door will be thrown open to him.[646]
+
+[Sidenote: Fiji and the Fijians.]
+
+So much for the belief in immortality as it is reported to exist among
+the Northern Melanesians of New Britain and the Bismarck Archipelago. We
+now pass to the consideration of a similar belief among another people
+of the same stock, who have been longer known to Europe, the Fijians.
+The archipelago which they occupy lies to the east of the New Hebrides
+and forms in fact the most easterly outpost of the black Melanesian race
+in the Pacific. Beyond it to the eastward are situated the smaller
+archipelagoes of Samoa and Tonga, inhabited by branches of the brown
+Polynesian race, whose members are scattered over the islands of the
+Pacific Ocean from Hawaii in the north to New Zealand in the south. Of
+all the branches of the Melanesian stock the Fijians at the date of
+their discovery by Europeans appear to have made the greatest advance in
+culture, material, social, and political. "The Fijian," says one who
+knew him long and intimately, "takes no mean place among savages in the
+social scale. Long before the white man visited his shores he had made
+very considerable progress towards civilisation. His intersexual code
+had advanced to the 'patriarchal stage': he was a skilful and diligent
+husbandman, who carried out extensive and laborious agricultural
+operations: he built good houses, whose interior he ornamented with no
+little taste, carved his weapons in graceful and intricate forms,
+manufactured excellent pottery, beat out from the inner bark of a tree a
+serviceable papyrus-cloth, upon which he printed, from blocks either
+carved or ingeniously pieced together, elegant and elaborate patterns in
+fast colours; and, with tools no better than a stone hatchet, a pointed
+shell, and a firestick, he constructed large canoes capable of carrying
+more than a hundred warriors across the open sea."[647]
+
+[Sidenote: Political superiority of the Fijians over the other
+Melanesians.]
+
+Politically the Fijians shewed their superiority to all the other
+Melanesians in the advance they had made towards a regular and organised
+government. While among the other branches of the same race government
+can hardly be said to exist, the power of chiefs being both slender and
+precarious, in Fiji the highest chiefs exercised despotic sway and
+received from Europeans the title of kings. The people had no voice in
+the state; the will of the king was generally law, and his person was
+sacred. Whatever he touched or wore became thereby holy and had to be
+made over to him; nobody else could afterwards touch it without danger
+of being struck dead on the spot as if by an electric shock. One king
+took advantage of this superstition by dressing up an English sailor in
+his royal robes and sending him about to throw his sweeping train over
+any article of food, whether dead or alive, which he might chance to
+come near. The things so touched were at once conveyed to the king
+without a word of explanation being required or a single remonstrance
+uttered. Some of the kings laid claim to a divine origin and on the
+strength of the claim exacted and received from their subjects the
+respect due to deities. In these exorbitant pretensions they were
+greatly strengthened by the institution of taboo, which lent the
+sanction of religion to every exertion of arbitrary power.[648]
+Corresponding with the growth of monarchy was the well-marked gradation
+of social ranks which prevailed in the various tribes from the king
+downwards through chiefs, warriors, and landholders, to slaves. The
+resulting political constitution has been compared to the old feudal
+system of Europe.[649]
+
+[Sidenote: Means of subsistence of the Fijians. Ferocity and depravity
+of the Fijians.]
+
+Like the other peoples of the Melanesian stock the Fijians subsist
+chiefly by agriculture, raising many sorts of esculent fruits and roots,
+particularly yams, taro, plantains, bread-fruit, sweet potatoes,
+bananas, coco-nuts, ivi nuts, and sugar-cane; but the chief proportion
+of their food is derived from yams (_Dioscorea_), of which they
+cultivate five or six varieties.[650] It has been observed that "the
+increase of cultivated plants is regular on receding from the Hawaiian
+group up to Fiji, where roots and fruits are found that are unknown on
+the more eastern islands."[651] Yet the Fijians in their native state,
+like all other Melanesian and Polynesian peoples, were entirely ignorant
+of the cereals; and in the opinion of a competent observer the
+consequent defect in their diet has contributed to the serious defects
+in their national character. The cereals, he tells us, are the staple
+food of all races that have left their mark in history; and on the other
+hand "the apathy and indolence of the Fijians arise from their climate,
+their diet and their communal institutions. The climate is too kind to
+stimulate them to exertion, their food imparts no staying power. The
+soil gives the means of existence for every man without effort, and the
+communal institutions destroy the instinct of accumulation."[652] Nor
+are apathy and indolence the only or the worst features in the character
+of these comparatively advanced savages. Their ferocity, cruelty, and
+moral depravity are depicted in dark colours by those who had the best
+opportunity of knowing them in the old days before their savagery was
+mitigated by contact with a milder religious faith and a higher
+civilisation. "In contemplating the character of this extraordinary
+portion of mankind," says one observer, "the mind is struck with wonder
+and awe at the mixture of a complicated and carefully conducted
+political system, highly finished manners, and ceremonious politeness,
+with a ferocity and practice of savage vices which is probably
+unparalleled in any other part of the world."[653] One of the first
+civilised men to gain an intimate acquaintance with the Fijians draws a
+melancholy contrast between the baseness and vileness of the people and
+the loveliness of the land in which they live.[654]
+
+[Sidenote: Scenery of the Fijian islands.]
+
+For the Fijian islands are exceedingly beautiful. They are of volcanic
+origin, mostly high and mountainous, but intersected by picturesque
+valleys, clothed with woods, and festooned with the most luxuriant
+tropical vegetation. "Among their attractions," we are told, "are high
+mountains, abrupt precipices, conical hills, fantastic turrets and crags
+of rock frowning down like olden battlements, vast domes, peaks
+shattered into strange forms; native towns on eyrie cliffs, apparently
+inaccessible; and deep ravines, down which some mountain stream, after
+long murmuring in its stony bed, falls headlong, glittering as a silver
+line on a block of jet, or spreading like a sheet of glass over bare
+rocks which refuse it a channel. Here also are found the softer features
+of rich vales, cocoa-nut groves, clumps of dark chestnuts, stately palms
+and bread-fruit, patches of graceful bananas or well-tilled taro-beds,
+mingling in unchecked luxuriance, and forming, with the wild
+reef-scenery of the girdling shore, its beating surf, and far-stretching
+ocean beyond, pictures of surpassing beauty."[655] Each island is
+encircled by a reef of white coral, on which the sea breaks, with a
+thunderous roar, in curling sheets of foam; while inside the reef
+stretches the lagoon, a calm lake of blue crystalline water revealing in
+its translucent depths beautiful gardens of seaweed and coral which fill
+the beholder with delighted wonder. Great and sudden is the contrast
+experienced by the mariner when he passes in a moment from the tossing,
+heaving, roaring billows without into the unbroken calm of the quiet
+haven within the barrier reef.[656]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian doctrine of souls.]
+
+Like most savages, the Fijians believed that man is animated by a soul
+which quits his body temporarily in sleep and permanently at death, to
+survive for a longer or a shorter time in a disembodied state
+thereafter. Indeed, they attributed souls to animals, vegetables,
+stones, tools, houses, canoes, and many other things, allowing that all
+of them may become immortal.[657] On this point I will quote the
+evidence of one of the earliest and best authorities on the customs and
+beliefs of the South Sea Islanders. "There seems," says William Mariner,
+"to be a wide difference between the opinions of the natives in the
+different clusters of the South Sea islands respecting the future
+existence of the soul. Whilst the Tonga doctrine limits immortality to
+chiefs, _matabooles_, and at most, to _mooas_, the Fiji doctrine, with
+abundant liberality, extends it to all mankind, to all brute animals, to
+all vegetables, and even to stones and mineral substances. If an animal
+or a plant die, its soul immediately goes to Bolotoo; if a stone or any
+other substance is broken, immortality is equally its reward; nay,
+artificial bodies have equal good luck with men, and hogs, and yams. If
+an axe or a chisel is worn out or broken up, away flies its soul for the
+service of the gods. If a house is taken down, or any way destroyed, its
+immortal part will find a situation on the plains of Bolotoo; and, to
+confirm this doctrine, the Fiji people can show you a sort of natural
+well, or deep hole in the ground, at one of their islands, across the
+bottom of which runs a stream of water, in which you may clearly
+perceive the souls of men and women, beasts and plants, of stocks and
+stones, canoes and houses, and of all the broken utensils of this frail
+world, swimming or rather tumbling along one over the other pell-mell
+into the regions of immortality. Such is the Fiji philosophy, but the
+Tonga people deny it, unwilling to think that the residence of the gods
+should be encumbered with so much useless rubbish. The natives of
+Otaheite entertain similar notions respecting these things, viz. that
+brutes, plants, and stones exist hereafter, but it is not mentioned that
+they extend the idea to objects of human invention."[658]
+
+[Sidenote: Reported Fijian doctrine of two human souls, a light one and
+a dark one.]
+
+According to one account, the Fijians imagined that every man has two
+souls, a dark soul, consisting of his shadow, and a light soul,
+consisting of his reflection in water or a looking-glass: the dark soul
+departs at death to Hades, while the light soul stays near the place
+where he died or was killed. "Probably," says Thomas Williams, "this
+doctrine of shadows has to do with the notion of inanimate objects
+having spirits. I once placed a good-looking native suddenly before a
+mirror. He stood delighted. 'Now,' said he, softly, 'I can see into the
+world of spirits.'"[659] However, according to another good authority
+this distinction of two human souls rests merely on a misapprehension of
+the Fijian word for shadow, _yaloyalo_, which is a reduplication of
+_yalo_, the word for soul.[660] Apparently the Fijians pictured to
+themselves the human soul as a miniature of the man himself. This may be
+inferred from the customs observed at the death of a chief among the
+Nakelo tribe. When a chief dies, certain men who are the hereditary
+undertakers call him, as he lies, oiled and ornamented, on fine mats,
+saying, "Rise, sir, the chief, and let us be going. The day has come
+over the land." Then they conduct him to the river side, where the
+ghostly ferryman comes to ferry Nakelo ghosts across the stream. As they
+attend the chief on his last journey, they hold their great fans close
+to the ground to shelter him, because, as one of them explained to a
+missionary, "His soul is only a little child."[661]
+
+[Sidenote: Absence of the soul in sleep. Catching the soul of a rascal
+in a scarf.]
+
+The souls of some men were supposed to quit their bodies in sleep and
+enter into the bodies of other sleepers, troubling and disturbing them.
+A soul that had contracted this bad habit was called a _yalombula_. When
+any one fainted or died, his vagrant spirit might, so the Fijians
+thought, be induced to come back by calling after it. Sometimes, on
+awaking from a nap, a stout man might be seen lying at full length and
+bawling out lustily for the return of his own soul.[662] In the windward
+islands of Fiji there used to be an ordeal called _yalovaki_ which was
+much dreaded by evil-doers. When the evidence was strong against
+suspected criminals, and they stubbornly refused to confess, the chief,
+who was also the judge, would call for a scarf, with which "to catch
+away the soul of the rogue." A threat of the rack could not have been
+more effectual. The culprit generally confessed at the sight and even
+the mention of the light instrument; but if he did not, the scarf would
+be waved over his head until his soul was caught in it like a moth or a
+fly, after which it would be carefully folded up and nailed to the small
+end of a chief's canoe, and for want of his soul the suspected person
+would pine and die.[663]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian dread of sorcery and witchcraft.]
+
+Further, the Fijians, like many other savages, stood in great terror of
+witchcraft, believing that the sorcerer had it in his power to kill them
+by the practice of his nefarious art. "Of all their superstitions," says
+Thomas Williams, "this exerts the strongest influence on the minds of
+the people. Men who laugh at the pretensions of the priest tremble at
+the power of the wizard; and those who become christians lose this fear
+last of all the relics of their heathenism."[664] Indeed "native agents
+of the mission who, in the discharge of their duty, have boldly faced
+death by open violence, have been driven from their posts by their dread
+of the sorcerer; and my own observation confirms the statement of more
+than one observer that savages not unfrequently die of fear when they
+think themselves bewitched."[665] Professed practitioners of witchcraft
+were dreaded by all classes, and by destroying mutual confidence they
+annulled the comfort and shook the security of society. Almost all
+sudden deaths were set down to their machinations. A common mode of
+effecting their object was to obtain a shred of the clothing of the man
+they intended to bewitch, some refuse of his food, a lock of his hair,
+or some other personal relic; having got it they wrapped it up in
+certain leaves, and then cooked or buried it or hung it up in the
+forest; whereupon the victim was supposed to die of a wasting disease.
+Another way was to bury a coco-nut, with the eye upward, beneath the
+hearth of the temple, on which a fire was kept constantly burning; and
+as the life of the nut was destroyed, so the health of the person whom
+the nut represented would fail till death put an end to his sufferings.
+"The native imagination," we are told, "is so absolutely under the
+control of fear of these charms, that persons, hearing that they were
+the object of such spells, have lain down on their mats, and died
+through fear."[666] To guard against the fell craft of the magician the
+people resorted to many precautions. A man who suspected another of
+plotting against him would be careful not to eat in his presence or at
+all events to leave no morsel of food behind, lest the other should
+secrete it and bewitch him by it; and for the same reason people
+disposed of their garments so that no part could be removed; and when
+they had their hair cut they generally hid the clippings in the thatch
+of their own houses. Some even built themselves a small hut and
+surrounded it with a moat, believing that a little water had power to
+neutralise the charms directed against them.[667]
+
+[Sidenote: The fear of sorcery has had the beneficial effect of
+enforcing habits of personal cleanliness.]
+
+"In the face of such instances as these," says one who knows the Fijians
+well, "it demands some courage to assert that upon the whole the belief
+in witchcraft was formerly a positive advantage to the community. It
+filled, in fact, the place of a system of sanitation. The wizard's tools
+consisting in those waste matters that are inimical to health, every man
+was his own scavenger. From birth to old age a man was governed by this
+one fear; he went into the sea, the graveyard or the depths of the
+forest to satisfy his natural wants; he burned his cast-off _malo_; he
+gave every fragment left over from his food to the pigs; he concealed
+even the clippings of his hair in the thatch of his house. This
+ever-present fear even drove women in the western districts out into the
+forest for the birth of their children, where fire destroyed every trace
+of their lying-in. Until Christianity broke it down, the villages were
+kept clean; there were no festering rubbish-heaps nor filthy
+_raras_."[668]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian dread of ghosts. Uproar made to drive away ghosts.]
+
+Of apparitions the Fijians used to be very much afraid. They believed
+that the ghosts of the dead appeared often and afflicted mankind,
+especially in sleep. The spirits of slain men, unchaste women, and women
+who died in childbed were most dreaded. After a death people have been
+known to hide themselves for a few days, until they supposed the soul of
+the departed was at rest. Also they shunned the places where people had
+been murdered, particularly when it rained, because then the moans of
+the ghost could be heard as he sat up, trying to relieve his pain by
+resting his poor aching head on the palms of his hands. Some however
+said that the moans were caused by the soul of the murderer knocking
+down the soul of his victim, whenever the wretched spirit attempted to
+get up.[669] When Fijians passed a spot in the forest where a man had
+been clubbed to death, they would sometimes throw leaves on it as a mark
+of homage to his spirit, believing that they would soon be killed
+themselves if they failed in thus paying their respects to the
+ghost.[670] And after they had buried a man alive, as they very often
+did, these savages used at nightfall to make a great din with large
+bamboos, trumpet-shells, and so forth, in order to drive away his spirit
+and deter him from loitering about his old home. "The uproar is always
+held in the late habitation of the deceased, the reason being that as no
+one knows for a certainty what reception he will receive in the
+invisible world, if it is not according to his expectations he will most
+likely repent of his bargain and wish to come back. For that reason they
+make a great noise to frighten him away, and dismantle his former
+habitation of everything that is attractive, and clothe it with
+everything that to their ideas seems repulsive."[671]
+
+[Sidenote: Killing a ghost.]
+
+However, stronger measures were sometimes resorted to. It was believed
+to be possible to kill a troublesome ghost. Once it happened that many
+chiefs feasted in the house of Tanoa, King of Ambau. In the course of
+the evening one of them related how he had slain a neighbouring chief.
+That very night, having occasion to leave the house, he saw, as he
+believed, the ghost of his victim, hurled his club at him, and killed
+him stone dead. On his return to the house he roused the king and the
+rest of the inmates from their slumbers, and recounted his exploit. The
+matter was deemed of high importance, and they all sat on it in solemn
+conclave. Next morning a search was made for the club on the scene of
+the murder; it was found and carried with great pomp and parade to the
+nearest temple, where it was laid up for a perpetual memorial. Everybody
+was firmly persuaded that by this swashing blow the ghost had been not
+only killed but annihilated.[672]
+
+[Sidenote: Dazing the ghost of a grandfather.]
+
+A more humane method of dealing with an importunate ghost used to be
+adopted in Vanua-levu, the largest but one of the Fijian islands. In
+that island, as a consequence, it is said, of reckoning kinship through
+the mother, a child was considered to be more closely related to his
+grandfather than to his father. Hence when a grandfather died, his ghost
+naturally desired to carry off the soul of his grandchild with him to
+the spirit land. The wish was creditable to the warmth of his domestic
+affection, but if the survivors preferred to keep the child with them a
+little longer in this vale of tears, they took steps to baffle
+grandfather's ghost. For this purpose when the old man's body was
+stretched on the bier and raised on the shoulders of half-a-dozen stout
+young fellows, the mother's brother would take the grandchild in his
+arms and begin running round and round the corpse. Round and round he
+ran, and grandfather's ghost looked after him, craning his neck from
+side to side and twisting it round and round in the vain attempt to
+follow the rapid movements of the runner. When the ghost was supposed to
+be quite giddy with this unwonted exercise, the mother's brother made a
+sudden dart away with the child in his arms, the bearers fairly bolted
+with the corpse to the grave, and before he could collect his scattered
+wits grandfather was safely landed in his long home.[673]
+
+[Sidenote: Special relation of grandfather to grandchild. Soul of a
+grandfather reborn in his grandchildren.]
+
+Mr. Fison, who reports this quaint mode of bilking a ghost, explains the
+special attachment of the grandfather to his grandchild by the rule of
+female descent which survives in Vanua-levu; and it is true that where
+exogamy prevails along with female descent, a child regularly belongs to
+the exogamous class of its grandfather and not of its father and hence
+may be regarded as more closely akin to the grandfather than to the
+father. But on the other hand it is to be observed that exogamy at
+present is unknown in Fiji, and at most its former prevalence in the
+islands can only be indirectly inferred from relics of totemism and from
+the existence of the classificatory system of relationship.[674] Perhaps
+the real reason why in Vanua-levu a dead grandfather is so anxious to
+carry off the soul of his living grandchild lies nearer to hand in the
+apparently widespread belief that the soul of the grandfather is
+actually reborn in his grandchild. For example, in Nukahiva, one of the
+Marquesas Islands, every one "is persuaded that the soul of a
+grandfather is transmitted by nature into the body of his grandchildren;
+and that, if an unfruitful wife were to place herself under the corpse
+of her deceased grandfather, she would be sure to become pregnant."[675]
+Again, the Kayans of Borneo "believe in the reincarnation of the soul,
+although this belief is not clearly harmonised with the belief in the
+life in another world. It is generally believed that the soul of a
+grandfather may pass into one of his grandchildren, and an old man will
+try to secure the passage of his soul to a favourite grandchild by
+holding it above his head from time to time. The grandfather usually
+gives up his name to his eldest grandson, and reassumes the original
+name of his childhood with the prefix or title _Laki_, and the custom
+seems to be connected with this belief or hope."[676]
+
+[Sidenote: A dead grandfather may reasonably reclaim his own soul from
+his grandchild.]
+
+Now where such a belief is held, it seems reasonable enough that a dead
+grandfather should reclaim his own soul for his personal use before he
+sets out for the spirit land; else how could he expect to be admitted to
+that blissful abode if on arriving at the portal he were obliged to
+explain to the porter that he had no soul about him, having left that
+indispensable article behind in the person of his grandchild? "Then you
+had better go back and fetch it. There is no admission at this gate for
+people without souls." Such might very well be the porter's retort; and
+foreseeing it any man of ordinary prudence would take the precaution of
+recovering his lost spiritual property before presenting himself to the
+Warden of the Dead. This theory would sufficiently account for the
+otherwise singular behaviour of grandfather's ghost in Vanua-levu. At
+the same time it must be admitted that the theory of the reincarnation
+of a grandfather in a grandson would be suggested more readily in a
+society where the custom of exogamy was combined with female descent
+than in one where the same custom coexisted with male descent; since,
+given exogamy and female descent, grandfather and grandson regularly
+belong to the same exogamous class, whereas father and son never do
+so.[677] Thus Mr. Fison may after all be right in referring the
+partiality of a Fijian grandfather for his grandson in the last resort
+to a system of exogamy and female kinship.
+
+[Footnote 627: G. Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), pp. 23 _sq._, 125, 320 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 628: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 294 _sqq._; P. A. Kleintitschen,
+_Die Küstenbewohner der Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Münster, N.D.),
+pp. 90 _sqq._ The shell money is called _tambu_ in New Britain, _diwara_
+in the Duke of York Island, and _aringit_ in New Ireland.]
+
+[Footnote 629: Rev. G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 307, 313, 435, 436.]
+
+[Footnote 630: Rev. G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 270 _sq._, compare pp. 127,
+200.]
+
+[Footnote 631: Rev. G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. v., 18.]
+
+[Footnote 632: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 141 _sq._, 144, 145, 190-193.]
+
+[Footnote 633: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 142, 192, 385, 386 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 634: G. Brown, _op. cit._ p. 390. The custom of cremating the
+dead in New Ireland is described more fully by Mr. R. Parkinson, who
+says that the life-sized figures which are burned with the corpse
+represent the deceased (_Dreissig Jahre in der Südsee_, pp. 273 _sqq._).
+In the central part of New Ireland the dead are buried in the earth;
+afterwards the bones are dug up and thrown into the sea. See Albert
+Hahl, "Das mittlere Neumecklenburg," _Globus_, xci. (1907) p. 314.]
+
+[Footnote 635: R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Südsee_ (Stuttgart,
+1907) p. 78; P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Küstenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Münster, N.D.), p. 222.]
+
+[Footnote 636: Mgr. Couppé, "En Nouvelle-Poméranie," _Les Missions
+Catholiques_, xxiii. (1891) pp. 364 _sq._; J. Graf Pfeil, _Studien und
+Beobachtungen aus der Südsee_ (Brunswick, 1899), p. 79.]
+
+[Footnote 637: R. Parkinson, _op. cit._ p. 81.]
+
+[Footnote 638: _P._ Rascher, _M.S.C._, "Die Sulka, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographic Neu-Pommern," _Archiv für Anthropologie_, xxix. (1904) pp.
+214 _sq._, 216; R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Südsee_, pp.
+185-187.]
+
+[Footnote 639: R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Südsee_, pp.
+404-406.]
+
+[Footnote 640: R. Parkinson, _op. cit._ pp. 441 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 641: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 176, 183, 385 _sq._ As to the
+wide-spread belief in New Britain that what we call natural deaths are
+brought about by sorcery, see further _P._ Rascher, _M.S.C._, "Die
+Sulka, ein Beitrag zur Ethnographic Neu-Pommern," _Archiv für
+Ethnographie_, xxix. (1904) pp. 221 _sq._; R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre
+in der Südsee_, pp. 117 _sq._ 199-201; P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die
+Küsten-bewohner der Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Münster, N.D.), p.
+215.]
+
+[Footnote 642: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 387-390.]
+
+[Footnote 643: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 35, 89, 196, 201.]
+
+[Footnote 644: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 177, 183, 184.]
+
+[Footnote 645: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 192-195.]
+
+[Footnote 646: P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Küstenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_, pp. 225 _sq._ Compare R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre
+in der Südsee_, p. 79.]
+
+[Footnote 647: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), p.
+xiv.]
+
+[Footnote 648: Thomas Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 22-26.]
+
+[Footnote 649: Charles Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 77; Th. Williams, _op.
+cit._ i. 18.]
+
+[Footnote 650: Charles Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 332 _sqq._; Thomas
+Williams _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition (London, 1860), i. 60
+_sqq._; Berthold Seeman, _Viti_ (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 279 _sqq._; Basil
+Thomson, _The Fijians_ (London, 1908), pp. 335 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 651: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 60 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 652: Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 338, 389 _sq._ The
+Fijians are in the main vegetarians, but the vegetables which they
+cultivate "contain a large proportion of starch and water, and are
+deficient in proteids. Moreover, the supply of the principal staples is
+irregular, being greatly affected by variable seasons, and the attacks
+of insects and vermin. Very few of them will bear keeping, and almost
+all of them must be eaten when ripe. As the food is of low nutritive
+value, a native always eats to repletion. In times of plenty a
+full-grown man will eat as much as ten pounds' weight of vegetables in
+the day; he will seldom be satisfied with less than five. A great
+quantity, therefore, is required to feed a very few people, and as
+everything is transported by hand, a disproportionate amount of time is
+spent in transporting food from the plantation to the consumer. The time
+spent in growing native food is also out of all proportion to its value"
+(Basil Thomson, _op. cit._ pp. 334 _sq._). The same writer tells us (p.
+335) that it has never occurred to the Fijians to dry any of the fruits
+they grow and to grind them into flour, as is done in Africa.]
+
+[Footnote 653: Capt. J. E. Erskine, _Journal of a Cruise among the
+Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London, 1853), pp. 272 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 654: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 46, 363. As to the cruelty
+and depravity of the Fijians in the old days see further Lorimer Fison,
+_Tales from Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), pp. xv. _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 655: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 6 _sq._ As to
+the scenery of the Fijian archipelago see further _id._, i. 4 _sqq._;
+Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 46, 322; _Stanford's Compendium of Geography
+and Travel, Australasia_, vol. ii. _Malaysia and the Pacific
+Archipelago_, edited by F. H. H. Guillemard (London, 1894), pp. 467
+_sqq._; Miss Beatrice Grimshaw, _From Fiji to the Cannibal Islands_
+(London, 1907), pp. 43 _sq._, 54 _sq._, 76-78, 106, 109 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 656: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 5 _sq._, 11; Ch.
+Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 46 _sq._ However, there is a remarkable
+difference not only in climate but in appearance between the windward
+and the leeward sides of these islands. The windward side, watered by
+abundant showers, is covered with luxuriant tropical vegetation; the
+leeward side, receiving little rain, presents a comparatively barren and
+burnt appearance, the vegetation dying down to the grey hues of the
+boulders among which it struggles for life. Hence the dry leeward side
+is better adapted for European settlement. See Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._
+iii. 320 _sq._; Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 10; B. Seeman, _Viti, an
+Account of a Government Mission to the Vitian or Fijian Islands in the
+years 1860-1861_ (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 277 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 657: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 241; J. E. Erskine, _op.
+cit._ p. 249; B. Seeman, _Viti_ (Cambridge, 1862), p. 398.]
+
+[Footnote 658: William Mariner, _An Account of the Natives of the Tonga
+Islands_, Second Edition (London, 1818), ii. 129 _sq._ The _matabooles_
+were a sort of honourable attendants on chiefs and ranked next to them
+in the social hierarchy; the _mooas_ were the next class of people below
+the _matabooles_. See W. Mariner, _op. cit._ ii. 84, 86. Bolotoo or Bulu
+was the mythical land of the dead.]
+
+[Footnote 659: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 241.]
+
+[Footnote 660: This is the opinion of my late friend, the Rev. Lorimer
+Fison, which he communicated to me in a letter dated 26th August, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote 661: Communication of the late Rev. Lorimer Fison in a letter
+to me dated 3rd November, 1898. I have already published it in _Taboo
+and the Perils of the Soul_, pp. 29 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 662: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 242; Lorimer Fison, _Tales
+from Old Fiji_, pp. 163 _sq._; _Taboo and the Perils of the Soul_, pp.
+39 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 663: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 250.]
+
+[Footnote 664: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 665: Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. xxxii.]
+
+[Footnote 666: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 248 _sq._; Lorimer Fison,
+_op. cit._ pp. xxxi. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 667: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 249.]
+
+[Footnote 668: Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_ (London, 1908), p. 166. A
+_rara_ is a public square (Rev. Lorimer Fison, in _Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute_, xiv. (1885) p. 17).]
+
+[Footnote 669: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 241.]
+
+[Footnote 670: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 671: Narrative of John Jackson, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+_Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London,
+1853), p. 477.]
+
+[Footnote 672: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 85.]
+
+[Footnote 673: Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ pp. 168 _sq_.]
+
+[Footnote 674: W. H. R. Rivers, "Totemism in Fiji," _Man_, viii. (1908)
+pp. 133 _sqq._; _Totemism and Exogamy_, ii. 134 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 675: U. Lisiansky, _A Voyage Round the World_ (London, 1814),
+p. 89.]
+
+[Footnote 676: Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of Borneo_
+(London, 1912), ii. 47.]
+
+[Footnote 677: Compare _Totemism and Exogamy_, iii. 297-299.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XIX
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF EASTERN MELANESIA (FIJI)
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian indifference to death.]
+
+At the close of last lecture I illustrated the unquestioning belief
+which the Fijians entertain with regard to the survival of the human
+soul after death. "The native superstitions with regard to a future
+state," we are told, "go far to explain the apparent indifference of the
+people about death; for, while believing in an eternal existence, they
+shut out from it the idea of any moral retribution in the shape either
+of reward or punishment. The first notion concerning death is that of
+simple rest, and is thus contained in one of their rhymes:--
+
+ "Death is easy:
+ Of what use is life?
+ To die is rest."[678]
+
+Again, another writer, speaking of the Fijians, says that "in general,
+the passage from life to death is considered as one from pain to
+happiness, and I was informed that nine out of ten look forward to it
+with anxiety, in order to escape from the infirmities of old age, or the
+sufferings of disease."[679]
+
+[Sidenote: John Jackson's account of the burying alive of a young Fijian
+man. Son buried alive by his father.]
+
+The cool indifference with which the Fijians commonly regarded their own
+death and that of other people might be illustrated by many examples. I
+will give one in the words of an English eye-witness, who lived among
+these savages for some time like one of themselves. At a place on the
+coast of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands, he says, "I
+walked into a number of temples, which were very plentiful, and at last
+into a _bure theravou_ (young man's _bure_), where I saw a tall young
+man about twenty years old. He appeared to be somewhat ailing, but not
+at all emaciated. He was rolling up the mat he had been sleeping upon,
+evidently preparing to go away somewhere. I addressed him, and asked him
+where he was going, when he immediately answered that he was going to be
+buried. I observed that he was not dead yet, but he said he soon should
+be dead when he was put under ground. I asked him why he was going to be
+buried? He said it was three days since he had eaten anything, and
+consequently he was getting very thin; and that if he lived any longer
+he would be much thinner, and then the women would call him a _lila_
+(skeleton), and laugh at him. I said he was a fool to throw himself away
+for fear of being laughed at; and asked him what or who his private god
+was, knowing it to be no use talking to him about Providence, a thing he
+had never heard of. He said his god was a shark, and that if he were
+cast away in a canoe and was obliged to swim, the sharks would not bite
+him. I asked him if he believed the shark, his god, had any power to act
+over him? He said yes. 'Well then,' said I, 'why do you not live a
+little longer, and trust to your god to give you an appetite?' Finding
+that he could not give me satisfactory answers, and being determined to
+get buried to avoid the jeers of the ladies, which to a Feejeean are
+intolerable, he told me I knew nothing about it, and that I must not
+compare him to a white man, who was generally insensible to all shame,
+and did not care how much he was laughed at. I called him a fool, and
+said the best thing he could do was to get buried out of the way,
+because I knew that most of them work by the rules of contrary; but it
+was all to no purpose. By this time all his relations had collected
+round the door. His father had a kind of wooden spade to dig the grave
+with, his mother a new suit of _tapa_ [bark-cloth], his sister some
+vermilion and a whale's tooth, as an introduction to the great god of
+Rage-Rage. He arose, took up his bed and walked, not for life, but for
+death, his father, mother, and sister following after, with several
+other distant relations, whom I accompanied. I noticed that they seemed
+to follow him something in the same way that they follow a corpse in
+Europe to the grave (that is, as far as relationship and acquaintance
+are concerned), but, instead of lamenting, they were, if not rejoicing,
+acting and chatting in a very unconcerned way. At last we reached a
+place where several graves could be seen, and a spot was soon selected
+by the man who was to be buried. The old man, his father, began digging
+his grave, while his mother assisted her son in putting on a new _tapa_
+[bark-cloth], and the girl (his sister) was besmearing him with
+vermilion and lamp-black, so as to send him decent into the invisible
+world, he (the victim) delivering messages that were to be taken by his
+sister to people then absent. His father then announced to him and the
+rest that the grave was completed, and asked him, in rather a surly
+tone, if he was not ready by this time. The mother then _nosed_ him, and
+likewise the sister. He said, 'Before I die, I should like a drink of
+water.' His father made a surly remark, and said, as he ran to fetch it
+in a leaf doubled up, 'You have been a considerable trouble during your
+life, and it appears that you are going to trouble us equally at your
+death.' The father returned with the water, which the son drank off, and
+then looked up into a tree covered with tough vines, saying he should
+prefer being strangled with a vine to being smothered in the grave. His
+father became excessively angry, and, spreading the mat at the bottom of
+the grave, told the son to die _faka tamata_ (like a man), when he
+stepped into the grave, which was not more than four feet deep, and lay
+down on his back with the whale's tooth in his hands, which were clasped
+across his belly. The spare sides of the mats were lapped over him so as
+to prevent the earth from getting to his body, and then about a foot of
+earth was shovelled in upon him as quickly as possible. His father
+stamped it immediately down solid, and called out in a loud voice, '_Sa
+tiko, sa tiko_ (You are stopping there, you are stopping there),'
+meaning 'Good-bye, good-bye.' The son answered with a very audible
+grunt, and then about two feet more earth was shovelled in and stamped
+as before by the loving father, and '_Sa tiko_' called out again, which
+was answered by another grunt, but much fainter. The grave was then
+completely filled up, when, for curiosity's sake, I said myself, '_Sa
+tiko_' but no answer was given, although I fancied, or really did see,
+the earth crack a little on the top of the grave. The father and mother
+then turned back to back on the middle of the grave, and, having dropped
+some kind of leaves from their hands, walked away in opposite directions
+towards a running stream of water hard by, where they and all the rest
+washed themselves, and made me wash myself, and then we returned to the
+town, where there was a feast prepared. As soon as the feast was over
+(it being then dark), began the dance and uproar which are always
+carried on either at natural or violent deaths."[680]
+
+[Sidenote: The readiness of the Fijians to die seems to have been partly
+a consequence of their belief in immortality.]
+
+The readiness with which the Fijians submitted to or even sought death
+appears to have been to some extent a direct consequence of their belief
+in immortality and of their notions as to the state of the soul
+hereafter. Thus we are informed by an early observer of this people that
+"self-immolation is by no means rare, and they believe that as they
+leave this life, so will they remain ever after. This forms a powerful
+motive to escape from decrepitude, or from a crippled condition, by a
+voluntary death."[681] Or, as another equally early observer puts it
+more fully, "the custom of voluntary suicide on the part of the old men,
+which is among their most extraordinary usages, is also connected with
+their superstitions respecting a future life. They believe that persons
+enter upon the delights of their elysium with the same faculties, mental
+and physical, that they possess at the hour of death, in short, that the
+spiritual life commences where the corporeal existence terminates. With
+these views, it is natural that they should desire to pass through this
+change before their mental and bodily powers are so enfeebled by age as
+to deprive them of their capacity for enjoyment. To this motive must be
+added the contempt which attaches to physical weakness among a nation of
+warriors, and the wrongs and insults which await those who are no longer
+able to protect themselves. When therefore a man finds his strength
+declining with the advance of age, and feels that he will soon be
+unequal to discharge the duties of this life, and to partake in the
+pleasures of that which is to come, he calls together his relations, and
+tells them that he is now worn out and useless, that he sees they are
+all ashamed of him, and that he has determined to be buried." So on a
+day appointed they met and buried him alive.[682]
+
+[Sidenote: The sick and aged put to death by their relatives.]
+
+The proposal to put the sick and aged to death did not always emanate
+from the parties principally concerned; when a son, for example, thought
+that his parents were growing too old and becoming a burden to him, he
+would give them notice that it was time for them to die, a notice which
+they usually accepted with equanimity, if not alacrity. As a rule, it
+was left to the choice of the aged and infirm to say whether they would
+prefer to be buried alive or to be strangled first and buried
+afterwards; and having expressed a predilection one way or the other
+they were dealt with accordingly. To strangle parents or other frail and
+sickly relatives with a rope was considered a more delicate and
+affectionate way of dispatching them than to knock them on the head with
+a club. In the old days the missionary Mr. Hunt witnessed several of
+these tender partings. "On one occasion, he was called upon by a young
+man, who desired that he would pray to his spirit for his mother, who
+was dead. Mr. Hunt was at first in hopes that this would afford him an
+opportunity of forwarding their great cause. On inquiry, the young man
+told him that his brothers and himself were just going to bury her. Mr.
+Hunt accompanied the young man, telling him he would follow in the
+procession, and do as he desired him, supposing, of course, the corpse
+would be brought along; but he now met the procession, when the young
+man said that this was the funeral, and pointed out his mother, who was
+walking along with them, as gay and lively as any of those present, and
+apparently as much pleased. Mr. Hunt expressed his surprise to the young
+man, and asked him how he could deceive him so much by saying his mother
+was dead, when she was alive and well. He said, in reply, that they had
+made her death-feast, and were now going to bury her; that she was old;
+that his brother and himself had thought she had lived long enough, and
+it was time to bury her, to which she had willingly assented, and they
+were about it now. He had come to Mr. Hunt to ask his prayers, as they
+did those of the priest. He added, that it was from love for his mother
+that he had done so; that, in consequence of the same love, they were
+now going to bury her, and that none but themselves could or ought to do
+so sacred an office! Mr. Hunt did all in his power to prevent so
+diabolical an act; but the only reply he received was, that she was
+their mother, and they were her children, and they ought to put her to
+death. On reaching the grave, the mother sat down, when they all,
+including children, grandchildren, relations, and friends, took an
+affectionate leave of her; a rope, made of twisted _tapa_ [bark-cloth],
+was then passed twice around her neck by her sons, who took hold of it,
+and strangled her; after which she was put into her grave, with the
+usual ceremonies. They returned to feast and mourn, after which she was
+entirely forgotten as though she had not existed."[683]
+
+[Sidenote: Wives strangled or buried alive at their husbands' funerals.]
+
+Again, wives were often strangled, or buried alive, at the funeral of
+their husbands, and generally at their own instance. Such scenes were
+frequently witnessed by white residents in the old days. On one occasion
+a Mr. David Whippy drove away the murderers, rescued the woman, and
+carried her to his own house, where she was resuscitated. But far from
+feeling grateful for her preservation, she loaded him with reproaches
+and ever afterwards manifested the most deadly hatred towards him. "That
+women should desire to accompany their husbands in death, is by no means
+strange when it is considered that it is one of the articles of their
+belief, that in this way alone can they reach the realms of bliss, and
+she who meets her death with the greatest devotedness, will become the
+favourite wife in the abode of spirits. The sacrifice is not, however,
+always voluntary; but, when a woman refuses to be strangled, her
+relations often compel her to submit. This they do from interested
+motives; for, by her death, her connexions become entitled to the
+property of her husband. Even a delay is made a matter of reproach.
+Thus, at the funeral of the late king Ulivou, which was witnessed by Mr.
+Cargill, his five wives and a daughter were strangled. The principal
+wife delayed the ceremony, by taking leave of those around her;
+whereupon Tanoa, the present king, chid her. The victim was his own
+aunt, and he assisted in putting the rope around her neck, and
+strangling her, a service he is said to have rendered on a former
+occasion to his own mother."[684] In the case of men who were drowned at
+sea or killed and eaten by enemies in war, their wives were sacrificed
+in the usual way. Thus when Ra Mbithi, the pride of Somosomo, was lost
+at sea, seventeen of his wives were destroyed; and after the news of a
+massacre of the Namena people at Viwa in 1839 eighty women were
+strangled to accompany the spirits of their murdered husbands.[685]
+
+[Sidenote: Human "grass" for the grave.]
+
+The bodies of women who were put to death for this purpose were
+regularly laid at the bottom of the grave to serve as a cushion for the
+dead husband to lie upon; in this capacity they were called grass
+(_thotho_), being compared to the dried grass which in Fijian houses
+used to be thickly strewn on the floors and covered with mats.[686] On
+this point, however, a nice distinction was observed. While wives were
+commonly sacrificed at the death of their husbands, in order to be
+spread like grass in their graves, it does not transpire that husbands
+were ever sacrificed at the death of their wives for the sake of serving
+as grass to their dead spouses in the grave. The great truth that all
+flesh is grass appears to have been understood by the Fijians as
+applicable chiefly to the flesh of women. Sometimes a man's mother was
+strangled as well as his wives. Thus Ngavindi, a young chief of Lasakau,
+was laid in the grave with a wife at his side, his mother at his feet,
+and a servant not far off. However, men as well as women were killed to
+follow their masters to the far country. The confidential companion of a
+chief was expected as a matter of common decency to die with his lord;
+and if he shirked the duty, he fell in the public esteem. When Mbithi, a
+chief of high rank and greatly esteemed in Mathuata, died in the year
+1840, not only his wife but five men with their wives were strangled to
+form the floor of his grave. They were laid on a layer of mats, and the
+body of the chief was stretched upon them.[687] There used to be a
+family in Vanua Levu which enjoyed the high privilege of supplying a
+hale man to be buried with the king of Fiji on every occasion of a royal
+decease. It was quite necessary that the man should be hale and hearty,
+for it was his business to grapple with the Fijian Cerberus in the other
+world, while his majesty slipped past into the abode of bliss.[688]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices of foreskins and fingers in honour of the dead.
+Circumcision performed on a lad as a propitiatory sacrifice to save the
+life of his father or father's brother. The rite of circumcision
+followed by a licentious orgy.]
+
+A curious sacrifice offered in honour of a dead chief consisted in the
+foreskins of all the boys who had arrived at a suitable age; the lads
+were circumcised on purpose to furnish them. Many boys had their little
+fingers chopped off on the same occasion, and the severed foreskins and
+fingers were placed in the chief's grave. When this bloody rite had been
+performed, the chief's relatives presented young bread-fruit trees to
+the mutilated boys, whose friends were bound to cultivate them till the
+boys could do it for themselves.[689] Women as well as boys had their
+fingers cut off in mourning. We read of a case when after the death of a
+king of Fiji sixty fingers were amputated and being each inserted in a
+slit reed were stuck along the eaves of the king's house.[690] Why
+foreskins and fingers were buried with a dead chief or stuck up on the
+roof of his house, we are not informed, and it is not easy to divine.
+Apparently we must suppose that, when they were buried with the body,
+they were thought to be of some assistance to the departed spirit in the
+land of souls. At all events it deserves to be noted that according to a
+very good authority a similar sacrifice of foreskins used to be made not
+only for the dead but for the living. When a man of note was dangerously
+ill, a family council would be held, at which it might be agreed that a
+circumcision should take place as a propitiatory measure. Notice having
+been given to the priests, an uncircumcised lad, the sick man's own son
+or the son of one of his brothers, was then taken by his kinsman to the
+_Vale tambu_ or God's House, and there presented as a _soro_, or
+offering of atonement, in order that his father or father's brother
+might be made whole. His escort at the same time made a present of
+valuable property at the shrine and promised much more in future, should
+their prayers be answered. The present and the promises were graciously
+received by the priest, who appointed a day on which the operation was
+to be performed. In the meantime no food might be taken from the
+plantations except what was absolutely required for daily use; no pigs
+or fowls might be killed, and no coco-nuts plucked from the trees.
+Everything, in short, was put under a strict taboo; all was set apart
+for the great feast which was to follow the performance of the rite. On
+the day appointed the son or nephew of the sick chief was circumcised,
+and with him a number of other lads whose friends had agreed to take
+advantage of the occasion. Their foreskins, stuck in the cleft of a
+split reed, were taken to the sacred enclosure (_Nanga_) and presented
+to the chief priest, who, holding the reeds in his hand, offered them to
+the ancestral gods and prayed for the sick man's recovery. Then followed
+a great feast, which ushered in a period of indescribable revelry and
+licence. All distinctions of property were for the time being suspended.
+Men and women arrayed themselves in all manner of fantastic garbs,
+addressed one another in the foulest language, and practised
+unmentionable abominations openly in the public square of the town. The
+nearest relationships, even that of own brother and sister, seemed to be
+no bar to the general licence, the extent of which was indicated by the
+expressive phrase of an old Nandi chief, who said, "While it lasts, we
+are just like the pigs." This feasting and orgy might be kept up for
+several days, after which the ordinary restraints of society and the
+common decencies of life were observed once more. The rights of private
+property were again respected; the abandoned revellers and debauchees
+settled down into staid married couples; and brothers and sisters, in
+accordance with the regular Fijian etiquette, might not so much as speak
+to one another. It should be added that these extravagances in connexion
+with the rite of circumcision appear to have been practised only in
+certain districts of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands, where
+they were always associated with the sacred stone enclosures which went
+by the name of _Nanga_.[691]
+
+[Sidenote: These orgies were apparently associated with the worship of
+the dead, to whom offerings were made in the _Nanga_ or sacred enclosure
+of stones.]
+
+The meaning of such orgies is very obscure, but from what we know of the
+savage and his ways we may fairly assume that they were no mere
+outbursts of unbridled passion, but that in the minds of those who
+practised them they had a definite significance and served a definite
+purpose. The one thing that seems fairly clear about them is that in
+some way they were associated with the worship or propitiation of the
+dead. At all events we are told on good authority that the _Nanga_, or
+sacred enclosure of stones, in which the severed foreskins were offered,
+was "the Sacred Place where the ancestral spirits are to be found by
+their worshippers, and thither offerings are taken on all occasions when
+their aid is to be invoked. Every member of the _Nanga_ has the
+privilege of approaching the ancestors at any time. When sickness visits
+himself or his kinsfolk, when he wishes to invoke the aid of the spirits
+to avert calamity or to secure prosperity, or when he deems it advisable
+to present a thank-offering, he may enter the _Nanga_ with proper
+reverence and deposit on the dividing wall his whale's tooth, or bundle
+of cloth, or dish of toothsome eels so highly prized by the elders, and
+therefore by the ancestors whose living representatives they are: or he
+may drag into the Sacred _Nanga_ his fattened pig, or pile up there his
+offering of the choicest yams. And, having thus recommended himself to
+the dead, he may invoke their powerful aid, or express his thankfulness
+for the benefits they have conferred, and beg for a continuance of their
+goodwill."[692] The first-fruits of the yam harvest were presented with
+great ceremony to the ancestors in the _Nanga_ before the bulk of the
+crop was dug for the people's use, and no man might taste of the new
+yams until the presentation had been made. The yams so offered were
+piled up in the sacred enclosure and left to rot there. If any one were
+impious enough to appropriate them to his own use, it was believed that
+he would be smitten with madness. Great feasts were held at the
+presentation of the first-fruits; and the sacred enclosure itself was
+often spoken of as the _Mbaki_ or Harvest.[693]
+
+[Sidenote: Periodical initiation of young men in the _Nanga_.]
+
+But the most characteristic and perhaps the most important of the rites
+performed in the _Nanga_ or sacred stone enclosure was the periodical
+initiation of young men, who by participation in the ceremony were
+admitted to the full privileges of manhood. According to one account the
+ceremony of initiation was performed as a rule only once in two years;
+according to another account it was observed annually in October or
+November, when the _ndrala_ tree (_Erythrina_) was in flower. The
+flowering of the tree marked the beginning of the Fijian year; hence the
+novices who were initiated at this season bore the title of _Vilavou_,
+that is, "New Year's Men." As a preparation for the feasts which
+attended the ceremony enormous quantities of yams were garnered and
+placed under a strict taboo; pigs were fattened in large numbers, and
+bales of native cloth stored on the tie-beams of the house-roofs. Spears
+of many patterns and curiously carved clubs were also provided against
+the festival. On the day appointed the initiated men went first into the
+sacred enclosure and made their offerings, the chief priest having
+opened the proceedings by libation and prayer. The heads of the novices
+were clean shaven, and their beards, if they had any, were also removed.
+Then each youth was swathed in long rolls of native cloth, and taking a
+spear in one hand and a club in the other he marched with his comrades,
+similarly swathed and armed, in procession into the sacred enclosure,
+though not into its inner compartment, the Holy of Holies. The
+procession was headed by a priest bearing his carved staff of office,
+and it was received on the holy ground by the initiates, who sat
+chanting a song in a deep murmuring tone, which occasionally swelled to
+a considerable volume of sound and was thought to represent the muffled
+roar of the surf breaking on a far-away coral reef. On entering the
+enclosure the youths threw down their weapons before them, and with the
+help of the initiated men divested themselves of the huge folds of
+native cloth in which they were enveloped, each man revolving slowly on
+his axis, while his attendant pulled at the bandage and gathered in the
+slack. The weapons and the cloth were the offerings presented by the
+novices to the ancestral spirits for the purpose of rendering themselves
+acceptable to these powerful beings. The offerings were repeated in like
+manner on four successive days; and as each youth was merely, as it
+were, the central roller of a great bale of cloth, the amount of cloth
+offered was considerable. It was all put away, with the spears and
+clubs, in the sacred storehouse by the initiated men. A feast concluded
+each day and was prolonged far into the night.
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of death and resurrection.]
+
+On the fifth day, the last and greatest of the festival, the heads of
+the young men were shaven again and their bodies swathed in the largest
+and best rolls of cloth. Then, taking their choicest weapons in their
+hands, they followed their leader as before into the sacred enclosure.
+But the outer compartment of the holy place, where on the previous days
+they had been received by the grand chorus of initiated men, was now
+silent and deserted. The procession stopped. A dead silence prevailed.
+Suddenly from the forest a harsh scream of many parrots broke forth, and
+then followed a mysterious booming sound which filled the souls of the
+novices with awe. But now the priest moves slowly forward and leads the
+train of trembling novices for the first time into the inner shrine, the
+Holy of Holies, the _Nanga tambu-tambu_. Here a dreadful spectacle meets
+their startled gaze. In the background sits the high priest, regarding
+them with a stony stare; and between him and them lie a row of dead men,
+covered with blood, their bodies seemingly cut open and their entrails
+protruding. The leader steps over them one by one, and the awestruck
+youths follow him until they stand in a row before the high priest,
+their very souls harrowed by his awful glare. Suddenly he utters a great
+yell, and at the cry the dead men start to their feet, and run down to
+the river to cleanse themselves from the blood and filth with which they
+are besmeared. They are initiated men, who represent the departed
+ancestors for the occasion; and the blood and entrails are those of many
+pigs that have been slaughtered for that night's revelry. The screams of
+the parrots and the mysterious booming sound were produced by a
+concealed orchestra, who screeched appropriately and blew blasts on
+bamboo trumpets, the mouths of which were partially immersed in water.
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrament of food and water.]
+
+The dead men having come to life again, the novices offered their
+weapons and the bales of native cloth in which they were swathed. These
+were accordingly removed to the storehouse and the young men were made
+to sit down in front of it. Then the high priest, cheered perhaps by the
+sight of the offerings, unbent the starched dignity of his demeanour.
+Skipping from side to side he cried in stridulous tones, "Where are the
+people of my enclosure? Are they gone to Tongalevu? Are they gone to the
+deep sea?" He had not called long when an answer rang out from the river
+in a deep-mouthed song, and soon the singers came in view moving
+rhythmically to the music of their solemn chant. Singing they filed in
+and took their places in front of the young men; then silence ensued.
+After that there entered four old men of the highest order of initiates;
+the first bore a cooked yam carefully wrapt in leaves so that no part of
+it should touch the hands of the bearer; the second carried a piece of
+baked pork similarly enveloped; the third held a drinking-cup of
+coco-nut shell or earthenware filled with water and wrapt round with
+native cloth; and the fourth bore a napkin of the same material.
+Thereupon the first elder passed along the row of novices putting the
+end of the yam into each of their mouths, and as he did so each of them
+nibbled a morsel of the sacred food; the second elder did the same with
+the sacred pork; the third elder followed with the holy water, with
+which each novice merely wetted his lips; and the rear was brought up by
+the fourth elder, who wiped all their mouths with his napkin. Then the
+high priest or one of the elders addressed the young men, warning them
+solemnly against the sacrilege of divulging to the profane any of the
+high mysteries they had seen and heard, and threatening all such
+traitors with the vengeance of the gods.
+
+[Sidenote: Presentation of the pig.]
+
+That ceremony being over, all the junior initiated men (_Lewe ni Nanga_)
+came forward, and each man presented to the novices a yam and a piece of
+nearly raw pork; whereupon the young men took the food and went away to
+cook it for eating. When the evening twilight had fallen, a huge pig,
+which had been specially set aside at a former festival, was dragged
+into the sacred enclosure and there presented to the novices, together
+with other swine, if they should be needed to furnish a plenteous
+repast.
+
+[Sidenote: Acceptance of the novices by the ancestral spirits.]
+
+The novices were now "accepted members of the _Nanga_, qualified to take
+their place among the men of the community, though still only on
+probation. As children--their childhood being indicated by their shaven
+heads--they were presented to the ancestors, and their acceptance was
+notified by what (looking at the matter from the natives' standpoint) we
+might, without irreverence, almost call the _sacrament_ of food and
+water, too sacred even for the elders' hands to touch. This acceptance
+was acknowledged and confirmed on the part of all the _Lewe ni Nanga_
+[junior initiated men] by their gift of food, and it was finally
+ratified by the presentation of the Sacred Pig. In like manner, on the
+birth of an infant, its father acknowledges it as legitimate, and
+otherwise acceptable, by a gift of food; and his kinsfolk formally
+signify approval and confirmation of his decision on the part of the
+clan by similar presentations."
+
+[Sidenote: The initiation followed by a period of sexual license. Sacred
+pigs.]
+
+Next morning the women, their hair dyed red and wearing waistbands of
+hibiscus or other fibre, came to the sacred enclosure and crawled
+through it on hands and knees into the Holy of Holies, where the elders
+were singing their solemn chant. The high priest then dipped his hands
+into the water of the sacred bowl and prayed to the ancestral spirits
+for the mothers and for their children. After that the women crawled
+back on hands and feet the way they had come, singing as they went and
+creeping over certain mounds of earth which had been thrown up for the
+purpose in the sacred enclosure. When they emerged from the holy ground,
+the men and women addressed each other in the vilest language, such as
+on ordinary occasions would be violently resented; and thenceforth to
+the close of the ceremonies some days later very great, indeed almost
+unlimited, licence prevailed between the sexes. During these days a
+number of pigs were consecrated to serve for the next ceremony. The
+animals were deemed sacred, and had the run of the fleshpots in the
+villages in which they were kept. Indeed they were held in the greatest
+reverence. To kill one, except for sacrifice at the rites in the
+_Nanga_, would have been a sacrilege which the Fijian mind refused to
+contemplate; and on the other hand to feed the holy swine was an act of
+piety. Men might be seen throwing down basketfuls of food before the
+snouts of the worshipful pigs, and at the same time calling the
+attention of the ancestral spirits to the meritorious deed. "Take
+knowledge of me," they would cry, "ye who lie buried, our heads! I am
+feeding this pig of yours." Finally, all the men who had taken part in
+the ceremonies bathed together in the river, carefully cleansing
+themselves from every particle of the black paint with which they had
+been bedaubed. When the novices, now novices no more, emerged from the
+water, the high priest, standing on the river bank, preached to them an
+eloquent sermon on the duties and responsibilities which devolved on
+them in their new position.[694]
+
+[Sidenote: The intention of the initiatory rites seems to be to
+introduce the young men to the ancestral spirits. The drama of death and
+resurrection. The Fijian rites of initiation seem to have been imported
+by Melanesian immigrants from the west.]
+
+The general intention of these initiatory rites appears to be, as Mr.
+Fison has said in the words which I have quoted, to introduce the young
+men to the ancestral spirits at their sanctuary, to incorporate them, so
+to say, in the great community which embraces all adult members of the
+tribe, whether living or dead. At all events this interpretation fits in
+very well with the prayers which are offered to the souls of departed
+kinsfolk on these occasions, and it is supported by the analogy of the
+New Guinea initiatory rites which I described in former lectures; for in
+these rites, as I pointed out, the initiation of the youths is closely
+associated with the conceptions of death and the dead, the main feature
+in the ritual consisting indeed of a simulation of death and subsequent
+resurrection. It is, therefore, significant that the very same
+simulation figures prominently in the Fijian ceremony, nay it would seem
+to be the very pivot on which the whole ritual revolves. Yet there is an
+obvious and important difference between the drama of death and
+resurrection as it is enacted in New Guinea and in Fiji; for whereas in
+New Guinea it is the novices who pretend to die and come to life again,
+in Fiji the pretence is carried out by initiated men who represent the
+ancestors, while the novices merely look on with horror and amazement at
+the awe-inspiring spectacle. Of the two forms of ritual the New Guinea
+one is probably truer to the original purpose of the rite, which seems
+to have been to enable the novices to put off the old, or rather the
+young, man and to put on a higher form of existence by participating in
+the marvellous powers and privileges of the mighty dead. And if such was
+really the intention of the ceremony, it is obvious that it was better
+effected by compelling the young communicants, as we may call them, to
+die and rise from the dead in their own persons than by obliging them to
+assist as mere passive spectators at a dramatic performance of death and
+resurrection. Yet in spite of this difference between the two rituals,
+the general resemblance between them is near enough to justify us in
+conjecturing that there may be a genetic connexion between the one and
+the other. The conjecture is confirmed, first, by the very limited and
+definite area of Fiji in which these initiatory rites were practised,
+and, second, by the equally definite tradition of their origin. With
+regard to the first of these points, the _Nanga_ or sacred stone
+enclosure with its characteristic rites was known only to certain
+tribes, who occupied a comparatively small area, a bare third of the
+island of Viti Levu. These tribes are the Nuyaloa, Vatusila, Mbatiwai,
+and Mdavutukia. They all seem to have spread eastward and southward from
+a place of origin in the western mountain district. Their physical type
+is pure Melanesian, with fewer traces of Polynesian admixture than can
+be detected in the tribes on the coast.[695] Hence it is natural to
+enquire whether the ritual of the _Nanga_ may not have been imported
+into Fiji by Melanesian immigrants from the west. The question appears
+to be answered in the affirmative by native tradition. "This is the word
+of our fathers concerning the _Nanga_," said an old Wainimala grey-beard
+to Mr. Fison. "Long, long ago their fathers were ignorant of it; but one
+day two strangers were found sitting in the _rara_ (public square), and
+they said they had come up from the sea to give them the _Nanga_. They
+were little men, and very dark-skinned, and one of them had his face and
+bust painted red, while the other was painted black. Whether these two
+were gods or men our fathers did not tell us, but it was they who taught
+our people the _Nanga_. This was in the old old times when our fathers
+were living in another land--not in this place, for we are strangers
+here. Our fathers fled hither from Navosa in a great war which arose
+among them, and when they came there was no _Nanga_ in the land. So they
+built one of their own after the fashion of that which they left behind
+them." "Here," says Mr. Basil Thomson, "we have the earliest
+tradition of missionary enterprise in the Pacific. I do not doubt that
+the two sooty-skinned little men were castaways driven eastward by one
+of those strong westerly gales that have been known to last for three
+weeks at a time. By Fijian custom the lives of all castaways were
+forfeit, but the pretence to supernatural powers would have saved men
+full of the religious rites of their Melanesian home, and would have
+assured them a hearing. The Wainimala tribes can name six generations
+since they settled in their present home, and therefore the introduction
+of the _Nanga_ cannot have been less than two centuries ago. During that
+time it has overspread one third of the large island."
+
+[Sidenote: The general licence associated with the ritual of the _Nanga_
+may be a temporary revival of primitive communism.]
+
+A very remarkable feature in the _Nanga_ ritual consists in the
+temporary licence accorded to the sexes and the suspension of
+proprietary rites in general. What is the meaning of this curious and to
+the civilised mind revolting custom? Here again the most probable,
+though merely conjectural, answer is furnished by Mr. Fison. "We cannot
+for a moment believe," he says, "that it is a mere licentious outbreak,
+without an underlying meaning and purpose. It is part of a religious
+rite, and is supposed to be acceptable to the ancestors. But why should
+it be acceptable to them unless it were in accordance with their own
+practice in the far-away past? There may be another solution of this
+difficult problem, but I confess myself unable to find any other which
+will cover all the corroborating facts."[696] In other words, Mr. Fison
+supposes that in the sexual licence and suspension of the rights of
+private property which characterise these festivals we have a
+reminiscence of a time when women and property were held in common by
+the community, and the motive for temporarily resuscitating these
+obsolete customs was a wish to propitiate the ancestral spirits, who
+were thought to be gratified by witnessing a revival of that primitive
+communism which they themselves had practised in the flesh so long ago.
+Truly a religious revival of a remarkable kind!
+
+[Sidenote: Description of the _Nanga_ or sacred enclosure of stones.]
+
+To conclude this part of my subject I will briefly describe the
+construction of a _Nanga_ or sacred stone enclosure, as it used to exist
+in Fiji. At the present day only ruins of these structures are to be
+seen, but by an observation of the ruins and a comparison of the
+traditions which still survive among the natives on the subject it is
+possible to reconstruct one of them with a fair degree of exactness. A
+_Nanga_ has been described as an open-air temple, and the description is
+just. It consisted of a rough parallelogram enclosed by flat stones set
+upright and embedded endwise in the earth. The length of the enclosure
+thus formed was about one hundred feet and its breadth about fifty feet.
+The upright stones which form the outer walls are from eighteen inches
+to three feet high, but as they do not always touch they may be
+described as alignments rather than walls. The long walls or alignments
+run east and west, the short ones north and south; but the orientation
+is not very exact. At the eastern end are two pyramidal heaps of stones,
+about five feet high, with square sloping sides and flat tops. The
+narrow passage between them is the main entrance into the sacred
+enclosure. Internally the structure was divided into three separate
+enclosures or compartments by two cross-walls of stone running north and
+south. These compartments, taking them from east to west, were called
+respectively the Little Nanga, the Great Nanga, and the Sacred Nanga or
+Holy of Holies (_Nanga tambu-tambu_). The partition walls between them
+were built solid of stones, with battering sides, to a height of five
+feet, and in the middle of each there was an opening to allow the
+worshippers to pass from one compartment to another. Trees, such as the
+candlenut and the red-leaved dracaena, and odoriferous shrubs were
+planted round the enclosure; and outside of it, to the west of the Holy
+of Holies, was a bell-roofed hut called _Vale tambu_, the Sacred House
+or Temple. The sacred _kava_ bowl stood in the Holy of Holies.[697] It
+is said that when the two traditionary founders of the _Nanga_ in Fiji
+were about to erect the first structure of that name in their new home,
+the chief priest poured a libation of _kava_ to the ancestral gods,
+"and, calling upon those who died long, long ago by name, he prayed that
+the people of the tribe, both old and young, might live before
+them."[698]
+
+[Sidenote: Comparison of the _Nanga_ with the cromlechs and other
+megalithic monuments of Europe.]
+
+The sacred enclosures of stones which I have described have been
+compared to the alignments of stones at Carnac in Brittany and Merivale
+on Dartmoor, and it has been suggested that in the olden time these
+ancient European monuments may have witnessed religious rites like those
+which were till lately performed in the rude open-air temples of
+Fiji.[699] If there is any truth in the suggestion, which I mention for
+what it is worth, it would furnish another argument in favour of the
+view that our European cromlechs and other megalithic monuments were
+erected specially for the worship of the dead. The mortuary character of
+Stonehenge, for example, is at least suggested by the burial mounds
+which cluster thick around and within sight of it; about three hundred
+such tombs have been counted within a radius of three miles, while the
+rest of the country in the neighbourhood is comparatively free from
+them.[700]
+
+[Footnote 678: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 242 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 679: Charles Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 86.]
+
+[Footnote 680: John Jackson's Narrative, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+_Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London,
+1853), pp. 475-477. The narrator, John Jackson, was an English seaman
+who resided alone among the Fijians for nearly two years and learned
+their language.]
+
+[Footnote 681: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 96.]
+
+[Footnote 682: _United States Exploring Expedition, Ethnology and
+Philology_, by H. Hale (Philadelphia, 1846), p. 65. Compare Capt. J. E.
+Erskine, _op. cit._ p. 248: "It would also seem that a belief in the
+resurrection of the body, in the exact condition in which it leaves the
+world, is one of the causes that induce, in many instances, a desire for
+death in the vigour of manhood, rather than in the decrepitude of old
+age"; Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 183: "The heathen notion is, that, as
+they die, such will their condition be in another world; hence their
+desire to escape extreme infirmity."]
+
+[Footnote 683: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 94 _sq._ Compare Th.
+Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 183-186; Lorimer Fison, _Tales from
+Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), pp. xxv. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 684: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 96. Compare Th. Williams,
+_op. cit._ i. 188 _sq._, 193 _sqq._, 200-202; Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._
+pp. xxv. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 685: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 200.]
+
+[Footnote 686: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 189; Lorimer Fison, _op.
+cit._ p. xvi.]
+
+[Footnote 687: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 189.]
+
+[Footnote 688: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 197.]
+
+[Footnote 689: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 100. Williams also says (_op.
+cit._ i. 167) that the proper time for performing the rite of
+circumcision was after the death of a chief, and he tells us that "many
+rude games attend it. Blindfolded youths strike at thin vessels of water
+hung from the branch of a tree. At Lakemba, the men arm themselves with
+branches of the cocoa-nut, and carry on a sham fight. At Ono, they
+wrestle. At Mbau, they fillip small stones from the end of a bamboo with
+sufficient force to make the person hit wince again. On Vanua Levu,
+there is a mock siege."]
+
+[Footnote 690: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 691: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) pp. 27 _sq._ On the other hand Mr. Basil
+Thomson's enquiries, made at a later date, did not confirm Mr. Fison's
+statement that the rite of circumcision was practised as a propitiation
+to recover a chief from sickness. "I was assured," he says, "on the
+contrary, that while offerings were certainly made in the _Nanga_ for
+the recovery of the sick, every youth was circumcised as a matter of
+routine, and that the rite was in no way connected with sacrifice for
+the sick" (Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 156 _sq._). However, Mr.
+Fison was a very careful and accurate enquirer, and his testimony is not
+to be lightly set aside.]
+
+[Footnote 692: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) p. 26. Compare Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, p.
+147: "The _Nanga_ was the 'bed' of the Ancestors, that is, the spot
+where their descendants might hold communion with them; the _Mbaki_ were
+the rites celebrated in the _Nanga_, whether of initiating the youths,
+or of presenting the first-fruits, or of recovering the sick, or of
+winning charms against wounds in battle."]
+
+[Footnote 693: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. 27.]
+
+[Footnote 694: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) pp. 14-26. The _Nanga_ and its rites have also
+been described by Mr. A. B. Joske ("The Nanga of Viti-levu,"
+_Internationales Archiv für Ethnographie_, ii. (1889) pp. 254-266), and
+Mr. Basil Thomson (_The Fijians_, pp. 146-156). As to the interval
+between the initiatory ceremonies Mr. Fison tells us that it was
+normally two years, but he adds: "This period, however, is not
+necessarily restricted to two years. There are always a number of youths
+who are growing to the proper age, and the length of the interval
+depends upon the decision of the elders. Whenever they judge that there
+is a sufficient number of youths ready for admission, a _Nanga_ is
+appointed to be held; and thus the interval may be longer or shorter,
+according to the supply of novices" (_op. cit._ p. 19). According to Mr.
+Basil Thomson the rites were celebrated annually. Mr. Fison's evidence
+as to the gross license which prevailed between the sexes after the
+admission of the women to the sacred enclosure is confirmed by Mr. Basil
+Thomson, who says, amongst other things, that "a native of Mbau, who
+lived for some years near the _Nanga_, assured me that the visit of the
+women to the _Nanga_ resulted in temporary promiscuity; all tabus were
+defied, and relations who could not speak to one another by customary
+law committed incest" (_op. cit._ p. 154).]
+
+[Footnote 695: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) pp. 14 _sqq._; Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp.
+147, 149.]
+
+[Footnote 696: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. 30.]
+
+[Footnote 697: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ pp. 15, 17, with Plate I.;
+Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 147 _sq._ Mr. Fison had not seen a
+_Nanga_; his description is based on information received from natives.
+Mr. Basil Thomson visited several of these structures and found them so
+alike that one description would serve for all. He speaks of only two
+inner compartments, which he calls the Holy of Holies (_Nanga
+tambu-tambu_) and the Middle Nanga (_Loma ni Nanga_), but the latter
+name appears to imply a third compartment, which is explicitly mentioned
+and named by Mr. Fison. The bell-shaped hut or temple to the west of the
+sacred enclosure is not noticed by Mr. Thomson.]
+
+[Footnote 698: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. 17.]
+
+[Footnote 699: Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 700: As to these monuments see Sir John Lubbock (Lord
+Avebury), _Prehistoric Times_, Fifth Edition (London, 1890), p. 127.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XX
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF EASTERN MELANESIA (FIJI)
+(_concluded_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Worship of ancestors in Fiji.]
+
+In the last lecture I described the rites of ancestor worship which in
+certain parts of Fiji used to be celebrated at the sacred enclosures of
+stones known as _Nangas_. But the worship of ancestral spirits was by no
+means confined to the comparatively small area in Fiji where such sacred
+enclosures were erected, nor were these open-air temples the only
+structures where the homage of the living was paid to the dead. On the
+contrary we are told by one who knew the Fijians in the old heathen days
+that among them "as soon as beloved parents expire, they take their
+place amongst the family gods. _Bures_, or temples, are erected to their
+memory, and offerings deposited either on their graves or on rudely
+constructed altars--mere stages, in the form of tables, the legs of
+which are driven into the ground, and the top of which is covered with
+pieces of native cloth. The construction of these altars is identical
+with that observed by Turner in Tanna, and only differs in its inferior
+finish from the altars formerly erected in Tahiti and the adjacent
+islands. The offerings, consisting of the choicest articles of food, are
+left exposed to wind and weather, and firmly believed by the mass of
+Fijians to be consumed by the spirits of departed friends and relations;
+but, if not eaten by animals, they are often stolen by the more
+enlightened class of their countrymen, and even some of the foreigners
+do not disdain occasionally to help themselves freely to them. However,
+it is not only on tombs or on altars that offerings are made; often,
+when the natives eat or drink anything, they throw portions of it away,
+stating them to be for their departed ancestors. I remember ordering a
+young chief to empty a bowl containing _kava_, which he did, muttering
+to himself, 'There, father, is some _kava_ for you. Protect me from
+illness or breaking any of my limbs whilst in the mountains.'"[701]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian notion of divinity. Two classes of gods, namely, gods
+strictly so called, and deified men.]
+
+"The native word expressive of divinity is _kalou_, which, while used to
+denote the people's highest notion of a god, is also constantly heard as
+a qualificative of any thing great or marvellous, or, according to
+Hazlewood's Dictionary, 'anything superlative, whether good or bad.'...
+Often the word sinks into a mere exclamation, or becomes an expression
+of flattery. 'You are a _kalou_!' or, 'Your countrymen are gods!' is
+often uttered by the natives, when hearing of the triumphs of art among
+civilized nations."[702] The Fijians distinguished two classes of gods:
+first, _kalou vu_, literally "Root-gods," that is, gods strictly so
+called, and second, _kalou yalo_, literally, "Soul-gods," that is,
+deified mortals. Gods of the first class were supposed to be absolutely
+eternal; gods of the second class, though raised far above mere
+humanity, were thought nevertheless to be subject to human passions and
+wants, to accidents, and even to death. These latter were the spirits of
+departed chiefs, heroes, and friends; admission into their number was
+easy, and any one might secure his own apotheosis who could ensure the
+services of some one to act as his representative and priest after his
+death.[703] However, though the Fijians admitted the distinction between
+the two classes of gods in theory, they would seem to have confused them
+in practice. Thus we are informed by an early authority that "they have
+superior and inferior gods and goddesses, more general and local
+deities, and, were it not an obvious contradiction, we should say they
+have gods _human_, and gods _divine_; for they have some gods who were
+gods originally, and some who were originally men. It is impossible to
+ascertain with any degree of probability how many gods the Fijians have,
+as any man who can distinguish himself in murdering his fellow-men may
+certainly secure to himself deification after death. Their friends are
+also sometimes deified and invoked. I have heard them invoke their
+friends who have been drowned at sea. I need not advert to the absurdity
+of praying to those who could not save themselves from a watery grave.
+Tuikilakila, the chief of Somosomo, offered Mr. Hunt a preferment of
+this sort. 'If you die first,' said he, 'I shall make you my god.' In
+fact, there appears to be no certain line of demarcation between
+departed spirits and gods, nor between gods and living men, for many of
+the priests and old chiefs are considered as sacred persons, and not a
+few of them will also claim to themselves the right of divinity. 'I am a
+god,' Tuikilakila would sometimes say; and he believed it too. They were
+not merely the words of his lips; he believed he was something above a
+mere man."[704]
+
+Writers on Fiji have given us lists of some of the principal gods of the
+first class,[705] who were supposed never to have been men; but in their
+account of the religious ritual they do not distinguish between the
+worship which was paid to such deities and that which was paid to
+deified men. Accordingly we may infer that the ritual was practically
+the same, and in the sequel I shall assume that what is told us of the
+worship of gods in general holds good of the worship of deified men in
+particular.
+
+[Sidenote: The Fijian temple (_bure_).]
+
+Every Fijian town had at least one _bure_ or temple, many of them had
+several. Significantly enough the spot where a chief had been killed was
+sometimes chosen for the site of a temple. The structure of these
+edifices was somewhat peculiar. Each of them was built on the top of a
+mound, which was raised to the height of from three to twenty feet above
+the ground and faced on its sloping sides with dry rubble-work of stone.
+The ascent to the temple was by a thick plank, the upper surface of
+which was cut into notched steps. The proportions of the sacred edifice
+itself were inelegant, if not uncouth, its height being nearly twice as
+great as its breadth at the base. The roof was high-pitched; the
+ridge-pole was covered with white shells (_Ovula cypraea_) and projected
+three or four feet at each end. For the most part each temple had two
+doors and a fire-place in the centre. From some temples it was not
+lawful to throw out the ashes, however much they might accumulate, until
+the end of the year, which fell in November. The furniture consisted of
+a few boxes, mats, several large clay jars, and many drinking vessels. A
+temple might also contain images, which, though highly esteemed as
+ornaments and held sacred, were not worshipped as idols. From the roof
+depended a long piece of white bark-cloth; it was carried down the angle
+so as to hang before the corner-post and lie on the floor. This cloth
+formed the path down which the god was believed to pass in order to
+enter and inspire his priest. It marked the holy place which few but he
+dared to approach. However, the temples were by no means dedicated
+exclusively to the use of religion. Each of them served also as a
+council-chamber and town-hall; there the chiefs lounged for hours
+together; there strangers were entertained; and there the head persons
+of the village might even sleep.[706] In some parts of Viti Levu the
+dead were sometimes buried in the temples, "that the wind might not
+disturb, nor the rain fall upon them," and in order that the living
+might have the satisfaction of lying near their departed friends. A
+child of high rank having died under the charge of the queen of
+Somosomo, the little body was placed in a box and hung from the tie-beam
+of the principal temple. For some months afterwards the daintiest food
+was brought daily to the dead child, the bearers approaching with the
+utmost respect and clapping their hands when the ghost was thought to
+have finished his meal just as a chiefs retainers used to do when he had
+done eating.[707]
+
+[Sidenote: Worship at the temples.]
+
+Temples were often unoccupied for months and allowed to fall into ruins,
+until the chief had some request to make to the god, when the necessary
+repairs were first carried out. No regular worship was maintained, no
+habitual reverence was displayed at the shrines. The principle of fear,
+we are told, seemed to be the only motive of religious observances, and
+it was artfully fomented by the priests, through whom alone the people
+had access to the gods when they desired to supplicate the favour of the
+divine beings. The prayers were naturally accompanied by offerings,
+which in matters of importance comprised large quantities of food,
+together with whales' teeth; in lesser affairs a tooth, club, mat, or
+spear sufficed. Of the food brought by the worshippers part was
+dedicated to the god, but as usual he only ate the soul of it, the
+substance being consumed by the priest and old men; the remainder
+furnished a feast of which all might partake.[708]
+
+[Sidenote: The priests.]
+
+The office of priest (_mbete_, _bete_) was usually hereditary, but when
+a priest died without male heirs a cunning fellow, ambitious of enjoying
+the sacred character and of living in idleness, would sometimes simulate
+the convulsive frenzy, which passed for a symptom of inspiration, and if
+he succeeded in the imposture would be inducted into the vacant
+benefice. Every chief had his priest, with whom he usually lived on a
+very good footing, the two playing into each other's hands and working
+the oracle for their mutual benefit. The people were grossly
+superstitious, and there were few of their affairs in which the priest
+had not a hand. His influence over them was great. In his own district
+he passed for the representative of the deity; indeed, according to an
+early missionary, the natives seldom distinguished the idea of the god
+from that of his minister, who was viewed by them with a reverence that
+almost amounted to deification.[709]
+
+[Sidenote: Oracles given by the priest under the inspiration of the god.
+Paroxysm of inspiration.]
+
+The principal duty of the priest was to reveal to men the will of the
+god, and this he always did through the direct inspiration of the deity.
+The revelation was usually made in response to an enquiry or a prayer;
+the supplicant asked, it might be, for a good crop of yams or taro, for
+showers of rain, for protection in battle, for a safe voyage, or for a
+storm to drive canoes ashore, so that the supplicant might rob, murder,
+and eat the castaways. To lend force to one or other of these pious
+prayers the worshipper brought a whale's tooth to the temple and
+presented it to the priest. The man of god might have had word of his
+coming and time to throw himself into an appropriate attitude. He might,
+for example, be seen lying on the floor near the sacred corner, plunged
+in a profound meditation. On the entrance of the enquirer the priest
+would rouse himself so far as to get up and then seat himself with his
+back to the white cloth, down which the deity was expected to slide into
+the medium's body. Having received the whale's tooth he would abstract
+his mind from all worldly matters and contemplate the tooth for some
+time with rapt attention. Presently he began to tremble, his limbs
+twitched, his features were distorted. These symptoms, the visible
+manifestation of the entrance of the spirit into him, gradually
+increased in violence till his whole frame was convulsed and shook as
+with a strong fit of ague: his veins swelled: the circulation of the
+blood was quickened. The man was now possessed and inspired by the god:
+his own human personality was for a time in abeyance: all that he said
+and did in the paroxysm passed for the words and acts of the indwelling
+deity. Shrill cries of "_Koi au! Koi au!_" "It is I! It is I!" filled
+the air, proclaiming the actual presence of the powerful spirit in the
+vessel of flesh and blood. In giving the oracular response the priest's
+eyes protruded from their sockets and rolled as in a frenzy: his voice
+rose into a squeak: his face was pallid, his lips livid, his breathing
+depressed, his whole appearance that of a furious madman. At last sweat
+burst from every pore, tears gushed from his eyes: the strain on the
+organism was visibly relieved; and the symptoms gradually abated. Then
+he would look round with a vacant stare: the god within him would cry,
+"I depart!" and the man would announce the departure of the spirit by
+throwing himself on his mat or striking the ground with his club, while
+blasts on a shell-trumpet conveyed to those at a distance the tidings
+that the deity had withdrawn from mortal sight into the world
+invisible.[710] "I have seen," says Mr. Lorimer Fison, "this possession,
+and a horrible sight it is. In one case, after the fit was over, for
+some time the man's muscles and nerves twitched and quivered in an
+extraordinary way. He was naked except for his breech-clout, and on his
+naked breast little snakes seemed to be wriggling for a moment or two
+beneath his skin, disappearing and then suddenly reappearing in another
+part of his chest. When the _mbete_ (which we may translate 'priest' for
+want of a better word) is seized by the possession, the god within him
+calls out his own name in a stridulous tone, 'It is I! Katouviere!' or
+some other name. At the next possession some other ancestor may declare
+himself."[711]
+
+[Sidenote: Specimens of the oracular utterances of Fijian gods.]
+
+From this last description of an eye-witness we learn that the spirit
+which possessed a priest and spoke through him was often believed to be
+that of a dead ancestor. Some of the inspired utterances of these
+prophets have been recorded. Here are specimens of Fijian inspiration.
+Speaking in the name of the great god Ndengei, who was worshipped in the
+form of a serpent, the priest said: "Great Fiji is my small club.
+Muaimbila is the head; Kamba is the handle. If I step on Muaimbila, I
+shall sink it into the sea, whilst Kamba shall rise to the sky. If I
+step on Kamba, it will be lost in the sea, whilst Muaimbila would rise
+into the skies. Yes, Viti Levu is my small war-club. I can turn it as I
+please. I can turn it upside down." Again, speaking by the mouth of a
+priest, the god Tanggirianima once made the following observations: "I
+and Kumbunavannua only are gods. I preside over wars, and do as I please
+with sickness. But it is difficult for me to come here, as the foreign
+god fills the place. If I attempt to descend by that pillar, I find it
+pre-occupied by the foreign god. If I try another pillar, I find it the
+same. However, we two are fighting the foreign god; and if we are
+victorious, we will save the woman. I _will_ save the woman. She will
+eat food to-day. Had I been sent for yesterday, she would have eaten
+then," and so on. The woman, about whose case the deity was consulted
+and whom he announced his fixed intention of saving, died a few hours
+afterwards.[712]
+
+[Sidenote: Human sacrifices in Fiji.]
+
+Ferocious and inveterate cannibals themselves, the Fijians naturally
+assumed that their gods were so too; hence human flesh was a common
+offering, indeed the most valued of all.[713] Formal human sacrifices
+were frequent. The victims were usually taken from a distant tribe, and
+when war and violence failed to supply the demand, recourse was
+sometimes had to negotiation. However obtained, the victims destined for
+sacrifice were often kept for a time and fattened to make them better
+eating. Then, tightly bound in a sitting posture, they were placed on
+hot stones in one of the usual ovens, and being covered over with leaves
+and earth were roasted alive, while the spectators roared with laughter
+at the writhings and contortions of the victims in their agony. When
+their struggles ceased and the bodies were judged to be done to a
+nicety, they were raked out of the oven, their faces painted black, and
+so carried to the temple, where they were presented to the gods, only,
+however, to be afterwards removed, cut up, and devoured by the
+people.[714]
+
+[Sidenote: Human sacrifices offered when a king's house was built or a
+great new canoe launched.]
+
+However, roasting alive in ovens was not the only way in which men and
+women were made away with in the service of religion. When a king's
+house was built, men were buried alive in the holes dug to receive the
+posts: they were compelled to clasp the posts in their arms, and then
+the earth was shovelled over them and rammed down. And when a large new
+canoe was launched, it was hauled down to the sea over the bodies of
+living men, who were pinioned and laid out at intervals on the beach to
+serve as rollers on which the great vessel glided smoothly into the
+water, leaving a row of mangled corpses behind. The theory of both these
+modes of sacrifice was explained by the Fijians to an Englishman who
+witnessed them. I will quote their explanation in his words. "They said
+in answer to the questions I put respecting the people being buried
+alive with the posts, that a house or palace of a king was just like a
+king's canoe: if the canoe was not hauled over men, as rollers, she
+would not be expected to float long, and in like manner the palace could
+not stand long if people were not to sit down and continually hold the
+posts up. But I said, 'How could they hold the posts up after they were
+dead?' They said, if they sacrificed their lives endeavouring to hold
+the posts in their right position to their superior's _turanga kai na
+kalou_ (chiefs and god), that the virtue of the sacrifice would
+instigate the gods to uphold the house after they were dead, and that
+they were honoured by being considered adequate to such a noble
+task."[715] Apparently the Fijians imagined that the souls of the dead
+men would somehow strengthen the souls of the houses and canoes and so
+prolong the lives of these useful objects; for it is to be remembered
+that according to Fijian theology houses and canoes as well as men and
+women were provided with immortal souls.
+
+[Sidenote: High estimation in which murder was held by the Fijians.]
+
+Perhaps the same theory of immortality partially accounts for the high
+honour in which the Fijian held the act of murder and for the admiration
+which he bestowed on all murderers. "Shedding of blood," we are told,
+"to him is no crime, but a glory. Whoever may be the victim,--whether
+noble or vulgar, old or young, man, woman, or child,--whether slain in
+war, or butchered by treachery,--to be somehow an acknowledged murderer
+is the object of the Fijian's restless ambition."[716] It was customary
+throughout Fiji to give honorary names to such as had clubbed to death a
+human being, of any age or either sex, during a war. The new epithet was
+given with the complimentary prefix _Koroi_. Mr. Williams once asked a
+man why he was called _Koroi_. "Because," he replied, "I, with several
+other men, found some women and children in a cave, drew them out and
+clubbed them, and then was consecrated."[717] Mr. Fison learned from
+another stout young warrior that he had earned the honourable
+distinction of _Koroi_ by lying in wait among the mangrove bushes at the
+waterside and killing a miserable old woman of a hostile tribe, as she
+crept along the mudflat seeking for shellfish. The man would have been
+equally honoured, adds Mr. Fison, if his victim had been a child. The
+hero of such an exploit, for two or three days after killing his man or
+woman, was allowed to besmear his face and bust with a mixture of
+lampblack and oil which differed from the common black war-paint;
+decorated with this badge of honour he strutted proudly through the
+town, the cynosure of all eyes, an object of envy to his fellows and of
+tender interest to the girls. The old men shouted approval after him,
+the women would _lulilu_ admiringly as he passed by, and the boys looked
+up to him as a superior being whose noble deeds they thirsted to
+emulate. Higher titles of honour still were bestowed on such as had
+slain their ten, or twenty, or thirty; and Mr. Fison tells us of a chief
+whose admiring countrymen had to compound all these titles into one in
+order to set forth his superlative claims to glory. A man who had never
+killed anybody was of very little account in this life, and he received
+the penalty due to his sin in the life hereafter. For in the spirit land
+the ghost of such a poor-spirited wretch was sentenced to what the
+Fijians regarded as the most degrading of all punishments, to beat a
+heap of muck with his bloodless club.[718]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of consecrating a manslayer. The temporary
+restrictions laid on a manslayer were probably dictated by a fear of his
+victim's ghost.]
+
+The ceremony of consecrating a manslayer was elaborate. He was anointed
+with red oil from the hair of his head to the soles of his feet; and
+when he had been thus incarnadined he exchanged clubs with the
+spectators, who believed that their weapons acquired a mysterious virtue
+by passing through his holy hands. Afterwards the anointed one, attended
+by the king and elders, solemnly stalked down to the sea and wetted the
+soles of his feet in the water. Then the whole company returned to the
+town, while the shell-trumpets sounded and the men raised a peculiar
+hoot. Custom required that a hut should be built in which the anointed
+man and his companions must pass the next three nights, during which the
+hero might not lie down, but had to sleep as he sat; all that time he
+might not change his bark-cloth garment, nor wash the red paint away
+from his body, nor enter a house in which there was a woman.[719] The
+reason for observing these curious restrictions is not mentioned, but in
+the light of similar practices, some of which have been noticed in these
+lectures,[720] we may conjecture that they were dictated by a fear of
+the victim's ghost, who among savages generally haunts his slayer and
+will do him a mischief, if he gets a chance. As it is especially in
+dreams that the naturally incensed spirit finds his opportunity, we can
+perhaps understand why the slayer might not lie down for the first three
+nights after the slaughter; the wrath of the ghost would then be at its
+hottest, and if he spied his murderer stretched in slumber on the
+ground, the temptation to take an unfair advantage of him might have
+been too strong to be resisted. But when his anger had had time to cool
+down or he had departed for his long home, as ghosts generally do after
+a reasonable time, the precautions taken to baffle his vengeance might
+be safely relaxed. Perhaps, as I have already hinted, the reverence
+which the Fijians felt for any man who had taken a human life, or at all
+events the life of an enemy, may have partly sprung from a belief that
+the slayer increased his own strength and valour either by subjugating
+the ghost of his victim and employing it as his henchman, or perhaps
+rather by simply absorbing in some occult fashion the vital energy of
+the slain. This view is confirmed by the permission given to the killer
+to assume the name of the killed, whenever his victim was a man of
+distinguished rank;[721] for by taking the name he, according to an
+opinion common among savages, assumed the personality of his namesake.
+
+[Sidenote: Other funeral customs based on a fear of the ghost.]
+
+The same fear of the ghost of the recently departed which manifested
+itself, if my interpretation of the customs is right, in the treatment
+of manslayers, seems to have imprinted itself, though in a more
+attenuated form, on some of the practices observed by Fijian mourners
+after a natural, not a violent, death.
+
+[Sidenote: Persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food.
+Seclusion of grave-diggers.]
+
+Thus all the persons who had handled a corpse were forbidden to touch
+anything for some time afterwards; in particular they were strictly
+debarred from touching their food with their hands; their victuals were
+brought to them by others, and they were fed like infants by attendants
+or obliged to pick up their food with their mouths from the ground. The
+time during which this burdensome restriction lasted was different
+according to the rank of the deceased: in the case of great chiefs it
+lasted from two to ten months; in the case of a petty chief it did not
+exceed one month; and in the case of a common person a taboo of not more
+than four days sufficed. When a chief's principal wife did not follow
+him to the other world by being strangled or buried alive, she might not
+touch her own food with her hands for three months. When the mourners
+grew tired of being fed like infants or feeding themselves like dogs,
+they sent word to the head chief and he let them know that he would
+remove the taboo whenever they pleased. Accordingly they sent him
+presents of pigs and other provisions, which he shared among the people.
+Then the tabooed persons went into a stream and washed themselves; after
+that they caught some animal, such as a pig or a turtle, and wiped their
+hands on it, and the animal thereupon became sacred to the chief. Thus
+the taboo was removed, and the men were free once more to work, to feed
+themselves, and to live with their wives. Lazy and idle fellows
+willingly undertook the duty of waiting on the dead, as it relieved them
+for some time from the painful necessity of earning their own
+bread.[722] The reason why such persons might not touch food with their
+hands was probably a fear of the ghost or at all events of the infection
+of death; the ghost or the infection might be clinging to their hands
+and might so be transferred from them to their food with fatal effects.
+In Great Fiji not every one might dig a chief's grave. The office was
+hereditary in a certain clan. After the funeral the grave-digger was
+shut up in a house and painted black from head to foot. When he had to
+make a short excursion, he covered himself with a large mantle of
+painted native cloth and was supposed to be invisible. His food was
+brought to the house after dark by silent bearers, who placed it just
+within the doorway. His seclusion might last for a long time;[723] it
+was probably intended to screen him from the ghost.
+
+[Sidenote: Hair cropped and finger-joints cut off in mourning.]
+
+The usual outward sign of mourning was to crop the hair or beard, or
+very rarely both. Some people merely made bald the crown of the head.
+Indeed the Fijians were too vain of their hair to part with it lightly,
+and to conceal the loss which custom demanded of them on these occasions
+they used to wear wigs, some of which were very skilfully made. The
+practice of cutting off finger-joints in mourning has already been
+mentioned; one early authority affirms and another denies that joints of
+the little toes were similarly amputated by the living as a mark of
+sorrow for the dead. So common was the practice of lopping off the
+little fingers in mourning that till recently few of the older natives
+could be found who had their hands intact; most of them indeed had lost
+the little fingers of both hands. There was a Fijian saying that the
+fourth finger "cried itself hoarse in vain for its absent mate"
+(_droga-droga-wale_). The mutilation was usually confined to the
+relations of the deceased, unless he happened to be one of the highest
+chiefs. However, the severed joints were often sent by poor people to
+wealthy families in mourning, who never failed to reward the senders for
+so delicate a mark of sympathy. Female mourners burned their skin into
+blisters by applying lighted rolls of bark-cloth to various parts of
+their bodies; the brands so produced might be seen on their arms,
+shoulders, necks, and breasts.[724] During the mourning for a king
+people fasted till evening for ten or twenty days; the coast for miles
+was tabooed and no one might fish there; the nuts also were made sacred.
+Some people in token of grief for a bereavement would abstain from fish,
+fruit, or other pleasant food for months together; others would dress in
+leaves instead of in cloth.[725]
+
+[Sidenote: Men whipped by women in time of mourning for a chief.]
+
+Though the motive for these observances is not mentioned, we may suppose
+that they were intended to soothe and please the ghost by testifying to
+the sorrow felt by the survivors at his decease. It is more doubtful
+whether the same explanation would apply to another custom which the
+Fijians used to observe in mourning. During ten days after a death,
+while the soul of a deceased chief was thought to be still lingering in
+or near his body, all the women of the town provided themselves with
+long whips, knotted with shells, and applied them with great vigour to
+the bodies of the men, raising weals and inflicting bloody wounds, while
+the men retorted by flirting pellets of clay from splinters of
+bamboo.[726] According to Mr. Williams, this ceremony was performed on
+the tenth day or earlier, and he adds: "I have seen grave personages,
+not accustomed to move quickly, flying with all possible speed before a
+company of such women. Sometimes the men retaliate by bespattering their
+assailants with mud; but they use no violence, as it seems to be a day
+on which they are bound to succumb."[727] As the soul of the dead was
+believed to quit his body and depart to his destined abode on the tenth
+day after death,[728] the scourging of the men by the women was probably
+supposed in some way to speed the parting guest on his long journey.
+
+[Sidenote: The dead taken out of the house by a special opening made in
+a wall. Examples of the custom among Aryan peoples.]
+
+When a certain king of Fiji died, the side of the house was broken down
+to allow the body to be carried out, though there were doorways wide
+enough for the purpose close at hand. The missionary who records the
+fact could not learn the reason of it.[729] The custom of taking the
+dead out of the house by a special opening, which is afterwards closed
+up, has not been confined to Fiji; on the contrary it has been practised
+by a multitude of peoples, savage, barbarous, and civilised, in many
+parts of the world. For example, it was an old Norse rule that a corpse
+might not be carried out of the house by the door which was used by the
+living; hence a hole was made in the wall at the back of the dead man's
+head and he was taken out through it backwards, or a hole was dug in the
+ground under the south wall and the body was drawn out through it.[730]
+The custom may have been at one time common to all the Aryan or
+Indo-european peoples, for it is mentioned in other of their ancient
+records and has been observed by widely separated branches of that great
+family down to modern times. Thus, the Zend-Avesta prescribes that, when
+a death has occurred, a breach shall be made in the wall and the corpse
+carried out through it by two men, who have first stripped off their
+clothes.[731] In Russia "the corpse was often carried out of the house
+through a window, or through a hole made for the purpose, and the custom
+is still kept up in many parts."[732] Speaking of the Hindoos a French
+traveller of the eighteenth century says that "instead of carrying the
+corpse out by the door they make an opening in the wall by which they
+pass it out in a seated posture, and the hole is closed up after the
+ceremony."[733] Among various Hindoo castes it is still customary, when
+a death has occurred on an inauspicious day, to remove the corpse from
+the house not through the door, but through a temporary hole made in the
+wall.[734] Old German law required that the corpses of criminals and
+suicides should be carried out through a hole under the threshold.[735]
+In the Highlands of Scotland the bodies of suicides were not taken out
+of the house for burial by the doors, but through an opening made
+between the wall and the thatch.[736]
+
+[Sidenote: Examples of the custom among non-Aryan peoples.]
+
+But widespread as such customs have been among Indo-european peoples,
+they have been by no means confined to that branch of the human race. It
+was an ancient Chinese practice to knock down part of the wall of a
+house for the purpose of carrying out a corpse.[737] Some of the
+Canadian Indians would never take a corpse out of the hut by the
+ordinary door, but always lifted a piece of the bark wall near which the
+dead man lay and then drew him through the opening.[738] Among the
+Esquimaux of Bering Strait a corpse is usually raised through the
+smoke-hole in the roof, but is never taken out by the doorway. Should
+the smoke-hole be too small, an opening is made in the rear of the house
+and then closed again.[739] When a Greenlander dies, "they do not carry
+out the corpse through the entry of the house, but lift it through the
+window, or if he dies in a tent, they unfasten one of the skins behind,
+and convey it out that way. A woman behind waves a lighted chip backward
+and forward, and says: 'There is nothing more to be had here.'"[740]
+Similarly the Hottentots, Bechuanas, Basutos, Marotse, Barongo, and many
+other tribes of South and West Africa never carry a corpse out by the
+door of the hut but always by a special opening made in the wall.[741] A
+similar custom is observed by the maritime Gajos of Sumatra[742] and by
+some of the Indian tribes of North-west America, such as the Tlingit and
+the Haida.[743] Among the Lepchis of Sikhim, whose houses are raised on
+piles, the dead are taken out by a hole made in the floor.[744] Dwellers
+in tents who practise this custom remove a corpse from the tent, not by
+the door, but through an opening made by lifting up an edge of the
+tent-cover: this is done by European gypsies[745] and by the Koryak of
+north-eastern Asia.[746]
+
+[Sidenote: The motive of the custom is a desire to prevent the ghost
+from returning to the house.]
+
+In all such customs the original motive probably was a fear of the ghost
+and a wish to exclude him from the house, lest he should return and
+carry off the survivors with him to the spirit land. Ghosts are commonly
+credited with a low degree of intelligence, and it appears to be
+supposed that they can only find their way back to a house by the
+aperture through which their bodies were carried out. Hence people made
+a practice of taking a corpse out not by the door, but through an
+opening specially made for the purpose, which was afterwards blocked up,
+so that when the ghost returned from the grave and attempted to enter
+the house, he found the orifice closed and was obliged to turn away
+disappointed. That this was the train of reasoning actually followed by
+some peoples may be gathered from the explanations which they themselves
+give of the custom. Thus among the Tuski of Alaska "those who die a
+natural death are carried out through a hole cut in the back of the hut
+or _yaráng_. This is immediately closed up, that the spirit of the dead
+man may not find his way back."[747] Among the Esquimaux of Hudson Bay
+"the nearest relatives on approach of death remove the invalid to the
+outside of the house, for if he should die within he must not be carried
+out of the door but through a hole cut in the side wall, and it must
+then be carefully closed to prevent the spirit of the person from
+returning."[748] Again, "when a Siamese is dead, his relations deposit
+the body in a coffin well covered. They do not pass it through the door
+but let it down into the street by an opening which they make in the
+wall. They also carry it thrice round the house, running at the top of
+their speed. They believe that if they did not take this precaution, the
+dead man would remember the way by which he had passed, and that he
+would return by night to do some ill turn to his family."[749] In
+Travancore the body of a dead rajah "is taken out of the palace through
+a breach in the wall, made for the purpose, to avoid pollution of the
+gate, and afterwards built up again so that the departed spirit may not
+return through the gate to trouble the survivors."[750] Among the Kayans
+of Borneo, whose dwellings are raised on piles above the ground, the
+coffin is conveyed out of the house by lowering it with rattans either
+through the floor, planks being taken up for the purpose, or under the
+eaves at the side of the gallery. "In this way they avoid carrying it
+down the house-ladder; and it seems to be felt that this precaution
+renders it more difficult for the ghost to find its way back to the
+house."[751] Among the Cheremiss of Russia, "old custom required that
+the corpse should not be carried out by the door but through a breach in
+the north wall, where there is usually a sash-window. But the custom has
+long been obsolete, even among the heathen, and only very old people
+speak of it. They explain it as follows: to carry it out by the door
+would be to shew the _Asyrèn_ (the dead man) the right way into the
+house, whereas a breach in the wooden wall is immediately closed by
+replacing the beams in position, and thus the _Asyrèn_ would in vain
+seek for an entrance."[752] The Samoyeds never carry a corpse out of the
+hut by the door, but lift up a piece of the reindeer-skin covering and
+draw the body out, head foremost, through the opening. They think that
+if they were to carry a corpse out by the door, the ghost would soon
+return and fetch away other members of the family.[753] On the same
+principle, as soon as the Indians of Tumupasa, in north-west Bolivia,
+have carried a corpse out of the house, "they shift the door to the
+opposite side, in order that the deceased may not be able to find
+it."[754] Once more, in Mecklenburg "it is a law regulating the return
+of the dead that they are compelled to return by the same way by which
+the corpse was removed from the house. In the villages of Picher,
+Bresegard, and others the people used to have movable thresholds at the
+house-doors, which, being fitted into the door-posts, could be shoved
+up. The corpse was then carried out of the house under the threshold,
+and therefore could not return over it."[755]
+
+[Sidenote: Some people only remove in this manner the bodies of persons
+whose ghosts are especially feared.]
+
+Even without such express testimonies to the meaning of the custom we
+may infer from a variety of evidence that the real motive for practising
+it is a fear of the ghost and a wish to prevent his return. For it is to
+be observed that some peoples do not carry out all their dead by a
+special opening, but that they accord this peculiar mode of removal only
+to persons who die under unlucky or disgraceful circumstances, and whose
+ghosts accordingly are more than usually dreaded. Thus we have seen that
+some modern Hindoo castes observe the custom only in the case of people
+who have died on inauspicious days; and that in Germany and the
+Highlands of Scotland this mode of removal was specially reserved for
+the bodies of suicides, whose ghosts are exceedingly feared by many
+people, as appears from the stringent precautions taken against
+them.[756] Again, among the Kavirondo of Central Africa, "when a woman
+dies without having borne a child, she is carried out of the back of the
+house. A hole is made in the wall and the corpse is ignominiously pushed
+through the hole and carried some distance to be buried, as it is
+considered a curse to die without a child. If the woman has given birth
+to a child, then her corpse is carried out through the front door and
+buried in the verandah of the house."[757] In Brittany a stillborn child
+is removed from the house, not by the door, but by the window; "for if
+by ill-luck it should chance otherwise, the mothers who should pass
+through that fatal door would bear nothing but stillborn infants."[758]
+In Perche, another province of France, the same rule is observed with
+regard to stillborn children, though the reason for it is not
+alleged.[759] But of all ghosts none perhaps inspire such deep and
+universal terror as the ghosts of women who have died in childbed, and
+extraordinary measures are accordingly taken to disable these dangerous
+spirits from returning and doing a mischief to the living.[760] Amongst
+the precautions adopted to keep them at bay is the custom of carrying
+their corpses out of the house by a special opening, which is afterwards
+blocked up. Thus in Laos, a province of Siam, "the bodies of women dying
+in childbirth, or within a month afterwards, are not even taken out of
+the house in the ordinary way by the door, but are let down through the
+floor."[761] The Kachins of Burma stand in such fear of the ghosts of
+women dying in childbed that no sooner has such a death occurred than
+the husband, the children, and almost all the people in the house take
+to flight lest the woman's ghost should bite them. "The body of the
+deceased must be burned as soon as possible in order to punish her for
+dying such a death, and also in order to frighten her ghost (_minla_).
+They bandage her eyes with her own hair and with leaves to prevent her
+from seeing anything; they wrap her in a mat, and they carry her out of
+the house, not by the ordinary door, but by an opening made for the
+purpose in the wall or the floor of the room where she breathed her
+last. Then they convey her to a deep ravine, where no one dares to pass;
+they lay her in the midst of a great pyre with all the clothes,
+jewellery, and other objects which belonged to her and of which she made
+use; and they burn the whole to cinders, to which they refuse the rites
+of sepulture. Thus they destroy all the property of the unfortunate
+woman, in order that her soul may not think of coming to fetch it
+afterwards and to bite people in the attempt."[762] Similarly among the
+Kayans or Bahaus of Central Borneo "the corpses of women dying in
+childbed excite a special horror; no man and no young woman may touch
+them; they are not carried out of the house through the front gallery,
+but are thrown out of the back wall of the dwelling, some boards having
+been removed for the purpose."[763] Indeed so great is the alarm felt by
+the Kayans at a miscarriage of this sort that when a woman labours hard
+in childbed, the news quickly spreads through the large communal house
+in which the people dwell; and if the attendants begin to fear a fatal
+issue, the whole household is thrown into consternation. All the men,
+from the chief down to the boys, will flee from the house, or, if it is
+night, they will clamber up among the beams of the roof and there hide
+in terror; and, if the worst happens, they remain there until the
+woman's corpse has been removed from the house for burial.[764]
+
+[Sidenote: Sometimes the custom is observed when the original motive for
+it is forgotten.]
+
+Sometimes, while the custom continues to be practised, the idea which
+gave rise to it has either become obscured or has been incorrectly
+reported. Thus we are told that when a death has taken place among the
+Indians of North-west America "the body is at once taken out of the
+house through an opening in the wall from which the boards have been
+removed. It is believed that his ghost would kill every one if the body
+were to stay in the house."[765] Such a belief, while it would furnish
+an excellent reason for hurrying the corpse out of the house as soon as
+possible, does not explain why it should be carried out through a
+special opening instead of through the door. Again, when a Queen of Bali
+died, "the body was drawn out of a large aperture made in the wall to
+the right-hand side of the door, in the absurd opinion of _cheating the
+devil_, whom these islanders believe to lie in wait in the ordinary
+passage."[766] Again, in Mukden, the capital of Manchuria, the corpses
+of children "must not be carried out of a door or window, but through a
+new or disused opening, in order that the evil spirit which causes the
+disease may not enter. The belief is that the Heavenly Dog which eats
+the sun at an eclipse demands the bodies of children, and that if they
+are denied to him he will bring certain calamity on the household."[767]
+These explanations of the custom are probably misinterpretations adopted
+at a later time when its original meaning was forgotten. For a custom
+often outlives the memory of the motives which gave it birth. And as
+royalty is very conservative of ancient usages, it would be no matter
+for surprise if the corpses of kings should continue to be carried out
+through special openings long after the bodies of commoners were allowed
+to be conveyed in commonplace fashion through the ordinary door. In
+point of fact we find the old custom observed by kings in countries
+where it has apparently ceased to be observed by their subjects. Thus
+among the Sakalava and Antimerina of Madagascar, "when a sovereign or a
+prince of the royal family dies within the enclosure of the king's
+palace, the corpse must be carried out of the palace, not by the door,
+but by a breach made for the purpose in the wall; the new sovereign
+could not pass through the door that had been polluted by the passage of
+a dead body."[768] Similarly among the Macassars and Buginese of
+Southern Celebes there is in the king's palace a window reaching to the
+floor through which on his decease the king's body is carried out.[769]
+That such a custom is only a limitation to kings of a rule which once
+applied to everybody becomes all the more probable, when we learn that
+in the island of Saleijer, which lies to the south of Celebes, each
+house has, besides its ordinary windows, a large window in the form of a
+door, through which, and not through the ordinary entrance, every corpse
+is regularly removed at death.[770]
+
+[Sidenote: Another Fijian funeral custom.]
+
+To return from this digression to Fiji, we may conclude with a fair
+degree of probability that when the side of a Fijian king's house was
+broken down to allow his corpse to be carried out, though there were
+doors at hand wide enough for the purpose, the original intention was to
+prevent the return of his ghost, who might have proved a very unwelcome
+intruder to his successor on the throne. But I cannot offer any
+explanation of another Fijian funeral custom. You may remember that in
+Fiji it was customary after the death of a chief to circumcise such lads
+as had reached a suitable age.[771] Well, on the fifth day after a
+chief's death a hole used to be dug under the floor of a temple and one
+of the newly circumcised lads was secreted in it. Then his companions
+fastened the doors of the temple securely and ran away. When the lad
+hidden in the hole blew on a shell-trumpet, the friends of the deceased
+chief surrounded the temple and thrust their spears at him through the
+fence.[772] What the exact significance of this curious rite may have
+been, I cannot even conjecture; but we may assume that it had something
+to do with the state of the late chief's soul, which was probably
+supposed to be lingering in the neighbourhood.
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian notions concerning the other world and the way
+thither. The River of the Souls.]
+
+It remains to say a little as to the notions which the Fijians
+entertained of the other world and the way thither. After death the
+souls of the departed were believed to set out for Bulu or Bulotu, there
+to dwell with the great serpent-shaped god Ndengei. His abode seems to
+have been generally placed in the Nakauvandra mountains, towards the
+western end of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands. But on this
+subject the ideas of the people were, as might be expected, both vague
+and inconsistent. Each tribe filled in the details of the mythical land
+and the mythical journey to suit its own geographical position. The
+souls had generally to cross water, either the sea or a river, and they
+were put across it by a ghostly ferryman, who treated the passengers
+with scant courtesy.[773] According to some people, the River of the
+Souls (_Waini-yalo_) is what mortals now call the Ndravo River. When the
+ghosts arrived on the bank, they hailed the ferryman and he paddled his
+canoe over to receive them. But before he would take them on board they
+had to state whether they proposed to ship as steerage or as cabin
+passengers, and he gave them their berths accordingly; for there was no
+mixing up of the classes in the ferry-boat; the ghosts of chiefs kept
+strictly to themselves at one end of the canoe, and the ghosts of
+commoners huddled together at the other end.[774] The natives of
+Kandavu, in Southern Fiji, say that on clear days they often see Bulotu,
+the spirit land, lying away across the sea with the sun shining sweetly
+on it; but they have long ago given up all hope of making their way to
+that happy land.[775] They seem to say with the Demon Lover,
+
+ "O yonder are the hills of heaven
+ Where you will never win."
+
+[Sidenote: The place of embarcation for the ghosts.]
+
+Though every island and almost every town had its own portal through
+which the spirits passed on their long journey to the far country, yet
+there was one called Nai Thombothombo, which appears to have been more
+popular and frequented than any of the others as a place of embarcation
+for ghosts. It is at the northern point of Mbua Bay, and the ghosts shew
+their good taste in choosing it as their port to sail from, for really
+it is a beautiful spot. The foreland juts out between two bays. A
+shelving beach slopes up to precipitous cliffs, their rocky face mantled
+with a thick green veil of creepers. Further inland the shade of tall
+forest trees and the softened gloom cast by crags and rocks lend to the
+scene an air of solemnity and hallowed repose well fitted to impress the
+susceptible native mind with an awful sense of the invisible beings that
+haunt these sacred groves. Natives have been known to come on pilgrimage
+to the spot expecting to meet ghosts and gods face to face.[776]
+
+[Sidenote: The ghost and the pandanus tree.]
+
+Many are the perils and dangers that beset the Path of the Souls (_Sala
+Ni Yalo_). Of these one of the most celebrated is a certain pandanus
+tree, at which every ghost must throw the ghost of the real whale's
+tooth which was placed for the purpose in his hand at burial. If he hits
+the tree, it is well for him; for it shews that his friends at home are
+strangling his wives, and accordingly he sits down contentedly to wait
+for the ghosts of his helpmeets, who will soon come hurrying to him. But
+if he makes a bad shot and misses the tree, the poor ghost is very
+disconsolate, for he knows that his wives are not being strangled, and
+who then will cook for him in the spirit land? It is a bitter thought,
+and he reflects with sorrow and anger on the ingratitude of men and
+especially of women. His reflections, as reported by the best authority,
+run thus: "How is this? For a long time I planted food for my wife, and
+it was also of great use to her friends: why then is she not allowed to
+follow me? Do my friends love me no better than this, after so many
+years of toil? Will no one, in love to me, strangle my wife?"[777]
+
+[Sidenote: Hard fate of unmarried ghosts.]
+
+But if the lot of a married ghost, whose wives have not been murdered,
+is hard, it is nevertheless felicity itself compared to the fate of
+bachelor ghosts. In the first place there is a terrible being called the
+Great Woman, who lurks in a shady defile, ready to pounce out on him;
+and if he escapes her clutches it is only to fall in with a much worse
+monster, of the name of Nangganangga, from whom there is, humanly
+speaking, no escape. This ferocious goblin lays himself out to catch the
+souls of bachelors, and so vigilant and alert is he that not a single
+unmarried Fijian ghost is known to have ever reached the mansions of the
+blest. He sits beside a big black stone at high-water mark waiting for
+his prey. The bachelor ghosts are aware that it would be useless to
+attempt to march past him when the tide is in; so they wait till it is
+low water and then try to sneak past him on the wet sand left by the
+retiring billows. Vain hope! Nangganangga, sitting by the stone, only
+smiles grimly and asks, with withering sarcasm, whether they imagine
+that the tide will never flow again? It does so only too soon for the
+poor ghosts, driving them with every breaking wave nearer and nearer to
+their implacable enemy, till the water laps on the fatal stone, and then
+he grips the shivering souls and dashes them to pieces on the big black
+block.[778]
+
+[Sidenote: The Killer of Souls.]
+
+Again, there is a very terrible giant armed with a great axe, who lies
+in wait for all and sundry. He makes no nice distinction between the
+married and the unmarried, but strikes out at all ghosts
+indiscriminately. Those whom he wounds dare not present themselves in
+their damaged state to the great God Ndengei; so they never reach the
+happy fields, but are doomed to roam the rugged mountains disconsolate.
+However, many ghosts contrive to slip past him unscathed. It is said
+that after the introduction of fire-arms into the islands the ghost of a
+certain chief made very good use of a musket which had been
+providentially buried with his body. When the giant drew near and was
+about to lunge out with the axe in his usual style, the ghost discharged
+the blunderbuss in his face, and while the giant was fully engaged in
+dodging the hail of bullets, the chief rushed past him and now enjoys
+celestial happiness.[779] Some lay the scene of this encounter a little
+beyond the town of Nambanaggatai; for it is to be remembered that many
+of the places in the Path of the Souls were identified with real places
+in the Fijian Islands. And the name of the giant is Samu-yalo, that is,
+the Killer of Souls. He artfully conceals himself in some mangrove
+bushes just beyond the town, from which he rushes out in the nick of
+time to fell the passing ghosts. Whenever he kills a ghost, he cooks and
+eats him and that is the end of the poor ghost. It is the second death.
+The highway to the Elysian fields runs, or used to run, right through
+the town of Nambanaggatai; so all the doorways of the houses were placed
+opposite each other to allow free and uninterrupted passage to the
+invisible travellers. And the inhabitants spoke to each other in low
+tones and communicated at a little distance by signs. The screech of a
+paroquet in the woods was the signal of the approach of a ghost or
+ghosts; the number of screeches was proportioned to the number of the
+ghosts,--one screech, one ghost, and so on.[780]
+
+[Sidenote: A trap for unwary ghosts.]
+
+Souls who escape the Killer of Souls pass on till they come to
+Naindelinde, one of the highest peaks of the Kauvandra mountains. Here
+the path ends abruptly on the brink of a precipice, the foot of which is
+washed by a deep lake. Over the edge of the precipice projects a large
+steer-oar, and the handle is held either by the great god Ndengei
+himself or, according to the better opinion, by his deputy. When a ghost
+comes up and peers ruefully over the precipice, the deputy accosts him.
+"Under what circumstances," he asks, "do you come to us? How did you
+conduct yourself in the other world?" Should the ghost be a man of rank,
+he may say, "I am a great chief. I lived as a chief, and my conduct was
+that of a chief. I had great wealth, many wives, and ruled over a
+powerful people. I have destroyed many towns, and slain many in war."
+"Good, good," says the deputy, "just sit down on the blade of that oar,
+and refresh yourself in the cool breeze." If the ghost is unwary enough
+to accept the invitation, he has no sooner seated himself on the blade
+of the oar with his legs dangling over the abyss, than the deputy-deity
+tilts up the other end of the oar and precipitates him into the deep
+water, far far below. A loud smack is heard as the ghost collides with
+the water, there is a splash, a gurgle, a ripple, and all is over. The
+ghost has gone to his account in Murimuria, a very second-rate sort of
+heaven, if it is nothing worse. But a ghost who is in favour with the
+great god Ndengei is warned by him not to sit down on the blade of the
+oar but on the handle. The ghost takes the hint and seats himself firmly
+on the safe end of the oar; and when the deputy-deity tries to heave it
+up, he cannot, for he has no purchase. So the ghost remains master of
+the situation, and after an interval for refreshment is sent back to
+earth to be deified.[781]
+
+[Sidenote: Murimuria, an inferior sort of heaven. The Fijian Elysium.]
+
+In Murimuria, which, as I said, is an inferior sort of heaven, the
+departed souls by no means lead a life of pure and unmixed enjoyment.
+Some of them are punished for the sins they committed in the flesh. But
+the Fijian notion of sin differs widely from ours. Thus we saw that the
+ghosts of men who did no murder in their lives were punished for their
+negligence by having to pound muck with clubs. Again, people who had not
+their ears bored on earth are forced in Hades to go about for ever
+bearing on their shoulders one of the logs of wood on which bark-cloth
+is beaten out with mallets, and all who see the sinner bending under the
+load jeer at him. Again, women who were not tattooed in their life are
+chased by the female ghosts, who scratch and cut and tear them with
+sharp shells, giving them no respite; or they scrape the flesh from
+their bones and bake it into bread for the gods. And ghosts who have
+done anything to displease the gods are laid flat on their faces in rows
+and converted into taro beds. But the few who do find their way into the
+Fijian Elysium are blest indeed. There the sky is always cloudless; the
+groves are perfumed with delicious scents; the open glades in the forest
+are pleasant; there is abundance of all that heart can desire. Language
+fails to describe the ineffable bliss of the happy land. There the souls
+of the truly good, who have murdered many of their fellows on earth and
+fed on their roasted bodies, are lapped in joy for ever.[782]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian doctrine of transmigration.]
+
+Nevertheless the souls of the dead were not universally believed to
+depart by the Spirit Path to the other world or to stay there for ever.
+To a certain extent the doctrines of transmigration found favour with
+the Fijians. Some of them held that the spirits of the dead wandered
+about the villages in various shapes and could make themselves visible
+or invisible at pleasure. The places which these vagrant souls loved to
+haunt were known to the people, who in passing by them were wont to make
+propitiatory offerings of food or cloth. For that reason, too, they were
+very loth to go abroad on a dark night lest they should come bolt upon a
+ghost. Further, it was generally believed that the soul of a celebrated
+chief might after death enter into some young man of the tribe and
+animate him to deeds of valour. Persons so distinguished were pointed
+out and regarded as highly favoured; great respect was paid to them,
+they enjoyed many personal privileges, and their opinions were treated
+with much consideration.[783]
+
+[Sidenote: Few souls saved under the old Fijian dispensation.]
+
+On the whole, when we survey the many perils which beset the way to the
+Fijian heaven, and the many risks which the souls of the dead ran of
+dying the second death in the other world or of being knocked on the
+head by the living in this, we shall probably agree with the missionary
+Mr. Williams in concluding that under the old Fijian dispensation there
+were few indeed that were saved. "Few, comparatively," he says, "are
+left to inhabit the regions of Mbulu, and the immortality even of these
+is sometimes disputed. The belief in a future state is universal in
+Fiji; but their superstitious notions often border upon transmigration,
+and sometimes teach an eventual annihilation."[784]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: Concluding observations.]
+
+Here I must break off my survey of the natural belief in immortality
+among mankind. At the outset I had expected to carry the survey further,
+but I have already exceeded the usual limits of these lectures and I
+must not trespass further on your patience. Yet the enquiry which I have
+opened seems worthy to be pursued, and if circumstances should admit of
+it, I shall hope at some future time to resume the broken thread of
+these researches and to follow it a little further through the labyrinth
+of human history. Be that as it may, I will now conclude with a few
+general observations suggested by the facts which I have laid before
+you.
+
+[Sidenote: Strength and universality of the natural belief in
+immortality among savages. Wars between savage tribes spring in large
+measure from their belief in immortality. Economic loss involved in
+sacrifices to the dead.]
+
+In the first place, then, it is impossible not to be struck by the
+strength, and perhaps we may say the universality, of the natural belief
+in immortality among the savage races of mankind. With them a life after
+death is not a matter of speculation and conjecture, of hope and fear;
+it is a practical certainty which the individual as little dreams of
+doubting as he doubts the reality of his conscious existence. He assumes
+it without enquiry and acts upon it without hesitation, as if it were
+one of the best-ascertained truths within the limits of human
+experience. The belief influences his attitude towards the higher
+powers, the conduct of his daily life, and his behaviour towards his
+fellows; more than that, it regulates to a great extent the relations of
+independent communities to each other. For the state of war, which
+normally exists between many, if not most, neighbouring savage tribes,
+springs in large measure directly from their belief in immortality;
+since one of the commonest motives for hostility is a desire to appease
+the angry ghosts of friends, who are supposed to have perished by the
+baleful arts of sorcerers in another tribe, and who, if vengeance is not
+inflicted on their real or imaginary murderers, will wreak their fury on
+their undutiful fellow-tribesmen. Thus the belief in immortality has not
+merely coloured the outlook of the individual upon the world; it has
+deeply affected the social and political relations of humanity in all
+ages; for the religious wars and persecutions, which distracted and
+devastated Europe for ages, were only the civilised equivalents of the
+battles and murders which the fear of ghosts has instigated amongst
+almost all races of savages of whom we possess a record. Regarded from
+this point of view, the faith in a life hereafter has been sown like
+dragons' teeth on the earth and has brought forth crop after crop of
+armed men, who have turned their swords against each other. And when we
+consider further the gratuitous and wasteful destruction of property as
+well as of life which is involved in sacrifices to the dead, we must
+admit that with all its advantages the belief in immortality has
+entailed heavy economical losses upon the races--and they are
+practically all the races of the world--who have indulged in this
+expensive luxury. It is not for me to estimate the extent and gravity of
+the consequences, moral, social, political, and economic, which flow
+directly from the belief in immortality. I can only point to some of
+them and commend them to the serious attention of historians and
+economists, as well as of moralists and theologians.
+
+[Sidenote: How does the savage belief in immortality bear on the
+question of the truth or falsehood of that belief in general? The answer
+depends to some extent on the view we take of human nature. The view of
+the grandeur and dignity of man.]
+
+My second observation concerns, not the practical consequences of the
+belief in immortality, but the question of its truth or falsehood. That,
+I need hardly say, is an even more difficult problem than the other, and
+as I intimated at the outset of the lectures I find myself wholly
+incompetent to solve it. Accordingly I have confined myself to the
+comparatively easy task of describing some of the forms of the belief
+and some of the customs to which it has given rise, without presuming to
+pass judgment upon them. I must leave it to others to place my
+collections of facts in the scales and to say whether they incline the
+balance for or against the truth of this momentous belief, which has
+been so potent for good or ill in history. In every enquiry much depends
+upon the point of view from which the enquirer approaches his subject;
+he will see it in different proportions and in different lights
+according to the angle and the distance from which he regards it. The
+subject under discussion in the present case is human nature itself; and
+as we all know, men have formed very different estimates of themselves
+and their species. On the one hand, there are those who love to dwell on
+the grandeur and dignity of man, and who swell with pride at the
+contemplation of the triumphs which his genius has achieved in the
+visionary world of imagination as well as in the realm of nature.
+Surely, they say, such a glorious creature was not born for mortality,
+to be snuffed out like a candle, to fade like a flower, to pass away
+like a breath. Is all that penetrating intellect, that creative fancy,
+that vaulting ambition, those noble passions, those far-reaching hopes,
+to come to nothing, to shrivel up into a pinch of dust? It is not so, it
+cannot be. Man is the flower of this wide world, the lord of creation,
+the crown and consummation of all things, and it is to wrong him and his
+creator to imagine that the grave is the end of all. To those who take
+this lofty view of human nature it is easy and obvious to find in the
+similar beliefs of savages a welcome confirmation of their own cherished
+faith, and to insist that a conviction so widely spread and so firmly
+held must be based on some principle, call it instinct or intuition or
+what you will, which is deeper than logic and cannot be confuted by
+reasoning.
+
+[Sidenote: The view of the pettiness and insignificance of man.]
+
+On the other hand, there are those who take a different view of human
+nature, and who find in its contemplation a source of humility rather
+than of pride. They remind us how weak, how ignorant, how short-lived is
+the individual, how infirm of purpose, how purblind of vision, how
+subject to pain and suffering, to diseases that torture the body and
+wreck the mind. They say that if the few short years of his life are not
+wasted in idleness and vice, they are spent for the most part in a
+perpetually recurring round of trivialities, in the satisfaction of
+merely animal wants, in eating, drinking, and slumber. When they survey
+the history of mankind as a whole, they find the record chequered and
+stained by folly and crime, by broken faith, insensate ambition, wanton
+aggression, injustice, cruelty, and lust, and seldom illumined by the
+mild radiance of wisdom and virtue. And when they turn their eyes from
+man himself to the place he occupies in the universe, how are they
+overwhelmed by a sense of his littleness and insignificance! They see
+the earth which he inhabits dwindle to a speck in the unimaginable
+infinities of space, and the brief span of his existence shrink into a
+moment in the inconceivable infinities of time. And they ask, Shall a
+creature so puny and frail claim to live for ever, to outlast not only
+the present starry system but every other that, when earth and sun and
+stars have crumbled into dust, shall be built upon their ruins in the
+long long hereafter? It is not so, it cannot be. The claim is nothing
+but the outcome of exaggerated self-esteem, of inflated vanity; it is
+the claim of a moth, shrivelled in the flame of a candle, to outlive the
+sun, the claim of a worm to survive the destruction of this terrestrial
+globe in which it burrows. Those who take this view of the pettiness and
+transitoriness of man compared with the vastness and permanence of the
+universe find little in the beliefs of savages to alter their opinion.
+They see in savage conceptions of the soul and its destiny nothing but a
+product of childish ignorance, the hallucinations of hysteria, the
+ravings of insanity, or the concoctions of deliberate fraud and
+imposture. They dismiss the whole of them as a pack of superstitions and
+lies, unworthy the serious attention of a rational mind; and they say
+that if such drivellings do not refute the belief in immortality, as
+indeed from the nature of things they cannot do, they are at least
+fitted to invest its high-flown pretensions with an air of ludicrous
+absurdity.
+
+[Sidenote: The conclusion left open.]
+
+Such are the two opposite views which I conceive may be taken of the
+savage testimony to the survival of our conscious personality after
+death. I do not presume to adopt the one or the other. It is enough for
+me to have laid a few of the facts before you. I leave you to draw your
+own conclusion.
+
+[Footnote 701: Berthold Seeman, _Viti, an Account of a Government
+Mission to the Vitian or Fijian Islands_ (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 391
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 702: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 216.]
+
+[Footnote 703: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 216, 218 _sq._; Basil
+Thomson, _The Fijians_, p. 112.]
+
+[Footnote 704: Hazlewood, quoted by Capt. J. E. Erskine, _Journal of a
+Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London, 1853), pp. 246
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 705: Ch. Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 83 _sq._; Th. Williams,
+_Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 217 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 706: Ch. Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 49, 86, 351, 352; Th.
+Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 221-223; B. Seeman, _Viti_, pp.
+392-394.]
+
+[Footnote 707: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 191 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 708: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 223, 231.]
+
+[Footnote 709: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 87; Th. Williams, _op. cit._
+i. 226, 227; Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 157 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 710: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 87 _sq._; Th. Williams, _op.
+cit._ i. 224 _sq._; Capt. J. E. Erskine, _op. cit._ p. 250; Lorimer
+Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), pp. 166 _sq._ As for the
+treatment of castaways, see J. E. Erskine, _op. cit._ p. 249; Th.
+Williams, _op. cit._ i. 210. The latter writer mentions a recent case in
+which fourteen or sixteen shipwrecked persons were cooked and eaten.]
+
+[Footnote 711: The Rev. Lorimer Fison, in a letter to me dated August
+26th, 1898. I have already quoted the passage in _The Magic Art and the
+Evolution of Kings_, i. 378.]
+
+[Footnote 712: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 225 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 713: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 231.]
+
+[Footnote 714: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 97; Th. Williams, _op. cit._
+i. 53.]
+
+[Footnote 715: John Jackson's Narrative, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+_Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London,
+1853), pp. 464 _sq._, 472 _sq._ The genital members of the men over whom
+the canoe was dragged were cut off and hung on a sacred tree
+(_akau-tambu_), "which was already artificially prolific in fruit, both
+of the masculine and feminine gender." The tree which bore such
+remarkable fruit was commonly an ironweed tree standing in a conspicuous
+situation. As to these sacrifices compare Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii.
+97; Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, pp. xvi. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 716: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i, 112.]
+
+[Footnote 717: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 55.]
+
+[Footnote 718: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, pp. xx., xxi.
+_sq._; Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 247; B. Seeman, _Viti_ (Cambridge,
+1862), p. 401.]
+
+[Footnote 719: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 55 _sq._ The writer witnessed
+what he calls the ceremony of consecration in the case of a young man of
+the highest rank in Somosomo and he has described what he saw. In this
+case a special hut was not built for the manslayer, and he was allowed
+to pass the nights in the temple of the war god.]
+
+[Footnote 720: See above, pp. 205 _sq._, 229 _sq._, 258, 279 _sq._, 323,
+396, 415.]
+
+[Footnote 721: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 55.]
+
+[Footnote 722: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 98, 99 _sq._ Compare Lorimer
+Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 163: "A person who has defiled himself
+by touching a corpse is called _yambo_, and is not allowed to touch food
+with his hands for several days." The custom as to a surviving widow is
+mentioned by Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 723: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 167.]
+
+[Footnote 724: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 101; Th. Williams, _op. cit._
+i. 197 _sq._; Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 168; Basil
+Thomson, _The Fijian_, p. 375.]
+
+[Footnote 725: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 197, 198.]
+
+[Footnote 726: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 727: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 198 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 728: Ch. Wilkes, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 729: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 197.]
+
+[Footnote 730: K. Weinhold, _Altnordisches Leben_ (Berlin, 1856), p.
+476.]
+
+[Footnote 731: _The Zend-Avesta_, Part i. _The Vendidâd,_ translated by
+James Darmesteter (Oxford, 1880), p. 95 (Fargard, viii. 2. 10) (_Sacred
+Books of the East_, vol. iv.).]
+
+[Footnote 732: W. R. S. Ralston, _The Songs of the Russian People_,
+Second Edition (London, 1872), p. 318.]
+
+[Footnote 733: Sonnerat, _Voyage aux Indes Orientales et à la Chine_
+(Paris, 1782), i. 86.]
+
+[Footnote 734: J. A. Dubois, _Moeurs, Institutions et Cérémonies des
+Peuples de l'Inde_ (Paris, 1825), ii. 225; E. Thurston, _Ethnographic
+Notes in Southern India_ (Madras, 1906), pp. 226 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 735: J. Grimm, _Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer_ 3rd ed.
+(Göttingen, 1881), pp. 726 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 736: Rev. J. G. Campbell, _Superstitions of the Highlands and
+Islands of Scotland_ (Glasgow, 1900), p. 242.]
+
+[Footnote 737: _The Sacred Books of China_, translated by James Legge,
+Part iii. _The Lî-Kî_, i.-x. (Oxford, 1885) pp. 144 _sq._ (Bk. ii. Sect.
+i. Pt. II. 33) (_Sacred Books of the East_, vol. xxvii.); J. F. Lafitau,
+_Moeurs des Sauvages Ameriquains_ (Paris, 1724), ii. 401 _sq._, citing
+Le Comte, _Nouv. Mémoires de la Chine_, vol. ii. p. 187.]
+
+[Footnote 738: _Relations des Jésuites_, 1633, p. 11; _id._, 1634, p. 23
+(Canadian reprint, Quebec, 1858); J. G. Kohl, _Kitschi-Gami_ (Bremen,
+1859), p. 149 note.]
+
+[Footnote 739: E. W. Nelson, "The Eskimo about Bering Strait,"
+_Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology_, Part i.
+(Washington, 1899), p. 311.]
+
+[Footnote 740: David Crantz, _History of Greenland_ (London, 1767), i.
+237. Compare Hans Egede, _Description of Greenland_, Second Edition
+(London, 1818), pp. 152 _sq._; Captain G. F. Lyon, _Private Journal_
+(London, 1824), p. 370; C. F. Hall, _Narrative of the Second Arctic
+Expedition_ (Washington, 1879), p. 265 (Esquimaux).]
+
+[Footnote 741: P. Kolben, _The Present State of the Cape of Good Hope_
+(London, 1731-1738), i. 316; C. P. Thunberg, "An Account of the Cape of
+Good Hope," in Pinkerton's _Voyages and Travels_, xvi. (London, 1814) p.
+142; _Bulletin de la Société de Géographie_ (Paris), ii, Série, ii.
+(1834) p. 196 (Bechuanas); _id._, vii. Série, vii. (1886) p. 587
+(Fernando Po); T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, _Relation d'un Voyage
+d'Exploration au Nord-est de la Colonie du Cap de Bonne-Espérance_
+(Paris, 1842), pp. 502 _sq._; C. J. Andersson, _Lake Ngami_, Second
+Edition (London, 1856), p. 466; G. Fritsch, _Die Eingeborenen
+Süd-Afrika's_ (Breslau, 1872), pp. 210, 335; R. Moffat, _Missionary
+Labours and Scenes in Southern Africa_ (London, 1842), p. 307; E.
+Casalis, _The Basutos_ (London, 1861), p. 202; Ladislaus Magyar, _Reisen
+in Süd-Afrika_ (Buda-Pesth and Leipsic, 1859), p. 350; Rev. J.
+Macdonald, _Light in Africa_, Second Edition (London, 1890), p. 166; E.
+Béguin, _Les Ma-Rotse_ (Lausanne and Fontaines, 1903), p. 115; Henri A.
+Junod, _Les Ba-Ronga_ (Neuchâtel, 1898), p. 48; _id._, _The Life of a
+South African Tribe_, i. (Neuchâtel, 1912) p. 138; Dudley Kidd, _The
+Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), p. 247; A. F. Mockler-Ferryman,
+_British Nigeria_ (London, 1902), p. 234; Ramseyer and Kühne, _Four
+Years in Ashantee_ (London, 1875), p. 50; A. B. Ellis, _The Land of
+Fetish_ (London, 1883), p. 13; _id._, _The Tshi-speaking Peoples of the
+Gold Coast_ (London, 1887), p. 239; E. Perregaud, _Chez les Achanti_
+(Neuchâtel, 1906), p. 127; J. Spieth, _Die Ewe-Stämme_ (Berlin, 1906),
+p. 756; H. R. Palmer, "Notes on the Korôrofawa and Jukoñ," _Journal of
+the African Society_, No. 44 (July, 1912), p. 414. The custom is also
+observed by some tribes of Central Africa. See Miss A. Werner, _The
+Natives of British Central Africa_ (London, 1906), p. 161; B. Gutmann,
+"Trauer und Begräbnisssitten der Wadschagga," _Globus_, lxxxix. (1906)
+p. 200; Rev. N. Stam, "Religious Conceptions of the Kavirondo,"
+_Anthropos_, v. (1910) p. 361.]
+
+[Footnote 742: C. Snouck Hurgronje, _Het Gajoland en zijne Bewoners_
+(Batavia, 1903), p. 313.]
+
+[Footnote 743: Aurel Krause, _Die Tlinkit-Indianer_ (Jena, 1885), p.
+225; Franz Boas, in _Sixth Report of the Committee on the North-western
+Tribes of Canada_, p. 23 (separate reprint from the _Report of the
+British Association for the Advancement of Science_, Leeds Meeting,
+1890); J. R. Swanton, _Contributions to the Ethnology of the Haida_
+(Leyden and New York, 1905), pp. 52, 54 (_The Jesup North Pacific
+Expedition, Memoir of the American Museum of Natural History_).]
+
+[Footnote 744: J. A. H. Louis, _The Gates of Thibet_ (Calcutta, 1894),
+p. 114.]
+
+[Footnote 745: H. von Wlislocki, _Volksglaube und religiöser Brauch der
+Zigeuner_ (Münster i. W., 1891), p. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 746: W. Jochelson, _The Koryak_ (New York and Leyden, 1908),
+pp. 110 _sq._ (_The Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Memoir of the
+American Museum of Natural History_).]
+
+[Footnote 747: W. H. Dall, _Alaska and its Resources_ (London, 1870), p.
+382.]
+
+[Footnote 748: Lucien M. Turner, "Ethnology of the Ungava District,
+Hudson Bay Territory," _Eleventh Annual Report of the Bureau of
+Ethnology_ (Washington, 1894), p. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 749: Mgr. Bruguière, in _Annales de l'Association de la
+Propagation de la Foi_, v. (Lyons and Paris, 1831) p. 180. Compare Mgr.
+Pallegoix, _Description du royaume Thai ou Siam_ (Paris, 1854), i. 245;
+Adolf Bastian, _Die Volker des östlichen Asien_, iii. (Jena, 1867) p.
+258; E. Young, _The Kingdom of the Yellow Robe_ (Westminster, 1898), p.
+246.]
+
+[Footnote 750: S. Mateer, _Native Life in Travancore_ (London, 1883), p.
+137. Compare A. Butterworth, "Royal Funerals in Travancore," _Indian
+Antiquary_, xxxi. (1902) p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 751: Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of Borneo_
+(London, 1912), ii. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 752: S. K. Kusnezow, "Über den Glauben vom Jenseits und den
+Todtencultus der Tscheremissen," _Internationales Archiv für
+Ethnographie_, ix. (1896) p. 157.]
+
+[Footnote 753: P. S. Pallas, _Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des
+Russischen Reichs_ (St. Petersburg, 1771-1776), iii. 75; Middendorff,
+_Reise in den äussersten Norden und Osten Sibiriens_, iv. 1464.]
+
+[Footnote 754: _Exploraciones y Noticias hidrograficas de los Rios del
+Norte de Bolivia_, publicados por Manuel V. Ballivian, Segunda Parte,
+_Diario del Viage al Madre de Dios hecho por el P. Fr. Nicolas Armentia,
+en los años de 1884 y 1885_ (La Paz, 1890), p. 20: _"Cuando muere
+alguno, apénas sacan el cadáver de la casa, cambian la puerta al lado
+opuesto, para que no dé con ella el difunto."_]
+
+[Footnote 755: Karl Bartsch, _Sagen, Märchen und Gebräuche aus
+Meklenburg_ (Vienna, 1879-1880), ii. 100, § 358.]
+
+[Footnote 756: For some evidence on this subject, see R. Lasch, "Die
+Behandlung der Leiche des Selbstmörders," _Globus_, lxxxvi. (1899) pp.
+63-66; Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 20 _sq._; A.
+Karasek, "Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Waschamba," _Baessler-Archiv_, i.
+(1911) pp. 190 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 757: Rev. N. Stam, "The Religious Conceptions of the
+Kavirondo," _Anthropos_, v. (1910) p. 361.]
+
+[Footnote 758: Alfred de Nore, _Coutumes, Mythes, et Traditions des
+Provinces de France_ (Paris and Lyons, 1846), p. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 759: Félix Chapiseau, _Le Folk-lore de la Beauce et du Perche_
+(Paris, 1902), ii. 164.]
+
+[Footnote 760: For some evidence on this subject see _Psyche's Task_,
+pp. 64 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 761: Carl Bock, _Temples and Elephants_ (London, 1884), p.
+262.]
+
+[Footnote 762: Ch. Gilhodes, "Naissance et Enfance chez les Katchins
+(Birmanie)," _Anthropos_, vi. (1911) pp. 872 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 763: A. W. Nieuwenhuis, _Quer durch Borneo_ (Leyden,
+1901-1907), i. 91.]
+
+[Footnote 764: Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of Borneo_
+(London, 1912), ii. 155.]
+
+[Footnote 765: Franz Boas, in _Sixth Report of the Committee on the
+North-western Tribes of Canada_, p. 23 (separate reprint from the
+_Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science_,
+Leeds Meeting, 1890).]
+
+[Footnote 766: Prevost, quoted by John Crawford, _History of the Indian
+Archipelago_ (Edinburgh, 1820), ii. 245. Compare Adolf Bastian, _Die
+Völker des östlichen Asien_, v. (Jena, 1869) p. 83.]
+
+[Footnote 767: Mrs. Bishop (Isabella L. Bird), _Korea and her
+Neighbours_ (London, 1898), i. 239 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 768: Arnold van Gennep, _Tabou et Totémisme à Madagascar_
+(Paris, 1904), p. 65, quoting Dr. Catat.]
+
+[Footnote 769: B. F. Matthes, _Bijdragen tot de Ethnologie van
+Zuid-Celebes_ (The Hague, 1875), p. 139; _id._, "Over de âdá's of
+gewoonten der Makassaren en Boegineezen," _Verslagen en Mededeelingen
+der Koninklijke Akademie van Wetenschappen_, Afdeeling Letterkunde,
+Derde Reeks, ii. (Amsterdam, 1885) p. 142.]
+
+[Footnote 770: W. M. Donselaar "Aanteekeningen over het eiland
+Saleijer," _Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche
+Zendelinggenootschap_, i. (1857) p. 291.]
+
+[Footnote 771: See above, p. 426.]
+
+[Footnote 772: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 167.]
+
+[Footnote 773: Ch. Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 83; Basil Thomson, _The
+Fijians_, p. 117.]
+
+[Footnote 774: Basil Thomson, _op. cit._ p. 121.]
+
+[Footnote 775: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 163.]
+
+[Footnote 776: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 239.]
+
+[Footnote 777: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 243 _sq._ Compare Berthold
+Seeman, _Viti, an Account of a Government Mission to the Vitian of
+Fijian Islands in the years 1860-1861_ (Cambridge, 1862), p. 399;
+Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 163; Basil Thomson, _The
+Fijians_, pp. 120 _sq._, 121 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 778: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i, 244 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 779: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 83.]
+
+[Footnote 780: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 245 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 781: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 246 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 782: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 247.]
+
+[Footnote 783: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 85 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 784: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 248.]
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+MYTH OF THE CONTINUANCE OF DEATH[785]
+
+
+The following story is told by the Balolo of the Upper Congo to explain
+the continuance, if not the origin, of death in the world. One day,
+while a man was working in the forest, a little man with two bundles,
+one large and one small, went up to him and said, "Which of these
+bundles will you have? The large one contains knives, looking-glasses,
+cloth and so forth; and the small one contains immortal life." "I cannot
+choose by myself," answered the man; "I must go and ask the other people
+in the town." While he was gone to ask the others, some women arrived
+and the choice was left to them. They tried the edges of the knives,
+decked themselves in the cloth, admired themselves in the
+looking-glasses, and, without more ado, chose the big bundle. The little
+man, picking up the small bundle, vanished. So when the man came back
+from the town, the little man and his bundles were gone. The women
+exhibited and shared the things, but death continued on the earth. Hence
+the people often say, "Oh, if those women had only chosen the small
+bundle, we should not be dying like this!"[786]
+
+[Footnote 785: See above, p. 77.]
+
+[Footnote 786: Rev. John H. Weeks, "Stories and other Notes from the
+Upper Congo," _Folk-lore_, xii. (1901) p. 461; _id._, _Among Congo
+Cannibals_ (London, 1913), p. 218. The country of the Balolo lies five
+miles south of the Equator, on Longitude 18° East.]
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Abinal, Father, 49
+
+Abipones, their belief in sorcery as a cause of death, 35
+
+Abnormal mental states explained by inspiration, 15
+
+Aborigines, magical powers attributed by immigrants to, 193
+
+Abstinence from certain food in mourning, 198, 208, 209, 230, 314, 360,
+452
+
+Abundance of food and water favourable to social progress, 90 _sq._
+
+Action as a clue to belief, 143
+
+Actors personating ghosts and spirits, 176, 179 _sq._, 180 _sqq._, 185
+_sqq._
+
+Adiri, the land of the dead, 211, 212, 213, 214
+
+Admiralty Islands, 393, 400, 401
+
+---- Islanders, their myths of the origin of death, 71, 76 _sq._
+
+Advance of culture among the aborigines of South-Eastern Australia, 141
+_sq._, 148 _sq._
+
+Africa, aborigines of, their ideas as to the cause of death, 49 _sqq._;
+ use of poison ordeal in, 50 _sqq._
+
+----, British Central, 162
+
+----, British East, 61, 66, 254
+
+Agriculture, rise of, favourable to astronomy, 140 _sq._;
+ Fijian, 408
+
+Akamba, their story of the origin of death, 61 _sq._
+
+Akikuyu, resurrection and circumcision among the, 254
+
+_Alcheringa_ or dream times, 96, 103, 114
+
+---- ancestors, their marvellous powers, 103
+
+---- home of the dead, 167
+
+Alfoors of Celebes, 166
+
+Alligators, ghosts in, 380
+
+_Alols_, bachelors' houses, 221, 222
+
+Altars, stones used as, 379
+
+Amputation of fingers in mourning, 199, 426 _sq._, 451
+
+Amulets consisting of relics of the dead, 332, 370
+
+Ancestor, totemic, developing into a god, 113
+
+Ancestor-worship possibly evolved from totemism, 114 _sq._
+
+Ancestors, reincarnation of, 92 _sqq._;
+ marvellous powers ascribed to remote, 103, 114 _sq._;
+ totemic, traditions concerning, 115 _sqq._;
+ dramatic ceremonies to commemorate the doings of, 118 _sqq._;
+ possible evolution of worship of, in Central Australia, 125 _sq._;
+ worshipped, 221, 297 _sq._, 328 _sqq._, 338, 340;
+ ghosts of, appealed to for help, 258 _sq._;
+ offerings to, 298;
+ prayers to, 329 _sq._, 332 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Dead
+
+Ancestral gods, foreskins of circumcised lads offered to, 427;
+ libations to, 430, 438
+
+---- images, 307 _sqq._, 315, 316 _sq._, 321, 322
+
+---- spirits help hunters and fishers, 226;
+ shrines for, 316, 317;
+ worshipped as gods, 369;
+ worshipped in the _Nanga_, 428 _sq._;
+ first-fruits offered to, 429;
+ cloth and weapons offered to, 430 _sq._;
+ novices presented to, at initiation, 432 _sq._, 434.
+
+Angola, the poison ordeal in, 51 _sq._
+
+Angoni, their burial customs, 162
+
+Animals, souls of sorcerers in, 39;
+ spirits of, go to the spirit land, 210;
+ sacrifices to the souls of, 239;
+ transmigration of dead into, 242, 245;
+ ghosts in the form of, 282;
+ ghosts turn into, 287;
+ ghosts incarnate in, 379 _sq._
+
+Animistic views of the Papuans, 264
+
+Anjea, a mythical being, 128
+
+Annam, 67, 69
+
+Anointing manslayers, 448
+
+Ant-hills, ghosts turn into, 287
+
+Ant totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, 120 _sq._
+
+Ants' nests, ghosts turn into, 351
+
+Anthropology, comparative and descriptive, 230 _sq._
+
+Antimerina of Madagascar, burial custom of the, 461
+
+Anuto, a creator, 296
+
+Apparitions, 396;
+ fear of, 414
+
+Appearance of the dead in dreams, 229
+
+Araucanians of Chili, their disbelief in natural death, 35, 53 _sq._
+
+Arawaks of Guiana, 36;
+ their myth of the origin of death, 70
+
+Arm-bone, final burial ceremony performed with the, 167 _sq._;
+ lower, of dead preserved, 274
+
+---- -bones, special treatment of the, 199;
+ of dead preserved, 225, 249
+
+Aroma district of British New Guinea, 201, 202
+
+Arrow-heads made of bones of the dead, 352
+
+Art, primitive religious, 114;
+ Papuan, 220
+
+_Arugo_, soul of dead, 207
+
+_Arumburinga_, spiritual double, 164
+
+Arunta, the, of Central Australia, 94;
+ ceremonies connected with totems, 119 _sqq._;
+ their magical ceremonies for the multiplication of the totems, 122
+ _sq._;
+ their customs as to the hair of the dead, 138;
+ their cuttings for the dead, 155 _sq._, 159;
+ burial customs of the, 164 _sq._, 166
+
+Aryan burial custom, 453
+
+_Asa_, Secret Society, 233
+
+Ashantee story of the origin of death, 63 _sq._
+
+Ashes smeared on mourners, 184, 361
+
+Astrolabe Bay in German New Guinea, 218, 230, 235, 237
+
+Astronomy, rise of, favoured by agriculture, 140 _sq._
+
+Asylums, 243
+
+_Asyrèn_, dead man, 457
+
+_Ataro_, a powerful ghost, 377
+
+Atonement for sick chief, 427
+
+Aukem, a mythical being, 181
+
+Aurora, one of the New Hebrides, 360, 382
+
+Australia, causes which retarded progress in, 89 _sq._;
+ germs of a worship of the dead in, 168 _sq._
+ _See also_ Central Australia, Western Australia
+
+----, the aborigines of, their ideas as to death from natural causes,
+ 40 _sqq._;
+ their primitive character, 88, 91;
+ the belief in immortality among, 127 _sqq._;
+ thought to be reborn in white people, 130, 131 _sqq._;
+ their burial customs, 144 _sqq._;
+ their primitive condition, 217
+
+----, South, beliefs as to the dead in, 134 _sqq._
+
+Australia, South-Eastern, beliefs as to the dead in, 133 _sq._, 139;
+ burial customs among the aborigines of, 145 _sqq._
+
+----, Western, burial customs in, 147, 150, 151
+
+Authority of chiefs based on their claim to magical powers, 395
+
+Avenging a death, pretence of, 282, 328
+
+
+Bachelor ghosts, hard fate of, 464
+
+Bachelors' houses, 221
+
+Bad and good, different fate of the, after death, 354
+
+Baganda, the, their ideas as to the causes of death, 56 _n._ 2;
+ their myth of the origin of death, 78 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Uganda
+
+Bahaus, the, of Borneo, 459
+
+Bahnars of Cochinchina, 74
+
+Bakaïri, the, of Brazil, 35
+
+Bakerewe, the, of the Victoria Nyanza, 50
+
+Bali, burial custom in, 460
+
+Balking ghosts, 455 _sqq._
+
+Balolo, of the Upper Congo, their myth of the continuance of death, 472
+
+_Balum_, ghost or spirit of dead, 244;
+ name for bull-roarer, 250;
+ name for a ghost or monster who swallows lads at initiation, 251, 255,
+ 260, 261;
+ soul of a dead man, 257, 261
+
+Bamler, G., 291, 297 _sq._
+
+Bananas in myths of the origin of death, 60, 70, 72 _sq._
+
+Bandages to prevent entrance of ghosts, 396
+
+Bandaging eyes of corpse, 459
+
+Banks' Islands, 343, 353, 386;
+ myths of the origin of death in, 71, 83 _sq._
+
+---- Islanders, funeral customs of the, 355 _sqq._
+
+Bantu family, 60
+
+Baronga, the, 61;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+Bartle Bay, 206, 208
+
+Basutos, the, 61;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+Bat in myth of origin of death, 75
+
+Bathing in sea after funeral, 207 _sq._;
+ as purification after a death, 314, 319
+
+Battel, Andrew, 51 _sq._
+
+Bechuanas, the, 61;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+Beetles in myth of the origin of death, 70
+
+Belep tribe of New Caledonia, 325
+
+Belief, acts as a clue to, 143
+
+Belief in immortality, origin of belief in, 25 _sqq._;
+ almost universal among races of mankind, 33;
+ among the aborigines of Central Australia, 87 _sqq._;
+ among the islanders of Torres Straits, 170 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of British New Guinea, 190 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of German New Guinea, 216 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Southern Melanesia, 324 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Central Melanesia, 343 _sqq._;
+ its practical effect on the life of the Central Melanesians, 391
+ _sq._;
+ among the natives of Northern Melanesia, 393 _sqq._;
+ among the Fijians, 406 _sqq._;
+ strongly held by savages, 468;
+ destruction of life and property entailed by the, 468 _sq._;
+ the question of its truth, 469 _sqq._
+
+Belief in sorcery a cause of keeping down the population, 38, 40
+
+Berkeley, his theory of knowledge, 11 _sq._
+
+Berlin Harbour in German New Guinea, 218
+
+Bernau, Rev. J. H., 38
+
+Beryl-stone in _Rose Mary_, 130
+
+Betindalo, the land of the dead, 350
+
+Bhotias, the, of the Himalayas, 163
+
+Biak or Wiak, island, 303
+
+Bilking a ghost, 416
+
+Bird in divination as to cause of death, 45
+
+Birds, souls of sorcerers in, 39
+
+Birth, new, at initiation, pretence of, 254
+
+Birthplaces, the dead buried in their, 160
+
+Birth-stones and birth-sticks (_churinga_) of the Central Australians,
+96 _sqq._
+
+Bismarck Archipelago, 70, 394, 402
+
+Black, mourners painted, 178, 241, 293;
+ gravediggers painted, 451
+
+---- -snake people, 94
+
+Blackened, faces of mourners, 403
+
+Blood of mourners dropped on corpse or into grave, 158 _sq._, 183, 185;
+ and hair of mourners offered to the dead, 183;
+ of pigs smeared on skulls and bones of the dead, 200;
+ soul thought to reside in the, 307;
+ of sacrificial victim not allowed to fall on the ground, 365
+
+---- revenge, duty of, 274, 276 _sq._;
+ discharged by sham fight, 136 _sq._
+
+Bogadyim, in German New Guinea, 230, 231
+
+Boigu, the island of the dead, 175, 184, 213
+
+Bolafagina, the lord of the dead, 350
+
+Bolotoo, the land of souls, 411
+
+Bones of the dead, second burial of the, 166 _sq._;
+ kept in house, 203;
+ worn by survivors, 225;
+ disinterred and kept in house, 225, 294;
+ making rain by means of the, 341
+
+---- and skulls of dead smeared with
+ blood of pigs, 200
+
+Bonitos, ghosts in, 380
+
+_Boollia_, magic, 41 _sq._
+
+"Born of an oak or a rock," 128
+
+Bougainville, island of, 393
+
+Boulia district of Queensland, 147, 155
+
+Bow, divination by, 241
+
+Bread-fruit trees, stones to make them bear fruit, 335 _sq._
+
+Breaking things offered to the dead, 276
+
+Breath, vital principle associated with the, 129 _sq._
+
+Brett, Rev. W. H., 35 _sqq._
+
+Brewin, an evil spirit, 45
+
+Brittany, burial custom in, 458
+
+Brothers-in-law in funeral rites, 177
+
+Brown, Rev. Dr. George, 48, 395
+
+Buandik, the, 138
+
+Buckley, the convict, 131
+
+Buginese, burial custom of the, 461
+
+Bugotu, 350, 352;
+ in Ysabel, 372, 379
+
+Building king's house, men sacrificed at, 446
+
+Bukaua, the, of German New Guinea, 242, 256 _sqq._
+
+Bull-roarers, 243;
+ used in divination, 249;
+ described, 250;
+ used at initiation of young men among the Yabim, 250 _sqq._;
+ among the Kaya-Kaya, 255;
+ at initiation among the Bukaua, 260 _sq._;
+ associated with the spirits of the dead, 261;
+ at initiation among the Kai, 263, 291;
+ at initiation of young men among the Tami, 301, 302
+
+Bulotu or Bulu, the land of the dead, 462, 463
+
+Bundle, the fatal, 472;
+ story of, 77 _sq._
+
+_Bures_, Fijian temples, 439
+
+Burial different for old and young, married and unmarried, etc., 161
+ _sqq._;
+ and burning of the dead, 162 _sq._;
+ special modes of, intended to prevent or facilitate the return of the
+ spirit, 163 _sqq._;
+ second, custom of, 166 _sq._;
+ in trees, 203;
+ in island, 319;
+ in the sea, 347 _sq._
+
+---- customs of the Australian aborigines, 144 _sqq._;
+ in Tumleo, 223;
+ of the Kai, 274;
+ of the New Caledonians, 326 _sq._, 339 _sq._;
+ in New Ireland, 397 _sq._;
+ in the Duke of York Island, 403.
+ _See also_ Corpse, Grave
+
+---- -grounds, sacred, 378
+
+Buried alive, old people, 359 _sq._
+
+Burma, 75
+
+Burning and burial of the dead, 162 _sq._
+
+---- bodies of women who died in childbed, 459
+
+Burns inflicted on themselves by mourners, 154, 155, 157, 327, 451
+
+Burnt offerings to the dead, 294
+
+---- sacrifices, reasons for, 348 _sq._;
+ to ghosts, 366, 367 _sq._, 373
+
+Burying alive the sick and old, Fijian custom of, 420 _sqq._
+
+---- people in their birthplaces, 160
+
+Bushmen, 65
+
+_Buwun_, deities, 296
+
+
+Caffres of South Africa, their beliefs as to the causes of death, 55
+_sq._
+
+Calabar, poison ordeal in, 52
+
+California, Indians of, 68
+
+Calling back a lost soul, 312
+
+Calm and wind produced by weather-doctors, 385 _sq._
+
+Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits, 171, 191
+
+Canaanites, the heathen, 154
+
+Canadian Indians, burial custom of the, 454
+
+Canarium nuts, first-fruits of, offered to ghosts, 368 _sq._
+
+Cannibal feasts in Fiji, 446
+
+Cannibals fear the ghosts of their victims, 396
+
+Canoe, men sacrificed at launching a new, 446 _sq._
+
+Canoes, Papuan, 220
+
+Cape Bedford in Queensland, 129, 130, 131
+
+---- King William in German New Guinea, 218, 238
+
+Carnac in Brittany, 438
+
+Catching soul in a scarf, 412 _sq._
+
+Cause, Hume's analysis of, 18 _sq._
+
+Causes, the propensity to search for, 17 _sq._;
+ two classes of, 22
+
+Caves used as burial-places or charnel-houses, 330 _sqq._
+
+Celebes, Central, 72
+
+Central Australia, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, 46
+_sq._;
+ their ideas as to resurrection, 68;
+ their belief in immortality, 87 _sqq._;
+ their belief in reincarnation of the dead, 92 _sqq._;
+ their attitude towards the dead, 124 _sqq._
+
+Cereals unknown to Melanesians and Polynesians, 408
+
+Ceremonial impurity of manslayer, 229 _sq._
+
+Ceremonies performed in honour of the Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake,
+ 108 _sqq._;
+ dramatic, to commemorate the doings of ancestors, 118 _sqq._;
+ funeral, of the Torres Straits Islanders, 176 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Dramatic Ceremonies, Dramatic Representations, Funeral
+ Ceremonies, Totems
+
+Chameleon in myths of the origin of death, 60 _sqq._
+
+Chams of Annam, 67
+
+Charms imparted by dead in dreams, 139
+
+Charnel-houses, 221 _sq._, 225, 328
+
+Cheating the devil, 460
+
+Chepara, the, 139
+
+Cheremiss of Russia, burial custom of the, 457
+
+Cherokee Indians, 77
+
+Chief, spirit of dead, a worshipful ghost, 352
+
+Chief's power in Central Melanesia based on a fear of ghosts, 391
+
+Chiefs deified after death, 369
+
+Chiefs' authority based on their claim to magical powers, 395
+
+Chieftainship, rise of, 141
+
+Childbed, treatment of ghosts of women dying in, 358;
+ special fear of ghosts of women dying in, 458 _sqq._
+
+Childless women, burial of, 458
+
+Children, Central Australian theory of the birth of, 93 _sq._;
+ belief of Queensland natives as to the birth of, 128
+
+Children buried in trees, 161, 312 _sq._;
+ stillborn, burial of, 458
+
+Child-stones, 93 _sq._
+
+Chingpaws of Burma, 75
+
+_Choi_, disembodied human spirits, 128
+
+Chukchansi Indians, 163
+
+_Churinga_, sacred sticks or stones, 96 _sqq._
+
+Circumcision as initiatory rite of young men, 233;
+ among the Yabim, 250 _sqq._;
+ among the Akikuyu, 254;
+ among the Bukaua, 260 _sq._;
+ among the Kai, 290 _sq._;
+ among the Tami, 301 _sq._;
+ as a propitiatory sacrifice, 426 _sqq._
+
+Clans, totemic, 104
+
+Clay, widow's body smeared with, 223
+
+Cleanliness due to fear of sorcery, 386 _sq._, 414
+
+Cleft stick used in cure, 271
+
+Clercq, F. S. A. de, 316
+
+Cloth and weapons offered to ancestral spirits, 430 _sq._
+
+Clubhouses for men, 221, 225, 226, 243, 256 _sq._, 355
+
+Cochinchina, 74
+
+Coco-nut trees of dead cut down, 208, 209, 327;
+ stones to blight, 335
+
+---- -nuts tabooed, 297
+
+Codrington, Dr. R. H., 54 _sq._, 344, 345 _sq._, 353, 355, 359, 362
+_sq._, 368, 380 _sq._
+
+Collins, David, 133
+
+Commemorative and magical ceremonies combined, 122, 126
+
+Commercial habits of the North Melanesians, 394
+
+Communal houses, 304
+
+Communism, temporary revival of primitive, 436 _sq._
+
+Comparative and descriptive anthropology, their relation, 230 _sq._
+
+Comparative method applied to the study of religion, 5 _sq._;
+ in anthropology, 30
+
+Compartments in land of the dead, 244, 354, 404
+
+Competition as a cause of progress, 89 _sq._
+
+Conception in women, Central Australian theory of, 93 _sq._;
+ belief of Queensland natives concerning, 128
+
+Conception of death, the savage, 31 _sqq._
+
+Concert of spirits, 340 _sq._
+
+Confession of sins, 201
+
+Congo, natives of the, their ideas as to natural death, 50;
+ worship of the moon on the, 68
+
+Consecration of manslayers in Fiji, 448 _sq._
+
+Consultation of ancestral images, 308 _sqq._
+
+Continence, required in training yam vines, 371
+
+Continuance of death, myth of the, 472
+
+Contradictions and inconsistencies in reasoning not peculiar to savages,
+111 _sq._
+
+Convulsions as evidence of inspiration, 443, 444
+
+Co-operative system of piety, 333
+
+Coorgs, the, 163
+
+Cord worn round neck by mourners, 241, 242, 249, 259, 361
+
+Corpse inspected to discover sorcerer, 37, 38, 53 _sq._;
+ dried on fire, 135, 184, 249, 313, 355;
+ tied to prevent ghost from walking, 144;
+ mauled and mutilated in order to disable the ghost, 153;
+ putrefying juices of, received by mourners on their bodies, 167, 205;
+ carried out feet foremost, 174;
+ decked with ornaments and flowers, 232;
+ painted white and red, 233;
+ crowned with red roses, 233, 234;
+ stript of ornaments before burial, 234, 241;
+ kept in house, 355;
+ property displayed beside the, 397;
+ persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food with their
+ hands, 450 _sq._;
+ carried out of house by special opening, 452 _sqq._
+
+Corpses mummified, 313;
+ of women dying in childbed burnt, 459
+
+Costume of mourners, 184, 198, 241 _sq._;
+ of widow and widower, 204
+
+Costumes of actors in dramatic ceremonies concerned with totems, 119
+_sqq._
+
+Crabs in myth of the origin of death, 70
+
+Cracking joints of fingers at incantation, 223
+
+Creator, the, and the origin of death, 73
+
+Crocodiles, transmigration of dead into, 245
+
+Cromlechs, 438
+
+Crops, ghosts expected to make the crops thrive, 259, 284, 288 _sq._
+
+Cross-questioning a ghost by means of fire, 278
+
+Cultivation of the ground, spirits of ancestors supposed to help in the,
+259
+
+Culture, advance of, among the aborigines of South-Eastern Australia,
+ 141 _sq._, 148 _sq._;
+ advanced, of the Fijians, 407
+
+Cursing enemies, 370, 403, 404
+
+Cutting down trees of the dead, 208, 209
+
+Cuttings of the flesh in honour of the dead, 154 _sqq._, 183, 184 _sq._,
+196, 272, 327, 359
+
+
+Dance of death, 185 _sqq._
+
+Dances as funeral rites, 179 _sqq._, 200;
+ masked, of the Monumbo, 228;
+ masked, of a Secret Society, 233;
+ at deaths, 293 _sq._;
+ of masked men in imitation of spirits, 297;
+ at festivals, 316;
+ at festivals of the dead, 321;
+ at funeral feasts, 399
+
+---- and games at festivals, 226
+
+Dark, ghosts dreaded in the, 197, 283, 306, 467;
+ female mourners remain in the, 360
+
+Daula, a ghost associated with the frigate-bird, 376
+
+Dawson, James, 42, 142, 143
+
+Dazing a ghost, 416
+
+Dead, worship of the, 23 _sqq._, 31, 328 _sqq._, 338;
+ seen in dreams, 27;
+ belief in the reincarnation of the, 92 _sqq._, 107;
+ spirits of, associated with conspicuous features of the landscape,
+ 115 _sqq._;
+ reincarnation of the, 124 _sq._, 127 _sqq._;
+ souls of the, supposed to go to the sky, 133 _sq._, 135, 138 _sq._,
+ 141, 142;
+ souls of the, supposed to be in stars, 134, 140;
+ names of the, not mentioned, 135;
+ magical virtue attributed to the hair of the, 137 _sq._;
+ appear to the living in dreams, 139, 195, 213, 229;
+ attentions paid to the, in regard to food, fire, property, etc.,
+ 144 _sqq._;
+ property of, deposited in grave, 145 _sqq._;
+ motive for destroying the property of the, 147 _sq._;
+ economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the, 149;
+ incipient worship of the, in Australia, 149, 150;
+ feared, 152 _sq._, 173 _sqq._, 196 _sq._, 201, 203, 244, 248;
+ cuttings of the flesh in honour of the, 154 _sqq._, 183, 184 _sq._,
+ 196, 327, 359;
+ thought to be strengthened by blood, 159;
+ disposed of in different ways according to their age, manner of death,
+ etc., 161 _sqq._;
+ fear of the, 168;
+ germs of a worship of the, in Australia, 168 _sq._;
+ destruction of the property of the, 174;
+ land of the, 175 _sq._, 192, 193, 194 _sq._, 202, 203, 207, 209 _sq._,
+ 211 _sqq._, 224, 228 _sq._, 244, 260, 286 _sq._, 292, 299, 305 _sq._,
+ 307, 322, 326, 345, 350 _sq._, 353 _sq._, 404 _sqq._, 462 _sqq._;
+ personated by masked men, 176, 179 _sq._, 182 _sq._, 185 _sqq._;
+ food offered to the, 183, 211, 214, 232, 241, 332, 338, 348 _sq._,
+ 364 _sq._, 367 _sq._, 372 _sq._, 396 _sq._, 429, 442, 467;
+ elements of a worship of the, in Torres Straits, 189;
+ laid on platforms, 199, 203, 205;
+ worshipped in British New Guinea, 201 _sq._;
+ prayers to the, 201 _sq._, 214, 259, 288, 307, 329 _sq._, 332 _sqq._,
+ 340, 376 _sq._, 401, 403 _sq._, 427, 441;
+ names of, not mentioned, 210, 246;
+ monuments of the, 225;
+ offerings of hunters and fishers to the, 226;
+ oracles of the, 235;
+ buried in the house, 236, 347, 352, 397, 398, 399;
+ offerings to the, 239, 276, 292, 298;
+ transmigrate into animals, 242, 245;
+ spirits of the, give good crops, 247 _sq._;
+ elements of a worship of the dead among the Yabim, 255;
+ spirits of the, believed to be mischievous, 257;
+ ancestors supposed to help in the cultivation of the ground, 259;
+ first-fruits offered to the, 259;
+ buried under houses, 259;
+ envious of the living, 267, 381;
+ burnt offerings to the, 294;
+ predominance of the worship of the, 297 _sq._;
+ power of the, over the living, 298, 306 _sq._, 307;
+ sacrifices to the, 307, 338;
+ wooden images (_korwar_) of the, 307 _sqq._, 315, 316 _sq._, 321, 322;
+ buried in island, 319;
+ festival of the, 320 _sq._;
+ medicine-men, inspired by spirits of the, 322;
+ spirits of the, embodied in their skulls, 338;
+ spirits of the, identified with white men, 342;
+ buried in the sea, 347 _sq._, 397;
+ relics of the, preserved, 348;
+ bodies of the, preserved for a time in the house, 351;
+ represented by wooden stocks, 374, 386;
+ burned in New Ireland, 397;
+ carried out of house by special opening, 452 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Ghost
+
+Dead kings of Uganda consulted as oracles, 151
+
+Death, the problem of, 31 _sqq._;
+ the savage conception of, 31 _sqq._;
+ thought to be an effect of sorcery, 33 _sqq._;
+ by natural causes, recognised by some savages, 55 _sq._;
+ myths of the origin of, 59 _sqq._;
+ personified in tales, 79 _sqq._;
+ not regarded as a natural necessity, 84 _sqq._;
+ the second, of the dead, 195, 286, 299, 345, 350, 351, 354;
+ attributed to sorcery, 249;
+ violent, ascribed to sorcery, 268 _sq._;
+ myth of the continuance of, 472
+
+Death and resurrection at initiation, ceremony of, 431, 434 _sq._;
+ pretence of, at initiation, 254 _sq._, 261, 302
+
+Death-dances, 293 _sq._;
+ of the Torres Straits Islanders, 179 _sqq._
+
+Deaths from natural causes, disbelief of savages in, 33 _sqq._;
+ attributed to sorcery, 136, 203;
+ set down to sorcery or ghosts, 203, 268, 270
+
+Deceiving the ghost, 237, 273, 280 _sqq._, 328
+
+Deceiving the spirits, 298
+
+Deification of the dead, 24, 25;
+ of parents, 439
+
+Deity consumes soul of offering, 297
+
+Demon carries off soul of sick, 194
+
+Demons as causes of disease and death, 36 _sq._
+
+Demonstrations, extravagant, of grief at a death, dictated by fear of
+the ghost, 271 _sqq._
+
+Déné or Tinneh Indians, their ideas as to death, 39 _sq._
+
+Departure of ghost thought to coincide with disappearance of flesh from
+bones, 165 _sq._
+
+Descent of the living into the nether world, 300, 355
+
+Descriptive and comparative anthropology, their relation, 230 _sq._
+
+Descriptive method in anthropology, 30
+
+Desertion of house after a death, 195, 196 _n._ 1, 210, 248, 275, 349,
+ 400;
+ of village after a death, 275
+
+Deserts as impediments to progress, 89, 90
+
+Design emblematic of totem, 168
+
+Destruction of house after a death, 210
+
+---- of life and property entailed by the belief in immortality, 468
+ _sq._
+
+---- of property of the dead, 174, 459;
+ motive for, 147 _sq._, 327
+
+Development arrested or retarded in savagery, 88 _sqq._
+
+Dieri, the, 138;
+ their burial customs, 144
+
+Differentiation of function in prayer, 332 _sq._
+
+Disbelief of savages in death from natural causes, 34 _sqq._
+
+Disease supposed to be caused by sorcery, 35 _sqq._;
+ demons regarded as causes of, 36 _sq._;
+ recognised by some savages as due to natural causes, 55 _sq._;
+ special modes of disposing of bodies of persons who die of, 162, 163.
+ _See also_ Sickness
+
+Diseases ascribed to ghosts, 257
+
+Disinterment of the bones of the dead, 225, 294
+
+Dissection of corpse to discover cause of death, 53 _sq._
+
+Divination to discover cause of death, 35, 36, 37 _sq._, 38, 39 _sq._,
+ 44, 45 _sq._, 50 _sqq._, 53 _sq._, 136;
+ by liver, 54;
+ by dreams, 136, 383;
+ by the skulls of the dead, 179;
+ to discover sorcerer who caused death, 240 _sq._, 249 _sq._, 257, 402;
+ by bow, 241;
+ by hair to discover cause of death, 319;
+ by means of ghosts, 389 _sq._;
+ to discover ghost who has caused sickness, 382
+
+Divinity of kings, 16;
+ of Fijian kings, 407 _sq._;
+ Fijian notion of, 440 _sq._
+
+Dog, in myth of the origin of death, 66;
+ the Heavenly, 460
+
+Dogs sacrificed to the dead, 232, 234;
+ sacrificed in epidemics, 296
+
+Doreh Bay in Dutch New Guinea, 303, 306
+
+Dragon supposed to swallow lads at initiation, 301.
+ _See also_ Monster
+
+Drama of death and resurrection at initiation, 431, 434 _sq._
+
+----, evolution of, 189
+
+Dramatic ceremonies in Central Australia, magical intention of, 122
+_sq._, 126
+
+---- concerned with totems, 119 _sqq._
+
+---- to commemorate the doings of ancestors, 118 _sqq._
+
+Dramatic representation of ghosts and spirits by masked men, 176, 179
+_sq._, 180 _sqq._, 185 _sqq._
+
+Drawings on ground in religious or magical ceremony, 112 _sq._
+
+---- on rocks, 318
+
+Dread of witchcraft, 413 _sq._
+
+Dreamer, professional, 383
+
+Dreams as a source of the belief in immortality and of the worship of
+ the dead, 27 _sq._, 214;
+ divination by, 136;
+ appearance of the dead to the living in, 139, 195, 213, 229;
+ savage faith in the truth of, 139 _sq._;
+ consultation of the dead in, 179;
+ danger of, 194;
+ the dead communicate with the living in, 248
+
+Driving away the ghost, 178, 197, 248, 305, 306, 323, 356 _sqq._, 396,
+399, 415
+
+Drowning of ghosts, 224
+
+Duke of York Island, 393, 397, 403, 404
+
+Dying, threats of the, 273
+
+
+Ears of corpse stopped with hot coals, 152;
+ of mourners cut, 183, 272, 327
+
+Earth-burial and tree-burial, 161, 166 _sq._
+
+Earthquakes ascribed to ghosts, 286, 288;
+ caused by deities, 296
+
+Eating totemic animals or plants, 120 _sq._
+
+Economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the dead, 149;
+ entailed by the belief in immortality, 468 _sq._
+
+Eel, ghost in, 379
+
+Eels offered to the dead, 429
+
+Egypt, custom at embalming a corpse in ancient, 178
+
+Elysium, the Fijian, 466 _sq._
+
+Embryology of religion, 88
+
+Emu totem, dramatic ceremonies concerned with, 122, 123
+
+Encounter Bay tribe of South Australia, 42
+
+Epilepsy ascribed to anger of ghosts, 257, 283
+
+---- and inspiration, 15
+
+Erdweg, Father Josef, 218, 219, 227
+
+Erskine, Capt. J. E., 409
+
+_Ertnatulunga_, sacred store-house, 99
+
+_Erythrophloeum guiniense_, in poison ordeal, 50
+
+Esquimaux, burial custom of the, 454, 456
+
+Essence, immaterial, of sacrifice absorbed by ghosts and spirits, 285,
+287, 374
+
+Euhemerism, 24 _sq._
+
+Euhemerus, 24
+
+European teaching, influence of, on native beliefs, 142 _sq._
+
+Evil spirits regarded as causes of death, 36 _sq._
+
+Excitement as mark of inspiration, 14
+
+Exogamy with female descent, 416, 418
+
+Exorcism as cure for sickness, 222 _sq._
+
+Experience defined, 12;
+ two sorts of, 13 _sq._
+
+---- and intuition, 11
+
+External world, question of the reality of, 13 _sq._;
+ an illusion, 21
+
+Eye, soul resides in the, 267
+
+Eyes of corpse bandaged, 459
+
+
+Faints ascribed to action of ghosts, 257, 283
+
+Faith, weakening of religious, 4
+
+Falling stars the souls of the dead, 229, 399
+
+Family prayers of the New Caledonians, 332 _sq._, 340
+
+---- priests, 332, 340
+
+Famine, the stone of, 334 _sq._
+
+Fasting in mourning for a king, 451 _sq._
+
+Father-in-law, mourning for a, 155
+
+Favourable natural conditions, their influence in stimulating social
+progress, 141 _sq._, 148 _sq._
+
+Fear of ghosts, 134, 135, 147, 151 _sqq._, 158, 173 _sqq._, 195, 196
+ _sq._, 201, 203, 229 _sq._, 232, 237, 276, 282 _sq._, 305, 321, 327,
+ 347, 396, 414 _sq._, 449, 455, 467;
+ a moral restraint, 175;
+ the source of extravagant demonstrations of grief at death, 271
+ _sqq._;
+ taboo based on, 390 _sq._;
+ a bulwark of morality, 392;
+ funeral customs based on, 450 _sqq._;
+ of women dying in childbed, 458 _sqq._
+
+Fear of the dead, 152 _sq._, 168, 173 _sqq._, 195, 196 _sq._, 201, 203,
+244, 248
+
+---- of witchcraft, 244
+
+---- the only principle of religious observances in Fiji, 443
+
+Feasts provided for ghosts, 247 _sq._
+ _See also_ Funeral Feasts
+
+Feather-money offered to ghosts, 374, 375
+
+Feet foremost, corpse carried out, 174
+
+Ferry for ghosts, 224, 244 _sq._, 350, 412, 462
+
+Festival of the dead, 320 _sq._
+
+Fig-trees, sacred, 199
+
+Fighting or warrior ghosts, 370
+
+Fiji and the Fijians, 406 _sqq._
+
+----, human sacrifices in, 446 _sq._
+
+Fijian islands, scenery of, 409 _sq._
+
+---- myths of origin of death, 66 _sq._, 75 _sq._
+
+Fijians, belief in immortality among the, 406 _sqq._;
+ their advanced culture, 407
+
+Fingers amputated in mourning, 199, 451
+
+---- of living sacrificed in honour of the dead, 426 _sq._
+
+Finsch Harbour in German New Guinea, 218, 242, 262
+
+Fire as a means of keeping off ghosts, 131
+
+---- -flies, ghosts as, 352
+
+---- kindled on grave, to warm ghost, 144 _sq._, 196 _sq._, 209, 211,
+223, 275, 359
+
+---- supplied to ghost, 246 _sq._;
+ used to keep off ghosts, 258, 283;
+ used in cross-questioning a ghost, 278
+
+Firstborn children, skull-topped images made of dead, 312
+
+First-fruits offered to the dead, 259;
+ of canarium nuts offered to ghosts, 368 _sq._;
+ offered to deified spirits of dead chiefs, 369;
+ offered to ghosts, 373 _sq._;
+ of yams offered to the ancestral spirits, 429
+
+Fish offered by fishermen to the dead, 226;
+ prayers for, 329;
+ ghost in, 379
+
+---- totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, 119 _sq._, 121
+
+Fishermen pray to ghosts, 289
+
+----, stones to help, 337
+
+Fison, Lorimer, 407, 412, 416, 418, 428 _n._ 1, 434, 435 _sqq._, 438
+_n._ 1, 445, 448
+
+Fits ascribed to contact with ghosts, 283.
+ _See also_ Epilepsy
+
+Florida, one of the Solomon Islands, 346, 347, 348, 349, 367, 368, 376,
+377, 379, 380
+
+Flutes, sacred, 221, 226, 233, 252
+
+Flying-foxes, souls of the dead in, 405
+
+Food placed on grave, 144;
+ offered to the dead, 183, 201, 208, 211, 214, 232, 241, 332, 338, 364
+ _sq._, 367 _sq._, 372 _sq._, 396 _sq._, 429, 442, 467;
+ abstinence from certain, in mourning, 198, 208, 209, 230, 314, 360,
+ 452;
+ supply promoted by ghosts, 283;
+ offered to ancestral spirits, 316;
+ offered to the skulls of the dead, 339 _sq._, 352;
+ offered to ghosts, 348 _sq._;
+ of ghosts, the living not to partake of the, 355
+
+---- not to be touched with the hands by gravediggers, 327;
+ not to be touched with hands by persons who have handled a corpse,
+ 450 _sq._
+
+---- and water, abundance of, favourable to social progress, 90 _sq._;
+ offered to the dead, 174
+
+Fool and Death, 83
+
+Footprints, magic of, 45
+
+Foundation-sacrifice of men, 446
+
+Fowlers pray to ghosts, 289
+
+Frenzy a symptom of inspiration, 443, 444 _sq._
+
+Frigate-bird, mark of the, 350;
+ ghost associated with the, 376
+
+Frigate-birds, ghosts in, 380
+
+Frog in stories of the origin of death, 61, 62 _sq._
+
+Fruit-trees cut down for ghost, 246
+
+---- of the dead cut down, 399
+
+Funeral ceremonies intended to dismiss the ghost from the land of the
+living, 174 _sq._
+
+---- ceremonies of the Torres Straits Islanders, 176 _sqq._
+
+---- customs of the Tami, 293 _sq._;
+ of the Central Melanesians, 347 _sqq._, 355 _sqq._;
+ based on fear of ghosts, 450 _sqq._
+
+---- feasts, 348, 351, 358 _sq._, 360, 396;
+ orations, 355 _sq._
+
+Forces, impersonal, the world conceived as a complex of, 21
+
+Foreskins sacrificed in honour of the dead, 426 _sq._;
+ of circumcised lads presented to ancestral gods, 427
+
+
+Gaboon, the, 54
+
+Gajos of Sumatra, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Gall used in divination, 54
+
+Game offered by hunters to the dead, 226
+
+Ganindo, a warrior ghost, 363 _sq._
+
+Gardens, ghosts of, 371
+
+Gazelle Peninsula, New Britain, 48, 69, 398, 405
+
+Geelvink Bay, in Dutch New Guinea, 303, 307
+
+Genital members of human victims hung on tree, 447 _n._ 1
+
+German burial custom, 453, 458
+
+Ghost appeased by sham fight, 137;
+ hunted into the grave, 164 _sq._;
+ thought to linger near body till flesh is decayed, 165 _sq._;
+ elaborate funeral ceremonies designed to get rid of, 174 _sq._;
+ driven away, 178, 197, 248;
+ extracted from body of patient, 271;
+ calls for vengeance, 278;
+ cursed and ill-treated, 285;
+ who causes sunshine and rain, 375
+
+---- -posts, 375
+
+---- -seer, 204 _sq._, 214, 229
+
+---- -shooter, 387 _sq._
+
+Ghostly ferry, 350, 412.
+ _See also_ Ferry
+
+Ghosts, mischievous nature of, 28;
+ as causes of sickness, 54 _sqq._, 195, 197, 222, 300, 305, 322, 389;
+ feared, 134, 135, 147, 151 _sqq._, 158, 173 _sqq._, 195, 196 _sq._,
+ 201, 203, 229 _sq._, 232, 237, 271 _sqq._, 276, 282 _sq._, 305, 321,
+ 327, 347, 396, 414 _sq._, 449, 457, 467;
+ attentions paid to, in regard to food, fire, property, etc., 144
+ _sqq._;
+ feared only of recently departed, 151 _sq._;
+ of nearest relations most feared, 153;
+ represented dramatically by masked men, 176, 179 _sq._, 182 _sq._,
+ 185 _sqq._;
+ should have their noses bored, 192, 194 _sq._;
+ return of the, 195, 198, 246, 300;
+ carry off the souls of the living, 197;
+ cause bad luck in hunting and fishing, 197;
+ identified with phosphorescent lights, 198, 258;
+ appear to seer, 204 _sq._;
+ of slain enemies especially dreaded, 205;
+ of the hanged specially feared, 212;
+ certain classes of ghosts specially feared, 212;
+ malignity of, 212, 381;
+ drowned, 224;
+ village of, 231 _sq._, 234;
+ give information, 240;
+ provided with fire, 246 _sq._;
+ feasts provided for, 247 _sq._;
+ thought to give good crops, 247 _sq._;
+ communicate with the living in dreams, 248;
+ diseases ascribed to action of, 257;
+ of the slain, special fear of, 258, 279, 306, 323;
+ of ancestors appealed to for help, 258 _sq._;
+ precautions taken against, 258;
+ expected to make the crops thrive, 259, 284, 288 _sq._;
+ natural death ascribed to action of, 268;
+ sickness ascribed to action of, 269 _sq._, 271, 279, 372, 375, 381
+ _sqq._;
+ deceived, 273, 280 _sqq._, 328;
+ thought to help hunters, 274, 284 _sq._;
+ in the form of animals, 282;
+ help the living by promoting supply of food, 283;
+ cause earthquakes, 286, 288;
+ as patrons of hunting and other departments, 287;
+ die the second death, 287;
+ turn into animals, 287;
+ turn into ant-hills, 287;
+ of warriors invoked by warriors, 288;
+ invoked by warriors, farmers, fowlers, fishermen, etc., 288 _sqq._;
+ of men may grow into gods, 289 _sq._;
+ of the dead in the form of serpents, 300;
+ driven away, 305, 306, 323, 356 _sqq._, 396, 399, 415;
+ cause all sorts of misfortunes, 306 _sq._;
+ call for vengeance, 310, 468;
+ sacrifices to, 328;
+ of power and ghosts of no account, distinction between, 345 _sq._;
+ of the recent dead most powerful, 346;
+ prayers to, 348;
+ of land and sea, 348;
+ food offered to, 348 _sq._;
+ live in islands, 350, 353;
+ live underground, 353 _sq._;
+ worshipful, 362 _sq._;
+ public and private, 367, 369 _sq._;
+ first-fruits offered to, 368 _sq._, 373 _sq._;
+ warlike, 370;
+ of gardens, 371;
+ human sacrifices to, 371 _sq._;
+ incarnate in sharks, 373;
+ sacrifices to, at planting, 375;
+ sanctuaries of, 377 _sq._;
+ incarnate in animals, 379 _sq._;
+ envious of the living, 381;
+ carry off souls, 383;
+ in stones, 383 _sq._;
+ inspiration by means of, 389 _sq._;
+ killed, 415 _sq._;
+ dazed, 416;
+ prevented from returning to the house, 455 _sq._;
+ unmarried, hard fate of, 464
+
+Ghosts and spirits, distinction between, in Central Melanesia, 343, 363;
+ regulate the weather, 384 _sq._
+
+---- of women dying in childbed, special fear of, 458 _sqq._;
+ special treatment of, 358.
+ _See also_ Dead _and_ Spirits
+
+Giant, mythical, thought to appear annually with the south-east monsoon,
+255
+
+Gifford, Lord, 2, 3
+
+Girdle made from hair of dead, 138
+
+Gnanji, the, of Central Australia, 92
+
+Goat in story of the origin of death, 64
+
+God, the question of his existence, 2;
+ defined, 9 _sq._;
+ knowledge of, how acquired, 11 _sqq._;
+ inferred as a cause, 22 _sq._;
+ and the origin of death, 61 _sqq._;
+ in form of serpent, 445, 462
+
+Gods created by man in his own likeness, 19 _sq._;
+ of nature, 20;
+ human, 20, 23 _sqq._;
+ unknown among aborigines of Australia, 91;
+ often developed out of ghosts, 289 _sq._;
+ ancestors worshipped as, 340, 369;
+ ancestral, sacrifice of foreskins to, 427;
+ ancestral, libations to, 438;
+ two classes of, in Fiji, 440
+
+---- and spirits, no certain demarcation between, 441
+
+Goldie, Rev. Hugh, 52
+
+Good crops given by ghosts, 247 _sq._
+
+---- spirit, 143
+
+---- and bad, different fate of the, after death, 354
+
+Gran Chaco, in Argentina, 165
+
+Grandfather, soul of, reborn in grandchild, 417;
+ his ghost dazed, 416
+
+Grandfather and grandchild, their relation under exogamy and female
+kinship, 416, 418
+
+Grandidier, A., 49
+
+Grass for graves, euphemism for human victims buried with the dead, 425
+_sq._
+
+---- -seed, magical ceremony for increasing, 102
+
+Grave, food placed on, 144, 145;
+ property of dead deposited in, 145 _sqq._;
+ hut erected on, 203;
+ of worshipful dead a sanctuary, 347;
+ stones heaped on, 360;
+ sacrifices to ghost on, 382
+
+Gravediggers, purification of, 314;
+ secluded, 327;
+ secluded and painted black, 451
+
+Graves, huts built on, for use of ghosts, 150 _sq._;
+ under the houses, 274.
+ _See also_ Huts
+
+Great Woman, the, 464
+
+Greek tragedy, W. Ridgeway on the origin of, 189
+
+Greeks, purificatory rites of ancient, 206
+
+Greenlanders, burial custom of the, 454
+
+Grey, Sir George, 41;
+ taken for an Australian aboriginal, 131 _sqq._
+
+Grief, extravagant demonstrations of grief in mourning, their motives,
+135 _sq._
+
+---- at a death, extravagant demonstrations of, dictated by fear of the
+ghost, 271 _sqq._
+
+_Grihya-Sutras_, 163
+
+Ground drawings in magical or religious ceremony, 112 _sq._
+
+Groves, sacred, the dead buried in, 326
+
+Guadalcanar, one of the Solomon Islands, 350, 372
+
+Guardian spirits, 227
+
+Guiana, Indians of, their ideas as to the cause of death, 35 _sqq._;
+ their offerings to the dead, 165
+
+Gullet of pig sacrificed, 368
+
+Gulu, king of heaven, 78
+
+Gypsies, European, burial custom of, 455
+
+
+Haddon, Dr. A. C., 171, 172 _sq._, 175, 176, 180
+
+Hagen, Dr. B., 230, 231
+
+Haida, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Hair burnt as charm, 43;
+ cut in mourning, 135, 320, 451;
+ of widow unshorn, 184;
+ of dead child worn by mother, 315;
+ of gravediggers not cut, 327;
+ used as amulet, 332
+
+---- of the dead, magical virtue attributed to, 137 _sq._;
+ worn by relatives, 249;
+ divination by means of, 319
+
+---- of mourners offered to the dead, 183;
+ cut off, 183, 204
+
+Hakea flower totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, 119, 121
+
+Hands, gravediggers and persons who have handled a corpse not to touch
+food with their, 327, 450 _sq._
+
+Hanged, ghosts of the, specially feared, 212
+
+Hare in myth of the origin of death, 65
+
+Harumae, a warrior ghost, 365 _sq._
+
+Hasselt, J. L. van, 305
+
+Hauri, a worshipful ghost, 372
+
+Head-dress of gravediggers, 327
+
+Head-hunters, 352
+
+Head of corpse cut off in order to disable the ghost, 153;
+ removed and preserved, 178.
+ _See also_ Skulls
+
+Heads of mourners shaved, 208
+
+----, human, cut off in honour of the dead, 352
+
+Heaps of stones on grave, 360
+
+Heart supposed to be the seat of human spirit, 129
+
+---- of pig sacrificed, 368
+
+Heavenly Dog, 460
+
+Hebrew prophets, 14
+
+Hen in myth of the origin of death, 79
+
+Highlands of Scotland, burial custom in the, 453, 458
+
+Hindoos, burial custom of the, 453, 458
+
+Historical method of treating natural theology, 2 _sq._
+
+History of religion, its importance, 3
+
+Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead, 207
+
+Hole in the wall, dead carried out through a, 452 _sqq._
+
+Holy of Holies, 430, 431, 433, 437, 438
+
+Homer on blood-drinking ghosts, 159
+
+Homicides, precautions taken by, against the ghosts of their victims,
+ 205 _sq._;
+ purification of, 206;
+ honours bestowed on, in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+ _See also_ Manslayers
+
+Homoeopathic magic, 288, 376
+
+---- or imitative magic, 335, 336, 338
+
+Honorary titles of homicides in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+
+Hood Peninsula of British New Guinea, 47, 202, 203
+
+Hos of Togoland, their myth of the origin of death, 81 _sqq._
+
+Hose, Ch., and McDougall, W., quoted, 265 _n._, 417
+
+Hottentots, their myth of the origin of death, 65;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+House deserted after a death, 195, 196 _n._ 1, 248, 275, 349, 400;
+ deserted or destroyed after a death, 210;
+ dead buried in the, 236, 347, 352, 397, 398, 399;
+ dead carried out of, by special opening, 452 _sqq._
+
+Houses, native, at Kalo, 202;
+ communal, 304
+
+Howitt, Dr. A. W., 44 _sq._, 139, 141
+
+Human gods, 20, 23 _sqq._
+
+---- nature, two different views of, 469 _sqq._
+
+---- sacrifices to ghosts, 371 _sq._;
+ in Fiji, 446 _sq._
+
+Hume's analysis of cause, 18 _sq._
+
+Hunt, Mr., his experience in Fiji, 423 _sq._
+
+Hunters supposed to be helped by ghosts, 274, 284 _sq._
+
+Huon Gulf, in German New Guinea, 242, 256
+
+Hut built to represent mythical monster at initiation, 251, 290, 301
+_sq._
+
+Huts erected on graves for use of ghosts, 150 _sq._;
+ erected on graves, 203, 223, 248, 259, 275, 293, 294
+
+Hypocritical lamentations at a death, 273
+
+---- indignation of accomplice at a murder, 280 _sqq._
+
+
+Idu, mountain of the dead, 193, 194 _sq._
+
+Iguana in myth of origin of death, 70
+
+Ilene, a worshipful ghost, 373
+
+Ill-treatment of ghost who gives no help, 285
+
+Illusion of the external world, 21
+
+Images of the dead, wooden (_korwar_ or _karwar_), 307 _sqq._, 311, 315,
+ 316 _sq._, 321, 322;
+ of sharks, 373;
+ in temples, 442
+
+Imitation of totems by disguised actors, 119 _sqq._;
+ of totemic animals, 177
+
+Imitative magic, 335, 336, 338, 376
+
+Immortality, belief in, among the aborigines of Central Australia, 87
+ _sqq._;
+ among the islanders of Torres Straits, 170 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of British New Guinea, 190 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of German New Guinea, 216 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Southern Melanesia, 324 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Central Melanesia, 343 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Northern Melanesia, 393 _sqq._;
+ among the Fijians, 406 _sqq._;
+ strongly held by savages, 468
+
+Immortality, limited sense of, 25;
+ origin of belief in, 25 _sqq._;
+ belief in human, almost universal among races of mankind, 33;
+ rivalry between men and animals for gift of, 74 _sq._;
+ question of the truth of the belief in, 469 _sqq._;
+ destruction of life and property entailed by the belief in, 468 _sq._
+
+---- in a bundle, 77 _sq._
+
+Impecunious ghosts, hard fate of, 406
+
+Impurity, ceremonial, of manslayer, 229 _sq._
+
+Im Thurn, Sir Everard F., 38 _sq._
+
+Incantations or spells, 385
+
+Inconsistencies and contradictions in reasoning not peculiar to savages,
+111 _sq._
+
+Inconsistency of savage thought, 143
+
+Indians of Guiana, their ideas about death, 35 _sqq._;
+ their beliefs as to the dead, 165
+
+---- of North-West America, burial custom of the, 455, 460
+
+Indifference to death, 419;
+ a consequence of belief in immortality, 422 _sq._
+
+Indo-European burial custom, 453
+
+Infanticide as cause of diminished population, 40
+
+Influence of European teaching on native beliefs, 142 _sq._
+
+Initiation at puberty regarded as a process of death and resurrection,
+254, 261
+
+---- of young men, 233;
+ in Central Australia, 100;
+ among the Yabim, 250 _sqq._;
+ among the Bukaua, 260 _sq._;
+ among the Kai, 290 _sq._;
+ in Fiji, 429 _sqq._
+
+Insanity, influence of, in history, 15 _sq._
+
+---- and inspiration not clearly distinguished, 388
+
+Insect in divination as to cause of death, 44, 46
+
+Inspiration, theory of, 14 _sq._;
+ of medium by ancestral spirits, 308 _sqq._;
+ by spirits of the dead, 322;
+ by ghosts in Central Melanesia, 388 _sq._;
+ attested by frenzy, 443, 444 _sq._
+
+---- and insanity not clearly distinguished, 388
+
+Insufflations, magical, to heal the sick, 329
+
+_Intichiuma_, magical ceremonies for the multiplication of totems, 122
+_sq._
+
+Intuition and experience, 11
+
+Invocation of ghosts, 288 _sq._;
+ of the dead, 329 _sq._, 332 _sqq._, 377, 378, 401, 441
+
+Island, dead buried in, 319
+
+---- of the dead, fabulous, 175
+
+Islands, ghosts live in, 350, 353
+
+Isle of Pines, 325, 330, 337
+
+Israelites forbidden to cut themselves for the dead, 154
+
+Ivory Coast, 52
+
+
+Jackson, John, quoted, 419 _sqq._, 447
+
+Jappen or Jobi, island, 303
+
+Jawbone of husband worn by widow, 204;
+ lower, of corpse preserved, 234 _sq._, 236, 274;
+ of dead king of Uganda preserved and consulted oracularly, 235
+
+Jawbones of the dead preserved, 351 _sq._;
+ of dead worn by relatives, 404
+
+Journey of ghosts to the land of the dead, 286 _sq._, 361 _sq._, 462
+_sqq._
+
+Juices of putrefaction received by mourners on their bodies, 167, 205,
+403
+
+---- of putrefying corpse drunk by widow, 313;
+ drunk by women, 355
+
+
+Kachins of Burma, burial custom of the, 459
+
+Kafirs, their beliefs as to the causes of death, 56
+
+Kagoro, the, of Northern Nigeria, 28 _n._ 1, 49
+
+Kai, the, of German New Guinea, 71, 262 _sqq._;
+ theory of the soul, 267
+
+Kaikuzi, brother of Death, 80
+
+Kaitish, the, 68, 158, 166
+
+Kalo, in British New Guinea, 202 _sq._
+
+_Kalou_, Fijian word for "god," 440
+
+_Kalou vu_, "root gods," 440
+
+_Kalou yalo_, "soul gods," 440
+
+_Kami_, the souls of the dead, 297 _sq._
+
+Kamilaroi tribe of New South Wales, 46, 155
+
+_Kanaima_ (_kenaima_), 36, 38
+
+_Kani_, name applied to ghosts, to bull-roarers, and to the monster who
+is thought to swallow lads at circumcision, 301
+
+Kaniet islands, 401
+
+_Kava_ offered to ancestral spirits, 440
+
+Kavirondo, burial custom of the, 458
+
+Kaya-Kaya or Tugeri, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 255
+
+Kayans, the, of Borneo, 417;
+ burial custom of, 456 _sq._, 459
+
+Kemp Welch River, 202
+
+_Keramo_, a fighting ghost, 370
+
+Keysser, Ch., 262, 263 _sq._, 267, 269 _n._ 3
+
+Kibu, the land of the dead, 175
+
+Kibuka, war-god of Uganda, 366
+
+Kidd, Dudley, 55
+
+Kidney-fat, extraction of, 43
+
+Killer of Souls, the, 465 _sq._
+
+Killing a ghost, 415 _sq._
+
+King, mourning for a, 451 _sq._
+
+King's corpse not carried out through the door, 452, 461
+
+Kings, divinity of, 16;
+ sanctity of Fijian, 407 _sq._
+
+Kintu and the origin of death, 78 _sqq._
+
+Kiwai, beliefs and customs concerning the dead in island of, 211 _sqq._
+
+Koita or Koitapu, of British New Guinea, 193
+
+Kolosh Indians, 163
+
+Komars, the, 163
+
+_Koroi_, honorary title of homicides in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+
+_Korwar_, or _karwar_, wooden images of the dead, 307 _sqq._, 315, 316
+_sq._, 321, 322
+
+Koryak, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Kosi and the origin of death, 76 _sq._
+
+Knowledge, natural, how acquired, 11
+
+---- of God, how acquired, 11 _sqq._;
+ of ghosts essential to medical practitioners in Melanesia, 384
+
+Kulin, the, 138
+
+Kurnai tribe of Victoria, 44, 138
+
+Kweariburra tribe, 153
+
+_Kwod_, sacred or ceremonial ground, 179
+
+
+Lambert, Father, 325, 327, 328, 332, 339
+
+Lamboam, the land of the dead, 260, 292, 299
+
+Lamentations, hypocritical, at a death, 271 _sqq._, 280 _sqq._
+
+Land burial and sea burial, 347 _sq._
+
+---- cleared for cultivation, 238, 242 _sq._, 256, 262 _sq._, 304
+
+---- ghosts and sea ghosts, 348
+
+---- of the dead, 175 _sq._, 192, 193, 194 _sq._, 202, 203, 207, 209
+ _sq._, 211 _sqq._, 224, 228 _sq._, 244, 260, 286 _sq._, 292, 299, 305
+ _sq._, 307, 322, 326, 345, 350 _sq._, 353 _sq._, 404 _sqq._, 462
+ _sqq._;
+ journeys of the living to the, 207, 355;
+ way to the, 212 _sq._, 462 _sqq._
+
+Landtman, Dr. G., 214
+
+Lang, Andrew, 216 _sq._
+
+Laos, burial custom in, 459
+
+Leaf as badge of a ghost, 391
+
+Leaves thrown on scene of murder, 415
+
+Leg bones of the dead preserved, 221, 249
+
+Legs of corpse broken in order to disable the ghost, 153
+
+Lehner, Stefan, 256
+
+Lepchis of Sikhim, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Le Souëf, A. A. C., 40 _sq._
+
+Libations to ancestral gods, 430, 438
+
+Licence, period of, following circumcision, 427 _sq._;
+ following initiation, 433, 434 _n._ 1, 436 _sq._
+
+Licentious orgy following circumcision, 427 _sq._
+
+Life in the other world like life in this, 286 _sq._
+
+Lightning, savage theory of, 19
+
+Lights, phosphorescent, thought to be ghosts, 198, 258
+
+Lime, powdered, used to dust the trail of a ghost, 277 _sq._
+
+_Lio'a_, a powerful ghost, 346
+
+Liver extracted by magic, 50;
+ divination by, 54
+
+Livers of pigs offered to the dead, 360 _sq._
+
+Lizard in divination as to cause of death, 44;
+ in myths of the origin of death, 60 _sq._, 70, 74 _sq._
+
+Lizards, ghosts in, 380
+
+Local totem centres, 97, 99, 124
+
+Long soul and short soul, 291 _sq._
+
+Lost souls, recovery of, 270 _sq._, 300 _sq._
+
+Luck, bad, in fishing and hunting, caused by ghosts, 197
+
+Luck of a village dependent on ghosts, 198
+
+_Lum_, men's clubhouse, 243, 250, 257
+
+
+Mabuiag, island of, 174
+
+Macassars, burial custom of the, 461
+
+Macluer Gulf in Dutch New Guinea, 317, 318
+
+Mad, stones to drive people, 335
+
+Madagascar, ideas as to natural death in, 48 _sq._
+
+Mafulu (Mambule), the, of British New Guinea, 198 _sqq._
+
+Maggots, appearance of, sign of departure of soul, 292
+
+Magic as a cause of death, 34 _sqq._;
+ Age of, 58;
+ attributed to aboriginal inhabitants of a country, 193;
+ homoeopathic or imitative, 288, 335, 336, 338, 376;
+ combined with religion, 111 _sq._, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 376;
+ Melanesian conception of, 380 _sq._;
+ working by means of personal refuse, 413 _sq._
+ _See also_ Sorcery _and_ Witchcraft
+
+---- and religion compared in reference to their destruction of human
+life, 56 _sq._
+
+Magical ceremonies for increasing the food supply, 102;
+ ceremonies for the multiplication of totems, 124 _sq._;
+ intention of dramatic ceremonies in Central Australia, 122 _sq._, 126;
+ virtues attributed to sacred stones in New Caledonia, 334 _sqq._
+
+Magician or priest, 336, 338.
+ _See also_ Sorcerer
+
+Magicians, their importance in history, 16;
+ but no priests at Doreh, 306
+
+Malagasy, their ideas as to natural death, 48 _sq._
+
+Malanta, one of the Solomon Islands, 350
+
+Malayalis, the, of Malabar, 162
+
+Malignity of ghosts, 212, 381
+
+Malo, island of, 48
+
+Man creates gods in his own likeness, 19 _sq._
+
+----, grandeur and dignity of, 469 _sq._;
+ pettiness and insignificance of, 470 _sq._
+
+_Mana_, supernatural or spiritual power, 346 _sq._, 352, 371, 380
+
+_Manoam_, evil spirits, 321
+
+Manoga, a worshipful ghost, 368
+
+Manslayers, precautions taken by, against the ghosts of their victims,
+ 205 _sq._, 258, 279, 323;
+ secluded, 279 _sq._,
+ consecration of, 448 _sq._;
+ restrictions imposed on, 449.
+ _See also_ Homicides
+
+_Mari_ or _mar_, ghost, 173
+
+_Mariget_, "ghost-hand," 177
+
+Mariner, William, 411
+
+Mariners, stones to help, 337
+
+Markets, native, 394
+
+Marotse, burial custom of the, 454
+
+Marquesas Islands, 417
+
+Married and unmarried, different modes of disposing of their corpses,
+162
+
+Masai, their myth of the origin of death, 65 _sq._
+
+Masked men, dramatic representation of ghosts and spirits by, 176, 179
+_sq._, 180 _sqq._, 185 _sqq._
+
+---- dances, 297;
+ of the Monumbo, 228
+
+Masks worn by actors in sacred ceremonies, 179;
+ used in dances, 233, 297
+
+Masquerades, 297
+
+Massim, the, of British New Guinea, 206
+
+Master of Life, 163
+
+Matacos Indians, 165
+
+Mate, a worshipful spirit, 239
+
+Material culture of the natives of New Guinea, 191;
+ of the natives of Tumleo, 219 _sq._;
+ of Papuans, 231;
+ of the Yabim, 242 _sq._;
+ of the Noofoor, 304 _sq._;
+ of the New Caledonians, 339;
+ of the North Melanesians, 393 _sqq._
+
+Mawatta or Mowat, 47
+
+_Mbete_, priest, 443, 445
+
+Mea, a spiritual medium, 196
+
+Mecklenburg, burial custom in, 457
+
+Medicine-men, their importance in history, 16;
+ inspired by spirits of the dead, 322
+
+Medium inspired by soul of dead, 308 _sq._
+
+Mediums, spiritual, 196
+
+Mediums who send their souls to deadland, 300
+
+Megalithic monuments, 438
+
+Melanesia, Central, belief in immortality among the natives of, 343
+ _sqq._
+
+----, Northern, belief in immortality among the natives of, 393 _sqq._
+
+----, Southern, belief in immortality among the natives of, 324 _sqq._
+
+Melanesian myths of the origin of death, 69, 71 _sq._, 83 _sq._;
+ theory of the soul, 344 _sq._
+
+Melanesians, their ideas as to natural deaths, 48, 54 _sq._;
+ Central, funeral customs of the, 347 _sqq._, 355 _sqq._;
+ and Papuans in New Guinea, 190 _sq._
+
+Memorial trees, 225
+
+Men sacrificed to support posts of new house, 446 _sq._;
+ whipped by women in mourning, 452
+
+Men's clubhouses, 221, 225, 226, 243, 256 _sq._, 355
+
+Mentras or Mantras of the Malay Peninsula, 73
+
+Merivale on Dartmoor, 438
+
+Messengers, the Two, myth of origin of death, 60 _sqq._
+
+Messou, Indian magician, 78
+
+Metals unknown in Northern Melanesia, 395
+
+Metempsychosis, widespread belief in, 29
+
+Methods of treating natural theology, 1 _sqq._
+
+---- of natural knowledge, 11
+
+Mexicans, the ancient, 163
+
+Meyer, H. E. A., 42
+
+Migration of villages, 339
+
+Migratory cultivation, 243
+
+Miklucho-Maclay, Baron N., 235
+
+Milky Way, Central Australian belief as to the, 140;
+ souls of dead go to, 153
+
+Milne Bay, 207
+
+Mimika district in Dutch New Guinea, 318
+
+Minnetaree Indians, 163
+
+Misfortunes of all kinds caused by ghosts, 306 _sq._
+
+Moanus, the, of the Admiralty Islands, 400
+
+Monarchical government, rise of, 141 _sq._
+
+Monsoon, south-east, festival at, 255
+
+Monsoons, seasons determined by, 216
+
+Monster supposed to swallow lads at initiation, 251 _sq._, 255, 260,
+261, 290 _sq._, 301 _sq._
+
+Monumbo, the, of German New Guinea, 227 _sq._
+
+Monuments of the dead, 225
+
+Moon, the waxing and waning, in myths of the origin of death, 60, 65
+_sqq._
+
+---- in relation to doctrine of resurrection, 67 _sq._;
+ worship of the, 68
+
+Moral restraint afforded by a fear of ghosts, 175
+
+---- depravity of the Fijians, 409
+
+Morality, superstition a crutch to, 175
+
+Mortuary dramas, 189
+
+_Mos_, a disembodied soul, 224
+
+Mota, island of, 387
+
+Motlav, in the Banks' Islands, 357
+
+Motu, the, of British New Guinea, 192
+
+Mound erected in a totemic ceremony, 110 _sq._
+
+Mounds on graves, 150, 164
+
+Mourners, professional, 136
+
+---- smeared with white clay, 158, 177;
+ painted black, 178, 293, 403;
+ garb of, 184, 198;
+ cut their hair, 183, 204, 320, 451;
+ abstain from certain foods, 198, 208, 209, 230, 314, 360, 452;
+ restrictions observed by, 313 _sq._;
+ tattooed, 314;
+ purified by bathing, 314, 319;
+ plastered with mud, 318;
+ cut or tear their ears, 183, 272, 327;
+ secluded, 360;
+ smeared with ashes, 361;
+ anoint themselves with juices of putrefying corpse, 403;
+ amputate their fingers, 199, 451;
+ burn their skin, 154, 155, 157, 327, 451.
+ _See also_ Cuttings _and_ Seclusion
+
+Mourning, hair cut in, 135;
+ extravagant demonstrations of grief in, 135 _sq._;
+ for a father-in-law, 155;
+ amputation of fingers in, 199;
+ varying period of, 274, 293;
+ for a king, 451 _sq._
+
+---- costume, 249, 274, 320;
+ a protection against ghosts, 241 _sq._;
+ of widower and widow, 259 _sq._
+
+Mowat or Mawatta, 47
+
+Mud, mourners plastered with, 318
+
+Mukden, burial custom in, 460
+
+Mukjarawaint tribe, 155
+
+Mummies of dead preserved in houses, 188
+
+Mummification of the dead, 184, 185, 313
+
+_Mungai_, places associated with totems, 117, 124
+
+Murder, leaves thrown on scene of, 415
+
+---- highly esteemed in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+
+Murdered man, ghost of, haunts murderer, 248
+
+Murimuria, a second-rate heaven, 466
+
+Murray Island, 174
+
+Mutilations, bodily, at puberty, 303
+
+Myth of the prelogical savage, 266
+
+---- of the continuance of death, 472
+
+Myths of the origin of death, 59 _sqq._
+
+
+_Nai_, souls of the dead, 240
+
+Nai Thombothombo, in Fiji, 463
+
+Nails of dead detached, 145;
+ preserved, 339
+
+Naindelinde in Fiji, 465
+
+Naiteru-kop, a Masai god, 65
+
+Namaquas, their myth of the origin of death, 65
+
+Nambanaggatai, in Fiji, 465
+
+Nambi and the origin of death, 78 _sqq._
+
+Name of mythical water-snake not uttered, 105
+
+Names of the dead not mentioned, 135, 210, 246
+
+Nandi, their myth of the origin of death, 66
+
+_Nanga_, sacred stone enclosure, 428 _sqq._;
+ description of, 437 _sq._
+
+Nangganangga, the foe of unmarried ghosts, 464
+
+_Nanja_ tree or stone, 98
+
+---- spot, 164, 165
+
+Narrinyeri tribe of South Australia, 43;
+ their beliefs as to the dead, 134 _sqq._
+
+Nassau, Rev. R. H., 51
+
+Native beliefs influenced by European teaching, 142 _sq._
+
+Natural theology defined, 1, 8
+
+---- death, disbelief of savages in, 33 _sqq._
+
+---- causes of death recognised by some savages, 55 _sq._
+
+---- features of landscape associated with traditions about the dead,
+115 _sqq._
+
+Nature, gods of, 20;
+ souls of the dead identified with spirits of, 130;
+ two different views of human, 469 _sqq._
+
+Nayars, the, of Cochin, 162 _sq._
+
+Ndengei, Fijian god in form of serpent, 445, 462, 464, 465, 466
+
+Necklaces worn in mourning, 198
+
+Negen Negorijen in Dutch New Guinea, 316, 317
+
+Negrito admixture in New Guinea, 198
+
+Nemunemu, a creator, 240
+
+Nether world, the lord of the, 286;
+ abode of the dead in the, 292, 299, 322, 326, 353 _sq._;
+ descent of the living into the, 300;
+ _See also_ Land of the Dead
+
+Nets worn by widows in mourning, 249, 260, 274, 293;
+ worn by women in mourning, 241
+
+New birth at initiation, pretence of, 254
+
+New Britain (New Pomerania), 48, 69, 393, 394, 402, 404
+
+---- Caledonia, natives of, 324;
+ their beliefs and customs concerning the dead, 325 _sqq._;
+ their system of family prayers, 332 _sq._, 340;
+ material culture of the, 339
+
+---- Georgia, 48
+
+---- Guinea, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, 47;
+ the races of, 190 _sq._;
+ belief in immortality among the natives of British, 190 _sqq._;
+ belief in immortality among the natives of Dutch, 303 _sqq._;
+ belief in immortality among the natives of German, 216 _sqq._
+
+New Hebrides, myth of the origin of death in, 71, 343, 353
+
+---- Ireland (New Mecklenburg), 393, 397
+
+---- South Wales, aborigines of, their ideas as to the causes of death,
+ 45 _sq._;
+ as to the home of the dead, 133 _sq._
+
+Newton, Alfred, 90 _n._ 1
+
+Neyaux, the, of the Ivory Coast, 52
+
+_Ngai_, human spirit, 129
+
+Ngoc, the, of Annam, 69
+
+Ngoni, the, 61
+
+Nias, island of, 70
+
+Nigeria, Northern, 28 _n._ 1, 49
+
+Niggardly people punished in the other world, 405
+
+Noblemen alone immortal, 33
+
+Noofoor, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 303
+
+Noomfor, island, 303
+
+Norse burial custom, 453
+
+Noses bored, ghosts should have their, 192, 194 _sq._
+
+Novices presented to ancestral spirits at initiation, 432 _sq._, 434
+
+Nukahiva, one of the Marquesas Islands, 417
+
+
+Objects offered to the dead broken, 276
+
+Offering, soul of, consumed by deity or spirit, 297, 298
+
+Offerings of food and water to the dead, 174;
+ of food to the dead, 183, 201, 208, 211, 214, 232, 241, 332, 338,
+ 364 _sq._, 367 _sq._, 372 _sq._, 396 _sq._, 429, 442, 467;
+ of blood and hair to the dead, 183;
+ of game and fish to the dead, 226;
+ to the dead, 239, 276, 292;
+ of first-fruits to the dead, 259;
+ to ancestors, 298;
+ of food to ghosts, 348 _sq._;
+ to ghosts, 364 _sq._;
+ of first-fruits to ancestral spirits, 429;
+ of cloth and weapons to ancestral spirits, 430 _sq._
+ _See also_ Sacrifices
+
+----, burnt, to the dead, 294
+
+_Oknanikilla_, local totem centre, 97, 99, 124
+
+Old and young, difference between the modes of burying, 161, 162 _sq._
+
+Old people buried alive, 359
+
+Olympia, Pelops at, 159
+
+Omens after a death, 319
+
+Opening, special, for carrying dead out of house, 452 _sqq._
+
+Oracles of dead kings, 151
+
+---- of the dead, 151, 176, 179, 235
+
+Oracular responses of Fijian priests, 443 _sqq._
+
+Oranges, spirits of the dead play with, 326
+
+Ordeal to detect sorcerer, 50 _sqq._
+
+Orgy, licentious, following circumcision, 427 _sq._
+
+Origin of belief in immortality, 26 _sqq._
+
+---- of death, myths of the, 59 _sqq._
+
+Orion's belt, 368
+
+Ornaments of corpse removed before burial, 223, 234, 241
+
+
+Pahouins, the, 54
+
+Palsy, a Samoan god, 72
+
+Pandanus, reason for planting, 362
+
+---- and ghosts, 463
+
+Panoi, Melanesian land of the dead, 83, 345, 353 _sq._, 355, 356
+
+Papuan art, 220
+
+Papuans, animistic views of the, 264
+
+---- and Melanesians in New Guinea, 190 _sq._
+
+_Paraks_, temples, 220
+
+Parents deified, 439
+
+Parkinson, R., 219, 221
+
+Pelops, human blood offered on grave of, 159
+
+Penates in New Guinea, 308, 317
+
+Pennefather River, natives of the, their belief in reincarnation of the
+dead, 128
+
+Perche, burial custom in, 458
+
+Personal refuse, magic working through, 386, 413 _sq._
+
+Personification of natural phenomena, 20;
+ of death, 81
+
+Phosphorescent lights supposed to be ghosts, 198, 258
+
+_Physostigma venenosum_ in poison ordeal, 52
+
+Piety, two types of, 23;
+ co-operative system of, 333
+
+Pigs, blood of, smeared on skulls and bones of the dead, 200;
+ sacrificed to the dead, 201;
+ sacrificed to monster who swallows lads at initiation, 251, 253, 260,
+ 290, 301;
+ sacrificed at grave, 356;
+ sacrificed at burial, 359;
+ sacrificed to ghosts, 365 _sq._;
+ sacrificed vicariously for the sick, 373, 374, 375;
+ sacred, 433
+
+----, livers of, offered to the dead, 360 _sq._
+
+Pines, Isle of, 325, 330, 337
+
+Pirnmeheel, good spirit, 143
+
+Place of sacrifice to ghosts, 370
+
+Planting, sacrifices to ghosts at, 375
+
+Platforms, dead laid on, 199, 203, 205
+
+Plato, on death, 33
+
+Pleiades, the, 368
+
+Plum-tree people, 94
+
+---- totem, dramatic ceremony connected with, 120, 121
+
+Poison ordeal to detect sorcerers, 50 _sqq._
+
+Political constitution of the Fijians, 407
+
+Pollution, ceremonial, of gravediggers, 327
+
+Polynesian blood, infusion of, in New Guinea, 291
+
+---- race, 406
+
+Polytheism and monotheism, 11
+
+Polytheism discarded, 20 _sq._
+
+Population, belief in sorcery a cause of keeping down the, 38, 40, 46
+_sq._, 51 _sqq._
+
+Port Lincoln tribe of S. Australia, 42
+
+---- Moresby, 193, 195
+
+Poso in Celebes, 72
+
+Posts of new house, men sacrificed to support, 446 _sq._
+
+Potsdam Harbour, in German New Guinea, 218, 227
+
+Pottery, native, 220;
+ in New Guinea, 305
+
+----, Fijian, 407
+
+---- unknown in Northern Melanesia, 395
+
+Practical character of the savage, 274
+
+Prayer-posts, 333 _sq._
+
+Prayers to the dead, 201 _sq._, 214, 222 _sq._, 259, 288, 307, 329
+ _sq._, 332 _sqq._, 340, 376 _sq._, 401, 403 _sq._, 427, 441;
+ to ghosts, 348
+
+Precautions taken against ghosts, 152 _sq._, 258;
+ against a wife's ghost, 197;
+ against ghosts of the slain, 205 _sq._
+
+Predominance of the worship of the dead, 297 _sq._
+
+Prelogical savage, myth of the, 266
+
+Pretence of attacking persons engaged in attending to a corpse, 177, 178
+
+---- of avenging the dead, 136 _sq._, 282, 328
+ _See also_ Sham fight
+
+Priest, family, 332, 340
+
+----, chief or high, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434
+
+---- or magician, 336, 338
+
+Priests, Fijian, 433 _sqq._
+
+Private or tame ghosts, 369 _sq._, 381, 382, 386
+
+---- property, rights of, consolidated by taboo, 390
+
+Problem of death, 31 _sqq._
+
+Progress partly determined by competition, 89 _sq._
+
+----, social, stimulated by favourable natural conditions, 148 _sq._
+
+Promiscuity, temporary, 427 _sq._, 433, 434 _n._ 1, 436 _sq._
+
+Property displayed beside the corpse, 397
+
+----, rights of private, consolidated by taboo, 390;
+ temporarily suspended, 427 _sq._
+
+Property of dead deposited in grave, 145 _sqq._, 359, 397;
+ motive for destroying, 147 _sq._;
+ hung up on trees, 148;
+ destroyed, 327, 459;
+ burnt, 401 _sq._
+
+Prophecy inspired by ghosts, 388
+
+Prophets inspired by ghosts, 388 _sq._
+
+----, Hebrew, 14
+
+Propitiation of the dead, 201, 307, 338;
+ of ghosts and spirits, 226, 239, 348
+
+Puberty, initiation at, 254 _sq._;
+ bodily mutilations at, 303
+
+Public ghosts, 367, 369
+
+Purification of homicides, 206, 229
+
+---- by bathing and shaving, 208
+
+---- of mourners by bathing, 314, 319
+
+
+Queensland, belief in reincarnation of the dead among the aborigines of,
+ 127 _sqq._;
+ burial customs in, 147
+
+
+Rain sent by a mythical water-snake, 112, 114;
+ prayers for, 288;
+ stones to make, 336 _sq._
+
+---- and sunshine caused by a ghost, 375
+
+---- -ghost, 375
+
+---- -making, 288;
+ by the bones of the dead, 341
+
+Rat in myth of the origin of death, 67
+
+Rationality of the savage, 264 _sqq._
+
+Rebirth of the dead, 93 _sq._, 107, 127 _sq._
+ _See also_ Reincarnation
+
+---- of parents in their children, 315
+
+Recovery of lost souls, 194, 270 _sq._, 300 _sq._
+
+Red, skulls painted, 178
+
+Red bark in poison ordeals, 50, 52
+
+---- paint, manslayers smeared with, 448, 449
+
+---- roses, corpse crowned with, 233, 234
+
+Reflection or shadow, soul associated with, 207, 267
+
+Refuse, personal, magic working by means of, 413 _sq._
+
+Reincarnation, widespread belief in, 29.
+ _See also_ Rebirth
+
+---- doctrine of, unknown in Torres Straits, 172
+
+---- of the dead, belief of Central Australians in, 92 _sqq._, 107
+
+---- of the dead, 124 _sq._, 127 _sq._;
+ of Australian aborigines in white people, 130, 131 _sqq._;
+ of parents in their children, 315;
+ of grandfather in grandchild, 417, 418
+
+Relics of the dead as amulets, 332, 370;
+ preserved, 348
+
+Religion, importance of the history of, 3;
+ embryology of, 88
+
+Religion and magic compared in reference to their destruction of human
+ life, 57 _sq._;
+ combined in ritual, 111 _sq._, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 376
+
+---- and theology, how related, 9
+
+Resemblance of children to the dead, a source of belief in the
+transmigration of souls, 28 _sq._
+
+Restrictions observed by mourners, 313 _sq._;
+ ceremonial, laid on gravediggers, 327;
+ imposed on manslayers, 449
+
+Resurrection, ceremony of, among the Akikuya, 254
+
+---- from the dead after three days, 67 _sq._;
+ of the dead, steps taken to prevent the, 144;
+ as an initiatory rite at puberty, 254 _sq._, 261, 302, 431, 434 _sq._
+
+Return of the ghosts, 195, 198, 246, 300
+
+Revelation, the question of a supernatural, 8 _sq._
+
+Revival, temporary, of primitive communism, 436 _sq._
+
+Rheumatism attributed to sorcery, 45
+
+Rhodesia, 77
+
+Ribs of dead distributed among relatives, 400
+
+Ridgeway, W., on the origin of Greek tragedy, 189
+
+Rights of property temporarily suspended, 427 _sq._
+
+Ritual combining elements of religion and magic, 111 _sq._
+
+Rivalry between man and animals for gift of immortality, 74 _sq._
+
+River crossed by souls of the dead, 299, 462
+
+Rocking stone, 213
+
+Roro-speaking tribes of British New Guinea, 47, 196, 198
+
+Roth, W. E., 128
+
+Run or Ron, island, 303, 311
+
+Russia, burial custom in, 453
+
+
+Saa, in Malanta, 350, 351, 372, 378
+
+Sacrament of pork and water at initiation, 432 _sq._
+
+Sacred stones in New Caledonia, magical virtues attributed to, 334
+_sqq._
+
+---- enclosure of stones (_Nanga_) in Fiji, 428 _sqq._, 437 _sq._
+
+---- pigs, 433
+
+Sacrifice, crude motives for, 298 _sq._;
+ place of, 332
+
+---- of dogs in epidemics, 296;
+ of foreskins and fingers in honour of the dead, 426 _sq._
+
+Sacrifices to the dead, economic loss entailed by, 149
+
+---- to the dead, 239, 307, 338.
+ _See also_ Offerings
+
+Sacrifices, burnt, reasons for, 348 _sq._;
+ burnt, to ghosts, 366, 367 _sq._, 373
+
+---- to ghosts, 328; at planting, 375
+
+----, human, to ghosts, 371 _sq._;
+ human, in Fiji, 446 _sq._
+
+Sacrificial ritual in the Solomon Islands, 365 _sq._
+
+Saddle Mountain in German New Guinea, 262
+
+St. Joseph River in New Guinea, 196, 198
+
+Sakalava, the, of Madagascar, 49;
+ burial custom of, 461
+
+Saleijer, island of, burial custom in, 461
+
+Samoa, 406
+
+---- Harbour, in German New Guinea, 256
+
+Samoan myth of the origin of death, 72
+
+Samoyeds, burial custom of the, 457
+
+Samu-yalo, the killer of souls, 465
+
+San Cristoval, one of the Solomon Islands, 347, 376
+
+Sanctuaries, primitive, 99
+
+---- of ghosts, 377 _sq._
+
+Sanctuary, grave of worshipful dead becomes a, 347
+
+Sanitation based on fear of sorcery, 386 _sq._, 414
+
+Santa Cruz Islands, 343
+
+Santa Cruz, in the Solomon Islands, burial customs at, 352;
+ sacrifices to ghosts in, 374 _sq._
+
+Savage, myth of the prelogical, 266
+
+----, practical character of the, 274
+
+----, rationality of the, 264 _sqq._
+
+---- notions of causality, 19 _sq._;
+ conception of death, 31 _sqq._;
+ disbelief in death from natural causes, 33 _sqq._;
+ thought vague and inconsistent, 143
+
+---- religion, the study of, 7
+
+Savagery, importance of the study of, 6 _sq._;
+ a case of arrested or retarded development, 88 _sq._;
+ rise of monarchy essential to emergence from, 142
+
+Savages pay little attention to the stars, 140;
+ strength and universality of belief in immortality among, 468
+
+Savo, one of the Solomon Islands, 347
+
+Scarf, soul caught in a, 412 _sq._
+
+Scenery of Fiji, 409 _sq._
+
+Schomburgk, Richard, 38
+
+Schürmann, C. W., 42 _sq._
+
+Scientific conception of the world as a system of impersonal forces, 20
+_sq._
+
+Scotland, burial custom in, 453, 458
+
+Sea, land of the dead at the bottom of the, 307, 326
+
+---- -burial, 397
+
+---- -burial and land-burial, 347 _sq._
+
+---- -ghosts and land-ghosts, 348
+
+Seclusion of widow and widower, 204, 248 _sq._, 259, 275;
+ of relatives at grave, 209;
+ of mourners, 223 _sq._, 313 _sq._, 360;
+ of novices at circumcision, 251 _sq._, 260 _sq._, 302;
+ of manslayers, 279 _sq._;
+ of gravediggers, 327, 451;
+ of female mourners, 398
+
+Seclusion and purification of manslayer, 229 _sq._
+
+Second death of the dead, 195, 287, 299, 345, 350, 351, 354
+
+Secret societies, 395
+
+---- Society (_Asa_), 233
+
+Seemann, Berthold, 439 _sq._
+
+Seer describes ghosts, 204 _sq._
+
+Seget Sélé, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 317
+
+Seligmann, Dr. C. G., 47, 191, 197, 206
+
+Selwyn, Bishop, 363
+
+Serpent and his cast skin in myths of the origin of death, 60, 69
+_sqq._, 74 _sq._, 83
+
+----, god in form of, 445, 462
+
+Serpents, souls of the dead in the form of, 300
+
+Setting sun, ghosts attracted to the, 175 _sq._
+
+Sexual licence following initiation, 433, 434 _n._ 1, 436 _sq._
+
+Shadow or reflection, human soul associated with, 129, 130, 173, 207,
+267, 395, 412
+
+Shadows of people seized by ghosts, 378, 383
+
+Shaking of medium a symptom of inspiration, 308, 309, 311
+
+Sham attack on men engaged in attending to a corpse, 177, 178
+
+---- burial, 356
+
+---- fight to appease ghost, 136 _sq._;
+ as a funeral ceremony, 235 _sq._, 327 _sq._;
+ as a ceremony to promote the growth of yams, 330.
+ _See also_ Pretence
+
+Sharks animated by ghosts, 348
+
+----, ghosts incarnate in, 373, 380;
+ images of, 373
+
+Shaving heads of mourners, 208
+
+Sheep in story of the origin of death, 64
+
+Shell-money, 394;
+ laid on corpse and buried with it, 398
+
+Shortlands Islands, 71
+
+Shrine of warrior ghost, 365
+
+Shrines for ancestral spirits, 316, 317
+
+Siamese, burial custom of the, 456
+
+Siasi Islands, 244
+
+Sick and old buried alive in Fiji, 420 _sqq._
+
+Sickness caused by demons, 194;
+ caused by ghosts, 56 _sq._, 195, 197, 222, 269 _sq._, 271, 279, 300,
+ 305, 322, 372, 381 _sqq._, 389
+
+---- supposed to be an effect of witchcraft, 35 _sqq._
+
+Sickness and death set down to sorcery, 240, 257
+
+---- and disease recognised by some savages as due to natural causes,
+ 55 _sq._
+ _See also_ Disease
+
+Sido, his journey to the land of the dead, 211 _sq._
+
+Sins, confession of, 201
+
+Skin cast as a means of renewing youth, 69 _sqq._, 74 _sq._, 83
+
+Skull-shaped stones in rain-making, 336 _sq._
+
+Skulls, spirits of the dead embodied in their, 338
+
+---- and arm-bones, special treatment of the, 199 _sq._;
+ carried by dancers at funeral dance, 200
+
+---- of the dead preserved, 199 _sqq._, 209, 249, 318, 328, 339, 347,
+ 351 _sq._, 398, 400 _sq._, 403;
+ preserved and consulted as oracles, 176, 178 _sq._, 179;
+ used in divination, 213;
+ kept in men's clubhouses, 221, 225;
+ inserted in wooden images, 311 _sq._, 321;
+ religious ceremonies performed with the, 329 _sq._;
+ food offered to the, 339 _sq._, 352;
+ used to fertilise plantations, 340;
+ used in conjurations, 402
+
+Sky, souls of the dead thought to be in the, 133 _sq._, 135, 138 _sq._,
+141, 142
+
+Slain, ghosts of the, especially dreaded, 205, 258, 279, 306, 323
+
+Sleep, soul thought to quit body in, 257, 291, 395, 412
+
+Smith, E. R., 53
+
+Smyth, R. Brough, 43 _sq._
+
+Snakes, ghosts in, 380
+
+Sneezing, omens from, 194
+
+Social progress stimulated by favourable natural conditions, 141 _sq._,
+148 _sq._
+
+---- ranks, gradation of, in Fiji, 408
+
+Solomon Islands, 343, 346 _sqq._;
+ sacrificial ritual in the, 365 _sq._
+
+Somosomo, one of the Fijian islands, 425, 441, 442
+
+Sorcerers, their importance in history, 16
+
+---- catch and detain souls, 267, 268 _sq._, 270
+
+---- put to death, 35, 35 _sq._, 37 _sq._, 40 _sq._, 44, 50, 136, 250,
+ 269, 277, 278 _sq._, 341 _sq._
+ _See also_ Magician
+
+Sorcery as the supposed cause of natural deaths, 33 _sqq._, 136, 268,
+ 270, 402;
+ sickness and death ascribed to, 257
+
+---- a cause of keeping down the population, belief in, 38, 40, 46
+ _sq._, 51 _sqq._
+
+---- Fijian dread of, 413 _sq._;
+ _See also_ Magic _and_ Witchcraft
+
+Sores ascribed to action of ghosts, 257
+
+_Soro_, atonement, 427
+
+Soul, world-wide belief in survival of soul after death, 24, 25, 33
+
+Soul of sleeper detained by enemy, 49;
+ human, associated with shadow or reflection, 173, 267, 395, 412;
+ pretence of carrying away the, 181 _sq._;
+ detained by demon, 194;
+ recovery of a lost, 194, 270 _sq._;
+ thought to quit body in sleep, 257, 291, 395, 412;
+ resides in the eye, 267;
+ thought to pervade the body, 267;
+ two kinds of human, 267 _sq._;
+ caught and detained by sorcerer, 267, 268 _sq._, 270;
+ long soul and short soul, 291 _sq._;
+ of offering consumed by deity or spirit, 297, 298;
+ thought to reside in the blood, 307;
+ Melanesian theory of the, 344 _sq._;
+ of sick tied up by ghost, 374;
+ North Melanesian theory of the, 395 _sq._;
+ in form of animals, 396;
+ Fijian theory of the, 410 _sqq._;
+ caught in a scarf, 412 _sq._;
+ of grandfather reborn in grandchild, 417;
+ of offerings consumed by gods, 443
+
+---- -stuff or spiritual essence, 267 _sq._, 270, 271, 279.
+ _See also_ Spirit
+
+Souls, recovery of lost, 300 _sq._;
+ River of the, 462;
+ the killer of, 464 _sq._
+
+---- of animals, sacrifices to the, 239;
+ of animals offered to ghosts, 246
+
+---- attributed by the Fijians to animals, vegetables, and inanimate
+things, 410 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead identified with spirits of nature, 130;
+ turned into animals, 229;
+ as falling stars, 229;
+ live in trees, 316
+
+---- carried off by ghosts, 197, 383;
+ of sorcerers in animals, 39
+
+---- of noblemen only saved, 33;
+ of those who died from home called back, 311
+
+Spells or incantations, 385
+
+Spencer and Gillen, 46 _sq._, 91 _sq._, 103, 104, 105, 106, 108, 116
+_sqq._, 123 _sq._, 140, 148, 156, 157, 158
+
+Spider and Death, 82 _sq._
+
+Spirit, human, associated with the heart, 129;
+ associated with the shadow, 129, 130.
+ _See also_ Soul
+
+Spirits, ancestral, help hunters and fishers, 226;
+ worshipped in the _Nanga_, 428 _sq._;
+ cloth and weapons offered to, 430 _sq._;
+ novices presented to, at initiation, 432 _sq._, 434
+
+---- of animals go to the spirit land, 210
+
+---- consume spiritual essence of sacrifices, 285, 287, 297, 298
+
+---- of the dead thought to be strengthened by blood, 159;
+ reborn in women, 93 _sq._;
+ give information to the living, 240;
+ give good crops, 247 _sq._;
+ thought to be mischievous, 257
+
+Spirits and ghosts, distinction between, in Central Melanesia, 343, 363
+
+---- and gods, no certain demarcation between, 441
+
+----, grand concert of, 340 _sq._;
+ represented by masked dancers, 297;
+ in tree-tops, 313
+
+----, guardian, 227
+
+---- of nature identified with souls of the dead, 130.
+ _See also_ Dead _and_ Ghost
+
+Spiritual essence or soul-stuff, 267 _sq._, 279.
+ _See also_ Soul-stuff
+
+Squatting posture of corpse in burial, 207
+
+Stanbridge, W. E., 44
+
+Stars associated with the souls of the dead, 134, 140;
+ little regarded by savages, 140;
+ falling, the souls of the dead, 229
+
+Steinen, K. von den, 35
+
+Sternberg, L., 15 _n._ 1
+
+Stick, cleft, used in cure, 271
+
+Stillborn children, burial of, 458
+
+Stocks, wooden, as representatives of the dead, 374, 386
+
+Stolz, Mr., 238, 239
+
+Stomach, soul seated in, 291 _sq._
+
+Stone, a rocking, 213
+
+---- used in rain-making, 288
+
+---- of Famine, 334
+
+---- of the Sun, 336
+
+Stonehenge, 438
+
+Stones, sacred, in New Caledonia, magical virtues attributed to, 334
+ _sqq._;
+ sacred, in sanctuaries, 377 _sq._
+
+---- used as altars, 379
+
+Stones inhabited by ghosts, 383 _sq._
+
+Store-houses, sacred, in Central Australia, 99, 101
+
+Strangling the sick and aged in Fiji, 423 _sq._
+
+_Sua_, human spirit or ghost, 193
+
+Suicide to escape decrepitude of old age, 422 _sq._
+
+Suicides, burial of, 164, 453, 458
+
+Sulka, the, of New Britain, 398 _sq._
+
+Sumatra, the Gajos of, 455
+
+Sun and the origin of death, 77
+
+----, ghosts attracted to the setting, 175 _sq._
+
+----, Stone of the, 336
+
+Sunshine, the making of, 336
+
+---- and rain caused by a ghost, 375
+
+Supernatural or spiritual power (_mana_) acquired from ghosts, 346
+_sq._, 352, 371, 380
+
+Superstition a crutch to morality, 175
+
+Supreme Being unknown among aborigines of Central Australia, 91 _sq._;
+ among the Monumbo, 228
+
+Survival of human soul after death, world-wide belief in, 24, 25, 33
+
+Swallowed by monster, pretence that candidates at initiation are, 251
+_sqq._, 260 _sq._, 290 _sq._, 301 _sq._
+
+Swine sent to ravage fields by ghosts, 278
+
+Symbolism of prayer-posts, 333 _sq._
+
+
+Taboo, meaning of, 390;
+ in Central Melanesia based on a fear of ghosts, 390 _sq._;
+ a prop of monarchical power, 408
+
+_Tabu_, demon, 194
+
+Tago, spirits, 297
+
+Tahiti, 439
+
+Tamanachiers, an Indian tribe, 70 _sq._
+
+Tami Islanders of German New Guinea, 291 _sqq._
+
+Taming a ghost, 370
+
+Tamos, the, of German New Guinea, 230
+
+Tanna, one of the New Hebrides, 369, 439
+
+Tanoa, king of Fiji, 425
+
+Taplin, Rev. George, 43, 134 _sqq._
+
+_Tapum_, guardian spirits, 227
+
+Taro, prayer for good crop of, 289
+
+Tasmanians, the, 89
+
+Tattooing as sign of mourning, 314
+
+Teeth of dead worn by relatives, 314 _sq._, 400, 404;
+ used as amulets, 332;
+ preserved as relics, 339;
+ used to fertilise plantations, 340
+
+Temples (_paraks_) in Tumleo, 220 _sq._
+
+----, Fijian, 439, 441 _sq._
+
+Terer, a mythical being, 181
+
+Thapauerlu, a pool, 105, 108
+
+Theology, natural, defined, 1, 8
+
+---- and religion, how related, 9
+
+Thomson, Basil, 408, 414, 428 _n._ 1, 429 _n._ 1, 434 _n._ 1, 436
+
+Threats of the dying, 273
+
+Three days, resurrection after, 67 _sq._
+
+Threshold, the dead carried out under the, 453, 457;
+ movable, 457
+
+Thrush in story of the origin of death, 61 _sq._
+
+Thunder the voice of a mythical being, 112, 114, 143
+
+_Tindalo_, a powerful ghost, 346
+
+Tinneh or Déné Indians, their ideas as to death, 39 _sq._
+
+Tlaloc, Mexican rain-god, 163
+
+Tlingit Indians, 163;
+ burial custom of the, 455
+
+To Kambinana, 69
+
+To Korvuvu, 69
+
+Togoland, West Africa, 81
+
+Toll exacted from ghosts, 224
+
+Tollkeeper, ghostly, 224
+
+Tonga, 406, 411
+
+Tongans, their limited doctrine of immortality, 33
+
+Torres Islands, 343, 353
+
+---- Straits Islanders, their ideas as to sickness and death, 47;
+ their belief in immortality, 170 _sqq._;
+ their ethnological affinity and social culture, 170 _sqq._;
+ funeral ceremonies of the, 176 _sqq._
+
+Totem, a dominant, 113;
+ design emblematic of, 168
+
+Totemic ancestor developing into a god, 113;
+ ancestors, traditions concerning, 115 _sqq._
+
+---- animals, imitation of, 177
+
+---- clans, 104;
+ animals and plants eaten, 120 _sq._;
+ animals and plants dramatically represented by actors, 121 _sq._
+
+Totemism, 95;
+ possibly developing into ancestor worship, 114 _sq._;
+ in Torres Straits, 172
+
+Totems, dramatic ceremonies connected with, 119 _sqq._;
+ eaten, 120 _sqq._;
+ magical ceremonies for the multiplication of, 124 _sq._
+
+Tracking a ghost, 277 _sq._
+
+Traditions of the dead associated with conspicuous features of the
+landscape, 115 _sqq._
+
+Transmigration, widespread belief in, 29;
+ of dead into animals, 242, 245;
+ of souls, 322;
+ Fijian doctrine of, 467
+
+Travancore, burial custom in, 456
+
+Tree of immortality, 74
+
+Tree-burial, 161, 166, 167, 199, 203;
+ of young children, 312 _sq._
+
+---- -tops, spirits in, 313
+
+Trees, property of dead hung up on, 148;
+ as monuments of the dead, 225;
+ huts built in, 263;
+ souls of the dead live in, 316
+
+Tremearne, Major A. J. N., 28 _n._ 1
+
+Truth of the belief in immortality, question of the, 469 _sqq._
+
+Tsiabiloum, the land of the dead, 326
+
+Tube inserted in grave, 277
+
+Tubes, magical, 269, 270
+
+Tubetube, island of, 206, 209, 210
+
+Tugeri or Kaya-Kaya, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 255
+
+Tully River in Queensland, 130
+
+Tulmeng, lord of the nether world, 286
+
+Tumleo, island of, 218 _sqq._
+
+Tumudurere, a mythical being, 207
+
+Tumupasa, burial custom of the Indians of, 457
+
+Turner, Dr. George, 325, 339, 369
+
+Turrbal tribe, 146
+
+Tuski of Alaska, burial custom of the, 456
+
+Two Messengers, the, myth of the origin of death, 60 _sqq._
+
+
+Uganda, first man in, 78;
+ dead kings of, worshipped, 151;
+ jawbones of dead kings of, preserved, 235;
+ war-god of, 366.
+ _See also_ Baganda
+
+Unburied dead, ghosts of the, 349
+
+Unfruitful wife, mode of impregnating, 417
+
+Unkulunkulu, 60
+
+Unmarried ghosts, hard fate of, 464
+
+Umatjera tribe, 68, 166
+
+Urabunna, the, of Central Australia, 95
+
+
+Vagueness and inconsistency of savage thought, 143
+
+_Vale tambu_, the Sacred House, 438
+
+Vanigela River, 202, 203
+
+Vanua Lava, mountain, 355
+
+---- -levu, one of the Fijian Islands, 416, 417, 418, 426
+
+Vaté or Efat, one of the New Hebrides, 359, 376
+
+Vengeance taken on enemies by means of a ghost, 258;
+ ghost calls for, 278, 310, 468
+
+Vetter, Konrad, 242, 244, 245, 248, 255
+
+Vicarious sacrifices of pigs for the sick, 372, 374, 375
+
+Victoria, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, 40 _sq._, 42;
+ their beliefs as to the dead, 142;
+ their burial customs, 145, 145 _sq._;
+ cuttings for the dead among the, 154 _sq._
+
+Views of human nature, two different, 469 _sqq._
+
+Village of ghosts, 231 _sq._, 234
+
+---- deserted after a death, 275
+
+Viti Levu, one of the Fijian Islands, 419, 428, 435, 445
+
+Vormann, Franz, 228 _sq._
+
+Vuatom, island, 70
+
+
+Wagawaga, in British New Guinea, 206 _sqq._
+
+Wainimala in Fiji, 436
+
+Wakelbura, the, 152
+
+Wallace, Alfred Russel, on death, 85 _sq._
+
+War, ancestral images taken to, 310, 315;
+ perpetual state of, 339
+
+---- -god of Uganda, 366
+
+Warramunga, the, of Central Australia, 94;
+ their totem the Wollunqua, 103 _sqq._, 108 _sqq._;
+ dramatic ceremonies connected with totems among the, 123 _sq._;
+ cuttings for the dead among the, 156 _sqq._;
+ burial customs of the, 167 _sq._
+
+Warrior ghost, 363 _sq._
+
+Warriors pray to ghosts, 288
+
+Wars among savages undertaken to appease angry ghosts, 468
+
+Wa-Sania, tribe of E. Africa, 66
+
+Washing body a rain-charm, 375
+
+Watch-an-die, tribe of W. Australia, 41
+
+Watch at the grave, 293
+
+---- of widow or widower on grave, 241
+
+Water as a barrier against ghosts, 152;
+ poured as a rain-charm, 375 _sq._
+
+---- great, to be crossed by ghosts, 224
+
+---- -snake, great mythical (Wollunqua), 104 _sqq._, 108 _sqq._
+
+Way to the land of the dead, 212 _sq._
+
+Weakening of religious faith, 4
+
+Weapons deposited with the dead, 145 _sqq._;
+ deposited at grave, 211;
+ of dead broken, 399
+
+Weather regulated by ghosts and spirits, 384 _sq._
+
+---- -doctors, 385 _sq._
+
+Weaving in New Guinea, 305
+
+Weismann, August, on death, 84 _sq._
+
+Wemba, the, of Northern Rhodesia, 77
+
+Western Australia, beliefs as to death among the natives of, 41 _sq._
+
+Whale's teeth as offerings, 420, 421, 429, 443, 444
+
+Whip of souls, 270
+
+Whipping men in mourning, 452
+
+White ants' nests, ghosts turn into, 351
+
+---- clay smeared on mourners, 158, 177
+
+---- men identified with the spirits of the dead, 342
+
+---- people, souls of dead Australian aborigines thought to be reborn
+in, 130, 131 _sqq._
+
+Whitened with chalk, bodies of lads after circumcision, 302
+
+Widow, mourning costume of, 184, 204;
+ seclusion of, 204;
+ killed to accompany the ghost of her husband, 249, 275;
+ drinks juices of putrefying corpse, 313
+
+Widower exposed to attacks of his wife's ghost, 197;
+ costume of, 204;
+ seclusion of, 204, 248 _sq._, 259
+
+Widows cut and burn their bodies in mourning, 176
+
+Wigs worn by Fijians, 451
+
+Wiimbaio tribe, 145
+
+Wilkes, Charles, 424 _sq._
+
+Williams, Thomas, 408, 412, 413, 452, 467
+
+Williamson, R. W., 201
+
+Wind, ghosts float down the, 176
+
+Windessi, in Dutch New Guinea, burial customs at, 318 _sq._
+
+_Wingara_, early mythical times, 116
+
+Witchcraft, fear of, 244;
+ death ascribed to, 277, 402;
+ Fijian terror of, 413 _sq._;
+ benefits derived from, 414
+
+Witchcraft or black magic in Central Melanesia, 386 _sq._
+
+---- as a cause of death, 34 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Sorcery
+
+Witchetty grub totem, dramatic ceremonies concerned with, 121 _sq._, 123
+
+Wives of the dead killed, 399;
+ strangled or buried alive at their husbands' funerals in Fiji, 424
+ _sq._
+
+Woibu, the land of the dead, 211
+
+Wolgal tribe, 146
+
+Wollunqua, mythical water-snake, totem of the Warramunga, 103 _sqq._,
+ 108 _sqq._, 125;
+ ceremonies in honour of the, 108 _sqq._
+
+Woman, old, in myths of the origin of death, 64, 71 _sq._
+
+----, the Great, 464
+
+Women thought not to have immortal spirits, 92;
+ cut and burn their bodies in mourning, 154 _sqq._, 196, 203;
+ excluded from circumcision ground, 291, 301;
+ dance at deaths, 293;
+ drink juices of putrefying corpse, 355;
+ not allowed to be present at sacrifices, 367;
+ whip men in mourning, 452;
+ burial of childless, 458;
+ the cause of death, 472
+
+---- dying in childbed, special treatment of their ghosts, 358;
+ their ghosts specially feared, 212, 458 _sqq._
+
+Wordsworth on immortality, 26 _n._ 1
+
+Worship of ancestors, 221, 328 _sqq._, 338;
+ predominance of the, 297 _sq._;
+ possibly evolved from totemism, 114 _sq._
+ _See also_ Worship of the dead.
+
+---- of ancestors in Central Australia, possible evolution of, 125
+ _sq._;
+ of ancestral spirits in the _Nanga_, 428 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead, 23 _sqq._, 328 _sqq._, 338;
+ in part based on a theory of dreams, 27 _sq._;
+ elements of it widespread, 31;
+ in British New Guinea, 201 _sq._;
+ predominance of the, 297 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead, incipient, in Australia, 149, 150, 168 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead in Torres Straits, elements of a, 189;
+ among the Yabim, elements of a, 255
+
+Worshipful ghosts, 362 _sq._
+
+Wotjobaluk, the, 67, 139
+
+Wraiths, 396
+
+Wurunjerri, the, 146
+
+
+Yabim, the, of German New Guinea, 242 _sqq._;
+ their ideas as to death, 47
+
+Yams, prayers for, 330;
+ stones to make yams grow, 337 _sq._
+
+Young children buried on trees, 312 _sq._
+
+Young and old, difference between the modes of burying, 161, 162 _sq._
+
+Youth supposed to be renewed by casting skin, 69 _sqq._, 74 _sq._, 83
+
+Ysabel, one of the Solomon Islands, 350, 372, 379, 380
+
+Yule Island, 196 _n._ 2, 197
+
+
+Zahn, Heinrich, 242, 244
+
+Zend-Avesta, 453
+
+Zulus, their story of the origin of death, 60 _sq._
+
+
+END OF VOL. I
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Works by J. G. FRAZER, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.
+
+
+THE GOLDEN BOUGH
+
+A STUDY IN MAGIC AND RELIGION
+
+Third Edition, revised and enlarged. 8vo.
+
+Part I. The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings. Two volumes, 20s. net.
+
+II. Taboo and the Perils of the Soul. One volume. 10s. net.
+
+III. The Dying God. One volume. Second Impression. 10s. net.
+
+IV. Adonis, Attis, Osiris. One volume. Second Edition. 10s. net.
+
+V. Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild. Two volumes. 20s. net.
+
+VI. The Scapegoat. (_Spring_, 1913.)
+
+VII. Balder the Beautiful. (_Spring_, 1913.)
+
+ _TIMES._--"The verdict of posterity will probably be that _The
+ Golden Bough_ has influenced the attitude of the human mind
+ towards supernatural beliefs and symbolical rituals more
+ profoundly than any other books published in the nineteenth
+ century except those of Darwin and Herbert Spencer."
+
+
+LECTURES ON THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE KINGSHIP. 8vo. 8s. 6d. net.
+
+ _ATHENÆUM._--"It is the effect of a good book not only to teach,
+ but also to stimulate and to suggest, and we think this the best
+ and highest quality, and one that will recommend these lectures
+ to all intelligent readers, as well as to the learned."
+
+
+PSYCHE'S TASK. A Discourse concerning the Influence of Superstition on
+the Growth of Institutions. 8vo. 2s. 6d. net.
+
+ _TIMES._--"Dr. Frazer has answered the question of how the moral
+ law has been safeguarded, especially in its infancy, with a
+ wealth of learning and a clearness of utterance that leave
+ nothing to be desired. Perhaps the uses of superstition is not
+ quite such a new theme as he seems to fancy. Even the most
+ ignorant of us were aware that many false beliefs of a religious
+ or superstitious character had had very useful moral or
+ physical, or especially sanitary, results. But if the theme is
+ fairly familiar, the curious facts which are adduced in support
+ of it will be new to most people, and will make the book as
+ interesting to read as the lectures must have been to hear."
+
+
+THE SCOPE OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY. 8vo. Sewed. 6d. net.
+
+ _OXFORD MAGAZINE._--"In his inaugural lecture the new Professor
+ of Social Anthropology in the University of Liverpool defines
+ his Science, states its aims, and puts in a spirited plea for
+ the scientific study of primitive man while there is still time,
+ before the savage in his natural state becomes as extinct as the
+ dodo."
+
+TOTEMISM AND EXOGAMY. A Treatise on Certain Early Forms of Superstition
+and Society. With Maps. Four vols. 8vo. 50s. net.
+
+ Mr. A. E. Crawley in _NATURE_.--"Prof. Frazer is a great artist
+ as well as a great anthropologist. He works on a big scale; no
+ one in any department of research, not even Darwin, has employed
+ a wider induction of facts. No one, again, has dealt more
+ conscientiously with each fact; however seemingly trivial, it is
+ prepared with minute pains and cautious tests for its destiny as
+ a slip to be placed under the anthropological microscope. He
+ combines, so to speak, the merits of Tintoretto and
+ Meissonier.... That portion of the book which is concerned with
+ totemism (if we may express our own belief at the risk of
+ offending Prof. Frazer's characteristic modesty) is actually
+ 'The Complete History of Totemism, its Practice and its Theory,
+ its Origin and its End.'... Nearly two thousand pages are
+ occupied with an ethnographical survey of totemism, an
+ invaluable compilation. The maps, including that of the
+ distribution of totemic peoples, are a new and useful feature."
+
+
+PAUSANIAS'S DESCRIPTION OF GREECE.
+Translated with a Commentary, Illustrations, and Maps.
+Second Edition. Six vols. 8vo. 126s. net.
+
+ _ATHENÆUM._--"All these writings in many languages Mr. Frazer
+ has read and digested with extraordinary care, so that his book
+ will be for years _the_ book of reference on such matters, not
+ only in England, but in France and Germany. It is a perfect
+ thesaurus of Greek topography, archæology, and art. It is,
+ moreover, far more interesting than any dictionary of the
+ subject; for it follows the natural guidance of the Greek
+ traveller, examining every town or village which he describes;
+ analysing and comparing with foreign parallels every myth or
+ fairy tale which he records; citing every information which can
+ throw light on the works of art he admires."
+
+
+PAUSANIAS AND OTHER GREEK SKETCHES.
+Globe 8vo. 4s. net.
+
+ _GUARDIAN._--"Here we have material which every one who has
+ visited Greece, or purposes to visit it, most certainly should
+ read and enjoy.... We cannot imagine a more excellent book for
+ the educated visitor to Greece."
+
+
+LETTERS OF WILLIAM COWPER. Chosen and
+Edited with a Memoir and a few Notes by J. G. Frazer,
+D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D. Two vols. Globe 8vo. 8s. net.
+
+(_Eversley Series._)
+
+ Mr. Clement Shorter in the _DAILY CHRONICLE_.--"To the task Dr.
+ Frazer has given a scholarly care that will make the edition one
+ that is a joy to possess. His introductory Memoir, of some
+ eighty pages in length, is a valuable addition to the many
+ appraisements of Cowper that these later years have seen. It is
+ no mere perfunctory 'introduction' but a piece of sound
+ biographical work.... Dr. Frazer has given us two volumes that
+ are an unqualified joy."
+
+
+
+MacMillan and Co., Ltd., London.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE
+WORSHIP OF THE DEAD, VOLUME I (OF 3)***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 20116-8.txt or 20116-8.zip *******
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume I (of 3), by Sir James George Frazer</title>
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of
+the Dead, Volume I (of 3), by Sir James George Frazer</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume I (of 3)</p>
+<p> The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia</p>
+<p>Author: Sir James George Frazer</p>
+<p>Release Date: December 15, 2006 [eBook #20116]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD, VOLUME I (OF 3)***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, David King,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net/">http://www.pgdp.net/</a>)<br />
+ from page images generously made available by<br />
+ the Humanities Text Initiative<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.hti.umich.edu/">http://www.hti.umich.edu/</a>),<br />
+ a unit of the University of Michigan's Digital Library Production Service</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ the Humanities Text Initiative, a unit of the University
+ of Michigan's Digital Library Production Service. See
+ <a href="http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=AFL0522.0001.001">
+ http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=AFL0522.0001.001</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="pg" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h1>THE
+BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY
+AND THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>J. G. FRAZER, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.</h2>
+
+<h3>FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE</h3>
+<h3>PROFESSOR OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL.</h3>
+
+
+<h3>VOL. I</h3>
+
+<center>THE BELIEF AMONG THE ABORIGINES OF AUSTRALIA,
+THE TORRES STRAITS ISLANDS, NEW GUINEA
+AND MELANESIA</center>
+
+<h3><i>THE GIFFORD LECTURES, ST. ANDREWS
+1911-1912</i></h3>
+
+<center>MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED<br/>
+ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON<br/>
+1913</center>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>Itaque unum illud erat insitum priscis illis, quos cascos
+appellat Ennius, esse in morte sensum neque excessu vitae sic deleri
+hominem, ut funditus interiret; idque cum multis aliis rebus; tum
+e pontificio jure et e caerimoniis sepulchrorum intellegi licet, quas
+maxumis ingeniis praediti nec tanta cura coluissent nec violatas
+tam inexpiabili religione sanxissent, nisi haereret in corum mentibus
+mortem non interitum esse omnia tollentem atque delentem,
+sed quandam quasi migrationem commutationemque vitae."</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Cicero</span>, <i>Tuscul. Disput.</i> i. 12.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<center>TO
+MY OLD FRIEND</center>
+
+<center>JOHN SUTHERLAND BLACK, LL.D.</center>
+
+<center>I DEDICATE AFFECTIONATELY</center>
+
+<center>A WORK</center>
+
+<center>WHICH OWES MUCH TO HIS ENCOURAGEMENT</center>
+
+
+
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+
+
+<p>The following lectures were delivered on Lord Gifford's
+Foundation before the University of St. Andrews in the
+early winters of 1911 and 1912. They are printed nearly
+as they were spoken, except that a few passages, omitted
+for the sake of brevity in the oral delivery, have been here
+restored and a few more added. Further, I have compressed
+the two introductory lectures into one, striking out some
+passages which on reflection I judged to be irrelevant or
+superfluous. The volume incorporates twelve lectures on
+"The Fear and Worship of the Dead" which I delivered in
+the Lent and Easter terms of 1911 at Trinity College,
+Cambridge, and repeated, with large additions, in my course
+at St. Andrews.</p>
+
+<p>The theme here broached is a vast one, and I hope to
+pursue it hereafter by describing the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead, as these have been found
+among the other principal races of the world both in
+ancient and modern times. Of all the many forms which
+natural religion has assumed none probably has exerted so
+deep and far-reaching an influence on human life as the
+belief in immortality and the worship of the dead; hence an
+historical survey of this most momentous creed and of the
+practical consequences which have been deduced from it
+can hardly fail to be at once instructive and impressive,
+whether we regard the record with complacency as a noble
+testimony to the aspiring genius of man, who claims to
+outlive the sun and the stars, or whether we view it with
+pity as a melancholy monument of fruitless labour and
+barren ingenuity expended in prying into that great
+mystery of which fools profess their knowledge and wise
+men confess their ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>J. G. FRAZER.<br/>
+Cambridge,<br/>
+<i>9th February 1913.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="sc">Dedication</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Preface</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Table of Contents</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-i">Lecture I.</a>&mdash;Introduction</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Natural theology, three modes of handling it, the dogmatic, the philosophical,
+and the historical, pp. 1 <i>sq.</i>; the historical method followed in these
+lectures, 2 <i>sq.</i>; questions of the truth and moral value of religious beliefs
+irrelevant in an historical enquiry, 3 <i>sq.</i>; need of studying the religion of
+primitive man and possibility of doing so by means of the comparative
+method, 5 <i>sq.</i>; urgent need of investigating the native religion of savages
+before it disappears, 6 <i>sq.</i>; a portion of savage religion the theme of
+these lectures, 7 <i>sq.</i>; the question of a supernatural revelation dismissed,
+8 <i>sq.</i>; theology and religion, their relations, 9; the term God defined,
+9 <i>sqq.</i>; monotheism and polytheism, 11; a natural knowledge of God, if
+it exists, only possible through experience, 11 <i>sq.</i>; the nature of experience,
+12 <i>sq.</i>; two kinds of experience, an inward and an outward, 13 <i>sq.</i>; the
+conception of God reached historically through both kinds of experience,
+14; inward experience or inspiration, 14 <i>sq.</i>; deification of living men,
+16 <i>sq.</i>; outward experience as a source of the idea of God, 17; the
+tendency to seek for causes, 17 <i>sq.</i>; the meaning of cause, 18 <i>sq.</i>; the
+savage explains natural processes by the hypothesis of spirits or gods,
+19 <i>sq.</i>; natural processes afterwards explained by hypothetical forces
+and atoms instead of by hypothetical spirits and gods, 20 <i>sq.</i>; nature in
+general still commonly explained by the hypothesis of a deity, 21 <i>sq.</i>;
+God an inferential or hypothetical cause, 22 <i>sq.</i>; the deification of dead
+men, 23-25; such a deification presupposes the immortality of the human
+soul or rather its survival for a longer or shorter time after death, 25 <i>sq.</i>;
+the conception of human immortality suggested both by inward experience,
+such as dreams, and by outward experience, such as the resemblances of
+the living to the dead, 26-29; the lectures intended to collect evidence
+as to the belief in immortality among certain savage races, 29 <i>sq.</i>; the
+method to be descriptive rather than comparative or philosophical, 30.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-ii">Lecture II.</a>&mdash;The Savage Conception of
+Death</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The subject of the lectures the belief in immortality and the worship of the dead
+among certain of the lower races, p. 31; question of the nature and origin
+of death, 31 <i>sq.</i>; universal interest of the question, 32 <i>sq.</i>; the belief in
+immortality general among mankind, 33; belief of many savages that
+death is not natural and that they would never die if their lives were not
+cut prematurely short by sorcery, 33 <i>sq.</i>; examples of this belief among
+the South American Indians, 34 <i>sqq.</i>; death sometimes attributed to
+sorcery and sometimes to demons, practical consequence of this distinction,
+37; belief in sorcery as the cause of death among the Indians of
+Guiana, 38 <i>sq.</i>, among the Tinneh Indians of North America, 39 <i>sq.</i>,
+among the aborigines of Australia, 40-47, among the natives of the
+Torres Straits Islands and New Guinea, 47, among the Melanesians, 48,
+among the Malagasy, 48 <i>sq.</i>, and among African tribes, 49-51; effect of
+such beliefs in thinning the population by causing multitudes to die for
+the imaginary crime of sorcery, 51-53; some savages attribute certain
+deaths to other causes than sorcery, 53; corpse dissected to ascertain
+cause of death, 53 <i>sq.</i>; the possibility of natural death admitted by the
+Melanesians and the Caffres of South Africa, 54-56; the admission marks
+an intellectual advance, 56 <i>sq.</i>; the recognition of ghosts or spirits, apart
+from sorcery, as a cause of disease and death also marks a step in moral
+and social progress, 57 <i>sq.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-iii">Lecture III.</a>&mdash;Myths of the Origin of
+Death</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Belief of savages in man's natural immortality, p. 59; savage stories of the origin
+of death, 59 <i>sq.</i>; four types of such stories:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>(1) <i>The Story of the Two Messengers</i>.&mdash;Zulu story of the chameleon
+and the lizard, 60 <i>sq.</i>; Akamba story of the chameleon and the thrush,
+61 <i>sq.</i>; Togo story of the dog and the frog, 62 <i>sq.</i>; Ashantee story of
+the goat and the sheep, 63 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>(2) <i>The Story of the Waxing and Waning Moon</i>.&mdash;Hottentot story of
+the moon, the hare, and death, 65; Masai story of the moon and death,
+65 <i>sq.</i>; Nandi story of the moon, the dog, and death, 66; Fijian story of
+the moon, the rat, and death, 67; Caroline, Wotjobaluk, and Cham
+stories of the moon, death, and resurrection, 67; death and resurrection
+after three days suggested by the reappearance of the new moon after
+three days, 67 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>(3) <i>The Story of the Serpent and his Cast Skin</i>.&mdash;New Britain and
+Annamite story of immortality, the serpent, and death, 69 <i>sq.</i>; Vuatom
+story of immortality, the lizard, the serpent, and death, 70; Nias story
+of immortality, the crab, and death, 70; Arawak and Tamanchier stories
+of immortality, the serpent, the lizard, the beetle, and death, 70 <i>sq.</i>;
+Melanesian story of the old woman and her cast skin, 71 <i>sq.</i>; Samoan
+story of the shellfish, two torches, and death, 72.</p>
+
+<p>(4) <i>The Story of the Banana</i>.&mdash;Poso story of immortality, the stone,
+the banana, and death, 72 <i>sq.</i>; Mentra story of immortality, the banana,
+and death, 73.</p>
+
+<p>Primitive philosophy in the stories of the origin of death, 73 <i>sq.</i>;
+Bahnar story of immortality, the tree, and death, 74; rivalry for the boon
+of immortality between men and animals that cast their skins, such as
+serpents and lizards, 74 <i>sq.</i>; stories of the origin of death told by Chingpaws,
+Australians, Fijians, and Admiralty Islanders, 75-77; African and
+American stories of the fatal bundle or the fatal box, 77 <i>sq.</i>; Baganda
+story how death originated through the imprudence of a woman, 78-81;
+West African story of Death and the spider, 81-83; Melanesian story of
+Death and the Fool, 83 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>Thus according to savages death is not a natural necessity, 84;
+similar view held by some modern biologists, as A. Weismann and
+A. R. Wallace, 84-86.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-iv">Lecture IV.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Aborigines of
+Central Australia</span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In tracing the evolution of religious beliefs we must begin with those of the
+lowest savages, p. 87; the aborigines of Australia the lowest savages
+about whom we possess accurate information, 88; savagery a case of
+retarded development, 88 <i>sq.</i>; causes which have retarded progress in
+Australia, 89 <i>sq.</i>; the natives of Central Australia on the whole more
+primitive than those of the coasts, 90 <i>sq.</i>; little that can be called religion
+among them, 91 <i>sq.</i>; their theory that the souls of the dead survive and
+are reborn in their descendants, 92 <i>sq.</i>; places where the souls of the
+dead await rebirth, and the mode in which they enter into women, 93 <i>sq.</i>;
+local totem centres, 94 <i>sq.</i>; totemism defined, 95; traditionary origin of
+the local totem centres (<i>oknanikilla</i>) where the souls of the dead assemble,
+96; sacred birth-stones or birth-sticks (<i>churinga</i>) which the souls of
+ancestors are thought to have dropped at these places, 96-102; elements
+of a worship of the dead, 102 <i>sq.</i>; marvellous powers attributed to the
+remote ancestors of the <i>alcheringa</i> or dream times, 103 <i>sq.</i>; the Wollunqua,
+a mythical water-snake, ancestor of a totemic clan of the Warramunga
+tribe, 104-106; religious character of the belief in the Wollunqua, 106.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-v">Lecture V.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Aborigines of
+Central Australia</span> (<i>continued</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Beliefs of the Central Australian aborigines concerning the reincarnation of the
+dead, p. 107; possibility of the development of ancestor worship, 107 <i>sq.</i>;
+ceremonies performed by the Warramunga in honour of the Wollunqua,
+the mythical ancestor of one of their totem clans, 108 <i>sqq.</i>; union of
+magic and religion in these ceremonies, 111 <i>sq.</i>; ground drawings of the
+Wollunqua, 112 <i>sq.</i>; importance of the Wollunqua in the evolution of
+religion and art, 113 <i>sq.</i>; how totemism might develop into polytheism
+through an intermediate stage of ancestor worship, 114 <i>sq.</i>; all the conspicuous
+features of the country associated by the Central Australians
+with the spirits of their ancestors, 115-118; dramatic ceremonies performed
+by them to commemorate the deeds of their ancestors, 118 <i>sq.</i>;
+examples of these ceremonies, 119-122; these ceremonies were probably
+in origin not merely commemorative or historical but magical, being
+intended to procure a supply of food and other necessaries, 122 <i>sq.</i>;
+magical virtue actually attributed to these dramatic ceremonies by the
+Warramunga, who think that by performing them they increase the food
+supply of the tribe, 123 <i>sq.</i>; hence the great importance ascribed by these
+savages to the due performance of the ancestral dramas, 124; general
+attitude of the Central Australian aborigines to their dead, and the lines
+on which, if left to themselves, they might have developed a regular
+worship of the dead, 124-126.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-vi">Lecture VI.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the other Aborigines
+of Australia</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Evidence for the belief in reincarnation among the natives of other parts of
+Australia than the centre, p. 127; beliefs of the Queensland aborigines
+concerning the nature of the soul and the state of the dead, 127-131;
+belief of the Australian aborigines that their dead are sometimes reborn
+in white people, 131-133; belief of the natives of South-Eastern Australia
+that their dead are not born again but go away to the sky or some distant
+country, 133 <i>sq.</i>; beliefs and customs of the Narrinyeri concerning the
+dead, 134 <i>sqq.</i>; motives for the excessive grief which they display at the
+death of their relatives, 135 <i>sq.</i>; their pretence of avenging the death of
+their friends on the guilty sorcerer, 136 <i>sq.</i>; magical virtue ascribed to
+the hair of the dead, 137 <i>sq.</i>; belief that the dead go to the sky, 138 <i>sq.</i>;
+appearance of the dead to the living in dreams, 139; savage faith in
+dreams, 139 <i>sq.</i>; association of the stars with the souls of the dead, 140;
+creed of the South-Eastern Australians touching the dead, 141; difference
+of this creed from that of the Central Australians, 141; this difference
+probably due in the main to a general advance of culture brought about
+by more favourable natural conditions in South-Eastern Australia, 141 <i>sq.</i>;
+possible influence of European teaching on native beliefs, 142 <i>sq.</i>; vagueness
+and inconsistency of native beliefs as to the state of the dead,
+143; custom a good test of belief, 143 <i>sq.</i>; burial customs of the
+Australian aborigines as evidence of their beliefs concerning the state of
+the dead, 144; their practice of supplying the dead with food, water, fire,
+weapons, and implements, 144-147; motives for the destruction of the
+property of the dead, 147 <i>sq.</i>; great economic loss entailed by developed
+systems of sacrificing to the dead, 149.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-vii">Lecture VII.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Aborigines of
+Australia</span> (<i>concluded</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Huts erected on graves for the use of the ghosts, pp. 150-152; the attentions
+paid by the Australian aborigines to their dead probably spring from fear
+rather than affection, 152; precautions taken by the living against the
+dangerous ghosts of the dead, 152 <i>sq.</i>; cuttings and brandings of the flesh
+of the living in honour of the dead, 154-158; the custom of allowing the
+blood of mourners to drip on the corpse or into the grave may be intended
+to strengthen the dead for a new birth, 158-162; different ways of disposing
+of the dead according to the age, rank, manner of death, etc., of
+the deceased, 162 <i>sq.</i>; some modes of burial are intended to prevent the
+return of the spirit, others are designed to facilitate it, 163-165; final
+departure of the ghost supposed to coincide with the disappearance of the
+flesh from his bones, 165 <i>sq.</i>; hence a custom has arisen in many tribes
+of giving the bones a second burial or otherwise disposing of them when
+the flesh is quite decayed, 166; tree-burial followed by earth-burial in
+some Australian tribes, 166-168; general conclusion as to the belief in
+immortality and the worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines,
+168 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-viii">Lecture VIII.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of the
+Torres Straits Islands</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Racial affinities of the Torres Straits Islanders, pp. 170 <i>sq.</i>; their material and
+social culture, 171 <i>sq.</i>; no developed worship of the dead among them,
+172 <i>sq.</i>; their fear of ghosts, 173-175; home of the dead a mythical
+island in the west, 175 <i>sq.</i>; elaborate funeral ceremonies of the Torres
+Straits Islanders characterised by dramatic representations of the dead and
+by the preservation of their skulls, which were consulted as oracles, 176.</p>
+
+<p>Funeral ceremonies of the Western Islanders, 177-180; part played
+by the brothers-in-law of the deceased at these ceremonies, 177 <i>sq.</i>;
+removal of the head and preparation of the skull for use in divination,
+178 <i>sq.</i>; great death-dance performed by masked men who personated
+the deceased, 179 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>Funeral ceremonies of the Eastern Islanders, 180-188; soul of the
+dead carried away by a masked actor, 181 <i>sq.</i>; dramatic performance by
+disguised men representing ghosts, 182 <i>sq.</i>; blood and hair of relatives
+offered to the dead, 183 <i>sq.</i>; mummification of the corpse, 184;
+costume of mourners, 184; cuttings for the dead, 184 <i>sq.</i>; death-dance
+by men personating ghosts, 185-188; preservation of the mummy and
+afterwards of the head or a wax model of it to be used in divination, 188.</p>
+
+<p>Images of the gods perhaps developed out of mummies of the dead,
+and a sacred or even secular drama developed out of funeral dances, 189.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-ix">Lecture IX.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+Among the Natives Of
+British New Guinea</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The two races of New Guinea, the Papuan and the Melanesian, pp. 190 <i>sq.</i>;
+beliefs and customs of the Motu concerning the dead, 192; the Koita
+and their beliefs as to the human soul and the state of the dead, 193-195;
+alleged communications with the dead by means of mediums, 195 <i>sq.</i>;
+fear of the dead, especially of a dead wife, 196 <i>sq.</i>; beliefs of the Mafulu
+concerning the dead, 198; their burial customs, 198 <i>sq.</i>; their use of the
+skulls and bones of the dead at a great festival, 199-201; worship of the
+dead among the natives of the Aroma district, 201 <i>sq.</i>; the Hood Peninsula,
+202 <i>sq.</i>; beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the
+natives of the Hood Peninsula, 203-206; seclusion of widows and
+widowers, 203 <i>sq.</i>; the ghost-seer, 204 <i>sq.</i>; application of the juices of the
+dead to the persons of the living, 205; precautions taken by manslayers
+against the ghosts of their victims, 205 <i>sq.</i>; purification for homicide
+originally a mode of averting the angry ghost of the slain, 206; beliefs
+and customs concerning the dead among the Massim of south-eastern New
+Guinea, 206-210; Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead, 207; purification of
+mourners by bathing and shaving, 207 <i>sq.</i>; foods forbidden to mourners,
+208 <i>sq.</i>; fires on the grave, 209; the land of the dead, 209 <i>sq.</i>; names
+of the dead not mentioned, 210; beliefs and customs concerning the dead
+among the Papuans of Kiwai, 211-214; Adiri, the land of the dead, 211-213;
+appearance of the dead to the living in dreams, 213 <i>sq.</i>; offerings
+to the dead, 214; dreams as a source of the belief in immortality, 214.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-x">Lecture X.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+German New Guinea</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Andrew Lang, pp. 216 <i>sq.</i>; review of preceding lectures, 217 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The Papuans of Tumleo, their material culture, 218-220; their
+temples, 220 <i>sq.</i>; their bachelors' houses containing the skulls of the
+dead, 221; spirits of the dead as the causes of sickness and disease,
+222 <i>sq.</i>; burial and mourning customs, 223 <i>sq.</i>; fate of the human soul
+after death, 224; monuments to the dead, 225; disinterment of the
+bones, 225; propitiation of ghosts and spirits, 226; guardian-spirits in
+the temples, 226 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The Monumbo of Potsdam Harbour, 227 <i>sq.</i>; their beliefs concerning
+the spirits of the dead, 228 <i>sq.</i>; their fear of ghosts, 229; their treatment
+of manslayers, 229 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The Tamos of Astrolabe Bay, 230; their ideas as to the souls of the
+dead, 231 <i>sq.</i>; their fear of ghosts, 232 <i>sqq.</i>; their Secret Society and
+rites of initiation, 233; their preservation of the jawbones of the dead,
+234 <i>sq.</i>; their sham fights after a death, 235 <i>sq.</i>; these fights perhaps
+intended to throw dust in the eyes of the ghost, 236 <i>sq.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xi">Lecture XI.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+German New Guinea</span> (<i>continued</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The Papuans of Cape King William, pp. 238 <i>sq.</i>; their ideas as to spirits and
+the souls of the dead, 239 <i>sq.</i>; their belief in sorcery as a cause of death,
+240 <i>sq.</i>; their funeral and mourning customs, 241 <i>sq.</i>; the fate of the
+soul after death, 242.</p>
+
+<p>The Yabim of Finsch Harbour, their material and artistic culture,
+242 <i>sq.</i>; their clubhouses for men, 243; their beliefs as to the state of
+the dead, 244 <i>sq.</i>; the ghostly ferry, 244 <i>sq.</i>; transmigration of human
+souls into animals, 245; the return of the ghosts, 246; offerings to
+ghosts, 246; ghosts provided with fire, 246 <i>sq.</i>; ghosts help in the cultivation
+of land, 247 <i>sq.</i>; burial and mourning customs, 248 <i>sq.</i>; divination
+to discover the sorcerer who has caused a death, 249 <i>sq.</i>; bull-roarers,
+250; initiation of young men, 250 <i>sqq.</i>; the rite of circumcision, the
+novices supposed to be swallowed by a monster, 251 <i>sq.</i>; the return of
+the novices, 253; the essence of the initiatory rites seems to be a simulation
+of death and resurrection, 253 <i>sqq.</i>; the new birth among the Akikuyu
+of British East Africa, 254.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xii">Lecture XII.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+German New Guinea</span> (<i>continued</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The Bukaua of Huon Gulf, their means of subsistence and men's clubhouses, pp.
+256 <i>sq.</i>; their ideas as to the souls of the dead, 257; sickness and death
+caused by ghosts and sorcerers, 257 <i>sq.</i>; fear of the ghosts of the slain,
+258; prayers to ancestral spirits on behalf of the crops, 259; first-fruits
+offered to the spirits of the dead, 259; burial and mourning customs,
+259 <i>sq.</i>; initiation of young men, novices at circumcision supposed to be
+swallowed and afterwards disgorged by a monster, 260 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The Kai, a Papuan tribe of mountaineers inland from Finsch Harbour,
+262; their country, mode of agriculture, and villages, 262 <i>sq.</i>; observations
+of a German missionary on their animism, 263 <i>sq.</i>; the essential
+rationality of the savage, 264-266; the Kai theory of the two sorts of
+human souls, 267 <i>sq.</i>; death commonly thought to be caused by sorcery,
+268 <i>sq.</i>; danger incurred by the sorcerer, 269; many hurts and maladies
+attributed to the action of ghosts, 269 <i>sq.</i>; capturing lost souls, 270 <i>sq.</i>;
+ghosts extracted from the body of a sick man or scraped from his person,
+271; extravagant demonstrations of grief at the death of a sick man, 271-273;
+hypocritical character of these demonstrations, which are intended
+to deceive the ghost, 273; burial and mourning customs, preservation of
+the lower jawbone and one of the lower arm bones, 274; mourning
+costume, seclusion of widow or widower, 274 <i>sq.</i>; widows sometimes
+strangled to accompany their dead husbands, 275; house or village
+deserted after a death, 275.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xiii">Lecture XIII.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+German New Guinea</span> (<i>continued</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The Kai (continued), their offerings to the dead, p. 276; divination by means of
+ghosts to detect the sorcerer who has caused a death, 276-278; avenging
+the death on the sorcerer and his people, 278 <i>sq.</i>; precautions against the
+ghosts of the slain, 279 <i>sq.</i>; attempts to deceive the ghosts of the murdered,
+280-282; pretence of avenging the ghost of a murdered man, 282;
+fear of ghosts by night, 282 <i>sq.</i>; services rendered by the spirits of the
+dead to farmers and hunters, 283-285; the journey of the soul to the spirit
+land, 285 <i>sq.</i>; life of the dead in the other world, 286 <i>sq.</i>; ghosts die
+the second death and turn into animals, 287; ghosts of famous people
+invoked long after their death, 287-289; possible development of ghosts
+into gods, 289 <i>sq.</i>; lads at circumcision supposed to be swallowed and
+disgorged by a monster, 290 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf, 291; their theory of a double
+human soul, a long one and a short one, 291 <i>sq.</i>; departure of the short
+soul for Lamboam, the nether world of the dead, 292; offerings to the
+dead, 292; appeasing the ghost, 292 <i>sq.</i>; funeral and mourning customs,
+dances in honour of the dead, offerings thrown into the fire, 293 <i>sq.</i>;
+bones of the dead dug up and kept in the house for a time, 294 <i>sq.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xiv">Lecture XIV.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+German and Dutch New Guinea</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf (continued), their doctrine of souls and gods,
+pp. 296 <i>sq.</i>; dances of masked men representing spirits, 297; worship of
+ancestral spirits and offerings to them, 297 <i>sq.</i>; life of the souls in Lamboam,
+the nether world, 299 <i>sq.</i>; evocation of ghosts by the ghost-seer,
+300; sickness caused by ghosts, 300 <i>sq.</i>; novices at circumcision supposed
+to be swallowed and disgorged by a monster, 301 <i>sq.</i>; meaning of the
+bodily mutilations inflicted on young men at puberty obscure, 302 <i>sq.</i>
+The natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303-323; the Noofoors of Geelvink
+Bay, their material culture and arts of life, 303-305; their fear and
+worship of the dead, 305-307; wooden images (<i>korwar</i>) of the dead kept
+in the houses and carried in canoes to be used as oracles, 307 <i>sq.</i>; the
+images consulted in sickness and taken with the people to war, 308-310;
+offerings to the images, 310 <i>sq.</i>; souls of those who have died away from
+home recalled to animate the images, 311; skulls of the dead, especially
+of firstborn children and of parents, inserted in the images, 312 <i>sq.</i>;
+bodies of young children hung on trees, 312 <i>sq.</i>; mummies of dead relatives
+kept in the houses, 313; seclusion of mourners and restrictions on
+their diet, 313 <i>sq.</i>; tattooing in honour of the dead, 314; teeth and hair
+of the dead worn by relatives, 314 <i>sq.</i>; rebirth of parents in their
+children, 315.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of islands off the west coast of New Guinea, their wooden
+images of dead ancestors and shrines for the residence of the ancestral
+spirits, 315 <i>sq.</i>; their festivals in honour of the dead, 316; souls of
+ancestors supposed to reside in the images and to protect the house and
+household, 317.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of the Macluer Gulf, their images and bowls in honour of
+the dead, 317 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The natives of the Mimika district, their burial and mourning customs,
+their preservation of the skulls of the dead, and their belief in ghosts,
+318.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of Windessi, their burial customs, 318 <i>sq.</i>; divination
+after a death, 319; mourning customs, 319 <i>sq.</i>; festival of the dead, 320
+<i>sq.</i>; wooden images of the dead, 321; doctrine of souls and of their fate
+after death, 321 <i>sq.</i>; medicine-men inspired by the souls of the dead, 322
+<i>sq.</i>; ghosts of slain enemies driven away, 323.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xv">Lecture XV.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+Southern Melanesia (New Caledonia)</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The Melanesians in general, their material culture, p. 324; Southern Melanesia,
+the New Caledonians, and Father Lambert's account of them, 325; their
+ideas as to the spirit land and the way thither, 325 <i>sq.</i>; burial customs,
+326; cuttings and brandings for the dead, 326 <i>sq.</i>; property of the dead
+destroyed, 327; seclusion of gravediggers and restrictions imposed on
+them, 327; sham fight in honour of the dead, 327 <i>sq.</i>; skulls of the
+dead preserved and worshipped on various occasions, such as sickness,
+fishing, and famine, 328-330; caves used as charnel-houses and sanctuaries
+of the dead in the Isle of Pines, 330-332; prayers and sacrifices to
+the ancestral spirits, 332 <i>sq.</i>; prayer-posts, 333 <i>sq.</i>; sacred stones associated
+with the dead and used to cause dearth or plenty, madness, a good
+crop of bread-fruit or yams, drought, rain, a good catch of fish, and so on,
+334-338; the religion of the New Caledonians mainly a worship of the
+dead tinctured with magic, 338.</p>
+
+<p>Evidence as to the natives of New Caledonia collected by Dr. George
+Turner, 339-342; material culture of the New Caledonians, 339; their
+burial customs, the skulls and nails of the dead preserved and used to
+fertilise the yam plantations, 339 <i>sq.</i>; worship of ancestors and prayers to
+the dead, 340; festivals in honour of the dead, 340 <i>sq.</i>; making rain by
+means of the skeletons of the dead, 341; execution of sorcerers, 341 <i>sq.</i>;
+white men identified with the spirits of the dead, 342.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xvi">Lecture XVI.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+Central Melanesia</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Central Melanesia divided into two archipelagoes, the religion of the Western
+Islands (Solomon Islands) characterised by a worship of the dead, the
+religion of the Eastern Islands (New Hebrides, Banks' Islands, Torres
+Islands, Santa Cruz Islands) characterised by a worship of non-human
+spirits, pp. 343 <i>sq.</i>; Central Melanesian theory of the soul, 344 <i>sq.</i>; the
+land of the dead either in certain islands or in a subterranean region called
+Panoi, 345; ghosts of power and ghosts of no account, 345 <i>sq.</i>; supernatural
+power (<i>mana</i>) acquired through ghosts, 346 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>Burial customs in the Western Islands (Solomon Islands), 347 <i>sqq.</i>;
+land-burial and sea-burial, land-ghosts and sea-ghosts, 347 <i>sq.</i>; funeral
+feasts and burnt-offerings to the dead, 348 <i>sq.</i>; the land of the dead and
+the ghostly ferry, 350 <i>sq.</i>; ghosts die the second death and turn into the
+nests of white ants, 350 <i>sq.</i>; preservation of the skull and jawbone in
+order to ensure the protection of the ghost, 351 <i>sq.</i>; human heads sought
+in order to add fresh spiritual power (<i>mana</i>) to the ghost of a dead
+chief, 352.</p>
+
+<p>Beliefs and customs concerning the dead in the Eastern Islands (New
+Hebrides, Banks' Islands, Torres Islands), 352 <i>sqq.</i>; Panoi, the subterranean
+abode of the dead, 353 <i>sq.</i>; ghosts die the second death, 354;
+different fates of the souls of the good and bad, 354 <i>sq.</i>; descent of the
+living into the world of the dead, 355; burial customs of the Banks'
+Islanders, 355 <i>sqq.</i>; dead sometimes temporarily buried in the house,
+355; display of property beside the corpse and funeral oration, 355
+<i>sq.</i>; sham burial of eminent men, 356; ghosts driven away from the
+village, 356-358; deceiving the ghosts of women who have died in child-bed,
+358; funeral feasts, 358 <i>sq.</i>; funeral customs in the New Hebrides,
+359 <i>sqq.</i>; the aged buried alive, 359 <i>sq.</i>; seclusion of mourners and restrictions
+on their diet, 360; sacrifice of pigs, 360 <i>sq.</i>; the journey of the
+ghost to the spirit land, 361 <i>sq.</i>; provisions made by the living for the
+welfare of the dead, 362.</p>
+
+<p>Only ghosts of powerful men worshipped, 362 <i>sq.</i>; institution of the
+worship of a martial ghost, 363 <i>sq.</i>; offerings of food and drink to the
+dead, 364 <i>sq.</i>; sacrifice of pigs to ghosts in the Solomon Islands, 365 <i>sq.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xvii">Lecture XVII.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+Central Melanesia</span> (<i>concluded</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Public sacrifices to ghosts in the Solomon Islands, pp. 367 <i>sq.</i>; offering of first-fruits
+to ghosts, 368 <i>sq.</i>; private ghosts as distinguished from public
+ghosts, 369 <i>sq.</i>; fighting ghosts kept as spiritual auxiliaries, 370; ghosts
+employed to make the gardens grow, 370 <i>sq.</i>; human sacrifices to ghosts,
+371 <i>sq.</i>; vicarious and other sacrifices to ghosts at Saa in Malanta,
+372 <i>sq.</i>; offerings of first-fruits to ghosts at Saa, 373 <i>sq.</i>; vicarious sacrifices
+offered for the sick to ghosts in Santa Cruz, 374; the dead represented
+by stocks in the houses, 374; native account of sacrifices in Santa
+Cruz, 374 <i>sq.</i>; prayers to the dead, 376 <i>sq.</i>; sanctuaries of ghosts in the
+Solomon Islands, 377-379; ghosts lodged in animals, birds, and fish,
+especially in sharks, 379 <i>sq.</i></p>
+
+<p>The belief in ghosts underlies the Melanesian conception of magic,
+380 <i>sq.</i>; sickness commonly caused by ghosts and cured by ghost-seers,
+381-384; contrast between Melanesian and European systems of medicine,
+384; weather regulated by ghosts and spirits and by weather-doctors
+who have the ear of ghosts and spirits, 384-386; witchcraft or
+black magic wrought by means of ghosts, 386-388; prophets inspired by
+ghosts, 388 <i>sq.</i>; divination operating through ghosts, 389 <i>sq.</i>; taboos
+enforced by ghosts, 390 <i>sq.</i>; general influence which a belief in the
+survival of the soul after death has exercised on Melanesian life, 391 <i>sq.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xviii">Lecture XVIII.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+Northern and Eastern Melanesia</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The natives of Northern Melanesia or the Bismarck Archipelago (New Britain,
+New Ireland, etc.), their material culture, commercial habits, and want
+of regular government, pp. 393-395; their theory of the soul, 395 <i>sq.</i>;
+their fear of ghosts, 396; offerings to the dead, 396 <i>sq.</i>; burial customs,
+397 <i>sq.</i>; preservation of the skulls, 398; customs and beliefs concerning
+the dead among the Sulka of New Britain, 398-400, among the Moanus
+of the Admiralty Islands, 400 <i>sq.</i> and among the natives of the Kaniet
+Islands, 401 <i>sq.</i>; natural deaths commonly attributed to sorcery, 402;
+divination to discover the sorcerer who caused the death, 402; death
+customs in the Duke of York Island, cursing the sorcerer, skulls preserved,
+feasts and dances, 403; prayers to the dead, 403 <i>sq.</i>; the land of
+the dead and the fate of the departed souls, hard lot of impecunious ghosts,
+404-406.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of Eastern Melanesia (Fiji), their material culture and
+political constitution, 406-408; means of subsistence, 408; moral
+character, 408 <i>sq.</i>; scenery of the Fijian islands, 409 <i>sq.</i>; the Fijian
+doctrine of souls, 410-412; souls of rascals caught in scarves, 412 <i>sq.</i>;
+fear of sorcery and precautions against it, 413 <i>sq.</i>; beneficial effect of the
+fear in enforcing habits of personal cleanliness, 414; fear of ghosts and
+custom of driving them away, 414 <i>sq.</i>; killing a ghost, 415 <i>sq.</i>; outwitting
+grandfather's ghost, 416; special relation of grandfather to grandchild,
+416; grandfather's soul reborn in his grandchild, 417 <i>sq.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xix">Lecture XIX.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+Eastern Melanesia (Fiji)</span> (<i>continued</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Indifference of the Fijians to death, p. 419; their custom of killing the sick and
+aged with the consent of the victims, 419-424; their readiness to die
+partly an effect of their belief in immortality, 422 <i>sq.</i>; wives strangled or
+buried alive to accompany their husbands to the spirit land, 424-426;
+servants and dependants killed to attend their dead lords, 426; sacrifices
+of foreskins and fingers in honour of dead chiefs, 426 <i>sq.</i>; boys circumcised
+in order to save the lives of their fathers or fathers' brothers, 427;
+saturnalia attending such rites of circumcision, 427 <i>sq.</i>; the <i>Nanga</i>,
+or sacred enclosure of stones, dedicated to the worship of ancestors,
+428 <i>sq.</i>; first-fruits of the yams offered to the ancestors in the <i>Nanga</i>,
+429; initiation of young men in the <i>Nanga</i>, drama of death and resurrection,
+sacrament of food and water, 429-432; the initiation followed by a
+period of sexual licence, 433; the initiatory rites apparently intended to
+introduce the novices to the ancestral spirits and endow them with the
+powers of the dead, 434 <i>sq.</i>; the rites seem to have been imported into
+Fiji by immigrants from the west, 435 <i>sq.</i>; the licence attending these
+rites perhaps a reversion to primitive communism for the purpose of propitiating
+the ancestral spirits, 436 <i>sq.</i>; description of the <i>Nanga</i> or sacred
+enclosure of stones, 437 <i>sq.</i>; comparison with the cromlechs and other
+megalithic monuments of Europe, 438.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#lecture-xx">Lecture XX.</a>&mdash;The Belief in Immortality
+among the Natives of
+Eastern Melanesia (Fiji)</span> (<i>concluded</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Worship of parents and other dead relations in Fiji, pp. 439 <i>sq.</i>; Fijian notion
+of divinity (<i>kalou</i>), 440; two classes of gods, namely, divine gods and
+human gods or deified men, 440 <i>sq.</i>; temples (<i>bures</i>) 441 <i>sq.</i>; worship
+at the temples, 443; priests (<i>betes</i>), their oracular inspiration by the gods,
+443-446; human sacrifices on various occasions, such as building a house
+or launching a new canoe, 446 <i>sq.</i>; high estimation in which manslaughter
+was held by the Fijians, 447 <i>sq.</i>; consecration of manslayers and restrictions
+laid on them, probably from fear of the ghosts of their victims,
+448 <i>sq.</i>; certain funeral customs based apparently on the fear of ghosts,
+450 <i>sqq.</i>; persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food
+with their hands, 450 <i>sq.</i>; seclusion of gravediggers, 451; mutilations,
+brandings, and fasts in honour of the dead, 451 <i>sq.</i>; the dead carried out
+of the house by a special opening to prevent the return of the ghost, 452-461;
+the other world and the way thither, 462 <i>sqq.</i>; the ghostly ferry,
+462 <i>sq.</i>; the ghost and the pandanus tree, 463 <i>sq.</i>; hard fate of the
+unmarried dead, 464; the Killer of Souls, 464 <i>sq.</i>; ghosts precipitated
+into a lake, 465 <i>sq.</i>; Murimuria, an inferior sort of heaven, 466; the
+Fijian Elysium, 466 <i>sq.</i>; transmigration and annihilation, the few that
+are saved, 467.</p>
+
+<p>Concluding observations, 467-471; strength and universality of the
+belief in immortality among savages, 468; the state of war among savage
+and civilised peoples often a direct consequence of the belief in immortality,
+468 <i>sq.</i>; economic loss involved in sacrifices to the dead, 469; how
+does the savage belief in immortality bear on the truth or falsehood of that
+belief in general? 469; the answer depends to some extent on the view
+we take of human nature, 469-471; the conclusion left open, 471.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#note">Note.</a></span>&mdash;Myth of the Continuance of Death</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><a href="#index">Index</a></span></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>[pg 1]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-i" id="lecture-i"></a>LECTURE I</h2>
+
+<h3>INTRODUCTION</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Natural theology, and the three modes of handling it, the
+dogmatic, the philosophical, and the historical.</p>
+
+<p>The subject of these lectures is a branch of natural theology.
+By natural theology I understand that reasoned knowledge of
+a God or gods which man may be supposed, whether rightly
+or wrongly, capable of attaining to by the exercise of his
+natural faculties alone. Thus defined, the subject may be
+treated in at least three different ways, namely, dogmatically,
+philosophically, and historically. We may simply state the
+dogmas of natural theology which appear to us to be true:
+that is the dogmatic method. Or, secondly, we may
+examine the validity of the grounds on which these dogmas
+have been or may be maintained: that is the philosophic
+method. Or, thirdly, we may content ourselves with
+describing the various views which have been held on the
+subject and tracing their origin and evolution in history:
+that is the historical method. The first of these three
+methods assumes the truth of natural theology, the second
+discusses it, and the third neither assumes nor discusses
+but simply ignores it: the historian as such is not concerned
+with the truth or falsehood of the beliefs he describes, his
+business is merely to record them and to track them as far
+as possible to their sources. Now that the subject of natural
+theology is ripe for a purely dogmatic treatment will hardly,
+I think, be maintained by any one, to whatever school of
+thought he may belong; accordingly that method of treatment
+need not occupy us further. Far otherwise is it with
+the philosophic method which undertakes to enquire into the
+truth or falsehood of the belief in a God: no method could
+be more appropriate at a time like the present, when the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id="page2"></a>[pg 2]</span>
+opinions of educated and thoughtful men on that profound
+topic are so unsettled, diverse, and conflicting. A philosophical
+treatment of the subject might comprise a discussion
+of such questions as whether a natural knowledge of God is
+possible to man, and, if possible, by what means and through
+what faculties it is attainable; what are the grounds for
+believing in the existence of a God; and, if this belief is
+justified, what may be supposed to be his essential nature
+and attributes, and what his relations to the world in general
+and to man in particular. Now I desire to confess at once
+that an adequate discussion of these and kindred questions
+would far exceed both my capacity and my knowledge; for
+he who would do justice to so arduous an enquiry should
+not only be endowed with a comprehensive and penetrating
+genius, but should possess a wide and accurate acquaintance
+with the best accredited results of philosophic speculation
+and scientific research. To such qualifications I can lay no
+claim, and accordingly I must regard myself as unfitted for
+a purely philosophic treatment of natural theology. To speak
+plainly, the question of the existence of a God is too deep for
+me. I dare neither affirm nor deny it. I can only humbly
+confess my ignorance. Accordingly, if Lord Gifford had
+required of his lecturers either a dogmatic or a philosophical
+treatment of natural theology, I could not have undertaken
+to deliver the lectures.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The method followed in these lectures is the historical.</p>
+
+<p>But in his deed of foundation, as I understand it, Lord
+Gifford left his lecturers free to follow the historical rather than
+the dogmatic or the philosophical method of treatment. He
+says: "The lecturers shall be under no restraint whatever in
+their treatment of their theme: for example, they may freely
+discuss (and it may be well to do so) all questions about
+man's conceptions of God or the Infinite, their origin, nature,
+and truth." In making this provision the founder appears
+to have allowed and indeed encouraged the lecturers not
+only to discuss, if they chose to do so, the philosophical
+basis of a belief in God, but also to set forth the various
+conceptions of the divine nature which have been held by
+men in all ages and to trace them to their origin: in short,
+he permitted and encouraged the lecturers to compose a
+history of natural theology or of some part of it. Even
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>[pg 3]</span>
+when it is thus limited to its historical aspect the theme is
+too vast to be mastered completely by any one man: the
+most that a single enquirer can do is to take a general but
+necessarily superficial survey of the whole and to devote
+himself especially to the investigation of some particular
+branch or aspect of the subject. This I have done more or
+less for many years, and accordingly I think that without
+being presumptuous I may attempt, in compliance with Lord
+Gifford's wishes and directions, to lay before my hearers a portion
+of the history of religion to which I have paid particular
+attention. That the historical study of religious beliefs,
+quite apart from the question of their truth or falsehood, is
+both interesting and instructive will hardly be disputed by
+any intelligent and thoughtful enquirer. Whether they have
+been well or ill founded, these beliefs have deeply influenced
+the conduct of human affairs; they have furnished some of
+the most powerful, persistent, and far-reaching motives of
+action; they have transformed nations and altered the face
+of the globe. No one who would understand the general
+history of mankind can afford to ignore the annals of
+religion. If he does so, he will inevitably fall into the most
+serious misconceptions even in studying branches of human
+activity which might seem, on a superficial view, to be quite
+unaffected by religious considerations.</p>
+
+<p class="side">An historical enquiry into the evolution of religion
+prejudices neither the question of the ethical value of religious
+practice nor the question of the truth or falsehood of religious
+belief.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore to trace theological and in general religious
+ideas to their sources and to follow them through all the
+manifold influences which they have exerted on the destinies
+of our race must always be an object of prime importance
+to the historian, whatever view he may take of their speculative
+truth or ethical value. Clearly we cannot estimate
+their ethical value until we have learned the modes in which
+they have actually determined human conduct for good or
+evil: in other words, we cannot judge of the morality of
+religious beliefs until we have ascertained their history:
+the facts must be known before judgment can be passed on
+them: the work of the historian must precede the work of
+the moralist. Even the question of the validity or truth of
+religious creeds cannot, perhaps, be wholly dissociated from
+the question of their origin. If, for example, we discover
+that doctrines which we had accepted with implicit faith
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>[pg 4]</span>
+from tradition have their close analogies in the barbarous
+superstitions of ignorant savages, we can hardly help suspecting
+that our own cherished doctrines may have originated
+in the similar superstitions of our rude forefathers; and the
+suspicion inevitably shakes the confidence with which we
+had hitherto regarded these articles of our faith. The doubt
+thus cast on our old creed is perhaps illogical, since even if
+we should discover that the creed did originate in mere
+superstition, in other words, that the grounds on which it was
+first adopted were false and absurd, this discovery would not
+really disprove the beliefs themselves, for it is perfectly
+possible that a belief may be true, though the reasons alleged
+in favour of it are false and absurd: indeed we may affirm
+with great probability that a multitude of human beliefs, true
+in themselves, have been accepted and defended by millions
+of people on grounds which cannot bear exact investigation
+for a moment. For example, if the facts of savage life
+which it will be my duty to submit to you should have the
+effect of making the belief in immortality look exceedingly
+foolish, those of my hearers who cherish the belief may console
+themselves by reflecting that, as I have just pointed out,
+a creed is not necessarily false because some of the reasons
+adduced in its favour are invalid, because it has sometimes
+been supported by the despicable tricks of vulgar imposture,
+and because the practices to which it has given rise
+have often been in the highest degree not only absurd but
+pernicious.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Yet such an enquiry may shake the confidence with which
+traditional beliefs have been held.</p>
+
+<p>Thus an historical enquiry into the origin of religious
+creeds cannot, strictly speaking, invalidate, still less refute,
+the creeds themselves, though it may, and doubtless often
+does weaken the confidence with which they are held. This
+weakening of religious faith as a consequence of a closer
+scrutiny of religious origins is unquestionably a matter of
+great importance to the community; for society has been
+built and cemented to a great extent on a foundation of
+religion, and it is impossible to loosen the cement and
+shake the foundation without endangering the superstructure.
+The candid historian of religion will not dissemble the
+danger incidental to his enquiries, but nevertheless it is his
+duty to prosecute them unflinchingly. Come what may, he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span>
+must ascertain the facts so far as it is possible to do so;
+having done that, he may leave to others the onerous and
+delicate task of adjusting the new knowledge to the practical
+needs of mankind. The narrow way of truth may often look
+dark and threatening, and the wayfarer may often be weary;
+yet even at the darkest and the weariest he will go forward
+in the trust, if not in the knowledge, that the way will lead
+at last to light and to rest; in plain words, that there is no
+ultimate incompatibility between the good and the true.</p>
+
+<p class="side">To discover the origin of the idea of God we must study the
+beliefs of primitive man.</p>
+
+<p>Now if we are indeed to discover the origin of man's
+conception of God, it is not sufficient to analyse the ideas
+which the educated and enlightened portion of mankind
+entertain on the subject at the present day; for in great
+measure these ideas are traditional, they have been handed
+down with little or no independent reflection or enquiry
+from generation to generation; hence in order to detect them
+in their inception it becomes necessary to push our analysis
+far back into the past. Large materials for such an historical
+enquiry are provided for us in the literature of ancient
+nations which, though often sadly mutilated and imperfect,
+has survived to modern times and throws much precious
+light on the religious beliefs and practices of the peoples
+who created it. But the ancients themselves inherited a
+great part of their religion from their prehistoric ancestors,
+and accordingly it becomes desirable to investigate the
+religious notions of these remote forefathers of mankind,
+since in them we may hope at last to arrive at the ultimate
+source, the historical origin, of the whole long development.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The beliefs of primitive man can only be understood through a
+comparative study of the various races in the lower stages of culture.</p>
+
+<p>But how can this be done? how can we investigate the
+ideas of peoples who, ignorant of writing, had no means of
+permanently recording their beliefs? At first sight the thing
+seems impossible; the thread of enquiry is broken off short;
+it has landed us on the brink of a gulf which looks impassable.
+But the case is not so hopeless as it appears. True,
+we cannot investigate the beliefs of prehistoric ages directly,
+but the comparative method of research may furnish us
+with the means of studying them indirectly; it may hold
+up to us a mirror in which, if we do not see the originals,
+we may perhaps contemplate their reflections. For a comparative
+study of the various races of mankind demonstrates,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>[pg 6]</span>
+or at least renders it highly probable, that humanity has
+everywhere started at an exceedingly low level of culture,
+a level far beneath that of the lowest existing savages, and
+that from this humble beginning all the various races of
+men have gradually progressed upward at different rates,
+some faster and some slower, till they have attained the
+particular stage which each of them occupies at the present
+time.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Hence the need of studying the beliefs and customs of
+savages, if we are to understand the evolution of culture in general.</p>
+
+<p>If this conclusion is correct, the various stages of
+savagery and barbarism on which many tribes and peoples
+now stand represent, broadly speaking, so many degrees of
+retarded social and intellectual development, they correspond
+to similar stages which the ancestors of the civilised races may
+be supposed to have passed through at more or less remote
+periods of their history. Thus when we arrange all the
+known peoples of the world according to the degree of their
+savagery or civilisation in a graduated scale of culture, we
+obtain not merely a comparative view of their relative positions
+in the scale, but also in some measure an historical
+record of the genetic development of culture from a very
+early time down to the present day. Hence a study of the
+savage and barbarous races of mankind is of the greatest
+importance for a full understanding of the beliefs and
+practices, whether religious, social, moral, or political, of the
+most civilised races, including our own, since it is practically
+certain that a large part of these beliefs and practices
+originated with our savage ancestors, and has been inherited
+by us from them, with more or less of modification, through
+a long line of intermediate generations.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The need is all the more urgent because savages are rapidly
+disappearing or being transformed.</p>
+
+<p>That is why the study of existing savages at the present
+day engrosses so much of the attention of civilised peoples.
+We see that if we are to comprehend not only our past
+history but our present condition, with all its many intricate
+and perplexing problems, we must begin at the beginning by
+attempting to discover the mental state of our savage forefathers,
+who bequeathed to us so much of the faiths, the laws,
+and the institutions which we still cherish; and more and more
+men are coming to perceive that the only way open to us of
+doing this effectually is to study the mental state of savages
+who to this day occupy a state of culture analogous to that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span>
+of our rude progenitors. Through contact with civilisation
+these savages are now rapidly disappearing, or at least losing
+the old habits and ideas which render them a document of
+priceless historical value for us. Hence we have every
+motive for prosecuting the study of savagery with ardour
+and diligence before it is too late, before the record is gone
+for ever. We are like an heir whose title-deeds must be
+scrutinised before he can take possession of the inheritance,
+but who finds the handwriting of the deeds so fading and
+evanescent that it threatens to disappear entirely before he
+can read the document to the end. With what keen attention,
+what eager haste, would he not scan the fast-vanishing
+characters? With the like attention and the like haste
+civilised men are now applying themselves to the investigation
+of the fast-vanishing savages.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Savage religion is to be the subject of these lectures.</p>
+
+<p>Thus if we are to trace historically man's conception of
+God to its origin, it is desirable, or rather essential, that we
+should begin by studying the most primitive ideas on the
+subject which are accessible to us, and the most primitive
+ideas are unquestionably those of the lowest savages.
+Accordingly in these lectures I propose to deal with a
+particular side or aspect of savage religion. I shall not
+trench on the sphere of the higher religions, not only
+because my knowledge of them is for the most part very
+slight, but also because I believe that a searching study of
+the higher and more complex religions should be postponed
+till we have acquired an accurate knowledge of the lower and
+simpler. For a similar reason the study of inorganic chemistry
+naturally precedes the study of organic chemistry, because
+inorganic compounds are much simpler and therefore more
+easily analysed and investigated than organic compounds.
+So with the chemistry of the mind; we should analyse the
+comparatively simple phenomena of savage thought into its
+constituent elements before we attempt to perform a similar
+operation on the vastly more complex phenomena of civilised
+beliefs.</p>
+
+<p class="side">But only a part of savage religion will be dealt with.</p>
+
+<p>But while I shall confine myself rigidly to the field of
+savage religion, I shall not attempt to present you with a
+complete survey even of that restricted area, and that for
+more reasons than one. In the first place the theme, even
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span>
+with this great limitation, is far too large to be adequately
+set forth in the time at my disposal; the sketch&mdash;for it
+could be no more than a sketch&mdash;would be necessarily
+superficial and probably misleading. In the second place,
+even a sketch of primitive religion in general ought to presuppose
+in the sketcher a fairly complete knowledge of the
+whole subject, so that all the parts may appear, not indeed
+in detail, but in their proper relative proportions. Now
+though I have given altogether a good deal of time to the
+study of primitive religion, I am far from having studied it
+in all its branches, and I could not trust myself to give an
+accurate general account of it even in outline; were I to
+attempt such a thing I should almost certainly fall, through
+sheer ignorance or inadvertence, into the mistake of exaggerating
+some features, unduly diminishing others, and omitting
+certain essential features altogether. Hence it seems to me
+better not to commit myself to so ambitious an enterprise
+but to confine myself in my lectures, as I have always done
+in my writings, to a comparatively minute investigation of
+certain special aspects or forms of primitive religion rather
+than attempt to embrace in a general view the whole of
+that large subject. Such a relatively detailed study of a
+single compartment may be less attractive and more tedious
+than a bird's-eye view of a wider area; but in the end it
+may perhaps prove a more solid contribution to knowledge.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Introductory observations. The question of a supernatural
+revelation excluded.</p>
+
+<p>But before I come to details I wish to make a few general
+introductory remarks, and in particular to define some of
+the terms which I shall have occasion to use in the lectures.
+I have defined natural theology as that reasoned knowledge
+of a God or gods which man may be supposed,
+whether rightly or wrongly, capable of attaining to by the
+exercise of his natural faculties alone. Whether there ever
+has been or can be a special miraculous revelation of God to
+man through channels different from those through which all
+other human knowledge is derived, is a question which does
+not concern us in these lectures; indeed it is expressly
+excluded from their scope by the will of the founder, who
+directed the lecturers to treat the subject "as a strictly
+natural science," "without reference to or reliance upon any
+supposed special exceptional or so-called miraculous revelation."
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span>
+Accordingly, in compliance with these directions, I
+dismiss at the outset the question of a revelation, and shall
+limit myself strictly to natural theology in the sense in
+which I have defined it.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Theology and religion, how related to each other.</p>
+
+<p>I have called natural theology a reasoned knowledge of
+a God or gods to distinguish it from that simple and comparatively,
+though I believe never absolutely, unreasoning
+faith in God which suffices for the practice of religion. For
+theology is at once more and less than religion: if on the
+one hand it includes a more complete acquaintance with the
+grounds of religious belief than is essential to religion, on the
+other hand it excludes the observance of those practical
+duties which are indispensable to any religion worthy of the
+name. In short, whereas theology is purely theoretical,
+religion is both theoretical and practical, though the
+theoretical part of it need not be so highly developed as in
+theology. But while the subject of the lectures is, strictly
+speaking, natural theology rather than natural religion, I
+think it would be not only difficult but undesirable to confine
+our attention to the purely theological or theoretical part
+of natural religion: in all religions, and not least in the
+undeveloped savage religions with which we shall deal,
+theory and practice fuse with and interact on each other too
+closely to be forcibly disjoined and handled apart. Hence
+throughout the lectures I shall not scruple to refer constantly
+to religious practice as well as to religious theory, without
+feeling that thereby I am transgressing the proper limits of
+my subject.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The term God defined.</p>
+
+<p>As theology is not only by definition but by etymology
+a reasoned knowledge or theory of a God or gods, it becomes
+desirable, before we proceed further, to define the sense in
+which I understand and shall employ the word God. That
+sense is neither novel nor abstruse; it is simply the sense
+which I believe the generality of mankind attach to the term.
+By a God I understand a superhuman and supernatural
+being, of a spiritual and personal nature, who controls the
+world or some part of it on the whole for good, and who is
+endowed with intellectual faculties, moral feelings, and active
+powers, which we can only conceive on the analogy of human
+faculties, feelings, and activities, though we are bound to suppose
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span>
+that in the divine nature they exist in higher degrees, perhaps
+in infinitely higher degrees, than the corresponding faculties,
+feelings, and activities of man. In short, by a God I mean a
+beneficent supernatural spirit, the ruler of the world or of
+some part of it, who resembles man in nature though he
+excels him in knowledge, goodness, and power. This is, I
+think, the sense in which the ordinary man speaks of a God,
+and I believe that he is right in so doing. I am aware that
+it has been not unusual, especially perhaps of late years, to
+apply the name of God to very different conceptions, to
+empty it of all implication of personality, and to reduce it
+to signifying something very large and very vague, such as
+the Infinite or the Absolute (whatever these hard words
+may signify), the great First Cause, the Universal Substance,
+"the stream of tendency by which all things seek to fulfil
+the law of their being,"<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> and so forth. Now without
+expressing any opinion as to the truth or falsehood of the
+views implied by such applications of the name of God, I
+cannot but regard them all as illegitimate extensions of the
+term, in short as an abuse of language, and I venture to
+protest against it in the interest not only of verbal accuracy
+but of clear thinking, because it is apt to conceal from ourselves
+and others a real and very important change of
+thought: in particular it may lead many to imagine that
+the persons who use the name of God in one or other of these
+extended senses retain certain theological opinions which they
+may in fact have long abandoned. Thus the misuse of the
+name of God may resemble the stratagem in war of putting
+up dummies to make an enemy imagine that a fort is still
+held after it has been evacuated by the garrison. I am far
+from alleging or insinuating that the illegitimate extension of
+the divine name is deliberately employed by theologians or
+others for the purpose of masking a change of front; but
+that it may have that effect seems at least possible. And
+as we cannot use words in wrong senses without running a
+serious risk of deceiving ourselves as well as others, it appears
+better on all accounts to adhere strictly to the common
+meaning of the name of God as signifying a powerful supernatural
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span>
+and on the whole beneficent spirit, akin in nature to
+man; and if any of us have ceased to believe in such a being
+we should refrain from applying the old word to the new faith,
+and should find some other and more appropriate term to
+express our meaning. At all events, speaking for myself, I
+intend to use the name of God consistently in the familiar
+sense, and I would beg my hearers to bear this steadily in
+mind.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Monotheism
+and polytheism.</p>
+
+<p>You will have observed that I have spoken of natural
+theology as a reasoned knowledge of a God or gods. There
+is indeed nothing in the definition of God which I have
+adopted to imply that he is unique, in other words, that there
+is only one God rather than several or many gods. It is
+true that modern European thinkers, bred in a monotheistic
+religion, commonly overlook polytheism as a crude theory
+unworthy the serious attention of philosophers; in short, the
+champions and the assailants of religion in Europe alike for
+the most part tacitly assume that there is either one God or
+none. Yet some highly civilised nations of antiquity and of
+modern times, such as the ancient Egyptians, Greeks, and
+Romans, and the modern Chinese and Hindoos, have
+accepted the polytheistic explanation of the world, and as
+no reasonable man will deny the philosophical subtlety of
+the Greeks and the Hindoos, to say nothing of the rest, a
+theory of the universe which has commended itself to them
+deserves perhaps more consideration than it has commonly
+received from Western philosophers; certainly it cannot be
+ignored in an historical enquiry into the origin of religion.</p>
+
+<p class="side">A natural knowledge of God can only be acquired by
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>If there is such a thing as natural theology, that is, a
+knowledge of a God or gods acquired by our natural faculties
+alone without the aid of a special revelation, it follows that it
+must be obtained by one or other of the methods by which all
+our natural knowledge is conveyed to us. Roughly speaking,
+these methods are two in number, namely, intuition and experience.
+Now if we ask ourselves, Do we know God intuitively
+in the same sense in which we know intuitively our own
+sensations and the simplest truths of mathematics, I think
+most men will acknowledge that they do not. It is true
+that according to Berkeley the world exists only as it is
+perceived, and that our perceptions of it are produced by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span>
+immediate action of God on our minds, so that everything
+we perceive might be described, if not as an idea in
+the mind of the deity, at least as a direct emanation from
+him. On this theory we might in a sense be said to have
+an immediate knowledge of God. But Berkeley's theory
+has found little acceptance, so far as I know, even among
+philosophers; and even if we regarded it as true, we should
+still have to admit that the knowledge of God implied by it
+is inferential rather than intuitive in the strict sense of the
+word: we infer God to be the cause of our perceptions
+rather than identify him with the perceptions themselves.
+On the whole, then, I conclude that man, or at all events the
+ordinary man, has, properly speaking, no immediate or
+intuitive knowledge of God, and that, if he obtains, without
+the aid of revelation, any knowledge of him at all, it can
+only be through the other natural channel of knowledge,
+that is, through experience.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The
+nature of
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>In experience, as distinct from intuition, we reach our
+conclusions not directly through simple contemplation of the
+particular sensations, emotions, or ideas of which we are at
+the moment conscious, but indirectly by calling up before
+the imagination and comparing with each other our
+memories of a variety of sensations, emotions, or ideas of
+which we have been conscious in the past, and by selecting
+or abstracting from the mental images so compared the
+points in which they resemble each other. The points of
+resemblance thus selected or abstracted from a number of
+particulars compose what we call an abstract or general
+idea, and from a comparison of such abstract or general
+ideas with each other we arrive at general conclusions, which
+define the relations of the ideas to each other. Experience
+in general consists in the whole body of conclusions thus
+deduced from a comparison of all the particular sensations,
+emotions, and ideas which make up the conscious life of the
+individual. Hence in order to constitute experience the
+mind has to perform a more or less complex series of
+operations, which are commonly referred to certain mental
+faculties, such as memory, imagination, and judgment.
+This analysis of experience does not pretend to be philosophically
+complete or exact; but perhaps it is sufficiently
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span>
+accurate for the purpose of these lectures, the scope of which
+is not philosophical but historical.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Two kinds of experience, the experience of our own mind and
+the experience of an external world.</p>
+
+<p>Now experience in the widest sense of the word may
+be conveniently distinguished into two sorts, the experience
+of our own mind and the experience of an external world.
+The distinction is indeed, like the others with which I am
+dealing at present, rather practically useful than theoretically
+sound; certainly it would not be granted by all philosophers,
+for many of them have held that we neither have nor with
+our present faculties can possibly attain to any immediate
+knowledge or perception of an external world, we merely
+infer its existence from our own sensations, which are as
+strictly a part of our mind as the ideas and emotions of
+our waking life or the visions of sleep. According to them,
+the existence of matter or of an external world is, so far as
+we are concerned, merely an hypothesis devised to explain
+the order of our sensations; it never has been perceived by
+any man, woman, or child who ever lived on earth; we have
+and can have no immediate knowledge or perception of anything
+but the states and operations of our own mind. On this
+theory what we call the world, with all its supposed infinitudes
+of space and time, its systems of suns and planets,
+its seemingly endless forms of inorganic matter and organic
+life, shrivels up, on a close inspection, into a fleeting, a
+momentary figment of thought. It is like one of those
+glass baubles, iridescent with a thousand varied and delicate
+hues, which a single touch suffices to shatter into dust. The
+philosopher, like the sorcerer, has but to wave his magic
+wand,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,</p>
+<p>The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces,</p>
+<p>The solemn temples, the great globe itself,</p>
+<p>Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve</p>
+<p>And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,</p>
+<p>Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff</p>
+<p>As dreams are made on, and our little life</p>
+<p>Is rounded with a sleep."</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p class="side">The distinction rather popular and convenient than
+philosophically strict.</p>
+
+<p>It would be beyond my province, even if it were within
+my power, to discuss these airy speculations, and thereby to
+descend into the arena where for ages subtle dialecticians
+have battled with each other over the reality or unreality of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span>
+an external world. For my purpose it suffices to adopt the
+popular and convenient distinction of mind and matter and
+hence to divide experience into two sorts, an inward experience
+of the acts and states of our own minds, and an outward
+experience of the acts and states of that physical universe
+by which we seem to be surrounded.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The knowledge or conception of God has been attained both by
+inward and by outward experience.</p>
+
+<p>Now if a natural knowledge of God is only possible
+by means of experience, in other words, by a process of
+reasoning based on observation, it will follow that such a
+knowledge may conceivably be acquired either by the way
+of inward or of outward experience; in other words, it may
+be attained either by reflecting on the processes of our own
+minds or by observing the processes of external nature.
+In point of fact, if we survey the history of thought, mankind
+appears to have arrived at a knowledge, or at all events at
+a conception, of deity by both these roads. Let me say a
+few words as to the two roads which lead, or seem to lead,
+man to God.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The conception of God is attained by inward experience, that
+is, by the observation of certain remarkable thoughts and feelings which
+are attributed to the inspiration of a deity. Practical dangers of the
+theory of inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, then, men in many lands and many
+ages have experienced certain extraordinary emotions and
+entertained certain extraordinary ideas, which, unable to
+account for them by reference to the ordinary forms of
+experience, they have set down to the direct action of a
+powerful spirit or deity working on their minds and even
+entering into and taking possession of their bodies; and in
+this excited state&mdash;for violent excitement is characteristic
+of these manifestations&mdash;the patient believes himself to
+be possessed of supernatural knowledge and supernatural
+power. This real or supposed mode of apprehending a
+divine spirit and entering into communion with it, is
+commonly and appropriately called inspiration. The phenomenon
+is familiar to us from the example of the Hebrew
+nation, who believed that their prophets were thus inspired
+by the deity, and that their sacred books were regularly
+composed under the divine afflatus. The belief is by no
+means singular, indeed it appears to be world-wide; for it
+would be hard to point to any race of men among whom
+instances of such inspiration have not been reported; and
+the more ignorant and savage the race the more numerous,
+to judge by the reports, are the cases of inspiration. Volumes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span>
+might be filled with examples, but through the spread
+of information as to the lower races in recent years the
+topic has become so familiar that I need not stop to
+illustrate it by instances. I will merely say that among
+savages the theory of inspiration or possession is commonly
+invoked to explain all abnormal mental states, particularly
+insanity or conditions of mind bordering on it, so that
+persons more or less crazed in their wits, and particularly
+hysterical or epileptic patients, are for that very reason
+thought to be peculiarly favoured by the spirits and are
+therefore consulted as oracles, their wild and whirling words
+passing for the revelations of a higher power, whether a
+god or a ghost, who considerately screens his too dazzling
+light under a thick veil of dark sayings and mysterious
+ejaculations.<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> I need hardly point out the very serious
+dangers which menace any society where such theories
+are commonly held and acted upon. If the decisions
+of a whole community in matters of the gravest importance
+are left to turn on the wayward fancies, the whims and
+vagaries of the insane or the semi-insane, what are likely
+to be the consequences to the commonwealth? What, for
+example, can be expected to result from a war entered upon
+at such dictation and waged under such auspices? Are cattle-breeding,
+agriculture, commerce, all the arts of life on which a
+people depend for their subsistence, likely to thrive when they
+are directed by the ravings of epilepsy or the drivellings of
+hysteria? Defeat in battle, conquest by enemies, death by
+famine and widespread disease, these and a thousand other
+lesser evils threaten the blind people who commit themselves
+to such blind guides. The history of savage and barbarous
+tribes, could we follow it throughout, might furnish us with
+a thousand warning instances of the fatal effects of carrying
+out this crude theory of inspiration to its logical conclusions;
+and if we hear less than might be expected of such instances,
+it is probably because the tribes who consistently acted up
+to their beliefs have thereby wiped themselves out of existence:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span>
+they have perished the victims of their folly and left
+no record behind. I believe that historians have not yet
+reckoned sufficiently with the disastrous influence which this
+worship of insanity,&mdash;for it is often nothing less&mdash;has exercised
+on the fortunes of peoples and on the development or
+decay of their institutions.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The belief in inspiration leads to the worship of living men
+as gods. Outward experience as a source of the idea of God.</p>
+
+<p>To a certain extent, however, the evil has provided its
+own remedy. For men of strong heads and ambitious
+temper, perceiving the exorbitant power which a belief in
+inspiration places in the hands of the feeble-minded, have
+often feigned to be similarly afflicted, and trading on their
+reputation for imbecility, or rather inspiration, have acquired
+an authority over their fellows which, though they have often
+abused it for vulgar ends, they have sometimes exerted for
+good, as for example by giving sound advice in matters of
+public concern, applying salutary remedies to the sick, and
+detecting and punishing crime, whereby they have helped to
+preserve the commonwealth, to alleviate suffering, and to
+cement that respect for law and order which is essential to
+the stability of society, and without which any community
+must fall to pieces like a house of cards. These great
+services have been rendered to the cause of civilisation and
+progress by the class of men who in primitive society are
+variously known as medicine-men, magicians, sorcerers,
+diviners, soothsayers, and so forth. Sometimes the respect
+which they have gained by the exercise of their profession
+has won for them political as well as spiritual or ghostly
+authority; in short, from being simple medicine-men
+or sorcerers they have grown into chiefs and kings.
+When such men, seated on the throne of state, retain their
+old reputation for being the vehicles of a divine spirit, they
+may be worshipped in the character of gods as well as
+revered in the capacity of kings; and thus exerting a two-fold
+sway over the minds of men they possess a most potent
+instrument for elevating or depressing the fortunes of their
+worshippers and subjects. In this way the old savage notion
+of inspiration or possession gradually develops into the
+doctrine of the divinity of kings, which after a long period of
+florescence dwindles away into the modest theory that kings
+reign by divine right, a theory familiar to our ancestors not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span>
+long ago, and perhaps not wholly obsolete among us even
+now. However, inspired men need not always blossom out
+into divine kings; they may, and often do, remain in the
+chrysalis state of simple deities revered by their simple
+worshippers, their brows encircled indeed with a halo of
+divinity but not weighted with the more solid substance
+of a kingly crown. Thus certain extraordinary mental
+states, which those who experience and those who witness
+them cannot account for in any other way, are often
+explained by the supposed interposition of a spirit or deity.
+This, therefore, is one of the two forms of experience by
+which men attain, or imagine that they attain, to a knowledge
+of God and a communion with him. It is what I
+have called the road of inward experience. Let us now
+glance at the other form of experience which leads, or
+seems to lead, to the same goal. It is what I have called
+the road of outward experience.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Tendency of the mind to search for causes, and the necessity
+for their discovery.</p>
+
+<p>When we contemplate the seemingly infinite variety,
+the endless succession, of events that pass under our observation
+in what we call the external world, we are led by an
+irresistible tendency to trace what we call a causal connexion
+between them. The tendency to discover the causes of
+things appears indeed to be innate in the constitution of
+our minds and indispensable to our continued existence.
+It is the link that arrests and colligates into convenient
+bundles the mass of particulars drifting pell-mell past on the
+stream of sensation; it is the cement that binds into an
+edifice seemingly of adamant the loose sand of isolated
+perceptions. Deprived of the knowledge which this tendency
+procures for us we should be powerless to foresee the succession
+of phenomena and so to adapt ourselves to it. We should be
+bewildered by the apparent disorder and confusion of everything,
+we should toss on a sea without a rudder, we should
+wander in an endless maze without a clue, and finding no
+way out of it, or, in plain words, unable to avoid a single
+one of the dangers which menace us at every turn, we should
+inevitably perish. Accordingly the propensity to search for
+causes is characteristic of man in all ages and at all levels of
+culture, though without doubt it is far more highly developed
+in civilised than in savage communities. Among savages
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span>
+it is more or less unconscious and instinctive; among
+civilised men it is deliberately cultivated and rewarded
+at least by the applause of their fellows, by the
+dignity, if not by the more solid recompenses, of learning.
+Indeed as civilisation progresses the enquiry into causes
+tends to absorb more and more of the highest intellectual
+energies of a people; and an ever greater number of men,
+renouncing the bustle, the pleasures, and the ambitions of an
+active life, devote themselves exclusively to the pursuit of
+abstract truth; they set themselves to discover the causes of
+things, to trace the regularity and order that may be supposed
+to underlie the seemingly irregular, confused, and arbitrary
+sequence of phenomena. Unquestionably the progress of
+civilisation owes much to the sustained efforts of such men, and
+if of late years and within our own memory the pace of
+progress has sensibly quickened, we shall perhaps not err in
+supposing that some part at least of the acceleration may be
+accounted for by an increase in the number of lifelong students.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The idea of cause is simply that of invariable sequence
+suggested by the observation of many particular cases of sequence.</p>
+
+<p>Now when we analyse the conception of a cause to the
+bottom, we find as the last residuum in our crucible nothing
+but what Hume found there long ago, and that is simply the
+idea of invariable sequence. Whenever we say that something
+is the cause of something else, all that we really mean
+is that the latter is invariably preceded by the former, so
+that whenever we find the second, which we call the effect,
+we may infer that the first, which we call the cause, has gone
+before it. All such inferences from effects to causes are
+based on experience; having observed a certain sequence of
+events a certain number of times, we conclude that the events
+are so conjoined that the latter cannot occur without the
+previous occurrence of the former. A single case of two
+events following each other could not of itself suggest that
+the one event is the cause of the other, since there is no
+necessary link between them in the mind; the sequence has
+to be repeated more or less frequently before we infer a
+causal connexion between the two; and this inference rests
+simply on that association of ideas which is established in
+our mind by the reiterated observation of the things. Once
+the ideas are by dint of repetition firmly welded together,
+the one by sheer force of habit calls up the other, and we say
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span>
+that the two things which are represented by those ideas
+stand to each other in the relation of cause and effect. The
+notion of causality is in short only one particular case of the
+association of ideas. Thus all reasoning as to causes implies
+previous observation: we reason from the observed to the
+unobserved, from the known to the unknown; and the wider
+the range of our observation and knowledge, the greater the
+probability that our reasoning will be correct.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The savage draws his ideas of natural causation from
+observation of himself. Hence he explains the phenomena of nature by
+supposing that they are produced by beings like himself. These beings
+may be called spirits or gods of nature to distinguish them from living
+human gods.</p>
+
+<p>All this is as true of the savage as of the civilised man.
+He too argues, and indeed can only argue on the basis of
+experience from the known to the unknown, from the
+observed to the hypothetical. But the range of his experience
+is comparatively narrow, and accordingly his inferences
+from it often appear to civilised men, with their wider knowledge,
+to be palpably false and absurd. This holds good
+most obviously in regard to his observation of external nature.
+While he often knows a good deal about the natural objects,
+whether animals, plants, or inanimate things, on which he is
+immediately dependent for his subsistence, the extent of
+country with which he is acquainted is commonly but small,
+and he has little or no opportunity of correcting the conclusions
+which he bases on his observation of it by a comparison
+with other parts of the world. But if he knows little of
+the outer world, he is necessarily somewhat better acquainted
+with his own inner life, with his sensations and ideas, his
+emotions, appetites, and desires. Accordingly it is natural
+enough that when he seeks to discover the causes of events
+in the external world, he should, arguing from experience,
+imagine that they are produced by the actions of invisible
+beings like himself, who behind the veil of nature pull the
+strings that set the vast machinery in motion. For example,
+he knows by experience that he can make sparks fly by
+knocking two flints against each other; what more natural,
+therefore, than that he should imagine the great sparks which
+we call lightning to be made in the same way by somebody
+up aloft, and that when he finds chipped flints on the ground
+he should take them for thunder-stones dropped by the
+maker of thunder and lightning from the clouds?<a id="footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a> Thus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span>
+arguing from his limited experience primitive man creates a
+multitude of spirits or gods in his own likeness to explain
+the succession of phenomena in nature of whose true causes
+he is ignorant; in short he personifies the phenomena as
+powerful anthropomorphic spirits, and believing himself to
+be more or less dependent on their good will he woos their
+favour by prayer and sacrifice. This personification of the
+various aspects of external nature is one of the most fruitful
+sources of polytheism. The spirits and gods created by
+this train of thought may be called spirits and gods of
+nature to distinguish them from the human gods, by which
+I mean the living men and women who are believed by
+their worshippers to be inspired or possessed by a divine
+spirit.</p>
+
+<p class="side">In time men reject polytheism as an explanation of natural
+processes and substitute certain abstract ideas of ethers, atoms,
+molecules, and so on.</p>
+
+<p>But as time goes on and men learn more about nature,
+they commonly become dissatisfied with polytheism as an
+explanation of the world and gradually discard it. From one
+department of nature after another the gods are reluctantly
+or contemptuously dismissed and their provinces committed
+to the care of certain abstract ideas of ethers, atoms,
+molecules, and so forth, which, though just as imperceptible
+to human senses as their divine predecessors, are judged by
+prevailing opinion to discharge their duties with greater
+regularity and despatch, and are accordingly firmly installed
+on the vacant thrones amid the general applause of the more
+enlightened portion of mankind. Thus instead of being
+peopled with a noisy bustling crowd of full-blooded and
+picturesque deities, clothed in the graceful form and animated
+with the warm passions of humanity, the universe outside
+the narrow circle of our consciousness is now conceived as
+absolutely silent, colourless, and deserted. The cheerful
+sounds which we hear, the bright hues which we see, have
+no existence, we are told, in the external world: the
+voices of friends, the harmonies of music, the chime of
+falling waters, the solemn roll of ocean, the silver splendour
+of the moon, the golden glories of sunset, the verdure
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span>
+of summer woods, and the hectic tints of autumn&mdash;all
+these subsist only in our own minds, and if we imagine
+them to have any reality elsewhere, we deceive ourselves.
+In fact the whole external world as perceived by us is
+one great illusion: if we gave the reins to fancy we
+might call it a mirage, a piece of witchery, conjured
+up by the spells of some unknown magician to bewilder
+poor ignorant humanity. Outside of ourselves there
+stretches away on every side an infinitude of space without
+sound, without light, without colour, a solitude traversed only
+in every direction by an inconceivably complex web of
+silent and impersonal forces. That, if I understand it
+aright, is the general conception of the world which modern
+science has substituted for polytheism.</p>
+
+<p class="side">But while they commonly discard the hypothesis of a deity as
+an explanation of all the particular processes of nature, they retain it
+as an explanation of nature in general.</p>
+
+<p>When philosophy and science by their combined efforts
+have ejected gods and goddesses from all the subordinate
+posts of nature, it might perhaps be expected that they
+would have no further occasion for the services of a deity,
+and that having relieved him of all his particular functions
+they would have arranged for the creation and general
+maintenance of the universe without him by handing over
+these important offices to an efficient staff of those ethers,
+atoms, corpuscles, and so forth, which had already proved
+themselves so punctual in the discharge of the minor
+duties entrusted to them. Nor, indeed, is this expectation
+altogether disappointed. A number of atheistical philosophers
+have courageously come forward and assured us that
+the hypothesis of a deity as the creator and preserver of the
+universe is quite superfluous, and that all things came into
+being or have existed from eternity without the help of any
+divine spirit, and that they will continue to exist without it
+to the end, if end indeed there is to be. But on the whole
+these daring speculators appear to be in a minority. The
+general opinion of educated people at the present day, could
+we ascertain it, would probably be found to incline to the
+conclusion that, though every department of nature is now
+worked by impersonal material forces alone, the universe as
+a whole was created and is still maintained by a great supernatural
+spirit whom we call God. Thus in Europe and in
+the countries which have borrowed their civilisation, their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span>
+philosophy, and their religion from it, the central problem of
+natural theology has narrowed itself down to the question, Is
+there one God or none? It is a profound question, and I
+for one profess myself unable to answer it.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Whether attained by inward or outward experience, the idea of
+God is regularly that of a cause inferred, not perceived.</p>
+
+<p>If this brief sketch of the history of natural theology is
+correct, man has by the exercise of his natural faculties alone,
+without the help of revelation, attained to a knowledge or at
+least to a conception of God in one of two ways, either
+by meditating on the operations of his own mind, or by
+observing the processes of external nature: inward experience
+and outward experience have conducted him by
+different roads to the same goal. By whichever of them
+the conception has been reached, it is regularly employed to
+explain the causal connexion of things, whether the things
+to be explained are the ideas and emotions of man himself
+or the changes in the physical world outside of him. In
+short, a God is always brought in to play the part of
+a cause; it is the imperious need of tracing the causes
+of events which has driven man to discover or invent a
+deity. Now causes may be arranged in two classes according
+as they are perceived or unperceived by the senses. For
+example, when we see the impact of a billiard cue on a
+billiard ball followed immediately by the motion of the ball,
+we say that the impact is the cause of the motion. In this
+case we perceive the cause as well as the effect. But, when
+we see an apple fall from a tree to the ground, we say that
+the cause of the fall is the force of gravitation exercised
+by the superior mass of the earth on the inferior mass of the
+apple. In this case, though we perceive the effect, we
+do not perceive the cause, we only infer it by a process
+of reasoning from experience. Causes of the latter sort may
+be called inferential or hypothetical causes to distinguish
+them from those which are perceived. Of the two classes of
+causes a deity belongs in general, if not universally, to the
+second, that is, to the inferential or hypothetical causes; for
+as a rule at all events his existence is not perceived by our
+senses but inferred by our reason. To say that he has
+never appeared in visible and tangible form to men would be
+to beg the question; it would be to make an assertion which
+is incapable of proof and which is contradicted by a multitude
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span>
+of contrary affirmations recorded in the traditions or the
+sacred books of many races; but without being rash we may
+perhaps say that such appearances, if they ever took place,
+belong to a past order of events and need hardly be reckoned
+with at the present time. For all practical purposes, therefore,
+God is now a purely inferential or hypothetical cause;
+he may be invoked to explain either our own thoughts and
+feelings, our impulses and emotions, or the manifold states
+and processes of external nature; he may be viewed either
+as the inspirer of the one or the creator and preserver of the
+other; and according as he is mainly regarded from the one
+point of view or the other, the conception of the divine
+nature tends to beget one of two very different types of
+piety. To the man who traces the finger of God in the
+workings of his own mind, the deity appears to be far closer
+than he seems to the man who only infers the divine
+existence from the marvellous order, harmony, and beauty
+of the external world; and we need not wonder that the
+faith of the former is of a more fervent temper and supplies
+him with more powerful incentives to a life of active devotion
+than the calm and rational faith of the latter. We may
+conjecture that the piety of most great religious reformers
+has belonged to the former rather than to the latter type; in
+other words, that they have believed in God because they
+felt, or imagined that they felt, him stirring in their own
+hearts rather than because they discerned the handiwork of
+a divine artificer in the wonderful mechanism of nature.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Besides the two sorts of gods already distinguished, namely
+natural gods and living human gods, there is a third sort which has
+played an important part in history, namely, the spirits of deified dead
+men. Euhemerism.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far I have distinguished two sorts of gods whom
+man discovers or creates for himself by the exercise of his
+unaided faculties, to wit natural gods, whom he infers from
+his observation of external nature, and human gods or
+inspired men, whom he recognises by virtue of certain extraordinary
+mental manifestations in himself or in others. But
+there is another class of human gods which I have not yet
+mentioned and which has played a very important part in
+the evolution of theology. I mean the deified spirits of dead
+men. To judge by the accounts we possess not only of
+savage and barbarous tribes but of some highly civilised
+peoples, the worship of the human dead has been one of the
+commonest and most influential forms of natural religion,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span>
+perhaps indeed the commonest and most influential of all.
+Obviously it rests on the supposition that the human
+personality in some form, whether we call it a soul, a spirit,
+a ghost, or what not, can survive death and thereafter continue
+for a longer or shorter time to exercise great power
+for good or evil over the destinies of the living, who are
+therefore compelled to propitiate the shades of the dead out
+of a regard for their own safety and well-being. This
+belief in the survival of the human spirit after death is
+world-wide; it is found among men in all stages of culture
+from the lowest to the highest; we need not wonder therefore
+that the custom of propitiating the ghosts or souls
+of the departed should be world-wide also. No doubt
+the degree of attention paid to ghosts is not the same
+in all cases; it varies with the particular degree of power
+attributed to each of them; the spirits of men who for
+any reason were much feared in their lifetime, such as
+mighty warriors, chiefs, and kings, are more revered and
+receive far more marks of homage than the spirits of
+common men; and it is only when this reverence and
+homage are carried to a very high pitch that they can
+properly be described as a deification of the dead. But
+that dead men have thus been raised to the rank of deities
+in many lands, there is abundant evidence to prove. And
+quite apart from the worship paid to those spirits which are
+admitted by their worshippers to have once animated the
+bodies of living men, there is good reason to suspect that
+many gods, who rank as purely mythical beings, were once
+men of flesh and blood, though their true history has passed
+out of memory or rather been transformed by legend into a
+myth, which veils more or less completely the real character
+of the imaginary deity. The theory that most or all gods
+originated after this fashion, in other words, that the worship
+of the gods is little or nothing but the worship of dead men, is
+known as Euhemerism from Euhemerus, the ancient Greek
+writer who propounded it. Regarded as a universal explanation
+of the belief in gods it is certainly false; regarded as a
+partial explanation of the belief it is unquestionably true;
+and perhaps we may even go further and say, that the more
+we penetrate into the inner history of natural religion,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span>
+the larger is seen to be the element of truth contained in
+Euhemerism. For the more closely we look at many deities
+of natural religion, the more distinctly do we seem to
+perceive, under the quaint or splendid pall which the
+mythical fancy has wrapt round their stately figures, the
+familiar features of real men, who once shared the common
+joys and the common sorrows of humanity, who trod life's
+common road to the common end.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The deification of dead men presupposes the immortality of
+the human soul, or rather its survival for a longer or shorter time
+after death.</p>
+
+<p>When we ask how it comes about that dead men have
+so often been raised to the rank of divinities, the first thing
+to be observed is that all such deifications must, if our theory
+is correct, be inferences drawn from experience of some sort;
+they must be hypotheses devised to explain the unperceived
+causes of certain phenomena, whether of the human mind
+or of external nature. All of them imply, as I have said, a
+belief that the conscious human personality, call it the soul,
+the spirit, or what you please, can survive the body and
+continue to exist in a disembodied state with unabated or
+even greatly increased powers for good or evil. This faith
+in the survival of personality after death may for the sake of
+brevity be called a faith in immortality, though the term
+immortality is not strictly correct, since it seems to imply
+eternal duration, whereas the idea of eternity is hardly
+intelligible to many primitive peoples, who nevertheless
+firmly believe in the continued existence, for a longer or
+shorter time, of the human spirit after the dissolution of the
+body. Now the faith in the immortality of the soul or, to
+speak more correctly, in the continued existence of conscious
+human personality after death, is, as I remarked before, exceedingly
+common among men at all levels of intellectual
+evolution from the lowest upwards; certainly it is not
+peculiar to adherents of the higher religions, but is held as
+an unquestionable truth by at least the great majority of
+savage and barbarous peoples as to whose ideas we possess
+accurate information; indeed it might be hard to point to
+any single tribe of men, however savage, of whom we could
+say with certainty that the faith is totally wanting among
+them.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The question of immortality is a fundamental problem of
+natural theology in the wider sense.</p>
+
+<p>Hence if we are to explain the deification of dead men,
+we must first explain the widespread belief in immortality;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span>
+we must answer the question, how does it happen that men
+in all countries and at all stages of ignorance or knowledge
+so commonly suppose that when they die their consciousness
+will still persist for an indefinite time after the decay of the
+body? To answer that question is one of the fundamental
+problems of natural theology, not indeed in the full sense
+of the word theology, if we confine the term strictly to a
+reasoned knowledge of a God; for the example of Buddhism
+proves that a belief in the existence of the human soul after
+death is quite compatible with disbelief in a deity. But if
+we may use, as I think we may, the phrase natural theology
+in an extended sense to cover theories which, though they
+do not in themselves affirm the existence of a God, nevertheless
+appear to be one of the deepest and most fruitful
+sources of the belief in his reality, then we may legitimately
+say that the doctrine of human immortality does fall within
+the scope of natural theology. What then is its origin?
+How is it that men so commonly believe themselves to be
+immortal?</p>
+
+<p class="side">If there is any natural knowledge of immortality, it must be
+acquired either by intuition or experience; it is apparently not given
+by intuition; hence it must be acquired, if at all, by experience.</p>
+
+<p>If there is any natural knowledge of human immortality, it must be
+acquired either by intuition or by experience; there is no other way.
+Now whether other men from a simple contemplation of their own nature,
+quite apart from reasoning, know or believe themselves intuitively to be
+immortal, I cannot say; but I can say with some confidence that for
+myself I have no such intuition whatever of my own immortality, and that
+if I am left to the resources of my natural faculties alone, I can as
+little affirm the certain or probable existence of my personality after
+death as I can affirm the certain or probable existence of a personal
+God. And I am bold enough to suspect that if men could analyse their own
+ideas, they would generally find themselves to be in a similar
+predicament as to both these profound topics. Hence I incline to lay it
+down as a probable proposition that men as a rule have no intuitive
+knowledge of their own immortality, and that if there is any natural
+knowledge of such a thing it can only be acquired by a process of
+reasoning from experience.<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span>
+<p class="side">The idea of immortality seems to have been suggested to man
+both by his inward and his outward experience, notably by dreams, which
+are a case of inward experience.</p>
+
+<p>What then is the kind of experience from which the
+theory of human immortality is deduced? Is it our experience
+of the operations of our own minds? or is it our
+experience of external nature? As a matter of historical
+fact&mdash;and you will remember that I am treating the question
+purely from the historical standpoint&mdash;men seem to have
+inferred the persistence of their personality after death both
+from the one kind of experience and from the other, that is,
+both from the phenomena of their inner life and from the
+phenomena of what we call the external world. Thus the
+savage, with whose beliefs we are chiefly concerned in these
+lectures, finds a very strong argument for immortality in the
+phenomena of dreams, which are strictly a part of his inner
+life, though in his ignorance he commonly fails to discriminate
+them from what we popularly call waking realities. Hence
+when the images of persons whom he knows to be dead
+appear to him in a dream, he naturally infers that these
+persons still exist somewhere and somehow apart from their
+bodies, of the decay or destruction of which he may have
+had ocular demonstration. How could he see dead people,
+he asks, if they did not exist? To argue that they have
+perished like their bodies is to contradict the plain evidence
+of his senses; for to the savage still more than to the civilised
+man seeing is believing; that he sees the dead only
+in dreams does not shake his belief, since he thinks the
+appearances of dreams just as real as the appearances of
+his waking hours. And once he has in this way gained a
+conviction that the dead survive and can help or harm him,
+as they seem to do in dreams, it is natural or necessary
+for him to extend the theory to the occurrences of daily
+life, which, as I have said, he does not sharply distinguish
+from the visions of slumber. He now explains many of
+these occurrences and many of the processes of nature by
+the direct interposition of the spirits of the departed; he
+traces their invisible hand in many of the misfortunes and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span>
+in some of the blessings which befall him; for it is a common
+feature of the faith in ghosts, at least among savages, that
+they are usually spiteful and mischievous, or at least testy and
+petulant, more apt to injure than to benefit the survivors.
+In that they resemble the personified spirits of nature,
+which in the opinion of most savages appear to be generally
+tricky and malignant beings, whose anger is dangerous and
+whose favour is courted with fear and trembling. Thus even
+without the additional assurance afforded by tales of apparitions
+and spectres, primitive man may come in time to imagine
+the world around him to be more or less thickly peopled,
+influenced, and even dominated by a countless multitude of
+spirits, among whom the shades of past generations of men
+and women hold a very prominent, often apparently the
+leading place. These spirits, powerful to help or harm, he
+seeks either simply to avert, when he deems them purely
+mischievous, or to appease and conciliate, when he supposes
+them sufficiently good-natured to respond to his advances.
+In some such way as this, arguing from the real but, as we
+think, misinterpreted phenomena of dreams, the savage may
+arrive at a doctrine of human immortality and from that at
+a worship of the dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">It has also been suggested by the resemblance of the living
+to the dead, which is a case of outward experience.</p>
+
+<p>This explanation of the savage faith in immortality is
+neither novel nor original: on the contrary it is perhaps the
+commonest and most familiar that has yet been propounded.
+If it does not account for all the facts, it probably accounts
+for many of them. At the same time I do not doubt that
+many other inferences drawn from experiences of different
+kinds have confirmed, even if they did not originally suggest,
+man's confident belief in his own immortality. To take
+a single example of outward experience, the resemblances
+which children often bear to deceased kinsfolk appear to
+have prompted in the minds of many savages the notion
+that the souls of these dead kinsfolk have been born again
+in their descendants.<a id="footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a> From a few cases of resemblances so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span>
+explained it would be easy to arrive at a general theory
+that all living persons are animated by the souls of the dead;
+in other words, that the human spirit survives death for an
+indefinite period, if not for eternity, during which it undergoes
+a series of rebirths or reincarnations. However it has been
+arrived at, this doctrine of the transmigration or reincarnation
+of the soul is found among many tribes of savages; and from
+what we know on the subject we seem to be justified in conjecturing
+that at certain stages of mental and social evolution
+the belief in metempsychosis has been far commoner and
+has exercised a far deeper influence on the life and institutions
+of primitive man than the actual evidence before us
+at present allows us positively to affirm.</p>
+
+
+<p class="side">The aim of these lectures is to collect a number of facts
+illustrative of the belief in immortality and of the customs based on it
+among some of the lower races.</p>
+
+<p>Be that as it may&mdash;and I have no wish to dogmatise on
+so obscure a topic&mdash;it is certain that a belief in the survival
+of the human personality after death and the practice of a
+propitiation or worship of the dead have prevailed very
+widely among mankind and have played a very important
+part in the development of natural religion. While many
+writers have duly recognised the high importance both of the
+belief and of the worship, no one, so far as I know, has
+attempted systematically to collect and arrange the facts
+which illustrate the prevalence of this particular type of
+religion among the various races of mankind. A large body
+of evidence lies to hand in the voluminous and rapidly
+increasing literature of ethnology; but it is dispersed over
+an enormous number of printed books and papers, to say
+nothing of the materials which still remain buried either in
+manuscript or in the minds of men who possess the requisite
+knowledge but have not yet committed it to writing. To
+draw all those stores of information together and digest them
+into a single treatise would be a herculean labour, from which
+even the most industrious researcher into the dusty annals
+of the human past might shrink dismayed. Certainly I
+shall make no attempt to perform such a feat within the
+narrow compass of these lectures. But it seems to me that
+I may make a useful, if a humble, contribution to the history
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span>
+of religion by selecting a portion of the evidence and submitting
+it to my hearers. For that purpose, instead of
+accumulating a mass of facts from all the various races of
+mankind and then comparing them together, I prefer to limit
+myself to a few races and to deal with each of them
+separately, beginning with the lowest savages, about whom
+we possess accurate information, and gradually ascending to
+peoples who stand higher in the scale of culture. In short
+the method of treatment which I shall adopt will be the
+descriptive rather than the comparative. I shall not
+absolutely refrain from instituting comparisons between the
+customs and beliefs of different races, but for the most part
+I shall content myself with describing the customs and
+beliefs of each race separately without reference to those of
+others. Each of the two methods, the comparative and the
+descriptive, has its peculiar advantages and disadvantages,
+and in my published writings I have followed now the one
+method and now the other. The comparative method is
+unquestionably the more attractive and stimulating, but it
+cannot be adopted without a good deal of more or less
+conscious theorising, since every comparison implicitly
+involves a theory. If we desire to exclude theories and
+merely accumulate facts for the use of science, the descriptive
+method is undoubtedly the better adapted for the
+arrangement of our materials: it may not stimulate enquiry
+so powerfully, but it lays a more solid foundation on which
+future enquirers may build. It is as a collection of facts
+illustrative of the belief in immortality and of all the
+momentous consequences which have flowed from that belief,
+that I desire the following lectures to be regarded. They
+are intended to serve simply as a document of religious
+history; they make no pretence to discuss philosophically
+the truth of the beliefs and the morality of the practices
+which will be passed under review. If any inferences can
+indeed be drawn from the facts to the truth or falsehood of
+the beliefs and to the moral worth or worthlessness of the
+practices, I prefer to leave it to others more competent than
+myself to draw them. My sight is not keen enough, my
+hand is not steady enough to load the scales and hold the
+balance in so difficult and delicate an enquiry.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span>
+
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a href="#footnotetag1"> (return) </a><p> Matthew Arnold, <i>Literature and Dogma</i>, ch. i., p. 31 (Popular Edition,
+London, 1893).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b><a href="#footnotetag2"> (return) </a><p> For a single instance see L. Sternberg, "Die Religion der
+Giljaken," <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Religionswissenschaft</i>, viii. (1905) pp. 462
+<i>sqq.</i>, where the writer tells us that the Gilyaks have boundless
+faith in the supernatural power of their shamans, and that the shamans
+are nearly always persons who suffer from hysteria in one form or
+another.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b><a href="#footnotetag3"> (return) </a><p> As to the widespread belief that flint weapons are
+thunderbolts see Sir E. B. Tylor, <i>Researches into the Early History
+of Mankind</i>, Third Edition (London, 1878), pp. 223-227; Chr.
+Blinkenberg, <i>The Thunderweapon in Religion and Folklore</i>
+(Cambridge, 1911); W. W. Skeat "Snakestones and Thunderbolts,"
+<i>Folk-lore</i>, xxiii. (1912) pp. 60 <i>sqq.</i>; and the references
+in <i>The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings</i>, ii. 374.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b><a href="#footnotetag4"> (return) </a><p> Wordsworth, who argues strongly, almost passionately, for
+"the consciousness of a principle of Immortality in the human soul,"
+admits that "the sense of Immortality, if not a coexistent and twin
+birth with Reason, is among the earliest of her offspring." See his
+<i>Essay upon Epitaphs</i>, appended to <i>The Excursion</i>
+(<i>Poetical Works</i>, London, 1832, vol. iv. pp. 336, 338). This
+somewhat hesitating admission of the inferential nature of the belief in
+immortality carries all the more weight because it is made by so warm an
+advocate of human immortality.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b><a href="#footnotetag5"> (return) </a><p> For instance, the Kagoro of Northern Nigeria believe that
+"a spirit may transmigrate into the body of a descendant born
+afterwards, male or female; in fact, this is common, as is proved by the
+likeness of children to their parents or grand-parents, and it is lucky,
+for the ghost has returned, and has no longer any power to frighten the
+relatives until the new body dies, and it is free again" (Major A. J. N.
+Tremearne, "Notes on some Nigerian Head-hunters," <i>Journal of the R.
+Anthropological Institute</i>, xlii. (1912) p. 159). Compare <i>Taboo
+and the Perils of the Soul</i>, pp. 88 <i>sq.</i>; <i>The Dying God</i>,
+p. 287 (p. 288, Second Impression).</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-ii" id="lecture-ii"></a>LECTURE II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SAVAGE CONCEPTION OF DEATH</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The subject of these lectures is the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Last day I explained the subject of which I propose to
+treat and the method which I intend to follow in these
+lectures. I shall describe the belief in immortality, or rather
+in the continued existence of the human soul after death, as
+that belief is found among certain of the lower races, and I
+shall give some account of the religion which has been
+based upon it. That religion is in brief a propitiation or
+worship of the human dead, who according to the degree of
+power ascribed to them by the living are supposed to vary
+in dignity from the humble rank of a mere common ghost
+up to the proud position of deity. The elements of such a
+worship appear to exist among all races of men, though in
+some they have been much more highly developed than
+in others.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Preliminary account of savage beliefs concerning the nature
+and origin of death.</p>
+
+<p>But before I address myself to the description of particular
+races, I wish in this and the following lecture to give you
+some general account of the beliefs of savages concerning
+the nature and origin of death. The problem of death has
+very naturally exercised the minds of men in all ages.
+Unlike so many problems which interest only a few solitary
+thinkers this one concerns us all alike, since simpletons as
+well as sages must die, and even the most heedless and
+feather-brained can hardly help sometimes asking themselves
+what comes after death. The question is therefore
+thrust in a practical, indeed importunate form on our attention;
+and we need not wonder that in the long history of
+human speculation some of the highest intellects should have
+occupied themselves with it and sought to find an answer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span>
+to the riddle. Some of their solutions of the problem,
+though dressed out in all the beauty of exquisite language
+and poetic imagery, singularly resemble the rude guesses of
+savages. So little, it would seem, do the natural powers
+even of the greatest minds avail to pierce the thick veil that
+hides the end of life.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The problem of death is one of universal interest.</p>
+
+<p>In saying that the problem is thrust home upon us
+all, I do not mean to imply that all men are constantly
+or even often engaged in meditating on the nature and origin
+of death. Far from it. Few people trouble themselves about
+that or any other purely abstract question: the common man
+would probably not give a straw for an answer to it. What he
+wants to know, what we all want to know, is whether death
+is the end of all things for the individual, whether our conscious
+personality perishes with the body or survives it for a
+time or for eternity. That is the enigma propounded to
+every human being who has been born into the world: that
+is the door at which so many enquirers have knocked in
+vain. Stated in this limited form the problem has indeed
+been of universal interest: there is no race of men known
+to us which has not pondered the mystery and arrived at
+some conclusions to which it more or less confidently
+adheres. Not that all races have paid an equal attention
+to it. On some it has weighed much more heavily than on
+others. While some races, like some individuals, take death
+almost lightly, and are too busy with the certainties of the
+present world to pay much heed to the uncertainties of a
+world to come, the minds of others have dwelt on the
+prospect of a life beyond the grave till the thought of it
+has risen with them to a passion, almost to an obsession,
+and has begotten a contempt for the fleeting joys of this
+ephemeral existence by comparison with the hoped-for bliss
+of an eternal existence hereafter. To the sceptic, examining
+the evidence for immortality by the cold light of reason, such
+peoples and such individuals may seem to sacrifice the substance
+for the shadow: to adopt a homely comparison, they
+are like the dog in the fable who dropped the real leg of
+mutton, from his mouth in order to snap at its reflection in
+the water. Be that as it may, where such beliefs and hopes
+are entertained in full force, the whole activity of the mind
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33"></a>[pg 33]</span>
+and the whole energy of the body are apt to be devoted to
+a preparation for a blissful or at all events an untroubled
+eternity, and life becomes, in the language of Plato, a meditation
+or practising of death. This excessive preoccupation
+with a problematic future has been a fruitful source of the
+most fatal aberrations both for nations and individuals. In
+pursuit of these visionary aims the few short years of life
+have been frittered away: wealth has been squandered:
+blood has been poured out in torrents: the natural affections
+have been stifled; and the cheerful serenity of reason
+has been exchanged for the melancholy gloom of madness.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"Oh threats of Hell and Hopes of Paradise!</p>
+<p>One thing at least is certain&mdash;<i>This</i> Life flies;</p>
+<p class="i2">One thing is certain and the rest is Lies;</p>
+<p>The Flower that once has blown for ever dies."</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p class="side">The belief in immortality general among mankind.</p>
+
+<p>The question whether our conscious personality survives
+after death has been answered by almost all races of men in
+the affirmative. On this point sceptical or agnostic peoples
+are nearly, if not wholly, unknown. Accordingly if abstract
+truth could be determined, like the gravest issues of national
+policy, by a show of hands or a counting of heads, the
+doctrine of human immortality, or at least of a life after
+death, would deserve to rank among the most firmly
+established of truths; for were the question put to the vote
+of the whole of mankind, there can be no doubt that
+the ayes would have it by an overwhelming majority.
+The few dissenters would be overborne; their voices would
+be drowned in the general roar. For dissenters there have
+been even among savages. The Tongans, for example,
+thought that only the souls of noblemen are saved, the rest
+perish with their bodies.<a id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a> However, this aristocratic view
+has never been popular, and is not likely to find favour in
+our democratic age.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of many savages that they would never die if their
+lives were not cut short by sorcery. Belief of the Abipones.</p>
+
+<p>But many savage races not only believe in a life after
+death; they are even of opinion that they would never
+die at all if it were not for the maleficent arts of sorcerers
+who cut the vital thread prematurely short. In other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>[pg 34]</span>
+words, they disbelieve in what we call a natural death; they
+think that all men are naturally immortal in this life, and
+that every death which takes place is in fact a violent
+death inflicted by the hand of a human enemy, though in
+many cases the foe is invisible and works his fell purpose not
+by a sword or a spear but by magic. Thus the Abipones,
+a now extinct tribe of horse Indians in Paraguay, used
+to allege that they would be immortal and that none
+of them would ever die if only the Spaniards and the
+sorcerers could be banished from America; for they were
+in the habit of attributing every death, whatever its
+cause, either to the baleful arts of sorcerers or to the
+firearms of the Spaniards. Even if a man died riddled
+with wounds, with his bones smashed, or through the
+exhaustion of old age, these Indians would all deny that
+the wounds or old age was the cause of his death; they
+firmly believed that the death was brought about by magic,
+and they would make careful enquiries to discover the sorcerer
+who had cast the fatal spell on their comrade. The relations
+of the deceased would move every stone to detect and punish
+the culprit; and they imagined that they could do this by
+cutting out the heart and tongue of the dead man and
+throwing them to a dog to be devoured. They thought that
+this in some way killed the wicked magician who had killed
+their friend. For example, it happened that in a squabble
+between two men about a horse a third man who tried to
+make peace between the disputants was mortally wounded
+by their spears and died in a few days. To us it might
+seem obvious that the peacemaker was killed by the spear-wounds
+which he had received, but none of the Abipones
+would admit such a thing for a moment. They stoutly
+affirmed that their comrade had been done to death by the
+magical arts of some person unknown, and their suspicions
+fell on a certain old woman, known to be a witch, to whom
+the deceased had lately refused to give a water-melon, and
+who out of spite had killed him by her spells, though he appeared
+to the European eye to have died of a spear-wound.<a id="footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>[pg 35]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Araucanians.</p>
+
+<p>Similarly the warlike Araucanians of Chili are said to
+disbelieve in natural death. Even if a man dies peaceably
+at the age of a hundred, they still think that he has been
+bewitched by an enemy. A diviner or medicine-man is
+consulted in order to discover the culprit. Some of these
+wizards enjoy a great reputation and the Indians will send
+a hundred miles or more to get the opinion of an eminent
+member of the profession. In such cases they submit to him
+some of the remains of the dead man, for example, his eyebrows,
+his nails, his tongue, or the soles of his feet, and from
+an examination of these relics the man of skill pronounces
+on the author of the death. The person whom he accuses
+is hunted down and killed, sometimes by fire, amid the yells
+of an enraged crowd.<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Baka&iuml;ri.</p>
+
+<p>When the eminent German anthropologist was questioning
+a Baka&iuml;ri Indian of Brazil as to the language of his
+tribe, he gave the sentence, "Every man must die" to be
+translated into the Baka&iuml;ri language. To his astonishment,
+the Indian remained long silent. The same long pause
+always occurred when an abstract proposition, with which
+he was unfamiliar, was put before the Indian for translation
+into his native tongue. On the present occasion the
+enquirer learned that the Indian has no idea of necessity in
+the abstract, and in particular he has no conception at all
+of the necessity of death. The cause of death, in his opinion,
+is invariably an ill turn done by somebody to the deceased.
+If there were only good men in the world, he thinks that
+there would be neither sickness nor death. He knows
+nothing about a natural end of the vital process; he believes
+that all sickness and disease are the effects of witchcraft.<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Indians of Guiana in sorcery as the cause of
+sickness and death.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of the Indians of Guiana, an English missionary,
+who knew them well, says that the worst
+feature in their character is their proneness to blood
+revenge, "by which a succession of retaliatory murders may
+be kept up for a long time. It is closely connected with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>[pg 36]</span>
+their system of sorcery, which we shall presently consider.
+A person dies,&mdash;and it is supposed that an enemy has
+secured the agency of an evil spirit to compass his death.
+Some sorcerer, employed by the friends of the deceased for
+that purpose, pretends by his incantations to discover the
+guilty individual or family, or at any rate to indicate the
+quarter where they dwell. A near relative of the deceased
+is then charged with the work of vengeance. He becomes
+a <i>kanaima</i>, or is supposed to be possessed by the destroying
+spirit so called, and has to live apart, according to strict
+rule, and submit to many privations, until the deed of blood
+be accomplished. If the supposed offender cannot be slain,
+some innocent member of his family&mdash;man, woman, or little
+child&mdash;must suffer instead."<a id="footnotetag10" name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a> The same writer tells us
+that these Indians of Guiana attribute sickness and death
+directly to the agency of certain evil spirits called <i>yauhahu</i>,
+who delight in inflicting miseries upon mankind. Pain, in
+the language of the Arawaks (one of the best-known tribes
+of Guiana), is called <i>yauhahu simaira</i> or "the evil spirit's
+arrow."<a id="footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> It is these evil spirits whom wicked sorcerers
+employ to accomplish their fell purpose. Thus while the
+demon is the direct cause of sickness and death, the sorcerer
+who uses him as his tool is the indirect cause. The demon
+is thought to do his work by inserting some alien substance
+into the body of the sufferer, and a medicine-man is
+employed to extract it by chanting an invocation to the
+maleficent spirit, shaking his rattle, and sucking the part of
+the patient's frame in which the cause of the malady is
+imagined to reside. "After many ceremonies he will produce
+from his mouth some strange substance, such as a
+thorn or gravel-stone, a fish-bone or bird's claw, a snake's
+tooth, or a piece of wire, which some malicious <i>yauhahu</i> is
+supposed to have inserted in the affected part. As soon as
+the patient fancies himself rid of this cause of his illness his
+recovery is generally rapid, and the fame of the sorcerer
+greatly increased. Should death, however, ensue, the blame
+is laid upon the evil spirit whose power and malignity have
+prevailed over the counteracting charms. Some rival sorcerer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>[pg 37]</span>
+will at times come in for a share of the blame, whom the
+sufferer has unhappily made his enemy, and who is supposed
+to have employed the <i>yauhahu</i> in destroying him. The
+sorcerers being supposed to have the power of causing, as
+well as of curing diseases, are much dreaded by the common
+people, who never wilfully offend them. So deeply rooted
+in the Indian's bosom is this belief concerning the origin of
+diseases, that they have little idea of sickness arising from
+other causes. Death may arise from a wound or a contusion,
+or be brought on by want of food, but in other cases it
+is the work of the <i>yauhahu</i>"<a id="footnotetag12" name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a> or evil spirit.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Some deaths attributed to sorcery and others to evil spirits:
+practical consequence of this distinction.</p>
+
+<p>In this account it is to be observed that while all
+natural deaths from sickness and disease are attributed to
+the direct action of evil spirits, only some of them are
+attributed to the indirect action of sorcerers. The practical
+consequences of this theoretical distinction are very important.
+For whereas death by sorcery must, in the
+opinion of savages, be avenged by killing the supposed
+sorcerer, death by the action of a demon cannot be
+so avenged; for how are you to get at the demon?
+Hence, while every death by sorcery involves, theoretically
+at least, another death by violence, death by a
+demon involves no such practical consequence. So far,
+therefore, the faith in sorcery is far more murderous than
+the faith in demons. This practical distinction is clearly
+recognised by these Indians of Guiana; for another writer,
+who laboured among them as a missionary, tells us
+that when a person dies a natural death, the medicine-man
+is called upon to decide whether he perished through
+the agency of a demon or the agency of a sorcerer. If he
+decides that the deceased died through the malice of an evil
+spirit, the body is quietly buried, and no more is thought
+of the matter. But if the wizard declares that the cause of
+death was sorcery, the corpse is closely inspected, and if a
+blue mark is discovered, it is pointed out as the spot where
+the invisible poisoned arrow, discharged by the sorcerer,
+entered the man. The next thing is to detect the culprit.
+For this purpose a pot containing a decoction of leaves
+is set to boil on a fire. When it begins to boil over, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>[pg 38]</span>
+side on which the scum first falls is the quarter in which
+the supposed murderer is to be sought. A consultation
+is then held: the guilt is laid on some individual, and
+one of the nearest relations of the deceased is charged with
+the duty of finding and killing him. If the imaginary
+culprit cannot be found, any other member of his family
+may be slain in his stead. "It is not difficult to conceive,"
+adds the writer, "how, under such circumstances, no man's
+life is secure; whilst these by no means unfrequent murders
+must greatly tend to diminish the number of the natives."<a id="footnotetag13" name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Among the Indians of Guiana death is oftener attributed to
+sorcery than to demons.</p>
+
+<p>However, it would seem that among the Indians of
+Guiana sickness and death are oftener ascribed to the agency
+of sorcerers than to the agency of demons acting alone. For
+another high authority on these Indians, Sir Everard F. im
+Thurn, tells us that "every death, every illness, is regarded
+not as the result of natural law, but as the work of a <i>kenaima</i>"
+or sorcerer. "Often indeed," he adds, "the survivors or the
+relatives of the invalid do not know to whom to attribute
+the deed, which therefore perforce remains unpunished; but
+often, again, there is real or fancied reason to fix on some
+one as the <i>kenaima</i>, and then the nearest relative of the
+injured individual devotes himself to retaliate. Strange
+ceremonies are sometimes observed in order to discover the
+secret <i>kenaima</i>. Richard Schomburgk describes a striking
+instance of this. A Macusi boy had died a natural death,
+and his relatives endeavoured to discover the quarter to
+which the <i>kenaima</i> who was supposed to have slain him
+belonged. Raising a terrible and monotonous dirge, they
+carried the body to an open piece of ground, and there
+formed a circle round it, while the father, cutting from the
+corpse both the thumbs and little fingers, both the great and
+the little toes, and a piece of each heel, threw these pieces into
+a new pot, which had been filled with water. A fire was
+kindled, and on this the pot was placed. When the water
+began to boil, according to the side on which one of the
+pieces was first thrown out from the pot by the bubbling of
+the water, in that direction would the <i>kenaima</i> be. In thus
+looking round to see who did the deed, the Indian thinks it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>[pg 39]</span>
+by no means necessary to fix on anyone who has been with
+or near the injured man. The <i>kenaima</i> is supposed to have
+done the deed, not necessarily in person, but probably in
+spirit."<a id="footnotetag14" name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a> For these Indians believe that each individual man
+has a body and a spirit within it, and that sorcerers can
+despatch their spirits out of their bodies to harm people at a
+distance. It is not always in an invisible form that these spirits
+of sorcerers are supposed to roam on their errands of mischief.
+The wizard can put his spirit into the shape of an animal,
+such as a jaguar, a serpent, a sting-ray, a bird, an insect,
+or anything else he pleases. Hence when an Indian is
+attacked by a wild beast, he thinks that his real foe is not
+the animal, but the sorcerer who has transformed himself
+into it. Curiously enough they look upon some small harmless
+birds in the same light. One little bird, in particular,
+which flits across the savannahs with a peculiar shrill whistle
+at morning and evening, is regarded by the Indians with
+especial fear as a transformed sorcerer. They think that
+for every one of these birds that they shoot they have an
+enemy the less, and they burn its little body, taking great
+care that not even a single feather escapes to be blown about
+by the wind. On a windy day a dozen men and women have
+been seen chasing the floating feathers of these birds about
+the savannah in order utterly to extinguish the imaginary
+wizard. Even the foreign substance, the stick, bone, or
+whatever it is, which the good medicine-man pretends to
+suck from the body of the sufferer "is often, if not always,
+regarded not simply as a natural body, but as the materialised
+form of a hostile spirit."<a id="footnotetag15" name="footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Tinneh Indians in sorcery as the cause of
+death.</p>
+
+<p>Beliefs and practices of the same general character are
+reported to have formerly prevailed among the Tinneh or
+D&eacute;n&eacute; Indians of North-west America. When any beloved
+or influential person died, nobody, we are told, would think
+of attributing the death to natural causes; it was assumed
+that the demise was an effect of sorcery, and the only difficulty
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40"></a>[pg 40]</span>
+was to ascertain the culprit. For that purpose the services
+of a shaman were employed. Rigged out in all his finery
+he would dance and sing, then suddenly fall down and feign
+death or sleep. On awaking from the apparent trance he
+would denounce the sorcerer who had killed the deceased by
+his magic art, and the denunciation generally proved the
+death-warrant of the accused.<a id="footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href="#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Australian aborigines in sorcery as the cause
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>Again, similar beliefs and customs in regard to what we
+should call natural death appear to have prevailed universally
+amongst the aborigines of Australia, and to have contributed
+very materially to thin the population. On this subject I
+will quote the words of an observer. His remarks apply to
+the Australian aborigines in general but to the tribes of
+Victoria in particular. He says: "The natives are much
+more numerous in some parts of Australia than they are in
+others, but nowhere is the country thickly peopled; some
+dire disease occasionally breaks out among the natives, and
+carries off large numbers.... But there are two other
+causes which, in my opinion, principally account for their
+paucity of numbers. The first is that infanticide is universally
+practised; the second, that a belief exists that no
+one can die a natural death. Thus, if an individual of a
+certain tribe dies, his relatives consider that his death has
+been caused by sorcery on the part of another tribe. The
+deceased's sons, or nearest relatives, therefore start off on a
+<i>bucceening</i> or murdering expedition. If the deceased is
+buried, a fly or a beetle is put into the grave, and the
+direction in which the insect wings its way when released is
+the one the avengers take. If the body is burnt, the whereabouts
+of the offending parties is indicated by the direction
+of the smoke. The first unfortunates fallen in with are
+generally watched until they encamp for the night; when
+they are buried in sleep, the murderers steal quietly up until
+they are within a yard or two of their victims, rush suddenly
+upon and butcher them. On these occasions they always
+abstract the kidney-fat, and also take off a piece of the skin
+of the thigh. These are carried home as trophies, as the
+American Indians take the scalp. The murderers anoint
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>[pg 41]</span>
+their bodies with the fat of their victims, thinking that by
+that process the strength of the deceased enters into them.
+Sometimes it happens that the <i>bucceening</i> party come suddenly
+upon a man of a strange tribe in a tree hunting opossums;
+he is immediately speared, and left weltering in his blood at
+the foot of the tree. The relatives of the murdered man at
+once proceed to retaliate; and thus a constant and never-ending
+series of murders is always going on.... I do not
+mean to assert that for every man that dies or is killed
+another is murdered; for it often happens that the deceased
+has no sons or relatives who care about avenging his death.
+At other times a <i>bucceening</i> party will return without having
+met with any one; then, again, they are sometimes repelled
+by those they attack."<a id="footnotetag17" name="footnotetag17"></a><a href="#footnote17"><sup>17</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the natives of Western Australia in sorcery as a
+cause of death. Beliefs of the tribes of Victoria and South Australia.</p>
+
+<p>Again, speaking of the tribes of Western Australia,
+Sir George Grey tells us that "the natives do not
+allow that there is such a thing as a death from natural
+causes; they believe, that were it not for murderers or
+the malignity of sorcerers, they might live for ever; hence,
+when a native dies from the effect of an accident, or
+from some natural cause, they use a variety of superstitious
+ceremonies, to ascertain in what direction the sorcerer
+lives, whose evil practices have brought about the death
+of their relative; this point being satisfactorily settled
+by friendly sorcerers, they then attach the crime to some
+individual, and the funeral obsequies are scarcely concluded,
+ere they start to revenge their supposed wrongs."<a id="footnotetag18" name="footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18"><sup>18</sup></a>
+Again, speaking of the Watch-an-die tribe of Western
+Australia, another writer tells us that they "possess the
+comfortable assurance that nearly all diseases, and consequently
+deaths, are caused by the enchantments of hostile
+tribes, and that were it not for the malevolence of their
+enemies they would (with a few exceptions) live for ever.
+Consequently, on the first approach of sickness their first
+endeavour is to ascertain whether the <i>boollia</i> [magic] of their
+own tribe is not sufficiently potent to counteract that of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42"></a>[pg 42]</span>
+their foes. Should the patient recover, they are, of course,
+proud of the superiority of their enchantment over that of
+their enemies: but should the <i>boollia</i> [magical influence]
+within the sick man prove stronger than their own, as there
+is no help for it, he must die, the utmost they can do in
+this case is to revenge his death."<a id="footnotetag19" name="footnotetag19"></a><a href="#footnote19"><sup>19</sup></a> But the same writer
+qualifies this general statement as follows: "It is not
+true," he says, "that the New Hollanders impute <i>all</i>
+natural deaths to the <i>boollia</i> [magic] of inimical tribes,
+for in most cases of persons wasting visibly away before
+death, they do not entertain the notion. It is chiefly in
+cases of sudden death, or when the body of the deceased
+is fat and in good condition, that this belief prevails, and it
+is only in such contingencies that it becomes an imperative
+duty to have revenge."<a id="footnotetag20" name="footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20"><sup>20</sup></a> Similarly, speaking of the tribes
+of Victoria in the early days of European settlement among
+them, the experienced observer Mr. James Dawson says that
+"natural deaths are generally&mdash;but not always&mdash;attributed
+to the malevolence and the spells of an enemy belonging to
+another tribe."<a id="footnotetag21" name="footnotetag21"></a><a href="#footnote21"><sup>21</sup></a> Again, with regard to the Encounter Bay
+tribe of South Australia we read that "there are but few
+diseases which they regard as the consequences of natural
+causes; in general they consider them the effects of enchantment,
+and produced by sorcerers."<a id="footnotetag22" name="footnotetag22"></a><a href="#footnote22"><sup>22</sup></a> Similarly of the Port
+Lincoln tribes in South Australia it is recorded that "in all
+cases of death that do not arise from old age, wounds, or
+other equally palpable causes, the natives suspect that unfair
+means have been practised; and even where the cause
+of death is sufficiently plain, they sometimes will not content
+themselves with it, but have recourse to an imaginary
+one, as the following case will prove:&mdash;A woman had
+been bitten by a black snake, across the thumb, in clearing
+out a well; she began to swell directly, and was a corpse
+in twenty-four hours; yet, another woman who had been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>[pg 43]</span>
+present when the accident occurred, stated that the deceased
+had named a certain native as having caused her death.
+Upon this statement, which was in their opinion corroborated
+by the circumstance that the snake had drawn no blood
+from the deceased, her husband and other friends had a fight
+with the accused party and his friends; a reconciliation,
+however, took place afterwards, and it was admitted on the
+part of the aggressors that they had been in error with
+regard to the guilty individual; but nowise more satisfied
+as to the bite of the snake being the true cause of the
+woman's death, another party was now suddenly discovered
+to be the real offender, and accordingly war was made upon
+him and his partisans, till at last the matter was dropped
+and forgotten. From this case, as well as from frequent
+occurrences of a similar nature, it appears evident that thirst
+for revenge has quite as great a share in these foul accusations
+as superstition."<a id="footnotetag23" name="footnotetag23"></a><a href="#footnote23"><sup>23</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Other testimonies as to the belief of the natives of South
+Australia and Victoria.</p>
+
+<p>However, other experienced observers of the Australian
+aborigines admit no such limitations and exceptions
+to the native theory that death is an effect of sorcery.
+Thus in regard to the Narrinyeri tribe of South Australia
+the Rev. George Taplin, who knew them intimately for
+years, says that "no native regards death as natural, but
+always as the result of sorcery."<a id="footnotetag24" name="footnotetag24"></a><a href="#footnote24"><sup>24</sup></a> Again, to quote Mr. R.
+Brough Smyth, who has collected much information on the
+tribes of Victoria: "Mr. Daniel Bunce, an intelligent observer,
+and a gentleman well acquainted with the habits of
+the blacks, says that no tribe that he has ever met with
+believes in the possibility of a man dying a natural death.
+If a man is taken ill, it is at once assumed that some
+member of a hostile tribe has stolen some of his hair. This
+is quite enough to cause serious illness. If the man continues
+sick and gets worse, it is assumed that the hair has been
+burnt by his enemy. Such an act, they say, is sufficient to
+imperil his life. If the man dies, it is assumed that the
+thief has choked his victim and taken away his kidney-fat.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>[pg 44]</span>
+When the grave is being dug, one or more of the older men&mdash;generally
+doctors or conjurors (<i>Buk-na-look</i>)&mdash;stand by
+and attentively watch the laborers; and if an insect is
+thrown out of the ground, these old men observe the
+direction which it takes, and having determined the line,
+two of the young men, relations of the deceased, are despatched
+in the path indicated, with instructions to kill the
+first native they meet, who they are assured and believe is
+the person directly chargeable with the crime of causing the
+death of their relative. Mr. John Green says that the men
+of the Yarra tribe firmly believe that no one ever dies a
+natural death. A man or a woman dies because of the
+wicked arts practised by some member of a hostile tribe;
+and they discover the direction in which to search for the
+slayer by the movements of a lizard which is seen immediately
+after the corpse is interred."<a id="footnotetag25" name="footnotetag25"></a><a href="#footnote25"><sup>25</sup></a> Again, speaking of the
+aborigines of Victoria, another writer observes: "All deaths
+from natural causes are attributed to the machinations of
+enemies, who are supposed to have sought for and burned
+the excrement of the intended victim, which, according to
+the general belief, causes a gradual wasting away. The
+relatives, therefore, watch the struggling feet of the dying
+person, as they point in the direction whence the injury is
+thought to come, and serve as a guide to the spot where it
+should be avenged. This is the duty of the nearest male
+relative; should he fail in its execution, it will ever be to
+him a reproach, although other relatives may have avenged
+the death. If the deceased were a chief, then the duty
+devolves upon the tribe. Chosen men are sent in the
+direction indicated, who kill the first persons they meet,
+whether men, women, or children; and the more lives that
+are sacrificed, the greater is the honour to the dead."<a id="footnotetag26" name="footnotetag26"></a><a href="#footnote26"><sup>26</sup></a>
+Again, in his account of the Kurnai tribe of Victoria the
+late Dr. A. W. Howitt remarks: "It is not difficult to see
+how, among savages, who have no knowledge of the real
+causes of diseases which are the common lot of humanity,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>[pg 45]</span>
+the very suspicion even of such a thing as death from
+disease should be unknown. Death by accident they can
+imagine; death by violence they can imagine; but I
+question if they can, in their savage condition, imagine
+death by mere disease. Rheumatism is believed to be
+produced by the machinations of some enemy. Seeing a
+Tatungolung very lame, I asked him what was the matter?
+He said, 'Some fellow has put <i>bottle</i> in my foot.' I asked
+him to let me see it. I found he was probably suffering
+from acute rheumatism. He explained that some enemy
+must have found his foot track, and have buried in it a
+piece of broken bottle. The magic influence, he believed,
+caused it to enter his foot.... Phthisis, pneumonia, bowel
+complaints, and insanity are supposed to be produced by an
+evil spirit&mdash;Brewin&mdash;'who is like the wind,' and who, entering
+his victims, can only be expelled by suitable incantations.... Thus
+the belief arises that death occurs only from
+accident, open violence, or secret magic; and, naturally, that
+the latter can only be met by counter-charms."<a id="footnotetag27" name="footnotetag27"></a><a href="#footnote27"><sup>27</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the aborigines of New South Wales in sorcery as the
+cause of sickness and death.</p>
+
+<p>The beliefs and practices of the aborigines of New
+South Wales in respect of death were similar. Thus we
+are told by a well-informed writer that "the natives do not
+believe in death from natural causes; therefore all sickness
+is attributed to the agency of sorcery, and counter charms
+are used to destroy its effect.... As a man's death is
+never supposed to have occurred naturally, except as the
+result of accident, or from a wound in battle, the first thing
+to be done when a death occurs is to endeavour to find out
+the person whose spells have brought about the calamity.
+In the Wathi-Wathi tribe the corpse is asked by each
+relative in succession to signify by some sign the person
+who has caused his death. Not receiving an answer, they
+watch in which direction a bird flies, after having passed
+over the deceased. This is considered an indication that
+the sorcerer is to be found in that direction. Sometimes
+the nearest relative sleeps with his head on the corpse, which
+causes him, they think, to dream of the murderer. There is,
+however, a good deal of uncertainty about the proceedings,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46"></a>[pg 46]</span>
+which seldom result in more than a great display of wrath,
+and of vowing of vengeance against some member of a
+neighbouring tribe. Unfortunately this is not always the
+case, the man who is supposed to have exercised the death-spell
+being sometimes waylaid and murdered in a most cruel
+manner."<a id="footnotetag28" name="footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28"><sup>28</sup></a> With regard to the great Kamilaroi tribe of
+New South Wales we read that "in some parts of the
+country a belief prevails that death, through disease, is, in
+many, if not in all cases, the result of an enemy's malice.
+It is a common saying, when illness or death comes, that
+some one has thrown his belt (<i>boor</i>) at the victim. There
+are various modes of fixing upon the murderer. One is to
+let an insect fly from the body of the deceased and see
+towards whom it goes. The person thus singled out is
+doomed."<a id="footnotetag29" name="footnotetag29"></a><a href="#footnote29"><sup>29</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the aborigines of Central Australia in sorcery as
+the cause of death.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of the tribes of Central Australia, Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen observe that "in the matter of morality
+their code differs radically from ours, but it cannot be denied
+that their conduct is governed by it, and that any known
+breaches are dealt with both surely and severely. In very
+many cases there takes place what the white man, not
+seeing beneath the surface, not unnaturally describes as
+secret murder, but, in reality, revolting though such slaughter
+may be to our minds at the present day, it is simply exactly
+on a par with the treatment accorded to witches not so very
+long ago in European countries. Every case of such secret
+murder, when one or more men stealthily stalk their prey
+with the object of killing him, is in reality the exacting of
+a life for a life, the accused person being indicated by the
+so-called medicine-man as one who has brought about the
+death of another man by magic, and whose life must therefore
+be forfeited. It need hardly be pointed out what a
+potent element this custom has been in keeping down the
+numbers of the tribe; no such thing as natural death is
+realised by the native; a man who dies has of necessity
+been killed by some other man, or perhaps even by a
+woman, and sooner or later that man or woman will be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>[pg 47]</span>
+attacked. In the normal condition of the tribe every death
+meant the killing of another individual."<a id="footnotetag30" name="footnotetag30"></a><a href="#footnote30"><sup>30</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the natives of the Torres Straits Islands and New
+Guinea in sorcery as the cause of death.</p>
+
+<p>Passing from Australia to other savage lands we learn
+that according to the belief of the Torres Straits Islanders
+all sickness and death were due to sorcery.<a id="footnotetag31" name="footnotetag31"></a><a href="#footnote31"><sup>31</sup></a> The natives of
+Mowat or Mawatta in British New Guinea "do not believe
+in a natural death, but attribute even the decease of an old
+man to the agency of some enemy known or unknown."<a id="footnotetag32" name="footnotetag32"></a><a href="#footnote32"><sup>32</sup></a>
+In the opinion of the tribes about Hood Peninsula in British
+New Guinea no one dies a natural death. Every such death
+is caused by the evil magic either of a living sorcerer or of a
+dead relation.<a id="footnotetag33" name="footnotetag33"></a><a href="#footnote33"><sup>33</sup></a> Of the Roro-speaking tribes of British New
+Guinea Dr. Seligmann writes that "except in the case of old
+folk, death is not admitted to occur without some obvious
+cause such as a spear-thrust. Therefore when vigorous and
+active members of the community die, it becomes necessary
+to explain their fate, and such deaths are firmly believed to
+be produced by sorcery. Indeed, as far as I have been able to
+ascertain, the Papuasian of this district regards the existence
+of sorcery, not, as has been alleged, as a particularly terrifying
+and horrible affair, but as a necessary and inevitable
+condition of existence in the world as he knows it."<a id="footnotetag34" name="footnotetag34"></a><a href="#footnote34"><sup>34</sup></a>
+Amongst the Yabim of German New Guinea "every case
+of death, even though it should happen accidentally, as by
+the fall of a tree or the bite of a shark, is laid at the door of
+the sorcerers. They are blamed even for the death of a child.
+If it is said that a little child never hurt anybody and therefore
+cannot have an enemy, the reply is that the intention
+was to injure the mother, and that the malady had been
+transferred to the infant through its mother's milk."<a id="footnotetag35" name="footnotetag35"></a><a href="#footnote35"><sup>35</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id="page48"></a>[pg 48]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Melanesians in sorcery as the cause of sickness
+and death.</p>
+
+<p>Again, in the island of Malo, one of the New Hebrides,
+a Catholic missionary reports that according to a belief
+deeply implanted in the native mind every disease is the
+effect of witchcraft, and that nobody dies a natural death
+but only as a consequence of violence, poison, or sorcery.<a id="footnotetag36" name="footnotetag36"></a><a href="#footnote36"><sup>36</sup></a>
+Similarly in New Georgia, one of the Solomon Islands, when a
+person is sick, the natives think that he must be bewitched by
+a man or woman, for in their opinion nobody can be sick or
+die unless he is bewitched; what we call natural sickness
+and death are impossible. In case of illness suspicion falls
+on some one who is supposed to have buried a charmed
+object with intent to injure the sufferer.<a id="footnotetag37" name="footnotetag37"></a><a href="#footnote37"><sup>37</sup></a> Of the Melanesians
+who inhabit the coast of the Gazelle Peninsula in New
+Britain it is said that all deaths by sickness or disease are
+attributed by them to the witchcraft of a sorcerer, and a
+diviner is called in to ascertain the culprit who by his evil
+magic has destroyed their friends.<a id="footnotetag38" name="footnotetag38"></a><a href="#footnote38"><sup>38</sup></a> "Amongst the Melanesians
+few, if any, are believed to die from natural causes
+only; if they are not killed in war, they are supposed to
+die from the effects of witchcraft or magic. Whenever any
+one was sick, his friends made anxious inquiries as to the
+person who had bewitched (<i>agara'd</i>) him. Some one would
+generally be found to admit that he had buried some portion
+of food or something belonging to the sick man, which had
+caused his illness. The friends would pay him to dig it up,
+and after that the patient would generally get well. If,
+however, he did not recover, it was assumed that some other
+person had also <i>agara'd</i> him."<a id="footnotetag39" name="footnotetag39"></a><a href="#footnote39"><sup>39</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The belief of the Malagasy in sorcery as a cause of death.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of the Malagasy a Catholic missionary tells us
+that in Madagascar nobody dies a natural death. With the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>[pg 49]</span>
+possible exception of centenarians everybody is supposed to
+die the victim of the sorcerer's diabolic art. If a relation of
+yours dies, the people comfort you by saying, "Cursed be
+the sorcerer who caused his death!" If your horse falls
+down a precipice and breaks its back, the accident has
+been caused by the malicious look of a sorcerer. If your
+dog dies of hydrophobia or your horse of a carbuncle, the
+cause is still the same. If you catch a fever in a district
+where malaria abounds, the malady is still ascribed to the
+art of the sorcerer, who has insinuated some deadly substances
+into your body.<a id="footnotetag40" name="footnotetag40"></a><a href="#footnote40"><sup>40</sup></a> Again, speaking of the Sakalava,
+a tribe in Madagascar, an eminent French authority on the
+island observes: "They have such a faith in the power of
+talismans that they even ascribe to them the power of killing
+their enemies. When they speak of poisoning, they do not
+allude, as many Europeans wrongly suppose, to death by
+vegetable or mineral poisons; the reference is to charms or
+spells. They often throw under the bed of an enemy an
+<i>ahouli</i> [talisman], praying it to kill him, and they are persuaded
+that sooner or later their wish will be accomplished.
+I have often been present at bloody vendettas which had no
+other origin but this. The Sakalava think that a great part
+of the population dies of poison in this way. In their
+opinion, only old people who have attained the extreme
+limits of human longevity die a natural death."<a id="footnotetag41" name="footnotetag41"></a><a href="#footnote41"><sup>41</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of African tribes in sorcery as the cause of sickness
+and death.</p>
+
+<p>In Africa similar beliefs are widely spread and lead,
+as elsewhere, to fatal consequences. Thus the Kagoro
+of Northern Nigeria refuse to believe in death from
+natural causes; all illnesses and deaths, in their opinion,
+are brought about by black magic, however old and
+decrepit the deceased may have been. They explain sickness
+by saying that a man's soul wanders from his body
+in sleep and may then be caught, detained, and even beaten
+with a stick by some evil-wisher; whenever that happens,
+the man naturally falls ill. Sometimes an enemy will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>[pg 50]</span>
+abstract the patient's liver by magic and carry it away to a
+cave in a sacred grove, where he will devour it in company
+with other wicked sorcerers. A witch-doctor is called in to
+detect the culprit, and whomever he denounces is shut up in
+a room, where a fire is kindled and pepper thrown into it;
+and there he is kept in the fumes of the burning pepper till
+he confesses his guilt and returns the stolen liver, upon
+which of course the sick man recovers. But should the
+patient die, the miscreant who did him to death by kidnapping
+his soul or his liver will be sold as a slave or
+choked.<a id="footnotetag42" name="footnotetag42"></a><a href="#footnote42"><sup>42</sup></a> In like manner the Bakerewe, who inhabit the
+largest island in the Victoria Nyanza lake, believe that all
+deaths and all ailments, however trivial, are the effect of
+witchcraft; and the person, generally an old woman, whom
+the witch-doctor accuses of having cast the spell on the
+patient is tied up, severely beaten, or stabbed to death
+on the spot.<a id="footnotetag43" name="footnotetag43"></a><a href="#footnote43"><sup>43</sup></a> Again, we are told that "the peoples
+of the Congo do not believe in a natural death, not
+even when it happens through drowning or any other
+accident. Whoever dies is the victim of witchcraft or of a
+spell. His soul has been eaten. He must be avenged by
+the punishment of the person who has committed the crime."
+Accordingly when a death has taken place, the medicine-man
+is sent for to discover the criminal. He pretends to be
+possessed by a spirit and in this state he names the wretch
+who has caused the death by sorcery. The accused has to
+submit to the poison ordeal by drinking a decoction of the
+red bark of the <i>Erythrophloeum guiniense</i>. If he vomits up
+the poison, he is innocent; but if he fails to do so, the
+infuriated crowd rushes on him and despatches him with
+knives and clubs. The family of the supposed culprit has
+moreover to pay an indemnity to the family of the supposed
+victim.<a id="footnotetag44" name="footnotetag44"></a><a href="#footnote44"><sup>44</sup></a> "Death, in the opinion of the natives, is never due
+to a natural cause. It is always the result either of a crime
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>[pg 51]</span>
+or of sorcery, and is followed by the poison ordeal, which has
+to be undergone by an innocent person whom the fetish-man
+accuses from selfish motives."<a id="footnotetag45" name="footnotetag45"></a><a href="#footnote45"><sup>45</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Effect of such beliefs in thinning the population by causing
+multitudes to die for the imaginary crime of sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>Evidence of the same sort could be multiplied for West
+Africa, where the fear of sorcery is rampant.<a id="footnotetag46" name="footnotetag46"></a><a href="#footnote46"><sup>46</sup></a> But without
+going into further details, I wish to point out the disastrous
+effects which here, as elsewhere, this theory of death has
+produced upon the population. For when a death from
+natural causes takes place, the author of the death being
+of course unknown, suspicion often falls on a number of
+people, all of whom are obliged to submit to the poison
+ordeal in order to prove their innocence, with the result
+that some or possibly all of them perish. A very experienced
+American missionary in West Africa, the Rev.
+R. H. Nassau, the friend of the late Miss Mary H. Kingsley,
+tells us that for every person who dies a natural death at
+least one, and often ten or more have been executed on an
+accusation of witchcraft.<a id="footnotetag47" name="footnotetag47"></a><a href="#footnote47"><sup>47</sup></a> Andrew Battel, a native of Essex,
+who lived in Angola for many years at the end of the
+sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth century, informs
+us that "in this country none on any account dieth, but they
+kill another for him: for they believe they die not their own
+natural death, but that some other has bewitched them to
+death. And all those are brought in by the friends of the
+dead whom they suspect; so that there many times come
+five hundred men and women to take the drink, made of the
+foresaid root <i>imbando</i>. They are brought all to the high-street
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>[pg 52]</span>
+or market-place, and there the master of the <i>imbando</i>
+sits with his water, and gives every one a cup of water by
+one measure; and they are commanded to walk in a certain
+place till they make water, and then they are free. But he
+that cannot urine presently falls down, and all the people,
+great and small, fall upon him with their knives, and beat
+and cut him into pieces. But I think the witch that gives
+the water is partial, and gives to him whose death is desired
+the strongest water, but no man of the bye-standers can
+perceive it. This is done in the town of Longo, almost every
+week throughout the year."<a id="footnotetag48" name="footnotetag48"></a><a href="#footnote48"><sup>48</sup></a> A French official tells us that
+among the Neyaux of the Ivory Coast similar beliefs and
+practices were visibly depopulating the country, every single
+natural death causing the death of four or five persons by
+the poison ordeal, which consisted in drinking the decoction
+of a red bark called by the natives <i>boduru</i>. At the death of
+a chief fifteen men and women perished in this way. The
+French Government had great difficulty in suppressing the
+ordeal; for the deluded natives firmly believed in the justice
+of the test and therefore submitted to it willingly in the
+full consciousness of their innocence.<a id="footnotetag49" name="footnotetag49"></a><a href="#footnote49"><sup>49</sup></a> In the neighbourhood
+of Calabar the poison ordeal, which here consists
+in drinking a decoction of a certain bean, the <i>Physostigma
+venenosum</i> of botanists, has had similar disastrous results,
+as we learn from the testimony of a missionary, the
+Rev. Hugh Goldie. He tells us that the people have
+firm faith in the ordeal and therefore not only accept
+it readily but appeal to it, convinced that it will demonstrate
+their innocence. A small tribe named Uwet in the hill-country
+of Calabar almost swept itself off the face of the
+earth by its constant use of the ordeal. On one occasion
+the whole population drank the poison to prove themselves
+pure, as they said; about half perished, "and the remnant,"
+says Mr. Goldie, "still continuing their superstitious practice,
+must soon become extinct"<a id="footnotetag50" name="footnotetag50"></a><a href="#footnote50"><sup>50</sup></a> These words were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>[pg 53]</span>
+written a good many years ago, and it is probable that by this
+time these poor fanatics have actually succeeded in exterminating
+themselves. So fatal may be the practical consequences
+of a purely speculative error; for it is to be
+remembered that these disasters flow directly from a mistaken
+theory of death.</p>
+
+<p class="side">General conclusion as to the belief in sorcery as the great
+cause of death.</p>
+
+<p>Much more evidence of the same kind could be adduced,
+but without pursuing the theme further I think we may
+lay it down as a general rule that at a certain stage
+of social and intellectual evolution men have believed
+themselves to be naturally immortal in this life and have
+regarded death by disease or even by accident or violence
+as an unnatural event which has been brought about
+by sorcery and which must be avenged by the death of the
+sorcerer. If that has been so, we seem bound to conclude
+that a belief in magic or sorcery has had a most potent
+influence in keeping down the numbers of savage tribes;
+since as a rule every natural death has entailed at least one,
+often several, sometimes many deaths by violence. This may
+help us to understand what an immense power for evil the
+world-wide faith in magic or sorcery has been among men.</p>
+
+<p class="side">But some savages have attributed death to other causes than
+sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>But even savages come in time to perceive that deaths
+are sometimes brought about by other causes than sorcery.
+We have seen that some of them admit extreme old age,
+accidents, and violence as causes of death which are independent
+of sorcery. The admission of these exceptions
+to the general rule certainly marks a stage of intellectual
+progress. I will give a few more instances of such admissions
+before concluding this part of my subject.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Some savages dissect the corpse to ascertain whether death
+was due to natural causes or to sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, certain savage tribes are reported to
+dissect the bodies of their dead in order to ascertain from
+an examination of the corpse whether the deceased died a
+natural death or perished by magic. This is reported by Mr.
+E. R. Smith concerning the Araucanians of Chili, who according
+to other writers, as we saw,<a id="footnotetag51" name="footnotetag51"></a><a href="#footnote51"><sup>51</sup></a> believe all deaths to be due
+to sorcery. Mr. Smith tells us that after death the services
+of the <i>machi</i> or medicine-man "are again required, especially
+if the deceased be a person of distinction. The body
+is dissected and examined. If the liver be found in a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54"></a>[pg 54]</span>
+healthy state, the death is attributed to natural causes; but
+if the liver prove to be inflamed, it is supposed to indicate
+the machinations of some evil-intentioned persons, and it
+rests with the medicine-man to discover the conspirator.
+This is accomplished by much the same means that were
+used to find out the nature of the disease. The gall is
+extracted, put in the magic drum, and after various incantations
+taken out and placed over the fire, in a pot carefully
+covered; if, after subjecting the gall to a certain amount of
+roasting, a stone is found in the bottom of the pot, it is
+declared to be the means by which death was produced.
+These stones, as well as the frogs, spiders, arrows, or whatever
+else may be extracted from the sick man, are called
+<i>Huecuvu</i>&mdash;the 'Evil One.' By aid of the <i>Huecuvu</i> the
+<i>machi</i> [medicine-man] throws himself into a trance, in which
+state he discovers and announces the person guilty of the
+death, and describes the manner in which it was produced."<a id="footnotetag52" name="footnotetag52"></a><a href="#footnote52"><sup>52</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Again, speaking of the Pahouins, a tribe of the Gaboon
+region in French Congo, a Catholic missionary writes thus:
+"It is so rare among the Pahouins that a death is considered
+natural! Scarcely has the deceased given up the
+ghost when the sorcerer appears on the scene. With three
+cuts of the knife, one transverse and two lateral, he dissects
+the breast of the corpse and turns down the skin on the
+face. Then he grabbles in the breast, examines the bowels
+attentively, marks the last muscular contractions, and thereupon
+pronounces whether the death was natural or not." If
+he decides that the death was due to sorcery, the suspected
+culprit has to submit to the poison ordeal in the usual
+manner to determine his guilt or innocence.<a id="footnotetag53" name="footnotetag53"></a><a href="#footnote53"><sup>53</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The possibility of natural death admitted by the
+Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p>Another savage people who have come to admit the
+possibility of merely natural death are the Melanesians of
+the New Hebrides and other parts of Central Melanesia.
+Amongst them "any sickness that is serious is believed to be
+brought about by ghosts or spirits; common complaints such
+as fever and ague are taken as coming in the course of nature.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>[pg 55]</span>
+To say that savages are never ill without supposing a supernatural
+cause is not true of Melanesians; they make up their
+minds as the sickness comes whether it is natural or not, and
+the more important the individual who is sick, the more likely
+his sickness is to be ascribed to the anger of a ghost whom
+he has offended, or to witchcraft. No great man would like
+to be told that he was ill by natural weakness or decay. The
+sickness is almost always believed to be caused by a ghost,
+not by a spirit.... Generally it is to the ghosts of the
+dead that sickness is ascribed in the eastern islands as well
+as in the western; recourse is had to them for aid in causing
+and removing sickness; and ghosts are believed to inflict
+sickness not only because some offence, such as a trespass,
+has been committed against them, or because one familiar
+with them has sought their aid with sacrifice and spells, but
+because there is a certain malignity in the feeling of all
+ghosts towards the living, who offend them by being alive."<a id="footnotetag54" name="footnotetag54"></a><a href="#footnote54"><sup>54</sup></a>
+From this account we learn, first, that the Melanesians admit
+some deaths by common diseases, such as fever and ague,
+to be natural; and, second, that they recognise ghosts and
+spirits as well as sorcerers and witches, among the causes of
+death; indeed they hold that ghosts are the commonest of
+all causes of sickness and death.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The possibility of natural death admitted by the Caffres of
+South Africa.</p>
+
+<p>The same causes of death are recognised also by the
+Caffres of South Africa, as we learn from Mr. Dudley Kidd,
+who tells us that according to the beliefs of the natives, "to
+start with, there is sickness which is supposed to be caused
+by the action of ancestral spirits or by fabulous monsters.
+Secondly, there is sickness which is caused by the magical
+practices of some evil person who is using witchcraft in secret.
+Thirdly, there is sickness which comes from neither of these
+causes, and remains unexplained. It is said to be 'only
+sickness, and nothing more.' This third form of sickness is,
+I think, the commonest. Yet most writers wholly ignore it,
+or deny its existence. It may happen that an attack of
+indigestion is one day attributed to the action of witch or
+wizard; another day the trouble is put down to the account
+of ancestral spirits; on a third occasion the people may be
+at a loss to account for it, and so may dismiss the problem
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a>[pg 56]</span>
+by saying that it is merely sickness. It is quite common
+to hear natives say that they are at a loss to account for
+some special case of illness. At first they thought it was
+caused by an angry ancestral spirit; but a great doctor has
+assured them that it is not the result of such a spirit.
+They then suppose it to be due to the magical practices of
+some enemy; but the doctor negatives that theory. The
+people are, therefore, driven to the conclusion that the
+trouble has no ascertainable cause. In some cases they do
+not even trouble to consult a diviner; they speedily recognise
+the sickness as due to natural causes. In such a
+case it needs no explanation. If they think that some
+friend of theirs knows of a remedy, they will try it on their
+own initiative, or may even go off to a white man to ask
+for some of his medicine. They would never dream of
+doing this if they thought they were being influenced by
+magic or by ancestral spirits. The Kafirs quite recognise
+that there are types of disease which are inherited, and have
+not been caused by magic or by ancestral spirits. They
+admit that some accidents are due to nothing but the
+patient's carelessness or stupidity. If a native gets his leg
+run over by a waggon, the people will often say that it is
+all his own fault through being clumsy. In other cases,
+with delightful inconsistency, they may say that some one
+has been working magic to cause the accident. In short, it
+is impossible to make out a theory of sickness which will
+satisfy our European conception of consistency."<a id="footnotetag55" name="footnotetag55"></a><a href="#footnote55"><sup>55</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The admission that death may be due to natural causes, marks
+an intellectual advance. The recognition of ghosts or spirits as a cause
+of disease, apart from sorcery, also marks a step in intellectual,
+moral, and social progress.</p>
+
+<p>From the foregoing accounts we see that the Melanesians
+and the Caffres, two widely different and widely separated
+races, agree in recognising at least three distinct causes of
+what we should call natural death. These three causes are,
+first, sorcery or witchcraft; second, ghosts or spirits; and third,
+disease.<a id="footnotetag56" name="footnotetag56"></a><a href="#footnote56"><sup>56</sup></a> That the recognition of disease in itself as a cause
+of death, quite apart from sorcery, marks an intellectual
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>[pg 57]</span>
+advance, will not be disputed. It is not so clear, though
+I believe it is equally true, that the recognition of ghosts or
+spirits as a cause of disease, quite apart from witchcraft,
+marks a real step in intellectual, moral, and social progress.
+In the first place, it marks a step in intellectual and moral
+progress; for it recognises that effects which before had been
+ascribed to human agency spring from superhuman causes;
+and this recognition of powers in the universe superior to man
+is not only an intellectual gain but a moral discipline: it
+teaches the important lesson of humility. In the second
+place it marks a step in social progress because when the blame
+of a death is laid upon a ghost or a spirit instead of on a
+sorcerer, the death has not to be avenged by killing a human
+being, the supposed author of the calamity. Thus the
+recognition of ghosts or spirits as the sources of sickness and
+death has as its immediate effect the sparing of an immense
+number of lives of men and women, who on the theory of
+death by sorcery would have perished by violence to expiate
+their imaginary crime. That this is a great gain to society
+is obvious: it adds immensely to the security of human life by
+removing one of the most fruitful causes of its destruction.</p>
+
+<p>It must be admitted, however, that the gain is not
+always as great as might be expected; the social advantages
+of a belief in ghosts and spirits are attended by many serious
+drawbacks. For while ghosts or spirits are commonly,
+though not always, supposed to be beyond the reach of
+human vengeance, they are generally thought to be well
+within the reach of human persuasion, flattery, and bribery;
+in other words, men think that they can appease and
+propitiate them by prayer and sacrifice; and while prayer
+is always cheap, sacrifice may be very dear, since it can,
+and often does, involve the destruction of an immense
+deal of valuable property and of a vast number of human
+lives. Yet if we could reckon up the myriads who have
+been slain in sacrifice to ghosts and gods, it seems probable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>[pg 58]</span>
+that they would fall far short of the untold multitudes
+who have perished as sorcerers and witches. For while
+human sacrifices in honour of deities or of the dead have
+been for the most part exceptional rather than regular, only
+the great gods and the illustrious dead being deemed worthy
+of such costly offerings, the slaughter of witches and wizards,
+theoretically at least, followed inevitably on every natural
+death among people who attributed all such deaths to sorcery.
+Hence if natural religion be defined roughly as a belief in
+superhuman spiritual beings and an attempt to propitiate
+them, we may perhaps say that, while natural religion has
+slain its thousands, magic has slain its ten thousands. But
+there are strong reasons for inferring that in the history of
+society an Age of Magic preceded an Age of Religion. If
+that was so, we may conclude that the advent of religion
+marked a great social as well as intellectual advance upon
+the preceding Age of Magic: it inaugurated an era of what
+might be described as mercy by comparison with the relentless
+severity of its predecessor.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote6" name="footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b><a href="#footnotetag6"> (return) </a><p> W. Martin, <i>An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands</i>, Second
+Edition (London, 1818), ii. 99.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote7" name="footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b><a href="#footnotetag7"> (return) </a><p> M. Dobrizhoffer, <i>Historia de Abiponibus</i>
+(Vienna, 1784), ii. 92 <i>sq.</i>, 240
+<i>sqq.</i> The author of this valuable
+work lived as a Catholic missionary in
+the tribe for eighteen years.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote8" name="footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b><a href="#footnotetag8"> (return) </a><p> C. Gay, "Fragment d'un Voyage dans le Chili et au Cusco,"
+<i>Bulletin de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de G&eacute;ographie</i> (Paris), Deuxi&egrave;me S&eacute;rie,
+xix. (1843) p. 25; H. Delaporte, "Une visite chez les Araucaniens,"
+<i>Bulletin de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de G&eacute;ographie</i> (Paris), Quatri&egrave;me S&eacute;rie, x.
+(1855) p. 30.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote9" name="footnote9"></a><b>Footnote 9:</b><a href="#footnotetag9"> (return) </a><p> K. von den Steinen, <i>Unter den
+Naturv&ouml;lkern Zentral-Brasiliens</i>
+(Berlin, 1894), pp. 344, 348.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote10" name="footnote10"></a><b>Footnote 10:</b><a href="#footnotetag10"> (return) </a><p> Rev. W. H. Brett, <i>The Indian
+Tribes of Guiana</i> (London, 1868), p.
+357.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote11" name="footnote11"></a><b>Footnote 11:</b><a href="#footnotetag11"> (return) </a><p>W. H. Brett, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 361 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote12" name="footnote12"></a><b>Footnote 12:</b><a href="#footnotetag12"> (return) </a><p>Rev. W. H. Brett, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 364 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote13" name="footnote13"></a><b>Footnote 13:</b><a href="#footnotetag13"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. H. Bernau, <i>Missionary Labours in British Guiana</i> (London,
+1847), pp. 56 <i>sq.</i>, 58.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote14" name="footnote14"></a><b>Footnote 14:</b><a href="#footnotetag14"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) E. F. im Thurn, <i>Among the
+Indians of Guiana</i> (London, 1883), pp.
+330 <i>sq.</i> For the case described see R.
+Schomburgk, <i>Reisen in Britisch-Guiana</i>,
+i. (Leipsic, 1847) pp. 324 <i>sq.</i> The boy
+died of dropsy. Perhaps the mode of
+divination adopted, by boiling some
+portions of him in water, had special
+reference to the nature of the disease.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote15" name="footnote15"></a><b>Footnote 15:</b><a href="#footnotetag15"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) E. F. im Thurn, <i>op. cit.</i> pp.
+332 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote16" name="footnote16"></a><b>Footnote 16:</b><a href="#footnotetag16"> (return) </a><p> Father A. G. Morice, "The Canadian D&eacute;n&eacute;s," <i>Annual
+Archaeological Report, 1905</i> (Toronto, 1906), p. 207.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote17" name="footnote17"></a><b>Footnote 17:</b><a href="#footnotetag17"> (return) </a><p> Albert A. C. Le Sou&euml;f, "Notes on the Natives of
+Australia," in R. Brough Smyth's <i>Aborigines of Victoria</i>
+(Melbourne and London, 1878), ii. 289 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote18" name="footnote18"></a><b>Footnote 18:</b><a href="#footnotetag18"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) George Grey, <i>Journals of two Expeditions of
+Discovery in Northwest and Western Australia</i> (London, 1841), ii.
+238.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote19" name="footnote19"></a><b>Footnote 19:</b><a href="#footnotetag19"> (return) </a><p> A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia,"
+<i>Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London</i>, N.S. iii.
+(1865) p. 236.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote20" name="footnote20"></a><b>Footnote 20:</b><a href="#footnotetag20"> (return) </a><p>A. Oldfield, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 245.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote21" name="footnote21"></a><b>Footnote 21:</b><a href="#footnotetag21"> (return) </a><p> J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i> (Melbourne, Sydney
+and Adelaide, 1881), p. 63.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote22" name="footnote22"></a><b>Footnote 22:</b><a href="#footnotetag22"> (return) </a><p> H. E. A. Meyer, "Manners and Customs of the Aborigines of
+the Encounter Bay Tribe," <i>Native Tribes of South Australia</i>
+(Adelaide, 1879), p. 195.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote23" name="footnote23"></a><b>Footnote 23:</b><a href="#footnotetag23"> (return) </a><p> C. W. Sch&uuml;rmann, "The Aboriginal Tribes of Port Lincoln in
+South Australia," <i>Native Tribes of South Australia</i>, pp. 237
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote24" name="footnote24"></a><b>Footnote 24:</b><a href="#footnotetag24"> (return) </a><p> Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," <i>Native Tribes of
+South Australia</i> (Adelaide, 1879), p. 25.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote25" name="footnote25"></a><b>Footnote 25:</b><a href="#footnotetag25"> (return) </a><p> R. Brough Smyth, <i>The Aborigines of Victoria</i>
+(Melbourne and London, 1878) i. 110.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote26" name="footnote26"></a><b>Footnote 26:</b><a href="#footnotetag26"> (return) </a><p> W. E. Stanbridge, "Some Particulars of the General
+Characteristics, Astronomy, and Mythology of the Tribes in the Central
+Part of Victoria, Southern Australia," <i>Transactions of the
+Ethnological Society of London</i>, New Series, i. (1861) p. 299.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote27" name="footnote27"></a><b>Footnote 27:</b><a href="#footnotetag27"> (return) </a><p> Lorimer Fison and A. W. Howitt, <i>Kamilaroi and
+Kurnai</i> (Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide, and Brisbane, 1880), pp. 250
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote28" name="footnote28"></a><b>Footnote 28:</b><a href="#footnotetag28"> (return) </a><p> A. L. P. Cameron, "Notes on some Tribes of New South
+Wales," <i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i> xiv. (1885) pp.
+361, 362 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote29" name="footnote29"></a><b>Footnote 29:</b><a href="#footnotetag29"> (return) </a><p> Rev. W. Ridley, <i>Kamilaroi</i>, Second Edition (Sydney,
+1875), p. 159.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote30" name="footnote30"></a><b>Footnote 30:</b><a href="#footnotetag30"> (return) </a><p> Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of
+Central Australia</i> (London, 1899), pp. 46-48.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote31" name="footnote31"></a><b>Footnote 31:</b><a href="#footnotetag31"> (return) </a><p> <i>Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to
+Torres Straits</i>, v. (Cambridge, 1904) pp. 248, 323.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote32" name="footnote32"></a><b>Footnote 32:</b><a href="#footnotetag32"> (return) </a><p> E. Beardmore, "The Natives of Mowat, British New Guinea,"
+<i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, xix. (1890) p. 461.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote33" name="footnote33"></a><b>Footnote 33:</b><a href="#footnotetag33"> (return) </a><p> R. E. Guise, "On the Tribes inhabiting the Mouth of the
+Wanigela River, New Guinea," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xxviii. (1899) p. 216.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote34" name="footnote34"></a><b>Footnote 34:</b><a href="#footnotetag34"> (return) </a><p> C. G. Seligmann, <i>The Melanesians of British New
+Guinea</i> (Cambridge, 1910), p. 279.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote35" name="footnote35"></a><b>Footnote 35:</b><a href="#footnotetag35"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf uns! oder die Arbeit
+der Neuen-Dettelsauer Mission</i>, iii. (Barmen, 1898) pp. 10
+<i>sq.</i>; <i>id.</i>, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser-Wilhelms-Land und
+den Bismarck-Archipel, 1897</i>, pp. 94, 98. Compare B. Hagen, <i>Unter
+den Papuas</i> (Wiesbaden, 1899), p. 256; <i>Verhandlungen der Berliner
+Gesellschaft f&uuml;r Anthropologie, Ethnologie, und Urgeschichte, 1900</i>,
+p. (415).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote36" name="footnote36"></a><b>Footnote 36:</b><a href="#footnotetag36"> (return) </a><p>Father A. Deniau, "Croyances religieuses et m&oelig;urs des
+indig&egrave;nes de l'Ile Malo," <i>Missions Catholiques</i>, xxxiii. (1901)
+pp. 315 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote37" name="footnote37"></a><b>Footnote 37:</b><a href="#footnotetag37"> (return) </a><p> C. Ribbe, <i>Zwei Jahre unter den Kannibalen der
+Salomo-Inseln</i> (Dresden-Blasewitz, 1903), p. 268.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote38" name="footnote38"></a><b>Footnote 38:</b><a href="#footnotetag38"> (return) </a><p> P. A. Kleintitschen, <i>Die K&uuml;stenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel</i> (Hiltrup bei M&uuml;nster, <span class="sc">N.D.</span>), p. 344. As to beliefs
+of this sort among the Sulka of New Britain, see <i>P.</i> Rascher, "Die
+Sulka," <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Anthropologie</i>, xxix. (1904) pp. 221
+<i>sq.</i>; R. Parkinson, <i>Dreissig Jahre in der S&uuml;dsee</i>
+(Stuttgart, 1907), pp. 199-201.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote39" name="footnote39"></a><b>Footnote 39:</b><a href="#footnotetag39"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, D.D., <i>Melanesians and Polynesians</i>
+(London, 1910), p. 176. Dr. Brown's account, of the Melanesians applies
+to the natives of New Britain and more particularly of the neighbouring
+Duke of York islands.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote40" name="footnote40"></a><b>Footnote 40:</b><a href="#footnotetag40"> (return) </a><p> Father Abinal, "Astrologie Malgache," <i>Missions
+Catholiques</i>, xi. (1879) p. 506.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote41" name="footnote41"></a><b>Footnote 41:</b><a href="#footnotetag41"> (return) </a><p> A. Grandidier, "Madagascar," <i>Bulletin de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de
+G&eacute;ographie</i> (Paris), Sixi&egrave;me S&eacute;rie, iii. (1872) pp. 399 <i>sq.</i>
+The talismans (<i>ahouli</i>) in question consist of the horns of oxen
+stuffed with a variety of odds and ends, such as sand, sticks, nails,
+and so forth.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote42" name="footnote42"></a><b>Footnote 42:</b><a href="#footnotetag42"> (return) </a><p> Major A. J. N. Tremearne, <i>The Tailed Head-hunters of
+Nigeria</i> (London, 1912), pp. 171 <i>sq.</i>; <i>id.</i>, "Notes on
+the Kagoro and other Headhunters," <i>Journal of the Royal
+Anthropological Institute</i>, xlii. (1912) pp. 160, 161.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote43" name="footnote43"></a><b>Footnote 43:</b><a href="#footnotetag43"> (return) </a><p> E. Hurel, "Religion et vie domestique des Bakerewe,"
+<i>Anthropos</i>, vi. (1912) pp. 85-87.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote44" name="footnote44"></a><b>Footnote 44:</b><a href="#footnotetag44"> (return) </a><p> Father Campana, "Congo Mission Catholique de Landana,"
+<i>Missions Catholiques</i>, xxvii. (1895) pp. 102 <i>sq</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote45" name="footnote45"></a><b>Footnote 45:</b><a href="#footnotetag45"> (return) </a><p> Th. Masui, <i>Guide de la Section de l'&Eacute;tat Ind&eacute;pendant du
+Congo &agrave; l'Exposition de Bruxelles&mdash;Tervueren en 1874</i> (Brussels,
+1897), p. 82.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote46" name="footnote46"></a><b>Footnote 46:</b><a href="#footnotetag46"> (return) </a><p> See for example O. Lenz, <i>Skizzen aus Westafrika</i>
+(Berlin, 1878), pp. 184 <i>sq.</i>; C. Cuny, "De Libreville au
+Cameroun," <i>Bulletin de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de G&eacute;ographie</i> (Paris), Septi&egrave;me
+S&eacute;rie, xvii. (1896) p. 341; Ch. Wunenberger, "La mission et le royaume
+de Humb&eacute;, sur les bords du Cun&egrave;ne," <i>Missions Catholiques</i>, xx.
+(1888) p. 262; Lieut. Herold, "Bericht betreffend religi&ouml;se Anschauungen
+und Gebr&auml;uche der deutschen Ewe-Neger," <i>Mittheilungen aus den
+deutschen Schutzgebieten</i>, v. (1892) p. 153; Dr. R. Plehn, "Beitr&auml;ge
+zur V&ouml;lkerkunde des Togo-Gebietes," <i>Mittheilungen des Seminars f&uuml;r
+Orientalische Sprachen zu Berlin</i>, ii. Dritte Abtheilung (1899), p.
+97; R. Fisch, "Die Dagbamba," <i>Baessler-Archiv</i>, iii. (1912) p.
+148. For evidence of similar beliefs and practices in other parts of
+Africa, see Brard, "Der Victoria-Nyanza," <i>Petermann's
+Mittheilungen</i>, xliii. (1897) pp. 79 <i>sq.</i>; Father Picarda,
+"Autour du Mand&eacute;ra," <i>Missions Catholiques</i>, xviii. (1886) p. 342.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote47" name="footnote47"></a><b>Footnote 47:</b><a href="#footnotetag47"> (return) </a><p> Rev. R. H. Nassau, <i>Fetichism in West Africa</i> (London,
+1904), pp. 241 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote48" name="footnote48"></a><b>Footnote 48:</b><a href="#footnotetag48"> (return) </a><p> "Strange Adventures of Andrew Battel," in John Pinkerton's
+<i>Voyages and Travels</i>, xvi. (London, 1814) p. 334.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote49" name="footnote49"></a><b>Footnote 49:</b><a href="#footnotetag49"> (return) </a><p> <i>Gouvernement G&eacute;n&eacute;ral de l'Afrique Occidentale
+Fran&ccedil;aise, Notices publi&eacute;es par le Gouvernement Central &agrave; l'occasion de
+l'Exposition Coloniale de Marseille, La C&ocirc;te d'Ivoire</i> (Corbeil,
+1906), pp. 570-572.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote50" name="footnote50"></a><b>Footnote 50:</b><a href="#footnotetag50"> (return) </a><p> Hugh Goldie, <i>Calabar and its Mission</i>, New Edition
+(Edinburgh and London, 1901), pp. 34 <i>sq.</i>, 37 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote51" name="footnote51"></a><b>Footnote 51:</b><a href="#footnotetag51"> (return) </a><p>Above, p. 35.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote52" name="footnote52"></a><b>Footnote 52:</b><a href="#footnotetag52"> (return) </a><p> E. R. Smith, <i>The Araucanians</i>
+(London, 1855), pp. 236 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote53" name="footnote53"></a><b>Footnote 53:</b><a href="#footnotetag53"> (return) </a><p> Father Trilles, "Milles lieues dans l'inconnu; &agrave; travers
+le pays Fang, de la c&ocirc;te aux rives du Djah," <i>Missions
+Catholiques</i>, xxxv. (1903) pp. 466 <i>sq.</i>, and as to the poison
+ordeal, <i>ib.</i> pp. 472 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote54" name="footnote54"></a><b>Footnote 54:</b><a href="#footnotetag54"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i> (Oxford, 1891), p. 194.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote55" name="footnote55"></a><b>Footnote 55:</b><a href="#footnotetag55"> (return) </a><p> Dudley Kidd, <i>The Essential Kafir</i>
+(London, 1904), pp. 133 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote56" name="footnote56"></a><b>Footnote 56:</b><a href="#footnotetag56"> (return) </a><p> In like manner the Baganda generally ascribed natural
+deaths either to sorcery or to the action of a ghost; but when they
+could not account for a person's death in either of these ways they said
+that Walumbe, the God of Death, had taken him. This last explanation
+approaches to an admission of natural death, though it is still mythical
+in form. The Baganda usually attributed any illness of the king to
+ghosts, because no man would dare to practise magic on him. A
+much-dreaded ghost was that of a man's sister; she was thought to vent
+her spite on his sons and daughters by visiting them with sickness. When
+she proved implacable, a medicine-man was employed to catch her ghost in
+a gourd or a pot and throw it away on waste land or drown it in a river.
+See Rev. J. Roscoe, <i>The Baganda</i> (London, 1911), pp. 98, 100, 101
+<i>sq.</i>, 286 <i>sq.</i>, 315 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>[pg 59]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-iii" id="lecture-iii"></a>LECTURE III</h2>
+
+<h3>MYTHS OF THE ORIGIN OF DEATH</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Belief of savages in man's natural immortality.</p>
+
+<p>In my last lecture I shewed that many savages do not
+believe in what we call a natural death; they imagine that
+all men are naturally immortal and would never die, if
+their lives were not cut prematurely short by sorcery.
+Further, I pointed out that this mistaken view of the nature
+of death has exercised a disastrous influence on the tribes
+who entertain it, since, attributing all natural deaths to
+sorcery, they consider themselves bound to discover and
+kill the wicked sorcerers whom they regard as responsible
+for the death of their friends. Thus in primitive society as
+a rule every natural death entails at least one and often
+several deaths by violence; since the supposed culprit being
+unknown suspicion may fall upon many persons, all of whom
+may be killed either out of hand or as a consequence of
+failing to demonstrate their innocence by means of an
+ordeal.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Savage stories of the origin of death.</p>
+
+<p>Yet even the savages who firmly believe in man's
+natural immortality are obliged sorrowfully to admit that,
+as things are at the present day, men do frequently die,
+whatever explanation we may give of so unexpected and
+unnatural an occurrence. Accordingly they are hard put
+to it to reconcile their theory of immortality with the
+practice of mortality. They have meditated on the subject
+and have given us the fruit of their meditation in a series of
+myths which profess to explain the origin of death. For
+the most part these myths are very crude and childish; yet
+they have a value of their own as examples of man's
+early attempts to fathom one of the great mysteries which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>[pg 60]</span>
+encompass his frail and transient existence on earth; and
+accordingly I have here collected, in all their naked simplicity,
+a few of these savage guesses at truth.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Four types of such stories.</p>
+
+<p>Myths of the origin of death conform to several types,
+among which we may distinguish, first, what I will call the
+type of the Two Messengers; second, the type of the Waxing
+and Waning Moon; third, the type of the Serpent and
+his Cast Skin; and fourth, the type of the Banana-tree. I
+will illustrate each type by examples, and will afterwards
+cite some miscellaneous instances which do not fall under
+any of these heads.</p>
+
+<p class="side">I. The tale of the Two Messengers. Zulu story of the
+chameleon and the lizard. The same story among other Bantu tribes.</p>
+
+<p>First, then, we begin with the type of the Two
+Messengers. Stories of this pattern are widespread in
+Africa, especially among tribes belonging to the great
+Bantu family, which occupies roughly the southern half
+of the continent. The best-known example of the tale
+is the one told by the Zulus. They say that in the
+beginning Unkulunkulu, that is, the Old Old One, sent
+the chameleon to men with a message saying, "Go, chameleon,
+go and say, Let not men die." The chameleon
+set out, but it crawled very slowly, and it loitered by the
+way to eat the purple berries of the <i>ubukwebezane</i> tree, or
+according to others it climbed up a tree to bask in the
+sun, filled its belly with flies, and fell fast asleep. Meantime
+the Old Old One had thought better of it and sent a
+lizard posting after the chameleon with a very different
+message to men, for he said to the animal, "Lizard, when
+you have arrived, say, Let men die." So the lizard went on
+his way, passed the dawdling chameleon, and arriving first
+among men delivered his message of death, saying, "Let
+men die." Then he turned on his heel and went back to
+the Old Old One who had sent him. But after he was gone,
+the chameleon at last arrived among men with his glad
+tidings of immortality, and he shouted, saying, "It is said,
+Let not men die!" But men answered, "O! we have heard
+the word of the lizard; it has told us the word, 'It is said,
+Let men die.' We cannot hear your word. Through the
+word of the lizard, men will die." And died they have ever
+since from that day to this. That is why some of the Zulus
+hate the lizard, saying, "Why did he run first and say, 'Let
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>[pg 61]</span>
+people die?'" So they beat and kill the lizard and say,
+"Why did it speak?" But others hate the chameleon and
+hustle it, saying, "That is the little thing which delayed to
+tell the people that they should not die. If he had only
+brought his message in time we should not have died; our
+ancestors also would have been still living; there would
+have been no diseases here on the earth. It all comes from
+the delay of the chameleon."<a id="footnotetag57" name="footnotetag57"></a><a href="#footnote57"><sup>57</sup></a> The same story is told in
+nearly the same form by other Bantu tribes, such as the
+Bechuanas,<a id="footnotetag58" name="footnotetag58"></a><a href="#footnote58"><sup>58</sup></a> the Basutos,<a id="footnotetag59" name="footnotetag59"></a><a href="#footnote59"><sup>59</sup></a> the Baronga,<a id="footnotetag60" name="footnotetag60"></a><a href="#footnote60"><sup>60</sup></a> and the Ngoni.<a id="footnotetag61" name="footnotetag61"></a><a href="#footnote61"><sup>61</sup></a>
+To this day the Baronga and the Ngoni owe the chameleon
+a grudge for having brought death into the world, so when
+children find a chameleon they will induce it to open its
+mouth, then throw a pinch of tobacco on its tongue, and
+watch with delight the creature writhing and changing
+colour from orange to green, from green to black in the
+agony of death; for thus they avenge the wrong which the
+chameleon has done to mankind.<a id="footnotetag62" name="footnotetag62"></a><a href="#footnote62"><sup>62</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Akamba story of the chameleon and the thrush.</p>
+
+<p>A story of the same type, but with some variations, is
+told by the Akamba, a Bantu tribe of British East Africa;
+but in their version the lizard has disappeared from the legend
+and has been replaced by the <i>itoroko</i>, a small bird of the
+thrush tribe, with a black head, a bluish-black back, and a
+buff-coloured breast. The tale runs thus:&mdash;Once upon a
+time God sent out the chameleon, the frog, and the thrush to
+find people who died one day and came to life again the next.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>[pg 62]</span>
+So off they set, the chameleon leading the way, for in those
+days he was a very important personage. Presently they
+came to some people lying like dead, so the chameleon went
+up to them and said, <i>Niwe, niwe, niwe</i>. The thrush asked
+him testily what he was making that noise for, to which the
+chameleon replied mildly, "I am only calling the people
+who go forward and then came back again," and he
+explained that the dead people would come to life again.
+But the thrush, who was of a sceptical turn of mind, derided
+the idea. Nevertheless, the chameleon persisted in calling
+to the dead people, and sure enough they opened their
+eyes and listened to him. But here the thrush broke in
+and told them roughly that dead they were and dead
+they must remain. With that away he flew, and though
+the chameleon preached to the corpses, telling them
+that he had come from God on purpose to bring them to
+life again, and that they were not to believe the lies of that
+shallow sceptic the thrush, they obstinately refused to pay
+any heed to him; not one of those dead corpses would
+budge. So the chameleon returned crestfallen to God and
+reported to him how, when he preached the gospel of resurrection
+to the corpses, the thrush had roared him down,
+so that the corpses could not hear a word he said. God
+thereupon cross-questioned the thrush, who stated that the
+chameleon had so bungled his message that he, the thrush,
+felt it his imperative duty to interrupt him. The simple
+deity believed the thrush, and being very angry with the
+chameleon he degraded him from his high position and
+made him walk very slow, lurching this way and that, as he
+does down to this very day. But the thrush he promoted
+to the office of wakening men from their slumber every
+morning, which he still does punctually at 2 <span class="sc">A.M.</span> before
+the note of any other bird is heard in the tropical forest.<a id="footnotetag63" name="footnotetag63"></a><a href="#footnote63"><sup>63</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Togo story of the dog and the frog.</p>
+
+<p>In this version, though the frog is sent out by God
+with the other two messengers he plays no part in the
+story; he is a mere dummy. But in another version of
+the story, which is told by the negroes of Togoland
+in German West Africa, the frog takes the place of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63"></a>[pg 63]</span>
+lizard and the thrush as the messenger of death. They
+say that once upon a time men sent a dog to God to say
+that when they died they would like to come to life again.
+So off the dog trotted to deliver the message. But on the
+way he felt hungry and turned into a house, where a man
+was boiling magic herbs. So the dog sat down and thought
+to himself, "He is cooking food." Meantime the frog had
+set off to tell God that when men died they would like not
+to come to life again. Nobody had asked him to give that
+message; it was a piece of pure officiousness and impertinence
+on his part. However, away he tore. The dog, who still
+sat watching the hell-broth brewing, saw him hurrying past
+the door, but he thought to himself, "When I have had
+something to eat, I will soon catch froggy up." However,
+froggy came in first and said to the deity, "When men die,
+they would like not to come to life again." After that, up
+comes the dog, and says he, "When men die, they would
+like to come to life again." God was naturally puzzled and
+said to the dog, "I really do not understand these two
+messages. As I heard the frog's request first, I will comply
+with it. I will not do what you said." That is the real
+reason why men die and do not come to life again. If the
+frog had only minded his own business instead of meddling
+with other people's, the dead would all have come to life
+again to this day.<a id="footnotetag64" name="footnotetag64"></a><a href="#footnote64"><sup>64</sup></a> In this version of the story not only are
+the persons of the two messengers different, the dog and the
+frog having replaced the chameleon and the lizard of the
+Bantu version, but the messengers are sent from men to God
+instead of from God to men.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Ashantee story of the goat and the sheep.</p>
+
+<p>In another version told by the Ashantees of West Africa
+the persons of the messengers are again different, but as in
+the Bantu version they are sent from God to men. The
+Ashantees say that long ago men were happy, for God
+dwelt among them and talked with them face to face. For
+example, if a child was roasting yams at the fire and wanted
+a relish to eat with the yams, he had nothing to do but to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>[pg 64]</span>
+throw a stick in the air and say, "God give me fish," and God
+gave him fish at once. However, these happy days did not last
+for ever. One unlucky day it happened that some women were
+pounding a mash with pestles in a mortar, while God stood
+by looking on. For some reason they were annoyed by the
+presence of the deity and told him to be off; and as he did
+not take himself off fast enough to please them, they beat
+him with their pestles. In a great huff God retired
+altogether from the world and left it to the direction of the
+fetishes; and still to this day people say, "Ah, if it had not
+been for that old woman, how happy we should be!"
+However, after he had withdrawn to heaven, the long-suffering
+deity sent a kind message by a goat to men upon earth
+to say, "There is something which they call Death. He
+will kill some of you. But even if you die, you will not
+perish completely. You will come to me in heaven." So
+off the goat set with this cheering intelligence. But before
+he came to the town he saw a tempting bush by the wayside
+and stopped to browse on it. When God in heaven
+saw the goat thus loitering by the way, he sent off a sheep
+with the same message to carry the glad tidings to men
+without delay. But the sheep did not give the message
+aright. Far from it: he said, "God sends you word that
+you will die and that will be an end of you." Afterwards
+the goat arrived on the scene and said, "God sends you
+word that you will die, certainly, but that will not be the
+end of you, for you will go to him." But men said to the
+goat, "No, goat, that is not what God said. We believe
+that the message which the sheep brought us is the one
+which God sent to us." That was the beginning of death
+among men.<a id="footnotetag65" name="footnotetag65"></a><a href="#footnote65"><sup>65</sup></a> However, in another Ashantee version of the
+tale the parts played by the sheep and the goat are reversed.
+It is the sheep who brings the tidings of immortality from
+God to men, but the goat overruns him and offers them
+death instead. Not knowing what death was, men accepted
+the seeming boon with enthusiasm and have died ever since.<a id="footnotetag66" name="footnotetag66"></a><a href="#footnote66"><sup>66</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">II. The story of the Waxing and Waning Moon. Hottentot story
+of the Moon, the hare, and death.</p>
+
+<p>So much for the tale of the Two Messengers. In the
+last versions of it which I have quoted, a feature to be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>[pg 65]</span>
+noticed is the perversion of the message by one of the
+messengers, who brings tidings of death instead of life
+eternal to men. The same perversion of the message reappears
+in some examples of the next type of story which
+I shall illustrate, namely the type of the Waxing and
+Waning Moon. Thus the Namaquas or Hottentots say that
+once the Moon charged the hare to go to men and say, "As
+I die and rise to life again, so shall you die and rise to life
+again." So the hare went to men, but either out of forgetfulness
+or malice he reversed the message and said, "As I
+die and do not rise to life again, so you shall also die and
+not rise to life again." Then he went back to the Moon,
+and she asked him what he had said. He told her, and
+when she heard how he had given the wrong message, she
+was so angry that she threw a stick at him and split his
+lip, which is the reason why the hare's lip is still split. So
+the hare ran away and is still running to this day. Some
+people, however, say that before he fled he clawed the
+Moon's face, which still bears the marks of the scratching,
+as anybody may see for himself on a clear moonlight night.
+So the Hottentots are still angry with the hare for bringing
+death into the world, and they will not let initiated men
+partake of its flesh.<a id="footnotetag67" name="footnotetag67"></a><a href="#footnote67"><sup>67</sup></a> There are traces of a similar story
+among the Bushmen.<a id="footnotetag68" name="footnotetag68"></a><a href="#footnote68"><sup>68</sup></a> In another Hottentot version two
+messengers appear, an insect and a hare; the insect is
+charged by the Moon with a message of immortality or
+rather of resurrection to men, but the hare persuades the
+insect to let him bear the tidings, which he perverts into a
+message of annihilation.<a id="footnotetag69" name="footnotetag69"></a><a href="#footnote69"><sup>69</sup></a> Thus in this particular version the
+type of the Two Messengers coincides with the Moon type.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Masai story of the moon and death.</p>
+
+<p>A story of the same type, though different in details, is
+told by the Masai of East Africa. They say that in the
+early days a certain god named Naiteru-kop told a man
+named Le-eyo that if a child were to die he was to throw
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>[pg 66]</span>
+away the body and say, "Man, die, and come back again;
+moon, die, and remain away." Well, soon afterwards a child
+died, but it was not one of the man's own children, so when
+he threw the body away he said, "Man, die, and remain
+away; moon, die, and return." Next one of his own
+children died, and when he threw away the body he said,
+"Man, die, and return; moon, die, and remain away." But
+the god said to him, "It is of no use now, for you
+spoilt matters with the other child." That is why down to
+this day when a man dies he returns no more, but when the
+moon dies she always comes to life again.<a id="footnotetag70" name="footnotetag70"></a><a href="#footnote70"><sup>70</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Nandi story of the moon, the dog, and death.</p>
+
+<p>Another story of the origin of death which belongs to
+this type is told by the Nandi of British East Africa. They
+say that when the first people lived upon the earth a dog
+came to them one day and said: "All people will die like the
+moon, but unlike the moon you will not return to life again
+unless you give me some milk to drink out of your gourd,
+and beer to drink through your straw. If you do this, I
+will arrange for you to go to the river when you die and to
+come to life again on the third day." But the people
+laughed at the dog, and gave him some milk and beer to
+drink off a stool. The dog was angry at not being served
+in the same vessels as a human being, and though he put
+his pride in his pocket and drank the milk and the beer
+from the stool, he went away in high dudgeon, saying, "All
+people will die, and the moon alone will return to life."
+That is the reason why, when people die, they stay away,
+whereas when the moon goes away she comes back again
+after three days' absence.<a id="footnotetag71" name="footnotetag71"></a><a href="#footnote71"><sup>71</sup></a> The Wa-Sania of British East
+Africa believe that in days gone by people never died, till
+one unlucky day a lizard came and said to them, "All of you
+know that the moon dies and rises again, but human beings
+will die and rise no more." They say that from that day
+people began to die and have persisted in dying ever since.<a id="footnotetag72" name="footnotetag72"></a><a href="#footnote72"><sup>72</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian story of the moon, the rat, and death. Caroline
+Islands story of the moon, death, and resurrection. Wotjobaluk story of
+the moon, death, and resurrection. Cham story of the moon, death, and
+resurrection.</p>
+
+<p>With these African stories of the origin of death we may
+compare one told by the Fijians on the other side of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>[pg 67]</span>
+world. They say that once upon a time the Moon contended
+that men should be like himself (for the Fijian moon
+seems to be a male); that is, he meant that just as he grows
+old, disappears, and comes in sight again, so men grown old
+should vanish for a while and then return to life. But the
+rat, who is a Fijian god, would not hear of it. "No," said
+he, "let men die like rats." And he had the best of it
+in the dispute, for men die like rats to this day.<a id="footnotetag73" name="footnotetag73"></a><a href="#footnote73"><sup>73</sup></a> In the
+Caroline Islands they say that long, long ago death was
+unknown, or rather it was a short sleep, not a long, long
+one, as it is now. Men died on the last day of the waning
+moon and came to life again on the first appearance of the
+new moon, just as if they had awakened from a refreshing
+slumber. But an evil spirit somehow contrived that when
+men slept the sleep of death they should wake no more.<a id="footnotetag74" name="footnotetag74"></a><a href="#footnote74"><sup>74</sup></a>
+The Wotjobaluk of south-eastern Australia relate that, when
+all animals were men and women, some of them died and
+the moon used to say, "You up-again," whereupon they
+came to life again. But once on a time an old man said,
+"Let them remain dead"; and since then nobody has ever
+come to life again except the moon, which still continues to
+do so down to this very day.<a id="footnotetag75" name="footnotetag75"></a><a href="#footnote75"><sup>75</sup></a> The Chams of Annam and
+Cambodia say that the goddess of good luck used to resuscitate
+people as fast as they died, till the sky-god, tired of
+her constant interference with the laws of nature, transferred
+her to the moon, where it is no longer in her power to bring
+the dead to life again.<a id="footnotetag76" name="footnotetag76"></a><a href="#footnote76"><sup>76</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Cycle of death and resurrection after three days, like the
+monthly disappearance and reappearance of the moon.</p>
+
+<p>These stories which associate human immortality with
+the moon are products of a primitive philosophy which,
+meditating on the visible changes, of the lunar orb, drew
+from the observation of its waning and waxing a dim
+notion that under a happier fate man might have been
+immortal like the moon, or rather that like it he might have
+undergone an endless cycle of death and resurrection, dying
+then rising again from the dead after three days. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>[pg 68]</span>
+same curious notion of death and resurrection after three
+days is entertained by the Unmatjera and Kaitish, two
+savage tribes of Central Australia. They say that long ago
+their dead used to be buried either in trees or underground,
+and that after three days they regularly rose from the dead.
+The Kaitish tell how this happy state of things came to an
+end. It was all through a man of the Curlew totem, who
+finding some men of the Little Wallaby totem burying a
+Little Wallaby man, fell into a passion and kicked the body
+into the sea. Of course after that the dead man could not
+come to life again, and that is why nowadays nobody rises
+from the dead after three days, as everybody used to do
+long ago.<a id="footnotetag77" name="footnotetag77"></a><a href="#footnote77"><sup>77</sup></a> Although no mention is made of the moon in
+this Australian story, we may conjecture that these savages,
+like the Nandi of East Africa, fixed upon three days as the
+normal interval between death and resurrection simply
+because three days is the interval between the disappearance
+of the old and the reappearance of the new moon. If that
+is so, the aborigines of Central Australia may be added to the
+many races of mankind who have seen in the waning and
+waxing moon an emblem of human immortality. Nor does
+this association of ideas end with a mere tradition that in some
+former age men used to die with the old moon and come to
+life again with the new moon. Many savages, on seeing the
+new moon for the first time in the month, observe ceremonies
+which seem to be intended to renew and increase their life
+and strength with the renewal and the increase of the lunar
+light. For example, on the day when the new moon first
+appeared, the Indians of San Juan Capistrano in California
+used to call together all the young men and make them run
+about, while the old men danced in a circle, saying, "As the
+moon dieth and cometh to life again, so we also having to
+die will again live."<a id="footnotetag78" name="footnotetag78"></a><a href="#footnote78"><sup>78</sup></a> Again, an old writer tells us that at
+the appearance of every new moon the negroes of the Congo
+clapped their hands and cried out, sometimes falling on their
+knees, "So may I renew my life as thou art renewed."<a id="footnotetag79" name="footnotetag79"></a><a href="#footnote79"><sup>79</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id="page69"></a>[pg 69]</span>
+
+<p class="side">III. Story of the Serpent and his Cast Skin. New Britain
+story of immortality, the serpent, and death. Annamite story of
+immortality, the serpent, and death. Vuatom story of immortality, the
+lizard, the serpent, and death.</p>
+
+<p>Another type of stories told to explain the origin of
+death is the one which I have called the type of the Serpent
+and his Cast Skin. Some savages seem to think that serpents
+and all other animals, such as lizards, which periodically shed
+their skins, thereby renew their life and so never die. Hence
+they imagine that if man also could only cast his old skin
+and put on a new one, he too would be immortal like a
+serpent. Thus the Melanesians, who inhabit the coast of
+the Gazelle Peninsula in New Britain, tell the following story
+of the origin of death. They say that To Kambinana, the
+Good Spirit, loved men and wished to make them immortal;
+but he hated the serpents and wished to kill them. So he
+called his brother To Korvuvu and said to him, "Go to men
+and take them the secret of immortality. Tell them to cast
+their skin every year. So will they be protected from death,
+for their life will be constantly renewed. But tell the
+serpents that they must thenceforth die." But To Korvuvu
+acquitted himself badly of his task; for he commanded
+men to die and betrayed to the serpents the secret of
+immortality. Since then all men have been mortal, but
+the serpents cast their skins every year and are immortal.<a id="footnotetag80" name="footnotetag80"></a><a href="#footnote80"><sup>80</sup></a>
+In this story we meet again with the incident of the
+reversed message; through a blunder or through the malice
+of the messenger the glad tidings of immortality are perverted
+into a melancholy message of death. A similar tale,
+with a similar incident, is told in Annam. They say that
+Ngoc hoang sent a messenger from heaven to men to say
+that when they had reached old age they should change their
+skins and live for ever, but that when serpents grew old they
+must die. The messenger came down to earth and said,
+rightly enough, "When man is old, he shall cast his skin;
+but when serpents are old, they shall die and be laid in
+coffins." So far, so good. But unfortunately there happened
+to be a brood of serpents within hearing, and when they
+heard the doom pronounced on their kind they fell into a
+fury and said to the messenger, "You must say it over again
+and just the contrary, or we will bite you." That frightened
+the messenger and he repeated his message, changing the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>[pg 70]</span>
+words thus: "When he is old, the serpent shall cast his
+skin; but when he is old, man shall die and be laid in the
+coffin." That is why all creatures are now subject to death,
+except the serpent, who, when he is old, casts his skin and
+lives for ever.<a id="footnotetag81" name="footnotetag81"></a><a href="#footnote81"><sup>81</sup></a> The natives of Vuatom, an island in the
+Bismarck Archipelago, say that a certain To Konokonomiange
+bade two lads fetch fire, promising that if they did
+so they should never die, but that if they refused their
+bodies would perish, though their shades or souls would
+survive. They would not hearken to him, so he cursed
+them, saying, "What! You would all have lived! Now
+you shall die, though your soul shall live. But the iguana
+(<i>Goniocephalus</i>) and the lizard (<i>Varanus indicus</i>) and the
+snake (<i>Enygrus</i>), they shall live, they shall cast their skin and
+they shall live for evermore." When the lads heard that,
+they wept, for bitterly they rued their folly in not going to
+fetch the fire for To Konokonomiange.<a id="footnotetag82" name="footnotetag82"></a><a href="#footnote82"><sup>82</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Nias story of immortality, the crab, and death. Arawak and
+Tamanachier stories of immortality, the serpent, the lizard, the beetle,
+and death.</p>
+
+<p>Other peoples tell somewhat different stories to explain
+how men missed the boon of immortality and serpents
+acquired it. Thus the natives of Nias, an island off the
+coast of Sumatra, say that, when the earth was created,
+a certain being was sent down by God from heaven to
+put the last touches to the work of creation. He should
+have fasted for a month, but unable to withstand the pangs
+of hunger he ate some bananas. The choice of food was
+most unlucky, for had he only eaten river-crabs instead of
+bananas men would have cast their skins like crabs and
+would never have died.<a id="footnotetag83" name="footnotetag83"></a><a href="#footnote83"><sup>83</sup></a> The Arawaks of British Guiana
+relate that once upon a time the Creator came down to earth
+to see how his creature man was getting on. But men were
+so wicked that they tried to kill him so he deprived them
+of eternal life and bestowed it on the animals which renew
+their skin, such as serpents, lizards, and beetles.<a id="footnotetag84" name="footnotetag84"></a><a href="#footnote84"><sup>84</sup></a> A somewhat
+different version of the story is told by the Tamanachiers,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71"></a>[pg 71]</span>
+an Indian tribe of the Orinoco. They say that after residing
+among them for some time the Creator took boat to cross
+to the other side of the great salt water from which he had
+come. Just as he was shoving off from the shore, he called
+out to them in a changed voice, "You will change your
+skins," by which he meant to say, "You will renew your
+youth like the serpents and the beetles." But unfortunately
+an old woman, hearing these words, cried out "Oh!" in
+a tone of scepticism, if not of sarcasm, which so annoyed
+the Creator that he changed his tune at once and said
+testily, "Ye shall die." That is why we are all mortal.<a id="footnotetag85" name="footnotetag85"></a><a href="#footnote85"><sup>85</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Melanesian story of the old woman who renewed her youth by
+casting her skin.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of the Banks' Islands and the New Hebrides
+believe that there was a time in the beginning of things
+when men never died but cast their skins like snakes
+and crabs and so renewed their youth. But the unhappy
+change to mortality came about at last, as it so often does
+in these stories, through an old woman. Having grown old,
+this dame went to a stream to change her skin, and change
+it she did, for she stripped off her wizened old hide, cast it
+upon the waters, and watched it floating down stream till it
+caught on a stick. Then she went home a buxom young
+woman. But the child whom she had left at home did not
+know her and set up such a prodigious squalling that to
+quiet it the woman went straight back to the river, fished
+out her cast-off old skin, and put it on again. From that
+day to this people have ceased to cast their skins and to live
+for ever.<a id="footnotetag86" name="footnotetag86"></a><a href="#footnote86"><sup>86</sup></a> The same legend of the origin of death has
+been recorded in the Shortlands Islands<a id="footnotetag87" name="footnotetag87"></a><a href="#footnote87"><sup>87</sup></a> and among the
+Kai of German New Guinea.<a id="footnotetag88" name="footnotetag88"></a><a href="#footnote88"><sup>88</sup></a> It is also told with some
+variations by the natives of the Admiralty Islands. They
+say that once on a time there was an old woman and she
+was frail. She had two sons, and they went a-fishing, and
+she herself went to bathe. She stripped off her wrinkled
+old skin and came forth as young as she had been long ago.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>[pg 72]</span>
+Her sons came home from the fishing, and very much
+astonished were they to see her. The one said, "It is our
+mother," but the other said, "She may be your mother, but
+she shall be my wife." Their mother heard them and said,
+"What were you two saying?" The two said, "Nothing!
+We only said that you are our mother." "You are liars,"
+said she, "I heard you both. If I had had my way, we
+should have grown to be old men and women, and then we
+should have cast our skin and been young men and young
+women. But you have had your way. We shall grow old
+men and old women and then we shall die." With that she
+fetched her old skin, and put it on, and became an old
+woman again. As for us, her descendants, we grow up and
+we grow old. And if it had not been for those two young
+men there would have been no end of our days, we should
+have lived for ever and ever.<a id="footnotetag89" name="footnotetag89"></a><a href="#footnote89"><sup>89</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Samoan story of the shellfish, two torches, and death.</p>
+
+<p>The Samoans tell how the gods held a council to decide what
+was to be done with men. One of them said, "Bring men and
+let them cast their skin; and when they die, let them be turned
+to shellfish or to a coco-nut leaf torch, which when shaken
+in the wind blazes out again." But another god called
+Palsy (<i>Supa</i>) rose up and said, "Bring men and let them be
+like the candle-nut torch, which when it is once out cannot
+be blown up again. Let the shellfish change their skin, but
+let men die." While they were debating, a heavy rain came
+on and broke up the meeting. As the gods ran for shelter
+to their houses, they cried, "Let it be according to the
+counsel of Palsy! Let it be according to the counsel of
+Palsy!" So men died, but shellfish cast their skins.<a id="footnotetag90" name="footnotetag90"></a><a href="#footnote90"><sup>90</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">IV. The Banana Story. Poso story of immortality, the stone,
+the banana, and death. Mentra story of immortality, the banana, and
+death.</p>
+
+<p>The last type of tales of the origin of death which I shall
+notice is the one which I have called the Banana type. We
+have already seen that according to the natives of Nias
+human mortality is all due to eating bananas instead of crabs.<a id="footnotetag91" name="footnotetag91"></a><a href="#footnote91"><sup>91</sup></a>
+A similar opinion is entertained by other people in that
+region of the world. Thus the natives of Poso, a district of
+Central Celebes, say that in the beginning the sky was very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>[pg 73]</span>
+near the earth, and that the Creator, who lived in it, used to
+let down his good gifts to men at the end of a rope. One
+day he thus lowered a stone; but our first father and mother
+would have none of it and they called out to their Maker,
+"What have we to do with this stone? Give us something
+else." The Creator complied and hauled away at the rope;
+the stone mounted up and up till it vanished from sight.
+Presently the rope was seen coming down from heaven again,
+and this time there was a banana at the end of it instead of
+a stone. Our first parents ran at the banana and took it.
+Then there came a voice from heaven, saying: "Because
+ye have chosen the banana, your life shall be like its life.
+When the banana-tree has offspring, the parent stem dies;
+so shall ye die and your children shall step into your place.
+Had ye chosen the stone, your life would have been like the
+life of the stone changeless and immortal." The man and
+his wife mourned over their fatal choice, but it was too late;
+that is how through the eating of a banana death came into
+the world.<a id="footnotetag92" name="footnotetag92"></a><a href="#footnote92"><sup>92</sup></a> The Mentras or Mantras, a shy tribe of savages
+in the jungles of the Malay Peninsula, allege that in the
+early days of the world men did not die, but only grew thin
+at the waning of the moon and then waxed fat again as she
+waxed to the full. Thus there was no check whatever on
+the population, which increased to a truly alarming extent.
+So a son of the first man brought this state of things to his
+father's notice and asked him what was to be done. The
+first man said, "Leave things as they are"; but his younger
+brother, who took a more Malthusian view of the situation,
+said, "No, let men die like the banana, leaving their offspring
+behind." The question was submitted to the Lord of the
+Underworld, and he decided in favour of death. Ever since
+then men have ceased to renew their youth like the moon
+and have died like the banana.<a id="footnotetag93" name="footnotetag93"></a><a href="#footnote93"><sup>93</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Primitive philosophy in the stories of the origin of death.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the three stories of the origin of death which
+I have called the Moon type, the Serpent type, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>[pg 74]</span>
+Banana type appear to be products of a primitive philosophy
+which sees a cheerful emblem of immortality in
+the waxing and waning moon and in the cast skins of
+serpents, but a sad emblem of mortality in the banana-tree,
+which perishes as soon as it has produced its fruit. But, as
+I have already said, these types of stories do not exhaust
+the theories or fancies of primitive man on the question how
+death came into the world. I will conclude this part of my
+subject with some myths which do not fall under any of the
+preceding heads.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Bahnar story of immortality, the tree, and death. Rivalry for
+the boon of immortality between men and animals that cast their skins,
+such as serpents and lizards.</p>
+
+<p>The Bahnars of eastern Cochinchina say that in the
+beginning when people died they used to be buried at the
+foot of a tree called L&ocirc;ng Bl&ocirc;, and that after a time they
+always rose from the dead, not as infants but as full-grown
+men and women. So the earth was peopled very fast, and
+all the inhabitants formed but one great town under the
+presidency of our first parents. In time men multiplied to
+such an extent that a certain lizard could not take his walks
+abroad without somebody treading on his tail. This vexed
+him, and the wily creature gave an insidious hint to the
+gravediggers. "Why bury the dead at the foot of the L&ocirc;ng
+Bl&ocirc; tree?" said he; "bury them at the foot of L&ocirc;ng Khung,
+and they will not come to life again. Let them die outright
+and be done with it." The hint was taken, and from that
+day the dead have not come to life again.<a id="footnotetag94" name="footnotetag94"></a><a href="#footnote94"><sup>94</sup></a> In this story
+there are several points to be noticed. In the first place the
+tree L&ocirc;ng Bl&ocirc; would seem to have been a tree of life, since
+all the dead who were buried at its foot came to life again.
+In the second place the lizard is here, as in so many African
+tales, the instrument of bringing death among men. Why
+was that so? We may conjecture that the reason is that
+the lizard like the serpent casts its skin periodically, from
+which primitive man might infer, as he infers with regard to
+serpents, that the creature renews its youth and lives for
+ever. Thus all the myths which relate how a lizard or a
+serpent became the maleficent agent of human mortality
+may perhaps be referred to an old idea of a certain jealousy
+and rivalry between men and all creatures which cast their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>[pg 75]</span>
+skin, notably serpents and lizards; we may suppose that in
+all such cases a story was told of a contest between man and
+his animal rivals for the possession of immortality, a contest
+in which, whether by mistake or by guile, the victory always
+remained with the animals, who thus became immortal, while
+mankind was doomed to mortality.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Chingpaw story of the origin of death. Australian story of
+the tree, the bat, and death. Fijian story of the origin of death.</p>
+
+<p>The Chingpaws of Upper Burma say that death
+originated in a practical joke played by an old man who
+pretended to be dead in the ancient days when nobody
+really died. But the Lord of the Sun, who held the threads
+of all human lives in his hand, detected the fraud and in
+anger cut short the thread of life of the practical joker.
+Since then everybody else has died; the door for death
+to enter into the world was opened by the folly of that
+silly, though humorous, old man.<a id="footnotetag95" name="footnotetag95"></a><a href="#footnote95"><sup>95</sup></a> The natives about the
+Murray River in Australia used to relate how the first
+man and woman were forbidden to go near a tree in
+which a bat lived, lest they should disturb the creature.
+One day, however, the woman was gathering firewood and
+she went near the tree. The bat flew away, and after that
+death came into the world.<a id="footnotetag96" name="footnotetag96"></a><a href="#footnote96"><sup>96</sup></a> Some of the Fijians accounted
+for human mortality as follows. When the first man, the
+father of the human race, was being buried, a god passed by
+the grave and asked what it meant, for he had never seen a
+grave before. On learning from the bystanders that they
+had just buried their father, "Do not bury him," said he,
+"dig the body up again." "No," said they, "we cannot do
+that. He has been dead four days and stinks." "Not so,"
+pleaded the god; "dig him up, and I promise you that he
+will live again." Heedless of the divine promise, these
+primitive sextons persisted in leaving their dead father in
+the grave. Then said the god to these wicked men, "By
+disobeying me you have sealed your own fate. Had you
+dug up your ancestor, you would have found him alive, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>[pg 76]</span>
+you yourselves, when you passed from this world, should have
+been buried, as bananas are, for the space of four days, after
+which you should have been dug up, not rotten, but ripe.
+But now, as a punishment for your disobedience, you shall
+die and rot." And still, when they hear this sad tale told,
+the Fijians say, "O that those children had dug up that
+body!"<a id="footnotetag97" name="footnotetag97"></a><a href="#footnote97"><sup>97</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Admiralty Islanders' stories of the origin of death.</p>
+
+<p>The Admiralty Islanders tell various stories to explain
+why man is mortal. One of them has already been related.
+Here is another. A Souh man went once to catch fish.
+A devil tried to devour him, but he fled into the forest
+and took refuge in a tree. The tree kindly closed on him
+so that the devil could not see him. When the devil was
+gone, the tree opened up and the man clambered down
+to the ground. Then said the tree to him, "Go to Souh
+and bring me two white pigs." He went and found two
+pigs, one was white and one was black. He took chalk and
+chalked the black pig so that it was white. Then he
+brought them to the tree, but on the way the chalk fell off
+the black pig. And when the tree saw the white pig and
+the black pig, he chid the man and said, "You are thankless.
+I was good to you. An evil will overtake you; you will
+die. The devil will fall upon you, and you will die." So it
+has been with us as it was with the man of Souh. An evil
+overtakes us or a spirit falls upon us, and we die. If it had
+been as the tree said, we should not have died.<a id="footnotetag98" name="footnotetag98"></a><a href="#footnote98"><sup>98</sup></a> Another
+story told by the Admiralty Islanders to account for the
+melancholy truth of man's mortality runs thus. Kosi, the
+chief of Moakareng, was in his house. He was hungry. He
+said to his two sons, "Go and climb the breadfruit trees and
+bring the fruit, that we may eat them together and not die."
+But they would not. So he went himself and climbed the
+breadfruit tree. But the north-west wind blew a storm, it
+blew and threw him down. He fell and his body died, but
+his ghost went home. He went and sat in his house. He
+tied up his hair and he painted his face with red ochre.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>[pg 77]</span>
+Now his wife and his two sons had gone after him into the
+wood. They went to fetch home the breadfruits. They
+came and saw Kosi, and he was dead. The three returned
+home, and there they saw the ghost of Kosi sitting in his
+house. They said, "You there! Who's that dead at the
+foot of the breadfruit tree? Kosi, he is dead at the foot
+of the breadfruit tree." Kosi, he said, "Here am I. I did
+not fall. Perhaps somebody else fell down. I did not.
+Here I am." "You're a liar," said they. "I ain't," said he.
+"Come," said they, "we'll go and see." They went. Kosi, he
+jumped into his body. He died. They buried him. If his
+wife had behaved well, we should not die. Our body would
+die, but our ghost would go about always in the old home.<a id="footnotetag99" name="footnotetag99"></a><a href="#footnote99"><sup>99</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Stories of the origin of death: the fatal bundle or the fatal
+box.</p>
+
+<p>The Wemba of Northern Rhodesia relate how God
+in the beginning created a man and a woman and gave
+them two bundles; in one of them was life and in the other
+death. Most unfortunately the man chose "the little bundle
+of death."<a id="footnotetag100" name="footnotetag100"></a><a href="#footnote100"><sup>100</sup></a> The Cherokee Indians of North America say
+that a number of beings were engaged in the work of
+creation. The Sun was made first. Now the creators
+intended that men should live for ever. But when the Sun
+passed over them in the sky, he told the people that there
+was not room enough for them all and that they had better
+die. At last the Sun's own daughter, who was with the
+people on earth, was bitten by a snake and died. Then the
+Sun repented him and said that men might live always; and
+he bade them take a box and go fetch his daughter's spirit in
+the box and bring it to her body, that she might live. But
+he charged them straitly not to open the box until they
+arrived at the dead body. However, moved by curiosity,
+they unhappily opened the box too soon; away flew the
+spirit, and all men have died ever since.<a id="footnotetag101" name="footnotetag101"></a><a href="#footnote101"><sup>101</sup></a> Some of the
+North American Indians informed the early Jesuit missionaries
+that a certain man had received the gift of immortality
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>[pg 78]</span>
+in a small packet from a famous magician named Messou,
+who repaired the world after it had been seriously damaged
+by a great flood. In bestowing on the man this valuable
+gift the magician strictly enjoined him on no account to open
+the packet. The man obeyed, and so long as the packet was
+unopened he remained immortal. But his wife was both
+curious and incredulous; she opened the packet to see what
+was in it, the precious contents flew away, and mankind has
+been subject to death ever since.<a id="footnotetag102" name="footnotetag102"></a><a href="#footnote102"><sup>102</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Baganda story how death came into the world through the
+forgetfulness and imprudence of a woman.</p>
+
+<p>As these American Indians tell how death came through
+the curiosity and incredulity of one woman, the Baganda of
+Central Africa relate how it came through the forgetfulness
+and imprudence of another. According to the Baganda the
+first man who came to earth in Uganda was named Kintu.
+He brought with him one cow and lived on its milk, for he
+had no other food. But in time a woman named Nambi, a
+daughter of Gulu, the king of heaven, came down to earth
+with her brother or sister, and seeing Kintu she fell in love
+with him and wished to have him for her husband. But
+her proud father doubted whether Kintu was worthy of his
+daughter's hand, and accordingly he insisted on testing his
+future son-in-law before he would consent to the marriage. So
+he carried off Kintu's cow and put it among his own herds in
+heaven. When Kintu found that the cow was stolen, he was
+in a great rage, but hunger getting the better of anger, he
+made shift to live by peeling the bark of trees and gathering
+herbs and leaves, which he cooked and ate. In time his
+future wife Nambi happened to spy the stolen cow among
+her father's herds and she told Kintu, who came to heaven
+to seek and recover the lost animal. His future father-in-law
+Gulu, Lord of Heaven, obliged him to submit to many tests
+designed to prove his fitness for marriage with the daughter
+of so exalted a being as the Lord of Heaven. All these
+tests Kintu successfully passed through. At last Gulu was
+satisfied, gave him his daughter Nambi to wife, and allowed
+him to return to earth with her.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The coming of Death.</p>
+
+<p>But Nambi had a brother and his name was Death
+(<i>Walumbe</i>). So before the Lord of Heaven sent her
+away with her husband he called them both to him
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>[pg 79]</span>
+and said, "You must hurry away before Death comes, or
+he will wish to go with you. You must not let him
+do so, for he would only cause you trouble and unhappiness."
+To this his daughter agreed, and she went to pack
+up her things. She and her husband then took leave of the
+Lord of Heaven, who gave them at parting a piece of advice.
+"Be sure," said he, "if you have forgotten anything, not to
+come back for it; because, if you do, Death will wish to go
+with you, and you must go without him." So off they set,
+the man and his wife, taking with them his cow and its
+calves, also a sheep, a goat, a fowl, and a banana tree. But
+on the way the woman remembered that she had forgotten
+the grain to feed the fowl, so she said to her husband, "I
+must go back for the grain to feed the fowl, or it will die."
+Her husband tried to dissuade her, but in vain. She said,
+"I will hurry back and get it without any one seeing me."
+So back she went in an evil hour and said to her father the
+Lord of Heaven, "I have forgotten the grain for the fowl
+and I am come back to fetch it from the doorway where I
+put it." Her father said sadly, "Did I not tell you that
+you were not to return if you had forgotten anything,
+because your brother Death would wish to go with you?
+Now he will accompany you." The woman fled, but Death
+saw her and followed hard after her. When she rejoined
+her husband, he was angry, for he saw Death and said,
+"Why have you brought your brother with you? Who can
+live with him?"</p>
+
+<p class="side">The importunity of Death.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the earth, Nambi planted her
+garden, and the bananas sprang up quickly and formed a
+grove. They lived happily for a time till one day Death
+came and asked for one of their daughters, that she might go
+away with him and be his cook. But the father said, "If the
+Lord of Heaven comes and asks me for one of my children,
+what am I to say? Shall I tell him that I have given her to
+you to be your cook?" Death was silent and went away.
+But he came back another day and asked again for a child
+to be his cook. When the father again refused, Death said,
+"I will kill your children." The father did not know what
+that meant, so he asked Death, "What is that you will do?"
+However, in a short time one of the children fell ill and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>[pg 80]</span>
+died, and then another and another. So the man went to
+the Lord of Heaven and complained that Death was
+taking away his children one by one. The Lord of Heaven
+said, "Did I not tell you, when you were going away, to go
+at once with your wife and not to return if you had forgotten
+anything, but you let your wife return to fetch the
+grain? Now you have Death living with you. If you had
+obeyed me, you would have been free from him and not lost
+any of your children."</p>
+
+<p class="side">The hunt
+for Death.</p>
+
+<p>However, the man pleaded with him, and the Lord
+Heaven at last consented to send Death's brother
+Kaikuzi to help the woman and to prevent Death from
+killing her children. So down came Kaikuzi to earth, and
+when he met his brother Death they greeted each other
+lovingly. Then Kaikuzi told Death that he had come to
+fetch him away from earth to heaven. Death was willing
+to go, but he said, "Let us take our sister too." "Nay," said
+his brother, "that cannot be, for she is a wife and must
+stay with her husband." The dispute waxed warm, Death
+insisting on carrying off his sister, and his brother refusing
+to allow him to do so. At last the brother angrily ordered
+Death to do as he was bid, and so saying he made as
+though he would seize him. But Death slipped from
+between his hands and fled into the earth. For a long
+time after that there was enmity between the two brothers.
+Kaikuzi tried in every way to catch Death, but Death always
+escaped. At last Kaikuzi told the people that he would
+have one final hunt for Death, and while the hunt was
+going on they must all stay in their houses; not a man,
+a woman, a child, nor even an animal was to be allowed
+to pass the threshold; and if they saw Death passing
+the window, they were not to utter a cry of terror but
+to keep still. Well, for some days his orders were obeyed.
+Not a living soul, not an animal, stirred abroad. All
+without was solitude, all within was silence. Encouraged
+by the universal stillness Death emerged from his lair, and his
+brother was just about to catch him, when some children,
+who had ventured out to herd their goats, saw Death and
+cried out. Death's good brother rushed to the spot and
+asked them why they had cried out. They said, "Because
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>[pg 81]</span>
+we saw Death." So his brother was angry because Death
+had again made good his escape into the earth, and he went
+to the first man and told him that he was weary of hunting
+Death and wished to return home to heaven. The first man
+thanked him kindly for all he had done, and said, "I fear
+there is nothing more to be done. We must only hope that
+Death will not kill all the people." It was a vain hope.
+Since then Death has lived on earth and killed everybody
+who is born into the world; and always, after the deed
+of murder is done, he escapes into the earth at Tanda in
+Singo.<a id="footnotetag103" name="footnotetag103"></a><a href="#footnote103"><sup>103</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">In the preceding story Death is distinctly personified. Death
+personified in a West African story of the origin of death. Death and
+the spider and the spider's daughter.</p>
+
+<p>If this curious tale of the origin of death reveals no very
+deep philosophy, it is at least interesting for the distinctness
+with which Death is conceived as a personal being, the son
+of the Lord of Heaven, the brother of the first man's wife.
+In this personification of Death the story differs from all the
+others which we have examined and marks an intellectual
+advance upon them; since the power of picturing abstract
+ideas to the mind with all the sharpness of outline and
+vividness of colour which are implied by personification is a
+faculty above the reach of very low intelligences. It is not
+surprising that the Baganda should have attained to this
+power, for they are probably the most highly cultured and
+intellectual of all the many Bantu tribes of Africa. The
+same conception of Death as a person occurs in a story of
+the origin of death which is told by the Hos, a negro tribe
+in Togoland, a district of West Africa. These Hos belong
+to the Ewe-speaking family of the true negroes, who have
+reached a comparatively high level of barbarism in the
+notorious kingdom of Dahomey. The story which the Hos
+tell as to the origin of death is as follows. Once upon a
+time there was a great famine in which even the hunters
+could find no flesh to eat. Then Death went and made
+a road as broad as from here to Sokode, and there he set
+many snares. Every animal that tried to pass that way
+fell into a snare. So Death had much flesh to eat. One
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>[pg 82]</span>
+day the Spider came to Death and said to him, "You have
+so much meat!" and she asked if she might have some to
+take home with her. Death gave her leave. So the Spider
+made a basket as long as from Ho to Akoviewe (a distance
+of about five miles), crammed it full of meat, and dragged it
+home. In return for this bounty the Spider gave Death her
+daughter Yiyisa to wife. So when Death had her for his
+wife, he gave her a hint. He said, "Don't walk on the broad
+road which I have made. Walk on the footpath which I
+have not made. When you go to the water, be sure to
+take none but the narrow way through the wood." Well,
+some time afterwards it had rained a little; the grass was
+wet, and Yiyisa wished to go to the watering-place. When
+she tried to walk on the narrow path through the forest, the
+tall damp grass wet her through and through, so she thought
+to herself, "In future I will only go on the broad road." But
+scarce had she set foot on the beautiful broad road when she
+fell into a snare and died on the spot. When Death came
+to the snare and saw his wife in it dead, he cut her up into
+bits and toasted them on the fire. One day the Spider
+paid a visit to her son-in-law Death, and he set a good meal
+before her. When she had eaten and drunk her fill and
+had got up to go home, she asked Death after her daughter.
+"If you take that meat from the fire," said Death, "you will
+see her." So the Spider took the flesh from the fire and
+there, sure enough, she found her dead daughter. Then
+she went home in great wrath and whetted her knife till it
+was so sharp that a fly lighting on the edge was cut in two.
+With that knife she came back to attack Death. But Death
+shot an arrow at her. She dodged it, and the arrow whizzed
+past her and set all the forest on fire. Then the Spider
+flung her sharp knife at Death, but it missed him and only
+sliced off the tops of the palms and all the other trees of
+the wood. Seeing that her stroke had failed, the Spider
+fled away home and shut herself up in her house. But
+Death waited for her on the edge of the town to kill her
+as soon as she ventured out. Next morning some women
+came out of the town to draw water at the watering-place,
+and as they went they talked with one another. But Death
+shot an arrow among them and killed several. The rest
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>[pg 83]</span>
+ran away home and said, "So and so is dead." Then
+Death came and looked at the bodies and said, "That
+is my game. I need go no more into the wood to hunt."
+That is how Death came into the world. If the Spider
+had not done what she did, nobody would ever have
+died.<a id="footnotetag104" name="footnotetag104"></a><a href="#footnote104"><sup>104</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Death personified in a Melanesian story of the origin of
+death.</p>
+
+<p>Again, the Melanesians of the Banks Islands tell a
+story of the origin of Death, in which that grim power is
+personified. They say that Death (<i>Mate</i>) used to live
+underground in a shadowy realm called Panoi, while men
+on earth changed their skins like serpents and so renewing
+their youth lived for ever. But a practical inconvenience of
+immortality was that property never changed hands; newcomers
+had no chance, everything was monopolised by the
+old, old stagers. To remedy this state of things and secure
+a more equitable distribution of property Death was induced
+to emerge from the lower world and to appear on earth
+among men; he came relying on an assurance that no
+harm would be done him. Well, when they had him, they
+laid him out on a board, covered him with a pall as if he
+were a corpse, and then proceeded with great gusto to
+divide his property and eat the funeral feast. On the fifth
+day they blew the conch shell to drive away the ghost, as
+usual, and lifted the pall to see what had become of Death.
+But there was no Death there; he had absconded leaving only
+his skeleton behind. They naturally feared that he had made
+off with an intention to return to his home underground,
+which would have been a great calamity; for if there were no
+Death on earth, how could men die and how could other
+people inherit their property? The idea was intolerable;
+so to cut off the retreat of the fugitive, the Fool was set
+to do sentinel duty at the parting of the ways, where one
+road leads down to the underworld, Death's home, and the
+other leads up to the upper world, the abode of the living.
+Here accordingly the Fool was stationed with strict orders
+to keep his eye on Death if he should attempt to sneak past
+him and return to the nether world. However, the Fool,
+like a fool as he was, sat watching the road to the upper
+world, and Death slipped behind him and so made good his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>[pg 84]</span>
+retreat. Since then all men have followed Death down that
+fatal path.<a id="footnotetag105" name="footnotetag105"></a><a href="#footnote105"><sup>105</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Thus according to savages death is not a necessary part of
+the order of nature. A similar view is held by some eminent modern
+biologists.</p>
+
+<p>So much for savage stories of the origin of death. They
+all imply a belief that death is not a necessary part of the
+order of nature, but that it originated in a pure mistake or
+misdeed of some sort on somebody's part, and that we should
+all have lived happy and immortal if it had not been for that
+disastrous blunder or crime. Thus the tales reflect the same
+frame of mind which I illustrated in the last lecture, when I
+shewed that many savages still to this day believe all men
+to be naturally immortal and death to be nothing but an
+effect of sorcery. In short, whether we regard the savage's
+attitude to death at the present day or his ideas as to its
+origin in the remote past, we must conclude that primitive
+man cannot reconcile himself to the notion of death as a
+natural and necessary event; he persists in regarding it as
+an accidental and unnecessary disturbance of the proper
+order of nature. To a certain extent, perhaps, in these
+crude speculations he has anticipated certain views of modern
+biology. Thus it has been maintained by Professor August
+Weissmann that death is not a natural necessity, that many
+of the lowest species of living animals do in fact live for
+ever; and that in the higher animals the custom of dying
+has been introduced in the course of evolution for the
+purpose of thinning the population and preventing the
+degeneration of the species, which would otherwise follow
+through the gradual and necessary deterioration of the
+immortal individuals, who, though they could not die,
+might yet sustain much bodily damage through hard
+knocks in the hurly-burly of eternal existence on earth.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Weissmann's view that death is not a natural necessity but an
+adaptation acquired in the course of evolution for the advantage of the
+race.</p>
+
+<p>On this subject I will quote some sentences from Professor
+Weissmann's essay on the duration of life. He
+says, "The necessity of death has been hitherto explained
+as due to causes which are inherent in organic nature,
+and not to the fact that it may be advantageous. I do
+not however believe in the validity of this explanation;
+I consider that death is not a primary necessity, but that it
+has been secondarily acquired as an adaptation. I believe
+that life is endowed with a fixed duration, not because it is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>[pg 85]</span>
+contrary to its nature to be unlimited, but because the
+unlimited existence of individuals would be a luxury without
+any corresponding advantage. The above-mentioned hypothesis
+upon the origin and necessity of death leads me to
+believe that the organism did not finally cease to renew the
+worn-out cell material because the nature of the cells did not
+permit them to multiply indefinitely, but because the power
+of multiplying indefinitely was lost when it ceased to be of
+use.... John Hunter, supported by his experiments on
+<i>anabiosis</i>, hoped to prolong the life of man indefinitely by
+alternate freezing and thawing; and the Veronese Colonel
+Aless. Guaguino made his contemporaries believe that a race
+of men existed in Russia, of which the individuals died
+regularly every year on the 27th of November, and returned
+to life on the 24th of the following April. There cannot
+however be the least doubt, that the higher organisms, as
+they are now constructed, contain within themselves the
+germs of death. The question however arises as to how
+this has come to pass; and I reply that death is to be
+looked upon as an occurrence which is advantageous to the
+species as a concession to the outer conditions of life, and
+not as an absolute necessity, essentially inherent in life itself.
+Death, that is the end of life, is by no means, as is usually
+assumed, an attribute of all organisms. An immense number
+of low organisms do not die, although they are easily destroyed,
+being killed by heat, poisons, etc. As long, however,
+as those conditions which are necessary for their life
+are fulfilled, they continue to live, and they thus carry the
+potentiality of unending life in themselves. I am speaking
+not only of the Amoebae and the low unicellular Algae, but
+also of far more highly organized unicellular animals, such
+as the Infusoria."<a id="footnotetag106" name="footnotetag106"></a><a href="#footnote106"><sup>106</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Similar view expressed by Alfred Russel Wallace.</p>
+
+<p>A similar suggestion that death is not a natural necessity
+but an innovation introduced for the good of the breed, has
+been made by our eminent English biologist, Mr. Alfred
+Russel Wallace. He says: "If individuals did not die they
+would soon multiply inordinately and would interfere with
+each other's healthy existence. Food would become scarce,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>[pg 86]</span>
+and hence the larger individuals would probably decompose
+or diminish in size. The deficiency of nourishment would
+lead to parts of the organism not being renewed; they
+would become fixed, and liable to more or less slow
+decomposition as dead parts within a living body. The
+smaller organisms would have a better chance of finding
+food, the larger ones less chance. That one which gave
+off several small portions to form each a new organism
+would have a better chance of leaving descendants like
+itself than one which divided equally or gave off a large
+part of itself. Hence it would happen that those which
+gave off very small portions would probably soon after
+cease to maintain their own existence while they would
+leave a numerous offspring. This state of things would be
+in any case for the advantage of the race, and would therefore,
+by natural selection, soon become established as the
+regular course of things, and thus we have the origin of <i>old
+age, decay, and death</i>; for it is evident that when one or more
+individuals have provided a sufficient number of successors
+they themselves, as consumers of nourishment in a constantly
+increasing degree, are an injury to their successors. Natural
+selection therefore weeds them out, and in many cases favours
+such races as die almost immediately after they have left
+successors. Many moths and other insects are in this
+condition, living only to propagate their kind and then
+immediately dying, some not even taking any food in the
+perfect and reproductive state."<a id="footnotetag107" name="footnotetag107"></a><a href="#footnote107"><sup>107</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Savages and some men of science agree that death is not a
+natural necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it appears that two of the most eminent biologists
+of our time agree with savages in thinking that death is by
+no means a natural necessity for all living beings. They
+only differ from savages in this, that whereas savages look
+upon death as the result of a deplorable accident, our men
+of science regard it as a beneficent reform instituted by
+nature as a means of adjusting the numbers of living beings
+to the quantity of the food supply, and so tending to the
+improvement and therefore on the whole to the happiness
+of the species.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote57" name="footnote57"></a><b>Footnote 57:</b><a href="#footnotetag57"> (return) </a><p> H. Callaway, <i>The Religious System of the Amazulu</i>,
+Part i. pp. 1, 3 <i>sq.</i>, Part ii. p. 138; Rev. L. Grout,
+<i>Zululand, or Life among the Zulu-Kafirs</i> (Philadelphia,
+<span class="sc">N.D.</span>), pp. 148 <i>sq.</i>; Dudley Kidd, <i>The Essential
+Kafir</i> (London, 1904), pp. 76 <i>sq.</i> Compare A. F. Gardiner,
+<i>Narrative of a Journey to the Zoolu Country</i> (London, 1836), pp.
+178 <i>sq.</i>, T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, <i>Relation d'un voyage
+d'Exploration au Nord-Est de la Colonie du Cap de Bonne-Esp&eacute;rance</i>
+(Paris, 1842), p. 472; Rev. J. Shooter, <i>The Kafirs of Natal and the
+Zulu Country</i> (London, 1857), p. 159; W. H. I. Bleek, <i>Reynard the
+Fox in South Africa</i> (London, 1864), p. 74; D. Leslie, <i>Among the
+Zulus and Amatongas</i>, Second Edition (Edinburgh, 1875), p. 209; F.
+Speckmann, <i>Die Hermannsburger Mission in Afrika</i> (Hermannsburg,
+1876), p. 164.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote58" name="footnote58"></a><b>Footnote 58:</b><a href="#footnotetag58"> (return) </a><p> J. Chapman, <i>Travels in the Interior of South Africa</i>
+(London, 1868), i. 47.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote59" name="footnote59"></a><b>Footnote 59:</b><a href="#footnotetag59"> (return) </a><p> E. Casalis, <i>The Basutos</i> (London, 1861), p. 242; E.
+Jacottet, <i>The Treasury of Ba-suto Lore</i>, i. (Morija, Basutoland,
+1908), pp. 46 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote60" name="footnote60"></a><b>Footnote 60:</b><a href="#footnotetag60"> (return) </a><p> H. A. Junod, <i>Les Ba-Ronga</i> Neuch&acirc;tel (1898), pp. 401
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote61" name="footnote61"></a><b>Footnote 61:</b><a href="#footnotetag61"> (return) </a><p> W. A. Elmslie, <i>Among the Wild Ngoni</i> (Edinburgh and
+London, 1899), p. 70.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote62" name="footnote62"></a><b>Footnote 62:</b><a href="#footnotetag62"> (return) </a><p>H. A. Junod and W. A. Elmslie, <i>ll.cc.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote63" name="footnote63"></a><b>Footnote 63:</b><a href="#footnotetag63"> (return) </a><p> C. W. Hobley, <i>Ethnology of A-Kamba and other East African Tribes</i>
+(Cambridge, 1910), pp. 107-109.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote64" name="footnote64"></a><b>Footnote 64:</b><a href="#footnotetag64"> (return) </a><p> Fr. M&uuml;ller, "Die Religionen Togos in Einzeldarstellungen,"
+<i>Anthropos</i>, ii. (1907) p. 203. In a version of the story reported
+from Calabar a sheep appears as the messenger of mortality, while a dog
+is the messenger of immortality or rather of resurrection. See "Calabar
+Stories," <i>Journal of the African Society</i>, No. 18 (January 1906),
+p. 194.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote65" name="footnote65"></a><b>Footnote 65:</b><a href="#footnotetag65"> (return) </a><p> E. Perregaux, <i>Chez les Achanti</i>
+(Neuch&acirc;tel, 1906), pp. 198 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote66" name="footnote66"></a><b>Footnote 66:</b><a href="#footnotetag66"> (return) </a><p>E. Perregaux, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 199.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote67" name="footnote67"></a><b>Footnote 67:</b><a href="#footnotetag67"> (return) </a><p> Sir J. E. Alexander, <i>Expedition of Discovery into the
+Interior of Africa</i> (London, 1838), i. 169; C. J. Andersson, <i>Lake
+Ngami</i>, Second Edition (London, 1856), pp. 328 <i>sq.</i>; W. H. I.
+Bleek, <i>Reynard the Fox in South Africa</i> (London, 1864), pp. 71-73;
+Th. Hahn, <i>Tsuni-Goam, the Supreme Being of the Khoi-Khoi</i>
+(London, 1881), p. 52.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote68" name="footnote68"></a><b>Footnote 68:</b><a href="#footnotetag68"> (return) </a><p> W. H. I. Bleek, <i>A Brief Account of Bushman
+Folk-lore</i> (London, 1875), pp. 9 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote69" name="footnote69"></a><b>Footnote 69:</b><a href="#footnotetag69"> (return) </a><p> W. H. I. Bleek, <i>Reynard the Fox in South Africa</i>,
+pp. 69 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote70" name="footnote70"></a><b>Footnote 70:</b><a href="#footnotetag70"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Hollis, <i>The Masai</i> (Oxford,
+1905), pp. 271 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote71" name="footnote71"></a><b>Footnote 71:</b><a href="#footnotetag71"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Hollis, <i>The Nandi</i> (Oxford,
+1909), p. 98.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote72" name="footnote72"></a><b>Footnote 72:</b><a href="#footnotetag72"> (return) </a><p> Captain W. E. H. Barrett, "Notes
+on the Customs and Beliefs of the Wa-Giriama,
+etc., British East Africa,"
+<i>Journal of the R. Anthropological Institute</i>,
+xli. (1911) p. 37.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote73" name="footnote73"></a><b>Footnote 73:</b><a href="#footnotetag73"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>,
+Second Edition (London, 1860), i.
+205.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote74" name="footnote74"></a><b>Footnote 74:</b><a href="#footnotetag74"> (return) </a><p> <i>Lettres &Eacute;difiantes et Curieuses</i>,
+Nouvelle &Eacute;dition, xv. (Paris, 1781)
+pp. 305 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote75" name="footnote75"></a><b>Footnote 75:</b><a href="#footnotetag75"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of
+South-East Australia</i> (London, 1904),
+pp. 428 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote76" name="footnote76"></a><b>Footnote 76:</b><a href="#footnotetag76"> (return) </a><p> Antoine Cabaton, <i>Nouvelles Recherches
+sur les Chams</i> (Paris, 1901),
+pp. 18 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote77" name="footnote77"></a><b>Footnote 77:</b><a href="#footnotetag77"> (return) </a><p> Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen,
+<i>Northern Tribes of Central Australia</i>
+(London, 1904), pp. 513 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote78" name="footnote78"></a><b>Footnote 78:</b><a href="#footnotetag78"> (return) </a><p> Father G. Boscana, "Chinigchinich,"
+in <i>Life in California, by an
+American</i> [A. Robinson] (New York,
+1846), pp. 298 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote79" name="footnote79"></a><b>Footnote 79:</b><a href="#footnotetag79"> (return) </a><p> Merolla, "Voyage to Congo," in
+J. Pinkerton's <i>Voyages and Travels</i>, xvi.
+(London, 1814) p. 273.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote80" name="footnote80"></a><b>Footnote 80:</b><a href="#footnotetag80"> (return) </a><p> P. A. Kleintitschen, <i>Die K&uuml;stenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel</i> (Hiltrup bei M&uuml;nster, <span class="sc">N.D.</span>), p. 334.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote81" name="footnote81"></a><b>Footnote 81:</b><a href="#footnotetag81"> (return) </a><p> A. Landes, "Contes et L&eacute;gendes Annamites," <i>Cochinchine
+fran&ccedil;aise, Excursions et Reconnaissances</i>, No. 25 (Saigon, 1886), pp.
+108 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote82" name="footnote82"></a><b>Footnote 82:</b><a href="#footnotetag82"> (return) </a><p> Otto Meyer, "Mythen und Erz&auml;hlungen von der Insel Vuatom
+(Bismarck-Archipel, S&uuml;dsee)," <i>Anthropos</i>, v. (1910) p. 724.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote83" name="footnote83"></a><b>Footnote 83:</b><a href="#footnotetag83"> (return) </a><p> H. Sundermann, "Die Insel Nias und die Mission daselbst,"
+<i>Allgemeine Missions-Zeitschrift</i>, xi. (1884) p. 451; E.
+Modigliani, <i>Un Viaggio a N&iacute;as</i> (Milan, 1890), p. 295.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote84" name="footnote84"></a><b>Footnote 84:</b><a href="#footnotetag84"> (return) </a><p> R. Schomburgk, <i>Reisen in Britisch-Guiana</i> (Leipsig,
+1847-1848), ii. 319.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote85" name="footnote85"></a><b>Footnote 85:</b><a href="#footnotetag85"> (return) </a><p>R. Schomburgk, <i>op. cit.</i> ii. 320.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote86" name="footnote86"></a><b>Footnote 86:</b><a href="#footnotetag86"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i> (Oxford, 1891),
+p. 265; W. Gray, "Some Notes on the Tannese," <i>Internationales Archiv
+f&uuml;r Ethnographie</i>, vii. (1894) p. 232.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote87" name="footnote87"></a><b>Footnote 87:</b><a href="#footnotetag87"> (return) </a><p> C. Ribbe, <i>Zwei Jahre unter den Kannibalen der
+Salomo-Inseln</i> (Dresden-Blasowitz, 1903), p. 148.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote88" name="footnote88"></a><b>Footnote 88:</b><a href="#footnotetag88"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Keysser, "Aus dem Leben der Kaileute," in R.
+Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch Neu-Guinea</i> (Berlin, 1911), iii. 161
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote89" name="footnote89"></a><b>Footnote 89:</b><a href="#footnotetag89"> (return) </a><p> Josef Meier, "Mythen und Sagen der Admiralit&auml;tsinsulaner,"
+<i>Anthropos</i>, iii. (1908) p. 193.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote90" name="footnote90"></a><b>Footnote 90:</b><a href="#footnotetag90"> (return) </a><p> George Brown, D.D., <i>Melanesians and Polynesians</i>
+(London, 1910), p. 365; George Turner, LL.D., <i>Samoa</i> (London,
+1884), pp. 8 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote91" name="footnote91"></a><b>Footnote 91:</b><a href="#footnotetag91"> (return) </a><p>See above, p. 70.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote92" name="footnote92"></a><b>Footnote 92:</b><a href="#footnotetag92"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Kruijt, "De legenden der Poso-Alfoeren aangaande de
+erste menschen," <i>Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche
+Zendelinggenootschap</i>, xxxviii. (1894) p. 340.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote93" name="footnote93"></a><b>Footnote 93:</b><a href="#footnotetag93"> (return) </a><p> D. F. A. Hervey, "The M&ecirc;ntra Traditions," <i>Journal of
+the Straits Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society</i>, No. 10 (December
+1882), p. 190; W. W. Skeat and C. O. Blagden, <i>Pagan Races of the
+Malay Peninsula</i> (London, 1906), ii. 337 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote94" name="footnote94"></a><b>Footnote 94:</b><a href="#footnotetag94"> (return) </a><p>Guerlach, "M&oelig;urs et Superstitions des sauvages Ba-hnars," <i>Missions
+Catholiques</i>, xix. (1887) p. 479.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote95" name="footnote95"></a><b>Footnote 95:</b><a href="#footnotetag95"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) J. G. Scott and J. P. Hardiman, <i>Gazetteer of
+Upper Burma and the Shan States</i>, Part i. vol. i. (Rangoon, 1900) pp.
+408 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote96" name="footnote96"></a><b>Footnote 96:</b><a href="#footnotetag96"> (return) </a><p> R. Brough Smyth, <i>The Aborigines of Victoria</i>
+(Melbourne and London, 1878), i. 428. On this narrative the author
+remarks: "This story appears to bear too close a resemblance to the
+Biblical account of the Fall. Is it genuine or not? Mr. Bulmer admits
+that it may have been invented by the aborigines after they had heard
+something of Scripture history."</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote97" name="footnote97"></a><b>Footnote 97:</b><a href="#footnotetag97"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 204 <i>sq.</i> For another Fijian story of the origin
+of death, see above, p. 67.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote98" name="footnote98"></a><b>Footnote 98:</b><a href="#footnotetag98"> (return) </a><p> Josef Meier, "Mythen und Sagen der Admiralit&auml;tsinsulaner,"
+<i>Anthropos</i>, iii. (1908) p. 194.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote99" name="footnote99"></a><b>Footnote 99:</b><a href="#footnotetag99"> (return) </a><p>Josef Meier, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 194 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote100" name="footnote100"></a><b>Footnote 100:</b><a href="#footnotetag100"> (return) </a><p> C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, <i>The Great Plateau of
+Northern Rhodesia</i> (London, 1911), pp. 80 <i>sq.</i> A like tale is
+told by the Balolo of the Upper Congo. See <i>Folk-lore</i>, xii. (1901)
+p. 461; and below, p. 472.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote101" name="footnote101"></a><b>Footnote 101:</b><a href="#footnotetag101"> (return) </a><p> J. Mooney, "Myths of the Cherokee," <i>Nineteenth Annual
+Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology</i>, Part i. (Washington,
+1900) p. 436, quoting "the Payne manuscript, of date about 1835."
+Compare <i>id.</i>, pp. 252-254, 436 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote102" name="footnote102"></a><b>Footnote 102:</b><a href="#footnotetag102"> (return) </a><p> <i>Relations des J&eacute;suites</i>, 1634, p. 13 (Canadian
+reprint, Quebec, 1858).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote103" name="footnote103"></a><b>Footnote 103:</b><a href="#footnotetag103"> (return) </a><p> Sir Harry Johnston, <i>The Uganda Protectorate</i>
+(London, 1904), ii. 700-705 (the story was taken down by Mr. J. F.
+Cunningham); Rev. J. Roscoe, <i>The Baganda</i> (London, 1911), pp.
+460-464. The story is briefly told by Mr. L. Decle, <i>Three Years in
+Savage Africa</i> (London, 1898), pp. 439 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote104" name="footnote104"></a><b>Footnote 104:</b><a href="#footnotetag104"> (return) </a><p>J. Spieth, <i>Die Ewe-St&auml;mme</i> (Berlin, 1906), pp. 590-593.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote105" name="footnote105"></a><b>Footnote 105:</b><a href="#footnotetag105"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i> (Oxford, 1891),
+pp. 265 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote106" name="footnote106"></a><b>Footnote 106:</b><a href="#footnotetag106"> (return) </a><p> A. Weissmann, <i>Essays upon Heredity and Kindred
+Biological Problems</i>, vol. i. (Oxford, 1891) pp. 25 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote107" name="footnote107"></a><b>Footnote 107:</b><a href="#footnotetag107"> (return) </a><p> A. R. Wallace, quoted in A. Weissmann's <i>Essays upon
+Heredity</i>, i. (Oxford, 1891) p. 24 note.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>[pg 87]</span>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-iv" id="lecture-iv"></a>LECTURE IV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE
+ABORIGINES OF CENTRAL AUSTRALIA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Proposed survey of the belief in immortality and the worship
+of the dead, as these are found among the various races of men,
+beginning with the lowest savages.</p>
+
+<p>In previous lectures we have considered the ideas which
+savages in general entertain of death and its origin. To-day
+we begin our survey of the beliefs and practices of particular
+races in regard to the dead. I propose to deal separately
+with some of the principal races of men and to shew in
+detail how the belief in human immortality and the worship
+of the dead, to which that belief naturally gives rise, have
+formed a more or less important element of their religion.
+And in order to trace as far as possible the evolution of that
+worship in history I shall begin with the lowest savages
+about whom we possess accurate information, and shall
+pass from them to higher races until, if time permitted, we
+might come to the civilised nations of antiquity and of
+modern times. In this way, by comparing the ideas and
+practices of peoples on different planes of culture we may
+be able approximately to reconstruct or represent to ourselves
+with a fair degree of probability the various stages
+through which this particular phase of religion may
+be supposed to have passed in the great civilised races
+before the dawn of history. Of course all such reconstructions
+must be more or less conjectural. In the
+absence of historical documents that is inevitable; but our
+reconstruction will be more or less probable according to the
+degree in which the corresponding stages of evolution are
+found to resemble or differ from each other in the various
+races of men. If we find that tribes at approximately the
+same level of culture in different parts of the world have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>[pg 88]</span>
+approximately the same religion, we may fairly infer that
+religion is in a sense a function of culture, and therefore that
+all races which have traversed the same stages of culture in
+the past have traversed also the same stages of religion; in
+short that, allowing for many minor variations, which flow
+inevitably from varying circumstances such as climate, soil,
+racial temperament, and so forth, the course of religious
+development has on the whole been uniform among mankind.
+This enquiry may be called the embryology of
+religion, in as much as it seeks to do for the development
+of religion what embryology in the strict sense of the word
+attempts to do for the development of life. And just as
+biology or the science of life naturally begins with the study
+of the lowest sorts of living beings, the humble protozoa, so
+we shall begin our enquiry with a study of the lowest
+savages of whom we possess a comparatively full and
+accurate record, namely, the aborigines of Australia.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Savagery a case not of degeneracy but of arrested or rather
+retarded development.</p>
+
+<p>At the outset I would ask you to bear in mind that, so
+far as evidence allows us to judge, savagery in all its
+phases appears to be nothing but a case of arrested or rather
+retarded development. The old view that savages have
+degenerated from a higher level of culture, on which their
+forefathers once stood, is destitute alike of evidence and of
+probability. On the contrary, the information which we
+possess as to the lower races, meagre and fragmentary as
+it unfortunately is, all seems to point to the conclusion that
+on the whole even the most savage tribes have reached their
+low level of culture from one still lower, and that the upward
+movement, though so slow as to be almost imperceptible, has
+yet been real and steady up to the point where savagery has
+come into contact with civilisation. The moment of such
+contact is a critical one for the savages. If the intellectual,
+moral, and social interval which divides them from the
+civilised intruders exceeds a certain degree, then it appears
+that sooner or later the savages must inevitably perish; the
+shock of collision with a stronger race is too violent to be
+withstood, the weaker goes to the wall and is shattered.
+But if on the other hand the breach between the two
+conflicting races is not so wide as to be impassable, there
+is a hope that the weaker may assimilate enough of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>[pg 89]</span>
+higher culture of the other to survive. It was so, for
+example, with our barbarous forefathers in contact with the
+ancient civilisations of Greece and Rome; and it may be so
+in future with some, for example, of the black races of the
+present day in contact with European civilisation. Time
+will shew. But among the savages who cannot permanently
+survive the shock of collision with Europe may certainly be
+numbered the aborigines of Australia. They are rapidly
+dwindling and wasting away, and before very many years
+have passed it is probable that they will be extinct like
+the Tasmanians, who, so far as we can judge from the
+miserably imperfect records of them which we possess,
+appear to have been savages of an even lower type than
+the Australians, and therefore to have been still less able
+to survive in the struggle for existence with their vigorous
+European rivals.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Physical causes which have retarded progress in Australia.</p>
+
+<p>The causes which have retarded progress in Australia
+and kept the aboriginal population at the lowest level of
+savagery appear to be mainly two; namely, first, the geographical
+isolation and comparatively small area of the
+continent, and, second, the barren and indeed desert nature
+of a great part of its surface; for the combined effect of
+these causes has been, by excluding foreign competitors
+and seriously restricting the number of competitors at home,
+to abate the rigour of competition and thereby to restrain
+the action of one of the most powerful influences which make
+for progress. In other words, elements of weakness have
+been allowed to linger on, which under the sterner conditions
+of life entailed by fierce competition would long ago have
+been eliminated and have made way for elements better
+adapted to the environment. What is true of the human
+inhabitants of Australia in this respect is true also of its
+fauna and flora. It has long been recognised that the
+animals and plants of Australia represent on the whole
+more archaic types of life than the animals and plants of
+the larger continents; and the reason why these antiquated
+creatures have survived there rather than elsewhere is mainly
+that, the area of competition being so much restricted through
+the causes I have mentioned, these comparatively weak forms
+of animal and vegetable life have not been killed off by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>[pg 90]</span>
+stronger competitors. That this is the real cause appears to
+be proved by the rapidity with which many animals and
+plants introduced into Australia from Europe tend to overrun
+the country and to oust the old native fauna and flora.<a id="footnotetag108" name="footnotetag108"></a><a href="#footnote108"><sup>108</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">In the centre of Australia the natural conditions of life are
+most unfavourable; hence the central aborigines have remained in a more
+primitive state than those of the coasts, where food and water are more
+plentiful.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that among the causes which have kept the
+aborigines of Australia at a very low level of savagery must
+be reckoned the desert nature of a great part of the country.
+Now it is the interior of the continent which is the most arid,
+waste, and barren. The coasts are comparatively fertile, for
+they are watered by showers condensed from an atmosphere
+which is charged with moisture by the neighbouring sea; and
+this condensation is greatly facilitated in the south-eastern
+and eastern parts of the continent by a high range of
+mountains which here skirts the coast for a long distance,
+attracting the moisture from the ocean and precipitating it
+in the form of snow and rain. Thus the vegetation and
+hence the supply of food both animal and vegetable in
+these well-watered portions of the continent are varied
+and plentiful. In striking contrast with the fertility and
+abundance of these favoured regions are the stony plains
+and bare rocky ranges of the interior, where water is scarce,
+vegetation scanty, and animal life at certain seasons of the
+year can only with difficulty be maintained. It would be no
+wonder if the natives of these arid sun-scorched wildernesses
+should have lagged behind even their savage brethren of the
+coasts in respect of material and social progress; and in fact
+there are many indications that they have done so, in other
+words, that the aborigines of the more fertile districts near
+the sea have made a greater advance towards civilisation
+than the tribes of the desert interior. This is the view of
+men who have studied the Australian savages most deeply
+at first hand, and, so far as I can judge of the matter without
+any such first-hand acquaintance, I entirely agree with their
+opinion. I have given my reasons elsewhere and shall not
+repeat them here. All that I wish to impress on you now
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>[pg 91]</span>
+is that in aboriginal Australia a movement of social and
+intellectual progress, slow but perceptible, appears to have
+been setting from the coast inwards, and that, so far as
+such things can be referred to physical causes, this particular
+movement in Australia would seem to have been initiated
+by the sea acting through an abundant rainfall and a consequent
+abundant supply of food.<a id="footnotetag109" name="footnotetag109"></a><a href="#footnote109"><sup>109</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Backward state of the Central Australian aborigines. They
+have no idea of a moral supreme being.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, in attempting to give you some account
+of the belief in immortality and the worship of the dead
+among the various races of mankind, I propose to begin
+with the natives of Central Australia, first, because the
+Australian aborigines are the most primitive savages about
+whom we have full and accurate information, and, second,
+because among these primitive savages the inhabitants
+of the central deserts are on the whole the most primitive.
+Like their brethren in the rest of the continent
+they were in their native condition absolutely ignorant of
+metals and of agriculture; they had no domestic animals
+except the dog, and they subsisted wholly by the products
+of the chase and the natural fruits, roots, and seeds, which
+the ground yielded without cultivation of any sort. In
+regard to their intellectual outlook upon the world, they
+were deeply imbued, as I shewed in a former lecture, with
+a belief in magic, but it can hardly be said that they possessed
+any religion in the strict sense of the word, by which
+I mean a propitiation of real or imaginary powers regarded
+as personal beings superior to man: certainly the
+Australian aborigines appear to have believed in no beings
+who deserve to be called gods. On this subject Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen, our best authorities on these tribes,
+observe as follows: "The Central Australian natives&mdash;and
+this is true of the tribes extending from Lake Eyre
+in the south to the far north and eastwards across to
+the Gulf of Carpentaria&mdash;have no idea whatever of the
+existence of any supreme being who is pleased if they
+follow a certain line of what we call moral conduct and
+displeased if they do not do so. They have not the
+vaguest idea of a personal individual other than an actual
+living member of the tribe who approves or disapproves of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>[pg 92]</span>
+their conduct, so far as anything like what we call morality
+is concerned. Any such idea as that of a future life of
+happiness or the reverse, as a reward for meritorious or as a
+punishment for blameworthy conduct, is quite foreign to
+them.... We know of no tribe in which there is a belief
+of any kind in a supreme being who rewards or punishes
+the individual according to his moral behaviour, using the
+word moral in the native sense."<a id="footnotetag110" name="footnotetag110"></a><a href="#footnote110"><sup>110</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Central Australian theory that the souls of the dead survive
+and are afterwards reborn as infants.</p>
+
+<p>But if the aborigines of Central Australia have no
+religion properly so called, they entertain beliefs and they
+observe practices out of which under favourable circumstances
+a religion might have been developed, if its evolution
+had not been arrested by the advent of Europeans. Among
+these elements of natural religion one of the most important
+is the theory which these savages hold as to the existence
+and nature of the dead. That theory is a very remarkable
+one. With a single exception, which I shall
+mention presently, they unanimously believe that death
+is not the end of all things for the individual, but that
+the human personality survives, apparently with little
+change, in the form of a spirit, which may afterwards be
+reborn as a child into the world. In fact they think that
+every living person without exception is the reincarnation
+of a dead person who lived on earth a longer or shorter
+time ago. This belief is held universally by the tribes
+which occupy an immense area of Australia from the centre
+northwards to the Gulf of Carpentaria.<a id="footnotetag111" name="footnotetag111"></a><a href="#footnote111"><sup>111</sup></a> The single exception
+to which I have referred is furnished by the Gnanji, a
+fierce and wild-looking tribe who eat their dead enemies
+and perhaps also their dead friends.<a id="footnotetag112" name="footnotetag112"></a><a href="#footnote112"><sup>112</sup></a> These savages deny
+that women have spirits which live after death; when a
+woman dies, that, they say, is the end of her. On the
+other hand, the spirit of a dead man, in their opinion,
+survives and goes to and fro on the earth visiting the places
+where his forefathers camped in days of old and destined to
+be born again of a woman at some future time, when the
+rains have fallen and bleached his bones.<a id="footnotetag113" name="footnotetag113"></a><a href="#footnote113"><sup>113</sup></a> But why these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>[pg 93]</span>
+primitive philosophers should deny the privilege of immortality
+to women and reserve it exclusively for men, is
+not manifest. All other Central Australian tribes appear
+to admit the rights of women equally with the rights of
+men in a life beyond the grave.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Central Australian theory as to the state of the dead.
+Certain conspicuous features of the landscape supposed to be tenanted by
+the souls of the dead waiting to be born again.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the state of the souls of the dead in the
+intervals between their successive reincarnations, the opinions
+of the Central Australian savages are clear and definite.
+Most civilised races who believe in the immortality of
+the soul have found themselves compelled to confess
+that, however immortal the spirits of the departed may
+be, they do not present themselves commonly to our eyes
+or ears, nor meddle much with the affairs of the living;
+hence the survivors have for the most part inferred that the
+dead do not hover invisible in our midst, but that they
+dwell somewhere, far away, in the height of heaven, or in
+the depth of earth, or in Islands of the Blest beyond the
+sea where the sun goes down. Not so with the simple
+aborigines of Australia. They imagine that the spirits of
+the dead continue to haunt their native land and especially
+certain striking natural features of the landscape, it may be
+a pool of water in a deep gorge of the barren hills, or a
+solitary tree in the sun-baked plains, or a great rock that
+affords a welcome shade in the sultry noon. Such spots
+are thought to be tenanted by the souls of the departed
+waiting to be born again. There they lurk, constantly on
+the look-out for passing women into whom they may enter,
+and from whom in due time they may be born as infants.
+It matters not whether the woman be married or unmarried,
+a matron or a maid, a blooming girl or a withered hag:
+any woman may conceive directly by the entrance into her
+of one of these disembodied spirits; but the natives have
+shrewdly observed that the spirits shew a decided preference
+for plump young women. Hence when such a damsel is
+passing near a plot of haunted ground, if she does not
+wish to become a mother, she will disguise herself as an
+aged crone and hobble past, saying in a thin cracked
+voice, "Don't come to me. I am an old woman." Such
+spots are often stones, which the natives call child-stones
+because the souls of the dead are there lying in wait for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>[pg 94]</span>
+women in order to be born as children. One such stone,
+for example, may be seen in the land of the Arunta tribe
+near Alice Springs. It projects to a height of three feet
+from the ground among the mulga scrub, and there is a
+round hole in it through which the souls of dead plum-tree
+people are constantly peeping, ready to pounce out on a
+likely damsel. Again, in the territory of the Warramunga
+tribe the ghosts of black-snake people are supposed to
+gather in the rocks round certain pools or in the gum-trees
+which border the generally dry bed of a water-course. No
+Warramunga woman would dare to strike one of these trees
+with an axe, because she is firmly convinced that in doing
+so she would set free one of the lurking black-snake spirits,
+who would immediately dart into her body. They think
+that the spirits are no larger than grains of sand and that
+they make their way into women through the navel. Nor
+is it merely by direct contact with one of these repositories
+of souls, nor yet by passing near it, that women may be
+gotten with child against their wish. The Arunta believe
+that any malicious man may by magic cause a woman or
+even a child to become a mother: he has only to go to one
+of the child-stones and rub it with his hands, muttering the
+words, "Plenty of young women. You look and go
+quickly."<a id="footnotetag114" name="footnotetag114"></a><a href="#footnote114"><sup>114</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">As a rule, only the souls of persons of one particular
+totemic clan are thought to congregate in one place.</p>
+
+<p>A remarkable feature in these gathering-places of the
+dead remains to be noticed. The society at each of them
+is very select. The ghosts are very clannish; as a rule none
+but people of one particular totemic clan are supposed to for-gather
+at any one place. For example, we have just seen that
+in the Arunta tribe the souls of dead people of the plum-tree
+totem congregate at a certain stone in the mulga scrub, and
+that in the Warramunga tribe the spirits of deceased persons
+who had black snakes for their totem haunt certain gum-trees.
+The same thing applies to most of the other haunts
+of the dead in Central Australia. Whether the totem was a
+kangaroo or an emu, a rat or a bat, a hawk or a cockatoo,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>[pg 95]</span>
+a bee or a fly, a yam or a grass seed, the sun or the moon,
+fire or water, lightning or the wind, it matters not what the
+totem was, only the ghosts of people of one totemic clan meet
+for the most part in one place; thus one rock will be
+tenanted by the spirits of kangaroo folk only, and another
+by spirits of emu folk only; one water-pool will be the
+home of dead rat people alone, and another the haunt of
+none but dead bat people; and so on with most of the
+other abodes of the souls. However, in the Urabunna tribe
+the ghosts are not so exclusive; some of them consent to
+share their abode with people of other totems. For example,
+a certain pool of water is haunted by the spirits of folk who
+in their lifetime had for their totems respectively the emu,
+rain, and a certain grub. On the other hand a group of
+granite boulders is inhabited only by the souls of persons
+of the pigeon totem.<a id="footnotetag115" name="footnotetag115"></a><a href="#footnote115"><sup>115</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Totemism defined.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps for the sake of some of my hearers I should
+say a word as to the meaning of totems and totemism.
+The subject is a large one and is still under discussion. For
+our present purpose it is not necessary that I should enter
+into details; I will therefore only say that a totem is
+commonly a class of natural objects, usually a species of
+animals or plants, with which a savage identifies himself
+in a curious way, imagining that he himself and his kinsfolk
+are for all practical purposes kangaroos or emus, rats or
+bats, hawks or cockatoos, yams or grass-seed, and so on,
+according to the particular class of natural objects which
+he claims as his totem. The origin of this remarkable
+identification of men with animals, plants, or other
+things is still much debated; my own view is that
+the key to the mystery is furnished by the Australian
+beliefs as to birth and rebirth which I have just described
+to you; but on that subject I will not now dwell.<a id="footnotetag116" name="footnotetag116"></a><a href="#footnote116"><sup>116</sup></a> All that
+I ask you to remember is that in Central Australia there
+is no general gathering-place for the spirits of the departed;
+the souls are sorted out more or less strictly according to
+their totems and dwell apart each in their own little preserve
+or preserves, on which ghosts of other totems are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>[pg 96]</span>
+supposed seldom or never to trespass. Thus the whole
+country-side is dotted at intervals with these spiritual parks
+or reservations, which are respected by the natives as the
+abodes of their departed kinsfolk. In size they vary from
+a few square yards to many square miles.<a id="footnotetag117" name="footnotetag117"></a><a href="#footnote117"><sup>117</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Traditionary origin of the local totem centres
+(<i>oknanikilla</i>) where the souls of the dead are supposed to
+assemble. The sacred sticks or stones (<i>churinga</i>) which the
+totemic ancestors carried about with them.</p>
+
+<p>The way in which these spiritual preserves originated is
+supposed to be as follows. In the earliest days of which
+the aborigines retain a tradition, and to which they give the
+name of the <i>alcheringa</i> or dream times, their remote ancestors
+roamed about the country in bands, each band composed of
+people of the same totem. Thus one band would consist
+of frog people only, another of witchetty grub people only,
+another of Hakea flower people only, and so on. Now in
+regard to the nature of these remote totemic ancestors of the
+<i>alcheringa</i> or dream times, the ideas of the natives are very
+hazy; they do not in fact clearly distinguish their human
+from their totemic nature; in speaking, for example, of a
+man of the kangaroo totem they seem unable to discriminate
+sharply between the man and the animal: perhaps we may
+say that what is before their mind is a blurred image, a sort
+of composite photograph, of a man and a kangaroo in one:
+the man is semi-bestial, the kangaroo is semi-human. And
+similarly with their ancestors of all other totems: if the
+particular ancestors, for example, had the bean-tree for their
+totem, then their descendants in thinking of them might,
+like the blind man in the Gospel, see in their mind's eye
+men walking like trees and trees perambulating like men.
+Now each of these semi-human ancestors is thought to have
+carried about with him on his peregrinations one or more
+sacred sticks or stones of a peculiar pattern, to which the
+Arunta give the name of <i>churinga</i>: they are for the most
+part oval or elongated and flattened stones or slabs of wood,
+varying in length from a few inches to over five feet, and
+inscribed with a variety of patterns which represent or have
+reference to the totems. But the patterns are purely conventional,
+consisting of circles, curved lines, spirals, and dots
+with no attempt to represent natural objects pictorially.
+Each of these sacred stones or sticks was intimately
+associated with the spirit part of the man or woman who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>[pg 97]</span>
+carried it; for women as well as men had their <i>churinga</i>.
+When these semi-human ancestors died, they went into the
+ground, leaving their sacred stones or sticks behind them on
+the spot, and in every case some natural feature arose to
+mark the place, it might be a tree, a rock, a pool of water,
+or what not. The memory of all such spots has been carefully
+preserved and handed down from generation to
+generation by the old men, and it is to these spots that
+down to the present day the souls of all the dead regularly
+repair in order to await reincarnation. The Arunta call the
+places <i>oknanikilla</i>, and we may call them local totem centres,
+because they are the centres where the spirits of the departed
+assemble according to their totems.<a id="footnotetag118" name="footnotetag118"></a><a href="#footnote118"><sup>118</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Every living person has also his or her sacred stick or stone
+(<i>churinga</i>), with which his or her spirit is closely bound up.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not merely the remote forefathers of the
+Central Australian savages who are said to have been
+possessed of these sacred sticks or stones: every man and
+woman who is born into the world has one of them, with
+which his or her spirit is believed to be closely bound up.
+This is intelligible when we remember that every living
+person is believed to be simply the reincarnation of an
+ancestor; for that being so he naturally comes to life with
+all the attributes which belonged to him in his previous
+state of existence on earth. The notion of the natives is
+that when a spirit child enters into a woman to be born, he
+immediately drops his sacred stick or stone on the spot,
+which is necessarily one of what we have called the local
+totem centres, since in the opinion of the natives it is only
+at or near them that a woman can conceive a child. Hence
+when her child is born, the woman tells her husband the
+place where she fancies that the infant entered into her, and
+he goes with some old men to find the precious object, the
+stick or stone dropped by the spirit of the infant when it
+entered into the mother. If it cannot be found, the men
+cut a wooden one from the nearest hard-wood tree, and
+this becomes the sacred stick or <i>churinga</i> of the newborn
+child. The exact spot, whether a tree or a stone or what
+not, in which the child's spirit is supposed to have tarried in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span>
+the interval between its incarnations, is called its <i>nanja</i> tree
+or stone or what not. A definite relation is supposed to
+exist between each individual and his <i>nanja</i> tree or stone.
+The tree or stone and any animal or bird that lights upon
+it is sacred to him and may not be molested. A native has
+been known earnestly to intercede with a white man to
+spare a tree because it was his <i>nanja</i> or birth-tree, and he
+feared that evil would befall him if it were cut down.<a id="footnotetag119" name="footnotetag119"></a><a href="#footnote119"><sup>119</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sanctity of the <i>churinga</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Thus in these Central Australian tribes every man,
+woman, and child has his or her sacred birth-stone or stick.
+But though every woman, like every man, has her sacred
+birth-stone or stick, she is never allowed to see it under pain
+of death or of being blinded with a fire-stick. Indeed none
+but old women are aware even of the existence of such
+things. Uninitiated men are likewise forbidden under the
+same severe penalties ever to look upon these most sacred
+objects.<a id="footnotetag120" name="footnotetag120"></a><a href="#footnote120"><sup>120</sup></a> The sanctity ascribed to the sticks and stones is
+intelligible when we remember that the spirits of all the
+people both living and dead are believed to be intimately
+associated with them. Each of them, we are told, is
+supposed to be so closely bound up with a person's spirit
+that it may be regarded as his or her representative, and
+those of dead people are believed to be endowed with the
+attributes of their former owners and actually to impart
+them to any one who happens to carry them about with
+him. Hence these apparently insignificant sticks and stones
+are, in the opinion of the natives, most potent instruments
+for conveying to the living the virtues and powers of the
+dead. For example, in a fight the possession of one of these
+holy sticks or stones is thought to endow the possessor with
+courage and accuracy of aim and also to deprive his
+adversary of these qualities. So firmly is this belief held,
+that if two men were fighting and one of them knew that
+the other carried a sacred birth-stone or stick while he himself
+did not, he would certainly lose heart and be beaten.
+Again, when a man is sick, he will sometimes have one of
+these sacred stones brought to him and will scrape a little
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span>
+dust off it, mix the dust with water, and drink it. This is
+supposed to strengthen him. Clearly he imagines that with
+the scrapings of the stone he absorbs the strength and other
+qualities of the person to whom the stone belonged.<a id="footnotetag121" name="footnotetag121"></a><a href="#footnote121"><sup>121</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacred store-houses (<i>ertnatulunga</i>) of the
+<i>churinga</i>.</p>
+
+<p>All the birth-stones or sticks (<i>churinga</i>) belonging to
+any particular totemic group are kept together, hidden away
+from the eyes of women and uninitiated men, in a sacred
+store-house or <i>ertnatulunga</i>, as the Arunta and Unmatjera
+call it. This store-house is always situated in one of the local
+totem centres or <i>oknanikilla</i>, which, as we have seen, vary in
+size from a few yards to many square miles. In itself the
+sacred treasure-house is usually a small cave or crevice in
+some lonely spot among the rugged hills. The entrance is
+carefully blocked up with stones arranged so artfully as to
+simulate nature and to awake no suspicion in the mind of
+passing strangers that behind these tumbled blocks lie
+concealed the most prized possessions of the tribe. The
+immediate neighbourhood of any one of these sacred store-houses
+is a kind of haven of refuge for wild animals, for
+once they have run thither, they are safe; no hunter would
+spear a kangaroo or opossum which cowered on the ground
+at one of these hallowed spots. The very plants which
+grow there are sacred and may not be plucked or broken or
+interfered with in any way. Similarly, an enemy who
+succeeds in taking refuge there, is safe from his pursuer, so
+long as he keeps within the sacred boundaries: even the
+avenger of blood, pursuing the murderer hot-foot, would not
+dare to lift up his hand against him on the holy ground.
+Thus, these places are sanctuaries in the strict sense of the
+word; they are probably the most primitive examples of
+their class and contain the germ out of which cities of refuge
+for manslayers and others might be developed. It is
+instructive, therefore, to observe that these rudimentary
+sanctuaries in the heart of the Australian wilderness derive
+their sacredness mainly, it would seem, from their association
+with the spirits of the dead, whose repose must not be
+disturbed by tumult, violence, and bloodshed. Even when
+the sacred birth-stones and sticks have been removed from
+the store-house in the secret recesses of the hills and have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>[pg 100]</span>
+been brought into the camp for the performance of certain
+solemn ceremonies, no fighting may take place, no weapons
+may be brandished in their neighbourhood: if men will
+quarrel and fight, they must take their weapons and go
+elsewhere to do it.<a id="footnotetag122" name="footnotetag122"></a><a href="#footnote122"><sup>122</sup></a> And when the men go to one of the
+sacred store-houses to inspect the treasures which it contains,
+they must each of them put his open hand solemnly
+over the mouth of the rocky crevice and then retire, in
+order to give the spirits due notice of the approach of
+strangers; for if they were disturbed suddenly, they would
+be angry.<a id="footnotetag123" name="footnotetag123"></a><a href="#footnote123"><sup>123</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Exhibition of the <i>churinga</i> to young men.</p>
+
+<p>It is only after a young man has passed through the
+severe ceremonies of initiation, which include most painful
+bodily mutilations, that he is deemed worthy to be introduced
+to the tribal arcana, the sacred sticks and stones, which
+repose in their hallowed cave among the mountain solitudes.
+Even when he has passed through all the ordeals, many
+years may elapse before he is admitted to a knowledge of
+these mysteries, if he shews himself to be of a light and
+frivolous disposition. When at last by the gravity of his
+demeanour he is judged to have proved himself indeed a
+man, a day is fixed for revealing to him the great secret.
+Then the headman of his local group, together with other
+grave and reverend seniors, conducts him to the mouth of
+the cave: the stones are rolled away from the entrance:
+the spirits within are duly warned of the approach of
+visitors; and then the sacred sticks and stones, tied up in
+bundles, are brought forth. The bundles are undone, the
+sticks and stones are taken out, one by one, reverently
+scrutinised, and exhibited to the novice, while the old men
+explain to him the meaning of the patterns incised on each
+and reveal to him the persons, alive or dead, to whom they
+belong. All the time the other men keep chanting in a
+low voice the traditions of their remote ancestors in the
+far-off dream times. At the close the novice is told the
+secret and sacred name which he is thenceforth to bear, and
+is warned never to allow it to pass his lips in the hearing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span>
+of anybody except members of his own totemic group.<a id="footnotetag124" name="footnotetag124"></a><a href="#footnote124"><sup>124</sup></a>
+Sometimes this secret name is that of an ancestor of whom
+the man or woman is supposed to be a reincarnation: for
+women as well as men have their secret and sacred names.<a id="footnotetag125" name="footnotetag125"></a><a href="#footnote125"><sup>125</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Number of <i>churinga</i> in a store-house. Significance of
+the <i>churinga</i>. Use of the <i>churinga</i> in magic.</p>
+
+<p>The number of sacred birth-stones and sticks kept
+in any one store-house naturally varies from group to
+group; but whatever their number, whether more or less,
+in any one store-house they all normally belong to the
+same totem, though a few belonging to other totems may
+be borrowed and deposited for a time with them. For
+example, a sacred store-house of the honey-ant totem
+was found to contain sixty-eight birth-sticks of that totem
+with a few of the lizard totem and two of the wild-cat
+totem.<a id="footnotetag126" name="footnotetag126"></a><a href="#footnote126"><sup>126</sup></a> Any store-house will usually contain both sticks
+and stones, but as a rule perhaps the sticks predominate
+in number.<a id="footnotetag127" name="footnotetag127"></a><a href="#footnote127"><sup>127</sup></a> Time after time these tribal repositories
+are visited by the men and their contents taken out and
+examined. On each examination the sacred sticks and
+stones are carefully rubbed over with dry and powdered
+red ochre or charcoal, the sticks being rubbed with red
+ochre only, but the stones either with red ochre or
+charcoal.<a id="footnotetag128" name="footnotetag128"></a><a href="#footnote128"><sup>128</sup></a> Further, it is customary on these occasions
+to press the sacred objects against the stomachs and thighs
+of all the men present; this is supposed to untie their
+bowels, which are thought to be tightened and knotted
+by the emotion which the men feel at the sight of these
+venerated sticks and stones. Indeed, the emotion is
+sometimes very real: men have been seen to weep on
+beholding these mystic objects for the first time after a
+considerable interval.<a id="footnotetag129" name="footnotetag129"></a><a href="#footnote129"><sup>129</sup></a> Whenever the sacred store-house
+is visited and its contents examined, the old men explain
+to the younger men the marks incised on the sticks and
+stones, and recite the traditions associated with the dead
+men to whom they belonged;<a id="footnotetag130" name="footnotetag130"></a><a href="#footnote130"><sup>130</sup></a> so that these rude objects
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span>
+of wood and stone, with the lines and dots scratched on
+them, serve the savages as memorials of the past; they
+are in fact rudimentary archives as well as, we may almost
+say, rudimentary idols; for a stone or stick which represents
+a revered ancestor and is supposed to be endowed with
+some portion of his spirit, is not far from being an idol.
+No wonder, therefore, that they are guarded and treasured
+by a tribe as its most precious possession. When a
+group of natives have been robbed of them by thoughtless
+white men and have found the sacred store-house empty,
+they have tried to kill the traitor who betrayed the
+hallowed spot to the strangers, and have remained in camp
+for a fortnight weeping and wailing for the loss and
+plastering themselves with pipeclay, which is their token
+of mourning for the dead.<a id="footnotetag131" name="footnotetag131"></a><a href="#footnote131"><sup>131</sup></a> Yet, as a great mark of
+friendship, they will sometimes lend these sacred sticks
+and stones to a neighbouring group; for believing that
+the sticks and stones are associated with the spiritual parts
+of their former and present owners, they naturally wish
+to have as many of them as possible and regard their
+possession as a treasure of great price, a sort of reservoir
+of spiritual force,<a id="footnotetag132" name="footnotetag132"></a><a href="#footnote132"><sup>132</sup></a> which can be turned to account not only
+in battle by worsting the enemy, but in various other ways,
+such as by magically increasing the food supply. For
+instance, when a man of the grass-seed totem wishes to
+increase the supply of grass-seed in order that it may be
+eaten by people of other totems, he goes to the sacred
+store-house, clears the ground all around it, takes out a few
+of the holy sticks and stones, smears them with red ochre
+and decorates them with birds' down, chanting a spell all
+the time. Then he rubs them together so that the down
+flies off in all directions; this is supposed to carry with
+it the magical virtue of the sticks or stones and so to
+fertilise the grass-seed.<a id="footnotetag133" name="footnotetag133"></a><a href="#footnote133"><sup>133</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Elements of a worship of the dead. Marvellous powers
+attributed by the Central Australians to their remote ancestors of the
+<i>alcheringa</i> or dream time.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, when we survey these practices and beliefs
+of the Central Australian aborigines, we may perhaps
+conclude that, if they do not amount to a worship of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span>
+dead, they at least contain the elements out of which such a
+worship might easily be developed. At first sight, no doubt,
+their faith in the transmigration of souls seems and perhaps
+really is a serious impediment to a worship of the dead in
+the strict sense of the word. For if they themselves are the
+dead come to life again, it is difficult to see how they can
+worship the spirits of the dead without also worshipping each
+other, since they are all by hypothesis simply these worshipful
+spirits reincarnated. But though in theory every living
+man and woman is merely an ancestor or ancestress born
+again and therefore should be his or her equal, in practice
+they appear to admit that their forefathers of the remote
+<i>alcheringa</i> or dream time were endowed with many marvellous
+powers which their modern reincarnations cannot lay
+claim to, and that accordingly these ancestral spirits were
+more to be reverenced, were in fact more worshipful, than
+their living representatives. On this subject Messrs. Spencer
+and Gillen observe: "The Central Australian native is firmly
+convinced, as will be seen from the accounts relating to their
+<i>alcheringa</i> ancestors, that the latter were endowed with
+powers such as no living man now possesses. They could
+travel underground or mount into the sky, and could make
+creeks and water-courses, mountain-ranges, sand-hills, and
+plains. In very many cases the actual names of these
+natives are preserved in their traditions, but, so far as
+we have been able to discover, there is no instance of any
+one of them being regarded in the light of a 'deity.'
+Amongst the Central Australian natives there is never any
+idea of appealing for assistance to any one of these Alcheringa
+ancestors in any way, nor is there any attempt made in
+the direction of propitiation, with one single exception in the
+case of the mythic creature called Wollunqua, amongst the
+Warramunga tribe, who, it may be remarked, is most
+distinctly regarded as a snake and not as a human being."<a id="footnotetag134" name="footnotetag134"></a><a href="#footnote134"><sup>134</sup></a>
+Thus far Messrs. Spencer and Gillen. From their testimony
+it appears that with a single possible exception, to which I
+will return immediately, the Central Australian aborigines
+are not known to worship any of their dead ancestors;
+they indeed believe their remote forefathers of the <i>alcheringa</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>[pg 104]</span>
+age to have been endowed with marvellous powers which
+they themselves do not possess; but they do not regard these
+ancestral spirits as deities, nor do they pray and sacrifice to
+them for help and protection. The single possible exception
+to this general rule known to Messrs. Spencer and Gillen is
+the case of the mythical water-snake called Wollunqua, who
+is in a sense revered and propitiated by the Warramunga
+tribe. The case is interesting and instructive as indicative
+of an advance from magic towards religion in the strict sense
+of the word. Accordingly I propose to consider it somewhat
+fully.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake, one of the Warramunga
+totems.</p>
+
+<p>The Wollunqua is one of the many totems of the Warramunga
+tribe. It is to be borne in mind that, though every
+Australian tribe has many totems which are most commonly
+animals or plants and more rarely other natural objects,
+all the totems are not respected by all the members of the
+tribe; each totem is respected only by a particular group
+of men and women in the tribe, who believe themselves to
+be descended from the same totemic ancestor. Thus the
+whole tribe is broken up into many groups or bodies of
+men and women, each group knit together by a belief in
+a common descent from the totem, by a common respect for
+the totemic species, whether it be a species of animals or
+plants, or what not, and finally by the possession of a common
+name derived from the totem. Thus, for example, we have
+a group of men and women who believe themselves descended
+from an ancestor who had the bandicoot for his totem; they
+all respect bandicoots; and they are all called bandicoot
+people. Similarly with all the other totemic groups within
+the tribe. It is convenient to have a name for these totemic
+groups or tribal subdivisions, and accordingly we may call
+them clans, provided we remember that a totemic clan in
+this sense is not an independent political community such
+as the Scottish Highland clans used to be; it is merely a
+subdivision of the tribe, and the members of it do not
+usually keep to themselves but live more or less interfused
+with members of all the other totemic clans which together
+compose the tribe. Now amongst the Warramunga the
+Wollunqua or mythical water-snake is the totem of such a
+clan or tribal subdivision, the members of which believe
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>[pg 105]</span>
+themselves to be descended from the creature and call themselves
+by its name. So far, therefore, the Wollunqua is
+merely a totem of the ordinary sort, an object of respect
+for a particular section of the tribe. Like other totemic
+ancestors the Wollunqua is supposed to have wandered
+about the country leaving supplies of spirit individuals at
+various points, individuals who are constantly undergoing
+reincarnation. But on the other hand the Wollunqua differs
+from almost all other Australian totems in this, that whereas
+they are real objects, such as animals, plants, water, wind,
+the sun and moon, and so on, the Wollunqua is a purely
+mythical creature, which exists only in the imagination of
+the natives; for they believe it to be a water-snake so
+huge that if it were to stand up on its tail, its head would
+reach far up into the sky. It now lives in a large pool
+called Thapauerlu, hidden away in a lonely valley of the
+Murchison Range; but the Warramunga fear that it may at
+any moment sally out and do some damage. They say that
+it actually killed a number of them on one of its excursions,
+though happily they at last succeeded in beating it off. So
+afraid are they of the creature, that in speaking of it
+amongst themselves they will not use its proper name of
+Wollunqua but call it instead <i>urkulu nappaurinnia</i>, because,
+as they told Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, if they were to
+name it too often by its real name they would lose control
+over the beast and it would rush forth and devour them.<a id="footnotetag135" name="footnotetag135"></a><a href="#footnote135"><sup>135</sup></a>
+Thus the natives do not distinguish the Wollunqua from
+the rest of their actually existing totems, as we do: they
+have never beheld him with their bodily eyes, yet to them he
+is just as real as the kangaroos which they see hopping along
+the sands, as the flies which buzz about their heads in the
+sunshine, or as the cockatoos which flap screaming past in
+the thickets. How real this belief in the mythical snake is
+with these savages, was brought vividly home to Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen when they visited, in company with some
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span>
+natives, the deep and lonely pool among the rocky hills in
+which the awful being is supposed to reside. Before they
+approached the spot, the natives had been talking and
+laughing freely, but when they drew near the water their
+voices were hushed and their demeanour became solemn.
+When all stood silent on the brink of the deep still pool,
+enclosed by a sandy margin on one side and by a line
+of red rocks on the other, two old men, the leaders of
+the totemic group of the Wollunqua, went down to the
+edge of the water and, with bowed heads, addressed the
+Wollunqua in whispers, asking him to remain quiet and do
+them no harm, for they were mates of his, and had brought
+two great white men to see where he lived and to tell them
+all about him. "We could plainly see," add Messrs. Spencer
+and Gillen, "that it was all very real to them, and that they
+implicitly believed that the Wollunqua was indeed alive
+beneath the water, watching them, though they could not see
+him."<a id="footnotetag136" name="footnotetag136"></a><a href="#footnote136"><sup>136</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Religious character of the belief in the Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>I need hardly point out what a near approach all
+this is to religion in the proper sense of the word. Here
+we have a firm belief in a purely imaginary being who is
+necessarily visible to the eye of faith alone, since I think we
+may safely assume that a water-snake, supposed to be many
+miles long and capable of reaching up to the sky, has no
+real existence either on the earth or in the waters under the
+earth. Yet to these savages this invisible being is just as
+real as the actually existing animals and men whom they
+perceive with their bodily senses; they not only pray to him
+but they propitiate him with a solemn ritual; and no doubt
+they would spurn with scorn the feeble attempts of shallow
+sceptics to question the reality of his existence or the literal
+truth of the myths they tell about him. Certainly these
+savages are far on the road to religion, if they have not
+already passed the Rubicon which divides it from the
+common workaday world. If an unhesitating faith in the
+unseen is part of religion, the Warramunga people of the
+Wollunqua totem are unquestionably religious.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote108" name="footnote108"></a><b>Footnote 108:</b><a href="#footnotetag108"> (return) </a><p> On the zoological peculiarities of Australia regarded as
+effects of its geographical isolation, see Alfred Newton, <i>Dictionary
+of Birds</i> (London, 1893-96), pp. 317-319. He observes (p. 318) that
+"the isolation of Australia is probably the next oldest in the world to
+that of New Zealand, having possibly existed since the time when no
+mammals higher than marsupials had appeared on the face of the earth."</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote109" name="footnote109"></a><b>Footnote 109:</b><a href="#footnotetag109"> (return) </a><p>For details see <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, i. 314 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote110" name="footnote110"></a><b>Footnote 110:</b><a href="#footnotetag110"> (return) </a><p> Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen,
+<i>Northern Tribes of Central Australia</i>
+(London, 1904), p. 491.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote111" name="footnote111"></a><b>Footnote 111:</b><a href="#footnotetag111"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. xi.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote112" name="footnote112"></a><b>Footnote 112:</b><a href="#footnotetag112"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p.
+545.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote113" name="footnote113"></a><b>Footnote 113:</b><a href="#footnotetag113"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 546.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote114" name="footnote114"></a><b>Footnote 114:</b><a href="#footnotetag114"> (return) </a><p> Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of
+Central Australia</i> (London, 1899), pp. 119-127, 335-338, 552; <i>id.,
+Northern Tribes of Central Australia</i>, pp. 145-153, 162, 271, 330
+<i>sq.</i>, 448-451, 512-515. Compare <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, i.
+188 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote115" name="footnote115"></a><b>Footnote 115:</b><a href="#footnotetag115"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 147.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote116" name="footnote116"></a><b>Footnote 116:</b><a href="#footnotetag116"> (return) </a><p> See <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, i. 155 <i>sqq.</i>, iv.
+40 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote117" name="footnote117"></a><b>Footnote 117:</b><a href="#footnotetag117"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 123, 126.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote118" name="footnote118"></a><b>Footnote 118:</b><a href="#footnotetag118"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 119-127, 128 <i>sqq.</i>, 513; <i>id., Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, pp. 145 <i>sqq.</i>, 257 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote119" name="footnote119"></a><b>Footnote 119:</b><a href="#footnotetag119"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 132-135; <i>id.</i>, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 258, 268 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote120" name="footnote120"></a><b>Footnote 120:</b><a href="#footnotetag120"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 128, 134.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote121" name="footnote121"></a><b>Footnote 121:</b><a href="#footnotetag121"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 134 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote122" name="footnote122"></a><b>Footnote 122:</b><a href="#footnotetag122"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 133, 135; <i>id.</i>,
+<i>Northern Tribes of Central Australia</i>,
+p. 269.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote123" name="footnote123"></a><b>Footnote 123:</b><a href="#footnotetag123"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 267.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote124" name="footnote124"></a><b>Footnote 124:</b><a href="#footnotetag124"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 139 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote125" name="footnote125"></a><b>Footnote 125:</b><a href="#footnotetag125"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 273.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote126" name="footnote126"></a><b>Footnote 126:</b><a href="#footnotetag126"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 141.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote127" name="footnote127"></a><b>Footnote 127:</b><a href="#footnotetag127"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 140</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote128" name="footnote128"></a><b>Footnote 128:</b><a href="#footnotetag128"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, pp. 144, 145.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote129" name="footnote129"></a><b>Footnote 129:</b><a href="#footnotetag129"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, pp. 164,
+<i>sq.</i>; <i>id.</i>, <i>Northern Tribes</i>, pp. 261, 264.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote130" name="footnote130"></a><b>Footnote 130:</b><a href="#footnotetag130"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, p. 145.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote131" name="footnote131"></a><b>Footnote 131:</b><a href="#footnotetag131"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, p. 136.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote132" name="footnote132"></a><b>Footnote 132:</b><a href="#footnotetag132"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, pp. 158
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote133" name="footnote133"></a><b>Footnote 133:</b><a href="#footnotetag133"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes</i>, pp. 271
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote134" name="footnote134"></a><b>Footnote 134:</b><a href="#footnotetag134"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 490 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote135" name="footnote135"></a><b>Footnote 135:</b><a href="#footnotetag135"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 226 <i>sq.</i> Another mythical being in which the
+Warramunga believe is <i>the pau-wa</i>, a fabulous animal, half human
+and somewhat resembling a dog. See Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i>
+pp. 195, 197, 201, 210 <i>sq.</i> But the creature seems not to be a
+totem, for it is not included in the list of totems given by Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen (<i>op. cit.</i> pp. 768-773).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote136" name="footnote136"></a><b>Footnote 136:</b><a href="#footnotetag136"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 252 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-v" id="lecture-v"></a>LECTURE V</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES
+OF CENTRAL AUSTRALIA (<i>continued</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Central Australian aborigines concerning the
+reincarnation of the dead. The mythical water-snake Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture we began our survey of the belief in
+immortality and the practices to which it has given rise
+among the aboriginal tribes of Central Australia. I shewed
+that these primitive savages hold a very remarkable theory of
+birth and death. They believe that the souls of the dead do not
+perish but are reborn in human form after a longer or shorter
+interval. During that interval the spirits of the departed
+are supposed to congregate in certain parts of the country,
+generally distinguished by some conspicuous natural feature,
+which accordingly the natives account sacred, believing them
+to be haunted by the souls of the dead. From time to time
+one of these disembodied spirits enters into a passing woman
+and is born as an infant into the world. Thus according to
+the Central Australian theory every living person without
+exception is the reincarnation of a dead man, woman, or
+child. At first sight the theory seems to exclude the
+possibility of any worship of the dead, since it appears
+to put the living on a footing of perfect equality with the
+dead by identifying the one with the other. But I pointed
+out that as a matter of fact these savages do admit,
+whether logically or not, the superiority of their remote
+ancestors to themselves: they acknowledge that these old
+forefathers of theirs did possess many marvellous powers to
+which they themselves can lay no claim. In this acknowledgment,
+accordingly, we may detect an opening or possibility
+for the development of a real worship of ancestors.
+Indeed, as I said at the close of last lecture, something
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span>
+closely approaching to ancestor worship has actually grown
+up in regard to the mythical ancestor of the Wollunqua
+clan in the Warramunga tribe. The Wollunqua is a
+purely fabulous water-snake, of gigantic dimensions, which
+is supposed to haunt the waters of a certain lonely pool
+called Thapauerlu, in the Murchison Range of mountains.
+Unlike the ancestors of the other totemic clans, this mythical
+serpent is never reborn in human form; he always lives in
+his solitary pool among the barren hills; but the natives
+think that he has it in his power to come forth and do
+them an injury, and accordingly they pray to him to remain
+quiet and not to harm them. Indeed so afraid of him are
+they that speaking of the creature among themselves they
+avoid using his proper name of Wollunqua and call him by
+a different name, lest hearing himself called by his true
+name he should rush forth and devour them. More than that
+they even endeavour to propitiate him by the performance
+of certain rites, which, however childish and absurd they
+may seem to us, are very solemn affairs for these simple folk.
+The rites were witnessed by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen,
+whose description I will summarise. It offers an interesting
+and instructive example of a ritual observed by primitive
+savages, who are clearly standing on, if they have not
+already crossed, the threshold of religion.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Wanderings of the Wollunqua. Dramatic ceremonies in honour of
+the Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>Like all other totemic ancestors the Wollunqua is said
+to have arisen at a particular spot, to have wandered about
+the country, and finally to have gone down into the ground.
+Starting from the deep rocky pool in the Murchison Range
+he travelled at first underground, coming up, however, at
+various points where he performed ceremonies and left
+many spirit children, who issued from his body and
+remained behind, forming local totemic centres when he
+had passed on. It is these spirit children who have formed
+the Wollunqua clan ever since, undergoing an endless
+series of reincarnations. Now the ceremonies which the
+clan perform in honour of their mythical ancestor the
+Wollunqua all refer to his wanderings about the country.
+Thus there is a particular water-hole called Pitingari where
+the great old water-snake is said to have emerged from the
+ground and looked about him. Here, accordingly, two
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>[pg 109]</span>
+men performed a ceremony. Each of them was decorated
+with a broad band of red down, which curved round both
+the front and the back of the performer and stood sharply
+out from the mass of white down with which all the rest of
+the upper part of his body was covered. These broad red
+bands represented the Wollunqua. Each man also wore a
+tall, conical helmet adorned with a curved band of red down,
+which, no doubt, likewise symbolised the mythical serpent.
+When the two actors in the little drama had been attired in
+this quaint costume of red and white down, they retired
+behind a bush, which served for the side scenes of a theatre.
+Then, when the orchestra, composed of adult men, struck up
+the music on the ceremonial ground by chanting and beating
+boomerangs and sticks together, the performers ran in,
+stopping every now and then to shake themselves in imitation
+of the snake. Finally, they sat down close together
+with their heads bowed down on a few green branches
+of gum-trees. A man then stepped up to them, knocked
+off their head-dresses, and the simple ceremony came to an
+end.<a id="footnotetag137" name="footnotetag137"></a><a href="#footnote137"><sup>137</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony in honour of the Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>The next ceremony was performed on the following day
+at another place called Antipataringa, where the mythical
+snake is said to have halted in his wanderings. The same
+two men acted as before, but this time one of them carried
+on his head a curious curved bundle shaped like an enormous
+boomerang. It was made of grass-stalks bound together
+with human hair-string and decorated with white down.
+This sacred object represented the Wollunqua himself.<a id="footnotetag138" name="footnotetag138"></a><a href="#footnote138"><sup>138</sup></a> From
+this spot the snake was believed to have travelled on to another
+place called Tjunguniari, where he popped up his head
+among the sand-hills, the greater part of his body remaining
+underground. Indeed, of such an enormous length was the
+serpent, that though his head had now travelled very many
+miles his tail still remained at the starting-point and had not
+yet begun to take part in the procession. Here accordingly
+the third ceremony, perhaps we may say the third act in
+the drama, was performed on the third day. In it one of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>[pg 110]</span>
+the actors personated the snake himself, while the other
+stood for a sand-hill.<a id="footnotetag139" name="footnotetag139"></a><a href="#footnote139"><sup>139</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Further ceremony in honour of the Wollunqua: the white mound
+with the red wavy band to represent the mythical snake.</p>
+
+<p>After an interval of three days a fourth ceremony was
+performed of an entirely different kind. A keel-shaped
+mound was made of wet sand, about fifteen feet long by
+two feet high. The smooth surface of the mound was covered
+with a mass of little dots of white down, except for a long
+wavy band of red down which ran all along both sides of
+the mound. This wavy red band represented the Wollunqua,
+his head being indicated by a small round swelling at one
+end and his tail by a short prolongation at the other. The
+mound itself represented a sand-hill beside which the snake
+is said to have stood up and looked about. The preparation
+of this elaborate emblem of the Wollunqua occupied the
+greater part of the day, and it was late in the afternoon
+before it was completed. When darkness fell, fires were
+lighted on the ceremonial ground, and as the night grew late
+more fires were kindled, and all of the men sat round the
+mound singing songs which referred to the mythical water-snake.
+This went on for hours. At last, about three
+o'clock in the morning, a ring of fires was lit all round the
+ceremonial ground, in the light of which the white trunks of
+the gum-trees and the surrounding scrub stood out weird and
+ghastly against the blackness of darkness beyond. Amid
+the wildest excitement the men of the Wollunqua totem now
+ranged themselves in single file on their knees beside the
+mound which bore the red image of their great mythical
+forefather, and with their hands on their thighs surged round
+and round it, every man bending in unison first to one side
+and then to the other, each successive movement being accompanied
+by a loud and simultaneous shout, or rather yell, while
+the other men, who were not of the Wollunqua totem, stood
+by, clanging their boomerangs excitedly, and one old man,
+who acted as a sort of choregus, walked backwards at the
+end of the kneeling procession of Wollunqua men, swaying
+his body about and lifting high his knees at every step. In
+this way, with shouts and clangour, the men of the totem
+surged twice round the mound on their knees. After that,
+as the fires died down, the men rose from their knees, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span>
+for another hour every one sat round the mound singing
+incessantly. The last act in the drama was played at four
+o'clock in the morning at the moment when the first faint
+streaks of dawn glimmered in the east. At sight of them
+every man jumped to his feet, the smouldering fires were
+rekindled, and in their blaze the long white mound stood
+out in strong relief. The men of the totem, armed with
+spears, boomerangs, and clubs, ranged themselves round it,
+and encouraged by the men of the other totems attacked it
+fiercely with their weapons, until in a few minutes they had
+hacked it to pieces, and nothing was left of it but a rough
+heap of sandy earth. The fires again died down and for a
+short time silence reigned. Then, just as the sun rose above
+the eastern horizon, the painful ceremony of subincision was
+performed on three youths, who had recently passed through
+the earlier stages of initiation.<a id="footnotetag140" name="footnotetag140"></a><a href="#footnote140"><sup>140</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The rite aims both at pleasing and at coercing the mythical
+snake.</p>
+
+<p>This remarkable rite is supposed, we are informed, "in
+some way to be associated with the idea of persuading, or
+almost forcing, the Wollunqua to remain quietly in his home
+under the water-hole at Thapauerlu, and to do no harm to
+any of the natives. They say that when he sees the mound
+with his representation drawn upon it he is gratified, and
+wriggles about underneath with pleasure. The savage
+attack upon the mound is associated with the idea of
+driving him down, and, taken altogether, the ceremony
+indicates their belief that, at one and the same time,
+they can both please and coerce the mythic beast. It is
+necessary to do things to please him, or else he might grow
+sulky and come out and do them harm, but at the same
+time they occasionally use force to make him do what
+they want."<a id="footnotetag141" name="footnotetag141"></a><a href="#footnote141"><sup>141</sup></a> In fact the ritual of the mound with its
+red image of the snake combines the principles of religion
+and magic. So far as the rite is intended to please and
+propitiate the mythical beast, it is religious; so far as
+it is intended to constrain him, it is magical. The two
+principles are contradictory and the attempt to combine
+them is illogical; but the savage is heedless, or rather
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>[pg 112]</span>
+totally unaware, of the contradiction and illogicality: all
+that concerns him is to accomplish his ends: he has neither
+the wish nor the ability to analyse his motives. In this
+respect he is in substantial agreement with the vast
+majority of mankind. How many of us scrutinise the
+reasons of our conduct with the view of detecting and
+eliminating any latent inconsistencies in them? And how
+many, or rather how few of us, on such a scrutiny would be
+so fortunate as to discover that there were no such inconsistencies
+to detect? The logical pedant who imagines
+that men cannot possibly act on inconsistent and even contradictory
+motives only betrays his ignorance of life. It is
+not therefore for us to cast stones at the Warramunga men
+of the Wollunqua totem for attempting to propitiate and
+constrain their mythical serpent at the same time. Such
+contradictions meet us again and again in the history of
+religion: it is interesting but by no means surprising to find
+them in one of its rudimentary stages.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Thunder the voice of the Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the day which succeeded the construction
+of the emblematic mound the old men who had
+made the emblem said they had heard the Wollunqua talking,
+and that he was pleased with what had been done and
+was sending them rain. What they took for the voice of
+the Wollunqua was thunder rumbling in the distance. No
+rain fell, but a few days later thunder was again heard rolling
+afar off and a heavy bank of clouds lay low on the
+western horizon. The old men now said that the Wollunqua
+was growling because the remains of the mound had
+been left uncovered; so they hastily cut down branches and
+covered up the ruins. After that the Wollunqua ceased to
+growl: there was no more thunder.<a id="footnotetag142" name="footnotetag142"></a><a href="#footnote142"><sup>142</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ground drawings of the Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>On the four following days ceremonies of an entirely
+different kind from all the preceding were performed in
+honour of the Wollunqua. A space of sandy ground was
+smoothed down, sprinkled with water, and rubbed so as to
+form a compact surface. The smooth surface was then
+overlaid with a coat of red or yellow ochre, and on this
+coloured background a number of designs were traced, one
+after the other, by a series of white dots, which together
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>[pg 113]</span>
+made up a pattern of curved lines and concentric circles.
+These patterns represented the Wollunqua and some of his
+traditionary adventures. The snake himself was portrayed
+by a broad wavy band, but all the other designs were purely
+conventional; for example, trees, ant-hills, and wells were
+alike indicated by circles. Altogether there were eight such
+drawings on the earth, some of them very elaborate and
+entailing, each of them, not less than six or seven hours'
+labour: one of them was ten feet long. Each drawing was
+rubbed out before the next one was drawn. Moreover, the
+drawings were accompanied by little dramas acted by
+decorated men. In one of these dramas no fewer than
+eight actors took part, some of whom wore head-dresses
+adorned with a long wavy band to represent the Wollunqua.
+The last drawing of all was supposed to portray the
+mythical snake as he plunged into the earth and returned
+to his home in the rocky pool called Thapauerlu among the
+Murchison Ranges.<a id="footnotetag143" name="footnotetag143"></a><a href="#footnote143"><sup>143</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Religious importance of the Wollunqua.</p>
+
+<p>I have dwelt at some length on these ceremonies of the
+Wollunqua totem, because they furnish a remarkable and
+perhaps unique instance in Australia of a totemic ancestor
+in the act of developing into something like a god. In the
+Warramunga tribe there are other snake totems besides the
+Wollunqua; for example, there is the black snake totem
+and the deaf adder totem. But this purely mythical water-snake,
+the Wollunqua, is the most important of them all
+and is regarded as the great father of all the snakes. "It
+is not easy," say Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, "to express
+in words what is in reality rather a vague feeling amongst
+the natives, but after carefully watching the different series
+of ceremonies we were impressed with the feeling that the
+Wollunqua represented to the native mind the idea of a
+dominant totem."<a id="footnotetag144" name="footnotetag144"></a><a href="#footnote144"><sup>144</sup></a> Thus he is at once a fabulous animal
+and the mythical ancestor of a human clan, but his animal
+nature apparently predominates over his semi-human nature,
+as shewn by the drawings and effigies of him, all of which
+are in serpent form. The prayers offered to him at the pool
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>[pg 114]</span>
+which he is supposed to haunt, and the attempt to please
+him by drawing his likeness can only be regarded as propitiatory
+rites and therefore as rudimentary forms of worship.
+And the idea that thunder is his voice, and that the rain is
+a gift sent by him in return for the homage paid to him by
+the people, appears to prove that in course of time, if left to
+himself, he might easily have been elevated to the sky and
+have ranked as a celestial deity, who dwells aloft and sends
+down or withholds the refreshing showers at his good
+pleasure. Thus the Wollunqua, a rude creation of the savage
+Australian imagination, possesses a high interest for the
+historian of religion, since he combines elements of ancestor
+worship and totem worship with a germ of heaven worship;
+while on the purely material side his representation, both in
+plastic form by a curved bundle of grass-stalks and in
+graphic form by broad wavy bands of red down, may be
+said in a sense to stand at the starting-point of that long
+development of religious art, which in so many countries
+and so many ages has attempted to represent to the bodily
+eye the mysteries of the unseen and invisible, and which,
+whatever we may think of the success or failure of that
+attempt, has given to the world some of the noblest works
+of sculpture and painting.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Possible religious evolution of totemism.</p>
+
+<p>I have already pointed out the difficulty of seeing how a
+belief in the reincarnation of the dead, such as prevails
+universally among the aborigines of Central Australia, could
+ever be reconciled with or develop into a worship of the
+dead; for by identifying the living with the dead, the theory
+of reincarnation seems to abolish that distinction between
+the worshipper and the worshipped which is essential to
+the existence of worship. But, as I also indicated, what
+seems a loophole or mode of escape from the dilemma may
+be furnished by the belief of these savages, that though
+they themselves are nothing but their ancestors come to
+life again, nevertheless in their earliest incarnations of the
+<i>alcheringa</i> or dream times their ancestors possessed miraculous
+powers which they have admittedly lost in their later
+reincarnations; for this suggests an incipient discrimination
+or line of cleavage between the living and the dead; it hints
+that perhaps after all the first ancestors, with their marvellous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>[pg 115]</span>
+endowments, may have been entirely different persons
+from their feebler descendants, and if this vague hint could
+only grow into a firm conviction of the essential difference
+between the two, then the course would be clear for the
+development of ancestor worship: the dead forefathers,
+viewed as beings perfectly distinct from and far superior to
+the living, might easily come to receive from the latter the
+homage of prayer and sacrifice, might be besought by their
+descendants to protect them in danger and to succour them
+in all the manifold ills of life, or at least to abstain from
+injuring them. Now, this important step in religious evolution
+appears to have been actually taken by the Wollunqua,
+the mythical water-snake, who is the totem of one of the
+Warramunga clans. Unlike all the other totems he is supposed
+to exist only in his invisible and animal form and
+never to be reincarnated in a man.<a id="footnotetag145" name="footnotetag145"></a><a href="#footnote145"><sup>145</sup></a> Hence, withdrawn as
+he is from the real world of sense, the imagination is free to
+play about him and to invest him more and more with those
+supernatural attributes which men ascribe to their deities.
+And what has actually happened to this particular totemic
+ancestor might under favourable circumstances happen to
+many others. Each of them might be gradually detached
+from the line of his descendants, might cease to be reincarnated
+in them, and might gradually attain to the lonely
+pre-eminence of godhead. Thus a system of pure totemism,
+such as prevails among the aborigines of Central Australia,
+might develop through a phase of ancestor worship into a
+pantheon of the ordinary type.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Conspicuous features of the landscape associated with
+ancestral spirits.</p>
+
+<p>Although none of the other totemic ancestors of the
+Central Australian aborigines appears to have advanced so
+far on the road to religion as the Wollunqua, yet they all
+contain in germ the elements out of which a religion might
+have been developed. It is difficult for us civilised men to
+conceive the extent to which the thoughts and lives of these
+savages are dominated by the memories and traditions of
+the dead. Every conspicuous feature in the landscape is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>[pg 116]</span>
+not only associated with the legendary doings of some
+ancestors but is commonly said to have arisen as a direct
+result of their actions. The mountains, the plains, the rivers,
+the seas, the islands of ancient Greece itself were not more
+thickly haunted by the phantoms of a fairy mythology than
+are the barren sun-scorched steppes and stony hills of the
+Australian wilderness; but great indeed is the gulf which
+divides the beautiful creations of Greek fancy from the crude
+imaginings of the Australian savage, whose legendary tales
+are for the most part a mere tissue of trivial absurdities
+unrelieved by a single touch of beauty or poetry.</p>
+
+<p class="side">A journey through the Warramunga country.</p>
+
+<p>To illustrate at once the nature and the abundance of these
+legends I will quote a passage in which Messrs. Spencer and
+Gillen describe a journey they took in company with some
+Warramunga natives over part of their country:&mdash;"For the
+first two days our way lay across miserable plain country
+covered with poor scrub, with here and there low ranges rising.
+Every prominent feature of any kind was associated with
+some tradition of their past. A range some five miles away
+from Tennant Creek arose to mark the path traversed by
+the great ancestor of the Pittongu (bat) totem. Several
+miles further on a solitary upstanding column of rock represented
+an opossum man who rested here, looked about the
+country, and left spirit children behind him; a low range of
+remarkably white quartzite hills indicated a large number of
+white ant eggs thrown here in the <i>wingara</i><a id="footnotetag146" name="footnotetag146"></a><a href="#footnote146"><sup>146</sup></a> by the Munga-munga
+women as they passed across the country. A solitary
+flat-topped hill arose to mark the spot where the Wongana
+(crow) ancestor paused for some time to pierce his nose;
+and on the second night we camped by the side of a waterhole
+where the same crow lived for some time in the
+<i>wingara</i>, and where now there are plenty of crow spirit
+children. All the time, as we travelled along, the old men
+were talking amongst themselves about the natural features
+associated in tradition with these and other totemic ancestors
+of the tribe, and pointing them out to us. On the third
+day we travelled, at first for some hours, by the side of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>[pg 117]</span>
+river-bed,&mdash;perfectly dry of course,&mdash;and passed the spot
+where two hawks first made fire by rubbing sticks together,
+two fine gum-trees on the banks now representing the place
+where they stood up. A few miles further on we came to a
+water-hole by the side of which the moon-man met a bandicoot
+woman, and while the two were talking together the
+fire made by the hawks crept upon them and burnt the
+woman, who was, however, restored to life again by the
+moon-man, with whom she then went up into the sky. Late
+in the afternoon we skirted the eastern base of the Murchison
+Range, the rugged quartzite hills in this part being
+associated partly with the crow ancestor and partly with
+the bat. Following up a valley leading into the hills we
+camped, just after sunset, by the side of a rather picturesque
+water-pool amongst the ranges. A short distance before
+reaching this the natives pointed out a curious red cliff,
+standing out amongst the low hills which were elsewhere
+covered with thin scrub. This, which is called Tjiti, represents
+the spot where an old woman spent a long time
+digging for yams, the latter being indicated by great heaps
+of stones lying all around. On the opposite side of the
+valley a column of stone marks the spot where the woman
+went into the earth. The water-hole by which we were
+camped was called Wiarminni. It was in reality a deep
+pool in the bed of a creek coming down from the hills.
+Behind it the rocks rose abruptly, and amongst them there
+was, or rather would have been if a stream had been flowing,
+a succession of cascades and rocky water-holes. Two of the
+latter, just above Wiarminni, are connected with a fish totem,
+and represent the spot where two fish men arose in the
+<i>alcheringa</i>, fought one another, left spirit children behind, and
+finally went down into the ground. We were now, so to
+speak, in the very midst of <i>mungai</i> [<i>i.e.</i> of places associated
+with the totems], for the old totemic ancestors of the tribe,
+who showed a most commendable fondness for arising and
+walking about in the few picturesque spots which their
+country contained, had apparently selected these rocky
+gorges as their central home. All around us the water-holes,
+gorges, and rocky crags were peopled with spirit individuals
+left behind by one or other of the following totemic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>[pg 118]</span>
+ancestors:&mdash;Wollunqua, Pittongu (bat), Wongana (crow),
+wild dog, emu, bandicoot, and fish, whose lines of travel in
+the <i>alcheringa</i> formed a regular network over the whole
+countryside."<a id="footnotetag147" name="footnotetag147"></a><a href="#footnote147"><sup>147</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Dramatic ceremonies to commemorate the doings of ancestors.</p>
+
+<p>Similar evidence could be multiplied, but this may suffice
+to teach us how to the minds of these Central Australian
+savages the whole country is haunted, in the literal sense, not
+merely by the memories of their dead, but by the spirits
+which they left behind them and which are constantly
+undergoing reincarnation. And not only are the minds of
+the aborigines preoccupied by the thought of their ancestors,
+who are recalled to them by all the familiar features of the
+landscape, but they spend a considerable part of their time
+in dramatically representing the legendary doings of their rude
+forefathers of the remote past. It is astonishing, we are
+told, how large a part of a native's life is occupied with the
+performance of these dramatic ceremonies. The older he
+grows, the greater is the share he takes in them, until at last
+they actually absorb the greater part of his thoughts. The
+rites which seem so trivial to us are most serious matters to
+him. They are all connected with the great ancestors of
+the tribe, and he is firmly convinced that when he dies his
+spirit will rejoin theirs and live in communion with them
+until the time comes for him to be born again into the
+world. With such solemnity does he look on the celebration
+of these commemorative services, as we may call them, that
+none but initiated men are allowed to witness them; women
+and children are strictly excluded from the spectacle. These
+sacred dramas are often, though by no means always, associated
+with the rites of initiation which young men have to
+pass through before they are admitted to full membership of
+the tribe and to participation in its deepest mysteries. The
+rites of initiation are not all undergone by a youth at the
+same time; they succeed each other at longer or shorter
+intervals of time, and at each of them he is privileged to
+witness some of the solemn ceremonies in which the traditions
+of the tribal ancestors are dramatically set forth before him,
+until, when he has passed through the last of the rites and
+ordeals, he is free to behold and to take part in the whole
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>[pg 119]</span>
+series of mystery plays or professedly historical dramas.
+Sometimes the performance of these dramas extends over
+two or three months, during which one or more of them are
+acted daily.<a id="footnotetag148" name="footnotetag148"></a><a href="#footnote148"><sup>148</sup></a> For the most part, they are very short and
+simple, each of them generally lasting only a few minutes,
+though the costumes of the actors are often elaborate and
+may have taken hours to prepare. I will describe a few of
+them as samples.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony of the Hakea flower totem.</p>
+
+<p>We will begin with a ceremony of the Hakea flower
+totem in the Arunta tribe, as to which it may be premised
+that a decoction of the Hakea flower is a favourite drink of
+the natives. The little drama was acted by two men, each
+of whom was decorated on his bare body by broad bands of
+pearly grey edged with white down, which passed round his
+waist and over his shoulders, contrasting well with the
+chocolate colour of his skin. On his head each of them
+wore a kind of helmet made of twigs, and from their ears
+hung tips of the tails of rabbit-bandicoots. The two sat on
+the ground facing each other with a shield between them.
+One of them held in his hand some twigs representing the
+Hakea flower in bloom; these he pretended to steep in water
+so as to brew the favourite beverage of the natives, and the
+man sitting opposite him made believe to suck it up with a
+little mop. Meantime the other men ran round and round
+them shouting <i>wha! wha!</i> This was the substance of the
+play, which ended as usual by several men placing their
+hands on the shoulders of the performers as a signal to them
+to stop.<a id="footnotetag149" name="footnotetag149"></a><a href="#footnote149"><sup>149</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony of a fish totem.</p>
+
+<p>Again, to take another Arunta ceremony of a fish totem
+called <i>interpitna</i>. The fish is the bony bream (<i>Chatoessus
+horni</i>), which abounds in the water-holes of the country.
+The play was performed by a single actor, an old man,
+whose face was covered with a mass of white down contrasting
+strongly with a large bunch of black eagle-hawk
+feathers which he wore on his head. His body was decorated
+with bands of charcoal edged with white down. Squatting
+on the ground he moved his body and extended his arms
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>[pg 120]</span>
+from his sides, opening and closing them as he leaned
+forwards, so as to imitate a fish swelling itself out and
+opening and closing its gills. Then, holding twigs in his
+hands, he moved along mimicking the action of a man who
+drives fish before him with a branch in a pool, just as the
+natives do to catch the fish. Meantime an orchestra of four
+men squatted beside him singing and beating time with a
+stick on the ground.<a id="footnotetag150" name="footnotetag150"></a><a href="#footnote150"><sup>150</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony of a plum-tree totem.</p>
+
+<p>Again, another Arunta ceremony of the plum-tree totem
+was performed by four actors, who simply pretended to
+knock down and eat imaginary plums from an imaginary
+plum-tree.<a id="footnotetag151" name="footnotetag151"></a><a href="#footnote151"><sup>151</sup></a> An interesting point in this very simple drama
+is that in it the men of the plum-tree totem are represented
+eating freely of their totem, which is quite contrary to the
+practice of the present day, but taken along with many
+similar ceremonies it goes far to prove that in the ancient
+days, to which all these dramatic ceremonies refer, it was the
+regular practice for men and women of a totem to eat their
+totemic animals or plants. As another example of a drama
+in which the performers are represented eating their totem
+we may take a ceremony of the ant totem in the Warramunga
+tribe. The legendary personages who figure in it
+are two women of the ant totem, ancestresses of the ant clan,
+who are said to have devoted all their time to catching and
+eating ants, except when they were engaged in the performance
+of ceremonies. The two men who personated
+these women in the drama (for no woman is allowed to
+witness, much less to act in, these sacred dramas) had
+the whole of the upper parts of their bodies, including
+their faces and the cylindrical helmets which they wore on
+their heads, covered with a dense mass of little specks of red
+down. These specks stood for the ants, alive or dead, and
+also for the stones and trees on the spots where the two
+women encamped. In the drama the two actors thus
+arrayed walked about the ground as if they were searching
+for ants to eat. Each of them carried a wooden trough and
+stooping down from time to time he turned over the ground
+and picked up small stones which he placed in the trough
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>[pg 121]</span>
+till it was full. The stones represented the masses of ants
+which the women gathered for food. After carrying on this
+pantomime for a time the two actors pretended to discover
+each other with surprise and to embrace with joy, much to
+the amusement of the spectators.<a id="footnotetag152" name="footnotetag152"></a><a href="#footnote152"><sup>152</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">In these ceremonies the action is appropriate to the totem.
+Ceremony of the witchetty grub totem.</p>
+
+<p>In all these ceremonies you will observe that the action
+of the drama is strictly appropriate to the totem. In the
+drama of the Hakea flower totem the actors pretend to
+make and drink the beverage brewed from Hakea flowers;
+in the ceremony of the fish totem the actor feigns to be a
+fish and also to catch fish; in the ceremony of the plum-tree
+totem the actors pretend to knock down and eat plums; and
+in the ceremony of the ant totem the actors make believe
+to gather ants for food. Similarly, to take a few more
+examples, in a ceremony of the witchetty grub totem of the
+Arunta tribe the body of the actor was decorated with lines
+of white and red down, and he had a shield adorned with a
+number of concentric circles of down. The smaller circles
+represented the bush on which the grub lives first of all, and
+the larger circles represented the bush on which the adult
+insect lays its eggs. When all was ready, the performer
+seated himself on the ground and imitated the grub, alternately
+doubling himself up and rising on his knees, while he
+extended his arms and made them quiver in imitation of the
+insect's wings; and every now and then he would bend over
+the shield and sway to and fro, and up and down, in imitation
+of the insect hovering over the bushes on which it lays its
+eggs.<a id="footnotetag153" name="footnotetag153"></a><a href="#footnote153"><sup>153</sup></a> In another ceremony of the witchetty grub totem, which
+followed immediately the one I have just described, the actor
+had two shields beside him. The smaller of the shields was
+ornamented with zigzag lines of white pipe-clay which were
+supposed to indicate the tracks of the grub; the larger shield
+was covered with larger and smaller series of concentric
+circles, the larger representing the seeds of a bush on which
+the insect feeds, while the smaller stood for the eggs of the
+adult insect. As before, the actor wriggled and flapped his
+arms in imitation of the fluttering of the insect when it first
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>[pg 122]</span>
+leaves its chrysalis case in the ground and attempts to fly.
+In acting thus he was supposed to represent a celebrated
+ancestor of the witchetty grub totem.<a id="footnotetag154" name="footnotetag154"></a><a href="#footnote154"><sup>154</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony of the emu totem.</p>
+
+<p>The last example of such ceremonies which I shall cite
+is one of the emu totem in the Arunta tribe. The body of
+the actor was decorated with perpendicular lines of white
+down reaching from his shoulders to his knees; and on his
+head he supported a towering head-piece tipped with a
+bunch of emu feathers in imitation of the neck and head of
+an emu. Thus arrayed he stalked backwards and forwards
+in the aimless fashion of the bird.<a id="footnotetag155" name="footnotetag155"></a><a href="#footnote155"><sup>155</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">These dramatic ceremonies were probably at first magical
+rites intended to supply the people with food and other necessaries.</p>
+
+<p>What are we to think of the intention of these little
+dramas which the Central Australian aborigines regard as
+sacred and to the performance of which they devote so
+much time and labour? At first sight they are simply
+commemorative services, designed to represent the ancestors
+as they lived and moved in the far-past times, to recall
+their adventures, of which legend has preserved the
+memory, and to set them dramatically before the eyes
+of their living descendants. So far, therefore, the dramas
+might be described as purely historical in intention, if not in
+reality. But there are reasons for thinking that in all cases
+a deeper meaning underlies, or formerly underlay, the performance
+of all these apparently simple historical plays; in
+fact, we may suspect that originally they were all magical
+ceremonies observed for the practical purpose of supplying
+the people with food, water, sunshine, and everything else
+of which they stand in need. This conclusion is suggested
+first of all by the practice of the Arunta and other Central
+Australian tribes, who observe very similar ceremonies with
+the avowed intention of thereby multiplying the totemic
+animals and plants in order that they may be eaten by the
+tribe, though not by the particular clan which has these
+animals or plants for its totem. It is true that the Arunta
+distinguish these magical ceremonies for the multiplication of
+the totems from what we may call the more purely commemorative
+or historical performances, and they have a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>[pg 123]</span>
+special name for the former, namely <i>intichiuma</i>, which they
+do not bestow on the latter. Yet these <i>intichiuma</i> or
+magical ceremonies resemble the commemorative ceremonies
+so closely that it is difficult to suppose they can always
+have been wholly distinct. For example, in the magical
+ceremonies for the multiplication of witchetty grubs the
+performers pretend to be the insects emerging from their
+chrysalis cases,<a id="footnotetag156" name="footnotetag156"></a><a href="#footnote156"><sup>156</sup></a> just as the actors do in the similar commemorative
+ceremony which I have described; and again
+in a magical ceremony for the multiplication of emus the
+performers wear head-dresses to represent the long neck
+and small head of the bird, and they mimic its gait,<a id="footnotetag157" name="footnotetag157"></a><a href="#footnote157"><sup>157</sup></a> exactly
+as the actors do in the commemorative ceremony. It seems
+reasonable, therefore, to conjecture that the ceremonies which
+now are, or seem to be, purely commemorative or historical
+were originally magical in intention, being observed for the
+practical purpose of multiplying edible animals and plants
+or supplying other wants of the tribe.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Among the Warramunga these dramatic ceremonies are avowedly
+performed as magical rites.</p>
+
+<p>Now this conjecture is strongly confirmed by the actual
+usage of the Warramunga tribe, amongst whom the commemorative
+or historical dramas are avowedly performed as
+magical rites: in other words, the Warramunga attribute a
+magical virtue to the simple performance of such dramas: they
+think that by merely acting the parts of their totemic ancestors
+they thereby magically multiply the edible animals or plants
+which these ancestors had for their totems. Hence in this
+tribe the magical ceremonies and the dramatic performances
+practically coincide: with them, as Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+say, the <i>intichiuma</i> or magical ceremonies (called by the
+Warramunga <i>thalamminta</i>) "for the most part simply consist
+in the performance of a complete series representing the
+<i>alcheringa</i> history of the totemic ancestor. In this tribe each
+totemic group has usually one great ancestor, who arose in
+some special spot and walked across the country, making
+various natural features as he did so,&mdash;creeks, plains, ranges,
+and water-holes,&mdash;and leaving behind him spirit individuals
+who have since been reincarnated. The <i>intichiuma</i> [or
+magical] ceremony of the totem really consists in tracking
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id="page124"></a>[pg 124]</span>
+these ancestors' paths, and repeating, one after the other, ceremonies
+commemorative of what are called the <i>mungai</i> spots,
+the equivalent of the <i>oknanikilla</i> amongst the Arunta&mdash;that
+is, the places where he left the spirit children behind."<a id="footnotetag158" name="footnotetag158"></a><a href="#footnote158"><sup>158</sup></a>
+Apparently the Warramunga imagine that by imitating a
+totemic ancestor at the very place where he left spirit children
+of the same totem behind him, they thereby enable these
+spirit children to be born again and so increase the food
+supply, whenever their totem is an edible animal or plant;
+for we must always remember that in the mind of these
+savages the idea of a man or woman is inextricably confused
+with the idea of his or her totem; they seem unable to distinguish
+between the two, and therefore they believe that
+in multiplying human beings at their local totemic centres
+(<i>mungai</i> or <i>oknanikilla</i>) they simultaneously multiply their
+totems; and as the totems are commonly edible animals
+and plants, it follows that in the opinion of the Warramunga
+the general effect of performing these ancestral plays is to
+increase the supply of food of the tribe. No wonder, therefore,
+that the dramas are sacred, and that the natives attribute
+the most serious significance to their performance: the neglect
+to perform them might, in their judgment, bring famine and
+ruin on the whole tribe. As Messrs. Spencer and Gillen,
+speaking of these ceremonies, justly observe: "Their proper
+performance is a matter of very great importance in the eyes
+of the natives, because, not only do they serve to keep alive
+and hand down from generation to generation the traditions
+of the tribe, but they are, at least amongst the Warramunga,
+intimately associated with the most important object of maintaining
+the food supply, as every totemic group is held
+responsible for the maintenance of the material object the
+name of which it bears."<a id="footnotetag159" name="footnotetag159"></a><a href="#footnote159"><sup>159</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">General view of the attitude of the Central Australian
+natives towards their dead.</p>
+
+<p>To sum up the attitude of the Central Australian natives
+towards their dead. They believe that their dead are constantly
+undergoing reincarnation by being born again of
+women into the world, in fact that every living man, woman,
+and child is nothing but a dead person come to life again,
+that so it has been from the beginning and that so it will be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>[pg 125]</span>
+to the end. Of a special world of the departed, remote and
+different from the material world in which they live and from
+the familiar scenes to which they have been accustomed from
+infancy, they have no conception; still less, if that is possible,
+have they any idea of a division of the world of the dead
+into a realm of bliss and a realm of woe, where the spirits of
+the good live ineffably happy and the spirits of the bad live
+unspeakably miserable. To their simple minds the spirits of
+the dead dwell all about them in the rocky gorges, the barren
+plains, the wooded dells, the rustling trees, the still waters of
+their native land, haunting in death the very spots where they
+last entered into their mothers' wombs to be born, and where
+in future they will again enter into the wombs of other women
+to be born again as other children into the world. And so,
+they think, it will go on for ever and ever. Such a creed
+seems at first sight, as I have pointed out, irreconcilable
+with a worship of the dead in the proper sense of the word;
+and so perhaps it would be, if these savages were strictly
+consistent and logical in their theories. But they are not.
+They admit that their remote ancestors, in other words, that
+they themselves in former incarnations, possessed certain
+marvellous powers to which in the present degenerate days
+they can lay no claim; and in this significant admission we
+may detect a rift, a real distinction of kind, between the living
+and the dead, which in time might widen out into an impassable
+gulf. In other words, we may suppose that the
+Central Australians, if left to themselves, might come to hold
+that the dead return no more to the land of the living, and
+that, acknowledging as they do the vast superiority of their
+remote ancestors to themselves, they might end by worshipping
+them, at first simply as powerful ancestral spirits, and
+afterwards as supernatural deities, whose original connexion
+with humanity had been totally forgotten. In point of fact
+we saw that among the Warramunga the mythical water-snake
+Wollunqua, who is regarded as an ancestor of a
+totemic clan, has made some progress towards deification;
+for while he is still regarded as the forefather of the clan
+which bears his name, it is no longer supposed that he is
+born again of women into the world, but that he lives eternal
+and invisible under the water of a haunted pool, and that he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>[pg 126]</span>
+has it in his power both to help and to harm his people, who
+pray to him and perform ceremonies in his honour. This
+awful being, whose voice is heard in the peal of thunder and
+whose dreadful name may not be pronounced in common
+life, is not far from godhead; at least he is apparently the
+nearest approach to it which the imagination of these rude
+savages has been able to conceive. Lastly, as I have pointed
+out, the reverence which the Central Australians entertain
+for their dead ancestors is closely bound up with their
+totemism; they fail to distinguish clearly or at all between
+men and their totems, and accordingly the ceremonies which
+they perform to commemorate the dead are at the same time
+magical rites designed to ensure an abundant supply of food
+and of all the other necessaries and conveniences which
+savage life requires or admits of; indeed, we may with some
+probability conjecture that the magical intention of these
+ceremonies is the primary and original one, and that the
+commemorative intention is secondary and derivative. If
+that could be proved to be so (which is hardly to be expected),
+we should be obliged to conclude that in this as
+in so many enquiries into the remote human past we detect
+evidence of an Age of Magic preceding anything that deserves
+to be dignified with the name of religion.</p>
+
+<p>That ends what I have to say at present as to the belief
+in immortality and the worship of the dead among the
+Central Australian aborigines. In my next lecture I propose
+to pursue the enquiry among the other tribes of
+Australia.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote137" name="footnote137"></a><b>Footnote 137:</b><a href="#footnotetag137"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 228 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote138" name="footnote138"></a><b>Footnote 138:</b><a href="#footnotetag138"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 229 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote139" name="footnote139"></a><b>Footnote 139:</b><a href="#footnotetag139"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 230 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote140" name="footnote140"></a><b>Footnote 140:</b><a href="#footnotetag140"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 231-238.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote141" name="footnote141"></a><b>Footnote 141:</b><a href="#footnotetag141"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 238.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote142" name="footnote142"></a><b>Footnote 142:</b><a href="#footnotetag142"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 238 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote143" name="footnote143"></a><b>Footnote 143:</b><a href="#footnotetag143"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 239-247.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote144" name="footnote144"></a><b>Footnote 144:</b><a href="#footnotetag144"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 248.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote145" name="footnote145"></a><b>Footnote 145:</b><a href="#footnotetag145"> (return) </a><p> "On the other hand there is a great difference between
+the Wollunqua and any other totem, inasmuch as the particular animal is
+purely mythical, and except for the one great progenitor of the totemic
+group, is not supposed to exist at the present day" (Spencer and Gillen,
+<i>Northern Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 248).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote146" name="footnote146"></a><b>Footnote 146:</b><a href="#footnotetag146"> (return) </a><p> The <i>wingara</i> is the equivalent of the Arunta
+<i>alcheringa</i>, that is, the earliest legendary or mythical times of
+which the natives profess to have knowledge.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote147" name="footnote147"></a><b>Footnote 147:</b><a href="#footnotetag147"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 249 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote148" name="footnote148"></a><b>Footnote 148:</b><a href="#footnotetag148"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 33 <i>sq.</i>, 177 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote149" name="footnote149"></a><b>Footnote 149:</b><a href="#footnotetag149"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 297 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote150" name="footnote150"></a><b>Footnote 150:</b><a href="#footnotetag150"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 316 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote151" name="footnote151"></a><b>Footnote 151:</b><a href="#footnotetag151"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 320.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote152" name="footnote152"></a><b>Footnote 152:</b><a href="#footnotetag152"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 199-204.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote153" name="footnote153"></a><b>Footnote 153:</b><a href="#footnotetag153"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 179 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote154" name="footnote154"></a><b>Footnote 154:</b><a href="#footnotetag154"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 179 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote155" name="footnote155"></a><b>Footnote 155:</b><a href="#footnotetag155"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 358 <i>sq.</i>, and
+p. 343, fig 73.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote156" name="footnote156"></a><b>Footnote 156:</b><a href="#footnotetag156"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 176.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote157" name="footnote157"></a><b>Footnote 157:</b><a href="#footnotetag157"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 182 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote158" name="footnote158"></a><b>Footnote 158:</b><a href="#footnotetag158"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 297.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote159" name="footnote159"></a><b>Footnote 159:</b><a href="#footnotetag159"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 197.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>[pg 127]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-vi" id="lecture-vi"></a>LECTURE VI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE OTHER
+ABORIGINES OF AUSTRALIA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Customs and beliefs concerning the dead in the other tribes
+of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I concluded my account of the beliefs
+and practices of the Central Australian aborigines in regard
+to the dead. To-day I propose to consider the customs and
+beliefs concerning the dead which prevail among the native
+tribes in other parts of Australia. But at the outset I must
+warn you that our information as to these other tribes is far
+less full and precise than that which we possess as to the tribes
+of the centre, which have had the great advantage of being
+observed and described by two highly qualified scientific
+observers, Messrs. Spencer and Gillen. Our knowledge of
+all other Australian tribes is comparatively fragmentary, and
+accordingly it is impossible to give even an approximately
+complete view of their notions concerning the state of the
+human spirit after death, and of the rites which they
+observe for the purpose of disarming or propitiating the
+souls of the departed. We must therefore content ourselves
+with more or less partial glimpses of this side of native
+religion.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief in the reincarnation of the dead among the natives of
+Queensland. The <i>ngai</i> spirits.</p>
+
+<p>The first question we naturally ask is whether the belief
+in the reincarnation of the dead, which prevails universally
+among the Central tribes, reappears among tribes in other
+parts of the continent. It certainly does so, and although the
+evidence on this subject is very imperfect it suffices to raise
+presumption that a similar belief in the rebirth or reincarnation
+of the dead was formerly universal among the
+Australian aborigines. Unquestionably the belief is entertained
+by some of the natives of Queensland, who have been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>[pg 128]</span>
+described for us by Mr. W. E. Roth. Thus, for example,
+the aborigines on the Pennefather River think that every
+person's spirit undergoes a series of reincarnations, and that
+in the interval between two reincarnations the spirit resides
+in one or other of the haunts of Anjea, a mythical being who
+causes conception in women by putting mud babies into
+their bodies. Such spots, haunted by the fabulous being
+Anjea and by the souls of the dead awaiting rebirth, may
+be a tree, a rock, or a pool of water; they clearly correspond
+to the local totem centres (<i>oknanikilla</i> among the
+Arunta, <i>mungai</i> among the Warramunga) of the Central
+Australian tribes which I described in former lectures. The
+natives of the Pennefather River observe a ceremony at
+the birth of a child in order to ascertain the exact spot
+where its spirit tarried in the interval since its last incarnation;
+and when they have discovered it they speak of the child
+as obtained from a tree, a rock, or a pool of water, according
+to the place from which its spirit is supposed to have passed
+into its mother.<a id="footnotetag160" name="footnotetag160"></a><a href="#footnote160"><sup>160</sup></a> Readers of the classics can hardly fail to
+be reminded of the Homeric phrase to be "born of an
+oak or a rock,"<a id="footnotetag161" name="footnotetag161"></a><a href="#footnote161"><sup>161</sup></a> which seems to point to a similar belief in
+the possibility of human souls awaiting reincarnation in the
+boughs of an oak-tree or in the cleft of a rock. In the
+opinion of the Pennefather natives all disembodied human
+spirits or <i>choi</i>, as they call them, are mischief-makers and evildoers,
+for they make people sick or crazy; but the medicine-men
+can sometimes control them for good or evil. They
+wander about in the bush, but there are certain hollow trees
+or clumps of trees with wide-spreading branches, which they
+most love to haunt, and they can be heard in the rustling
+of the leaves or the crackling of the boughs at night.
+Anjea himself, who puts babies into women, is never seen,
+but you may hear him laughing in the depths of the forest,
+among the rocks, in the lagoons, and along the mangrove
+swamps; and when you hear his laugh you may be sure
+that he has got a baby.<a id="footnotetag162" name="footnotetag162"></a><a href="#footnote162"><sup>162</sup></a> If a native happens to hurt
+himself near a tree, he imagines that the spirit of some dead
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>[pg 129]</span>
+person is lurking among the branches, and he will never
+cut that tree down lest a worse thing should befall him at
+the hands of the vengeful ghost.<a id="footnotetag163" name="footnotetag163"></a><a href="#footnote163"><sup>163</sup></a> A curious feature in the
+beliefs of these Pennefather natives is that apart from the
+spirit called <i>choi</i>, which lives in a disembodied state between
+two incarnations, every person is supposed to have a spirit
+of a different sort called <i>ngai</i>, which has its seat in the
+heart; they feel it beating within their breast; it talks to
+them in sleep and so is the cause of dreams. At death a
+man's <i>ngai</i> spirit does not go away into the bush to await
+reincarnation like his <i>choi</i> spirit; on the contrary, it passes
+at once into his children, boys and girls alike; for before
+their father's death children are supposed not to possess
+a <i>ngai</i> spirit; if a child dies before its father, they think
+that it never had a <i>ngai</i> spirit at all. And the <i>ngai</i> spirit
+may leave a man in his lifetime as well as at death; for
+example, when a person faints, the natives think that he does
+so because his <i>ngai</i> spirit has departed from him, and they will
+stamp on the ground to make it return. On the other hand
+the <i>choi</i> spirit is supposed never to quit a man during life;
+it is thought to be in some undefined way related to the
+shadow, whereas the <i>ngai</i> spirit, as we saw, manifests itself
+in the beating of the heart. When a woman dies, her <i>ngai</i>
+spirit goes not into her children but into her sisters, one
+after the other; and when all the sisters are dead, the
+woman's <i>ngai</i> spirit goes away among the mangroves and
+perishes altogether.<a id="footnotetag164" name="footnotetag164"></a><a href="#footnote164"><sup>164</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Thus these savages explain the phenomena of birth and
+death, of conscious and unconscious life, by a theory of a
+double human spirit, one associated with the heart and the
+other with the shadow. The psychology is rudimentary,
+still it is interesting as an attempt to solve problems which
+still puzzle civilised man.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the natives of Cape Bedford in Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>Other Queensland aborigines associate the vital principle
+not with the heart but with the breath. For example, at
+Cape Bedford the natives call it <i>wau-wu</i> and think that it
+never leaves the body sleeping or waking till death, when it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>[pg 130]</span>
+haunts its place of burial for a time and may communicate with
+the living. Thus, like the ghost of Hamlet's father, it will
+often appear to a near kinsman or intimate friend, tell him the
+pitiful tale how he was done to death by an enemy, and urge
+him to revenge. Again, the soul of a man's dead father or
+friend may bear him company on a journey and, like the
+beryl-stone in Rossetti's poem <i>Rose Mary</i>, warn him of an
+ambuscade lurking for him in a spot where the man himself
+sees nothing. But the spirits of the dead do not always come
+with such friendly intent; they may drive the living distracted;
+a peculiar form of mental excitement and bewilderment
+is attributed to their action. Further, these aborigines
+at Cape Bedford, in Queensland, believe that all spirits of
+nature are in fact souls of the dead. Such spirits usually
+leave their haunts in the forests and caves at night. Stout-hearted
+old men can see and converse with them and receive
+from them warnings of danger; but women and children
+fear these spirits and never see them. But some spirits of
+the dead, when they have ceased to haunt their places of
+burial, go away eastward and are reincarnated in white
+people; hence these savages often look for a resemblance to
+some deceased tribesman among Europeans, and frequently
+wonder why it is that the white man, on whom their fancy
+has pitched, remembers nothing about his former life as a
+black man among blacks.<a id="footnotetag165" name="footnotetag165"></a><a href="#footnote165"><sup>165</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the natives of the Tully River in Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of the Tully River in Queensland associate
+the principle of life both with the breath and with the
+shadow. It departs from the body temporarily in sleep and
+fainting-fits and permanently in death, after which it may be
+heard at night tapping on the top of huts or creaking in the
+branches of trees. It is everlasting, so far as these savages
+have any idea of eternity, and further it is intangible; hence
+in its disembodied state it needs no food, and none is set
+out for it. The disposition of these disembodied spirits of
+the dead is good or bad, according to their disposition in
+life. Yet when a man is alone by himself, the spirit even of
+one of his own dead kinsfolk will sometimes come and do him
+a mischief. On the other hand it can do nothing to several
+people together; there is safety in numbers. They may all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>[pg 131]</span>
+see and hear the ghost, but he will not attack them. Hence
+these savages have been taught from childhood to beware of
+going alone: solitary people are liable at any moment to be
+assailed by the spirits of the dead. The only means they
+know of warding off these ghostly assailants is by lighting
+good fires.<a id="footnotetag166" name="footnotetag166"></a><a href="#footnote166"><sup>166</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Australian aborigines that their dead are
+reborn in white people.</p>
+
+<p>I have mentioned the belief of the Cape Bedford natives
+that the spirits of their dead are sometimes reincarnated in
+white people. A similar notion is reported from other and
+widely separated parts of Australia, and wherever it exists
+may be taken as evidence of a general belief as to the
+rebirth or reincarnation of the dead, even where such a belief
+is not expressly recorded. This superstition has sometimes
+proved of service to white people who have been cast among
+the blacks, for it has ensured them a hospitable and even
+affectionate welcome, where otherwise they might have
+encountered suspicion and hostility, if not open violence.
+Thus, for example, the convict Buckley, who escaped from
+the penal settlement on Port Phillip Bay in 1803, was
+found by some of the Wudthaurung tribe carrying a piece
+of a broken spear, which he had abstracted from the grave
+of one of their people. So they took him to be the dead
+man risen from the grave; he received the name of the
+deceased, was adopted by his relations, and lived with the
+tribe for thirty-two years without ever conversing with a
+white man; when at last he met one, he had forgotten the
+English language.<a id="footnotetag167" name="footnotetag167"></a><a href="#footnote167"><sup>167</sup></a> Again, a Mr. Naseby, who lived in the
+Kamilaroi country for fifty years, happened to have the
+marks of cupping on his back, and the natives could not be
+persuaded that he was not one of themselves come to life
+again with the family scars on his body,<a id="footnotetag168" name="footnotetag168"></a><a href="#footnote168"><sup>168</sup></a> for the Australian
+aborigines commonly raise scars on the bodies of young
+men at initiation. The late Sir George Grey was identified
+by an old Australian woman as her dead son come to
+life again. It may be worth while to quote his account
+of this unlooked-for meeting with his long-lost mother; for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>[pg 132]</span>
+it will impress on you, better than any words of mine could
+do, the firmness of the faith which these savages repose in the
+resurrection of the body, or at all events in the reincarnation
+of the soul. Grey writes as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="side">Experience of Sir George Grey.</p>
+
+<p>"After we had tethered the horses, and made ourselves
+tolerably comfortable, we heard loud voices from
+the hills above us: the effect was fine,&mdash;for they really
+almost appeared to float in the air; and as the wild cries of
+the women, who knew not our exact position, came by upon
+the wind, I thought it was well worth a little trouble to hear
+these savage sounds under such circumstances. Our guides
+shouted in return, and gradually the approaching cries came
+nearer and nearer. I was, however, wholly unprepared for
+the scene that was about to take place. A sort of procession
+came up, headed by two women, down whose cheeks tears
+were streaming. The eldest of these came up to me, and
+looking for a moment at me, said,&mdash;'<i>Gwa, gwa, bundo, bal</i>,'&mdash;'Yes,
+yes, in truth it is him'; and then throwing her
+arms round me, cried bitterly, her head resting on my
+breast; and although I was totally ignorant of what their
+meaning was, from mere motives of compassion, I offered no
+resistance to her caresses, however disagreeable they might
+be, for she was old, ugly, and filthily dirty; the other
+younger one knelt at my feet, also crying. At last the
+old lady, emboldened by my submission, deliberately kissed
+me on each cheek, just in the manner a Frenchwoman
+would have done; she then cried a little more, and at length
+relieving me, assured me that I was the ghost of her son,
+who had some time before been killed by a spear-wound in
+his breast. The younger female was my sister; but she,
+whether from motives of delicacy, or from any imagined
+backwardness on my part, did not think proper to kiss me.
+My new mother expressed almost as much delight at my
+return to my family, as my real mother would have done,
+had I been unexpectedly restored to her. As soon as she
+left me, my brothers, and father (the old man who had
+previously been so frightened), came up and embraced me
+after their manner,&mdash;that is, they threw their arms round my
+waist, placed their right knee against my right knee, and
+their breast against my breast, holding me in this way for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>[pg 133]</span>
+several minutes. During the time that the ceremony lasted,
+I, according to the native custom, preserved a grave and
+mournful expression of countenance. This belief, that white
+people are the souls of departed blacks, is by no means an
+uncommon superstition amongst them; they themselves never
+having an idea of quitting their own land, cannot imagine
+others doing it;&mdash;and thus, when they see white people suddenly
+appear in their country, and settling themselves down
+in particular spots, they imagine that they must have formed
+an attachment for this land in some other state of existence;
+and hence conclude the settlers were at one period black
+men and their own relations. Likenesses, whether real or
+imagined, complete the delusion; and from the manner of
+the old woman I have just alluded to, from her many
+tears, and from her warm caresses, I feel firmly convinced
+that she really believed I was her son, whose first thought,
+upon his return to earth, had been to re-visit his old mother,
+and bring her a present."<a id="footnotetag169" name="footnotetag169"></a><a href="#footnote169"><sup>169</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">In South-eastern Australia the natives believed that the
+souls of the dead were not reborn but went up to the sky.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole then we may conclude that a belief
+in the reincarnation of the dead has not been confined
+to the tribes of Central Australia, but has been held by
+the tribes in many, perhaps at one time in all, other
+parts of the continent. Yet, if we may judge from the
+imperfect records which we possess, this faith in the
+return of the dead to life in human form would seem
+to have given way and been replaced to some extent by
+a different creed among many tribes of South-eastern
+Australia. In this part of the continent it appears to have
+been often held by the natives that after death the soul is
+not born again among men, but goes away for ever to
+some distant country either in the sky or beyond the sea,
+where all the spirits of the dead congregate. Thus
+Lieutenant-Colonel Collins, who was Governor of New
+South Wales in the early days of the colony, at the end of
+the eighteenth century, reports that when the natives were
+often questioned "as to what became of them after their
+decease, some answered that they went either on or beyond
+the great water; but by far the greater number signified,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id="page134"></a>[pg 134]</span>
+that they went to the clouds."<a id="footnotetag170" name="footnotetag170"></a><a href="#footnote170"><sup>170</sup></a> Again, the Narrinyeri tribe
+of South Australia believed that all the dead went up to the
+sky and that some of them at least became stars. We
+possess an excellent description of the beliefs and customs
+of this tribe from the pen of a missionary, the Rev. George
+Taplin, who lived among them for many years. His account
+of their theory of the state of the dead is instructive. It
+runs thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Narrinyeri concerning the dead.</p>
+
+<p>"The Narrinyeri point out several stars, and say that
+they are deceased warriors who have gone to heaven
+(<i>Wyirrewarre</i>). There are Wyungare, and Nepalle, and the
+Manchingga, and several others. Every native expects to
+go to <i>Wyirrewarre</i> after death. They also believe that the
+dead descend from thence, and walk the earth; and that
+they are able to injure those whom they dislike. Consequently,
+men who have been notorious in life for a
+domineering and revengeful disposition are very much
+dreaded after death. For instance, there is Karungpe, who
+comes in the dead of night, when the camp fire has
+burned low, and like a rushing wind scatters the dying
+embers, and then takes advantage of the darkness to rob
+some sleeper of life; and it is considered dangerous to
+whistle in the dark, for Karungpe is especially attracted
+by a whistle. There is another restless spirit&mdash;the deceased
+father of a boy whom I well know&mdash;who is said to rove
+about armed with a rope, with which he catches people.
+All the Narrinyeri, old and young, are dreadfully afraid of
+seeing ghosts, and none of them will venture into the scrub
+after dark, lest he should encounter the spirits which are
+supposed to roam there. I have heard some admirable
+specimens of ghost stories from them. In one case I
+remember the ghost was represented to have set fire to a
+<i>wurley</i> [hut], and ascended to heaven in the flame. The
+Narrinyeri regard the disapprobation of the spirits of the
+dead as a thing to be dreaded; and if a serious quarrel takes
+place between near relatives, some of the friends are sure to
+interpose with entreaties to the contentious parties to be
+reconciled, lest the spirits of the dead should be offended
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>[pg 135]</span>
+at unseemly disputes between those who ought to be at
+peace. The name of the dead must not be mentioned until
+his body has decayed, lest a want of sorrow should seem to
+be indicated by the common and flippant use of his name.
+A native would have the deceased believe that he cannot
+hear or speak his name without weeping."<a id="footnotetag171" name="footnotetag171"></a><a href="#footnote171"><sup>171</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Narrinyeri fear of the dead. Mourning customs.</p>
+
+<p>From this account it would appear that the Narrinyeri
+have no belief in the reincarnation of the dead; they
+suppose that the souls of the departed live up aloft in the
+sky, from which they descend at night in the form of
+ghosts to haunt and trouble the living. On the whole
+the attitude of the Narrinyeri towards their dead kinsfolk
+seems to be dominated by fear; of affection there is
+apparently little or no trace. It is true that like most
+Australian tribes they indulge in extravagant demonstrations
+of grief at the death of their kinsfolk. A great lamentation
+and wailing is made by all the relations and friends of the
+deceased. They cut off their hair close to the head and
+besmudge themselves with oil and pounded charcoal. The
+women besmear themselves with the most disgusting filth.
+All beat and cut themselves and make a violent show of
+sorrow; and all the time that the corpse, rubbed over with
+grease and red ochre, is being dried over a slow fire in the
+hut, the women take it by turns to weep and wail before it,
+so that the lamentation never ceases for days. Yet Mr.
+Taplin was persuaded "that fear has more to do with most
+of these exhibitions than grief"; and he tells us that "for
+one minute a woman will appear in the deepest agony of
+grief and tears; a few minutes after, the conventional amount
+of weeping having been accomplished, they will laugh and
+talk with the merriest."<a id="footnotetag172" name="footnotetag172"></a><a href="#footnote172"><sup>172</sup></a> The principal motive, in fact, for
+all this excessive display of sorrow would seem to be a fear
+lest the jealous ghost should think himself slighted and
+should avenge the slight on the cold-hearted relatives who
+do not mourn sufficiently for the irreparable loss they have
+sustained by his death. We may conjecture that the same
+train of thought explains the ancient and widespread
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>[pg 136]</span>
+custom of hiring professional mourners to wail over the
+dead; the tears and lamentations of his kinsfolk are not
+enough to soothe the wounded feelings of the departed, they
+must be reinforced by noisier expressions of regret.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Deaths attributed by the Narrinyeri to sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>But there is another powerful motive for all these
+violent demonstrations of grief, into the secret of which we
+are let by Mr. Taplin. He says that "all the relatives
+are careful to be present and not to be wanting in the
+proper signs of sorrow, lest they should be suspected
+of complicity in causing the death."<a id="footnotetag173" name="footnotetag173"></a><a href="#footnote173"><sup>173</sup></a> In fact the Narrinyeri,
+like many other savages, attribute all, or most,
+natural deaths to sorcery. When a person dies, they think
+that he or she has been killed by the evil magic of some ill-wisher,
+and one of the first things to be done is to discover
+the culprit in order that his life may be taken in revenge.
+For this purpose the Narrinyeri resort to a form of divination.
+On the first night after the death the nearest relation
+of the deceased sleeps with his head on the corpse, hoping
+thus to dream of the sorcerer who has done the mischief.
+Next day the corpse is placed on a sort of bier supported on
+men's shoulders. The friends of the deceased gather round
+and call out the names of suspected persons to see whether
+the corpse will give any sign. At last the next of kin calls
+out the name of the person of whom he has dreamed, and if
+at the sound the corpse makes a movement towards him,
+which the bearers say they cannot resist, it is regarded as a
+clear token that the man so named is the malefactor. It
+only remains for the kinsfolk of the dead to hunt down the
+culprit and kill him.<a id="footnotetag174" name="footnotetag174"></a><a href="#footnote174"><sup>174</sup></a> Thus not only the relations but everybody
+in the neighbourhood has the strongest motive for
+assuming at least an appearance of sorrow at a death, lest
+the suspicion of having caused it by sorcery should fall upon
+him.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Pretence made by the Narrinyeri of avenging the death of
+their friends on the guilty sorcerer.</p>
+
+<p>It deserves to be noted, that while the Narrinyeri
+nominally acknowledged the duty of killing the sorcerer
+who in their opinion had caused the death of their friend,
+they by no means always discharged the duty, but sometimes
+contented themselves with little more than a pretence
+of revenge. Mr. Taplin's account of the proceedings observed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>[pg 137]</span>
+on such an occasion is instructive. It runs thus:
+"The spirit of the dead is not considered to have been
+appeased until his relatives have avenged his death. They
+will kill the sorcerer who has caused it if they can catch
+him; but generally they cannot catch him, and often do
+not wish it. Most probably he belongs to some other tribe
+of the Narrinyeri. Messengers pass between the tribes
+relative to the affair, and the friends of the accused person
+at last formally curse the dead man and all his dead
+relatives. This constitutes a <i>casus belli</i>. Arrangements are
+forthwith made for a pitched battle, and the two tribes meet
+in company with their respective allies. The tribe to which
+the dead man belongs weep and make a great lamentation
+for him, and the opposing tribe sets some fellows to dance
+about and play antics in derision of their enemies. Then
+the whole tribe will set up a great laugh by way of further
+provocation. If there is any other cause of animosity
+between the tribes besides the matter of avenging the dead
+there will now be a pretty severe fight with spears. If,
+however, the tribes have nothing but the dead man to fight
+about, they will probably throw a few spears, indulge in
+considerable abuse of each other, perhaps one or two will
+get slightly wounded, and then some of the old men will
+declare that enough has been done. The dead man is considered
+to have been appeased by the efforts of his friends
+to avenge his death by fighting, and the two tribes are
+friendly again. In such a case the fight is a mere ceremony."<a id="footnotetag175" name="footnotetag175"></a><a href="#footnote175"><sup>175</sup></a>
+Thus among the Narrinyeri the duty of blood
+revenge was often supposed to be sufficiently discharged by
+a sham fight performed apparently for the satisfaction of
+the ghost, who was supposed to be looking on and to be
+gratified by the sight of his friends hurling spears at the
+author of his death. Merciful pretences of the same sort
+have been practised by other savages in order to satisfy the
+vengeful ghost without the effusion of blood. Examples of
+them will come before us later on.<a id="footnotetag176" name="footnotetag176"></a><a href="#footnote176"><sup>176</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Magical virtue ascribed to the hair of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>However, the attitude of the Narrinyeri towards their
+dead was not purely one of fear and aversion. They
+imagined that they could derive certain benefits from their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>[pg 138]</span>
+departed kinsfolk, and the channel through which these
+benefits flowed was furnished by their hair. They cut off
+the hair of the dead and spun it into a cord, and this cord
+was commonly worn by the men as a head-band. They
+said that thereby they "smelled the dead," and that the
+smell made their eyes large and their sight keen, so that in
+a fight they could see the spears coming and could parry or
+avoid them.<a id="footnotetag177" name="footnotetag177"></a><a href="#footnote177"><sup>177</sup></a> Similar magical virtues are ascribed to the
+hair of the dead by the Arunta. Among them the hair of
+a dead man is cut off and made into a magic girdle, which
+is a valued possession and is only worn when a man is
+going out to engage in a tribal fight or to stalk a foe for
+the purpose of destroying him by witchcraft. The girdle is
+supposed to be endowed with magic power and to impart
+to its possessor all the warlike qualities of the dead man
+from whose hair it was made; in particular, it is thought to
+ensure accuracy of aim in the wearer, while at the same
+time it destroys that of his adversary.<a id="footnotetag178" name="footnotetag178"></a><a href="#footnote178"><sup>178</sup></a> Hence the girdle is
+worn by the man who takes the lead in avenging the death
+of the deceased on his supposed murderer; the mere sight
+of it, they think, so terrifies the victim that his legs tremble
+under him, he becomes incapable of fighting, and is easily
+speared.<a id="footnotetag179" name="footnotetag179"></a><a href="#footnote179"><sup>179</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief that the souls of the dead go up to the sky.</p>
+
+<p>Among the tribes of South-eastern Australia the
+Narrinyeri were not alone in holding the curious belief
+that the souls of the dead go up into the sky to live
+there for ever, but that their ghosts come down again from
+time to time, roam about their old haunts on earth, and
+communicate with the living. This, for example, was the
+belief of the Dieri, the Buandik, the Kurnai, and the Kulin
+tribes.<a id="footnotetag180" name="footnotetag180"></a><a href="#footnote180"><sup>180</sup></a> The Buandik thought that everything in skyland
+was better than on earth; a fat kangaroo, for example, was
+compared to a kangaroo of heaven, where, of course, the
+animals might be expected to abound.<a id="footnotetag181" name="footnotetag181"></a><a href="#footnote181"><sup>181</sup></a> The Kulin imagined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id="page139"></a>[pg 139]</span>
+that the spirits of the dead ascended to heaven by the bright
+rays of the setting sun.<a id="footnotetag182" name="footnotetag182"></a><a href="#footnote182"><sup>182</sup></a> The Wailwun natives in New
+South Wales used to bury their dead in hollow trees, and
+when they dropped the body into its place, the bearers and
+the bystanders joined in a loud whirring sound, like the rush
+of the wind. They said that this represented the upward
+flight of the soul to the sky.<a id="footnotetag183" name="footnotetag183"></a><a href="#footnote183"><sup>183</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Appearance of the dead to the living, especially in dreams.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the ghosts on earth, some tribes of
+South-eastern Australia believe that they can be seen by
+the living, can partake of food, and can warm themselves
+at a fire. It is especially the graves, where their mouldering
+bodies are deposited, that these restless spirits are supposed
+to haunt; it is there that they shew themselves either
+to people generally or to such as have the second
+sight.<a id="footnotetag184" name="footnotetag184"></a><a href="#footnote184"><sup>184</sup></a> But it is most commonly in dreams that they
+appear to the living and hold communication with them.
+Often these communications are believed to be helpful.
+Thus the tribes of the Wotjobaluk nation thought that the
+ghosts of their dead relations could visit them in sleep to
+protect them. A Mukjarawaint man told Dr. Howitt that
+his father came to him in a dream and warned him to beware
+or he would be killed. This, the man believed, was the
+saving of his life; for he afterwards came to the place which
+he had seen in his dream; whereupon, instead of going on,
+he turned back, so that his enemies, who might have been
+waiting for him there, did not catch him.<a id="footnotetag185" name="footnotetag185"></a><a href="#footnote185"><sup>185</sup></a> Another man
+informed Dr. Howitt that his dead uncle appeared to him in
+sleep and taught him charms against sickness and other
+evils; and the Chepara tribe similarly believed that male
+ancestors visited sleepers and imparted to them charms to
+avert evil magic.<a id="footnotetag186" name="footnotetag186"></a><a href="#footnote186"><sup>186</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Savage faith in the truth of dreams. Association of the stars
+with the souls of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Such notions follow naturally from the savage theory
+of dreams. Almost all savages appear to believe firmly
+in the truth of dreams; they fail to draw the distinction,
+which to us seems obvious, between the imaginary creations
+of the mind in sleep and the waking realities of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>[pg 140]</span>
+physical world. Whatever they dream of must, they think,
+be actually existing; for have they not seen it with their
+own eyes? To argue that the visions of sleep have no real
+existence is, therefore, in their opinion, to argue against the
+plain evidence of their senses; and they naturally treat
+such exaggerated scepticism with incredulity and contempt.
+Hence when they dream of their dead friends and relations
+they necessarily conclude that these persons are still alive
+somewhere and somehow, though they do not commonly
+appear by daylight to people in their waking hours. Unquestionably
+this savage faith in the reality of dreams has
+been one of the principal sources of the widespread, almost
+universal, belief in the survival of the human soul after death.
+It explains why ghosts are supposed to appear rather by
+night than by day, since it is chiefly by night that men sleep
+and dream dreams. Perhaps it may also partly account for
+the association of the stars with the souls of the dead. For
+if the dead appear to the living mainly in the hours of darkness,
+it seems not unnatural to imagine that the bright
+points of light which then bespangle the canopy of heaven
+are either the souls of the departed or fires kindled by them
+in their home aloft. For example, the Central Australian
+aborigines commonly suppose the stars to be the camp-fires
+of natives who live on the banks of the great river which we
+civilised men, by a survival of primitive mythology, call the
+Milky Way. However, these rude savages, we are told,
+as a general rule "appear to pay very little attention to the
+stars in detail, probably because they enter very little into
+anything which is connected with their daily life, and more
+especially with their food supply."<a id="footnotetag187" name="footnotetag187"></a><a href="#footnote187"><sup>187</sup></a> The same observation
+which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen here make as to the
+natives of Central Australia might be applied to most
+savages who have remained in the purely hunting stage of
+social development. Such men are not much addicted to
+star-gazing, since the stars have little or nothing to tell them
+that they wish to know. It is not till people have betaken
+themselves to sowing and reaping crops that they begin to
+scan the heavens more carefully in order to determine the
+season of sowing by observation of the great celestial
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>[pg 141]</span>
+time-keepers, the rising and setting of certain constellations,
+above all, apparently, of the Pleiades.<a id="footnotetag188" name="footnotetag188"></a><a href="#footnote188"><sup>188</sup></a> In short, the rise of
+agriculture favours the rise of astronomy.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Creed of the South-eastern Australians touching the dead.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to the ideas of the Australian aborigines
+concerning the dead, we may say of the natives of the
+south-eastern part of the continent, in the words of Dr.
+Howitt, that "there is a universal belief in the existence of
+the human spirit after death, as a ghost, which is able to
+communicate with the living when they sleep. It finds its
+way to the sky-country, where it lives in a land like the
+earth, only more fertile, better watered, and plentifully supplied
+with game."<a id="footnotetag189" name="footnotetag189"></a><a href="#footnote189"><sup>189</sup></a> This belief is very different from that
+of the Central Australian natives, who think that the souls
+of the dead tarry on earth in their old familiar haunts until
+the time comes for them to be born again into the world.
+Of the two different creeds that of the south-eastern tribes
+may be regarded as the more advanced, since it admits that
+the dead do not return to life, and that their disembodied
+spirits do not haunt perpetually a multitude of spiritual
+parks or reservations dotted over the face of the country.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The creed seems to form part of a general advance of culture
+in this part of the continent.</p>
+
+<p>But how are we to account for this marked difference
+of belief between the natives of the Centre and the natives
+of the South-east? Perhaps the most probable explanation
+is that the creed of the south-eastern tribes in this
+respect is part of a general advance of culture brought
+about by the more favourable natural conditions under which
+they live as compared with the forlorn state of the rude
+inhabitants of the Central deserts. That advance of culture
+manifests itself in a variety of ways. On the material side
+it is seen in more substantial and permanent dwellings and
+in warmer and better clothing. On the social side it is seen
+in an incipient tendency to the rise of a regular chieftainship,
+a thing which is quite unknown among the democratic or
+rather oligarchic savages of the Centre, who are mainly
+governed by the old men in council.<a id="footnotetag190" name="footnotetag190"></a><a href="#footnote190"><sup>190</sup></a> But the rise of
+chieftainship is a great step in political progress; since a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id="page142"></a>[pg 142]</span>
+monarchical government of some sort appears to be essential
+to the emergence of mankind from savagery. On the whole,
+then, the beliefs of the South-eastern Australian aborigines
+seem to mark a step on the upward road towards civilisation.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Possible influence of European teaching on native beliefs.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time we must not forget that these beliefs
+may have been influenced by the lessons which they have
+learned from white settlers with whom in this part of
+Australia they have been so long in contact. The possibility
+of such a transfusion of the new wine of Europe into the old
+bottles of Australia did not escape the experienced Mr.
+James Dawson, an early settler in Victoria, who has given
+us a valuable account of the natives of that region in the
+old days when they were still comparatively little contaminated
+by intercourse with the whites. He describes as
+follows the views which prevailed as to the dead among the
+tribes of Western Victoria:&mdash;"After the disposal of the body
+of a good person, its shade walks about for three days; and
+although it appears to people, it holds no communication
+with them. Should it be seen and named by anyone during
+these three days, it instantly disappears. At the expiry of
+three days it goes off to a beautiful country above the clouds,
+abounding with kangaroo and other game, where life will be
+enjoyed for ever. Friends will meet and recognize each
+other there; but there will be no marrying, as the bodies
+have been left on earth. Children under four or five years
+have no souls and no future life. The shades of the wicked
+wander miserably about the earth for one year after death,
+frightening people, and then descend to Ummekulleen,
+never to return." After giving us this account of the
+native creed Mr. Dawson adds very justly: "Some of
+the ideas described above may possibly have originated
+with the white man, and been transmitted from Sydney
+by one tribe to another."<a id="footnotetag191" name="footnotetag191"></a><a href="#footnote191"><sup>191</sup></a> The probability of white
+influence on this particular doctrine of religion is increased
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>[pg 143]</span>
+by the frank confession which these same natives made of
+the religious deterioration (as they regarded it) which they
+had suffered in another direction through the teaching of the
+missionaries. On this subject, to quote again from Mr.
+Dawson, the savages are of opinion that "the good spirit,
+Pirnmeheeal, is a gigantic man, living above the clouds;
+and as he is of a kindly disposition, and harms no one, he is
+seldom mentioned, but always with respect. His voice, the
+thunder, is listened to with pleasure, as it does good to man
+and beast, by bringing rain, and making grass and roots
+grow for their benefit. But the aborigines say that the
+missionaries and government protectors have given them a
+dread of Pirnmeheeal; and they are sorry that the young
+people, and many of the old, are now afraid of a being who
+never did any harm to their forefathers."<a id="footnotetag192" name="footnotetag192"></a><a href="#footnote192"><sup>192</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Vagueness and inconsistency of native beliefs as to the state
+of the dead. Custom or ritual as the interpreter of belief.</p>
+
+<p>However, it is very difficult to ascertain the exact beliefs
+of savages as to the dead. The thought of the savage is
+apt to be vague and inconsistent; he neither represents his
+ideas clearly to his own mind nor can he express them
+lucidly to others, even if he wishes to do so. And his
+thought is not only vague and inconsistent; it is fluid and
+unstable, liable to shift and change under alien influence.
+For these and other reasons, such as the distrust of strangers
+and the difficulty of language, which often interposes a
+formidable barrier between savage man and the civilised
+enquirer, the domain of primitive beliefs is beset by so
+many snares and pitfalls that we might almost despair of
+arriving at the truth, were it not that we possess a clue to
+guide us on the dark and slippery way. That clue is
+action. While it is generally very difficult to ascertain
+what any man thinks, it is comparatively easy to ascertain
+what he does; and what a man does, not what he
+says, is the surest touchstone to his real belief. Hence
+when we attempt to study the religion of backward races,
+the ritual which they practise is generally a safer indication
+of their actual creed than the loudest profession of faith.
+In regard to the state of the human soul after death the
+beliefs of the Australian aborigines are clearly reflected in
+many of the customs which they observe at the death and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id="page144"></a>[pg 144]</span>
+burial of their friends and enemies, and it is accordingly
+with an account of some of these customs that I propose to
+conclude this part of my subject.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs of the Australian aborigines as evidence of
+their beliefs concerning the state of the soul after death. Food placed
+on the grave for the use of the ghost and fires kindled to warm him.</p>
+
+<p>Now some of the burial customs observed by the
+Australian savages reveal in the clearest manner their
+belief that the human soul survives the death of the body,
+that in its disembodied state it retains consciousness and
+feeling, and can do a mischief to the living; in short, they
+shew that in the opinion of these people the departed live
+in the form of dangerous ghosts. Thus, for example, when
+the deceased is a person of importance, the Dieri place food
+for many days on the grave, and in winter they kindle a
+fire in order that the ghost may warm himself at it. If the
+food remains untouched on the grave, they think that the
+dead is not hungry.<a id="footnotetag193" name="footnotetag193"></a><a href="#footnote193"><sup>193</sup></a> The Blanch-water section of that
+tribe fear the spirits of the dead and accordingly take steps
+to prevent their resurrection. For that purpose they tie
+the toes of the corpse together and the thumbs behind the
+back, which must obviously make it difficult for the dead
+man to arise in his might and pursue them. Moreover, for
+a month after the death they sweep a clear space round
+the grave at dusk every evening, and inspect it every
+morning. If they find any tracks on it, they assume that
+they have been made by the restless ghost in his nocturnal
+peregrinations, and accordingly they dig up his mouldering
+remains and bury them in some other place, where they
+hope he will sleep sounder.<a id="footnotetag194" name="footnotetag194"></a><a href="#footnote194"><sup>194</sup></a> The Kukata tribe think that
+the ghost may be thirsty, so they obligingly leave a drinking
+vessel on the grave, that he may slake his thirst. Also
+they deposit spears and other weapons on the spot, together
+with a digging-stick, which is specially intended to ward
+off evil spirits who may be on the prowl.<a id="footnotetag195" name="footnotetag195"></a><a href="#footnote195"><sup>195</sup></a> The ghosts of
+the natives on the Maranoa river were also thirsty souls,
+so vessels full of water were sometimes suspended for their
+use over the grave.<a id="footnotetag196" name="footnotetag196"></a><a href="#footnote196"><sup>196</sup></a> A custom of lighting a fire on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>[pg 145]</span>
+grave to warm the poor shivering ghost seems to have
+been not uncommon among the aboriginal Australians.
+The Western Victorians, for example, kept up large fires
+all night for this purpose.<a id="footnotetag197" name="footnotetag197"></a><a href="#footnote197"><sup>197</sup></a> In the Wiimbaio tribe two
+fires were kept burning for a whole month on the grave,
+one to the right and the other to the left, in order that the
+ghost might come out and warm himself at them in the
+chill night air. If they found tracks near the grave, they
+inferred, like the Dieri, that the perturbed spirit had quitted
+his narrow bed to pace to and fro in the long hours of
+darkness; but if no footprints were visible they thought
+that he slept in peace.<a id="footnotetag198" name="footnotetag198"></a><a href="#footnote198"><sup>198</sup></a> In some parts of Western Australia
+the natives maintained fires on the grave for more than a
+month for the convenience of the ghost; and they clearly
+expected him to come to life again, for they detached the
+nails from the thumb and forefinger of the corpse and
+deposited them in a small hole beside the grave, in order
+that they might know their friend at his resurrection.<a id="footnotetag199" name="footnotetag199"></a><a href="#footnote199"><sup>199</sup></a> The
+length of time during which fires were maintained or
+kindled daily on the grave is said to have varied, according
+to the estimation in which the man was held, from a few
+days to three or four years.<a id="footnotetag200" name="footnotetag200"></a><a href="#footnote200"><sup>200</sup></a> We have seen that the Dieri
+laid food on the grave for the hungry ghost to partake of,
+and the same custom was observed by the Gournditch-mara
+tribe.<a id="footnotetag201" name="footnotetag201"></a><a href="#footnote201"><sup>201</sup></a> However, some intelligent old aborigines of Western
+Victoria derided the custom as "white fellow's gammon."<a id="footnotetag202" name="footnotetag202"></a><a href="#footnote202"><sup>202</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Property of the dead buried with them.</p>
+
+<p>Further, in some tribes of South-eastern Australia it
+was customary to deposit the scanty property of the
+deceased, usually consisting of a few rude weapons or
+implements, on the grave or to bury it with him. Thus
+the natives of Western Victoria buried all a dead man's ornaments,
+weapons, and property with him in the grave, only
+reserving his stone axes, which were too valuable to be thus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>[pg 146]</span>
+sacrificed: these were inherited by the next of kin.<a id="footnotetag203" name="footnotetag203"></a><a href="#footnote203"><sup>203</sup></a> The
+Wurunjerri also interred the personal property of the dead
+with him; if the deceased was a man, his spear-thrower
+was stuck in the ground at the head of the grave; if
+the deceased was a woman, the same thing was done with
+her digging-stick. That these implements were intended
+for the use of the ghost and not merely as headstones
+to mark the situation of the tomb and the sex of the
+departed, is clear from a significant exception to the custom.
+When the departed brother was a man of violent temper,
+who had been quarrelsome and a brawler in his life, no
+weapons were buried with him, obviously lest in a fit of
+ill-temper he should sally from the grave and assault
+people with them.<a id="footnotetag204" name="footnotetag204"></a><a href="#footnote204"><sup>204</sup></a> Similarly the Turrbal tribe, who
+deposited their dead in the forks of trees, used to leave
+a spear and club near the corpse "that the spirit of the
+dead might have weapons wherewith to kill game for his
+sustenance in the future state. A yam-stick was placed in
+the ground at a woman's grave, so that she might go away
+at night and seek for roots."<a id="footnotetag205" name="footnotetag205"></a><a href="#footnote205"><sup>205</sup></a> The Wolgal tribe were very
+particular about burying everything that belonged to a
+dead man with him; spears and nets, though valuable
+articles of property, were thus sacrificed; even a canoe has
+been known to be cut up in order that the pieces of it
+might be deposited in the grave. In fact "everything
+belonging to a dead man was put out of sight."<a id="footnotetag206" name="footnotetag206"></a><a href="#footnote206"><sup>206</sup></a> Similarly
+in the Geawe-gal tribe all the implements and inanimate
+property of a warrior were interred with him.<a id="footnotetag207" name="footnotetag207"></a><a href="#footnote207"><sup>207</sup></a> In the
+Gringai country not only was all a man's property buried
+with him, but every native present at the burial contributed
+something, and these contributions were piled together at
+the head of the corpse before the grave was filled in.<a id="footnotetag208" name="footnotetag208"></a><a href="#footnote208"><sup>208</sup></a>
+Among the tribes of Southern Victoria, when the grave
+has been dug and lined with fresh leaves and twigs so as
+to make a soft bed, the dead man's property is brought in
+two bags, and the sorcerer shakes out the contents. They
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>[pg 147]</span>
+consist of such small articles as pieces of hard stone suitable
+for cutting or paring skins, bones for boring holes, twine
+made of opossum wool, and so forth. These are placed in
+the grave, and the bags and rugs of the deceased are torn
+up and thrown in likewise. Then the sorcerer asks whether
+the dead man had any other property, and if he had, it is
+brought forward and laid beside the torn fragments of the
+bags and rugs. Everything that a man owned in life must
+be laid beside him in death.<a id="footnotetag209" name="footnotetag209"></a><a href="#footnote209"><sup>209</sup></a> Again, among the tribes of
+the Lower Murray, Lachlan, and Darling rivers in New
+South Wales, all a dead man's property, including his
+weapons and nets, was buried with his body in the grave.<a id="footnotetag210" name="footnotetag210"></a><a href="#footnote210"><sup>210</sup></a>
+Further, we are told that among the natives of Western
+Australia the weapons and personal property of the deceased
+are placed on the grave, "so that when he rises from the
+dead they may be ready to his hand."<a id="footnotetag211" name="footnotetag211"></a><a href="#footnote211"><sup>211</sup></a> In the Boulia
+district of Queensland the things which belonged to a dead
+man, such as his boomerangs and spears, are either buried
+with him, destroyed by fire, or sometimes, though rarely,
+distributed among his tribal brothers, but never among his
+children.<a id="footnotetag212" name="footnotetag212"></a><a href="#footnote212"><sup>212</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Intention of destroying the property of the dead. The
+property of the dead not destroyed in Central Australia.</p>
+
+<p>Thus among certain tribes of Australia, especially in the
+south-eastern part of the continent, it appears that the
+custom of burying or destroying a dead man's property has
+been very common. That the intention of the custom in
+some cases is to supply the supposed needs of the ghost,
+seems to be fairly certain; but we may doubt whether this
+explanation would apply to the practice of burning or
+otherwise destroying the things which had belonged to the
+deceased. More probably such destruction springs from an
+overpowering dread of the ghost and a wish to sever all
+connexion with him, so that he may have no excuse for
+returning and haunting the survivors, as he might do if his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>[pg 148]</span>
+property were either kept by them or deposited in the
+grave. Whatever the motive for the burial or destruction
+of a dead man's property may be, the custom appears not
+to prevail among the tribes of Central Australia. In the
+eastern Arunta tribe, indeed, it is said that sometimes a
+little wooden vessel used in camp for holding small objects
+may be buried with the man, but this is the only instance
+which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen could hear of in which
+any article of ordinary use is buried in the grave. Far from
+wasting property in that way, these economical savages
+preserve even a man's personal ornaments, such as his
+necklaces, armlets, and the fur string which he wore round
+his head; indeed, as we have seen, they go so far as to cut
+off the hair from the head of the deceased and to keep
+it for magical uses.<a id="footnotetag213" name="footnotetag213"></a><a href="#footnote213"><sup>213</sup></a> In the Warramunga tribe all the
+belongings of a dead man go to the tribal brothers of his
+mother.<a id="footnotetag214" name="footnotetag214"></a><a href="#footnote214"><sup>214</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Property of the dead hung up on trees, then washed and
+distributed. Economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The difference in this respect between the practice of the
+Central tribes and that of the tribes nearer the sea, especially
+in Victoria and New South Wales, is very notable. A custom
+intermediate between the two is observed by some tribes of
+the Darling River, who hang up the weapons, nets, and other
+property of the deceased on trees for about two months, then
+wash them, and distribute them among the relations.<a id="footnotetag215" name="footnotetag215"></a><a href="#footnote215"><sup>215</sup></a> The
+reason for hanging the things up and washing them is no
+doubt to rid them of the infection of death in order that they
+may be used with safety by the survivors. Such a custom
+points clearly to a growing fear of the dead; and that fear
+or reverence comes out still more clearly in the practice
+of either burying the property of the dead with them or
+destroying it altogether, which is observed by the aborigines
+of Victoria and other parts of Australia who live under
+more favourable conditions of life than the inhabitants of
+the Central deserts. This confirms the conclusion which we
+have reached on other grounds, that among the aboriginal
+population of Australia favourable natural conditions in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>[pg 149]</span>
+respect of climate, food, and water have exercised a most
+important influence in stimulating social progress in many
+directions, and not least in the direction of religion. At the
+same time, while we recognise that the incipient tendency to
+a worship of the dead which may be detected in these regions
+marks a step forward in religious development, we must
+acknowledge that the practice of burying or destroying the
+property of the dead, which is one of the ways in which
+the tendency manifests itself, is, regarded from the side of
+economic progress, a decided step backward. It marks, in
+fact, the beginning of a melancholy aberration of the human
+mind, which has led mankind to sacrifice the real interests
+of the living to the imaginary interests of the dead. With the
+general advance of society and the accompanying accumulation
+of property these sacrifices have at certain stages of evolution
+become heavier and heavier, as the demands of the
+ghosts became more and more exacting. The economic
+waste which the belief in the immortality of the soul has
+entailed on the world is incalculable. When we contemplate
+that waste in its small beginnings among the rude savages
+of Australia it appears insignificant enough; the world is
+not much the poorer for the loss of a parcel of boomerangs,
+spears, fur string, and skin rugs. But when we pass from
+the custom in this its feeble source and follow it as it swells
+in volume through the nations of the world till it attains the
+dimensions of a mighty river of wasted labour, squandered
+treasure, and spilt blood, we cannot but wonder at the
+strange mixture of good and evil in the affairs of mankind,
+seeing in what we justly call progress so much hardly
+earned gain side by side with so much gratuitous loss, such
+immense additions to the substantial value of life to be set
+off against such enormous sacrifices to the shadow of a
+shade.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote160" name="footnote160"></a><b>Footnote 160:</b><a href="#footnotetag160"> (return) </a><p> W. E. Roth, <i>North Queensland Ethnography, Bulletin No.
+5, Superstition, Magic, and Medicine</i> (Brisbane, 1903), pp. 18, 23,
+&sect;&sect; 68, 83.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote161" name="footnote161"></a><b>Footnote 161:</b><a href="#footnotetag161"> (return) </a><p>Homer, <i>Odyssey</i>, xix. 163.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote162" name="footnote162"></a><b>Footnote 162:</b><a href="#footnotetag162"> (return) </a><p>W. E. Roth, <i>ll. cc.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote163" name="footnote163"></a><b>Footnote 163:</b><a href="#footnotetag163"> (return) </a><p> W. E. Roth, <i>North Queensland
+Ethnography, Bulletin No. 5</i> (Brisbane,
+1903), p. 29. &sect; 116.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote164" name="footnote164"></a><b>Footnote 164:</b><a href="#footnotetag164"> (return) </a><p>W. E. Roth. <i>op. cit.</i> p. 18, &sect; 68.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote165" name="footnote165"></a><b>Footnote 165:</b><a href="#footnotetag165"> (return) </a><p>W. E. Roth, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 17, 29, &sect;&sect; 65, 116.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote166" name="footnote166"></a><b>Footnote 166:</b><a href="#footnotetag166"> (return) </a><p>W. E. Roth, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 17, &sect; 65.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote167" name="footnote167"></a><b>Footnote 167:</b><a href="#footnotetag167"> (return) </a><p> J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i> (Melbourne,
+Sydney, and Adelaide, 1881), pp. 110 <i>sq.</i>; A. W. Howitt, <i>Native
+Tribes of South-East Australia</i> (London, 1904), p. 442.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote168" name="footnote168"></a><b>Footnote 168:</b><a href="#footnotetag168"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 445.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote169" name="footnote169"></a><b>Footnote 169:</b><a href="#footnotetag169"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) George Grey, <i>Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery in North-West and Western Australia</i> (London, 1841), i.
+301-303.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote170" name="footnote170"></a><b>Footnote 170:</b><a href="#footnotetag170"> (return) </a><p> Lieutenant-Colonel David Collins, <i>An Account of the
+English Colony in New South Wales</i>, Second Edition (London, 1804), p.
+354.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote171" name="footnote171"></a><b>Footnote 171:</b><a href="#footnotetag171"> (return) </a><p> Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri,"
+in <i>Native Tribes of South
+Australia</i> (Adelaide, 1879), pp. 18 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote172" name="footnote172"></a><b>Footnote 172:</b><a href="#footnotetag172"> (return) </a><p> Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri,"
+<i>op. cit.</i> pp. 20 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote173" name="footnote173"></a><b>Footnote 173:</b><a href="#footnotetag173"> (return) </a><p>Rev. G. Taplin, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 20.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote174" name="footnote174"></a><b>Footnote 174:</b><a href="#footnotetag174"> (return) </a><p>Rev. G. Taplin, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 19 <i>sq.</i>, 21.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote175" name="footnote175"></a><b>Footnote 175:</b><a href="#footnotetag175"> (return) </a><p>Rev. G. Taplin, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 21.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote176" name="footnote176"></a><b>Footnote 176:</b><a href="#footnotetag176"> (return) </a><p>See below, pp. 235 <i>sqq.</i>, 327 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote177" name="footnote177"></a><b>Footnote 177:</b><a href="#footnotetag177"> (return) </a><p>Rev. G. Taplin, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 21.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote178" name="footnote178"></a><b>Footnote 178:</b><a href="#footnotetag178"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 538 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote179" name="footnote179"></a><b>Footnote 179:</b><a href="#footnotetag179"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 544 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote180" name="footnote180"></a><b>Footnote 180:</b><a href="#footnotetag180"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of South-East
+Australia</i>, pp. 434, 436, 437, 438. Compare E. J. Eyre, <i>Journals
+of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia</i> (London, 1845),
+ii. 357.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote181" name="footnote181"></a><b>Footnote 181:</b><a href="#footnotetag181"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 434.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote182" name="footnote182"></a><b>Footnote 182:</b><a href="#footnotetag182"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 438.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote183" name="footnote183"></a><b>Footnote 183:</b><a href="#footnotetag183"> (return) </a><p>Rev. W. Ridley, <i>Kamilaroi</i> (Sydney, 1875), p. 160.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote184" name="footnote184"></a><b>Footnote 184:</b><a href="#footnotetag184"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of South-East
+Australia</i>, pp. 434, 438, 439; J. Dawson, <i>Australian
+Aborigines</i>, p. 50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote185" name="footnote185"></a><b>Footnote 185:</b><a href="#footnotetag185"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 435.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote186" name="footnote186"></a><b>Footnote 186:</b><a href="#footnotetag186"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 437.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote187" name="footnote187"></a><b>Footnote 187:</b><a href="#footnotetag187"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 628.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote188" name="footnote188"></a><b>Footnote 188:</b><a href="#footnotetag188"> (return) </a><p> As to the place occupied by the Pleiades in primitive
+calendars, see <i>Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild</i>, i. 309-319.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote189" name="footnote189"></a><b>Footnote 189:</b><a href="#footnotetag189"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of
+South-East Australia</i>, pp. 439 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote190" name="footnote190"></a><b>Footnote 190:</b><a href="#footnotetag190"> (return) </a><p>See <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, i. 314 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote191" name="footnote191"></a><b>Footnote 191:</b><a href="#footnotetag191"> (return) </a><p> J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i>, p. 51. A man of
+the Ta-ta-thi tribe in New South Wales informed Mr. A. L. P. Cameron
+that the natives believed in a pit of fire where bad men were roasted
+after death. This reported belief, resting apparently on the testimony
+of a single informant, may without doubt be ascribed to the influence of
+Christian teaching. See A. L. P. Cameron, "Notes on some Tribes of New
+South Wales," <i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, xiv.
+(1885) pp. 364 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote192" name="footnote192"></a><b>Footnote 192:</b><a href="#footnotetag192"> (return) </a><p>J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i>, p. 49.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote193" name="footnote193"></a><b>Footnote 193:</b><a href="#footnotetag193"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of South-East
+Australia</i>, p. 448.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote194" name="footnote194"></a><b>Footnote 194:</b><a href="#footnotetag194"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i>. p. 449. Compare E. M.
+Curr, <i>The Australian Race</i>, i. 87: "The object sought in tying up
+the remains of the dead is to prevent the deceased from escaping from
+the tomb and frightening or injuring the survivors."</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote195" name="footnote195"></a><b>Footnote 195:</b><a href="#footnotetag195"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 451.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote196" name="footnote196"></a><b>Footnote 196:</b><a href="#footnotetag196"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 467.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote197" name="footnote197"></a><b>Footnote 197:</b><a href="#footnotetag197"> (return) </a><p>J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i>, p. 50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote198" name="footnote198"></a><b>Footnote 198:</b><a href="#footnotetag198"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of South-East
+Australia</i>, p. 452.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote199" name="footnote199"></a><b>Footnote 199:</b><a href="#footnotetag199"> (return) </a><p> R. Salvado, <i>M&eacute;moires historiques sur l' Australie</i>
+(Paris, 1854), p. 261; <i>Missions Catholiques</i>, x. (1878) p. 247.
+For more evidence as to the lighting of fires for this purpose see A. W.
+Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 455, 470.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote200" name="footnote200"></a><b>Footnote 200:</b><a href="#footnotetag200"> (return) </a><p> A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia,"
+<i>Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London</i>, New Series,
+iii. (1865) p. 245.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote201" name="footnote201"></a><b>Footnote 201:</b><a href="#footnotetag201"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 455.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote202" name="footnote202"></a><b>Footnote 202:</b><a href="#footnotetag202"> (return) </a><p> J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i>, pp. 50
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote203" name="footnote203"></a><b>Footnote 203:</b><a href="#footnotetag203"> (return) </a><p>J. Dawson, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 63.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote204" name="footnote204"></a><b>Footnote 204:</b><a href="#footnotetag204"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of
+South-East Australia</i>, p. 458.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote205" name="footnote205"></a><b>Footnote 205:</b><a href="#footnotetag205"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 470.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote206" name="footnote206"></a><b>Footnote 206:</b><a href="#footnotetag206"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 461 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote207" name="footnote207"></a><b>Footnote 207:</b><a href="#footnotetag207"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 464.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote208" name="footnote208"></a><b>Footnote 208:</b><a href="#footnotetag208"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 464.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote209" name="footnote209"></a><b>Footnote 209:</b><a href="#footnotetag209"> (return) </a><p> R. Brough Smyth, <i>The Aborigines of Victoria</i>, i.
+104.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote210" name="footnote210"></a><b>Footnote 210:</b><a href="#footnotetag210"> (return) </a><p> P. Beveridge, "Of the Aborigines Inhabiting the Great
+Lacustrine and Riverine Depression of the Lower Murray, Lower
+Murrumbidgee, Lower Lachlan, and Lower Darling," <i>Journal and
+Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales</i>, xvii. (1883) p.
+29.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote211" name="footnote211"></a><b>Footnote 211:</b><a href="#footnotetag211"> (return) </a><p> A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia,"
+<i>Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London</i>, New Series,
+iii. (1865) p. 245.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote212" name="footnote212"></a><b>Footnote 212:</b><a href="#footnotetag212"> (return) </a><p> W. E. Roth, <i>Ethnological Studies among the
+North-West-Central Queensland Aborigines</i> (Brisbane and London,
+1897), p. 164.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote213" name="footnote213"></a><b>Footnote 213:</b><a href="#footnotetag213"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 466, 497 <i>sq.</i>, 538 <i>sq.</i> See above, p.
+138.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote214" name="footnote214"></a><b>Footnote 214:</b><a href="#footnotetag214"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 524.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote215" name="footnote215"></a><b>Footnote 215:</b><a href="#footnotetag215"> (return) </a><p> F. Bonney, "On some Customs
+of the Aborigines of the River Darling,
+New South Wales," <i>Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute</i>, xiii. (1884)
+p. 135.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>[pg 150]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-vii" id="lecture-vii"></a>LECTURE VII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES
+OF AUSTRALIA (<i>concluded</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Attention to the comfort of the dead. Huts erected on graves
+for the use of the ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I shewed that in the maritime regions of
+Australia, where the conditions of life are more favourable
+than in the Central deserts, we may detect the germs of
+a worship of the dead in certain attentions which the living
+pay to the spirits of the departed, for example by kindling
+fires on the grave for the ghost to warm himself at, by leaving
+food and water for him to eat and drink, and by depositing
+his weapons and other property in the tomb for his use
+in the life after death. Another mark of respect shewn to
+the dead is the custom of erecting a hut on the grave for
+the accommodation of the ghost. Thus among the tribes of
+South Australia we are told that "upon the mounds, or
+tumuli, over the graves, huts of bark, or boughs, are generally
+erected to shelter the dead from the rain; they are also
+frequently wound round with netting."<a id="footnotetag216" name="footnotetag216"></a><a href="#footnote216"><sup>216</sup></a> Again, in Western
+Australia a small hut of rushes, grass, and so forth is said to
+have been set up by the natives over the grave.<a id="footnotetag217" name="footnotetag217"></a><a href="#footnote217"><sup>217</sup></a> Among
+the tribes of the Lower Murray, Lower Lachlan, and Lower
+Darling rivers, when a person died who had been highly
+esteemed in life, a neat hut was erected over his grave so as
+to cover it entirely. The hut was of oval shape, about five
+feet high, and roofed with thatch, which was firmly tied to
+the framework by cord many hundreds of yards in length.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>[pg 151]</span>
+Sometimes the whole hut was enveloped in a net. At the
+eastern end of the hut a small opening was left just large
+enough to allow a full-grown man to creep in, and the floor
+was covered with grass, which was renewed from time to
+time as it became withered. Each of these graves was
+enclosed by a fence of brushwood forming a diamond-shaped
+enclosure, within which the tomb stood exactly in the
+middle. All the grass within the fence was neatly shaved
+off and the ground swept quite clean. Sepulchres of this
+sort were kept up for two or three years, after which they were
+allowed to fall into disrepair, and when a few more years had
+gone by the very sites of them were forgotten.<a id="footnotetag218" name="footnotetag218"></a><a href="#footnote218"><sup>218</sup></a> The intention
+of erecting huts on graves is not mentioned in these
+cases, but on analogy we may conjecture that they are intended
+for the convenience and comfort of the ghost. This
+is confirmed by an account given of a native burial on the
+Vasse River in Western Australia. We are told that when
+the grave had been filled in, the natives piled logs on it to
+a considerable height and then constructed a hut upon the
+logs, after which one of the male relations went into the
+hut and said, "I sit in his house."<a id="footnotetag219" name="footnotetag219"></a><a href="#footnote219"><sup>219</sup></a> Thus it would seem
+that the hut on the grave is regarded as the house of the
+dead man. If only these sepulchral huts were kept up
+permanently, they might develop into something like temples,
+in which the spirits of the departed might be invoked and
+propitiated with prayer and sacrifice. It is thus that the
+great round huts, in which the remains of dead kings of
+Uganda are deposited, have grown into sanctuaries or shrines,
+where the spirits of the deceased monarchs are consulted as
+oracles through the medium of priests.<a id="footnotetag220" name="footnotetag220"></a><a href="#footnote220"><sup>220</sup></a> But in Australia
+this development is prevented by the simple forgetfulness
+of the savages. A few years suffice with them to wipe
+out the memory of the deceased and with it his chance of
+developing into an ancestral deity. Like most savages, the
+Australian aborigines seem to fear only the ghosts of the
+recently departed; one writer tells us that they have no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>[pg 152]</span>
+fear of the ghost of a man who has been dead say forty
+years.<a id="footnotetag221" name="footnotetag221"></a><a href="#footnote221"><sup>221</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of the dead and precautions taken by the living against
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The burial customs of the Australian aborigines which I
+have described betray not only a belief in the existence of
+the ghost, but also a certain regard for his comfort and
+convenience. However, we may suspect that in most, if not
+in all, cases the predominant motive of these attentions is
+fear rather than affection. The survivors imagine that any
+want of respect for the dead, any neglect of his personal
+comforts in the grave, would excite his resentment and draw
+down on them his vengeance. That these savages are
+really actuated by fear of the dead is expressly affirmed of
+some tribes. Thus we are told that the Yuin "were always
+afraid that the dead man might come out of the grave and
+follow them."<a id="footnotetag222" name="footnotetag222"></a><a href="#footnote222"><sup>222</sup></a> After burying a body the Ngarigo were
+wont to cross a river in order to prevent the ghost from
+pursuing them;<a id="footnotetag223" name="footnotetag223"></a><a href="#footnote223"><sup>223</sup></a> obviously they shared the common opinion
+that ghosts for some reason are unable to cross water. The
+Wakelbura took other measures to throw the poor ghost off
+the scent. They marked all the trees in a circle round the
+place where the dead man was buried; so that when he
+emerged from the grave and set off in pursuit of his retiring
+relations, he would follow the marks on the trees in a circle
+and always come back to the point from which he had
+started. And to make assurance doubly sure they put
+coals in the dead man's ears, which, by bunging up these
+apertures, were supposed to keep his ghost in the body till
+his friends had got a good start away from him. As a
+further precaution they lit fires and put bushes in the forks
+of trees, with the idea that the ghost would roost in the
+bushes and warm himself at the fires, while they were
+hastening away.<a id="footnotetag224" name="footnotetag224"></a><a href="#footnote224"><sup>224</sup></a> Here, therefore, we see that the real
+motive for kindling fires for the use of the dead is fear, not
+affection. In this respect the burial customs of the tribes
+at the Herbert River are still more significant. These
+savages buried with the dead man his weapons, his ornaments,
+and indeed everything he had used in life; moreover,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>[pg 153]</span>
+they built a hut on the grave, put a drinking-vessel in the
+hut, and cleared a path from it down to the water for the
+use of the ghost; and often they placed food and water on
+the grave. So far, these measures might be interpreted as
+marks of pure and disinterested affection for the soul of the
+departed. But such an interpretation is totally excluded
+by the ferocious treatment which these savages meted out to
+the corpse. To frighten the spirit, lest he should haunt the
+camp, the father or brother of the deceased, or the husband,
+if it was a woman, took a club and mauled the body with
+such violence that he often smashed the bones; further, he
+generally broke both its legs in order to prevent it from
+wandering of nights; and as if that were not enough, he
+bored holes in the stomach, the shoulders, and the lungs, and
+filled the holes with stones, so that even if the poor ghost
+should succeed by a desperate effort in dragging his mangled
+body out of the grave, he would be so weighed down by this
+ballast of stones that he could not get very far. However,
+after roaming up and down in this pitiable condition for a
+time in their old haunts, the spirits were supposed at last to
+go up aloft to the Milky Way.<a id="footnotetag225" name="footnotetag225"></a><a href="#footnote225"><sup>225</sup></a> The Kwearriburra tribe,
+on the Lynd River, in Queensland, also took forcible measures
+to prevent the resurrection of the dead. Whenever a person
+died, they cut off his or her head, roasted it in a fire on the
+grave, and when it was thoroughly charred they smashed it
+in bits and left the fragments among the hot coals. They
+calculated that when the ghost rose from the grave with the
+view of following the tribe, he would miss his head and go
+groping blindly about for it till he scorched himself in the
+embers of the fire and was glad to shrink back into his
+narrow bed.<a id="footnotetag226" name="footnotetag226"></a><a href="#footnote226"><sup>226</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Thus even among those Australian tribes which have
+progressed furthest in the direction of religion, such approaches
+as they have made towards a worship of the dead
+appear to be determined far more by fear than by affection and
+reverence. And we are told that it is the nearest relations
+and the most influential men whose ghosts are most dreaded.<a id="footnotetag227" name="footnotetag227"></a><a href="#footnote227"><sup>227</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>[pg 154]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Cuttings and brandings of the flesh of the living in honour
+of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>There is another custom observed by the Australian
+aborigines in mourning which deserves to be mentioned.
+We all know that the Israelites were forbidden to make
+cuttings in their flesh for the dead.<a id="footnotetag228" name="footnotetag228"></a><a href="#footnote228"><sup>228</sup></a> The custom was probably
+practised by the heathen Canaanites, as it has been by
+savages in various parts of the world. Nowhere, perhaps,
+has the practice prevailed more generally or been carried
+out with greater severity than in aboriginal Australia. For
+example, with regard to the tribes in the central part of
+Victoria we are told that "the parents of the deceased
+lacerate themselves fearfully, especially if it be an only son
+whose loss they deplore. The father beats and cuts his
+head with a tomahawk until he utters bitter groans. The
+mother sits by the fire and burns her breasts and abdomen
+with a small fire-stick till she wails with pain; then she
+replaces the stick in the fire, to use again when the pain is
+less severe. This continues for hours daily, until the time
+of lamentation is completed; sometimes the burns thus
+inflicted are so severe as to cause death."<a id="footnotetag229" name="footnotetag229"></a><a href="#footnote229"><sup>229</sup></a> It is especially
+the women, and above all the widows, who torture themselves
+in this way. Speaking of the tribes of Victoria, a
+writer tells us that on the death of her husband a widow,
+"becoming frantic, seizes fire-sticks and burns her breasts,
+arms, legs, and thighs. Rushing from one place to another,
+and intent only on injuring herself, and seeming to delight
+in the self-inflicted torture, it would be rash and vain to
+interrupt her. She would fiercely turn on her nearest relative
+or friend and burn him with her brands. When exhausted,
+and when she can scarcely walk, she yet endeavours to kick
+the embers of the fire, and to throw them about. Sitting
+down, she takes the ashes in her hands, rubs them into her
+wounds, and then scratches her face (the only part not
+touched by the fire-sticks) until the blood mingles with the
+ashes which partly hide her cruel wounds."<a id="footnotetag230" name="footnotetag230"></a><a href="#footnote230"><sup>230</sup></a> Among the
+Kurnai of South-eastern Victoria the relations of the dead
+would cut and gash themselves with sharp stones and tomahawks
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>[pg 155]</span>
+until their heads and bodies streamed with blood.<a id="footnotetag231" name="footnotetag231"></a><a href="#footnote231"><sup>231</sup></a>
+In the Mukjarawaint tribe, when a man died, his kinsfolk
+wept over him and slashed themselves with tomahawks and
+other sharp instruments for about a week.<a id="footnotetag232" name="footnotetag232"></a><a href="#footnote232"><sup>232</sup></a> In the tribes of
+the Lower Murray and Lower Darling rivers mourners scored
+their backs and arms, sometimes even their faces, with red-hot
+brands, which raised hideous ulcers; afterwards they
+flung themselves prone on the grave, tore out their hair by
+handfuls, rubbed earth over their heads and bodies in great
+profusion, and ripped up their green ulcers till the mingled
+blood and grime presented a ghastly spectacle. These
+self-inflicted sores remained long unhealed.<a id="footnotetag233" name="footnotetag233"></a><a href="#footnote233"><sup>233</sup></a> Among the
+Kamilaroi, a large tribe of eastern New South Wales, the
+mourners, and especially the women, used to cut their heads
+with tomahawks and allow the blood to dry on them.<a id="footnotetag234" name="footnotetag234"></a><a href="#footnote234"><sup>234</sup></a>
+Speaking of a native burial on the Murray River, a writer
+says that "around the bier were many women, relations of
+the deceased, wailing and lamenting bitterly, and lacerating
+their thighs, backs, and breasts, with shells or flint, until the
+blood flowed copiously from the gashes."<a id="footnotetag235" name="footnotetag235"></a><a href="#footnote235"><sup>235</sup></a> In the Boulia
+district of Queensland women in mourning score their thighs,
+both inside and outside, with sharp stones or bits of glass,
+so as to make a series of parallel cuts; in neighbouring
+districts of Queensland the men make much deeper cross-shaped
+cuts on their thighs.<a id="footnotetag236" name="footnotetag236"></a><a href="#footnote236"><sup>236</sup></a> In the Arunta tribe of Central
+Australia a man is bound to cut himself on the shoulder in
+mourning for his father-in-law; if he does not do so, his wife
+may be given away to another man in order to appease the
+wrath of the ghost at his undutiful son-in-law. Arunta men
+regularly bear on their shoulders the raised scars which
+shew that they have done their duty by their dead fathers-in-law.<a id="footnotetag237" name="footnotetag237"></a><a href="#footnote237"><sup>237</sup></a>
+The female relations of a dead man in the Arunta
+tribe also cut and hack themselves in token of sorrow,
+working themselves up into a sort of frenzy as they do so;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>[pg 156]</span>
+yet in all their apparent excitement they take care never to
+wound a vital part, but vent their fury on their scalps, their
+shoulders, and their legs.<a id="footnotetag238" name="footnotetag238"></a><a href="#footnote238"><sup>238</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Cuttings for the dead among the Warramunga.</p>
+
+<p>In the Warramunga tribe of Central Australia Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen witnessed the mourning for a dead man.
+Even before the sufferer had breathed his last the lamentations
+and self-inflicted wounds began. When it was known
+that the end was near, all the native men ran at full speed
+to the spot, and Messrs. Spencer and Gillen followed them
+to see what was to be seen. What they saw, or part of
+what they saw, was this. Some of the women, who had
+gathered from all directions, were lying prostrate on the
+body of the dying man, while others were standing or
+kneeling around, digging the sharp ends of yam-sticks into
+the crown of their heads, from which the blood streamed
+down over their faces, while all the time they kept up a loud
+continuous wail. Many of the men, rushing up to the scene
+of action, flung themselves also higgledy-piggledy on the
+sufferer, the women rising and making way for them, till
+nothing was to be seen but a struggling mass of naked bodies
+all mixed up together. Presently up came a man yelling
+and brandishing a stone knife. On reaching the spot he
+suddenly gashed both his thighs with the knife, cutting right
+across the muscles, so that, unable to stand, he dropped
+down on the top of the struggling bodies, till his mother,
+wife, and sisters dragged him out of the scrimmage, and immediately
+applied their mouths to his gaping wounds, while
+he lay exhausted and helpless on the ground. Gradually
+the struggling mass of dusky bodies untwined itself, disclosing
+the unfortunate sick man, who was the object, or rather the
+victim, of this well-meant demonstration of affection and
+sorrow. If he had been ill before, he was much worse when
+his friends left him: indeed it was plain that he had not
+long to live. Still the weeping and wailing went on; the
+sun set, darkness fell on the camp, and later in the evening
+the man died. Then the wailing rose louder than before,
+and men and women, apparently frantic with grief, rushed
+about cutting themselves with knives and sharp-pointed
+sticks, while the women battered each other's heads with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>[pg 157]</span>
+clubs, no one attempting to ward off either cuts or blows.
+An hour later a funeral procession set out by torchlight
+through the darkness, carrying the body to a wood about a
+mile off, where it was laid on a platform of boughs in a low
+gum-tree. When day broke next morning, not a sign of
+human habitation was to be seen in the camp where the
+man had died. All the people had removed their rude huts
+to some distance, leaving the place of death solitary; for
+nobody wished to meet the ghost of the deceased, who
+would certainly be hovering about, along with the spirit of
+the living man who had caused his death by evil magic,
+and who might be expected to come to the spot in the
+outward form of an animal to gloat over the scene of his
+crime. But in the new camp the ground was strewed with
+men lying prostrate, their thighs gashed with the wounds
+which they had inflicted on themselves with their own hands.
+They had done their duty by the dead and would bear to
+the end of their life the deep scars on their thighs as badges
+of honour. On one man Messrs. Spencer and Gillen counted
+the dints of no less than twenty-three wounds which he had
+inflicted on himself at various times. Meantime the women
+had resumed the duty of lamentation. Forty or fifty of
+them sat down in groups of five or six, weeping and wailing
+frantically with their arms round each other, while the actual
+and tribal wives, mothers, wives' mothers, daughters, sisters,
+mothers' mothers, sisters' husbands' mothers, and grand-daughters,
+according to custom, once more cut their scalps
+open with yam-sticks, and the widows afterwards in addition
+seared the scalp wounds with red-hot fire-sticks.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Cuttings for the dead strictly regulated by custom.</p>
+
+<p>In these mourning customs, wild and extravagant as the
+expression of sorrow appears to be, everything is regulated
+by certain definite rules; and a woman who did not thus
+maul herself when she ought to do so would be severely
+punished, or even killed, by her brother. Similarly with the
+men, it is only those who stand in certain relationships to
+the deceased who must cut and hack themselves in his
+honour, and these relationships are determined by the particular
+exogamous class to which the dead man happened to
+belong. Of such classes there are eight in the Warramunga
+tribe. On the occasion described by Messrs. Spencer and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>[pg 158]</span>
+Gillen it was a man of the Tjunguri class who died; and
+the men who gashed their thighs stood to him in one or
+other of the following relationships: grandfather on the
+mother's side, mother's brother, brother of the dead man's
+wife, and her mother's brother.<a id="footnotetag239" name="footnotetag239"></a><a href="#footnote239"><sup>239</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The cuttings and brandings which mourners inflict on
+themselves may be intended to convince the ghost of the sincerity of
+their sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>We naturally ask, What motive have these savages for
+inflicting all this voluntary and, as it seems to us, wholly
+superfluous suffering on themselves? It can hardly be that
+these wounds and burns are merely a natural and unfeigned
+expression of grief. We have seen that by experienced
+observers such extravagant demonstrations of sorrow are set
+down rather to fear than to affection. Similarly Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen suggest that at least one motive is a fear
+entertained by the native lest, if he does not make a sufficient
+display of grief, the ghost of the dead man will be offended
+and do him a mischief.<a id="footnotetag240" name="footnotetag240"></a><a href="#footnote240"><sup>240</sup></a> In the Kaitish tribe of Central
+Australia it is believed that if a woman does not keep her
+body covered with ashes from the camp fire during the
+whole time of mourning, the spirit of her deceased husband,
+who constantly follows her about, will kill her and strip all
+the flesh from her bones.<a id="footnotetag241" name="footnotetag241"></a><a href="#footnote241"><sup>241</sup></a> Again, in the Arunta tribe
+mourners smear themselves with white pipeclay, and the
+motive for this custom is said to be to render themselves
+more conspicuous, so that the ghost may see and be satisfied
+that he is being properly mourned for.<a id="footnotetag242" name="footnotetag242"></a><a href="#footnote242"><sup>242</sup></a> Thus the fear of the
+ghost, who, at least among the Australian aborigines, is
+commonly of a jealous temper and stands very firmly on his
+supposed rights, may suffice to explain the practice of self-mutilation
+at mourning.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Custom of allowing the blood of mourners to drip on the
+corpse or into the grave.</p>
+
+<p>But it is possible that another motive underlies the
+drawing of blood on these occasions. For it is to be
+observed that the blood of the mourners is often allowed to
+drop directly either on the dead body or into the grave.
+Thus, for example, among the tribes on the River Darling
+several men used to stand by the open grave and cut each
+other's heads with a boomerang; then they held their bleeding
+heads over the grave so that the blood dripped on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>[pg 159]</span>
+corpse lying in it. If the deceased was highly esteemed, the
+bleeding was repeated after some earth had been thrown on
+the body.<a id="footnotetag243" name="footnotetag243"></a><a href="#footnote243"><sup>243</sup></a> Among the Arunta it is customary for the women
+kinsfolk of the dead to cut their own and each other's heads
+so severely with clubs and digging-sticks that blood streams
+from them on the grave.<a id="footnotetag244" name="footnotetag244"></a><a href="#footnote244"><sup>244</sup></a> Again, at a burial on the Vasse
+River, in Western Australia, a writer describes how, when
+the grave was dug, the natives placed the corpse beside it,
+then "gashed their thighs, and at the flowing of the blood
+they all said, 'I have brought blood,' and they stamped the
+foot forcibly on the ground, sprinkling the blood around
+them; then wiping the wounds with a wisp of leaves, they
+threw it, bloody as it was, on the dead man."<a id="footnotetag245" name="footnotetag245"></a><a href="#footnote245"><sup>245</sup></a> With these
+Australian practices we may compare a custom observed by
+the civilised Greeks of antiquity. Every year the Peloponnesian
+lads lashed themselves on the grave of Pelops at
+Olympia, till the blood ran down their backs as a libation
+in honour of the dead man.<a id="footnotetag246" name="footnotetag246"></a><a href="#footnote246"><sup>246</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The blood intended to strengthen the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Now what is the intention of thus applying the blood of
+the living to the dead or pouring it into the grave? So far
+as the ancient Greeks are concerned the answer is not
+doubtful. We know from Homer that the ghosts of the
+dead were supposed to drink the blood that was offered to
+them and to be strengthened by the draught.<a id="footnotetag247" name="footnotetag247"></a><a href="#footnote247"><sup>247</sup></a> Similarly with
+the Australian savages, their object can hardly be any other
+than that of strengthening the spirit of the dead; for these
+aborigines are in the habit of giving human blood to the
+sick and the aged to drink for the purpose of restoring them
+to health and strength;<a id="footnotetag248" name="footnotetag248"></a><a href="#footnote248"><sup>248</sup></a> hence it would be natural for
+them to imagine that they could refresh and fortify the feeble
+ghost in like manner. Perhaps the blood was intended
+specially to strengthen the spirits of the dead for the
+new birth or reincarnation, to which so many of these
+savages look forward.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id="page160"></a>[pg 160]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Custom of burying people in the place where they were born.
+The custom perhaps intended to facilitate the rebirth of the soul.</p>
+
+<p>The same motive may possibly explain the custom
+observed by some Australian tribes of burying people, as
+far as possible, at the place where they were born. Thus in
+regard to the tribes of Western Victoria we are informed
+that "dying persons, especially those dying from old age,
+generally express an earnest desire to be taken to their
+birthplace, that they may die and be buried there. If
+possible, these wishes are always complied with by the
+relatives and friends. Parents will point out the spot where
+they were born, so that when they become old and infirm,
+their children may know where they wish their bodies to be
+disposed of."<a id="footnotetag249" name="footnotetag249"></a><a href="#footnote249"><sup>249</sup></a> Again, some tribes in the north and north-east
+of Victoria "are said to be more than ordinarily scrupulous in
+interring the dead. If practicable, they will bury the corpse
+near the spot where, as a child, it first drew breath. A mother
+will carry a dead infant for weeks, in the hope of being able
+to bury it near the place where it was born; and a dead
+man will be conveyed a long distance, in order that the last
+rites may be performed in a manner satisfactory to the
+tribe."<a id="footnotetag250" name="footnotetag250"></a><a href="#footnote250"><sup>250</sup></a> Another writer, speaking of the Australian
+aborigines in general, says: "By what I could learn, it is
+considered proper by many tribes that a black should be
+buried at or near the spot where he or she was born, and for
+this reason, when a black becomes seriously ill, the invalid
+is carried a long distance to these certain spots to die, as
+in this case. They apparently object to place a body in
+strange ground." The same writer mentions the case of a
+blackfellow, who began digging a grave close beside the
+kitchen door of a Mr. Campbell. When Mr. Campbell
+remonstrated with him, the native replied that he had no
+choice, for the dead man had been born on that very spot.
+With much difficulty Mr. Campbell persuaded him to bury
+his deceased friend a little further off from the kitchen door.<a id="footnotetag251" name="footnotetag251"></a><a href="#footnote251"><sup>251</sup></a>
+A practice of this sort would be intelligible on the theory of
+the Central Australians, who imagine that the spirits of all
+the dead return to the very spots where they entered into
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>[pg 161]</span>
+their mothers' wombs, and that they wait there until another
+opportunity presents itself to them of being born again into
+the world. For if people really believe, as do many
+Australian tribes, that when they die they will afterwards
+come to life again as infants, it is perfectly natural that they
+should take steps to ensure and facilitate the new birth. The
+Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes of Central Australia do this
+in the case of dead children. These savages draw a sharp
+distinction between young children and very old men and
+women. When very old people die, their bodies are at once
+buried in the ground, but the bodies of children are placed
+in wooden troughs and deposited on platforms of boughs in
+the branches of trees, and the motive for treating a dead
+child thus is, we are informed, the hope "that before very
+long its spirit may come back again and enter into the body
+of a woman&mdash;in all probability that of its former mother."<a id="footnotetag252" name="footnotetag252"></a><a href="#footnote252"><sup>252</sup></a>
+The reason for drawing this distinction between the young
+and the old by disposing of their bodies in different fashions,
+is explained with great probability by Messrs. Spencer and
+Gillen as follows: "In the Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes,
+while every old man has certain privileges denied to the
+younger men, yet if he be decidedly infirm and unable
+to take his part in the performance of ceremonies which
+are often closely concerned&mdash;or so at least the natives
+believe them to be&mdash;with the general welfare of the tribe,
+then the feeling undoubtedly is that there is no need to pay
+any very special respect to his remains. This feeling is
+probably vaguely associated with the idea that, as his body
+is infirm, so to a corresponding extent will his spirit part be,
+and therefore they have no special need to consider or
+propitiate this, as it can do them no harm. On the other
+hand they are decidedly afraid of hurting the feelings of any
+strong man who might be capable of doing them some
+mischief unless he saw that he was properly mourned for.
+Acting under much the same feeling they pay respect to the
+bodies of dead children and young women, in the hope that
+the spirit will soon return and undergo reincarnation. It is
+also worth noticing that they do not bury in trees any young
+man who has violated tribal law by taking as wife a woman
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id="page162"></a>[pg 162]</span>
+who is forbidden to him; such an individual is always
+buried directly in the ground."<a id="footnotetag253" name="footnotetag253"></a><a href="#footnote253"><sup>253</sup></a> Apparently these law-abiding
+savages are not anxious that members of the criminal
+classes should be born again and should have the opportunity
+of troubling society once more.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Different modes of disposing of the dead adopted in the same
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>I would call your attention particularly to the different
+modes of burial thus accorded by these two tribes to
+different classes of persons. It is too commonly assumed
+that each tribe has one uniform way of disposing of all
+its dead, say either by burning or by burying, and on
+that assumption certain general theories have been built
+as to the different views taken of the state of the dead by
+different tribes. But in point of fact the assumption is
+incorrect. Not infrequently the same tribe disposes of
+different classes of dead people in quite different ways;
+for instance, it will bury some and burn others. Thus
+amongst the Angoni of British Central Africa the corpses
+of chiefs are burned with all their household belongings, but
+the bodies of commoners are buried with all their belongings
+in caves.<a id="footnotetag254" name="footnotetag254"></a><a href="#footnote254"><sup>254</sup></a> In various castes or tribes of India it is the
+custom to burn the bodies of married people but to bury the
+bodies of the unmarried.<a id="footnotetag255" name="footnotetag255"></a><a href="#footnote255"><sup>255</sup></a> With some peoples of India the
+distinction is made, not between the married and the
+unmarried, but between adults and children, especially
+children under two years old; in such cases the invariable
+practice appears to be to burn the old and bury the young.
+Thus among the Malayalis of Malabar the bodies of men
+and women are burned, but the bodies of children under two
+years are buried, and so are the bodies of all persons
+who have died of cholera or small-pox.<a id="footnotetag256" name="footnotetag256"></a><a href="#footnote256"><sup>256</sup></a> The same
+distinctions are observed by the Nayars, Kadupattans, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>[pg 163]</span>
+other castes or tribes of Cochin.<a id="footnotetag257" name="footnotetag257"></a><a href="#footnote257"><sup>257</sup></a> The old rule laid down
+in the ancient Hindoo law-book <i>The Grihya-Sutras</i> was that
+children who died under the age of two should be buried,
+not burnt.<a id="footnotetag258" name="footnotetag258"></a><a href="#footnote258"><sup>258</sup></a> The Bhotias of the Himalayas bury all children
+who have not yet obtained their permanent teeth, but
+they burn all other people.<a id="footnotetag259" name="footnotetag259"></a><a href="#footnote259"><sup>259</sup></a> Among the Komars the young
+are buried, and the old cremated.<a id="footnotetag260" name="footnotetag260"></a><a href="#footnote260"><sup>260</sup></a> The Coorgs bury the
+bodies of women and of boys under sixteen years of age,
+but they burn the bodies of men.<a id="footnotetag261" name="footnotetag261"></a><a href="#footnote261"><sup>261</sup></a> The Chukchansi Indians
+of California are said to have burned only those who died a
+violent death or were bitten by snakes, but to have buried
+all others.<a id="footnotetag262" name="footnotetag262"></a><a href="#footnote262"><sup>262</sup></a> The Minnetaree Indians disposed of their dead
+differently according to their moral character. Bad and
+quarrelsome men they buried in the earth that the Master of
+Life might not see them; but the bodies of good men they
+laid on scaffolds, that the Master of Life might behold
+them.<a id="footnotetag263" name="footnotetag263"></a><a href="#footnote263"><sup>263</sup></a> The Kolosh or Tlingit Indians of Alaska burn their
+ordinary dead on a pyre, but deposit the bodies of shamans
+in large coffins, which are supported on four posts.<a id="footnotetag264" name="footnotetag264"></a><a href="#footnote264"><sup>264</sup></a> The
+ancient Mexicans thought that all persons who died of
+infectious diseases were killed by the rain-god Tlaloc; so
+they painted their bodies blue, which was the rain-god's
+colour, and buried instead of burning them.<a id="footnotetag265" name="footnotetag265"></a><a href="#footnote265"><sup>265</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Special modes of burial adopted to prevent or facilitate the
+return of the spirit.</p>
+
+<p>These examples may suffice to illustrate the different
+ways in which the same people may dispose of their dead
+according to the age, sex, social rank, or moral character of
+the deceased, or the manner of his death. In some cases
+the special mode of burial adopted seems clearly intended
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id="page164"></a>[pg 164]</span>
+to guard against the return of the dead, whether in the
+form of ghosts or of children born again into the world.
+Such, for instance, was obviously the intention of the old
+English custom of burying a suicide at a cross-road with a
+stake driven through his body. And if some burial customs
+are plainly intended to pin down the dead in the earth, or
+at least to disable him from revisiting the survivors, so
+others appear to be planned with the opposite intention of
+facilitating the departure of the spirit from the grave, in
+order that he may repair to a more commodious lodging or
+be born again into the tribe. For example, the Arunta
+of Central Australia always bury their dead in the earth
+and raise a low mound over the grave; but they leave a
+depression in the mound on the side which faces towards
+the spot where the spirit of the deceased is supposed to
+have dwelt in the intervals between his successive reincarnations;
+and we are expressly told that the purpose of leaving
+this depression is to allow the spirit to go out and in easily;
+for until the final ceremony of mourning has been performed
+at the grave, the ghost is believed to spend his time partly
+in watching over his near relations and partly in the
+company of its <i>arumburinga</i> or spiritual double, who lives
+at the old <i>nanja</i> spot, that is, at the place where the disembodied
+soul tarries waiting to be born again.<a id="footnotetag266" name="footnotetag266"></a><a href="#footnote266"><sup>266</sup></a> Thus the
+Arunta imagine that for some time after death the spirit
+of the deceased is in a sort of intermediate state, partly
+hovering about the abode of the living, partly visiting his
+own proper spiritual home, to which on the completion of
+the mourning ceremonies he will retire to await the new
+birth. The final mourning ceremony, which marks the
+close of this intermediate state, takes place some twelve
+or eighteen months after the death. It consists mainly in
+nothing more or less than a ghost hunt; men armed with
+shields and spear-throwers assemble and with loud shouts
+beat the air, driving the invisible ghost before them from
+the spot where he died, while the women join in the shouts
+and buffet the air with the palms of their hands to chase
+away the dead man from the old camp which he loves to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>[pg 165]</span>
+haunt. In this way the beaters gradually advance towards
+the grave till they have penned the ghost into it, when they
+immediately dance on the top of it, beating the air downwards
+as if to drive the spirit down, and stamping on the
+ground as if to trample him into the earth. After that, the
+women gather round the grave and cut each other's heads
+with clubs till the blood streams down on it. This brings the
+period of mourning to an end; and if the deceased was a man,
+his widow is now free to marry again. In token that the days
+of her sorrow are over, she wears at this final ceremony the
+gay feathers of the ring-neck parrot in her hair. The spirit
+of her dead husband, lying in the grave, is believed to
+know the sign and to bid her a last farewell. Even after he
+has thus been hunted into the grave and trampled down in it,
+his spirit may still watch over his friends, guard them from
+harm, and visit them in dreams.<a id="footnotetag267" name="footnotetag267"></a><a href="#footnote267"><sup>267</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Departure of the ghost supposed to coincide with the
+disappearance of the flesh from his bones.</p>
+
+<p>We may naturally ask, Why should the spirit of the
+dead be supposed at first to dwell more or less intermittently
+near the spot where he died, and afterwards to take up his
+abode permanently at his <i>nanja</i> spot till the time comes
+for him to be born again? A good many years ago I
+conjectured<a id="footnotetag268" name="footnotetag268"></a><a href="#footnote268"><sup>268</sup></a> that this idea of a change in the abode of the
+ghost may be suggested by a corresponding change which
+takes place, or is supposed to take place, about the same
+time in the state of the body; in fact, that so long as the
+flesh adheres to the bones, so long the soul of the dead man
+may be thought to be detained in the neighbourhood of the
+body, but that when the flesh has quite decayed, the soul is
+completely liberated from its old tabernacle and is free to
+repair to its true spiritual home. In confirmation of this
+conjecture I pointed to the following facts. Some of the
+Indians of Guiana bring food and drink to their dead so
+long as the flesh remains on the bones; but when it has
+mouldered away, they conclude that the man himself has
+departed.<a id="footnotetag269" name="footnotetag269"></a><a href="#footnote269"><sup>269</sup></a> The Matacos Indians of the Gran Chaco in
+Argentina believe that the soul of a dead man does not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>[pg 166]</span>
+pass down into the nether world until his body is decomposed
+or burnt. Further, the Alfoors of Central Celebes
+suppose that the spirits of the departed cannot enter the
+spirit-land until all the flesh has been removed from their
+bones; for until that has been done, the gods (<i>lamoa</i>) in
+the other world could not bear the stench of the corpse.
+Accordingly at a great festival the bodies of all who have
+died within a certain time are dug up and the decaying
+flesh scraped from the bones. Comparing these ideas, I
+suggested that they may explain the widespread custom of
+a second burial, that is, the practice of disinterring the dead
+after a certain time and disposing of their bones otherwise.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Second burial of the bones among the tribes of Central
+Australia. Final burial ceremony among the Warramunga.</p>
+
+<p>Now so far as the tribes of Central Australia are
+concerned, my conjecture has been confirmed by the subsequent
+researches of Messrs. Spencer and Gillen in that
+region. For they have found that the tribes to the north
+of the Arunta regularly give their dead a second burial,
+that a change in the state of the ghosts is believed to
+coincide with the second burial, and apparently also, though
+this is not so definitely stated, that the time for the second
+burial is determined by the disappearance of the flesh from
+the bones. Amongst the tribes which practise a second
+burial the custom is first to deposit the dead on platforms
+among the branches of trees, till the flesh has quite mouldered
+away, and then to bury the bones in the earth: in short,
+they practise tree-burial first and earth-burial afterwards.<a id="footnotetag270" name="footnotetag270"></a><a href="#footnote270"><sup>270</sup></a>
+For example, in the Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes, when a
+man dies, his body is carried by his relations to a tree
+distant a mile or two from the camp. There it is laid on a
+platform by itself for some months. When the flesh has
+disappeared from the bones, a kinsman of the deceased, in
+strictness a younger brother (<i>itia</i>), climbs up into the tree,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>[pg 167]</span>
+dislocates the bones, places them in a wooden vessel, and
+hands them down to a female relative. Then the bones
+are laid in the grave with the head facing in the direction
+in which his mother's brother is supposed to have camped
+in days of old. After the bones have been thus interred,
+the spirit of the dead man is believed to go away and to
+remain in his old <i>alcheringa</i> home until such time as he
+once more undergoes reincarnation.<a id="footnotetag271" name="footnotetag271"></a><a href="#footnote271"><sup>271</sup></a> But in these tribes, as
+we saw, very old men and women receive only one burial,
+being at once laid in an earthy grave and never set up on
+a platform in a tree; and we have seen reason to think
+that this difference in the treatment of the aged springs
+from the indifference or contempt in which their ghosts
+are held by comparison with the ghosts of the young and
+vigorous. In the Warramunga tribe, who regularly deposit
+their dead in trees first and in the earth afterwards, so long
+as the corpse remains in the tree and the flesh has not
+completely disappeared from the bones, the mother of the
+deceased and the women who stand to him or her in the
+relation of tribal motherhood are obliged from time to time
+to go to the tree, and sitting under the platform to allow
+its putrid juices to drip down on their bodies, into which
+they rub them as a token of sorrow. This, no doubt, is
+intended to please the jealous ghost; for we are told that
+he is believed to haunt the tree and even to visit the camp,
+in order, if he was a man, to see for himself that his widows
+are mourning properly. The time during which the mouldering
+remains are left in the tree is at least a year and may
+be more.<a id="footnotetag272" name="footnotetag272"></a><a href="#footnote272"><sup>272</sup></a> The final ceremony which brings the period of
+mourning to an end is curious and entirely different from the
+one observed by the Arunta on the same occasion. When
+the bones have been taken down from the tree, an arm-bone
+is put carefully apart from the rest. Then the skull is
+smashed, and the fragments together with all the rest of
+the bones except the arm-bone, are buried in a hollow
+ant-hill near the tree. Afterwards the arm-bone is wrapt
+up in paper-bark and wound round with fur-string, so as to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>[pg 168]</span>
+make a torpedo-shaped parcel, which is kept by a tribal
+mother of the deceased in her rude hovel of branches, till,
+after the lapse of some days or weeks, the time comes for
+the last ceremony of all. On that day a design emblematic
+of the totem of the deceased is drawn on the ground, and
+beside it a shallow trench is dug about a foot deep and
+fifteen feet long. Over this trench a number of men,
+elaborately decorated with down of various colours, stand
+straddle-legged, while a line of women, decorated with red
+and yellow ochre, crawl along the trench under the long
+bridge made by the straddling legs of the men. The last
+woman carries the arm-bone of the dead in its parcel, and
+as soon as she emerges from the trench, the bone is snatched
+from her by a kinsman of the deceased, who carries it to a
+man standing ready with an uplifted axe beside the totemic
+drawing. On receiving the bone, the man at once smashes
+it, hastily buries it in a small pit beside the totemic emblem
+of the departed, and closes the opening with a large flat
+stone, signifying thereby that the season of mourning is
+over and that the dead man or woman has been gathered
+to his or her totem. The totemic design, beside which the
+arm-bone is buried, represents the spot at which the totemic
+ancestor of the deceased finally went down into the earth.
+When once the arm-bone has thus been broken and laid in
+its last resting-place, the soul of the dead person, which
+they describe as being of about the size of a grain of sand, is
+supposed to go back to the place where it camped long ago
+in a previous incarnation, there to remain with the souls of
+other men and women of the same totem until the time
+comes for it to be born again.<a id="footnotetag273" name="footnotetag273"></a><a href="#footnote273"><sup>273</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">General conclusion as to the belief in immortality and the
+worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines.</p>
+
+<p>This must conclude what I have to say as to the belief
+in immortality and the worship of the dead among the
+aborigines of Australia. The evidence I have adduced is
+sufficient to prove that these savages firmly believe both in
+the existence of the human soul after death and in the
+power which it can exert for good or evil over the survivors.
+On the whole the dominant motive in their treatment of the
+dead appears to be fear rather than affection. Yet the
+attention which many tribes pay to the comfort of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>[pg 169]</span>
+departed by providing them with huts, food, water, fire,
+clothing, implements and weapons, may not be dictated by
+purely selfish motives; in any case they are clearly intended
+to please and propitiate the ghosts, and therefore contain
+the germs of a regular worship of the dead.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote216" name="footnote216"></a><b>Footnote 216:</b><a href="#footnotetag216"> (return) </a><p> E. J. Eyre, <i>Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into
+Central Australia</i> (London, 1845), ii. 349.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote217" name="footnote217"></a><b>Footnote 217:</b><a href="#footnotetag217"> (return) </a><p> A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Victoria,"
+<i>Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London</i>, N.S. iii.
+(1865) p. 245.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote218" name="footnote218"></a><b>Footnote 218:</b><a href="#footnotetag218"> (return) </a><p> P. Beveridge, in <i>Journal and Proceedings of the Royal
+Society of New South Wales</i>, xvii. (1883) pp. 29 <i>sq.</i> Compare
+R. Brough Smyth, <i>Aborigines of Victoria</i>, i. 100 note.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote219" name="footnote219"></a><b>Footnote 219:</b><a href="#footnotetag219"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) G. Grey, <i>Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery</i>, ii. 332 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote220" name="footnote220"></a><b>Footnote 220:</b><a href="#footnotetag220"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. Roscoe, <i>The Baganda</i> (London, 1911), pp.
+109 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote221" name="footnote221"></a><b>Footnote 221:</b><a href="#footnotetag221"> (return) </a><p> E. M. Curr, <i>The Australian Race</i> (Melbourne and
+London, 1886-1887), i. 87.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote222" name="footnote222"></a><b>Footnote 222:</b><a href="#footnotetag222"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of South-East
+Australia</i>, p. 463.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote223" name="footnote223"></a><b>Footnote 223:</b><a href="#footnotetag223"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 461.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote224" name="footnote224"></a><b>Footnote 224:</b><a href="#footnotetag224"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 473.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote225" name="footnote225"></a><b>Footnote 225:</b><a href="#footnotetag225"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 474.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote226" name="footnote226"></a><b>Footnote 226:</b><a href="#footnotetag226"> (return) </a><p> F. C. Urquhart, "Legends of the Australian Aborigines,"
+<i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, xiv. (1885) p. 88.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote227" name="footnote227"></a><b>Footnote 227:</b><a href="#footnotetag227"> (return) </a><p> E. M. Curr, <i>The Australian Race</i>,
+i. 87.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote228" name="footnote228"></a><b>Footnote 228:</b><a href="#footnotetag228"> (return) </a><p>Leviticus xix. 28; Deuteronomy xiv. 1.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote229" name="footnote229"></a><b>Footnote 229:</b><a href="#footnotetag229"> (return) </a><p> W. Stanbridge, "Tribes in the Central Part of Victoria,"
+<i>Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London</i>, N.S. i.
+(1861) p. 298.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote230" name="footnote230"></a><b>Footnote 230:</b><a href="#footnotetag230"> (return) </a><p>R. Brough Smyth, <i>Aborigines of Victoria</i>, i. 105.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote231" name="footnote231"></a><b>Footnote 231:</b><a href="#footnotetag231"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Howitt, <i>Native Tribes of South-East
+Australia</i>, p. 459.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote232" name="footnote232"></a><b>Footnote 232:</b><a href="#footnotetag232"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit</i>. p. 453.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote233" name="footnote233"></a><b>Footnote 233:</b><a href="#footnotetag233"> (return) </a><p> P. Beveridge, in <i>Journal and Proceedings of the Royal
+Society of New South Wales</i>, xvii. (1883) pp. 28, 29.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote234" name="footnote234"></a><b>Footnote 234:</b><a href="#footnotetag234"> (return) </a><p>A. W. Howitt, <i>op. cit</i>. p. 466.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote235" name="footnote235"></a><b>Footnote 235:</b><a href="#footnotetag235"> (return) </a><p> E. J. Eyre, <i>Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into
+Central Australia</i> (London, 1845), ii. 347.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote236" name="footnote236"></a><b>Footnote 236:</b><a href="#footnotetag236"> (return) </a><p> W. E. Roth, <i>Studies among the North-West-Central
+Queensland Aborigines</i> (Brisbane and London, 1897), p. 164; compare
+p. 165.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote237" name="footnote237"></a><b>Footnote 237:</b><a href="#footnotetag237"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 500.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote238" name="footnote238"></a><b>Footnote 238:</b><a href="#footnotetag238"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 510.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote239" name="footnote239"></a><b>Footnote 239:</b><a href="#footnotetag239"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 516-552.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote240" name="footnote240"></a><b>Footnote 240:</b><a href="#footnotetag240"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, p. 510.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote241" name="footnote241"></a><b>Footnote 241:</b><a href="#footnotetag241"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes</i>, p. 507.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote242" name="footnote242"></a><b>Footnote 242:</b><a href="#footnotetag242"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes</i>, p. 511.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote243" name="footnote243"></a><b>Footnote 243:</b><a href="#footnotetag243"> (return) </a><p> F. Bonney, "On some Customs of the Aborigines of the
+River Darling," <i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, xiii.
+(1884) pp. 134 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote244" name="footnote244"></a><b>Footnote 244:</b><a href="#footnotetag244"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 507, 509 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote245" name="footnote245"></a><b>Footnote 245:</b><a href="#footnotetag245"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) G. Grey, <i>Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery</i>, ii. 332, quoting Mr. Bussel.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote246" name="footnote246"></a><b>Footnote 246:</b><a href="#footnotetag246"> (return) </a><p>Scholiast on Pindar, <i>Olymp.</i> i. 146.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote247" name="footnote247"></a><b>Footnote 247:</b><a href="#footnotetag247"> (return) </a><p>Homer, <i>Odyssey</i>, xi. 23 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote248" name="footnote248"></a><b>Footnote 248:</b><a href="#footnotetag248"> (return) </a><p> <i>The Magic Art and the Evolution
+of Kings</i>, i. 91 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote249" name="footnote249"></a><b>Footnote 249:</b><a href="#footnotetag249"> (return) </a><p>J. Dawson, <i>Australian Aborigines</i>, p. 62.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote250" name="footnote250"></a><b>Footnote 250:</b><a href="#footnotetag250"> (return) </a><p>R. Brough Smyth, <i>Aborigines of Victoria</i>, i. 108.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote251" name="footnote251"></a><b>Footnote 251:</b><a href="#footnotetag251"> (return) </a><p> J. F. Mann, "Notes on the Aborigines of Australia,"
+<i>Proceedings of the Geographical Society of Australasia</i>, i.
+(Sydney, 1885) p. 48.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote252" name="footnote252"></a><b>Footnote 252:</b><a href="#footnotetag252"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, p. 506.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote253" name="footnote253"></a><b>Footnote 253:</b><a href="#footnotetag253"> (return) </a><p>Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes</i>, p. 512.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote254" name="footnote254"></a><b>Footnote 254:</b><a href="#footnotetag254"> (return) </a><p> R. Sutherland Rattray, <i>Some Folk-lore Stories and
+Songs in Chinyanja</i> (London, 1907), pp. 99-101, 182.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote255" name="footnote255"></a><b>Footnote 255:</b><a href="#footnotetag255"> (return) </a><p> F. Fawcett, "The Kondayamkottai Maravars, a Dravidian
+Tribe of Tinnevelly, Southern India," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xxxiii. (1903) p. 64; Captain Wolsley Haig, "Notes on the
+Rangari Caste in Barar," <i>Journal of the Asiatic Society of
+Bengal</i>, lxx. Part iii. (1901) p. 8; E. Thurston, <i>Castes and
+Tribes of Southern India</i> (Madras, 1909), iv. 226 (as to the
+Lambadis), vi. 244 (as to the Raniyavas); compare <i>id.</i>,
+<i>Ethnographic Notes in Southern India</i> (Madras, 1906), p. 155.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote256" name="footnote256"></a><b>Footnote 256:</b><a href="#footnotetag256"> (return) </a><p> E. Thurston, <i>Ethnographic Notes in Southern India</i>,
+p. 207.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote257" name="footnote257"></a><b>Footnote 257:</b><a href="#footnotetag257"> (return) </a><p> L. K. Anantha Krishna Iyer, <i>The Cochin Tribes and
+Castes</i> (Madras, 1909-1912), ii. 91, 112, 157, 360, 378.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote258" name="footnote258"></a><b>Footnote 258:</b><a href="#footnotetag258"> (return) </a><p> <i>The Grihya Sutras</i>, translated by H. Oldenberg,
+Part i. p. 355 (<i>Sacred Books of the East</i>, vol. xxix.). Compare W.
+Crooke, <i>Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern India</i>
+(Westminster, 1896), i. 245.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote259" name="footnote259"></a><b>Footnote 259:</b><a href="#footnotetag259"> (return) </a><p> Ch. A. Sherring, <i>Western Tibet and the British
+Borderland</i> (London, 1906), pp. 123 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote260" name="footnote260"></a><b>Footnote 260:</b><a href="#footnotetag260"> (return) </a><p> P. N. Bose, "Chhattisgar," <i>Journal of the Asiatic
+Society of Bengal</i>, lix., Part i. (1891) p. 290.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote261" name="footnote261"></a><b>Footnote 261:</b><a href="#footnotetag261"> (return) </a><p> E. Thurston, <i>Ethnographic Notes in Southern India</i>,
+p. 205.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote262" name="footnote262"></a><b>Footnote 262:</b><a href="#footnotetag262"> (return) </a><p> S. Powers, <i>Tribes of California</i> (Washington,
+1877), p. 383.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote263" name="footnote263"></a><b>Footnote 263:</b><a href="#footnotetag263"> (return) </a><p> Maximilian Prinz zu Wied, <i>Reise in das Innere
+Nord-America</i> (Coblenz, 1839-1841), ii. 235.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote264" name="footnote264"></a><b>Footnote 264:</b><a href="#footnotetag264"> (return) </a><p> T. de Pauly, <i>Description Ethnographique des Peuples de
+la Russie, Peuples de l'Am&eacute;rique Russe</i> (St. Petersburg, 1862), p.
+13.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote265" name="footnote265"></a><b>Footnote 265:</b><a href="#footnotetag265"> (return) </a><p> E. Seler, <i>Altmexikanische Studien</i>, ii. (Berlin,
+1899) p. 42 (<i>Ver&ouml;ffentlichungen aus dem K&ouml;niglichen Museum f&uuml;r
+V&ouml;lkerkunde</i>, vi. 2/4).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote266" name="footnote266"></a><b>Footnote 266:</b><a href="#footnotetag266"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, p. 497; <i>id.</i>,
+<i>Northern Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 506.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote267" name="footnote267"></a><b>Footnote 267:</b><a href="#footnotetag267"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Native Tribes
+of Central Australia</i>, pp. 503-508.
+The name of the final mourning ceremony
+among the Arunta is <i>urpmilchima</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote268" name="footnote268"></a><b>Footnote 268:</b><a href="#footnotetag268"> (return) </a><p> <i>The Golden Bough</i>, Second Edition (London, 1900),
+i. 434 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote269" name="footnote269"></a><b>Footnote 269:</b><a href="#footnotetag269"> (return) </a><p> A. Biet, <i>Voyage de la France Equinoxiale en l'Isle de
+Cayenne</i> (Paris, 1664), p. 392.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote270" name="footnote270"></a><b>Footnote 270:</b><a href="#footnotetag270"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, pp. 505
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote271" name="footnote271"></a><b>Footnote 271:</b><a href="#footnotetag271"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, pp. 506-508.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote272" name="footnote272"></a><b>Footnote 272:</b><a href="#footnotetag272"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern
+Tribes of Central Australia</i>, p. 530.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote273" name="footnote273"></a><b>Footnote 273:</b><a href="#footnotetag273"> (return) </a><p> Spencer and Gillen, <i>Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia</i>, pp. 530-543.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>[pg 170]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-viii" id="lecture-viii"></a>LECTURE VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF THE TORRES STRAITS ISLANDS</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The Islanders of Torres Straits. The Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I concluded my account of the belief in
+immortality and worship of the dead, or rather of the
+elements out of which such a worship might have grown,
+among the aborigines of Australia. To-day we pass to the
+consideration of a different people, the islanders of Torres
+Straits. As you may know, Torres Straits are the broad
+channel which divides Australia on the south from the great
+island of New Guinea on the north. The small islands
+which are scattered over the strait fall roughly into two
+groups, a Western and an Eastern, of which the eastern
+is at once the more isolated and the more fertile. In
+appearance, character, and customs the inhabitants of all
+these islands belong to the Papuan family, which inhabits
+the western half of New Guinea, but in respect of language
+there is a marked difference between the natives of the two
+groups; for while the speech of the Western Islanders is
+akin to that of the Australians, the speech of the Eastern
+Islanders is akin to that of the Papuans of New Guinea.
+The conclusion to be drawn from these facts appears to be
+that the Western Islands of Torres Straits were formerly
+inhabited by aborigines of the Australian family, and that
+at a later time they were occupied by immigrants from New
+Guinea, who adopted the language of the aboriginal inhabitants,
+but gradually extinguished the aboriginal type
+and character either by peaceful absorption or by conquest
+and extermination.<a id="footnotetag274" name="footnotetag274"></a><a href="#footnote274"><sup>274</sup></a> Hence the Western Islanders of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page171" id="page171"></a>[pg 171]</span>
+Torres Straits form a transition both geographically and
+ethnographically between the aborigines of Australia on the
+one side and the aborigines of New Guinea on the other
+side. Accordingly in our survey of the belief in immortality
+among the lower races we may appropriately consider the
+Islanders of Torres Straits immediately after the aborigines
+of Australia and before we pass onward to other and more
+distant races. These Islanders have a special claim on the
+attention of a Cambridge lecturer, since almost all the exact
+knowledge we possess of them we owe to the exertions of
+Cambridge anthropologists and especially to Dr. A. C.
+Haddon, who on his first visit to the islands in 1888
+perceived the urgent importance of procuring an accurate
+record of the old beliefs and customs of the natives before
+it was too late, and who never rested till that record was
+obtained, as it happily has been, first by his own unaided
+researches in the islands, and afterwards by the united
+researches of a band of competent enquirers. In the history
+of anthropology the Cambridge Expedition to Torres Straits
+in 1898 will always hold an honourable place, to the credit
+of the University which promoted it and especially to that of
+the zealous and devoted investigator who planned, organised,
+and carried it to a successful conclusion. Practically all
+that I shall have to tell you as to the beliefs and practices
+of the Torres Straits Islanders is derived from the accurate
+and laborious researches of Dr. Haddon and his colleagues.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Social culture of the Torres Straits Islanders.</p>
+
+<p>While the natives of Torres Straits are, or were at the
+time of their discovery, in the condition which we call
+savagery, they stand on a far higher level of social and
+intellectual culture than the rude aborigines of Australia.
+To indicate roughly the degree of advance we need only say
+that, whereas the Australians are nomadic hunters and
+fishers, entirely ignorant of agriculture, and destitute to a
+great extent not only of houses but even of clothes, the
+natives of Torres Straits live in settled villages and diligently
+till the soil, raising a variety of crops, such as yams, sweet
+potatoes, bananas, sugar-cane, and tobacco.<a id="footnotetag275" name="footnotetag275"></a><a href="#footnote275"><sup>275</sup></a> Of the two
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>[pg 172]</span>
+groups of islands the eastern is the more fertile and the
+inhabitants are more addicted to agriculture than are the
+natives of the western islands, who, as a consequence of the
+greater barrenness of the soil, have to eke out their subsistence
+to a considerable extent by fishing.<a id="footnotetag276" name="footnotetag276"></a><a href="#footnote276"><sup>276</sup></a> And there is other
+evidence to shew that the Eastern Islanders have attained
+to a somewhat higher stage of social evolution than their
+Western brethren;<a id="footnotetag277" name="footnotetag277"></a><a href="#footnote277"><sup>277</sup></a> the more favourable natural conditions
+under which they live may possibly have contributed to
+raise the general level of culture. One of the most marked
+distinctions in this respect between the inhabitants of the
+two groups is that, whereas a regular system of totemism
+with its characteristic features prevails among the Western
+Islanders, no such system nor even any very clear evidence
+of its former existence is to be found among the Eastern
+Islanders, whether it be that they never had it or, what is
+more likely, that they once had but have lost it.<a id="footnotetag278" name="footnotetag278"></a><a href="#footnote278"><sup>278</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Torres Straits Islanders in the existence of
+the human spirit after death.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, so far as regards our immediate
+subject, the belief in immortality and the worship of the
+dead, a general resemblance may be traced between the
+creed and customs of the Eastern and Western tribes.
+Both of them, like the Australian aborigines, firmly believe
+in the existence of the human spirit after death, but unlike
+the Australians they seem to have no idea that the souls of
+the departed are ever born again into the world; the doctrine
+of reincarnation, so widespread among the natives of Australia,
+appears to have no place in the creed of their near neighbours
+the Torres Straits Islanders, whose dead, like our own,
+though they may haunt the living for a time, are thought
+to depart at last to a distant spirit-land and to return no
+more. At the same time neither in the one group nor in
+the other is there any clear evidence of what may be called
+a worship of the dead in the strict sense of the word, unless
+we except the cults of certain more or less mythical heroes.
+On this point the testimony of Dr. Haddon is definite as to the
+Western Islanders. He says: "In no case have I obtained
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id="page173"></a>[pg 173]</span>
+in the Western Islands an indication of anything approaching
+a worship of deceased persons ancestral or otherwise, with the
+exception of the heroes shortly to be mentioned; neither is
+there any suggestion that their own ancestors have been in
+any way apotheosized."<a id="footnotetag279" name="footnotetag279"></a><a href="#footnote279"><sup>279</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of the ghosts of the recently departed.</p>
+
+<p>But if these savages have not, with the possible exception
+of the cult of certain heroes, any regular worship of the
+dead, they certainly have the germ out of which such
+a worship might be developed, and that is a firm belief
+in ghosts and in the mischief which they may do to
+the living. The word for a ghost is <i>mari</i> in the West
+and <i>mar</i> in the East: it means also a shadow or reflection,<a id="footnotetag280" name="footnotetag280"></a><a href="#footnote280"><sup>280</sup></a>
+which seems to shew that these savages, like many others,
+have derived their notion of the human soul from the
+observation of shadows and reflections cast by the body on
+the earth or on water. Further, the Western Islanders appear
+to distinguish the ghosts of the recently departed (<i>mari</i>) from
+the spirits of those who have been longer dead, which they
+call <i>markai</i>;<a id="footnotetag281" name="footnotetag281"></a><a href="#footnote281"><sup>281</sup></a> and if we accept this distinction "we may
+assert," according to Dr. Haddon, "that the Torres Straits
+Islanders feared the ghosts but believed in the general
+friendly disposition of the spirits of the departed."<a id="footnotetag282" name="footnotetag282"></a><a href="#footnote282"><sup>282</sup></a> Similarly
+we saw that the Australian aborigines regard with fear the
+ghosts of those who have just died, while they are either
+indifferent to the spirits of those who have died many years
+ago or even look upon them as beings of higher powers than
+their descendants, whom they can benefit in various ways.
+This sharp distinction between the spirits of the dead,
+according to the date at which they died, is widespread,
+perhaps universal among mankind. However truly the
+dead were loved in their lifetime, however bitterly they were
+mourned at their death, no sooner have they passed beyond
+our ken than the thought of their ghosts seems to inspire
+the generality of mankind with an instinctive fear and
+horror, as if the character of even the best friends and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>[pg 174]</span>
+nearest relations underwent a radical change for the worse
+as soon as they had shuffled off the mortal coil. But among
+savages this belief in the moral deterioration of ghosts is
+certainly much more marked than among civilised races.
+Ghosts are dreaded both by the Western and the Eastern tribes
+of Torres Straits. Thus in Mabuiag, one of the Western
+Islands, the corpse was carried out of camp feet foremost,
+else it was thought that the ghost would return and trouble
+the survivors. Further, when the body had been laid upon
+a stage or platform on clear level ground away from the
+dwelling, the remains of any food and water of which the
+deceased might have been partaking in his last moments
+were carried out and placed beside the corpse lest the ghost
+should come back to fetch them for himself, to the annoyance
+and terror of his relations. This is the reason actually
+alleged by the natives for what otherwise might have been
+interpreted as a delicate mark of affection and thoughtful
+care for the comfort of the departed. If next morning the
+food was found scattered, the people said that the ghost was
+angry and had thrown it about.<a id="footnotetag283" name="footnotetag283"></a><a href="#footnote283"><sup>283</sup></a> Further, on the day of
+the death the mourners went into the gardens, slashed at the
+taro, knocked down coco-nuts, pulled up sweet potatoes, and
+destroyed bananas. We are told that "the food was
+destroyed for the sake of the dead man, it was 'like good-bye.'"<a id="footnotetag284" name="footnotetag284"></a><a href="#footnote284"><sup>284</sup></a>
+We may suspect that the real motive for the
+destruction was the same as that for laying food and water
+beside the corpse, namely, a wish to give the ghost no
+excuse for returning to haunt and pester his surviving
+relatives. How could he have the heart to return to the
+desolated garden which in his lifetime it had been his pride
+and joy to cultivate?</p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of the ghosts of the recently departed among the Murray
+Islanders.</p>
+
+<p>In Murray Island, also, which belongs to the Eastern
+group, the ghost of a recently deceased person is much
+dreaded; it is supposed to haunt the neighbourhood for
+two or three months, and the elaborate funeral ceremonies
+which these savages perform appear to be based on this
+belief and to be intended, in fact, to dismiss the ghost from
+the land of the living, where he is a very unwelcome visitor,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>[pg 175]</span>
+to his proper place in the land of the dead.<a id="footnotetag285" name="footnotetag285"></a><a href="#footnote285"><sup>285</sup></a> "The Murray
+Islanders," says Dr. Haddon, "perform as many as possible
+of the necessary ceremonies in order that the ghost of the
+deceased might not feel slighted, for otherwise it was sure
+to bring trouble on the relatives by causing strong winds to
+destroy their gardens and break down their houses."<a id="footnotetag286" name="footnotetag286"></a><a href="#footnote286"><sup>286</sup></a> These
+islanders still believe that a ghost may feel resentment when
+his children are neglected or wronged, or when his lands or
+goods are appropriated by persons who have no claim to
+them. And this fear of the wrath of the ghost, Dr. Haddon
+tells us, no doubt in past times acted as a wholesome deterrent
+on evil-doers and helped to keep the people from crime,
+though now-a-days they look rather to the law than to
+ghosts for the protection of their rights and the avenging
+of their wrongs.<a id="footnotetag287" name="footnotetag287"></a><a href="#footnote287"><sup>287</sup></a> Yet here, as in so many places, it would
+seem that superstition has proved a useful crutch on which
+morality can lean until it is strong enough to walk alone.
+In the absence of the police the guardianship of law and
+morality may be provisionally entrusted to ghosts, who, if
+they are too fickle and uncertain in their temper to make
+ideal constables, are at least better than nothing. With this
+exception it does not appear that the moral code of the
+Torres Straits Islanders derived any support or sanction
+from their religion. No appeal was made by them to
+totems, ancestors, or heroes; no punishment was looked for
+from these quarters for any infringement of the rules and
+restraints which hold society together.<a id="footnotetag288" name="footnotetag288"></a><a href="#footnote288"><sup>288</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The island home of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The land of the dead to which the ghosts finally depart
+is, in the opinion of the Torres Straits Islanders, a mythical
+island in the far west or rather north-west. The Western
+Islanders name it Kibu; the Eastern Islanders call it Boigu.
+The name Kibu means "sundown." It is natural enough
+that islanders should place the home of the dead in some
+far island of the sea to which no canoe of living men has
+ever sailed, and it is equally natural that the fabulous island
+should lie to westward where the sun goes down; for it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>[pg 176]</span>
+seems to be a common thought that the souls of the dead
+are attracted by the great luminary, like moths by a candle,
+and follow him when he sinks in radiant glory into the sea.
+To take a single example, in the Maram district of Assam
+it is forbidden to build houses facing westward, because that
+is the direction in which the spirits of the dead go to their
+long home.<a id="footnotetag289" name="footnotetag289"></a><a href="#footnote289"><sup>289</sup></a> But the Torres Straits Islanders have a special
+reason, as Dr. Haddon has well pointed out, for thinking
+that the home of the dead is away in the north-west; and the
+reason is that in these latitudes the trade wind blows steady
+and strong from the south-east for seven or eight months of
+the year; so that for the most part the spirits have only to
+let themselves go and the wind will sweep them away on its
+pinions to their place of rest. How could the poor fluttering
+things beat up to windward in the teeth of the blast?<a id="footnotetag290" name="footnotetag290"></a><a href="#footnote290"><sup>290</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Elaborate funeral ceremonies observed by the Torres Straits
+Islanders.</p>
+
+<p>The funeral ceremonies observed by the Torres Straits
+Islanders were numerous and elaborate, and they present
+some features of special interest. They succeeded each
+other at intervals, sometimes of months, and amongst the
+Eastern Islanders in particular there were so many of them
+that, were it not that the bodies of the very young and the
+very old were treated less ceremoniously, the living would
+have been perpetually occupied in celebrating the obsequies
+of the dead.<a id="footnotetag291" name="footnotetag291"></a><a href="#footnote291"><sup>291</sup></a> The obsequies differed somewhat from each
+other in the East and the West, but they had two characteristics
+in common: first, the skulls of the dead were commonly
+preserved apart from the bodies and were consulted as
+oracles; and, second, the ghosts of the recently deceased
+were represented in dramatic ceremonies by masked men,
+who mimicked the gait and gestures of the departed and
+were thought by the women and children to be the very
+ghosts themselves. But in details there were a good many
+variations between the practice of the Eastern and the
+Western Islanders. We will begin with the customs of the
+Western Islanders.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id="page177"></a>[pg 177]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral ceremonies observed by the Western Islanders. Removal
+and preservation of the skull. Skulls used in divination.</p>
+
+<p>When a death had taken place, the corpse was carried
+out of the house and set on a staging supported by four
+forked posts and covered by a roof of mats. The office of
+attending to the body devolved properly on the brothers-in-law
+(<i>imi</i>) of the deceased, who, while they were engaged in
+the duties of the office, bore the special title of <i>mariget</i> or
+"ghost-hand." It deserves to be noticed that these men
+were always of a different totem from the deceased; for if
+the dead person was a man, the <i>mariget</i> were his wife's
+brothers and therefore had the same totem as the dead
+man's wife, which, on account of the law of exogamy, always
+differed from the totem of her husband. And if the dead
+person was a woman, the <i>mariget</i> were her husband's brothers
+and therefore had his totem, which necessarily differed from
+hers. When they had discharged the preliminary duties to
+the corpse, the brothers-in-law went and informed the relations
+and friends. This they did not in words but by a
+prescribed pantomime. For example, if the deceased had
+had the crocodile for his totem, they imitated the ungainly
+gait of crocodiles waddling and resting, if the deceased had
+the snake for his totem, they in like manner mimicked the
+crawling of a snake. The relations then painted their bodies
+with white coral mud, cut their hair, plastered mud over their
+heads, and cut off their ear ornaments or severed the distended
+lobe of the ear as a sign of mourning. Then, armed
+with bows and arrows, they came out to the stage where the
+corpse was lying and let fly arrows at the men who were
+in attendance on it, that is, at the brothers-in-law of the
+deceased, who warded off the shafts as best they could.<a id="footnotetag292" name="footnotetag292"></a><a href="#footnote292"><sup>292</sup></a>
+The meaning of this sham attack on the men who were
+discharging the last offices of respect to the dead comes
+out clearly in another ceremony which was performed some
+time afterwards, as we shall see presently. For five or six
+days the corpse remained on the platform or bier watched
+by the brothers-in-law, who had to prevent certain large
+lizards from devouring it and to frighten away any prowling
+ghosts that might be lured to the spot by the stench. After
+the lapse of several days the relations returned to the body,
+mourned, and beat the roof of the bier, while they raised a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>[pg 178]</span>
+shout to drive off any part of the dead man's spirit that
+might be lingering about his mouldering remains. The
+reason for doing so was, that the time had now arrived
+for cutting off the head of the corpse, and they thought that
+the head would not come off easily if the man's spirit were
+still in the body; he might reasonably be expected to hold
+on tight to it and not to resign, without a struggle, so
+valuable a part of his person. When the poor ghost had
+thus been chased away with shouts and blows, the principal
+brother-in-law came forward and performed the amputation
+by sawing off the head. Having done so, he usually placed
+it in a nest of termites or white ants in order that the insects
+might pick it clean; but sometimes for the same purpose he
+deposited it in a creek. When it was thoroughly clean, the
+grinning white skull was painted red all over and placed in
+a decorated basket. Then followed the ceremony of formally
+handing over this relic of the dead to the relations. The
+brothers-in-law, who had been in attendance on the body,
+painted themselves black all over, covered their heads with
+leaves, and walked in solemn procession, headed by the chief
+brother-in-law, who carried the skull in the basket. Meantime
+the male relatives were awaiting them, seated on a large
+mat in the ceremonial ground, while the women grouped
+themselves in the background. As the procession of men
+approached bearing the skull, the mourners shot arrows over
+their heads as a sign of anger at them for having decapitated
+their relation. But this was a mere pretence, probably intended
+to soothe and flatter the angry ghost: the arrows
+flew over the men without hurting them.<a id="footnotetag293" name="footnotetag293"></a><a href="#footnote293"><sup>293</sup></a> Similarly in
+ancient Egypt the man who cut open a corpse for embalmment
+had no sooner done his office than he fled precipitately,
+pursued by the relations with stones and curses, because he
+had wounded and mangled the body of their kinsman.<a id="footnotetag294" name="footnotetag294"></a><a href="#footnote294"><sup>294</sup></a>
+Sometimes the skull was made up to resemble the head
+of a living man: an artificial nose of wood and beeswax
+supplied the place of a nose of flesh; pearl-shells were
+inserted in the empty eye-balls; and any teeth that might
+be missing were represented by pieces of wood, while the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>[pg 179]</span>
+lower jaw was lashed firmly to the cranium.<a id="footnotetag295" name="footnotetag295"></a><a href="#footnote295"><sup>295</sup></a> Whether thus
+decorated or not, the skulls of the dead were preserved and
+used in divination. Whenever a skull was to be thus consulted,
+it was first cleaned, repainted, and either anointed
+with certain plants or placed upon them. Then the
+enquirer enjoined the skull to speak the truth, and placing
+it on his pillow at night went to sleep. The dream which
+he dreamed that night was the answer of the skull, which
+spoke with a clappering noise like that of teeth chattering
+together. When people went on voyages, they used to take a
+divining skull with them in the stern of the canoe.<a id="footnotetag296" name="footnotetag296"></a><a href="#footnote296"><sup>296</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Great death-dance of the Western Islanders. The dead
+personated by masked actors.</p>
+
+<p>The great funeral ceremony, or rather death-dance, of
+the Western Islanders took place in the island of Pulu.
+When the time came for it, a few men would meet and
+make the necessary preparations. The ceremony was
+always performed on the sacred or ceremonial ground
+(<i>kwod</i>), and the first thing to do was to enclose this
+ground, for the sake of privacy, with a screen of mats
+hung on a framework of wood and bamboos. When the
+screen had been erected, the drums which were to be used
+by the orchestra were placed in position beside it. Then
+the relations were summoned to attend the performance.
+The ceremony might be performed for a number of recently
+deceased people at once, and it varied in importance and
+elaboration according to the importance and the number
+of the deceased whose obsequies were being celebrated.
+The chief differences were in the number of the performers
+and the greater or less display of scenic apparatus. The
+head-dresses or leafy masks worn by the actors in the
+sacred drama were made secretly in the bush; no woman
+or uninitiated man might witness the operation. When
+all was ready, and the people were assembled, the men
+being stationed in front and the women and children in
+the background, the disguised actors appeared on the
+scene and played the part of the dead, each one of them
+mimicking the gait and actions of the particular man or
+woman whom he personated; for all the parts were played
+by men, no woman might act in these ceremonies. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>[pg 180]</span>
+order in which the various ghosts were to appear on the
+scene was arranged beforehand; so that when the actors
+came forward from behind the screen, the spectators knew
+which of the dead they were supposed to have before them.
+The performers usually danced in pairs, and vanished behind
+the screen when their dance was finished. Thus one pair
+would follow another till the play was over. Besides the
+actors who played the serious and solemn part of the dead,
+there was usually a clown who skipped about and cut capers,
+tumbling down and getting up again, to make the spectators
+laugh and so to relieve the strain on their emotions, which
+were deeply stirred by this dance of death. The beat of
+the drums proclaimed that the sacred drama was at an end.
+Then followed a great feast, at which special portions of food
+were assigned by the relatives of the deceased to the actors
+who had personated them.<a id="footnotetag297" name="footnotetag297"></a><a href="#footnote297"><sup>297</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Intention of the ceremonies.</p>
+
+<p>As to the intention of these curious dramatic performances
+we have no very definite information. Dr. Haddon
+says: "The idea evidently was to convey to the mourners
+the assurance that the ghost was alive and that in the person
+of the dancer he visited his friends; the assurance of his life
+after death comforted the bereaved ones."<a id="footnotetag298" name="footnotetag298"></a><a href="#footnote298"><sup>298</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral ceremonies observed by the Eastern Islanders. The
+soul of the dead carried away by a masked actor.</p>
+
+<p>In the Eastern Islands of Torres Straits the funeral ceremonies
+seem to have been even more numerous and elaborate.
+The body was at first laid on the ground on a mat outside the
+house, if the weather were fine. There friends wept and wailed
+over it, the nearest relations, such as the wife and mother,
+sitting at the head of the corpse. About an hour after the
+sun had set, the drummers and singers arrived. All night
+the drums beat and the people sang, but just as the dawn was
+breaking the wild music died away into silence. The wants
+of the living were now attended to: the assembled people
+breakfasted on green coco-nuts; and then, about an hour
+after sunrise, they withdrew from the body and took up a
+position a little further off to witness the next act of the
+drama of death. The drums now struck up again in quicker
+time to herald the approach of an actor, who could be heard,
+but not seen, shaking his rattle in the adjoining forest.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>[pg 181]</span>
+Faster and faster beat the drums, louder and louder rose the
+singing, till the spectators were wound up to a pitch of
+excitement bordering on frenzy. Then at last a strange
+figure burst from the forest and came skipping and posturing
+towards the corpse. It was Terer, a spirit or mythical being
+who had come to fetch the soul of the departed and to bear
+it far away to its place of rest in the island beyond the sea.
+On his head he wore a wreath of leaves: a mask made of
+the mid-ribs of coco-nut leaves or of croton leaves hid his
+face: a long feather of the white tern nodded on his brow;
+and a mantle of green coco-nut leaves concealed his body
+from the shoulders to the knees. His arms were painted
+red: round his neck he wore a crescent of pearl-shell: in
+his left hand he carried a bow and arrows, and in his
+mouth a piece of wood, to which were affixed two rings
+of green coco-nut leaf. Thus attired he skipt forwards,
+rattling a bunch of nuts in his right hand, bending his head
+now to one side and now to another, swaying his body backwards
+and forwards, but always keeping time to the measured
+beat of the drums. At last, after a series of rapid jumps
+from one foot to the other, he ended his dance, and turning
+round fled away westward along the beach. He had taken
+the soul of the dead and was carrying it away to the spirit-land.
+The excitement of the women now rose to the
+highest pitch. They screamed and jumped from the ground
+raising their arms in air high above their heads. Shrieking
+and wailing all pursued the retreating figure along the beach,
+the mother or widow of the dead man casting herself again
+and again prostrate on the sand and throwing it in handfuls
+over her head. Among the pursuers was another masked
+man, who represented Aukem, the mother of Terer. She,
+or rather he, was dressed in dried banana leaves: long
+tufts of grass hung from her head over her face and shoulders;
+and in her mouth she carried a lighted bundle of dry coco-nut
+fibre, which emitted clouds of smoke. With an unsteady
+rickety gait the beldame hobbled after her rapidly retreating
+son, who turned round from time to time, skipping and
+posturing derisively as if to taunt her, and then hurrying
+away again westward. Thus the two quaint figures retreated
+further and further, he in front and she behind, till they were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id="page182"></a>[pg 182]</span>
+lost to view. But still the drums continued to beat and the
+singers to chant their wild song, when nothing was to be
+seen but the deserted beach with the sky and the drifting
+clouds above and the white waves breaking on the strand.
+Meantime the two actors in the sacred drama made their
+way westward till their progress was arrested by the sea.
+They plunged into it and swimming westward unloosed their
+leafy envelopes and let them float away to the spirit-land in
+the far island beyond the rolling waters. But the men
+themselves swam back to the beach, resumed the dress of
+ordinary mortals, and quietly mingled with the assembly of
+mourners.<a id="footnotetag299" name="footnotetag299"></a><a href="#footnote299"><sup>299</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Personation of ghosts by masked men.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the first act of the drama. The second
+followed immediately about ten o'clock in the morning.
+The actors in it were twenty or thirty men disguised as
+ghosts or spirits of the dead (<i>zera markai</i>). Their bodies
+were blackened from the neck to the ankles, but the lower
+part of their faces and their feet were dyed bright red, and a
+red triangle was painted on the front of their bodies. They
+wore head-dresses of grass with long projecting ribs of coco-nut
+leaves, and a long tail of grass behind reaching down to
+the level of the knees. In their hands they held long ribs
+of coco-nut leaf. They were preceded by a curious figure
+called <i>pager</i>, a man covered from head to foot with dry grass
+and dead banana leaves, who sidled along with an unsteady
+rolling gait in a zigzag course, keeping his head bowed, his
+red-painted hands clasped in front of his face, and his elbows
+sticking out from both sides of his body. In spite of his
+erratic course and curious mode of progression he drew away
+from the troop of ghosts behind him and came on towards
+the spectators, jerking his head from side to side, his hands
+shaking, and wailing as he went. Behind him marched
+the ghosts, with their hands crossed behind their backs and
+their faces looking out to sea. When they drew near to the
+orchestra, who were singing and drumming away, they halted
+and formed in two lines facing the spectators. They now
+all assumed the familiar attitude of a fencer on guard, one
+foot and arm advanced, the other foot and arm drawn back,
+and lunged to right and left as if they were stabbing something
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id="page183"></a>[pg 183]</span>
+with the long ribs of the coco-nut leaves which they
+held in their hands. This man&oelig;uvre they repeated several
+times, the orchestra playing all the time. Then they
+retreated into the forest, but only to march out again, form
+in line, stand on guard, and lunge again and again at the
+invisible foe. This appears to have been the whole of the
+second act of the drama. No explanation of it is given.
+We can only conjecture that the band of men, who seem
+from their name (<i>zera markai</i>) to have represented the ghosts
+or spirits of the dead, came to inform the living that the
+departed brother or sister had joined the majority, and that
+any attempt to rescue him or her would be vain. That
+perhaps was the meaning of the solemn pantomime of the
+lines of actors standing on guard and lunging again and
+again towards the spectators. But I must acknowledge that
+this is a mere conjecture of my own.<a id="footnotetag300" name="footnotetag300"></a><a href="#footnote300"><sup>300</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Blood and hair offered to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Be that as it may, when this act of the drama was
+over, the mourners took up the body and with weeping and
+wailing laid it on a wooden framework resting on four posts
+at a little distance from the house of the deceased. Youths
+who had lately been initiated, and girls who had attained to
+puberty, now had the lobes of their ears cut. The blood
+streamed down over their faces and bodies and was allowed
+to drip on the feet of the corpse as a mark of pity or sorrow.<a id="footnotetag301" name="footnotetag301"></a><a href="#footnote301"><sup>301</sup></a>
+The other relatives cut their hair and left the shorn locks in
+a heap under the body. Blood and hair were probably
+regarded as offerings made to the departed kinsman or kinswoman.
+We saw that the Australian aborigines in like
+manner cut themselves and allow the blood to drip on
+the corpse; and they also offer their hair to the dead,
+cutting off parts of their beards, singeing them, and throwing
+them on the corpse.<a id="footnotetag302" name="footnotetag302"></a><a href="#footnote302"><sup>302</sup></a> Having placed the body on the stage
+and deposited their offerings of hair under it, the relatives
+took some large yams, cut them in pieces, and laid the pieces
+beside the body in order to serve as food for the ghost,
+who was supposed to eat it at night.<a id="footnotetag303" name="footnotetag303"></a><a href="#footnote303"><sup>303</sup></a> This notion seems
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>[pg 184]</span>
+inconsistent with the belief that the soul of the departed
+had already been carried off to Boigu, the island of the dead;
+but consistency in such matters is as little to be looked for
+among savages as among ourselves.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Mummification of the corpse.</p>
+
+<p>When the body had remained a few days on the stage
+in the open air, steps were taken to convert it into a
+mummy. For this purpose it was laid in a small canoe
+manned by some young people of the same sex as the
+deceased. They paddled it across the lagoon to the reef
+and there rubbed off the skin, extracted the bowels from
+the abdomen and the brain from the skull, and having sewed
+up the hole in the abdomen and thrown the bowels into
+the sea, they brought the remains back to land and lashed
+them to the wooden framework with string, while they fixed
+a small stick to the lower jaw to keep it from drooping.
+The framework with its ghastly burden was fastened vertically
+to two posts behind the house, where it was concealed
+from public view by a screen of coco-nut leaves. Holes were
+pricked with an arrow between the fingers and toes to allow
+the juices of decomposition to escape, and a fire was kindled
+and kept burning under the stage to dry up the body.<a id="footnotetag304" name="footnotetag304"></a><a href="#footnote304"><sup>304</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Garb of mourners. Cuttings for the dead.</p>
+
+<p>About ten days after the death a feast of bananas,
+yams, and germinating coco-nuts was partaken of by the
+relations and friends, and portions were distributed to the
+assembled company, who carried them home in baskets. It
+was on this occasion that kinsfolk and friends assumed
+the garb of mourners. Their faces and bodies were
+smeared with a mixture of greyish earth and water: the
+ashes of a wood fire were strewn on their heads; and fringes
+of sago leaves were fastened on their arms and legs. A
+widow wore besides a special petticoat made of the inner
+bark of the fig-tree; the ends of it were passed between her
+legs and tucked up before and behind. She had to leave
+her hair unshorn during the whole period of her widowhood;
+and in time it grew into a huge mop of a light yellow colour
+in consequence of the ashes with which it was smeared.
+This coating of ashes, as well as the grey paint on her face
+and body, she was expected to renew from time to time.<a id="footnotetag305" name="footnotetag305"></a><a href="#footnote305"><sup>305</sup></a>
+It was also on the occasion of this feast, on or about the tenth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>[pg 185]</span>
+day after death, that young kinsfolk of the deceased had
+certain patterns cut in their flesh by a sharp shell. The
+persons so operated on were young adults of both sexes
+nearly related to the dead man or woman. Women generally
+operated on women and men on men. The patients
+were held down during the operation, which was painful, and
+they sometimes fainted under it. The patterns were first
+drawn on the skin in red paint and then cut in with the
+shell. They varied a good deal in shape. Some consisted
+of arrangements of lines and scrolls; a favourite one, which
+was only carved on women, represented a centipede. The
+blood which flowed from the wounds was allowed to drip on
+the corpse, thus forming a sacrifice or tribute to the dead.<a id="footnotetag306" name="footnotetag306"></a><a href="#footnote306"><sup>306</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Dance of Death. The nocturnal dance.</p>
+
+<p>When the body had remained some time, perhaps
+four or six months, on the scaffold, and the process of
+mummification was far advanced, a dance of death was
+held to celebrate the final departure of the spirit for its
+long home. Several men, seldom exceeding four in
+number, were chosen to act the part of ghosts, including
+the ghost of him or her in whose honour the performance
+was specially held. Further, about a dozen men were
+selected to form a sort of chorus; their business was
+to act as intermediaries between the living and the dead,
+summoning up the shades, serving as their messengers,
+and informing the people of their presence. The costume
+of the ghosts was simple, consisting of nothing but a head-dress
+and shoulder-band of leaves. The chorus, if we
+may call them so, wore girdles of leaves round their
+waists and wreaths of leaves on their heads. When
+darkness had fallen, the first act of the drama was played.
+The chorus stood in line opposite the mummy. Beyond
+them stood or sat the drummers, and beyond them again
+the audience was crowded on the beach, the women
+standing furthest from the mummy and nearest to the sea.
+The drummers now struck up, chanting at the same time
+to the beat of the drums. This was the overture. Then
+a shrill whistle in the forest announced the approach of
+a ghost. The subdued excitement among the spectators,
+especially among the women, was intense. Meantime the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>[pg 186]</span>
+chorus, holding each other's hands, advanced sidelong
+towards the mummy with strange gestures, the hollow
+thud of their feet as they stamped on the ground being
+supposed to be the tread of the ghosts. Thus they
+advanced to the red-painted mummy with its grinning
+mouth. Behind it by this time stood one of the ghosts,
+and between him and the chorus a dialogue ensued.
+"Whose ghost is there?" called out the chorus; and a
+strident voice answered from the darkness, "The ghost
+of so and so is here." At that the chorus retreated in the
+same order as they had advanced, and again the hollow
+thud of their feet sounded in the ears of the excited
+spectators as the tramp of the dead. On reaching the
+drummers in their retreat the chorus called out some
+words of uncertain meaning, which have been interpreted,
+"Spirit of so-and-so, away at sea, loved little." At all
+events, the name of a dead person was pronounced, and
+at the sound the women, thrilled with excitement, leaped
+from the ground, holding their hands aloft; then hurled
+themselves prone on the sand, throwing it over their heads
+and wailing. The drums now beat faster and a wild weird
+chant rose into the air, then died away and all was silent,
+except perhaps for the lapping of the waves on the sand
+or the muffled thunder of the surf afar off on the barrier
+reef. Thus one ghost after another was summoned from
+the dusty dead and vanished again into the darkness.
+When all had come and gone, the leader of the chorus,
+who kept himself invisible behind the screen save for a
+moment when he was seen by the chorus to glide behind
+the mummy on its stage, blew a whistle and informed the
+spectators in a weird voice that all the ghosts that had
+been summoned that night would appear before them in
+broad day light on the morrow. With that the audience
+dispersed. But the men who had played the parts of the
+ghosts came forward and sat down with the chorus and
+the drummers on mats beside the body. There they
+remained singing to the beat of the drums till the first faint
+streaks of dawn glimmered in the east.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The noonday dance. The ghosts represented by masked actors.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning the men assembled beside the body
+to inspect the actors who were to personate the ghosts,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>[pg 187]</span>
+in order to make sure that they had learned their parts
+well and could mimick to the life the figure and gait of
+the particular dead persons whom they represented. By
+the time that these preparations were complete, the
+morning had worn on to noon. The audience was already
+assembled on the beach and on the long stretch of sand
+left by the ebbing tide; for the hour of the drama was
+always fixed at low water so as to allow ample space for
+the spectators to stand at a distance from the players,
+lest they should detect the features of the living under
+the masks of the dead. All being ready, the drummers
+marched in and took up their position just above the
+beach, facing the audience. The overture having been
+concluded, the first ghost was seen to glide from the forest
+and come dancing towards the beach. If he represented
+a woman, his costume was more elaborate than it had
+been under the shades of evening the night before. His
+whole body was painted red. A petticoat of leaves
+encircled his waist: a mask of leaves, surmounted by tufts
+of cassowary and pigeon feathers, concealed his head;
+and in his hands he carried brooms of coco-nut palm leaf.
+If he personated a man, he held a bow in one hand and
+an arrow in the other, and his costume was the usual
+dress of a dancer, with the addition of a head-dress
+of leaves and feathers and a diamond-shaped ornament
+of bamboo, which he held in his teeth and which entirely
+concealed his features. He approached dancing and
+mimicking the gestures of the person whom he represented.
+At the sight the women wailed, and the widow would cry
+out, "That's my husband," the mother would cry out,
+"That's my son." Then suddenly the drummers would
+call out, "Ah! Ah! Ai! Ai!" at which the women would fall
+to the ground, while the dancer retreated into the forest.
+In this way one ghost after the other would make his
+appearance, play his part, and vanish. Occasionally two
+of them would appear and dance together. The women
+and children, we are told, really believed that the actors
+were the ghosts of their dead kinsfolk. When the first
+dancer had thus danced before the people, he advanced
+with the drummers towards the framework on which the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>[pg 188]</span>
+mummy was stretched, and there he repeated his dance
+before it. But the people were not allowed to witness
+this mystery; they remained wailing on the beach, for
+this was the moment at which the ghost of the dead man
+or woman was supposed to be departing for ever to the
+land of shades.<a id="footnotetag307" name="footnotetag307"></a><a href="#footnote307"><sup>307</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Preservation of the mummy.</p>
+
+<p>Some days afterwards the mummy was affixed to a new
+framework of bamboo and carried into the hut. In former
+times the huts were of a beehive shape, and the framework
+which supported the mummy was fastened to the central
+post on which the roof rested. The body thus stood erect
+within the house. Its dried skin had been painted red.
+The empty orbits of the eyes had been filled with pieces of
+pearl-shell of the nautilus to imitate eyes, two round spots
+of black beeswax standing for the pupils. The ears were
+decorated with shreds of the sago-palm or with grey seeds.
+A frontlet of pearl-shell nautilus adorned the head, and a
+crescent of pearl-shell the breast. In the darkness of the
+old-fashioned huts the body looked like a living person.
+In course of time it became almost completely mummified
+and as light as if it were made of paper. Swinging to and
+fro with every breath of wind, it turned its gleaming eyes
+at each movement of the head. The hut was now
+surrounded by posts and ropes to prevent the ghost from
+making his way into it and taking possession of his old
+body. Ghosts were supposed to appear only at night, and
+it was imagined that in the dark they would stumble against
+the posts and entangle themselves in the ropes, till in despair
+they desisted from the attempt to penetrate into the hut.
+In time the mummy mouldered away and fell to pieces. If
+the deceased was a male, the head was removed and a wax
+model of it made and given to the brother, whether blood
+or tribal brother, of the dead man. The head thus prepared
+or modelled in wax, with eyes of pearl-shell, was used in
+divination. The decaying remains of the body were taken
+to the beach and placed on a platform supported by four
+posts. That was their last resting-place.<a id="footnotetag308" name="footnotetag308"></a><a href="#footnote308"><sup>308</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id="page189"></a>[pg 189]</span>
+
+<p class="side">General summary. Dramas of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>To sum up the foregoing evidence, we may say that if
+the beliefs and practices of the Torres Straits Islanders
+which I have described do not amount to a worship of the
+dead, they contain the elements out of which such a worship
+might easily have been developed. The preservation of the
+bodies of the dead, or at least their skulls, in the houses, and
+the consultation of them as oracles, prove that the spirits of
+the dead are supposed to possess knowledge which may be
+of great use to the living; and the custom suggests that in
+other countries the images of the gods may perhaps have
+been evolved out of the mummies of the dead. Further, the
+dramatic representation of the ghosts in a series of striking
+and impressive performances indicates how a sacred and in
+time a secular drama may elsewhere have grown out of a
+purely religious celebration concerned with the souls of the
+departed. In this connexion we are reminded of Professor
+Ridgeway's theory that ancient Greek tragedy originated in
+commemorative songs and dances performed at the tomb for
+the purpose of pleasing and propitiating the ghost of the
+mighty dead.<a id="footnotetag309" name="footnotetag309"></a><a href="#footnote309"><sup>309</sup></a> Yet the mortuary dramas of the Torres
+Straits Islanders can hardly be adduced to support that
+theory by analogy so long as we are ignorant of the precise
+significance which the natives themselves attached to these
+remarkable performances. There is no clear evidence that
+the dramas were acted for the amusement and gratification
+of the ghost rather than for the edification of the spectators.
+One important act certainly represented, and might well be
+intended to facilitate, the final departure of the spirit of the
+deceased to the land of souls. But the means taken to
+effect that departure might be adopted in the interests of
+the living quite as much as out of a tender regard for the
+welfare of the dead, since the ghost of the recently departed
+is commonly regarded with fear and aversion, and his
+surviving relations resort to many expedients for the purpose
+of ridding themselves of his unwelcome presence.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote274" name="footnote274"></a><b>Footnote 274:</b><a href="#footnotetag274"> (return) </a><p> S. H. Ray, in <i>Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological
+Expedition to Torres Straits</i>, iii. (Cambridge, 1907) pp. 509-511; A.
+C. Haddon, "The Religion of the Torres Straits Islanders,"
+<i>Anthropological Essays presented to E. B. Tyler</i> (Oxford, 1907),
+p. 175.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote275" name="footnote275"></a><b>Footnote 275:</b><a href="#footnotetag275"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, iv. 92 <i>sqq.</i>, 144 <i>sqq.</i>, v. 346, vi. 207
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote276" name="footnote276"></a><b>Footnote 276:</b><a href="#footnotetag276"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Haddon, in <i>Anthropological Essays presented to
+E. B. Tylor</i>, p. 186.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote277" name="footnote277"></a><b>Footnote 277:</b><a href="#footnotetag277"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, vi. 254 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote278" name="footnote278"></a><b>Footnote 278:</b><a href="#footnotetag278"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, vi. 254 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote279" name="footnote279"></a><b>Footnote 279:</b><a href="#footnotetag279"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Haddon, in <i>Anthropological Essays presented to
+E. B. Tylor</i>, p. 181.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote280" name="footnote280"></a><b>Footnote 280:</b><a href="#footnotetag280"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 355 <i>sq.</i>, vi. 251; A. C. Haddon, in
+<i>Anthropological Essays presented to E. B. Tylor</i>, p. 179.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote281" name="footnote281"></a><b>Footnote 281:</b><a href="#footnotetag281"> (return) </a><p> For authorities see the references in the preceding
+note.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote282" name="footnote282"></a><b>Footnote 282:</b><a href="#footnotetag282"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, vi. 253.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote283" name="footnote283"></a><b>Footnote 283:</b><a href="#footnotetag283"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 248, 249.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote284" name="footnote284"></a><b>Footnote 284:</b><a href="#footnotetag284"> (return) </a><p><i>Id.</i>, p. 250.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote285" name="footnote285"></a><b>Footnote 285:</b><a href="#footnotetag285"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, vi. 253; A. C. Haddon, in <i>Anthropological Essays
+presented to E. B. Tylor</i>, p. 180.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote286" name="footnote286"></a><b>Footnote 286:</b><a href="#footnotetag286"> (return) </a><p>A. C. Haddon, <i>l.c.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote287" name="footnote287"></a><b>Footnote 287:</b><a href="#footnotetag287"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Haddon, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 182 <i>sq.</i>;
+<i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits</i>, vi. 127.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote288" name="footnote288"></a><b>Footnote 288:</b><a href="#footnotetag288"> (return) </a><p>A. C. Haddon, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 183.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote289" name="footnote289"></a><b>Footnote 289:</b><a href="#footnotetag289"> (return) </a><p> T. C. Hodson, <i>The Naga Tribes
+of Manipur</i> (London, 1911), p. 43.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote290" name="footnote290"></a><b>Footnote 290:</b><a href="#footnotetag290"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 355 <i>sq.</i>, vi. 252. In the former passage Dr.
+Haddon seems to identify Boigu with the island of that name off the
+south coast of New Guinea; in the latter he prefers to regard it as
+mythical.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote291" name="footnote291"></a><b>Footnote 291:</b><a href="#footnotetag291"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition
+to Torres Straits</i>, vi. 127.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote292" name="footnote292"></a><b>Footnote 292:</b><a href="#footnotetag292"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 248 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote293" name="footnote293"></a><b>Footnote 293:</b><a href="#footnotetag293"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 250 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote294" name="footnote294"></a><b>Footnote 294:</b><a href="#footnotetag294"> (return) </a><p>Diodorus Siculus, i. 91.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote295" name="footnote295"></a><b>Footnote 295:</b><a href="#footnotetag295"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 258.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote296" name="footnote296"></a><b>Footnote 296:</b><a href="#footnotetag296"> (return) </a><p><i>Id.</i>, p. 362.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote297" name="footnote297"></a><b>Footnote 297:</b><a href="#footnotetag297"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 252-256.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote298" name="footnote298"></a><b>Footnote 298:</b><a href="#footnotetag298"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, v. 256.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote299" name="footnote299"></a><b>Footnote 299:</b><a href="#footnotetag299"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, vi. 129-133.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote300" name="footnote300"></a><b>Footnote 300:</b><a href="#footnotetag300"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition
+to Torres Straits</i>, vi. 133 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote301" name="footnote301"></a><b>Footnote 301:</b><a href="#footnotetag301"> (return) </a><p><i>Id.</i>, pp. 135, 154.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote302" name="footnote302"></a><b>Footnote 302:</b><a href="#footnotetag302"> (return) </a><p> (Sir) George Grey, <i>Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery in North-West and Western Australia</i> (London, 1841), ii.
+335.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote303" name="footnote303"></a><b>Footnote 303:</b><a href="#footnotetag303"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres
+Straits</i>, vi. 135.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote304" name="footnote304"></a><b>Footnote 304:</b><a href="#footnotetag304"> (return) </a><p><i>Op. cit.</i> p. 136.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote305" name="footnote305"></a><b>Footnote 305:</b><a href="#footnotetag305"> (return) </a><p><i>Op. cit.</i> pp. 138, 153, 157 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote306" name="footnote306"></a><b>Footnote 306:</b><a href="#footnotetag306"> (return) </a><p><i>Op. cit.</i> pp. 154 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote307" name="footnote307"></a><b>Footnote 307:</b><a href="#footnotetag307"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition
+to Torres Straits</i>, vi. 139-141.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote308" name="footnote308"></a><b>Footnote 308:</b><a href="#footnotetag308"> (return) </a><p> <i>Cambridge Anthropological Expedition
+to Torres Straits</i>, vi. 148 <i>sq.</i>
+As to divination with skulls or waxen
+models, see <i>id.</i>, pp. 266 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote309" name="footnote309"></a><b>Footnote 309:</b><a href="#footnotetag309"> (return) </a><p> W. Ridgeway, <i>The Origin of
+Tragedy, with special reference to the
+Greek Tragedians</i> (Cambridge, 1910),
+pp. 26 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id="page190"></a>[pg 190]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-ix" id="lecture-ix"></a>LECTURE IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF BRITISH NEW
+GUINEA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The two races of New Guinea, the Papuan and the Melanesian.</p>
+
+<p>In my last lecture I dealt with the islanders of Torres Straits,
+and shewed that these savages firmly believe in the existence
+of the human soul after death, and that if their beliefs and
+customs in this respect do not always amount to an actual
+worship of the departed, they contain at least the elements out
+of which such a worship might easily be developed. To-day
+we pass from the small islands of Torres Straits to the vast
+neighbouring island, almost continent, of New Guinea, the
+greater part of which is inhabited by a race related by
+physical type and language to the Torres Straits Islanders,
+and exhibiting approximately the same level of social and
+intellectual culture. New Guinea, roughly speaking, appears
+to be occupied by two different races, to which the names of
+Papuan and Melanesian are now given; and it is to the
+Papuan race, not to the Melanesian, that the Torres Straits
+Islanders are akin. The Papuans, a tall, dark-skinned,
+frizzly-haired race, inhabit apparently the greater part of
+New Guinea, including the whole of the western and
+central portions of the island. The Melanesians, a smaller,
+lighter-coloured, frizzly-haired race, inhabit the long eastern
+peninsula, including the southern coast from about Cape
+Possession eastward,<a id="footnotetag310" name="footnotetag310"></a><a href="#footnote310"><sup>310</sup></a> and tribes speaking a Melanesian
+language are also settled about Finsch Harbour and Huon
+Gulf in German New Guinea.<a id="footnotetag311" name="footnotetag311"></a><a href="#footnote311"><sup>311</sup></a> These Melanesians are
+most probably immigrants who have settled in New
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>[pg 191]</span>
+Guinea from the north and east, where the great chain
+of islands known as Melanesia stretches in an immense
+semicircle from New Ireland on the north to New
+Caledonia on the south-east. The natives of this chain of
+islands or series of archipelagoes are the true Melanesians;
+their kinsmen in New Guinea have undergone admixture
+with the Papuan aborigines, and accordingly should rather
+be called Papuo-Melanesians than Melanesians simply. Their
+country appears to be wholly comprised within the limits of
+British and German New Guinea; so far as I am aware,
+the vast area of Dutch New Guinea is inhabited solely by
+tribes of the Papuan race. In respect of material culture
+both races stand approximately on the same level: they live
+in settled villages, they practise agriculture, they engage in
+commerce, and they have a fairly developed barbaric art.
+Thus they have made some progress in the direction of
+civilisation; certainly they have far outstripped the wandering
+savages of Australia, who subsist entirely on the products
+of the chase and on the natural fruits of the earth.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Scantiness of our information as to the natives of New
+Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>But although the natives of New Guinea have now
+been under the rule of European powers, Britain, Germany,
+and Holland, for many years, we unfortunately possess little
+detailed information as to their mental and social condition.
+It is true that the members of the Cambridge Anthropological
+Expedition to Torres Straits visited some parts
+of the southern coasts of British New Guinea, and several
+years later, in 1904, Dr. Seligmann was able to devote
+somewhat more time to the investigation of the same region
+and has given us the results of his enquiries in a valuable
+book. But the time at his disposal did not suffice for a
+thorough investigation of this large region; and accordingly
+his information, eked out though it is by that of
+Protestant and Catholic missionaries, still leaves us in the
+dark as to much which we should wish to know. Among the
+natives of British New Guinea our information is especially
+defective in regard to the Papuans, who occupy the greater
+part of the possession, including the whole of the western
+region; for Dr. Seligmann's book, which is the most detailed
+and systematic work yet published on the ethnology of British
+New Guinea, deals almost exclusively with the Melanesian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>[pg 192]</span>
+portion of the population. Accordingly I shall begin what
+I have to say on this subject with the Melanesian or rather
+Papuo-Melanesian tribes of south-eastern New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The Motu, their beliefs and customs concerning the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst these people the best known are the Motu, a
+tribe of fishermen and potters, who live in and about Port
+Moresby in the Central District of British New Guinea.
+Their language conforms to the Melanesian type. They
+are immigrants, but the country from which they came is
+unknown.<a id="footnotetag312" name="footnotetag312"></a><a href="#footnote312"><sup>312</sup></a> In their opinion the spirits of the dead dwell in
+a happy land where parted friends meet again and never
+suffer hunger. They fish, hunt, and plant, and are just like
+living men, except that they have no noses. When they first
+arrive in the mansions of the blest, they are laid out to dry on
+a sort of gridiron over a slow fire in order to purge away the
+grossness of the body and make them ethereal and light, as
+spirits should be. Yet, oddly enough, though they have no
+noses they cannot enter the realms of bliss unless their noses
+were pierced in their lifetime. For these savages bore holes
+in their noses and insert ornaments, or what they regard as
+such, in the holes. The operation is performed on children
+about the age of six years; and if children die before it has
+been performed on them, the parents will bore a hole in the
+nose of the corpse in order that the spirit of the child may
+go to the happy land. For if they omitted to do so, the
+poor ghost would have to herd with other whole-nosed ghosts
+in a bad place called Tageani, where there is little food to
+eat and no betelnuts to chew. The spirits of the dead are
+very powerful and visit bad people with their displeasure.
+Famine and scarcity of fish and game are attributed to the
+anger of the spirits. But they hearken to prayer and appear
+to their friends in dreams, sometimes condescending to give
+them directions for their guidance in time of trouble.<a id="footnotetag313" name="footnotetag313"></a><a href="#footnote313"><sup>313</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>[pg 193]</span>
+
+<p class="side">The Koita or Koitapu.</p>
+
+<p>Side by side with the Motu live the Koita or Koitapu,
+who appear to be the aboriginal inhabitants of the country
+and to belong to the Papuan stock. Their villages lie
+scattered for a distance of about forty miles along the coast,
+from a point about seven miles south-east of Port Moresby
+to a point on Redscar Bay to the north-west of that settlement.
+They live on friendly terms with the Motu and have
+intermarried with them for generations. The villages of the
+two tribes are usually built near to or even in direct continuity
+with each other. But while the Motu are mainly
+fishers and potters, the Koita are mainly tillers of the soil,
+though they have learned some arts or adopted some customs
+from their neighbours. They say to the Motu, "Yours is
+the sea, the canoes, the nets; ours the land and the wallaby.
+Give us fish for our flesh, and pottery for our yams and
+bananas." The Motu look down upon the Koita, but fear
+their power of sorcery, and apply to them for help in sickness
+and for the weather they happen to require; for they
+imagine that the Koita rule the elements and can make rain
+or sunshine, wind or calm by their magic. Thus, as in so
+many cases, the members of the immigrant race confess their
+inability to understand and manage the gods or spirits of
+the land, and have recourse in time of need to the magic
+of the aboriginal inhabitants. While the Koita belong to
+the Papuan stock and speak a Papuan language, most of
+the men understand the Motu tongue, which is one of the
+Melanesian family. Altogether these two tribes, the Koita
+and the Motu, may be regarded as typical representatives
+of the mixed race to which the name of Papuo-Melanesian
+is now given.<a id="footnotetag314" name="footnotetag314"></a><a href="#footnote314"><sup>314</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Koita concerning the human soul.</p>
+
+<p>The Koita believe that the human spirit or ghost, which
+they call <i>sua</i>, leaves the body at death and goes away to live
+with other ghosts on a mountain called Idu. But they think
+that the spirit can quit the body and return to it during life;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id="page194"></a>[pg 194]</span>
+it goes away, for example, in dreams, and if a sleeper should
+unfortunately waken before his soul has had time to return,
+he will probably fall sick. Sneezing is a sign that the soul
+has returned to the body, and if a man does not sneeze for
+many weeks together, his friends look on it as a grave
+symptom; his soul, they imagine, must be a very long way
+off.<a id="footnotetag315" name="footnotetag315"></a><a href="#footnote315"><sup>315</sup></a> Moreover, a man's soul may be enticed from his body
+and detained by a demon or <i>tabu</i>, as the Koita call it. Thus,
+when a man who has been out in the forest returns home
+and shakes with fever, it is assumed that he has fallen down
+and been robbed of his soul by a demon. In order to recover
+that priceless possession, the sufferer and his friends repair
+to the exact spot in the forest where the supposed robbery
+was perpetrated. They take with them a long bamboo with
+some valuable ornaments tied to it, and two men support it
+horizontally over a pot which is filled with grass. A light
+is put to the grass, and as it crackles and blazes a number of
+men standing round the pot strike it with stones till it
+breaks, whereat they all groan. Then the company returns
+to the village, and the sick man lies down in his house with
+the bamboo and its ornaments hung over him. This is
+supposed to be all that is needed to effect a perfect cure;
+for the demon has kindly accepted the soul of the ornaments
+and released the soul of the sufferer, who ought to recover
+accordingly.<a id="footnotetag316" name="footnotetag316"></a><a href="#footnote316"><sup>316</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Koita concerning the state of the dead.
+Alleged communications with the dead by means of mediums.</p>
+
+<p>However, at death the soul goes away for good and all;
+at least there appears to be no idea that it will ever return
+to life in the form of an infant, as the souls of the Central
+Australian aborigines are supposed to do. All Koita ghosts
+live together on Mount Idu, and their life is very like the
+one they led here on earth. There is no distinction between
+the good and the bad, the righteous and the wicked, the
+strong and the weak, the young and the old; they all fare
+alike in the spirit-land, with one exception. Like the Motu,
+the Koita are in the habit of boring holes in their noses and
+inserting ornaments in the holes; and they think that if any
+person were so unfortunate as to be buried with his nose
+whole and entire, his ghost would have to go about in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>[pg 195]</span>
+other world with a creature like a slow-worm depending
+from his nostrils on either side. Hence, when anybody dies
+before the operation of nose-boring has been performed on
+him or her, the friends take care to bore a hole in the nose of
+the corpse in order that the ghost may not appear disfigured
+among his fellows in dead man's land. There the ghosts
+dwell in houses, cultivate gardens, marry wives, and amuse
+themselves just as they did here on earth. They live a
+long time, but not for ever; for they grow weaker and
+weaker and at last die the second death, never to revive
+again, not even as ghosts. The exact length of time they
+live in the spirit-land has not been accurately ascertained;
+but there seems to be a notion that they survive
+only so long as their names and their memories survive
+among the living. When these are utterly forgotten, the
+poor ghosts cease to exist. If that is so, it is obvious that
+the dead depend for their continued existence upon the
+recollection of the living; their names are in a sense their
+souls, so that oblivion of the name involves extinction of
+the soul.<a id="footnotetag317" name="footnotetag317"></a><a href="#footnote317"><sup>317</sup></a> But though the spirits of the dead go away to
+live for a time on Mount Idu, they often return to their
+native villages and haunt the place of their death. On these
+visits they shew little benevolence or lovingkindness to their
+descendants. They punish any neglect in the performance
+of the funeral rites and any infringement of tribal customs,
+and the punishment takes the form of sickness or of bad
+luck in hunting or fishing. This dread of the ghost commonly
+leads the Koita to desert a house after a death and
+to let it fall into decay; but sometimes the widow, or in rare
+cases a brother or sister, will continue to inhabit the house
+of the deceased. Children who play near dwellings which
+have been deserted on account of death may fall sick; and
+if people who are not members of the family partake of
+food which has been hung up in such houses, they also may
+sicken. It is in dreams that the ghosts usually appear to
+the survivors; but occasionally they may be seen or at least
+felt by people in the waking state. Some years ago four
+Motuan girls persuaded many natives of Port Moresby that
+they could evoke the spirit of a youth named Tamasi, who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id="page196"></a>[pg 196]</span>
+had died three years before. The mother and other sorrowing
+relatives of the deceased paid a high price to the principal
+medium, a young woman named Mea, for an interview with
+the ghost. The meeting took place in a house by night.
+The relations and friends squatted on the ground in expectation;
+and sure enough the ghost presented himself in the
+darkness and went round shaking hands most affably with
+the assembled company. However, a sceptic who happened
+to assist at this spiritual sitting, had the temerity to hold on
+tight to the proffered hand of the ghost, while another infidel
+assisted him to obtain a sight as well as a touch of the
+vanished hand by striking a light. It then turned out that
+the supposed apparition was no spirit but the medium
+Mea herself. She was brought before a magistrate, who
+sentenced her to a short term of imprisonment and relieved
+her of the property which she had amassed by the exercise
+of her spiritual talents.<a id="footnotetag318" name="footnotetag318"></a><a href="#footnote318"><sup>318</sup></a> It is hardly for us, or at least
+for some of us, to cast stones at the efforts of ignorant
+savages to communicate by means of such intermediaries
+with their departed friends. Similar attempts have been
+made in our own country within our lifetime, and I believe
+that they are still being made, in perfect good faith, by
+educated ladies and gentlemen, who like their black brethren
+and sisters in the faith are sometimes made the dupes of
+designing knaves. If New Guinea has its Meas, Europe has
+its Eusapias. Human credulity and vulgar imposture are
+much the same all the world over.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The fear of the dead is strongly marked in some funeral
+customs which are observed by the Roro-speaking tribes
+who occupy a territory at the mouth of the St. Joseph river in
+British New Guinea.<a id="footnotetag319" name="footnotetag319"></a><a href="#footnote319"><sup>319</sup></a> When a death takes place, the female
+relations of the deceased lacerate their skulls, faces, breasts,
+bellies, arms, and legs with sharp shells, till they stream
+with blood and fall down exhausted. Moreover, a fire is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id="page197"></a>[pg 197]</span>
+kindled on the grave and kept up almost continually for
+months for the purpose, we are told, of warming the ghost.<a id="footnotetag320" name="footnotetag320"></a><a href="#footnote320"><sup>320</sup></a>
+These attentions might be interpreted as marks of affection
+rather than of fear; but in other customs of these people
+the dread of the ghost is unmistakable. For when the
+corpse has been placed in the grave a near kinsman strokes
+it twice with a branch from head to foot in order to drive
+away the dead man's spirit; and in Yule Island, when the
+ghost has thus been brushed away from the body, he is pursued
+by two men brandishing sticks and torches from the village
+to the edge of the forest, where with a last curse they hurl
+the sticks and torches after him.<a id="footnotetag321" name="footnotetag321"></a><a href="#footnote321"><sup>321</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghost of dead wife feared by widower.</p>
+
+<p>Among these people the visits of ghosts, though frequent,
+are far from welcome, for all ghosts are supposed to be
+mischievous and to take no delight but in injuring the living.
+Hence, for example, a widower in mourning goes about
+everywhere armed with an axe to defend himself against the
+spirit of his dead wife, who might play him many an ill turn
+if she caught him defenceless and off his guard. And he is
+subject to many curious restrictions and has to lead the life
+of an outcast from society, apparently because people fear
+to come into contact with a man whose steps are dogged
+by so dangerous a spirit.<a id="footnotetag322" name="footnotetag322"></a><a href="#footnote322"><sup>322</sup></a> This account of the terrors of
+ghosts we owe to a Catholic missionary. But according to
+the information collected by Dr. Seligmann among these
+people the dread inspired by the souls of the dead is not
+so absolute. He tells us, indeed, that ghosts are thought to
+make people ill by stealing their souls; that the natives
+fear to go alone outside the village in the dark lest they
+should encounter a spectre; and that if too many quarrels
+occur among the women, the spirits of the dead may
+manifest their displeasure by visiting hunters and fishers
+with bad luck, so that it may be necessary to conjure their
+souls out of the village. On the other hand, it is said
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>[pg 198]</span>
+that if the ghosts abandoned a village altogether, the luck of
+the villagers would be gone, and if such a thing is supposed
+to have happened, measures are taken to bring back the
+spirits of the departed to the old home.<a id="footnotetag323" name="footnotetag323"></a><a href="#footnote323"><sup>323</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Mafulu concerning the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Inland from the Roro-speaking tribes, among the mountains
+at the head of the St. Joseph River, there is a tribe
+known to their neighbours as the Mafulu, though they call
+themselves Mambule. They speak a Papuan language, but
+their physical characteristics are believed to indicate a strain
+of Negrito blood.<a id="footnotetag324" name="footnotetag324"></a><a href="#footnote324"><sup>324</sup></a> The Mafulu hold that at death the
+human spirit leaves the body and becomes a malevolent
+ghost. Accordingly they drive it away with shouts. It is
+supposed to go away to the tops of the mountains there to
+become, according to its age, either a shimmering light on
+the ground or a large sort of fungus, which is found only
+on the mountains. Hence natives who come across such a
+shimmering light or such a fungus are careful not to tread
+on it; much less would they eat the fungus. However, in
+spite of their transformation into these things, the ghosts
+come down from the mountains and prowl about the villages
+and gardens seeking what they may devour, and as their
+intentions are always evil their visits are dreaded by the
+people, who fill up the crevices and openings, except the
+doors, of their houses at night in order to prevent the
+incursions of these unquiet spirits. When a mission station
+was founded in their country, the Mafulu were amazed that
+the missionaries should sleep alone in rooms with open doors
+and windows, through which the ghosts might enter.<a id="footnotetag325" name="footnotetag325"></a><a href="#footnote325"><sup>325</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs of the Mafulu.</p>
+
+<p>Common people among the Mafulu are buried in shallow
+graves in the village, and pigs are killed at the funeral for
+the purpose of appeasing the ghost. Mourners wear necklaces
+of string and smear their faces, sometimes also their
+bodies, with black, which they renew from time to time.
+Instead of wearing a necklace, a widow, widower, or other
+near relative may abstain during the period of mourning
+from eating a favourite food of the deceased. A woman
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>[pg 199]</span>
+who has lost a child, especially a first-born or dearly loved
+child, will often amputate the first joint of one of her fingers
+with an adze; and she may repeat the amputation if she
+suffers another bereavement. A woman has been seen with
+three of her fingers mutilated in this fashion.<a id="footnotetag326" name="footnotetag326"></a><a href="#footnote326"><sup>326</sup></a> The corpses
+of chiefs, their wives, and other members of their families
+are not buried in graves but laid in rude coffins, which are
+then deposited either on rough platforms in the village or in
+the fork of a species of fig-tree. This sort of tree, called by
+the natives <i>gabi</i>, is specially used for such burials; one of
+them has been seen supporting no less than six coffins, one
+above the other. The Mafulu never cut down these trees,
+and in seeking a new site for a village they will often choose
+a place where one of them is growing. So long as the
+corpse of a chief is rotting and stinking on the platform or
+the tree, the village is deserted by the inhabitants; only two
+men, relatives of the deceased, remain behind exposed to the
+stench of the decaying body and the blood of the pigs which
+were slaughtered at the funeral feast. When decomposition
+is complete, the people return to the village. Should the
+coffin fall to the ground through the decay of the platform
+or the tree on which it rests, the people throw away all the
+bones except the skull and the larger bones of the arms and
+legs; these they bury in a shallow grave under the platform,
+or put in a box on a burial tree, or hang up in the chief's
+house.<a id="footnotetag327" name="footnotetag327"></a><a href="#footnote327"><sup>327</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Use made of the skulls and bones at a great festival.</p>
+
+<p>The skulls and leg and arm bones of chiefs, their wives,
+and other members of their families, which have thus been
+preserved, play a prominent part in the great feasts which
+the inhabitants of a Mafulu village celebrate at intervals of
+perhaps fifteen or twenty years. Great preparations are made
+for such a celebration. A series of tall posts, one for each
+household, is erected in the open space which intervenes
+between the two rows of the village houses. Yams and
+taro are fastened to the upper parts of the posts; and
+below them are hung in circles the skulls and arm and
+leg bones of dead chiefs, their wives, and kinsfolk, which
+have been preserved in the manner described. Any skulls
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id="page200"></a>[pg 200]</span>
+and bones that remain over when all the posts have been
+thus decorated are placed on a platform, which has either
+served for the ordinary exposure of a chief's corpse or has
+been specially erected for the purpose of the festival. At a
+given moment of the ceremony the chief of the clan cuts
+down the props which support the platform, so that the
+skulls and bones roll on the ground. These are picked
+up and afterwards distributed, along with some of the skulls
+and bones from the posts, by the chief of the clan to the
+more important of the invited guests, who wear them as
+ornaments on their arms in a great dance. None but
+certain of the male guests take part in the dance; the
+villagers themselves merely look on. All the dancers are
+arrayed in full dancing costume, including heavy head-dresses
+of feathers, and they carry drums and spears, sometimes
+also clubs or adzes. The dance lasts the whole night.
+When it is over, the skulls and bones are hung up again on
+the tall posts. Afterwards the fruits and vegetables which
+have been collected in large quantities are divided among
+the guests. On a subsequent morning a large number of
+pigs are killed, and certain of the hosts take some of the
+human bones from the posts and dip them in the blood
+which flows from the mouths of the slaughtered pigs.
+With these blood-stained bones they next touch the skulls
+and all the other bones on the posts, which include all the
+skulls and arm and leg bones of all the chiefs and members
+of their families and other prominent persons who have been
+buried in the village or in any other village of the community
+since the last great feast was held. These relics of
+mortality may afterwards be kept in the chief's house, or
+hung on a tree, or simply thrown away in the forest; but in
+no case are they ever again used for purposes of ceremony.
+The slaughtered pigs are cut up and the portions distributed
+among the guests, who carry them away for consumption in
+their own villages.<a id="footnotetag328" name="footnotetag328"></a><a href="#footnote328"><sup>328</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Trace of ancestor worship among the Mafulu.</p>
+
+<p>This preservation of the skulls and bones of chiefs and
+other notables for years, and the dipping of them in the
+blood of pigs at a great festival, must apparently be designed
+to propitiate or influence in some way the ghosts of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>[pg 201]</span>
+persons to whom the skulls and bones belonged in their
+lifetime. But Mr. R. W. Williamson, to whom we are
+indebted for the description of this interesting ceremony,
+was not able to detect any other clear indications of
+ancestor worship among the people.<a id="footnotetag329" name="footnotetag329"></a><a href="#footnote329"><sup>329</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Worship of the dead among the natives of the Aroma district.</p>
+
+<p>However, a real worship of the dead, or something
+approaching to it, is reported to exist among some of the
+natives of the Aroma district in British New Guinea. Each
+family is said to have a sacred place, whither they carry
+offerings for the spirits of dead ancestors, whom they terribly
+fear. Sickness in the family, death, famine, scarcity of fish,
+and so forth, are all set down to the anger of these dreadful
+beings, who must accordingly be propitiated. On certain
+occasions the help of the spirits is especially invoked and
+their favour wooed by means of offerings. Thus, when a
+house is being built and the central post has been erected,
+sacrifices of wallaby, fish, and bananas are presented to the
+souls of the dead, and a prayer is put up that they will be
+pleased to keep the house always full of food and to prevent
+it from falling down in stormy weather. Again, when the
+natives begin to plant their gardens, they first take a bunch
+of bananas and sugar-cane and standing in the middle of the
+garden call over the names of dead members of the family,
+adding, "There is your food, your bananas and sugar-cane;
+let our food grow well, and let it be plentiful. If it does not
+grow well and plentifully, you all will be full of shame, and
+so shall we." Again, before the people set out on a trading
+expedition, they present food to the spirits at the central
+post of the house and pray them to go before the traders and
+prepare the people, so that the trade may be good. Once
+more, when there is sickness in the family, a pig is killed
+and its carcase carried to the sacred place, where the spirits
+are asked to accept it. Sins, also, are confessed, such as
+that people have gathered bananas or coco-nuts without
+offering any of them to their dead ancestors. In presenting
+the pig they say, "There is a pig; accept it, and remove
+the sickness." But if prayers and sacrifices are vain, and
+the patient dies, then, while the relatives all stand round the
+open grave, the chief's sister or cousin calls out in a loud
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id="page202"></a>[pg 202]</span>
+voice: "You have been angry with us for the bananas or
+the coco-nuts which we have gathered, and in your anger
+you have taken away this child. Now let it suffice, and
+bury your anger." So saying they lower the body into
+the grave and shovel in the earth on the top of it. The
+spirits of the departed, on quitting their bodies, paddle in
+canoes across the lagoon and go away to the mountains,
+where they live in perfect bliss, with no work to do and no
+trouble to vex them, chewing betel, dancing all night and
+resting all day.<a id="footnotetag330" name="footnotetag330"></a><a href="#footnote330"><sup>330</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Hood Peninsula. The town of Kalo.</p>
+
+<p>Between the Aroma District in the south-east and Port
+Moresby on the north-west is situated the Hood Peninsula
+in the Central District of British New Guinea. It is
+inhabited by the Bulaa, Babaka, Kamali, and Kalo tribes,
+which all speak dialects of one language.<a id="footnotetag331" name="footnotetag331"></a><a href="#footnote331"><sup>331</sup></a> The village or
+town of Kalo, built at the base of the peninsula, close to
+the mouth of the Vanigela or Kemp Welch River, is said
+to be the wealthiest village in British New Guinea. It
+includes some magnificent native houses, all built over the
+water on piles, some of which are thirty feet high. The
+sight of these great houses perched on such lofty and
+massive props is very impressive. In front of each house
+is a series of large platforms like gigantic steps. Some
+of the posts and under-surfaces of the houses are carved
+with figures of crocodiles and so forth. The labour of
+cutting the huge planks for the flooring of the houses and
+the platforms must be immense, and must have been still
+greater in the old days, when the natives had only stone
+tools to work with. Many of the planks are cut out of the
+slab-like buttresses of tall forest trees which grow inland. So
+hard is the wood that the boards are handed down as heirlooms
+from father to son, and the piles on which the houses
+are built last for generations. The inhabitants of Kalo
+possess gardens, where the rich alluvial soil produces a
+superabundance of coco-nuts, bananas, yams, sweet potatoes,
+and taro. Areca palms also flourish and produce the betel
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>[pg 203]</span>
+nuts, which are in great demand for chewing with quick-lime
+and so constitute a source of wealth. Commanding the
+mouth of the Vanigela River, the people of Kalo absorb
+the trade with the interior; and their material prosperity is
+said to have rendered them conceited and troublesome.<a id="footnotetag332" name="footnotetag332"></a><a href="#footnote332"><sup>332</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the natives of
+the Hood Peninsula. Seclusion of the widow or widower.</p>
+
+<p>The tribes inhabiting the Hood Peninsula are reported
+to have no belief in any good spirit but an unlimited
+faith in bad spirits, amongst whom they include the souls
+of their dead ancestors. At death the ghosts join their forefathers
+in a subterranean region, where they have splendid
+gardens, houses, and so forth. Yet not content with their
+life in the underworld, they are always on the watch to
+deal out sickness and death to their surviving friends and
+relations, who may have the misfortune to incur their
+displeasure. So the natives are most careful to do nothing
+that might offend these touchy and dangerous spirits. Like
+many other savages, they do not believe that anybody dies
+a natural death; they think that all the deaths which
+we should call natural are brought about either by an
+ancestral ghost (<i>palagu</i>) or by a sorcerer or witch (<i>wara</i>).
+Even when a man dies of snake-bite, they detect in the discoloration
+of the body the wounds inflicted upon him by
+the fell art of the magician.<a id="footnotetag333" name="footnotetag333"></a><a href="#footnote333"><sup>333</sup></a> On the approach of death the
+house of the sick man is filled by anxious relatives and
+friends, who sit around watching for the end. When it
+comes, there is a tremendous outburst of grief. The men
+beat their faces with their clenched fists; the women
+tear their cheeks with their nails till the blood streams
+down. They usually bury their dead in graves, which
+among the inland tribes are commonly dug near the houses
+of the deceased. The maritime tribes, who live in houses
+built on piles over the water, sometimes inter the corpse
+in the forest. But at other times they place it in a
+canoe, which they anchor off the village. Then, when the
+body has dried up, they lay it on a platform in a tree.
+Finally, they collect and clean the bones, tie them in a
+bundle, and place them on the roof of the house. When the
+corpse is buried, a temporary hut is erected over the grave,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>[pg 204]</span>
+and in it the widow or widower lives in seclusion for two or
+three months. During her seclusion the widow employs
+herself in fashioning her widow's weeds, which consist of a
+long grass petticoat reaching to the ankles. She wears a
+large head-dress made of shells; her head is shaved, and her
+body blackened. Further, she wears round her neck the
+waistband of her deceased husband with his lower jaw-bone
+attached to it. The costume of a widower is somewhat
+similar, though he does not wear a long grass petticoat.
+Instead of it he has a graceful fringe, which hangs from his
+waist half way to the knees. On his head he wears an
+elaborate head-dress made of shells, and on his arms he has
+armlets of the same material. His hair is cut off and his
+whole skin blackened. Round his neck is a string, from
+which depends his dead wife's petticoat. It is sewn up into
+small bulk and hangs under his right arm. While the
+widow or widower is living in seclusion on the grave, he or
+she is supplied with food by relations. At sundown on the
+day of the burial, a curious ceremony is performed. An old
+woman or man, supposed to be gifted with second-sight, is
+sent for. Seating herself at the foot of the grave she peers
+into the deepening shadows under the coco-nut palms. At
+first she remains perfectly still, while the relations of the
+deceased watch her with painful anxiety. Soon her look
+becomes more piercing, and lowering her head, while she still
+gazes into the depth of the forest, she says in low and
+solemn tones, "I see coming hither So-and-So's grandfather"
+(mentioning the name of the dead person). "He says he is
+glad to welcome his grandson to his abode. I see now his
+father and his own little son also, who died in infancy."
+Gradually, she grows more and more excited, waving her
+arms and swaying her body from side to side. "Now they
+come," she cries, "I can see all our forefathers in a fast-gathering
+crowd. They are coming closer and yet closer.
+Make room, make room for the spirits of our departed
+ancestors." By this time she has worked herself up into a
+frenzy. She throws herself on the ground, beating her head
+with her clenched fists. Foam flies from her lips, her eyes
+become fixed, and she rolls over insensible. But the fit
+lasts only a short time. She soon comes to herself;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>[pg 205]</span>
+the vision is past, and the visionary is restored to common
+life.<a id="footnotetag334" name="footnotetag334"></a><a href="#footnote334"><sup>334</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Application of the juices of the dead to the persons of the
+living.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the inland tribes of this district have a peculiar
+way of disposing of their dead. A double platform about
+ten feet high is erected near the village. On the upper
+platform the corpse is placed, and immediately below it the
+widow or widower sleeps on the lower platform, allowing
+juices of the decaying body to stream down on her or
+him. This application of the decomposing juices of a
+corpse to the persons of the living is not uncommon among
+savages; it appears to be a form of communion with the
+dead, the survivors thus in a manner identifying themselves
+with their departed kinsfolk by absorbing a portion of
+their bodily substance. Among the tribes in question a
+widower marks his affection for his dead wife by never
+washing himself during the period of mourning; he
+would not rid himself of those products of decomposition
+which link him, however sadly, with her whom he has lost.
+Every day, too, reeking with these relics of mortality, he
+solemnly stalks through the village.<a id="footnotetag335" name="footnotetag335"></a><a href="#footnote335"><sup>335</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Precautions taken by man-slayers against the ghosts of their
+victims.</p>
+
+<p>But there is a distinction between ghosts. If all of
+them are feared, some are more dreadful than others, and
+amongst the latter may naturally be reckoned the ghosts
+of slain enemies. Accordingly the slayer has to observe
+special precautions to guard against the angry and vengeful
+spirit of his victim. Amongst these people, we are told,
+a man who has taken life is held to be impure until he
+has undergone certain ceremonies. As soon as possible
+after the deed is done, he cleanses himself and his weapon.
+Then he repairs to his village and seats himself on the
+logs of sacrificial staging. No one approaches him or takes
+any notice whatever of him. Meantime a house is made
+ready, in which he must live by himself for several days,
+waited on only by two or three small boys. He may eat
+nothing but toasted bananas, and only the central parts of
+them; the ends are thrown away. On the third day a
+small feast is prepared for him by his friends, who also
+provide him with some new waistbands. Next day, arrayed
+in all his finery and wearing the badges which mark him as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>[pg 206]</span>
+a homicide, he sallies forth fully armed and parades the
+village. Next day a hunt takes place, and from the game
+captured a kangaroo is selected. It is cut open, and with
+its spleen and liver the back of the homicide is rubbed.
+Then he walks solemnly down to the nearest water and
+standing straddle-legs in it washes himself. All young
+untried warriors then swim between his legs, which is supposed
+to impart his courage and strength to them. Next
+day at early dawn he dashes out of his house fully armed
+and calls aloud the name of his victim. Having satisfied
+himself that he has thoroughly scared the ghost of the
+dead man, he returns to his house. Further, floors are
+beaten and fires kindled for the sake of driving away the
+ghost, lest he should still be lingering in the neighbourhood.
+A day later the purification of the homicide is complete
+and he is free to enter his wife's house, which he might
+not do before.<a id="footnotetag336" name="footnotetag336"></a><a href="#footnote336"><sup>336</sup></a> This account of the purification of a
+homicide suggests that the purificatory rites, which have
+been observed in similar cases by many peoples, including
+the ancient Greeks, are primarily intended to free the slayer
+from the dangerous ghost of his victim, which haunts him
+and seeks to take his life. Such rites in fact appear designed,
+not to restore the homicide to a state of moral innocence,
+but merely to guard him against a physical danger; they
+are protective, not reformatory, in character; they are
+exorcisms, not purifications in the sense which we attach
+to the word. This interpretation of the ceremonies observed
+by manslayers among many peoples might be supported by
+a large array of evidence; but to go into the matter fully
+would lead me into a long digression. I have collected
+some of the evidence elsewhere.<a id="footnotetag337" name="footnotetag337"></a><a href="#footnote337"><sup>337</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the Massim of
+south-eastern New Guinea. Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead. Mourners bathe
+and shave their heads. Food deposited in the grave. Dietary restrictions
+imposed on mourners.</p>
+
+<p>We now pass to that branch of the Papuo-Melanesian
+race which occupies the extreme south-eastern part of
+British New Guinea, and to which Dr. Seligmann gives
+the name of Massim. These people have been observed
+more especially at three places, namely Bartle Bay,
+Wagawaga, and Tubetube, a small island of the Engineer
+group lying off the south-eastern extremity of New Guinea.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>[pg 207]</span>
+Among them the old custom was to bury the dead
+on the outskirts of the hamlet and sometimes within
+a few yards of the houses, and apparently the remains
+were afterwards as a rule left undisturbed; there was no
+general practice of exhuming the bones and depositing
+them elsewhere.<a id="footnotetag338" name="footnotetag338"></a><a href="#footnote338"><sup>338</sup></a> At Wagawaga the name for the spirit
+or soul of a dead person is <i>arugo</i>, which also signifies a
+man's shadow or reflection in a glass or in water; and
+though animals and trees are not supposed to have spirits,
+their reflections bear the same name <i>arugo</i>.<a id="footnotetag339" name="footnotetag339"></a><a href="#footnote339"><sup>339</sup></a> The souls of
+the dead are believed to depart to the land of Hiyoyoa,
+which is under the sea, near Maivara, at the head of Milne
+Bay. The land of the dead, as usual, resembles in all
+respects the land of the living, except that it is day there
+when it is night at Wagawaga, and the dead speak of
+the upper world in the language of Milne Bay instead of
+in that of Wagawaga. A certain being called Tumudurere
+receives the ghosts on their arrival and directs them where
+to make their gardens. The souls of living men and
+women can journey to the land of the dead and return
+to earth; indeed this happens not unfrequently. There
+is a man at Wagawaga who has often gone thither and
+come back; whenever he wishes to make the journey, he
+has nothing to do but to smear himself with a magical
+stuff and to fall asleep, after which he soon wakes up in
+Hiyoyoa. At first the ghosts whom he met in the other
+world did not invite him to partake of their food, because
+they knew that if he did so he could not return to the
+land of the living; but apparently practice has rendered
+him immune to the usually fatal effects of the food of
+the dead.<a id="footnotetag340" name="footnotetag340"></a><a href="#footnote340"><sup>340</sup></a> Though Hiyoyoa, at the head of Milne Bay,
+lies to the west of Wagawaga, the dead are buried in a
+squatting posture with their faces turned to the east, in
+order that their souls may depart to the other world.<a id="footnotetag341" name="footnotetag341"></a><a href="#footnote341"><sup>341</sup></a>
+Immediately after the funeral the relations who have taken
+part in the burial go down to the sea and bathe, and so
+do the widow and children of the deceased because they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>[pg 208]</span>
+supported the dying husband and father in his extremity.
+After bathing in the sea the widow and children shave
+their heads.<a id="footnotetag342" name="footnotetag342"></a><a href="#footnote342"><sup>342</sup></a> Both the bathing and the shaving are
+doubtless forms of ceremonial purification; in other words,
+they are designed to rid the survivors of the taint of death,
+or perhaps more definitely to remove the ghost from their
+persons, to which he may be supposed to cling like a burr.
+At Bartle Bay the dead are buried on their sides with
+their heads pointing in the direction from which the
+totem clan of the deceased is said to have come originally;
+and various kinds of food, of which the dead man
+had partaken in his last illness, are deposited, along with
+some paltry personal ornaments, in the grave. Apparently
+the food is intended to serve as provision for the ghost
+on his journey to the other world. Curiously enough, the
+widow is forbidden to eat of the same kinds of food of
+which her husband ate during his last illness, and the
+prohibition is strictly observed until after the last of the
+funeral feasts.<a id="footnotetag343" name="footnotetag343"></a><a href="#footnote343"><sup>343</sup></a> The motive of the prohibition is not
+obvious; perhaps it may be a fear of attracting the ghost
+back to earth through the savoury food which he loved
+in the body. At Wagawaga, after the relatives who took
+part in the burial have bathed in the sea, they cut down
+several of the coco-nut trees which belonged to the deceased,
+leaving both nuts and trees to rot on the ground. During
+the first two or three weeks after the funeral these same
+relatives may not eat boiled food, but only roast; they
+may not drink water, but only the milk of young coco-nuts
+made hot, and although they may eat yams they must
+abstain from bananas and sugar-cane.<a id="footnotetag344" name="footnotetag344"></a><a href="#footnote344"><sup>344</sup></a> A man may not
+eat coco-nuts grown in his dead father's hamlet, nor pigs
+and areca-nuts from it during the whole remainder of his
+life.<a id="footnotetag345" name="footnotetag345"></a><a href="#footnote345"><sup>345</sup></a> The reasons for these dietary restrictions are not
+mentioned, but no doubt the abstinences are based on a
+fear of the ghost, or at all events on a dread of the contagion
+of death, to which all who had a share in the burial are
+especially exposed.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id="page209"></a>[pg 209]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral customs at Tubetube. The fire on the grave. The happy
+land.</p>
+
+<p>At Tubetube, in like manner, immediately after a
+funeral a brother of the deceased cuts down two or
+three of the dead man's coco-nut trees. There, also, the
+children of the deceased may not eat any coco-nuts from
+their father's trees nor even from any trees grown in his
+hamlet; nay, they may not partake of any garden produce
+grown in the vicinity of the hamlet; and similarly they
+must abstain from the pork of all pigs fattened in their
+dead father's village. But these prohibitions do not apply
+to the brothers, sisters, and other relatives of the departed.
+The relations who have assisted at the burial remain at
+the grave for five or six days, being fed by the brothers
+or other near kinsfolk of the deceased. They may not
+quit the spot even at night, and if it rains they huddle
+into a shelter built over the grave. During their vigil at
+the tomb they may not drink water, but are allowed a
+little heated coco-nut milk; they are supposed to eat only
+a little yam and other vegetable food.<a id="footnotetag346" name="footnotetag346"></a><a href="#footnote346"><sup>346</sup></a> On the day when
+the body is buried a fire is kindled at the grave and kept
+burning night and day until the feast of the dead has been
+held. "The reason for having the fire is that the spirit
+may be able to get warm when it rises from the grave.
+The natives regard the spirit as being very cold, even as the
+body is when the life has departed from it, and without this
+external warmth provided by the fire it would be unable to
+undertake the journey to its final home. The feast for the
+dead is celebrated when the flesh has decayed, and in some
+places the skull is taken from the grave, washed and placed
+in the house, being buried again when the feast is over. At
+Tubetube this custom of taking the skull from the grave is
+not regularly followed, in some instances it is, but the feast
+is always held, and on the night of the day on which the
+feast takes place, the fire, which has been in some cases kept
+burning for over a month, is allowed to burn out, as the
+spirit, being now safe and happy in the spirit-land, has no
+further need of it."<a id="footnotetag347" name="footnotetag347"></a><a href="#footnote347"><sup>347</sup></a> "In this spirit-land eternal youth
+prevails, there are no old men nor old women, but all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id="page210"></a>[pg 210]</span>
+are in the full vigour of the prime of life, or are attaining
+thereto, and having reached that stage never grow
+older. Old men and old women, who die as such on
+Tubetube, renew their youth in this happy place, where
+there are no more sickness, no evil spirits, and no death.
+Marriage, and giving in marriage, continue; if a man dies,
+his widow, though she may have married again, is at her
+death re-united to her first husband in the spirit-land, and
+the second husband when he arrives has to take one of the
+women already there who may be without a mate, unless he
+marries again before his death, in which case he would have
+to wait until his wife joins him. Children are born, and on
+arriving at maturity do not grow older. Houses are built,
+canoes are made but they are never launched, and gardens
+are planted and yield abundantly. The spirits of their
+animals, dogs, pigs, etc., which have died on Tubetube,
+precede and follow them to the spirit-land. Fighting and
+stealing are unknown, and all are united in a common
+brotherhood."<a id="footnotetag348" name="footnotetag348"></a><a href="#footnote348"><sup>348</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The names of the dead not mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>In the south-eastern part of New Guinea the fear of
+the dead is further manifested by the common custom of
+avoiding the mention of their names. If their names were
+those of common objects, the words are dropped from the
+language of the district so long as the memory of the
+departed persists, and new names are substituted for them.
+For example, when a man named Binama, which means
+the hornbill, died at Wagawaga, the name of the bird
+was changed to <i>ambadina</i>, which means "the plasterer."<a id="footnotetag349" name="footnotetag349"></a><a href="#footnote349"><sup>349</sup></a>
+In this way many words are either permanently lost or
+revived with modified or new meanings. Hence the fear
+of the dead is here, as in many other places, a fertile source
+of change in language. Another indication of the terror
+inspired by ghosts is the custom of abandoning or destroying
+the house in which a death has taken place; and this
+custom used to be observed in certain cases at Tubetube
+and Wagawaga.<a id="footnotetag350" name="footnotetag350"></a><a href="#footnote350"><sup>350</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id="page211"></a>[pg 211]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs and customs concerning the dead in the island of
+Kiwai.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far I have dealt mainly with the beliefs and
+practices of the Papuo-Melanesians in the eastern part of
+British New Guinea. With regard to the pure Papuan
+population in the western part of the possession our information
+is much scantier. However, we learn that in
+Kiwai, a large island at the mouth of the Fly River, the
+dead are buried in the villages and the ghosts are supposed
+to live in the ground near their decaying bodies, but to
+emerge from time to time into the upper air and look about
+them, only, however, to return to their abode beneath the
+sod. Nothing is buried with the corpse; but a small
+platform is made over the grave, or sticks are planted in
+the ground along its sides, and on these are placed sago,
+yams, bananas, coco-nuts, and cooked crabs and fish, all for
+the spirit of the dead to eat. A fire is also kindled beside
+the grave and kept up by the friends for nine days in order
+that the poor ghost may not shiver with cold at night.
+These practices prove not merely a belief in the survival
+of the soul after death but a desire to make it comfortable.
+Further, when the deceased is a man, his bow and arrows
+are stuck at the head of the grave; when the deceased is
+a woman, her petticoat is hung upon a stick. No doubt
+the weapons and the garment are intended for the use of
+the ghost, when he or she revisits the upper air. On the
+ninth day after the burial a feast is prepared, the drum is
+beaten, the conch shell blown, and the chief mourner
+declares that no more fires need be lighted and no more
+food placed on the grave.<a id="footnotetag351" name="footnotetag351"></a><a href="#footnote351"><sup>351</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Adiri, the land of the dead, and Sido, the first man who went
+thither. The fear of ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>According to the natives of Kiwai the land of the dead
+is called Adiri or Woibu. The first man to go thither and
+to open up a road for others to follow him, was Sido, a
+popular hero about whom the people tell many tales. But
+whereas in his lifetime Sido was an admired and beneficent
+being, in his ghostly character he became a mischievous elf
+who played pranks on such as he fell in with. His adventures
+after death furnish the theme of many stories.
+However, it is much to his credit that, finding the land of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>[pg 212]</span>
+the dead a barren region without vegetation of any sort, he,
+by an act of generation, converted it into a garden, where
+bananas, yams, taro, coco-nuts and other fruits and vegetables
+grew and ripened in a single night. Having thus
+fertilised the lower region, he announced to Adiri, the lord
+of the subterranean realm, that he was the precursor of many
+more men and women who would descend thereafter into
+the spirit world. His prediction has been amply fulfilled;
+for ever since then everybody has gone by the same road to
+the same place.<a id="footnotetag352" name="footnotetag352"></a><a href="#footnote352"><sup>352</sup></a> However, when a person dies, his or her
+spirit may linger for a few days in the neighbourhood of its
+old home before setting out for the far country. During
+that time the spirit may occasionally be seen by ordinary
+people, and accordingly the natives are careful not to go
+out in the dark for fear of coming bolt on the ghost; and
+they sometimes adopt other precautions against the prowling
+spectre, who might otherwise haunt them and carry
+them off with him to deadland. Some classes of ghosts are
+particularly dreaded on account of their malignity; such,
+for example, are the spirits of women who have died in
+childbed, and of people who have hanged themselves or been
+devoured by crocodiles. Such ghosts loiter for a long time
+about the places where they died, and they are very
+dangerous, because they are for ever luring other people
+to die the same death which they died themselves. Yet
+another troop of evil ghosts are the souls of those who were
+beheaded in battle; for they kill and devour people, and at
+night you may see the blood shining like fire as it gushes
+from the gaping gashes in their throats.<a id="footnotetag353" name="footnotetag353"></a><a href="#footnote353"><sup>353</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The path of the ghosts to Adiri. Adiri, the land of the
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>The road to Adiri or deadland is fairly well known, and
+the people can point to many landmarks on it. For example,
+in the island of Paho there is a tree called <i>dani</i>,
+under which the departing spirits sit down and weep.
+When they have cried their fill and rubbed their poor tear-bedraggled
+faces with mud, they make little pellets of clay
+and throw them at the tree, and anybody can see for
+himself the pellets sticking to the branches. It is true that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>[pg 213]</span>
+the pellets resemble the nests of insects, but this resemblance
+is only fortuitous. Near the tree is a rocking stone, which
+the ghosts set in motion, and the sound that they make in
+so doing is like the muffled roll of a drum. And while the
+stone rocks to and fro with a hollow murmur, the ghosts
+dance, the men on one side of the stone and the women on
+the other. Again at Mabudavane, where the Mawata people
+have gardens, you may sometimes hear, in the stillness of
+night, the same weird murmur, which indicates the presence
+of a ghost. Then everybody keeps quiet, the children are
+hushed to silence, and all listen intently. The murmur
+continues for a time and then ends abruptly in a splash,
+which tells the listeners that the ghost has leaped over the
+muddy creek. Further on, the spirits come to Boigu, where
+they swim in the waterhole and often appear to people in
+their real shape. But after Boigu the track of the ghosts is
+lost, or at least has not been clearly ascertained. The spirit
+world lies somewhere away in the far west, but the living
+are not quite sure of the way to it, and they are somewhat
+vague in their accounts of it. There is no difference
+between the fate of the good and the fate of the bad
+in the far country; the dead meet the friends who died
+before them; and people who come from the same village
+probably live together in the same rooms of the long
+house of the ghosts. However, some native sceptics even
+doubt whether there is such a place as Adiri at all, and
+whether death may not be the end of consciousness to the
+individual.<a id="footnotetag354" name="footnotetag354"></a><a href="#footnote354"><sup>354</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Appearance of the dead to the living in dreams.</p>
+
+<p>The dead often appear to the living in dreams, warning
+them of danger or furnishing them with useful information
+with regard to the cultivation of their gardens, the practice of
+witchcraft, and so on. In order to obtain advice from his dead
+parents a man will sometimes dig up their skulls from the
+grave and sleep beside them; and to make sure of receiving
+their prompt attention he will not infrequently provide himself
+with a cudgel, with which he threatens to smash their skulls
+if they do not answer his questions. Some persons possess
+a special faculty of communicating with the departing spirit
+of a person who has just died. Should they desire to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>[pg 214]</span>
+question it they will lurk beside the road which ghosts are
+known to take; and in order not to be betrayed by their
+smell, which is very perceptible to a ghost, they will chew
+the leaf or bark of a certain tree and spit the juice over
+their bodies. Then the ghost cannot detect them, or rather
+he takes them to be ghosts like himself, and accordingly he
+may in confidence impart to them most valuable information,
+such for example as full particulars with regard to
+the real cause of his death. This priceless intelligence the
+ghost-seer hastens to communicate to his fellow tribesmen.<a id="footnotetag355" name="footnotetag355"></a><a href="#footnote355"><sup>355</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Offerings to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>When a man has just died and been buried, his surviving
+relatives lay some of his weapons and ornaments,
+together with presents of food, upon his grave, no doubt
+for the use of the ghost; but some of these things they
+afterwards remove and bring back to the village, probably
+considering, with justice, that they will be more useful to
+the living than to the dead. But offerings to the dead may
+be presented to them at other places than their tombs.
+"The great power," says Dr. Landtman, "which the dead
+represent to the living has given rise to a sort of simple
+offering to them, almost the only kind of offering met with
+among the Kiwai Papuans. The natives occasionally lay
+down presents of food at places to which spirits come,
+and utter some request for assistance which the spirits
+are supposed to hear."<a id="footnotetag356" name="footnotetag356"></a><a href="#footnote356"><sup>356</sup></a> In such offerings and prayers
+we may detect the elements of a regular worship of the
+dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Dreams as a source of the belief in immortality.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the source of these beliefs among the
+Kiwai people Dr. Landtman observes that "undoubtedly
+dreams have largely contributed in supplying the natives
+with ideas about Adiri and life after death. A great
+number of dreams collected by me among the Kiwai people
+tell of wanderings to Adiri or of meetings with spirits of
+dead men, and as dreams are believed to describe the real
+things which the soul sees while roaming about outside the
+body, we understand that they must greatly influence the
+imagination of the people."<a id="footnotetag357" name="footnotetag357"></a><a href="#footnote357"><sup>357</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>That concludes what I have to say as to the belief in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>[pg 215]</span>
+immortality and the worship of the dead among the natives
+of British New Guinea. In the following lectures I shall
+deal with the same rudimentary aspect of religion as it is
+reported to exist among the aborigines of the vast regions
+of German and Dutch New Guinea.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote310" name="footnote310"></a><b>Footnote 310:</b><a href="#footnotetag310"> (return) </a><p> C. G. Seligmann, <i>The Melanesians of British New
+Guinea</i> (Cambridge, 1910), pp. 1 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote311" name="footnote311"></a><b>Footnote 311:</b><a href="#footnotetag311"> (return) </a><p>See below, pp. 242, 256, 261 <i>sq.</i>, 291.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote312" name="footnote312"></a><b>Footnote 312:</b><a href="#footnotetag312"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Haddon, <i>Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown</i>
+(London, 1901), pp. 249 <i>sq.</i> As to the Motu and their Melanesian
+or Polynesian affinities, see Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the
+Motu," <i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, vii. (1878) pp.
+470 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote313" name="footnote313"></a><b>Footnote 313:</b><a href="#footnotetag313"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. Chalmers, <i>Pioneering in New Guinea</i>
+(London, 1887), pp. 168-170. Compare Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology
+of the Motu," <i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, vii.
+(1878) pp. 484 <i>sqq.</i>; Rev. W. G. Lawes, "Ethnological Notes on the
+Motu, Koitapu and Koiari Tribes of New Guinea," <i>Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute</i>, viii. (1879) pp. 370 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote314" name="footnote314"></a><b>Footnote 314:</b><a href="#footnotetag314"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Haddon, <i>Headhunters, Black, White, and
+Brown</i>, pp. 249 <i>sq.</i>; C. G. Seligmann, <i>The Melanesians of
+British New Guinea</i>, pp. 16, 41. As to the Koita (or Koitapu) and the
+Motu, see further the Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the Motu,"
+<i>Journal of the Anthropological Institute</i>, vii. (1878) pp. 470
+<i>sqq.</i>; Rev. W. G. Lawes, "Ethnological Notes on the Motu, Koitapu
+and Koiari Tribes of New Guinea," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, viii. (1879) pp. 369 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote315" name="footnote315"></a><b>Footnote 315:</b><a href="#footnotetag315"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 189-191.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote316" name="footnote316"></a><b>Footnote 316:</b><a href="#footnotetag316"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 185 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote317" name="footnote317"></a><b>Footnote 317:</b><a href="#footnotetag317"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 192.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote318" name="footnote318"></a><b>Footnote 318:</b><a href="#footnotetag318"> (return) </a><p> C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 190-192. As to the
+desertion of the house after death, see <i>id.</i>, pp. 89 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote319" name="footnote319"></a><b>Footnote 319:</b><a href="#footnotetag319"> (return) </a><p> The territory of the Roro-speaking tribes extends from
+Kevori, east of Waimatuma (Cape Possession), to Hiziu in the
+neighbourhood of Galley Reach. Inland of these tribes lies a region
+called by them Mekeo, which is inhabited by two closely related tribes,
+the Biofa and Vee. Off the coast lies Yule Island, which is commonly
+called Roro. See C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 195.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote320" name="footnote320"></a><b>Footnote 320:</b><a href="#footnotetag320"> (return) </a><p>V. Jouet, <i>La Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Missionaires du Sacr&eacute; C&oelig;ur
+dans les Vicariats Apostoliques de la M&eacute;lan&eacute;sie et de la Micron&eacute;sie</i>
+(Issoudun, 1887), p. 30; Father Guis, "Les Canaques: Mort-deuil,"
+<i>Missions Catholiques</i>, xxxiv. (1902) pp. 186, 200.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote321" name="footnote321"></a><b>Footnote 321:</b><a href="#footnotetag321"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 274 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote322" name="footnote322"></a><b>Footnote 322:</b><a href="#footnotetag322"> (return) </a><p> Father Guis, "Les Canaques: Mort-deuil," <i>Missions
+Catholiques</i>, xxxiv. (1902) pp. 208 <i>sq.</i> See <i>Psyche's
+Task</i>, pp. 75 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote323" name="footnote323"></a><b>Footnote 323:</b><a href="#footnotetag323"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 310.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote324" name="footnote324"></a><b>Footnote 324:</b><a href="#footnotetag324"> (return) </a><p> R. W. Williamson, <i>The Mafulu Mountain People of
+British New Guinea</i> (London, 1912), pp. 2 <i>sq.</i>, 297
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote325" name="footnote325"></a><b>Footnote 325:</b><a href="#footnotetag325"> (return) </a><p> R. W. Williamson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 243 <i>sq.</i>,
+246, 266-269.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote326" name="footnote326"></a><b>Footnote 326:</b><a href="#footnotetag326"> (return) </a><p>R. W. Williamson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 245-250.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote327" name="footnote327"></a><b>Footnote 327:</b><a href="#footnotetag327"> (return) </a><p>R. W. Williamson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 256-258, 261-263.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote328" name="footnote328"></a><b>Footnote 328:</b><a href="#footnotetag328"> (return) </a><p>R. W. Williamson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 125-152.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote329" name="footnote329"></a><b>Footnote 329:</b><a href="#footnotetag329"> (return) </a><p>R. W. Williamson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 270 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote330" name="footnote330"></a><b>Footnote 330:</b><a href="#footnotetag330"> (return) </a><p> J. Chalmers and W. Wyatt Gill, <i>Work and Adventure in
+New Guinea</i> (London, 1885), pp. 84-86.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote331" name="footnote331"></a><b>Footnote 331:</b><a href="#footnotetag331"> (return) </a><p> R. E. Guise, "On the Tribes inhabiting the Mouth of the
+Wanigela River, New Guinea," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xxviii. (1899) p. 205.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote332" name="footnote332"></a><b>Footnote 332:</b><a href="#footnotetag332"> (return) </a><p> A. C. Haddon, <i>Headhunters, Black, White, and
+Brown</i>, p. 213.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote333" name="footnote333"></a><b>Footnote 333:</b><a href="#footnotetag333"> (return) </a><p>R. E. Guise, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 216 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote334" name="footnote334"></a><b>Footnote 334:</b><a href="#footnotetag334"> (return) </a><p>R. E. Guise, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 210 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote335" name="footnote335"></a><b>Footnote 335:</b><a href="#footnotetag335"> (return) </a><p>R. E. Guise, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 211.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote336" name="footnote336"></a><b>Footnote 336:</b><a href="#footnotetag336"> (return) </a><p>R. E. Guise, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 213 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote337" name="footnote337"></a><b>Footnote 337:</b><a href="#footnotetag337"> (return) </a><p> <i>Psyche's Task</i>, pp. 52 <i>sqq.</i>; <i>Taboo and
+the Perils of the Soul</i>, pp. 167 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote338" name="footnote338"></a><b>Footnote 338:</b><a href="#footnotetag338"> (return) </a><p> C. G. Seligmann, <i>The Melanesians
+of British New Guinea</i>, p. 607.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote339" name="footnote339"></a><b>Footnote 339:</b><a href="#footnotetag339"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 655.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote340" name="footnote340"></a><b>Footnote 340:</b><a href="#footnotetag340"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 655 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote341" name="footnote341"></a><b>Footnote 341:</b><a href="#footnotetag341"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 610.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote342" name="footnote342"></a><b>Footnote 342:</b><a href="#footnotetag342"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 611.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote343" name="footnote343"></a><b>Footnote 343:</b><a href="#footnotetag343"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 616 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote344" name="footnote344"></a><b>Footnote 344:</b><a href="#footnotetag344"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann. <i>op. cit.</i> p. 611.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote345" name="footnote345"></a><b>Footnote 345:</b><a href="#footnotetag345"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 618 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote346" name="footnote346"></a><b>Footnote 346:</b><a href="#footnotetag346"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 613 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote347" name="footnote347"></a><b>Footnote 347:</b><a href="#footnotetag347"> (return) </a><p> The Rev. J. T. Field of Tubetube (Slade Island), quoted
+by George Brown, D.D., <i>Melanesians and Polynesians</i> (London,
+1910), pp. 442 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote348" name="footnote348"></a><b>Footnote 348:</b><a href="#footnotetag348"> (return) </a><p>Rev. J. T. Field, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 443 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote349" name="footnote349"></a><b>Footnote 349:</b><a href="#footnotetag349"> (return) </a><p> C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 629-631. Dr.
+Seligmann seems to think that the custom is at present dictated by
+courtesy and a reluctance to grieve the relatives of the deceased; but
+the original motive can hardly have been any other than a fear of the
+ghost.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote350" name="footnote350"></a><b>Footnote 350:</b><a href="#footnotetag350"> (return) </a><p>C. G. Seligmann, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 631 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote351" name="footnote351"></a><b>Footnote 351:</b><a href="#footnotetag351"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. Chalmers, "Notes on the
+Natives of Kiwai Island, Fly River,
+British New Guinea," <i>Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute</i>, xxxiii. (1903)
+pp. 119, 120.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote352" name="footnote352"></a><b>Footnote 352:</b><a href="#footnotetag352"> (return) </a><p> G. Landtman, "Wanderings of the Dead in the Folk-lore of
+the Kiwai-speaking Papuans," <i>Festskrift till&auml;gnad Edvard
+Westermarck</i> (Helsingfors, 1912), pp. 59-66.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote353" name="footnote353"></a><b>Footnote 353:</b><a href="#footnotetag353"> (return) </a><p>G. Landtman, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 67 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote354" name="footnote354"></a><b>Footnote 354:</b><a href="#footnotetag354"> (return) </a><p>G. Landtman, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 68-71.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote355" name="footnote355"></a><b>Footnote 355:</b><a href="#footnotetag355"> (return) </a><p>G. Landtman, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 77 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote356" name="footnote356"></a><b>Footnote 356:</b><a href="#footnotetag356"> (return) </a><p>G. Landtman, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 78 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote357" name="footnote357"></a><b>Footnote 357:</b><a href="#footnotetag357"> (return) </a><p>G. Landtman, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 71.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id="page216"></a>[pg 216]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-x" id="lecture-x"></a>LECTURE X</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Andrew Lang.</p>
+
+<p>I feel that I cannot begin my second course of lectures without
+referring to the loss which the study of primitive religion
+has lately sustained by the death of one of my predecessors in
+this chair, one who was a familiar and an honoured figure in
+this place, Mr. Andrew Lang. Whatever may be the judgment
+of posterity on his theories&mdash;and all our theories on these
+subjects are as yet more or less tentative and provisional&mdash;there
+can be no question but that by the charm of his
+writings, the wide range of his knowledge, the freshness and
+vigour of his mind, and the contagious enthusiasm which he
+brought to bear on whatever he touched, he was a great
+power in promoting the study of primitive man not in this
+country only, but wherever the English language is spoken,
+and that he won for himself a permanent place in the
+history of the science to which he devoted so much of his
+remarkable gifts and abilities. As he spent a part of every
+winter in St. Andrews, I had thought that in the course on
+which I enter to-day I might perhaps be honoured by his
+presence at some of my lectures. But it was not to be.
+Yet a fancy strikes me to which I will venture to give utterance.
+You may condemn, but I am sure you will not smile
+at it. It has been said of Macaulay that if his spirit ever
+revisited the earth, it might be expected to haunt the
+flagged walk beside the chapel in the great court of Trinity
+College, Cambridge, the walk which in his lifetime he loved
+to pace book in hand. And if Andrew Lang's spirit could
+be seen flitting pensively anywhere, would it not be just
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+here, in "the college of the scarlet gown," in the "little city
+worn and grey," looking out on the cold North Sea, the city
+which he knew and loved so well? Be that as it may, his
+memory will always be associated with St. Andrews; and
+if the students who shall in future go forth from this ancient
+university to carry St. Andrew's Cross, if I may say so, on
+their banner in the eternal warfare with falsehood and error,&mdash;if
+they cannot imitate Andrew Lang in the versatility of
+his genius, in the variety of his accomplishments, in the
+manifold graces of his literary art, it is to be hoped that
+they will strive to imitate him in qualities which are
+more within the reach of us all, in his passionate devotion
+to knowledge, in his ardent and unflagging pursuit
+of truth.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="side">Review of preceding lectures.</p>
+
+<p>In my last course of lectures I explained that I proposed
+to treat of the belief in immortality from a purely
+historical point of view. My intention is not to discuss the
+truth of the belief or to criticise the grounds on which it has
+been maintained. To do so would be to trench on the
+province of the theologian and the philosopher. I limit
+myself to the far humbler task of describing, first, the belief
+as it has been held by some savage races, and, second, some
+of the practical consequences which these primitive peoples
+have deduced from it for the conduct of life, whether these
+consequences take the shape of religious rites or moral
+precepts. Now in such a survey of savage creed and
+practice it is convenient to begin with the lowest races of
+men about whom we have accurate information and to pass
+from them gradually to higher and higher races, because we
+thus start with the simplest forms of religion and advance
+by regular gradations to more complex forms, and we may
+hope in this way to render the course of religious evolution
+more intelligible than if we were to start from the most
+highly developed religions and to work our way down from
+them to the most embryonic. In pursuance of this plan I
+commenced my survey with the aborigines of Australia,
+because among the races of man about whom we are well
+informed these savages are commonly and, I believe, justly
+supposed to stand at the foot of the human scale. Having
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>
+given you some account of their beliefs and practices concerning
+the dead I attempted to do the same for the islanders
+of Torres Straits and next for the natives of British New
+Guinea. There I broke off, and to-day I shall resume the
+thread of my discourse at the broken end by describing the
+beliefs and practices concerning the dead, as these beliefs are
+entertained and these practices observed by the natives of
+German New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p class="side">German New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>As you are aware, the German territory of New Guinea
+skirts the British territory on the north throughout its entire
+length and comprises roughly a quarter of the whole island,
+the British and German possessions making up together the
+eastern half of New Guinea, while the western half belongs
+to Holland.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Information as to the natives of German New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>Our information as to the natives of German New
+Guinea is very fragmentary, and is confined almost entirely
+to the tribes of the coast. As to the inhabitants of the
+interior we know as yet very little. However, German
+missionaries and others have described more or less fully the
+customs and beliefs of the natives at various points of this
+long coast, and I shall extract from their descriptions some
+notices of that particular aspect of the native religion with
+which in these lectures we are specially concerned. The
+points on the coast as to which a certain amount of ethnographical
+information is forthcoming are, to take them in the
+order from west to east, Berlin Harbour, Potsdam Harbour,
+Astrolabe Bay, the Maclay Coast, Cape King William,
+Finsch Harbour, and the Tami Islands in Huon Gulf. I
+propose to say something as to the natives at each of these
+points, beginning with Berlin Harbour, the most westerly of
+them.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The island of Tumleo.</p>
+
+<p>Berlin Harbour is formed by a group of four small
+islands, which here lie off the coast. One of the islands
+bears the name of Tumleo or Tamara, and we possess an
+excellent account of the natives of this island from the pen
+of a Catholic missionary, Father Mathias Josef Erdweg,<a id="footnotetag358" name="footnotetag358"></a><a href="#footnote358"><sup>358</sup></a>
+which I shall draw upon in what follows. We have also
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span>
+a paper by a German ethnologist, the late Mr. R. Parkinson,
+on the same subject,<a id="footnotetag359" name="footnotetag359"></a><a href="#footnote359"><sup>359</sup></a> but his information is in part derived
+from Father Erdweg and he appears to have erred by
+applying too generally the statements which Father Erdweg
+strictly limited to the inhabitants of Tumleo.<a id="footnotetag360" name="footnotetag360"></a><a href="#footnote360"><sup>360</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The natives of Tumleo, their material and artistic culture.</p>
+
+<p>The island of Tumleo lies in 142&deg; 25" of East Longitude
+and 3&deg; 15" of South Latitude, and is distant about sixty
+sea-miles from the westernmost point of German New
+Guinea. It is a coral island, surrounded by a barrier reef
+and rising for the most part only a few feet above the sea.<a id="footnotetag361" name="footnotetag361"></a><a href="#footnote361"><sup>361</sup></a>
+In stature the natives fall below the average European
+height; but they are well fed and strongly built. Their
+colour varies from black to light brown. Their hair is very
+frizzly. Women and children wear it cut short; men wear
+it done up into wigs. They number less than three hundred,
+divided into four villages. The population seems to have
+declined through wars, disease, and infanticide.<a id="footnotetag362" name="footnotetag362"></a><a href="#footnote362"><sup>362</sup></a> Like the
+Papuans generally, they live in settled villages and engage
+in fishing, agriculture, and commerce. The houses are
+solidly built of wood and are raised above the ground upon
+piles, which consist of a hard and durable timber, sometimes
+iron-wood.<a id="footnotetag363" name="footnotetag363"></a><a href="#footnote363"><sup>363</sup></a> The staple food of the people is sago, which
+they obtain from the sago-palm. These stately palms,
+with their fan-like foliage, are rare on the coral island of
+Tumleo, but grow abundantly in the swampy lowlands of
+the neighbouring mainland. Accordingly in the months
+of May and June, when the sea is calm, the natives cross
+over to the mainland in their canoes and obtain a supply
+of sago in exchange for the products of their island. The
+sago is eaten in the form both of porridge and of bread.<a id="footnotetag364" name="footnotetag364"></a><a href="#footnote364"><sup>364</sup></a>
+Other vegetable foods are furnished by sweet potatoes, taro,
+yams, bananas, sugar-cane, and coco-nuts, all of which the
+natives cultivate.<a id="footnotetag365" name="footnotetag365"></a><a href="#footnote365"><sup>365</sup></a> Fishing is a principal industry of the
+people; it is plied by both sexes and by old and young,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id="page220"></a>[pg 220]</span>
+with nets, spears, and bows and arrows.<a id="footnotetag366" name="footnotetag366"></a><a href="#footnote366"><sup>366</sup></a> Pottery is another
+flourishing industry. As among many other savages, it is
+practised only by women, but the men take the pots to
+market; for these islanders do a good business in pots
+with the neighbouring tribes.<a id="footnotetag367" name="footnotetag367"></a><a href="#footnote367"><sup>367</sup></a> They build large outrigger
+canoes, which sail well before the wind, but can hardly beat
+up against it, being heavy to row. In these canoes the
+natives of Tumleo make long voyages along the coast; but
+as the craft are not very seaworthy they never stand out to
+sea, if they can help it, but hug the shore in order to run
+for safety to the beach in stormy weather.<a id="footnotetag368" name="footnotetag368"></a><a href="#footnote368"><sup>368</sup></a> In regard to
+art the natives display some taste and skill in wood-carving.
+For example, the projecting house-beams are sometimes
+carved in the shape of crocodiles, birds, and grotesque human
+figures; and their canoes, paddles, head-rests, drums, drum-sticks,
+and vessels are also decorated with carving. Birds,
+fish, crocodiles, foliage, and scroll-work are the usual
+patterns.<a id="footnotetag369" name="footnotetag369"></a><a href="#footnote369"><sup>369</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The temples (<i>paraks</i>) of Tumleo.</p>
+
+<p>A remarkable feature in the villages of Tumleo and
+the neighbouring islands and mainland consists of the
+<i>paraks</i> or temples, the high gables of which may be
+seen rising above the bushes in all the villages of this
+part of the coast. No such buildings exist elsewhere in
+this region. They are set apart for the worship of
+certain guardian spirits, and on them the native lavishes
+all the resources of his elementary arts of sculpture and
+painting. They are built of wood in two storeys and raised
+on piles besides. The approach to one of them is always
+by one or two ladders provided on both sides with hand-rails
+or banisters. These banisters are elaborately decorated
+with carving, which is always of the same pattern.
+One banister is invariably carved in the shape of a
+crocodile holding a grotesque human figure in its jaws,
+while on the other hand the animal's tail is grasped by
+one or more human figures. The other banister regularly
+exhibits a row of human or rather ape-like effigies seated
+one behind the other, each of them resting his arms on the
+shoulders of the figure in front. Often there are seven such
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span>
+figures in a row. The natives are so shy in speaking of
+these temples that it is difficult to ascertain the meaning
+of the curious carvings by which they are adorned. Mr.
+Parkinson supposed that they represent spirits, not apes.
+He tells us that there are no apes in New Guinea. The
+interior of the temple (<i>parak</i>) is generally empty. The
+only things to be seen in its two rooms, the upper and
+lower, are bamboo flutes and drums made out of the hollow
+trunks of trees. On these instruments men concealed in
+the temple discourse music in order to signify the presence
+of the spirit.<a id="footnotetag370" name="footnotetag370"></a><a href="#footnote370"><sup>370</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The bachelors' houses (<i>alols</i>) of Tumleo.</p>
+
+<p>Different from these <i>paraks</i> or temples are the <i>alols</i>,
+which are bachelors' houses and council-houses in one.
+Like the temples, they are raised above the ground and
+approached by a ladder, but unlike the temples they have
+only one storey. In them the unmarried men live and the
+married men meet to take counsel and to speak of things
+which may not be mentioned before women. On a small
+stand or table in each of these <i>alols</i> or men's clubhouses
+are kept the skulls of dead men. And as the temple
+(<i>parak</i>) is devoted to the worship of spirits, so the men's
+clubhouse (<i>alol</i>) is the place where the dead ancestors are
+worshipped. Women and children may not enter it, but it
+is not regarded with such superstitious fear as the temple.
+The dead are buried in their houses or beside them. Afterwards
+the bones are dug up and the skulls of grown men
+are deposited, along with one of the leg bones, on the
+stand or table in the men's clubhouse (<i>alol</i>). The skulls of
+youths, women, and children are kept in the houses where
+they died. When the table in the clubhouse is quite full of
+grinning trophies of mortality, the old skulls are removed
+to make room for the new ones and are thrown away in a
+sort of charnel-house, where the other bones are deposited
+after they have been dug up from the graves. Such a
+charnel-house is called a <i>tjoll p&aacute;ru</i>. There is one such
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+place for the bones of grown men and another for the bones
+of women and children. Some bones, however, are kept
+and used as ornaments or as means to work magic with.
+For the dead are often invoked, for example, to lay the
+wind or for other useful purposes; and at such invocations
+the bones play a part.<a id="footnotetag371" name="footnotetag371"></a><a href="#footnote371"><sup>371</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Spirits of the dead thought to be the causes of sickness and
+disease.</p>
+
+<p>But while the spirits of the dead are thus invited to
+help their living relations and friends, they are also feared
+as the causes of sickness and disease. Any serious ailment
+is usually attributed to magic or witchcraft, and the treatment
+which is resorted to aims rather at breaking the spell
+which has been cast on the sick man than at curing his
+malady by the application of physical remedies. In short
+the remedy is exorcism rather than physic. Now the
+enchantment under which the patient is supposed to be
+labouring is often, though not always, ascribed to the
+malignant arts of the spirits of the dead, or the <i>m&otilde;s</i>, as the
+natives of Tumleo call them. In such a case the ghosts are
+thought to be clinging to the body of the sufferer, and the
+object of the medical treatment is to detach them from him
+and send them far away. With this kindly intention some
+men will go into the forest and collect a number of herbs,
+including a kind of peppermint. These are tied into one
+or more bundles according to the number of the patients
+and then taken to the men's clubhouse (<i>alol</i>), where they are
+heated over a fire. Then the patient is brought, and two
+men strike him lightly with the packet of herbs on his body
+and legs, while they utter an incantation, inviting the
+ancestral spirits who are plaguing him to leave his body
+and go away, in order that he may be made whole. One
+such incantation, freely translated, runs thus: "Spirit of the
+great-grandfather, of the father, come out! We give thee
+coco-nuts, sago-porridge, fish. Go away (from the sick man).
+Let him be well. Do no harm here and there. Tell the
+people of Leming (O spirit) to give us tobacco. When the
+waves are still, we push off from the land, sailing northward
+(to Tumleo). It is the time of the north-west wind (when
+the surf is heavy). May the billows calm down in the south,
+O in the south, on the coast of Leming, that we may sail
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span>
+to the south, to Leming! Out there may the sea be calm,
+that we may push off from the land for home!" In this
+incantation a prayer to the spirit of the dead to relax his
+hold on the sufferer appears to be curiously combined with
+a prayer or spell to calm the sea when the people sail across
+to the coast of Leming to fetch a cargo of tobacco. When
+the incantation has been recited and the patient stroked
+with the bundle of herbs, one of his ears and both his arm-pits
+are moistened with a blood-red spittle produced by the
+chewing of betel-nut, pepper, and lime. Then they take
+hold of his fingers and make each of them crack, one after
+the other, while they recite some of the words of the preceding
+incantation. Next three men take each of them a branch
+of the <i>volju</i> tree, bend it into a bow, and stroke the sick
+man from head to foot, while they recite another incantation,
+in which they command the spirit to let the sick man alone
+and to go away into the water or the mud. Often when a
+man is seriously ill he will remove from his own house to
+the house of a relation or friend, hoping that the spirit who
+has been tormenting him will not be able to discover him at
+his new address.<a id="footnotetag372" name="footnotetag372"></a><a href="#footnote372"><sup>372</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial and mourning customs in Tumleo.</p>
+
+<p>If despite of all these precautions the patient should die,
+he or she is placed in a wooden coffin and buried with little
+delay in a grave, which is dug either in the house or close
+beside it. The body is smeared all over with clay and
+decked with many rings or ornaments, most of which,
+however, are removed in a spirit of economy before the lid
+of the coffin is shut down. Sometimes arrows, sometimes a
+rudder, sometimes the bones of dead relations are buried with
+the corpse in the grave. When the grave is dug outside of
+the house, a small hut is erected over it, and a fire is kept
+burning on it for a time. In the house of mourning the
+wife, sister, or other female relative of the deceased must
+remain strictly secluded for a period which varies from a
+few weeks to three months. In token of mourning the
+widow's body is smeared with clay, and from time to time
+she is heard to chant a dirge in a whining, melancholy tone.
+This seclusion lasts so long as the ghost is supposed to be
+still on his way to the other world. When he has reached
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>[pg 224]</span>
+his destination, the fire is suffered to die down on the grave,
+and his widow or other female relative is free to quit the
+house and resume her ordinary occupations. Through her
+long seclusion in the shade her swarthy complexion assumes
+a lighter tint, but it soon deepens again when she is exposed
+once more to the strong tropical sunshine.<a id="footnotetag373" name="footnotetag373"></a><a href="#footnote373"><sup>373</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Tumleo people as to the fate of the human soul
+after death.</p>
+
+<p>The people of Tumleo firmly believe in the existence
+of the human soul after death, though their notions of the
+disembodied soul or <i>m&otilde;s</i>, as they call it, are vague. They
+think that on its departure from the body the soul goes to
+a place deep under ground, where there is a great water.
+Over that water every soul must pass on a ladder to reach
+the abode of bliss. The ladder is in the keeping of a spirit
+called <i>Su asin tjakin</i> or "the Great Evil," who takes toll of
+the ghosts before he lets them use his ladder. Hence an
+ear-ring and a bracelet are deposited with every corpse in
+the grave in order that the dead man may have wherewithal
+to pay the toll to the spirit at the great water. When the
+ghost arrives at the place of passage and begs for the use of
+the ladder, the spirit asks him, "Shall I get my bracelet if I
+let you pass?" If he receives it and happens to be in a
+good humour, he will let the ghost scramble across the ladder
+to the further shore. But woe to the stingy ghost, who
+should try to sneak across the ladder without paying toll.
+The ghostly tollkeeper detects the fraud in an instant and
+roars out, "So you would cheat me of my dues? You shall
+pay for that." So saying he tips the ladder up, and down
+falls the ghost plump into the deep water and is drowned.
+But the honest ghost, who has paid his way like a man and
+arrived on the further shore, is met by two other ghosts
+who ferry him in a canoe across to Sisano, which is a place
+on the mainland a good many miles to the north of Tumleo.
+A great river flows there and in the river are three cities of
+the dead, in one of which the newly arrived ghost takes up
+his abode. Then it is that the fire on his grave is allowed
+to go out and his widow may mingle with her fellows again.
+However, the ghosts are not strictly confined to the spirit-land.
+They can come back to earth and roam about working good or
+evil for the living and especially for their friends and relations.<a id="footnotetag374" name="footnotetag374"></a><a href="#footnote374"><sup>374</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>[pg 225]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Monuments to the dead in Tumleo. Disinterment of the bones.</p>
+
+<p>It is perhaps this belief not only in the existence but
+in the return of the spirits of the dead which induces the
+survivors to erect monuments or memorials to them. In
+Tumleo these monuments consist for the most part of young
+trees, which are cut down, stripped of their leaves, and set
+up in the ground beside the house of the deceased. The
+branches of such a memorial tree are hung with fruits,
+coco-nuts, loin-cloths, pots, and personal ornaments, all of
+which we may suppose are intended for the comfort and
+convenience of the ghost when he returns from deadland
+to pay his friends a visit.<a id="footnotetag375" name="footnotetag375"></a><a href="#footnote375"><sup>375</sup></a> But the remains of the dead are
+not allowed to rest quietly in the grave for ever. After two
+or three years they are dug up with much ceremony at the
+point of noon, when the sun is high overhead. The skull
+of the deceased, if he was a man, is then deposited, as we
+saw, with one of the thigh bones in the men's clubhouse,
+while of the remaining bones some are kept by the relations
+and the others thrown away in a charnel-house. Among
+the relics which the relations preserve are the lower arm
+bones, the shoulder-blades, the ribs, and the vertebra. The
+vertebra is often fastened to a bracelet; a couple of ribs are
+converted into a necklace; and the shoulder-blades are used
+to decorate baskets. The lower arm bones are generally
+strung on a cord, which is worn on solemn occasions round
+the neck so that the bones hang down behind. They are
+especially worn thus in war, and they are made use of also
+when their owner desires to obtain a favourable wind for a
+voyage. No doubt, though this is not expressly affirmed,
+the spirit of the departed is supposed to remain attached
+in some fashion to his bones and so to help the possessor
+of these relics in time of need. When the bones have been
+dug up and disposed of with all due ceremony, several men
+who were friends or relations of the deceased must keep
+watch and ward for some days in the men's clubhouse,
+where his grinning skull now stands amid similar trophies
+of mortality on a table or shelf. They may not quit the
+building except in case of necessity, and they must always
+speak in a whisper for fear of disturbing the ghost, who is
+very naturally lurking in the neighbourhood of his skull.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>[pg 226]</span>
+However, in spite of these restrictions the watchers enjoy
+themselves; for baskets of sago and fish are provided
+abundantly for their consumption, and if their tongues are
+idle their jaws are very busy.<a id="footnotetag376" name="footnotetag376"></a><a href="#footnote376"><sup>376</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Propitiation of the souls of the dead and other spirits.</p>
+
+<p>The people think that if they stand on a good footing
+with the souls of the departed and with other spirits, these
+powerful beings will bring them good luck in trade and on
+their voyages. Now the time when trade is lively and the
+calm sea is dotted with canoes plying from island to island
+or from island to mainland, is the season when the gentle
+south-east monsoon is blowing. On the other hand, when
+the waves run high under the blast of the strong north-west
+monsoon, the sea is almost deserted and the people stay
+at home;<a id="footnotetag377" name="footnotetag377"></a><a href="#footnote377"><sup>377</sup></a> the season is to these tropical islanders what
+winter is to the inhabitants of northern latitudes. Accordingly
+it is when the wind is shifting round from the stormy
+north-west to the balmy south-east that the natives set
+themselves particularly to win the favour of ghosts and
+spirits, and this they do by repairing the temples and clubhouses
+in which the spirits and ghosts are believed to dwell,
+and by cleaning and tidying up the open spaces around
+them. These repairs are the occasion of a festival accompanied
+by dances and games. Early in the morning of
+the festive day the shrill notes of the flutes and the hollow
+rub-a-dub of the drums are heard to proceed from the
+interior of the temple, proclaiming the arrival of the guardian
+spirit and his desire to partake of fish and sago. So the
+men assemble and the feast is held in the evening. Festivals
+are also held both in the temples and in the men's clubhouses
+on the occasion of a successful hunt or fishing.
+Out of gratitude for the help vouchsafed them by the
+ancestral spirits, the hunters or fishers bring the larger
+game or fish to the temples or clubhouses and eat them
+there; and then hang up some parts of the animals or
+fish, such as the skeletons, the jawbones of pigs, or the shells
+of turtles, in the clubhouses as a further mark of homage to
+the spirits of the dead.<a id="footnotetag378" name="footnotetag378"></a><a href="#footnote378"><sup>378</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Guardian spirits (<i>tapum</i>) in Tumleo.</p>
+
+<p>So far as appears, the spirits who dwell in the temples
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id="page227"></a>[pg 227]</span>
+are not supposed to be ancestors. Father Erdweg describes
+them as guardian spirits or goddesses, for they are all of the
+female sex. Every village has several of them; indeed in
+the village of Sapi almost every family has its own guardian
+spirit. The name for these guardian spirits is <i>tapum</i>, which
+seems to be clearly connected with the now familiar word
+<i>tapu</i> or taboo, in the sense of sacred, which is universally
+understood in the islands of the Pacific. On the whole
+the <i>tapum</i> are kindly and beneficent spirits, who bring good
+luck to such as honour them. A hunter or a fisherman
+ascribes his success in the chase or in fishing to the protection
+of his guardian spirit; and when he is away from
+home trading for sago and other necessaries of life, it is
+his guardian spirit who gives him favour in the eyes of
+the foreigners with whom he is dealing. Curiously enough,
+though these guardian spirits are all female, they have no
+liking for women and children. Indeed, no woman or child
+may set foot in a temple, or even loiter in the open space
+in front of it. And at the chief festivals, when the temples
+are being repaired, all the women and children must quit
+the village till the evening shadows have fallen and the
+banquet of their husbands, fathers, and brothers at the
+temple is over.<a id="footnotetag379" name="footnotetag379"></a><a href="#footnote379"><sup>379</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>On the whole, then, we conclude that a belief in the
+continued existence of the spirits of the dead, and in their
+power to help or harm their descendants, plays a considerable
+part in the life of the Papuans of Tumleo. Whether
+the guardian spirits or goddesses, who are worshipped in
+the temples, were originally conceived as ancestral spirits or
+not, must be left an open question for the present.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The Monumbo of Potsdam Harbour.</p>
+
+<p>Passing eastward from Tumleo along the northern coast
+of German New Guinea we come to Monumbo or Potsdam
+Harbour, situated about the 145th degree of East Longitude.
+The Monumbo are a Papuan tribe numbering about four
+hundred souls, who inhabit twelve small villages close to the
+seashore. Their territory is a narrow but fertile strip of
+country, well watered and covered with luxuriant vegetation,
+lying between the sea and a range of hills. The bay is
+sheltered by an island from the open sea, and the natives
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id="page228"></a>[pg 228]</span>
+can paddle their canoes on its calm water in almost any
+weather. The villages, embowered on the landward side in
+groves of trees of many useful sorts and screened in front
+by rows of stately coco-nut palms, are composed of large
+houses solidly built of timber and are kept very clean and
+tidy. The Monumbo are a strongly-built people, of the
+average European height, with what is described as a
+remarkably Semitic type of features. The men wear their
+hair plaited about a long tube, decorated with shells and
+dogs' teeth, which sticks out stiffly from the head. The
+women wear their hair in a sort of mop, composed of
+countless plaits, which hang down in tangle. In disposition
+the Monumbo are cheerful and contented, proud of themselves
+and their country; they think they are the cleverest
+and most fortunate people on earth, and look down with
+pity and contempt on Europeans. According to them the
+business of the foreign settlers in their country is folly, and
+the teaching of the missionaries is nonsense. They subsist
+by agriculture, hunting, and fishing. Their well-kept plantations
+occupy the level ground and in some places extend
+up the hill-sides. Among the plants which they cultivate
+are taro, yams, sweet potatoes, bananas, various kinds of
+vegetables, and sugar-cane. Among their fruit-trees are
+the sago-palm, the coco-nut palm, and the bread-fruit tree.
+They make use both of earthenware and of wooden vessels.
+Their dances, especially their masked dances, which are
+celebrated at intervals of four or five years, have excited
+the warm admiration of the despised European.<a id="footnotetag380" name="footnotetag380"></a><a href="#footnote380"><sup>380</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Monumbo concerning the spirits of the dead.
+Dread of ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to their religion and morality I will quote
+the evidence of a Catholic missionary who has laboured
+among them. "The Monumbo are acquainted with no
+Supreme Being, no moral good or evil, no rewards, no
+place of punishment or joy after death, no permanent
+immortality.... When people die, their souls go to the land
+of spirits, a place where they dwell without work or suffering,
+but which they can also quit. Betel-chewing, smoking,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>[pg 229]</span>
+dancing, sleeping, all the occupations that they loved on
+earth, are continued without interruption in the other
+world. They converse with men in dreams, but play them
+many a shabby trick, take possession of them and even, it
+may be, kill them. Yet they also help men in all manner
+of ways in war and the chase. Men invoke them, pray to
+them, make statues in their memory, which are called <i>dva</i>
+(plural <i>dvaka</i>), and bring them offerings of food, in order to
+obtain their assistance. But if the spirits of the dead do
+not help, they are rated in the plainest language. Death
+makes no great separation. The living converse with the
+dead very much as they converse with each other. Time
+alone brings with it a gradual oblivion of the departed.
+Falling stars and lightning are nothing but the souls of the
+dead, who stick dry banana leaves in their girdles, set them
+on fire, and then fly through the air. At last when the
+souls are old they die, but are not annihilated, for they are
+changed into animals and plants. Such animals are, for
+example, the white ants and a rare kind of wild pig, which
+is said not to allow itself to be killed. Such a tree, for
+example, is the <i>barimbar</i>. That, apparently, is the whole
+religion of the Monumbo. Yet they are ghost-seers of the
+most arrant sort. An anxious superstitious fear pursues
+them at every step. Superstitious views are the motives
+that determine almost everything that they do or leave
+undone."<a id="footnotetag381" name="footnotetag381"></a><a href="#footnote381"><sup>381</sup></a> Their dread of ghosts is displayed in their
+custom of doing no work in the plantations for three days
+after a death, lest the ghost, touched to the quick by their
+heartless indifference, should send wild boars to ravage the
+plantations. And when a man has slain an enemy in war,
+he has to remain a long time secluded in the men's clubhouse,
+touching nobody, not even his wife and children,
+while the villagers celebrate his victory with song and
+dance. He is believed to be in a state of ceremonial
+impurity (<i>bolobolo</i>) such that, if he were to touch his wife
+and children, they would be covered with sores. At the
+end of his seclusion he is purified by washings and other
+purgations and is clean once more.<a id="footnotetag382" name="footnotetag382"></a><a href="#footnote382"><sup>382</sup></a> The reason of this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>[pg 230]</span>
+uncleanness of a victorious warrior is not mentioned, but
+analogy makes it nearly certain that it is a dread of the
+vengeful ghost of the man whom he has slain. A similar
+fear probably underlies the rule that a widower must abstain
+from certain foods, such as fish and sauces, and from bathing
+for a certain time after the death of his wife.<a id="footnotetag383" name="footnotetag383"></a><a href="#footnote383"><sup>383</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Tamos of Astrolabe Bay. Mistake of attempting to combine
+descriptive with comparative anthropology.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Potsdam Harbour and the Monumbo, and
+moving still eastward along the coast of German New
+Guinea, we come to a large indentation known as Astrolabe
+Bay. The natives of this part of the coast call themselves
+Tamos. The largest village on the bay bears the name of
+Bogadyim and in 1894 numbered about three hundred
+inhabitants.<a id="footnotetag384" name="footnotetag384"></a><a href="#footnote384"><sup>384</sup></a> Our principal authority on the natives is a
+German ethnologist, Dr. B. Hagen, who spent about eighteen
+months at Stefansort on Astrolabe Bay. Unfortunately he
+has mixed up his personal observations of these particular
+people not merely with second-hand accounts of natives of
+other parts of New Guinea but with discussions of general
+theories of the origin and migrations of races and of the
+development of social institutions; so that it is not altogether
+easy to disentangle the facts for which he is a
+first-hand witness, from those which he reports at second,
+third, or fourth hand. Scarcely anything, I may observe in
+passing, more impairs the value and impedes the usefulness
+of personal observations of savage races than this deplorable
+habit of attempting to combine the work of description with
+the work of comparison and generalisation. The two kinds
+of work are entirely distinct in their nature, and require
+very different mental qualities for their proper performance;
+the one should never be confused with the other.
+The task of descriptive anthropology is to record observations,
+without any admixture of theory; the task of
+comparative anthropology is to compare the observations
+made in all parts of the world, and from the comparison
+to deduce theories, more or less provisional, of the origin
+and growth of beliefs and institutions, always subject to
+modification and correction by facts which may afterwards
+be brought to light. There is no harm, indeed there is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>[pg 231]</span>
+great positive advantage, in the descriptive anthropologist
+making himself acquainted with the theories of the comparative
+anthropologist, for by so doing his attention will
+probably be called to many facts which he might otherwise
+have overlooked and which, when recorded, may either
+confirm or refute the theories in question. But if he knows
+these theories, he should keep his knowledge strictly in the
+background and never interlard his descriptions of facts with
+digressions into an alien province. In this way descriptive
+anthropology and comparative anthropology will best work
+hand in hand for the furtherance of their common aim, the
+understanding of the nature and development of man.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The religion of the Tamos. Beliefs of the Tamos as to the
+souls of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Like the Papuans in general, the Tamos of Astrolabe
+Bay are a settled agricultural people, who dwell in fixed
+villages, subsist mainly by the produce of the ground which
+they cultivate, and engage in a commerce of barter with their
+neighbours.<a id="footnotetag385" name="footnotetag385"></a><a href="#footnote385"><sup>385</sup></a> Their material culture thus does not differ
+essentially from that of the other Papuans, and I need not
+give particulars of it. With regard to their religious views
+Dr. Hagen tells us candidly that he has great hesitation in
+expressing an opinion. "Nothing," he says very justly,
+"is more difficult for a European than to form an approximately
+correct conception of the religious views of a savage
+people, and the difficulty is infinitely increased when the
+enquirer has little or no knowledge of their language."
+Dr. Hagen had, indeed, an excellent interpreter and intelligent
+assistant in the person of a missionary, Mr. Hoffmann;
+but Mr. Hoffmann himself admitted that he had no clear
+ideas as to the religious views of the Tamos; however, in his
+opinion they are entirely destitute of the conception of God
+and of a Creator. Yet among the Tamos of Bogadyim,
+Dr. Hagen tells us, a belief in the existence of the soul after
+death is proved by their assertion that after death the soul
+(<i>gunung</i>) goes to <i>buka kure</i>, which seems to mean the village
+of ghosts. This abode of the dead appears to be situated
+somewhere in the earth, and the Tamos speak of it with a
+shudder. They tell of a man in the village of Bogadyim
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>[pg 232]</span>
+who died and went away to the village of the ghosts. But
+as he drew near to the village, he met the ghost of his dead
+brother who had come forth with bow and arrows and spear
+to hunt a wild boar. This boar-hunting ghost was very
+angry at meeting his brother, who had just died, and drove
+him back to the land of the living. From this narrative it
+would seem that in the other world the ghosts are thought
+to pursue the same occupations which they followed in life.
+The natives are in great fear of ghosts (<i>buka</i>). Travelling
+alone with them in the forest at nightfall you may mark
+their timidity and hear them cry anxiously, "Come, let us
+be going! The ghost is roaming about." The ghosts of
+those who have perished in battle do not go to the Village
+of Ghosts (<i>buka kure</i>); they repair to another place called
+<i>bopa kure</i>. But this abode of the slain does not seem to be
+a happy land or Valhalla; the natives are even more afraid
+of it than of the Village of Ghosts (<i>buka kure</i>). They will
+hardly venture at night to pass a spot where any one has
+been slain. Sometimes fires are kindled by night on such
+spots; and the sight of the flames flickering in the distance
+inspires all the beholders with horror, and nothing in the
+world would induce them to approach such a fire. The
+souls of men who have been killed, but whose death has not
+been avenged, are supposed to haunt the village. For some
+time after death the ghost is believed to linger in the
+neighbourhood of his deserted body. When Mr. Hoffmann
+went with some Tamos to another village to bring back the
+body of a fellow missionary, who had died there, and darkness
+had fallen on them in the forest, his native companions
+started with fear every moment, imagining that they saw
+the missionary's ghost popping out from behind a tree.<a id="footnotetag386" name="footnotetag386"></a><a href="#footnote386"><sup>386</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Treatment of the corpse. Secret Society called <i>Asa</i>.</p>
+
+<p>When death has taken place, the corpse is first exposed
+on a scaffold in front of the house, where it is decked with
+ornaments and surrounded with flowers. If the deceased
+was rich, a dog is hung on each side of the scaffold, and
+the souls of the animals are believed to accompany the
+ghost to the spirit-land. Taros, yams, and coco-nuts are
+also suspended from the scaffold, no doubt for the refreshment
+of the ghost. Then the melancholy notes of a horn are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>[pg 233]</span>
+heard in the distance, at the sound of which all the women
+rush away. Soon the horn-blower appears, paints the
+corpse white and red, crowns it with great red hibiscus
+roses, then blows his horn, and vanishes.<a id="footnotetag387" name="footnotetag387"></a><a href="#footnote387"><sup>387</sup></a> He is a member
+of a secret society, called <i>Asa</i>, which has its lodge standing
+alone in the forest. Only men belong to the society;
+women and children are excluded from it and look upon
+it with fear and awe. If any one raises a cry, "<i>Asa</i>
+is coming," or the sound of the musical instruments of
+the society is heard in the distance, all the women
+and children scamper away. The natives are very unwilling
+to let any stranger enter one of the lodges of the
+society. The interior of such a building is usually somewhat
+bare, but it contains the wooden masks which are
+worn in the ceremonial dances of the society, and the
+horns and flutes on which the members discourse their
+awe-inspiring music. In construction it scarcely differs
+from the ordinary huts of the village; if anything it
+is worse built and more primitive. The secrets of the
+society are well kept; at least very little seems to have
+been divulged to Europeans. The most important of
+its ceremonies is that of the initiation of the young men,
+who on this occasion are circumcised before they are
+recognised as full-grown men and members of the secret
+society. At such times the men encamp and feast for
+weeks or even months together on the open space in
+front of the society's lodge, and masked dances are danced
+to the accompaniment of the instrumental music. These
+initiatory ceremonies are held at intervals of about ten or
+fifteen years, when there are a considerable number of
+young men to be initiated together.<a id="footnotetag388" name="footnotetag388"></a><a href="#footnote388"><sup>388</sup></a> Although we are still
+in the dark as to the real meaning of this and indeed
+of almost all similar secret societies among savages, the
+solemn part played by a member of the society at the
+funeral rites seems very significant. Why should he come
+mysteriously to the melancholy music of the horn, paint
+the corpse red and white, crown it with red roses, and then
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>[pg 234]</span>
+vanish again to music as he had come? It is scarcely
+rash to suppose that this ceremony has some reference to
+the state of the dead man's soul, and we may conjecture
+that just as the fruits hung on the scaffold are doubtless
+intended for the consumption of the ghost, and the souls
+of the dogs are expressly said to accompany him to the
+spirit-land, so the painting of the corpse and the crown
+of red roses may be designed in some way to speed the
+parting spirit on the way to its long home. In the absence
+of exact information as to the beliefs of these savages
+touching the state of the dead we can only guess at the
+meaning which they attach to these symbols. Perhaps
+they think that only ghosts who are painted red and white
+and who wear wreaths of red roses on their heads are
+admitted to the Village of the Ghosts, and that such as
+knock at the gate with no paint on their bodies and no
+wreath of roses on their brows are refused admittance and
+must turn sorrowfully away, to haunt their undutiful friends
+on earth who had omitted to pay the last marks of respect
+and honour to the dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs of the Tamos. Removal of the lower jawbone.</p>
+
+<p>When the corpse has lain in all its glory, with its
+ornaments, its paint and its flowers, for a short time on
+the scaffold, it is removed and buried. The exposure
+never lasts more than a day. If the man died in the
+morning, he is buried at night. The grave is dug in the
+house itself. It is only about three feet deep and four feet
+long. If the corpse is too long for the grave, as usually
+happens, the legs are remorselessly doubled up and trampled
+in. It is the relations on the mother's side who dig the
+grave and lower the body, shrouded in mats or leaves,
+into its narrow bed. Before doing so they take care to
+strip it of its ornaments, its rings, necklaces, boar's teeth,
+and so forth, which no doubt are regarded as too valuable
+to be sacrificed. Yet a regard for the comfort of the dead
+is shewn by the custom of covering the open grave with
+wood and then heaping the mould on the top, in order, we
+are told, that the earth may not press heavy on him who
+sleeps below. <i>Sit tibi terra levis!</i> After some months
+the grave is opened and the lower jaw removed from the
+corpse and preserved. This removal of the jaw is the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>[pg 235]</span>
+occasion of solemnities and ceremonial washings, in which
+the whole male population of the village takes part.
+But as to the meaning of these ceremonies, and as to
+what is done with the jawbone, we have no exact information.<a id="footnotetag389" name="footnotetag389"></a><a href="#footnote389"><sup>389</sup></a>
+According to the Russian traveller, Baron N.
+von Miklucho-Maclay, who has also given us an account
+of the Papuans of Astrolabe Bay,<a id="footnotetag390" name="footnotetag390"></a><a href="#footnote390"><sup>390</sup></a> though not apparently
+of the villages described by Dr. Hagen, the whole skull
+is dug up and separated from the corpse after the lapse of
+about a year, but only the lower jawbone is carefully kept by
+the nearest kinsman as a memorial of the deceased. Baron
+Miklucho-Maclay had great difficulty in inducing a native
+to part with one of these memorials of a dead relation.<a id="footnotetag391" name="footnotetag391"></a><a href="#footnote391"><sup>391</sup></a>
+In any case the preservation of this portion of the deceased
+may be supposed to have for its object the maintenance of
+friendly relations between the living and the dead. Similarly
+in Uganda the jawbone is the only part of the body of a
+deceased king which, along with his navel-string, is carefully
+preserved in his temple-tomb and consulted oracularly.<a id="footnotetag392" name="footnotetag392"></a><a href="#footnote392"><sup>392</sup></a>
+We may conjecture that the reason for preserving this
+part of the human frame rather than any other is that the
+jawbone is an organ of speech, and that therefore it appears
+to the primitive mind well fitted to maintain intercourse
+with the dead man's spirit and to obtain oracular communications
+from him.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Sham fight as a funeral ceremony at Astrolabe Bay.</p>
+
+<p>The Russian traveller, Baron Miklucho-Maclay, has
+described a curious funeral ceremony which is observed by
+some of the Papuans of Astrolabe Bay. I will give the first
+part of his description in his own words, which I translate from
+the German. He says: "The death of a man is announced to
+the neighbouring villages by a definite series of beats on the
+drum. On the same day or the next morning the whole male
+population assembles in the vicinity of the village of the
+deceased. All the men are in full warlike array. To the
+beat of drum the guests march into the village, where a crowd
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>[pg 236]</span>
+of men, also armed for war, await the new-comers beside the
+dead man's hut. After a short parley the men divide into
+two opposite camps, and thereupon a sham fight takes place.
+However, the combatants go to work very gingerly and
+make no use of their spears. But dozens of arrows are
+continually discharged, and not a few are wounded in the
+sham fight, though not seriously. The nearest relations and
+friends of the deceased appear especially excited and behave
+as if they were frantic. When all are hot and tired and all
+arrows have been shot away, the pretended enemies seat
+themselves in a circle and in what follows most of them act
+as simple spectators." Thereupon the nearest relations
+bring out the corpse and deposit it in a crouching position,
+with the knees drawn up to the chin, on some mats and
+leaves of the sago-palm, which had previously been spread
+out in the middle of the open space. Beside the corpse are
+laid his things, some presents from neighbours, and some
+freshly cooked food. While the men sit round in a circle,
+the women, even the nearest relatives of the deceased, may
+only look on from a distance. When all is ready, some
+men step out from the circle to help the nearest of kin in
+the next proceedings, which consist in tying the corpse up
+tightly into a bundle by means of rattans and creepers.
+Then the bundle is attached to a stout stick and carried
+back into the house. There the corpse in its bundle is
+fastened under the roof by means of the stick, and the dead
+man's property, together with the presents of the neighbours
+and the food, are left beside it. After that the house is
+abandoned, and the guests return to their own villages. A
+few days later, when decomposition is far advanced, the
+corpse is taken down and buried in a grave in the house,
+which continues to be inhabited by the family. After the
+lapse of about a year, the body is dug up, the skull separated
+from it, and the lower jawbone preserved by the nearest
+relation, as I have already mentioned.<a id="footnotetag393" name="footnotetag393"></a><a href="#footnote393"><sup>393</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The sham fight perhaps intended to deceive the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>What is the meaning of this curious sham fight which
+among these people seems to be regularly enacted after a
+death? The writer who reports the custom offers no
+explanation of it. I would conjecture with all due caution
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>[pg 237]</span>
+that it may possibly be intended as a satisfaction to the
+ghost in order to make him suppose that his death has been
+properly avenged. In a former lecture I shewed that natural
+deaths are regularly imagined by many savages to be
+brought about by the magical practices of enemies, and that
+accordingly the relations of the deceased take vengeance on
+some innocent person whom for one reason or another they
+regard as the culprit. It is possible that these Papuans of
+Astrolabe Bay, instead of actually putting the supposed
+sorcerer to death, have advanced so far as to abandon that
+cruel and unjust practice and content themselves with
+throwing dust in the eyes of the ghost by a sham instead of
+a real fight. But that is only a conjecture of my own,
+which I merely suggest for what it is worth.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether, looking over the scanty notices of the beliefs
+and practices of these Papuans of Astrolabe Bay concerning
+the departed, we may say in general that while the fear of
+ghosts is conspicuous enough among them, there is but little
+evidence of anything that deserves to be called a regular
+worship of the dead.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote358" name="footnote358"></a><b>Footnote 358:</b><a href="#footnotetag358"> (return) </a><p> P. Mathias Josef Erdweg, "Die Bewohner der Insel Tumleo,
+Berlin-hafen, Deutsch-Neu-Guinea," <i>Mittheilungen der
+Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien</i>, xxxii. (1902) pp. 274-310,
+317-399.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote359" name="footnote359"></a><b>Footnote 359:</b><a href="#footnotetag359"> (return) </a><p> R. Parkinson, "Die Berlinhafen Section, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographie der Neu-Guinea-K&uuml;ste," <i>Internationales Archiv f&uuml;r
+Ethnographie</i>, xiii. (1900) pp. 18-54.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote360" name="footnote360"></a><b>Footnote 360:</b><a href="#footnotetag360"> (return) </a><p> See the note of Father P. W. Schmidt on Father Erdweg's
+paper, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 274.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote361" name="footnote361"></a><b>Footnote 361:</b><a href="#footnotetag361"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 274.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote362" name="footnote362"></a><b>Footnote 362:</b><a href="#footnotetag362"> (return) </a><p> Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 277 <i>sq</i>. The frizzly
+character of the hair is mentioned by Mr. R. Parkinson, <i>op. cit.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote363" name="footnote363"></a><b>Footnote 363:</b><a href="#footnotetag363"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 355 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote364" name="footnote364"></a><b>Footnote 364:</b><a href="#footnotetag364"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 342-346.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote365" name="footnote365"></a><b>Footnote 365:</b><a href="#footnotetag365"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 335 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote366" name="footnote366"></a><b>Footnote 366:</b><a href="#footnotetag366"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 330 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote367" name="footnote367"></a><b>Footnote 367:</b><a href="#footnotetag367"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 350 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote368" name="footnote368"></a><b>Footnote 368:</b><a href="#footnotetag368"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 363 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote369" name="footnote369"></a><b>Footnote 369:</b><a href="#footnotetag369"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 374.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote370" name="footnote370"></a><b>Footnote 370:</b><a href="#footnotetag370"> (return) </a><p> R. Parkinson, "Die Berlinhafen Section, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographie der Neu-Guinea-K&uuml;ste," <i>Internationales Archiv f&uuml;r
+Ethnographie</i>, xiii. (1900) pp. 33-35. Father Erdweg speaks of the
+<i>parak</i> as a spirit-temple or spirit-house in which the deities of
+the Tumleo dwell (<i>op. cit.</i> p. 377): he tells us that as a rule
+each village has only one <i>parak</i>. As to the spirits which dwell in
+these temples, see below, pp. 226 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote371" name="footnote371"></a><b>Footnote 371:</b><a href="#footnotetag371"> (return) </a><p> R. Parkinson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 35, 42 <i>sq.</i>;
+Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 292 <i>sq.</i>, 306.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote372" name="footnote372"></a><b>Footnote 372:</b><a href="#footnotetag372"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 284-287.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote373" name="footnote373"></a><b>Footnote 373:</b><a href="#footnotetag373"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 288-291.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote374" name="footnote374"></a><b>Footnote 374:</b><a href="#footnotetag374"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 297 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote375" name="footnote375"></a><b>Footnote 375:</b><a href="#footnotetag375"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 291.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote376" name="footnote376"></a><b>Footnote 376:</b><a href="#footnotetag376"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 291-293.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote377" name="footnote377"></a><b>Footnote 377:</b><a href="#footnotetag377"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 298, 371.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote378" name="footnote378"></a><b>Footnote 378:</b><a href="#footnotetag378"> (return) </a><p> Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 295 <i>sqq.</i>,
+299 <i>sq.</i>, 334 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote379" name="footnote379"></a><b>Footnote 379:</b><a href="#footnotetag379"> (return) </a><p>Erdweg, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 295-297.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote380" name="footnote380"></a><b>Footnote 380:</b><a href="#footnotetag380"> (return) </a><p> P. Franz Vormann, "Dorf und Hausanlage beiden Monumbo,
+Deutsch-Neuguinea," <i>Anthropos</i>, iv. (1909) pp. 660 <i>sqq.</i>;
+<i>id.</i>, "Zur Psychologie, Religion, Soziologie und Geschichte der
+Monumbo-Papua, Deutsch-Neuguinea," <i>Anthropos</i>, v. (1910) pp.
+407-409.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote381" name="footnote381"></a><b>Footnote 381:</b><a href="#footnotetag381"> (return) </a><p> P. Franz Vormann, in <i>Anthropos</i>, v. (1910) pp. 409
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote382" name="footnote382"></a><b>Footnote 382:</b><a href="#footnotetag382"> (return) </a><p> P. Franz Vormann, in <i>Anthropos</i>, v. (1910) pp. 410,
+411.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote383" name="footnote383"></a><b>Footnote 383:</b><a href="#footnotetag383"> (return) </a><p>P. Franz Vormann, <i>ibid.</i>, p. 412.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote384" name="footnote384"></a><b>Footnote 384:</b><a href="#footnotetag384"> (return) </a><p>B. Hagen, <i>Unter den Papua's</i> (Wiesbaden, 1899), pp. 143, 221.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote385" name="footnote385"></a><b>Footnote 385:</b><a href="#footnotetag385"> (return) </a><p> For the evidence see B. Hagen, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 193
+<i>sqq.</i> As to barter he tells us (p. 216) that all articles in use
+at Bogadyim are imported, nothing is made on the spot.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote386" name="footnote386"></a><b>Footnote 386:</b><a href="#footnotetag386"> (return) </a><p>B. Hagen, <i>Unter den Papua's</i> (Wiesbaden, 1899), pp. 264-266.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote387" name="footnote387"></a><b>Footnote 387:</b><a href="#footnotetag387"> (return) </a><p>B. Hagen, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 258 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote388" name="footnote388"></a><b>Footnote 388:</b><a href="#footnotetag388"> (return) </a><p> B. Hagen, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 270 <i>sq.</i>
+As to the period and details of the
+circumcision ceremonies see <i>id.</i>, pp.
+234-238.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote389" name="footnote389"></a><b>Footnote 389:</b><a href="#footnotetag389"> (return) </a><p>B. Hagen, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 260.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote390" name="footnote390"></a><b>Footnote 390:</b><a href="#footnotetag390"> (return) </a><p> N. von Miklucho-Maclay, "Ethnologische Bemerkungen &uuml;ber
+die Papuas der Maclay-K&uuml;ste in Neu-Guinea," <i>Natuurkundig Tijdschrift
+voor Nederlandsch Indie</i>, xxxv. (1875) pp. 66-93; <i>id.</i>, xxxvi.
+(1876) pp. 294-333.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote391" name="footnote391"></a><b>Footnote 391:</b><a href="#footnotetag391"> (return) </a><p> N. von Miklucho-Maclay, <i>op. cit.</i> xxxvi. (1876) p.
+302.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote392" name="footnote392"></a><b>Footnote 392:</b><a href="#footnotetag392"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. Roscoe, <i>The Baganda</i> (London, 1911), pp.
+109 <i>sqq.</i>; <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, ii. 470.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote393" name="footnote393"></a><b>Footnote 393:</b><a href="#footnotetag393"> (return) </a><p>N. von Miklucho-Maclay, <i>op. cit.</i> xxxvi. (1876) pp. 300-302.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>[pg 238]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xi" id="lecture-xi"></a>LECTURE XI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA (<i>continued</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The Papuans of Cape King William.</p>
+
+<p>In my last lecture I gave you some account of the beliefs
+and practices concerning the dead which have been recorded
+among the Papuans of German New Guinea. To-day I
+resume the subject and shall first speak of the natives on
+the coast about Cape King William, at the foot of Mount
+Cromwell. We possess an account of their religion and
+customs from the pen of a German missionary, Mr. Stolz,
+who has lived three years among them and studied their
+language.<a id="footnotetag394" name="footnotetag394"></a><a href="#footnote394"><sup>394</sup></a> His description applies to the inhabitants of two
+villages only, namely Lamatkebolo and Quambu, or Sialum
+and Kwamkwam, as they are generally called on the maps,
+who together number about five hundred souls. They
+belong to the Papuan stock and subsist chiefly by the cultivation
+of yams, which they plant in April or May and
+reap in January or February. But they also cultivate sweet
+potatoes and make some use of bananas and coco-nuts.
+They clear the land for cultivation by burning down the grass
+and afterwards turning up the earth with digging-sticks, a
+labour which is performed chiefly by the men. The land is
+not common property; each family tills its own fields, though
+sometimes one family will aid another in the laborious task
+of breaking up the soil. Moreover they trade with the
+natives of the interior, who, inhabiting a more fertile and
+better-watered country, are able to export a portion of their
+superfluities, especially taro, sweet potatoes, betel-nuts, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>[pg 239]</span>
+tobacco, to the less favoured dwellers on the sea-coast, receiving
+mostly dried fish in return. Curiously enough the
+traffic is chiefly in the hands of old women.<a id="footnotetag395" name="footnotetag395"></a><a href="#footnote395"><sup>395</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Propitiation of ghosts and spirits. The spirit Mate. Spirits
+called <i>Nai</i>.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the religion of these people Mr. Stolz
+tells us that they know nothing of a deity who should
+receive the homage of his worshippers; they recognise only
+spirits and the souls of the dead. To these last they bring
+offerings, not because they feel any need to do them reverence,
+but simply out of fear and a desire to win their favour.
+The offerings are presented at burials and when they begin
+to cultivate the fields. Their purpose is to persuade the
+souls of the dead to ward off all the evil influences that
+might thwart the growth of the yams, their staple food.
+The ghosts are also expected to guard the fields against
+the incursions of wild pigs and the ravages of locusts. At
+a burial the aim of the sacrifice is to induce the soul of the
+departed brother or sister to keep far away from the village
+and to do no harm to the people. Sacrifices are even
+offered to the souls of animals, such as dogs and pigs, to
+prevent them from coming back and working mischief.
+However, the ghosts of these creatures are not very exacting;
+a few pieces of sugar-cane, a coco-nut shell, or a taro
+shoot suffice to content their simple tastes and to keep them
+quiet. Amongst the spirits to whom the people pay a sort
+of worship there is one named Mate, who seems to be
+closely akin to Balum, a spirit about whom we shall hear
+more among the Yabim further to the east. However, not
+very much is known about Mate; his worship, if it can be
+called so, flourishes chiefly among the inland tribes, of whom
+the coast people stand so much in awe that they dare not
+speak freely on the subject of this mysterious being. Some
+of them indeed are bold enough to whisper that there is no
+such being as Mate at all, and that the whole thing is a
+cheat devised by sly rogues for the purpose of appropriating
+a larger share of roast pork at their religious feasts, from
+which women are excluded. Whatever may be thought of
+these sceptical views, it appears to be certain that the name
+of Mate is also bestowed on a number of spirits who disport
+themselves by day in open grassy places, while they retire
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>[pg 240]</span>
+by night to the deep shades of the forest; and the majority
+of these spirits are thought to be the souls of ancestors or
+of the recently departed. Again, there is another class
+of spirits called <i>Nai</i>, who unlike all other spirits are on
+friendly terms with men. These are the souls of dead
+villagers, who died far away from home. They warn people
+of danger and very obligingly notify them of the coming
+of trading steamers. When a man dies in a foreign land,
+his soul appears as a <i>Nai</i> to his sorrowing relatives and
+announces his sad fate to them. He does so always at night.
+When the men are gathered round the fire on the open
+square of the village, the ghost climbs the platform which
+usually serves for public meetings and banquets, and from
+this coin of vantage, plunged in the deep shadow, he lifts up
+his voice and delivers his message of warning, news, or
+prediction, as the case may be.<a id="footnotetag396" name="footnotetag396"></a><a href="#footnote396"><sup>396</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The creator Nemunemu. Sickness and death often regarded as
+the effects of sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>However, ghosts of the dead are not the only spiritual
+beings with whom these people are acquainted. They know
+of a much higher being, of the name of Nemunemu, endowed
+with superhuman power, who made the heaven and the
+earth with the assistance of two brothers; the elder brother
+constructed the mainland of New Guinea, while the younger
+fashioned the islands and the sea. When the natives first
+saw a steamer on the horizon they thought it was Nemunemu's
+ship, and the smoke at the funnel they took to be the
+tobacco-smoke which he puffed to beguile the tedium of the
+voyage.<a id="footnotetag397" name="footnotetag397"></a><a href="#footnote397"><sup>397</sup></a> They are also great believers in magic and witchcraft,
+and cases of sickness and death, which are not attributed
+to the malignity of ghosts and spirits, are almost invariably
+set down to the machinations of sorcerers. Only the deaths
+of decrepit old folks are regarded as natural. When a man
+has died, and his death is believed to have been caused by
+magic, the people resort to divination in order to discover
+the wicked magician who has perpetrated the crime. For
+this purpose they place the corpse on a bier, cover it with a
+mat, and set it on the shoulders of four men, while a fifth
+man taps lightly with an arrow on the mat and enquires of
+the departed whether such and such a village has bewitched
+him to death. If the bier remains still, it means "No"; but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id="page241"></a>[pg 241]</span>
+if it rocks backward and forward, it means "Yes," and the
+avengers of blood must seek their victim, the guilty sorcerer,
+in that village. The answer is believed to be given by the
+dead man's ghost, who stirs his body at the moment when
+his murderer's village is named. It is useless for the
+inhabitants of that village to disclaim all knowledge of the
+sickness and death of the deceased. The people repose
+implicit faith in this form of divination. "His soul itself
+told us," they say, and surely he ought to know. Another
+form of divination which they employ for the same purpose
+is to put the question to the ghost, while two men hold a bow
+which belonged to him and to which some personal articles
+of his are attached. The answer is again yes or no according
+as the bow moves or is still.<a id="footnotetag398" name="footnotetag398"></a><a href="#footnote398"><sup>398</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral and mourning customs.</p>
+
+<p>When the author of the death has been discovered in
+one way or another, the corpse is decked with all the ornaments
+that can be collected from the relatives and prepared
+for burial. A shallow grave is dug under the house and
+lined with mats. Then the body is lowered into the grave:
+one of the sextons strikes up a lament, and the shrill voices
+of the women in the house join in the melancholy strain.
+When he lies in his narrow bed, the ornaments are removed
+from his person, but some of his tools, weapons, and other
+belongings are buried with him, no doubt for his use in the
+life hereafter. The funeral celebration, in which the whole
+village commonly takes part, lasts several days and consists
+in the bringing of offerings to the dead and the abstinence
+from all labour in the fields. Yams are brought from the
+field of the departed and cooked. A small pot filled with
+yams and a vessel of water are placed on the grave; the
+rest of the provisions is consumed by the mourners. The
+next of kin, especially the widow or widower, remain for
+about a week at the grave, watching day and night, lest the
+body should be dug up and devoured by a certain foul fiend
+with huge wings and long claws, who battens on corpses.
+The mourning costume of men consists in smearing the face
+with black and wearing a cord round the neck and a netted
+cap on the head. Instead of such a cap a woman in
+mourning wraps herself in a large net and a great apron of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id="page242"></a>[pg 242]</span>
+grass. While the other ensigns of woe are soon discarded
+or disappear, the cord about the neck is worn for a longer
+time, generally till next harvest. The sacrifice of a pig
+brings the period of mourning to an end and after it the
+cord may be laid aside. If any one were so hard-hearted
+as not to wear that badge of sorrow, the people believe that
+the angry ghost would come back and fetch him away. He
+would die.<a id="footnotetag399" name="footnotetag399"></a><a href="#footnote399"><sup>399</sup></a> Thus among these savages the mourning
+costume is regarded as a protection against the dangerous
+ghost of the departed; it soothes his wounded feelings and
+prevents him from making raids on the living.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Fate of the souls of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>As to the place to which the souls of the dead repair
+and the fate that awaits them there, very vague and contradictory
+ideas prevail among the natives of this district.
+Some say that the ghosts go eastward to Bukaua on Huon
+Gulf and there lead a shadowy life very like their life on
+earth. Others think that the spirits hover near the village
+where they lived in the flesh. Others again are of opinion
+that they transmigrate into animals and prolong their life in
+one or other of the bodies of the lower creatures.<a id="footnotetag400" name="footnotetag400"></a><a href="#footnote400"><sup>400</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Yabim and Bukaua tribes.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Cape King William we pass eastward along
+the coast of German New Guinea and come to Finsch
+Harbour. From a point some miles to the north of Finsch
+Harbour as far as Samoa Harbour on Huon Gulf the coast
+is inhabited by two kindred tribes, the Yabim and the
+Bukaua, who speak a Melanesian language. I shall deal first
+with the Yabim tribe, whose customs and beliefs have been
+described for us with a fair degree of fulness by two German
+missionaries, Mr. Konrad Vetter and Mr. Heinrich Zahn.<a id="footnotetag401" name="footnotetag401"></a><a href="#footnote401"><sup>401</sup></a>
+The following account is based chiefly on the writings of
+Mr. Vetter, whose mission station is at the village of Simbang.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Material and artistic culture of the Yabim.</p>
+
+<p>Like the other natives of New Guinea the Yabim build
+permanent houses, live in settled villages, and till the ground.
+Every year they make a fresh clearing in the forest by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page243" id="page243"></a>[pg 243]</span>
+cutting down the trees, burning the fallen timber, and planting
+taro, bananas, sugar-cane, and tobacco in the open glade.
+When the crops have been reaped, the place is abandoned,
+and is soon overgrown again by the rank tropical vegetation,
+while the natives move on to another patch, which they clear
+and cultivate in like manner. This rude mode of tillage is
+commonly practised by many savages, especially within the
+tropics. Cultivation of this sort is migratory, and in some
+places, though apparently not in New Guinea, the people
+shift their habitations with their fields as they move on from
+one part of the forest to another. Among the Yabim the
+labour of clearing a patch for cultivation is performed by all
+the men of a village in common, but when the great trees
+have fallen with a crash to the ground, and the trunks,
+branches, foliage and underwood have been burnt, with a
+roar of flames and a crackling like a rolling fire of musketry,
+each family appropriates a portion of the clearing for its
+own use and marks off its boundaries with sticks. But they
+also subsist in part by fishing, and for this purpose they
+build outrigger canoes. They display considerable skill and
+taste in wood-carving, and are fond of ornamenting their
+houses, canoes, paddles, tools, spears, and drums with figures
+of crocodiles, fish, and other patterns.<a id="footnotetag402" name="footnotetag402"></a><a href="#footnote402"><sup>402</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Men's clubhouses (<i>lum</i>).</p>
+
+<p>The villages are divided into wards, and every ward
+contains its clubhouse for men, called a <i>lum</i>, in which young
+men and lads are obliged to pass the night. It consists of
+a bedroom above and a parlour with fireplaces below. In
+the parlour the grown men pass their leisure hours during
+the day, and here the councils are held. The wives cook
+the food at home and bring it for their husbands to the
+clubhouse. The bull-roarers which are used at the initiatory
+ceremonies are kept in the principal clubhouse of the village.
+Such a clubhouse serves as an asylum; men fleeing from
+the avenger of blood who escape into it are safe. It is said
+that the spirit (<i>balum</i>) has swallowed or concealed them.
+But if they steal out of it and attempt to make their way to
+another village, they carry their life in their hand.<a id="footnotetag403" name="footnotetag403"></a><a href="#footnote403"><sup>403</sup></a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>[pg 244]</span>
+Among the Yabim, according to Mr. Zahn, religion in the
+proper sense does not exist, but on the other hand the whole
+people is dominated by the fear of witchcraft and of the spirits of
+the dead.<a id="footnotetag404" name="footnotetag404"></a><a href="#footnote404"><sup>404</sup></a> The following is the account which Mr. Vetter gives of
+the beliefs and customs of these people concerning the departed.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Yabim concerning the state of the dead. The
+ghostly ferry.</p>
+
+<p>They do not believe that death is the end of all things
+for the individual; they think that his soul survives and
+becomes a spirit or ghost, which they call a <i>balum</i>. The
+life of human spirits in the other world is a shadowy continuation
+of the life on earth, and as such it has little
+attraction for the mind of the Papuan. Of heaven and hell,
+a place of reward and a place of punishment for the souls of
+the good and bad respectively, he has no idea. However,
+his world of the dead is to some extent divided into compartments.
+In one of them reside the ghosts of people who
+have been slain, in another the ghosts of people who have
+been hanged, and in a third the ghosts of people who have
+been devoured by a shark or a crocodile. How many more
+compartments there may be for the accommodation of the
+souls, we are not told. The place is in one of the islands of
+Siasi. No living man has ever set foot in the island, for
+smoke and mist hang over it perpetually; but from out the
+mist you may hear the sound of the barking of dogs, the
+grunting of swine, and the crowing of cocks, which seems to
+shew that in the opinion of these people animals have
+immortal souls as well as men. The natives of the Siasi
+islands say that the newly arrived ghosts may often be seen
+strolling on the beach; sometimes the people can even
+recognise the familiar features of friends with whom they did
+business in the flesh. The mode in which the spirits of the
+dead arrive at their destination from the mainland is naturally
+by a ferry: indeed, the prow of the ghostly ferry-boat may
+be seen to this day in the village of Bogiseng. The way in
+which it came to be found there was this. A man of the
+village lay dying, and on his deathbed he promised to give
+his friends a sign of his continued existence after death by
+appearing as a ghost in their midst. Only he stipulated
+that in order to enable him to do so they would place a
+stone club in the hand of his corpse. This was done. He
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>[pg 245]</span>
+died, the club was placed in his cold hand, and his sorrowing
+but hopeful relations awaited results. They had not very
+long to wait. For no sooner had the ghost, armed with the
+stone club, stepped down to the sea-shore than he called
+imperiously for the ferry-boat. It soon hove in sight, with
+the ghostly ferryman in it paddling to the beach to receive
+the passenger. But when the prow grated on the pebbles,
+the artful ghost, instead of stepping into it as he should
+have done, lunged out at it with the stone club so forcibly
+that he broke the prow clean off. In a rage the ferryman
+roared out to him, "I won't put you across! You and your
+people shall be kangaroos." The ghost had gained his
+point. He turned back from the ferry and brought to his
+friends as a trophy the prow of the ghostly canoe, which is
+treasured in the village to this day. I should add that the
+prow in question bears a suspicious resemblance to a powder-horn
+which has been floating about for some time in the
+water; but no doubt this resemblance is purely fortuitous
+and without any deep significance.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Transmigration of human souls into animals.</p>
+
+<p>From this veracious narrative we gather that sometimes
+the souls of the dead, instead of going away to the spirit-land,
+transmigrate into the bodies of animals. The case of
+the kangaroos is not singular. In the village of Simbang
+Mr. Vetter knows two families, of whom the ghosts pass at
+death into the carcases of crocodiles and a species of fabulous
+pigs respectively. Hence members of the one family are
+careful not to injure crocodiles, lest the souls of their dead
+should chance to be lodged in the reptiles; and the members
+of the other family would be equally careful not to hurt the
+fabulous pigs if ever they fell in with them. However, the
+crocodile people, not to be behind their neighbours, assert
+that after death their spirits can also roam about the wood
+as ghosts and go to the spirit-land. In explanation they
+say that every human being has two souls; one of them is
+his reflection on the water, the other is his shadow on the
+land. No doubt it is the water-soul which goes to the island
+of Siasi, while the land-soul is free to occupy the body of a
+crocodile, a kangaroo, or some other animal.<a id="footnotetag405" name="footnotetag405"></a><a href="#footnote405"><sup>405</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>[pg 246]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Return of the ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>But even when the ghosts have departed to their island
+home, they are by no means strictly confined to it. They
+can return, especially at night, to roam about the woods and
+the villages, and the living are very much afraid of them,
+for the ghosts delight in doing mischief. It is especially in
+the first few days after a death that the ghost is an object
+of terror, for he is then still loitering about the village.
+During these days everybody is afraid to go alone into the
+forest for fear of meeting him, and if a dog or a pig strays
+in the wood and is lost, the people make sure that the ghost
+has made off with the animal, and the aggrieved owners
+roundly abuse the sorrowing family, telling them that their
+old father or mother, as the case may be, is no better than a
+thief. They are also very unwilling to mention the names
+of dead persons, imagining that were the ghost to hear his
+name pronounced he might fancy he was being called for
+and might accordingly suspend his habitual occupation of
+munching sour fruits in the forest to come and trouble the
+living.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Offerings to ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Hence in order to keep the short-tempered ghost in
+good humour by satisfying his wants, lest he should think
+himself neglected and wreak his vexation on the survivors,
+the people go a-fishing after a death, or they kill a pig
+or a dog; sometimes also they cut down a fruit-tree.
+But it is only the souls of the animals which are destined
+for the consumption of the ghost; their bodies are roasted
+and eaten by the living. On a grave you may sometimes
+see a small basket suspended from a stick; but if you look
+into it you will find nothing but a little soot and some fish
+scales, which is all that remains of the fried fish.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts provided with fire.</p>
+
+<p>The Yabim also imagine that the ghost has need of fire
+to guide him to the door of the man who has done him to
+death by sorcery. Accordingly they provide the spirit with
+this necessary as follows. On the evening of the day on
+which the body has been buried, they kindle a fire on a
+potsherd and heap dry leaves on it. As they do so they
+mention the names of all the sorcerers they can think of,
+and he at whose name the smouldering leaves burst into a
+bright flame is the one who has done the deed. Having
+thus ascertained the true cause of death, beyond reach of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id="page247"></a>[pg 247]</span>
+cavil, they proceed to light up the ghost to the door of his
+murderer. For this purpose a procession is formed. A
+man, holding the smouldering fire in the potsherd with one
+hand and a bundle of straw with the other, leads the way.
+He is followed by another who draws droning notes from
+a water-bottle of the deceased, which he finally smashes.
+After these two march a number of young fellows who
+make a plumping sound by smacking their thighs with the
+hollow of their hands. This solemn procession wends its
+way to a path in the neighbouring forest. By this time the
+shades of night have fallen. The firebearer now sets the
+fire on the ground and calls on the ghost to come and take
+it. They firmly believe that he does so and that having
+got it he hies away to cast the glowing embers down at the
+door of the man who has done him to death. They even
+fancy they see the flickering light carried by the invisible
+hand retreating through the shadows into the depth of the
+forest; and in order to follow it with their eyes they will
+sometimes climb tall trees or launch a canoe and put out to
+sea, gazing intently at the glimmering ray till it vanishes
+from their sight in the darkness. Perhaps the gleam of
+fire-flies, which abound in these tropical forests, or the
+flashing of a meteor, as it silently drops from the starry
+heaven into the sea, may serve to feed this superstitious
+fancy.<a id="footnotetag406" name="footnotetag406"></a><a href="#footnote406"><sup>406</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts thought to help in the cultivation of the land.</p>
+
+<p>But the spirits of the dead are supposed to be able to
+help as well as harm the living. Good crops and a successful
+hunt are attributed to their influence. It is especially the
+spirits of the ancient owners of the land who are credited with
+the power of promoting the growth of the crops. Hence
+when a clearing has been made in the forest and planted
+with taro, and the plants are shewing a good head of leaves,
+preparations are made to feast the ghosts of the people to
+whom the land belonged in days gone by. For this purpose
+a sago-palm is cut down, sago-porridge made, and a wild
+boar killed. Then the men arrayed in all their finery march
+out in solemn procession by day to the taro field; and the
+leader invites the spirits in a loud voice to come to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>[pg 248]</span>
+village and partake of the sago-porridge and pork that have
+been made ready for them. But the invisible guests content
+themselves as usual with snuffing up the fragrant smell of
+the roast pork and the steam of the porridge; the substance
+of these dainties is consumed by the living. Yet the help
+which the ghosts give in the cultivation of the land would
+seem to be conceived as a purely negative one; the offerings
+are made to them for the purpose of inducing them to keep
+away and not injure the growing crops. It is also believed
+that the ghosts of the dead make communications to the
+living in dreams or by whistling, and even that they can
+bring things to their friends and relations. But on the
+whole, Mr. Vetter tells us, the dominant attitude of the
+living to the dead is one of fear; the power of the ghosts
+is oftener exerted for evil than for good.<a id="footnotetag407" name="footnotetag407"></a><a href="#footnote407"><sup>407</sup></a> The ghost of a
+murdered man in particular is dreaded, because he is believed
+to haunt his murderer and to do him a mischief. Hence
+they drive away such a dangerous ghost with shouts and
+the beating of drums; and by way of facilitating his
+departure they launch a model of a canoe, laden with taro
+and tobacco, in order to transport him with all comfort to
+the land of souls.<a id="footnotetag408" name="footnotetag408"></a><a href="#footnote408"><sup>408</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial and mourning customs among the Yabim.</p>
+
+<p>Among the Yabim the dead are usually buried in shallow
+graves close to the houses where they died. Some trifles
+are laid with the body in the grave, in order that the dead
+man or woman may have the use of them in the other
+world. But any valuables that may be deposited with the
+corpse are afterwards dug up and appropriated by the
+survivors. If the deceased was the householder himself or
+his wife, the house is almost always deserted, however solidly
+it may be built. The reason for thus abandoning so valuable
+a piece of property is not mentioned; but we may
+assume that the motive is a fear of the ghost, who is
+supposed to haunt his old home. A temporary hut is built
+on the grave, and in it the family of the deceased take up
+their abode for six weeks or more; here they cook, eat, and
+sleep. A widower sits in a secluded corner by himself,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>[pg 249]</span>
+invisible to all and unwashed; during the period of full
+mourning he may not shew himself in the village. When
+he does come forth again, he wears a mourning hat made of
+bark in the shape of a cylinder without crown or brim; a
+widow wears a great ugly net, which wraps her up almost
+completely from the head to the knees. Sometimes in
+memory of the deceased they wear a lock of his hair or a
+bracelet. Other relations wear cords round their necks in
+sign of mourning. The period of mourning varies greatly;
+it may last for months or even years. Sometimes the
+bodies of beloved children or persons who have been much
+respected are not buried but tied up in bundles and set up
+in a house until the flesh has quite mouldered away; then
+the skull and the bones of the arms and legs are anointed,
+painted red, and preserved for a time. Mr. Vetter records
+the case of a chief whose corpse was thus preserved in the
+assembly-house of the village, after it had been dried over a
+fire. When it had been reduced to a mummy, the skull and
+the arm-bones and leg-bones were detached, oiled, and
+reddened, and then kept for some years in the house of the
+chief's eldest son, till finally they were deposited in the
+grave of a kinsman. In some of the inland villages of this
+part of New Guinea the widow is sometimes throttled by
+her relations at the death of her husband, in order that she
+may accompany him to the other world.<a id="footnotetag409" name="footnotetag409"></a><a href="#footnote409"><sup>409</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Deaths attributed by the Yabim to sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>The Yabim believe that except in the case of very old
+people every death is caused by sorcery; hence when anybody
+has departed this life, his relations make haste to
+discover the wicked sorcerer who has killed their kinsman.
+For that purpose they have recourse to various forms of
+divination. One of them has been already described, but
+they have others. For example, they put a powder like
+sulphur in a piece of bamboo tube and kindle a fire under
+it. Then an old man takes a bull-roarer and taps with
+it on the bamboo tube, naming all the sorcerers in the
+neighbouring villages. He at the mention of whose name
+the fire catches the powder and blazes up is the guilty
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>[pg 250]</span>
+man. Another way of detecting the culprit is to attach the
+feather of a bird of paradise to a staff and give the staff to
+two men to hold upright between the palms of their right
+hands. Then somebody names the sorcerers, and he at
+whose name the staff turns round and the feather points
+downwards is the one who caused the death. When the
+avengers of blood, wrought up to a high pitch of fury, fall
+in with the family of the imaginary criminal, they may put
+the whole of them to death lest the sons should afterwards
+avenge their father's murder by the black art. Sometimes
+a dangerous and dreaded sorcerer will be put out of the
+way with the connivance of the chief of his own village;
+and after a few days the murderers will boldly shew themselves
+in the village where the crime was perpetrated and
+will reassure the rest of the people, saying, "Be still. The
+wicked man has been taken off. No harm will befall you."<a id="footnotetag410" name="footnotetag410"></a><a href="#footnote410"><sup>410</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Bull-roarers (<i>balum</i>). Initiation of young men.</p>
+
+<p>It is very significant that the word <i>balum</i>, which means
+a ghost, is applied by the Yabim to the instrument now
+generally known among anthropologists as a bull-roarer. It
+is a small fish-shaped piece of wood which, being tied to a
+string and whirled rapidly round, produces a humming or
+booming sound like the roaring of a bull or the muttering of
+distant thunder. Instruments of this sort are employed by
+savages in many parts of the world at their mysteries; the
+weird sound which the implement makes when swung is
+supposed by the ignorant and uninitiated to be the voice of
+a spirit and serves to impress them with a sense of awe and
+mystery. So it is with the Papuans about Finsch Harbour,
+with whom we are at present concerned. At least one such
+bull-roarer is kept in the <i>lum</i> or bachelors' clubhouse of every
+village, and the women and uninitiated boys are forbidden to
+see it under pain of death. The instrument plays a great
+part in the initiation of young men, which takes place at
+intervals of several years, when there are a number of youths
+ready to be initiated, and enough pigs can be procured to
+furnish forth the feasts which form an indispensable part
+of the ceremony. The principal initiatory rite consists of
+circumcision, which is performed on all youths before they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>[pg 251]</span>
+are admitted to the rank of full-grown men. The age of
+the candidates varies considerably, from four years up to
+twenty. Many are married before they are initiated. The
+operation is performed in the forest, and the procession of
+the youths to the place appointed is attended by a number
+of men swinging bull-roarers. As the procession sets out,
+the women look on from a distance, weeping and howling,
+for they are taught to believe that the lads, their sons and
+brothers, are about to be swallowed up by a monster called
+a <i>balum</i> or ghost, who will only release them from his belly
+on condition of receiving a sufficient number of roast pigs.
+How, then, can the poor women be sure that they will ever
+see their dear ones again? So amid the noise of weeping
+and wailing the procession passes into the forest, and the
+booming sound of the bull-roarers dies away in the
+distance.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The rite of circumcision; the lads supposed to be swallowed
+by a monster (<i>balum</i>). The sacred flutes.</p>
+
+<p>The place where the operation is performed on the lads
+is a long hut, about a hundred feet in length, which
+diminishes in height towards the rear. This represents the
+belly of the monster which is to swallow up the candidates.
+To keep up the delusion a pair of great eyes are painted
+over the entrance, and above them the projecting roots of
+a betel-palm represent the monster's hair, while the trunk of
+the tree passes for his backbone. As the awe-struck lads
+approach this imposing creature, he is heard from time to
+time to utter a growl. The growl is in fact no other than
+the humming note of bull-roarers swung by men, who are
+concealed within the edifice. When the procession has
+come to a halt in front of the artificial monster, a loud
+defiant blast blown on shell-trumpets summons him to
+stand forth. The reply follows in the shape of another
+muffled roar of the bull-roarers from within the building. At
+the sound the men say that "Balum is coming up," and they
+raise a shrill song like a scream and sacrifice pigs to the
+monster in order to induce him to spare the lives of the
+candidates. When the operation has been performed on
+the lads, they must remain in strict seclusion for three or
+four months, avoiding all contact with women and even the
+sight of them. They live in the long hut, which represents
+the monster's belly, and their food is brought them by elder
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>[pg 252]</span>
+men. Their leisure time is spent in weaving baskets and
+playing on certain sacred flutes, which are never used
+except at such seasons. The instruments are of two
+patterns. One is called the male and the other the female,
+and they are supposed to be married to each other. No
+woman may see these mysterious flutes; if she did she
+would die. Even if she hears their shrill note in the distance,
+she will hasten to hide herself in a thicket. When the
+initiatory ceremonies are over, the flutes are carefully kept
+in the men's clubhouse of the village till the next time they
+are wanted for a similar occasion. On the other hand, if
+the women are obliged to go near the place where the lads
+are living in seclusion, they beat on certain bamboo drums
+in order to warn them to keep out of the way. Sometimes,
+though perhaps rarely, one of the lads dies under the
+operation; in that case the men explain his disappearance
+to the women by saying that the monster has a pig's
+stomach as well as a human stomach, and that unfortunately
+the deceased young man slipped by mistake into the wrong
+stomach and so perished miserably. But as a rule the
+candidates pass into the right stomach and after a sufficient
+period has been allowed for digestion, they come forth safe
+and sound, the monster having kindly consented to let them
+go free in consideration of the roast pigs which have been
+offered to him by the men. Indeed he is not very
+exacting, for he contents himself with devouring the souls
+of the pigs, while he leaves their bodies to be consumed
+by his worshippers. This is a kindly and considerate way
+of dealing with sacrifice, which our New Guinea ghost or
+monster shares with many deities of much higher social
+pretensions. However, lest he should prove refractory and
+perhaps run away with the poor young men in his inside, or
+possibly make a dart at any women or children who might
+be passing, the men take the precaution of tying him down
+tight with ropes. When the time of seclusion is up, one of
+the last acts in the long series of ceremonies is to cast off
+the ropes and let the monster go free. He avails himself
+of his liberty to return to his subterranean abode, and the
+young men are brought back to the village with much
+solemnity.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>[pg 253]</span>
+
+<p class="side">The return of the novices to the village.</p>
+
+<p>An eye-witness has described the ceremony. The lads,
+now ranking as full-grown men, were first bathed in the sea
+and then elaborately decorated with paint and so forth. In
+marching back to the village they had to keep their eyes
+tightly shut, and each of them was led by a man who acted
+as a kind of god-father. As the procession moved on, an
+old bald-headed man touched each boy solemnly on the
+chin and brow with a bull-roarer. In the village preparations
+for a banquet had meanwhile been made, and the
+women and girls were waiting in festal attire. The women
+were much moved at the return of the lads; they sobbed
+and tears of joy ran down their cheeks. Arrived in the
+village the newly-initiated lads were drawn up in a row and
+fresh palm leaves were spread in front of them. Here they
+stood with closed eyes, motionless as statues. Then a man
+passed behind them, touching each of them in the hams
+with the handle of an axe and saying, "O circumcised one,
+sit down." But still the lads remained standing, stiff and
+motionless. Not till another man had knocked repeatedly
+on the ground with the stalk of a palm-leaf, crying,
+"O circumcised ones, open your eyes!" did the youths,
+one after another, open their eyes as if awaking from a
+profound stupor. Then they sat down on the mats and
+partook of the food brought them by the men. Young and
+old now ate in the open air. Next morning the circumcised
+lads were bathed in the sea and painted red instead of
+white. After that they might talk to women. This was
+the end of the ceremony.<a id="footnotetag411" name="footnotetag411"></a><a href="#footnote411"><sup>411</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The essence of the initiatory rites seems to be a simulation
+of death and resurrection; the novice is supposed to be killed and to
+come to life or be born again. The new birth among the Akikuyu of
+British East Africa.</p>
+
+<p>The meaning of these curious ceremonies observed on
+the return of the lads to the village is not explained by
+the writer who describes them; but the analogy of similar
+ceremonies observed at initiation by many other races
+allows us to divine it with a fair degree of probability.
+As I have already observed in a former lecture,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>[pg 254]</span>
+the ceremony of initiation at puberty is very often regarded
+as a process of death and resurrection; the candidate is
+supposed to die or to be killed and to come to life again or
+be born again; and the pretence of a new birth is not uncommonly
+kept up by the novices feigning to have forgotten
+all the most common actions of life and having accordingly
+to learn them all over again like newborn babes. We may
+conjecture that this is why the young circumcised Papuans,
+with whom we are at present concerned, march back to their
+village with closed eyes; this is why, when bidden to sit
+down, they remain standing stiffly, as if they understood
+neither the command nor the action; and this, too, we may
+surmise, is why their mothers and sisters receive them with
+a burst of emotion, as if their dead had come back to them
+from the grave. This interpretation of the ceremony is confirmed
+by a curious rite which is observed by the Akikuyu
+of British East Africa. Amongst them every boy or girl at
+or about the age of ten years has solemnly to pretend to be
+born again, not in a moral or religious, but in a physical
+sense. The mother of the child, or, if she is dead, some
+other woman, goes through an actual pantomime of bringing
+forth the boy or girl. I will spare you the details of the
+pantomime, which is very graphic, and will merely mention
+that the bouncing infant squalls like a newborn babe.
+Now this ceremony of the new birth was formerly enacted
+among the Akikuyu at the rite of circumcision, though the
+two ceremonies are now kept distinct.<a id="footnotetag412" name="footnotetag412"></a><a href="#footnote412"><sup>412</sup></a> Hence it is not
+very rash to conjecture that the ceremony performed by the
+young Papuans of Finsch Harbour on their return to the
+village after undergoing circumcision is merely a way of
+keeping up the pretence of being born again and of being
+therefore as ignorant and helpless as babes.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The mock death of the novices as a preliminary to the mock
+birth.</p>
+
+<p>But if the end of the initiation is a mock resurrection, or
+rather new birth, as it certainly seems to be, we may infer
+with some confidence that the first part of it, namely the
+act of circumcision, is a mock death. This is borne out by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id="page255"></a>[pg 255]</span>
+the explicit statement of a very good authority, Mr. Vetter,
+that "the circumcision is designated as a process of being
+swallowed by the spirit, out of whose stomach (represented
+by a long hut) the release must take place by means
+of a sacrifice of pigs."<a id="footnotetag413" name="footnotetag413"></a><a href="#footnote413"><sup>413</sup></a> And it is further confirmed by the
+observation that both the spirit which is supposed to operate
+on the lads, and the bull-roarer, which apparently represents
+his voice, are known by the name of <i>balum</i>, which means the
+ghost or spirit of a dead person. Similarly, among the
+Tugeri or Kaya-Kaya, a large Papuan tribe on the south
+coast of Dutch New Guinea, the name of the bull-roarer,
+which they call <i>sosom</i>, is given to a mythical giant, who is
+supposed to appear every year with the south-east monsoon.
+When he comes, a festival is held in his honour and bull-roarers
+are swung. Boys are presented to the giant, and
+he kills them, but brings them to life again.<a id="footnotetag414" name="footnotetag414"></a><a href="#footnote414"><sup>414</sup></a> Thus the
+initiatory rite of circumcision, to which all lads have to submit
+among the Yabim, seems to be closely bound up with
+their conception of death and with their belief in a life after
+death; since the whole ceremony apparently consists in a
+simulation of dying and coming to life again. That is why
+I have touched upon these initiatory rites, which at first
+sight might appear to have no connexion with our immediate
+subject, the belief in immortality and the worship of the
+dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">General summary as to the Yabim.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole we may say that the Yabim have a very
+firm and practical belief in a life after death, and that while
+their attitude to the spirits of the departed is generally one
+of fear, they nevertheless look to these spirits also for information
+and help on various occasions. Thus their beliefs
+and practices contain at least in germ the elements of a
+worship of the dead.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote394" name="footnote394"></a><b>Footnote 394:</b><a href="#footnotetag394"> (return) </a><p> Stolz, "Die Umgebung von Kap K&ouml;nig Wilhelm," in R.
+Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch New-Guinea</i> (Berlin, 1911), iii. 243-286.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote395" name="footnote395"></a><b>Footnote 395:</b><a href="#footnotetag395"> (return) </a><p>Stolz, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 252-254.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote396" name="footnote396"></a><b>Footnote 396:</b><a href="#footnotetag396"> (return) </a><p>Stolz, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 245-247.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote397" name="footnote397"></a><b>Footnote 397:</b><a href="#footnotetag397"> (return) </a><p>Stolz, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 247 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote398" name="footnote398"></a><b>Footnote 398:</b><a href="#footnotetag398"> (return) </a><p>Stolz, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 248-250.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote399" name="footnote399"></a><b>Footnote 399:</b><a href="#footnotetag399"> (return) </a><p>Stolz, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 258.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote400" name="footnote400"></a><b>Footnote 400:</b><a href="#footnotetag400"> (return) </a><p>Stolz, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 259.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote401" name="footnote401"></a><b>Footnote 401:</b><a href="#footnotetag401"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, in <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf uns! oder die
+Arbeit der Neuen-Dettelsauer Mission</i>, Nos. 1-4 (Barmen, 1898);
+<i>id.</i>, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land</i>, 1897, pp.
+86-102; <i>id.</i>, in <i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, xi. (Jena, 1892) pp. 102-106; <i>id.</i>, in
+<i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, xii. (Jena,
+1893) pp. 95-97; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea</i>, iii (Berlin, 1911) pp. 287-394.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote402" name="footnote402"></a><b>Footnote 402:</b><a href="#footnotetag402"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf uns!</i> ii. (Barmen,
+1898) pp. 6-12.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote403" name="footnote403"></a><b>Footnote 403:</b><a href="#footnotetag403"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, <i>op. cit.</i> ii. 8; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim,"
+in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. 291, 308, 311.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote404" name="footnote404"></a><b>Footnote 404:</b><a href="#footnotetag404"> (return) </a><p>H. Zahn, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 291.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote405" name="footnote405"></a><b>Footnote 405:</b><a href="#footnotetag405"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf
+uns!</i> iii. 21 <i>sq.</i> According to Mr. H.
+Zahn (<i>op. cit.</i> p. 324) every village has
+its own entrance into the spirit-land.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote406" name="footnote406"></a><b>Footnote 406:</b><a href="#footnotetag406"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf uns!</i> iii. 19-24;
+<i>id.</i>, in <i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu
+Jena</i>, xii. (1893) pp. 96 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote407" name="footnote407"></a><b>Footnote 407:</b><a href="#footnotetag407"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf uns!</i> ii. 7, iii.
+24; <i>id.</i>, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land und den
+Bismarck-Archipel</i>, 1897, p. 94.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote408" name="footnote408"></a><b>Footnote 408:</b><a href="#footnotetag408"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser
+Wilhelms-Land</i>, 1897, p. 94.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote409" name="footnote409"></a><b>Footnote 409:</b><a href="#footnotetag409"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser
+Wilhelms-Land</i>, 1897, pp. 94 <i>sq.</i>; <i>id.</i>, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf
+uns!</i> iii. 15-19. Compare H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's
+<i>Deutsch Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. 320 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote410" name="footnote410"></a><b>Footnote 410:</b><a href="#footnotetag410"> (return) </a><p> H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. 318-320.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote411" name="footnote411"></a><b>Footnote 411:</b><a href="#footnotetag411"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land
+und den Bismarck-Archipel</i>, 1897, pp. 92 <i>sq.</i>; <i>id.</i>, in
+<i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, xi. (1892)
+p. 105; <i>id.</i>, <i>Komm her&uuml;ber und hilf uns!</i> ii. (1898) p. 18;
+<i>id.</i>, cited by M. Krieger, <i>Neu-Guinea</i>, pp. 167-170; O.
+Schellong, "Das Barlum (<i>sic</i>)-fest der Gegend Finsch-hafens
+(Kaiserwilhelmsland), ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der Beschneidung der
+Melanesier," <i>Internationales Archiv f&uuml;r Ethnographie</i>, ii. (1889)
+pp. 145-162; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. 296-298.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote412" name="footnote412"></a><b>Footnote 412:</b><a href="#footnotetag412"> (return) </a><p> W. S. Routledge and K. Routledge, <i>With a Prehistoric
+People, the Akikuyu of British East Africa</i> (London, 1910), pp. 151
+<i>sq.</i> Compare <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, iv. 228; C. W. Hobley,
+"Kikuyu Customs and Beliefs," <i>Journal of the Royal Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xl. (1910) pp. 440 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote413" name="footnote413"></a><b>Footnote 413:</b><a href="#footnotetag413"> (return) </a><p> K. Vetter, in <i>Nachrichten &uuml;ber Kaiser Wilhelmsland und
+den Bismarck-Archipel</i>, 1897, p. 93.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote414" name="footnote414"></a><b>Footnote 414:</b><a href="#footnotetag414"> (return) </a><p> R. P&ouml;ch, "Vierter Bericht &uuml;ber meine Reise nach
+Neu-Guinea," <i>Sitzungsberichte der
+mathematisch-naturwissenschaftlichen Klasse der Kaiserlichen Akademie
+der Wissenschaften</i> (Vienna), cxv. (1906) Abteilung 1, pp. 901, 902.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id="page256"></a>[pg 256]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xii" id="lecture-xii"></a>LECTURE XII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA (<i>continued</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The Bukaua of German New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I described the beliefs and practices concerning
+the dead as they are to be found among the Yabim
+of German New Guinea. To-day we begin with the Bukaua,
+a kindred and neighbouring tribe, which occupies the coast
+lands of the northern portion of Huon Gulf from Schollenbruch
+Point to Samoa Harbour. The language which the
+Bukaua speak belongs, like the language of the Yabim, to
+the Melanesian, not to the Papuan family. Their customs
+and beliefs have been reported by a German missionary, Mr.
+Stefan Lehner, whose account I follow.<a id="footnotetag415" name="footnotetag415"></a><a href="#footnote415"><sup>415</sup></a> In many respects
+they closely resemble those of their neighbours the Yabim.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Means of subsistence of the Bukaua. Men's clubhouses.</p>
+
+<p>The Bukaua are an agricultural people who subsist
+mainly on the crops of taro which they raise. But they
+also cultivate many kinds of bananas and vegetables,
+together with sugar-cane, sago, and tobacco. From time to
+time they cut down and burn the forest in order to obtain
+fresh fields for cultivation. The land is not held in common.
+Each family has its own fields and patches of forest, and
+would resent the intrusion of others on their hereditary
+domain. Hunting and fishing supply them with animal food
+to eke out the vegetable nourishment which they draw from
+their fields and plantations.<a id="footnotetag416" name="footnotetag416"></a><a href="#footnote416"><sup>416</sup></a> Every village contains one or
+more of the men's clubhouses which are a common feature
+in the social life of the tribes on this coast. In these clubhouses
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>[pg 257]</span>
+the young men are obliged to sleep, and on the platforms
+in front of them the older men hold their councils.
+Such a clubhouse is called a <i>lum</i>.<a id="footnotetag417" name="footnotetag417"></a><a href="#footnote417"><sup>417</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the Bukaua concerning the souls of the dead.
+Sickness and disease attributed to ghostly agency.</p>
+
+<p>The Bukaua have a firm belief in the existence of the
+human soul after death. They think that a man's soul can
+even quit his body temporarily in his lifetime during sleep
+or a swoon, and that in its disembodied state it can appear
+to people at a distance; but such apparitions are regarded
+as omens of approaching death, when the soul will depart
+for good and all. The soul of a dead man is called a <i>balum</i>.
+The spirits of the departed are believed to be generally mischievous
+and spiteful to the living, but they can be appeased
+by sacrifice, and other measures can be taken to avert their
+dangerous influence.<a id="footnotetag418" name="footnotetag418"></a><a href="#footnote418"><sup>418</sup></a> They are very touchy, and if they
+imagine that they are not honoured enough by their kinsfolk,
+and that the offerings made to them are insufficient,
+they will avenge the slight by visiting their disrespectful and
+stingy relatives with sickness and disease. Among the
+maladies which the natives ascribe to the anger of ghosts
+are epilepsy, fainting fits, and wasting decline.<a id="footnotetag419" name="footnotetag419"></a><a href="#footnote419"><sup>419</sup></a> When a
+man suffers from a sore which he believes to have been
+inflicted on him by a ghost, he will take a stone from the
+fence of the grave and heat it in the fire, saying: "Father,
+see, thou hast gone, I am left, I must till the land in thy
+stead and care for my brothers and sisters. Do me good
+again." Then he dips the hot stone in a puddle on the
+grave, and holds his sore in the steam which rises from it.
+His pain is eased thereby and he explains the alleviation
+which he feels by saying, "The spirit of the dead man has
+eaten up the wound."<a id="footnotetag420" name="footnotetag420"></a><a href="#footnote420"><sup>420</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sickness and death often ascribed by the Bukaua to sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>But like most savages the Bukaua attribute many illnesses
+and many deaths not to the wrath of ghosts but to
+the malignant arts of sorcerers; and in such cases they
+usually endeavour by means of divination to ascertain the
+culprit and to avenge the death of their friend by taking
+the life of his imaginary murderer.<a id="footnotetag421" name="footnotetag421"></a><a href="#footnote421"><sup>421</sup></a> If they fail to exact
+vengeance, the ghost is believed to be very angry, and they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id="page258"></a>[pg 258]</span>
+must be on their guard against him. He may meet them
+anywhere, but is especially apt to dog the footsteps of the
+sorcerer who killed him. Hence when on the occasion of a
+great feast the sorcerer comes to the village of his victim,
+the surviving relatives of the dead man are at particular
+pains to protect themselves and their property against the
+insidious attacks of the prowling ghost. For this purpose
+they bury a creeper with white blossoms in the path leading
+to the village; the ghost is thought to be filled with fear at
+the sight of it and to turn back, leaving his kinsfolk, their
+dogs, and pigs in peace.<a id="footnotetag422" name="footnotetag422"></a><a href="#footnote422"><sup>422</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of the ghosts of the slain.</p>
+
+<p>Another class of ghosts who are much dreaded are the
+spirits of slain foes. They are believed to pursue their
+slayers to the village and to blind them so that sooner or
+later they fall an easy prey to their enemies. Hence when
+a party of warriors has returned home from a successful
+attack on a village, in which they have butchered all on
+whom they could lay their hands, they kindle a great fire,
+dance wildly about it, and hurl burning brands in the direction
+of the battlefield in order to keep the ghosts of their
+slaughtered foes at bay. Phosphorescent lights seen under
+the houses throw the inmates into great alarm, for they
+are thought to be the souls of the slain. Sometimes the
+vanquished in battle resort to a curious ruse for the purpose
+of avenging themselves on the victors by means of a
+ghost. They take the sleeping-mat of one of the slain, roll
+it up in a bundle along with his loin-cloth, apron, netted
+bag, or head-rest, and give the bundle to two cripples to
+carry. Then they steal quietly to the landing-place of
+their foes, peering warily about lest they should be observed.
+The bundle represents the dead man, and the cripples who
+carry it reel to and fro, and finally sink to the ground with
+their burden. In this way the ghost of the victim, whose
+things are carried in the bundle, is supposed to make their
+enemies weak and tottery. Strong young men are not
+given the bundle to carry, lest the ghost should spoil their
+manly figures; whereas if he should wound or maim a
+couple of poor cripples, no great harm is done.<a id="footnotetag423" name="footnotetag423"></a><a href="#footnote423"><sup>423</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts of ancestors appealed to for help, especially in the
+cultivation of the ground. First-fruits offered to the spirits of the
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>However, the Bukaua also look on the ghosts of their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page259" id="page259"></a>[pg 259]</span>
+ancestors in a more amiable light as beings who, if properly
+appealed to, can and will help them in the affairs of life,
+especially by procuring for them good crops. Hence when
+they are planting their fields, which are formed in clearings
+of the forest, they take particular care to insert shoots of
+all their crops in the ground near the tree stumps which
+remain standing, because the souls of their dead grandfathers
+and great-grandfathers are believed to be sitting on the
+stumps watching their descendants at their work. Accordingly
+in the act of planting they call out the names of
+these forefathers and pray them to guard the field in order
+that their living children may have food and not suffer
+from hunger. And at harvest, when the first-fruits of the
+taro, bananas, sugar-cane, and so forth have been brought
+back from the fields, a portion of them is offered in a bowl
+to the spirits of the forefathers in the house of the landowner,
+and the spirits are addressed in prayer as follows: "O ye
+who have guarded our field as we prayed you to do, there
+is something for you; now and henceforth behold us with
+favour." While the family are feasting on the rest of the
+first-fruits, the householder will surreptitiously stir the
+offerings in the bowl with his finger, and will then shew
+the bowl to the others as a proof that the souls of the dead
+have really partaken of the good things provided for them.<a id="footnotetag424" name="footnotetag424"></a><a href="#footnote424"><sup>424</sup></a>
+A hunter will also pray to his dead father to drive the
+wild pigs into his net.<a id="footnotetag425" name="footnotetag425"></a><a href="#footnote425"><sup>425</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial and mourning customs of the Bukaua.</p>
+
+<p>The Bukaua bury their dead in shallow graves, which
+are sometimes dug under the houses but more usually in front
+of or beside them. Along with the corpses are deposited bags
+of taro, nuts, drinking-vessels, and other articles of daily use.
+Only the stone axes are too valuable to be thus sacrificed.
+Over the grave is erected a rude hut in which the widower,
+if the deceased was a married woman, remains for a time
+in seclusion. A widow on the death of her husband
+remains in the house. Widow and widower may not shew
+themselves in public until they have prepared their mourning
+costume. The widower wears a black hat made of bark,
+cords round his neck, wicker work on his arms and feet, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id="page260"></a>[pg 260]</span>
+a torn old bracelet of his wife in a bag on his breast. A
+widow is completely swathed in nets, one over the other,
+and she carries about with her the loincloth of her deceased
+husband. The souls of the dead dwell in a subterranean
+region called <i>lamboam</i>, and their life there seems to resemble
+life here on earth; but the ideas of the people on the
+subject are very vague.<a id="footnotetag426" name="footnotetag426"></a><a href="#footnote426"><sup>426</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Initiation of young men among the Bukaua. Lads at
+circumcision supposed to be swallowed by a monster.</p>
+
+<p>The customs and beliefs of the Bukaua in regard to
+the initiation of young men are practically identical with
+those of their neighbours the Yabim. Indeed the initiatory
+ceremonies are performed by the tribes jointly, now in the
+territory of the Bukaua, now in the territory of the Yabim,
+or in the land of the Kai, a tribe of mountaineers, or again
+in the neighbouring Tami islands. The intervals between
+the ceremonies vary from ten to eighteen years.<a id="footnotetag427" name="footnotetag427"></a><a href="#footnote427"><sup>427</sup></a> The central
+feature of the initiatory rites is the circumcision of the novices.
+It is given out that the lads are swallowed by a ferocious
+monster called a <i>balum</i>, who, however, is induced by the
+sacrifice of many pigs to vomit them up again. In spewing
+them out of his maw he bites or scratches them, and the
+wound so inflicted is circumcision. This explanation of the
+rite is fobbed off on the women, who more or less believe it
+and weep accordingly when their sons are led away to be
+committed to the monster's jaws. And when the time for
+the ceremony is approaching, the fond mothers busy themselves
+with rearing and fattening young pigs, so that they
+may be able with them to redeem their loved ones from the
+belly of the ravenous beast; for he must have a pig for
+every boy. When a lad bleeds to death from the effect of
+the operation, he is secretly buried, and his sorrowful mother
+is told that the monster swallowed him and refused to bring
+him up again. What really happens is that the youths are
+shut up for several months in a house specially built for the
+purpose in the village. During their seclusion they are
+under the charge of guardians, usually two young men, and
+must observe strictly a rule of fasting and chastity. When
+they are judged to be ready to undergo the rite, they are
+led forth and circumcised in front of the house amid a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id="page261"></a>[pg 261]</span>
+prodigious uproar made by the swinging of bull-roarers.
+The noise is supposed to be the voice of the monster who
+swallows and vomits up the novice at circumcision. The
+bull-roarer as well as the monster bears the name of <i>balum</i>,
+and the building in which the novices are lodged before and
+after the operation is called the monster's house (<i>balumslum</i>).
+After they have been circumcised the lads remain in the
+house for several months till their wounds are healed; then,
+painted and bedizened with all the ornaments that can be
+collected, they are brought back and restored to their joyful
+mothers. Women must vacate the village for a long time
+while the initiatory ceremonies are being performed.<a id="footnotetag428" name="footnotetag428"></a><a href="#footnote428"><sup>428</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Novices at circumcision supposed to be killed and then
+restored to a new and higher life.</p>
+
+<p>The meaning of the whole rite, as I pointed out in
+dealing with the similar initiatory rite of the Yabim, appears
+to be that the novices are killed and then restored to a new
+and better life; for after their initiation they rank no longer
+as boys but as full-grown men, entitled to all the privileges
+of manhood and citizenship, if we can speak of such a thing
+as citizenship among the savages of New Guinea. This
+interpretation of the rite is supported by the notable fact
+that the Bukaua, like the Yabim, give the name of <i>balum</i>
+to the souls of the dead as well as to the mythical monster
+and to the bull-roarer; this shews how intimately the three
+things are associated in their minds. Indeed not only is
+the bull-roarer in general associated with the souls of the
+dead by a community of name, but among the Bukaua
+each particular bull-roarer bears in addition the name of a
+particular dead man and varies in dignity and importance
+with the dignity and importance of the deceased person
+whom it represents. The most venerated of all are
+curiously carved and have been handed down for generations;
+they bear the names of famous warriors or magicians
+of old and are supposed to reproduce the personal
+peculiarities of the celebrated originals in their shape and
+tones. And there are smaller bull-roarers which emit
+shriller notes and are thought to represent the shrill-voiced
+wives of the ancient heroes.<a id="footnotetag429" name="footnotetag429"></a><a href="#footnote429"><sup>429</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Kai tribe of Saddle Mountain in German New Guinea. The
+land of the Kai. Their mode of cultivation. Their villages.</p>
+
+<p>The Bukaua and the Yabim, the two tribes with which
+I have been dealing in this and the last lecture, inhabit, as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>[pg 262]</span>
+I have said, the coast about Finsch Harbour and speak a
+Melanesian language. We now pass from them to the
+consideration of another people, belonging to a different
+stock and speaking a different language, who inhabit the
+rugged and densely wooded mountains inland from Finsch
+Harbour. Their neighbours on the coast call these
+mountaineers by the name of Kai, a word which signifies
+forest or inland in opposition to the seashore; and this
+name of the tribe we may adopt, following the example of
+a German missionary, Mr. Ch. Keysser, who has laboured
+among them for more than eleven years and has given us
+an excellent description of their customs and beliefs. His
+account applies particularly to the natives of what is called
+Saddle Mountain, the part of the range which advances
+nearest to the coast and rises to the height of about three
+thousand feet. It is a rough, broken country, cleft by many
+ravines and covered with forest, bush, or bamboo thickets;
+though here and there at rare intervals some brown patches
+mark the clearings which the sparse inhabitants have made
+for the purpose of cultivation. Water is plentiful. Springs
+gush forth everywhere in the glens and valleys, and rushing
+streams of crystal-clear water pour down the mountain sides,
+and in the clefts of the hills are lonely tarns, the undisturbed
+haunts of wild ducks and other water fowl. During the
+wet season, which extends from June to August, the rain
+descends in sheets and the mountains are sometimes covered
+for weeks together with so thick a mist that all prospect is
+cut off at the distance of a hundred yards. The natives
+are then loth to leave their huts and will spend the day
+crouching over a fire. They are a shorter and sturdier race
+than the tribes on the coast; the expression of their face
+is less frank and agreeable, and their persons are very much
+dirtier. They belong to the aboriginal Papuan stock,
+whereas the Yabim and Bukaua on the coast are probably
+immigrants from beyond the sea, who have driven the
+indigenous population back into the mountains.<a id="footnotetag430" name="footnotetag430"></a><a href="#footnote430"><sup>430</sup></a> Their
+staple foods are taro and yams, which they grow in their
+fields. A field is cultivated for only one year at a time;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id="page263"></a>[pg 263]</span>
+it is then allowed to lie fallow and is soon overgrown with
+rank underwood. Six or eight years may elapse before
+it is again cleared and brought under cultivation. Game
+and fish abound in the woods and waters, and the Kai
+make free use of these natural resources. They keep pigs
+and dogs, and eat the flesh of both. Pork is indeed a
+favourite viand, figuring largely in the banquets which are
+held at the circumcision festivals.<a id="footnotetag431" name="footnotetag431"></a><a href="#footnote431"><sup>431</sup></a> The people live in small
+villages, each village comprising from two to six houses.
+The houses are raised on piles and the walls are usually
+constructed of pandanus leaves, though many natives now
+make them of boards. After eighteen months or two years
+the houses are so rotten and tumble-down that the village
+is deserted and a new one built on another site. Assembly-houses
+are erected only for the circumcision ceremonies, and
+the bull-roarers used on these occasions are kept in them.
+Husband and wife live together, often two couples in one
+hut; but each family has its own side of the house and
+its own fireplace. In times of insecurity the Kai used to
+build their huts for safety among the spreading boughs
+of great trees. A whole village, consisting of three or
+four huts, might thus be quartered on a single tree. Of
+late years, with the peace and protection for life introduced
+by German rule, these tree-houses have gone out of
+fashion.<a id="footnotetag432" name="footnotetag432"></a><a href="#footnote432"><sup>432</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Observations of a German missionary on the animistic beliefs
+of the Kai.</p>
+
+<p>After describing the manners and customs of the Kai
+people at some length, the German missionary, who knows
+them intimately, proceeds to give us a very valuable account
+of their old native religion or superstition. He prefaces his
+account with some observations, the fruit of long experience,
+which deserve to be laid to heart by all who attempt to
+penetrate into the inner life, the thoughts, the feelings, the
+motives of savages. As his remarks are very germane to
+the subject of these lectures, I will translate them. He
+says: "In the preceding chapters I have sketched the
+daily life of the Kai people. But I have not attempted to
+set forth the reasons for their conduct, which is often very
+peculiar and unintelligible. The explanation of that conduct
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id="page264"></a>[pg 264]</span>
+lies in the animistic view which the Papuan takes of the
+world. It must be most emphatically affirmed that nobody
+can judge the native aright who has not gained an insight
+into what we may call his religious opinions. The native
+must be described as very religious, although his ideas do
+not coincide with ours. His feelings, thoughts, and will
+are most intimately connected with his belief in souls. With
+that belief he is born, he has sucked it in with his mother's
+milk, and from the standpoint of that belief he regards the
+things and occurrences that meet him in life; by that belief
+he regulates his behaviour. An objective way of looking
+at events is unknown to him; everything is brought by him
+into relation to his belief, and by it he seeks to explain
+everything that to him seems strange and rare."<a id="footnotetag433" name="footnotetag433"></a><a href="#footnote433"><sup>433</sup></a> "The
+labyrinth of animistic customs at first sight presents an
+appearance of wild confusion to him who seeks to penetrate
+into them and reduce them to order; but on closer inspection
+he will soon recognise certain guiding lines. These
+guiding lines are the laws of animism, which have passed
+into the flesh and blood of the Papuan and influence his
+thought and speech, his acts and his omissions, his love and
+hate, in short his whole life and death. When once we have
+discovered these laws, the whole of the superstitious nonsense
+falls into an orderly system which compels us to regard it
+with a certain respect that increases in proportion to the
+contempt in which we had previously held the people. We
+need not wonder, moreover, that the laws of animism partially
+correspond to general laws of nature."<a id="footnotetag434" name="footnotetag434"></a><a href="#footnote434"><sup>434</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The essential rationality of the savage.</p>
+
+<p>Thus according to Mr. Keysser, who has no theory to
+maintain and merely gives us in this passage the result of
+long personal observation, the Kai savages are thinking,
+reasoning men, whose conduct, however strange and at first
+sight unintelligible it may appear to us, is really based on
+a definite religious or if you please superstitious view of
+the world. It is true that their theory as well as their
+practice differs widely from ours; but it would be false and
+unjust to deny that they have a theory and that on the
+whole their practice squares with it. Similar testimony is
+borne to other savage races by men who have lived long
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page265" id="page265"></a>[pg 265]</span>
+among them and observed them closely;<a id="footnotetag435" name="footnotetag435"></a><a href="#footnote435"><sup>435</sup></a> and on the
+strength of such testimony I think we may lay it down as
+a well-established truth that savages in general, so far as
+they are known to us, have certain more or less definite
+theories, whether we call them religious or philosophical, by
+which they regulate their conduct, and judged by which
+their acts, however absurd they may seem to the civilised
+man, are really both rational and intelligible. Hence it is,
+in my opinion, a profound mistake hastily to conclude that
+because the behaviour of the savage does not agree with
+our notions of what is reasonable, natural, and proper, it
+must therefore necessarily be illogical, the result of blind
+impulse rather than of deliberate thought and calculation.
+No doubt the savage like the civilised man does often act
+purely on impulse; his passions overmaster his reason, and
+sweep it away before them. He is probably indeed much
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>[pg 266]</span>
+more impulsive, much more liable to be whirled about by
+gusts of emotion than we are; yet it would be unfair to
+judge his life as a whole by these occasional outbursts rather
+than by its general tenour, which to those who know him
+from long observation reveals a groundwork of logic and
+reason resembling our own in its operations, though differing
+from ours in the premises from which it sets out. I think
+it desirable to emphasise the rational basis of savage life
+because it has been the fashion of late years with some
+writers to question or rather deny it. According to them,
+if I understand them aright, the savage acts first and invents
+his reasons, generally very absurd reasons, for so doing
+afterwards. Significantly enough, the writers who argue in
+favour of the essential irrationality of savage conduct have
+none of them, I believe, any personal acquaintance with
+savages. Their conclusions are based not on observation
+but on purely theoretical deductions, a most precarious
+foundation on which to erect a science of man or indeed
+of anything. As such, they cannot be weighed in the
+balance against the positive testimony of many witnesses
+who have lived for years with the savage and affirm
+emphatically the logical basis which underlies and explains
+his seeming vagaries. At all events I for one have no
+hesitation in accepting the evidence of such men to matters
+of fact with which they are acquainted, and I unhesitatingly
+reject all theories which directly contradict that evidence.
+If there ever has been any race of men who invariably
+acted first and thought afterwards, I can only say that in
+the course of my reading and observation I have never met
+with any trace of them, and I am apt to suppose that, if
+they ever existed anywhere but in the imagination of bookish
+dreamers, their career must have been an exceedingly short
+one, since in the struggle for existence they would surely
+succumb to adversaries who tempered and directed the blind
+fury of combat with at least a modicum of reason and sense.
+The myth of the illogical or prelogical savage may safely be
+relegated to that museum of learned absurdities and abortions
+which speculative anthropology is constantly enriching with
+fresh specimens of misapplied ingenuity and wasted industry.
+But enough of these fantasies. Let us return to facts.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>[pg 267]</span>
+
+<p class="side">The Kai theory of the soul.</p>
+
+<p>The life of the Kai people, according to Mr. Keysser, is
+dominated by their conception of the soul. That conception
+differs greatly from and is very much more extensive
+than ours. The Kai regards his reflection and
+his shadow as his soul or parts of it; hence you should not
+tread on a man's shadow for fear of injuring his soul. The
+soul likewise dwells in his heart, for he feels it beating.
+Hence if you give a native a friendly poke in the ribs, he
+protests, saying, "Don't poke me so; you might drive my
+soul out of my body, and then I should die." The soul
+moreover resides in the eye, where you may see it twinkling;
+when it departs, the eye grows dim and vacant. Moreover,
+the soul is in the foot as much as in the head; it lurks even
+in the spittle and the other bodily excretions. The soul in
+fact pervades the body just as warmth does; everything
+that a man touches he infects, so to say, with his soul;
+that mysterious entity exists in the very sound of his voice.
+The sorcerer catches a man's soul by his magic, shuts it
+up tight, and destroys it. Then the man dies. He dies
+because the sorcerer has killed his soul. Yet the Kai
+believes, whether consistently or not, that the soul of the
+dead man continues to live. He talks to it, he makes
+offerings to it, he seeks to win its favour in order that he
+may have luck in the chase; he fears its ill-will and anger;
+he gives it food to eat, liquor to drink, tobacco to smoke, and
+betel to chew. What could a reasonable ghost ask for more?<a id="footnotetag436" name="footnotetag436"></a><a href="#footnote436"><sup>436</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Two kinds of human souls.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, according to Mr. Keysser, whose exposition I
+am simply reproducing, the Kai believes not in one nor yet
+in many souls belonging to each individual; he implicitly
+assumes that there are two different kinds of souls. One
+of these is the soul which survives the body at death; in all
+respects it resembles the man himself as he lived on earth,
+except that it has no body. It is not indeed absolutely
+incorporeal, but it is greatly shrunken and attenuated by
+death. That is why the souls of the dead are so angry
+with the living; they repine at their own degraded condition;
+they envy the full-blooded life which the living enjoy and
+which the dead have lost. The second kind of soul is
+distinguished by Mr. Keysser from the former as a spiritual
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id="page268"></a>[pg 268]</span>
+essence or soul-stuff, which pervades the body as sap
+pervades the tree, and which diffuses itself like corporeal
+warmth over everything with which the body is brought
+into contact.<a id="footnotetag437" name="footnotetag437"></a><a href="#footnote437"><sup>437</sup></a> In these lectures we are concerned chiefly
+with the former kind of soul, which is believed to survive
+the death of the body, and which answers much more
+nearly than the second to the popular European conception
+of the soul. Accordingly in what follows we shall confine
+our attention mainly to it.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Death thought by the Kai to be commonly caused by sorcery.</p>
+
+<p>Like many other savages, the Kai do not believe in the
+possibility of a natural death; they think that everybody
+dies through the maleficent arts of sorcerers or ghosts.
+Even in the case of old people, we are told, they assume
+the cause of death to be sorcery, and to sorcery all misfortunes
+are ascribed. If a man falls on the path and
+wounds himself to death, as often happens, on the jagged
+stump of a bamboo, the natives conclude that he was
+bewitched. The way in which the sorcerer brought about
+the catastrophe was this. He obtained some object which
+was infected with the soul-stuff or spiritual essence of his
+victim; he stuck a pile in the ground, he spread the soul-stuff
+on the pile; then he pretended to wound himself on
+the pile and to groan with pain. Anybody can see for
+himself that by a natural and necessary concatenation of
+causes this compelled the poor fellow to stumble over that
+jagged bamboo stump and to perish miserably. Again,
+take the case of a hunter in the forest who is charged and
+ripped up by a wild boar. On a superficial view of the
+circumstances it might perhaps occur to you that the cause
+of death was the boar. But you would assuredly be
+mistaken. The real cause of death was again a sorcerer,
+who pounded up the soul-stuff of his victim with a boar's
+tooth. Again, suppose that a man is bitten by a serpent
+and dies. A shallow rationalist might say that the man
+died of the bite; but the Kai knows better. He is aware
+that what really killed him was the sorcerer who took a
+pinch of his victim's soul and bunged it up tight in a tube
+along with the sting of a snake. Similarly, if a woman
+dies in childbed, or if a man hangs himself, the cause of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id="page269"></a>[pg 269]</span>
+death is still a sorcerer operating with the appropriate
+means and gestures. Thus to make a man hang himself
+all that the sorcerer has to do is to get a scrap of his
+victim's soul&mdash;and the smallest scrap is quite enough for
+his purpose, it may be a mere shred or speck of soul
+adhering to a hair of the man's head, to a drop of his sweat,
+or to a crumb of his food,&mdash;I say that the sorcerer need only
+obtain a tiny little bit of his victim's soul, clap it in a tube,
+set the tube dangling at the end of a string, and go through
+a pantomime of gurgling, goggling and so forth, like a man
+in the last stage of strangulation, and his victim is thereby
+physically compelled to put his neck in the noose and hang
+himself in good earnest.<a id="footnotetag438" name="footnotetag438"></a><a href="#footnote438"><sup>438</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Danger incurred by the sorcerer.</p>
+
+<p>Where these views of sorcery prevail, it is no wonder
+that the sorcerer is an unpopular character. He naturally
+therefore shrinks from publicity and hides his somewhat
+lurid light under a bushel. Not to put too fine a point on
+it, he carries his life in his hand and may be knocked on
+the head at any moment without the tedious formality of a
+trial. Once his professional reputation is established, all
+the deaths in the neighbourhood may be set down at his
+door. If he gets wind of a plot to assassinate him, he
+may stave off his doom for a while by soothing the angry
+passions of his enemies with presents, but sooner or later his
+fate is sealed.<a id="footnotetag439" name="footnotetag439"></a><a href="#footnote439"><sup>439</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Many hurts and maladies attributed by the Kai to the action
+of ghosts. In other cases the sickness is traced to witchcraft.
+Capturing a lost soul.</p>
+
+<p>However, the Kai savage is far from attributing all
+deaths without distinction to sorcerers.<a id="footnotetag440" name="footnotetag440"></a><a href="#footnote440"><sup>440</sup></a> In many hurts
+and maladies he detects the cold clammy hand of a ghost.
+If a man, for example, wounds himself in the forest, perhaps
+in the pursuit of a wild beast, he may imagine that he has
+been speared or clubbed by a malignant ghost. And when
+a person falls ill, the first thing to do is naturally to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page270" id="page270"></a>[pg 270]</span>
+ascertain the cause of the illness in order that it may be
+treated properly. In all such enquiries, Mr. Keysser tells
+us, suspicion first falls on the ghosts; they are looked upon
+as even worse than the sorcerers.<a id="footnotetag441" name="footnotetag441"></a><a href="#footnote441"><sup>441</sup></a> So when a doctor is
+called in to see a patient, the only question with him is
+whether the sickness is caused by a sorcerer or a ghost. To
+decide this nice point he takes a boiled taro over which he
+has pronounced a charm. This he bites, and if he finds a
+small stone in the fruit, he decides that ghosts are the cause
+of the malady; but if on the other hand he detects a minute
+roll of leaves, he knows that the sufferer is bewitched. In the
+latter case the obvious remedy is to discover the sorcerer
+and to induce him, for an adequate consideration, to give up
+the magic tube in which he has bottled up a portion of
+the sick man's soul. If, however, the magician turns a deaf
+ear alike to the voice of pity and the allurement of gain,
+the resources of the physician are not yet exhausted. He
+now produces his whip or scourge for souls. This valuable
+instrument consists, like a common whip, of a handle with a
+lash attached to it, but what gives it the peculiar qualities
+which distinguish it from all other whips is a small packet
+tied to the end of the lash. The packet contains a certain
+herb, and the sick man and his friends must all touch it in
+order to impregnate it with the volatile essence of their
+souls. Armed with this potent implement the doctor goes
+by night into the depth of the forest; for the darkness of
+night and the solitude of the woods are necessary for the
+success of the delicate operation which this good physician
+of souls has now to perform. Finding himself alone he
+whistles for the lost soul of the sufferer, and if only the
+sorcerer by his infernal craft has not yet brought it to
+death's door, the soul appears at the sound of the whistle;
+for it is strongly attracted by the soul-stuff of its friends in
+the packet. But the doctor has still to catch it, a feat
+which is not so easily accomplished as might be supposed.
+It is now that the whip of souls comes into play. Suddenly
+the doctor heaves up his arm and lashes out at the truant
+soul with all his might. If only he hits it, the business is
+done, the soul is captured, the doctor carries it back to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id="page271"></a>[pg 271]</span>
+house in triumph, and restores it to the body of the poor
+sick man, who necessarily recovers.<a id="footnotetag442" name="footnotetag442"></a><a href="#footnote442"><sup>442</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Extracting ghosts from a sick man.</p>
+
+<p>But suppose that the result of the diagnosis is different,
+and that on mature consideration the doctor should decide
+that a ghost and not a sorcerer is at the bottom of the
+mischief. The question then naturally arises whether the
+sick man has not of late been straying on haunted ground
+and infected himself with the very dangerous soul-stuff or
+spiritual essence of the dead. If he remembers to have done
+so, some leaves are fetched from the place in the forest where
+the mishap occurred, and with them the whole body of the
+sufferer or the wound, as the case may be, is stroked or
+brushed down. The healing virtue of this procedure is
+obvious. The ghosts who are vexing the patient are
+attracted by the familiar smell of the leaves which come
+from their old home; and yielding in a moment of weakness
+to the soft emotions excited by the perfume they creep out
+of the body of the sick man and into the leaves. Quick as
+thought the doctor now whisks the leaves away with the
+ghosts in them; he belabours them with a cudgel, he hangs
+them up in the smoke, or he throws them into the fire.
+Such powerful disinfectants have their natural results; if the
+ghosts are not absolutely destroyed they are at least disarmed,
+and the sick is made whole.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Scraping ghosts from the patient's body.</p>
+
+<p>Another equally effective cure for sickness caused by
+ghosts is this. You take a stout stick, cleave it down the
+middle so that the two ends remain entire, and give it to
+two men to hold. Then the sick man pokes his head
+through the cleft; after that you rub him with the stick
+from the crown of his head to the soles of his feet. In this
+way you obviously scrape off the bloodsucking ghosts who
+are clinging like flies or mosquitoes to his person, and having
+thus transferred them to the cleft stick you throw it away or
+otherwise destroy it. The cure is now complete, and if the
+patient does not recover, he cannot reasonably blame the
+doctor, who has done all that humanly speaking could be
+done to bring back the bloom of health to the poor sick man.<a id="footnotetag443" name="footnotetag443"></a><a href="#footnote443"><sup>443</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Extravagant demonstrations of grief at the death of a sick
+man.</p>
+
+<p>If, however, the sick man obstinately persists in dying,
+there is a great uproar in the village. For the fear of his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id="page272"></a>[pg 272]</span>
+ghost has now fallen like a thunderclap on all the people.
+His disembodied spirit is believed to be hovering in the air,
+seeing everything that is done, hearing every word that is
+spoken, and woe to the unlucky wight who does not display
+a proper degree of sorrow for the irreparable loss that has
+just befallen the community. Accordingly shrieks of despair
+begin to resound, and crocodile tears to flow in cataracts.
+The whole population assemble and give themselves up to
+the most frantic demonstrations of grief. Cries are raised
+on all sides, "Why must he die?" "Wherefore did they
+bewitch him?" "Those wicked, wicked men!" "I'll do
+for them!" "I'll hew them in pieces!" "I'll destroy their
+crops!" "I'll fell all their palm-trees!" "I'll stick all
+their pigs!" "O brother, why did you leave me?" "O
+friend, how can I live without you?" To make good these
+threats one man will be seen prancing wildly about and
+stabbing with a spear at the invisible sorcerers; another
+catches up a cudgel and at one blow shivers a water-pot
+of the deceased into atoms, or rushes out like one demented
+and lays a palm-tree level with the ground. Some fling
+themselves prostrate beside the corpse and sob as if
+their very hearts would break. They take the dead man
+by the hand, they stroke him, they straighten out the
+poor feet which are already growing cold. They coo to
+him softly, they lift up the languid head, and then lay it
+gently down. Then in a frenzy of grief one of them will
+leap to his feet, shriek, bellow, stamp on the floor, grapple
+with the roof beams, shake the walls, as if he would pull the
+house down, and finally hurl himself on the ground and roll
+over and over howling as if his distress was more than he could
+endure. Another looks wildly about him. He sees a knife.
+He grasps it. His teeth are set, his mind is made up.
+"Why need he die?" he cries, "he, my friend, with whom
+I had all things in common, with whom I ate out of the
+same dish?" Then there is a quick movement of the knife,
+and down he falls. But he is not dead. He has only slit
+the flap of one of his ears, and the trickling blood bedabbles
+his body. Meantime with the hoarse cries of the men are
+mingled the weeping and wailing, the shrill screams and
+lamentations of the women; while above all the din and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id="page273"></a>[pg 273]</span>
+uproar rises the booming sound of the shell trumpets blown
+to carry the tidings of death to all the villages in the
+neighbourhood. But gradually the wild tumult dies away
+into silence. Grief or the simulation of it has exhausted
+itself: the people grow calm; they sit down, they smoke or
+chew betel, while some engage in the last offices of attention
+to the dead.<a id="footnotetag444" name="footnotetag444"></a><a href="#footnote444"><sup>444</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Hypocritical character of these demonstrations, which are
+intended to deceive the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>A civilised observer who witnessed such a scene of
+boisterous lamentation, but did not know the natives well,
+might naturally set down all these frantic outbursts to
+genuine sorrow, and might enlarge accordingly on the
+affectionate nature of savages, who are thus cut to the heart
+by the death of any one of their acquaintance. But the
+missionary who knows them better assures us that most of
+these expressions of mourning and despair are a mere
+blind to deceive and soothe the dreaded ghost of the
+deceased into a comfortable persuasion that he is fondly
+loved and sadly missed by his surviving relatives and friends.
+This view of the essential hypocrisy of the lamentations is
+strongly confirmed by the threats which sick people will
+sometimes utter to their attendants. "If you don't take
+better care of me," a man will sometimes say, "and if you
+don't do everything you possibly can to preserve my valuable
+life, my ghost will serve you out." That is why friends
+and relations are so punctilious in paying visits of respect
+and condolence to the sick. Sometimes the last request
+which a dying man addresses to his kinsfolk is that they
+will kill this or that sorcerer who has killed him; and
+he enforces the injunction by threats of the terrible
+things he will do to them in his disembodied state if they
+fail to avenge his death on his imaginary murderer. As
+all the relatives of a dead man stand in fear of his ghost,
+the body may not be buried until all of them have had an
+opportunity of paying their respects to it. If, as sometimes
+happens, a corpse is interred before a relative can arrive
+from a distance, he will on arrival break out into reproaches
+and upbraidings against the grave-diggers for exposing him
+to the wrath of the departed spirit.<a id="footnotetag445" name="footnotetag445"></a><a href="#footnote445"><sup>445</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial and mourning customs of the Kai. Preservation of the
+lower jawbone.</p>
+
+<p>When all the relations and friends have assembled and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id="page274"></a>[pg 274]</span>
+testified their sorrow, the body is buried on the second or
+third day after death. The grave is usually dug under the
+house and is so shallow that even when it has been closed the
+stench is often very perceptible. The ornaments which were
+placed on the body when it was laid out are removed before
+it is lowered into the grave, and the dead takes his last rest
+wrapt in a simple leaf-mat. Often a dying man expresses a
+wish not to be buried. In that case his corpse, tightly
+bandaged, is deposited in a corner of the house, and the
+products of decomposition are allowed to drain through a
+tube into the ground. When they have ceased to run, the
+bundle is opened and the bones taken out and buried, except
+the lower jawbone, which is preserved, sometimes along
+with one of the lower arm bones. The lower jawbone
+reminds the possessor of the duty of blood revenge which he
+owes to the deceased, and which the dying man may have
+inculcated on him with his last breath. The lower arm
+bone brings luck in the chase, especially if the departed
+relative was a mighty hunter. However, if the hunters have
+a long run of bad luck, they conclude that the ghost has
+departed to the under world and accordingly bury the
+lower arm bone and the lower jawbone with the rest of the
+skeleton. The length of the period of mourning is similarly
+determined by the good or bad fortune of the huntsmen.
+If the ghost provides them with game in abundance for a
+long time after his death, the days of mourning are proportionately
+extended; but when the game grows scarce or
+fails altogether, the mourning comes to an end and the
+memory of the deceased soon fades away.<a id="footnotetag446" name="footnotetag446"></a><a href="#footnote446"><sup>446</sup></a> The savage is a
+thoroughly practical man and is not such a fool as to waste
+his sorrow over a ghost who gives him nothing in return.
+Nothing for nothing is his principle. His relations to the
+dead stand on a strictly commercial basis.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Mourning costume. Widows strangled to accompany their dead
+husbands.</p>
+
+<p>The mourning costume consists of strings round the
+neck, bracelets of reed on the arms, and a cylindrical hat
+of bark on the head. A widow is swathed in nets. The
+intention of the costume is to signify to the ghost the
+sympathy which the mourner feels for him in his disembodied
+state. If the man in his lifetime was wont to crouch shivering
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id="page275"></a>[pg 275]</span>
+over the fire, a little fire will be kept up for a time at the
+foot of the grave in order to warm his homeless spirit.<a id="footnotetag447" name="footnotetag447"></a><a href="#footnote447"><sup>447</sup></a>
+The widow or widower has to discharge the disagreeable
+duty of living day and night for several weeks in a hovel
+built directly over the grave. Not unfrequently the lot of a
+widow is much harder. At her own request she is sometimes
+strangled and buried with her husband in the grave,
+in order that her soul may accompany his on the journey
+to the other world. The other relations have no interest
+in encouraging the woman to sacrifice herself, rather the
+contrary; but if she insists they fear to balk her, lest they
+should offend the ghost of her husband, who would punish
+them in many ways for keeping his wife from him. But
+even such voluntary sacrifices, if we may believe Mr. Ch.
+Keysser, are dictated rather by a selfish calculation than by
+an impulse of disinterested affection. He mentions the case
+of a man named Jabu, both of whose wives chose thus to attend
+their husband in death. The deceased was an industrious
+man, a skilful hunter and farmer, who provided his wives
+with abundance of food. As such men are believed to work
+hard also in the other world, tilling fields and killing game
+just as here, the widows thought they could not do better
+than follow him as fast as possible to the spirit land, since
+they had no prospect of getting such another husband here
+on earth. "How firmly convinced," adds the missionary
+admiringly, "must these people be of the reality of another
+world when they sacrifice their earthly existence, not for
+the sake of a better life hereafter, but merely in order to be
+no worse off there than they have been on earth." And
+he adds that this consideration explains why no man ever
+chooses to be strangled at the death of his wife. The labour
+market in the better land is apparently not recruited from
+the ranks of women.<a id="footnotetag448" name="footnotetag448"></a><a href="#footnote448"><sup>448</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">House or village deserted after a death.</p>
+
+<p>The house in which anybody has died is deserted,
+because the ghost of the dead is believed to haunt it and
+make it unsafe at night. If the deceased was a chief or a
+man of importance, the whole village is abandoned and a
+new one built on another site.<a id="footnotetag449" name="footnotetag449"></a><a href="#footnote449"><sup>449</sup></a></p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote415" name="footnote415"></a><b>Footnote 415:</b><a href="#footnotetag415"> (return) </a><p> Stefan Lehner, "Bukaua," in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. (Berlin, 1911) pp. 395-485.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote416" name="footnote416"></a><b>Footnote 416:</b><a href="#footnotetag416"> (return) </a><p> S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 399, 433 <i>sq.</i>, 437
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote417" name="footnote417"></a><b>Footnote 417:</b><a href="#footnotetag417"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 399.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote418" name="footnote418"></a><b>Footnote 418:</b><a href="#footnotetag418"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 414.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote419" name="footnote419"></a><b>Footnote 419:</b><a href="#footnotetag419"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 466, 468.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote420" name="footnote420"></a><b>Footnote 420:</b><a href="#footnotetag420"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 469.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote421" name="footnote421"></a><b>Footnote 421:</b><a href="#footnotetag421"> (return) </a><p> S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 462 <i>sqq.</i>, 466, 467,
+471 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote422" name="footnote422"></a><b>Footnote 422:</b><a href="#footnotetag422"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 462.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote423" name="footnote423"></a><b>Footnote 423:</b><a href="#footnotetag423"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 444 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote424" name="footnote424"></a><b>Footnote 424:</b><a href="#footnotetag424"> (return) </a><p> S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 434 <i>sqq.</i>; compare
+<i>id.</i>, pp. 478 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote425" name="footnote425"></a><b>Footnote 425:</b><a href="#footnotetag425"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 462.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote426" name="footnote426"></a><b>Footnote 426:</b><a href="#footnotetag426"> (return) </a><p> S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 430, 470, 472 <i>sq.</i>,
+474 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote427" name="footnote427"></a><b>Footnote 427:</b><a href="#footnotetag427"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 403.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote428" name="footnote428"></a><b>Footnote 428:</b><a href="#footnotetag428"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 402-410.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote429" name="footnote429"></a><b>Footnote 429:</b><a href="#footnotetag429"> (return) </a><p>S. Lehner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 410-414.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote430" name="footnote430"></a><b>Footnote 430:</b><a href="#footnotetag430"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Keysser, "Aus dem Leben der Kaileute," in R.
+Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. 3-6.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote431" name="footnote431"></a><b>Footnote 431:</b><a href="#footnotetag431"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 12 <i>sq.</i>, 17-20.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote432" name="footnote432"></a><b>Footnote 432:</b><a href="#footnotetag432"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 9-12.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote433" name="footnote433"></a><b>Footnote 433:</b><a href="#footnotetag433"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 111.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote434" name="footnote434"></a><b>Footnote 434:</b><a href="#footnotetag434"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 113.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote435" name="footnote435"></a><b>Footnote 435:</b><a href="#footnotetag435"> (return) </a><p> Compare Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, <i>The Pagan Tribes of
+Borneo</i> (London, 1912), ii. 221 <i>sq.</i>: "It has often been
+attempted to exhibit the mental life of savage peoples as profoundly
+different from our own; to assert that they act from motives, and reach
+conclusions by means of mental processes, so utterly different from our
+own motives and processes that we cannot hope to interpret or understand
+their behaviour unless we can first, by some impossible or at least by
+some hitherto undiscovered method, learn the nature of these mysterious
+motives and processes. These attempts have recently been renewed in
+influential quarters. If these views were applied to the savage peoples
+of the interior of Borneo, we should characterise them as fanciful
+delusions natural to the anthropologist who has spent all the days of
+his life in a stiff collar and a black coat upon the well-paved ways of
+civilised society. We have no hesitation in saying that, the more
+intimately one becomes acquainted with these pagan tribes, the more
+fully one realises the close similarity of their mental processes to
+one's own. Their primary impulses and emotions seem to be in all
+respects like our own. It is true that they are very unlike the typical
+civilised man of some of the older philosophers, whose every action
+proceeded from a nice and logical calculation of the algebraic sum of
+pleasures and pains to be derived from alternative lines of conduct; but
+we ourselves are equally unlike that purely mythical personage. The
+Kayan or the Iban often acts impulsively in ways which by no means
+conduce to further his best interests or deeper purposes; but so do we
+also. He often reaches conclusions by processes that cannot be logically
+justified; but so do we also. He often holds, and upon successive
+occasions acts upon, beliefs that are logically inconsistent with one
+another; but so do we also." For further testimonies to the reasoning
+powers of savages, which it would be superfluous to affirm if it were
+not at present a fashion with some theorists to deny, see <i>Taboo and
+the Perils of the Soul</i>, pp. 420 <i>sqq.</i> And on the tendency of
+the human mind in general, not of the savage mind in particular, calmly
+to acquiesce in inconsistent and even contradictory conclusions, I may
+refer to a note in <i>Adonis, Attis, Osiris</i>, Second Edition, p. 4.
+But indeed to observe such contradictions in practice the philosopher
+need not quit his own study.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote436" name="footnote436"></a><b>Footnote 436:</b><a href="#footnotetag436"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 111 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote437" name="footnote437"></a><b>Footnote 437:</b><a href="#footnotetag437"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 112.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote438" name="footnote438"></a><b>Footnote 438:</b><a href="#footnotetag438"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 140. As to the magical
+tubes in which the sorcerer seals up some part of his victim's soul, see
+<i>id.</i>, p. 135.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote439" name="footnote439"></a><b>Footnote 439:</b><a href="#footnotetag439"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 140 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote440" name="footnote440"></a><b>Footnote 440:</b><a href="#footnotetag440"> (return) </a><p> Mr. Keysser indeed affirms that in the mind of the Kai
+sorcery "is regarded as the cause of all deaths" (<i>op. cit.</i> p.
+102), and again that "all men without exception die in consequence of
+the baneful acts of these sorcerers and their accomplices" (p. 134); and
+again that "even in the case of old people they assume sorcery to be the
+cause of death; to sorcery, too, all misfortunes whatever are ascribed"
+(p. 140). But that these statements are exaggerations seems to follow
+from Mr. Keysser's own account of the wounds, sicknesses, and deaths
+which these savages attribute to ghosts and not to sorcerers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote441" name="footnote441"></a><b>Footnote 441:</b><a href="#footnotetag441"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 141.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote442" name="footnote442"></a><b>Footnote 442:</b><a href="#footnotetag442"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 133 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote443" name="footnote443"></a><b>Footnote 443:</b><a href="#footnotetag443"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 141 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote444" name="footnote444"></a><b>Footnote 444:</b><a href="#footnotetag444"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 80 <i>sq.</i>, 142.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote445" name="footnote445"></a><b>Footnote 445:</b><a href="#footnotetag445"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 142.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote446" name="footnote446"></a><b>Footnote 446:</b><a href="#footnotetag446"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 82, 83.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote447" name="footnote447"></a><b>Footnote 447:</b><a href="#footnotetag447"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 82, 142 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote448" name="footnote448"></a><b>Footnote 448:</b><a href="#footnotetag448"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 83 <i>sq.</i>, 143.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote449" name="footnote449"></a><b>Footnote 449:</b><a href="#footnotetag449"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 83.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>[pg 276]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xiii" id="lecture-xiii"></a>LECTURE XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF
+GERMAN NEW GUINEA (<i>continued</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Offerings to appease ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I gave you some account of the fear
+and awe which the Kai of German New Guinea entertain
+for the spirits of the dead. Believing that the ghost is
+endowed with all the qualities and faculties which distinguished
+the man in his lifetime, they naturally dread
+most the ghosts of warlike, cruel, violent, and passionate
+men, and take the greatest pains to soothe their anger and
+win their favour. For that purpose they give the departed
+spirit all sorts of things to take with him to the far country.
+And in order that he may have the use of them it is
+necessary to smash or otherwise spoil them. Thus the
+spear that is given him must be broken, the pot must be
+shivered, the bag must be torn, the palm-tree must be cut
+down. Fruits are offered to the ghost by dashing them in
+pieces or hanging a bunch of them over the grave. Objects
+of value, such as boars' tusks or dogs' teeth, are made over
+to him by being laid on the corpse; but the economical
+savage removes these precious things from the body at
+burial. All such offerings and sacrifices, we are told, are
+made simply out of fear of the ghost. It is no pleasure to
+a man to cut down a valuable palm-tree, which might have
+helped to nourish himself and his family for years; he does
+it only lest a worse thing should befall him at the hands of
+the departed spirit.<a id="footnotetag450" name="footnotetag450"></a><a href="#footnote450"><sup>450</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Mode of discovering the sorcerer who caused a death.</p>
+
+<p>But the greatest service that the Kai can render to a
+dead man is to take vengeance on the sorcerer who caused
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>[pg 277]</span>
+his death by witchcraft. The first thing is to discover the
+villain, and in the search for him the ghost obligingly
+assists his surviving kinsfolk. Sometimes, however, it is
+necessary to resort to a stratagem in order to secure his
+help. Thus, for example, one day while the ghost, blinded
+by the strong sunlight, is cowering in a dark corner or
+reposing at full length in the grave, his relatives will set up
+a low scaffold in a field, cover it with leaves, and pile up
+over it a mass of the field fruits which belonged to the dead
+man, so that the whole erection may appear to the eye of
+the unsuspecting ghost a heap of taro, yams, and so forth,
+and nothing more. But before the sun goes down, two or
+three men steal out from the house, and ensconce themselves
+under the scaffold, where they are completely concealed
+by the piled-up fruits. When darkness has fallen, out
+comes the ghost and prowling about espies the heap of
+yams and taro. At sight of the devastation wrought in his
+field he flies into a passion, and curses and swears in the
+feeble wheezy whisper in which ghosts always speak. In
+the course of his fluent imprecations he expresses a wish
+that the miscreants who have wasted his substance may
+suffer so and so at the hands of the sorcerer. That is just
+what the men in hiding have been waiting for. No sooner
+do they hear the name of the sorcerer than they jump up
+with a great shout; the startled ghost takes to his heels;
+and all the people in the village come pouring out of the
+houses. Very glad they are to know that the murderer
+has been found out, and sooner or later they will have his
+blood.<a id="footnotetag451" name="footnotetag451"></a><a href="#footnote451"><sup>451</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Another way of detecting the sorcerer.</p>
+
+<p>Another mode of eliciting the requisite information from
+the ghost is this. In order to allow him to communicate
+freely with his mouldering body, his relations insert a tube
+through the earth of the grave down to the corpse; then
+they sprinkle powdered lime on the grave. At night the
+ghost comes along, picks up the powdered lime, and makes off
+in a bee line for the village where the sorcerer who bewitched
+him resides. On the way he drops some of the powder
+here and there, so that next morning, on the principle of the
+paper-chase, his relatives can trace his footsteps to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>[pg 278]</span>
+very door of his murderer. In many districts the people
+tie a packet of lime to the knee of a corpse so that his
+ghost may have it to hand when he wants it.<a id="footnotetag452" name="footnotetag452"></a><a href="#footnote452"><sup>452</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Cross-questioning the ghost by means of fire.</p>
+
+<p>But the favourite way of cross-questioning the ghost on
+subject of his decease is by means of fire. A few men
+go out before nightfall from the village and sit down in a
+row, one behind the other, on the path. The man in front
+has a leaf-mat drawn like a hood over his head and back
+in order that the ghost may not touch him from behind
+unawares. In his hand he holds a glowing coal and some
+tinder, and as he puts the one to the other he calls to the
+ghost, "Come, take, take, take; come, take, take, take," and
+so on. Meantime his mates behind him are reckoning up
+the names of all the men near and far who are suspected of
+sorcery, and a portion of the village youth have clambered
+up trees and are on the look-out for the ghost. If they do
+not see his body they certainly see his eye twinkling in the
+gloom, though the uninstructed European might easily
+mistake it for a glow-worm. No sooner do they catch sight
+of it than they bawl out, "Come hither, fetch the fire, and
+burn him who burnt thee." If the tinder blazes up at the
+name of a sorcerer, it is flung towards the village where the
+man in question dwells. And if at the same time a glow-worm
+is seen to move in the same direction, the people
+entertain no doubt that the ghost has appeared and fetched
+the soul of the fire.<a id="footnotetag453" name="footnotetag453"></a><a href="#footnote453"><sup>453</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Necessity of destroying the sorcerer who caused a death.</p>
+
+<p>In whichever way the author of the death may be
+detected, the avengers of blood set out for the village of
+the miscreant and seek to take his life. Almost all the
+wars between villages or tribes spring from such expeditions.
+The sorcerer or sorcerers must be extirpated, nay all their
+kith and kin must be destroyed root and branch, if the
+people are to live in peace and quiet. The ghost of the
+dead calls, nay clamours for vengeance, and if he does not
+get it, he will wreak his spite on his negligent relations.
+Not only will he give them no luck in the chase, but he
+will drive the wild swine into the fields to trample down
+and root up the crops, and he will do them every mischief
+in his power. If rain does not fall, so that the freshly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>[pg 279]</span>
+planted root crops wither; or if sickness is rife, the people
+recognise in the calamity the wrath of the ghost, who can
+only be appeased by the slaughter of the wicked magician
+or of somebody else. Hence the avengers of blood often
+do not set out until a fresh death, an outbreak of sickness,
+failure in the chase, or some other misfortune reminds the
+living of the duty they owe to the dead. The Kai is not
+by nature warlike, and he might never go to war if it were
+not that he dreads the vengeance of ghosts more than the
+wrath of men.<a id="footnotetag454" name="footnotetag454"></a><a href="#footnote454"><sup>454</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Slayers dread the ghosts of the slain.</p>
+
+<p>If the expedition has been successful, if the enemy's
+village has been surprised and stormed, the men and old
+women butchered, and the young women taken prisoners,
+the warriors beat a hasty retreat with their booty in order
+to be safe at home, or at least in the shelter of a friendly
+village, before nightfall. Their reason for haste is the fear
+of being overtaken in the darkness by the ghosts of their
+slaughtered foes, who, powerless by day, are very dangerous
+and terrible by night. Restlessly through the hours of
+darkness these unquiet spirits follow like sleuth-hounds in
+the tracks of their retreating enemies, eager to come up with
+them and by contact with the bloodstained weapons of their
+slayers to recover the spiritual substance which they have
+lost. Not till they have done so can they find rest and peace.
+That is why the victors are careful not at first to bring back
+their weapons into the village but to hide them somewhere
+in the bushes at a safe distance. There they leave them for
+some days until the baffled ghosts may be supposed to have
+given up the chase and returned, sad and angry, to their
+mangled bodies in the charred ruins of their old home.
+The first night after the return of the warriors is always
+the most anxious time; all the villagers are then on the
+alert for fear of the ghosts; but if the night passes quietly,
+their terror gradually subsides and gives place to the dread
+of their surviving enemies.<a id="footnotetag455" name="footnotetag455"></a><a href="#footnote455"><sup>455</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Seclusion of man-slayers from fear of their victims' ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>As the victors in a raid are supposed to have more or
+less of the soul-stuff or spiritual essence of their slain foes
+adhering to their persons, none of their friends will venture
+to touch them for some time after their return to the village.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id="page280"></a>[pg 280]</span>
+Everybody avoids them and goes carefully out of their way.
+If during this time any of the villagers suffers from a pain
+in his stomach, he thinks that he must have inadvertently
+sat down where one of the warriors had sat before him. If
+somebody endures the pangs of toothache, he makes sure
+that he must have eaten a fruit which had been touched by
+one of the slayers. All the refuse of the meals of these
+gallant men must be most carefully put away lest a pig
+should devour it; for if it did do so, the animal would
+certainly die, which would be a serious loss to the owner.
+Hence when the warriors have satisfied their hunger, any
+food that remains over is burnt or buried. The fighting men
+themselves are not very seriously incommoded, or at all
+events endangered, by the ghosts of their victims; for they
+have taken the precaution to disinfect themselves by the
+sap of a certain creeper, which, if it does not render them
+absolutely immune to ghostly influence, at least fortifies
+their constitution to a very considerable extent.<a id="footnotetag456" name="footnotetag456"></a><a href="#footnote456"><sup>456</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Feigned indignation of a man who has connived at the murder
+of a relative.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, instead of sending forth a band of warriors
+to ravage, burn, and slaughter the whole male population of
+the village in which the wicked sorcerer resides, the people
+of one village will come to a secret understanding with the
+people of the sorcerer's village to have the miscreant quietly
+put out of the way. A hint is given to the scoundrel's next
+of kin, it may be his brother, son, or nephew, that if he will
+only wink at the slaughter of his obnoxious relative, he will
+receive a handsome compensation from the slayers. Should
+he privately accept the offer, he is most careful to conceal
+his connivance at the deed of blood, lest he should draw
+down on his head the wrath of his murdered kinsman's
+ghost. So, when the deed is done and the murder is out,
+he works himself up into a state of virtuous sorrow and
+indignation, covers his head with the leaves of a certain
+plant, and chanting a dirge in tones of heart-rending grief,
+marches straight to the village of the murderers. There, on
+the public square, surrounded by an attentive audience, he
+opens the floodgates of his eloquence and pours forth the
+torrent of an aching heart. "You have slain my kinsman,"
+says he, "you are wicked men! How could you kill so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id="page281"></a>[pg 281]</span>
+good a man, who conferred so many benefits on me in his
+lifetime? I knew nothing of the plot. Had I had an
+inkling of it, I would have foiled it. How can I now
+avenge his death? I have no property with which to hire
+men of war to go and punish his murderers. Yet in spite
+of everything my murdered kinsman will not believe in my
+innocence! He will be angry with me, he will pay me out, he
+will do me all the harm he can. Therefore do you declare
+openly whether I had any share whatever in his death,
+and come and strew lime on my head in order that he may
+convince himself of my innocence." This appeal of injured
+innocence meets with a ready response. The people dust
+the leaves on his head with powdered lime; and so, decorated
+with the white badge of spotless virtue, and enriched with a
+boar's tusk or other valuable object as the price of his compliance,
+he returns to his village with a conscience at peace
+with all the world, reflecting with satisfaction on the profitable
+transaction he has just concluded, and laughing in his
+sleeve at the poor deluded ghost of his murdered relative.<a id="footnotetag457" name="footnotetag457"></a><a href="#footnote457"><sup>457</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Comedy acted to deceive the ghost of a murdered kinsman.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the worthy soul who thus for a valuable
+consideration consents to waive all his personal feelings,
+will even carry his self-abnegation so far as to be present
+and look on at the murder of his kinsman. But true to his
+principles he will see to it that the thing is done decently
+and humanely. When the struggle is nearly over and the
+man is down, writhing on the ground with the murderers
+busy about him, his loving kinsman will not suffer them to
+take an unfair advantage of their superior numbers to cut
+him up alive with their knives, to chop him with their axes,
+or to smash him with their clubs. He will only allow them
+to stab him with their spears, repeating of course the stabs
+again and again till the victim ceases to writhe and
+quiver, and lies there dead as a stone. Then begins the
+real time of peril for the virtuous kinsman who has been
+a spectator and director of the scene; for the ghost of the
+murdered man has now deserted its mangled body, and,
+still blinded with blood and smarting with pain, might
+easily and even excusably misunderstand the situation.
+It is essential, therefore, in order to prevent a painful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id="page282"></a>[pg 282]</span>
+misapprehension, that the kinsman should at once and emphatically
+disclaim any part or parcel in the murder. This
+he accordingly does in language which leaves no room for
+doubt or ambiguity. He falls into a passion: he rails at
+the murderers: he proclaims his horror at their deed. All
+the way home he refuses to be comforted. He upbraids
+the assassins, he utters the most frightful threats against
+them; he rushes at them to snatch their weapons from
+them and dash them in pieces. But they easily wrench
+the weapons from his unresisting hands. For the whole
+thing is only a piece of acting. His sole intention is that
+the ghost may see and hear it all, and being convinced of
+the innocence of his dear kinsman may not punish him
+with bad crops, wounds, sickness, and other misfortunes.
+Even when he has reached the village, he keeps up the
+comedy for a time, raging, fretting and fuming at the
+irreparable loss he has sustained by the death of his lamented
+relative.<a id="footnotetag458" name="footnotetag458"></a><a href="#footnote458"><sup>458</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Pretence of avenging the ghost of a murdered sorcerer.</p>
+
+<p>Similarly when a chief has among his subjects a particular
+sorcerer whom he fears but with whom he is professedly
+on terms of friendship, he will sometimes engage a
+man to murder him. No sooner, however, is the murder
+perpetrated than the chief who bespoke it hastens in seeming
+indignation with a band of followers to the murderer's
+village. The assassin, of course, has got a hint of what is
+coming, and he and his friends take care not to be at home
+when the chief arrives on his mission of vengeance. Balked
+by the absence of their victim the avengers of blood breathe
+out fire and slaughter, but content themselves in fact with
+smashing an old pot or two, knocking down a deserted hut,
+and perhaps felling a banana-tree or a betel-palm. Having
+thus given the ghost of the murdered man an unequivocal
+proof of the sincerity of their friendship, they return quietly
+home.<a id="footnotetag459" name="footnotetag459"></a><a href="#footnote459"><sup>459</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Kai afraid of ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>The habits of Kai ghosts are to some extent just the
+contrary of those of living men. They sleep by day and
+go about their business by night, when they frighten people
+and play them all kinds of tricks. Usually they appear in
+the form of animals. As light has the effect of blinding or at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page283" id="page283"></a>[pg 283]</span>
+least dazzling them, they avoid everything bright, and hence
+it is easy to scare them away by means of fire. That is
+why no native will go even a short way in the dark without
+a bamboo torch. If it is absolutely necessary to go out by
+night, which he is very loth to do, he will hum and haw
+loudly before quitting the house so as to give notice to any
+lurking ghost that he is coming with a light, which allows
+the ghost to scuttle out of his way in good time. The people
+of a village live in terror above all so long as a corpse
+remains unburied in it; after nightfall nobody would then
+venture out of sight of the houses. When a troop of people
+go by night to a neighbouring village with flaring torches
+in their hands, nobody is willing to walk last on the path;
+they all huddle together for safety in the middle, till one
+man braver than the rest consents to act as rearguard.
+The rustling of a bush in the evening twilight startles them
+with the dread of some ghastly apparition; the sight of a
+pig in the gloaming is converted by their fears into the
+vision of a horrible spectre. If a man stumbles, it is because
+a ghost has pushed him, and he fancies he perceives the
+frightful thing in a tree-stump or any chance object. No
+wonder a Kai man fears ghosts, since he believes that the
+mere touch of one of them may be fatal. People who fall
+down in fits or in faints are supposed to have been touched
+by ghosts; and on coming to themselves they will tell their
+friends with the most solemn assurance how they felt the
+death-cold hand of the ghost on their body, and how a
+shudder ran through their whole frame at contact with the
+uncanny being.<a id="footnotetag460" name="footnotetag460"></a><a href="#footnote460"><sup>460</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Services rendered to the living by ghosts of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>But it would be a mistake to imagine that the ghosts
+of the dead are a source of danger, annoyance, and discomfort,
+and nothing more. That is not so. They may and
+do render the Kai the most material services in everyday
+life, particularly by promoting the supply of food both
+vegetable and animal. I have said that these practical
+savages stand towards their departed kinsfolk on a strictly
+commercial footing; and I will now illustrate the benefits
+which the Kai hope to receive from the ghosts in return for
+all the respect and attention lavished on them. In the first
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>[pg 284]</span>
+place, then, so long as a ghost remains in the neighbourhood
+of the village, it is expected of him that he shall make the
+crops thrive and neither tread them down himself nor allow
+wild pigs to do so. The expectation is reasonable, yet
+the conduct of the ghost does not always answer to it.
+Occasionally, whether out of sheer perverseness or simple
+absence of mind, he will sit down in a field; and wherever
+he does so, he makes a hollow where the fruits will not
+grow. Indeed any fruit that he even touches with his foot
+in passing, shrivels up. Where these things have happened,
+the people offer boiled taro and a few crabs to the ghosts
+to induce them to keep clear of the crops and to repose
+their weary limbs elsewhere than in the tilled fields.<a id="footnotetag461" name="footnotetag461"></a><a href="#footnote461"><sup>461</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts help Kai hunters to kill game.</p>
+
+<p>But the most important service which the dead render
+to the living is the good luck which they vouchsafe to
+hunters. Hence in order to assure himself of the favour
+of the dead the hunter hangs his nets on a grave before
+he uses them. If a man was a good and successful hunter
+in his lifetime, his ghost will naturally be more than usually
+able to assist his brethren in the craft after his death. For
+that reason when such a man has just died, the people,
+to adopt a familiar proverb, hasten to make hay while the
+sun shines by hunting very frequently, in the confident
+expectation of receiving ghostly help from the deceased
+hunter. In the evening, when they return from the chase,
+they lay a small portion of their bag near his grave, scatter a
+powder which possesses the special virtue of attracting ghosts,
+and call out, "So-and-so, come and eat; here I set down
+food for you, it is a part of all we have." If after such an
+offering and invocation the night wind rustles the tops of
+the trees or shakes the thatch of leaves on the roofs, they
+know that the ghost is in the village. The twinkle of a
+glow-worm near his grave is the glitter of his eye. In the
+morning, too, before they sally forth to the woods, one of
+the next of kin to the dead huntsman will go betimes to his
+grave, stamp on it to waken the sleeper below, and call out,
+"So-and-so, come! we are now about to go out hunting.
+Help us to a good bag!" If they have luck, they praise
+the deceased as a good spirit and in the evening supply
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id="page285"></a>[pg 285]</span>
+his wants again with food, tobacco, and betel. The sacrifice,
+as usually happens in such cases, does not call for any
+great exercise of self-denial; since the spirit consumes only
+the spiritual essence of the good things, while he leaves
+their material substance to be enjoyed by the living.<a id="footnotetag462" name="footnotetag462"></a><a href="#footnote462"><sup>462</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ill-treatment of a ghost who fails to help hunters.</p>
+
+<p>However, it sometimes happens that the ghost disappoints
+them, and that the hunters return in the evening
+hungry and empty-handed. This may even be repeated
+day after day, and still the people will not lose hope. They
+think that the ghost is perhaps busy working in his field,
+or that he has gone on a visit and will soon come home.
+To give him time to do his business or see his friends at
+leisure, they will remain in the village for several days.
+Then, when they imagine that he must surely have returned,
+they go out into the woods and try their luck
+again. But should there still be no ghost and no game,
+they begin to be seriously alarmed. They think that some
+evil must have befallen him. But if time goes on and still
+he gives no sign and the game continues scarce and shy,
+their feelings towards the ghost undergo a radical alteration.
+Passion getting the better of prudence, they will even reproach
+him with ingratitude, taunt him with his uselessness,
+and leave him to starve. Should he after that still remain
+deaf to their railing and regardless of the short commons
+to which they have reduced him, they will discharge a volley
+of abuse at his grave and trouble themselves about him no
+more. However, if, not content with refusing his valuable
+assistance in the chase, the ghost should actually blight the
+crops or send wild boars into the fields to trample them
+down, the patience of the long-suffering people is quite
+exhausted: the vials of their wrath overflow; and snatching
+up their cudgels in a fury they belabour his grave till his
+bones ache, or even drive him with blows and curses
+altogether from the village.<a id="footnotetag463" name="footnotetag463"></a><a href="#footnote463"><sup>463</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The journey of ghosts to the spirit land.</p>
+
+<p>Such an outcast ghost, if he does not seek his revenge
+by prowling in the neighbourhood and preying on society
+at large, will naturally bethink himself of repairing to his
+long home in the under world. For sooner or later the
+spirits of the dead congregate there. It is especially when
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id="page286"></a>[pg 286]</span>
+the flesh has quite mouldered away from his bones that the
+ghost packs up his little traps and sets out for the better
+land. The entrance to the abode of bliss is a cave to the
+west of Saddle Mountain. Here in the gully there is a
+projecting tree-stump on which the ghosts perch waiting
+for a favourable moment to jump into the mouth of the
+cavern. When a slight earthquake is felt, a Kai man will
+often say, "A ghost has just leaped from the tree into the
+cave; that is why the earth is shaking." Down below the
+ghosts are received by Tulmeng, lord of the nether world.
+Often he appears in a canoe to ferry them over to the
+further shore. "Blood or wax?" is the laconic question
+which he puts to the ghost on the bank. He means to say,
+"Were you killed or were you done to death by magic?"
+For it is with wax that the sorcerer stops up the fatal little
+tubes in which he encloses the souls of his enemies. And
+the reason why the lord of the dead puts the question to
+the newcomer is that the ghosts of the slain and the ghosts
+of the bewitched dwell in separate places. Right in front
+of the land of souls rises a high steep wall, which cannot
+be climbed even by ghosts. The spirits have accordingly
+to make their way through it and thereupon find themselves
+in their new abode. According to some Kai, before the
+ghosts are admitted to ghost land they must swing to and
+fro on a rope and then drop into water, where they are
+washed clean of bloodstains and all impurity; after which
+they ascend, spick and span, the last slope to the village of
+ghosts.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Life of ghosts in the other world.</p>
+
+<p>Tulmeng has the reputation of being a very stern ruler
+in his weird realm, but the Kai really know very little about
+him. He beats refractory souls, and it is essential that
+every ghost should have his ears and nose bored. The
+operation is very painful, and to escape it most people take
+the precaution of having their ears and noses bored in their
+lifetime. Life in the other world goes on just like life in
+this one. Houses are built exactly like houses on earth,
+and there as here pigs swarm in the streets. Fields are
+tilled and crops are got in; ghostly men marry ghostly
+women, who give birth to ghostly children. The same old
+round of love and hate, of quarrelling and fighting, of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id="page287"></a>[pg 287]</span>
+battle, murder and sudden death goes on in the shadowy
+realm below ground just as in the more solid world above
+ground. Sorcerers are there also, and they breed just as
+bad blood among the dead as among the living. All things
+indeed are the same except for their shadowy unsubstantial
+texture.<a id="footnotetag464" name="footnotetag464"></a><a href="#footnote464"><sup>464</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts die and turn into animals.</p>
+
+<p>But the ghosts do not live for ever in the nether world.
+They die the second death and turn into animals, generally
+into cuscuses. In the shape of animals they haunt the
+wildest, deepest, darkest glens of the rugged mountains.
+No one but the owner has the right to set foot on such
+haunted ground. He may even kill the ghostly animals.
+Any one else who dared to disturb them in their haunts
+would do so at the peril of his life. But even the owner of
+the land who has killed one of the ghostly creatures is
+bound to appease the spirit of the dead beast. He may
+not cut up the carcase at once, but must leave it for a time,
+perhaps for a whole night, after laying on it presents which
+are intended to mollify and soothe the injured spirit. In
+placing the gifts on the body he says, "Take the gifts and
+leave us that which was a game animal, that we may eat
+it." When the animal's ghost has appropriated the spiritual
+essence of the offerings, the hunter and his family may eat
+the carcase. Should one of these ghostly creatures die or
+be killed, its spirit turns either into an insect or into an
+ant-hill. Children who would destroy such an ant-hill or
+throw little darts at it, are warned by their elders not to
+indulge in such sacrilegious sport. When the insect also
+dies, the series of spiritual transformations is at an end.<a id="footnotetag465" name="footnotetag465"></a><a href="#footnote465"><sup>465</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts of persons eminent for good or evil in their lives are
+remembered and appealed to for help long after their deaths. Prayers to
+ghosts for rain, a good crop of yams, and so forth.</p>
+
+<p>The ghosts whose help is invoked by hunters and
+farmers are commonly the spirits of persons who have lately
+died, since such spirits linger for a time in the neighbourhood,
+or rather in the memory of the people. But besides
+these spirits of the recent dead there are certain older
+ghosts who may be regarded as permanent patrons of
+hunting and other departments of life and nature, because
+their fame has survived long after the men or women
+themselves were gathered to their fathers. For example,
+men who were bold and resolute in battle during their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>[pg 288]</span>
+life will be invoked long after their death, whenever a
+stout heart is needed for some feat of daring. And
+men who were notorious thieves and villains in the flesh
+will be invited, long after their bodies have mouldered
+in the grave, to lend their help when a deed of villainy is
+to be done. The names of men or women who were
+eminent for good or evil in their lives survive indefinitely
+in the memory of the tribe. Thus before a battle many
+a Kai warrior will throw something over the enemy's
+village and as he does so he will softly call on two ghosts,
+"We and Gunang, ye two heroes, come and guard me and
+keep the foes from me, that they may not be able to hurt
+me! But stand by me that I may be able to riddle them
+with spears!" Again, when a magician wishes to cause
+an earthquake, he will take a handful of ashes, wrap
+them in certain leaves, and pronounce the following spell
+over the packet: "Thou man S&acirc;iong, throw about everything
+that exists; houses, villages, paths, fields, bushes and
+tall forest trees, yams, and taro, throw them all hither and
+thither; break and smash everything, but leave me in
+peace!" While he utters this incantation or prayer, the
+sorcerer's body itself twitches and quivers more and more
+violently, till the hut creaks and cracks and his strength is
+exhausted. Then he throws the packet of ashes out of the
+hut, and after that the earthquake is sure to follow sooner
+or later. So when they want rain, the Kai call upon two
+ghostly men named Balong and Batu, or Dinding and
+Bojang, to drive away a certain woman named Yondimi,
+so that the rain which she is holding up may fall upon the
+earth. The prayer for rain addressed to the ghosts is
+combined with a magical spell pronounced over a stone.
+And when rain has fallen in abundance and the Kai wish
+to make it cease, they strew hot ashes on the stone or lay
+it in a wood fire. On the principle of homoeopathic magic
+the heat of the ashes or of the fire is supposed to dry up
+the rain. Thus in these ceremonies for the production or
+cessation of rain we see that religion, represented by the
+invocation of the ghosts, goes hand in hand with magic,
+represented by the hocus-pocus with the stone. Again,
+certain celebrated ghosts are invoked to promote the growth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id="page289"></a>[pg 289]</span>
+of taro and yams. Thus to ensure a good crop of taro,
+the suppliant will hold a bud of taro in his hand and pray,
+"O Mrs. Zewanong, may my taro leaves unfold till they
+are as broad as the petticoat which covers thy loins!"
+When they are planting yams, they pray to two women
+named Tendung and Molewa that they would cause the
+yams to put forth as long suckers as the strings which the
+women twist to make into carrying-nets. Before they dig
+up the yams, they take a branch and drive with it the evil
+spirits or ghosts from the house in which the yams are to
+be stored. Having effected this clearance they stick the
+branch in the roof of the house and appoint a certain
+ghostly man named Ehang to act as warden. Again,
+fowlers invoke a married pair of ghosts called M&acirc;nze and
+T&acirc;mingoka to frighten the birds from the trees and drive
+them on the limed twigs. Or they pray to a ghostly
+woman named L&acirc;ne, saying, "In all places of the neighbourhood
+shake the betel-nuts from the palms, that they may
+fall down to me on this fruit-tree and knock the berries
+from the boughs!" But by the betel-nuts the fowler in
+veiled language means the birds, which are to come in flocks
+to the fruit-tree and be caught fast by the lime on the
+branches. Again, when a fisherman wishes to catch eels,
+he prays to two ghosts called Yambi and Ngigw&acirc;li, saying:
+"Come, ye two men, and go down into the holes of the
+pool; smite the eels in them, and draw them out on the
+bank, that I may kill them!" Once more, when a child
+suffers from enlarged spleen, which shews as a swelling on
+its body, the parent will pray to a ghost named Aidolo for
+help in these words: "Come and help this child! It is
+big with a ball of sickness. Cut it up and squeeze and
+squash it, that the blood and pus may drain away and my
+child may be made whole!" To give point to the prayer
+the petitioner simultaneously pretends to cut a cross on the
+swelling with a knife.<a id="footnotetag466" name="footnotetag466"></a><a href="#footnote466"><sup>466</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Possible development of departmental gods out of ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>From this it appears that men and women who impressed
+their contemporaries by their talents, their virtues,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id="page290"></a>[pg 290]</span>
+or their vices in their lifetime, are sometimes remembered
+long after their death and continue to be invoked by their
+descendants for help in the particular department in which
+they had formerly rendered themselves eminent either for
+good or for evil. Such powerful and admired or dreaded
+ghosts might easily grow in time into gods and goddesses,
+who are worshipped as presiding over the various departments
+of nature and of human life. There is good reason
+to think that among many tribes and nations of the world
+the history of a god, if it could be recovered, would be
+found to be the history of a spirit who served his apprenticeship
+as a ghost before he was promoted to the rank of
+deity.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Kai lads at circumcision supposed to be swallowed by a
+monster. Bull-roarers.</p>
+
+<p>Before quitting the Kai tribe I will mention that they,
+like the other tribes on this coast, practise circumcision and
+appear to associate the custom more or less vaguely with
+the spirits of the dead. Like their neighbours, they impress
+women with the belief that at circumcision the lads are
+swallowed by a monster, who can only be induced to
+disgorge them by the bribe of much food and especially of
+pigs, which are accordingly bred and kept nominally for this
+purpose, but really to furnish a banquet for the men alone.
+The ceremony is performed at irregular intervals of several
+years. A long hut, entered through a high door at one
+end and tapering away at the other, is built in a lonely
+part of the forest. It represents the monster which is to
+swallow the novices in its capacious jaws. The process of
+deglutition is represented as follows. In front of the
+entrance to the hut a scaffold is erected and a man mounts
+it. The novices are then led up one by one and passed
+under the scaffold. As each comes up, the man overhead
+makes a gesture of swallowing, while at the same time he
+takes a great gulp of water from a coco-nut flask. The
+trembling novice is now supposed to be in the maw of the
+monster; but a pig is offered for his redemption, the man
+on the scaffold, as representative of the beast, accepts the
+offering, a gurgling sound is heard, and the water which he
+had just gulped descends in a jet on the novice, who now
+goes free. The actual circumcision follows immediately on
+this impressive pantomime. The monster who swallows the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page291" id="page291"></a>[pg 291]</span>
+lads is named Ngosa, which means "Grandfather"; and the
+same name is given to the bull-roarers which are swung at
+the festival. The Kai bull-roarer is a lance-shaped piece of
+palm-wood, more or less elaborately carved, which being
+swung at the end of a string emits the usual droning,
+booming sound. When they are not in use, the instruments
+are kept, carefully wrapt up, in the men's house, which no
+woman may enter. Only the old men have the right to
+undo these precious bundles and take out the sacred bull-roarers.
+Women, too, are strictly excluded from the
+neighbourhood of the circumcision ground; any who intrude
+on it are put to death. The mythical monster who is
+supposed to haunt the ground is said to be very dangerous
+to the female sex. When the novices go forth to be
+swallowed by him in the forest, the women who remain in
+the village weep and wail; and they rejoice greatly when
+the lads come back safe and sound.<a id="footnotetag467" name="footnotetag467"></a><a href="#footnote467"><sup>467</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf.</p>
+
+<p>The last tribe of German New Guinea to which I shall
+invite your attention are the Tami. Most of them live not
+on the mainland but in a group of islands in Huon Gulf,
+to the south-east of Yabim. They are of a purer Melanesian
+stock than most of the tribes on the neighbouring coast of
+New Guinea. The German missionary Mr. G. Bamler,
+who lived amongst them for ten years and knows the people
+and their language intimately, thinks that they may even
+contain a strong infusion of Polynesian blood.<a id="footnotetag468" name="footnotetag468"></a><a href="#footnote468"><sup>468</sup></a> They are a
+seafaring folk, who extend their voyages all along the coast
+for the purpose of trade, bartering mats, pearls, fish, coco-nuts,
+and other tree-fruits which grow on their islands for
+taro, bananas, sugar-cane, and sago, which grow on the
+mainland.<a id="footnotetag469" name="footnotetag469"></a><a href="#footnote469"><sup>469</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The long soul and the short soul.</p>
+
+<p>In the opinion of these people every man has two souls,
+a long one and a short one. The long soul is identified
+with the shadow. It is only loosely attached to its owner,
+wandering away from his body in sleep and returning to it
+when he wakes with a start. The seat of the long soul is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page292" id="page292"></a>[pg 292]</span>
+in the stomach. When the man dies, the long soul quits
+his body and appears to his relations at a distance, who
+thus obtain the first intimation of his decease. Having
+conveyed the sad intelligence to them, the long soul departs
+by way of Maligep, on the west coast of New Britain, to a
+village on the north coast, the inhabitants of which recognise
+the Tami ghosts as they flit past.<a id="footnotetag470" name="footnotetag470"></a><a href="#footnote470"><sup>470</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Departure of the short soul to Lamboam, the nether world.</p>
+
+<p>The short soul, on the other hand, never leaves the
+body in life but only after death. Even then it tarries for
+a time in the neighbourhood of the body before it takes its
+departure for Lamboam, which is the abode of the dead in
+the nether world. The Tami bury their dead in shallow
+graves under or near the houses. They collect in a coco-nut
+shell the maggots which swarm from the decaying
+corpse; and when the insects cease to swarm, they know
+that the short soul has gone away to its long home. It is
+the short soul which receives and carries away with it the
+offerings that are made to the deceased. These offerings
+serve a double purpose; they form the nucleus of the
+dead man's property in the far country, and they ensure
+him a friendly reception on his arrival. For example, the
+soul shivers with cold, when it first reaches the subterranean
+realm, and the other ghosts, the old stagers, obligingly heat
+stones to warm it up.<a id="footnotetag471" name="footnotetag471"></a><a href="#footnote471"><sup>471</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Dilemma of the Tami.</p>
+
+<p>However, the restless spirit returns from time to time
+to haunt and terrify the sorcerer, who was the cause of its
+death. But its threats are idle; it can really do him very
+little harm. Yet it keeps its ghostly eye on its surviving
+relatives to see that they do not stand on a friendly footing
+with the wicked sorcerer. Strictly speaking the Tami
+ought to avenge his death, but as a matter of fact they do
+not. The truth of it is that the Tami do a very good
+business with the people on the mainland, among whom
+the sorcerer is usually to be found; and the amicable relations
+which are essential to the maintenance of commerce
+would unquestionably suffer if a merchant were to indulge
+his resentment so far as to take his customer's head instead
+of his sago and bananas. These considerations reduce the
+Tami to a painful dilemma. If they gratify the ghost
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id="page293"></a>[pg 293]</span>
+they lose a customer; if they keep the customer they must
+bitterly offend the ghost, who will punish them for their
+disrespect to his memory. In this delicate position the
+Tami endeavour to make the best of both worlds. On
+the one hand, by loudly professing their wrath and
+indignation against the guilty sorcerer they endeavour to
+appease the ghost; and on the other hand, by leaving
+the villain unmolested they do nothing to alienate their
+customers.<a id="footnotetag472" name="footnotetag472"></a><a href="#footnote472"><sup>472</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral and mourning customs of the Tami.</p>
+
+<p>But if they do not gratify the desire for vengeance of
+the blood-thirsty ghost, they are at great pains to testify
+their respect for him in all other ways. The whole village
+takes part in the mourning and lamentation for a death.
+The women dance death dances, the men lend a hand in
+the preparations for the burial. All festivities are stopped:
+the drums are silent. As the people believe that when
+anybody has died, the ghosts of his dead kinsfolk gather
+in the village and are joined by other ghosts, they are
+careful not to leave the mourners alone, exposed to the
+too pressing attentions of the spectral visitors; they keep
+the bereaved family company, especially at night; indeed,
+if the weather be fine, the whole population of the village
+will encamp round the temporary hut which is built on the
+grave. This watch at the grave lasts about eight days.
+The watchers are supported and comforted in the discharge
+of their pious duty by a liberal allowance of food and drink.
+Nor are the wants of the ghost himself forgotten. Many
+families offer him taro broth at this time. The period of
+mourning lasts two or three years. During the first year the
+observances prescribed by custom are strictly followed, and
+the nearest relations must avoid publicity. After a year
+they are allowed more freedom; for example, the widow
+may lay aside the heavy net, which is her costume in full
+mourning, and may replace it by a lighter one; moreover,
+she may quit the house. At the end of the long period of
+mourning, dances are danced in honour of the deceased.
+They begin in the evening and last all night till daybreak.
+The mourners on these occasions smear their heads, necks,
+and breasts with black earth. A great quantity of food,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id="page294"></a>[pg 294]</span>
+particularly of pigs and taro broth, has been made ready;
+for the whole village, and perhaps a neighbouring village
+also, has been invited to share in the festivity, which
+may last eight or ten days, if the provisions suffice. The
+dances begin with a gravity and solemnity appropriate to a
+memorial of the dead; but towards the close the performers
+indulge in a lighter vein and act comic pieces, which so
+tickle the fancy of the spectators, that many of them roll
+on the ground with laughter. Finally, the temporary hut
+erected on the grave is taken down and the materials
+burned. As the other ghosts of the village are believed
+to be present in attendance on the one who is the guest of
+honour, all the villagers bring offerings and throw them
+into the fire. However, persons who are not related to the
+ghosts may snatch the offerings from the flames and convert
+them to their own use. Precious objects, such as boars'
+tusks and dogs' teeth, are not committed to the fire but
+merely swung over it in a bag, while the name of the
+person who offers the valuables in this economical fashion
+is proclaimed aloud for the satisfaction of the ghost. With
+these dances, pantomimes, and offerings the living have
+discharged the last duties of respect and affection to the
+dead. Yet for a while his ghost is thought to linger as a
+domestic or household spirit; but the time comes when he
+is wholly forgotten.<a id="footnotetag473" name="footnotetag473"></a><a href="#footnote473"><sup>473</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Bones of the dead dug up and kept in the house for a time.</p>
+
+<p>Many families, however, not content with the observance
+of these ordinary ceremonies, dig up the bodies of
+their dead when the flesh has mouldered away, redden the
+bones with ochre, and keep them bundled up in the house
+for two or three years, when these relics of mortality are
+finally committed to the earth. The intention of thus
+preserving the bones for years in the house is not mentioned,
+but no doubt it is to maintain a closer intimacy with the
+departed spirit than seems possible if his skeleton is left to
+rot in the grave. When he is at last laid in the ground,
+the tomb is enclosed by a strong wooden fence and planted
+with ornamental shrubs. Yet in the course of years, as
+the memory of the deceased fades away, his grave is
+neglected, the fence decays, the shrubs run wild; another
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page295" id="page295"></a>[pg 295]</span>
+generation, which knew him not, will build a house on the
+spot, and if in digging the foundations they turn up his
+bleached and mouldering bones, it is nothing to them: why
+should they trouble themselves about the spirit of a man
+or woman whose very name is forgotten?<a id="footnotetag474" name="footnotetag474"></a><a href="#footnote474"><sup>474</sup></a></p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote450" name="footnote450"></a><b>Footnote 450:</b><a href="#footnotetag450"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 142 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote451" name="footnote451"></a><b>Footnote 451:</b><a href="#footnotetag451"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 143.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote452" name="footnote452"></a><b>Footnote 452:</b><a href="#footnotetag452"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>l.c.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote453" name="footnote453"></a><b>Footnote 453:</b><a href="#footnotetag453"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 143 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote454" name="footnote454"></a><b>Footnote 454:</b><a href="#footnotetag454"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 62 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote455" name="footnote455"></a><b>Footnote 455:</b><a href="#footnotetag455"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, pp. 64 <i>sqq.</i>, 147 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote456" name="footnote456"></a><b>Footnote 456:</b><a href="#footnotetag456"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 132.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote457" name="footnote457"></a><b>Footnote 457:</b><a href="#footnotetag457"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 148.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote458" name="footnote458"></a><b>Footnote 458:</b><a href="#footnotetag458"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 148 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote459" name="footnote459"></a><b>Footnote 459:</b><a href="#footnotetag459"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 149.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote460" name="footnote460"></a><b>Footnote 460:</b><a href="#footnotetag460"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 147.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote461" name="footnote461"></a><b>Footnote 461:</b><a href="#footnotetag461"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 145.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote462" name="footnote462"></a><b>Footnote 462:</b><a href="#footnotetag462"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 145.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote463" name="footnote463"></a><b>Footnote 463:</b><a href="#footnotetag463"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 145 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote464" name="footnote464"></a><b>Footnote 464:</b><a href="#footnotetag464"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 149 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote465" name="footnote465"></a><b>Footnote 465:</b><a href="#footnotetag465"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 112, 150 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote466" name="footnote466"></a><b>Footnote 466:</b><a href="#footnotetag466"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 151-154. In this passage
+the ghosts are spoken of simply as spirits (<i>Geister</i>); but the
+context proves that the spirits in question are those of the dead.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote467" name="footnote467"></a><b>Footnote 467:</b><a href="#footnotetag467"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Keysser, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 34-40.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote468" name="footnote468"></a><b>Footnote 468:</b><a href="#footnotetag468"> (return) </a><p> G. Bamler, "Tami," in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. (Berlin, 1911) p. 489; compare <i>ib.</i> p. vii.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote469" name="footnote469"></a><b>Footnote 469:</b><a href="#footnotetag469"> (return) </a><p> H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's <i>Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. 315 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote470" name="footnote470"></a><b>Footnote 470:</b><a href="#footnotetag470"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 518.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote471" name="footnote471"></a><b>Footnote 471:</b><a href="#footnotetag471"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>l.c.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote472" name="footnote472"></a><b>Footnote 472:</b><a href="#footnotetag472"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 518 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote473" name="footnote473"></a><b>Footnote 473:</b><a href="#footnotetag473"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 519-522.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote474" name="footnote474"></a><b>Footnote 474:</b><a href="#footnotetag474"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 518.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>[pg 296]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xiv" id="lecture-xiv"></a>LECTURE XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF GERMAN AND DUTCH NEW GUINEA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The Tami doctrine of souls and gods. The Tago spirits,
+represented by masked men.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of the last lecture I dealt with the Tami, a
+people of Melanesian stock who inhabit a group of islands
+off the mainland of New Guinea. I explained their theory
+of the human soul. According to them, every man has
+two distinct souls, a long one and a short one, both of
+which survive his death, but depart in different directions,
+one of them repairing to the lower world, and the other
+being last sighted off the coast of New Britain. But the
+knowledge which these savages possess of the spiritual
+world is not limited to the souls of men; they are acquainted
+with several deities (<i>buwun</i>), who live in the
+otherwise uninhabited island of Djan. They are beings
+of an amorous disposition, and though their real shape
+is that of a fish's body with a human head, they can take
+on the form of men in order to seduce women. They
+also cause epidemics and earthquakes; yet the people
+shew them no respect, for they believe them to be dull-witted
+as well as lecherous. At most, if a fearful epidemic
+is raging, they will offer the gods a lean little pig or a
+mangy cur; and should an earthquake last longer than
+usual they will rap on the ground, saying, "Hullo, you
+down there! easy a little! We men are still here." They
+also profess acquaintance with a god named Anuto, who
+created the heaven and the earth together with the first
+man and woman. He is a good being; nobody need be
+afraid of him. At festivals and meat markets the Tami
+offer him the first portion in a little basket, which a lad
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page297" id="page297"></a>[pg 297]</span>
+carries away into the wood and leaves there. As usual,
+the deity consumes only the soul of the offering; the bearer
+eats the material substance.<a id="footnotetag475" name="footnotetag475"></a><a href="#footnote475"><sup>475</sup></a> The Tami further believe
+in certain spirits called Tago which are very old, having
+been created at the same time as the village. Every
+family or clan possesses its own familiar spirits of this
+class. They are represented by men who disguise their
+bodies in dense masses of sago leaves and their faces in
+grotesque masks with long hooked noses. In this costume
+the maskers jig it as well as the heavy unwieldy disguise
+allows them to do. But the dance consists in little more
+than running round and round in a circle, with an occasional
+hop; the orchestra stands in the middle, singing and
+thumping drums. Sometimes two or three of the masked
+men will make a round of the village, pelting the men
+with pebbles or hard fruits, while the women and children
+scurry out of their way. When they are not in use the
+masks are hidden away in a hut in the forest, which women
+and children may not approach. Their secret is sternly
+kept: any betrayal of it is punished with death. The
+season for the exhibition of these masked dances recurs
+only once in ten or twelve years, but it extends over a
+year or thereabout. During the whole of the dancing-season,
+curiously enough, coco-nuts are strictly tabooed;
+no person may eat them, so that the unused nuts
+accumulate in thousands. As coco-nuts ordinarily form
+a daily article of diet with the Tami, their prohibition
+for a year is felt by the people as a privation. The
+meaning of the prohibition and also of the masquerades
+remains obscure.<a id="footnotetag476" name="footnotetag476"></a><a href="#footnote476"><sup>476</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The superhuman beings with whom the Tami are chiefly
+concerned are the souls of the dead. Offerings to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>But while the Tami believe in gods and spirits of
+various sorts, the superhuman beings with whom they chiefly
+concern themselves are the souls of the dead. On this
+subject Mr. Bamler writes: "All the spirits whom we have
+thus far described are of little importance in the life and
+thought of the Tami; they are remembered only on
+special occasions. The spirits who fill the thoughts and
+attract the attention of the Tami are the <i>kani</i>, that is,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page298" id="page298"></a>[pg 298]</span>
+the souls of the departed. The Tami therefore practise
+the worship of ancestors. Yet the memory of ancestors
+does not reach far back; people occupy themselves only
+with the souls of those relatives whom they have personally
+known. Hence the worship seldom extends beyond the
+grandfather, even when a knowledge of more remote
+progenitors survives. An offering to the ancestors takes
+the form of a little dish of boiled taro, a cigar, betel-nuts,
+and the like; but the spirits partake only of the image
+or soul of the things offered, while the material substance
+falls to the share of mankind. There is no fixed rule
+as to the manner or time of the offering. It is left to
+the caprice or childlike affection of the individual to decide
+how he will make it. With most natives it is a simple
+matter of business, the throwing of a sprat to catch a
+salmon; the man brings his offering only when he needs
+the help of the spirits. There is very little ceremony about
+it. The offerer will say, for example, 'There, I lay a cigar
+for you; smoke it and hereafter drive fish towards me';
+or, 'Accompany me on the journey, and see to it that I
+do good business.' The place where the food is presented
+is the shelf for pots and dishes under the roof. Thus
+they imagine that the spirits exert a tolerably far-reaching
+influence over all created things, and it is their notion
+that the spirits take possession of the objects. In like
+manner the spirits can injure a man by thwarting his plans,
+for example, by frightening away the fish, blighting the
+fruits of the fields, and so forth. If the native is forced to
+conclude that the spirits are against him, he has no hesitation
+about deceiving them in the grossest manner. Should the
+requisite sacrifices be inconvenient to him, he flatly refuses
+them, or gives the shabbiest things he can find. In all
+this the native displays the same craft and cunning which
+he is apt to practise in his dealings with the whites. He
+fears the power which the spirit has over him, yet he tries
+whether he cannot outwit the spirit like an arrant block-head."<a id="footnotetag477" name="footnotetag477"></a><a href="#footnote477"><sup>477</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Crude motives for sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>This account of the crude but quite intelligible motives
+which lead these savages to sacrifice to the spirits of their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page299" id="page299"></a>[pg 299]</span>
+dead may be commended to the attention of writers on the
+history of religion who read into primitive sacrifice certain
+subtle and complex ideas which it never entered into the
+mind of primitive man to conceive and which, even if they
+were explained to him, he would in all probability be
+totally unable to understand.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Lamboam, the land of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>According to the Tami, the souls of the dead live in
+the nether world. The spirit-land is called Lamboam; the
+entrance to it is by a cleft in a rock. The natives of the
+mainland also call Hades by the name of Lamboam; but
+whereas according to them every village has its own little
+Lamboam, the Tami hold that there is only one big Lamboam
+for everybody, though it is subdivided into many mansions,
+of which every village has one to itself. In Lamboam everything
+is fairer and more perfect than on earth. The fruits
+are so plentiful that the blessed spirits can, if they choose,
+give themselves up to the delights of idleness; the villages
+are full of ornamental plants. Yet on the other hand we
+are informed that life beneath the ground is very like
+life above it: people work and marry, they squabble and
+wrangle, they fall sick and even die, just as people do on
+earth. Souls which die the second death in Lamboam are
+changed into vermin, such as ants and worms; however,
+others say that they turn into wood-spirits, who do men a
+mischief in the fields. It is not so easy as is commonly
+supposed to effect an entrance into the spirit-land. You
+must pass a river, and even when you have crossed it you
+will be very likely to suffer from the practical jokes which
+the merry old ghosts play on a raw newcomer. A very
+favourite trick of theirs is to send him up a pandanus tree to
+look for fruit. If he is simple enough to comply, they catch
+him by the legs as he is swarming up the trunk and drag him
+down, so that his whole body is fearfully scratched, if not
+quite ripped up, by the rough bark. That is why people
+put valuable things with the dead in the grave, in order that
+their ghosts on arrival in Lamboam may have the wherewithal
+to purchase the good graces of the facetious old stagers.<a id="footnotetag478" name="footnotetag478"></a><a href="#footnote478"><sup>478</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Return of the ghosts to earth, sometimes in the form of
+serpents.</p>
+
+<p>However, even when the ghosts have succeeded in effecting
+a lodgment in Lamboam, they are not strictly confined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page300" id="page300"></a>[pg 300]</span>
+to it. They can break bounds at any moment and return
+to the upper air. This they do particularly when any of
+their surviving relations is at the point of death. Ghosts of
+deceased kinsfolk and of others gather round the parting soul
+and attend it to the far country. Yet sometimes, apparently,
+the soul sets out alone, for the anxious relatives will call out
+to it, "Miss not the way." But ghosts visit their surviving
+friends at other times than at the moment of death. For
+example, some families possess the power of calling up spirits
+in the form of serpents from the vasty deep. The spirits
+whom they evoke are usually those of persons who have died
+quite lately; for such ghosts cannot return to earth except
+in the guise of serpents. In this novel shape they naturally
+feel shy and hide under a mat. They come out only in the
+dusk of the evening or the darkness of night and sit on the
+shelf for pots and dishes under the roof. They have lost
+the faculty of speech and can express themselves only in
+whistles. These whistles the seer, who is generally a woman,
+understands perfectly and interprets to his or her less gifted
+fellows. In this way a considerable body of information,
+more or less accurate in detail, is collected as to life in the
+other world. More than that, it is even possible for men,
+and especially for women, to go down alive into the nether
+world and prosecute their enquiries at first hand among the
+ghosts. Women who possess this remarkable faculty transmit
+it to their daughters, so that the profession is hereditary.
+When anybody wishes to ascertain how it fares with one of
+his dead kinsfolk in Lamboam, he has nothing to do but to
+engage the services of one of these professional mediums,
+giving her something which belonged to his departed friend.
+The medium rubs her forehead with ginger, muttering an
+incantation, lies down on the dead man's property, and falls
+asleep. Her soul then goes down in a dream to deadland
+and elicits from the ghosts the required information, which
+on waking from sleep she imparts to the anxious enquirer.<a id="footnotetag479" name="footnotetag479"></a><a href="#footnote479"><sup>479</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sickness caused by a spirit.</p>
+
+<p>Sickness accompanied by fainting fits is ascribed to the
+action of a spirit, it may be the ghost of a near relation, who
+has carried off the "long soul" of the sufferer. The truant
+soul is recalled by a blast blown on a triton-shell, in which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page301" id="page301"></a>[pg 301]</span>
+some chewed ginger or <i>massoi</i> bark has been inserted. The
+booming sound attracts the attention of the vagrant spirit,
+while the smell of the bark or of the ginger drives away
+the ghost.<a id="footnotetag480" name="footnotetag480"></a><a href="#footnote480"><sup>480</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Tami lads supposed to be swallowed by a monster at
+circumcision; the monster and the bull-roarer are both called
+<i>kani</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The name which the Tami give to the spirits of the dead
+is <i>kani</i>; but like other tribes in this part of New Guinea
+they apply the same term to the bull-roarer and also to the
+mythical monster who is supposed to swallow the lads at
+circumcision. The identity of the name for the three things
+seems to prove that in the mind of the Tami the initiatory
+rites, of which circumcision is the principal feature, are closely
+associated with their conception of the state of the human
+soul after death, though what the precise nature of the
+association may be still remains obscure. Like their neighbours
+on the mainland of New Guinea, the Tami give out
+that the novices at initiation are swallowed by a monster or
+dragon, who only consents to disgorge his prey in consideration
+of a tribute of pigs, the rate of the tribute being one
+novice one pig. In the act of disgorging the lad the dragon
+bites him, and the bite is visible to all in the cut called
+circumcision. The voice of the monster is heard in the hum
+of the bull-roarers, which are swung at the ceremony in such
+numbers and with such force that in still weather the booming
+sound may be heard across the sea for many miles. To
+impress women and children with an idea of the superhuman
+strength of the dragon deep grooves are cut in the trunks of
+trees and afterwards exhibited to the uninitiated as the marks
+made by the monster in tugging at the ropes which bound
+him to the trees. However, the whole thing is an open
+secret to the married women, though they keep their knowledge
+to themselves, fearing to incur the penalty of death
+which is denounced upon all who betray the mystery.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The rite of circumcision. Seclusion and return of the newly
+circumcised lads.</p>
+
+<p>The initiatory rites are now celebrated only at intervals
+of many years. When the time is come for the ceremony,
+women are banished from the village and special quarters
+prepared for them elsewhere; for they are strictly forbidden
+to set foot in the village while the monster or spirit who
+swallows the lads has his abode in it. A special hut is then
+built for the accommodation of the novices during the many
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page302" id="page302"></a>[pg 302]</span>
+months which they spend in seclusion before and after the
+operation of circumcision. The hut represents the monster;
+it consists of a framework of thin poles covered with palm-leaf
+mats and tapering down at one end. Looked at from a
+distance it resembles a whale. The backbone is composed
+of a betel-nut palm, which has been grubbed up with its
+roots. The root with its fibres represents the monster's head
+and hair, and under it are painted a pair of eyes and a great
+mouth in red, white, and black. The passage of the novices
+into the monster's belly is represented by causing them to
+defile past a row of men who hold bull-roarers aloft over the
+heads of the candidates. Before this march past takes place,
+each of the candidates is struck by the chief with a bull-roarer
+on his chin and brow. The operation of circumcising
+the lads is afterwards performed behind a screen set up near
+the monster-shaped house. It is followed by a great feast
+on swine's flesh. After their wounds are healed the circumcised
+lads have still to remain in seclusion for three or four
+months. Finally, they are brought back to the village with
+great pomp. For this solemn ceremony their faces, necks,
+and breasts are whitened with a thick layer of chalk, while
+red stripes, painted round their mouths and eyes and prolonged
+to the ears, add to the grotesqueness of their appearance.
+Their eyes are closed with a plaster of chalk, and
+thus curiously arrayed and blindfolded they are led back to
+the village square, where leave is formally given them to
+open their eyes. At the entrance to the village they are
+received by the women, who weep for joy and strew boiled
+field-fruits on the way. Next morning the newly initiated lads
+wash off the crust of chalk, and have their hair, faces, necks,
+and breasts painted bright red. This ends their time of
+seclusion, which has lasted five or six months; they now
+rank as full-grown men.<a id="footnotetag481" name="footnotetag481"></a><a href="#footnote481"><sup>481</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Simulation of death and resurrection.</p>
+
+<p>In these initiatory rites, as in the similar rites of the
+neighbouring tribes on the mainland of New Guinea, we may
+perhaps detect a simulation of death and of resurrection to a
+new and higher life. But why circumcision should form
+the central feature of such a drama is a question to which
+as yet no certain or even very probable answer can be given.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page303" id="page303"></a>[pg 303]</span>
+The bodily mutilations of various sorts, which in many
+savage tribes mark the transition from boyhood to manhood,
+remain one of the obscurest features in the life of uncultured
+races. That they are in most cases connected with the
+great change which takes place in the sexes at puberty
+seems fairly certain; but we are far from understanding the
+ideas which primitive man has formed on this mysterious
+subject.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The natives of Dutch New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>That ends what I have to say as to the notions of death
+and a life hereafter which are entertained by the natives of
+German New Guinea. We now turn to the natives of Dutch
+New Guinea, who occupy roughly speaking the western half
+of the great island. Our information as to their customs
+and beliefs on this subject is much scantier, and accordingly
+my account of them will be much briefer.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Geelvink Bay and Doreh Bay. The Noofoor or Noomfor people.
+Their material culture and arts of life.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the western end of the Dutch possession there
+is on the northern coast a deep and wide indentation known
+as Geelvink Bay, which in its north-west corner includes
+a very much smaller indentation known as Doreh Bay.
+Scattered about in the waters of the great Geelvink Bay are
+many islands of various sizes, such as Biak or Wiak, Jappen
+or Jobi, Run or Ron, Noomfor, and many more. It is in
+regard to the natives who inhabit the coasts or islands of
+Geelvink Bay that our information is perhaps least imperfect,
+and it is accordingly with them that I shall begin. In
+physical appearance, expression of the face, mode of wearing
+the hair, and still more in manners and customs these
+natives of the coast and islands differ from the natives of
+the mountains in the interior. The name given to them by
+Dutch and German writers is Noofoor or Noomfor. Their
+original home is believed to be the island of Biak or Wiak,
+which lies at the northern entrance of the bay, and from
+which they are supposed to have spread southwards and
+south-westwards to the other islands and to the mainland of
+New Guinea.<a id="footnotetag482" name="footnotetag482"></a><a href="#footnote482"><sup>482</sup></a> They are a handsomely built race. Their
+colour is usually dark brown, but in some individuals it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page304" id="page304"></a>[pg 304]</span>
+shades off to light-brown, while in others it deepens into
+black-brown. The forehead is high and narrow; the eye is
+dark brown or black with a lively expression; the nose
+broad and flat, the lips thick and projecting. The cheekbones
+are not very high. The facial angle agrees with that
+of Europeans. The hair is abundant and frizzly. The
+people live in settled villages and subsist by agriculture,
+hunting, and fishing. Their large communal houses are
+raised above the ground on piles; on the coast they are
+built over the water. Each house has a long gallery, one in
+front and one behind, and a long passage running down the
+middle of the dwelling, with the rooms arranged on either
+side of it. Each room has its own fireplace and is occupied
+by a single family. One such communal house may contain
+from ten to twenty families with a hundred or more men,
+women, and children, besides dogs, fowls, parrots, and other
+creatures. When the house is built over the water, it is
+commonly connected with the shore by a bridge; but in
+some places no such bridge exists, and at high water the
+inmates can only communicate with the shore by means of
+their canoes. The staple food of the people is sago, which
+they extract from the sago-palm; but they also make use of
+bread-fruit, together with millet, rice, and maize, whenever they
+can obtain these cereals. Their flesh diet includes wild pigs,
+birds, fish, and trepang. While some of them subsist mainly
+by fishing and commerce, others devote themselves almost
+exclusively to the cultivation of their gardens, which they
+lay out in clearings of the dense tropical forest, employing
+chiefly axes and chopping-knives as their instruments of
+tillage. Of ploughs they, like most savages, seem to know
+nothing. The rice and other plants which they raise in
+these gardens are produced by the dry method of cultivation.
+In hunting birds they employ chiefly bows and arrows, but
+sometimes also snares. The arrows with which they shoot
+the birds of paradise are blunted so as not to injure the
+splendid plumage of the birds. Turtle-shells, feathers of the
+birds of paradise, and trepang are among the principal
+articles which they barter with traders for cotton-goods,
+knives, swords, axes, beads and so forth. They display
+some skill and taste in wood-carving. The art of working
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page305" id="page305"></a>[pg 305]</span>
+in iron has been introduced among them from abroad and
+is now extensively practised by the men. They make large
+dug-out canoes with outriggers, which seem to be very seaworthy,
+for they accomplish long voyages even in stormy
+weather. The making of pottery, basket-work, and weaving,
+together with pounding rice and cooking food, are the special
+business of women. The men wear waistbands or loin-cloths
+made of bark, which is beaten till it becomes as supple as
+leather. The women wear petticoats or strips of blue cotton
+round their loins, and as ornaments they have rings of silver,
+copper, or shell on their arms and legs.<a id="footnotetag483" name="footnotetag483"></a><a href="#footnote483"><sup>483</sup></a> Thus the people
+have attained to a fair degree of barbaric culture.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of ghosts. Ideas of the spirit-world.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is significant that among these comparatively
+advanced savages the fear of ghosts and the reverence
+entertained for them have developed into something which
+might almost be called a systematic worship of the dead.
+As to their fear of ghosts I will quote the evidence of a
+Dutch missionary, Mr. J. L. van Hasselt, who lived for many
+years among them and is the author of a grammar and
+dictionary of their language. He says: "That a great fear
+of ghosts prevails among the Papuans is intelligible. Even
+by day they are reluctant to pass a grave, but nothing
+would induce them to do so by night. For the dead
+are then roaming about in their search for gambier and
+tobacco, and they may also sail out to sea in a canoe.
+Some of the departed, above all the so-called <i>Mambrie</i> or
+heroes, inspire them with especial fear. In such cases for
+some days after the burial you may hear about sunset a
+simultaneous and horrible din in all the houses of all the
+villages, a yelling, screaming, beating and throwing of sticks;
+happily the uproar does not last long: its intention is to
+compel the ghost to take himself off: they have given him
+all that befits him, namely, a grave, a funeral banquet, and
+funeral ornaments; and now they beseech him not to thrust
+himself on their observation any more, not to breathe any
+sickness upon the survivors, and not to kill them or 'fetch'
+them, as the Papuans put it. Their ideas of the spirit-world
+are very vague. Their usual answer to such questions is,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page306" id="page306"></a>[pg 306]</span>
+'We know not.' If you press them, they will commonly
+say that the spirit realm is under the earth or under the
+bottom of the sea. Everything there is as it is in the upper
+world, only the vegetation down below is more luxuriant, and
+all plants grow faster. Their fear of death and their helpless
+wailing over the dead indicate that the misty kingdom of
+the shades offers but little that is consolatory to the Papuan
+at his departure from this world."<a id="footnotetag484" name="footnotetag484"></a><a href="#footnote484"><sup>484</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of ghosts in general and of the ghosts of the slain in
+particular.</p>
+
+<p>Again, speaking of the natives of Doreh, a Dutch official
+observes that "superstition and magic play a principal part
+in the life of the Papuan. Occasions for such absurdities he
+discovers at every step. Thus he cherishes a great fear of
+the ghosts of slain persons, for which reason their bodies
+remain unburied on the spot where they were murdered.
+When a murder has taken place in the village, the inhabitants
+assemble for several evenings in succession and raise
+a fearful outcry in order to chase away the soul, in case it
+should be minded to return to the village. They set up
+miniature wooden houses here and there on trees in the
+forest for the ghosts of persons who die of disease or through
+accidents, believing that the souls take up their abode in
+them."<a id="footnotetag485" name="footnotetag485"></a><a href="#footnote485"><sup>485</sup></a> The same writer remarks that these savages have
+no priests, but that they have magicians (<i>kokinsor</i>), who
+practise exorcisms, work magic, and heal the sick, for which
+they receive a small payment in articles of barter or food.<a id="footnotetag486" name="footnotetag486"></a><a href="#footnote486"><sup>486</sup></a>
+Speaking of the Papuans of Dutch New Guinea in general
+another writer informs us that "they honour the memory of
+the dead in every way, because they ascribe to the spirits of
+the departed a great influence on the life of the survivors....
+Whereas in life all good and evil comes from the soul,
+after death, on the other hand, the spirit works for the most
+part only evil. It loves especially to haunt by night the
+neighbourhood of its old dwelling and the grave; so the
+people particularly avoid the neighbourhood of graves at
+night, and when darkness has fallen they will not go out
+except with a burning brand.... According to the belief
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page307" id="page307"></a>[pg 307]</span>
+of the Papuans the ghosts cause sickness, bad harvests, war,
+and in general every misfortune. From fear of such evils
+and in order to keep them in good humour, the people make
+provision for the spirits of the departed after death. Also
+they sacrifice to them before every important undertaking
+and never fail to ask their advice."<a id="footnotetag487" name="footnotetag487"></a><a href="#footnote487"><sup>487</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Papuan ideas as to the state of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>A Dutch writer, who has given us a comparatively full
+account of the natives of Geelvink Bay, describes as follows
+their views in regard to the state of the dead: "According
+to the Papuans the soul, which they imagine to have its seat
+in the blood, continues to exist at the bottom of the sea,
+and every one who dies goes thither. They imagine the
+state of things there to be much the same as that in which
+they lived on earth. Hence at his burial the dead man is
+given an equipment suitable to his rank and position in life.
+He is provided with a bow and arrow, armlets and body-ornaments,
+pots and pans, everything that may stand him in
+good stead in the life hereafter. This provision must not
+be neglected, for it is a prevalent opinion that the dead
+continue always to maintain relations with the world and
+with the living, that they possess superhuman power, exercise
+great influence over the affairs of life on earth, and are able
+to protect in danger, to stand by in war, to guard against
+shipwreck at sea, and to grant success in fishing and hunting.
+For such weighty reasons the Papuans do all in their power
+to win the favour of their dead. On undertaking a journey
+they are said never to forget to hang amulets about themselves
+in the belief that their dead will then surely help
+them; hence, too, when they are at sea in rough weather,
+they call upon the souls of the departed, asking them for
+better weather or a favourable breeze, in case the wind
+happens to be contrary."<a id="footnotetag488" name="footnotetag488"></a><a href="#footnote488"><sup>488</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Wooden images of the dead (<i>korwar</i>).</p>
+
+<p>In order to communicate with these powerful spirits and
+to obtain their advice and help in time of need, the Papuans
+of Geelvink Bay make wooden images of their dead, which
+they keep in their houses and consult from time to time.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page308" id="page308"></a>[pg 308]</span>
+Every family has at least one such ancestral image, which
+forms the medium whereby the soul of the deceased communicates
+with his or her surviving relatives. These images
+or Penates, as we may call them, are carved of wood, about
+a foot high, and represent the deceased person in a standing,
+sitting, or crouching attitude, but commonly with the hands
+folded in front. The head is disproportionately large, the
+nose long and projecting, the mouth wide and well furnished
+with teeth; the eyes are formed of large green or blue
+beads with black dots to indicate the pupils. Sometimes
+the male figures carry a shield in the left hand and brandish
+a sword in the right; while the female figures are represented
+grasping with both hands a serpent which stands on
+its coiled tail. Rags of many colours adorn these figures,
+and the hair of the deceased, whom they represent, is placed
+between their legs. Such an ancestral image is called a
+<i>korwar</i> or <i>karwar</i>. The natives identify these effigies with
+the deceased persons whom they portray, and accordingly
+they will speak of one as their father or mother or other
+relation. Tobacco and food are offered to the images, and
+the natives greet them reverentially by bowing to the earth
+before them with the two hands joined and raised to the
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Such images carried on voyages and consulted as oracles. The
+images consulted in sickness.</p>
+
+<p>Such images are kept in the houses and carried in canoes
+on voyages, in order that they may be at hand to help and
+advise their kinsfolk and worshippers. They are consulted on
+many occasions, for example, when the people are going on
+a journey, or about to fish for turtles or trepang, or when a
+member of the family is sick, and his relations wish to know
+whether he will recover. At these consultations the enquirer
+may either take the image in his hands or crouch before it
+on the ground, on which he places his offerings of tobacco,
+cotton, beads, and so forth. The spirit of the dead is
+thought to be in the image and to pass from it into the
+enquirer, who thus becomes inspired by the soul of the
+deceased and acquires his superhuman knowledge. As a
+sign of his inspiration the medium shivers and shakes.
+According to some accounts, however, this shivering and
+shaking of the medium is an evil omen; whereas if he
+remains tranquil, the omen is good. It is especially in cases
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page309" id="page309"></a>[pg 309]</span>
+of sickness that the images are consulted. The mode of
+consultation has been described as follows by a Dutch
+writer: "When any one is sick and wishes to know the
+means of cure, or when any one desires to avert misfortune
+or to discover something unknown, then in presence of the
+whole family one of the members is stupefied by the fumes
+of incense or by other means of producing a state of trance.
+The image of the deceased person whose advice is sought is
+then placed on the lap or shoulder of the medium in order
+to cause the soul to pass out of the image into his body.
+At the moment when that happens, he begins to shiver;
+and, encouraged by the bystanders, the soul speaks through
+the mouth of the medium and names the means of cure
+or of averting the calamity. When he comes to himself,
+the medium knows nothing of what he has been saying.
+This they call <i>kor karwar</i>, that is, 'invoking the soul;'
+and they say <i>karwar iwos</i>, 'the soul speaks.'" The
+writer adds: "It is sometimes reported that the souls go
+to the underworld, but that is not true. The Papuans
+think that after death the soul abides by the corpse and
+is buried with it in the grave; hence before an image is
+made, if it is necessary to consult the soul, the enquirer must
+betake himself to the grave in order to do so. But when
+the image is made, the soul enters into it and is supposed to
+remain in it so long as satisfactory answers are obtained
+from it in consultation. But should the answers prove
+disappointing, the people think that the soul has deserted
+the image, on which they throw the image away as useless.
+Where the soul has gone, nobody knows, and they do not
+trouble their heads about it, since it has lost its power."<a id="footnotetag489" name="footnotetag489"></a><a href="#footnote489"><sup>489</sup></a>
+The person who acts as medium in consulting the spirit may
+be either the house-father himself or a magician (<i>konoor</i>).<a id="footnotetag490" name="footnotetag490"></a><a href="#footnote490"><sup>490</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page310" id="page310"></a>[pg 310]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Example of the consultation of an ancestral image.</p>
+
+<p>As an example of these consultations we may take
+the case of a man who was suffering from a painful sore on
+his finger and wished to ascertain the cause of the trouble.
+So he set one of the ancestral images before him and
+questioned it closely. At first the image made no reply;
+but at last the man remembered that he had neglected his
+duty to his dead brother by failing to marry his widow, as,
+according to native custom, he should have done. Now the
+natives believe that the dead can punish them for any
+breach of customary law; so it occurred to our enquirer that
+the ghost of his dead brother might have afflicted him with
+the sore on his finger for not marrying his widow. Accordingly
+he put the question to the image, and in doing so the compunction
+of a guilty conscience caused him to tremble. This
+trembling he took for an answer of the image in the affirmative,
+wherefore he went off and took the widow to wife and
+provided for her maintenance.<a id="footnotetag491" name="footnotetag491"></a><a href="#footnote491"><sup>491</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ancestral images consulted as to the cause of death.
+Offerings to the images.</p>
+
+<p>Again, the ancestral images are often consulted to ascertain
+the cause of a death; and if the image attributes the death to
+the evil magic of a member of another tribe, an expedition
+will be sent to avenge the wrong by slaying the supposed
+culprit. For the souls of the dead take it very ill and wreak
+their spite on the survivors, if their death is not avenged on
+their enemies. Not uncommonly the consultation of the
+images merely furnishes a pretext for satisfying a grudge
+against an individual or a tribe.<a id="footnotetag492" name="footnotetag492"></a><a href="#footnote492"><sup>492</sup></a> The mere presence of
+these images appears to be supposed to benefit the sick; a
+woman who was seriously ill has been seen to lie with four
+or five ancestral figures fastened at the head of her bed. On
+enquiry she explained that they did not all belong to her,
+but that some of them had been kindly lent to her by
+relations and friends.<a id="footnotetag493" name="footnotetag493"></a><a href="#footnote493"><sup>493</sup></a> Again, the images are taken by the
+natives with them to war, because they hope thereby to
+secure the help of the spirits whom the images represent.
+Also they make offerings from time to time to the effigies
+and hold feasts in their honour.<a id="footnotetag494" name="footnotetag494"></a><a href="#footnote494"><sup>494</sup></a> They observe, indeed,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page311" id="page311"></a>[pg 311]</span>
+that the food which they present to these household
+idols remains unconsumed, but they explain this by saying
+that the spirits are content to snuff up the savour
+of the viands, and to leave their gross material substance
+alone.<a id="footnotetag495" name="footnotetag495"></a><a href="#footnote495"><sup>495</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Images of persons who have died away from home.</p>
+
+<p>In general, images are only made of persons who have
+died at home. But in the island of Ron or Run they are
+also made of persons who have died away from home or
+have fallen in battle. In such cases the difficulty is to
+compel the soul to quit its mortal remains far away and
+come to animate the image. However, the natives of Ron
+have found means to overcome this difficulty. They first
+carve the wooden image of the dead person and then call
+his soul back to the village by setting a great tree on fire,
+while the family assemble round it and one of them, holding
+the image in his hand, acts the part of a medium, shivering
+and shaking and falling into a trance after the approved
+fashion of mediums in many lands. After this ceremony
+the image is supposed to be animated by the soul of the
+deceased, and it is kept in the house with as much confidence
+as any other.<a id="footnotetag496" name="footnotetag496"></a><a href="#footnote496"><sup>496</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sometimes the head of the image is composed of the skull of
+the deceased.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the head of the image consists of the skull
+of the deceased, which has been detached from the skeleton
+and inserted in a hole at the top of the effigy. In such
+cases the body of the image is of wood and the head of
+bone. It is especially men who have distinguished themselves
+by their bravery or have earned a name for themselves
+in other ways who are thus represented. Apparently
+the notion is that as a personal relic of the departed the
+skull is better fitted to retain his soul than a mere head of
+wood. But in the island of Ron or Run, and perhaps elsewhere,
+skull-topped images of this sort are made for all firstborn
+children, whether male or female, young or old, at least
+for all who die from the age of twelve years and upward.
+These images have a special name, <i>bemar boo</i>, which means
+"head of a corpse." They are kept in the room of the
+parents who have lost the child.<a id="footnotetag497" name="footnotetag497"></a><a href="#footnote497"><sup>497</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Mode of preparing such skull-headed images.</p>
+
+<p>The mode in which such images are prepared is as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page312" id="page312"></a>[pg 312]</span>
+follows. The body of the firstborn child, who dies at the
+age of years or upwards, is laid in a small canoe,
+which is deposited in a hut erected behind the dwelling-house.
+Here the mother is obliged to keep watch night
+and day beside the corpse and to maintain a blazing fire
+till the head drops off the body, which it generally does
+about twenty days after the death. Then the trunk is
+wrapped in leaves and buried, but the head is brought
+into the house and carefully preserved. Above the spot
+where it is deposited a small opening is made in the roof,
+through which a stick is thrust bearing some rags or flags
+to indicate that the remains of a dead body are in the
+house. When, after the lapse of three or four months,
+the nose and ears of the head have dropped off, and
+the eyes have mouldered away, the relations and friends
+assemble in the house of mourning. In the middle of the
+assembly the father of the child crouches on his hams with
+downcast look in an attitude of grief, while one of the
+persons present begins to carve a new nose and a new pair
+of ears for the skull out of a piece of wood. The kind of
+wood varies according as the deceased was a male or a
+female. All the time that the artist is at work, the rest of
+the company chant a melancholy dirge. When the nose
+and ears are finished and have been attached to the skull,
+and small round fruits have been inserted in the hollow
+sockets of the eyes to represent the missing orbs, a banquet
+follows in honour of the deceased, who is now represented
+by his decorated skull set up on a block of wood on the
+table. Thus he receives his share of the food and of the
+cigars, and is raised to the rank of a domestic idol or
+<i>korwar</i>. Henceforth the skull is carefully kept in a corner
+of the chamber to be consulted as an oracle in time of need.
+The bodies of fathers and mothers are treated in the same
+way as those of firstborn children. On the other hand the
+bodies of children who die under the age of two years are
+never buried. The remains are packed in baskets of rushes
+covered with lids and tightly corded, and the baskets are
+then hung on the branches of tall trees, where no more
+notice is taken of them. Four or five such baskets containing
+the mouldering bodies of infants may sometimes be seen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page313" id="page313"></a>[pg 313]</span>
+hanging on a single tree.<a id="footnotetag498" name="footnotetag498"></a><a href="#footnote498"><sup>498</sup></a> The reason for thus disposing
+of the remains of young children is said to be as follows.
+A thick mist hangs at evening over the top of the dense
+tropical forest, and in the mist dwell two spirits called
+Narwur and Imgier, one male and the other female, who
+kill little children, not out of malice but out of love, because
+they wish to have the children with them. So when a
+child dies, the parents fasten its little body to the branches
+of a tall tree in the forest, hoping that the spirit pair will
+take it and be satisfied, and will spare its small brothers and
+sisters.<a id="footnotetag499" name="footnotetag499"></a><a href="#footnote499"><sup>499</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Mummification of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>In some parts of Geelvink Bay, however, the bodies of
+the dead are treated differently. For example, on the
+south coast of the island of Jobi or Jappen and elsewhere
+the corpses are reduced to mummies by being dried on a
+bamboo stage over a slow fire; after which the mummies,
+wrapt in cloth, are kept in the house, being either laid along
+the wall or hung from the ceiling. When the number of
+these relics begins to incommode the living inmates of the
+house, the older mummies are removed and deposited in the
+hollow trunks of ancient trees. In some tribes who thus
+mummify their dead the juices of corruption which drip
+from the rotting corpse are caught in a vessel and given to
+the widow to drink, who is forced to gulp them down under
+the threat of decapitation if she were to reject the loathsome
+beverage.<a id="footnotetag500" name="footnotetag500"></a><a href="#footnote500"><sup>500</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Restrictions observed by mourners. Tattooing in honour of the
+dead. Teeth of the dead worn by relatives.</p>
+
+<p>The family in which a death has taken place is subject
+for a time to certain burdensome restrictions, which are
+probably dictated by a fear of the ghost. Thus all the
+time till the effigy of the deceased has been made and a
+feast given in his honour, they are obliged to remain in the
+house without going out for any purpose, not even to bathe
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page314" id="page314"></a>[pg 314]</span>
+or to fetch food and drink. Moreover they must abstain
+from the ordinary articles of diet and confine themselves to
+half-baked cakes of sago and other unpalatable viands.
+As these restrictions may last for months they are not
+only irksome but onerous, especially to people who have no
+slaves to fetch and carry for them. However, in that case
+the neighbours come to the rescue and supply the mourners
+with wood, water, and the other necessaries of life, until
+custom allows them to go out and help themselves. After
+the effigy of the dead has been made, the family go in state
+to a sacred place to purify themselves by bathing. If the
+journey is made by sea, no other canoe may meet or sail
+past the canoe of the mourners under pain of being confiscated
+to them and redeemed at a heavy price. On their
+return from the holy place, the period of mourning is over,
+and the family is free to resume their ordinary mode of life
+and their ordinary victuals.<a id="footnotetag501" name="footnotetag501"></a><a href="#footnote501"><sup>501</sup></a> That the seclusion of the
+mourners in the house for some time after the death springs
+from a fear of the ghost is not only probable on general
+grounds but is directly suggested by a custom which is
+observed at the burial of the body. When it has been laid
+in the earth along with various articles of daily use, which
+the ghost is supposed to require for his comfort, the mourners
+gather round the grave and each of them picks up a leaf,
+which he folds in the shape of a spoon and holds several
+times over his head as if he would pour out the contents
+upon it. As they do so, they all murmur, "<i>Rur i rama</i>,"
+that is, "The spirit comes." This exclamation or incantation
+is supposed to prevent the ghost from troubling them.
+The gravediggers may not enter their houses till they have
+bathed and so removed from their persons the contagion of
+death, in order that the soul of the deceased may have no
+power over them.<a id="footnotetag502" name="footnotetag502"></a><a href="#footnote502"><sup>502</sup></a> Mourners sometimes tattoo themselves
+in honour of the dead. For a father, the marks are tattooed
+on the cheeks and under the eyes; for a grandfather, on the
+breast; for a mother, on the shoulders and arms; for a
+brother, on the back. On the death of a father or mother,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page315" id="page315"></a>[pg 315]</span>
+the eldest son or, if there is none such, the eldest daughter
+wears the teeth and hair of the deceased. When the teeth
+of old people drop out, they are kept on purpose to be thus
+strung on a string and worn by their sons or daughters
+after their death. Similarly, a mother wears as a permanent
+mark of mourning the teeth of her dead child strung on a
+cord round her neck, and as a temporary mark of mourning
+a little bag on her throat containing a lock of the child's
+hair.<a id="footnotetag503" name="footnotetag503"></a><a href="#footnote503"><sup>503</sup></a> The intention of these customs is not mentioned.
+Probably they are not purely commemorative but designed
+in some way either to influence for good the spirit of the
+departed or to obtain its help and protection for the living.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Rebirth of parents in their children.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far we have found no evidence among the natives
+of New Guinea of a belief that the dead are permanently
+reincarnated in their human descendants. However, the
+inhabitants of Ayambori, an inland village about an hour
+distant to the east of Doreh, are reported to believe that
+the soul of a dead man returns in his eldest son, and that
+the soul of a dead woman returns in her eldest daughter.<a id="footnotetag504" name="footnotetag504"></a><a href="#footnote504"><sup>504</sup></a>
+So stated the belief is hardly clear and intelligible; for if a
+man has several sons, he must evidently be alive and not
+dead when the eldest of them is born, and similarly with a
+woman and her eldest daughter. On the analogy of similar
+beliefs elsewhere we may conjecture that these Papuans
+imagine every firstborn son to be animated by the soul of
+his father, whether his father be alive or dead, and every
+firstborn daughter to be animated by the soul of her
+mother, whether her mother be alive or dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Customs concerning the dead observed in the islands off the
+western end of New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>Beliefs and customs concerning the dead like those which
+we have found among the natives of Geelvink Bay are
+reported to prevail in other parts of Dutch New Guinea, but
+our information about them is much less full. Thus, off the
+western extremity of New Guinea there is a group of small
+islands (Waaigeoo, Salawati, Misol, Waigama, and so on),
+the inhabitants of which make <i>karwar</i> or wooden images of
+their dead ancestors. These they keep in separate rooms
+of their houses and take with them as talismans to war.
+In these inner rooms are also kept miniature wooden houses
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page316" id="page316"></a>[pg 316]</span>
+in which their ancestors are believed to reside, and in which
+even Mohammedans (for some of the natives profess Islam)
+burn incense on Fridays in honour of the souls of the dead.
+These souls are treated like living beings, for in the morning
+some finely pounded sago is placed in the shrines; at noon
+it is taken away, but may not be eaten by the inmates of
+the house. Curiously enough, women are forbidden to set
+food for the dead in the shrines: if they did so, it is believed
+that they would be childless. Further, in the chief's
+house there are shrines for the souls of all the persons who
+have died in the whole village. Such a house might almost
+be described as a temple of the dead. Among the inhabitants
+of the Negen Negorijen or "Nine Villages" the
+abodes of the ancestral spirits are often merely frameworks
+of houses decorated with coloured rags. These frameworks
+are called <i>roem seram</i>. On festal occasions they are
+brought forth and the people dance round them to music.
+The mountain tribes of these islands to the west of New
+Guinea seldom have any such little houses for the souls of
+the dead. They think that the spirits of the departed dwell
+among the branches of trees, to which accordingly the
+living attach strips of red and white cotton, always to the
+number of seven or a multiple of seven. Also they place
+food on the branches or hang it in baskets on the boughs,<a id="footnotetag505" name="footnotetag505"></a><a href="#footnote505"><sup>505</sup></a>
+no doubt in order to feed the hungry ghosts. But among
+the tribes on the coast, who make miniature houses for the
+use of their dead, these little shrines form a central feature of
+the religious life of the people. At festivals, especially on
+the occasion of a marriage or a death, the shrines are brought
+out from the side chamber and are set down in the central
+room of the house, where the people dance round them,
+singing and making music for days together with no interruption
+except for meals.<a id="footnotetag506" name="footnotetag506"></a><a href="#footnote506"><sup>506</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Wooden images of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>According to the Dutch writer, Mr. de Clercq, whose
+account I am reproducing, this worship of the dead, represented
+by wooden images (<i>karwar</i>) and lodged in miniature
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page317" id="page317"></a>[pg 317]</span>
+houses, is, together with a belief in good and bad spirits,
+the only thing deserving the name of religion that can
+be detected among these people. It is certain that the
+wooden images represent members of the family who died
+a natural death at home; they are never, as in Ansoes and
+Waropen, images of persons who have been murdered or
+slain in battle. Hence they form a kind of Penates, who
+are supposed to lead an invisible life in the family circle.
+The natives of the Negen Negorijen, for example, believe
+that these wooden images (<i>karwar</i>), which are both male
+and female, contain the souls of their ancestors, who protect
+the house and household and are honoured at festivals by
+having portions of food set beside their images.<a id="footnotetag507" name="footnotetag507"></a><a href="#footnote507"><sup>507</sup></a> The Seget
+S&eacute;l&eacute;, who occupy the extreme westerly point of New Guinea,
+bury their dead in the island of Lago and set up little houses
+in the forest for the use of the spirits of their ancestors. But
+these little houses may never be entered or even approached
+by members of the family.<a id="footnotetag508" name="footnotetag508"></a><a href="#footnote508"><sup>508</sup></a> A traveller, who visited a hut
+occupied by members of the Seget tribe in Princess Island,
+or Kararaboe, found a sick man in it and observed that
+before the front and back door were set up double rows of
+roughly hewn images painted with red and black stripes. He
+was told that these images were intended to keep off the
+sickness; for the natives thought that it would not dare to
+run the gauntlet between the double rows of figures into the
+house.<a id="footnotetag509" name="footnotetag509"></a><a href="#footnote509"><sup>509</sup></a> We may conjecture that these rude images represented
+ancestral spirits who were doing sentinel duty over
+the sick man.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Customs concerning the dead among the natives of the Macluer
+Gulf.</p>
+
+<p>Among the natives of the Macluer Gulf, which penetrates
+deep into the western part of Dutch New Guinea, the souls
+of dead men who have distinguished themselves by bravery
+or in other ways are honoured in the shape of wooden images,
+which are sometimes wrapt in cloth and decorated with shells
+about the neck. In Sekar, a village on the south side of the
+gulf, small bowls, called <i>kararasa</i> after the spirits of ancestors
+who are believed to lodge in them, are hung up in the houses;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page318" id="page318"></a>[pg 318]</span>
+on special occasions food is placed in them. In some of the
+islands of the Macluer Gulf the dead are laid in hollows of
+the rocks, which are then adorned with drawings of birds,
+hands, and so forth. The hands are always painted white
+or yellowish on a red ground. The other figures are drawn
+with chalk on the weathered surface of the rock. But the
+natives either cannot or will not give any explanation of the
+custom.<a id="footnotetag510" name="footnotetag510"></a><a href="#footnote510"><sup>510</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial and mourning customs in the Mimika district.</p>
+
+<p>The Papuans of the Mimika district, on the southern
+coast of Dutch New Guinea, sometimes bury their dead in
+shallow graves near the huts; sometimes they place them
+in coffins on rough trestles and leave them there till decomposition
+is complete, when they remove the skull and preserve
+it in the house, either burying it in the sand of the floor
+or hanging it in a sort of basket from the roof, where it
+becomes brown with smoke and polished with frequent handling.
+The people do not appear to be particularly attached
+to these relics of their kinsfolk and they sell them readily
+to Europeans. Mourners plaster themselves all over with
+mud, and sometimes they bathe in the river, probably as a
+mode of ceremonial purification. They believe in ghosts,
+which they call <i>niniki</i>; but beyond that elementary fact
+we have no information as to their beliefs concerning the
+state of the dead.<a id="footnotetag511" name="footnotetag511"></a><a href="#footnote511"><sup>511</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs at Windessi.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of Windessi in Dutch New Guinea generally
+bury their dead the day after the decease. As a rule the
+corpse is wrapt in mats and a piece of blue cloth and laid
+on a scaffold; few are coffined. All the possessions of the
+dead, including weapons, fishing-nets, wooden bowls, pots,
+and so forth, according as the deceased was a man or a woman,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page319" id="page319"></a>[pg 319]</span>
+are placed beside him or her. If the death is attributed to
+the influence of an evil spirit, they take hold of a lock of
+hair of the corpse and mention various places. At the
+mention of each place, they tug the hair; and if it comes
+out, they conclude that the death was caused by somebody
+at the place which was mentioned at the moment. But if
+the hair does not come out, they infer that evil spirits had no
+hand in the affair. Before the body is carried away, the
+family bathes, no doubt to purify themselves from the contagion
+of death. Among the people of Windessi it is a
+common custom to bury the dead in an island. At such a
+burial the bystanders pick up a fallen leaf, tear it in two, and
+stroke the corpse with it, in order that the ghost of the
+departed may not kill them. When the body has been
+disposed of either in a grave or on a scaffold, they embark
+in the canoe and sit listening for omens. One of the men in
+a loud voice bids the birds and the flies to be silent; and all
+the others sit as still as death in an attitude of devotion.
+At last, after an interval of silence, the man who called out
+tells his fellows what he has heard. If it was the buzz of the
+blue flies that he heard, some one else will die. If it was the
+booming sound of a triton shell blown in the distance, a raid
+must be made in that direction to rob and murder. Why it
+must be so, is not said, but we may suppose that the note of
+the triton shell is believed to betray the place of the enemy
+who has wrought the death by magic, and that accordingly
+an expedition must be sent to avenge the supposed crime on
+the supposed murderer. If the note of a bird called <i>kohwi</i>
+is heard, then the fruit-trees will bear fruit. Though all the
+men sit listening in the canoe, the ominous sounds are heard
+only by the man who called out.<a id="footnotetag512" name="footnotetag512"></a><a href="#footnote512"><sup>512</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Mourning customs at Windessi.</p>
+
+<p>When the omens have thus been taken, the paddles
+again dip in the water, and the canoe returns to the house
+of mourning. Arrived at it, the men disembark, climb up
+the ladder (for the houses seem to be built on piles over the
+water) and run the whole length of the long house with their
+paddles on their shoulders. Curiously enough, they never
+do this at any other time, because they imagine that it would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page320" id="page320"></a>[pg 320]</span>
+cause the death of somebody. Meantime the women have
+gone into the forest to get bark, which they beat into
+bark-cloth and make into mourning caps for themselves.
+The men busy themselves with plaiting armlets and leglets
+of rattan, in which some red rags are stuck. Large blue and
+white beads are strung on a red cord and worn round the
+neck. Further, the hair is shorn in sign of mourning.
+Mourners are forbidden to eat anything cooked in a pot.
+Sago-porridge, which is a staple food with some of the natives
+of New Guinea, is also forbidden to mourners at Windessi.
+If they would eat rice, it must be cooked in a bamboo. The
+doors and windows of the house are closed with planks or
+mats, just as with us the blinds are lowered in a house after
+a death. The surviving relatives make as many long sago-cakes
+as there are houses in the village and send them to the
+inmates; they also prepare a few for themselves. All who
+do not belong to the family now leave the house of mourning.
+Then the eldest brother or his representative gets up and all
+follow him to the back verandah, where a woman stands
+holding a bow and arrows, an axe, a paddle, and so forth.
+Every one touches these implements. Since the death, there
+has been no working in the house, but this time of inactivity
+is now over and every one is free to resume his usual occupations.
+This ends the preliminary ceremonies of mourning,
+which go by the name of <i>djawarra</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A month afterwards round cakes of sago are baked on
+the fire, and all the members of the family, their friends, and
+the persons who assisted at the burial receive three such
+cakes each. Only very young children are now allowed to
+eat sago-porridge. This ceremony is called <i>djawarra baba</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Festival of the dead. Wooden images of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>When a year or more has elapsed, the so-called festival
+of the dead takes place. Often the festival is held for
+several dead at the same time, and in that case the cost is
+borne in common. From far and near the people have
+collected sago, coco-nuts, and other food. For two nights
+and a day they dance and sing, but without the accompaniment
+of drums (<i>tifa</i>) and gongs. The first night, the
+signs of mourning are still worn, hence no sago-porridge
+may be eaten; only friends who are not in mourning are
+allowed to partake of it. The night is spent in eating,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page321" id="page321"></a>[pg 321]</span>
+drinking, smoking, singing and dancing. Next day many
+people make <i>korwars</i> of their dead, that is, grotesque wooden
+images carved in human form, which are regarded as the
+representatives of the departed. Some people fetch the
+head of the deceased person, and having made a wooden
+image with a large head and a hole in the back of it, they
+insert the skull into the wooden head from behind. After
+that friends feed the mourners with sago-porridge, putting it
+into their mouths with the help of the chopsticks which are
+commonly used in eating sago. When that is done, the
+period of mourning is at an end, and the signs of mourning
+are thrown away. A dance on the beach follows, at which
+the new wooden images of the dead make their appearance.
+But still the drums and gongs are silent. Dancing and
+singing go on till the next morning, when the whole of the
+ceremonies come to an end.<a id="footnotetag513" name="footnotetag513"></a><a href="#footnote513"><sup>513</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fear of the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>The exact meaning of all these ceremonies is not clear,
+but we may conjecture that they are based in large measure
+on the fear of the ghost. That fear comes out plainly in
+the ceremony of stroking the corpse with leaves in order to
+prevent the ghost from killing the survivors. The writer to
+whom we are indebted for an account of these customs tells
+us in explanation of them that among these people death is
+ascribed to the influence of evil spirits called <i>manoam</i>, who
+are supposed to be incarnate in some human beings. Hence
+they often seek to avenge a death by murdering somebody
+who has the reputation of being an evil spirit incarnate.
+If they succeed in doing so, they celebrate the preliminary
+mourning ceremonies called <i>djawarra</i> and <i>djawarra baba</i>,
+but the festival of the dead is changed into a memorial
+festival, at which the people dance and sing to the
+accompaniment of drums (<i>tifa</i>), gongs, and triton shells;
+and instead of carving a wooden image of the deceased, they
+make marks on the fleshless skull of the murdered man.<a id="footnotetag514" name="footnotetag514"></a><a href="#footnote514"><sup>514</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the natives of Windessi as to the life after
+death. Medicine-men inspired by the spirits of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of Windessi are said to have the following
+belief as to the life after death, though we are told that the
+creed is now known to very few of them; for their old
+beliefs and customs are fading away under the influence of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page322" id="page322"></a>[pg 322]</span>
+mission station which is established among them. According
+to their ancient creed, every man and every woman has two
+spirits, and in the nether world, called <i>sarooka</i>, is a large house
+where there is room for all the people of Windessi. When
+a woman dies, both her spirits always go down to the
+nether world, where they are clothed with flesh and bones,
+need do no work, and live for ever. But when a man dies,
+only one of his spirits must go to the under world; the
+other may pass or transmigrate into a living man or, in rare
+cases, into a living woman; the person so inspired by a
+dead man's spirit becomes an <i>inderri</i>, that is, a medicine-man
+or medicine-woman and has power to heal the sick.
+When a person wishes to become a medicine-man or
+medicine-woman, he or she acts as follows. If a man has
+died, and his friends are sitting about the corpse lamenting,
+the would-be medicine-man suddenly begins to shiver and
+to rub his knee with his folded hands, while he utters a
+monotonous sound. Gradually he falls into an ecstasy, and
+if his whole body shakes convulsively, the spirit of the dead
+man is supposed to have entered into him, and he becomes
+a medicine-man. Next day or the day after he is taken
+into the forest; some hocus-pocus is performed over him,
+and the spirits of lunatics, who dwell in certain thick
+trees, are invoked to take possession of him. He is now
+himself called a lunatic, and on returning home behaves
+as if he were half-crazed. This completes his training
+as a medicine-man, and he is now fully qualified to kill
+or cure the sick. His mode of cure depends on the
+native theory of sickness. These savages think that sickness
+is caused by a malicious or angry spirit, apparently the
+spirit of a dead person; for a patient will say, "The <i>korwar</i>"
+(that is, the wooden image which represents a particular
+dead person) "is murdering me, or is making me sick." So
+the medicine-man is called in, and sets to work on the
+sufferer, while the <i>korwar</i>, or wooden image of the spirit who
+is supposed to be doing all the mischief, stands beside him.
+The principal method of cure employed by the doctor is
+massage. He chews a certain fruit fine and rubs the
+patient with it; also he pinches him all over the body as if
+to drive out the spirit. Often he professes to extract a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page323" id="page323"></a>[pg 323]</span>
+stone, a bone, or a stick from the body of the sufferer. At
+last he gives out that he has ascertained the cause of the
+sickness; the sick man has done or has omitted to do something
+which has excited the anger of the spirit.<a id="footnotetag515" name="footnotetag515"></a><a href="#footnote515"><sup>515</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts of slain enemies dreaded.</p>
+
+<p>From all this it would seem that the souls of the dead
+are more feared than loved and reverenced by the Papuans
+of Windessi. Naturally the ghosts of enemies who have
+perished at their hands are particularly dreaded by them.
+That dread explains some of the ceremonies which are
+observed in the village at the return of a successful party of
+head-hunters. As they draw near the village, they announce
+their approach and success by blowing on triton shells.
+Their canoes also are decked with branches. The faces of
+the men who have taken a head are blackened with charcoal;
+and if several have joined in killing one man, his skull is
+divided between them. They always time their arrival
+so as to reach home in the early morning. They come
+paddling to the village with a great noise, and the women
+stand ready to dance in the verandahs of the houses. The
+canoes row past the <i>roem sram</i> or clubhouse where the
+young men live; and as they pass, the grimy-faced slayers
+fling as many pointed sticks or bamboos at the house as
+they have killed enemies. The rest of the day is spent
+very quietly. But now and then they drum or blow on
+the conch, and at other times they beat on the walls of
+the houses with sticks, shouting loudly at the same time, to
+drive away the ghosts of their victims.<a id="footnotetag516" name="footnotetag516"></a><a href="#footnote516"><sup>516</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>That concludes what I have to say as to the fear and
+worship of the dead in Dutch New Guinea.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote475" name="footnote475"></a><b>Footnote 475:</b><a href="#footnotetag475"> (return) </a><p> G. Bamler, "Tami," in R. Neuhauss's
+<i>Deutsch Neu-Guinea</i>, iii. (Berlin,
+1911) pp. 489-492.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote476" name="footnote476"></a><b>Footnote 476:</b><a href="#footnotetag476"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 507-512.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote477" name="footnote477"></a><b>Footnote 477:</b><a href="#footnotetag477"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 513 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote478" name="footnote478"></a><b>Footnote 478:</b><a href="#footnotetag478"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 514 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote479" name="footnote479"></a><b>Footnote 479:</b><a href="#footnotetag479"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 515 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote480" name="footnote480"></a><b>Footnote 480:</b><a href="#footnotetag480"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 516.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote481" name="footnote481"></a><b>Footnote 481:</b><a href="#footnotetag481"> (return) </a><p>G. Bamler, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 493-507.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote482" name="footnote482"></a><b>Footnote 482:</b><a href="#footnotetag482"> (return) </a><p> J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuast&auml;mme an der Geelvinkbai
+(Neu-guinea)," <i>Mitteilungen der geographischen Gesellschaft zu
+Jena</i>, ix. (1890) p. 1; F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," <i>Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap</i>, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) pp. 587
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote483" name="footnote483"></a><b>Footnote 483:</b><a href="#footnotetag483"> (return) </a><p> J. L. van Hasselt, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 2, 3, 5
+<i>sq.</i>; A. Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>
+(Schiedam, 1863), pp. 28 <i>sqq.</i>, 33 <i>sqq.</i>, 42 <i>sq.</i>, 47
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote484" name="footnote484"></a><b>Footnote 484:</b><a href="#footnotetag484"> (return) </a><p> J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuast&auml;mme an der Geelvinkbai
+(Neu-guinea)," <i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu
+Jena</i>, ix. (1891) p. 101.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote485" name="footnote485"></a><b>Footnote 485:</b><a href="#footnotetag485"> (return) </a><p> H. van Rosenberg, <i>Der Malayische Archipel</i>
+(Leipsic, 1878), p. 461.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote486" name="footnote486"></a><b>Footnote 486:</b><a href="#footnotetag486"> (return) </a><p>H. van Rosenberg, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 462.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote487" name="footnote487"></a><b>Footnote 487:</b><a href="#footnotetag487"> (return) </a><p> M. Krieger, <i>Neu-Guinea</i> (Berlin, <span class="sc">N.D.</span>,
+preface dated 1899), pp. 401, 402.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote488" name="footnote488"></a><b>Footnote 488:</b><a href="#footnotetag488"> (return) </a><p> A. Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>
+(Schiedam, 1863), p. 77. Compare O. Finsch, <i>Neu-Guinea und seine
+Bewohner</i> (Bremen, 1865), p. 105.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote489" name="footnote489"></a><b>Footnote 489:</b><a href="#footnotetag489"> (return) </a><p> F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West- en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," <i>Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap</i>, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) p. 631. On
+these <i>korwar</i> or <i>karwar</i> (images of the dead) see further A.
+Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>, pp. 72 <i>sq.</i>,
+77-79; O. Finsch, <i>Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner</i>, pp. 104-106; H.
+von Rosenberg, <i>Der Malayische Archipel</i>, pp. 460 <i>sq.</i>; J. L.
+van Hasselt, "Die Papuast&auml;mme an der Geelvinkbaai (Neu-Guinea)"
+<i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, ix. (1891)
+p. 100; M. Krieger, <i>Neu-Guinea</i>, pp. 400 <i>sq.</i>, 402
+<i>sq.</i>, 498 <i>sqq.</i> In the text I have drawn on these various
+accounts.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote490" name="footnote490"></a><b>Footnote 490:</b><a href="#footnotetag490"> (return) </a><p>J. L. van Hasselt, <i>l.c.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote491" name="footnote491"></a><b>Footnote 491:</b><a href="#footnotetag491"> (return) </a><p> A. Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>,
+pp. 78 <i>sq.</i>; O. Finsch, <i>Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner</i>, pp.
+105 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote492" name="footnote492"></a><b>Footnote 492:</b><a href="#footnotetag492"> (return) </a><p> A. Goudswaard, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 79; O. Finsch, <i>op.
+cit.</i> p. 106.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote493" name="footnote493"></a><b>Footnote 493:</b><a href="#footnotetag493"> (return) </a><p>J. L. van Hasselt, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 100.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote494" name="footnote494"></a><b>Footnote 494:</b><a href="#footnotetag494"> (return) </a><p>A. Goudswaard, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 78.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote495" name="footnote495"></a><b>Footnote 495:</b><a href="#footnotetag495"> (return) </a><p>F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 632.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote496" name="footnote496"></a><b>Footnote 496:</b><a href="#footnotetag496"> (return) </a><p>F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 632.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote497" name="footnote497"></a><b>Footnote 497:</b><a href="#footnotetag497"> (return) </a><p>F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 632.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote498" name="footnote498"></a><b>Footnote 498:</b><a href="#footnotetag498"> (return) </a><p> A. Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>,
+pp. 70-73; O. Finsch, <i>Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner</i> pp. 104
+<i>sq.</i>; M. Krieger, <i>Neu-Guinea</i>, p. 398.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote499" name="footnote499"></a><b>Footnote 499:</b><a href="#footnotetag499"> (return) </a><p> J. L. van Hasselt, in <i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, iv. (1886) pp. 118 <i>sq.</i> As to the spirit
+or spirits who dwell in tree tops and draw away the souls of the living
+to themselves, see further "Eenige bijzonderheden betreffende de Papoeas
+van de Geelvinksbaai van Nieuw-Guinea," <i>Bijdragen tot de Taal-
+Landen Volkenkunde van Ne&ecirc;rlandsch-Indi&euml;</i>, ii. (1854) pp. 375
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote500" name="footnote500"></a><b>Footnote 500:</b><a href="#footnotetag500"> (return) </a><p> A. Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>,
+p. 73; J. L. van Hasselt, in <i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, iv. (1886) p. 118; M. Krieger,
+<i>Neu-Guinea</i>, pp. 398. <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote501" name="footnote501"></a><b>Footnote 501:</b><a href="#footnotetag501"> (return) </a><p> A. Goudswaard, <i>De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai</i>,
+pp. 75 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote502" name="footnote502"></a><b>Footnote 502:</b><a href="#footnotetag502"> (return) </a><p> J. L. van Hasselt, in <i>Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena</i>, iv. (1886) 117 <i>sq.</i>; M. Krieger, <i>op.
+cit.</i> pp. 397 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote503" name="footnote503"></a><b>Footnote 503:</b><a href="#footnotetag503"> (return) </a><p>A. Goudswaard, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 74 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote504" name="footnote504"></a><b>Footnote 504:</b><a href="#footnotetag504"> (return) </a><p> <i>Nieuw Guinea ethnographisch en natuurkundig onderzocht
+en beschreven</i> (Amsterdam, 1862), p. 162.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote505" name="footnote505"></a><b>Footnote 505:</b><a href="#footnotetag505"> (return) </a><p> F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West- en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," <i>Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap</i>, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) pp. 198
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote506" name="footnote506"></a><b>Footnote 506:</b><a href="#footnotetag506"> (return) </a><p>F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 201.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote507" name="footnote507"></a><b>Footnote 507:</b><a href="#footnotetag507"> (return) </a><p>F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 202, 205.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote508" name="footnote508"></a><b>Footnote 508:</b><a href="#footnotetag508"> (return) </a><p>F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 211.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote509" name="footnote509"></a><b>Footnote 509:</b><a href="#footnotetag509"> (return) </a><p> J. W. van Hille, "Reizen in West-Nieuw-Guinea,"
+<i>Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig
+Genootschap</i>, Tweede Serie, xxiii. (1906) p. 463.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote510" name="footnote510"></a><b>Footnote 510:</b><a href="#footnotetag510"> (return) </a><p> F. S. A. de Clercq, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 459 <i>sq.</i>,
+461 <i>sq.</i> A German traveller, Mr. H. K&uuml;hn, spent some time at Sekar
+and purchased a couple of what he calls "old heathen idols," which are
+now in the ethnological Museum at Leipsic. One of them, about a foot
+high, represents a human head and bust; the other, about two feet high,
+represents a squat sitting figure. They are probably ancestral images
+(<i>korwar</i> or <i>karwar</i>). The natives are said to have such
+confidence in the protection of these "idols" that they leave their
+jewellery and other possessions unguarded beside them, in the full
+belief that nobody would dare to steal anything from spots protected by
+such mighty beings. See H. K&uuml;hn, "Mein Aufenthalt in Neu-Guinea,"
+<i>Festschrift des 25j&auml;hrigen Bestehens des Vereins f&uuml;r Erdkunde zu
+Dresden</i> (Dresden, 1888), pp. 143 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote511" name="footnote511"></a><b>Footnote 511:</b><a href="#footnotetag511"> (return) </a><p> A. F. R. Wollaston, <i>Pygmies and Papuans</i> (London,
+1912), pp. 132 <i>sq.</i>, 136-140.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote512" name="footnote512"></a><b>Footnote 512:</b><a href="#footnotetag512"> (return) </a><p> J. L. D. van der Roest, "Uit the leven der bevolking van
+Windessi," <i>Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal- Landen Volkenkunde</i>,
+xl. (1898) pp. 159 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote513" name="footnote513"></a><b>Footnote 513:</b><a href="#footnotetag513"> (return) </a><p> J. L. D. van der Roest, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 161
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote514" name="footnote514"></a><b>Footnote 514:</b><a href="#footnotetag514"> (return) </a><p>J. L. D. van der Roest, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 162.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote515" name="footnote515"></a><b>Footnote 515:</b><a href="#footnotetag515"> (return) </a><p>J. L. D. van der Roest, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 164-166.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote516" name="footnote516"></a><b>Footnote 516:</b><a href="#footnotetag516"> (return) </a><p> J. L. D. van der Roest, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 157
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page324" id="page324"></a>[pg 324]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xv" id="lecture-xv"></a>LECTURE XV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF SOUTHERN MELANESIA (NEW CALEDONIA)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Melanesia and the Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I concluded our survey of the beliefs and
+practices concerning death and the dead which are reported
+to prevail among the natives of New Guinea. We now
+pass to the natives of Melanesia, the great archipelago or
+rather chain of archipelagoes, which stretches round the north-eastern
+and eastern ends of New Guinea and southward,
+parallel to the coast of Queensland, till it almost touches the
+tropic of Capricorn. Thus the islands lie wholly within the
+tropics and are for the most part characterised by tropical heat
+and tropical luxuriance of vegetation. Only New Caledonia,
+the most southerly of the larger islands, differs somewhat
+from the rest in its comparatively cool climate and scanty
+flora.<a id="footnotetag517" name="footnotetag517"></a><a href="#footnote517"><sup>517</sup></a> The natives of the islands belong to the Melanesian
+race. They are dark-skinned and woolly-haired and speak
+a language which is akin to the Polynesian language. In
+material culture they stand roughly on the same level as the
+natives of New Guinea, a considerable part of whom in the
+south-eastern part of the island, as I pointed out before, are
+either pure Melanesians or at all events exhibit a strong
+infusion of Melanesian blood. They cultivate the ground,
+live in settled villages, build substantial houses, construct
+outrigger-canoes, display some aptitude for art, possess
+strong commercial instincts, and even employ various
+mediums of exchange, of which shell-money is the most
+notable.<a id="footnotetag518" name="footnotetag518"></a><a href="#footnote518"><sup>518</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page325" id="page325"></a>[pg 325]</span>
+
+<p class="side">The New Caledonians.</p>
+
+<p>We shall begin our survey of these islands with New
+Caledonia in the south, and from it shall pass northwards
+through the New Hebrides and Solomon Islands to the
+Bismarck Archipelago, which consists chiefly of the two
+great islands of New Britain and New Ireland with the
+group of the Admiralty Islands terminating it to the
+westward. For our knowledge of the customs and religion
+of the New Caledonians we depend chiefly on the evidence
+of a Catholic missionary, Father Lambert, who has worked
+among them since 1856 and has published a valuable book
+on the subject.<a id="footnotetag519" name="footnotetag519"></a><a href="#footnote519"><sup>519</sup></a> To be exact, his information applies not
+to the natives of New Caledonia itself, but to the inhabitants
+of a group of small islands, which lie immediately off the
+northern extremity of the island and are known as the
+Belep group. Father Lambert began to labour among the
+Belep at a time when no white man had as yet resided
+among them. At a later time circumstances led him to
+transfer his ministry to the Isle of Pines, which lies off the
+opposite or southern end of New Caledonia. A comparative
+study of the natives at the two extremities of New Caledonia
+revealed to him an essential similarity in their beliefs and
+customs; so that it is not perhaps very rash to assume
+that similar customs prevail among the aborigines of New
+Caledonia itself, which lies intermediate between the two
+points observed by Father Lambert.<a id="footnotetag520" name="footnotetag520"></a><a href="#footnote520"><sup>520</sup></a> The assumption is
+confirmed by evidence which was collected by Dr. George
+Turner from the mainland of New Caledonia so long ago
+as 1845.<a id="footnotetag521" name="footnotetag521"></a><a href="#footnote521"><sup>521</sup></a> Accordingly in what follows I shall commonly
+speak of the New Caledonians in general, though the
+statements for the most part apply in particular to the
+Belep tribe.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs of the New Calendonians as to the land of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The souls of the New Caledonians, like those of most
+savages, are supposed to be immortal, at least to survive
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page326" id="page326"></a>[pg 326]</span>
+death for an indefinite period. They all go, good and bad
+alike, to dwell in a very rich and beautiful country situated
+at the bottom of the sea, to the north-east of the island
+of Pott. The name of the land of souls is Tsiabiloum.
+But before they reach this happy land they must run the
+gauntlet of a grim spirit called Kiemoua, who has his abode
+on a rock in the island of Pott. He is a fisherman of
+souls; for he catches them as they pass in a net and after
+venting his fury on them he releases them, and they pursue
+their journey to Tsiabiloum, the land of the dead. It is
+a country more fair and fertile than tongue can tell. Yams,
+taros, sugar-canes, bananas all grow there in profusion and
+without cultivation. There are forests of wild orange-trees,
+also, and the golden fruits serve the blessed spirits as
+playthings. You can tell roughly how long it is since a
+spirit quitted the upper world by the colour of the orange
+which he plays with; for the oranges of those who have
+just arrived are green; the oranges of those who have been
+longer dead are ripe; and the oranges of those who died
+long ago are dry and wizened. There is no night in that
+blessed land, and no sleep; for the eyes of the spirits are
+never weighed down with slumber. Sorrow and sickness,
+decrepitude and death never enter; even boredom is
+unknown. But it is only the nights, or rather the hours
+corresponding to nights on earth, which the spirits pass
+in these realms of bliss. At daybreak they revisit their old
+home on earth and take up their posts in the cemeteries
+where they are honoured; then at nightfall they flit away
+back to the spirit-land beneath the sea, there to resume
+their sport with oranges, green, golden, or withered, till dawn
+of day. On these repeated journeys to and fro they have
+nothing to fear from the grim fisherman and his net; it
+is only on their first passage to the nether world that he
+catches and trounces them.<a id="footnotetag522" name="footnotetag522"></a><a href="#footnote522"><sup>522</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs of the New Calendonians.</p>
+
+<p>The bodies of the dead are buried in shallow graves,
+which are dug in a sacred grove. The corpse is placed in
+a crouching attitude with the head at or above the surface
+of the ground, in order to allow of the skull being easily
+detached from the trunk, at a subsequent time. In token
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page327" id="page327"></a>[pg 327]</span>
+of sorrow the nearest relations of the deceased tear the
+lobes of their ears and inflict large burns on their arms and
+breasts. The houses, nets, and other implements of the
+dead are burnt; his plantations are ravaged, his coco-nut
+palms felled with the axe. The motive for this destruction
+of the property of the deceased is not mentioned, but the
+custom points to a fear of the ghost; the people probably
+make his old home as unattractive as possible in order to
+offer him no temptation to return and haunt them. The
+same fear of the ghost, or at all events of the infection of
+death, is revealed by the stringent seclusion and ceremonial
+pollution of the grave-diggers. They are two in number;
+no other persons may handle the corpse. After they have
+discharged their office they must remain near the corpse for
+four or five days, observing a rigorous fast and keeping
+apart from their wives. They may not shave or cut their
+hair, and they are obliged to wear a tall pyramidal and very
+cumbersome head-dress. They may not touch food with
+their hands. If they help themselves to it, they must pick
+it up with their mouths alone or with a stick, not with their
+fingers. Oftener they are fed by an attendant, who puts the
+victuals into their mouths as he might do if they were
+palsied. On the other hand they are treated by the people
+with great respect; common folk will not pass near them
+without stooping.<a id="footnotetag523" name="footnotetag523"></a><a href="#footnote523"><sup>523</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sham fight as a mourning ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>A curious ceremony which the New Caledonians observe
+at a certain period of mourning for the dead is a sham fight.
+Father Lambert describes one such combat which he witnessed.
+A number of men were divided into two parties;
+one party was posted on the beach, the other and much
+larger party was stationed in the adjoining cemetery, where
+food and property had been collected. From time to time
+a long piercing yell would be heard; then a number of men
+would break from the crowd in the cemetery and rush
+furiously down to the beach with their slings and stones
+ready to assail their adversaries. These, answering yell
+with yell, would then plunge into the sea, armed with
+battle-axes and clubs, while they made a feint of parrying
+the stones hurled at them by the other side. But neither
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page328" id="page328"></a>[pg 328]</span>
+the shots nor the parries appeared to be very seriously
+meant. Then when the assailants retired, the fugitives
+pretended to pursue them, till both parties had regained
+their original position. The same scene of alternate attack
+and retreat was repeated hour after hour, till at last, the
+pretence of enmity being laid aside, the two parties joined
+in a dance, their heads crowned with leafy garlands. Father
+Lambert, who describes this ceremony as an eye-witness,
+offers no explanation of it. But as he tells us that all
+deaths are believed by these savages to be an effect of
+sorcery, we may conjecture that the sham fight is intended
+to delude the ghost into thinking that his death is being
+avenged on the sorcerer who killed him.<a id="footnotetag524" name="footnotetag524"></a><a href="#footnote524"><sup>524</sup></a> In former lectures
+I shewed that similar pretences are made, apparently for a
+similar purpose, by some of the natives of Australia and
+New Guinea.<a id="footnotetag525" name="footnotetag525"></a><a href="#footnote525"><sup>525</sup></a> If the explanation is correct, we can hardly
+help applauding the ingenuity which among these savages
+has discovered a bloodless mode of satisfying the ghost's
+craving for blood.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Preservation of the skulls of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>About a year after the death, when the flesh of the
+corpse is entirely decayed, the skull is removed and placed
+solemnly in another burying-ground, or rather charnel-house,
+where all the skulls of the family are deposited. Every
+family has such a charnel-house, which is commonly situated
+near the dwelling. It appears to be simply an open space
+in the forest, where the skulls are set in a row on the ground.<a id="footnotetag526" name="footnotetag526"></a><a href="#footnote526"><sup>526</sup></a>
+Yet in a sense it may be called a temple for the worship of
+ancestors; for recourse is had to the skulls on various
+occasions in order to obtain the help of the spirits of the
+dead. "The true worship of the New Caledonians," says
+Father Lambert, "is the worship of ancestors. Each family
+has its own; it religiously preserves their name; it is proud
+of them and has confidence in them. Hence it has its
+burial-place and its pious hearth for the sacrifices to be
+offered to their ghosts. It is the most inviolable piece of
+property; an encroachment on such a spot by a neighbour
+is a thing unheard of."<a id="footnotetag527" name="footnotetag527"></a><a href="#footnote527"><sup>527</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Examples of ancestor-worship among the New Caledonians.</p>
+
+<p>A few examples may serve to illustrate the ancestor-worship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page329" id="page329"></a>[pg 329]</span>
+of the New Caledonians. When a person is sick, a
+member of the family, never a stranger, is appointed to heal
+him by means of certain magical insufflations. To enable
+him to do so with effect the healer first repairs to the family
+charnel-house and lays some sugar-cane leaves beside the
+skulls, saying, "I lay these leaves on you that I may go
+and breathe upon our sick relative, to the end that he may
+live." Then he goes to a tree belonging to the family and
+lays other sugar-cane leaves at its foot, saying, "I lay these
+leaves beside the tree of my father and of my grandfather,
+in order that my breath may have healing virtue." Next he
+takes some leaves of the tree or a piece of its bark, chews it
+into a mash, and then goes and breathes on the patient, his
+breath being moistened with spittle which is charged with
+particles of the leaves or the bark.<a id="footnotetag528" name="footnotetag528"></a><a href="#footnote528"><sup>528</sup></a> Thus the healing virtue
+of his breath would seem to be drawn from the spirits of the
+dead as represented partly by their skulls and partly by the
+leaves and bark of the tree which belonged to them in life,
+and to which their souls appear in some manner to be
+attached in death.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers for fish.</p>
+
+<p>Again, when a shoal of fish has made its appearance on
+the reef, a number of superstitious ceremonies have to be
+performed before the people may go and spear them in the
+water. On the eve of the fishing-day the medicine-man
+of the tribe causes a quantity of leaves of certain specified
+plants to be collected and roasted in the native ovens.
+Next day the leaves are taken from the ovens and deposited
+beside the ancestral skulls, which have been arranged and
+decorated for the ceremony. All the fishermen, armed with
+their fishing-spears, repair to the holy ground or sacred
+grove where the skulls are kept, and there they draw themselves
+up in two rows, while the medicine-man chants an
+invocation or prayer for a good catch. At every verse the
+crowd raises a cry of approval and assent. At its conclusion
+the medicine-man sets an example by thrusting with his spear
+at a fish, and all the men immediately plunge into the water
+and engage in fishing.<a id="footnotetag529" name="footnotetag529"></a><a href="#footnote529"><sup>529</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers for sugar-cane.</p>
+
+<p>Again, in order that a sugar plantation may flourish, the
+medicine-man will lay a sugar-cane beside the ancestral
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page330" id="page330"></a>[pg 330]</span>
+skulls, saying, "This is for you. We beg of you to ward off
+all curses, all tricks of wicked people, in order that our
+plantations may prosper."<a id="footnotetag530" name="footnotetag530"></a><a href="#footnote530"><sup>530</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers for yams.</p>
+
+<p>Again, when the store of yams is running short and
+famine is beginning to be felt, the New Caledonians celebrate
+a festival called <i>moulim</i> in which the worship of their
+ancestors is the principal feature. A staff is wreathed with
+branches, apparently to represent a yam, and a hedge of
+coco-nut leaves is made near the ancestral skulls. The
+decorated staff is then set up there, and prayers for the
+prosperity of the crops are offered over and over again.
+After that nobody may enter a yam-field or a cemetery or
+touch sea-water for three days. On the third day a man
+stationed on a mound chants an invocation or incantation in
+a loud voice. Next all the men go down to the shore, each
+of them with a firebrand in his hand, and separating into
+two parties engage in a sham fight. Afterwards they bathe
+and repairing to the charnel-house deposit coco-nut leaves
+beside the skulls of their ancestors. They are then free
+to partake of the feast which has been prepared by the
+women.<a id="footnotetag531" name="footnotetag531"></a><a href="#footnote531"><sup>531</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Caverns used by the natives as charnel-houses in the Isle of
+Pines.</p>
+
+<p>While the beliefs and customs of the New Caledonians
+in regard to the dead bear a general resemblance to each
+other, whether they belong to the north or to the south of
+the principal island, a special feature is introduced into the
+mortuary customs of the natives of the Isle of Pines by the
+natural caves and grottoes with which the outer rim of the
+island, to the distance of several miles from the shore, is
+riddled; for in these caverns the natives in the old heathen
+days were wont to deposit the bones and skulls of their dead
+and to use the caves as sanctuaries or chapels for the
+worship of the spirits of the departed. Some of the caves
+are remarkable both in themselves and in their situation.
+Most of those which the natives turned into charnel-houses
+are hidden away, sometimes at great distances, in the rank
+luxuriance of the tropical forests. Some of them open
+straight from the level of the ground; to reach others
+you must clamber up the rocks; to explore others you
+must descend into the bowels of the earth. A glimmering
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page331" id="page331"></a>[pg 331]</span>
+twilight illumines some; thick darkness veils others, and it
+is only by torchlight that you can explore their mysterious
+depths. Penetrating into the interior by the flickering
+gleam of flambeaus held aloft by the guides, and picking
+your steps among loose stones and pools of water, you
+might fancy yourself now in the great hall of a ruined
+castle, now in the vast nave of a gothic cathedral with its
+chapels opening off it into the darkness on either hand.
+The illusion is strengthened by the multitude of stalactites
+which hang from the roof of the cavern and, glittering in the
+fitful glow of the torches, might be taken for burning cressets
+kindled to light up the revels in a baronial hall, or for holy
+lamps twinkling in the gloom of a dim cathedral aisle before
+holy images, where solitary worshippers kneel in silent
+devotion. In the shifting play of the light and shadow cast
+by the torches the fantastic shapes of the incrustations which
+line the sides or rise from the floor of the grotto appear to
+the imagination of the observer now as the gnarled trunks
+of huge trees, now as statues or torsos of statues, now as
+altars, on which perhaps a nearer approach reveals a row of
+blanched and grinning skulls. No wonder if such places,
+chosen for the last resting-places of the relics of mortality,
+have fed the imagination of the natives with weird notions
+of a life after death, a life very different from that which the
+living lead in the glowing sunshine and amid the rich tropical
+verdure a few paces outside of these gloomy caverns. It is
+with a shiver and a sense of relief that the visitor escapes
+from them to the warm outer air and sees again the ferns
+and creepers hanging over the mouth of the cave like a
+green fringe against the intense blue of the sky.<a id="footnotetag532" name="footnotetag532"></a><a href="#footnote532"><sup>532</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sea-caves.</p>
+
+<p>While this is the general character of the caves which
+are to be found hidden away in the forests, many of those
+near the shore consist simply of apertures hollowed out in
+the face of the cliffs by the slow but continuous action of
+the waves in the course of ages. On the beach itself sea-caves
+are found in which the rising tide precipitates itself
+with a hollow roar as of subterranean thunder; and at a
+point, some way back from the strand, where the roof of
+one of these caves has fallen in, the salt water is projected
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page332" id="page332"></a>[pg 332]</span>
+into the air in the form of intermittent jets of spray, which
+vary in height with the force of the wind and tide.<a id="footnotetag533" name="footnotetag533"></a><a href="#footnote533"><sup>533</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers and sacrifices offered to the dead by the New
+Caledonians.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the use which the natives make of these
+caves as charnel-houses and mortuary chapels, Father
+Lambert tells us that any one of them usually includes
+three compartments, a place of burial, a place of skulls, and
+a place of sacrifice. But often the place of skulls is also the
+place of sacrifice; and in no case is the one far from the
+other. The family priest, who is commonly the senior
+member of the family, may address his prayers to the
+ancestors in the depth of the cavern, in the place of skulls,
+or in the place of sacrifice, whenever circumstances call for
+a ritual of unusual solemnity. Otherwise with the help
+of his amulets he may pray to the souls of the forefathers
+anywhere; for these amulets consist of personal and portable
+relics of the dead, such as locks of hair, teeth, and so forth; or
+again they may be leaves or other parts of plants which are
+sacred to the family; so that a wizard who is in possession
+of them can always and anywhere communicate with the
+ancestral spirits. The place of sacrifice would seem to be
+more often in the open air than in a cave, for Father
+Lambert tells us that in the centre of it a shrub, always of
+the same species, is planted and carefully cultivated. Beside
+it may be seen the pots and stones which are used in
+cooking the food offered to the dead. In this worship of
+the dead a certain differentiation of functions or division of
+labour obtains between the various families. All have not
+the same gifts and graces. The prayers of one family
+offered to their ancestral ghosts are thought to be powerful
+in procuring rain in time of drought; the prayers of another
+will cause the sun to break through the clouds when the
+sky is overcast; the supplications of a third will produce a
+fine crop of yams; the earnest entreaties of a fourth will
+ensure victory in war; and the passionate pleadings of a
+fifth will guard mariners against the perils and dangers of
+the deep. And so on through the whole gamut of human
+needs, so far as these are felt by savages. If only wrestling
+in prayer could satisfy the wants of man, few people should
+be better provided with all the necessaries and comforts of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page333" id="page333"></a>[pg 333]</span>
+life than the New Caledonians. And according to the
+special purpose to which a family devotes its spiritual
+energies, so will commonly be the position of its oratory.
+For example, if rain-making is their strong point, their
+house of prayer will be established near a cultivated field,
+in order that the crops may immediately experience the
+benefit to be derived from their orisons. Again, if they
+enjoy a high reputation for procuring a good catch of fish,
+the family skulls will be placed in the mouth of a cave
+looking out over the great ocean, or perhaps on a bleak
+little wind-swept isle, where in the howl of the blast, the
+thunder of the waves on the strand, and the clangour of
+the gulls overhead, the fancy of the superstitious savage
+may hear the voices of his dead forefathers keeping watch
+and ward over their children who are tossed on the heaving
+billows.<a id="footnotetag534" name="footnotetag534"></a><a href="#footnote534"><sup>534</sup></a> Thus among these fortunate islanders religion
+and industry go hand in hand; piety has been reduced to
+a co-operative system which diffuses showers of blessings
+on the whole community.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayer-posts.</p>
+
+<p>As it is clearly impossible even for the most devout
+to pray day and night without cessation, the weakness of
+the flesh requiring certain intervals for refreshment and
+repose, the New Caledonians have devised an ingenious
+method of continuing their orisons at the shrine in their
+own absence. For this purpose they make rods or poles
+of various lengths, carve and paint them rudely, wind
+bandages of native cloth about them, and having fastened
+large shells to the top, set them up either in the sepulchral
+caves or in the place of skulls. In setting up one of these
+poles the native will pray for the particular favour which
+he desires to obtain from the ancestors for himself or his
+family; and he appears to think that in some way the pole
+will continue to recite the prayer in the ears of the ghosts,
+when he himself has ceased to speak and has returned to
+his customary avocations. And when members of his
+family visit the shrine and see the pole, they will be reminded
+of the particular benefit which they are entitled to expect
+from the souls of the departed. A certain rude symbolism
+may be traced in the materials and other particulars of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page334" id="page334"></a>[pg 334]</span>
+these prayer-posts. A hard wood signifies strength; a tall
+pole overtopping all the rest imports a wish that he for
+whose sake it was erected may out-top all his rivals; and
+so on.<a id="footnotetag535" name="footnotetag535"></a><a href="#footnote535"><sup>535</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Religion combined with magic in the ritual of the New
+Caledonians. Sacred stones endowed with special magical virtues. The
+"stone of famine."</p>
+
+<p>We may assume with some probability that in the mind
+of the natives such resemblances are not purely figurative
+or symbolic, but that they are also magical in intention,
+being supposed not merely to represent the object of the
+supplicant's prayer, but actually, on the principle of homoeopathic
+or imitative magic, to contribute to its accomplishment.
+If that is so, we must conclude that the religion of these
+savages, as manifested in their prayers to the spirits of the
+dead, is tinctured with an alloy of magic; they do not trust
+entirely to the compassion of the spirits and their power
+to help them; they seek to reinforce their prayers by a
+certain physical compulsion acting through the natural
+properties of the prayer-posts. This interpretation is
+confirmed by a parallel use which these people make of
+certain sacred stones, which apart from their possible
+character as representatives of the ancestors, seem to be
+credited with independent magical virtues by reason of their
+various shapes and appearances. For example, there is a
+piece of polished jade which is called "the stone of famine,"
+because it is supposed capable of causing either dearth or
+abundance, but is oftener used by the sorcerer to create,
+or at least to threaten, dearth, in order thereby to extort
+presents from his alarmed fellow tribesmen. This stone is
+kept in a burial-ground and derives its potency from the
+dead. The worshipper or the sorcerer (for he combines the
+two characters) who desires to cause a famine repairs to
+the burial-ground, uncovers the stone, rubs it with certain
+plants, and smears one half of it with black pigment. Then
+he makes a small hole in the ground and inserts the
+blackened end of the stone in the hole. Next he prays
+to the ancestors that nothing may go well with the country.
+If this malevolent rite should be followed by the desired
+effect, the sorcerer soon sees messengers arriving laden with
+presents, who entreat him to stay the famine. If his cupidity
+is satisfied, he rubs the stone again, inserts it upside down
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page335" id="page335"></a>[pg 335]</span>
+in the ground, and prays to his ancestors to restore plenty
+to the land.<a id="footnotetag536" name="footnotetag536"></a><a href="#footnote536"><sup>536</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Stones to drive people mad.</p>
+
+<p>Again, certain rough unhewn stones, which are kept
+in the sacred places, are thought to possess the power of
+driving people mad. To effect this purpose the sorcerer
+has only to strike one of them with the branches of a
+certain tree and to pray to the ancestral spirits that they
+would deprive so-and-so of his senses.<a id="footnotetag537" name="footnotetag537"></a><a href="#footnote537"><sup>537</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Stones to blight coco-nut palms. Stones to make bread-fruit
+trees bear fruit.</p>
+
+<p>Again, there is a stone which they use in cursing a
+plantation of coco-nut palms. The stone resembles a
+blighted coco-nut, and no doubt it is this resemblance
+which is supposed to endow it with the magical power to
+blight coco-nut trees. In order to effect his malicious
+purpose the sorcerer rubs the stone in the cemetery with
+certain leaves and then deposits it in a hole at the foot
+of a coco-nut tree, covers it up, and prays that all the
+trees of the plantation may be barren. This ceremony
+combines the elements of magic and religion. The prayer,
+which is no doubt addressed to the spirits of the dead,
+though this is not expressly affirmed, is purely religious;
+but the employment of a stone resembling a blighted coco-nut
+for the purpose of blighting the coco-nut palms is a
+simple piece of homoeopathic or imitative magic, in which,
+as usual, the desired effect is supposed to be produced by
+an imitation of it. Similarly, in order to make a bread-fruit
+tree bear fruit they employ two stones, one of which
+resembles the unripe and the other the ripe fruit. These
+are kept, as usual, in a cemetery; and when the trees begin
+to put forth fruit, the small stone resembling the unripe fruit
+is buried at the foot of one of the trees with the customary
+prayers and ceremonies; and when the fruits are more
+mature the small stone is replaced by the larger stone
+which resembles the ripe fruit. Then, when the fruits on
+the tree are quite ripe, the two stones are removed and
+deposited again in the cemetery: they have done their work
+by bringing to maturity the fruits which they resemble.
+This again is a piece of pure homoeopathic or imitative
+magic working by means of mimicry; but the magical
+virtue of the stones is reinforced by the spiritual power
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page336" id="page336"></a>[pg 336]</span>
+of the dead, for the stones have been kept in a cemetery and
+prayers have been addressed to the souls of the departed.<a id="footnotetag538" name="footnotetag538"></a><a href="#footnote538"><sup>538</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The "stone of the sun."</p>
+
+<p>Again, the natives have two disc-shaped stones, each
+with a hole in the centre, which together make up what
+they call "the stone of the sun." No doubt it is regarded
+as a symbol of the sun, and as such it is employed to cause
+drought in a ceremony which, like the preceding, combines
+the elements of magic and religion. The sun-stone is kept
+in one of the sacred places, and when a sorcerer wishes
+to make drought with it, he brings offerings to the ancestral
+spirits in the sacred place. These offerings are purely
+religious, but the rest of the ceremony is purely magical.
+At the moment when the sun rises from the sea, the
+magician or priest, whichever we choose to call him (for
+he combines both characters), passes a burning brand in
+and out of the hole in the sun-stone, while he says, "I
+kindle the sun, in order that he may eat up the clouds
+and dry up our land, so that it shall no longer bear
+fruit." Here the putting of fire to the sun-stone is a
+piece of pure homoeopathic or imitative magic, designed to
+increase the burning heat of the sun by mimicry.<a id="footnotetag539" name="footnotetag539"></a><a href="#footnote539"><sup>539</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Stones to make rain.</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, when a wizard desires to make rain, he
+proceeds as follows. The place of sacrifice is decorated and
+enclosed with a fence, and a large quantity of provisions is
+deposited in it to be offered to the ancestors whose skulls
+stand there in a row. Opposite the skulls the wizard places
+a row of pots full of a medicated water, and he brings a
+number of sacred stones of a rounded form or shaped like a
+skull. Each of these stones, after being rubbed with the
+leaves of a certain tree, is placed in one of the pots of
+water. Then the wizard recites a long litany or series of
+invocations to the ancestors, which may be summarised thus:
+"We pray you to help us, in order that our country may
+revive and live anew." Then holding a branch in his hand
+he climbs a tree and scans the horizon if haply he may
+descry a cloud, be it no larger than a man's hand. Should
+he be fortunate enough to see one, he waves the branch
+to and fro to make the cloud mount up in the sky, while he
+also stretches out his arms to right and left to enlarge it so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page337" id="page337"></a>[pg 337]</span>
+that it may hide the sun and overcast the whole heaven.<a id="footnotetag540" name="footnotetag540"></a><a href="#footnote540"><sup>540</sup></a>
+Here again the prayers and offerings are purely religious;
+while the placing of the skull-shaped stones in pots full
+of water, and the waving of the branch to bring up the
+clouds, are magical ceremonies designed to produce rain by
+mimicry and compulsion.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Stones to make or mar sea-voyages.</p>
+
+<p>Again, the natives have a stone in the shape of a canoe,
+which they employ in ceremonies for the purpose of favouring
+or hindering navigation. If the sorcerer desires to make
+a voyage prosperous, he places the canoe-shaped stone before
+the ancestral skulls with the right side up; but if he wishes
+to cause his enemy to perish at sea, he places the canoe-shaped
+stone bottom upwards before the skulls, which, on
+the principles of homoeopathic or imitative magic, must
+clearly make his enemy's canoe to capsize and precipitate
+its owner into the sea. Whichever of these ceremonies he
+performs, the wizard accompanies the magical rite, as usual,
+with prayers and offerings of food to the ancestral spirits
+who are represented by the skulls.<a id="footnotetag541" name="footnotetag541"></a><a href="#footnote541"><sup>541</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Stones to help fishermen.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of the Isle of Pines subsist mainly by
+fishing; hence they naturally have a large number of
+sacred stones which they use for the purpose of securing
+the blessing of the ancestral spirits on the business of the
+fisherman. Indeed each species of fish has its own special
+sacred stone. These stones are kept in large shells in a
+cemetery. A wizard who desires to make use of one of
+them paints the stone with a variety of colours, chews
+certain leaves, and then breathes on the stone and moistens
+it with his spittle. After that he sets up the stone before
+the ancestral skulls, saying, "Help us, that we may be
+successful in fishing." The sacrifices to the spirits consist
+of bananas, sugar-cane, and fish, never of taros or yams.
+After the fishing and the sacrificial meal, the stone is put
+back in its place, and covered up respectfully.<a id="footnotetag542" name="footnotetag542"></a><a href="#footnote542"><sup>542</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Stones to make yams grow.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, the natives of the Isle of Pines cultivate many
+different kinds of yams, and they have a correspondingly
+large number of sacred stones destined to aid them in the
+cultivation by ensuring the blessing of the dead upon the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page338" id="page338"></a>[pg 338]</span>
+work. In shape and colour these stones differ from each
+other, each of them bearing a resemblance, real or fanciful,
+to the particular species of yam which it is supposed to
+quicken. But the method of operating with them is much
+the same for all. The stone is placed before the skulls,
+wetted with water, and wiped with certain leaves. Yams
+and fish, cooked on the spot, are offered in sacrifice to
+the dead, the priest or magician saying, "This is your
+offering in order that the crop of yams may be good."
+So saying he presents the food to the dead and himself
+eats a little of it. After that the stone is taken away and
+buried in the yam field which it is designed to fertilise.<a id="footnotetag543" name="footnotetag543"></a><a href="#footnote543"><sup>543</sup></a>
+Here, again, the prayer and sacrifice to the dead are purely
+religious rites intended to propitiate the spirits and secure
+their help; while the burying of the yam-shaped stone in
+the yam-field to make the yams grow is a simple piece of
+homoeopathic or imitative magic. Similarly in order to
+cultivate taros and bananas, stones resembling taros and
+bananas are buried in the taro field or the banana grove,
+and their magical virtue is reinforced by prayers and offerings
+to the dead.<a id="footnotetag544" name="footnotetag544"></a><a href="#footnote544"><sup>544</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The religion of the New Caledonians is mainly a worship of
+the dead tinctured with magic.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole we may conclude that among the natives
+of New Caledonia there exists a real worship of the dead,
+and that this worship is indeed the principal element in
+their religion. The spirits of the dead, though they are
+supposed to spend part of their time in a happy land far
+away under the sea, are nevertheless believed to be near
+at hand, hovering about in the burial-grounds or charnel-houses
+and embodied apparently in their skulls. To these
+spirits the native turns for help in all the important seasons
+and emergencies of life; he appeals to them in prayer and
+seeks to propitiate them by sacrifice. Thus in his attitude
+towards his dead ancestors we perceive the elements of a
+real religion. But, as I have just pointed out, many rites
+of this worship of ancestors are accompanied by magical
+ceremonies. The religion of these islanders is in fact deeply
+tinged with magic; it marks a transition from an age of
+pure magic in the past to an age of more or less pure
+religion in the future.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page339" id="page339"></a>[pg 339]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Evidence as to the religion of the New Caledonians furnished
+by Dr. G. Turner.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far I have based my account of the beliefs and
+customs of the New Caledonians concerning the dead on the
+valuable information which we owe to the Catholic missionary
+Father Lambert. But, as I pointed out, his evidence
+refers not so much to the natives of the mainland as to the
+inhabitants of certain small islands at the two extremities of
+the great island. It may be well, therefore, to supplement
+his description by some notes which a distinguished Protestant
+missionary, the Rev. Dr. George Turner, obtained in
+the year 1845 from two native teachers, one a Samoan and
+the other a Rarotongan, who lived in the south-south-eastern
+part of New Caledonia for three years.<a id="footnotetag545" name="footnotetag545"></a><a href="#footnote545"><sup>545</sup></a> Their evidence, it
+will be observed, goes to confirm Father Lambert's view as
+to the general similarity of the religious beliefs and customs
+prevailing throughout the island.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Material culture of the New Caledonians.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of this part of New Caledonia were divided
+into separate districts, each with its own name, and war, perpetual
+war, was the rule between the neighbouring communities.
+They cultivated taro, yams, coco-nuts, and sugar-cane;
+but they had no intoxicating <i>kava</i> and kept no pigs. They
+cooked their food in earthenware pots manufactured by the
+women. In former days their only edge-tools were made of
+stone, and they felled trees by a slow fire smouldering close
+to the ground. Similarly they hollowed out the fallen
+trees by means of a slow fire to make their canoes. Their
+villages were not permanent. They migrated within certain
+bounds, as they planted. A village might comprise as many
+as fifty or sixty round houses. The chiefs had absolute
+power of life and death. Priests did not meddle in political
+affairs.<a id="footnotetag546" name="footnotetag546"></a><a href="#footnote546"><sup>546</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs; preservation of the skulls and teeth.</p>
+
+<p>At death they dressed the corpse with a belt and shell
+armlets, cut off the nails of the fingers and toes, and kept
+them as relics. They spread the grave with a mat, and
+buried all the body but the head. After ten days the friends
+twisted off the head, extracted the teeth to be kept as relics,
+and preserved the skull also. In cases of sickness and other
+calamities they presented offerings of food to the skulls of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page340" id="page340"></a>[pg 340]</span>
+the dead. The teeth of the old women were taken to the
+yam plantations and were supposed to fertilise them; and
+their skulls were set up on poles in the plantations for the
+same purpose. When they buried a chief, they erected
+spears at his head, fastened a spear-thrower to his forefinger,
+and laid a club on the top of his grave,<a id="footnotetag547" name="footnotetag547"></a><a href="#footnote547"><sup>547</sup></a> no doubt for
+the convenience of the ghost.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers to ancestors.</p>
+
+<p>"Their gods," we are told, "were their ancestors, whose
+relics they kept up and idolised. At one place they had
+wooden idols before the chiefs' houses. The office of the
+priest was hereditary. Almost every family had its priest.
+To make sure of favours and prosperity they prayed not
+only to their own gods, but also, in a general way, to the
+gods of other lands. Fishing, planting, house-building,
+and everything of importance was preceded by prayers to
+their guardian spirits for success. This was especially the
+case before going to battle. They prayed to one for the
+eye, that they might see the spear as it flew towards them.
+To another for the ear, that they might hear the approach
+of the enemy. Thus, too, they prayed for the feet, that they
+might be swift in pursuing the enemy; for the heart, that
+they might be courageous; for the body, that they might
+not be speared; for the head, that it might not be clubbed;
+and for sleep, that it might be undisturbed by an attack
+of the enemy. Prayers over, arms ready, and equipped
+with their relic charms, they went off to battle."<a id="footnotetag548" name="footnotetag548"></a><a href="#footnote548"><sup>548</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">"Grand concert of spirits."</p>
+
+<p>The spirits of the dead were believed to go away into
+the forest. Every fifth month they had a "spirit night" or
+"grand concert of spirits." Heaps of food were prepared
+for the occasion. The people assembled in the afternoon
+round a certain cave. At sundown they feasted, and then
+one stood up and addressed the spirits in the cave, saying,
+"You spirits within, may it please you to sing a song, that
+all the women and men out here may listen to your sweet
+voices." Thereupon a strange unearthly concert of voices
+burst on their ears from the cave, the nasal squeak of old
+men and women forming the dominant note. But the
+hearers outside listened with delight to the melody, praised
+the sweet voices of the singers, and then got up and danced
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page341" id="page341"></a>[pg 341]</span>
+to the music. The singing swelled louder and louder as the
+dance grew faster and more furious, till the concert closed
+in a nocturnal orgy of unbridled license, which, but for the
+absence of intoxicants, might compare with the worst of the
+ancient bacchanalia. The singers in the cave were the old
+men and women who had ensconced themselves in it
+secretly during the day; but the hoax was not suspected
+by the children and young people, who firmly believed
+that the spirits of the dead really assembled that night in
+the cavern and assisted at the sports and diversions of the
+living.<a id="footnotetag549" name="footnotetag549"></a><a href="#footnote549"><sup>549</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Making rain by means of the bones of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The souls of the departed also kindly bore a hand in the
+making of rain. In order to secure their co-operation for
+this beneficent purpose the human rain-maker proceeded as
+follows. He blackened himself all over, exhumed a dead
+body, carried the bones to a cave, jointed them, and suspended
+the skeleton over some taro leaves. After that
+he poured water on the skeleton so that it ran down and
+fell on the leaves underneath. They imagined that the soul
+of the deceased took up the water, converted it into rain, and
+then caused it to descend in refreshing showers. But the
+rain-maker had to stay in the cavern fasting till his efforts
+were crowned with success, and when the ghost was tardy in
+executing his commission, the rain-maker sometimes died of
+hunger. As a rule, however, they chose the showery months
+of March and April for the operation of rain-making, so that
+the wizard ran little risk of perishing a martyr to the cause
+of science. When there was too much rain, and they wanted
+fine weather, the magician procured it by a similar process,
+except that instead of drenching the skeleton with water he
+lit a fire under it and burned it up,<a id="footnotetag550" name="footnotetag550"></a><a href="#footnote550"><sup>550</sup></a> which naturally induced
+or compelled the ghost to burn up the clouds and let the sun
+shine out.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Execution of maleficent sorcerers. Reincarnation of the dead
+in white people.</p>
+
+<p>Another class of magicians were the maleficent sorcerers
+who caused people to fall ill and die by burning their personal
+rubbish. When one of these rascals was convicted
+of repeated offences of that sort, he was formally tried and
+condemned. The people assembled and a great festival was
+held. The condemned man was decked with a garland
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page342" id="page342"></a>[pg 342]</span>
+of red flowers; his arms and legs were covered with flowers
+and shells, and his face and body painted black. Thus
+arrayed he came dashing forward, rushed through the
+people, plunged from the rocks into the sea, and was
+seen no more. The natives also ascribed sickness to the
+arts of white men, whom they identified with the spirits
+of the dead; and assigned this belief as a reason for their
+wish to kill the strangers.<a id="footnotetag551" name="footnotetag551"></a><a href="#footnote551"><sup>551</sup></a></p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote517" name="footnote517"></a><b>Footnote 517:</b><a href="#footnotetag517"> (return) </a><p> F. H. H. Guillemard, <i>Australasia</i>, II. <i>Malaysia
+and the Pacific Archipelagoes</i> (London, 1894), p. 458.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote518" name="footnote518"></a><b>Footnote 518:</b><a href="#footnotetag518"> (return) </a><p> J. Deniker, <i>The Races of Man</i> (London, 1900), pp.
+498 <i>sq.</i> As to the mediums of exchange, particularly the
+shell-money, see R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i> (Oxford,
+1891), pp. 323 <i>sqq.</i>; R. Parkinson, <i>Dreissig J&auml;hre in der
+S&uuml;dsee</i> (Stuttgart, 1907), pp. 82 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote519" name="footnote519"></a><b>Footnote 519:</b><a href="#footnotetag519"> (return) </a><p>Le P&egrave;re Lambert, <i>M&oelig;urs et Superstitions des
+N&eacute;o-Cal&eacute;doniens</i> (Noum&eacute;a, 1900). This work originally appeared as a
+series of articles in the Catholic missionary journal <i>Les Missions
+Catholiques</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote520" name="footnote520"></a><b>Footnote 520:</b><a href="#footnotetag520"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>M&oelig;urs et Superstitions des
+N&eacute;o-Cal&eacute;doniens</i>, pp. ii., iv. <i>sq.</i>; 255.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote521" name="footnote521"></a><b>Footnote 521:</b><a href="#footnotetag521"> (return) </a><p> George Turner, LL.D., <i>Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and
+long before</i> (London, 1884), pp. 340 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote522" name="footnote522"></a><b>Footnote 522:</b><a href="#footnotetag522"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 13-16.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote523" name="footnote523"></a><b>Footnote 523:</b><a href="#footnotetag523"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 235-239.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote524" name="footnote524"></a><b>Footnote 524:</b><a href="#footnotetag524"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 238, 239 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote525" name="footnote525"></a><b>Footnote 525:</b><a href="#footnotetag525"> (return) </a><p>Above, pp. 136 <i>sq.</i>, 235 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote526" name="footnote526"></a><b>Footnote 526:</b><a href="#footnotetag526"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 24, 240.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote527" name="footnote527"></a><b>Footnote 527:</b><a href="#footnotetag527"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 274.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote528" name="footnote528"></a><b>Footnote 528:</b><a href="#footnotetag528"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 24, 26.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote529" name="footnote529"></a><b>Footnote 529:</b><a href="#footnotetag529"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 211.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote530" name="footnote530"></a><b>Footnote 530:</b><a href="#footnotetag530"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 218.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote531" name="footnote531"></a><b>Footnote 531:</b><a href="#footnotetag531"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 224 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote532" name="footnote532"></a><b>Footnote 532:</b><a href="#footnotetag532"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 275 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote533" name="footnote533"></a><b>Footnote 533:</b><a href="#footnotetag533"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 276.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote534" name="footnote534"></a><b>Footnote 534:</b><a href="#footnotetag534"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 288 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote535" name="footnote535"></a><b>Footnote 535:</b><a href="#footnotetag535"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 290, 292.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote536" name="footnote536"></a><b>Footnote 536:</b><a href="#footnotetag536"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 292 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote537" name="footnote537"></a><b>Footnote 537:</b><a href="#footnotetag537"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 293 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote538" name="footnote538"></a><b>Footnote 538:</b><a href="#footnotetag538"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 294.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote539" name="footnote539"></a><b>Footnote 539:</b><a href="#footnotetag539"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 296 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote540" name="footnote540"></a><b>Footnote 540:</b><a href="#footnotetag540"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 297 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote541" name="footnote541"></a><b>Footnote 541:</b><a href="#footnotetag541"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 298.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote542" name="footnote542"></a><b>Footnote 542:</b><a href="#footnotetag542"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 300.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote543" name="footnote543"></a><b>Footnote 543:</b><a href="#footnotetag543"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 301 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote544" name="footnote544"></a><b>Footnote 544:</b><a href="#footnotetag544"> (return) </a><p>Lambert, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 217 <i>sq.</i>, 300.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote545" name="footnote545"></a><b>Footnote 545:</b><a href="#footnotetag545"> (return) </a><p> George Turner, LL.D., <i>Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and
+long before</i> (London, 1884), pp. 340 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote546" name="footnote546"></a><b>Footnote 546:</b><a href="#footnotetag546"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 340, 341, 343, 344.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote547" name="footnote547"></a><b>Footnote 547:</b><a href="#footnotetag547"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 342 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote548" name="footnote548"></a><b>Footnote 548:</b><a href="#footnotetag548"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 345.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote549" name="footnote549"></a><b>Footnote 549:</b><a href="#footnotetag549"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 346 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote550" name="footnote550"></a><b>Footnote 550:</b><a href="#footnotetag550"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 345 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote551" name="footnote551"></a><b>Footnote 551:</b><a href="#footnotetag551"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 342.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page343" id="page343"></a>[pg 343]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xvi" id="lecture-xvi"></a>LECTURE XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF
+CENTRAL MELANESIA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">The islands of Central Melanesia. Distinction between the
+religion of the Eastern and Western Islanders.</p>
+
+<p>In our survey of savage beliefs and practices concerning the
+dead we now pass from New Caledonia, the most southerly
+island of Melanesia, to the groups of islands known as the
+New Hebrides, the Banks' Islands, the Torres Islands, the
+Santa Cruz Islands, and the Solomon Islands, which together
+constitute what we may call Central Melanesia. These
+groups of islands may themselves be distinguished into two
+archipelagoes, a western and an eastern, of which the Western
+comprises the Solomon Islands and the Eastern includes
+all the rest. Corresponding to this geographical distinction
+there is a religious distinction; for while the religion of the
+Western islanders (the Solomon Islanders) consists chiefly in
+a fear and worship of the ghosts of the dead, the religion
+of the Eastern islanders is characterised mainly by the fear
+and worship of spirits which are not supposed ever to have
+been incarnate in human bodies. Both groups of islanders,
+the Western and the Eastern, recognise indeed both classes
+of spirits, namely ghosts that once were men and spirits who
+never were men; but the religious bias of the one group is
+towards ghosts rather than towards pure spirits, and the
+religious bias of the other group is towards pure spirits
+rather than towards ghosts. It is not a little remarkable
+that the islanders whose bent is towards ghosts
+have carried the system of sacrifice and the arts of life to
+a higher level than the islanders whose bent is towards pure
+spirits; this applies particularly to the sacrificial system,
+which is much more developed in the west than in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page344" id="page344"></a>[pg 344]</span>
+east.<a id="footnotetag552" name="footnotetag552"></a><a href="#footnote552"><sup>552</sup></a> From this it would seem to follow that if a faith in
+ghosts is more costly than a faith in pure spirits, it is at
+the same time more favourable to the evolution of culture.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Dr. R. H. Codrington on the Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p>For the whole of this region we are fortunate in possessing
+the evidence of the Rev. Dr. R. H. Codrington, one of
+the most sagacious, cautious, and accurate of observers, who
+laboured as a missionary among the natives for twenty-four
+years, from 1864 to 1887, and has given us a most valuable
+account of their customs and beliefs in his book <i>The
+Melanesians</i>, which must always remain an anthropological
+classic. In describing the worship of the dead as it is carried
+on among these islanders I shall draw chiefly on the copious
+evidence supplied by Dr. Codrington; and I shall avail
+myself of his admirable researches to enter into considerable
+details on the subject, since details recorded by an accurate
+observer are far more instructive than the vague generalities
+of superficial observers, which are too often all the information
+we possess as to the religion of savages.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Melanesian theory of the soul.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, all the Central Melanesians believe that
+man is composed of a body and a soul, that death is the final
+parting of the soul from the body, and that after death the
+soul continues to exist as a conscious and more or less active
+being.<a id="footnotetag553" name="footnotetag553"></a><a href="#footnote553"><sup>553</sup></a> Thus the creed of these savages on this profound
+subject agrees fundamentally with the creed of the average
+European; if my hearers were asked to state their beliefs
+as to the nature of life and death, I imagine that most of
+them would formulate them in substantially the same way.
+However, when the Central Melanesian savage attempts to
+define the nature of the vital principle or soul, which
+animates the body during life and survives it after death, he
+finds himself in a difficulty; and to continue the parallel I
+cannot help thinking that if my hearers in like manner were
+invited to explain their conception of the soul, they would
+similarly find themselves embarrassed for an answer. But
+an examination of the Central Melanesian theory of the soul
+would lead us too far from our immediate subject; we must
+be content to say that, "whatever word the Melanesian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page345" id="page345"></a>[pg 345]</span>
+people use for soul, they mean something essentially belonging
+to each man's nature which carries life to his body with it,
+and is the seat of thought and intelligence, exercising therefore
+power which is not of the body and is invisible in its
+action."<a id="footnotetag554" name="footnotetag554"></a><a href="#footnote554"><sup>554</sup></a> However the soul may be defined, the Melanesians
+are universally of opinion that it survives the death of the
+body and goes away to some more or less distant region,
+where the spirits of all the dead congregate and continue for
+the most part to live for an indefinite time, though some
+of them, as we shall see presently, are supposed to die
+a second death and so to come to an end altogether. In
+Western Melanesia, that is, in the Solomon Islands, the
+abode of the dead is supposed to be in certain islands, which
+differ in the creed of different islanders; but in Eastern
+Melanesia the abode of the dead is thought to be a subterranean
+region called Panoi.<a id="footnotetag555" name="footnotetag555"></a><a href="#footnote555"><sup>555</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Distinction between ghosts of power and ghosts of no
+account.</p>
+
+<p>But though the souls of the departed go away to the
+spirit land, nevertheless, with a seeming or perhaps real
+inconsistency, their ghosts are also supposed to haunt
+their graves and their old homes and to exercise great
+power for good or evil over the living, who are accordingly
+often obliged to woo their favour by prayer and
+sacrifice. According to the Solomon Islanders, however,
+among whom ghosts are the principal objects of worship,
+there is a great distinction to be drawn among ghosts.
+"The distinction," says Dr. Codrington, "is between ghosts
+of power and ghosts of no account, between those whose
+help is sought and their wrath deprecated, and those from
+whom nothing is expected and to whom no observance
+is due. Among living men there are some who stand out
+distinguished for capacity in affairs, success in life, valour in
+fighting, and influence over others; and these are so, it is
+believed, because of the supernatural and mysterious powers
+which they have, and which are derived from communication
+with those ghosts of the dead gone before them who are full
+of those same powers. On the death of a distinguished man
+his ghost retains the powers that belonged to him in life, in
+greater activity and with stronger force; his ghost therefore
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page346" id="page346"></a>[pg 346]</span>
+is powerful and worshipful, and so long as he is remembered
+the aid of his powers is sought and worship is offered him;
+he is the <i>tindalo</i> of Florida, the <i>lio'a</i> of Saa. In every
+society, again, the multitude is composed of insignificant
+persons, '<i>numerus fruges consumeri nati</i>,' of no particular
+account for valour, skill, or prosperity. The ghosts
+of such persons continue their insignificance, and are nobodies
+after death as before; they are ghosts because all men have
+souls, and the souls of dead men are ghosts; they are
+dreaded because all ghosts are awful, but they get no
+worship and are soon only thought of as the crowd of the
+nameless population of the lower world."<a id="footnotetag556" name="footnotetag556"></a><a href="#footnote556"><sup>556</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts of the great and of the recently dead are chiefly
+regarded. Supernatural power (<i>mana</i>) acquired through ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>From this account of Dr. Codrington we see that it is
+only the ghosts of great and powerful people who are
+worshipped; the ghosts of ordinary people are indeed feared,
+but no worship is paid to them. Further, we are told that
+it is the ghosts of those who have lately died that are
+deemed to be most powerful and are therefore most regarded;
+as the dead are forgotten, their ghosts cease to be worshipped,
+their power fades away,<a id="footnotetag557" name="footnotetag557"></a><a href="#footnote557"><sup>557</sup></a> and their place in the religion of the
+people is taken by the ghosts of the more recently departed.
+In fact here, as elsewhere, the existence of the dead seems
+to be dependent on the memory of the living; when they
+are forgotten they cease to exist. Further, it deserves to be
+noticed that in the Solomon Islands what we should call a
+man's natural powers and capacities are regarded as supernatural
+endowments acquired by communication with a
+mighty ghost. If a man is a great warrior, it is not because
+he is strong of arm, quick of eye, and brave of heart; it is
+because he is supported by the ghost of a dead warrior,
+whose power he has drawn to himself through an amulet of
+stone tied round his neck, or a tuft of leaves in his belt, or a
+tooth attached to one of his fingers, or a spell by the recitation
+of which he can enlist the aid of the ghost.<a id="footnotetag558" name="footnotetag558"></a><a href="#footnote558"><sup>558</sup></a> And
+similarly with all other pre-eminent capacities and virtues;
+in the mind of the Solomon Islanders, they are all supernatural
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page347" id="page347"></a>[pg 347]</span>
+gifts and graces bestowed on men by ghosts. This
+all-pervading supernatural power the Central Melanesian
+calls <i>mana</i>.<a id="footnotetag559" name="footnotetag559"></a><a href="#footnote559"><sup>559</sup></a> Thus for these savages the whole world teems
+with ghostly influences; their minds are filled, we may
+almost say, obsessed, with a sense of the unseen powers
+which encompass and determine even in its minute
+particulars the life of man on earth: in their view the
+visible world is, so to say, merely a puppet-show of which
+the strings are pulled and the puppets made to dance by
+hands invisible. Truly the attitude of these savages to
+the universe is deeply religious.</p>
+
+<p>We may now consider the theory and practice of the
+Central Melanesians on this subject somewhat more in
+detail; and in doing so we shall begin with their funeral
+customs, which throw much light on their views of death and
+the dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs in the Solomon Islands. Land burial and sea
+burial. Land-ghosts and sea-ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, for example, in Florida, one of the Solomon
+Islands, the corpse is usually buried. Common men are
+buried in their gardens or plantations, chiefs sometimes in
+the village, a chief's child sometimes in the house. If the
+ghost of the deceased is worshipped, his grave becomes a
+sanctuary (<i>vunuhu</i>); the skull is often dug up and hung
+in the house. On the return from the burial the mourners
+take a different road from that by which they carried the
+corpse to the grave; this they do in order to throw the
+ghost off the scent and so prevent him from following them
+home. This practice clearly shews the fear which the
+natives feel for the ghosts of the newly dead. A man
+is buried with money, porpoise teeth, and some of his
+personal ornaments; but, avarice getting the better of
+superstition, these things are often secretly dug up again and
+appropriated by the living. Sometimes a dying man will
+express a wish to be cast into the sea; his friends will
+therefore paddle out with the corpse, tie stones to the feet,
+and sink it in the depths. In the island of Savo, another of
+the Solomon Islands, common men are generally thrown
+into the sea and only great men are buried.<a id="footnotetag560" name="footnotetag560"></a><a href="#footnote560"><sup>560</sup></a> The same
+distinction is made at Wango in San Cristoval, another of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page348" id="page348"></a>[pg 348]</span>
+the same group of islands; there also the bodies of common
+folk are cast into the sea, but men of consequence are buried,
+and some relic of them, it may be a skull, a tooth, or a
+finger-bone, is preserved in a shrine at the village. From
+this difference in burial customs flows a not unimportant
+religious difference. The souls of the great people who are
+buried on land turn into land-ghosts, and the souls of
+commoners who are sunk in the sea turn into sea-ghosts.
+The land-ghosts are seen to hover about the villages,
+haunting their graves and their relics; they are also heard
+to speak in hollow whispers. Their aid can be obtained
+by such as know them. The sea-ghosts have taken a great
+hold on the imagination of the natives of the south-eastern
+Solomon Islands; and as these people love to illustrate
+their life by sculpture and painting, they shew us clearly
+what they suppose these sea-ghosts to be like. At Wango
+there used to be a canoe-house full of sculptures and
+paintings illustrative of native life; amongst others there
+was a series of scenes like those which are depicted on the
+walls of Egyptian tombs. One of the scenes represented
+a canoe attacked by sea-ghosts, which were portrayed as
+demons compounded partly of human limbs, partly of the
+bodies and tails of fishes, and armed with spears and arrows
+in the form of long-bodied garfish and flying-fish. If a man
+falls ill on returning from a voyage or from fishing on the
+rocks, it is thought that one of these sea-ghosts has shot
+him. Hence when men are in danger at sea, they seek to
+propitiate the ghosts by throwing areca-nuts and fragments
+of food into the water and by praying to the ghosts not to
+be angry with them. Sharks are also supposed to be
+animated by the ghosts of the dead.<a id="footnotetag561" name="footnotetag561"></a><a href="#footnote561"><sup>561</sup></a> It is interesting and
+instructive to find that in this part of the world sea-demons,
+who might be thought to be pure spirits of nature, are in fact
+ghosts of the dead.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Burnt offerings in honour of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>In the island of Florida, two days after the death of a
+chief or of any person who was much esteemed, the relatives
+and friends assemble and hold a funeral feast, at which they
+throw a bit of food into the fire for the ghost, saying, "This
+is for you."<a id="footnotetag562" name="footnotetag562"></a><a href="#footnote562"><sup>562</sup></a> In other of the Solomon Islands morsels of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page349" id="page349"></a>[pg 349]</span>
+food are similarly thrown on the fire at the death-feasts as
+the dead man's share.<a id="footnotetag563" name="footnotetag563"></a><a href="#footnote563"><sup>563</sup></a> Thus, in the Shortlands Islands,
+when a famous chief named Gorai died, his body was burnt
+and his relatives cast food, beads, and other property into
+the fire. The dead chief had been very fond of tea, so one
+of his daughters threw a cup of tea into the flames. Women
+danced a funeral dance round the pyre till the body was
+consumed.<a id="footnotetag564" name="footnotetag564"></a><a href="#footnote564"><sup>564</sup></a> Why should the dead man's food and property
+be burnt? No explanation of the practice is given by our
+authorities, so we are left to conjecture the reason of it. Is
+it that by volatilising the solid substance of the food you
+make it more accessible to the thin unsubstantial nature
+of the ghost? Is it that you destroy the property of the
+ghost lest he should come back in person to fetch it and
+so haunt and trouble the survivors? Is it that the spirits
+of the dead are supposed to reside in the fire on the hearth,
+so that offerings cast into the flames are transmitted to
+them directly? Whether it is with any such ideas that the
+Solomon Islanders throw food into the fire for ghosts, I
+cannot say. The whole question of the meaning of burnt
+sacrifice is still to a great extent obscure.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral customs in the island of Florida. The ghostly ferry.</p>
+
+<p>At the funeral feast of a chief in the island of Florida
+the axes, spears, shield and other belongings of the deceased
+are hung up with great lamentations in his house; everything
+remains afterwards untouched and the house falls into ruins,
+which as time goes on are thickly mantled with the long
+tendrils of the sprouting yams. But we are told that the
+weapons are not intended to accompany the ghost to the
+land of souls; they are hung up only as a memorial of a
+great and valued man. "With the same feeling they cut
+down a dead man's fruit-trees as a mark of respect and
+affection, not with any notion of these things serving him in
+the world of ghosts; he ate of them, they say, when he was
+alive, he will never eat again, and no one else shall have
+them." However, they think that the ghost benefits by
+burial; for if a man is killed and his body remains unburied,
+his restless ghost will haunt the place.<a id="footnotetag565" name="footnotetag565"></a><a href="#footnote565"><sup>565</sup></a> The ghosts of such
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page350" id="page350"></a>[pg 350]</span>
+Florida people as have been duly buried depart to Betindalo,
+which seems to be situated in the south-eastern part of the
+great island of Guadalcanar. A ship waits to ferry them
+across the sea to the spirit-land. This is almost the only
+example of a ferry-boat used by ghosts in Melanesia. On
+their way to the ferry the ghosts may be heard twittering;
+and again on the shore, while they are waiting for the ferry-boat,
+a sound of their dancing breaks the stillness of night;
+but no man can see the dancers. It is not until they land
+on the further shore that they know they are dead. There
+they are met by a ghost, who thrusts a rod into their noses
+to see whether the cartilage is pierced as it should be; ghosts
+whose noses have been duly bored in life follow the onward
+path with ease, but all others have pain and difficulty in
+making their way to the realm of the shades. Yet though
+the souls of the dead thus depart to Betindalo, nevertheless
+their ghosts as usual not only haunt their burial-places, but
+come to the sacrifices offered to them and may be heard
+disporting themselves at night, playing on pipes, dancing,
+and shouting.<a id="footnotetag566" name="footnotetag566"></a><a href="#footnote566"><sup>566</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Belief of the Solomon Islanders that the souls of the dead
+live in islands. The second death.</p>
+
+<p>Similarly at Bugotu in the island of Ysabel (one of the
+Solomon Islands) the ghosts of the dead are supposed to go
+away to an island, and yet to haunt their graves and shew
+themselves to the survivors by night. In the island of the
+dead there is a pool with a narrow tree-trunk lying across it.
+Here is stationed Bolafagina, the ghostly lord of the place.
+Every newly arrived ghost must appear before him, and he
+examines their hands to see whether they bear the mark
+of the sacred frigate-bird cut on them; if they have the
+mark, the ghosts pass across the tree-trunk and mingle
+with the departed spirits in the world of the dead. But
+ghosts who have not the mark on their hands are cast into
+the gulf and perish out of their ghostly life: this is the
+second death.<a id="footnotetag567" name="footnotetag567"></a><a href="#footnote567"><sup>567</sup></a> The same notion of a second death meets
+us in a somewhat different form among the natives of Saa
+in Malanta, another of the Solomon Islands. All the ghosts
+of these people swim across the sea to two little islands
+called Marapa, which lie off Marau in Guadalcanar. There
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page351" id="page351"></a>[pg 351]</span>
+the ghosts of children live in one island and the ghosts of
+grown-up people in another; for the older people would be
+plagued by the chatter of children if they all dwelt together
+in one island. Yet in other respects the life of the departed
+spirits in these islands is very like life on earth. There are
+houses, gardens, and canoes there just as here, but all is thin
+and unsubstantial. Living men who land in the islands see
+nothing of these things; there is a pool where they hear
+laughter and merry cries, and where the banks are wet with
+invisible bathers. But the life of the ghosts in these islands
+is not eternal. The spirits of common folk soon turn into
+the nests of white ants, which serve as food for the more
+robust ghosts. Hence a living man will say to his idle son,
+"When I die, I shall have ants' nests to eat, but then what
+will you have?" The ghosts of persons who were powerful
+on earth last much longer. So long as they are remembered
+and worshipped by the living, their natural strength remains
+unabated; but when men forget them, and turn to worship
+some of the more recent dead, then no more food is offered
+to them in sacrifice, so they pine away and change into
+white ants' nests just like common folk. This is the second
+death. However, while the ghosts survive they can return
+from the islands to Saa and revisit their village and friends.
+The living can even discern them in the form of dim and
+fleeting shadows. A man who wishes for any reason to see
+a ghost can always do so very simply by taking a pinch of
+lime from his betel-box and smearing it on his forehead.
+Then the ghost appears to him quite plainly.<a id="footnotetag568" name="footnotetag568"></a><a href="#footnote568"><sup>568</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs in Saa. Preservation of the skull and jawbone.
+Burial customs in Santa Cruz. Burial customs in Ysabel.</p>
+
+<p>In Saa the dead are usually buried in a common cemetery;
+but when the flesh has decayed the bones are taken up and
+heaped on one side. But if the deceased was a very great
+man or a beloved father, his body is preserved for a time in
+his son's house, being hung up either in a canoe or in the
+carved effigy of a sword-fish. Very favourite children are
+treated in the same way. The corpse may be kept in this
+way for years. Finally, there is a great funeral feast, at
+which the remains are removed to the common burial-ground,
+but the skull and jawbone are detached from the skeleton
+and kept in the house enclosed in the hollow wooden figure
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page352" id="page352"></a>[pg 352]</span>
+of a bonito-fish. By means of these relics the survivors
+think that they can secure the aid of the powerful ghost.
+Sometimes the corpse and afterwards the skull and jawbone
+are preserved, not in the house of the deceased,
+but in the <i>oha</i> or public canoe-house, which so far becomes
+a sort of shrine or temple of the dead.<a id="footnotetag569" name="footnotetag569"></a><a href="#footnote569"><sup>569</sup></a> At Santa
+Cruz in the Solomon Islands the corpse is buried in a very
+deep grave in the house. Inland they dig up the bones
+again to make arrow-heads; also they detach the skull and
+keep it in a chest in the house, saying that it is the man
+himself. They even set food before the skull, no doubt for
+the use of the ghost. Yet they imagine that the ghosts of
+the dead go to the great volcano Tamami, where they are
+burnt in the crater and thus being renewed stay in the fiery
+region. Nevertheless the souls of the dead also haunt the
+forests in Santa Cruz; on wet and dark nights the natives
+see them twinkling in the gloom like fire-flies, and at the
+sight they are sore afraid.<a id="footnotetag570" name="footnotetag570"></a><a href="#footnote570"><sup>570</sup></a> So little consistent with itself is
+the creed of these islanders touching the state of the dead.
+At Bugotu in the island of Ysabel (one of the Solomon
+Islands) a chief is buried with his head near the surface and
+a fire is kept burning over the grave, in order that the skull
+may be taken up and preserved in the house of his successor.
+The spirit of the dead chief has now become a worshipful
+ghost, and an expedition is sent out to cut off and bring
+back human heads in his honour. Any person, not belonging
+to the place, whom the head-hunters come across will be
+killed by them and his or her skull added to the collection,
+which is neatly arranged on the shore. These ghastly
+trophies are believed to add fresh spiritual power (<i>mana</i>) to
+the ghost of the dead chief. Till they have been procured,
+the people of the place take care not to move about. The
+grave of the chief is built up with stones and sacrifices are
+offered upon it.<a id="footnotetag571" name="footnotetag571"></a><a href="#footnote571"><sup>571</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Beliefs and customs of the Eastern islanders concerning the
+dead. Panoi, the subterranean abode of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far we have been considering the beliefs and
+practices concerning the dead which prevail among the
+Western Melanesians of the Solomon Islands and Santa
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page353" id="page353"></a>[pg 353]</span>
+Cruz. We now turn to those of the Eastern Melanesians,
+who inhabit the Torres Islands, the Banks' Islands, and the
+New Hebrides. A broad distinction exists between the
+ghosts of these two regions in as much as the ghosts of the
+Western Melanesians all live in islands, but the ghosts of all
+Eastern Melanesians live underground in a subterranean
+region which commonly bears the name of Panoi. The
+exact position of Panoi has not been ascertained; all that is
+regarded as certain is that it is underground. However,
+there are many entrances to it and some of them are well
+known. One of them, for example, is a rock on the
+mountain at Mota, others are at volcanic vents which belch
+flames on the burning hill of Garat over the lake at Gaua,
+and another is on the great mountain of Vanua Lava. The
+ghosts congregate on points of land before their departure,
+as well as at the entrances to the underworld, and there on
+moonlight nights you may hear the ghostly crew dancing,
+singing, shouting, and whistling on the claws of land-crabs.
+It is not easy to extract from the natives a precise and consistent
+account of the place of the dead and the state of the
+spirits in it; nor indeed, as Dr. Codrington justly observes,
+would it be reasonable to expect full and precise details on a
+subject about which the sources of information are perhaps
+not above suspicion. However, as far as can be made out,
+Panoi or the abode of the dead is on the whole a happy
+region. In many respects it resembles the land of the living;
+for there are houses there and villages, and trees with red
+leaves, and day and night. Yet all is hollow and unreal.
+The ghosts do nothing but talk and sing and dance; there
+is no clubhouse there, and though men and women live
+together, there is no marrying or giving in marriage. All is
+very peaceful, too, in that land; for there is no war and no
+tyrant to oppress the people. Yet the ghost of a great man
+goes down like a great man among the ghosts, resplendent in
+all his trinkets and finery; but like everything else in the
+underworld these ornaments, for all the brave show they
+make, are mere unsubstantial shadows. The pigs which
+were killed at his funeral feast and the food that was heaped
+on his grave cannot go down with him into that far country;
+for none of these things, not even pigs, have souls. How
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page354" id="page354"></a>[pg 354]</span>
+then could they find their way to the spirit world? It is
+clearly impossible. The ghosts in the nether world do not
+mix indiscriminately. There are separate compartments for
+such as died violent deaths. There is one compartment for
+those who were shot, there is another for those who were
+clubbed, and there is another for those who were done to
+death by witchcraft. The ghosts of those who were shot
+keep rattling the reeds of the arrows which dealt them their
+fatal wounds. Ghosts in the nether world have no knowledge
+of things out of their sight and hearing; yet the living
+call upon them in time of need and trouble, as if they could
+hear and help. Life, too, in the kingdom of shadows is not
+eternal. The ghosts die the second death. Yet some say
+that there are two such kingdoms, each called Panoi, the one
+over the other; and that when the dead die the second death
+in the upper realm they rise again from the dead in the
+nether realm, where they never die but only turn into white
+ants' nests.<a id="footnotetag572" name="footnotetag572"></a><a href="#footnote572"><sup>572</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Distinction between the fate of the good and the fate of the
+bad in the other world.</p>
+
+<p>It is interesting and not unimportant to observe that
+some of these islanders make a distinction between the fate
+of good people and the fate of bad people after death. The
+natives of Motlav, one of the Banks' Islands, think that
+Panoi is a good place and that only the souls of the good
+can enter it. According to them the souls of murderers,
+sorcerers, thieves, liars, and adulterers are not suffered to
+enter the happy land. The ghost of a murderer, for
+example, is met at the entrance by the ghost of his victim,
+who withstands him and turns him back. All the bad
+ghosts go away to a bad place, where they live, not indeed
+in physical pain, but in misery: they quarrel, they are restless,
+homeless, pitiable, malignant: they wander back to
+earth: they eat the foulest food, their breath is noisome:
+they harm the living out of spite, they eat men's souls, they
+haunt graves and woods. But in the true Panoi the souls of
+the good live in peace and harmony.<a id="footnotetag573" name="footnotetag573"></a><a href="#footnote573"><sup>573</sup></a> Thus these people
+believe that the state of the soul after death depends on the
+kind of life a man led on earth; if he was good, he will be
+happy; if he was bad, he will be miserable. If this creed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page355" id="page355"></a>[pg 355]</span>
+is of purely native origin, and Dr. Codrington seems to
+entertain no doubt that it is so, it marks a considerable
+ethical advance among those who accept it.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Descent of the living to the world of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The Eastern Melanesians think that living people can go
+down to the land of the dead and return alive to the upper
+world. Sometimes they do this in the body, but at other
+times only in the spirit, when they are asleep or in a faint;
+for at such times their souls quit their bodies and can
+wander away down to Panoi. When the living thus make
+their way to the spirit land, they are sometimes cautioned by
+friendly ghosts to eat nothing there, no doubt lest by partaking
+of ghostly food they should be turned to ghosts and
+never return to the land of the living.<a id="footnotetag574" name="footnotetag574"></a><a href="#footnote574"><sup>574</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Disposal of the dead among the Eastern islanders. Burial
+customs of the Banks' Islanders.</p>
+
+<p>We will now consider the various modes in which the
+Eastern Melanesians dispose of their dead; for funeral
+customs commonly furnish some indication of the ideas
+which a people entertain as to the state of the soul after
+death. The Banks' Islanders generally buried their dead in
+the forest not far from the village; but if the deceased was
+a great man or died a remarkable death, they might inter
+him in the village near the men's clubhouse (<i>gamal</i>). A
+favourite son or child might be buried in the house itself;
+but in such cases the grave would be opened after fifty or a
+hundred days and the bones taken up and hidden in the
+forest, though some of them might be hung up in the house.
+However, in some places there was, and indeed still is, a
+custom of keeping the putrefying corpse unburied in the
+house as a mark of affection. At Gaua, in Santa Maria, the
+body was dried over slow fires for ten days or more, till
+nothing but skin and bones remained; and the women who
+watched over it during these days drank the juices of putrefaction
+which dripped from the decaying flesh. The same
+thing used formerly to be done in Mota, another of the
+Banks' Islands. The corpses of great men in these islands
+were adorned in all their finery and laid out on the open
+space in the middle of the village. Here bunches of coco-nuts,
+yams, and other food were heaped up beside the body;
+and an orator of fluent speech addressed the ghost telling
+him that when he had gone down to Panoi, the spirit land,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page356" id="page356"></a>[pg 356]</span>
+and the ghosts asked him after his rank, he was to give them
+a list of all the things heaped beside his dead body; then
+the ghosts would know what a great man he was and would
+treat him with proper deference. The orator dealt very
+candidly with the moral character of the deceased. If he
+had been a bad man, the speaker would say, "Poor ghost,
+will you be able to enter Panoi? I think not." The food
+which is piled up beside the body while the orator is pronouncing
+the eulogium or the censure of the departed is
+afterwards heaped up on the grave or buried in it. At Gaua
+they kill pigs and hang up the carcases or parts of them at
+the grave. The object of all this display is to make a
+favourable impression on the ghosts in the spirit land, in
+order that they may give the newly deceased man a good
+reception. When the departed was an eminent warrior or
+sorcerer, his friends will sometimes give him a sham burial
+and hide his real grave, lest people should dig up his bones
+and his skull to make magic with them; for the relics of
+such a man are naturally endowed with great magical virtue.<a id="footnotetag575" name="footnotetag575"></a><a href="#footnote575"><sup>575</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts driven away from the village. Expulsion of the ghosts
+of persons who suffered from sores and ulcers.</p>
+
+<p>In these islands the ghost does not at once leave the
+neighbourhood of his old body; he shews no haste to depart
+to the nether world. Indeed he commonly loiters about the
+house and the grave for five or ten days, manifesting his
+presence by noises in the house and by lights upon the
+grave. By the fifth day his relations generally think that
+they have had quite enough of him, and that it is high time
+he should set out for his long home. Accordingly they drive
+him away with shouts and the blowing of conch-shells or the
+booming sound of bull-roarers.<a id="footnotetag576" name="footnotetag576"></a><a href="#footnote576"><sup>576</sup></a> At Ureparapara the mode
+of expelling the ghost from the village is as follows. Missiles
+to be hurled at the lingering spirit are collected in the shape
+of small stones and pieces of bamboo, which have been
+charmed by wizards so as to possess a ghost-expelling virtue.
+The artillery having been thus provided, the people muster
+at one end of the village, armed with bags of enchanted
+stones and pieces of enchanted bamboos. The signal to
+march is given by two men, who sit in the dead man's house,
+one on either side, holding two white stones in their hands,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page357" id="page357"></a>[pg 357]</span>
+which they clink together. At the sound of the clinking the
+women begin to wail and the men to march; tramp, tramp
+they go like one man through the village from end to end,
+throwing stones into the houses and all about and beating
+the bamboos together. Thus they drive the reluctant ghost
+step by step from the village into the forest, where they
+leave him to find his own way down to the land of the dead.
+Till that time the widow of the deceased was bound to remain
+on his bed without quitting it for a moment except on
+necessity; and if she had to leave it for a few minutes she
+always left a coco-nut on the bed to represent her till she
+came back. The reason for this was that her husband's
+ghost was believed to be lingering in the house all these
+days, and he would naturally expect to see his wife in the
+nuptial chamber. At Motlav the people are not so hard
+upon the poor ghosts: they do not drive away all ghosts
+from their old homes, but only the ghosts of such as had in
+their lifetime the misfortune to be afflicted with grievous
+sores and ulcers. The expulsion of such ghosts may therefore
+be regarded as a sanitary precaution designed to prevent
+the spirits from spreading the disease. When a man
+who suffers severely from sores or ulcers lies dying, the
+people of his village, taking time by the forelock, send word
+to the inhabitants of the next village westwards, warning
+them to be in readiness to give the ghost a warm reception.
+For it is well known that at their departure from the body
+ghosts always go westward towards the setting sun. So
+when the poor man is dead, they bury his diseased body in
+the village and devote all their energies to the expulsion of
+his soul. By blowing blasts on shell-trumpets and beating
+the ground with the stalks of coco-nut fronds they chase the
+ghost clean away from their own village and on to the next.
+The inhabitants of that village meantime are ready to receive
+their unwelcome visitor, and beating their bounds in the most
+literal sense they soon drive him onwards to the land of their
+next neighbours. So the chase goes on from village to
+village, till the ghost has been finally hunted into the sea at
+the point of the shore which faces the setting sun. There
+at last the beaters throw away the stalks which have served
+to whack the ghost, and return home in the perfect assurance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page358" id="page358"></a>[pg 358]</span>
+that he has left the island and gone to his own place down
+below, so that he cannot afflict anybody with the painful
+disease from which he suffered. But as for his ulcerated
+corpse rotting in the grave, they do not give a thought to it.
+Their concern is with the spiritual and the unseen; they do
+not stoop to regard the material and carnal.<a id="footnotetag577" name="footnotetag577"></a><a href="#footnote577"><sup>577</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Special treatment of the ghosts of women who died in
+childbed.</p>
+
+<p>A special treatment is accorded to the ghosts of women
+who died in childbed. If the mother dies and the child
+lives, her ghost will not go away to the nether world without
+taking the infant with her. Hence in order to deceive the
+ghost, they wrap a piece of a banana-trunk loosely in leaves
+and lay it on the bosom of the dead mother when they lower
+her into the grave. The ghost clasps the bundle to her
+breast, thinking it is her baby, and goes away contentedly
+to the spirit land. As she walks, the banana-stalk slips
+about in the leaves and she imagines it is the infant stirring;
+for she has not all her wits about her, ghosts being naturally
+in a dazed state at first on quitting their familiar bodies.
+But when she arrives in deadland and finds she has been
+deceived, and when perhaps some heartless ghosts even
+jeer at her wooden baby, back she comes tearing to earth
+in grief and rage to seek and carry off the real infant.
+However, the survivors know what to expect and have
+taken the precaution of removing the child to another house
+where the mother will never find it; but she keeps looking
+for it always, and a sad and angry ghost is she.<a id="footnotetag578" name="footnotetag578"></a><a href="#footnote578"><sup>578</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral feasts.</p>
+
+<p>After the funeral follows a series, sometimes a long
+series, of funeral feasts, which form indeed one of the
+principal institutions of these islands. The number of the
+feasts and the length of time during which they are repeated
+vary much in the different islands, and depend also on the
+consideration in which the deceased was held. The days
+on which the feasts are celebrated are the fifth and the tenth
+after the death, and afterwards every tenth day up to the
+hundredth or even it may be, in the case of a father, a
+mother, or a wife, up to the thousandth day. These feasts
+appear now to be chiefly commemorative, but they also
+benefit the dead; for the ghost is naturally gratified by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page359" id="page359"></a>[pg 359]</span>
+seeing that his friends remember him and do their duty by
+him so handsomely. At these banquets food is put aside
+for the dead with the words "This is for thee." The
+practice of thus setting aside food for the ghost at a series
+of funeral feasts appears at first sight, as Dr. Codrington
+observes, inconsistent with the theory that the ghosts live
+underground.<a id="footnotetag579" name="footnotetag579"></a><a href="#footnote579"><sup>579</sup></a> But the objection thus suggested is rather
+specious than real; for we must always bear in mind that,
+to judge from the accounts given of them in all countries,
+ghosts experience no practical difficulty in obtaining
+temporary leave of absence from the other world and
+coming to this one, so to say, on furlough for the purpose
+of paying a surprise visit to their sorrowing friends and
+relations. The thing is so well known that it would be at
+once superfluous and tedious to illustrate it at length; many
+examples have incidentally met us in the course of these
+lectures.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Funeral customs in Vat&eacute; or Efat. Old people buried alive.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of Vat&eacute; or Efat, one of the New Hebrides,
+set up a great wailing at a death and scratched their faces
+till they streamed with blood. Bodies of the dead were
+buried. When a corpse was laid in the grave, a pig was
+brought to the place and its head was chopped off and
+thrown into the grave to be buried with the body. This,
+we are told, "was supposed to prevent disease spreading
+to other members of the family." Probably, in the opinion
+of the natives, the pig's head was a sop thrown to the ghost
+to keep him from coming and fetching away other people to
+deadland. With the same intention, we may take it, they
+buried with the dead the cups, pillows, and other things which
+he had used in his lifetime. On the top of the grave they
+kindled a fire to enable the soul of the deceased to rise
+to the sun. If that were not done, the soul went to the
+wretched regions of Pakasia down below. The old were
+buried alive at their own request. It was even deemed a
+disgrace to the family of an aged chief if they did not bury
+him alive. When an old man felt sick and weak and thought
+that he was dying, he would tell his friends to get all ready
+and bury him. They yielded to his wishes, dug a deep
+round pit, wound a number of fine mats round his body, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page360" id="page360"></a>[pg 360]</span>
+lowered him into the grave in a sitting posture. Live pigs
+were then brought to the brink of the grave, and each of
+them was tethered by a cord to one of the old man's arms.
+When the pigs had thus, as it were, been made over to him,
+the cords were cut, and the animals were led away to be
+killed, baked, and eaten at the funeral feast; but the souls of the
+pigs the old man took away with him to the spirit land, and
+the more of them he took the warmer and more gratifying
+was the reception he met with from the ghosts. Having
+thus ensured his eternal welfare by the pig strings which
+dangled at his arms, the old man was ready; more mats
+were laid over him, the earth was shovelled in, and his dying
+groans were drowned amid the weeping and wailing of his
+affectionate kinsfolk.<a id="footnotetag580" name="footnotetag580"></a><a href="#footnote580"><sup>580</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial and mourning customs in Aurora, one of the New
+Hebrides. Behaviour of the soul at death.</p>
+
+<p>At Maewo in Aurora, one of the New Hebrides, when
+a death has taken place, the body is buried in a grave near
+the village clubhouse. For a hundred days afterwards the
+female mourners may not go into the open and their faces
+may not be seen; they stay indoors and in the dark and
+cover themselves with a large mat reaching to the ground.
+But the widow goes every day, covered with her mat, to
+weep at the grave; this she does both in the morning and
+in the afternoon. During this time of mourning the next
+of kin may not eat certain succulent foods, such as yams,
+bananas, and caladium; they eat only the gigantic caladium,
+bread-fruit, coco-nuts, mallows, and so forth; "and all these
+they seek in the bush where they grow wild, not eating
+those which have been planted." They count five days
+after the death and then build up great heaps of stones
+over the grave. After that, if the deceased was a very great
+man, who owned many gardens and pigs, they count fifty
+days and then kill pigs, and cut off the point of the liver
+of each pig; and the brother of the deceased goes toward
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page361" id="page361"></a>[pg 361]</span>
+the forest and calls out the dead man's name, crying, "This
+is for you to eat." They think that if they do not kill pigs
+for the benefit of their departed friend, his ghost has no
+proper existence, but hangs miserably on tangled creepers.
+After the sacrifice they all cry again, smear their bodies and
+faces all over with ashes, and wear cords round their necks
+for a hundred days in token that they are not eating good
+food.<a id="footnotetag581" name="footnotetag581"></a><a href="#footnote581"><sup>581</sup></a> They imagine that as soon as the soul quits the
+body at death, it mounts into a tree where there is a bird's
+nest fern, and sitting there among the fronds it laughs and
+mocks at the people who are crying and making great
+lamentations over his deserted tabernacle. "There he sits,
+wondering at them and ridiculing them. 'What are they
+crying for?' he says; 'whom are they sorry for? Here am
+I.' For they think that the real thing is the soul, and that
+it has gone away from the body just as a man throws off
+his clothes and leaves them, and the clothes lie by themselves
+with nothing in them."<a id="footnotetag582" name="footnotetag582"></a><a href="#footnote582"><sup>582</sup></a> This estimate of the comparative
+value of soul and body is translated from the words of a
+New Hebridean native; it singularly resembles that which
+is sometimes held up to our admiration as one of the finest
+fruits of philosophy and religion. So narrow may be the
+line that divides the meditations of the savage and the sage.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Journey of the ghost to the other world.</p>
+
+<p>When a Maewo ghost has done chuckling at the folly
+of his surviving relatives, who sorrow as those who have no
+hope, he turns his back on his old home and runs along the
+line of hills till he comes to a place where there are two
+rocks with a deep ravine between them. He leaps the
+chasm, and if he lands on the further side, he is dead
+indeed; but if he falls short, he returns to life. At the
+land's end, where the mountains descend into the sea, all
+the ghosts of the dead are gathered to meet him. If in his
+lifetime he had slain any one by club or arrow, or done any
+man to death by magic, he must now run the gauntlet of
+the angry ghosts of his victims, who beat and tear him and
+stab him with daggers such as people stick pigs with; and
+as they do so, they taunt him, saying, "While you were still
+in the world you thought yourself a valiant man; but now
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page362" id="page362"></a>[pg 362]</span>
+we will take our revenge on you." At another point in
+the path there is a deep gully, where if a ghost falls he is
+inevitably dashed to pieces; and if he escapes this peril,
+there is a ferocious pig waiting for him further on, which
+devours the ghosts of all persons who in their life on earth
+omitted to plant pandanus trees, from which mats are
+made. But the wise man, who planted pandanus betimes,
+now reaps the fruit of his labours; for when the pig makes
+a rush at his departed spirit, the ghost nimbly swarms up
+the pandanus tree and so escapes his pursuer. That is why
+everybody in Maewo likes to plant pandanus trees. And
+if a man's ears were not pierced in his life, his ghost will
+not be allowed to drink water; if he was not tattooed, his
+ghost may not eat good food. A thoughtful father will
+provide for the comfort of his children in the other world
+by building a miniature house for each of them in his garden
+when the child is a year old; if the infant is a boy, he puts
+a bow, an arrow, and a club in the little house; if the child
+is a girl, he plants pandanus for her beside the tiny dwelling.<a id="footnotetag583" name="footnotetag583"></a><a href="#footnote583"><sup>583</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Only ghosts of powerful men are worshipped.</p>
+
+<p>So much for the fate of common ghosts in Central
+Melanesia. We have now to consider the position of the
+more powerful spirits, who after death are believed to exercise
+great influence over the living, especially over their surviving
+relations, and who have accordingly to be propitiated with
+prayer and sacrifice. This worship of the dead, as we saw,
+forms the principal feature in the religion of the Solomon
+Islanders. "But it must not be supposed," says Dr.
+Codrington, "that every ghost becomes an object of worship.
+A man in danger may call upon his father, his grandfather,
+or his uncle: his nearness of kin is sufficient ground for it.
+The ghost who is to be worshipped is the spirit of a man
+who in his lifetime had <i>mana</i> [supernatural or magical power]
+in him; the souls of common men are the common herd of
+ghosts, nobodies alike before and after death. The supernatural
+power abiding in the powerful living man abides in
+his ghost after death, with increased vigour and more ease
+of movement. After his death, therefore, it is expected
+that he should begin to work, and some one will come
+forward and claim particular acquaintance with the ghost;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page363" id="page363"></a>[pg 363]</span>
+if his power should shew itself, his position is assured as one
+worthy to be invoked, and to receive offerings, till his cultus
+gives way before the rising importance of one newly dead,
+and the sacred place where his shrine once stood and his
+relics were preserved is the only memorial of him that
+remains; if no proof of his activity appears, he sinks into
+oblivion at once."<a id="footnotetag584" name="footnotetag584"></a><a href="#footnote584"><sup>584</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Worship paid chiefly to the recent and well-remembered dead.</p>
+
+<p>From this instructive account we learn that worship is
+paid chiefly to the recent and well-remembered dead, to the
+men whom the worshippers knew personally and feared or
+respected in their lifetime. On the other hand, when men
+have been long dead, and all who knew them have also
+been gathered to their fathers, their memory fades away and
+with it their worship gradually falls into complete desuetude.
+Thus the spirits who receive the homage of these savages
+were real men of flesh and blood, not mythical beings
+conjured up by the fancy of their worshippers, which some
+legerdemain of the mind has foisted into the shrine and encircled
+with the halo of divinity. Not that the Melanesians
+do not also worship beings who, so far as we can see, are
+purely mythical, though their worshippers firmly believe in
+their reality. But "they themselves make a clear distinction
+between the existing, conscious, powerful disembodied spirits
+of the dead, and other spiritual beings that never have been
+men at all. It is true that the two orders of beings get
+confused in native language and thought, but their confusion
+begins at one end and the confusion of their visitors at
+another; they think so much and constantly of ghosts that
+they speak of beings who were never men as ghosts;
+Europeans take the spirits of the lately dead for gods; less
+educated Europeans call them roundly devils."<a id="footnotetag585" name="footnotetag585"></a><a href="#footnote585"><sup>585</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Way in which a dead warrior came to be worshipped as a
+martial ghost.</p>
+
+<p>As an example of the way in which the ghost of a real
+man who has just died may come to be worshipped Dr.
+Codrington tells us the story of Ganindo, which he had from
+Bishop Selwyn. This Ganindo was a great fighting man
+of Honggo in Florida, one of the Solomon Islands. He
+went with other warriors on a head-hunting expedition
+against Gaeta; but being mortally wounded with an arrow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page364" id="page364"></a>[pg 364]</span>
+near the collar-bone he was brought back by his comrades
+to the hill of Bonipari, where he died and was buried. His
+friends cut off his head, put it in a basket, built a house
+for it, and said that he was a worshipful ghost (<i>tindalo</i>).
+Afterwards they said, "Let us go and take heads." So
+they embarked on their canoe and paddled away to seek
+the heads of enemies. When they came to quiet water,
+they stopped paddling and waited till they felt the canoe
+rock under them, and when they felt it they said, "That is
+a ghost." To find out what particular ghost it was they
+called out the names of several, and when they came to the
+name of Ganindo, the canoe rocked again. So they knew
+that it was he who was making the canoe to rock. In like
+manner they learned what village they were to attack.
+Returning victorious with the heads of the foe they threw a
+spear into the roof of Ganindo's house, blew conch-shells,
+and danced round it, crying, "Our ghost is strong to kill!"
+Then they sacrificed fish and other food to him. Also they
+built him a new house, and made four images of him for
+the four corners, one of Ganindo himself, two of his sisters,
+and another. When it was all ready, eight men translated
+the relics to the new shrine. One of them carried Ganindo's
+bones, another his betel-nuts, another his lime-box, another
+his shell-trumpet. They all went into the shrine crouching
+down, as if burdened by a heavy weight, and singing in
+chorus, "Hither, hither, let us lift the leg!" At that the
+eight legs went up together, and then they sang, "Hither,
+hither!" and at that the eight legs went down together.
+In this solemn procession the relics were brought and laid
+on a bamboo platform, and sacrifices to the new martial
+ghost were inaugurated. Other warlike ghosts revered in
+Florida are known not to have been natives of the island
+but famous warriors of the western isles, where supernatural
+power is believed to be stronger.<a id="footnotetag586" name="footnotetag586"></a><a href="#footnote586"><sup>586</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Offerings to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the islands of Central Melanesia prayers and
+offerings are everywhere made to ghosts or spirits or to
+both. The simplest and commonest sacrificial act is that
+of throwing a small portion of food to the dead; this is
+probably a universal practice in Melanesia. A morsel of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page365" id="page365"></a>[pg 365]</span>
+food ready to be eaten, for example of yam, a leaf of
+mallow, or a bit of betel-nut, is thrown aside; and where
+they drink kava, a libation is made of a few drops, as the
+share of departed friends or as a memorial of them with
+which they will be pleased. At the same time the offerer
+may call out the name of some one who either died lately
+or is particularly remembered at the time; or without the
+special mention of individuals he may make the offering
+generally to the ghosts of former members of the community.
+To set food on a burial-place or before some memorial
+image is a common practice, though in some places, as in
+Santa Cruz, the offering is soon taken away and eaten by
+the living.<a id="footnotetag587" name="footnotetag587"></a><a href="#footnote587"><sup>587</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrificial ritual in the Solomon Islands.</p>
+
+<p>In the Solomon Islands the sacrificial ritual is more
+highly developed. It may be described in the words of a
+native of San Cristoval. "In my country," he wrote, "they
+think that ghosts are many, very many indeed, some very
+powerful, and some not. There is one who is principal in
+war; this one is truly mighty and strong. When our
+people wish to fight with any other place, the chief men of
+the village and the sacrificers and the old men, and the
+elder and younger men, assemble in the place sacred to this
+ghost; and his name is Harumae. When they are thus
+assembled to sacrifice, the chief sacrificer goes and takes a
+pig; and if it be not a barrow pig they would not sacrifice
+it to that ghost, he would reject it and not eat of it. The
+pig is killed (it is strangled), not by the chief sacrificer, but
+by those whom he chooses to assist, near the sacred place.
+Then they cut it up; they take great care of the blood lest
+it should fall upon the ground; they bring a bowl and set
+the pig in it, and when they cut it up the blood runs down
+into it. When the cutting up is finished, the chief sacrificer
+takes a bit of flesh from the pig, and he takes a cocoa-nut
+shell and dips up some of the blood. Then he takes the
+blood and the bit of flesh and enters into the house (the
+shrine), and calls that ghost and says, 'Harumae! Chief in
+war! we sacrifice to you with this pig, that you may help
+us to smite that place; and whatsoever we shall carry away
+shall be your property, and we also will be yours.' Then
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page366" id="page366"></a>[pg 366]</span>
+he burns the bit of flesh in a fire upon a stone, and pours
+down the blood upon the fire. Then the fire blazes greatly
+upwards to the roof, and the house is full of the smell of
+pig, a sign that the ghost has heard. But when the
+sacrificer went in he did not go boldly, but with awe; and
+this is the sign of it; as he goes into the holy house he
+puts away his bag, and washes his hands thoroughly, to
+shew that the ghost shall not reject him with disgust."
+The pig was afterwards eaten. It should be observed that
+this Harumae who received sacrifices as a martial ghost,
+mighty in war, had not been dead many years when the
+foregoing account of the mode of sacrificing to him was
+written. The elder men remembered him alive, nor was
+he a great warrior, but a kind and generous man, believed
+to be plentifully endowed with supernatural power. His
+shrine was a small house in the village, where relics of him
+were preserved.<a id="footnotetag588" name="footnotetag588"></a><a href="#footnote588"><sup>588</sup></a> Had the Melanesians been left to themselves,
+it seems possible that this Harumae might have
+developed into the war-god of San Cristoval, just as in
+Central Africa another man of flesh and blood is known to
+have developed into the war-god of Uganda.<a id="footnotetag589" name="footnotetag589"></a><a href="#footnote589"><sup>589</sup></a></p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote552" name="footnote552"></a><b>Footnote 552:</b><a href="#footnotetag552"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i> (Oxford, 1891),
+pp. 122, 123, 124, 180 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote553" name="footnote553"></a><b>Footnote 553:</b><a href="#footnotetag553"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i> (Oxford, 1891),
+pp. 247, 253.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote554" name="footnote554"></a><b>Footnote 554:</b><a href="#footnotetag554"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 248.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote555" name="footnote555"></a><b>Footnote 555:</b><a href="#footnotetag555"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 255 <i>sqq</i>.,
+264 <i>sqq</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote556" name="footnote556"></a><b>Footnote 556:</b><a href="#footnotetag556"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> 253 <i>sq</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote557" name="footnote557"></a><b>Footnote 557:</b><a href="#footnotetag557"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 254, 258, 261;
+compare <i>id.</i>, pp. 125, 130.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote558" name="footnote558"></a><b>Footnote 558:</b><a href="#footnotetag558"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 120, 254.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote559" name="footnote559"></a><b>Footnote 559:</b><a href="#footnotetag559"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 118 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote560" name="footnote560"></a><b>Footnote 560:</b><a href="#footnotetag560"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 254 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote561" name="footnote561"></a><b>Footnote 561:</b><a href="#footnotetag561"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 258 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote562" name="footnote562"></a><b>Footnote 562:</b><a href="#footnotetag562"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 255.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote563" name="footnote563"></a><b>Footnote 563:</b><a href="#footnotetag563"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 259.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote564" name="footnote564"></a><b>Footnote 564:</b><a href="#footnotetag564"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, D.D., <i>Melanesians and Polynesians</i>
+(London, 1910), pp. 214, 217.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote565" name="footnote565"></a><b>Footnote 565:</b><a href="#footnotetag565"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 255.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote566" name="footnote566"></a><b>Footnote 566:</b><a href="#footnotetag566"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 255 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote567" name="footnote567"></a><b>Footnote 567:</b><a href="#footnotetag567"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 256 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote568" name="footnote568"></a><b>Footnote 568:</b><a href="#footnotetag568"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 260 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote569" name="footnote569"></a><b>Footnote 569:</b><a href="#footnotetag569"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 261 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote570" name="footnote570"></a><b>Footnote 570:</b><a href="#footnotetag570"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 263 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote571" name="footnote571"></a><b>Footnote 571:</b><a href="#footnotetag571"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 257.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote572" name="footnote572"></a><b>Footnote 572:</b><a href="#footnotetag572"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 264, 273
+<i>sq.</i>, 275-277.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote573" name="footnote573"></a><b>Footnote 573:</b><a href="#footnotetag573"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 274 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote574" name="footnote574"></a><b>Footnote 574:</b><a href="#footnotetag574"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 266, 276, 277,
+286.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote575" name="footnote575"></a><b>Footnote 575:</b><a href="#footnotetag575"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 267-270.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote576" name="footnote576"></a><b>Footnote 576:</b><a href="#footnotetag576"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 269.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote577" name="footnote577"></a><b>Footnote 577:</b><a href="#footnotetag577"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 270
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote578" name="footnote578"></a><b>Footnote 578:</b><a href="#footnotetag578"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, p. 275.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote579" name="footnote579"></a><b>Footnote 579:</b><a href="#footnotetag579"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 271
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote580" name="footnote580"></a><b>Footnote 580:</b><a href="#footnotetag580"> (return) </a><p> G. Turner, <i>Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before</i> (London, 1884), pp. 335 <i>sq.</i> This account is based on
+information furnished by Sualo, a Samoan teacher, who lived for a long
+time on the island. The statement that the fire kindled on the grave was
+intended "to enable the soul of the departed to rise to the sun" may be
+doubted; it may be a mere inference of Dr. Turner's Samoan informant.
+More probably the fire was intended to warm the shivering ghost. I do
+not remember any other evidence that the souls of the Melanesian dead
+ascend to the sun; certainly it is much more usual for them to descend
+into the earth.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote581" name="footnote581"></a><b>Footnote 581:</b><a href="#footnotetag581"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 281 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote582" name="footnote582"></a><b>Footnote 582:</b><a href="#footnotetag582"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 278 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote583" name="footnote583"></a><b>Footnote 583:</b><a href="#footnotetag583"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 279 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote584" name="footnote584"></a><b>Footnote 584:</b><a href="#footnotetag584"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 124
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote585" name="footnote585"></a><b>Footnote 585:</b><a href="#footnotetag585"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, p. 121.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote586" name="footnote586"></a><b>Footnote 586:</b><a href="#footnotetag586"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 125
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote587" name="footnote587"></a><b>Footnote 587:</b><a href="#footnotetag587"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 127, 128.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote588" name="footnote588"></a><b>Footnote 588:</b><a href="#footnotetag588"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 129
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote589" name="footnote589"></a><b>Footnote 589:</b><a href="#footnotetag589"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. Roscoe, "Kibuka, the War God of the Baganda,"
+<i>Man</i>, vii. (1907) pp. 161-166; <i>id.</i>, <i>The Baganda</i>
+(London, 1911), pp. 301 <i>sqq.</i> The history of this African war-god
+is more or less mythical, but his personal relics, which are now
+deposited in the Ethnological Museum at Cambridge, suffice to prove his
+true humanity.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page367" id="page367"></a>[pg 367]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xvii" id="lecture-xvii"></a>LECTURE XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF CENTRAL MELANESIA (<i>concluded</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Public sacrifices to ghosts in the Solomon Islands.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of last lecture I described the mode in which
+sacrifices are offered to a martial ghost in San Cristoval,
+one of the Solomon Islands. We saw that the flesh of a
+pig is burned in honour of the ghost and that the victim's
+blood is poured on the flames. Similarly in Florida, another
+of the Solomon Islands, food is conveyed to worshipful
+ghosts by being burned in the fire. Some ghosts are known
+by name to everybody, others may be known only to
+individuals, who have found out or been taught how to
+approach them, and who accordingly regard such ghosts
+as their private property. In every village a public ghost
+is worshipped, and the chief is the sacrificer. He has
+learned from his predecessor how to throw or heave the
+sacrifice, and he imparts this knowledge to his son or
+nephew, whom he intends to leave as his successor. The
+place of sacrifice is an enclosure with a little house or shrine
+in which the relics are kept; it is new or old according as
+the man whose ghost is worshipped died lately or long ago.
+When a public sacrifice is performed, the people assemble
+near but not in the sacred place; boys but not women may
+be present. The sacrificer alone enters the shrine, but he
+takes with him his son or other person whom he has instructed
+in the ritual. Muttering an incantation he kindles
+a fire of sticks, but may not blow on the holy flame. Then
+from a basket he takes some prepared food, such as a mash
+of yams, and throws it on the fire, calling out the name of
+the ghost and bidding him take his food, while at the same
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page368" id="page368"></a>[pg 368]</span>
+time he prays for whatever is desired. If the fire blazes
+up and consumes the food, it is a good sign; it proves that
+the ghost is present and that he is blowing up the flame.
+The remainder of the food the sacrificer takes back to the
+assembled people; some of it he eats himself and some of
+it he gives to his assistant to eat. The people receive their
+portions of the food at his hands and eat it or take it away.
+While the sacrificing is going on, there is a solemn silence.
+If a pig is killed, the portion burned in the sacrificial fire
+is the heart in Florida, but the gullet at Bugotu. One
+ghost who is commonly known and worshipped is called
+Manoga. When the sacrificer invokes this ghost, he heaves
+the sacrifice round about and calls him, first to the east,
+where rises the sun, saying, "If thou dwellest in the east,
+where rises the sun, Manoga! come hither and eat thy
+<i>tutu</i> mash!" Then turning he lifts it towards where sets
+the sun, and says, "If thou dwellest in the west, where sets
+the sun, Manoga! come hither and eat thy <i>tutu</i>!" There
+is not a quarter to which he does not lift it up. And when
+he has finished lifting it he says, "If thou dwellest in heaven
+above, Manoga! come hither and eat thy <i>tutu</i>! If thou
+dwellest in the Pleiades or Orion's belt; if below in Turivatu;
+if in the distant sea; if on high in the sun, or in the moon;
+if thou dwellest inland or by the shore, Manoga! come
+hither and eat thy <i>tutu</i>!"<a id="footnotetag590" name="footnotetag590"></a><a href="#footnote590"><sup>590</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">First-fruits of the canarium nuts sacrificed to ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Twice a year there are general sacrifices in which the
+people of a village take part. One of these occasions is
+when the canarium nut, so much used in native cookery,
+is ripe. None of the nuts may be eaten till the first-fruits
+have been offered to the ghost. "Devil he eat first; all
+man he eat behind," is the lucid explanation which a native
+gave to an English enquirer. The knowledge of the way
+in which the first-fruits must be offered is handed down
+from generation to generation, and the man who is learned
+in this lore has authority to open the season. He observes
+the state of the crop, and early one morning he is heard
+to shout. He climbs a tree, picks some nuts, cracks them,
+eats, and puts some on the stones in his sacred place for
+the ghost. Then the rest of the people may gather the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page369" id="page369"></a>[pg 369]</span>
+nuts for themselves. The chief himself sacrifices the new
+nuts, mixed with other food, to the public ghost on the
+stones of the village sanctuary; and every man who has a
+private ghost of his own does the same in his own sacred
+place. About two months afterwards there is another
+public sacrifice when the root crops generally have been
+dug; pig or fish is then offered; and a man who digs up
+his yams, or whatever it may be, offers his private sacrifice
+besides.<a id="footnotetag591" name="footnotetag591"></a><a href="#footnote591"><sup>591</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrifice of first-fruits to ancestral spirits in Tanna.</p>
+
+<p>In like manner the natives of Tanna, one of the Southern
+New Hebrides, offered the first-fruits to the deified spirits
+of their ancestors. On this subject I will quote the evidence
+of the veteran missionary, the Rev. Dr. George Turner, who
+lived in Tanna for seven months in 1841. He says: "The
+general name for gods seemed to be <i>aremha</i>; that means
+a <i>dead man</i>, and hints alike at the origin and nature of
+their religious worship. The spirits of their departed
+ancestors were among their gods. Chiefs who reach an
+advanced age were after death deified, addressed by name,
+and prayed to on various occasions. They were supposed
+especially to preside over the growth of the yams and the
+different fruit trees. The first-fruits were presented to them,
+and in doing this they laid a little of the fruit on some
+stone, or shelving branch of the tree, or some more temporary
+altar of a few rough sticks from the bush, lashed together
+with strips of bark, in the form of a table, with its four feet
+stuck in the ground. All being quiet, the chief acted as
+high priest, and prayed aloud thus: 'Compassionate father!
+here is some food for you; eat it; be kind to us on account
+of it.' And, instead of an <i>amen</i>, all united in a shout.
+This took place about mid-day, and afterwards those who
+were assembled continued together feasting and dancing
+till midnight or three in the morning."<a id="footnotetag592" name="footnotetag592"></a><a href="#footnote592"><sup>592</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Private ghosts. Fighting ghosts kept as auxiliaries.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the public ghosts, each of whom is revered
+by a whole village, many a man keeps, so to say, a private or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page370" id="page370"></a>[pg 370]</span>
+tame ghost of his own on leash. The art of taming a ghost
+consists in knowing the leaves, bark, and vines in which he
+delights and in treating him accordingly. This knowledge
+a man may acquire by the exercise of his natural faculties
+or he may learn it from somebody else. However he may
+obtain the knowledge, he uses it for his own personal
+advantage, sacrificing to the ghost in order to win his
+favour and get something from him in return. The mode
+of sacrificing to a private ghost is the same as to a public
+ghost. The owner has a sacred place or private chapel of
+his own, where he draws near to the ghost in prayer and
+burns his bit of food in the fire. A man often keeps a
+fighting ghost (<i>keramo</i>), who helps him in battle or in
+slaying his private enemy. Before he goes out to commit
+homicide, he pulls up his ginger-plant and judges from the
+ease or difficulty with which the plant yields to or resists
+his tug, whether he will succeed in the enterprise or not.
+Then he sacrifices to the ghost, and having placed some
+ginger and leaves on his shield, and stuffed some more in
+his belt and right armlet, he sallies forth. He curses his
+enemy by his fighting ghost, saying, "Siria (if that should
+be the name of the ghost) eats thee, and I shall slay thee";
+and if he kills him, he cries to the ghost, "Thine is this
+man, Siria, and do thou give me supernatural power!"
+No prudent Melanesian would attempt to commit manslaughter
+without a ghost as an accomplice; to do so would
+be to court disaster, for the slain man's ghost would have
+power over the slayer; therefore before he imbrues his
+hands in blood he deems it desirable to secure the assistance
+of a valiant ghost who can, if need be, overcome the ghost
+of his victim in single combat. If he cannot procure such
+a useful auxiliary in any other way, he must purchase
+him. Further, he fortifies himself with some personal relic,
+such as a tooth or lock of hair of the deceased warrior,
+whose ghost he has taken into his service; this relic he
+wears as an amulet in a little bag round the neck, when
+he is on active service; at other times it is kept in the
+house.<a id="footnotetag593" name="footnotetag593"></a><a href="#footnote593"><sup>593</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Garden ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Different from these truculent spirits are the peaceful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page371" id="page371"></a>[pg 371]</span>
+ghosts who cause the garden to bear fruit. If the gardener
+happens to know such a ghost, he can pray and sacrifice
+to him on his own account; but if he has no such friend
+in the spirit world, he must employ an expert. The man
+of skill goes into the midst of the garden with a little mashed
+food in his left hand, and smiting it with his right hand he
+calls on the ghost to come and eat. He says: "This produce
+thou shall eat; give supernatural power (<i>mana</i>) to
+this garden, that food may be good and plentiful." He
+digs holes at the four corners of the garden, and in them
+he buries such leaves as the ghost loves, so that the garden
+may have ghostly power and be fruitful. And when the
+yams sprout, he twines them with the particular creeper
+and fastens them with the particular wood to which the
+ghost is known to be partial. These agricultural ghosts
+are very sensitive; if a man enters the garden, who has just
+eaten pork or cuscus or fish or shell-fish, the ghost of the
+garden manifests his displeasure by causing the produce of
+the garden to droop; but if the eater lets three or four days
+go by after his meal, he may then enter the garden with
+impunity, for the food has left his stomach. For a similar
+reason, apparently, when the yam vines are being trained,
+the men sleep near the gardens and never approach their
+wives; for should they tread the garden after conjugal
+intercourse, the yams would be blighted.<a id="footnotetag594" name="footnotetag594"></a><a href="#footnote594"><sup>594</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Human sacrifices to ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the favour of a ghost is obtained by human
+sacrifices. On these occasions the flesh of the victim does
+not, like the flesh of a pig, furnish the materials of a
+sacrificial banquet; but little bits of it are eaten by young
+men to improve their fighting power and by elders for a
+special purpose. Such sacrifices are deemed more effectual
+than the sacrifices of less precious victims; and advantage
+was sometimes taken of a real or imputed crime to offer
+the criminal to some ghost. So, for example, within living
+memory Dikea, chief of Ravu, convicted a certain man of
+stealing tobacco, and sentenced him to be sacrificed; and
+the grown lads ate pieces of him cooked in the sacrificial
+fire. Again, the same chief offered another human sacrifice
+in the year 1886. One of his wives had proved false, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page372" id="page372"></a>[pg 372]</span>
+he sent her away vowing that she should not return till
+he had offered a human sacrifice to Hauri. Also his son
+died, and he vowed to kill a man for him. The vow was
+noised abroad, and everybody knew that he would pay well
+for somebody to kill. Now the Savo people had bought
+a captive boy in Guadalcanar, but it turned out a bad
+bargain, for the boy was lame and nearly blind. So they
+brought him to Dikea, and he gave them twenty coils of
+shell money for the lad. Then the chief laid his hand on
+the victim's breast and cried, "Hauri! here is a man for
+you," and his followers killed him with axes and clubs.
+The cripple's skull was added to the chief's collection, and
+his legs were sent about the country to make known what
+had been done. In Bugotu of Ysabel, when the people
+had slain an enemy in fight, they used to bring back his
+head in triumph, cut slices off it, and burn them in sacrifice.
+And if they took a prisoner alive, they would bring him
+to the sacred place, the grave of the man whose ghost was
+to be honoured. There they bound him hand and foot
+and buffeted him till he died, or if he did not die under
+the buffets they cut his throat. As they beat the man
+with their fists, they called on the ghost to take him, and
+when he was dead, they burned a bit of him in the fire for
+the ghost.<a id="footnotetag595" name="footnotetag595"></a><a href="#footnote595"><sup>595</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrifices to ghosts in Saa.</p>
+
+<p>At Saa in Malanta, one of the Solomon Islands, sacrifices
+are offered to ghosts on various occasions. Thus on his
+return from a voyage a man will put food in the case which
+contains the relics of his dead father; and in the course of
+his voyage, if he should land in a desert isle, he will throw
+food and call on father, grandfather, and other deceased
+friends. Again, when sickness is ascribed to the anger of a
+ghost, a man of skill is sent for to discover what particular
+ghost is doing the mischief. When he has ascertained the
+culprit, he is furnished by the patient's relatives with a little
+pig, which he is to sacrifice to the ghost as a substitute
+for the sick man. Provided with this vicarious victim he
+repairs to the haunt of the ghost, strangles the animal, and
+burns it whole in a fire along with grated yam, coco-nut,
+and fish. As he does so, he calls out the names of all the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page373" id="page373"></a>[pg 373]</span>
+ghosts of his family, his ancestors, and all who are deceased,
+down even to children and women, and he names the man
+who furnished the pig for the ghostly repast. A portion
+of the mixed food he preserves unburnt, wraps it in a
+dracaena leaf, and puts it beside the case which contains the
+relics of the man to whose ghost the sacrifice has been
+offered. Sometimes, however, instead of burning a pig in
+the fire, which is an expensive and wasteful form of sacrifice,
+the relatives of the sick man content themselves with
+cooking a pig or a dog in the oven, cutting up the carcase,
+and laying out all the parts in order. Then the sacrificer
+comes and sits at the animal's head, and calls out the names
+of all the dead members of the ghost's family in order
+downwards, saying, "Help, deliver this man, cut short the
+line that has bound him." Then the pig is eaten by all
+present except the women; nothing is burnt.<a id="footnotetag596" name="footnotetag596"></a><a href="#footnote596"><sup>596</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrifices of first-fruits to ghosts in Saa.</p>
+
+<p>The last sort of sacrifices to ghosts at Saa which we
+need notice is the sacrifice of first-fruits. Thus, when the
+yams are ripe the people fetch some of them from each
+garden to offer to the ghosts. All the male members of
+the family assemble at the holy place which belongs to
+them. Then one of them enters the shrine, lays a yam
+beside the skull which lies there, and cries with a loud voice
+to the ghost, "This is yours to eat." The others call
+quietly on the names of all the ancestors and give their
+yams, which are very many in number, because one from
+each garden is given to each ghost. If any man has besides
+a relic of the dead, such as a skull, bones, or hair, in his
+house, he takes home a yam and sets it beside the relic.
+Again, the first flying-fish of the season are sacrificed to
+ghosts, who may take the form of sharks; for we shall see
+presently that Melanesian ghosts are sometimes supposed
+to inhabit the bodies of these ferocious monsters. Some
+ghost-sharks have sacred places ashore, where figures of
+sharks are set up. In that case the first flying-fish are
+cooked and set before the shark images. But it may be
+that a shark ghost has no sacred place on land, and then
+there is nothing for it but to take the flying-fish out to sea
+and shred them into the water, while the sacrificer calls
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page374" id="page374"></a>[pg 374]</span>
+out the name of the particular ghost whom he desires to
+summon to the feast.<a id="footnotetag597" name="footnotetag597"></a><a href="#footnote597"><sup>597</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Vicarious sacrifices for the sick.</p>
+
+<p>Vicarious sacrifices for the sick are offered in San
+Cristoval to a certain malignant ghost called Tapia, who is
+believed to seize a man's soul and tie it up to a banyan
+tree. When that has happened, a man who knows how to
+manage Tapia intercedes with him. He takes a pig or fish
+to the sacred place and offers it to the grim ghost, saying,
+"This is for you to eat in place of that man; eat this, don't
+kill him." With that he can loose the captive soul and
+take it back to the sick man, who thereupon recovers.<a id="footnotetag598" name="footnotetag598"></a><a href="#footnote598"><sup>598</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrifices to ghosts in Santa Cruz. The dead represented by a
+stock.</p>
+
+<p>In Santa Cruz the sacrifices offered to ghosts are very
+economical; for if the offering is of food, the living eat it
+up after a decent interval; if it is a valuable, they remove it
+and resume the use of it themselves. The principle of this
+spiritual economy probably lies in the common belief that
+ghosts, being immaterial, absorb the immaterial essence of
+the objects, leaving the material substance to be enjoyed by
+men. When a man of mark dies in Santa Cruz, his relations
+set up a stock of wood in his house to represent him. This
+is renewed from time to time, till after a while the man is
+forgotten or thrown into the shade by the attractions of
+some newer ghost, so that the old stock is neglected. But
+when the stock is first put up, a pig is killed and two strips
+of flesh from the back bone are set before the stock as food
+for the ghost, but only to be soon taken away and eaten by
+the living. Similar offerings may be repeated from time to
+time, as when the stock is renewed. Again, when a garden
+is planted, they spread feather-money and red native cloth
+round it for the use of the ghost; but his enjoyment of these
+riches is brief and precarious.<a id="footnotetag599" name="footnotetag599"></a><a href="#footnote599"><sup>599</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Native account of sacrifices to ghosts in Santa Cruz.</p>
+
+<p>To supplement the foregoing account of sacrifices to
+ghosts in Santa Cruz, I will add a description of some of
+them which was given by a native of Santa Cruz in his own
+language and translated for us by a missionary. It runs
+thus: "When anyone begins to fall sick he seeks a doctor
+(<i>meduka</i>), and when the doctor comes near the sick man he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page375" id="page375"></a>[pg 375]</span>
+stiffens his body, and all those in the house think a ghost
+has entered into the doctor, and they are all very quiet.
+Some doctors tell the sick man's relatives to kill a pig for
+the ghost who has caused the sickness. When they have
+killed the pig they take it into the ghost-house and invite
+some other men, and they eat with prayers to the ghost; and
+the doctor takes a little piece and puts it near the base of the
+ghost-post, and says to it: 'This is thy food; oh, deliver
+up again the spirit of thy servant, that he may be well
+again.' The little portion they have offered to the ghost is
+then eaten; but small boys may not eat of it."<a id="footnotetag600" name="footnotetag600"></a><a href="#footnote600"><sup>600</sup></a> "Every
+year the people plant yams and tomagos; and when they
+begin to work and have made ready the place and begun to
+plant, first, they offer to the ghost who they think presides
+over foods. There is an offering place in the bush, and
+they go there and take much food, and also feather money.
+Men, women, and children do this, and they think the ghost
+notices if there are many children, and gives much food at
+harvest; and the ghost to whom they offer is named Ilene.
+When the bread-fruit begins to bear they take great care
+lest anyone should light a fire near the bole of the tree, or
+throw a stone at the tree. The ghost, who they think protects
+the bread-fruit, is called Duka-Kane or Kae Tuabia,
+who has two names; they think this ghost has four eyes."<a id="footnotetag601" name="footnotetag601"></a><a href="#footnote601"><sup>601</sup></a>
+"The heathen thinks a ghost makes the sun to shine and
+the rain. If it is continual sunshine and the yams are
+withering the people assemble together and contribute
+money, and string it to the man with whom the rain-ghost
+abides, and food also, and beseech him not to do the thing
+he was doing. That man will not wash his face for a long
+time, he will not work lest he perspire and his body be wet,
+for he thinks that if his body be wet it will rain. Then
+this man, with whom the rain-ghost is, takes water and
+goes into the ghost-house and sprinkles it at the head of
+the ghost-post (<i>duka</i>), and if there are many ghost-posts in
+the house he pours water over them all that it may rain."<a id="footnotetag602" name="footnotetag602"></a><a href="#footnote602"><sup>602</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page376" id="page376"></a>[pg 376]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Combination of magic with religion.</p>
+
+<p>In these ceremonies for the making of rain we see a
+combination of magic with religion. The appeal to the
+rain-ghost is religious; but the pouring of the water on the
+ghost-post is magical, being an imitation of the result which
+the officiating priest or magician, whichever we choose to
+call him, desires to produce. The taboos observed by the
+owner of the rain-ghost so long as he wishes to prevent the
+rain from falling are also based on the principle of homoeopathic
+or imitative magic: he abstains from washing his
+face or working, lest the water or the sweat trickling down
+his body should mimick rain and thereby cause it to fall.<a id="footnotetag603" name="footnotetag603"></a><a href="#footnote603"><sup>603</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of Aneiteum, one of the Southern New
+Hebrides, worshipped the spirits of their ancestors, chiefly
+on occasions of sickness.<a id="footnotetag604" name="footnotetag604"></a><a href="#footnote604"><sup>604</sup></a> Again, the people of Vat&eacute; or
+Efat, another of the New Hebrides, worshipped the souls of
+their forefathers and prayed to them over the <i>kava</i>-bowl for
+health and prosperity.<a id="footnotetag605" name="footnotetag605"></a><a href="#footnote605"><sup>605</sup></a> As an example of prayers offered to
+the dead we may take the petition which the natives of Florida
+put up at sea to Daula, a well-known ghost, who is associated
+with the frigate-bird. They say: "Do thou draw the canoe,
+that it may reach the land; speed my canoe, grandfather,
+that I may quickly reach the shore whither I am bound.
+Do thou, Daula, lighten the canoe, that it may quickly
+gain the land and rise upon the shore." They also invoke
+Daula to help them in fishing. "If thou art powerful,
+O Daula," they say, "put a fish or two into this net and let
+them die there." After a good catch they praise him,
+saying, "Powerful is the ghost of the net." And when the
+natives of Florida are in danger on the sea, they call upon
+their immediate forefathers; one will call on his grandfather,
+another on his father, another on some dead friend,
+calling with reverence and saying, "Save us on the deep!
+Save us from the tempest! Bring us to the shore!" In San
+Cristoval people apply to ghosts for victory in battle, health
+in sickness, and good crops; but the word which they use to
+signify such an application conveys the notion of charm
+rather than of prayer. However, in the Banks' Islands
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page377" id="page377"></a>[pg 377]</span>
+what may be called prayer is strictly speaking an invocation
+of the dead; indeed the very word for prayer (<i>tataro</i>) seems
+to be identical with that for a powerful ghost (<i>'ataro</i> in San
+Cristoval). A man in peril on the sea will call on his dead
+friends, especially on one who was in his lifetime a good
+sailor. And in Mota, when an oven is opened, they throw
+in a leaf of cooked mallow for a ghost, saying to him, "This
+is a lucky bit for your eating; they who have charmed your
+food or clubbed you (as the case may be), take hold of their
+hands, drag them away to hell, let them be dead." So
+when they pour water on the oven, they pray to the ghost,
+saying, "Pour it on the head of him down there who has
+laid plots against me, has clubbed me, has shot me, has
+stolen things of mine (as the case may be), he shall die."
+Again, when they make a libation before drinking, they
+pray, saying, "Grandfather! this is your lucky drop of
+kava; let boars come in to me; the money I have spent,
+let it come back to me; the food that is gone, let it come
+back hither to the house of you and me." And on starting
+for a voyage they will say, "Uncle! father! plenty of boars
+for you, plenty of money; kava for your drinking, lucky
+food for your eating in the canoe. I pray you with this,
+look down upon me, let me go on a safe sea." Or when
+the canoe labours with a heavy freight, they will pray,
+"Take off your burden from us, that we may speed on a
+safe sea."<a id="footnotetag606" name="footnotetag606"></a><a href="#footnote606"><sup>606</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sanctuaries of ghosts in Florida.</p>
+
+<p>In the island of Florida, the sanctuary of a powerful
+ghost is called a <i>vunuhu</i>. Sometimes it is in the village,
+sometimes in the garden-ground, sometimes in the forest.
+If it is in the village, it is fenced about, lest the foot of any
+rash intruder should infringe its sanctity. Sometimes the
+sanctuary is the place where the dead man is buried; sometimes
+it merely contains his relics, which have been translated
+thither. In some sanctuaries there is a shrine and in
+some an image. Generally, if not always, stones may be
+seen lying in such a holy place. The sight of one of them
+has probably struck the fancy of the man who founded the
+worship; he thought it a likely place for the ghost to
+haunt, and other smaller stones and shells have been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page378" id="page378"></a>[pg 378]</span>
+subsequently added. Once a sanctuary has been established,
+everything within it becomes sacred (<i>tambu</i>) and belongs to
+the ghost. Were a tree growing within it to fall across the
+path, nobody would step over it. When a sacrifice is to be
+offered to the ghost on the holy ground, the man who knows
+the ghost, and whose duty it is to perform the sacrifice,
+enters first and all who attend him follow, treading in his
+footsteps. In going out no one will look back, lest his
+soul should stay behind. No one would pass such a
+sanctuary when the sun was so low as to cast his shadow
+into it; for if he did the ghost would seize his shadow and
+so drag the man himself into his den. If there were a
+shrine in the sanctuary, nobody but the sacrificer might
+enter it. Such a shrine contained the weapons and other
+properties which belonged in his lifetime to the man whose
+ghost was worshipped on the spot.<a id="footnotetag607" name="footnotetag607"></a><a href="#footnote607"><sup>607</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sanctuaries of ghosts in Malanta.</p>
+
+<p>At Saa in Malanta, another of the Solomon Islands, all
+burial-grounds where common people are interred are so
+far sacred that no one will go there without due cause;
+but places where the remains of nobles repose, and where
+sacrifices are offered to their ghosts, are regarded with very
+great respect, they may indeed be called family sanctuaries.
+Some of them are very old, the powerful ghosts who are
+worshipped in them being remote ancestors. It sometimes
+happens that the man who used to sacrifice in such a place
+dies without having instructed his son in the proper chant
+of invocation with which the worshipful ghost should be
+approached. In such a case the young man who succeeds
+him may fear to go to the old sanctuary, lest he should
+commit a mistake and offend the ghost; so he will take
+some ashes from the old sacrificial fire-place and found a
+new sanctuary. It is not common in that part of Malanta
+to build shrines for the relics of the dead, but it is sometimes
+done. Such shrines, on the other hand, are common
+in the villages of San Cristoval and in the sacred places of
+that island where great men lie buried. To trespass on
+them would be likely to rouse the anger of the ghosts, some
+of whom are known to be of a malignant disposition.<a id="footnotetag608" name="footnotetag608"></a><a href="#footnote608"><sup>608</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page379" id="page379"></a>[pg 379]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Sanctuaries which are not burial-grounds.</p>
+
+<p>But burial-grounds are not the only sanctuaries in the
+Solomon Islands. There are some where no dead man is
+known to be interred, though in Dr. Codrington's opinion
+there are probably none which do not derive their sanctity
+from the presence of a ghost. In the island of Florida the
+appearance of something wonderful will cause any place to
+become a sanctuary, the wonder being accepted as proof of
+a ghostly presence. For example, in the forest near Olevuga
+a man planted some coco-nut and almond trees and died
+not long afterwards. Then there appeared among the trees
+a great rarity in the shape of a white cuscus. The people
+took it for granted that the animal was the dead man's
+ghost, and therefore they called it by his name. The place
+became a sanctuary; no one would gather the coco-nuts and
+almonds that grew there, till two Christian converts set the
+ghost at defiance and appropriated his garden, with the
+coco-nuts and almonds. Through the same part of the
+forest ran a stream full of eels, one of which was so big that
+the people were quite sure it must be a ghost; so nobody
+would bathe in that stream or drink from it, except at one
+pool, which for the sake of convenience was considered not
+to be sacred. Again, in Bugotu, a district of Ysabel, which
+is another of the Solomon Islands, there is a pool known to
+be the haunt of a very old ghost. When a man has an
+enemy whom he wishes to harm he will obtain some scraps
+of his food and throw them into the water. If the food is
+at once devoured by the fish, which swarm in the pool,
+the man will die, but otherwise his life may be saved by the
+intervention of a man who knows the habits of the ghost
+and how to propitiate him. In these sacred places there
+are stones, on which people place food in order to obtain
+good crops, while for success in fishing they deposit morsels
+of cooked fish. Such stones are treated with reverence and
+seem to be in a fair way to develop into altars. However,
+when the old ghost is superseded, as he often is, by younger
+rivals, the development of an altar out of the stones is
+arrested.<a id="footnotetag609" name="footnotetag609"></a><a href="#footnote609"><sup>609</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ghosts in animals, such as sharks, alligators, snakes,
+bonitos, and frigate-birds.</p>
+
+<p>From some of these instances we learn that Melanesian
+ghosts can sometimes take up their abode in animals, such
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page380" id="page380"></a>[pg 380]</span>
+as cuscuses, eels, and fish. The creatures which are oftenest
+used as vehicles by the spirits of the dead are sharks,
+alligators, snakes, bonitos, and frigate-birds. Snakes which
+haunt a sacred place are themselves sacred, because they
+belong to or actually embody the ghost. Sharks, again, in
+all these islands are very often thought to be the abode of
+ghosts; for men before their death will announce that they
+will appear as sharks, and afterwards any shark remarkable
+for size or colour which haunts a certain shore or coast is
+taken to be somebody's ghost and receives the name of the
+deceased. At Saa certain food, such as coco-nuts from
+particular trees, is reserved to feed such a ghost-shark;
+and men of whom it is known for certain that they will
+be sharks after their death are allowed to anticipate the
+posthumous honours which await them by devouring such
+food in the sacred place, just as if they were real sharks.
+Sharks are very commonly believed to be the abode of
+ghosts in Florida and Ysabel, and in Savo, where they are
+particularly numerous; hence, though all sharks are not
+venerated, there is no living creature so commonly held
+sacred by the Central Melanesians as a shark; and shark-ghosts
+seem even to form a class of powerful supernatural
+beings. Again, when a lizard was seen frequenting a house
+after a death, it would be taken for the ghost returning to
+its old home; and many ghosts, powerful to aid the mariner
+at sea, take up their quarters in frigate-birds.<a id="footnotetag610" name="footnotetag610"></a><a href="#footnote610"><sup>610</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The belief in ghosts underlies the Melanesian conception of
+magic.</p>
+
+<p>Again, a belief in powerful ghosts underlies to a great
+extent the Melanesian conception of magic, as that conception
+is expounded by Dr. Codrington. "That invisible power,"
+he tells us, "which is believed by the natives to cause all
+such effects as transcend their conception of the regular
+course of nature, and to reside in spiritual beings, whether
+in the spiritual part of living men or in the ghosts of the
+dead, being imparted by them to their names and to various
+things that belong to them, such as stones, snakes, and
+indeed objects of all sorts, is that generally known as <i>mana</i>.
+Without some understanding of this it is impossible to
+understand the religious beliefs and practices of the
+Melanesians; and this again is the active force in all they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page381" id="page381"></a>[pg 381]</span>
+do and believe to be done in magic, white or black. By
+means of this men are able to control or direct the forces of
+nature, to make rain or sunshine, wind or calm, to cause
+sickness or remove it, to know what is far off in time and
+space, to bring good luck and prosperity, or to blast and
+curse. No man, however, has this power of his own; all
+that he does is done by the aid of personal beings, ghosts
+or spirits."<a id="footnotetag611" name="footnotetag611"></a><a href="#footnote611"><sup>611</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Illness generally thought to be caused by ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, to begin with the medical profession, which is a
+branch of magic long before it becomes a department of
+science, every serious sickness is believed to be brought
+about by ghosts or spirits, but generally it is to the ghosts of
+the dead that illness is ascribed both by the Eastern and by
+the Western islanders. Hence recourse is had to ghosts
+for aid both in causing and in curing sickness. They are
+thought to inflict disease, not only because some offence,
+such as trespass, has been committed against them, or
+because one who knows their ways has instigated them
+thereto by sacrifice and spells, but because there is a certain
+malignity in the feeling of all ghosts towards the living, who
+offend them simply by being alive. All human faculties,
+apart from the mere bodily functions, are supposed to be
+enhanced by death; hence the ghost of a powerful and ill-natured
+man is only too ready to take advantage of his
+increased powers for mischief.<a id="footnotetag612" name="footnotetag612"></a><a href="#footnote612"><sup>612</sup></a> Thus in the island of Florida
+illness is regularly laid at the door of a ghost; the only
+question that can arise is which particular ghost is doing
+the mischief. Sometimes the patient imagines that he has
+offended his dead father, uncle, or brother, who accordingly
+takes his revenge by stretching him on a bed of sickness.
+In that case no special intercessor is required; the patient
+himself or one of his kinsfolk will sacrifice and beg the
+ghost to take the sickness away; it is purely a family affair.
+Sometimes the sick man thinks that it is his own private or
+tame ghost who is afflicting him; so he will leave the house
+in order to escape his tormentor. But if the cause of sickness
+remains obscure, a professional doctor or medicine-man
+will be consulted. He always knows, or at least can
+ascertain, the ghost who is causing all the trouble, and he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page382" id="page382"></a>[pg 382]</span>
+takes his measures accordingly. Thus he will bind on the
+sick man the kind of leaves that the ghost loves; he will
+chew ginger and blow it into the patient's ears and on that
+part of the skull which is soft in infants; he will call on the
+name of the ghost and entreat him to remove the sickness.
+Should all these remedies prove vain, the doctor is by no
+means at the end of his resources. He may shrewdly
+suspect that somebody, who has an ill-will at the patient,
+has set his private ghost to maul the sick man and do him
+a grievous bodily injury. If his suspicions are confirmed
+and he discovers the malicious man who is egging on the
+mischievous ghost, he will bribe him to call off his ghost;
+and if the man refuses, the doctor will hire another ghost to
+assault and batter the original assailant. At Wango in San
+Cristoval regular battles used to be fought by the invisible
+champions above the sickbed of the sufferer, whose life or
+death depended on the issue of the combat. Their weapons
+were spears, and sometimes more than one ghost would be
+engaged on either side.<a id="footnotetag613" name="footnotetag613"></a><a href="#footnote613"><sup>613</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Diagnosis of ghosts who have caused illness.</p>
+
+<p>In Ysabel the doctor employs an ingenious apparatus
+for discovering the cause of sickness and ascertaining its
+cure. He suspends a stone at one end of a string while he
+holds the other end in his hand. Then he recites the names
+of all the people who died lately, and when the stone swings
+at anybody's name, he knows that the ghost of that man
+has caused the illness. It remains to find out what the
+ghost will take to relax his clutch on the sick man, it may
+be a mash of yams, a fish, a pig, or perhaps a human
+substitute. The question is put and answered as before;
+and whatever the oracle declares to be requisite is offered on
+the dead man's grave. Thus the ghost is appeased and the
+sufferer is made whole.<a id="footnotetag614" name="footnotetag614"></a><a href="#footnote614"><sup>614</sup></a> In these islands a common cause
+of illness is believed to be an unwarrantable intrusion on
+premises occupied by a ghost, who punishes the trespasser by
+afflicting him with bodily pains and ailments, or it may be
+by carrying off his soul. At Maewo in Aurora, one of the
+New Hebrides, when there is reason to think that a sickness
+is due to ghostly agency, the friends of the sick man send
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page383" id="page383"></a>[pg 383]</span>
+for a professional dreamer, whose business it is to ascertain
+what particular ghost has been offended and to make it up
+with him. So the dreamer falls asleep and in his sleep he
+dreams a dream. He seems to himself to be in the place
+where the patient was working before his illness; and there
+he spies a queer little old man, who is really no other than
+the ghost. The dreamer falls into conversation with him,
+learns his name, and winning his confidence extracts from
+him a true account of the whole affair. The fact is that in
+working at his garden the man encroached, whether wittingly
+or not is no matter, on land which the ghost regards as his
+private preserve; and to punish the intrusion the ghost
+carried off the intruder's soul and impounded it in a magic
+fence in his garden, where it still languishes in durance vile.
+The dreamer at once tenders a frank and manly apology on
+behalf of his client; he assures the ghost that the trespass
+was purely inadvertent, that no personal disrespect whatever
+was intended, and he concludes by requesting the ghost to
+overlook the offence for this time and to release the imprisoned
+soul. This appeal to the better feelings of the
+ghost has its effect; he pulls up the fence and lets the soul
+out of the pound; it flies back to the sick man, who thereupon
+recovers. Sometimes an orphan child is made sick by
+its dead mother, whose ghost draws away the soul of the
+infant to keep her company in the spirit land. In such a
+case, again, a dreamer is employed to bring back the lost
+soul from the far country; and if he can persuade the
+mother's ghost to relinquish the tiny soul of her baby, the
+child will be made whole.<a id="footnotetag615" name="footnotetag615"></a><a href="#footnote615"><sup>615</sup></a> Once more certain long stones
+in the Banks' Islands are inhabited by ghosts so active and
+robust that if a man's shadow so much as falls on one of
+them, the ghost in the stone will clutch the shadow and pull
+the soul clean out of the man, who dies accordingly. Such
+stones, dangerous as they unquestionably are to the chance
+passer-by, nevertheless for that very reason possess a valuable
+property which can be turned to excellent account. A man,
+for example, will put one of these stones in his house to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page384" id="page384"></a>[pg 384]</span>
+guard it like a watch-dog in his absence; and if he sends a
+friend to fetch something out of it which he has forgotten,
+the messenger, on approaching the house, will take good
+care to call out the owner's name, lest the ghost in the
+stone, mistaking him for a thief and a robber, should pounce
+out on him and do him a mischief before he had time to
+explain.<a id="footnotetag616" name="footnotetag616"></a><a href="#footnote616"><sup>616</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Contrast between Melanesian and European medicine.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it appears that for a medical practitioner in
+Melanesia the first requisite is an intimate acquaintance, not
+with the anatomy of the human frame and the properties of
+drugs, but with ghosts, their personal peculiarities, habits,
+and haunts. Only by means of the influence which such
+a knowledge enables him to exert on these powerful and
+dangerous beings can the good physician mitigate and
+assuage the sufferings of poor humanity. His professional
+skill, while it certainly aims at the alleviation of physical
+evils, attains its object chiefly, if not exclusively, by a direct
+appeal to those higher, though invisible, powers which encompass
+the life of man, or at all events of the Melanesian.
+The firm faith in the spiritual and the unseen which these
+sable doctors display in their treatment of the sick presents
+a striking contrast to the procedure of their European
+colleagues, who trust exclusively to the use of mere physical
+remedies, such as drugs and lancets, now carving the body
+of the sufferer with knives, and now inserting substances,
+about which they know little, into places about which they
+know nothing. Has not science falsely so called still much
+to learn from savagery?</p>
+
+<p class="side">The weather believed to be regulated by ghosts and spirits.
+Weather-doctors.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not the departments of medicine and surgery
+alone, important as these are to human welfare, which
+in Melanesia are directed and controlled by spiritual
+forces. The weather in those regions is also regulated
+by ghosts and spirits. It is they who cause the wind to
+blow or to be still, the sun to shine forth or to be overcast
+with clouds, the rain to descend or the earth to be parched
+with drought; hence fertility and abundance or dearth and
+famine prevail alternately at the will of these spiritual
+directors. From this it follows that men who stand on a
+footing of intimacy with ghosts and spirits can by judicious
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page385" id="page385"></a>[pg 385]</span>
+management induce them to adapt the weather to the varying
+needs of mankind. But it is to be observed that the
+supernatural beings, who are the real sources of atmospheric
+phenomena, have delegated or deputed a portion of their
+powers not merely to certain material objects, such as stones
+or leaves, but to certain set forms of words, which men call
+incantations or spells; and accordingly all such objects and
+formulas do, by virtue of this delegation, possess in themselves
+a real and we may almost say natural influence over
+the weather, which is often manifested in a striking congruity
+or harmony between the things themselves and the effects
+which they are calculated to produce. This adaptation of
+means to end in nature may perhaps be regarded as a
+beautiful proof of the existence of spirits and ghosts working
+their purposes unseen behind the gaily coloured screen or
+curtain of the physical universe. At all events men who are
+acquainted with the ghostly properties of material objects and
+words can turn them to account for the benefit of their friends
+and the confusion of their foes, and they do so very readily if
+only it is made worth their while. Hence it comes about that
+in these islands there are everywhere weather-doctors or
+weather-mongers, who through their familiarity with ghosts
+and spirits and their acquaintance with the ghostly or
+spiritual properties of things, are able to control the weather
+and to supply their customers with wind or calm, rain or
+sunshine, famine or abundance, at a reasonable rate and a
+moderate figure.<a id="footnotetag617" name="footnotetag617"></a><a href="#footnote617"><sup>617</sup></a> The advantages of such a system over our
+own blundering method of managing the weather, or rather
+of leaving it to its own devices, are too obvious to be insisted
+on. To take a few examples. In the island of Florida,
+when a calm is wanted, the weather-doctor takes a bunch of
+leaves, of the sort which the ghost loves, and hides the bunch
+in the hollow of a tree where there is water, at the same
+time invoking the ghost with the proper charm. This
+naturally produces rain and with the rain a calm. In the
+seafaring life of the Solomon Islanders the maker of calms is
+a really valuable citizen.<a id="footnotetag618" name="footnotetag618"></a><a href="#footnote618"><sup>618</sup></a> The Santa Cruz people are also
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page386" id="page386"></a>[pg 386]</span>
+great voyagers, and their wizards control the weather on their
+expeditions, taking with them the stock or log which represents
+their private or tame ghost and setting it up on a stage in
+the cabin. The presence of the familiar ghost being thus
+secured, the weather-doctor will undertake to provide wind
+or calm according to circumstances.<a id="footnotetag619" name="footnotetag619"></a><a href="#footnote619"><sup>619</sup></a> We have already seen
+how in these islands the wizard makes rain by pouring water
+on the wooden posts which represent the rain-ghosts.<a id="footnotetag620" name="footnotetag620"></a><a href="#footnote620"><sup>620</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Black magic working through personal refuse or rubbish of the
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>Such exercises of ghostly power for the healing of the sick
+and the improvement of the weather are, when well directed
+and efficacious, wholly beneficial. But ghostly power is a two-edged
+weapon which can work evil as well as good to mankind.
+In fact it can serve the purpose of witchcraft. The
+commonest application of this pernicious art is one which is
+very familiar to witches and sorcerers in many parts of the
+world. The first thing the wizard does is to obtain a fragment
+of food, a bit of hair, a nail-clipping, or indeed anything
+that has been closely connected with the person of his
+intended victim. This is the medium through which the
+power of the ghost or spirit is brought to bear; it is, so to
+say, the point of support on which the magician rests the
+whole weight of his infernal engine. In order to give effect
+to the charm it is very desirable, if not absolutely necessary,
+to possess some personal relic, such as a bone, of the dead
+man whose ghost is to set the machinery in motion. At all
+events the essential thing is to bring together the man who
+is to be injured and the ghost or spirit who is to injure him;
+and this can be done most readily by placing the personal
+relics or refuse of the two men, the living and the dead, in
+contact with each other; for thus the magic circuit, if we
+may say so, is complete, and the fatal current flows from the
+dead to the living. That is why it is most dangerous to
+leave any personal refuse or rubbish lying about; you never
+can tell but that some sorcerer may get hold of it and work
+your ruin by means of it. Hence the people are naturally most
+careful to hide or destroy all such refuse in order to prevent it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page387" id="page387"></a>[pg 387]</span>
+from falling into the hands of witches and wizards; and this
+sage precaution has led to habits of cleanliness which the
+superficial European is apt to mistake for what he calls enlightened
+sanitation, but which a deeper knowledge of native
+thought would reveal to him in their true character as far-seeing
+measures designed to defeat the nefarious art of the
+sorcerer.<a id="footnotetag621" name="footnotetag621"></a><a href="#footnote621"><sup>621</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Black magic working without any personal relic of the victim.
+The ghost-shooter.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, however, an adept in the black art can
+work his fell purpose even without any personal relic of his
+victim. In the Banks' Islands, for example, he need only
+procure a bit of human bone or a fragment of some lethal
+weapon, it may be a splinter of a club or a chip of an arrow,
+which has killed somebody. This he wraps up in the proper
+leaves, recites over it the appropriate charm, and plants it
+secretly in the path along which his intended victim is expected
+to pass. The ghost of the man who owned the bone
+in his life or perished by the club or the arrow, is now lurking
+like a lion in the path; and if the poor fellow strolls along it
+thinking no evil, the ghost will spring at him and strike him
+with disease. The charm is perfectly efficient if the man
+does come along the path, but clearly it misses fire if he does
+not. To remedy this defect in the apparatus a sorcerer sometimes
+has recourse to a portable instrument, a sort of pocket
+pistol, which in the Banks' Islands is known as a ghost-shooter.
+It is a bamboo tube, loaded not with powder and
+shot, but with a dead man's bone and other magical ingredients,
+over which the necessary spell has been crooned.
+Armed with this deadly weapon the sorcerer has only to step
+up to his unsuspecting enemy, whip out the pocket pistol,
+uncork the muzzle by removing his thumb from the orifice,
+and present it at the victim; the fatal discharge follows in
+an instant and the man drops to the ground. The ghost in
+the pistol has done his work. Sometimes, however, an
+accident happens. The marksman misses his victim and
+hits somebody else. This occurred, for example, not very
+many years ago in the island of Mota. A man named
+Isvitag was waiting with his ghost-shooter to pop at his
+enemy, but in his nervous excitement he let fly too soon,
+just as a woman with a child on her hip stepped across the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page388" id="page388"></a>[pg 388]</span>
+path. The shot, or rather the ghost, hit the child point-blank,
+and it was his sister's child, his own next of kin!
+You may imagine the distress of the affectionate uncle at
+this deplorable miscarriage. To prevent inflammation of the
+wound he, with great presence of mind, plunged his pocket
+pistol in water, and this timely remedy proved so efficacious
+that the child took no hurt.<a id="footnotetag622" name="footnotetag622"></a><a href="#footnote622"><sup>622</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Prophecy inspired by ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Another department of Melanesian life in which ghosts
+figure very prominently is prophecy. The knowledge of
+future events is believed to be conveyed to the people by
+a ghost or spirit speaking with the voice of a man, who
+is himself unconscious while he speaks. The predictions
+which emanate from the prophet under these circumstances
+are in the strictest sense inspired. His human personality
+is for the time being in abeyance, and he is merely the
+mouthpiece of the powerful spirit which has temporarily
+taken possession of his body and speaks with his voice.
+The possession is indeed painfully manifest. His eyes
+glare, foam bursts from his mouth, his limbs writhe, his
+whole body is convulsed. These are the workings of the
+mighty spirit shaking and threatening to rend the frail
+tabernacle of flesh. This form of inspiration is not clearly
+distinguishable from what we call madness; indeed the
+natives do not attempt to distinguish between the two
+things; they regard the madman and the prophet as
+both alike inspired by a ghost or spirit, and a man will
+sometimes pretend to be mad in order that he may get
+the reputation of being a prophet. At Saa a man will
+speak with the voice of a powerful man deceased, while
+he twists and writhes under the influence of the ghost;
+he calls himself by the name of the deceased who speaks
+through him, and he is so addressed by others; he will
+eat fire, lift enormous weights, and foretells things to
+come. When the inspiration, or insanity, is particularly
+violent, and the Banks' Islanders think they have had
+quite enough of it, the friends of the prophet or of the
+madman will sometimes catch him and hold him struggling
+and roaring in the smoke of strong-smelling leaves, while
+they call out the names of the dead men whose ghosts
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page389" id="page389"></a>[pg 389]</span>
+are most likely to be abroad at the time, for as soon as
+the right name is mentioned the ghost departs from the
+man, who then returns to his sober senses. But this
+method of smoking out a ghost is not always successful.<a id="footnotetag623" name="footnotetag623"></a><a href="#footnote623"><sup>623</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Divination by means of ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>There are many methods by which ghosts and spirits
+are believed to make known to men who employ them
+the secret things which the unassisted human intelligence
+could not discover; and some of them hardly perhaps
+need the intervention of a professional wizard. These
+methods of divination differ very little in the various
+islands. In the Solomon Islands, for instance, when an
+expedition has started in a fleet of canoes, there is sometimes
+a hesitation whether they shall proceed, or a doubt
+as to what direction they should take. Thereupon a
+diviner may declare that he has felt a ghost step on
+board; for did not the canoe tip over to the one side?
+Accordingly he asks the invisible passenger, "Shall we go
+on? Shall we go to such and such a place?" If the
+canoe rocks, the answer is yes; if it lies on an even
+keel, the answer is no. Again, when a man is sick and
+his friends wish to know what ghost is vexing or, as they
+say, eating him, a diviner or wizard is sent for. He comes
+bringing an assistant, and the two sit down, the wizard
+in front and the assistant at his back, and they hold a
+stick or bamboo by the two ends. The wizard then begins
+to slap the end of the bamboo he holds, calling out one
+after another the names of men not very long deceased, and
+when he names the one who is afflicting the sick man the
+stick of itself becomes violently agitated.<a id="footnotetag624" name="footnotetag624"></a><a href="#footnote624"><sup>624</sup></a> We are not
+informed, but we may probably assume, that it is the ghost
+and not the man who really agitates the stick. A somewhat
+different mode of divination was occasionally employed
+at Motlav in the Banks' Islands in order to discover a thief
+or other criminal. After a burial they would take a bag,
+put some Tahitian chestnut and scraped banana into it, and
+tie it to the end of a hollow bamboo tube about ten feet long
+in such a way that the end of the tube was inserted in the
+mouth of the bag. Then the bag was laid on the dead
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page390" id="page390"></a>[pg 390]</span>
+man's grave, and the diviners grasped the other end of the
+bamboo. The names of the recently dead were then called
+over, and while this was being done the men felt the bamboo
+grow heavy in their hands, for a ghost was scrambling up
+from the bag into the hollow of the bamboo. Having thus
+secured him they carried the imprisoned ghost in the bamboo
+into the village, where the roll of the recent dead was again
+called over in order to learn whose ghost had been caught
+in the trap. When wrong names were mentioned, the free
+end of the bamboo moved from side to side, but at the
+mention of the right name it revolved briskly. Having
+thus ascertained whom they had to deal with, they questioned
+the entrapped ghost, "Who stole so and so? Who
+was guilty in such a case?" Thereupon the bamboo, moved
+no doubt by the ghost inside, pointed at the culprit, if he
+was present, or made signs as before when the names of the
+suspected evildoers were mentioned.<a id="footnotetag625" name="footnotetag625"></a><a href="#footnote625"><sup>625</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Taboo based on a fear of ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Of the many departments of Central Melanesian life
+which are permeated by a belief in ghostly power the
+last which I shall mention is the institution of taboo. In
+Melanesia, indeed, the institution is not so conspicuous as
+it used to be in Polynesia; yet even there it has been
+a powerful instrument in the consolidation of the rights
+of private property, and as such it deserves the attention
+of historians who seek to trace the evolution of law and
+morality. As understood in the Banks' Islands and the
+New Hebrides the word taboo (<i>tambu</i> or <i>tapu</i>) signifies a
+sacred and unapproachable character which is imposed on
+certain things by the arbitrary will of a chief or other
+powerful man. Somebody whose authority with the people
+gives him confidence to make the announcement will declare
+that such and such an object may not be touched, that such
+and such a place may not be approached, and that such and
+such an action may not be performed under a certain
+penalty, which in the last resort will be inflicted by ghostly
+or spiritual agency. The object, place, or action in question
+becomes accordingly taboo or sacred. Hence in these
+islands taboo may be defined as a prohibition with a curse
+expressed or implied. The sanction or power at the back
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page391" id="page391"></a>[pg 391]</span>
+of the taboo is not that of the man who imposes it; rather
+it is that of the ghost or spirit in whose name or in reliance
+upon whom the taboo is imposed. Thus in Florida a chief
+will forbid something to be done or touched under a penalty;
+he may proclaim, for example, that any one who violates
+his prohibition must pay him a hundred strings of shell
+money. To a European such a proclamation seems a proof
+of the chief's power; but to the native the chiefs power, in
+this and in everything, rests on the persuasion that the chief
+has his mighty ghost at his back. The sense of this in the
+particular case is indeed remote, the fear of the chiefs anger
+is present and effective, but the ultimate sanction is the
+power of the ghost. If a common man were to take upon
+himself to taboo anything he might do so; people would
+imagine that he would not dare to make such an announcement
+unless he knew he could enforce it; so they would
+watch, and if anybody violated the taboo and fell sick afterwards,
+they would conclude that the taboo was supported by
+a powerful ghost who punished infractions of it. Hence the
+reputation and authority of the man who imposed the taboo
+would rise accordingly; for it would be seen that he had a
+powerful ghost at his back. Every ghost has a particular
+kind of leaf for his badge; and in imposing his taboo a man
+will set the leaf of his private ghost as a mark to warn trespassers
+of the spiritual power with which they have to
+reckon; when people see a leaf stuck, it may be, on a tree, a
+house, or a canoe, they do not always know whose it is; but
+they do know that if they disregard the mark they have to
+deal with a ghost and not with a man,<a id="footnotetag626" name="footnotetag626"></a><a href="#footnote626"><sup>626</sup></a> and the knowledge is
+a more effectual check on thieving and other crimes than the
+dread of mere human justice. Many a rascal fears a ghost
+who does not fear the face of man.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The life of the Central Melanesians deeply influenced by
+their belief in the survival of the human soul after death.</p>
+
+<p>What I have said may suffice to impress you with a
+sense of the deep practical influence which a belief in the
+survival of the human soul after death exercises on the life
+and conduct of the Central Melanesian savage. To him the
+belief is no mere abstract theological dogma or speculative
+tenet, the occasional theme of edifying homilies and pious
+meditation; it is an inbred, unquestioning, omnipresent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page392" id="page392"></a>[pg 392]</span>
+conviction which affects his thoughts and actions daily and
+at every turn; it guides his fortunes as an individual and
+controls his behaviour as a member of a community, by inculcating
+a respect for the rights of others and enforcing a
+submission to the public authorities. With him the fear of
+ghosts and spirits is a bulwark of morality and a bond
+of society; for he firmly believes in their unseen presence
+everywhere and in the punishments which they can inflict on
+wrongdoers. His whole theory of causation differs fundamentally
+from ours and necessarily begets a fundamental difference
+of practice. Where we see natural forces and material
+substances, the Melanesian sees ghosts and spirits. A great
+gulf divides his conception of the world from ours; and
+it may be doubted whether education will ever enable him
+to pass the gulf and to think and act like us. The products
+of an evolution which has extended over many ages cannot
+be forced like mushrooms in a summer day; it is vain to
+pluck the fruit of the tree of knowledge before it is ripe.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote590" name="footnote590"></a><b>Footnote 590:</b><a href="#footnotetag590"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 130-132.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote591" name="footnote591"></a><b>Footnote 591:</b><a href="#footnotetag591"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 132
+<i>sq.</i>; C. M. Woodford, <i>A Naturalist among the Head-hunters</i>
+(London, 1890), pp. 26-28.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote592" name="footnote592"></a><b>Footnote 592:</b><a href="#footnotetag592"> (return) </a><p> G. Turner, LL.D., <i>Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before</i> (London, 1884), pp. 318 <i>sq.</i> Yams are the principal
+fruits cultivated by the Tannese, who bestow a great deal of labour on
+the plantation and keep them in fine order. See G. Turner, <i>op.
+cit.</i> pp. 317 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote593" name="footnote593"></a><b>Footnote 593:</b><a href="#footnotetag593"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 133
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote594" name="footnote594"></a><b>Footnote 594:</b><a href="#footnotetag594"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, p. 134.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote595" name="footnote595"></a><b>Footnote 595:</b><a href="#footnotetag595"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 135 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote596" name="footnote596"></a><b>Footnote 596:</b><a href="#footnotetag596"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 137
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote597" name="footnote597"></a><b>Footnote 597:</b><a href="#footnotetag597"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, p. 138.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote598" name="footnote598"></a><b>Footnote 598:</b><a href="#footnotetag598"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 138 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote599" name="footnote599"></a><b>Footnote 599:</b><a href="#footnotetag599"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 139.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote600" name="footnote600"></a><b>Footnote 600:</b><a href="#footnotetag600"> (return) </a><p> "Native Stories of Santa Cruz and Reef Islands,"
+translated by the Rev. W. O'Ferrall, <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xxxiv. (1904) p. 223.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote601" name="footnote601"></a><b>Footnote 601:</b><a href="#footnotetag601"> (return) </a><p> "Native Stories from Santa Cruz and Reef Islands," <i>op.
+cit.</i> p. 224.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote602" name="footnote602"></a><b>Footnote 602:</b><a href="#footnotetag602"> (return) </a><p> "Native Stories from Santa Cruz and Reef Islands," <i>op.
+cit.</i> p. 225.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote603" name="footnote603"></a><b>Footnote 603:</b><a href="#footnotetag603"> (return) </a><p> Compare <i>The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings</i>,
+i. 269 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote604" name="footnote604"></a><b>Footnote 604:</b><a href="#footnotetag604"> (return) </a><p> G. Turner, <i>Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before</i> (London, 1884), p. 326.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote605" name="footnote605"></a><b>Footnote 605:</b><a href="#footnotetag605"> (return) </a><p>G. Turner, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 334.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote606" name="footnote606"></a><b>Footnote 606:</b><a href="#footnotetag606"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 145-148.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote607" name="footnote607"></a><b>Footnote 607:</b><a href="#footnotetag607"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 175
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote608" name="footnote608"></a><b>Footnote 608:</b><a href="#footnotetag608"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>,
+pp. 176 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote609" name="footnote609"></a><b>Footnote 609:</b><a href="#footnotetag609"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 177 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote610" name="footnote610"></a><b>Footnote 610:</b><a href="#footnotetag610"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 178-180.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote611" name="footnote611"></a><b>Footnote 611:</b><a href="#footnotetag611"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 191.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote612" name="footnote612"></a><b>Footnote 612:</b><a href="#footnotetag612"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 194.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote613" name="footnote613"></a><b>Footnote 613:</b><a href="#footnotetag613"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 194-196.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote614" name="footnote614"></a><b>Footnote 614:</b><a href="#footnotetag614"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 196.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote615" name="footnote615"></a><b>Footnote 615:</b><a href="#footnotetag615"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 208
+<i>sq.</i> As to sickness supposed to be caused by trespass on the
+premises of a ghost see further <i>id.</i>, pp. 194, 195, 218.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote616" name="footnote616"></a><b>Footnote 616:</b><a href="#footnotetag616"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, p. 184.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote617" name="footnote617"></a><b>Footnote 617:</b><a href="#footnotetag617"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, p. 200.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote618" name="footnote618"></a><b>Footnote 618:</b><a href="#footnotetag618"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 200, 201.
+The spirit whom the Florida wizard appeals to for good or bad weather is
+called a <i>vigona</i>; and the natives believe it to be always the
+ghost of a dead man. But it seems very doubtful whether this opinion is
+strictly correct. See R. H. Codrington, <i>op cit.</i> pp. 124, 134.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote619" name="footnote619"></a><b>Footnote 619:</b><a href="#footnotetag619"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 201. The Santa Cruz
+name for such a ghost is <i>duka</i> (<i>ibid.</i> p. 139).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote620" name="footnote620"></a><b>Footnote 620:</b><a href="#footnotetag620"> (return) </a><p>Above, p. 375.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote621" name="footnote621"></a><b>Footnote 621:</b><a href="#footnotetag621"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 202-204.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote622" name="footnote622"></a><b>Footnote 622:</b><a href="#footnotetag622"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 205
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote623" name="footnote623"></a><b>Footnote 623:</b><a href="#footnotetag623"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 209
+<i>sq.</i>, 218-220.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote624" name="footnote624"></a><b>Footnote 624:</b><a href="#footnotetag624"> (return) </a><p>R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 210.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote625" name="footnote625"></a><b>Footnote 625:</b><a href="#footnotetag625"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 211
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote626" name="footnote626"></a><b>Footnote 626:</b><a href="#footnotetag626"> (return) </a><p> R. H. Codrington, <i>The Melanesians</i>, pp. 215
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page393" id="page393"></a>[pg 393]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xviii" id="lecture-xviii"></a>LECTURE XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF NORTHERN AND EASTERN MELANESIA</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Northern Melanesia. Material culture of the North
+Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I concluded my account of the belief in
+immortality and the worship of the dead among the natives
+of Central Melanesia. To-day we pass to what may be
+called Northern Melanesia, by which is to be understood the
+great archipelago lying to the north-east of New Guinea. It
+comprises the two large islands of New Britain and New
+Ireland, now called New Pomerania and New Mecklenburg,
+with the much smaller Duke of York Island lying between
+them, and the chain of New Hanover and the Admiralty
+Islands stretching away westward from the north-western
+extremity of New Ireland. The whole of the archipelago,
+together with the adjoining island of Bougainville in the
+Solomon Islands, is now under German rule. The people
+belong to the same stock and speak the same language as
+the natives of Central and Southern Melanesia, and their
+level of culture is approximately the same. They live
+in settled villages and subsist chiefly by the cultivation of
+the ground, raising crops of taro, yams, bananas, sugar-cane,
+and so forth. Most of the agricultural labour is performed
+by the women, who plant, weed the ground, and carry the
+produce to the villages. The ground is, or rather used to
+be, dug by sharp-pointed sticks. The men hunt cassowaries,
+wallabies, and wild pigs, and they catch fish by both nets
+and traps. Women and children take part in the fishing
+and many of them become very expert in spearing fish.
+Among the few domestic animals which they keep are pigs,
+dogs, and fowls. The villages are generally situated in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page394" id="page394"></a>[pg 394]</span>
+the midst of a dense forest; but on the coast the natives
+build their houses not far from the beach as a precaution
+against the attacks of the forest tribes, of whom they
+stand greatly in fear. A New Britain village generally
+consists of a number of small communities or families,
+each of which dwells in a separate enclosure. The houses
+are very small and badly built, oblong in shape and
+very low. Between the separate hamlets which together
+compose a village lie stretches of virgin forest, through which
+run irregular and often muddy foot-tracks, scooped out here
+and there into mud-holes where the pigs love to wallow
+during the heat of the tropical day. As the people of any
+one district used generally to be at war with their neighbours,
+it was necessary that they should live together for the sake
+of mutual protection.<a id="footnotetag627" name="footnotetag627"></a><a href="#footnote627"><sup>627</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Commercial habits of the North Melanesians. Their
+backwardness in other respects.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, in spite of their limited intercourse with
+surrounding villages, the natives of the New Britain or the
+Bismarck Archipelago were essentially a trading people.
+They made extensive use of shell money and fully recognised
+the value of any imported articles as mediums of
+exchange or currency. Markets were held on certain days
+at fixed places, where the forest people brought their yams,
+taro, bananas and so forth and exchanged them for fish,
+tobacco, and other articles with the natives of the coast.
+They also went on long trading expeditions to procure
+canoes, cuscus teeth, pigs, slaves, and so forth, which on
+their return they generally sold at a considerable profit. The
+shell which they used as money is the <i>Nassa immersa</i> or
+<i>Nassa calosa</i>, found on the north coast of New Britain.
+The shells were perforated and threaded on strips of cane,
+which were then joined together in coils of fifty to two
+hundred fathoms.<a id="footnotetag628" name="footnotetag628"></a><a href="#footnote628"><sup>628</sup></a> The rights of private property were fully
+recognised. All lands belonged to certain families, and
+husband and wife had each the exclusive right to his or
+her goods and chattels. But while in certain directions
+the people had made some progress, in others they remained
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page395" id="page395"></a>[pg 395]</span>
+very backward. Pottery and the metals were unknown;
+no metal or specimen of metal-work has been found in
+the archipelago; on the other hand the natives made much
+use of stone implements, especially adzes and clubs. In war
+they never used bows and arrows.<a id="footnotetag629" name="footnotetag629"></a><a href="#footnote629"><sup>629</sup></a> They had no system of
+government, unless that name may be given to the power
+wielded by the secret societies and by chiefs, who exercised
+a certain degree of influence principally by reason of the
+reputation which they enjoyed as sorcerers and magicians.
+They were not elected nor did they necessarily inherit their
+office; they simply claimed to possess magical powers, and
+if they succeeded in convincing the people of the justice of
+their claim, their authority was recognised. Wealth also
+contributed to establish their position in the esteem of the
+public.<a id="footnotetag630" name="footnotetag630"></a><a href="#footnote630"><sup>630</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Rev. George Brown on the Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the religious ideas and customs of the
+natives we are not fully informed, but so far as these have
+been described they appear to agree closely with those of
+their kinsfolk in Central Melanesia. The first European to
+settle in the archipelago was the veteran missionary, the
+Rev. George Brown, D.D., who resided in the islands from
+1875 to 1880 and has revisited them on several occasions
+since; he reduced the language to writing for the first time,<a id="footnotetag631" name="footnotetag631"></a><a href="#footnote631"><sup>631</sup></a>
+and is one of our best authorities on the people. In what
+follows I shall make use of his valuable testimony along
+with that of more recent observers.</p>
+
+<p class="side">North Melanesian theory of the soul. Fear of ghosts,
+especially the ghosts of persons who have been killed and eaten.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of the archipelago believe that every person
+is animated by a soul, which survives his death and may
+afterwards influence the survivors for good or evil. Their
+word for soul is <i>nio</i> or <i>niono</i>, meaning a shadow. The root
+is <i>nio</i>, which by the addition of personal suffixes becomes
+<i>niong</i> "my soul or shadow," <i>niom</i> "your soul or shadow,"
+<i>niono</i> "his soul or shadow." They think that the soul is like
+the man himself, and that it always stays inside of his body,
+except when it goes out on a ramble during sleep or a faint.
+A man who is very sleepy may say, "My soul wants to go
+away." They believe, however, that it departs for ever at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page396" id="page396"></a>[pg 396]</span>
+death; hence when a man is sick, his friends will offer
+prayers to prevent its departure. There is only one kind of
+soul, but it can appear in many shapes and enter into animals,
+such as rats, lizards, birds, and so on. It can hear, see, and
+speak, and present itself in the form of a wraith or apparition
+to people at the moment of or soon after death. On being
+asked why he thought that the soul does not perish with the
+body, a native said, "Because it is different; it is not of the
+same nature at all." They believe that the souls of the dead
+occasionally visit the living and are seen by them, and that
+they haunt houses and burial-places. They are very much
+afraid of the ghosts and do all they can to drive or frighten
+them away. Above all, being cannibals, they stand in great
+fear of the ghosts of the people whom they have killed and
+eaten. The man who is cutting up a human body takes
+care to tie a bandage over his mouth and nose during the
+operation of carving in order to prevent the enraged soul of
+the victim from entering into his body by these apertures;
+and for a similar reason the doors of the houses are shut
+while the cannibal feast is going on inside. And to keep the
+victim's ghost quiet while his body is being devoured, a cut
+from a joint is very considerately placed on a tree outside of
+the house, so that he may eat of his own flesh and be satisfied.
+At the conclusion of the banquet, the people shout, brandish
+spears, beat the bushes, blow horns, beat drums, and make
+all kinds of noises for the purpose of chasing the ghost or
+ghosts of the murdered and eaten men away from the village.
+But while they send away the souls, they keep the skulls and
+jawbones of the victims; as many as thirty-five jawbones
+have been seen hanging in a single house in New Ireland.
+As for the skulls, they are, or rather were placed on the
+branch of a dead tree and so preserved on the beach or near
+the house of the man who had taken them.<a id="footnotetag632" name="footnotetag632"></a><a href="#footnote632"><sup>632</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Offerings to the souls of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the death of their friends they deem it
+very important to obtain the bodies and bury them. They
+offer food to the souls of their departed kinsfolk for a long
+time after death, until all the funeral feasts are over; but
+they do not hold annual festivals in honour of dead
+ancestors. The food offered to the dead is laid every day
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page397" id="page397"></a>[pg 397]</span>
+on a small platform in a tree; but the natives draw a distinction
+between offerings to the soul of a man who died a
+natural death and offerings to the soul of a man who was
+killed in a fight; for whereas they place the former on a
+living tree, they deposit the latter on a dead tree. Moreover,
+they lay money, weapons, and property, often indeed the
+whole wealth of the family, near the corpse of their friend,
+in order that the soul of the deceased may carry off the
+souls of these valuables to the spirit land. But when the
+body is carried away to be buried, most of the property is
+removed by its owners for their own use. However, the
+relations will sometimes detach a few shells from the coils of
+shell money and a few beads from a necklace and drop them
+in a fire for the behoof of the ghost. But when the deceased
+was a chief or other person of importance, some of his
+property would be buried with him. And before burial his
+body would be propped up on a special chair in front of his
+house, adorned with necklaces, wreaths of flowers and feathers,
+and gaudy with war-paint. In one hand would be placed a
+large cooked yam, and in the other a spear, while a club
+would be put on his shoulder. The yam was to stay the
+pangs of hunger on his long journey, and the weapons were
+to enable him to fight the foes who might resist his entrance
+into the spirit land. In the Duke of York Island the corpse
+was usually disposed of by being sunk in a deep part of the
+lagoon; but sometimes it was buried in the house and a fire
+kept burning on the spot.<a id="footnotetag633" name="footnotetag633"></a><a href="#footnote633"><sup>633</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs in New Ireland and New Britain. Preservation
+of the skull.</p>
+
+<p>In New Ireland the dead were rolled up in winding-sheets
+made of pandanus leaves, then weighted with stones
+and buried at sea. However, at some places they were
+deposited in deep underground watercourses or caverns.
+Towards the northern end of New Ireland corpses were
+burned on large piles of firewood in an open space of the
+village. A number of images curiously carved out of wood
+or chalk were set round the blazing pyre, but the meaning of
+these strange figures is uncertain. Men and women uttered
+the most piteous wailings, threw themselves on the top of the
+corpse, and pulled at the arms and legs. This they did not
+merely to express their grief, but because they thought that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page398" id="page398"></a>[pg 398]</span>
+if they saw and handled the dead body while it was burning,
+the ghost could not or would not haunt them afterwards.<a id="footnotetag634" name="footnotetag634"></a><a href="#footnote634"><sup>634</sup></a>
+Amongst the natives of the Gazelle Peninsula in New
+Britain the dead are generally buried in shallow graves in or
+near their houses. Some of the shell money which belonged
+to a man in life is buried with him. Women with blackened
+bodies sleep on the grave for weeks.<a id="footnotetag635" name="footnotetag635"></a><a href="#footnote635"><sup>635</sup></a> When the deceased
+was a great chief, his corpse, almost covered with shell money,
+is placed in a canoe, which is deposited in a small house.
+Thereupon the nearest female relations are led into the house,
+and the door being walled up they are obliged to remain
+there with the rotting body until all the flesh has mouldered
+away. Food is passed in to them through a hole in the wall,
+and under no pretext are they allowed to leave the hut before
+the decomposition of the corpse is complete. When nothing
+of the late chief remains but a skeleton, the hut is opened
+and the solemn funeral takes place. The bones of the dead
+are buried, but his skull is hung up in the taboo house in
+order, we are told, that his ghost may remain in the neighbourhood
+of the village and see how his memory is honoured.
+After the burial of the headless skeleton feasting and dancing
+go on, often for more than a month, and the expenses are
+defrayed out of the riches left by the deceased.<a id="footnotetag636" name="footnotetag636"></a><a href="#footnote636"><sup>636</sup></a> Even in
+the case of eminent persons who have been buried whole and
+entire in the usual way, a special mark of respect is sometimes
+paid to their memory by digging up their skulls after a year
+or more, painting them red and white, decorating them with
+feathers, and setting them up on a scaffold constructed for
+the purpose.<a id="footnotetag637" name="footnotetag637"></a><a href="#footnote637"><sup>637</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Disposal of the dead among the Sulka of New Britain.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhat similar is the disposal of the dead among the
+Sulka, a tribe of New Britain who inhabit a mountainous and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page399" id="page399"></a>[pg 399]</span>
+well-watered country to the south of the Gazelle Peninsula.
+When a Sulka dies, his plantation is laid waste, and the
+young fruit-trees cut down, but the ripe fruits are first
+distributed among the living. His pigs are slaughtered and
+their flesh in like manner distributed, and his weapons are
+broken. If the deceased was a rich man, his wife or wives
+will sometimes be killed. The corpse is usually buried next
+morning. A hole is dug in the house and the body deposited
+in it in a sitting posture. The upper part of the corpse
+projects from the grave and is covered with a tower-like
+structure of basket-work, which is stuffed with banana-leaves.
+Great care is taken to preserve the body from touching the
+earth. Stones are laid round about the structure and a fire
+kindled. Relations come and sleep for a time beside the
+corpse, men and women separately. Some while afterwards
+the soul of the deceased is driven away. The time for
+carrying out the expulsion is settled by the people in whispers,
+lest the ghost should overhear them and prepare for a stout
+resistance. The evening before the ceremony takes place
+many coco-nut leaves are collected. Next morning, as soon
+as a certain bird (<i>Philemon coquerelli</i>) is heard to sing, the
+people rise from their beds and set up a great cry. Then
+they beat the walls, shake the posts, set fire to dry coco-nut
+leaves, and finally rush out into the paths. At that moment,
+so the people think, the soul of the dead quits the hut.
+When the flesh of the corpse is quite decayed, the bones are
+taken from the grave, sewed in leaves, and hung up. Soon
+afterwards a funeral feast is held, at which men and women
+dance. For some time after a burial taro is planted beside
+the house of death and enclosed with a fence. The Sulka
+think that the ghost comes and gathers the souls of the taro.
+The ripe fruit is allowed to rot. Falling stars are supposed
+to be the souls of the dead which have been hurled up aloft
+and are now descending to bathe in the sea. The trail of
+light behind them is thought to be a tail of coco-nut leaves
+which other souls have fastened to them and set on fire. In
+like manner the phosphorescent glow on the sea comes from
+souls disporting themselves in the water. Persons who at
+their death left few relations, or did evil in their life, or were
+murdered outside of the village, are not buried in the house.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page400" id="page400"></a>[pg 400]</span>
+Their corpses are deposited on rocks or on scaffolds in the
+forest, or are interred on the spot where they met their death.
+The reason for this treatment of their corpses is not mentioned;
+but we may conjecture that their ghosts are regarded with
+contempt, dislike, or fear, and that the survivors seek to give
+them a wide berth by keeping their bodies at a distance
+from the village. The corpses of those who died suddenly
+are not buried but wrapt up in leaves and laid on a scaffold
+in the house, which is then shut up and deserted. This
+manner of disposing of them seems also to indicate a dread
+or distrust of their ghosts.<a id="footnotetag638" name="footnotetag638"></a><a href="#footnote638"><sup>638</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Disposal of the dead among the Moanus of the Admiralty
+Islands. Prayers offered to the skull of a dead chief.</p>
+
+<p>Among the Moanus of the Admiralty Islands the dead
+are kept in the houses unburied until the flesh is completely
+decayed and nothing remains but the bones. Old women
+then wash the skeleton carefully in sea-water, after which it
+is disjointed and divided. The backbone, together with the
+bones of the legs and upper arms, is deposited in one basket
+and put away somewhere; the skull, together with the ribs
+and the bones of the lower arms, is deposited in another
+basket, which is sunk for a time in the sea. When the bones
+are completely cleaned and bleached in the water, they are
+laid with sweet-smelling herbs in a wooden vessel and placed
+in the house which the dead man inhabited during his life.
+But the teeth have been previously extracted from the skull
+and converted into a necklace for herself by the sister of the
+deceased. After a time the ribs are distributed by the son
+among the relatives. The principal widow gets two, other
+near kinsfolk get one apiece, and they wear these relics under
+their arm-bands. The distribution of the ribs is the occasion
+of a great festival, and it is followed some time afterwards by
+a still greater feast, for which extensive preparations are made
+long beforehand. All who intend to be present at the
+ceremony send vessels of coco-nut oil in advance; and if
+the deceased was a great chief the number of the oil vessels
+and of the guests may amount to two thousand. Meantime
+the giver of the feast causes a scaffold to be erected for the
+reception of the skull, and the whole art of the wood-carver
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page401" id="page401"></a>[pg 401]</span>
+is exhausted in decorating the scaffold with figures of turtles,
+birds, and so forth, while a wooden dog acts as sentinel at
+either end. When the multitude has assembled, and the
+orchestra of drums, collected from the whole neighbourhood,
+has sent forth a far-sounding crash of music, the giver of the
+feast steps forward and pronounces a florid eulogium on the
+deceased, a warm panegyric on the guests who have honoured
+him by their presence, and a fluent invective against his
+absent foes. Nor does he forget to throw in some delicate
+allusions to his own noble generosity in providing the
+assembled visitors with this magnificent entertainment. For
+this great effort of eloquence the orator has been primed in
+the morning by the sorcerer. The process of priming consists
+in kneeling on the orator's shoulders and tugging at
+the hair of his head with might and main, which is clearly
+calculated to promote the flow of his rhetoric. If none of
+the hair comes out in the sorcerer's hands, a masterpiece of
+oratory is confidently looked forward to in the afternoon.
+When the speech, for which such painful preparations have
+been made, is at last over, the drums again strike up. No
+sooner have their booming notes died away over land and sea,
+than the sorcerer steps up to the scaffold, takes from it the
+bleached skull, and holds it in both his hands. Then the
+giver of the feast goes up to him, dips a bunch of dracaena
+leaves in a vessel of oil, and smites the skull with it, saying,
+"Thou art my father!" At that the drums again beat
+loudly. Then he strikes the skull a second time with the
+leaves, saying, "Take the food that has been made ready in
+thine honour!" And again there is a crash of drums.
+After that he smites the skull yet again and prays saying,
+"Guard me! Guard my people! Guard my children!"
+And every prayer of the litany is followed by the solemn
+roll of the drums. When these impressive invocations to
+the spirit of the dead chief are over, the feasting begins.
+The skull is thenceforth carefully preserved.<a id="footnotetag639" name="footnotetag639"></a><a href="#footnote639"><sup>639</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Disposal of the dead in the Kaniet Islands. Preservation of
+the skull.</p>
+
+<p>In the Kaniet Islands, a small group to the north-west
+of the Admiralty Islands, the dead are either sunk in the sea
+or buried in shallow graves, face downward, near the house.
+All the movable property of the deceased is piled on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page402" id="page402"></a>[pg 402]</span>
+grave, left there for three weeks, and then burnt. Afterwards
+the skull is dug up, placed in a basket, and having been
+decorated with leaves and feathers is hung up in the house.
+Thus adorned it not only serves to keep the dead in memory,
+but is also employed in many conjurations to defeat the
+nefarious designs of other ghosts, who are believed to work
+most of the ills that afflict humanity.<a id="footnotetag640" name="footnotetag640"></a><a href="#footnote640"><sup>640</sup></a> Apparently these
+islanders employ a ghost to protect them against ghosts on
+the principle of setting a thief to catch a thief.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Death attributed to witchcraft.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst the natives of the Bismarck Archipelago few
+persons, if any, are believed to die from natural causes
+alone; if they are not killed in war they are commonly
+supposed to perish by witchcraft or sorcery, even when the
+cause of death might seem to the uninstructed European to
+be sufficiently obvious in such things as exposure to heavy
+rain, the carrying of too heavy a burden, or remaining too
+long a time under water. So when a man has died, his
+friends are anxious to discover who has bewitched him to
+death. In this enquiry the ghost is expected to lend his
+assistance. Thus on the night after the decease the friends
+will assemble outside the house, and a sorcerer will address
+the ghost and request him to name the author of his death.
+If the ghost, as sometimes happens, makes no reply, the
+sorcerer will jog his memory by calling out the name of
+some suspected person; and should the ghost still be silent,
+the wizard will name another and another, till at the mention
+of one name a tapping sound is heard like the drumming
+of fingers on a board or on a mat The sound may
+proceed from the house or from a pearl shell which the
+sorcerer holds in his hand; but come from where it may, it
+is taken as a certain proof that the man who has just been
+named did the deed, and he is dealt with accordingly.
+Many a poor wretch in New Britain has been killed and
+eaten on no other evidence than that of the fatal tapping.<a id="footnotetag641" name="footnotetag641"></a><a href="#footnote641"><sup>641</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page403" id="page403"></a>[pg 403]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Burial customs in the Duke of York Island. Preservation of
+the skull.</p>
+
+<p>When a man of mark is buried in the Duke of York
+Island, the masters of sorcery take leaves, spit on them, and
+throw them, with a number of poisonous things, into the
+grave, uttering at the same time loud imprecations on the
+wicked enchanter who has killed their friend. Then they
+go and bathe, and returning they fall to cursing again; and
+if the miscreant survived the first imprecations, it is regarded
+as perfectly certain that he will fall a victim to the second.
+Sometimes, when the deceased was a chief distinguished for
+bravery and wisdom, his corpse would be exposed on a high
+platform in front of his house and left there to rot, while his
+relatives sat around and inhaled the stench, conceiving that
+with it they absorbed the courage and skill of the departed
+worthy. Some of them would even anoint their bodies with
+the drippings from the putrefying corpse for the same
+purpose. The women also made fires that the ghost might
+warm himself at them. When the head became detached
+from the trunk, it was carefully preserved by the next of
+kin, while the other remains were buried in a shallow grave
+in the house. All the female relatives blackened their
+dusky faces for a long time, after which the skull was put
+on a platform, a great feast was held, and dances were
+performed for many nights in its honour. Then at last the
+spirit of the dead man, which till that time was supposed to
+be lingering about his old abode, took his departure, and his
+friends troubled themselves about him no more.<a id="footnotetag642" name="footnotetag642"></a><a href="#footnote642"><sup>642</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Prayers to the spirits of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>The souls of the dead are always regarded by these
+people as beings whose help can be invoked on special
+occasions, such as fighting or fishing or any other matter
+of importance; and since the spirits whom they invoke are
+always those of their own kindred they are presumed to
+be friendly to the petitioners. The objects for which formal
+prayers are addressed to the souls of ancestors appear to be
+always temporal benefits, such as victory over enemies and
+plenty of food; prayers for the promotion of moral virtue
+are seemingly unknown. For example, if a woman laboured
+hard in childbirth, she was thought to be bewitched, and
+prayers would be offered to the spirits of dead ancestors to
+counteract the spell. Again, young men are instructed by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page404" id="page404"></a>[pg 404]</span>
+their elders in the useful art of cursing the enemies of the
+tribe; and among a rich variety of imprecations an old man
+will invoke the spirit of his brother, father, or uncle, or all of
+them, to put their fingers into the ears of the enemy that
+he may not hear, to cover his eyes that he may not see, and
+to stop his mouth that he may not cry for help, but may
+fall an easy prey to the curser and his friends.<a id="footnotetag643" name="footnotetag643"></a><a href="#footnote643"><sup>643</sup></a> More
+amiable and not less effectual are the prayers offered to the
+spirits of the dead over a sick man. At the mention of each
+name in the prayer the supplicants make a chirping or
+hissing sound, and rub lime over the patient. Before administering
+medicine they pray over it to the spirits of the
+dead; then the patient gulps it down, thus absorbing the
+virtue of the medicine and of the prayer in one. In New
+Britain they reinforce the prayers to the dead in time of
+need by wearing the jawbone of the deceased; and in the
+Duke of York Island people often wear a tooth or some
+hair of a departed relative, not merely as a mark of respect,
+but as a magical means of obtaining supernatural help.<a id="footnotetag644" name="footnotetag644"></a><a href="#footnote644"><sup>644</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">North Melanesian views as to the land of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Sooner or later the souls of all the North Melanesian
+dead take their departure for the spirit land. But the
+information which has reached the living as to that far
+country is at once vague and inconsistent. They call it
+<i>Matana nion</i>, but whereabout it lies they cannot for the
+most part precisely tell. All they know for certain is that
+it is far away, and that there is always some particular spot
+in the neighbourhood from which the souls take their
+departure; for example, the Duke of York ghosts invariably
+start from the little island of Nuruan, near Mioko. Wherever
+it may be, the land of souls is divided into compartments;
+people who have died of sickness or witchcraft go
+to one place, and people who have been killed in battle
+go to another. They do not go unattended; for when a
+man dies two friends sleep beside his corpse the first night,
+one on each side, and their spirits are believed to accompany
+the soul of the dead man to the spirit land. They say that
+on their arrival in the far country, betel-nut is presented to
+them all, but the two living men refuse to partake of it,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page405" id="page405"></a>[pg 405]</span>
+because they know that were they to eat it they would
+return no more to the land of the living. When they do
+return, they have often, as might be expected, strange tales
+to tell of what they saw among the ghosts. The principal
+personage in the other world is called the "keeper of souls."
+It is said that once on a time the masterful ghost of a dead
+chief attempted to usurp the post of warden of the dead; in
+pursuance of this ambitious project he attacked the warden
+with a tomahawk and cut off one of his legs, but the amputated
+limb immediately reunited itself with the body; and a
+second amputation was followed by the same disappointing
+result. Life in the other world is reported to be very like
+life in this world. Some people find it very dismal, and
+others very beautiful. Those who were rich here will be
+rich there, and those who were poor on earth will be poor
+in Hades. As to any moral retribution which may overtake
+evil-doers in the life to come, their ideas are very vague;
+only they are sure that the ghosts of the niggardly will be
+punished by being dumped very hard against the buttress-roots
+of chestnut-trees. They say, too, that all breaches of
+etiquette or of the ordinary customs of the country will
+meet with certain appropriate punishments in the spirit
+land. When the soul has thus done penance, it takes
+possession of the body of some animal, for instance, the
+flying-fox. Hence a native is much alarmed if he should
+be sitting under a tree from which a flying-fox has been
+frightened away. Should anything drop from the bat or
+from the tree on which it was hanging, he would look on it
+as an omen of good or ill according to the nature of the
+thing which fell on or near him. If it were useless or dirty,
+he would certainly apprehend some serious misfortune.
+Sometimes when a man dies and his soul arrives in the
+spirit land, his friends do not want him there and drive him
+back to earth, so he comes to life again. That is the
+explanation which the natives give of what we call the
+recovery of consciousness after a faint or swoon.<a id="footnotetag645" name="footnotetag645"></a><a href="#footnote645"><sup>645</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The land of the dead. State of the dead in the other world
+supposed to depend on the amount of money they left in this one.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the natives of the Gazelle Peninsula in New
+Britain imagine that the home of departed spirits is in
+Nakanei, the part of the coast to which they sail to get
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page406" id="page406"></a>[pg 406]</span>
+their shell money. Others suppose that it is in the islands
+off Cape Takes. So when they are sailing past these islands
+they dip the paddles softly in the water, and observe a death-like
+stillness, cowering down in the canoes, lest the ghosts
+should spy them and do them a mischief. At the entrance
+to these happy isles is posted a stern watchman to see that
+no improper person sneaks into them. To every ghost that
+arrives he puts three questions, "Who are you? Where do
+you come from? How much shell money did you leave
+behind you?" On his answers to these three questions
+hangs the fate of the ghost. If he left much money, he is
+free to enter the realm of bliss, where he will pass the time
+with other happy souls smoking and eating and enjoying
+other sensual delights. But if he left little or no money, he
+is banished the earthly paradise and sent home to roam
+like a wild beast in the forest, battening on leaves and filth.
+With bitter sighs and groans he prowls about the villages at
+night and seeks to avenge himself by scaring or plaguing
+the survivors. To stay his hunger and appease his wrath
+relatives or friends will sometimes set forth food for him to
+devour. Yet even for such an impecunious soul there is hope;
+for if somebody only takes pity on him and gives a feast in
+his honour and distributes shell money to the guests, the
+ghost may return to the islands of the blest, and the door
+will be thrown open to him.<a id="footnotetag646" name="footnotetag646"></a><a href="#footnote646"><sup>646</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fiji and the Fijians.</p>
+
+<p>So much for the belief in immortality as it is reported
+to exist among the Northern Melanesians of New Britain
+and the Bismarck Archipelago. We now pass to the consideration
+of a similar belief among another people of the
+same stock, who have been longer known to Europe, the
+Fijians. The archipelago which they occupy lies to the
+east of the New Hebrides and forms in fact the most easterly
+outpost of the black Melanesian race in the Pacific. Beyond
+it to the eastward are situated the smaller archipelagoes
+of Samoa and Tonga, inhabited by branches of the brown
+Polynesian race, whose members are scattered over the
+islands of the Pacific Ocean from Hawaii in the north to
+New Zealand in the south. Of all the branches of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page407" id="page407"></a>[pg 407]</span>
+Melanesian stock the Fijians at the date of their discovery
+by Europeans appear to have made the greatest advance in
+culture, material, social, and political. "The Fijian," says
+one who knew him long and intimately, "takes no mean
+place among savages in the social scale. Long before the
+white man visited his shores he had made very considerable
+progress towards civilisation. His intersexual code had
+advanced to the 'patriarchal stage': he was a skilful and
+diligent husbandman, who carried out extensive and laborious
+agricultural operations: he built good houses, whose interior
+he ornamented with no little taste, carved his weapons in
+graceful and intricate forms, manufactured excellent pottery,
+beat out from the inner bark of a tree a serviceable papyrus-cloth,
+upon which he printed, from blocks either carved or
+ingeniously pieced together, elegant and elaborate patterns
+in fast colours; and, with tools no better than a stone
+hatchet, a pointed shell, and a firestick, he constructed large
+canoes capable of carrying more than a hundred warriors
+across the open sea."<a id="footnotetag647" name="footnotetag647"></a><a href="#footnote647"><sup>647</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Political superiority of the Fijians over the other
+Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p>Politically the Fijians shewed their superiority to all the
+other Melanesians in the advance they had made towards a
+regular and organised government. While among the other
+branches of the same race government can hardly be said
+to exist, the power of chiefs being both slender and precarious,
+in Fiji the highest chiefs exercised despotic sway
+and received from Europeans the title of kings. The people
+had no voice in the state; the will of the king was generally
+law, and his person was sacred. Whatever he touched or
+wore became thereby holy and had to be made over to him;
+nobody else could afterwards touch it without danger of
+being struck dead on the spot as if by an electric shock.
+One king took advantage of this superstition by dressing up
+an English sailor in his royal robes and sending him about
+to throw his sweeping train over any article of food, whether
+dead or alive, which he might chance to come near. The
+things so touched were at once conveyed to the king without
+a word of explanation being required or a single remonstrance
+uttered. Some of the kings laid claim to a divine origin
+and on the strength of the claim exacted and received from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page408" id="page408"></a>[pg 408]</span>
+their subjects the respect due to deities. In these exorbitant
+pretensions they were greatly strengthened by the institution
+of taboo, which lent the sanction of religion to every exertion
+of arbitrary power.<a id="footnotetag648" name="footnotetag648"></a><a href="#footnote648"><sup>648</sup></a> Corresponding with the growth of
+monarchy was the well-marked gradation of social ranks
+which prevailed in the various tribes from the king downwards
+through chiefs, warriors, and landholders, to slaves.
+The resulting political constitution has been compared to
+the old feudal system of Europe.<a id="footnotetag649" name="footnotetag649"></a><a href="#footnote649"><sup>649</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Means of subsistence of the Fijians. Ferocity and depravity
+of the Fijians.</p>
+
+<p>Like the other peoples of the Melanesian stock the
+Fijians subsist chiefly by agriculture, raising many sorts of
+esculent fruits and roots, particularly yams, taro, plantains,
+bread-fruit, sweet potatoes, bananas, coco-nuts, ivi nuts, and
+sugar-cane; but the chief proportion of their food is derived
+from yams (<i>Dioscorea</i>), of which they cultivate five or six
+varieties.<a id="footnotetag650" name="footnotetag650"></a><a href="#footnote650"><sup>650</sup></a> It has been observed that "the increase of
+cultivated plants is regular on receding from the Hawaiian
+group up to Fiji, where roots and fruits are found that are
+unknown on the more eastern islands."<a id="footnotetag651" name="footnotetag651"></a><a href="#footnote651"><sup>651</sup></a> Yet the Fijians
+in their native state, like all other Melanesian and Polynesian
+peoples, were entirely ignorant of the cereals; and in the
+opinion of a competent observer the consequent defect in
+their diet has contributed to the serious defects in their
+national character. The cereals, he tells us, are the staple
+food of all races that have left their mark in history; and
+on the other hand "the apathy and indolence of the Fijians
+arise from their climate, their diet and their communal
+institutions. The climate is too kind to stimulate them to
+exertion, their food imparts no staying power. The soil
+gives the means of existence for every man without effort,
+and the communal institutions destroy the instinct of
+accumulation."<a id="footnotetag652" name="footnotetag652"></a><a href="#footnote652"><sup>652</sup></a> Nor are apathy and indolence the only or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page409" id="page409"></a>[pg 409]</span>
+the worst features in the character of these comparatively
+advanced savages. Their ferocity, cruelty, and moral
+depravity are depicted in dark colours by those who had
+the best opportunity of knowing them in the old days before
+their savagery was mitigated by contact with a milder
+religious faith and a higher civilisation. "In contemplating
+the character of this extraordinary portion of mankind,"
+says one observer, "the mind is struck with wonder and
+awe at the mixture of a complicated and carefully conducted
+political system, highly finished manners, and ceremonious
+politeness, with a ferocity and practice of savage vices which
+is probably unparalleled in any other part of the world."<a id="footnotetag653" name="footnotetag653"></a><a href="#footnote653"><sup>653</sup></a>
+One of the first civilised men to gain an intimate acquaintance
+with the Fijians draws a melancholy contrast between the
+baseness and vileness of the people and the loveliness of the
+land in which they live.<a id="footnotetag654" name="footnotetag654"></a><a href="#footnote654"><sup>654</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Scenery of the Fijian islands.</p>
+
+<p>For the Fijian islands are exceedingly beautiful. They
+are of volcanic origin, mostly high and mountainous, but
+intersected by picturesque valleys, clothed with woods, and
+festooned with the most luxuriant tropical vegetation.
+"Among their attractions," we are told, "are high mountains,
+abrupt precipices, conical hills, fantastic turrets and crags of
+rock frowning down like olden battlements, vast domes,
+peaks shattered into strange forms; native towns on eyrie
+cliffs, apparently inaccessible; and deep ravines, down which
+some mountain stream, after long murmuring in its stony
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page410" id="page410"></a>[pg 410]</span>
+bed, falls headlong, glittering as a silver line on a block of
+jet, or spreading like a sheet of glass over bare rocks which
+refuse it a channel. Here also are found the softer features
+of rich vales, cocoa-nut groves, clumps of dark chestnuts,
+stately palms and bread-fruit, patches of graceful bananas
+or well-tilled taro-beds, mingling in unchecked luxuriance,
+and forming, with the wild reef-scenery of the girdling shore,
+its beating surf, and far-stretching ocean beyond, pictures of
+surpassing beauty."<a id="footnotetag655" name="footnotetag655"></a><a href="#footnote655"><sup>655</sup></a> Each island is encircled by a reef of
+white coral, on which the sea breaks, with a thunderous roar,
+in curling sheets of foam; while inside the reef stretches
+the lagoon, a calm lake of blue crystalline water revealing
+in its translucent depths beautiful gardens of seaweed and
+coral which fill the beholder with delighted wonder. Great
+and sudden is the contrast experienced by the mariner when
+he passes in a moment from the tossing, heaving, roaring
+billows without into the unbroken calm of the quiet haven
+within the barrier reef.<a id="footnotetag656" name="footnotetag656"></a><a href="#footnote656"><sup>656</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian doctrine of souls.</p>
+
+<p>Like most savages, the Fijians believed that man is
+animated by a soul which quits his body temporarily in
+sleep and permanently at death, to survive for a longer or a
+shorter time in a disembodied state thereafter. Indeed, they
+attributed souls to animals, vegetables, stones, tools, houses,
+canoes, and many other things, allowing that all of them may
+become immortal.<a id="footnotetag657" name="footnotetag657"></a><a href="#footnote657"><sup>657</sup></a> On this point I will quote the evidence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page411" id="page411"></a>[pg 411]</span>
+of one of the earliest and best authorities on the customs
+and beliefs of the South Sea Islanders. "There seems,"
+says William Mariner, "to be a wide difference between the
+opinions of the natives in the different clusters of the South
+Sea islands respecting the future existence of the soul.
+Whilst the Tonga doctrine limits immortality to chiefs,
+<i>matabooles</i>, and at most, to <i>mooas</i>, the Fiji doctrine, with
+abundant liberality, extends it to all mankind, to all brute
+animals, to all vegetables, and even to stones and mineral
+substances. If an animal or a plant die, its soul immediately
+goes to Bolotoo; if a stone or any other substance is broken,
+immortality is equally its reward; nay, artificial bodies have
+equal good luck with men, and hogs, and yams. If an axe
+or a chisel is worn out or broken up, away flies its soul for
+the service of the gods. If a house is taken down, or any
+way destroyed, its immortal part will find a situation on the
+plains of Bolotoo; and, to confirm this doctrine, the Fiji
+people can show you a sort of natural well, or deep hole in
+the ground, at one of their islands, across the bottom of
+which runs a stream of water, in which you may clearly
+perceive the souls of men and women, beasts and plants, of
+stocks and stones, canoes and houses, and of all the broken
+utensils of this frail world, swimming or rather tumbling
+along one over the other pell-mell into the regions of immortality.
+Such is the Fiji philosophy, but the Tonga people
+deny it, unwilling to think that the residence of the gods
+should be encumbered with so much useless rubbish. The
+natives of Otaheite entertain similar notions respecting these
+things, viz. that brutes, plants, and stones exist hereafter,
+but it is not mentioned that they extend the idea to objects
+of human invention."<a id="footnotetag658" name="footnotetag658"></a><a href="#footnote658"><sup>658</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Reported Fijian doctrine of two human souls, a light one and
+a dark one.</p>
+
+<p>According to one account, the Fijians imagined that
+every man has two souls, a dark soul, consisting of his
+shadow, and a light soul, consisting of his reflection in water
+or a looking-glass: the dark soul departs at death to Hades,
+while the light soul stays near the place where he died or was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page412" id="page412"></a>[pg 412]</span>
+killed. "Probably," says Thomas Williams, "this doctrine
+of shadows has to do with the notion of inanimate objects
+having spirits. I once placed a good-looking native suddenly
+before a mirror. He stood delighted. 'Now,' said he, softly,
+'I can see into the world of spirits.'"<a id="footnotetag659" name="footnotetag659"></a><a href="#footnote659"><sup>659</sup></a> However, according
+to another good authority this distinction of two human souls
+rests merely on a misapprehension of the Fijian word for
+shadow, <i>yaloyalo</i>, which is a reduplication of <i>yalo</i>, the word
+for soul.<a id="footnotetag660" name="footnotetag660"></a><a href="#footnote660"><sup>660</sup></a> Apparently the Fijians pictured to themselves the
+human soul as a miniature of the man himself. This may
+be inferred from the customs observed at the death of a chief
+among the Nakelo tribe. When a chief dies, certain men
+who are the hereditary undertakers call him, as he lies, oiled
+and ornamented, on fine mats, saying, "Rise, sir, the chief,
+and let us be going. The day has come over the land."
+Then they conduct him to the river side, where the ghostly
+ferryman comes to ferry Nakelo ghosts across the stream.
+As they attend the chief on his last journey, they hold their
+great fans close to the ground to shelter him, because, as one
+of them explained to a missionary, "His soul is only a little
+child."<a id="footnotetag661" name="footnotetag661"></a><a href="#footnote661"><sup>661</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Absence of the soul in sleep. Catching the soul of a rascal
+in a scarf.</p>
+
+<p>The souls of some men were supposed to quit their
+bodies in sleep and enter into the bodies of other sleepers,
+troubling and disturbing them. A soul that had contracted
+this bad habit was called a <i>yalombula</i>. When any one
+fainted or died, his vagrant spirit might, so the Fijians
+thought, be induced to come back by calling after it. Sometimes,
+on awaking from a nap, a stout man might be seen
+lying at full length and bawling out lustily for the return of
+his own soul.<a id="footnotetag662" name="footnotetag662"></a><a href="#footnote662"><sup>662</sup></a> In the windward islands of Fiji there used
+to be an ordeal called <i>yalovaki</i> which was much dreaded by
+evil-doers. When the evidence was strong against suspected
+criminals, and they stubbornly refused to confess, the chief,
+who was also the judge, would call for a scarf, with which "to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page413" id="page413"></a>[pg 413]</span>
+catch away the soul of the rogue." A threat of the rack
+could not have been more effectual. The culprit generally confessed
+at the sight and even the mention of the light instrument;
+but if he did not, the scarf would be waved over his
+head until his soul was caught in it like a moth or a fly, after
+which it would be carefully folded up and nailed to the small
+end of a chief's canoe, and for want of his soul the suspected
+person would pine and die.<a id="footnotetag663" name="footnotetag663"></a><a href="#footnote663"><sup>663</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian dread of sorcery and witchcraft.</p>
+
+<p>Further, the Fijians, like many other savages, stood in
+great terror of witchcraft, believing that the sorcerer had it
+in his power to kill them by the practice of his nefarious
+art. "Of all their superstitions," says Thomas Williams,
+"this exerts the strongest influence on the minds of the
+people. Men who laugh at the pretensions of the priest
+tremble at the power of the wizard; and those who become
+christians lose this fear last of all the relics of their
+heathenism."<a id="footnotetag664" name="footnotetag664"></a><a href="#footnote664"><sup>664</sup></a> Indeed "native agents of the mission who,
+in the discharge of their duty, have boldly faced death by
+open violence, have been driven from their posts by their
+dread of the sorcerer; and my own observation confirms the
+statement of more than one observer that savages not unfrequently
+die of fear when they think themselves bewitched."<a id="footnotetag665" name="footnotetag665"></a><a href="#footnote665"><sup>665</sup></a>
+Professed practitioners of witchcraft were dreaded by all
+classes, and by destroying mutual confidence they annulled
+the comfort and shook the security of society. Almost all
+sudden deaths were set down to their machinations. A
+common mode of effecting their object was to obtain a
+shred of the clothing of the man they intended to bewitch,
+some refuse of his food, a lock of his hair, or some
+other personal relic; having got it they wrapped it up
+in certain leaves, and then cooked or buried it or hung
+it up in the forest; whereupon the victim was supposed
+to die of a wasting disease. Another way was to bury
+a coco-nut, with the eye upward, beneath the hearth of the
+temple, on which a fire was kept constantly burning; and as
+the life of the nut was destroyed, so the health of the person
+whom the nut represented would fail till death put an end to
+his sufferings. "The native imagination," we are told, "is so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page414" id="page414"></a>[pg 414]</span>
+absolutely under the control of fear of these charms, that
+persons, hearing that they were the object of such spells, have
+lain down on their mats, and died through fear."<a id="footnotetag666" name="footnotetag666"></a><a href="#footnote666"><sup>666</sup></a> To guard
+against the fell craft of the magician the people resorted to
+many precautions. A man who suspected another of plotting
+against him would be careful not to eat in his presence
+or at all events to leave no morsel of food behind, lest the
+other should secrete it and bewitch him by it; and for the
+same reason people disposed of their garments so that no
+part could be removed; and when they had their hair cut
+they generally hid the clippings in the thatch of their own
+houses. Some even built themselves a small hut and surrounded
+it with a moat, believing that a little water had
+power to neutralise the charms directed against them.<a id="footnotetag667" name="footnotetag667"></a><a href="#footnote667"><sup>667</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The fear of sorcery has had the beneficial effect of
+enforcing habits of personal cleanliness.</p>
+
+<p>"In the face of such instances as these," says one who
+knows the Fijians well, "it demands some courage to assert
+that upon the whole the belief in witchcraft was formerly
+a positive advantage to the community. It filled, in fact,
+the place of a system of sanitation. The wizard's tools
+consisting in those waste matters that are inimical to health,
+every man was his own scavenger. From birth to old age
+a man was governed by this one fear; he went into the sea,
+the graveyard or the depths of the forest to satisfy his
+natural wants; he burned his cast-off <i>malo</i>; he gave every
+fragment left over from his food to the pigs; he concealed
+even the clippings of his hair in the thatch of his house.
+This ever-present fear even drove women in the western
+districts out into the forest for the birth of their children,
+where fire destroyed every trace of their lying-in. Until
+Christianity broke it down, the villages were kept clean;
+there were no festering rubbish-heaps nor filthy <i>raras</i>."<a id="footnotetag668" name="footnotetag668"></a><a href="#footnote668"><sup>668</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian dread of ghosts. Uproar made to drive away ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Of apparitions the Fijians used to be very much afraid.
+They believed that the ghosts of the dead appeared often
+and afflicted mankind, especially in sleep. The spirits of
+slain men, unchaste women, and women who died in
+childbed were most dreaded. After a death people have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page415" id="page415"></a>[pg 415]</span>
+been known to hide themselves for a few days, until they
+supposed the soul of the departed was at rest. Also they
+shunned the places where people had been murdered, particularly
+when it rained, because then the moans of the
+ghost could be heard as he sat up, trying to relieve his pain
+by resting his poor aching head on the palms of his hands.
+Some however said that the moans were caused by the soul
+of the murderer knocking down the soul of his victim,
+whenever the wretched spirit attempted to get up.<a id="footnotetag669" name="footnotetag669"></a><a href="#footnote669"><sup>669</sup></a> When
+Fijians passed a spot in the forest where a man had been
+clubbed to death, they would sometimes throw leaves on it
+as a mark of homage to his spirit, believing that they would
+soon be killed themselves if they failed in thus paying their
+respects to the ghost.<a id="footnotetag670" name="footnotetag670"></a><a href="#footnote670"><sup>670</sup></a> And after they had buried a man
+alive, as they very often did, these savages used at nightfall
+to make a great din with large bamboos, trumpet-shells, and
+so forth, in order to drive away his spirit and deter him
+from loitering about his old home. "The uproar is always
+held in the late habitation of the deceased, the reason being
+that as no one knows for a certainty what reception he
+will receive in the invisible world, if it is not according
+to his expectations he will most likely repent of his bargain
+and wish to come back. For that reason they make a
+great noise to frighten him away, and dismantle his former
+habitation of everything that is attractive, and clothe it with
+everything that to their ideas seems repulsive."<a id="footnotetag671" name="footnotetag671"></a><a href="#footnote671"><sup>671</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Killing a ghost.</p>
+
+<p>However, stronger measures were sometimes resorted to.
+It was believed to be possible to kill a troublesome ghost.
+Once it happened that many chiefs feasted in the house of
+Tanoa, King of Ambau. In the course of the evening one
+of them related how he had slain a neighbouring chief.
+That very night, having occasion to leave the house, he
+saw, as he believed, the ghost of his victim, hurled his club
+at him, and killed him stone dead. On his return to the
+house he roused the king and the rest of the inmates from
+their slumbers, and recounted his exploit. The matter was
+deemed of high importance, and they all sat on it in solemn
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page416" id="page416"></a>[pg 416]</span>
+conclave. Next morning a search was made for the club
+on the scene of the murder; it was found and carried with
+great pomp and parade to the nearest temple, where it was
+laid up for a perpetual memorial. Everybody was firmly
+persuaded that by this swashing blow the ghost had been
+not only killed but annihilated.<a id="footnotetag672" name="footnotetag672"></a><a href="#footnote672"><sup>672</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Dazing the ghost of a grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>A more humane method of dealing with an importunate
+ghost used to be adopted in Vanua-levu, the largest but one
+of the Fijian islands. In that island, as a consequence,
+it is said, of reckoning kinship through the mother, a child
+was considered to be more closely related to his grandfather
+than to his father. Hence when a grandfather died, his
+ghost naturally desired to carry off the soul of his grandchild
+with him to the spirit land. The wish was creditable
+to the warmth of his domestic affection, but if the
+survivors preferred to keep the child with them a little
+longer in this vale of tears, they took steps to baffle
+grandfather's ghost. For this purpose when the old man's
+body was stretched on the bier and raised on the shoulders
+of half-a-dozen stout young fellows, the mother's brother
+would take the grandchild in his arms and begin running
+round and round the corpse. Round and round he ran,
+and grandfather's ghost looked after him, craning his neck
+from side to side and twisting it round and round in the
+vain attempt to follow the rapid movements of the runner.
+When the ghost was supposed to be quite giddy with this
+unwonted exercise, the mother's brother made a sudden
+dart away with the child in his arms, the bearers fairly
+bolted with the corpse to the grave, and before he could
+collect his scattered wits grandfather was safely landed in
+his long home.<a id="footnotetag673" name="footnotetag673"></a><a href="#footnote673"><sup>673</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Special relation of grandfather to grandchild. Soul of a
+grandfather reborn in his grandchildren.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fison, who reports this quaint mode of bilking a
+ghost, explains the special attachment of the grandfather
+to his grandchild by the rule of female descent which survives
+in Vanua-levu; and it is true that where exogamy
+prevails along with female descent, a child regularly belongs
+to the exogamous class of its grandfather and not of its
+father and hence may be regarded as more closely akin to
+the grandfather than to the father. But on the other hand
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page417" id="page417"></a>[pg 417]</span>
+it is to be observed that exogamy at present is unknown in
+Fiji, and at most its former prevalence in the islands can
+only be indirectly inferred from relics of totemism and from
+the existence of the classificatory system of relationship.<a id="footnotetag674" name="footnotetag674"></a><a href="#footnote674"><sup>674</sup></a>
+Perhaps the real reason why in Vanua-levu a dead grandfather
+is so anxious to carry off the soul of his living
+grandchild lies nearer to hand in the apparently widespread
+belief that the soul of the grandfather is actually reborn in
+his grandchild. For example, in Nukahiva, one of the
+Marquesas Islands, every one "is persuaded that the soul
+of a grandfather is transmitted by nature into the body of
+his grandchildren; and that, if an unfruitful wife were to
+place herself under the corpse of her deceased grandfather,
+she would be sure to become pregnant."<a id="footnotetag675" name="footnotetag675"></a><a href="#footnote675"><sup>675</sup></a> Again, the
+Kayans of Borneo "believe in the reincarnation of the soul,
+although this belief is not clearly harmonised with the belief
+in the life in another world. It is generally believed that
+the soul of a grandfather may pass into one of his grandchildren,
+and an old man will try to secure the passage of
+his soul to a favourite grandchild by holding it above his
+head from time to time. The grandfather usually gives up
+his name to his eldest grandson, and reassumes the original
+name of his childhood with the prefix or title <i>Laki</i>, and the
+custom seems to be connected with this belief or hope."<a id="footnotetag676" name="footnotetag676"></a><a href="#footnote676"><sup>676</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">A dead grandfather may reasonably reclaim his own soul from
+his grandchild.</p>
+
+<p>Now where such a belief is held, it seems reasonable
+enough that a dead grandfather should reclaim his own soul
+for his personal use before he sets out for the spirit land;
+else how could he expect to be admitted to that blissful
+abode if on arriving at the portal he were obliged to explain
+to the porter that he had no soul about him, having
+left that indispensable article behind in the person of his
+grandchild? "Then you had better go back and fetch it.
+There is no admission at this gate for people without souls."
+Such might very well be the porter's retort; and foreseeing
+it any man of ordinary prudence would take the precaution
+of recovering his lost spiritual property before presenting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page418" id="page418"></a>[pg 418]</span>
+himself to the Warden of the Dead. This theory would
+sufficiently account for the otherwise singular behaviour of
+grandfather's ghost in Vanua-levu. At the same time it
+must be admitted that the theory of the reincarnation of a
+grandfather in a grandson would be suggested more readily
+in a society where the custom of exogamy was combined
+with female descent than in one where the same custom
+coexisted with male descent; since, given exogamy and
+female descent, grandfather and grandson regularly belong
+to the same exogamous class, whereas father and son never
+do so.<a id="footnotetag677" name="footnotetag677"></a><a href="#footnote677"><sup>677</sup></a> Thus Mr. Fison may after all be right in referring
+the partiality of a Fijian grandfather for his grandson in
+the last resort to a system of exogamy and female kinship.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote627" name="footnote627"></a><b>Footnote 627:</b><a href="#footnotetag627"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, D.D., <i>Melanesians and Polynesians</i>
+(London, 1910), pp. 23 <i>sq.</i>, 125, 320 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote628" name="footnote628"></a><b>Footnote 628:</b><a href="#footnotetag628"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 294 <i>sqq.</i>; P. A.
+Kleintitschen, <i>Die K&uuml;stenbewohner der Gazellehalbinsel</i> (Hiltrup
+bei M&uuml;nster, <span class="sc">N.D.</span>), pp. 90 <i>sqq.</i> The shell money is
+called <i>tambu</i> in New Britain, <i>diwara</i> in the Duke of York
+Island, and <i>aringit</i> in New Ireland.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote629" name="footnote629"></a><b>Footnote 629:</b><a href="#footnotetag629"> (return) </a><p>Rev. G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 307, 313, 435, 436.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote630" name="footnote630"></a><b>Footnote 630:</b><a href="#footnotetag630"> (return) </a><p> Rev. G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 270 <i>sq.</i>,
+compare pp. 127, 200.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote631" name="footnote631"></a><b>Footnote 631:</b><a href="#footnotetag631"> (return) </a><p>Rev. G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. v., 18.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote632" name="footnote632"></a><b>Footnote 632:</b><a href="#footnotetag632"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 141 <i>sq.</i>, 144, 145,
+190-193.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote633" name="footnote633"></a><b>Footnote 633:</b><a href="#footnotetag633"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 142, 192, 385, 386
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote634" name="footnote634"></a><b>Footnote 634:</b><a href="#footnotetag634"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 390. The custom of cremating
+the dead in New Ireland is described more fully by Mr. R. Parkinson, who
+says that the life-sized figures which are burned with the corpse
+represent the deceased (<i>Dreissig Jahre in der S&uuml;dsee</i>, pp. 273
+<i>sqq.</i>). In the central part of New Ireland the dead are buried in
+the earth; afterwards the bones are dug up and thrown into the sea. See
+Albert Hahl, "Das mittlere Neumecklenburg," <i>Globus</i>, xci. (1907)
+p. 314.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote635" name="footnote635"></a><b>Footnote 635:</b><a href="#footnotetag635"> (return) </a><p> R. Parkinson, <i>Dreissig Jahre in der S&uuml;dsee</i>
+(Stuttgart, 1907) p. 78; P. A. Kleintitschen, <i>Die K&uuml;stenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel</i> (Hiltrup bei M&uuml;nster, <span class="sc">N.D.</span>), p. 222.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote636" name="footnote636"></a><b>Footnote 636:</b><a href="#footnotetag636"> (return) </a><p> Mgr. Coupp&eacute;, "En Nouvelle-Pom&eacute;ranie," <i>Les Missions
+Catholiques</i>, xxiii. (1891) pp. 364 <i>sq.</i>; J. Graf Pfeil,
+<i>Studien und Beobachtungen aus der S&uuml;dsee</i> (Brunswick, 1899), p.
+79.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote637" name="footnote637"></a><b>Footnote 637:</b><a href="#footnotetag637"> (return) </a><p>R. Parkinson, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 81.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote638" name="footnote638"></a><b>Footnote 638:</b><a href="#footnotetag638"> (return) </a><p> <i>P.</i> Rascher, <i>M.S.C.</i>, "Die Sulka, ein Beitrag
+zur Ethnographic Neu-Pommern," <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Anthropologie</i>, xxix.
+(1904) pp. 214 <i>sq.</i>, 216; R. Parkinson, <i>Dreissig Jahre in der
+S&uuml;dsee</i>, pp. 185-187.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote639" name="footnote639"></a><b>Footnote 639:</b><a href="#footnotetag639"> (return) </a><p>R. Parkinson, <i>Dreissig Jahre in der S&uuml;dsee</i>, pp. 404-406.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote640" name="footnote640"></a><b>Footnote 640:</b><a href="#footnotetag640"> (return) </a><p>R. Parkinson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 441 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote641" name="footnote641"></a><b>Footnote 641:</b><a href="#footnotetag641"> (return) </a><p> G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 176, 183, 385 <i>sq.</i> As
+to the wide-spread belief in New Britain that what we call natural
+deaths are brought about by sorcery, see further <i>P.</i> Rascher,
+<i>M.S.C.</i>, "Die Sulka, ein Beitrag zur Ethnographic Neu-Pommern,"
+<i>Archiv f&uuml;r Ethnographie</i>, xxix. (1904) pp. 221 <i>sq.</i>; R.
+Parkinson, <i>Dreissig Jahre in der S&uuml;dsee</i>, pp. 117 <i>sq.</i>
+199-201; P. A. Kleintitschen, <i>Die K&uuml;sten-bewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel</i> (Hiltrup bei M&uuml;nster, <span class="sc">N.D.</span>), p. 215.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote642" name="footnote642"></a><b>Footnote 642:</b><a href="#footnotetag642"> (return) </a><p>G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 387-390.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote643" name="footnote643"></a><b>Footnote 643:</b><a href="#footnotetag643"> (return) </a><p>G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 35, 89, 196, 201.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote644" name="footnote644"></a><b>Footnote 644:</b><a href="#footnotetag644"> (return) </a><p>G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 177, 183, 184.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote645" name="footnote645"></a><b>Footnote 645:</b><a href="#footnotetag645"> (return) </a><p>G. Brown, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 192-195.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote646" name="footnote646"></a><b>Footnote 646:</b><a href="#footnotetag646"> (return) </a><p> P. A. Kleintitschen, <i>Die K&uuml;stenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel</i>, pp. 225 <i>sq.</i> Compare R. Parkinson,
+<i>Dreissig Jahre in der S&uuml;dsee</i>, p. 79.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote647" name="footnote647"></a><b>Footnote 647:</b><a href="#footnotetag647"> (return) </a><p> Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i> (London, 1904),
+p. xiv.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote648" name="footnote648"></a><b>Footnote 648:</b><a href="#footnotetag648"> (return) </a><p> Thomas Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, Second
+Edition (London, 1860), i. 22-26.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote649" name="footnote649"></a><b>Footnote 649:</b><a href="#footnotetag649"> (return) </a><p> Charles Wilkes, <i>Narrative of the United States
+Exploring Expedition</i>, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 77; Th.
+Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 18.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote650" name="footnote650"></a><b>Footnote 650:</b><a href="#footnotetag650"> (return) </a><p> Charles Wilkes, <i>Narrative of the United States
+Exploring Expedition</i>, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 332
+<i>sqq.</i>; Thomas Williams <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 60 <i>sqq.</i>; Berthold Seeman, <i>Viti</i>
+(Cambridge, 1862), pp. 279 <i>sqq.</i>; Basil Thomson, <i>The
+Fijians</i> (London, 1908), pp. 335 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote651" name="footnote651"></a><b>Footnote 651:</b><a href="#footnotetag651"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 60 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote652" name="footnote652"></a><b>Footnote 652:</b><a href="#footnotetag652"> (return) </a><p> Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, pp. 338, 389
+<i>sq.</i> The Fijians are in the main vegetarians, but the vegetables
+which they cultivate "contain a large proportion of starch and water,
+and are deficient in proteids. Moreover, the supply of the principal
+staples is irregular, being greatly affected by variable seasons, and
+the attacks of insects and vermin. Very few of them will bear keeping,
+and almost all of them must be eaten when ripe. As the food is of low
+nutritive value, a native always eats to repletion. In times of plenty a
+full-grown man will eat as much as ten pounds' weight of vegetables in
+the day; he will seldom be satisfied with less than five. A great
+quantity, therefore, is required to feed a very few people, and as
+everything is transported by hand, a disproportionate amount of time is
+spent in transporting food from the plantation to the consumer. The time
+spent in growing native food is also out of all proportion to its value"
+(Basil Thomson, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 334 <i>sq.</i>). The same writer
+tells us (p. 335) that it has never occurred to the Fijians to dry any
+of the fruits they grow and to grind them into flour, as is done in
+Africa.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote653" name="footnote653"></a><b>Footnote 653:</b><a href="#footnotetag653"> (return) </a><p> Capt. J. E. Erskine, <i>Journal of a Cruise among the
+Islands of the Western Pacific</i> (London, 1853), pp. 272 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote654" name="footnote654"></a><b>Footnote 654:</b><a href="#footnotetag654"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 46, 363. As to the
+cruelty and depravity of the Fijians in the old days see further Lorimer
+Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i> (London, 1904), pp. xv. <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote655" name="footnote655"></a><b>Footnote 655:</b><a href="#footnotetag655"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 6
+<i>sq.</i> As to the scenery of the Fijian archipelago see further
+<i>id.</i>, i. 4 <i>sqq.</i>; Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 46, 322;
+<i>Stanford's Compendium of Geography and Travel, Australasia</i>, vol.
+ii. <i>Malaysia and the Pacific Archipelago</i>, edited by F. H. H.
+Guillemard (London, 1894), pp. 467 <i>sqq.</i>; Miss Beatrice Grimshaw,
+<i>From Fiji to the Cannibal Islands</i> (London, 1907), pp. 43
+<i>sq.</i>, 54 <i>sq.</i>, 76-78, 106, 109 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote656" name="footnote656"></a><b>Footnote 656:</b><a href="#footnotetag656"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 5
+<i>sq.</i>, 11; Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 46 <i>sq.</i> However,
+there is a remarkable difference not only in climate but in appearance
+between the windward and the leeward sides of these islands. The
+windward side, watered by abundant showers, is covered with luxuriant
+tropical vegetation; the leeward side, receiving little rain, presents a
+comparatively barren and burnt appearance, the vegetation dying down to
+the grey hues of the boulders among which it struggles for life. Hence
+the dry leeward side is better adapted for European settlement. See Ch.
+Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 320 <i>sq.</i>; Th. Williams, <i>op.
+cit.</i> i. 10; B. Seeman, <i>Viti, an Account of a Government Mission
+to the Vitian or Fijian Islands in the years 1860-1861</i> (Cambridge,
+1862), pp. 277 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote657" name="footnote657"></a><b>Footnote 657:</b><a href="#footnotetag657"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 241; J. E. Erskine,
+<i>op. cit.</i> p. 249; B. Seeman, <i>Viti</i> (Cambridge, 1862), p.
+398.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote658" name="footnote658"></a><b>Footnote 658:</b><a href="#footnotetag658"> (return) </a><p> William Mariner, <i>An Account of the Natives of the
+Tonga Islands</i>, Second Edition (London, 1818), ii. 129 <i>sq.</i> The
+<i>matabooles</i> were a sort of honourable attendants on chiefs and
+ranked next to them in the social hierarchy; the <i>mooas</i> were the
+next class of people below the <i>matabooles</i>. See W. Mariner, <i>op.
+cit.</i> ii. 84, 86. Bolotoo or Bulu was the mythical land of the dead.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote659" name="footnote659"></a><b>Footnote 659:</b><a href="#footnotetag659"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 241.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote660" name="footnote660"></a><b>Footnote 660:</b><a href="#footnotetag660"> (return) </a><p> This is the opinion of my late friend, the Rev. Lorimer
+Fison, which he communicated to me in a letter dated 26th August, 1898.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote661" name="footnote661"></a><b>Footnote 661:</b><a href="#footnotetag661"> (return) </a><p> Communication of the late Rev. Lorimer Fison in a letter
+to me dated 3rd November, 1898. I have already published it in <i>Taboo
+and the Perils of the Soul</i>, pp. 29 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote662" name="footnote662"></a><b>Footnote 662:</b><a href="#footnotetag662"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 242; Lorimer Fison,
+<i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, pp. 163 <i>sq.</i>; <i>Taboo and the Perils
+of the Soul</i>, pp. 39 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote663" name="footnote663"></a><b>Footnote 663:</b><a href="#footnotetag663"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 250.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote664" name="footnote664"></a><b>Footnote 664:</b><a href="#footnotetag664"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 248.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote665" name="footnote665"></a><b>Footnote 665:</b><a href="#footnotetag665"> (return) </a><p>Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> p. xxxii.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote666" name="footnote666"></a><b>Footnote 666:</b><a href="#footnotetag666"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 248 <i>sq.</i>; Lorimer
+Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. xxxi. <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote667" name="footnote667"></a><b>Footnote 667:</b><a href="#footnotetag667"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 249.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote668" name="footnote668"></a><b>Footnote 668:</b><a href="#footnotetag668"> (return) </a><p> Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i> (London, 1908), p. 166.
+A <i>rara</i> is a public square (Rev. Lorimer Fison, in <i>Journal of
+the Anthropological Institute</i>, xiv. (1885) p. 17).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote669" name="footnote669"></a><b>Footnote 669:</b><a href="#footnotetag669"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 241.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote670" name="footnote670"></a><b>Footnote 670:</b><a href="#footnotetag670"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote671" name="footnote671"></a><b>Footnote 671:</b><a href="#footnotetag671"> (return) </a><p> Narrative of John Jackson, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+<i>Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific</i>
+(London, 1853), p. 477.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote672" name="footnote672"></a><b>Footnote 672:</b><a href="#footnotetag672"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 85.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote673" name="footnote673"></a><b>Footnote 673:</b><a href="#footnotetag673"> (return) </a><p>Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 168 <i>sq</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote674" name="footnote674"></a><b>Footnote 674:</b><a href="#footnotetag674"> (return) </a><p> W. H. R. Rivers, "Totemism in Fiji," <i>Man</i>, viii.
+(1908) pp. 133 <i>sqq.</i>; <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, ii. 134
+<i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote675" name="footnote675"></a><b>Footnote 675:</b><a href="#footnotetag675"> (return) </a><p> U. Lisiansky, <i>A Voyage Round the World</i> (London,
+1814), p. 89.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote676" name="footnote676"></a><b>Footnote 676:</b><a href="#footnotetag676"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, <i>The Pagan Tribes of
+Borneo</i> (London, 1912), ii. 47.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote677" name="footnote677"></a><b>Footnote 677:</b><a href="#footnotetag677"> (return) </a><p>Compare <i>Totemism and Exogamy</i>, iii. 297-299.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page419" id="page419"></a>[pg 419]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xix" id="lecture-xix"></a>LECTURE XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF EASTERN MELANESIA (FIJI) (<i>continued</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Fijian indifference to death.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of last lecture I illustrated the unquestioning
+belief which the Fijians entertain with regard to the survival
+of the human soul after death. "The native superstitions
+with regard to a future state," we are told, "go far to
+explain the apparent indifference of the people about death;
+for, while believing in an eternal existence, they shut out
+from it the idea of any moral retribution in the shape either
+of reward or punishment. The first notion concerning death
+is that of simple rest, and is thus contained in one of their
+rhymes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"Death is easy:</p>
+<p> Of what use is life?</p>
+<p class="i4">To die is rest."<a id="footnotetag678" name="footnotetag678"></a><a href="#footnote678"><sup>678</sup></a></p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p>Again, another writer, speaking of the Fijians, says that
+"in general, the passage from life to death is considered as
+one from pain to happiness, and I was informed that nine
+out of ten look forward to it with anxiety, in order to escape
+from the infirmities of old age, or the sufferings of disease."<a id="footnotetag679" name="footnotetag679"></a><a href="#footnote679"><sup>679</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">John Jackson's account of the burying alive of a young Fijian
+man. Son buried alive by his father.</p>
+
+<p>The cool indifference with which the Fijians commonly
+regarded their own death and that of other people might be
+illustrated by many examples. I will give one in the words
+of an English eye-witness, who lived among these savages for
+some time like one of themselves. At a place on the coast
+of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands, he says,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page420" id="page420"></a>[pg 420]</span>
+"I walked into a number of temples, which were very
+plentiful, and at last into a <i>bure theravou</i> (young man's <i>bure</i>),
+where I saw a tall young man about twenty years old. He
+appeared to be somewhat ailing, but not at all emaciated.
+He was rolling up the mat he had been sleeping upon,
+evidently preparing to go away somewhere. I addressed
+him, and asked him where he was going, when he
+immediately answered that he was going to be buried. I
+observed that he was not dead yet, but he said he soon
+should be dead when he was put under ground. I
+asked him why he was going to be buried? He said it was
+three days since he had eaten anything, and consequently
+he was getting very thin; and that if he lived any longer
+he would be much thinner, and then the women would call
+him a <i>lila</i> (skeleton), and laugh at him. I said he was
+a fool to throw himself away for fear of being laughed at;
+and asked him what or who his private god was, knowing it
+to be no use talking to him about Providence, a thing he
+had never heard of. He said his god was a shark, and that
+if he were cast away in a canoe and was obliged to swim,
+the sharks would not bite him. I asked him if he believed
+the shark, his god, had any power to act over him? He
+said yes. 'Well then,' said I, 'why do you not live a little
+longer, and trust to your god to give you an appetite?'
+Finding that he could not give me satisfactory answers, and
+being determined to get buried to avoid the jeers of the
+ladies, which to a Feejeean are intolerable, he told me I
+knew nothing about it, and that I must not compare him to
+a white man, who was generally insensible to all shame, and
+did not care how much he was laughed at. I called him a
+fool, and said the best thing he could do was to get buried
+out of the way, because I knew that most of them work by
+the rules of contrary; but it was all to no purpose. By
+this time all his relations had collected round the door.
+His father had a kind of wooden spade to dig the grave
+with, his mother a new suit of <i>tapa</i> [bark-cloth], his sister
+some vermilion and a whale's tooth, as an introduction to
+the great god of Rage-Rage. He arose, took up his bed
+and walked, not for life, but for death, his father, mother,
+and sister following after, with several other distant relations,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page421" id="page421"></a>[pg 421]</span>
+whom I accompanied. I noticed that they seemed to follow
+him something in the same way that they follow a corpse in
+Europe to the grave (that is, as far as relationship and
+acquaintance are concerned), but, instead of lamenting, they
+were, if not rejoicing, acting and chatting in a very unconcerned
+way. At last we reached a place where several
+graves could be seen, and a spot was soon selected by the
+man who was to be buried. The old man, his father, began
+digging his grave, while his mother assisted her son in
+putting on a new <i>tapa</i> [bark-cloth], and the girl (his sister)
+was besmearing him with vermilion and lamp-black, so as to
+send him decent into the invisible world, he (the victim)
+delivering messages that were to be taken by his sister to
+people then absent. His father then announced to him and
+the rest that the grave was completed, and asked him,
+in rather a surly tone, if he was not ready by this time.
+The mother then <i>nosed</i> him, and likewise the sister. He
+said, 'Before I die, I should like a drink of water.' His
+father made a surly remark, and said, as he ran to fetch it
+in a leaf doubled up, 'You have been a considerable trouble
+during your life, and it appears that you are going to trouble
+us equally at your death.' The father returned with the
+water, which the son drank off, and then looked up into
+a tree covered with tough vines, saying he should prefer
+being strangled with a vine to being smothered in the grave.
+His father became excessively angry, and, spreading the mat
+at the bottom of the grave, told the son to die <i>faka tamata</i>
+(like a man), when he stepped into the grave, which was
+not more than four feet deep, and lay down on his back
+with the whale's tooth in his hands, which were clasped
+across his belly. The spare sides of the mats were lapped
+over him so as to prevent the earth from getting to his
+body, and then about a foot of earth was shovelled in
+upon him as quickly as possible. His father stamped it
+immediately down solid, and called out in a loud voice,
+'<i>Sa tiko, sa tiko</i> (You are stopping there, you are stopping
+there),' meaning 'Good-bye, good-bye.' The son answered
+with a very audible grunt, and then about two feet more
+earth was shovelled in and stamped as before by the loving
+father, and '<i>Sa tiko</i>' called out again, which was answered
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page422" id="page422"></a>[pg 422]</span>
+by another grunt, but much fainter. The grave was then
+completely filled up, when, for curiosity's sake, I said myself,
+'<i>Sa tiko</i>' but no answer was given, although I fancied, or
+really did see, the earth crack a little on the top of the
+grave. The father and mother then turned back to back on
+the middle of the grave, and, having dropped some kind
+of leaves from their hands, walked away in opposite
+directions towards a running stream of water hard by, where
+they and all the rest washed themselves, and made me wash
+myself, and then we returned to the town, where there was
+a feast prepared. As soon as the feast was over (it being
+then dark), began the dance and uproar which are always
+carried on either at natural or violent deaths."<a id="footnotetag680" name="footnotetag680"></a><a href="#footnote680"><sup>680</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The readiness of the Fijians to die seems to have been partly
+a consequence of their belief in immortality.</p>
+
+<p>The readiness with which the Fijians submitted to or
+even sought death appears to have been to some extent
+a direct consequence of their belief in immortality and of
+their notions as to the state of the soul hereafter. Thus we
+are informed by an early observer of this people that "self-immolation
+is by no means rare, and they believe that as
+they leave this life, so will they remain ever after. This
+forms a powerful motive to escape from decrepitude, or
+from a crippled condition, by a voluntary death."<a id="footnotetag681" name="footnotetag681"></a><a href="#footnote681"><sup>681</sup></a> Or,
+as another equally early observer puts it more fully, "the
+custom of voluntary suicide on the part of the old men,
+which is among their most extraordinary usages, is also
+connected with their superstitions respecting a future life.
+They believe that persons enter upon the delights of their
+elysium with the same faculties, mental and physical, that
+they possess at the hour of death, in short, that the spiritual
+life commences where the corporeal existence terminates.
+With these views, it is natural that they should desire to
+pass through this change before their mental and bodily
+powers are so enfeebled by age as to deprive them of their
+capacity for enjoyment. To this motive must be added
+the contempt which attaches to physical weakness among
+a nation of warriors, and the wrongs and insults which await
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page423" id="page423"></a>[pg 423]</span>
+those who are no longer able to protect themselves. When
+therefore a man finds his strength declining with the
+advance of age, and feels that he will soon be unequal to
+discharge the duties of this life, and to partake in the
+pleasures of that which is to come, he calls together his
+relations, and tells them that he is now worn out and useless,
+that he sees they are all ashamed of him, and that he has
+determined to be buried." So on a day appointed they met
+and buried him alive.<a id="footnotetag682" name="footnotetag682"></a><a href="#footnote682"><sup>682</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The sick and aged put to death by their relatives.</p>
+
+<p>The proposal to put the sick and aged to death did not
+always emanate from the parties principally concerned; when
+a son, for example, thought that his parents were growing
+too old and becoming a burden to him, he would give them
+notice that it was time for them to die, a notice which they
+usually accepted with equanimity, if not alacrity. As a
+rule, it was left to the choice of the aged and infirm to say
+whether they would prefer to be buried alive or to be
+strangled first and buried afterwards; and having expressed
+a predilection one way or the other they were dealt with
+accordingly. To strangle parents or other frail and sickly
+relatives with a rope was considered a more delicate
+and affectionate way of dispatching them than to knock
+them on the head with a club. In the old days the
+missionary Mr. Hunt witnessed several of these tender
+partings. "On one occasion, he was called upon by a
+young man, who desired that he would pray to his spirit
+for his mother, who was dead. Mr. Hunt was at first
+in hopes that this would afford him an opportunity of
+forwarding their great cause. On inquiry, the young man
+told him that his brothers and himself were just going
+to bury her. Mr. Hunt accompanied the young man,
+telling him he would follow in the procession, and do as
+he desired him, supposing, of course, the corpse would be
+brought along; but he now met the procession, when the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page424" id="page424"></a>[pg 424]</span>
+young man said that this was the funeral, and pointed out
+his mother, who was walking along with them, as gay and
+lively as any of those present, and apparently as much
+pleased. Mr. Hunt expressed his surprise to the young
+man, and asked him how he could deceive him so much
+by saying his mother was dead, when she was alive and
+well. He said, in reply, that they had made her death-feast,
+and were now going to bury her; that she was old;
+that his brother and himself had thought she had lived long
+enough, and it was time to bury her, to which she had
+willingly assented, and they were about it now. He had
+come to Mr. Hunt to ask his prayers, as they did those of
+the priest. He added, that it was from love for his mother
+that he had done so; that, in consequence of the same love,
+they were now going to bury her, and that none but themselves
+could or ought to do so sacred an office! Mr. Hunt
+did all in his power to prevent so diabolical an act; but
+the only reply he received was, that she was their mother,
+and they were her children, and they ought to put her to
+death. On reaching the grave, the mother sat down, when
+they all, including children, grandchildren, relations, and
+friends, took an affectionate leave of her; a rope, made of
+twisted <i>tapa</i> [bark-cloth], was then passed twice around her
+neck by her sons, who took hold of it, and strangled her;
+after which she was put into her grave, with the usual
+ceremonies. They returned to feast and mourn, after which
+she was entirely forgotten as though she had not existed."<a id="footnotetag683" name="footnotetag683"></a><a href="#footnote683"><sup>683</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Wives strangled or buried alive at their husbands' funerals.</p>
+
+<p>Again, wives were often strangled, or buried alive, at
+the funeral of their husbands, and generally at their own
+instance. Such scenes were frequently witnessed by white
+residents in the old days. On one occasion a Mr. David
+Whippy drove away the murderers, rescued the woman,
+and carried her to his own house, where she was resuscitated.
+But far from feeling grateful for her preservation, she loaded
+him with reproaches and ever afterwards manifested the
+most deadly hatred towards him. "That women should
+desire to accompany their husbands in death, is by no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page425" id="page425"></a>[pg 425]</span>
+means strange when it is considered that it is one of the
+articles of their belief, that in this way alone can they reach
+the realms of bliss, and she who meets her death with the
+greatest devotedness, will become the favourite wife in the
+abode of spirits. The sacrifice is not, however, always
+voluntary; but, when a woman refuses to be strangled, her
+relations often compel her to submit. This they do from
+interested motives; for, by her death, her connexions become
+entitled to the property of her husband. Even a delay is
+made a matter of reproach. Thus, at the funeral of the
+late king Ulivou, which was witnessed by Mr. Cargill, his
+five wives and a daughter were strangled. The principal
+wife delayed the ceremony, by taking leave of those around
+her; whereupon Tanoa, the present king, chid her. The
+victim was his own aunt, and he assisted in putting the
+rope around her neck, and strangling her, a service he is
+said to have rendered on a former occasion to his own
+mother."<a id="footnotetag684" name="footnotetag684"></a><a href="#footnote684"><sup>684</sup></a> In the case of men who were drowned at sea or
+killed and eaten by enemies in war, their wives were sacrificed
+in the usual way. Thus when Ra Mbithi, the pride of
+Somosomo, was lost at sea, seventeen of his wives were
+destroyed; and after the news of a massacre of the Namena
+people at Viwa in 1839 eighty women were strangled to
+accompany the spirits of their murdered husbands.<a id="footnotetag685" name="footnotetag685"></a><a href="#footnote685"><sup>685</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Human "grass" for the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The bodies of women who were put to death for this purpose
+were regularly laid at the bottom of the grave to serve as
+a cushion for the dead husband to lie upon; in this capacity
+they were called grass (<i>thotho</i>), being compared to the dried
+grass which in Fijian houses used to be thickly strewn on
+the floors and covered with mats.<a id="footnotetag686" name="footnotetag686"></a><a href="#footnote686"><sup>686</sup></a> On this point, however,
+a nice distinction was observed. While wives were commonly
+sacrificed at the death of their husbands, in order to be
+spread like grass in their graves, it does not transpire that
+husbands were ever sacrificed at the death of their wives
+for the sake of serving as grass to their dead spouses in
+the grave. The great truth that all flesh is grass appears
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page426" id="page426"></a>[pg 426]</span>
+to have been understood by the Fijians as applicable chiefly
+to the flesh of women. Sometimes a man's mother was
+strangled as well as his wives. Thus Ngavindi, a young
+chief of Lasakau, was laid in the grave with a wife at his
+side, his mother at his feet, and a servant not far off. However,
+men as well as women were killed to follow their
+masters to the far country. The confidential companion
+of a chief was expected as a matter of common decency to
+die with his lord; and if he shirked the duty, he fell in the
+public esteem. When Mbithi, a chief of high rank and
+greatly esteemed in Mathuata, died in the year 1840, not
+only his wife but five men with their wives were strangled
+to form the floor of his grave. They were laid on a layer
+of mats, and the body of the chief was stretched upon them.<a id="footnotetag687" name="footnotetag687"></a><a href="#footnote687"><sup>687</sup></a>
+There used to be a family in Vanua Levu which enjoyed
+the high privilege of supplying a hale man to be buried
+with the king of Fiji on every occasion of a royal decease.
+It was quite necessary that the man should be hale and
+hearty, for it was his business to grapple with the Fijian
+Cerberus in the other world, while his majesty slipped past
+into the abode of bliss.<a id="footnotetag688" name="footnotetag688"></a><a href="#footnote688"><sup>688</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrifices of foreskins and fingers in honour of the dead.
+Circumcision performed on a lad as a propitiatory sacrifice to save the
+life of his father or father's brother. The rite of circumcision
+followed by a licentious orgy.</p>
+
+<p>A curious sacrifice offered in honour of a dead chief
+consisted in the foreskins of all the boys who had arrived
+at a suitable age; the lads were circumcised on purpose to
+furnish them. Many boys had their little fingers chopped
+off on the same occasion, and the severed foreskins and
+fingers were placed in the chief's grave. When this bloody
+rite had been performed, the chief's relatives presented
+young bread-fruit trees to the mutilated boys, whose friends
+were bound to cultivate them till the boys could do it
+for themselves.<a id="footnotetag689" name="footnotetag689"></a><a href="#footnote689"><sup>689</sup></a> Women as well as boys had their fingers
+cut off in mourning. We read of a case when after the
+death of a king of Fiji sixty fingers were amputated and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page427" id="page427"></a>[pg 427]</span>
+being each inserted in a slit reed were stuck along the eaves
+of the king's house.<a id="footnotetag690" name="footnotetag690"></a><a href="#footnote690"><sup>690</sup></a> Why foreskins and fingers were buried
+with a dead chief or stuck up on the roof of his house, we
+are not informed, and it is not easy to divine. Apparently
+we must suppose that, when they were buried with the body,
+they were thought to be of some assistance to the departed
+spirit in the land of souls. At all events it deserves to be
+noted that according to a very good authority a similar
+sacrifice of foreskins used to be made not only for the dead
+but for the living. When a man of note was dangerously
+ill, a family council would be held, at which it might be
+agreed that a circumcision should take place as a propitiatory
+measure. Notice having been given to the priests, an
+uncircumcised lad, the sick man's own son or the son of one
+of his brothers, was then taken by his kinsman to the <i>Vale
+tambu</i> or God's House, and there presented as a <i>soro</i>, or
+offering of atonement, in order that his father or father's
+brother might be made whole. His escort at the same time
+made a present of valuable property at the shrine and
+promised much more in future, should their prayers be
+answered. The present and the promises were graciously
+received by the priest, who appointed a day on which the
+operation was to be performed. In the meantime no food
+might be taken from the plantations except what was
+absolutely required for daily use; no pigs or fowls might
+be killed, and no coco-nuts plucked from the trees. Everything,
+in short, was put under a strict taboo; all was set
+apart for the great feast which was to follow the performance
+of the rite. On the day appointed the son or nephew of
+the sick chief was circumcised, and with him a number of
+other lads whose friends had agreed to take advantage of
+the occasion. Their foreskins, stuck in the cleft of a split
+reed, were taken to the sacred enclosure (<i>Nanga</i>) and
+presented to the chief priest, who, holding the reeds in
+his hand, offered them to the ancestral gods and prayed for
+the sick man's recovery. Then followed a great feast,
+which ushered in a period of indescribable revelry and
+licence. All distinctions of property were for the time
+being suspended. Men and women arrayed themselves
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page428" id="page428"></a>[pg 428]</span>
+in all manner of fantastic garbs, addressed one another in
+the foulest language, and practised unmentionable abominations
+openly in the public square of the town. The nearest
+relationships, even that of own brother and sister, seemed
+to be no bar to the general licence, the extent of which
+was indicated by the expressive phrase of an old Nandi
+chief, who said, "While it lasts, we are just like the pigs."
+This feasting and orgy might be kept up for several days,
+after which the ordinary restraints of society and the common
+decencies of life were observed once more. The rights of
+private property were again respected; the abandoned
+revellers and debauchees settled down into staid married
+couples; and brothers and sisters, in accordance with the
+regular Fijian etiquette, might not so much as speak to one
+another. It should be added that these extravagances
+in connexion with the rite of circumcision appear to have
+been practised only in certain districts of Viti Levu, the
+largest of the Fijian Islands, where they were always associated
+with the sacred stone enclosures which went by the
+name of <i>Nanga</i>.<a id="footnotetag691" name="footnotetag691"></a><a href="#footnote691"><sup>691</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">These orgies were apparently associated with the worship of
+the dead, to whom offerings were made in the <i>Nanga</i> or sacred
+enclosure of stones.</p>
+
+<p>The meaning of such orgies is very obscure, but from
+what we know of the savage and his ways we may fairly
+assume that they were no mere outbursts of unbridled
+passion, but that in the minds of those who practised them
+they had a definite significance and served a definite
+purpose. The one thing that seems fairly clear about them
+is that in some way they were associated with the worship
+or propitiation of the dead. At all events we are told on
+good authority that the <i>Nanga</i>, or sacred enclosure of stones,
+in which the severed foreskins were offered, was "the Sacred
+Place where the ancestral spirits are to be found by their
+worshippers, and thither offerings are taken on all occasions
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page429" id="page429"></a>[pg 429]</span>
+when their aid is to be invoked. Every member of the
+<i>Nanga</i> has the privilege of approaching the ancestors at any
+time. When sickness visits himself or his kinsfolk, when
+he wishes to invoke the aid of the spirits to avert calamity
+or to secure prosperity, or when he deems it advisable to
+present a thank-offering, he may enter the <i>Nanga</i> with
+proper reverence and deposit on the dividing wall his whale's
+tooth, or bundle of cloth, or dish of toothsome eels so highly
+prized by the elders, and therefore by the ancestors whose
+living representatives they are: or he may drag into the
+Sacred <i>Nanga</i> his fattened pig, or pile up there his offering
+of the choicest yams. And, having thus recommended
+himself to the dead, he may invoke their powerful aid, or
+express his thankfulness for the benefits they have conferred,
+and beg for a continuance of their goodwill."<a id="footnotetag692" name="footnotetag692"></a><a href="#footnote692"><sup>692</sup></a> The first-fruits
+of the yam harvest were presented with great ceremony
+to the ancestors in the <i>Nanga</i> before the bulk of the crop
+was dug for the people's use, and no man might taste of
+the new yams until the presentation had been made. The
+yams so offered were piled up in the sacred enclosure and
+left to rot there. If any one were impious enough to
+appropriate them to his own use, it was believed that he
+would be smitten with madness. Great feasts were held at
+the presentation of the first-fruits; and the sacred enclosure
+itself was often spoken of as the <i>Mbaki</i> or Harvest.<a id="footnotetag693" name="footnotetag693"></a><a href="#footnote693"><sup>693</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Periodical initiation of young men in the <i>Nanga</i>.</p>
+
+<p>But the most characteristic and perhaps the most
+important of the rites performed in the <i>Nanga</i> or sacred
+stone enclosure was the periodical initiation of young men,
+who by participation in the ceremony were admitted to the
+full privileges of manhood. According to one account the
+ceremony of initiation was performed as a rule only once in
+two years; according to another account it was observed
+annually in October or November, when the <i>ndrala</i> tree
+(<i>Erythrina</i>) was in flower. The flowering of the tree
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page430" id="page430"></a>[pg 430]</span>
+marked the beginning of the Fijian year; hence the novices
+who were initiated at this season bore the title of <i>Vilavou</i>,
+that is, "New Year's Men." As a preparation for the feasts
+which attended the ceremony enormous quantities of yams
+were garnered and placed under a strict taboo; pigs were
+fattened in large numbers, and bales of native cloth stored
+on the tie-beams of the house-roofs. Spears of many
+patterns and curiously carved clubs were also provided
+against the festival. On the day appointed the initiated
+men went first into the sacred enclosure and made their
+offerings, the chief priest having opened the proceedings by
+libation and prayer. The heads of the novices were clean
+shaven, and their beards, if they had any, were also removed.
+Then each youth was swathed in long rolls of native cloth,
+and taking a spear in one hand and a club in the other he
+marched with his comrades, similarly swathed and armed,
+in procession into the sacred enclosure, though not into its
+inner compartment, the Holy of Holies. The procession
+was headed by a priest bearing his carved staff of office,
+and it was received on the holy ground by the initiates,
+who sat chanting a song in a deep murmuring tone, which
+occasionally swelled to a considerable volume of sound and
+was thought to represent the muffled roar of the surf breaking
+on a far-away coral reef. On entering the enclosure the
+youths threw down their weapons before them, and with the
+help of the initiated men divested themselves of the huge
+folds of native cloth in which they were enveloped, each
+man revolving slowly on his axis, while his attendant pulled
+at the bandage and gathered in the slack. The weapons
+and the cloth were the offerings presented by the novices to
+the ancestral spirits for the purpose of rendering themselves
+acceptable to these powerful beings. The offerings were
+repeated in like manner on four successive days; and as
+each youth was merely, as it were, the central roller of
+a great bale of cloth, the amount of cloth offered was considerable.
+It was all put away, with the spears and clubs,
+in the sacred storehouse by the initiated men. A feast
+concluded each day and was prolonged far into the night.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony of death and resurrection.</p>
+
+<p>On the fifth day, the last and greatest of the festival,
+the heads of the young men were shaven again and their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page431" id="page431"></a>[pg 431]</span>
+bodies swathed in the largest and best rolls of cloth.
+Then, taking their choicest weapons in their hands, they
+followed their leader as before into the sacred enclosure.
+But the outer compartment of the holy place, where on the
+previous days they had been received by the grand chorus
+of initiated men, was now silent and deserted. The procession
+stopped. A dead silence prevailed. Suddenly from
+the forest a harsh scream of many parrots broke forth, and
+then followed a mysterious booming sound which filled the
+souls of the novices with awe. But now the priest moves
+slowly forward and leads the train of trembling novices for
+the first time into the inner shrine, the Holy of Holies, the
+<i>Nanga tambu-tambu</i>. Here a dreadful spectacle meets their
+startled gaze. In the background sits the high priest,
+regarding them with a stony stare; and between him and
+them lie a row of dead men, covered with blood, their
+bodies seemingly cut open and their entrails protruding.
+The leader steps over them one by one, and the awestruck
+youths follow him until they stand in a row before the
+high priest, their very souls harrowed by his awful glare.
+Suddenly he utters a great yell, and at the cry the dead
+men start to their feet, and run down to the river to cleanse
+themselves from the blood and filth with which they are
+besmeared. They are initiated men, who represent the
+departed ancestors for the occasion; and the blood and
+entrails are those of many pigs that have been slaughtered
+for that night's revelry. The screams of the parrots and
+the mysterious booming sound were produced by a concealed
+orchestra, who screeched appropriately and blew blasts on
+bamboo trumpets, the mouths of which were partially
+immersed in water.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Sacrament of food and water.</p>
+
+<p>The dead men having come to life again, the novices
+offered their weapons and the bales of native cloth in which
+they were swathed. These were accordingly removed to the
+storehouse and the young men were made to sit down in
+front of it. Then the high priest, cheered perhaps by
+the sight of the offerings, unbent the starched dignity of
+his demeanour. Skipping from side to side he cried in
+stridulous tones, "Where are the people of my enclosure?
+Are they gone to Tongalevu? Are they gone to the deep
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page432" id="page432"></a>[pg 432]</span>
+sea?" He had not called long when an answer rang out
+from the river in a deep-mouthed song, and soon the singers
+came in view moving rhythmically to the music of their
+solemn chant. Singing they filed in and took their places
+in front of the young men; then silence ensued. After
+that there entered four old men of the highest order of
+initiates; the first bore a cooked yam carefully wrapt in
+leaves so that no part of it should touch the hands of the
+bearer; the second carried a piece of baked pork similarly
+enveloped; the third held a drinking-cup of coco-nut shell
+or earthenware filled with water and wrapt round with
+native cloth; and the fourth bore a napkin of the same
+material. Thereupon the first elder passed along the row
+of novices putting the end of the yam into each of their
+mouths, and as he did so each of them nibbled a morsel of
+the sacred food; the second elder did the same with the
+sacred pork; the third elder followed with the holy water,
+with which each novice merely wetted his lips; and the
+rear was brought up by the fourth elder, who wiped all
+their mouths with his napkin. Then the high priest or one
+of the elders addressed the young men, warning them
+solemnly against the sacrilege of divulging to the profane
+any of the high mysteries they had seen and heard, and
+threatening all such traitors with the vengeance of the gods.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Presentation of the pig.</p>
+
+<p>That ceremony being over, all the junior initiated men
+(<i>Lewe ni Nanga</i>) came forward, and each man presented
+to the novices a yam and a piece of nearly raw pork;
+whereupon the young men took the food and went away to
+cook it for eating. When the evening twilight had fallen, a
+huge pig, which had been specially set aside at a former
+festival, was dragged into the sacred enclosure and there
+presented to the novices, together with other swine, if they
+should be needed to furnish a plenteous repast.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Acceptance of the novices by the ancestral spirits.</p>
+
+<p>The novices were now "accepted members of the <i>Nanga</i>,
+qualified to take their place among the men of the community,
+though still only on probation. As children&mdash;their
+childhood being indicated by their shaven heads&mdash;they were
+presented to the ancestors, and their acceptance was notified
+by what (looking at the matter from the natives' standpoint)
+we might, without irreverence, almost call the <i>sacrament</i> of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page433" id="page433"></a>[pg 433]</span>
+food and water, too sacred even for the elders' hands to
+touch. This acceptance was acknowledged and confirmed
+on the part of all the <i>Lewe ni Nanga</i> [junior initiated men]
+by their gift of food, and it was finally ratified by the presentation
+of the Sacred Pig. In like manner, on the birth
+of an infant, its father acknowledges it as legitimate, and
+otherwise acceptable, by a gift of food; and his kinsfolk
+formally signify approval and confirmation of his decision
+on the part of the clan by similar presentations."</p>
+
+<p class="side">The initiation followed by a period of sexual license. Sacred
+pigs.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning the women, their hair dyed red and
+wearing waistbands of hibiscus or other fibre, came to the
+sacred enclosure and crawled through it on hands and knees
+into the Holy of Holies, where the elders were singing their
+solemn chant. The high priest then dipped his hands into
+the water of the sacred bowl and prayed to the ancestral
+spirits for the mothers and for their children. After that
+the women crawled back on hands and feet the way they
+had come, singing as they went and creeping over certain
+mounds of earth which had been thrown up for the purpose
+in the sacred enclosure. When they emerged from the
+holy ground, the men and women addressed each other
+in the vilest language, such as on ordinary occasions
+would be violently resented; and thenceforth to the close
+of the ceremonies some days later very great, indeed
+almost unlimited, licence prevailed between the sexes.
+During these days a number of pigs were consecrated
+to serve for the next ceremony. The animals were deemed
+sacred, and had the run of the fleshpots in the villages in
+which they were kept. Indeed they were held in the
+greatest reverence. To kill one, except for sacrifice at the
+rites in the <i>Nanga</i>, would have been a sacrilege which the
+Fijian mind refused to contemplate; and on the other
+hand to feed the holy swine was an act of piety. Men
+might be seen throwing down basketfuls of food before
+the snouts of the worshipful pigs, and at the same time
+calling the attention of the ancestral spirits to the meritorious
+deed. "Take knowledge of me," they would cry, "ye who
+lie buried, our heads! I am feeding this pig of yours."
+Finally, all the men who had taken part in the ceremonies
+bathed together in the river, carefully cleansing themselves
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page434" id="page434"></a>[pg 434]</span>
+from every particle of the black paint with which they had
+been bedaubed. When the novices, now novices no more,
+emerged from the water, the high priest, standing on the
+river bank, preached to them an eloquent sermon on the
+duties and responsibilities which devolved on them in their
+new position.<a id="footnotetag694" name="footnotetag694"></a><a href="#footnote694"><sup>694</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The intention of the initiatory rites seems to be to
+introduce the young men to the ancestral spirits. The drama of death and
+resurrection. The Fijian rites of initiation seem to have been imported
+by Melanesian immigrants from the west.</p>
+
+<p>The general intention of these initiatory rites appears to
+be, as Mr. Fison has said in the words which I have quoted,
+to introduce the young men to the ancestral spirits at their
+sanctuary, to incorporate them, so to say, in the great community
+which embraces all adult members of the tribe,
+whether living or dead. At all events this interpretation fits
+in very well with the prayers which are offered to the souls
+of departed kinsfolk on these occasions, and it is supported
+by the analogy of the New Guinea initiatory rites which
+I described in former lectures; for in these rites, as I pointed
+out, the initiation of the youths is closely associated with
+the conceptions of death and the dead, the main feature in
+the ritual consisting indeed of a simulation of death and
+subsequent resurrection. It is, therefore, significant that the
+very same simulation figures prominently in the Fijian ceremony,
+nay it would seem to be the very pivot on which the
+whole ritual revolves. Yet there is an obvious and important
+difference between the drama of death and resurrection as it
+is enacted in New Guinea and in Fiji; for whereas in New
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page435" id="page435"></a>[pg 435]</span>
+Guinea it is the novices who pretend to die and come to life
+again, in Fiji the pretence is carried out by initiated men
+who represent the ancestors, while the novices merely look
+on with horror and amazement at the awe-inspiring spectacle.
+Of the two forms of ritual the New Guinea one is probably
+truer to the original purpose of the rite, which seems to have
+been to enable the novices to put off the old, or rather the
+young, man and to put on a higher form of existence
+by participating in the marvellous powers and privileges of
+the mighty dead. And if such was really the intention of
+the ceremony, it is obvious that it was better effected by
+compelling the young communicants, as we may call them,
+to die and rise from the dead in their own persons than
+by obliging them to assist as mere passive spectators at
+a dramatic performance of death and resurrection. Yet in
+spite of this difference between the two rituals, the general
+resemblance between them is near enough to justify us
+in conjecturing that there may be a genetic connexion
+between the one and the other. The conjecture is confirmed,
+first, by the very limited and definite area of Fiji in which
+these initiatory rites were practised, and, second, by the
+equally definite tradition of their origin. With regard to the
+first of these points, the <i>Nanga</i> or sacred stone enclosure with
+its characteristic rites was known only to certain tribes, who
+occupied a comparatively small area, a bare third of the
+island of Viti Levu. These tribes are the Nuyaloa, Vatusila,
+Mbatiwai, and Mdavutukia. They all seem to have spread
+eastward and southward from a place of origin in the
+western mountain district. Their physical type is pure
+Melanesian, with fewer traces of Polynesian admixture than
+can be detected in the tribes on the coast.<a id="footnotetag695" name="footnotetag695"></a><a href="#footnote695"><sup>695</sup></a> Hence it
+is natural to enquire whether the ritual of the <i>Nanga</i> may
+not have been imported into Fiji by Melanesian immigrants
+from the west. The question appears to be answered in the
+affirmative by native tradition. "This is the word of our
+fathers concerning the <i>Nanga</i>," said an old Wainimala grey-beard
+to Mr. Fison. "Long, long ago their fathers were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page436" id="page436"></a>[pg 436]</span>
+ignorant of it; but one day two strangers were found sitting
+in the <i>rara</i> (public square), and they said they had come up
+from the sea to give them the <i>Nanga</i>. They were little men,
+and very dark-skinned, and one of them had his face and
+bust painted red, while the other was painted black.
+Whether these two were gods or men our fathers did not tell
+us, but it was they who taught our people the <i>Nanga</i>. This
+was in the old old times when our fathers were living in
+another land&mdash;not in this place, for we are strangers here.
+Our fathers fled hither from Navosa in a great war which
+arose among them, and when they came there was no <i>Nanga</i> in
+the land. So they built one of their own after the fashion
+of that which they left behind them." "Here," says Mr.
+Basil Thomson, "we have the earliest tradition of missionary
+enterprise in the Pacific. I do not doubt that the two sooty-skinned
+little men were castaways driven eastward by one
+of those strong westerly gales that have been known to last
+for three weeks at a time. By Fijian custom the lives of all
+castaways were forfeit, but the pretence to supernatural
+powers would have saved men full of the religious rites of
+their Melanesian home, and would have assured them a
+hearing. The Wainimala tribes can name six generations
+since they settled in their present home, and therefore
+the introduction of the <i>Nanga</i> cannot have been less than
+two centuries ago. During that time it has overspread one
+third of the large island."</p>
+
+<p class="side">The general licence associated with the ritual of the
+<i>Nanga</i> may be a temporary revival of primitive communism.</p>
+
+<p>A very remarkable feature in the <i>Nanga</i> ritual consists
+in the temporary licence accorded to the sexes and the
+suspension of proprietary rites in general. What is the
+meaning of this curious and to the civilised mind revolting
+custom? Here again the most probable, though merely
+conjectural, answer is furnished by Mr. Fison. "We cannot
+for a moment believe," he says, "that it is a mere licentious
+outbreak, without an underlying meaning and purpose. It
+is part of a religious rite, and is supposed to be acceptable
+to the ancestors. But why should it be acceptable to them
+unless it were in accordance with their own practice in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page437" id="page437"></a>[pg 437]</span>
+far-away past? There may be another solution of this
+difficult problem, but I confess myself unable to find any
+other which will cover all the corroborating facts."<a id="footnotetag696" name="footnotetag696"></a><a href="#footnote696"><sup>696</sup></a> In
+other words, Mr. Fison supposes that in the sexual licence
+and suspension of the rights of private property which
+characterise these festivals we have a reminiscence of a time
+when women and property were held in common by the
+community, and the motive for temporarily resuscitating
+these obsolete customs was a wish to propitiate the ancestral
+spirits, who were thought to be gratified by witnessing a
+revival of that primitive communism which they themselves
+had practised in the flesh so long ago. Truly a religious
+revival of a remarkable kind!</p>
+
+<p class="side">Description of the <i>Nanga</i> or sacred enclosure of
+stones.</p>
+
+<p>To conclude this part of my subject I will briefly describe
+the construction of a <i>Nanga</i> or sacred stone enclosure, as it
+used to exist in Fiji. At the present day only ruins of these
+structures are to be seen, but by an observation of the ruins
+and a comparison of the traditions which still survive among
+the natives on the subject it is possible to reconstruct one of
+them with a fair degree of exactness. A <i>Nanga</i> has been
+described as an open-air temple, and the description is just.
+It consisted of a rough parallelogram enclosed by flat stones
+set upright and embedded endwise in the earth. The length
+of the enclosure thus formed was about one hundred feet
+and its breadth about fifty feet. The upright stones which
+form the outer walls are from eighteen inches to three feet
+high, but as they do not always touch they may be described
+as alignments rather than walls. The long walls or alignments
+run east and west, the short ones north and south;
+but the orientation is not very exact. At the eastern end
+are two pyramidal heaps of stones, about five feet high,
+with square sloping sides and flat tops. The narrow
+passage between them is the main entrance into the sacred
+enclosure. Internally the structure was divided into three
+separate enclosures or compartments by two cross-walls of
+stone running north and south. These compartments, taking
+them from east to west, were called respectively the Little
+Nanga, the Great Nanga, and the Sacred Nanga or Holy of
+Holies (<i>Nanga tambu-tambu</i>). The partition walls between
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page438" id="page438"></a>[pg 438]</span>
+them were built solid of stones, with battering sides, to
+a height of five feet, and in the middle of each there was an
+opening to allow the worshippers to pass from one compartment
+to another. Trees, such as the candlenut and the red-leaved
+dracaena, and odoriferous shrubs were planted round
+the enclosure; and outside of it, to the west of the Holy of
+Holies, was a bell-roofed hut called <i>Vale tambu</i>, the Sacred
+House or Temple. The sacred <i>kava</i> bowl stood in the
+Holy of Holies.<a id="footnotetag697" name="footnotetag697"></a><a href="#footnote697"><sup>697</sup></a> It is said that when the two traditionary
+founders of the <i>Nanga</i> in Fiji were about to erect the first
+structure of that name in their new home, the chief priest
+poured a libation of <i>kava</i> to the ancestral gods, "and, calling
+upon those who died long, long ago by name, he prayed that
+the people of the tribe, both old and young, might live
+before them."<a id="footnotetag698" name="footnotetag698"></a><a href="#footnote698"><sup>698</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Comparison of the <i>Nanga</i> with the cromlechs and other
+megalithic monuments of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The sacred enclosures of stones which I have described
+have been compared to the alignments of stones at Carnac
+in Brittany and Merivale on Dartmoor, and it has been
+suggested that in the olden time these ancient European
+monuments may have witnessed religious rites like those
+which were till lately performed in the rude open-air temples
+of Fiji.<a id="footnotetag699" name="footnotetag699"></a><a href="#footnote699"><sup>699</sup></a> If there is any truth in the suggestion, which I
+mention for what it is worth, it would furnish another
+argument in favour of the view that our European cromlechs
+and other megalithic monuments were erected specially for
+the worship of the dead. The mortuary character of Stonehenge,
+for example, is at least suggested by the burial
+mounds which cluster thick around and within sight of it;
+about three hundred such tombs have been counted within a
+radius of three miles, while the rest of the country in the
+neighbourhood is comparatively free from them.<a id="footnotetag700" name="footnotetag700"></a><a href="#footnote700"><sup>700</sup></a></p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote678" name="footnote678"></a><b>Footnote 678:</b><a href="#footnotetag678"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 242 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote679" name="footnote679"></a><b>Footnote 679:</b><a href="#footnotetag679"> (return) </a><p> Charles Wilkes, <i>Narrative of the United States
+Exploring Expedition</i>, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 86.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote680" name="footnote680"></a><b>Footnote 680:</b><a href="#footnotetag680"> (return) </a><p> John Jackson's Narrative, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+<i>Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific</i>
+(London, 1853), pp. 475-477. The narrator, John Jackson, was an English
+seaman who resided alone among the Fijians for nearly two years and
+learned their language.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote681" name="footnote681"></a><b>Footnote 681:</b><a href="#footnotetag681"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 96.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote682" name="footnote682"></a><b>Footnote 682:</b><a href="#footnotetag682"> (return) </a><p> <i>United States Exploring Expedition, Ethnology and
+Philology</i>, by H. Hale (Philadelphia, 1846), p. 65. Compare Capt. J.
+E. Erskine, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 248: "It would also seem that a belief in
+the resurrection of the body, in the exact condition in which it leaves
+the world, is one of the causes that induce, in many instances, a desire
+for death in the vigour of manhood, rather than in the decrepitude of
+old age"; Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 183: "The heathen notion is,
+that, as they die, such will their condition be in another world; hence
+their desire to escape extreme infirmity."</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote683" name="footnote683"></a><b>Footnote 683:</b><a href="#footnotetag683"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 94 <i>sq.</i> Compare
+Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 183-186; Lorimer Fison,
+<i>Tales from Old Fiji</i> (London, 1904), pp. xxv. <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote684" name="footnote684"></a><b>Footnote 684:</b><a href="#footnotetag684"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 96. Compare Th.
+Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 188 <i>sq.</i>, 193 <i>sqq.</i>, 200-202;
+Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. xxv. <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote685" name="footnote685"></a><b>Footnote 685:</b><a href="#footnotetag685"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 200.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote686" name="footnote686"></a><b>Footnote 686:</b><a href="#footnotetag686"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 189;
+Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> p. xvi.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote687" name="footnote687"></a><b>Footnote 687:</b><a href="#footnotetag687"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 189.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote688" name="footnote688"></a><b>Footnote 688:</b><a href="#footnotetag688"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 197.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote689" name="footnote689"></a><b>Footnote 689:</b><a href="#footnotetag689"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 100. Williams also says
+(<i>op. cit.</i> i. 167) that the proper time for performing the rite of
+circumcision was after the death of a chief, and he tells us that "many
+rude games attend it. Blindfolded youths strike at thin vessels of water
+hung from the branch of a tree. At Lakemba, the men arm themselves with
+branches of the cocoa-nut, and carry on a sham fight. At Ono, they
+wrestle. At Mbau, they fillip small stones from the end of a bamboo with
+sufficient force to make the person hit wince again. On Vanua Levu,
+there is a mock siege."</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote690" name="footnote690"></a><b>Footnote 690:</b><a href="#footnotetag690"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 198.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote691" name="footnote691"></a><b>Footnote 691:</b><a href="#footnotetag691"> (return) </a><p> Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xiv. (1885) pp. 27 <i>sq.</i> On the other hand Mr. Basil
+Thomson's enquiries, made at a later date, did not confirm Mr. Fison's
+statement that the rite of circumcision was practised as a propitiation
+to recover a chief from sickness. "I was assured," he says, "on the
+contrary, that while offerings were certainly made in the <i>Nanga</i>
+for the recovery of the sick, every youth was circumcised as a matter of
+routine, and that the rite was in no way connected with sacrifice for
+the sick" (Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, pp. 156 <i>sq.</i>).
+However, Mr. Fison was a very careful and accurate enquirer, and his
+testimony is not to be lightly set aside.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote692" name="footnote692"></a><b>Footnote 692:</b><a href="#footnotetag692"> (return) </a><p> Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xiv. (1885) p. 26. Compare Basil Thomson, <i>The
+Fijians</i>, p. 147: "The <i>Nanga</i> was the 'bed' of the Ancestors,
+that is, the spot where their descendants might hold communion with
+them; the <i>Mbaki</i> were the rites celebrated in the <i>Nanga</i>,
+whether of initiating the youths, or of presenting the first-fruits, or
+of recovering the sick, or of winning charms against wounds in battle."</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote693" name="footnote693"></a><b>Footnote 693:</b><a href="#footnotetag693"> (return) </a><p>Rev. Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 27.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote694" name="footnote694"></a><b>Footnote 694:</b><a href="#footnotetag694"> (return) </a><p> Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xiv. (1885) pp. 14-26. The <i>Nanga</i> and its rites
+have also been described by Mr. A. B. Joske ("The Nanga of Viti-levu,"
+<i>Internationales Archiv f&uuml;r Ethnographie</i>, ii. (1889) pp. 254-266),
+and Mr. Basil Thomson (<i>The Fijians</i>, pp. 146-156). As to the
+interval between the initiatory ceremonies Mr. Fison tells us that it
+was normally two years, but he adds: "This period, however, is not
+necessarily restricted to two years. There are always a number of youths
+who are growing to the proper age, and the length of the interval
+depends upon the decision of the elders. Whenever they judge that there
+is a sufficient number of youths ready for admission, a <i>Nanga</i> is
+appointed to be held; and thus the interval may be longer or shorter,
+according to the supply of novices" (<i>op. cit.</i> p. 19). According
+to Mr. Basil Thomson the rites were celebrated annually. Mr. Fison's
+evidence as to the gross license which prevailed between the sexes after
+the admission of the women to the sacred enclosure is confirmed by Mr.
+Basil Thomson, who says, amongst other things, that "a native of Mbau,
+who lived for some years near the <i>Nanga</i>, assured me that the
+visit of the women to the <i>Nanga</i> resulted in temporary
+promiscuity; all tabus were defied, and relations who could not speak to
+one another by customary law committed incest" (<i>op. cit.</i> p.
+154).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote695" name="footnote695"></a><b>Footnote 695:</b><a href="#footnotetag695"> (return) </a><p> Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," <i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, xiv. (1885) pp. 14 <i>sqq.</i>; Basil Thomson, <i>The
+Fijians</i>, pp. 147, 149.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote696" name="footnote696"></a><b>Footnote 696:</b><a href="#footnotetag696"> (return) </a><p>Rev. Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 30.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote697" name="footnote697"></a><b>Footnote 697:</b><a href="#footnotetag697"> (return) </a><p> Rev. Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 15, 17, with
+Plate I.; Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, pp. 147 <i>sq.</i> Mr.
+Fison had not seen a <i>Nanga</i>; his description is based on
+information received from natives. Mr. Basil Thomson visited several of
+these structures and found them so alike that one description would
+serve for all. He speaks of only two inner compartments, which he calls
+the Holy of Holies (<i>Nanga tambu-tambu</i>) and the Middle Nanga
+(<i>Loma ni Nanga</i>), but the latter name appears to imply a third
+compartment, which is explicitly mentioned and named by Mr. Fison. The
+bell-shaped hut or temple to the west of the sacred enclosure is not
+noticed by Mr. Thomson.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote698" name="footnote698"></a><b>Footnote 698:</b><a href="#footnotetag698"> (return) </a><p>Rev. Lorimer Fison, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 17.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote699" name="footnote699"></a><b>Footnote 699:</b><a href="#footnotetag699"> (return) </a><p>Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, p. 147.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote700" name="footnote700"></a><b>Footnote 700:</b><a href="#footnotetag700"> (return) </a><p> As to these monuments see Sir
+John Lubbock (Lord Avebury), <i>Prehistoric
+Times</i>, Fifth Edition (London,
+1890), p. 127.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page439" id="page439"></a>[pg 439]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="lecture-xx" id="lecture-xx"></a>LECTURE XX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES
+OF EASTERN MELANESIA (FIJI) (<i>concluded</i>)</h3>
+
+
+<p class="side">Worship of ancestors in Fiji.</p>
+
+<p>In the last lecture I described the rites of ancestor worship
+which in certain parts of Fiji used to be celebrated at the
+sacred enclosures of stones known as <i>Nangas</i>. But the
+worship of ancestral spirits was by no means confined to
+the comparatively small area in Fiji where such sacred
+enclosures were erected, nor were these open-air temples the
+only structures where the homage of the living was paid to
+the dead. On the contrary we are told by one who knew
+the Fijians in the old heathen days that among them "as
+soon as beloved parents expire, they take their place amongst
+the family gods. <i>Bures</i>, or temples, are erected to their
+memory, and offerings deposited either on their graves or
+on rudely constructed altars&mdash;mere stages, in the form of
+tables, the legs of which are driven into the ground, and the
+top of which is covered with pieces of native cloth. The
+construction of these altars is identical with that observed
+by Turner in Tanna, and only differs in its inferior finish
+from the altars formerly erected in Tahiti and the adjacent
+islands. The offerings, consisting of the choicest articles of
+food, are left exposed to wind and weather, and firmly
+believed by the mass of Fijians to be consumed by the
+spirits of departed friends and relations; but, if not eaten
+by animals, they are often stolen by the more enlightened
+class of their countrymen, and even some of the foreigners
+do not disdain occasionally to help themselves freely to
+them. However, it is not only on tombs or on altars that
+offerings are made; often, when the natives eat or drink
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page440" id="page440"></a>[pg 440]</span>
+anything, they throw portions of it away, stating them to
+be for their departed ancestors. I remember ordering a
+young chief to empty a bowl containing <i>kava</i>, which he did,
+muttering to himself, 'There, father, is some <i>kava</i> for you.
+Protect me from illness or breaking any of my limbs whilst
+in the mountains.'"<a id="footnotetag701" name="footnotetag701"></a><a href="#footnote701"><sup>701</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian notion of divinity. Two classes of gods, namely, gods
+strictly so called, and deified men.</p>
+
+<p>"The native word expressive of divinity is <i>kalou</i>, which,
+while used to denote the people's highest notion of a god, is
+also constantly heard as a qualificative of any thing great
+or marvellous, or, according to Hazlewood's Dictionary,
+'anything superlative, whether good or bad.'... Often
+the word sinks into a mere exclamation, or becomes an
+expression of flattery. 'You are a <i>kalou</i>!' or, 'Your
+countrymen are gods!' is often uttered by the natives,
+when hearing of the triumphs of art among civilized nations."<a id="footnotetag702" name="footnotetag702"></a><a href="#footnote702"><sup>702</sup></a>
+The Fijians distinguished two classes of gods: first, <i>kalou
+vu</i>, literally "Root-gods," that is, gods strictly so called, and
+second, <i>kalou yalo</i>, literally, "Soul-gods," that is, deified
+mortals. Gods of the first class were supposed to be
+absolutely eternal; gods of the second class, though raised
+far above mere humanity, were thought nevertheless to be
+subject to human passions and wants, to accidents, and even
+to death. These latter were the spirits of departed chiefs,
+heroes, and friends; admission into their number was easy,
+and any one might secure his own apotheosis who could
+ensure the services of some one to act as his representative
+and priest after his death.<a id="footnotetag703" name="footnotetag703"></a><a href="#footnote703"><sup>703</sup></a> However, though the Fijians
+admitted the distinction between the two classes of gods in
+theory, they would seem to have confused them in practice.
+Thus we are informed by an early authority that "they
+have superior and inferior gods and goddesses, more general
+and local deities, and, were it not an obvious contradiction,
+we should say they have gods <i>human</i>, and gods <i>divine</i>; for
+they have some gods who were gods originally, and some
+who were originally men. It is impossible to ascertain with
+any degree of probability how many gods the Fijians
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page441" id="page441"></a>[pg 441]</span>
+have, as any man who can distinguish himself in murdering
+his fellow-men may certainly secure to himself deification
+after death. Their friends are also sometimes deified and
+invoked. I have heard them invoke their friends who have
+been drowned at sea. I need not advert to the absurdity
+of praying to those who could not save themselves from a
+watery grave. Tuikilakila, the chief of Somosomo, offered
+Mr. Hunt a preferment of this sort. 'If you die first,' said
+he, 'I shall make you my god.' In fact, there appears to
+be no certain line of demarcation between departed spirits
+and gods, nor between gods and living men, for many of
+the priests and old chiefs are considered as sacred persons,
+and not a few of them will also claim to themselves the
+right of divinity. 'I am a god,' Tuikilakila would sometimes
+say; and he believed it too. They were not merely
+the words of his lips; he believed he was something above a
+mere man."<a id="footnotetag704" name="footnotetag704"></a><a href="#footnote704"><sup>704</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Writers on Fiji have given us lists of some of the
+principal gods of the first class,<a id="footnotetag705" name="footnotetag705"></a><a href="#footnote705"><sup>705</sup></a> who were supposed never to
+have been men; but in their account of the religious ritual
+they do not distinguish between the worship which was paid
+to such deities and that which was paid to deified men.
+Accordingly we may infer that the ritual was practically the
+same, and in the sequel I shall assume that what is told us
+of the worship of gods in general holds good of the worship
+of deified men in particular.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The Fijian temple (<i>bure</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Every Fijian town had at least one <i>bure</i> or temple,
+many of them had several. Significantly enough the spot
+where a chief had been killed was sometimes chosen for
+the site of a temple. The structure of these edifices was
+somewhat peculiar. Each of them was built on the top of a
+mound, which was raised to the height of from three to
+twenty feet above the ground and faced on its sloping sides
+with dry rubble-work of stone. The ascent to the temple
+was by a thick plank, the upper surface of which was cut
+into notched steps. The proportions of the sacred edifice
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page442" id="page442"></a>[pg 442]</span>
+itself were inelegant, if not uncouth, its height being nearly
+twice as great as its breadth at the base. The roof was
+high-pitched; the ridge-pole was covered with white shells
+(<i>Ovula cypraea</i>) and projected three or four feet at each
+end. For the most part each temple had two doors and a
+fire-place in the centre. From some temples it was not
+lawful to throw out the ashes, however much they might
+accumulate, until the end of the year, which fell in November.
+The furniture consisted of a few boxes, mats, several large
+clay jars, and many drinking vessels. A temple might also
+contain images, which, though highly esteemed as ornaments
+and held sacred, were not worshipped as idols. From the
+roof depended a long piece of white bark-cloth; it was
+carried down the angle so as to hang before the corner-post
+and lie on the floor. This cloth formed the path down
+which the god was believed to pass in order to enter and
+inspire his priest. It marked the holy place which few but
+he dared to approach. However, the temples were by no
+means dedicated exclusively to the use of religion. Each
+of them served also as a council-chamber and town-hall;
+there the chiefs lounged for hours together; there strangers
+were entertained; and there the head persons of the village
+might even sleep.<a id="footnotetag706" name="footnotetag706"></a><a href="#footnote706"><sup>706</sup></a> In some parts of Viti Levu the dead
+were sometimes buried in the temples, "that the wind might
+not disturb, nor the rain fall upon them," and in order that
+the living might have the satisfaction of lying near their
+departed friends. A child of high rank having died under
+the charge of the queen of Somosomo, the little body was
+placed in a box and hung from the tie-beam of the principal
+temple. For some months afterwards the daintiest food
+was brought daily to the dead child, the bearers approaching
+with the utmost respect and clapping their hands
+when the ghost was thought to have finished his meal
+just as a chiefs retainers used to do when he had done
+eating.<a id="footnotetag707" name="footnotetag707"></a><a href="#footnote707"><sup>707</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Worship at the temples.</p>
+
+<p>Temples were often unoccupied for months and allowed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page443" id="page443"></a>[pg 443]</span>
+to fall into ruins, until the chief had some request to make
+to the god, when the necessary repairs were first carried out.
+No regular worship was maintained, no habitual reverence
+was displayed at the shrines. The principle of fear, we are
+told, seemed to be the only motive of religious observances,
+and it was artfully fomented by the priests, through whom
+alone the people had access to the gods when they desired to
+supplicate the favour of the divine beings. The prayers were
+naturally accompanied by offerings, which in matters of
+importance comprised large quantities of food, together with
+whales' teeth; in lesser affairs a tooth, club, mat, or spear
+sufficed. Of the food brought by the worshippers part was
+dedicated to the god, but as usual he only ate the soul of it,
+the substance being consumed by the priest and old men;
+the remainder furnished a feast of which all might partake.<a id="footnotetag708" name="footnotetag708"></a><a href="#footnote708"><sup>708</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The priests.</p>
+
+<p>The office of priest (<i>mbete</i>, <i>bete</i>) was usually hereditary,
+but when a priest died without male heirs a cunning fellow,
+ambitious of enjoying the sacred character and of living in
+idleness, would sometimes simulate the convulsive frenzy,
+which passed for a symptom of inspiration, and if he
+succeeded in the imposture would be inducted into the
+vacant benefice. Every chief had his priest, with whom he
+usually lived on a very good footing, the two playing into
+each other's hands and working the oracle for their mutual
+benefit. The people were grossly superstitious, and there
+were few of their affairs in which the priest had not a hand.
+His influence over them was great. In his own district he
+passed for the representative of the deity; indeed, according
+to an early missionary, the natives seldom distinguished
+the idea of the god from that of his minister, who was
+viewed by them with a reverence that almost amounted to
+deification.<a id="footnotetag709" name="footnotetag709"></a><a href="#footnote709"><sup>709</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Oracles given by the priest under the inspiration of the god.
+Paroxysm of inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>The principal duty of the priest was to reveal to men
+the will of the god, and this he always did through the
+direct inspiration of the deity. The revelation was usually
+made in response to an enquiry or a prayer; the supplicant
+asked, it might be, for a good crop of yams or taro, for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page444" id="page444"></a>[pg 444]</span>
+showers of rain, for protection in battle, for a safe voyage,
+or for a storm to drive canoes ashore, so that the supplicant
+might rob, murder, and eat the castaways. To lend force
+to one or other of these pious prayers the worshipper
+brought a whale's tooth to the temple and presented it to
+the priest. The man of god might have had word of his
+coming and time to throw himself into an appropriate
+attitude. He might, for example, be seen lying on the floor
+near the sacred corner, plunged in a profound meditation.
+On the entrance of the enquirer the priest would rouse himself
+so far as to get up and then seat himself with his back
+to the white cloth, down which the deity was expected
+to slide into the medium's body. Having received the
+whale's tooth he would abstract his mind from all worldly
+matters and contemplate the tooth for some time with rapt
+attention. Presently he began to tremble, his limbs twitched,
+his features were distorted. These symptoms, the visible
+manifestation of the entrance of the spirit into him, gradually
+increased in violence till his whole frame was convulsed and
+shook as with a strong fit of ague: his veins swelled: the
+circulation of the blood was quickened. The man was now
+possessed and inspired by the god: his own human
+personality was for a time in abeyance: all that he said
+and did in the paroxysm passed for the words and acts of
+the indwelling deity. Shrill cries of "<i>Koi au! Koi au!</i>"
+"It is I! It is I!" filled the air, proclaiming the actual
+presence of the powerful spirit in the vessel of flesh and
+blood. In giving the oracular response the priest's eyes
+protruded from their sockets and rolled as in a frenzy: his
+voice rose into a squeak: his face was pallid, his lips livid,
+his breathing depressed, his whole appearance that of a
+furious madman. At last sweat burst from every pore, tears
+gushed from his eyes: the strain on the organism was
+visibly relieved; and the symptoms gradually abated.
+Then he would look round with a vacant stare: the god
+within him would cry, "I depart!" and the man would
+announce the departure of the spirit by throwing himself on
+his mat or striking the ground with his club, while blasts on
+a shell-trumpet conveyed to those at a distance the tidings
+that the deity had withdrawn from mortal sight into the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page445" id="page445"></a>[pg 445]</span>
+world invisible.<a id="footnotetag710" name="footnotetag710"></a><a href="#footnote710"><sup>710</sup></a> "I have seen," says Mr. Lorimer Fison,
+"this possession, and a horrible sight it is. In one case, after
+the fit was over, for some time the man's muscles and nerves
+twitched and quivered in an extraordinary way. He was
+naked except for his breech-clout, and on his naked breast
+little snakes seemed to be wriggling for a moment or two
+beneath his skin, disappearing and then suddenly reappearing
+in another part of his chest. When the <i>mbete</i> (which
+we may translate 'priest' for want of a better word) is
+seized by the possession, the god within him calls out his
+own name in a stridulous tone, 'It is I! Katouviere!' or
+some other name. At the next possession some other
+ancestor may declare himself."<a id="footnotetag711" name="footnotetag711"></a><a href="#footnote711"><sup>711</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Specimens of the oracular utterances of Fijian gods.</p>
+
+<p>From this last description of an eye-witness we learn
+that the spirit which possessed a priest and spoke
+through him was often believed to be that of a dead
+ancestor. Some of the inspired utterances of these
+prophets have been recorded. Here are specimens of Fijian
+inspiration. Speaking in the name of the great god Ndengei,
+who was worshipped in the form of a serpent, the priest
+said: "Great Fiji is my small club. Muaimbila is the
+head; Kamba is the handle. If I step on Muaimbila, I
+shall sink it into the sea, whilst Kamba shall rise to the sky.
+If I step on Kamba, it will be lost in the sea, whilst
+Muaimbila would rise into the skies. Yes, Viti Levu is my
+small war-club. I can turn it as I please. I can turn it
+upside down." Again, speaking by the mouth of a priest,
+the god Tanggirianima once made the following observations:
+"I and Kumbunavannua only are gods. I preside over
+wars, and do as I please with sickness. But it is difficult
+for me to come here, as the foreign god fills the place. If I
+attempt to descend by that pillar, I find it pre-occupied by
+the foreign god. If I try another pillar, I find it the
+same. However, we two are fighting the foreign god; and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page446" id="page446"></a>[pg 446]</span>
+if we are victorious, we will save the woman. I <i>will</i> save
+the woman. She will eat food to-day. Had I been sent
+for yesterday, she would have eaten then," and so on.
+The woman, about whose case the deity was consulted and
+whom he announced his fixed intention of saving, died a
+few hours afterwards.<a id="footnotetag712" name="footnotetag712"></a><a href="#footnote712"><sup>712</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Human sacrifices in Fiji.</p>
+
+<p>Ferocious and inveterate cannibals themselves, the Fijians
+naturally assumed that their gods were so too; hence human
+flesh was a common offering, indeed the most valued of all.<a id="footnotetag713" name="footnotetag713"></a><a href="#footnote713"><sup>713</sup></a>
+Formal human sacrifices were frequent. The victims were
+usually taken from a distant tribe, and when war and
+violence failed to supply the demand, recourse was sometimes
+had to negotiation. However obtained, the victims destined
+for sacrifice were often kept for a time and fattened to make
+them better eating. Then, tightly bound in a sitting posture,
+they were placed on hot stones in one of the usual ovens,
+and being covered over with leaves and earth were roasted
+alive, while the spectators roared with laughter at the
+writhings and contortions of the victims in their agony.
+When their struggles ceased and the bodies were judged to
+be done to a nicety, they were raked out of the oven, their
+faces painted black, and so carried to the temple, where they
+were presented to the gods, only, however, to be afterwards
+removed, cut up, and devoured by the people.<a id="footnotetag714" name="footnotetag714"></a><a href="#footnote714"><sup>714</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Human sacrifices offered when a king's house was built or a
+great new canoe launched.</p>
+
+<p>However, roasting alive in ovens was not the only way
+in which men and women were made away with in the service
+of religion. When a king's house was built, men were buried
+alive in the holes dug to receive the posts: they were compelled
+to clasp the posts in their arms, and then the earth
+was shovelled over them and rammed down. And when a
+large new canoe was launched, it was hauled down to the
+sea over the bodies of living men, who were pinioned and
+laid out at intervals on the beach to serve as rollers on which
+the great vessel glided smoothly into the water, leaving a row
+of mangled corpses behind. The theory of both these modes
+of sacrifice was explained by the Fijians to an Englishman
+who witnessed them. I will quote their explanation in his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page447" id="page447"></a>[pg 447]</span>
+words. "They said in answer to the questions I put respecting
+the people being buried alive with the posts, that a
+house or palace of a king was just like a king's canoe: if the
+canoe was not hauled over men, as rollers, she would not be
+expected to float long, and in like manner the palace could
+not stand long if people were not to sit down and continually
+hold the posts up. But I said, 'How could they hold the
+posts up after they were dead?' They said, if they sacrificed
+their lives endeavouring to hold the posts in their right
+position to their superior's <i>turanga kai na kalou</i> (chiefs and
+god), that the virtue of the sacrifice would instigate the gods
+to uphold the house after they were dead, and that they were
+honoured by being considered adequate to such a noble task."<a id="footnotetag715" name="footnotetag715"></a><a href="#footnote715"><sup>715</sup></a>
+Apparently the Fijians imagined that the souls of the dead
+men would somehow strengthen the souls of the houses and
+canoes and so prolong the lives of these useful objects; for
+it is to be remembered that according to Fijian theology
+houses and canoes as well as men and women were provided
+with immortal souls.</p>
+
+<p class="side">High estimation in which murder was held by the Fijians.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the same theory of immortality partially accounts
+for the high honour in which the Fijian held the act of
+murder and for the admiration which he bestowed on all
+murderers. "Shedding of blood," we are told, "to him is no
+crime, but a glory. Whoever may be the victim,&mdash;whether
+noble or vulgar, old or young, man, woman, or child,&mdash;whether
+slain in war, or butchered by treachery,&mdash;to be somehow an
+acknowledged murderer is the object of the Fijian's restless
+ambition."<a id="footnotetag716" name="footnotetag716"></a><a href="#footnote716"><sup>716</sup></a> It was customary throughout Fiji to give
+honorary names to such as had clubbed to death a human
+being, of any age or either sex, during a war. The new
+epithet was given with the complimentary prefix <i>Koroi</i>.
+Mr. Williams once asked a man why he was called <i>Koroi</i>.
+"Because," he replied, "I, with several other men, found some
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page448" id="page448"></a>[pg 448]</span>
+women and children in a cave, drew them out and clubbed
+them, and then was consecrated."<a id="footnotetag717" name="footnotetag717"></a><a href="#footnote717"><sup>717</sup></a> Mr. Fison learned from
+another stout young warrior that he had earned the honourable
+distinction of <i>Koroi</i> by lying in wait among the mangrove
+bushes at the waterside and killing a miserable old woman of
+a hostile tribe, as she crept along the mudflat seeking for
+shellfish. The man would have been equally honoured, adds
+Mr. Fison, if his victim had been a child. The hero of such
+an exploit, for two or three days after killing his man or
+woman, was allowed to besmear his face and bust with a
+mixture of lampblack and oil which differed from the common
+black war-paint; decorated with this badge of honour he
+strutted proudly through the town, the cynosure of all eyes,
+an object of envy to his fellows and of tender interest to the
+girls. The old men shouted approval after him, the women
+would <i>lulilu</i> admiringly as he passed by, and the boys looked
+up to him as a superior being whose noble deeds they
+thirsted to emulate. Higher titles of honour still were
+bestowed on such as had slain their ten, or twenty, or thirty;
+and Mr. Fison tells us of a chief whose admiring countrymen
+had to compound all these titles into one in order to set
+forth his superlative claims to glory. A man who had
+never killed anybody was of very little account in this life,
+and he received the penalty due to his sin in the life hereafter.
+For in the spirit land the ghost of such a poor-spirited
+wretch was sentenced to what the Fijians regarded as the
+most degrading of all punishments, to beat a heap of muck
+with his bloodless club.<a id="footnotetag718" name="footnotetag718"></a><a href="#footnote718"><sup>718</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Ceremony of consecrating a manslayer. The temporary
+restrictions laid on a manslayer were probably dictated by a fear of his
+victim's ghost.</p>
+
+<p>The ceremony of consecrating a manslayer was elaborate.
+He was anointed with red oil from the hair of his head
+to the soles of his feet; and when he had been thus incarnadined
+he exchanged clubs with the spectators, who
+believed that their weapons acquired a mysterious virtue by
+passing through his holy hands. Afterwards the anointed
+one, attended by the king and elders, solemnly stalked down
+to the sea and wetted the soles of his feet in the water.
+Then the whole company returned to the town, while the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page449" id="page449"></a>[pg 449]</span>
+shell-trumpets sounded and the men raised a peculiar hoot.
+Custom required that a hut should be built in which the
+anointed man and his companions must pass the next three
+nights, during which the hero might not lie down, but had
+to sleep as he sat; all that time he might not change his
+bark-cloth garment, nor wash the red paint away from his
+body, nor enter a house in which there was a woman.<a id="footnotetag719" name="footnotetag719"></a><a href="#footnote719"><sup>719</sup></a>
+The reason for observing these curious restrictions is not
+mentioned, but in the light of similar practices, some of
+which have been noticed in these lectures,<a id="footnotetag720" name="footnotetag720"></a><a href="#footnote720"><sup>720</sup></a> we may conjecture
+that they were dictated by a fear of the victim's
+ghost, who among savages generally haunts his slayer and
+will do him a mischief, if he gets a chance. As it is especially
+in dreams that the naturally incensed spirit finds his
+opportunity, we can perhaps understand why the slayer
+might not lie down for the first three nights after the
+slaughter; the wrath of the ghost would then be at its
+hottest, and if he spied his murderer stretched in slumber on
+the ground, the temptation to take an unfair advantage of
+him might have been too strong to be resisted. But when
+his anger had had time to cool down or he had departed for
+his long home, as ghosts generally do after a reasonable
+time, the precautions taken to baffle his vengeance might
+be safely relaxed. Perhaps, as I have already hinted, the
+reverence which the Fijians felt for any man who had taken
+a human life, or at all events the life of an enemy, may have
+partly sprung from a belief that the slayer increased his
+own strength and valour either by subjugating the ghost of
+his victim and employing it as his henchman, or perhaps
+rather by simply absorbing in some occult fashion the vital
+energy of the slain. This view is confirmed by the permission
+given to the killer to assume the name of the killed, whenever
+his victim was a man of distinguished rank;<a id="footnotetag721" name="footnotetag721"></a><a href="#footnote721"><sup>721</sup></a> for by taking
+the name he, according to an opinion common among savages,
+assumed the personality of his namesake.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page450" id="page450"></a>[pg 450]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Other funeral customs based on a fear of the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>The same fear of the ghost of the recently departed
+which manifested itself, if my interpretation of the customs
+is right, in the treatment of manslayers, seems to have
+imprinted itself, though in a more attenuated form, on some
+of the practices observed by Fijian mourners after a natural,
+not a violent, death.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food.
+Seclusion of grave-diggers.</p>
+
+<p>Thus all the persons who had handled a corpse were
+forbidden to touch anything for some time afterwards; in
+particular they were strictly debarred from touching their
+food with their hands; their victuals were brought to them
+by others, and they were fed like infants by attendants or
+obliged to pick up their food with their mouths from the
+ground. The time during which this burdensome restriction
+lasted was different according to the rank of the deceased:
+in the case of great chiefs it lasted from two to ten months;
+in the case of a petty chief it did not exceed one month;
+and in the case of a common person a taboo of not more
+than four days sufficed. When a chief's principal wife did
+not follow him to the other world by being strangled or
+buried alive, she might not touch her own food with her
+hands for three months. When the mourners grew tired of
+being fed like infants or feeding themselves like dogs, they
+sent word to the head chief and he let them know that he
+would remove the taboo whenever they pleased. Accordingly
+they sent him presents of pigs and other provisions, which
+he shared among the people. Then the tabooed persons
+went into a stream and washed themselves; after that they
+caught some animal, such as a pig or a turtle, and wiped
+their hands on it, and the animal thereupon became sacred
+to the chief. Thus the taboo was removed, and the men
+were free once more to work, to feed themselves, and to live
+with their wives. Lazy and idle fellows willingly undertook
+the duty of waiting on the dead, as it relieved them for some
+time from the painful necessity of earning their own bread.<a id="footnotetag722" name="footnotetag722"></a><a href="#footnote722"><sup>722</sup></a>
+The reason why such persons might not touch food with
+their hands was probably a fear of the ghost or at all events
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page451" id="page451"></a>[pg 451]</span>
+of the infection of death; the ghost or the infection might
+be clinging to their hands and might so be transferred from
+them to their food with fatal effects. In Great Fiji not every
+one might dig a chief's grave. The office was hereditary in
+a certain clan. After the funeral the grave-digger was shut
+up in a house and painted black from head to foot. When
+he had to make a short excursion, he covered himself with
+a large mantle of painted native cloth and was supposed to
+be invisible. His food was brought to the house after dark
+by silent bearers, who placed it just within the doorway.
+His seclusion might last for a long time;<a id="footnotetag723" name="footnotetag723"></a><a href="#footnote723"><sup>723</sup></a> it was probably
+intended to screen him from the ghost.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Hair cropped and finger-joints cut off in mourning.</p>
+
+<p>The usual outward sign of mourning was to crop the
+hair or beard, or very rarely both. Some people merely
+made bald the crown of the head. Indeed the Fijians were
+too vain of their hair to part with it lightly, and to conceal
+the loss which custom demanded of them on these occasions
+they used to wear wigs, some of which were very skilfully
+made. The practice of cutting off finger-joints in mourning
+has already been mentioned; one early authority affirms and
+another denies that joints of the little toes were similarly
+amputated by the living as a mark of sorrow for the dead.
+So common was the practice of lopping off the little fingers
+in mourning that till recently few of the older natives could
+be found who had their hands intact; most of them indeed
+had lost the little fingers of both hands. There was a Fijian
+saying that the fourth finger "cried itself hoarse in vain for
+its absent mate" (<i>droga-droga-wale</i>). The mutilation was
+usually confined to the relations of the deceased, unless he
+happened to be one of the highest chiefs. However, the
+severed joints were often sent by poor people to wealthy
+families in mourning, who never failed to reward the senders
+for so delicate a mark of sympathy. Female mourners
+burned their skin into blisters by applying lighted rolls of
+bark-cloth to various parts of their bodies; the brands so
+produced might be seen on their arms, shoulders, necks, and
+breasts.<a id="footnotetag724" name="footnotetag724"></a><a href="#footnote724"><sup>724</sup></a> During the mourning for a king people fasted till
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page452" id="page452"></a>[pg 452]</span>
+evening for ten or twenty days; the coast for miles was
+tabooed and no one might fish there; the nuts also were
+made sacred. Some people in token of grief for a bereavement
+would abstain from fish, fruit, or other pleasant food
+for months together; others would dress in leaves instead of
+in cloth.<a id="footnotetag725" name="footnotetag725"></a><a href="#footnote725"><sup>725</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Men whipped by women in time of mourning for a chief.</p>
+
+<p>Though the motive for these observances is not
+mentioned, we may suppose that they were intended to
+soothe and please the ghost by testifying to the sorrow felt
+by the survivors at his decease. It is more doubtful whether
+the same explanation would apply to another custom which
+the Fijians used to observe in mourning. During ten days
+after a death, while the soul of a deceased chief was thought
+to be still lingering in or near his body, all the women of
+the town provided themselves with long whips, knotted with
+shells, and applied them with great vigour to the bodies of
+the men, raising weals and inflicting bloody wounds, while
+the men retorted by flirting pellets of clay from splinters of
+bamboo.<a id="footnotetag726" name="footnotetag726"></a><a href="#footnote726"><sup>726</sup></a> According to Mr. Williams, this ceremony was
+performed on the tenth day or earlier, and he adds: "I
+have seen grave personages, not accustomed to move quickly,
+flying with all possible speed before a company of such
+women. Sometimes the men retaliate by bespattering their
+assailants with mud; but they use no violence, as it seems
+to be a day on which they are bound to succumb."<a id="footnotetag727" name="footnotetag727"></a><a href="#footnote727"><sup>727</sup></a> As
+the soul of the dead was believed to quit his body and
+depart to his destined abode on the tenth day after death,<a id="footnotetag728" name="footnotetag728"></a><a href="#footnote728"><sup>728</sup></a> the
+scourging of the men by the women was probably supposed
+in some way to speed the parting guest on his long journey.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The dead taken out of the house by a special opening made in
+a wall. Examples of the custom among Aryan peoples.</p>
+
+<p>When a certain king of Fiji died, the side of the house
+was broken down to allow the body to be carried out,
+though there were doorways wide enough for the purpose
+close at hand. The missionary who records the fact could
+not learn the reason of it.<a id="footnotetag729" name="footnotetag729"></a><a href="#footnote729"><sup>729</sup></a> The custom of taking the dead
+out of the house by a special opening, which is afterwards
+closed up, has not been confined to Fiji; on the contrary it
+has been practised by a multitude of peoples, savage, barbarous,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page453" id="page453"></a>[pg 453]</span>
+and civilised, in many parts of the world. For
+example, it was an old Norse rule that a corpse might not
+be carried out of the house by the door which was used
+by the living; hence a hole was made in the wall at the
+back of the dead man's head and he was taken out through
+it backwards, or a hole was dug in the ground under the south
+wall and the body was drawn out through it.<a id="footnotetag730" name="footnotetag730"></a><a href="#footnote730"><sup>730</sup></a> The custom
+may have been at one time common to all the Aryan or
+Indo-european peoples, for it is mentioned in other of their
+ancient records and has been observed by widely separated
+branches of that great family down to modern times. Thus,
+the Zend-Avesta prescribes that, when a death has occurred,
+a breach shall be made in the wall and the corpse carried
+out through it by two men, who have first stripped off their
+clothes.<a id="footnotetag731" name="footnotetag731"></a><a href="#footnote731"><sup>731</sup></a> In Russia "the corpse was often carried out of the
+house through a window, or through a hole made for the
+purpose, and the custom is still kept up in many parts."<a id="footnotetag732" name="footnotetag732"></a><a href="#footnote732"><sup>732</sup></a>
+Speaking of the Hindoos a French traveller of the eighteenth
+century says that "instead of carrying the corpse out by the
+door they make an opening in the wall by which they pass
+it out in a seated posture, and the hole is closed up after
+the ceremony."<a id="footnotetag733" name="footnotetag733"></a><a href="#footnote733"><sup>733</sup></a> Among various Hindoo castes it is still
+customary, when a death has occurred on an inauspicious
+day, to remove the corpse from the house not through the
+door, but through a temporary hole made in the wall.<a id="footnotetag734" name="footnotetag734"></a><a href="#footnote734"><sup>734</sup></a> Old
+German law required that the corpses of criminals and
+suicides should be carried out through a hole under the
+threshold.<a id="footnotetag735" name="footnotetag735"></a><a href="#footnote735"><sup>735</sup></a> In the Highlands of Scotland the bodies of
+suicides were not taken out of the house for burial by the
+doors, but through an opening made between the wall and
+the thatch.<a id="footnotetag736" name="footnotetag736"></a><a href="#footnote736"><sup>736</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page454" id="page454"></a>[pg 454]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Examples of the custom among non-Aryan peoples.</p>
+
+<p>But widespread as such customs have been among
+Indo-european peoples, they have been by no means confined
+to that branch of the human race. It was an
+ancient Chinese practice to knock down part of the wall of
+a house for the purpose of carrying out a corpse.<a id="footnotetag737" name="footnotetag737"></a><a href="#footnote737"><sup>737</sup></a> Some of
+the Canadian Indians would never take a corpse out of the
+hut by the ordinary door, but always lifted a piece of the
+bark wall near which the dead man lay and then drew him
+through the opening.<a id="footnotetag738" name="footnotetag738"></a><a href="#footnote738"><sup>738</sup></a> Among the Esquimaux of Bering
+Strait a corpse is usually raised through the smoke-hole in
+the roof, but is never taken out by the doorway. Should
+the smoke-hole be too small, an opening is made in the rear
+of the house and then closed again.<a id="footnotetag739" name="footnotetag739"></a><a href="#footnote739"><sup>739</sup></a> When a Greenlander
+dies, "they do not carry out the corpse through the entry of
+the house, but lift it through the window, or if he dies in
+a tent, they unfasten one of the skins behind, and convey it
+out that way. A woman behind waves a lighted chip backward
+and forward, and says: 'There is nothing more to be
+had here.'"<a id="footnotetag740" name="footnotetag740"></a><a href="#footnote740"><sup>740</sup></a> Similarly the Hottentots, Bechuanas, Basutos,
+Marotse, Barongo, and many other tribes of South and
+West Africa never carry a corpse out by the door of the hut
+but always by a special opening made in the wall.<a id="footnotetag741" name="footnotetag741"></a><a href="#footnote741"><sup>741</sup></a> A similar
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page455" id="page455"></a>[pg 455]</span>
+custom is observed by the maritime Gajos of Sumatra<a id="footnotetag742" name="footnotetag742"></a><a href="#footnote742"><sup>742</sup></a> and
+by some of the Indian tribes of North-west America, such as
+the Tlingit and the Haida.<a id="footnotetag743" name="footnotetag743"></a><a href="#footnote743"><sup>743</sup></a> Among the Lepchis of Sikhim,
+whose houses are raised on piles, the dead are taken out by
+a hole made in the floor.<a id="footnotetag744" name="footnotetag744"></a><a href="#footnote744"><sup>744</sup></a> Dwellers in tents who practise
+this custom remove a corpse from the tent, not by the door,
+but through an opening made by lifting up an edge of the
+tent-cover: this is done by European gypsies<a id="footnotetag745" name="footnotetag745"></a><a href="#footnote745"><sup>745</sup></a> and by the
+Koryak of north-eastern Asia.<a id="footnotetag746" name="footnotetag746"></a><a href="#footnote746"><sup>746</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The motive of the custom is a desire to prevent the ghost
+from returning to the house.</p>
+
+<p>In all such customs the original motive probably was
+a fear of the ghost and a wish to exclude him from the
+house, lest he should return and carry off the survivors with
+him to the spirit land. Ghosts are commonly credited
+with a low degree of intelligence, and it appears to be supposed
+that they can only find their way back to a house
+by the aperture through which their bodies were carried
+out. Hence people made a practice of taking a corpse
+out not by the door, but through an opening specially
+made for the purpose, which was afterwards blocked
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page456" id="page456"></a>[pg 456]</span>
+up, so that when the ghost returned from the grave and
+attempted to enter the house, he found the orifice closed and
+was obliged to turn away disappointed. That this was the
+train of reasoning actually followed by some peoples may be
+gathered from the explanations which they themselves give
+of the custom. Thus among the Tuski of Alaska "those
+who die a natural death are carried out through a hole cut in
+the back of the hut or <i>yar&aacute;ng</i>. This is immediately closed
+up, that the spirit of the dead man may not find his
+way back."<a id="footnotetag747" name="footnotetag747"></a><a href="#footnote747"><sup>747</sup></a> Among the Esquimaux of Hudson Bay "the
+nearest relatives on approach of death remove the invalid
+to the outside of the house, for if he should die within he
+must not be carried out of the door but through a hole cut in the
+side wall, and it must then be carefully closed to prevent the
+spirit of the person from returning."<a id="footnotetag748" name="footnotetag748"></a><a href="#footnote748"><sup>748</sup></a> Again, "when a Siamese
+is dead, his relations deposit the body in a coffin well covered.
+They do not pass it through the door but let it down into
+the street by an opening which they make in the wall. They
+also carry it thrice round the house, running at the top
+of their speed. They believe that if they did not take this
+precaution, the dead man would remember the way by
+which he had passed, and that he would return by night
+to do some ill turn to his family."<a id="footnotetag749" name="footnotetag749"></a><a href="#footnote749"><sup>749</sup></a> In Travancore the
+body of a dead rajah "is taken out of the palace through
+a breach in the wall, made for the purpose, to avoid pollution
+of the gate, and afterwards built up again so that the
+departed spirit may not return through the gate to trouble
+the survivors."<a id="footnotetag750" name="footnotetag750"></a><a href="#footnote750"><sup>750</sup></a> Among the Kayans of Borneo, whose
+dwellings are raised on piles above the ground, the coffin is
+conveyed out of the house by lowering it with rattans either
+through the floor, planks being taken up for the purpose,
+or under the eaves at the side of the gallery. "In
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page457" id="page457"></a>[pg 457]</span>
+this way they avoid carrying it down the house-ladder;
+and it seems to be felt that this precaution renders it
+more difficult for the ghost to find its way back to
+the house."<a id="footnotetag751" name="footnotetag751"></a><a href="#footnote751"><sup>751</sup></a> Among the Cheremiss of Russia, "old custom
+required that the corpse should not be carried out by the
+door but through a breach in the north wall, where there
+is usually a sash-window. But the custom has long been
+obsolete, even among the heathen, and only very old people
+speak of it. They explain it as follows: to carry it out by
+the door would be to shew the <i>Asyr&egrave;n</i> (the dead man) the
+right way into the house, whereas a breach in the wooden
+wall is immediately closed by replacing the beams in position,
+and thus the <i>Asyr&egrave;n</i> would in vain seek for an entrance."<a id="footnotetag752" name="footnotetag752"></a><a href="#footnote752"><sup>752</sup></a>
+The Samoyeds never carry a corpse out of the hut by the
+door, but lift up a piece of the reindeer-skin covering and
+draw the body out, head foremost, through the opening.
+They think that if they were to carry a corpse out by the
+door, the ghost would soon return and fetch away other
+members of the family.<a id="footnotetag753" name="footnotetag753"></a><a href="#footnote753"><sup>753</sup></a> On the same principle, as soon as
+the Indians of Tumupasa, in north-west Bolivia, have carried
+a corpse out of the house, "they shift the door to the opposite
+side, in order that the deceased may not be able to find
+it."<a id="footnotetag754" name="footnotetag754"></a><a href="#footnote754"><sup>754</sup></a> Once more, in Mecklenburg "it is a law regulating
+the return of the dead that they are compelled to return by
+the same way by which the corpse was removed from the
+house. In the villages of Picher, Bresegard, and others the
+people used to have movable thresholds at the house-doors,
+which, being fitted into the door-posts, could be shoved up.
+The corpse was then carried out of the house under the
+threshold, and therefore could not return over it."<a id="footnotetag755" name="footnotetag755"></a><a href="#footnote755"><sup>755</sup></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page458" id="page458"></a>[pg 458]</span>
+
+<p class="side">Some people only remove in this manner the bodies of persons
+whose ghosts are especially feared.</p>
+
+<p>Even without such express testimonies to the meaning
+of the custom we may infer from a variety of evidence that
+the real motive for practising it is a fear of the ghost and a
+wish to prevent his return. For it is to be observed that
+some peoples do not carry out all their dead by a special
+opening, but that they accord this peculiar mode of removal
+only to persons who die under unlucky or disgraceful circumstances,
+and whose ghosts accordingly are more than usually
+dreaded. Thus we have seen that some modern Hindoo
+castes observe the custom only in the case of people who
+have died on inauspicious days; and that in Germany and
+the Highlands of Scotland this mode of removal was specially
+reserved for the bodies of suicides, whose ghosts are exceedingly
+feared by many people, as appears from the stringent
+precautions taken against them.<a id="footnotetag756" name="footnotetag756"></a><a href="#footnote756"><sup>756</sup></a> Again, among the Kavirondo
+of Central Africa, "when a woman dies without having
+borne a child, she is carried out of the back of the house. A
+hole is made in the wall and the corpse is ignominiously
+pushed through the hole and carried some distance to be
+buried, as it is considered a curse to die without a child. If
+the woman has given birth to a child, then her corpse is
+carried out through the front door and buried in the verandah
+of the house."<a id="footnotetag757" name="footnotetag757"></a><a href="#footnote757"><sup>757</sup></a> In Brittany a stillborn child is removed
+from the house, not by the door, but by the window; "for
+if by ill-luck it should chance otherwise, the mothers who
+should pass through that fatal door would bear nothing but
+stillborn infants."<a id="footnotetag758" name="footnotetag758"></a><a href="#footnote758"><sup>758</sup></a> In Perche, another province of France,
+the same rule is observed with regard to stillborn children,
+though the reason for it is not alleged.<a id="footnotetag759" name="footnotetag759"></a><a href="#footnote759"><sup>759</sup></a> But of all ghosts
+none perhaps inspire such deep and universal terror as the
+ghosts of women who have died in childbed, and extraordinary
+measures are accordingly taken to disable these dangerous
+spirits from returning and doing a mischief to the living.<a id="footnotetag760" name="footnotetag760"></a><a href="#footnote760"><sup>760</sup></a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page459" id="page459"></a>[pg 459]</span>
+Amongst the precautions adopted to keep them at bay is
+the custom of carrying their corpses out of the house by a
+special opening, which is afterwards blocked up. Thus in
+Laos, a province of Siam, "the bodies of women dying in
+childbirth, or within a month afterwards, are not even taken
+out of the house in the ordinary way by the door, but are
+let down through the floor."<a id="footnotetag761" name="footnotetag761"></a><a href="#footnote761"><sup>761</sup></a> The Kachins of Burma stand
+in such fear of the ghosts of women dying in childbed that
+no sooner has such a death occurred than the husband, the
+children, and almost all the people in the house take to
+flight lest the woman's ghost should bite them. "The body
+of the deceased must be burned as soon as possible in order
+to punish her for dying such a death, and also in order
+to frighten her ghost (<i>minla</i>). They bandage her eyes with
+her own hair and with leaves to prevent her from seeing
+anything; they wrap her in a mat, and they carry her out
+of the house, not by the ordinary door, but by an opening
+made for the purpose in the wall or the floor of the room
+where she breathed her last. Then they convey her to a
+deep ravine, where no one dares to pass; they lay her
+in the midst of a great pyre with all the clothes, jewellery,
+and other objects which belonged to her and of which she
+made use; and they burn the whole to cinders, to which
+they refuse the rites of sepulture. Thus they destroy all the
+property of the unfortunate woman, in order that her soul
+may not think of coming to fetch it afterwards and to
+bite people in the attempt."<a id="footnotetag762" name="footnotetag762"></a><a href="#footnote762"><sup>762</sup></a> Similarly among the Kayans
+or Bahaus of Central Borneo "the corpses of women dying
+in childbed excite a special horror; no man and no young
+woman may touch them; they are not carried out of the house
+through the front gallery, but are thrown out of the back
+wall of the dwelling, some boards having been removed for
+the purpose."<a id="footnotetag763" name="footnotetag763"></a><a href="#footnote763"><sup>763</sup></a> Indeed so great is the alarm felt by the
+Kayans at a miscarriage of this sort that when a woman
+labours hard in childbed, the news quickly spreads through
+the large communal house in which the people dwell; and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page460" id="page460"></a>[pg 460]</span>
+if the attendants begin to fear a fatal issue, the whole
+household is thrown into consternation. All the men, from
+the chief down to the boys, will flee from the house, or, if it
+is night, they will clamber up among the beams of the roof
+and there hide in terror; and, if the worst happens, they
+remain there until the woman's corpse has been removed
+from the house for burial.<a id="footnotetag764" name="footnotetag764"></a><a href="#footnote764"><sup>764</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Sometimes the custom is observed when the original motive for
+it is forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, while the custom continues to be practised,
+the idea which gave rise to it has either become obscured or
+has been incorrectly reported. Thus we are told that when
+a death has taken place among the Indians of North-west
+America "the body is at once taken out of the house
+through an opening in the wall from which the boards have
+been removed. It is believed that his ghost would kill
+every one if the body were to stay in the house."<a id="footnotetag765" name="footnotetag765"></a><a href="#footnote765"><sup>765</sup></a> Such
+a belief, while it would furnish an excellent reason for
+hurrying the corpse out of the house as soon as possible,
+does not explain why it should be carried out through a
+special opening instead of through the door. Again, when a
+Queen of Bali died, "the body was drawn out of a large
+aperture made in the wall to the right-hand side of the
+door, in the absurd opinion of <i>cheating the devil</i>, whom these
+islanders believe to lie in wait in the ordinary passage."<a id="footnotetag766" name="footnotetag766"></a><a href="#footnote766"><sup>766</sup></a>
+Again, in Mukden, the capital of Manchuria, the corpses of
+children "must not be carried out of a door or window, but
+through a new or disused opening, in order that the evil
+spirit which causes the disease may not enter. The belief is
+that the Heavenly Dog which eats the sun at an eclipse
+demands the bodies of children, and that if they are denied
+to him he will bring certain calamity on the household."<a id="footnotetag767" name="footnotetag767"></a><a href="#footnote767"><sup>767</sup></a>
+These explanations of the custom are probably misinterpretations
+adopted at a later time when its original meaning was
+forgotten. For a custom often outlives the memory of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page461" id="page461"></a>[pg 461]</span>
+motives which gave it birth. And as royalty is very conservative
+of ancient usages, it would be no matter for surprise
+if the corpses of kings should continue to be carried
+out through special openings long after the bodies of
+commoners were allowed to be conveyed in commonplace
+fashion through the ordinary door. In point of fact we find
+the old custom observed by kings in countries where it
+has apparently ceased to be observed by their subjects.
+Thus among the Sakalava and Antimerina of Madagascar,
+"when a sovereign or a prince of the royal family dies
+within the enclosure of the king's palace, the corpse must be
+carried out of the palace, not by the door, but by a breach
+made for the purpose in the wall; the new sovereign could
+not pass through the door that had been polluted by the
+passage of a dead body."<a id="footnotetag768" name="footnotetag768"></a><a href="#footnote768"><sup>768</sup></a> Similarly among the Macassars
+and Buginese of Southern Celebes there is in the king's
+palace a window reaching to the floor through which on his
+decease the king's body is carried out.<a id="footnotetag769" name="footnotetag769"></a><a href="#footnote769"><sup>769</sup></a> That such a custom
+is only a limitation to kings of a rule which once applied to
+everybody becomes all the more probable, when we learn
+that in the island of Saleijer, which lies to the south of
+Celebes, each house has, besides its ordinary windows, a
+large window in the form of a door, through which, and not
+through the ordinary entrance, every corpse is regularly
+removed at death.<a id="footnotetag770" name="footnotetag770"></a><a href="#footnote770"><sup>770</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Another Fijian funeral custom.</p>
+
+<p>To return from this digression to Fiji, we may conclude
+with a fair degree of probability that when the side of a
+Fijian king's house was broken down to allow his corpse to
+be carried out, though there were doors at hand wide enough
+for the purpose, the original intention was to prevent the
+return of his ghost, who might have proved a very unwelcome
+intruder to his successor on the throne. But I cannot offer
+any explanation of another Fijian funeral custom. You may
+remember that in Fiji it was customary after the death of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page462" id="page462"></a>[pg 462]</span>
+chief to circumcise such lads as had reached a suitable age.<a id="footnotetag771" name="footnotetag771"></a><a href="#footnote771"><sup>771</sup></a>
+Well, on the fifth day after a chief's death a hole used to
+be dug under the floor of a temple and one of the newly
+circumcised lads was secreted in it. Then his companions
+fastened the doors of the temple securely and ran away. When
+the lad hidden in the hole blew on a shell-trumpet, the friends
+of the deceased chief surrounded the temple and thrust their
+spears at him through the fence.<a id="footnotetag772" name="footnotetag772"></a><a href="#footnote772"><sup>772</sup></a> What the exact significance
+of this curious rite may have been, I cannot even conjecture;
+but we may assume that it had something to do with the
+state of the late chief's soul, which was probably supposed to
+be lingering in the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian notions concerning the other world and the way
+thither. The River of the Souls.</p>
+
+<p>It remains to say a little as to the notions which the
+Fijians entertained of the other world and the way thither.
+After death the souls of the departed were believed to set
+out for Bulu or Bulotu, there to dwell with the great serpent-shaped
+god Ndengei. His abode seems to have been generally
+placed in the Nakauvandra mountains, towards the western
+end of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands. But on
+this subject the ideas of the people were, as might be expected,
+both vague and inconsistent. Each tribe filled in the details
+of the mythical land and the mythical journey to suit its own
+geographical position. The souls had generally to cross
+water, either the sea or a river, and they were put across it
+by a ghostly ferryman, who treated the passengers with scant
+courtesy.<a id="footnotetag773" name="footnotetag773"></a><a href="#footnote773"><sup>773</sup></a> According to some people, the River of the Souls
+(<i>Waini-yalo</i>) is what mortals now call the Ndravo River. When
+the ghosts arrived on the bank, they hailed the ferryman and
+he paddled his canoe over to receive them. But before he
+would take them on board they had to state whether they
+proposed to ship as steerage or as cabin passengers, and he
+gave them their berths accordingly; for there was no mixing
+up of the classes in the ferry-boat; the ghosts of chiefs kept
+strictly to themselves at one end of the canoe, and the
+ghosts of commoners huddled together at the other end.<a id="footnotetag774" name="footnotetag774"></a><a href="#footnote774"><sup>774</sup></a>
+The natives of Kandavu, in Southern Fiji, say that on clear
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page463" id="page463"></a>[pg 463]</span>
+days they often see Bulotu, the spirit land, lying away across
+the sea with the sun shining sweetly on it; but they have
+long ago given up all hope of making their way to that
+happy land.<a id="footnotetag775" name="footnotetag775"></a><a href="#footnote775"><sup>775</sup></a> They seem to say with the Demon Lover,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"O yonder are the hills of heaven</p>
+<p class="i2">Where you will never win."</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p class="side">The place of embarcation for the ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Though every island and almost every town had its own
+portal through which the spirits passed on their long journey
+to the far country, yet there was one called Nai Thombothombo,
+which appears to have been more popular and
+frequented than any of the others as a place of embarcation
+for ghosts. It is at the northern point of Mbua Bay, and
+the ghosts shew their good taste in choosing it as their port
+to sail from, for really it is a beautiful spot. The foreland
+juts out between two bays. A shelving beach slopes up to
+precipitous cliffs, their rocky face mantled with a thick green
+veil of creepers. Further inland the shade of tall forest trees
+and the softened gloom cast by crags and rocks lend to the
+scene an air of solemnity and hallowed repose well fitted to
+impress the susceptible native mind with an awful sense of
+the invisible beings that haunt these sacred groves. Natives
+have been known to come on pilgrimage to the spot expecting
+to meet ghosts and gods face to face.<a id="footnotetag776" name="footnotetag776"></a><a href="#footnote776"><sup>776</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The ghost and the pandanus tree.</p>
+
+<p>Many are the perils and dangers that beset the Path of
+the Souls (<i>Sala Ni Yalo</i>). Of these one of the most celebrated
+is a certain pandanus tree, at which every ghost must
+throw the ghost of the real whale's tooth which was placed
+for the purpose in his hand at burial. If he hits the tree, it
+is well for him; for it shews that his friends at home are
+strangling his wives, and accordingly he sits down contentedly
+to wait for the ghosts of his helpmeets, who will soon come
+hurrying to him. But if he makes a bad shot and misses the
+tree, the poor ghost is very disconsolate, for he knows that
+his wives are not being strangled, and who then will cook for
+him in the spirit land? It is a bitter thought, and he reflects
+with sorrow and anger on the ingratitude of men and especially
+of women. His reflections, as reported by the best authority,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page464" id="page464"></a>[pg 464]</span>
+run thus: "How is this? For a long time I planted food
+for my wife, and it was also of great use to her friends: why
+then is she not allowed to follow me? Do my friends love
+me no better than this, after so many years of toil? Will no
+one, in love to me, strangle my wife?"<a id="footnotetag777" name="footnotetag777"></a><a href="#footnote777"><sup>777</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Hard fate of unmarried ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>But if the lot of a married ghost, whose wives have not
+been murdered, is hard, it is nevertheless felicity itself compared
+to the fate of bachelor ghosts. In the first place there
+is a terrible being called the Great Woman, who lurks
+in a shady defile, ready to pounce out on him; and if he
+escapes her clutches it is only to fall in with a much worse
+monster, of the name of Nangganangga, from whom there
+is, humanly speaking, no escape. This ferocious goblin lays
+himself out to catch the souls of bachelors, and so vigilant
+and alert is he that not a single unmarried Fijian ghost is
+known to have ever reached the mansions of the blest. He
+sits beside a big black stone at high-water mark waiting for
+his prey. The bachelor ghosts are aware that it would be
+useless to attempt to march past him when the tide is in; so
+they wait till it is low water and then try to sneak past him
+on the wet sand left by the retiring billows. Vain hope!
+Nangganangga, sitting by the stone, only smiles grimly and
+asks, with withering sarcasm, whether they imagine that the
+tide will never flow again? It does so only too soon for the
+poor ghosts, driving them with every breaking wave nearer
+and nearer to their implacable enemy, till the water laps on
+the fatal stone, and then he grips the shivering souls and
+dashes them to pieces on the big black block.<a id="footnotetag778" name="footnotetag778"></a><a href="#footnote778"><sup>778</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">The Killer of Souls.</p>
+
+<p>Again, there is a very terrible giant armed with a great
+axe, who lies in wait for all and sundry. He makes no nice
+distinction between the married and the unmarried, but strikes
+out at all ghosts indiscriminately. Those whom he wounds
+dare not present themselves in their damaged state to the
+great God Ndengei; so they never reach the happy fields,
+but are doomed to roam the rugged mountains disconsolate.
+However, many ghosts contrive to slip past him unscathed.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page465" id="page465"></a>[pg 465]</span>
+It is said that after the introduction of fire-arms into the
+islands the ghost of a certain chief made very good use of a
+musket which had been providentially buried with his body.
+When the giant drew near and was about to lunge out with
+the axe in his usual style, the ghost discharged the blunderbuss
+in his face, and while the giant was fully engaged in
+dodging the hail of bullets, the chief rushed past him and
+now enjoys celestial happiness.<a id="footnotetag779" name="footnotetag779"></a><a href="#footnote779"><sup>779</sup></a> Some lay the scene of this
+encounter a little beyond the town of Nambanaggatai; for it
+is to be remembered that many of the places in the Path of
+the Souls were identified with real places in the Fijian Islands.
+And the name of the giant is Samu-yalo, that is, the Killer
+of Souls. He artfully conceals himself in some mangrove
+bushes just beyond the town, from which he rushes out in the
+nick of time to fell the passing ghosts. Whenever he kills a
+ghost, he cooks and eats him and that is the end of the poor
+ghost. It is the second death. The highway to the Elysian
+fields runs, or used to run, right through the town of Nambanaggatai;
+so all the doorways of the houses were placed
+opposite each other to allow free and uninterrupted passage
+to the invisible travellers. And the inhabitants spoke to each
+other in low tones and communicated at a little distance by
+signs. The screech of a paroquet in the woods was the signal
+of the approach of a ghost or ghosts; the number of screeches
+was proportioned to the number of the ghosts,&mdash;one screech,
+one ghost, and so on.<a id="footnotetag780" name="footnotetag780"></a><a href="#footnote780"><sup>780</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">A trap for unwary ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Souls who escape the Killer of Souls pass on till they
+come to Naindelinde, one of the highest peaks of the
+Kauvandra mountains. Here the path ends abruptly on the
+brink of a precipice, the foot of which is washed by a deep
+lake. Over the edge of the precipice projects a large
+steer-oar, and the handle is held either by the great god
+Ndengei himself or, according to the better opinion, by his
+deputy. When a ghost comes up and peers ruefully over the
+precipice, the deputy accosts him. "Under what circumstances,"
+he asks, "do you come to us? How did you conduct
+yourself in the other world?" Should the ghost be a
+man of rank, he may say, "I am a great chief. I lived as
+a chief, and my conduct was that of a chief. I had great
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page466" id="page466"></a>[pg 466]</span>
+wealth, many wives, and ruled over a powerful people. I
+have destroyed many towns, and slain many in war." "Good,
+good," says the deputy, "just sit down on the blade of that
+oar, and refresh yourself in the cool breeze." If the ghost is
+unwary enough to accept the invitation, he has no sooner
+seated himself on the blade of the oar with his legs dangling
+over the abyss, than the deputy-deity tilts up the other end
+of the oar and precipitates him into the deep water, far far
+below. A loud smack is heard as the ghost collides with
+the water, there is a splash, a gurgle, a ripple, and all is over.
+The ghost has gone to his account in Murimuria, a very
+second-rate sort of heaven, if it is nothing worse. But a ghost
+who is in favour with the great god Ndengei is warned by
+him not to sit down on the blade of the oar but on the
+handle. The ghost takes the hint and seats himself firmly on
+the safe end of the oar; and when the deputy-deity tries to
+heave it up, he cannot, for he has no purchase. So the ghost
+remains master of the situation, and after an interval for
+refreshment is sent back to earth to be deified.<a id="footnotetag781" name="footnotetag781"></a><a href="#footnote781"><sup>781</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Murimuria, an inferior sort of heaven. The Fijian Elysium.</p>
+
+<p>In Murimuria, which, as I said, is an inferior sort of
+heaven, the departed souls by no means lead a life of pure and
+unmixed enjoyment. Some of them are punished for the
+sins they committed in the flesh. But the Fijian notion of
+sin differs widely from ours. Thus we saw that the ghosts
+of men who did no murder in their lives were punished for
+their negligence by having to pound muck with clubs. Again,
+people who had not their ears bored on earth are forced in
+Hades to go about for ever bearing on their shoulders one of
+the logs of wood on which bark-cloth is beaten out with
+mallets, and all who see the sinner bending under the load
+jeer at him. Again, women who were not tattooed in their life
+are chased by the female ghosts, who scratch and cut and tear
+them with sharp shells, giving them no respite; or they scrape
+the flesh from their bones and bake it into bread for the gods.
+And ghosts who have done anything to displease the gods are
+laid flat on their faces in rows and converted into taro beds.
+But the few who do find their way into the Fijian Elysium are
+blest indeed. There the sky is always cloudless; the groves
+are perfumed with delicious scents; the open glades in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page467" id="page467"></a>[pg 467]</span>
+forest are pleasant; there is abundance of all that heart can
+desire. Language fails to describe the ineffable bliss of the
+happy land. There the souls of the truly good, who have
+murdered many of their fellows on earth and fed on their
+roasted bodies, are lapped in joy for ever.<a id="footnotetag782" name="footnotetag782"></a><a href="#footnote782"><sup>782</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Fijian doctrine of transmigration.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless the souls of the dead were not universally
+believed to depart by the Spirit Path to the other world or
+to stay there for ever. To a certain extent the doctrines of
+transmigration found favour with the Fijians. Some of them
+held that the spirits of the dead wandered about the villages
+in various shapes and could make themselves visible or
+invisible at pleasure. The places which these vagrant souls
+loved to haunt were known to the people, who in passing by
+them were wont to make propitiatory offerings of food or
+cloth. For that reason, too, they were very loth to go abroad
+on a dark night lest they should come bolt upon a ghost.
+Further, it was generally believed that the soul of a celebrated
+chief might after death enter into some young man of the
+tribe and animate him to deeds of valour. Persons so distinguished
+were pointed out and regarded as highly favoured;
+great respect was paid to them, they enjoyed many personal
+privileges, and their opinions were treated with much consideration.<a id="footnotetag783" name="footnotetag783"></a><a href="#footnote783"><sup>783</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="side">Few souls saved under the old Fijian dispensation.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, when we survey the many perils which
+beset the way to the Fijian heaven, and the many risks
+which the souls of the dead ran of dying the second death in
+the other world or of being knocked on the head by the
+living in this, we shall probably agree with the missionary
+Mr. Williams in concluding that under the old Fijian dispensation
+there were few indeed that were saved. "Few,
+comparatively," he says, "are left to inhabit the regions of
+Mbulu, and the immortality even of these is sometimes disputed.
+The belief in a future state is universal in Fiji; but
+their superstitious notions often border upon transmigration,
+and sometimes teach an eventual annihilation."<a id="footnotetag784" name="footnotetag784"></a><a href="#footnote784"><sup>784</sup></a></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="side">Concluding observations.</p>
+
+<p>Here I must break off my survey of the natural belief in
+immortality among mankind. At the outset I had expected
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page468" id="page468"></a>[pg 468]</span>
+to carry the survey further, but I have already exceeded the
+usual limits of these lectures and I must not trespass further
+on your patience. Yet the enquiry which I have opened
+seems worthy to be pursued, and if circumstances should
+admit of it, I shall hope at some future time to resume the
+broken thread of these researches and to follow it a little
+further through the labyrinth of human history. Be that as
+it may, I will now conclude with a few general observations
+suggested by the facts which I have laid before you.</p>
+
+<p class="side">Strength and universality of the natural belief in
+immortality among savages. Wars between savage tribes spring in large
+measure from their belief in immortality. Economic loss involved in
+sacrifices to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, then, it is impossible not to be struck
+by the strength, and perhaps we may say the universality, of
+the natural belief in immortality among the savage races of
+mankind. With them a life after death is not a matter of
+speculation and conjecture, of hope and fear; it is a practical
+certainty which the individual as little dreams of doubting
+as he doubts the reality of his conscious existence. He
+assumes it without enquiry and acts upon it without hesitation,
+as if it were one of the best-ascertained truths within
+the limits of human experience. The belief influences his
+attitude towards the higher powers, the conduct of his daily
+life, and his behaviour towards his fellows; more than that,
+it regulates to a great extent the relations of independent
+communities to each other. For the state of war, which
+normally exists between many, if not most, neighbouring
+savage tribes, springs in large measure directly from their
+belief in immortality; since one of the commonest motives
+for hostility is a desire to appease the angry ghosts of
+friends, who are supposed to have perished by the baleful
+arts of sorcerers in another tribe, and who, if vengeance is
+not inflicted on their real or imaginary murderers, will wreak
+their fury on their undutiful fellow-tribesmen. Thus the
+belief in immortality has not merely coloured the outlook of
+the individual upon the world; it has deeply affected the
+social and political relations of humanity in all ages; for
+the religious wars and persecutions, which distracted and
+devastated Europe for ages, were only the civilised equivalents
+of the battles and murders which the fear of ghosts
+has instigated amongst almost all races of savages of whom
+we possess a record. Regarded from this point of view,
+the faith in a life hereafter has been sown like dragons'
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page469" id="page469"></a>[pg 469]</span>
+teeth on the earth and has brought forth crop after crop of
+armed men, who have turned their swords against each
+other. And when we consider further the gratuitous and
+wasteful destruction of property as well as of life which is
+involved in sacrifices to the dead, we must admit that with
+all its advantages the belief in immortality has entailed
+heavy economical losses upon the races&mdash;and they are
+practically all the races of the world&mdash;who have indulged in
+this expensive luxury. It is not for me to estimate the extent
+and gravity of the consequences, moral, social, political, and
+economic, which flow directly from the belief in immortality.
+I can only point to some of them and commend them to the
+serious attention of historians and economists, as well as of
+moralists and theologians.</p>
+
+<p class="side">How does the savage belief in immortality bear on the
+question of the truth or falsehood of that belief in general? The answer
+depends to some extent on the view we take of human nature. The view of
+the grandeur and dignity of man.</p>
+
+<p>My second observation concerns, not the practical consequences
+of the belief in immortality, but the question of its
+truth or falsehood. That, I need hardly say, is an even
+more difficult problem than the other, and as I intimated at
+the outset of the lectures I find myself wholly incompetent
+to solve it. Accordingly I have confined myself to the
+comparatively easy task of describing some of the forms of
+the belief and some of the customs to which it has given
+rise, without presuming to pass judgment upon them. I
+must leave it to others to place my collections of facts in
+the scales and to say whether they incline the balance for
+or against the truth of this momentous belief, which has
+been so potent for good or ill in history. In every enquiry
+much depends upon the point of view from which the enquirer
+approaches his subject; he will see it in different
+proportions and in different lights according to the angle
+and the distance from which he regards it. The subject
+under discussion in the present case is human nature
+itself; and as we all know, men have formed very different
+estimates of themselves and their species. On the one
+hand, there are those who love to dwell on the grandeur
+and dignity of man, and who swell with pride at the
+contemplation of the triumphs which his genius has
+achieved in the visionary world of imagination as well as
+in the realm of nature. Surely, they say, such a glorious
+creature was not born for mortality, to be snuffed out
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page470" id="page470"></a>[pg 470]</span>
+like a candle, to fade like a flower, to pass away like a
+breath. Is all that penetrating intellect, that creative fancy,
+that vaulting ambition, those noble passions, those far-reaching
+hopes, to come to nothing, to shrivel up into a
+pinch of dust? It is not so, it cannot be. Man is the
+flower of this wide world, the lord of creation, the crown and
+consummation of all things, and it is to wrong him and his
+creator to imagine that the grave is the end of all. To
+those who take this lofty view of human nature it is easy
+and obvious to find in the similar beliefs of savages a welcome
+confirmation of their own cherished faith, and to insist
+that a conviction so widely spread and so firmly held must
+be based on some principle, call it instinct or intuition or
+what you will, which is deeper than logic and cannot be
+confuted by reasoning.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The view of the pettiness and insignificance of man.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, there are those who take a different
+view of human nature, and who find in its contemplation a
+source of humility rather than of pride. They remind us
+how weak, how ignorant, how short-lived is the individual,
+how infirm of purpose, how purblind of vision, how subject
+to pain and suffering, to diseases that torture the body
+and wreck the mind. They say that if the few short
+years of his life are not wasted in idleness and vice, they are
+spent for the most part in a perpetually recurring round
+of trivialities, in the satisfaction of merely animal wants,
+in eating, drinking, and slumber. When they survey the
+history of mankind as a whole, they find the record
+chequered and stained by folly and crime, by broken
+faith, insensate ambition, wanton aggression, injustice,
+cruelty, and lust, and seldom illumined by the mild radiance
+of wisdom and virtue. And when they turn their eyes
+from man himself to the place he occupies in the universe,
+how are they overwhelmed by a sense of his littleness and
+insignificance! They see the earth which he inhabits
+dwindle to a speck in the unimaginable infinities of space,
+and the brief span of his existence shrink into a moment
+in the inconceivable infinities of time. And they ask, Shall
+a creature so puny and frail claim to live for ever, to
+outlast not only the present starry system but every other
+that, when earth and sun and stars have crumbled into dust,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page471" id="page471"></a>[pg 471]</span>
+shall be built upon their ruins in the long long hereafter?
+It is not so, it cannot be. The claim is nothing but the
+outcome of exaggerated self-esteem, of inflated vanity; it is
+the claim of a moth, shrivelled in the flame of a candle, to
+outlive the sun, the claim of a worm to survive the destruction
+of this terrestrial globe in which it burrows. Those
+who take this view of the pettiness and transitoriness of
+man compared with the vastness and permanence of the
+universe find little in the beliefs of savages to alter their
+opinion. They see in savage conceptions of the soul and
+its destiny nothing but a product of childish ignorance, the
+hallucinations of hysteria, the ravings of insanity, or the
+concoctions of deliberate fraud and imposture. They dismiss
+the whole of them as a pack of superstitions and lies,
+unworthy the serious attention of a rational mind; and
+they say that if such drivellings do not refute the belief in
+immortality, as indeed from the nature of things they cannot
+do, they are at least fitted to invest its high-flown pretensions
+with an air of ludicrous absurdity.</p>
+
+<p class="side">The conclusion left open.</p>
+
+<p>Such are the two opposite views which I conceive may
+be taken of the savage testimony to the survival of our
+conscious personality after death. I do not presume to
+adopt the one or the other. It is enough for me to have
+laid a few of the facts before you. I leave you to draw
+your own conclusion.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote701" name="footnote701"></a><b>Footnote 701:</b><a href="#footnotetag701"> (return) </a><p> Berthold Seeman, <i>Viti, an Account of a Government
+Mission to the Vitian or Fijian Islands</i> (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 391
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote702" name="footnote702"></a><b>Footnote 702:</b><a href="#footnotetag702"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>,
+i. 216.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote703" name="footnote703"></a><b>Footnote 703:</b><a href="#footnotetag703"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 216, 218
+<i>sq.</i>; Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, p. 112.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote704" name="footnote704"></a><b>Footnote 704:</b><a href="#footnotetag704"> (return) </a><p> Hazlewood, quoted by Capt. J. E. Erskine, <i>Journal of a
+Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific</i> (London, 1853), pp.
+246 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote705" name="footnote705"></a><b>Footnote 705:</b><a href="#footnotetag705"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition</i>, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 83 <i>sq.</i>; Th.
+Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 217 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote706" name="footnote706"></a><b>Footnote 706:</b><a href="#footnotetag706"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition</i>, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 49, 86, 351, 352; Th.
+Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 221-223; B. Seeman,
+<i>Viti</i>, pp. 392-394.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote707" name="footnote707"></a><b>Footnote 707:</b><a href="#footnotetag707"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 191 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote708" name="footnote708"></a><b>Footnote 708:</b><a href="#footnotetag708"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 223, 231.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote709" name="footnote709"></a><b>Footnote 709:</b><a href="#footnotetag709"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 87; Th.
+Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 226, 227; Basil
+Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, pp. 157 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote710" name="footnote710"></a><b>Footnote 710:</b><a href="#footnotetag710"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 87 <i>sq.</i>; Th.
+Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 224 <i>sq.</i>; Capt. J. E. Erskine, <i>op.
+cit.</i> p. 250; Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i> (London,
+1904), pp. 166 <i>sq.</i> As for the treatment of castaways, see J. E.
+Erskine, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 249; Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 210.
+The latter writer mentions a recent case in which fourteen or sixteen
+shipwrecked persons were cooked and eaten.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote711" name="footnote711"></a><b>Footnote 711:</b><a href="#footnotetag711"> (return) </a><p> The Rev. Lorimer Fison, in a letter to me dated August
+26th, 1898. I have already quoted the passage in <i>The Magic Art and
+the Evolution of Kings</i>, i. 378.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote712" name="footnote712"></a><b>Footnote 712:</b><a href="#footnotetag712"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>,
+i. 225 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote713" name="footnote713"></a><b>Footnote 713:</b><a href="#footnotetag713"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 231.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote714" name="footnote714"></a><b>Footnote 714:</b><a href="#footnotetag714"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 97; Th. Williams, <i>op.
+cit.</i> i. 53.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote715" name="footnote715"></a><b>Footnote 715:</b><a href="#footnotetag715"> (return) </a><p> John Jackson's Narrative, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+<i>Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific</i>
+(London, 1853), pp. 464 <i>sq.</i>, 472 <i>sq.</i> The genital members
+of the men over whom the canoe was dragged were cut off and hung on a
+sacred tree (<i>akau-tambu</i>), "which was already artificially
+prolific in fruit, both of the masculine and feminine gender." The tree
+which bore such remarkable fruit was commonly an ironweed tree standing
+in a conspicuous situation. As to these sacrifices compare Ch. Wilkes,
+<i>op. cit.</i> iii. 97; Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, pp.
+xvi. <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote716" name="footnote716"></a><b>Footnote 716:</b><a href="#footnotetag716"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i, 112.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote717" name="footnote717"></a><b>Footnote 717:</b><a href="#footnotetag717"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 55.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote718" name="footnote718"></a><b>Footnote 718:</b><a href="#footnotetag718"> (return) </a><p> Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, pp. xx., xxi.
+<i>sq.</i>; Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 247; B. Seeman, <i>Viti</i>
+(Cambridge, 1862), p. 401.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote719" name="footnote719"></a><b>Footnote 719:</b><a href="#footnotetag719"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 55 <i>sq.</i> The writer
+witnessed what he calls the ceremony of consecration in the case of a
+young man of the highest rank in Somosomo and he has described what he
+saw. In this case a special hut was not built for the manslayer, and he
+was allowed to pass the nights in the temple of the war god.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote720" name="footnote720"></a><b>Footnote 720:</b><a href="#footnotetag720"> (return) </a><p> See above, pp. 205 <i>sq.</i>, 229 <i>sq.</i>,
+258, 279 <i>sq.</i>, 323, 396, 415.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote721" name="footnote721"></a><b>Footnote 721:</b><a href="#footnotetag721"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 55.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote722" name="footnote722"></a><b>Footnote 722:</b><a href="#footnotetag722"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 98, 99 <i>sq.</i>
+Compare Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, p. 163: "A person who
+has defiled himself by touching a corpse is called <i>yambo</i>, and is
+not allowed to touch food with his hands for several days." The custom
+as to a surviving widow is mentioned by Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i.
+198.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote723" name="footnote723"></a><b>Footnote 723:</b><a href="#footnotetag723"> (return) </a><p>Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, p. 167.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote724" name="footnote724"></a><b>Footnote 724:</b><a href="#footnotetag724"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 101; Th. Williams,
+<i>op. cit.</i> i. 197 <i>sq.</i>; Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old
+Fiji</i>, p. 168; Basil Thomson, <i>The Fijian</i>, p. 375.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote725" name="footnote725"></a><b>Footnote 725:</b><a href="#footnotetag725"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 197, 198.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote726" name="footnote726"></a><b>Footnote 726:</b><a href="#footnotetag726"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 99.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote727" name="footnote727"></a><b>Footnote 727:</b><a href="#footnotetag727"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 198 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote728" name="footnote728"></a><b>Footnote 728:</b><a href="#footnotetag728"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>l.c.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote729" name="footnote729"></a><b>Footnote 729:</b><a href="#footnotetag729"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 197.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote730" name="footnote730"></a><b>Footnote 730:</b><a href="#footnotetag730"> (return) </a><p> K. Weinhold, <i>Altnordisches Leben</i> (Berlin, 1856),
+p. 476.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote731" name="footnote731"></a><b>Footnote 731:</b><a href="#footnotetag731"> (return) </a><p> <i>The Zend-Avesta</i>, Part i. <i>The Vendid&acirc;d,</i>
+translated by James Darmesteter (Oxford, 1880), p. 95 (Fargard, viii. 2.
+10) (<i>Sacred Books of the East</i>, vol. iv.).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote732" name="footnote732"></a><b>Footnote 732:</b><a href="#footnotetag732"> (return) </a><p> W. R. S. Ralston, <i>The Songs of the Russian People</i>,
+Second Edition (London, 1872), p. 318.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote733" name="footnote733"></a><b>Footnote 733:</b><a href="#footnotetag733"> (return) </a><p> Sonnerat, <i>Voyage aux Indes Orientales et &agrave; la
+Chine</i> (Paris, 1782), i. 86.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote734" name="footnote734"></a><b>Footnote 734:</b><a href="#footnotetag734"> (return) </a><p>J. A. Dubois, <i>M&oelig;urs, Institutions et C&eacute;r&eacute;monies des
+Peuples de l'Inde</i> (Paris, 1825), ii. 225; E. Thurston,
+<i>Ethnographic Notes in Southern India</i> (Madras, 1906), pp. 226
+<i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote735" name="footnote735"></a><b>Footnote 735:</b><a href="#footnotetag735"> (return) </a><p> J. Grimm, <i>Deutsche Rechtsalterth&uuml;mer</i> 3rd ed.
+(G&ouml;ttingen, 1881), pp. 726 <i>sqq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote736" name="footnote736"></a><b>Footnote 736:</b><a href="#footnotetag736"> (return) </a><p> Rev. J. G. Campbell, <i>Superstitions
+of the Highlands and Islands of
+Scotland</i> (Glasgow, 1900), p. 242.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote737" name="footnote737"></a><b>Footnote 737:</b><a href="#footnotetag737"> (return) </a><p> <i>The Sacred Books of China</i>, translated by James
+Legge, Part iii. <i>The L&icirc;-K&icirc;</i>, i.-x. (Oxford, 1885) pp. 144
+<i>sq.</i> (Bk. ii. Sect. i. Pt. II. 33) (<i>Sacred Books of the
+East</i>, vol. xxvii.); J. F. Lafitau, <i>M&oelig;urs des Sauvages
+Ameriquains</i> (Paris, 1724), ii. 401 <i>sq.</i>, citing Le Comte,
+<i>Nouv. M&eacute;moires de la Chine</i>, vol. ii. p. 187.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote738" name="footnote738"></a><b>Footnote 738:</b><a href="#footnotetag738"> (return) </a><p> <i>Relations des J&eacute;suites</i>, 1633, p. 11; <i>id.</i>,
+1634, p. 23 (Canadian reprint, Quebec, 1858); J. G. Kohl,
+<i>Kitschi-Gami</i> (Bremen, 1859), p. 149 note.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote739" name="footnote739"></a><b>Footnote 739:</b><a href="#footnotetag739"> (return) </a><p> E. W. Nelson, "The Eskimo about Bering Strait,"
+<i>Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology</i>,
+Part i. (Washington, 1899), p. 311.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote740" name="footnote740"></a><b>Footnote 740:</b><a href="#footnotetag740"> (return) </a><p> David Crantz, <i>History of Greenland</i> (London, 1767),
+i. 237. Compare Hans Egede, <i>Description of Greenland</i>, Second
+Edition (London, 1818), pp. 152 <i>sq.</i>; Captain G. F. Lyon,
+<i>Private Journal</i> (London, 1824), p. 370; C. F. Hall, <i>Narrative
+of the Second Arctic Expedition</i> (Washington, 1879), p. 265
+(Esquimaux).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote741" name="footnote741"></a><b>Footnote 741:</b><a href="#footnotetag741"> (return) </a><p> P. Kolben, <i>The Present State of the Cape of Good
+Hope</i> (London, 1731-1738), i. 316; C. P. Thunberg, "An Account of the
+Cape of Good Hope," in Pinkerton's <i>Voyages and Travels</i>, xvi.
+(London, 1814) p. 142; <i>Bulletin de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de G&eacute;ographie</i>
+(Paris), ii, S&eacute;rie, ii. (1834) p. 196 (Bechuanas); <i>id.</i>, vii.
+S&eacute;rie, vii. (1886) p. 587 (Fernando Po); T. Arbousset et F. Daumas,
+<i>Relation d'un Voyage d'Exploration au Nord-est de la Colonie du Cap
+de Bonne-Esp&eacute;rance</i> (Paris, 1842), pp. 502 <i>sq.</i>; C. J.
+Andersson, <i>Lake Ngami</i>, Second Edition (London, 1856), p. 466; G.
+Fritsch, <i>Die Eingeborenen S&uuml;d-Afrika's</i> (Breslau, 1872), pp. 210,
+335; R. Moffat, <i>Missionary Labours and Scenes in Southern Africa</i>
+(London, 1842), p. 307; E. Casalis, <i>The Basutos</i> (London, 1861),
+p. 202; Ladislaus Magyar, <i>Reisen in S&uuml;d-Afrika</i> (Buda-Pesth and
+Leipsic, 1859), p. 350; Rev. J. Macdonald, <i>Light in Africa</i>,
+Second Edition (London, 1890), p. 166; E. B&eacute;guin, <i>Les Ma-Rotse</i>
+(Lausanne and Fontaines, 1903), p. 115; Henri A. Junod, <i>Les
+Ba-Ronga</i> (Neuch&acirc;tel, 1898), p. 48; <i>id.</i>, <i>The Life of a
+South African Tribe</i>, i. (Neuch&acirc;tel, 1912) p. 138; Dudley Kidd,
+<i>The Essential Kafir</i> (London, 1904), p. 247; A. F.
+Mockler-Ferryman, <i>British Nigeria</i> (London, 1902), p. 234;
+Ramseyer and K&uuml;hne, <i>Four Years in Ashantee</i> (London, 1875), p. 50;
+A. B. Ellis, <i>The Land of Fetish</i> (London, 1883), p. 13;
+<i>id.</i>, <i>The Tshi-speaking Peoples of the Gold Coast</i> (London,
+1887), p. 239; E. Perregaud, <i>Chez les Achanti</i> (Neuch&acirc;tel, 1906),
+p. 127; J. Spieth, <i>Die Ewe-St&auml;mme</i> (Berlin, 1906), p. 756; H. R.
+Palmer, "Notes on the Kor&ocirc;rofawa and Juko&ntilde;," <i>Journal of the African
+Society</i>, No. 44 (July, 1912), p. 414. The custom is also observed by
+some tribes of Central Africa. See Miss A. Werner, <i>The Natives of
+British Central Africa</i> (London, 1906), p. 161; B. Gutmann, "Trauer
+und Begr&auml;bnisssitten der Wadschagga," <i>Globus</i>, lxxxix. (1906) p.
+200; Rev. N. Stam, "Religious Conceptions of the Kavirondo,"
+<i>Anthropos</i>, v. (1910) p. 361.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote742" name="footnote742"></a><b>Footnote 742:</b><a href="#footnotetag742"> (return) </a><p> C. Snouck Hurgronje, <i>Het Gajoland en zijne
+Bewoners</i> (Batavia, 1903), p. 313.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote743" name="footnote743"></a><b>Footnote 743:</b><a href="#footnotetag743"> (return) </a><p> Aurel Krause, <i>Die Tlinkit-Indianer</i> (Jena, 1885),
+p. 225; Franz Boas, in <i>Sixth Report of the Committee on the
+North-western Tribes of Canada</i>, p. 23 (separate reprint from the
+<i>Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science</i>,
+Leeds Meeting, 1890); J. R. Swanton, <i>Contributions to the Ethnology
+of the Haida</i> (Leyden and New York, 1905), pp. 52, 54 (<i>The Jesup
+North Pacific Expedition, Memoir of the American Museum of Natural
+History</i>).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote744" name="footnote744"></a><b>Footnote 744:</b><a href="#footnotetag744"> (return) </a><p> J. A. H. Louis, <i>The Gates of Thibet</i> (Calcutta,
+1894), p. 114.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote745" name="footnote745"></a><b>Footnote 745:</b><a href="#footnotetag745"> (return) </a><p> H. von Wlislocki, <i>Volksglaube und religi&ouml;ser Brauch
+der Zigeuner</i> (M&uuml;nster i. W., 1891), p. 99.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote746" name="footnote746"></a><b>Footnote 746:</b><a href="#footnotetag746"> (return) </a><p> W. Jochelson, <i>The Koryak</i> (New York and Leyden,
+1908), pp. 110 <i>sq.</i> (<i>The Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Memoir
+of the American Museum of Natural History</i>).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote747" name="footnote747"></a><b>Footnote 747:</b><a href="#footnotetag747"> (return) </a><p> W. H. Dall, <i>Alaska and its Resources</i>
+(London, 1870), p. 382.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote748" name="footnote748"></a><b>Footnote 748:</b><a href="#footnotetag748"> (return) </a><p> Lucien M. Turner, "Ethnology of the Ungava District,
+Hudson Bay Territory," <i>Eleventh Annual Report of the Bureau of
+Ethnology</i> (Washington, 1894), p. 191.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote749" name="footnote749"></a><b>Footnote 749:</b><a href="#footnotetag749"> (return) </a><p> Mgr. Brugui&egrave;re, in <i>Annales de l'Association de la
+Propagation de la Foi</i>, v. (Lyons and Paris, 1831) p. 180. Compare
+Mgr. Pallegoix, <i>Description du royaume Thai ou Siam</i> (Paris,
+1854), i. 245; Adolf Bastian, <i>Die Volker des &ouml;stlichen Asien</i>,
+iii. (Jena, 1867) p. 258; E. Young, <i>The Kingdom of the Yellow
+Robe</i> (Westminster, 1898), p. 246.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote750" name="footnote750"></a><b>Footnote 750:</b><a href="#footnotetag750"> (return) </a><p> S. Mateer, <i>Native Life in Travancore</i> (London,
+1883), p. 137. Compare A. Butterworth, "Royal Funerals in Travancore,"
+<i>Indian Antiquary</i>, xxxi. (1902) p. 251.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote751" name="footnote751"></a><b>Footnote 751:</b><a href="#footnotetag751"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, <i>The Pagan Tribes of
+Borneo</i> (London, 1912), ii. 35.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote752" name="footnote752"></a><b>Footnote 752:</b><a href="#footnotetag752"> (return) </a><p> S. K. Kusnezow, "&Uuml;ber den Glauben vom Jenseits und den
+Todtencultus der Tscheremissen," <i>Internationales Archiv f&uuml;r
+Ethnographie</i>, ix. (1896) p. 157.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote753" name="footnote753"></a><b>Footnote 753:</b><a href="#footnotetag753"> (return) </a><p> P. S. Pallas, <i>Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des
+Russischen Reichs</i> (St. Petersburg, 1771-1776), iii. 75; Middendorff,
+<i>Reise in den &auml;ussersten Norden und Osten Sibiriens</i>, iv. 1464.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote754" name="footnote754"></a><b>Footnote 754:</b><a href="#footnotetag754"> (return) </a><p> <i>Exploraciones y Noticias hidrograficas de los Rios del
+Norte de Bolivia</i>, publicados por Manuel V. Ballivian, Segunda Parte,
+<i>Diario del Viage al Madre de Dios hecho por el P. Fr. Nicolas
+Armentia, en los a&ntilde;os de 1884 y 1885</i> (La Paz, 1890), p. 20:
+<i>"Cuando muere alguno, ap&eacute;nas sacan el cad&aacute;ver de la casa, cambian la
+puerta al lado opuesto, para que no d&eacute; con ella el difunto."</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote755" name="footnote755"></a><b>Footnote 755:</b><a href="#footnotetag755"> (return) </a><p> Karl Bartsch, <i>Sagen, M&auml;rchen und
+Gebr&auml;uche aus Meklenburg</i> (Vienna,
+1879-1880), ii. 100, &sect; 358.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote756" name="footnote756"></a><b>Footnote 756:</b><a href="#footnotetag756"> (return) </a><p> For some evidence on this subject, see R. Lasch, "Die
+Behandlung der Leiche des Selbstm&ouml;rders," <i>Globus</i>, lxxxvi. (1899)
+pp. 63-66; Rev. J. Roscoe, <i>The Baganda</i> (London, 1911), pp. 20
+<i>sq.</i>; A. Karasek, "Beitr&auml;ge zur Kenntnis der Waschamba,"
+<i>Baessler-Archiv</i>, i. (1911) pp. 190 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote757" name="footnote757"></a><b>Footnote 757:</b><a href="#footnotetag757"> (return) </a><p> Rev. N. Stam, "The Religious Conceptions of the
+Kavirondo," <i>Anthropos</i>, v. (1910) p. 361.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote758" name="footnote758"></a><b>Footnote 758:</b><a href="#footnotetag758"> (return) </a><p> Alfred de Nore, <i>Coutumes, Mythes, et Traditions des
+Provinces de France</i> (Paris and Lyons, 1846), p. 198.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote759" name="footnote759"></a><b>Footnote 759:</b><a href="#footnotetag759"> (return) </a><p> F&eacute;lix Chapiseau, <i>Le Folk-lore de la Beauce et du
+Perche</i> (Paris, 1902), ii. 164.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote760" name="footnote760"></a><b>Footnote 760:</b><a href="#footnotetag760"> (return) </a><p> For some evidence on this subject see <i>Psyche's
+Task</i>, pp. 64 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote761" name="footnote761"></a><b>Footnote 761:</b><a href="#footnotetag761"> (return) </a><p> Carl Bock, <i>Temples and Elephants</i> (London, 1884),
+p. 262.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote762" name="footnote762"></a><b>Footnote 762:</b><a href="#footnotetag762"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Gilhodes, "Naissance et Enfance chez les Katchins
+(Birmanie)," <i>Anthropos</i>, vi. (1911) pp. 872 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote763" name="footnote763"></a><b>Footnote 763:</b><a href="#footnotetag763"> (return) </a><p> A. W. Nieuwenhuis, <i>Quer durch Borneo</i> (Leyden,
+1901-1907), i. 91.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote764" name="footnote764"></a><b>Footnote 764:</b><a href="#footnotetag764"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, <i>The Pagan Tribes of
+Borneo</i> (London, 1912), ii. 155.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote765" name="footnote765"></a><b>Footnote 765:</b><a href="#footnotetag765"> (return) </a><p> Franz Boas, in <i>Sixth Report of the Committee on the
+North-western Tribes of Canada</i>, p. 23 (separate reprint from the
+<i>Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science</i>,
+Leeds Meeting, 1890).</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote766" name="footnote766"></a><b>Footnote 766:</b><a href="#footnotetag766"> (return) </a><p> Prevost, quoted by John Crawford, <i>History of the
+Indian Archipelago</i> (Edinburgh, 1820), ii. 245. Compare Adolf
+Bastian, <i>Die V&ouml;lker des &ouml;stlichen Asien</i>, v. (Jena, 1869) p. 83.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote767" name="footnote767"></a><b>Footnote 767:</b><a href="#footnotetag767"> (return) </a><p> Mrs. Bishop (Isabella L. Bird), <i>Korea and her
+Neighbours</i> (London, 1898), i. 239 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote768" name="footnote768"></a><b>Footnote 768:</b><a href="#footnotetag768"> (return) </a><p> Arnold van Gennep, <i>Tabou et Tot&eacute;misme &agrave; Madagascar</i>
+(Paris, 1904), p. 65, quoting Dr. Catat.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote769" name="footnote769"></a><b>Footnote 769:</b><a href="#footnotetag769"> (return) </a><p> B. F. Matthes, <i>Bijdragen tot de Ethnologie van
+Zuid-Celebes</i> (The Hague, 1875), p. 139; <i>id.</i>, "Over de &acirc;d&aacute;'s
+of gewoonten der Makassaren en Boegineezen," <i>Verslagen en
+Mededeelingen der Koninklijke Akademie van Wetenschappen</i>, Afdeeling
+Letterkunde, Derde Reeks, ii. (Amsterdam, 1885) p. 142.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote770" name="footnote770"></a><b>Footnote 770:</b><a href="#footnotetag770"> (return) </a><p> W. M. Donselaar "Aanteekeningen over het eiland
+Saleijer," <i>Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche
+Zendelinggenootschap</i>, i. (1857) p. 291.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote771" name="footnote771"></a><b>Footnote 771:</b><a href="#footnotetag771"> (return) </a><p>See above, p. 426.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote772" name="footnote772"></a><b>Footnote 772:</b><a href="#footnotetag772"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 167.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote773" name="footnote773"></a><b>Footnote 773:</b><a href="#footnotetag773"> (return) </a><p> Ch. Wilkes, <i>Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition</i>, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 83; Basil Thomson,
+<i>The Fijians</i>, p. 117.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote774" name="footnote774"></a><b>Footnote 774:</b><a href="#footnotetag774"> (return) </a><p>Basil Thomson, <i>op. cit.</i> p. 121.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote775" name="footnote775"></a><b>Footnote 775:</b><a href="#footnotetag775"> (return) </a><p>Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, p. 163.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote776" name="footnote776"></a><b>Footnote 776:</b><a href="#footnotetag776"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>Fiji and the Fijians</i>, i. 239.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote777" name="footnote777"></a><b>Footnote 777:</b><a href="#footnotetag777"> (return) </a><p> Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 243 <i>sq.</i> Compare
+Berthold Seeman, <i>Viti, an Account of a Government Mission to the
+Vitian of Fijian Islands in the years 1860-1861</i> (Cambridge, 1862),
+p. 399; Lorimer Fison, <i>Tales from Old Fiji</i>, p. 163; Basil
+Thomson, <i>The Fijians</i>, pp. 120 <i>sq.</i>, 121 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote778" name="footnote778"></a><b>Footnote 778:</b><a href="#footnotetag778"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i, 244 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote779" name="footnote779"></a><b>Footnote 779:</b><a href="#footnotetag779"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 83.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote780" name="footnote780"></a><b>Footnote 780:</b><a href="#footnotetag780"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 245 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote781" name="footnote781"></a><b>Footnote 781:</b><a href="#footnotetag781"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 246 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote782" name="footnote782"></a><b>Footnote 782:</b><a href="#footnotetag782"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 247.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote783" name="footnote783"></a><b>Footnote 783:</b><a href="#footnotetag783"> (return) </a><p>Ch. Wilkes, <i>op. cit.</i> iii. 85 <i>sq.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote784" name="footnote784"></a><b>Footnote 784:</b><a href="#footnotetag784"> (return) </a><p>Th. Williams, <i>op. cit.</i> i. 248.</p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page472" id="page472"></a>[pg 472]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="note" id="note"></a>NOTE</h2>
+
+<h3>MYTH OF THE CONTINUANCE OF DEATH<a id="footnotetag785" name="footnotetag785"></a><a href="#footnote785"><sup>785</sup></a></h3>
+
+
+<p>The following story is told by the Balolo of the Upper Congo to
+explain the continuance, if not the origin, of death in the world.
+One day, while a man was working in the forest, a little man with
+two bundles, one large and one small, went up to him and said,
+"Which of these bundles will you have? The large one contains
+knives, looking-glasses, cloth and so forth; and the small one
+contains immortal life." "I cannot choose by myself," answered
+the man; "I must go and ask the other people in the town."
+While he was gone to ask the others, some women arrived and the
+choice was left to them. They tried the edges of the knives,
+decked themselves in the cloth, admired themselves in the looking-glasses,
+and, without more ado, chose the big bundle. The little
+man, picking up the small bundle, vanished. So when the man
+came back from the town, the little man and his bundles were gone.
+The women exhibited and shared the things, but death continued
+on the earth. Hence the people often say, "Oh, if those women
+had only chosen the small bundle, we should not be dying like
+this!"<a id="footnotetag786" name="footnotetag786"></a><a href="#footnote786"><sup>786</sup></a></p>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote785" name="footnote785"></a><b>Footnote 785:</b><a href="#footnotetag785"> (return) </a><p>See above, p. 77.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote786" name="footnote786"></a><b>Footnote 786:</b><a href="#footnotetag786"> (return) </a><p> Rev. John H. Weeks, "Stories
+and other Notes from the Upper
+Congo," <i>Folk-lore</i>, xii. (1901) p. 461;
+<i>id.</i>, <i>Among Congo Cannibals</i> (London,
+1913), p. 218. The country of the
+Balolo lies five miles south of the
+Equator, on Longitude 18&deg; East.</p></blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page473" id="page473"></a>[pg 473]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="index" id="index"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Abinal, Father, <a href="#page49">49</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Abipones, their belief in sorcery as a cause of death, <a href="#page35">35</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Abnormal mental states explained by inspiration, <a href="#page15">15</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Aborigines, magical powers attributed by immigrants to, <a href="#page193">193</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Abstinence from certain food in mourning, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href="#page452">452</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Abundance of food and water favourable to social progress, <a href="#page90">90</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Action as a clue to belief, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Actors personating ghosts and spirits, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page180">180</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page185">185</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Adiri, the land of the dead, <a href="#page211">211</a>, <a href="#page212">212</a>, <a href="#page213">213</a>, <a href="#page214">214</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Admiralty Islands, <a href="#page393">393</a>, <a href="#page400">400</a>, <a href="#page401">401</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Islanders, their myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page71">71</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Advance of culture among the aborigines of South-Eastern Australia, <a href="#page141">141</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page148">148</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Africa, aborigines of, their ideas as to the cause of death, <a href="#page49">49</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;use of poison ordeal in, <a href="#page50">50</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, British Central, <a href="#page162">162</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, British East, <a href="#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Agriculture, rise of, favourable to astronomy, <a href="#page140">140</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Fijian, <a href="#page408">408</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Akamba, their story of the origin of death, <a href="#page61">61</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Akikuyu, resurrection and circumcision among the, <a href="#page254">254</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Alcheringa</i> or dream times, <a href="#page96">96</a>, <a href="#page103">103</a>, <a href="#page114">114</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; ancestors, their marvellous powers, <a href="#page103">103</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; home of the dead, <a href="#page167">167</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Alfoors of Celebes, <a href="#page166">166</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Alligators, ghosts in, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Alols</i>, bachelors' houses, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page222">222</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Altars, stones used as, <a href="#page379">379</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Amputation of fingers in mourning, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href="#page426">426</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page451">451</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Amulets consisting of relics of the dead, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page370">370</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ancestor, totemic, developing into a god, <a href="#page113">113</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ancestor-worship possibly evolved from totemism, <a href="#page114">114</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ancestors, reincarnation of, <a href="#page92">92</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;marvellous powers ascribed to remote, <a href="#page103">103</a>, <a href="#page114">114</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;totemic, traditions concerning, <a href="#page115">115</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dramatic ceremonies to commemorate the doings of, <a href="#page118">118</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;possible evolution of worship of, in Central Australia, <a href="#page125">125</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worshipped, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page328">328</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page340">340</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghosts of, appealed to for help, <a href="#page258">258</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offerings to, <a href="#page298">298</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;prayers to, <a href="#page329">329</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-dead">Dead</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ancestral gods, foreskins of circumcised lads offered to, <a href="#page427">427</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;libations to, <a href="#page430">430</a>, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; images, <a href="#page307">307</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; spirits help hunters and fishers, <a href="#page226">226</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;shrines for, <a href="#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page317">317</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worshipped as gods, <a href="#page369">369</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worshipped in the <i>Nanga</i>, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;first-fruits offered to, <a href="#page429">429</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cloth and weapons offered to, <a href="#page430">430</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;novices presented to, at initiation, <a href="#page432">432</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page434">434</a>.<br/>
+<br/>
+Angola, the poison ordeal in, <a href="#page51">51</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Angoni, their burial customs, <a href="#page162">162</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Animals, souls of sorcerers in, <a href="#page39">39</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;spirits of, go to the spirit land, <a href="#page210">210</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrifices to the souls of, <a href="#page239">239</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;transmigration of dead into, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghosts in the form of, <a href="#page282">282</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghosts turn into, <a href="#page287">287</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghosts incarnate in, <a href="#page379">379</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Animistic views of the Papuans, <a href="#page264">264</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Anjea, a mythical being, <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Annam, <a href="#page67">67</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Anointing manslayers, <a href="#page448">448</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ant-hills, ghosts turn into, <a href="#page287">287</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ant totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, <a href="#page120">120</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ants' nests, ghosts turn into, <a href="#page351">351</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Anthropology, comparative and descriptive, <a href="#page230">230</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page497" id="page497"></a>[pg 497]</span>
+<br/>
+Antimerina of Madagascar, burial custom of the, <a href="#page461">461</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Anuto, a creator, <a href="#page296">296</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Apparitions, <a href="#page396">396</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;fear of, <a href="#page414">414</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Appearance of the dead in dreams, <a href="#page229">229</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Araucanians of Chili, their disbelief in natural death, <a href="#page35">35</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Arawaks of Guiana, <a href="#page36">36</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page70">70</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Arm-bone, final burial ceremony performed with the, <a href="#page167">167</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;lower, of dead preserved, <a href="#page274">274</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -bones, special treatment of the, <a href="#page199">199</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of dead preserved, <a href="#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page249">249</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Aroma district of British New Guinea, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page202">202</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Arrow-heads made of bones of the dead, <a href="#page352">352</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Art, primitive religious, <a href="#page114">114</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Papuan, <a href="#page220">220</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Arugo</i>, soul of dead, <a href="#page207">207</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Arumburinga</i>, spiritual double, <a href="#page164">164</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Arunta, the, of Central Australia, <a href="#page94">94</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremonies connected with totems, <a href="#page119">119</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their magical ceremonies for the multiplication of the totems, <a href="#page122">122</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their customs as to the hair of the dead, <a href="#page138">138</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their cuttings for the dead, <a href="#page155">155</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page159">159</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial customs of the, <a href="#page164">164</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page166">166</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Aryan burial custom, <a href="#page453">453</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Asa</i>, Secret Society, <a href="#page233">233</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ashantee story of the origin of death, <a href="#page63">63</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ashes smeared on mourners, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page361">361</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Astrolabe Bay in German New Guinea, <a href="#page218">218</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page235">235</a>, <a href="#page237">237</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Astronomy, rise of, favoured by agriculture, <a href="#page140">140</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Asylums, <a href="#page243">243</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Asyr&egrave;n</i>, dead man, <a href="#page457">457</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Ataro</i>, a powerful ghost, <a href="#page377">377</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Atonement for sick chief, <a href="#page427">427</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Aukem, a mythical being, <a href="#page181">181</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Aurora, one of the New Hebrides, <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href="#page382">382</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Australia, causes which retarded progress in, <a href="#page89">89</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;germs of a worship of the dead in, <a href="#page168">168</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-central-australia">Central Australia</a>, <a href="#index-western-australia">Western Australia</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, the aborigines of, their ideas as to death from natural causes, <a href="#page40">40</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their primitive character, <a href="#page88">88</a>, <a href="#page91">91</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the belief in immortality among, <a href="#page127">127</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to be reborn in white people, <a href="#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page131">131</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their burial customs, <a href="#page144">144</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their primitive condition, <a href="#page217">217</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, South, beliefs as to the dead in, <a href="#page134">134</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Australia, South-Eastern, beliefs as to the dead in, <a href="#page133">133</a> <i>sq.</i>, 139;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial customs among the aborigines of, <a href="#page145">145</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Western, burial customs in, <a href="#page147">147</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page151">151</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Authority of chiefs based on their claim to magical powers, <a href="#page395">395</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Avenging a death, pretence of, <a href="#page282">282</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bachelor ghosts, hard fate of, <a href="#page464">464</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bachelors' houses, <a href="#page221">221</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bad and good, different fate of the, after death, <a href="#page354">354</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-baganda" id="index-baganda"></a>Baganda, the, their ideas as to the causes of death, <a href="#page56">56</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote56">2</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page78">78</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-uganda">Uganda</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bahaus, the, of Borneo, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bahnars of Cochinchina, <a href="#page74">74</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Baka&iuml;ri, the, of Brazil, <a href="#page35">35</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bakerewe, the, of the Victoria Nyanza, <a href="#page50">50</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bali, burial custom in, <a href="#page460">460</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Balking ghosts, <a href="#page455">455</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Balolo, of the Upper Congo, their myth of the continuance of death, <a href="#page472">472</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Balum</i>, ghost or spirit of dead, <a href="#page244">244</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;name for bull-roarer, <a href="#page250">250</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;name for a ghost or monster who swallows lads at initiation, <a href="#page251">251</a>, <a href="#page255">255</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page261">261</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;soul of a dead man, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page261">261</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bamler, G., <a href="#page291">291</a>, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bananas in myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a>, <a href="#page70">70</a>, <a href="#page72">72</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bandages to prevent entrance of ghosts, <a href="#page396">396</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bandaging eyes of corpse, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Banks' Islands, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a>, <a href="#page386">386</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;myths of the origin of death in, <a href="#page71">71</a>, <a href="#page83">83</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Islanders, funeral customs of the, <a href="#page355">355</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bantu family, <a href="#page60">60</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Baronga, the, <a href="#page61">61</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bartle Bay, <a href="#page206">206</a>, <a href="#page208">208</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Basutos, the, <a href="#page61">61</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bat in myth of origin of death, <a href="#page75">75</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bathing in sea after funeral, <a href="#page207">207</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as purification after a death, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page319">319</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Battel, Andrew, <a href="#page51">51</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bechuanas, the, <a href="#page61">61</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Beetles in myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page70">70</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Belep tribe of New Caledonia, <a href="#page325">325</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Belief, acts as a clue to, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Belief in immortality, origin of belief in, <a href="#page25">25</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;almost universal among races of mankind, <a href="#page33">33</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the aborigines of Central Australia, <a href="#page87">87</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the islanders of Torres Straits, <a href="#page170">170</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of British New Guinea, <a href="#page190">190</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page498" id="page498"></a>[pg 498]</span>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of German New Guinea, <a href="#page216">216</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page303">303</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Southern Melanesia, <a href="#page324">324</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Central Melanesia, <a href="#page343">343</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;its practical effect on the life of the Central Melanesians, <a href="#page391">391</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Northern Melanesia, <a href="#page393">393</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Fijians, <a href="#page406">406</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;strongly held by savages, <a href="#page468">468</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;destruction of life and property entailed by the, <a href="#page468">468</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the question of its truth, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Belief in sorcery a cause of keeping down the population, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page40">40</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Berkeley, his theory of knowledge, <a href="#page11">11</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Berlin Harbour in German New Guinea, <a href="#page218">218</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bernau, Rev. J. H., <a href="#page38">38</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Beryl-stone in <i>Rose Mary</i>, <a href="#page130">130</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Betindalo, the land of the dead, <a href="#page350">350</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bhotias, the, of the Himalayas, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Biak or Wiak, island, <a href="#page303">303</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bilking a ghost, <a href="#page416">416</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bird in divination as to cause of death, <a href="#page45">45</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Birds, souls of sorcerers in, <a href="#page39">39</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Birth, new, at initiation, pretence of, <a href="#page254">254</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Birthplaces, the dead buried in their, <a href="#page160">160</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Birth-stones and birth-sticks (<i>churinga</i>) of the Central Australians, <a href="#page96">96</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bismarck Archipelago, <a href="#page70">70</a>, <a href="#page394">394</a>, <a href="#page402">402</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Black, mourners painted, <a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page293">293</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;gravediggers painted, <a href="#page451">451</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -snake people, <a href="#page94">94</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Blackened, faces of mourners, <a href="#page403">403</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Blood of mourners dropped on corpse or into grave, <a href="#page158">158</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page185">185</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;and hair of mourners offered to the dead, <a href="#page183">183</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of pigs smeared on skulls and bones of the dead, <a href="#page200">200</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;soul thought to reside in the, <a href="#page307">307</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of sacrificial victim not allowed to fall on the ground, <a href="#page365">365</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; revenge, duty of, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page276">276</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;discharged by sham fight, <a href="#page136">136</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bogadyim, in German New Guinea, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Boigu, the island of the dead, <a href="#page175">175</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page213">213</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bolafagina, the lord of the dead, <a href="#page350">350</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bolotoo, the land of souls, <a href="#page411">411</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bones of the dead, second burial of the, <a href="#page166">166</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;kept in house, <a href="#page203">203</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worn by survivors, <a href="#page225">225</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;disinterred and kept in house, <a href="#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page294">294</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;making rain by means of the, <a href="#page341">341</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and skulls of dead smeared with blood of pigs, <a href="#page200">200</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bonitos, ghosts in, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Boollia</i>, magic, <a href="#page41">41</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+"Born of an oak or a rock," <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bougainville, island of, <a href="#page393">393</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Boulia district of Queensland, <a href="#page147">147</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bow, divination by, <a href="#page241">241</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bread-fruit trees, stones to make them bear fruit, <a href="#page335">335</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Breaking things offered to the dead, <a href="#page276">276</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Breath, vital principle associated with the, <a href="#page129">129</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Brett, Rev. W. H., <a href="#page35">35</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Brewin, an evil spirit, <a href="#page45">45</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Brittany, burial custom in, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Brothers-in-law in funeral rites, <a href="#page177">177</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Brown, Rev. Dr. George, <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href="#page395">395</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Buandik, the, <a href="#page138">138</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Buckley, the convict, <a href="#page131">131</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Buginese, burial custom of the, <a href="#page461">461</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bugotu, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Ysabel, <a href="#page372">372</a>, <a href="#page379">379</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Building king's house, men sacrificed at, <a href="#page446">446</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bukaua, the, of German New Guinea, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Bull-roarers, <a href="#page243">243</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used in divination, <a href="#page249">249</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;described, <a href="#page250">250</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used at initiation of young men among the Yabim, <a href="#page250">250</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Kaya-Kaya, <a href="#page255">255</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at initiation among the Bukaua, <a href="#page260">260</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;associated with the spirits of the dead, <a href="#page261">261</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at initiation among the Kai, <a href="#page263">263</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at initiation of young men among the Tami, <a href="#page301">301</a>, <a href="#page302">302</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bulotu or Bulu, the land of the dead, <a href="#page462">462</a>, <a href="#page463">463</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bundle, the fatal, <a href="#page472">472</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;story of, <a href="#page77">77</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Bures</i>, Fijian temples, <a href="#page439">439</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Burial different for old and young, married and unmarried, etc., <a href="#page161">161</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;and burning of the dead, <a href="#page162">162</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;special modes of, intended to prevent or facilitate the return of the spirit, <a href="#page163">163</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;second, custom of, <a href="#page166">166</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in trees, <a href="#page203">203</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in island, <a href="#page319">319</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in the sea, <a href="#page347">347</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; customs of the Australian aborigines, <a href="#page144">144</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Tumleo, <a href="#page223">223</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the Kai, <a href="#page274">274</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the New Caledonians, <a href="#page326">326</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page339">339</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in New Ireland, <a href="#page397">397</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in the Duke of York Island, <a href="#page403">403</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-corpse">Corpse</a>, <a href="#index-grave">Grave</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -grounds, sacred, <a href="#page378">378</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Buried alive, old people, <a href="#page359">359</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Burma, <a href="#page75">75</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Burning and burial of the dead, <a href="#page162">162</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; bodies of women who died in childbed, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Burns inflicted on themselves by mourners, <a href="#page154">154</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a>, <a href="#page157">157</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Burnt offerings to the dead, <a href="#page294">294</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; sacrifices, reasons for, <a href="#page348">348</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to ghosts, <a href="#page366">366</a>, <a href="#page367">367</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page373">373</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page499" id="page499"></a>[pg 499]</span>
+<br/>
+Burying alive the sick and old, Fijian custom of, <a href="#page420">420</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; people in their birthplaces, <a href="#page160">160</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Bushmen, <a href="#page65">65</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Buwun</i>, deities, <a href="#page296">296</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caffres of South Africa, their beliefs as to the causes of death, <a href="#page55">55</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Calabar, poison ordeal in, <a href="#page52">52</a><br/>
+<br/>
+California, Indians of, <a href="#page68">68</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Calling back a lost soul, <a href="#page312">312</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Calm and wind produced by weather-doctors, <a href="#page385">385</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page191">191</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Canaanites, the heathen, <a href="#page154">154</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Canadian Indians, burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Canarium nuts, first-fruits of, offered to ghosts, <a href="#page368">368</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Cannibal feasts in Fiji, <a href="#page446">446</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cannibals fear the ghosts of their victims, <a href="#page396">396</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Canoe, men sacrificed at launching a new, <a href="#page446">446</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Canoes, Papuan, <a href="#page220">220</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cape Bedford in Queensland, <a href="#page129">129</a>, <a href="#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page131">131</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; King William in German New Guinea, <a href="#page218">218</a>, <a href="#page238">238</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Carnac in Brittany, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Catching soul in a scarf, <a href="#page412">412</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Cause, Hume's analysis of, <a href="#page18">18</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Causes, the propensity to search for, <a href="#page17">17</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;two classes of, <a href="#page22">22</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Caves used as burial-places or charnel-houses, <a href="#page330">330</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Celebes, Central, <a href="#page72">72</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-central-australia" id="index-central-australia"></a>Central Australia, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, <a href="#page46">46</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their ideas as to resurrection, <a href="#page68">68</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their belief in immortality, <a href="#page87">87</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their belief in reincarnation of the dead, <a href="#page92">92</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their attitude towards the dead, <a href="#page124">124</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Cereals unknown to Melanesians and Polynesians, <a href="#page408">408</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ceremonial impurity of manslayer, <a href="#page229">229</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ceremonies performed in honour of the Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake, <a href="#page108">108</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dramatic, to commemorate the doings of ancestors, <a href="#page118">118</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;funeral, of the Torres Straits Islanders, <a href="#page176">176</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-dramatic-ceremonies">Dramatic Ceremonies</a>, <a href="#index-dramatic-representation">Dramatic Representations</a>, <a href="#index-funeral-ceremonies">Funeral Ceremonies</a>, <a href="#index-totems">Totems</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chameleon in myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Chams of Annam, <a href="#page67">67</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Charms imparted by dead in dreams, <a href="#page139">139</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Charnel-houses, <a href="#page221">221</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cheating the devil, <a href="#page460">460</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chepara, the, <a href="#page139">139</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cheremiss of Russia, burial custom of the, <a href="#page457">457</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cherokee Indians, <a href="#page77">77</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chief, spirit of dead, a worshipful ghost, <a href="#page352">352</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chief's power in Central Melanesia based on a fear of ghosts, <a href="#page391">391</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chiefs deified after death, <a href="#page369">369</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chiefs' authority based on their claim to magical powers, <a href="#page395">395</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chieftainship, rise of, <a href="#page141">141</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Childbed, treatment of ghosts of women dying in, <a href="#page358">358</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;special fear of ghosts of women dying in, <a href="#page458">458</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Childless women, burial of, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Children, Central Australian theory of the birth of, <a href="#page93">93</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief of Queensland natives as to the birth of, <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Children buried in trees, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page312">312</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;stillborn, burial of, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Child-stones, <a href="#page93">93</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Chingpaws of Burma, <a href="#page75">75</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Choi</i>, disembodied human spirits, <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Chukchansi Indians, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Churinga</i>, sacred sticks or stones, <a href="#page96">96</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Circumcision as initiatory rite of young men, <a href="#page233">233</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Yabim, <a href="#page250">250</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Akikuyu, <a href="#page254">254</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Bukaua, <a href="#page260">260</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Kai, <a href="#page290">290</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Tami, <a href="#page301">301</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as a propitiatory sacrifice, <a href="#page426">426</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Clans, totemic, <a href="#page104">104</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Clay, widow's body smeared with, <a href="#page223">223</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cleanliness due to fear of sorcery, <a href="#page386">386</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page414">414</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cleft stick used in cure, <a href="#page271">271</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Clercq, F. S. A. de, <a href="#page316">316</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cloth and weapons offered to ancestral spirits, <a href="#page430">430</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Clubhouses for men, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href="#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page355">355</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cochinchina, <a href="#page74">74</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Coco-nut trees of dead cut down, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;stones to blight, <a href="#page335">335</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -nuts tabooed, <a href="#page297">297</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Codrington, Dr. R. H., <a href="#page54">54</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page344">344</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page353">353</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a>, <a href="#page359">359</a>, <a href="#page362">362</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page368">368</a>, <a href="#page380">380</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Collins, David, <a href="#page133">133</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Commemorative and magical ceremonies combined, <a href="#page122">122</a>, <a href="#page126">126</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Commercial habits of the North Melanesians, <a href="#page394">394</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Communal houses, <a href="#page304">304</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Communism, temporary revival of primitive, <a href="#page436">436</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Comparative and descriptive anthropology, their relation, <a href="#page230">230</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page500" id="page500"></a>[pg 500]</span>
+<br/>
+Comparative method applied to the study of religion, <a href="#page5">5</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in anthropology, <a href="#page30">30</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Compartments in land of the dead, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page354">354</a>, <a href="#page404">404</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Competition as a cause of progress, <a href="#page89">89</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Conception in women, Central Australian theory of, <a href="#page93">93</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief of Queensland natives concerning, <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Conception of death, the savage, <a href="#page31">31</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Concert of spirits, <a href="#page340">340</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Confession of sins, <a href="#page201">201</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Congo, natives of the, their ideas as to natural death, <a href="#page50">50</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worship of the moon on the, <a href="#page68">68</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Consecration of manslayers in Fiji, <a href="#page448">448</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Consultation of ancestral images, <a href="#page308">308</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Continence, required in training yam vines, <a href="#page371">371</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Continuance of death, myth of the, <a href="#page472">472</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Contradictions and inconsistencies in reasoning not peculiar to savages, <a href="#page111">111</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Convulsions as evidence of inspiration, <a href="#page443">443</a>, <a href="#page444">444</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Co-operative system of piety, <a href="#page333">333</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Coorgs, the, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cord worn round neck by mourners, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page361">361</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-corpse" id="index-corpse"></a>Corpse inspected to discover sorcerer, <a href="#page37">37</a>, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dried on fire, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page313">313</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;tied to prevent ghost from walking, <a href="#page144">144</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;mauled and mutilated in order to disable the ghost, <a href="#page153">153</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;putrefying juices of, received by mourners on their bodies, <a href="#page167">167</a>, <a href="#page205">205</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;carried out feet foremost, <a href="#page174">174</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;decked with ornaments and flowers, <a href="#page232">232</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;painted white and red, <a href="#page233">233</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;crowned with red roses, <a href="#page233">233</a>, <a href="#page234">234</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;stript of ornaments before burial, <a href="#page234">234</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;kept in house, <a href="#page355">355</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;property displayed beside the, <a href="#page397">397</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food with their hands, <a href="#page450">450</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;carried out of house by special opening, <a href="#page452">452</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Corpses mummified, <a href="#page313">313</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of women dying in childbed burnt, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Costume of mourners, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of widow and widower, <a href="#page204">204</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Costumes of actors in dramatic ceremonies concerned with totems, <a href="#page119">119</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Crabs in myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page70">70</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cracking joints of fingers at incantation, <a href="#page223">223</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Creator, the, and the origin of death, <a href="#page73">73</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Crocodiles, transmigration of dead into, <a href="#page245">245</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cromlechs, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Crops, ghosts expected to make the crops thrive, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page284">284</a>, <a href="#page288">288</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Cross-questioning a ghost by means of fire, <a href="#page278">278</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cultivation of the ground, spirits of ancestors supposed to help in the, <a href="#page259">259</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Culture, advance of, among the aborigines of South-Eastern Australia, <a href="#page141">141</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page148">148</a> <i>sq.</i>;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;advanced, of the Fijians, <a href="#page407">407</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cursing enemies, <a href="#page370">370</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a>, <a href="#page404">404</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Cutting down trees of the dead, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-cuttings" id="index-cuttings"></a>Cuttings of the flesh in honour of the dead, <a href="#page154">154</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page359">359</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dance of death, <a href="#page185">185</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Dances as funeral rites, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page200">200</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;masked, of the Monumbo, <a href="#page228">228</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;masked, of a Secret Society, <a href="#page233">233</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at deaths, <a href="#page293">293</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of masked men in imitation of spirits, <a href="#page297">297</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at festivals, <a href="#page316">316</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at festivals of the dead, <a href="#page321">321</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;at funeral feasts, <a href="#page399">399</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and games at festivals, <a href="#page226">226</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dark, ghosts dreaded in the, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page283">283</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>, <a href="#page467">467</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;female mourners remain in the, <a href="#page360">360</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Daula, a ghost associated with the frigate-bird, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dawson, James, <a href="#page42">42</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dazing a ghost, <a href="#page416">416</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-dead" id="index-dead"></a>Dead, worship of the, <a href="#page23">23</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page31">31</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page338">338</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;seen in dreams, <a href="#page27">27</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief in the reincarnation of the, <a href="#page92">92</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page107">107</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;spirits of, associated with conspicuous features of the landscape, <a href="#page115">115</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;reincarnation of the, <a href="#page124">124</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page127">127</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;souls of the, supposed to go to the sky, <a href="#page133">133</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page138">138</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;souls of the, supposed to be in stars, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href="#page140">140</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;names of the, not mentioned, <a href="#page135">135</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;magical virtue attributed to the hair of the, <a href="#page137">137</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;appear to the living in dreams, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page213">213</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;attentions paid to the, in regard to food, fire, property, etc., <a href="#page144">144</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;property of, deposited in grave, <a href="#page145">145</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;motive for destroying the property of the, <a href="#page147">147</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the, <a href="#page149">149</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;incipient worship of the, in Australia, <a href="#page149">149</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;feared, <a href="#page152">152</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page173">173</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cuttings of the flesh in honour of the, <a href="#page154">154</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page359">359</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to be strengthened by blood, <a href="#page159">159</a>;<br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page501" id="page501"></a>[pg 501]</span>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;disposed of in different ways according to their age, manner of death, etc., <a href="#page161">161</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;fear of the, <a href="#page168">168</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;germs of a worship of the, in Australia, <a href="#page168">168</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;destruction of the property of the, <a href="#page174">174</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;land of the, <a href="#page175">175</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page192">192</a>, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page202">202</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page207">207</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page211">211</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page224">224</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page286">286</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page353">353</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page404">404</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page462">462</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;personated by masked men, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page182">182</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page185">185</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;food offered to the, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page211">211</a>, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page348">348</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page364">364</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page367">367</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page372">372</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page396">396</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page429">429</a>, <a href="#page442">442</a>, <a href="#page467">467</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;elements of a worship of the, in Torres Straits, <a href="#page189">189</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;laid on platforms, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page205">205</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worshipped in British New Guinea, <a href="#page201">201</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;prayers to the, <a href="#page201">201</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page288">288</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page329">329</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page401">401</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page427">427</a>, <a href="#page441">441</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;names of, not mentioned, <a href="#page210">210</a>, <a href="#page246">246</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;monuments of the, <a href="#page225">225</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offerings of hunters and fishers to the, <a href="#page226">226</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;oracles of the, <a href="#page235">235</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;buried in the house, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href="#page397">397</a>, <a href="#page398">398</a>, <a href="#page399">399</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offerings to the, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href="#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href="#page298">298</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;transmigrate into animals, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;spirits of the, give good crops, <a href="#page247">247</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;elements of a worship of the dead among the Yabim, <a href="#page255">255</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;spirits of the, believed to be mischievous, <a href="#page257">257</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ancestors supposed to help in the cultivation of the ground, <a href="#page259">259</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;first-fruits offered to the, <a href="#page259">259</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;buried under houses, <a href="#page259">259</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;envious of the living, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page381">381</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burnt offerings to the, <a href="#page294">294</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;predominance of the worship of the, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;power of the, over the living, <a href="#page298">298</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page307">307</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrifices to the, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;wooden images (<i>korwar</i>) of the, <a href="#page307">307</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;buried in island, <a href="#page319">319</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;festival of the, <a href="#page320">320</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;medicine-men, inspired by spirits of the, <a href="#page322">322</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;spirits of the, embodied in their skulls, <a href="#page338">338</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;spirits of the, identified with white men, <a href="#page342">342</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;buried in the sea, <a href="#page347">347</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page397">397</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;relics of the, preserved, <a href="#page348">348</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;bodies of the, preserved for a time in the house, <a href="#page351">351</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;represented by wooden stocks, <a href="#page374">374</a>, <a href="#page386">386</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burned in New Ireland, <a href="#page397">397</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;carried out of house by special opening, <a href="#page452">452</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-ghost">Ghost</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dead kings of Uganda consulted as oracles, <a href="#page151">151</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Death, the problem of, <a href="#page31">31</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the savage conception of, <a href="#page31">31</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to be an effect of sorcery, <a href="#page33">33</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by natural causes, recognised by some savages, <a href="#page55">55</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;myths of the origin of, <a href="#page59">59</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;personified in tales, <a href="#page79">79</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;not regarded as a natural necessity, <a href="#page84">84</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the second, of the dead, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page286">286</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a>, <a href="#page354">354</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;attributed to sorcery, <a href="#page249">249</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;violent, ascribed to sorcery, <a href="#page268">268</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;myth of the continuance of, <a href="#page472">472</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Death and resurrection at initiation, ceremony of, <a href="#page431">431</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;pretence of, at initiation, <a href="#page254">254</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page261">261</a>, <a href="#page302">302</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Death-dances, <a href="#page293">293</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the Torres Straits Islanders, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Deaths from natural causes, disbelief of savages in, <a href="#page33">33</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;attributed to sorcery, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;set down to sorcery or ghosts, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page268">268</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Deceiving the ghost, <a href="#page237">237</a>, <a href="#page273">273</a>, <a href="#page280">280</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page328">328</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Deceiving the spirits, <a href="#page298">298</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Deification of the dead, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page25">25</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of parents, <a href="#page439">439</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Deity consumes soul of offering, <a href="#page297">297</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Demon carries off soul of sick, <a href="#page194">194</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Demons as causes of disease and death, <a href="#page36">36</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Demonstrations, extravagant, of grief at a death, dictated by fear of the ghost, <a href="#page271">271</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+D&eacute;n&eacute; or Tinneh Indians, their ideas as to death, <a href="#page39">39</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Departure of ghost thought to coincide with disappearance of flesh from bones, <a href="#page165">165</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Descent of the living into the nether world, <a href="#page300">300</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Descriptive and comparative anthropology, their relation, <a href="#page230">230</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Descriptive method in anthropology, <a href="#page30">30</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Desertion of house after a death, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote318">1</a>, <a href="#page210">210</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>, <a href="#page349">349</a>, <a href="#page400">400</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of village after a death, <a href="#page275">275</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Deserts as impediments to progress, <a href="#page89">89</a>, <a href="#page90">90</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Design emblematic of totem, <a href="#page168">168</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Destruction of house after a death, <a href="#page210">210</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of life and property entailed by the belief in immortality, <a href="#page468">468</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of property of the dead, <a href="#page174">174</a>, <a href="#page459">459</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;motive for, <a href="#page147">147</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page327">327</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Development arrested or retarded in savagery, <a href="#page88">88</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Dieri, the, <a href="#page138">138</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their burial customs, <a href="#page144">144</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Differentiation of function in prayer, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Disbelief of savages in death from natural causes, <a href="#page34">34</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-disease" id="index-disease"></a>Disease supposed to be caused by sorcery, <a href="#page35">35</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;demons regarded as causes of, <a href="#page36">36</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;recognised by some savages as due to natural causes, <a href="#page55">55</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;special modes of disposing of bodies of persons who die of, <a href="#page162">162</a>, <a href="#page163">163</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-sickness">Sickness</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page502" id="page502"></a>[pg 502]</span>
+<br/>
+Diseases ascribed to ghosts, <a href="#page257">257</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Disinterment of the bones of the dead, <a href="#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page294">294</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dissection of corpse to discover cause of death, <a href="#page53">53</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Divination to discover cause of death, <a href="#page35">35</a>, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page37">37</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page39">39</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page44">44</a>, <a href="#page45">45</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page50">50</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page53">53</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page136">136</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by liver, <a href="#page54">54</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by dreams, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page383">383</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by the skulls of the dead, <a href="#page179">179</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to discover sorcerer who caused death, <a href="#page240">240</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page249">249</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page402">402</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by bow, <a href="#page241">241</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by hair to discover cause of death, <a href="#page319">319</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by means of ghosts, <a href="#page389">389</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to discover ghost who has caused sickness, <a href="#page382">382</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Divinity of kings, <a href="#page16">16</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of Fijian kings, <a href="#page407">407</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Fijian notion of, <a href="#page440">440</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Dog, in myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page66">66</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the Heavenly, <a href="#page460">460</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dogs sacrificed to the dead, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page234">234</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed in epidemics, <a href="#page296">296</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Doreh Bay in Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page303">303</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dragon supposed to swallow lads at initiation, <a href="#page301">301</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-monster">Monster</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Drama of death and resurrection at initiation, <a href="#page431">431</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, evolution of, <a href="#page189">189</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-dramatic-ceremonies" id="index-dramatic-ceremonies"></a>Dramatic ceremonies in Central Australia, magical intention of, <a href="#page122">122</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page126">126</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; concerned with totems, <a href="#page119">119</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; to commemorate the doings of ancestors, <a href="#page118">118</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-dramatic-representation" id="index-dramatic-representation"></a>Dramatic representation of ghosts and spirits by masked men, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page180">180</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page185">185</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Drawings on ground in religious or magical ceremony, <a href="#page112">112</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; on rocks, <a href="#page318">318</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dread of witchcraft, <a href="#page413">413</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Dreamer, professional, <a href="#page383">383</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dreams as a source of the belief in immortality and of the worship of the dead, <a href="#page27">27</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page214">214</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;divination by, <a href="#page136">136</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;appearance of the dead to the living in, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page213">213</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;savage faith in the truth of, <a href="#page139">139</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;consultation of the dead in, <a href="#page179">179</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;danger of, <a href="#page194">194</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the dead communicate with the living in, <a href="#page248">248</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Driving away the ghost, <a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href="#page356">356</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page396">396</a>, <a href="#page399">399</a>, <a href="#page415">415</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Drowning of ghosts, <a href="#page224">224</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Duke of York Island, <a href="#page393">393</a>, <a href="#page397">397</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a>, <a href="#page404">404</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Dying, threats of the, <a href="#page273">273</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ears of corpse stopped with hot coals, <a href="#page152">152</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of mourners cut, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Earth-burial and tree-burial, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Earthquakes ascribed to ghosts, <a href="#page286">286</a>, <a href="#page288">288</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;caused by deities, <a href="#page296">296</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Eating totemic animals or plants, <a href="#page120">120</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the dead, <a href="#page149">149</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;entailed by the belief in immortality, <a href="#page468">468</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Eel, ghost in, <a href="#page379">379</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Eels offered to the dead, <a href="#page429">429</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Egypt, custom at embalming a corpse in ancient, <a href="#page178">178</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Elysium, the Fijian, <a href="#page466">466</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Embryology of religion, <a href="#page88">88</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Emu totem, dramatic ceremonies concerned with, <a href="#page122">122</a>, <a href="#page123">123</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Encounter Bay tribe of South Australia, <a href="#page42">42</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-epilepsy" id="index-epilepsy"></a>Epilepsy ascribed to anger of ghosts, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page283">283</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and inspiration, <a href="#page15">15</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Erdweg, Father Josef, <a href="#page218">218</a>, <a href="#page219">219</a>, <a href="#page227">227</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Erskine, Capt. J. E., <a href="#page409">409</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Ertnatulunga</i>, sacred store-house, <a href="#page99">99</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Erythrophloeum guiniense</i>, in poison ordeal, <a href="#page50">50</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Esquimaux, burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a>, <a href="#page456">456</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Essence, immaterial, of sacrifice absorbed by ghosts and spirits, <a href="#page285">285</a>, <a href="#page287">287</a>, <a href="#page374">374</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Euhemerism, <a href="#page24">24</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Euhemerus, <a href="#page24">24</a><br/>
+<br/>
+European teaching, influence of, on native beliefs, <a href="#page142">142</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Evil spirits regarded as causes of death, <a href="#page36">36</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Excitement as mark of inspiration, <a href="#page14">14</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Exogamy with female descent, <a href="#page416">416</a>, <a href="#page418">418</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Exorcism as cure for sickness, <a href="#page222">222</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Experience defined, <a href="#page12">12</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;two sorts of, <a href="#page13">13</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and intuition, <a href="#page11">11</a><br/>
+<br/>
+External world, question of the reality of, <a href="#page13">13</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;an illusion, <a href="#page21">21</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Eye, soul resides in the, <a href="#page267">267</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Eyes of corpse bandaged, <a href="#page459">459</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Faints ascribed to action of ghosts, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page283">283</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Faith, weakening of religious, <a href="#page4">4</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Falling stars the souls of the dead, <a href="#page229">229</a>, <a href="#page399">399</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Family prayers of the New Caledonians, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page340">340</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; priests, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page340">340</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Famine, the stone of, <a href="#page334">334</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fasting in mourning for a king, <a href="#page451">451</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Father-in-law, mourning for a, <a href="#page155">155</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Favourable natural conditions, their influence in stimulating social progress, <a href="#page141">141</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page148">148</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fear of ghosts, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page147">147</a>, <a href="#page151">151</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page237">237</a>, <a href="#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page282">282</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page396">396</a>, <a href="#page414">414</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page449">449</a>, <a href="#page455">455</a>, <a href="#page467">467</a>;<br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page503" id="page503"></a>[pg 503]</span>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;a moral restraint, <a href="#page175">175</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the source of extravagant demonstrations of grief at death, <a href="#page271">271</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;taboo based on, <a href="#page390">390</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;a bulwark of morality, <a href="#page392">392</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;funeral customs based on, <a href="#page450">450</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of women dying in childbed, <a href="#page458">458</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fear of the dead, <a href="#page152">152</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page168">168</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of witchcraft, <a href="#page244">244</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; the only principle of religious observances in Fiji, <a href="#page443">443</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Feasts provided for ghosts, <a href="#page247">247</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-funeral-feasts">Funeral Feasts</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Feather-money offered to ghosts, <a href="#page374">374</a>, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Feet foremost, corpse carried out, <a href="#page174">174</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-ferry" id="index-ferry"></a>Ferry for ghosts, <a href="#page224">224</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a>, <a href="#page462">462</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Festival of the dead, <a href="#page320">320</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fig-trees, sacred, <a href="#page199">199</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fighting or warrior ghosts, <a href="#page370">370</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fiji and the Fijians, <a href="#page406">406</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, human sacrifices in, <a href="#page446">446</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fijian islands, scenery of, <a href="#page409">409</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; myths of origin of death, <a href="#page66">66</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page75">75</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fijians, belief in immortality among the, <a href="#page406">406</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their advanced culture, <a href="#page407">407</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fingers amputated in mourning, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of living sacrificed in honour of the dead, <a href="#page426">426</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Finsch Harbour in German New Guinea, <a href="#page218">218</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page262">262</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fire as a means of keeping off ghosts, <a href="#page131">131</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -flies, ghosts as, <a href="#page352">352</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; kindled on grave, to warm ghost, <a href="#page144">144</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page211">211</a>, <a href="#page223">223</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>, <a href="#page359">359</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; supplied to ghost, <a href="#page246">246</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used to keep off ghosts, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href="#page283">283</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used in cross-questioning a ghost, <a href="#page278">278</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Firstborn children, skull-topped images made of dead, <a href="#page312">312</a><br/>
+<br/>
+First-fruits offered to the dead, <a href="#page259">259</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of canarium nuts offered to ghosts, <a href="#page368">368</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to deified spirits of dead chiefs, <a href="#page369">369</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to ghosts, <a href="#page373">373</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of yams offered to the ancestral spirits, <a href="#page429">429</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fish offered by fishermen to the dead, <a href="#page226">226</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;prayers for, <a href="#page329">329</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghost in, <a href="#page379">379</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, <a href="#page119">119</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page121">121</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fishermen pray to ghosts, <a href="#page289">289</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, stones to help, <a href="#page337">337</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fison, Lorimer, <a href="#page407">407</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a>, <a href="#page416">416</a>, <a href="#page418">418</a>, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote691">1</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a>, <a href="#page435">435</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page438">438</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote697">1</a>, <a href="#page445">445</a>, <a href="#page448">448</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fits ascribed to contact with ghosts, <a href="#page283">283</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-epilepsy">Epilepsy</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Florida, one of the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page348">348</a>, <a href="#page349">349</a>, <a href="#page367">367</a>, <a href="#page368">368</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a>, <a href="#page377">377</a>, <a href="#page379">379</a>, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Flutes, sacred, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href="#page233">233</a>, <a href="#page252">252</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Flying-foxes, souls of the dead in, <a href="#page405">405</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Food placed on grave, <a href="#page144">144</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to the dead, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page211">211</a>, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page364">364</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page367">367</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page372">372</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page396">396</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page429">429</a>, <a href="#page442">442</a>, <a href="#page467">467</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;abstinence from certain, in mourning, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href="#page452">452</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;supply promoted by ghosts, <a href="#page283">283</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to ancestral spirits, <a href="#page316">316</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to the skulls of the dead, <a href="#page339">339</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page352">352</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to ghosts, <a href="#page348">348</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of ghosts, the living not to partake of the, <a href="#page355">355</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; not to be touched with the hands by gravediggers, <a href="#page327">327</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;not to be touched with hands by persons who have handled a corpse, <a href="#page450">450</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and water, abundance of, favourable to social progress, <a href="#page90">90</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;offered to the dead, <a href="#page174">174</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fool and Death, <a href="#page83">83</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Footprints, magic of, <a href="#page45">45</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Foundation-sacrifice of men, <a href="#page446">446</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Fowlers pray to ghosts, <a href="#page289">289</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Frenzy a symptom of inspiration, <a href="#page443">443</a>, <a href="#page444">444</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Frigate-bird, mark of the, <a href="#page350">350</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghost associated with the, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Frigate-birds, ghosts in, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Frog in stories of the origin of death, <a href="#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page62">62</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Fruit-trees cut down for ghost, <a href="#page246">246</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead cut down, <a href="#page399">399</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-funeral-ceremonies" id="index-funeral-ceremonies"></a>Funeral ceremonies intended to dismiss the ghost from the land of the living, <a href="#page174">174</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; ceremonies of the Torres Straits Islanders, <a href="#page176">176</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; customs of the Tami, <a href="#page293">293</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the Central Melanesians, <a href="#page347">347</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page355">355</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;based on fear of ghosts, <a href="#page450">450</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; <a name="index-funeral-feasts" id="index-funeral-feasts"></a>feasts, <a href="#page348">348</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a>, <a href="#page358">358</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href="#page396">396</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;orations, <a href="#page355">355</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Forces, impersonal, the world conceived as a complex of, <a href="#page21">21</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Foreskins sacrificed in honour of the dead, <a href="#page426">426</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of circumcised lads presented to ancestral gods, <a href="#page427">427</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gaboon, the, <a href="#page54">54</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gajos of Sumatra, burial custom of the, <a href="#page455">455</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gall used in divination, <a href="#page54">54</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Game offered by hunters to the dead, <a href="#page226">226</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ganindo, a warrior ghost, <a href="#page363">363</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Gardens, ghosts of, <a href="#page371">371</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page504" id="page504"></a>[pg 504]</span>
+<br/>
+Gazelle Peninsula, New Britain, <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page398">398</a>, <a href="#page405">405</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Geelvink Bay, in Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page303">303</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Genital members of human victims hung on tree, <a href="#page447">447</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote715">1</a><br/>
+<br/>
+German burial custom, <a href="#page453">453</a>, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-ghost" id="index-ghost"></a>Ghost appeased by sham fight, <a href="#page137">137</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;hunted into the grave, <a href="#page164">164</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to linger near body till flesh is decayed, <a href="#page165">165</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;elaborate funeral ceremonies designed to get rid of, <a href="#page174">174</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;driven away, <a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;extracted from body of patient, <a href="#page271">271</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;calls for vengeance, <a href="#page278">278</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cursed and ill-treated, <a href="#page285">285</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;who causes sunshine and rain, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -posts, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -seer, <a href="#page204">204</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -shooter, <a href="#page387">387</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ghostly ferry, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-ferry">Ferry</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ghosts, mischievous nature of, <a href="#page28">28</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as causes of sickness, <a href="#page54">54</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page222">222</a>, <a href="#page300">300</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page389">389</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;feared, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page147">147</a>, <a href="#page151">151</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page237">237</a>, <a href="#page271">271</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page282">282</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page396">396</a>, <a href="#page414">414</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page449">449</a>, <a href="#page457">457</a>, <a href="#page467">467</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;attentions paid to, in regard to food, fire, property, etc., <a href="#page144">144</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;feared only of recently departed, <a href="#page151">151</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of nearest relations most feared, <a href="#page153">153</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;represented dramatically by masked men, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page182">182</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page185">185</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;should have their noses bored, <a href="#page192">192</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;return of the, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href="#page300">300</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;carry off the souls of the living, <a href="#page197">197</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cause bad luck in hunting and fishing, <a href="#page197">197</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;identified with phosphorescent lights, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page258">258</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;appear to seer, <a href="#page204">204</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of slain enemies especially dreaded, <a href="#page205">205</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the hanged specially feared, <a href="#page212">212</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;certain classes of ghosts specially feared, <a href="#page212">212</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;malignity of, <a href="#page212">212</a>, <a href="#page381">381</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;drowned, <a href="#page224">224</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;village of, <a href="#page231">231</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page234">234</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;give information, <a href="#page240">240</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;provided with fire, <a href="#page246">246</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;feasts provided for, <a href="#page247">247</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to give good crops, <a href="#page247">247</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;communicate with the living in dreams, <a href="#page248">248</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;diseases ascribed to action of, <a href="#page257">257</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the slain, special fear of, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of ancestors appealed to for help, <a href="#page258">258</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;precautions taken against, <a href="#page258">258</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;expected to make the crops thrive, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page284">284</a>, <a href="#page288">288</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;natural death ascribed to action of, <a href="#page268">268</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sickness ascribed to action of, <a href="#page269">269</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page372">372</a>, <a href="#page375">375</a>, <a href="#page381">381</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;deceived, <a href="#page273">273</a>, <a href="#page280">280</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page328">328</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to help hunters, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page284">284</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in the form of animals, <a href="#page282">282</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;help the living by promoting supply of food, <a href="#page283">283</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cause earthquakes, <a href="#page286">286</a>, <a href="#page288">288</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as patrons of hunting and other departments, <a href="#page287">287</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;die the second death, <a href="#page287">287</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;turn into animals, <a href="#page287">287</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;turn into ant-hills, <a href="#page287">287</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of warriors invoked by warriors, <a href="#page288">288</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;invoked by warriors, farmers, fowlers, fishermen, etc., <a href="#page288">288</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of men may grow into gods, <a href="#page289">289</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the dead in the form of serpents, <a href="#page300">300</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;driven away, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href="#page356">356</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page396">396</a>, <a href="#page399">399</a>, <a href="#page415">415</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cause all sorts of misfortunes, <a href="#page306">306</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;call for vengeance, <a href="#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page468">468</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrifices to, <a href="#page328">328</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of power and ghosts of no account, distinction between, <a href="#page345">345</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the recent dead most powerful, <a href="#page346">346</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;prayers to, <a href="#page348">348</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of land and sea, <a href="#page348">348</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;food offered to, <a href="#page348">348</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;live in islands, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;live underground, <a href="#page353">353</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worshipful, <a href="#page362">362</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;public and private, <a href="#page367">367</a>, <a href="#page369">369</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;first-fruits offered to, <a href="#page368">368</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page373">373</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;warlike, <a href="#page370">370</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of gardens, <a href="#page371">371</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;human sacrifices to, <a href="#page371">371</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;incarnate in sharks, <a href="#page373">373</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrifices to, at planting, <a href="#page375">375</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sanctuaries of, <a href="#page377">377</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;incarnate in animals, <a href="#page379">379</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;envious of the living, <a href="#page381">381</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;carry off souls, <a href="#page383">383</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in stones, <a href="#page383">383</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;inspiration by means of, <a href="#page389">389</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;killed, <a href="#page415">415</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dazed, <a href="#page416">416</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;prevented from returning to the house, <a href="#page455">455</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;unmarried, hard fate of, <a href="#page464">464</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ghosts and spirits, distinction between, in Central Melanesia, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href="#page363">363</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;regulate the weather, <a href="#page384">384</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of women dying in childbed, special fear of, <a href="#page458">458</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;special treatment of, <a href="#page358">358</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-dead">Dead</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#index-spirits">Spirits</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Giant, mythical, thought to appear annually with the south-east monsoon, <a href="#page255">255</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gifford, Lord, <a href="#page2">2</a>, <a href="#page3">3</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Girdle made from hair of dead, <a href="#page138">138</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gnanji, the, of Central Australia, <a href="#page92">92</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Goat in story of the origin of death, <a href="#page64">64</a><br/>
+<br/>
+God, the question of his existence, <a href="#page2">2</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;defined, <a href="#page9">9</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;knowledge of, how acquired, <a href="#page11">11</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;inferred as a cause, <a href="#page22">22</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;and the origin of death, <a href="#page61">61</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in form of serpent, <a href="#page445">445</a>, <a href="#page462">462</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gods created by man in his own likeness, <a href="#page19">19</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of nature, <a href="#page20">20</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;human, <a href="#page20">20</a>, <a href="#page23">23</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;unknown among aborigines of Australia, <a href="#page91">91</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;often developed out of ghosts, <a href="#page289">289</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ancestors worshipped as, <a href="#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page369">369</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ancestral, sacrifice of foreskins to, <a href="#page427">427</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ancestral, libations to, <a href="#page438">438</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;two classes of, in Fiji, <a href="#page440">440</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and spirits, no certain demarcation between, <a href="#page441">441</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Goldie, Rev. Hugh, <a href="#page52">52</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page505" id="page505"></a>[pg 505]</span>
+<br/>
+Good crops given by ghosts, <a href="#page247">247</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; spirit, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and bad, different fate of the, after death, <a href="#page354">354</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gran Chaco, in Argentina, <a href="#page165">165</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Grandfather, soul of, reborn in grandchild, <a href="#page417">417</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;his ghost dazed, <a href="#page416">416</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Grandfather and grandchild, their relation under exogamy and female kinship, <a href="#page416">416</a>, <a href="#page418">418</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Grandidier, A., <a href="#page49">49</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Grass for graves, euphemism for human victims buried with the dead, <a href="#page425">425</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -seed, magical ceremony for increasing, <a href="#page102">102</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-grave" id="index-grave"></a>Grave, food placed on, <a href="#page144">144</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;property of dead deposited in, <a href="#page145">145</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;hut erected on, <a href="#page203">203</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of worshipful dead a sanctuary, <a href="#page347">347</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;stones heaped on, <a href="#page360">360</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrifices to ghost on, <a href="#page382">382</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gravediggers, purification of, <a href="#page314">314</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;secluded, <a href="#page327">327</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;secluded and painted black, <a href="#page451">451</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Graves, huts built on, for use of ghosts, <a href="#page150">150</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;under the houses, <a href="#page274">274</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-huts">Huts</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Great Woman, the, <a href="#page464">464</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Greek tragedy, W. Ridgeway on the origin of, <a href="#page189">189</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Greeks, purificatory rites of ancient, <a href="#page206">206</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Greenlanders, burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Grey, Sir George, <a href="#page41">41</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;taken for an Australian aboriginal, <a href="#page131">131</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Grief, extravagant demonstrations of grief in mourning, their motives, <a href="#page135">135</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; at a death, extravagant demonstrations of, dictated by fear of the ghost, <a href="#page271">271</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Grihya-Sutras</i>, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ground drawings in magical or religious ceremony, <a href="#page112">112</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Groves, sacred, the dead buried in, <a href="#page326">326</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Guadalcanar, one of the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page372">372</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Guardian spirits, <a href="#page227">227</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Guiana, Indians of, their ideas as to the cause of death, <a href="#page35">35</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their offerings to the dead, <a href="#page165">165</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gullet of pig sacrificed, <a href="#page368">368</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gulu, king of heaven, <a href="#page78">78</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Gypsies, European, burial custom of, <a href="#page455">455</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haddon, Dr. A. C., <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page172">172</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page175">175</a>, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page180">180</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hagen, Dr. B., <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Haida, burial custom of the, <a href="#page455">455</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hair burnt as charm, <a href="#page43">43</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cut in mourning, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page320">320</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of widow unshorn, <a href="#page184">184</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of dead child worn by mother, <a href="#page315">315</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of gravediggers not cut, <a href="#page327">327</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used as amulet, <a href="#page332">332</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, magical virtue attributed to, <a href="#page137">137</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worn by relatives, <a href="#page249">249</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;divination by means of, <a href="#page319">319</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of mourners offered to the dead, <a href="#page183">183</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cut off, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page204">204</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hakea flower totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, <a href="#page119">119</a>, <a href="#page121">121</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hands, gravediggers and persons who have handled a corpse not to touch food with their, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page450">450</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Hanged, ghosts of the, specially feared, <a href="#page212">212</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hare in myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page65">65</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Harumae, a warrior ghost, <a href="#page365">365</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Hasselt, J. L. van, <a href="#page305">305</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hauri, a worshipful ghost, <a href="#page372">372</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Head-dress of gravediggers, <a href="#page327">327</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Head-hunters, <a href="#page352">352</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Head of corpse cut off in order to disable the ghost, <a href="#page153">153</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;removed and preserved, <a href="#page178">178</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-skulls">Skulls</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Heads of mourners shaved, <a href="#page208">208</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, human, cut off in honour of the dead, <a href="#page352">352</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Heaps of stones on grave, <a href="#page360">360</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Heart supposed to be the seat of human spirit, <a href="#page129">129</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of pig sacrificed, <a href="#page368">368</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Heavenly Dog, <a href="#page460">460</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hebrew prophets, <a href="#page14">14</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hen in myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page79">79</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Highlands of Scotland, burial custom in the, <a href="#page453">453</a>, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hindoos, burial custom of the, <a href="#page453">453</a>, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Historical method of treating natural theology, <a href="#page2">2</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+History of religion, its importance, <a href="#page3">3</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead, <a href="#page207">207</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hole in the wall, dead carried out through a, <a href="#page452">452</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Holy of Holies, <a href="#page430">430</a>, <a href="#page431">431</a>, <a href="#page433">433</a>, <a href="#page437">437</a>, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Homer on blood-drinking ghosts, <a href="#page159">159</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-homicides" id="index-homicides"></a>Homicides, precautions taken by, against the ghosts of their victims, <a href="#page205">205</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;purification of, <a href="#page206">206</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;honours bestowed on, in Fiji, <a href="#page447">447</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-manslayers">Manslayers</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Homoeopathic magic, <a href="#page288">288</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; or imitative magic, <a href="#page335">335</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Honorary titles of homicides in Fiji, <a href="#page447">447</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Hood Peninsula of British New Guinea, <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page202">202</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hos of Togoland, their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page81">81</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page506" id="page506"></a>[pg 506]</span>
+<br/>
+Hose, Ch., and McDougall, W., quoted, <a href="#page265">265</a> <i><a href="#footnote435">n.</a></i>, <a href="#page417">417</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hottentots, their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page65">65</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+House deserted after a death, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote318">1</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>, <a href="#page349">349</a>, <a href="#page400">400</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;deserted or destroyed after a death, <a href="#page210">210</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dead buried in the, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href="#page397">397</a>, <a href="#page398">398</a>, <a href="#page399">399</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dead carried out of, by special opening, <a href="#page452">452</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Houses, native, at Kalo, <a href="#page202">202</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;communal, <a href="#page304">304</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Howitt, Dr. A. W., <a href="#page44">44</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href="#page141">141</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Human gods, <a href="#page20">20</a>, <a href="#page23">23</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; nature, two different views of, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; sacrifices to ghosts, <a href="#page371">371</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Fiji, <a href="#page446">446</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Hume's analysis of cause, <a href="#page18">18</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Hunt, Mr., his experience in Fiji, <a href="#page423">423</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Hunters supposed to be helped by ghosts, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page284">284</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Huon Gulf, in German New Guinea, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hut built to represent mythical monster at initiation, <a href="#page251">251</a>, <a href="#page290">290</a>, <a href="#page301">301</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-huts" id="index-huts"></a>Huts erected on graves for use of ghosts, <a href="#page150">150</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;erected on graves, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page223">223</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>, <a href="#page293">293</a>, <a href="#page294">294</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Hypocritical lamentations at a death, <a href="#page273">273</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; indignation of accomplice at a murder, <a href="#page280">280</a> <i>sqq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Idu, mountain of the dead, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Iguana in myth of origin of death, <a href="#page70">70</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ilene, a worshipful ghost, <a href="#page373">373</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ill-treatment of ghost who gives no help, <a href="#page285">285</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Illusion of the external world, <a href="#page21">21</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Images of the dead, wooden (<i>korwar</i> or <i>karwar</i>), <a href="#page307">307</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page311">311</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of sharks, <a href="#page373">373</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in temples, <a href="#page442">442</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Imitation of totems by disguised actors, <a href="#page119">119</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of totemic animals, <a href="#page177">177</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Imitative magic, <a href="#page335">335</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Immortality, belief in, among the aborigines of Central Australia, <a href="#page87">87</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the islanders of Torres Straits, <a href="#page170">170</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of British New Guinea, <a href="#page190">190</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of German New Guinea, <a href="#page216">216</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page303">303</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Southern Melanesia, <a href="#page324">324</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Central Melanesia, <a href="#page343">343</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the natives of Northern Melanesia, <a href="#page393">393</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Fijians, <a href="#page406">406</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;strongly held by savages, <a href="#page468">468</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Immortality, limited sense of, <a href="#page25">25</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;origin of belief in, <a href="#page25">25</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief in human, almost universal among races of mankind, <a href="#page33">33</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;rivalry between men and animals for gift of, <a href="#page74">74</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;question of the truth of the belief in, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;destruction of life and property entailed by the belief in, <a href="#page468">468</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; in a bundle, <a href="#page77">77</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Impecunious ghosts, hard fate of, <a href="#page406">406</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Impurity, ceremonial, of manslayer, <a href="#page229">229</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Im Thurn, Sir Everard F., <a href="#page38">38</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Incantations or spells, <a href="#page385">385</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Inconsistencies and contradictions in reasoning not peculiar to savages, <a href="#page111">111</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Inconsistency of savage thought, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Indians of Guiana, their ideas about death, <a href="#page35">35</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their beliefs as to the dead, <a href="#page165">165</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of North-West America, burial custom of the, <a href="#page455">455</a>, <a href="#page460">460</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Indifference to death, <a href="#page419">419</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;a consequence of belief in immortality, <a href="#page422">422</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Indo-European burial custom, <a href="#page453">453</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Infanticide as cause of diminished population, <a href="#page40">40</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Influence of European teaching on native beliefs, <a href="#page142">142</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Initiation at puberty regarded as a process of death and resurrection, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href="#page261">261</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of young men, <a href="#page233">233</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Central Australia, <a href="#page100">100</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Yabim, <a href="#page250">250</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Bukaua, <a href="#page260">260</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Kai, <a href="#page290">290</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Fiji, <a href="#page429">429</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Insanity, influence of, in history, <a href="#page15">15</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and inspiration not clearly distinguished, <a href="#page388">388</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Insect in divination as to cause of death, <a href="#page44">44</a>, <a href="#page46">46</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Inspiration, theory of, <a href="#page14">14</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of medium by ancestral spirits, <a href="#page308">308</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by spirits of the dead, <a href="#page322">322</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;by ghosts in Central Melanesia, <a href="#page388">388</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;attested by frenzy, <a href="#page443">443</a>, <a href="#page444">444</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and insanity not clearly distinguished, <a href="#page388">388</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Insufflations, magical, to heal the sick, <a href="#page329">329</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Intichiuma</i>, magical ceremonies for the multiplication of totems, <a href="#page122">122</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Intuition and experience, <a href="#page11">11</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Invocation of ghosts, <a href="#page288">288</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the dead, <a href="#page329">329</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page377">377</a>, <a href="#page378">378</a>, <a href="#page401">401</a>, <a href="#page441">441</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Island, dead buried in, <a href="#page319">319</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, fabulous, <a href="#page175">175</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Islands, ghosts live in, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Isle of Pines, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page507" id="page507"></a>[pg 507]</span>
+<br/>
+Israelites forbidden to cut themselves for the dead, <a href="#page154">154</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ivory Coast, <a href="#page52">52</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jackson, John, quoted, <a href="#page419">419</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page447">447</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Jappen or Jobi, island, <a href="#page303">303</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Jawbone of husband worn by widow, <a href="#page204">204</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;lower, of corpse preserved, <a href="#page234">234</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page274">274</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of dead king of Uganda preserved and consulted oracularly, <a href="#page235">235</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Jawbones of the dead preserved, <a href="#page351">351</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of dead worn by relatives, <a href="#page404">404</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Journey of ghosts to the land of the dead, <a href="#page286">286</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page361">361</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page462">462</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Juices of putrefaction received by mourners on their bodies, <a href="#page167">167</a>, <a href="#page205">205</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of putrefying corpse drunk by widow, <a href="#page313">313</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;drunk by women, <a href="#page355">355</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kachins of Burma, burial custom of the, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kafirs, their beliefs as to the causes of death, <a href="#page56">56</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kagoro, the, of Northern Nigeria, <a href="#page28">28</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote5">1</a>, <a href="#page49">49</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kai, the, of German New Guinea, <a href="#page71">71</a>, <a href="#page262">262</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;theory of the soul, <a href="#page267">267</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kaikuzi, brother of Death, <a href="#page80">80</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kaitish, the, <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kalo, in British New Guinea, <a href="#page202">202</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kalou</i>, Fijian word for "god," <a href="#page440">440</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kalou vu</i>, "root gods," <a href="#page440">440</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kalou yalo</i>, "soul gods," <a href="#page440">440</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kami</i>, the souls of the dead, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Kamilaroi tribe of New South Wales, <a href="#page46">46</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kanaima</i> (<i>kenaima</i>), <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page38">38</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kani</i>, name applied to ghosts, to bull-roarers, and to the monster who is thought to swallow lads at circumcision, <a href="#page301">301</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kaniet islands, <a href="#page401">401</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kava</i> offered to ancestral spirits, <a href="#page440">440</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kavirondo, burial custom of the, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kaya-Kaya or Tugeri, the, of Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page255">255</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kayans, the, of Borneo, <a href="#page417">417</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of, <a href="#page456">456</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kemp Welch River, <a href="#page202">202</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Keramo</i>, a fighting ghost, <a href="#page370">370</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Keysser, Ch., <a href="#page262">262</a>, <a href="#page263">263</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page269">269</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote440">3</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kibu, the land of the dead, <a href="#page175">175</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kibuka, war-god of Uganda, <a href="#page366">366</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kidd, Dudley, <a href="#page55">55</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kidney-fat, extraction of, <a href="#page43">43</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Killer of Souls, the, <a href="#page465">465</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Killing a ghost, <a href="#page415">415</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+King, mourning for a, <a href="#page451">451</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+King's corpse not carried out through the door, <a href="#page452">452</a>, <a href="#page461">461</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kings, divinity of, <a href="#page16">16</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sanctity of Fijian, <a href="#page407">407</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Kintu and the origin of death, <a href="#page78">78</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Kiwai, beliefs and customs concerning the dead in island of, <a href="#page211">211</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Koita or Koitapu, of British New Guinea, <a href="#page193">193</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kolosh Indians, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Komars, the, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Koroi</i>, honorary title of homicides in Fiji, <a href="#page447">447</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Korwar</i>, or <i>karwar</i>, wooden images of the dead, <a href="#page307">307</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Koryak, burial custom of the, <a href="#page455">455</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kosi and the origin of death, <a href="#page76">76</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Knowledge, natural, how acquired, <a href="#page11">11</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of God, how acquired, <a href="#page11">11</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of ghosts essential to medical practitioners in Melanesia, <a href="#page384">384</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kulin, the, <a href="#page138">138</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kurnai tribe of Victoria, <a href="#page44">44</a>, <a href="#page138">138</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Kweariburra tribe, <a href="#page153">153</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Kwod</i>, sacred or ceremonial ground, <a href="#page179">179</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lambert, Father, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a>, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lamboam, the land of the dead, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lamentations, hypocritical, at a death, <a href="#page271">271</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page280">280</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-land" id="index-land"></a>Land burial and sea burial, <a href="#page347">347</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; cleared for cultivation, <a href="#page238">238</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href="#page262">262</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page304">304</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; ghosts and sea ghosts, <a href="#page348">348</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, <a href="#page175">175</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page192">192</a>, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page202">202</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page207">207</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page211">211</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page224">224</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page286">286</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page353">353</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page404">404</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page462">462</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;journeys of the living to the, <a href="#page207">207</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;way to the, <a href="#page212">212</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page462">462</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Landtman, Dr. G., <a href="#page214">214</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lang, Andrew, <a href="#page216">216</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Laos, burial custom in, <a href="#page459">459</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Leaf as badge of a ghost, <a href="#page391">391</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Leaves thrown on scene of murder, <a href="#page415">415</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Leg bones of the dead preserved, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page249">249</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Legs of corpse broken in order to disable the ghost, <a href="#page153">153</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lehner, Stefan, <a href="#page256">256</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lepchis of Sikhim, burial custom of the, <a href="#page455">455</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Le Sou&euml;f, A. A. C., <a href="#page40">40</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Libations to ancestral gods, <a href="#page430">430</a>, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Licence, period of, following circumcision, <a href="#page427">427</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;following initiation, <a href="#page433">433</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote694">1</a>, <a href="#page436">436</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Licentious orgy following circumcision, <a href="#page427">427</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page508" id="page508"></a>[pg 508]</span>
+<br/>
+Life in the other world like life in this, <a href="#page286">286</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Lightning, savage theory of, <a href="#page19">19</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lights, phosphorescent, thought to be ghosts, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page258">258</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Lime, powdered, used to dust the trail of a ghost, <a href="#page277">277</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Lio'a</i>, a powerful ghost, <a href="#page346">346</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Liver extracted by magic, <a href="#page50">50</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;divination by, <a href="#page54">54</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Livers of pigs offered to the dead, <a href="#page360">360</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Lizard in divination as to cause of death, <a href="#page44">44</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page70">70</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Lizards, ghosts in, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Local totem centres, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Long soul and short soul, <a href="#page291">291</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Lost souls, recovery of, <a href="#page270">270</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page300">300</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Luck, bad, in fishing and hunting, caused by ghosts, <a href="#page197">197</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Luck of a village dependent on ghosts, <a href="#page198">198</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Lum</i>, men's clubhouse, <a href="#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page250">250</a>, <a href="#page257">257</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mabuiag, island of, <a href="#page174">174</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Macassars, burial custom of the, <a href="#page461">461</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Macluer Gulf in Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page317">317</a>, <a href="#page318">318</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mad, stones to drive people, <a href="#page335">335</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Madagascar, ideas as to natural death in, <a href="#page48">48</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Mafulu (Mambule), the, of British New Guinea, <a href="#page198">198</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Maggots, appearance of, sign of departure of soul, <a href="#page292">292</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-magic" id="index-magic"></a>Magic as a cause of death, <a href="#page34">34</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Age of, <a href="#page58">58</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;attributed to aboriginal inhabitants of a country, <a href="#page193">193</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;homoeopathic or imitative, <a href="#page288">288</a>, <a href="#page335">335</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;combined with religion, <a href="#page111">111</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page334">334</a>, <a href="#page335">335</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Melanesian conception of, <a href="#page380">380</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;working by means of personal refuse, <a href="#page413">413</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-sorcery">Sorcery</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#index-witchcraft">Witchcraft</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and religion compared in reference to their destruction of human life, <a href="#page56">56</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Magical ceremonies for increasing the food supply, <a href="#page102">102</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremonies for the multiplication of totems, <a href="#page124">124</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;intention of dramatic ceremonies in Central Australia, <a href="#page122">122</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page126">126</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;virtues attributed to sacred stones in New Caledonia, <a href="#page334">334</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-magician" id="index-magician"></a>Magician or priest, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-sorcery">Sorcerer</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Magicians, their importance in history, <a href="#page16">16</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;but no priests at Doreh, <a href="#page306">306</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Malagasy, their ideas as to natural death, <a href="#page48">48</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Malanta, one of the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page350">350</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Malayalis, the, of Malabar, <a href="#page162">162</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Malignity of ghosts, <a href="#page212">212</a>, <a href="#page381">381</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Malo, island of, <a href="#page48">48</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Man creates gods in his own likeness, <a href="#page19">19</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, grandeur and dignity of, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;pettiness and insignificance of, <a href="#page470">470</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Mana</i>, supernatural or spiritual power, <a href="#page346">346</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href="#page371">371</a>, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Manoam</i>, evil spirits, <a href="#page321">321</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Manoga, a worshipful ghost, <a href="#page368">368</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-manslayers" id="index-manslayers"></a>Manslayers, precautions taken by, against the ghosts of their victims, <a href="#page205">205</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;secluded, <a href="#page279">279</a> <i>sq.</i>,<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;consecration of, <a href="#page448">448</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;restrictions imposed on, <a href="#page449">449</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-homicides">Homicides</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Mari</i> or <i>mar</i>, ghost, <a href="#page173">173</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Mariget</i>, "ghost-hand," <a href="#page177">177</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mariner, William, <a href="#page411">411</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mariners, stones to help, <a href="#page337">337</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Markets, native, <a href="#page394">394</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Marotse, burial custom of the, <a href="#page454">454</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Marquesas Islands, <a href="#page417">417</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Married and unmarried, different modes of disposing of their corpses, <a href="#page162">162</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Masai, their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page65">65</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Masked men, dramatic representation of ghosts and spirits by, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page180">180</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page185">185</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; dances, <a href="#page297">297</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the Monumbo, <a href="#page228">228</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Masks worn by actors in sacred ceremonies, <a href="#page179">179</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used in dances, <a href="#page233">233</a>, <a href="#page297">297</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Masquerades, <a href="#page297">297</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Massim, the, of British New Guinea, <a href="#page206">206</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Master of Life, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Matacos Indians, <a href="#page165">165</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mate, a worshipful spirit, <a href="#page239">239</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Material culture of the natives of New Guinea, <a href="#page191">191</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the natives of Tumleo, <a href="#page219">219</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of Papuans, <a href="#page231">231</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the Yabim, <a href="#page242">242</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the Noofoor, <a href="#page304">304</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the New Caledonians, <a href="#page339">339</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the North Melanesians, <a href="#page393">393</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Mawatta or Mowat, <a href="#page47">47</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Mbete</i>, priest, <a href="#page443">443</a>, <a href="#page445">445</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mea, a spiritual medium, <a href="#page196">196</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mecklenburg, burial custom in, <a href="#page457">457</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Medicine-men, their importance in history, <a href="#page16">16</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;inspired by spirits of the dead, <a href="#page322">322</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Medium inspired by soul of dead, <a href="#page308">308</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Mediums, spiritual, <a href="#page196">196</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mediums who send their souls to deadland, <a href="#page300">300</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Megalithic monuments, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page509" id="page509"></a>[pg 509]</span>
+<br/>
+Melanesia, Central, belief in immortality among the natives of, <a href="#page343">343</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Northern, belief in immortality among the natives of, <a href="#page393">393</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Southern, belief in immortality among the natives of, <a href="#page324">324</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Melanesian myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page71">71</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page83">83</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;theory of the soul, <a href="#page344">344</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Melanesians, their ideas as to natural deaths, <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href="#page54">54</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Central, funeral customs of the, <a href="#page347">347</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page355">355</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;and Papuans in New Guinea, <a href="#page190">190</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Memorial trees, <a href="#page225">225</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Men sacrificed to support posts of new house, <a href="#page446">446</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;whipped by women in mourning, <a href="#page452">452</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Men's clubhouses, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href="#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page355">355</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mentras or Mantras of the Malay Peninsula, <a href="#page73">73</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Merivale on Dartmoor, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Messengers, the Two, myth of origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Messou, Indian magician, <a href="#page78">78</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Metals unknown in Northern Melanesia, <a href="#page395">395</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Metempsychosis, widespread belief in, <a href="#page29">29</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Methods of treating natural theology, <a href="#page1">1</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of natural knowledge, <a href="#page11">11</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mexicans, the ancient, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Meyer, H. E. A., <a href="#page42">42</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Migration of villages, <a href="#page339">339</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Migratory cultivation, <a href="#page243">243</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Miklucho-Maclay, Baron N., <a href="#page235">235</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Milky Way, Central Australian belief as to the, <a href="#page140">140</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;souls of dead go to, <a href="#page153">153</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Milne Bay, <a href="#page207">207</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mimika district in Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page318">318</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Minnetaree Indians, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Misfortunes of all kinds caused by ghosts, <a href="#page306">306</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Moanus, the, of the Admiralty Islands, <a href="#page400">400</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Monarchical government, rise of, <a href="#page141">141</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Monsoon, south-east, festival at, <a href="#page255">255</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Monsoons, seasons determined by, <a href="#page216">216</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-monster" id="index-monster"></a>Monster supposed to swallow lads at initiation, <a href="#page251">251</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page255">255</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page261">261</a>, <a href="#page290">290</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page301">301</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Monumbo, the, of German New Guinea, <a href="#page227">227</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Monuments of the dead, <a href="#page225">225</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Moon, the waxing and waning, in myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a>, <a href="#page65">65</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; in relation to doctrine of resurrection, <a href="#page67">67</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worship of the, <a href="#page68">68</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Moral restraint afforded by a fear of ghosts, <a href="#page175">175</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; depravity of the Fijians, <a href="#page409">409</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Morality, superstition a crutch to, <a href="#page175">175</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mortuary dramas, <a href="#page189">189</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Mos</i>, a disembodied soul, <a href="#page224">224</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mota, island of, <a href="#page387">387</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Motlav, in the Banks' Islands, <a href="#page357">357</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Motu, the, of British New Guinea, <a href="#page192">192</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mound erected in a totemic ceremony, <a href="#page110">110</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Mounds on graves, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page164">164</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mourners, professional, <a href="#page136">136</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; smeared with white clay, <a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page177">177</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;painted black, <a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href="#page293">293</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;garb of, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cut their hair, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page204">204</a>, <a href="#page320">320</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;abstain from certain foods, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href="#page452">452</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;restrictions observed by, <a href="#page313">313</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;tattooed, <a href="#page314">314</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;purified by bathing, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page319">319</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;plastered with mud, <a href="#page318">318</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cut or tear their ears, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;secluded, <a href="#page360">360</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;smeared with ashes, <a href="#page361">361</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;anoint themselves with juices of putrefying corpse, <a href="#page403">403</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;amputate their fingers, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burn their skin, <a href="#page154">154</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a>, <a href="#page157">157</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-cuttings">Cuttings</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#index-seclusion">Seclusion</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mourning, hair cut in, <a href="#page135">135</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;extravagant demonstrations of grief in, <a href="#page135">135</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;for a father-in-law, <a href="#page155">155</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;amputation of fingers in, <a href="#page199">199</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;varying period of, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page293">293</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;for a king, <a href="#page451">451</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; costume, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page320">320</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;a protection against ghosts, <a href="#page241">241</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of widower and widow, <a href="#page259">259</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Mowat or Mawatta, <a href="#page47">47</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mud, mourners plastered with, <a href="#page318">318</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mukden, burial custom in, <a href="#page460">460</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mukjarawaint tribe, <a href="#page155">155</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mummies of dead preserved in houses, <a href="#page188">188</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mummification of the dead, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page185">185</a>, <a href="#page313">313</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Mungai</i>, places associated with totems, <a href="#page117">117</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Murder, leaves thrown on scene of, <a href="#page415">415</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; highly esteemed in Fiji, <a href="#page447">447</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Murdered man, ghost of, haunts murderer, <a href="#page248">248</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Murimuria, a second-rate heaven, <a href="#page466">466</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Murray Island, <a href="#page174">174</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Mutilations, bodily, at puberty, <a href="#page303">303</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Myth of the prelogical savage, <a href="#page266">266</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the continuance of death, <a href="#page472">472</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page59">59</a> <i>sqq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Nai</i>, souls of the dead, <a href="#page240">240</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nai Thombothombo, in Fiji, <a href="#page463">463</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nails of dead detached, <a href="#page145">145</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;preserved, <a href="#page339">339</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page510" id="page510"></a>[pg 510]</span>
+<br/>
+Naindelinde in Fiji, <a href="#page465">465</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Naiteru-kop, a Masai god, <a href="#page65">65</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Namaquas, their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page65">65</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nambanaggatai, in Fiji, <a href="#page465">465</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nambi and the origin of death, <a href="#page78">78</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Name of mythical water-snake not uttered, <a href="#page105">105</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Names of the dead not mentioned, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page210">210</a>, <a href="#page246">246</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nandi, their myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page66">66</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Nanga</i>, sacred stone enclosure, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;description of, <a href="#page437">437</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Nangganangga, the foe of unmarried ghosts, <a href="#page464">464</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Nanja</i> tree or stone, <a href="#page98">98</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; spot, <a href="#page164">164</a>, <a href="#page165">165</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Narrinyeri tribe of South Australia, <a href="#page43">43</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their beliefs as to the dead, <a href="#page134">134</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Nassau, Rev. R. H., <a href="#page51">51</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Native beliefs influenced by European teaching, <a href="#page142">142</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Natural theology defined, <a href="#page1">1</a>, <a href="#page8">8</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; death, disbelief of savages in, <a href="#page33">33</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; causes of death recognised by some savages, <a href="#page55">55</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; features of landscape associated with traditions about the dead, <a href="#page115">115</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Nature, gods of, <a href="#page20">20</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;souls of the dead identified with spirits of, <a href="#page130">130</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;two different views of human, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Nayars, the, of Cochin, <a href="#page162">162</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ndengei, Fijian god in form of serpent, <a href="#page445">445</a>, <a href="#page462">462</a>, <a href="#page464">464</a>, <a href="#page465">465</a>, <a href="#page466">466</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Necklaces worn in mourning, <a href="#page198">198</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Negen Negorijen in Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page317">317</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Negrito admixture in New Guinea, <a href="#page198">198</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nemunemu, a creator, <a href="#page240">240</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nether world, the lord of the, <a href="#page286">286</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;abode of the dead in the, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;descent of the living into the, <a href="#page300">300</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-land">Land of the Dead</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nets worn by widows in mourning, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page293">293</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worn by women in mourning, <a href="#page241">241</a><br/>
+<br/>
+New birth at initiation, pretence of, <a href="#page254">254</a><br/>
+<br/>
+New Britain (New Pomerania), <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page393">393</a>, <a href="#page394">394</a>, <a href="#page402">402</a>, <a href="#page404">404</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Caledonia, natives of, <a href="#page324">324</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their beliefs and customs concerning the dead, <a href="#page325">325</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their system of family prayers, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page340">340</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;material culture of the, <a href="#page339">339</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Georgia, <a href="#page48">48</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Guinea, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, <a href="#page47">47</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the races of, <a href="#page190">190</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief in immortality among the natives of British, <a href="#page190">190</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief in immortality among the natives of Dutch, <a href="#page303">303</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;belief in immortality among the natives of German, <a href="#page216">216</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+New Hebrides, myth of the origin of death in, <a href="#page71">71</a>, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Ireland (New Mecklenburg), <a href="#page393">393</a>, <a href="#page397">397</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; South Wales, aborigines of, their ideas as to the causes of death, <a href="#page45">45</a> <i>sq.</i>;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as to the home of the dead, <a href="#page133">133</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Newton, Alfred, <a href="#page90">90</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote108">1</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Neyaux, the, of the Ivory Coast, <a href="#page52">52</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Ngai</i>, human spirit, <a href="#page129">129</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ngoc, the, of Annam, <a href="#page69">69</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ngoni, the, <a href="#page61">61</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nias, island of, <a href="#page70">70</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nigeria, Northern, <a href="#page28">28</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote5">1</a>, <a href="#page49">49</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Niggardly people punished in the other world, <a href="#page405">405</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Noblemen alone immortal, <a href="#page33">33</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Noofoor, the, of Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page303">303</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Noomfor, island, <a href="#page303">303</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Norse burial custom, <a href="#page453">453</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Noses bored, ghosts should have their, <a href="#page192">192</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Novices presented to ancestral spirits at initiation, <a href="#page432">432</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page434">434</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Nukahiva, one of the Marquesas Islands, <a href="#page417">417</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Objects offered to the dead broken, <a href="#page276">276</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Offering, soul of, consumed by deity or spirit, <a href="#page297">297</a>, <a href="#page298">298</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-offerings" id="index-offerings"></a>Offerings of food and water to the dead, <a href="#page174">174</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of food to the dead, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page211">211</a>, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page364">364</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page367">367</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page372">372</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page396">396</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page429">429</a>, <a href="#page442">442</a>, <a href="#page467">467</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of blood and hair to the dead, <a href="#page183">183</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of game and fish to the dead, <a href="#page226">226</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to the dead, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href="#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page292">292</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of first-fruits to the dead, <a href="#page259">259</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to ancestors, <a href="#page298">298</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of food to ghosts, <a href="#page348">348</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to ghosts, <a href="#page364">364</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of first-fruits to ancestral spirits, <a href="#page429">429</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of cloth and weapons to ancestral spirits, <a href="#page430">430</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-sacrifices">Sacrifices</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, burnt, to the dead, <a href="#page294">294</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Oknanikilla</i>, local totem centre, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Old and young, difference between the modes of burying, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page162">162</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Old people buried alive, <a href="#page359">359</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Olympia, Pelops at, <a href="#page159">159</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Omens after a death, <a href="#page319">319</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Opening, special, for carrying dead out of house, <a href="#page452">452</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Oracles of dead kings, <a href="#page151">151</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, <a href="#page151">151</a>, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a>, <a href="#page235">235</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page511" id="page511"></a>[pg 511]</span>
+<br/>
+Oracular responses of Fijian priests, <a href="#page443">443</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Oranges, spirits of the dead play with, <a href="#page326">326</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ordeal to detect sorcerer, <a href="#page50">50</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Orgy, licentious, following circumcision, <a href="#page427">427</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Origin of belief in immortality, <a href="#page26">26</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of death, myths of the, <a href="#page59">59</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Orion's belt, <a href="#page368">368</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ornaments of corpse removed before burial, <a href="#page223">223</a>, <a href="#page234">234</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pahouins, the, <a href="#page54">54</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Palsy, a Samoan god, <a href="#page72">72</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pandanus, reason for planting, <a href="#page362">362</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and ghosts, <a href="#page463">463</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Panoi, Melanesian land of the dead, <a href="#page83">83</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page355">355</a>, <a href="#page356">356</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Papuan art, <a href="#page220">220</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Papuans, animistic views of the, <a href="#page264">264</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and Melanesians in New Guinea, <a href="#page190">190</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Paraks</i>, temples, <a href="#page220">220</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Parents deified, <a href="#page439">439</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Parkinson, R., <a href="#page219">219</a>, <a href="#page221">221</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pelops, human blood offered on grave of, <a href="#page159">159</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Penates in New Guinea, <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href="#page317">317</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pennefather River, natives of the, their belief in reincarnation of the dead, <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Perche, burial custom in, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Personal refuse, magic working through, <a href="#page386">386</a>, <a href="#page413">413</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Personification of natural phenomena, <a href="#page20">20</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of death, <a href="#page81">81</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Phosphorescent lights supposed to be ghosts, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page258">258</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Physostigma venenosum</i> in poison ordeal, <a href="#page52">52</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Piety, two types of, <a href="#page23">23</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;co-operative system of, <a href="#page333">333</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pigs, blood of, smeared on skulls and bones of the dead, <a href="#page200">200</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed to the dead, <a href="#page201">201</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed to monster who swallows lads at initiation, <a href="#page251">251</a>, <a href="#page253">253</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href="#page290">290</a>, <a href="#page301">301</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed at grave, <a href="#page356">356</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed at burial, <a href="#page359">359</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed to ghosts, <a href="#page365">365</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificed vicariously for the sick, <a href="#page373">373</a>, <a href="#page374">374</a>, <a href="#page375">375</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacred, <a href="#page433">433</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, livers of, offered to the dead, <a href="#page360">360</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Pines, Isle of, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pirnmeheel, good spirit, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Place of sacrifice to ghosts, <a href="#page370">370</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Planting, sacrifices to ghosts at, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Platforms, dead laid on, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page205">205</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Plato, on death, <a href="#page33">33</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pleiades, the, <a href="#page368">368</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Plum-tree people, <a href="#page94">94</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; totem, dramatic ceremony connected with, <a href="#page120">120</a>, <a href="#page121">121</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Poison ordeal to detect sorcerers, <a href="#page50">50</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Political constitution of the Fijians, <a href="#page407">407</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pollution, ceremonial, of gravediggers, <a href="#page327">327</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Polynesian blood, infusion of, in New Guinea, <a href="#page291">291</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; race, <a href="#page406">406</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Polytheism and monotheism, <a href="#page11">11</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Polytheism discarded, <a href="#page20">20</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Population, belief in sorcery a cause of keeping down the, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page40">40</a>, <a href="#page46">46</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page51">51</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Port Lincoln tribe of S. Australia, <a href="#page42">42</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Moresby, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href="#page195">195</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Poso in Celebes, <a href="#page72">72</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Posts of new house, men sacrificed to support, <a href="#page446">446</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Potsdam Harbour, in German New Guinea, <a href="#page218">218</a>, <a href="#page227">227</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Pottery, native, <a href="#page220">220</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in New Guinea, <a href="#page305">305</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Fijian, <a href="#page407">407</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; unknown in Northern Melanesia, <a href="#page395">395</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Practical character of the savage, <a href="#page274">274</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Prayer-posts, <a href="#page333">333</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Prayers to the dead, <a href="#page201">201</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href="#page222">222</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page288">288</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page329">329</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page332">332</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page401">401</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page427">427</a>, <a href="#page441">441</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;to ghosts, <a href="#page348">348</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Precautions taken against ghosts, <a href="#page152">152</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page258">258</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;against a wife's ghost, <a href="#page197">197</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;against ghosts of the slain, <a href="#page205">205</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Predominance of the worship of the dead, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Prelogical savage, myth of the, <a href="#page266">266</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-pretence" id="index-pretence"></a>Pretence of attacking persons engaged in attending to a corpse, <a href="#page177">177</a>, <a href="#page178">178</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of avenging the dead, <a href="#page136">136</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page282">282</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-sham-attack">Sham fight</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Priest, family, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page340">340</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, chief or high, <a href="#page430">430</a>, <a href="#page431">431</a>, <a href="#page432">432</a>, <a href="#page433">433</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; or magician, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Priests, Fijian, <a href="#page433">433</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Private or tame ghosts, <a href="#page369">369</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page381">381</a>, <a href="#page382">382</a>, <a href="#page386">386</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; property, rights of, consolidated by taboo, <a href="#page390">390</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Problem of death, <a href="#page31">31</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Progress partly determined by competition, <a href="#page89">89</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, social, stimulated by favourable natural conditions, <a href="#page148">148</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Promiscuity, temporary, <a href="#page427">427</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page433">433</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote691">1</a>, <a href="#page436">436</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Property displayed beside the corpse, <a href="#page397">397</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, rights of private, consolidated by taboo, <a href="#page390">390</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;temporarily suspended, <a href="#page427">427</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page512" id="page512"></a>[pg 512]</span>
+<br/>
+Property of dead deposited in grave, <a href="#page145">145</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page359">359</a>, <a href="#page397">397</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;motive for destroying, <a href="#page147">147</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;hung up on trees, <a href="#page148">148</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;destroyed, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page459">459</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burnt, <a href="#page401">401</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Prophecy inspired by ghosts, <a href="#page388">388</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Prophets inspired by ghosts, <a href="#page388">388</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Hebrew, <a href="#page14">14</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Propitiation of the dead, <a href="#page201">201</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of ghosts and spirits, <a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href="#page348">348</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Puberty, initiation at, <a href="#page254">254</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;bodily mutilations at, <a href="#page303">303</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Public ghosts, <a href="#page367">367</a>, <a href="#page369">369</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Purification of homicides, <a href="#page206">206</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; by bathing and shaving, <a href="#page208">208</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of mourners by bathing, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page319">319</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Queensland, belief in reincarnation of the dead among the aborigines of, <a href="#page127">127</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial customs in, <a href="#page147">147</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rain sent by a mythical water-snake, <a href="#page112">112</a>, <a href="#page114">114</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;prayers for, <a href="#page288">288</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;stones to make, <a href="#page336">336</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and sunshine caused by a ghost, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -ghost, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -making, <a href="#page288">288</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;by the bones of the dead, <a href="#page341">341</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Rat in myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page67">67</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Rationality of the savage, <a href="#page264">264</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-rebirth" id="index-rebirth"></a>Rebirth of the dead, <a href="#page93">93</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page107">107</a>, <a href="#page127">127</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-reincarnation">Reincarnation</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of parents in their children, <a href="#page315">315</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Recovery of lost souls, <a href="#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page300">300</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Red, skulls painted, <a href="#page178">178</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Red bark in poison ordeals, <a href="#page50">50</a>, <a href="#page52">52</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; paint, manslayers smeared with, <a href="#page448">448</a>, <a href="#page449">449</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; roses, corpse crowned with, <a href="#page233">233</a>, <a href="#page234">234</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Reflection or shadow, soul associated with, 207, 267<br/>
+<br/>
+Refuse, personal, magic working by means of, <a href="#page413">413</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-reincarnation" id="index-reincarnation"></a>Reincarnation, widespread belief in, <a href="#page29">29</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-rebirth">Rebirth</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; doctrine of, unknown in Torres Straits, <a href="#page172">172</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, belief of Central Australians in, <a href="#page92">92</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page107">107</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, <a href="#page124">124</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page127">127</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Australian aborigines in white people, <a href="#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page131">131</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of parents in their children, <a href="#page315">315</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of grandfather in grandchild, <a href="#page417">417</a>, <a href="#page418">418</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Relics of the dead as amulets, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page370">370</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;preserved, <a href="#page348">348</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Religion, importance of the history of, <a href="#page3">3</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;embryology of, <a href="#page88">88</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Religion and magic compared in reference to their destruction of human life, <a href="#page57">57</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;combined in ritual, <a href="#page111">111</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page334">334</a>, <a href="#page335">335</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and theology, how related, <a href="#page9">9</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Resemblance of children to the dead, a source of belief in the transmigration of souls, <a href="#page28">28</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Restrictions observed by mourners, <a href="#page313">313</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremonial, laid on gravediggers, <a href="#page327">327</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;imposed on manslayers, <a href="#page449">449</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Resurrection, ceremony of, among the Akikuya, <a href="#page254">254</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; from the dead after three days, <a href="#page67">67</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of the dead, steps taken to prevent the, <a href="#page144">144</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as an initiatory rite at puberty, <a href="#page254">254</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page261">261</a>, <a href="#page302">302</a>, <a href="#page431">431</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Return of the ghosts, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href="#page300">300</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Revelation, the question of a supernatural, <a href="#page8">8</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Revival, temporary, of primitive communism, <a href="#page436">436</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Rheumatism attributed to sorcery, <a href="#page45">45</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Rhodesia, <a href="#page77">77</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ribs of dead distributed among relatives, <a href="#page400">400</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Ridgeway, W., on the origin of Greek tragedy, <a href="#page189">189</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Rights of property temporarily suspended, <a href="#page427">427</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Ritual combining elements of religion and magic, <a href="#page111">111</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Rivalry between man and animals for gift of immortality, <a href="#page74">74</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+River crossed by souls of the dead, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page462">462</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Rocking stone, <a href="#page213">213</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Roro-speaking tribes of British New Guinea, <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Roth, W. E., <a href="#page128">128</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Run or Ron, island, <a href="#page303">303</a>, <a href="#page311">311</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Russia, burial custom in, <a href="#page453">453</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saa, in Malanta, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a>, <a href="#page372">372</a>, <a href="#page378">378</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sacrament of pork and water at initiation, <a href="#page432">432</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Sacred stones in New Caledonia, magical virtues attributed to, <a href="#page334">334</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; enclosure of stones (<i>Nanga</i>) in Fiji, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page437">437</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; pigs, <a href="#page433">433</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sacrifice, crude motives for, <a href="#page298">298</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;place of, <a href="#page332">332</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of dogs in epidemics, <a href="#page296">296</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of foreskins and fingers in honour of the dead, <a href="#page426">426</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-sacrifices" id="index-sacrifices"></a>Sacrifices to the dead, economic loss entailed by, <a href="#page149">149</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; to the dead, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-offerings">Offerings</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page513" id="page513"></a>[pg 513]</span>
+<br/>
+Sacrifices, burnt, reasons for, <a href="#page348">348</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burnt, to ghosts, <a href="#page366">366</a>, <a href="#page367">367</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page373">373</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; to ghosts, <a href="#page328">328</a>; at planting, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, human, to ghosts, <a href="#page371">371</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;human, in Fiji, <a href="#page446">446</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Sacrificial ritual in the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page365">365</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Saddle Mountain in German New Guinea, <a href="#page262">262</a><br/>
+<br/>
+St. Joseph River in New Guinea, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sakalava, the, of Madagascar, <a href="#page49">49</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of, <a href="#page461">461</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Saleijer, island of, burial custom in, <a href="#page461">461</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Samoa, <a href="#page406">406</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Harbour, in German New Guinea, <a href="#page256">256</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Samoan myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page72">72</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Samoyeds, burial custom of the, <a href="#page457">457</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Samu-yalo, the killer of souls, <a href="#page465">465</a><br/>
+<br/>
+San Cristoval, one of the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sanctuaries, primitive, <a href="#page99">99</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of ghosts, <a href="#page377">377</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Sanctuary, grave of worshipful dead becomes a, <a href="#page347">347</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sanitation based on fear of sorcery, <a href="#page386">386</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page414">414</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Santa Cruz Islands, <a href="#page343">343</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Santa Cruz, in the Solomon Islands, burial customs at, <a href="#page352">352</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrifices to ghosts in, <a href="#page374">374</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Savage, myth of the prelogical, <a href="#page266">266</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, practical character of the, <a href="#page274">274</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, rationality of the, <a href="#page264">264</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; notions of causality, <a href="#page19">19</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;conception of death, <a href="#page31">31</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;disbelief in death from natural causes, <a href="#page33">33</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought vague and inconsistent, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; religion, the study of, <a href="#page7">7</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Savagery, importance of the study of, <a href="#page6">6</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;a case of arrested or retarded development, <a href="#page88">88</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;rise of monarchy essential to emergence from, <a href="#page142">142</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Savages pay little attention to the stars, <a href="#page140">140</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;strength and universality of belief in immortality among, <a href="#page468">468</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Savo, one of the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page347">347</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Scarf, soul caught in a, <a href="#page412">412</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Scenery of Fiji, <a href="#page409">409</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Schomburgk, Richard, <a href="#page38">38</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sch&uuml;rmann, C. W., <a href="#page42">42</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Scientific conception of the world as a system of impersonal forces, <a href="#page20">20</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Scotland, burial custom in, <a href="#page453">453</a>, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sea, land of the dead at the bottom of the, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -burial, <a href="#page397">397</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -burial and land-burial, <a href="#page347">347</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -ghosts and land-ghosts, <a href="#page348">348</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-seclusion" id="index-seclusion"></a>Seclusion of widow and widower, <a href="#page204">204</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of relatives at grave, <a href="#page209">209</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of mourners, <a href="#page223">223</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page313">313</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page360">360</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of novices at circumcision, <a href="#page251">251</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page260">260</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page302">302</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of manslayers, <a href="#page279">279</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of gravediggers, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page451">451</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of female mourners, <a href="#page398">398</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Seclusion and purification of manslayer, <a href="#page229">229</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Second death of the dead, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page287">287</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a>, <a href="#page354">354</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Secret societies, <a href="#page395">395</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Society (<i>Asa</i>), <a href="#page233">233</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Seemann, Berthold, <a href="#page439">439</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Seer describes ghosts, <a href="#page204">204</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Seget S&eacute;l&eacute;, the, of Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page317">317</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Seligmann, Dr. C. G., <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page206">206</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Selwyn, Bishop, <a href="#page363">363</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Serpent and his cast skin in myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page74">74</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page83">83</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, god in form of, <a href="#page445">445</a>, <a href="#page462">462</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Serpents, souls of the dead in the form of, <a href="#page300">300</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Setting sun, ghosts attracted to the, <a href="#page175">175</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Sexual licence following initiation, <a href="#page433">433</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote692">1</a>, <a href="#page436">436</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Shadow or reflection, human soul associated with, <a href="#page129">129</a>, <a href="#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a>, <a href="#page207">207</a>, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page395">395</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shadows of people seized by ghosts, <a href="#page378">378</a>, <a href="#page383">383</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shaking of medium a symptom of inspiration, <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href="#page309">309</a>, <a href="#page311">311</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-sham-attack" id="index-sham-attack"></a>Sham attack on men engaged in attending to a corpse, <a href="#page177">177</a>, <a href="#page178">178</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; burial, <a href="#page356">356</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; fight to appease ghost, <a href="#page136">136</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as a funeral ceremony, <a href="#page235">235</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page327">327</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as a ceremony to promote the growth of yams, <a href="#page330">330</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-pretence">Pretence</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sharks animated by ghosts, <a href="#page348">348</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, ghosts incarnate in, <a href="#page373">373</a>, <a href="#page380">380</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;images of, <a href="#page373">373</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shaving heads of mourners, <a href="#page208">208</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sheep in story of the origin of death, <a href="#page64">64</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shell-money, <a href="#page394">394</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;laid on corpse and buried with it, <a href="#page398">398</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shortlands Islands, <a href="#page71">71</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shrine of warrior ghost, <a href="#page365">365</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Shrines for ancestral spirits, <a href="#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page317">317</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Siamese, burial custom of the, <a href="#page456">456</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Siasi Islands, <a href="#page244">244</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sick and old buried alive in Fiji, <a href="#page420">420</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-sickness" id="index-sickness"></a>Sickness caused by demons, <a href="#page194">194</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;caused by ghosts, <a href="#page56">56</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page222">222</a>, <a href="#page269">269</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page300">300</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page372">372</a>, <a href="#page381">381</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page389">389</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; supposed to be an effect of witchcraft, <a href="#page35">35</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page514" id="page514"></a>[pg 514]</span>
+<br/>
+Sickness and death set down to sorcery, <a href="#page240">240</a>, <a href="#page257">257</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and disease recognised by some savages as due to natural causes, <a href="#page55">55</a> <i>sq.</i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-disease">Disease</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sido, his journey to the land of the dead, <a href="#page211">211</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Sins, confession of, <a href="#page201">201</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Skin cast as a means of renewing youth, <a href="#page69">69</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page74">74</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page83">83</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Skull-shaped stones in rain-making, <a href="#page336">336</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-skulls" id="index-skulls"></a>Skulls, spirits of the dead embodied in their, <a href="#page338">338</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and arm-bones, special treatment of the, <a href="#page199">199</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;carried by dancers at funeral dance, <a href="#page200">200</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead preserved, <a href="#page199">199</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page318">318</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page398">398</a>, <a href="#page400">400</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page403">403</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;preserved and consulted as oracles, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page178">178</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page179">179</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used in divination, <a href="#page213">213</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;kept in men's clubhouses, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page225">225</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;inserted in wooden images, <a href="#page311">311</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page321">321</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;religious ceremonies performed with the, <a href="#page329">329</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;food offered to the, <a href="#page339">339</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page352">352</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used to fertilise plantations, <a href="#page340">340</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used in conjurations, <a href="#page402">402</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sky, souls of the dead thought to be in the, <a href="#page133">133</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page138">138</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Slain, ghosts of the, especially dreaded, <a href="#page205">205</a>, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sleep, soul thought to quit body in, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>, <a href="#page395">395</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Smith, E. R., <a href="#page53">53</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Smyth, R. Brough, <a href="#page43">43</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Snakes, ghosts in, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sneezing, omens from, <a href="#page194">194</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Social progress stimulated by favourable natural conditions, <a href="#page141">141</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page148">148</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; ranks, gradation of, in Fiji, <a href="#page408">408</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Solomon Islands, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href="#page346">346</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacrificial ritual in the, <a href="#page365">365</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Somosomo, one of the Fijian islands, <a href="#page425">425</a>, <a href="#page441">441</a>, <a href="#page442">442</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sorcerers, their importance in history, <a href="#page16">16</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; catch and detain souls, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page268">268</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page270">270</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; put to death, <a href="#page35">35</a>, <a href="#page35">35</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page37">37</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page40">40</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page44">44</a>, <a href="#page50">50</a>, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page250">250</a>, <a href="#page269">269</a>, <a href="#page277">277</a>, <a href="#page278">278</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page341">341</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-magician">Magician</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-sorcery" id="index-sorcery"></a>Sorcery as the supposed cause of natural deaths, <a href="#page33">33</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page268">268</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page402">402</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sickness and death ascribed to, <a href="#page257">257</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; a cause of keeping down the population, belief in, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page40">40</a>, <a href="#page46">46</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page51">51</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Fijian dread of, <a href="#page413">413</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-magic">Magic</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#index-witchcraft">Witchcraft</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sores ascribed to action of ghosts, <a href="#page257">257</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Soro</i>, atonement, <a href="#page427">427</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-soul" id="index-soul"></a>Soul, world-wide belief in survival of soul after death, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href="#page33">33</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Soul of sleeper detained by enemy, <a href="#page49">49</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;human, associated with shadow or reflection, <a href="#page173">173</a>, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page395">395</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;pretence of carrying away the, <a href="#page181">181</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;detained by demon, <a href="#page194">194</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;recovery of a lost, <a href="#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to quit body in sleep, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>, <a href="#page395">395</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;resides in the eye, <a href="#page267">267</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to pervade the body, <a href="#page267">267</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;two kinds of human, <a href="#page267">267</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;caught and detained by sorcerer, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page268">268</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page270">270</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;long soul and short soul, <a href="#page291">291</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of offering consumed by deity or spirit, <a href="#page297">297</a>, <a href="#page298">298</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to reside in the blood, <a href="#page307">307</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Melanesian theory of the, <a href="#page344">344</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of sick tied up by ghost, <a href="#page374">374</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;North Melanesian theory of the, <a href="#page395">395</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in form of animals, <a href="#page396">396</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Fijian theory of the, <a href="#page410">410</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;caught in a scarf, <a href="#page412">412</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of grandfather reborn in grandchild, <a href="#page417">417</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of offerings consumed by gods, <a href="#page443">443</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -stuff or spiritual essence, <a href="#page267">267</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page279">279</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-spirit">Spirit</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Souls, recovery of lost, <a href="#page300">300</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;River of the, <a href="#page462">462</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the killer of, <a href="#page464">464</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of animals, sacrifices to the, <a href="#page239">239</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of animals offered to ghosts, <a href="#page246">246</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; attributed by the Fijians to animals, vegetables, and inanimate things, <a href="#page410">410</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead identified with spirits of nature, <a href="#page130">130</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;turned into animals, <a href="#page229">229</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as falling stars, <a href="#page229">229</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;live in trees, <a href="#page316">316</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; carried off by ghosts, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page383">383</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of sorcerers in animals, <a href="#page39">39</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of noblemen only saved, <a href="#page33">33</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of those who died from home called back, <a href="#page311">311</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Spells or incantations, <a href="#page385">385</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Spencer and Gillen, <a href="#page46">46</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page91">91</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page103">103</a>, <a href="#page104">104</a>, <a href="#page105">105</a>, <a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href="#page108">108</a>, <a href="#page116">116</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page123">123</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page140">140</a>, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page156">156</a>, <a href="#page157">157</a>, <a href="#page158">158</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Spider and Death, <a href="#page82">82</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-spirit" id="index-spirit"></a>Spirit, human, associated with the heart, <a href="#page129">129</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;associated with the shadow, <a href="#page129">129</a>, <a href="#page130">130</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-soul">Soul</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-spirits" id="index-spirits"></a>Spirits, ancestral, help hunters and fishers, <a href="#page226">226</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;worshipped in the <i>Nanga</i>, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cloth and weapons offered to, <a href="#page430">430</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;novices presented to, at initiation, <a href="#page432">432</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page434">434</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of animals go to the spirit land, <a href="#page210">210</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; consume spiritual essence of sacrifices, <a href="#page285">285</a>, <a href="#page287">287</a>, <a href="#page297">297</a>, <a href="#page298">298</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead thought to be strengthened by blood, <a href="#page159">159</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;reborn in women, <a href="#page93">93</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;give information to the living, <a href="#page240">240</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;give good crops, <a href="#page247">247</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;thought to be mischievous, <a href="#page257">257</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page515" id="page515"></a>[pg 515]</span>
+<br/>
+Spirits and ghosts, distinction between, in Central Melanesia, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href="#page363">363</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and gods, no certain demarcation between, <a href="#page441">441</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, grand concert of, <a href="#page340">340</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;represented by masked dancers, <a href="#page297">297</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in tree-tops, <a href="#page313">313</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, guardian, <a href="#page227">227</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of nature identified with souls of the dead, <a href="#page130">130</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-dead">Dead</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#index-ghost">Ghost</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-spiritual-essence" id="index-spiritual-essence"></a>Spiritual essence or soul-stuff, <a href="#page267">267</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page279">279</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-spiritual-essence">Soul-stuff</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Squatting posture of corpse in burial, <a href="#page207">207</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stanbridge, W. E., <a href="#page44">44</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stars associated with the souls of the dead, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href="#page140">140</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;little regarded by savages, <a href="#page140">140</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;falling, the souls of the dead, <a href="#page229">229</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Steinen, K. von den, <a href="#page35">35</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sternberg, L., <a href="#page15">15</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote2">1</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stick, cleft, used in cure, <a href="#page271">271</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stillborn children, burial of, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stocks, wooden, as representatives of the dead, <a href="#page374">374</a>, <a href="#page386">386</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stolz, Mr., <a href="#page238">238</a>, <a href="#page239">239</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stomach, soul seated in, <a href="#page291">291</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Stone, a rocking, <a href="#page213">213</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; used in rain-making, <a href="#page288">288</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of Famine, <a href="#page334">334</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the Sun, <a href="#page336">336</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stonehenge, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stones, sacred, in New Caledonia, magical virtues attributed to, <a href="#page334">334</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;sacred, in sanctuaries, <a href="#page377">377</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; used as altars, <a href="#page379">379</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Stones inhabited by ghosts, <a href="#page383">383</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Store-houses, sacred, in Central Australia, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page101">101</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Strangling the sick and aged in Fiji, <a href="#page423">423</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Sua</i>, human spirit or ghost, <a href="#page193">193</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Suicide to escape decrepitude of old age, <a href="#page422">422</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Suicides, burial of, <a href="#page164">164</a>, <a href="#page453">453</a>, <a href="#page458">458</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sulka, the, of New Britain, <a href="#page398">398</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Sumatra, the Gajos of, <a href="#page455">455</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sun and the origin of death, <a href="#page77">77</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, ghosts attracted to the setting, <a href="#page175">175</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Stone of the, <a href="#page336">336</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Sunshine, the making of, <a href="#page336">336</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and rain caused by a ghost, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Supernatural or spiritual power (<i>mana</i>) acquired from ghosts, <a href="#page346">346</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href="#page371">371</a>, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Superstition a crutch to morality, <a href="#page175">175</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Supreme Being unknown among aborigines of Central Australia, <a href="#page91">91</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Monumbo, <a href="#page228">228</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Survival of human soul after death, world-wide belief in, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href="#page33">33</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Swallowed by monster, pretence that candidates at initiation are, <a href="#page251">251</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page260">260</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page290">290</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page301">301</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Swine sent to ravage fields by ghosts, <a href="#page278">278</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Symbolism of prayer-posts, <a href="#page333">333</a> <i>sq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taboo, meaning of, <a href="#page390">390</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Central Melanesia based on a fear of ghosts, <a href="#page390">390</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;a prop of monarchical power, <a href="#page408">408</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Tabu</i>, demon, <a href="#page194">194</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tago, spirits, <a href="#page297">297</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tahiti, <a href="#page439">439</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tamanachiers, an Indian tribe, <a href="#page70">70</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Tami Islanders of German New Guinea, <a href="#page291">291</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Taming a ghost, <a href="#page370">370</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tamos, the, of German New Guinea, <a href="#page230">230</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tanna, one of the New Hebrides, <a href="#page369">369</a>, <a href="#page439">439</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tanoa, king of Fiji, <a href="#page425">425</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Taplin, Rev. George, <a href="#page43">43</a>, <a href="#page134">134</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Tapum</i>, guardian spirits, <a href="#page227">227</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Taro, prayer for good crop of, <a href="#page289">289</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tasmanians, the, <a href="#page89">89</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tattooing as sign of mourning, <a href="#page314">314</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Teeth of dead worn by relatives, <a href="#page314">314</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page400">400</a>, <a href="#page404">404</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used as amulets, <a href="#page332">332</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;preserved as relics, <a href="#page339">339</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;used to fertilise plantations, <a href="#page340">340</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Temples (<i>paraks</i>) in Tumleo, <a href="#page220">220</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Fijian, <a href="#page439">439</a>, <a href="#page441">441</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Terer, a mythical being, <a href="#page181">181</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Thapauerlu, a pool, <a href="#page105">105</a>, <a href="#page108">108</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Theology, natural, defined, <a href="#page1">1</a>, <a href="#page8">8</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; and religion, how related, <a href="#page9">9</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Thomson, Basil, <a href="#page408">408</a>, <a href="#page414">414</a>, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote691">1</a>, <a href="#page429">429</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote692">1</a>, <a href="#page434">434</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote694">1</a>, <a href="#page436">436</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Threats of the dying, <a href="#page273">273</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Three days, resurrection after, <a href="#page67">67</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Threshold, the dead carried out under the, <a href="#page453">453</a>, <a href="#page457">457</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;movable, <a href="#page457">457</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Thrush in story of the origin of death, <a href="#page61">61</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Thunder the voice of a mythical being, <a href="#page112">112</a>, <a href="#page114">114</a>, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Tindalo</i>, a powerful ghost, <a href="#page346">346</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tinneh or D&eacute;n&eacute; Indians, their ideas as to death, <a href="#page39">39</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Tlaloc, Mexican rain-god, <a href="#page163">163</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tlingit Indians, <a href="#page163">163</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial custom of the, <a href="#page455">455</a><br/>
+<br/>
+To Kambinana, <a href="#page69">69</a><br/>
+<br/>
+To Korvuvu, <a href="#page69">69</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Togoland, West Africa, <a href="#page81">81</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Toll exacted from ghosts, <a href="#page224">224</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tollkeeper, ghostly, <a href="#page224">224</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tonga, <a href="#page406">406</a>, <a href="#page411">411</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page516" id="page516"></a>[pg 516]</span>
+<br/>
+Tongans, their limited doctrine of immortality, <a href="#page33">33</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Torres Islands, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; Straits Islanders, their ideas as to sickness and death, <a href="#page47">47</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their belief in immortality, <a href="#page170">170</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their ethnological affinity and social culture, <a href="#page170">170</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;funeral ceremonies of the, <a href="#page176">176</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Totem, a dominant, <a href="#page113">113</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;design emblematic of, <a href="#page168">168</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Totemic ancestor developing into a god, <a href="#page113">113</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ancestors, traditions concerning, <a href="#page115">115</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; animals, imitation of, <a href="#page177">177</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; clans, <a href="#page104">104</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;animals and plants eaten, <a href="#page120">120</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;animals and plants dramatically represented by actors, <a href="#page121">121</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Totemism, <a href="#page95">95</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;possibly developing into ancestor worship, <a href="#page114">114</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in Torres Straits, <a href="#page172">172</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-totems" id="index-totems"></a>Totems, dramatic ceremonies connected with, <a href="#page119">119</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;eaten, <a href="#page120">120</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;magical ceremonies for the multiplication of, <a href="#page124">124</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Tracking a ghost, <a href="#page277">277</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Traditions of the dead associated with conspicuous features of the landscape, <a href="#page115">115</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Transmigration, widespread belief in, <a href="#page29">29</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of dead into animals, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of souls, <a href="#page322">322</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Fijian doctrine of, <a href="#page467">467</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Travancore, burial custom in, <a href="#page456">456</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tree of immortality, <a href="#page74">74</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tree-burial, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href="#page167">167</a>, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of young children, <a href="#page312">312</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -tops, spirits in, <a href="#page313">313</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Trees, property of dead hung up on, <a href="#page148">148</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;as monuments of the dead, <a href="#page225">225</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;huts built in, <a href="#page263">263</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;souls of the dead live in, <a href="#page316">316</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tremearne, Major A. J. N., <a href="#page28">28</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote5">1</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Truth of the belief in immortality, question of the, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Tsiabiloum, the land of the dead, <a href="#page326">326</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tube inserted in grave, <a href="#page277">277</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tubes, magical, <a href="#page269">269</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tubetube, island of, <a href="#page206">206</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href="#page210">210</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tugeri or Kaya-Kaya, the, of Dutch New Guinea, <a href="#page255">255</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tully River in Queensland, <a href="#page130">130</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tulmeng, lord of the nether world, <a href="#page286">286</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tumleo, island of, <a href="#page218">218</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Tumudurere, a mythical being, <a href="#page207">207</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tumupasa, burial custom of the Indians of, <a href="#page457">457</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Turner, Dr. George, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href="#page369">369</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Turrbal tribe, <a href="#page146">146</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Tuski of Alaska, burial custom of the, <a href="#page456">456</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Two Messengers, the, myth of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a> <i>sqq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="index-uganda" id="index-uganda"></a>Uganda, first man in, <a href="#page78">78</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dead kings of, worshipped, <a href="#page151">151</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;jawbones of dead kings of, preserved, <a href="#page235">235</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;war-god of, <a href="#page366">366</a>.<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-baganda">Baganda</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Unburied dead, ghosts of the, <a href="#page349">349</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Unfruitful wife, mode of impregnating, <a href="#page417">417</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Unkulunkulu, <a href="#page60">60</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Unmarried ghosts, hard fate of, <a href="#page464">464</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Umatjera tribe, <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Urabunna, the, of Central Australia, <a href="#page95">95</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vagueness and inconsistency of savage thought, <a href="#page143">143</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Vale tambu</i>, the Sacred House, <a href="#page438">438</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vanigela River, <a href="#page202">202</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vanua Lava, mountain, <a href="#page355">355</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -levu, one of the Fijian Islands, <a href="#page416">416</a>, <a href="#page417">417</a>, <a href="#page418">418</a>, <a href="#page426">426</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vat&eacute; or Efat, one of the New Hebrides, <a href="#page359">359</a>, <a href="#page376">376</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vengeance taken on enemies by means of a ghost, <a href="#page258">258</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ghost calls for, <a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href="#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page468">468</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vetter, Konrad, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>, <a href="#page255">255</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vicarious sacrifices of pigs for the sick, <a href="#page372">372</a>, <a href="#page374">374</a>, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Victoria, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, <a href="#page40">40</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page42">42</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their beliefs as to the dead, <a href="#page142">142</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their burial customs, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cuttings for the dead among the, <a href="#page154">154</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Views of human nature, two different, <a href="#page469">469</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Village of ghosts, <a href="#page231">231</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page234">234</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; deserted after a death, <a href="#page275">275</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Viti Levu, one of the Fijian Islands, <a href="#page419">419</a>, <a href="#page428">428</a>, <a href="#page435">435</a>, <a href="#page445">445</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Vormann, Franz, <a href="#page228">228</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Vuatom, island, <a href="#page70">70</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wagawaga, in British New Guinea, <a href="#page206">206</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Wainimala in Fiji, <a href="#page436">436</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wakelbura, the, <a href="#page152">152</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wallace, Alfred Russel, on death, <a href="#page85">85</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+War, ancestral images taken to, <a href="#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;perpetual state of, <a href="#page339">339</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -god of Uganda, <a href="#page366">366</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Warramunga, the, of Central Australia, <a href="#page94">94</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their totem the Wollunqua, <a href="#page103">103</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page108">108</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dramatic ceremonies connected with totems among the, <a href="#page123">123</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cuttings for the dead among the, <a href="#page156">156</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial customs of the, <a href="#page167">167</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Warrior ghost, <a href="#page363">363</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Warriors pray to ghosts, <a href="#page288">288</a><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page517" id="page517"></a>[pg 517]</span>
+<br/>
+Wars among savages undertaken to appease angry ghosts, <a href="#page468">468</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wa-Sania, tribe of E. Africa, <a href="#page66">66</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Washing body a rain-charm, <a href="#page375">375</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Watch-an-die, tribe of W. Australia, <a href="#page41">41</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Watch at the grave, <a href="#page293">293</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of widow or widower on grave, <a href="#page241">241</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Water as a barrier against ghosts, <a href="#page152">152</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;poured as a rain-charm, <a href="#page375">375</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; great, to be crossed by ghosts, <a href="#page224">224</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -snake, great mythical (Wollunqua), <a href="#page104">104</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page108">108</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Way to the land of the dead, <a href="#page212">212</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Weakening of religious faith, <a href="#page4">4</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Weapons deposited with the dead, <a href="#page145">145</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;deposited at grave, <a href="#page211">211</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of dead broken, <a href="#page399">399</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Weather regulated by ghosts and spirits, <a href="#page384">384</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; -doctors, <a href="#page385">385</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Weaving in New Guinea, <a href="#page305">305</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Weismann, August, on death, <a href="#page84">84</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Wemba, the, of Northern Rhodesia, <a href="#page77">77</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-western-australia" id="index-western-australia"></a>Western Australia, beliefs as to death among the natives of, <a href="#page41">41</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Whale's teeth as offerings, <a href="#page420">420</a>, <a href="#page421">421</a>, <a href="#page429">429</a>, <a href="#page443">443</a>, <a href="#page444">444</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Whip of souls, <a href="#page270">270</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Whipping men in mourning, <a href="#page452">452</a><br/>
+<br/>
+White ants' nests, ghosts turn into, <a href="#page351">351</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; clay smeared on mourners, <a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page177">177</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; men identified with the spirits of the dead, <a href="#page342">342</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; people, souls of dead Australian aborigines thought to be reborn in, <a href="#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page131">131</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Whitened with chalk, bodies of lads after circumcision, <a href="#page302">302</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Widow, mourning costume of, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page204">204</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;seclusion of, <a href="#page204">204</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;killed to accompany the ghost of her husband, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;drinks juices of putrefying corpse, <a href="#page313">313</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Widower exposed to attacks of his wife's ghost, <a href="#page197">197</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;costume of, <a href="#page204">204</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;seclusion of, <a href="#page204">204</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page259">259</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Widows cut and burn their bodies in mourning, <a href="#page176">176</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wigs worn by Fijians, <a href="#page451">451</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wiimbaio tribe, <a href="#page145">145</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wilkes, Charles, <a href="#page424">424</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Williams, Thomas, <a href="#page408">408</a>, <a href="#page412">412</a>, <a href="#page413">413</a>, <a href="#page452">452</a>, 467<br/>
+<br/>
+Williamson, R. W., <a href="#page201">201</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wind, ghosts float down the, <a href="#page176">176</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Windessi, in Dutch New Guinea, burial customs at, <a href="#page318">318</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+<i>Wingara</i>, early mythical times, <a href="#page116">116</a><br/>
+<br/>
+<a name="index-witchcraft" id="index-witchcraft"></a>Witchcraft, fear of, <a href="#page244">244</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;death ascribed to, <a href="#page277">277</a>, <a href="#page402">402</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Fijian terror of, <a href="#page413">413</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;benefits derived from, <a href="#page414">414</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Witchcraft or black magic in Central Melanesia, <a href="#page386">386</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; as a cause of death, <a href="#page34">34</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-sorcery">Sorcery</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Witchetty grub totem, dramatic ceremonies concerned with, <a href="#page121">121</a> <i>sq.</i>, <a href="#page123">123</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wives of the dead killed, <a href="#page399">399</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;strangled or buried alive at their husbands' funerals in Fiji, <a href="#page424">424</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Woibu, the land of the dead, <a href="#page211">211</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wolgal tribe, <a href="#page146">146</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wollunqua, mythical water-snake, totem of the Warramunga, <a href="#page103">103</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page108">108</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page125">125</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremonies in honour of the, <a href="#page108">108</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Woman, old, in myths of the origin of death, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page71">71</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash;, the Great, <a href="#page464">464</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Women thought not to have immortal spirits, <a href="#page92">92</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;cut and burn their bodies in mourning, <a href="#page154">154</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;excluded from circumcision ground, <a href="#page291">291</a>, <a href="#page301">301</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;dance at deaths, <a href="#page293">293</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;drink juices of putrefying corpse, <a href="#page355">355</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;not allowed to be present at sacrifices, <a href="#page367">367</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;whip men in mourning, <a href="#page452">452</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;burial of childless, <a href="#page458">458</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;the cause of death, <a href="#page472">472</a><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; dying in childbed, special treatment of their ghosts, <a href="#page358">358</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their ghosts specially feared, <a href="#page212">212</a>, <a href="#page458">458</a> <i>sqq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Wordsworth on immortality, <a href="#page26">26</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote4">1</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Worship of ancestors, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page338">338</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;predominance of the, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;possibly evolved from totemism, <a href="#page114">114</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>See also</i> <a href="#index-worship-of-dead">Worship of the dead</a>.<br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of ancestors in Central Australia, possible evolution of, <a href="#page125">125</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;of ancestral spirits in the <i>Nanga</i>, <a href="#page428">428</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; <a name="index-worship-of-dead" id="index-worship-of-dead"></a>of the dead, <a href="#page23">23</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page328">328</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page338">338</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in part based on a theory of dreams, <a href="#page27">27</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;elements of it widespread, <a href="#page31">31</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;in British New Guinea, <a href="#page201">201</a> <i>sq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;predominance of the, <a href="#page297">297</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead, incipient, in Australia, <a href="#page149">149</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page168">168</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+&mdash;&mdash; of the dead in Torres Straits, elements of a, <a href="#page189">189</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;among the Yabim, elements of a, <a href="#page255">255</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Worshipful ghosts, <a href="#page362">362</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Wotjobaluk, the, <a href="#page67">67</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wraiths, <a href="#page396">396</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Wurunjerri, the, <a href="#page146">146</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yabim, the, of German New Guinea, <a href="#page242">242</a> <i>sqq.</i>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;their ideas as to death, <a href="#page47">47</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Yams, prayers for, <a href="#page330">330</a>;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;stones to make yams grow, <a href="#page337">337</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Young children buried on trees, <a href="#page312">312</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page518" id="page518"></a>[pg 518]</span>
+<br/>
+Young and old, difference between the modes of burying, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page162">162</a> <i>sq.</i><br/>
+<br/>
+Youth supposed to be renewed by casting skin, <a href="#page69">69</a> <i>sqq.</i>, <a href="#page74">74</a> <i>sq.</i>, 83<br/>
+<br/>
+Ysabel, one of the Solomon Islands, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page372">372</a>, <a href="#page379">379</a>, <a href="#page380">380</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Yule Island, <a href="#page196">196</a> <i>n.</i> <a href="#footnote319">2</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Zahn, Heinrich, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Zend-Avesta, <a href="#page453">453</a><br/>
+<br/>
+Zulus, their story of the origin of death, <a href="#page60">60</a> <i>sq.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>END OF VOL. I</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page520" id="page520"></a>[pg 520]</span>
+
+
+
+
+<p><b>Works by J. G. FRAZER, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.</b></p>
+
+
+<p><b>THE GOLDEN BOUGH</b></p>
+
+<p>A STUDY IN MAGIC AND RELIGION</p>
+
+<p>Third Edition, revised and enlarged. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p>Part I. <span class="sc">The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings.</span> Two
+volumes, 20s. net.</p>
+
+<p>II. <span class="sc">Taboo and the Perils of the Soul.</span> One volume. 10s. net.</p>
+
+<p>III. <span class="sc">The Dying God.</span> One volume. Second Impression. 10s. net.</p>
+
+<p>IV. <span class="sc">Adonis, Attis, Osiris.</span> One volume. Second Edition. 10s. net.</p>
+
+<p>V. <span class="sc">Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild.</span> Two volumes. 20s. net.</p>
+
+<p>VI. <span class="sc">The Scapegoat.</span> (<i>Spring</i>, 1913.)</p>
+
+<p>VII. <span class="sc">Balder the Beautiful.</span> (<i>Spring</i>, 1913.)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>TIMES.</i>&mdash;"The verdict of posterity will probably be that <i>The Golden Bough</i> has
+influenced the attitude of the human mind towards supernatural beliefs and symbolical
+rituals more profoundly than any other books published in the nineteenth century
+except those of Darwin and Herbert Spencer."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><b>LECTURES ON THE EARLY HISTORY OF
+THE KINGSHIP.</b> 8vo. 8s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>ATHEN&AElig;UM.</i>&mdash;"It is the effect of a good book not only to teach, but also to
+stimulate and to suggest, and we think this the best and highest quality, and one that
+will recommend these lectures to all intelligent readers, as well as to the learned."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><b>PSYCHE'S TASK.</b> A Discourse concerning the Influence
+of Superstition on the Growth of Institutions. 8vo. 2s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>TIMES.</i>&mdash;"Dr. Frazer has answered the question of how the moral law has been
+safeguarded, especially in its infancy, with a wealth of learning and a clearness of
+utterance that leave nothing to be desired. Perhaps the uses of superstition is not
+quite such a new theme as he seems to fancy. Even the most ignorant of us were
+aware that many false beliefs of a religious or superstitious character had had very
+useful moral or physical, or especially sanitary, results. But if the theme is fairly
+familiar, the curious facts which are adduced in support of it will be new to most
+people, and will make the book as interesting to read as the lectures must have been
+to hear."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><b>THE SCOPE OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY.</b>
+8vo. Sewed. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>OXFORD MAGAZINE.</i>&mdash;"In his inaugural lecture the new Professor of Social
+Anthropology in the University of Liverpool defines his Science, states its aims, and
+puts in a spirited plea for the scientific study of primitive man while there is still time,
+before the savage in his natural state becomes as extinct as the dodo."
+</p></blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page521" id="page521"></a>[pg 521]</span>
+
+<p><b>TOTEMISM AND EXOGAMY.</b> A Treatise on
+Certain Early Forms of Superstition and Society. With
+Maps. Four vols. 8vo. 50s. net.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<span class="sc">Mr. A. E. Crawley</span> in <i>NATURE</i>.&mdash;"Prof. Frazer is a great artist as well as a
+great anthropologist. He works on a big scale; no one in any department of research,
+not even Darwin, has employed a wider induction of facts. No one, again, has dealt
+more conscientiously with each fact; however seemingly trivial, it is prepared with
+minute pains and cautious tests for its destiny as a slip to be placed under the
+anthropological microscope. He combines, so to speak, the merits of Tintoretto and
+Meissonier.... That portion of the book which is concerned with totemism (if we
+may express our own belief at the risk of offending Prof. Frazer's characteristic
+modesty) is actually 'The Complete History of Totemism, its Practice and its Theory,
+its Origin and its End.'... Nearly two thousand pages are occupied with an ethnographical
+survey of totemism, an invaluable compilation. The maps, including that
+of the distribution of totemic peoples, are a new and useful feature."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><b>PAUSANIAS'S DESCRIPTION OF GREECE.</b>
+Translated with a Commentary, Illustrations, and Maps.
+Second Edition. Six vols. 8vo. 126s. net.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>ATHEN&AElig;UM.</i>&mdash;"All these writings in many languages Mr. Frazer has read
+and digested with extraordinary care, so that his book will be for years <i>the</i> book of
+reference on such matters, not only in England, but in France and Germany. It is a
+perfect thesaurus of Greek topography, arch&aelig;ology, and art. It is, moreover, far more
+interesting than any dictionary of the subject; for it follows the natural guidance of
+the Greek traveller, examining every town or village which he describes; analysing
+and comparing with foreign parallels every myth or fairy tale which he records; citing
+every information which can throw light on the works of art he admires."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><b>PAUSANIAS AND OTHER GREEK SKETCHES.</b>
+Globe 8vo. 4s. net.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<i>GUARDIAN.</i>&mdash;"Here we have material which every one who has visited Greece,
+or purposes to visit it, most certainly should read and enjoy.... We cannot imagine
+a more excellent book for the educated visitor to Greece."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><b>LETTERS OF WILLIAM COWPER.</b> Chosen and
+Edited with a Memoir and a few Notes by <span class="sc">J. G. Frazer</span>,
+D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D. Two vols. Globe 8vo. 8s. net.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Eversley Series.</i>)</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<span class="sc">Mr. Clement Shorter</span> in the <i>DAILY CHRONICLE</i>.&mdash;"To the task Dr.
+Frazer has given a scholarly care that will make the edition one that is a joy to
+possess. His introductory Memoir, of some eighty pages in length, is a valuable
+addition to the many appraisements of Cowper that these later years have seen. It is
+no mere perfunctory 'introduction' but a piece of sound biographical work....
+Dr. Frazer has given us two volumes that are an unqualified joy."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>MACMILLAN AND CO., <span class="sc">Ltd.</span>, LONDON.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="pg" />
+
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD, VOLUME I (OF 3)***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of
+the Dead, Volume I (of 3), by Sir James George Frazer
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume I (of 3)
+ The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia
+
+
+Author: Sir James George Frazer
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 15, 2006 [eBook #20116]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE
+WORSHIP OF THE DEAD, VOLUME I (OF 3)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, David King, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from
+page images generously made available by the Humanities Text Initiative
+(http://www.hti.umich.edu/), a unit of the University of Michigan's
+Digital Library Production Service
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through
+ the Humanities Text Initiative, a unit of the University
+ of Michigan's Digital Library Production Service. See
+ http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=AFL0522.0001.001
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD
+
+by
+
+J. G. FRAZER, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.
+
+Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge
+Professor of Social Anthropology in the University of Liverpool.
+
+VOL. I
+
+The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits
+Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia
+
+The Gifford Lectures, St. Andrews 1911-1912
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MacMillan and Co., Limited
+St. Martin's Street, London
+1913
+
+
+ _Itaque unum illud erat insitum priscis illis, quos cascos
+ appellat Ennius, esse in morte sensum neque excessu vitae sic
+ deleri hominem, ut funditus interiret; idque cum multis aliis
+ rebus; tum e pontificio jure et e caerimoniis sepulchrorum
+ intellegi licet, quas maxumis ingeniis praediti nec tanta cura
+ coluissent nec violatas tam inexpiabili religione sanxissent,
+ nisi haereret in corum mentibus mortem non interitum esse omnia
+ tollentem atque delentem, sed quandam quasi migrationem
+ commutationemque vitae._
+
+ Cicero, _Tuscul. Disput._ i. 12.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+MY OLD FRIEND
+
+JOHN SUTHERLAND BLACK, LL.D.
+
+I DEDICATE AFFECTIONATELY
+
+A WORK
+
+WHICH OWES MUCH TO HIS ENCOURAGEMENT
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+The following lectures were delivered on Lord Gifford's Foundation
+before the University of St. Andrews in the early winters of 1911 and
+1912. They are printed nearly as they were spoken, except that a few
+passages, omitted for the sake of brevity in the oral delivery, have
+been here restored and a few more added. Further, I have compressed the
+two introductory lectures into one, striking out some passages which on
+reflection I judged to be irrelevant or superfluous. The volume
+incorporates twelve lectures on "The Fear and Worship of the Dead" which
+I delivered in the Lent and Easter terms of 1911 at Trinity College,
+Cambridge, and repeated, with large additions, in my course at St.
+Andrews.
+
+The theme here broached is a vast one, and I hope to pursue it hereafter
+by describing the belief in immortality and the worship of the dead, as
+these have been found among the other principal races of the world both
+in ancient and modern times. Of all the many forms which natural
+religion has assumed none probably has exerted so deep and far-reaching
+an influence on human life as the belief in immortality and the worship
+of the dead; hence an historical survey of this most momentous creed and
+of the practical consequences which have been deduced from it can hardly
+fail to be at once instructive and impressive, whether we regard the
+record with complacency as a noble testimony to the aspiring genius of
+man, who claims to outlive the sun and the stars, or whether we view it
+with pity as a melancholy monument of fruitless labour and barren
+ingenuity expended in prying into that great mystery of which fools
+profess their knowledge and wise men confess their ignorance.
+
+J. G. FRAZER.
+Cambridge,
+_9th February 1913._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+Dedication
+
+Preface
+
+Table of Contents
+
+Lecture I.--Introduction
+
+Natural theology, three modes of handling it, the dogmatic, the
+philosophical, and the historical, pp. 1 _sq._; the historical method
+followed in these lectures, 2 _sq._; questions of the truth and moral
+value of religious beliefs irrelevant in an historical enquiry, 3 _sq._;
+need of studying the religion of primitive man and possibility of doing
+so by means of the comparative method, 5 _sq._; urgent need of
+investigating the native religion of savages before it disappears, 6
+_sq._; a portion of savage religion the theme of these lectures, 7
+_sq._; the question of a supernatural revelation dismissed, 8 _sq._;
+theology and religion, their relations, 9; the term God defined, 9
+_sqq._; monotheism and polytheism, 11; a natural knowledge of God, if it
+exists, only possible through experience, 11 _sq._; the nature of
+experience, 12 _sq._; two kinds of experience, an inward and an outward,
+13 _sq._; the conception of God reached historically through both kinds
+of experience, 14; inward experience or inspiration, 14 _sq._;
+deification of living men, 16 _sq._; outward experience as a source of
+the idea of God, 17; the tendency to seek for causes, 17 _sq._; the
+meaning of cause, 18 _sq._; the savage explains natural processes by the
+hypothesis of spirits or gods, 19 _sq._; natural processes afterwards
+explained by hypothetical forces and atoms instead of by hypothetical
+spirits and gods, 20 _sq._; nature in general still commonly explained
+by the hypothesis of a deity, 21 _sq._; God an inferential or
+hypothetical cause, 22 _sq._; the deification of dead men, 23-25; such a
+deification presupposes the immortality of the human soul or rather its
+survival for a longer or shorter time after death, 25 _sq._; the
+conception of human immortality suggested both by inward experience,
+such as dreams, and by outward experience, such as the resemblances of
+the living to the dead, 26-29; the lectures intended to collect evidence
+as to the belief in immortality among certain savage races, 29 _sq._;
+the method to be descriptive rather than comparative or philosophical,
+30.
+
+Lecture II.--The Savage Conception of Death
+
+The subject of the lectures the belief in immortality and the worship of
+the dead among certain of the lower races, p. 31; question of the nature
+and origin of death, 31 _sq._; universal interest of the question, 32
+_sq._; the belief in immortality general among mankind, 33; belief of
+many savages that death is not natural and that they would never die if
+their lives were not cut prematurely short by sorcery, 33 _sq._;
+examples of this belief among the South American Indians, 34 _sqq._;
+death sometimes attributed to sorcery and sometimes to demons, practical
+consequence of this distinction, 37; belief in sorcery as the cause of
+death among the Indians of Guiana, 38 _sq._, among the Tinneh Indians of
+North America, 39 _sq._, among the aborigines of Australia, 40-47, among
+the natives of the Torres Straits Islands and New Guinea, 47, among the
+Melanesians, 48, among the Malagasy, 48 _sq._, and among African tribes,
+49-51; effect of such beliefs in thinning the population by causing
+multitudes to die for the imaginary crime of sorcery, 51-53; some
+savages attribute certain deaths to other causes than sorcery, 53;
+corpse dissected to ascertain cause of death, 53 _sq._; the possibility
+of natural death admitted by the Melanesians and the Caffres of South
+Africa, 54-56; the admission marks an intellectual advance, 56 _sq._;
+the recognition of ghosts or spirits, apart from sorcery, as a cause of
+disease and death also marks a step in moral and social progress, 57
+_sq._
+
+Lecture III.--Myths of the Origin of Death
+
+Belief of savages in man's natural immortality, p. 59; savage stories of
+the origin of death, 59 _sq._; four types of such stories:--
+
+(1) _The Story of the Two Messengers_.--Zulu story of the chameleon and
+the lizard, 60 _sq._; Akamba story of the chameleon and the thrush, 61
+_sq._; Togo story of the dog and the frog, 62 _sq._; Ashantee story of
+the goat and the sheep, 63 _sq._
+
+(2) _The Story of the Waxing and Waning Moon_.--Hottentot story of the
+moon, the hare, and death, 65; Masai story of the moon and death, 65
+_sq._; Nandi story of the moon, the dog, and death, 66; Fijian story of
+the moon, the rat, and death, 67; Caroline, Wotjobaluk, and Cham stories
+of the moon, death, and resurrection, 67; death and resurrection after
+three days suggested by the reappearance of the new moon after three
+days, 67 _sq._
+
+(3) _The Story of the Serpent and his Cast Skin_.--New Britain and
+Annamite story of immortality, the serpent, and death, 69 _sq._; Vuatom
+story of immortality, the lizard, the serpent, and death, 70; Nias story
+of immortality, the crab, and death, 70; Arawak and Tamanchier stories
+of immortality, the serpent, the lizard, the beetle, and death, 70
+_sq._; Melanesian story of the old woman and her cast skin, 71 _sq._;
+Samoan story of the shellfish, two torches, and death, 72.
+
+(4) _The Story of the Banana_.--Poso story of immortality, the stone,
+the banana, and death, 72 _sq._; Mentra story of immortality, the
+banana, and death, 73.
+
+Primitive philosophy in the stories of the origin of death, 73 _sq._;
+Bahnar story of immortality, the tree, and death, 74; rivalry for the
+boon of immortality between men and animals that cast their skins, such
+as serpents and lizards, 74 _sq._; stories of the origin of death told
+by Chingpaws, Australians, Fijians, and Admiralty Islanders, 75-77;
+African and American stories of the fatal bundle or the fatal box, 77
+_sq._; Baganda story how death originated through the imprudence of a
+woman, 78-81; West African story of Death and the spider, 81-83;
+Melanesian story of Death and the Fool, 83 _sq._
+
+Thus according to savages death is not a natural necessity, 84; similar
+view held by some modern biologists, as A. Weismann and A. R. Wallace,
+84-86.
+
+Lecture IV.--The Belief in Immortality among the Aborigines of Central
+Australia
+
+In tracing the evolution of religious beliefs we must begin with those
+of the lowest savages, p. 87; the aborigines of Australia the lowest
+savages about whom we possess accurate information, 88; savagery a case
+of retarded development, 88 _sq._; causes which have retarded progress
+in Australia, 89 _sq._; the natives of Central Australia on the whole
+more primitive than those of the coasts, 90 _sq._; little that can be
+called religion among them, 91 _sq._; their theory that the souls of the
+dead survive and are reborn in their descendants, 92 _sq._; places where
+the souls of the dead await rebirth, and the mode in which they enter
+into women, 93 _sq._; local totem centres, 94 _sq._; totemism defined,
+95; traditionary origin of the local totem centres (_oknanikilla_) where
+the souls of the dead assemble, 96; sacred birth-stones or birth-sticks
+(_churinga_) which the souls of ancestors are thought to have dropped at
+these places, 96-102; elements of a worship of the dead, 102 _sq._;
+marvellous powers attributed to the remote ancestors of the _alcheringa_
+or dream times, 103 _sq._; the Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake,
+ancestor of a totemic clan of the Warramunga tribe, 104-106; religious
+character of the belief in the Wollunqua, 106.
+
+Lecture V.--The Belief in Immortality among the Aborigines of Central
+Australia (_continued_)
+
+Beliefs of the Central Australian aborigines concerning the
+reincarnation of the dead, p. 107; possibility of the development of
+ancestor worship, 107 _sq._; ceremonies performed by the Warramunga in
+honour of the Wollunqua, the mythical ancestor of one of their totem
+clans, 108 _sqq._; union of magic and religion in these ceremonies, 111
+_sq._; ground drawings of the Wollunqua, 112 _sq._; importance of the
+Wollunqua in the evolution of religion and art, 113 _sq._; how totemism
+might develop into polytheism through an intermediate stage of ancestor
+worship, 114 _sq._; all the conspicuous features of the country
+associated by the Central Australians with the spirits of their
+ancestors, 115-118; dramatic ceremonies performed by them to commemorate
+the deeds of their ancestors, 118 _sq._; examples of these ceremonies,
+119-122; these ceremonies were probably in origin not merely
+commemorative or historical but magical, being intended to procure a
+supply of food and other necessaries, 122 _sq._; magical virtue actually
+attributed to these dramatic ceremonies by the Warramunga, who think
+that by performing them they increase the food supply of the tribe, 123
+_sq._; hence the great importance ascribed by these savages to the due
+performance of the ancestral dramas, 124; general attitude of the
+Central Australian aborigines to their dead, and the lines on which, if
+left to themselves, they might have developed a regular worship of the
+dead, 124-126.
+
+Lecture VI.--The Belief in Immortality among the other Aborigines of
+Australia
+
+Evidence for the belief in reincarnation among the natives of other
+parts of Australia than the centre, p. 127; beliefs of the Queensland
+aborigines concerning the nature of the soul and the state of the dead,
+127-131; belief of the Australian aborigines that their dead are
+sometimes reborn in white people, 131-133; belief of the natives of
+South-Eastern Australia that their dead are not born again but go away
+to the sky or some distant country, 133 _sq._; beliefs and customs of
+the Narrinyeri concerning the dead, 134 _sqq._; motives for the
+excessive grief which they display at the death of their relatives, 135
+_sq._; their pretence of avenging the death of their friends on the
+guilty sorcerer, 136 _sq._; magical virtue ascribed to the hair of the
+dead, 137 _sq._; belief that the dead go to the sky, 138 _sq._;
+appearance of the dead to the living in dreams, 139; savage faith in
+dreams, 139 _sq._; association of the stars with the souls of the dead,
+140; creed of the South-Eastern Australians touching the dead, 141;
+difference of this creed from that of the Central Australians, 141; this
+difference probably due in the main to a general advance of culture
+brought about by more favourable natural conditions in South-Eastern
+Australia, 141 _sq._; possible influence of European teaching on native
+beliefs, 142 _sq._; vagueness and inconsistency of native beliefs as to
+the state of the dead, 143; custom a good test of belief, 143 _sq._;
+burial customs of the Australian aborigines as evidence of their beliefs
+concerning the state of the dead, 144; their practice of supplying the
+dead with food, water, fire, weapons, and implements, 144-147; motives
+for the destruction of the property of the dead, 147 _sq._; great
+economic loss entailed by developed systems of sacrificing to the dead,
+149.
+
+Lecture VII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Aborigines of
+Australia (_concluded_)
+
+Huts erected on graves for the use of the ghosts, pp. 150-152; the
+attentions paid by the Australian aborigines to their dead probably
+spring from fear rather than affection, 152; precautions taken by the
+living against the dangerous ghosts of the dead, 152 _sq._; cuttings and
+brandings of the flesh of the living in honour of the dead, 154-158; the
+custom of allowing the blood of mourners to drip on the corpse or into
+the grave may be intended to strengthen the dead for a new birth,
+158-162; different ways of disposing of the dead according to the age,
+rank, manner of death, etc., of the deceased, 162 _sq._; some modes of
+burial are intended to prevent the return of the spirit, others are
+designed to facilitate it, 163-165; final departure of the ghost
+supposed to coincide with the disappearance of the flesh from his bones,
+165 _sq._; hence a custom has arisen in many tribes of giving the bones
+a second burial or otherwise disposing of them when the flesh is quite
+decayed, 166; tree-burial followed by earth-burial in some Australian
+tribes, 166-168; general conclusion as to the belief in immortality and
+the worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines, 168 _sq._
+
+Lecture VIII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of the Torres
+Straits Islands
+
+Racial affinities of the Torres Straits Islanders, pp. 170 _sq._; their
+material and social culture, 171 _sq._; no developed worship of the dead
+among them, 172 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 173-175; home of the dead a
+mythical island in the west, 175 _sq._; elaborate funeral ceremonies of
+the Torres Straits Islanders characterised by dramatic representations
+of the dead and by the preservation of their skulls, which were
+consulted as oracles, 176.
+
+Funeral ceremonies of the Western Islanders, 177-180; part played by the
+brothers-in-law of the deceased at these ceremonies, 177 _sq._; removal
+of the head and preparation of the skull for use in divination, 178
+_sq._; great death-dance performed by masked men who personated the
+deceased, 179 _sq._
+
+Funeral ceremonies of the Eastern Islanders, 180-188; soul of the dead
+carried away by a masked actor, 181 _sq._; dramatic performance by
+disguised men representing ghosts, 182 _sq._; blood and hair of
+relatives offered to the dead, 183 _sq._; mummification of the corpse,
+184; costume of mourners, 184; cuttings for the dead, 184 _sq._;
+death-dance by men personating ghosts, 185-188; preservation of the
+mummy and afterwards of the head or a wax model of it to be used in
+divination, 188.
+
+Images of the gods perhaps developed out of mummies of the dead, and a
+sacred or even secular drama developed out of funeral dances, 189.
+
+Lecture IX.--The Belief in Immortality Among the Natives Of British New
+Guinea
+
+The two races of New Guinea, the Papuan and the Melanesian, pp. 190
+_sq._; beliefs and customs of the Motu concerning the dead, 192; the
+Koita and their beliefs as to the human soul and the state of the dead,
+193-195; alleged communications with the dead by means of mediums, 195
+_sq._; fear of the dead, especially of a dead wife, 196 _sq._; beliefs
+of the Mafulu concerning the dead, 198; their burial customs, 198 _sq._;
+their use of the skulls and bones of the dead at a great festival,
+199-201; worship of the dead among the natives of the Aroma district,
+201 _sq._; the Hood Peninsula, 202 _sq._; beliefs and customs concerning
+the dead among the natives of the Hood Peninsula, 203-206; seclusion of
+widows and widowers, 203 _sq._; the ghost-seer, 204 _sq._; application
+of the juices of the dead to the persons of the living, 205; precautions
+taken by manslayers against the ghosts of their victims, 205 _sq._;
+purification for homicide originally a mode of averting the angry ghost
+of the slain, 206; beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the
+Massim of south-eastern New Guinea, 206-210; Hiyoyoa, the land of the
+dead, 207; purification of mourners by bathing and shaving, 207 _sq._;
+foods forbidden to mourners, 208 _sq._; fires on the grave, 209; the
+land of the dead, 209 _sq._; names of the dead not mentioned, 210;
+beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the Papuans of Kiwai,
+211-214; Adiri, the land of the dead, 211-213; appearance of the dead to
+the living in dreams, 213 _sq._; offerings to the dead, 214; dreams as a
+source of the belief in immortality, 214.
+
+Lecture X.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea
+
+Andrew Lang, pp. 216 _sq._; review of preceding lectures, 217 _sq._
+
+The Papuans of Tumleo, their material culture, 218-220; their temples,
+220 _sq._; their bachelors' houses containing the skulls of the dead,
+221; spirits of the dead as the causes of sickness and disease, 222
+_sq._; burial and mourning customs, 223 _sq._; fate of the human soul
+after death, 224; monuments to the dead, 225; disinterment of the bones,
+225; propitiation of ghosts and spirits, 226; guardian-spirits in the
+temples, 226 _sq._
+
+The Monumbo of Potsdam Harbour, 227 _sq._; their beliefs concerning the
+spirits of the dead, 228 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 229; their
+treatment of manslayers, 229 _sq._
+
+The Tamos of Astrolabe Bay, 230; their ideas as to the souls of the
+dead, 231 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 232 _sqq._; their Secret Society
+and rites of initiation, 233; their preservation of the jawbones of the
+dead, 234 _sq._; their sham fights after a death, 235 _sq._; these
+fights perhaps intended to throw dust in the eyes of the ghost, 236
+_sq._
+
+Lecture XI.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea (_continued_)
+
+The Papuans of Cape King William, pp. 238 _sq._; their ideas as to
+spirits and the souls of the dead, 239 _sq._; their belief in sorcery as
+a cause of death, 240 _sq._; their funeral and mourning customs, 241
+_sq._; the fate of the soul after death, 242.
+
+The Yabim of Finsch Harbour, their material and artistic culture, 242
+_sq._; their clubhouses for men, 243; their beliefs as to the state of
+the dead, 244 _sq._; the ghostly ferry, 244 _sq._; transmigration of
+human souls into animals, 245; the return of the ghosts, 246; offerings
+to ghosts, 246; ghosts provided with fire, 246 _sq._; ghosts help in the
+cultivation of land, 247 _sq._; burial and mourning customs, 248 _sq._;
+divination to discover the sorcerer who has caused a death, 249 _sq._;
+bull-roarers, 250; initiation of young men, 250 _sqq._; the rite of
+circumcision, the novices supposed to be swallowed by a monster, 251
+_sq._; the return of the novices, 253; the essence of the initiatory
+rites seems to be a simulation of death and resurrection, 253 _sqq._;
+the new birth among the Akikuyu of British East Africa, 254.
+
+Lecture XII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea (_continued_)
+
+The Bukaua of Huon Gulf, their means of subsistence and men's
+clubhouses, pp. 256 _sq._; their ideas as to the souls of the dead, 257;
+sickness and death caused by ghosts and sorcerers, 257 _sq._; fear of
+the ghosts of the slain, 258; prayers to ancestral spirits on behalf of
+the crops, 259; first-fruits offered to the spirits of the dead, 259;
+burial and mourning customs, 259 _sq._; initiation of young men, novices
+at circumcision supposed to be swallowed and afterwards disgorged by a
+monster, 260 _sq._
+
+The Kai, a Papuan tribe of mountaineers inland from Finsch Harbour, 262;
+their country, mode of agriculture, and villages, 262 _sq._;
+observations of a German missionary on their animism, 263 _sq._; the
+essential rationality of the savage, 264-266; the Kai theory of the two
+sorts of human souls, 267 _sq._; death commonly thought to be caused by
+sorcery, 268 _sq._; danger incurred by the sorcerer, 269; many hurts and
+maladies attributed to the action of ghosts, 269 _sq._; capturing lost
+souls, 270 _sq._; ghosts extracted from the body of a sick man or
+scraped from his person, 271; extravagant demonstrations of grief at the
+death of a sick man, 271-273; hypocritical character of these
+demonstrations, which are intended to deceive the ghost, 273; burial and
+mourning customs, preservation of the lower jawbone and one of the lower
+arm bones, 274; mourning costume, seclusion of widow or widower, 274
+_sq._; widows sometimes strangled to accompany their dead husbands, 275;
+house or village deserted after a death, 275.
+
+Lecture XIII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German New
+Guinea (_continued_)
+
+The Kai (continued), their offerings to the dead, p. 276; divination by
+means of ghosts to detect the sorcerer who has caused a death, 276-278;
+avenging the death on the sorcerer and his people, 278 _sq._;
+precautions against the ghosts of the slain, 279 _sq._; attempts to
+deceive the ghosts of the murdered, 280-282; pretence of avenging the
+ghost of a murdered man, 282; fear of ghosts by night, 282 _sq._;
+services rendered by the spirits of the dead to farmers and hunters,
+283-285; the journey of the soul to the spirit land, 285 _sq._; life of
+the dead in the other world, 286 _sq._; ghosts die the second death and
+turn into animals, 287; ghosts of famous people invoked long after their
+death, 287-289; possible development of ghosts into gods, 289 _sq._;
+lads at circumcision supposed to be swallowed and disgorged by a
+monster, 290 _sq._
+
+The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf, 291; their theory of a double human
+soul, a long one and a short one, 291 _sq._; departure of the short soul
+for Lamboam, the nether world of the dead, 292; offerings to the dead,
+292; appeasing the ghost, 292 _sq._; funeral and mourning customs,
+dances in honour of the dead, offerings thrown into the fire, 293 _sq._;
+bones of the dead dug up and kept in the house for a time, 294 _sq._
+
+Lecture XIV.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of German and
+Dutch New Guinea
+
+The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf (continued), their doctrine of souls and
+gods, pp. 296 _sq._; dances of masked men representing spirits, 297;
+worship of ancestral spirits and offerings to them, 297 _sq._; life of
+the souls in Lamboam, the nether world, 299 _sq._; evocation of ghosts
+by the ghost-seer, 300; sickness caused by ghosts, 300 _sq._; novices at
+circumcision supposed to be swallowed and disgorged by a monster, 301
+_sq._; meaning of the bodily mutilations inflicted on young men at
+puberty obscure, 302 _sq._ The natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303-323; the
+Noofoors of Geelvink Bay, their material culture and arts of life,
+303-305; their fear and worship of the dead, 305-307; wooden images
+(_korwar_) of the dead kept in the houses and carried in canoes to be
+used as oracles, 307 _sq._; the images consulted in sickness and taken
+with the people to war, 308-310; offerings to the images, 310 _sq._;
+souls of those who have died away from home recalled to animate the
+images, 311; skulls of the dead, especially of firstborn children and of
+parents, inserted in the images, 312 _sq._; bodies of young children
+hung on trees, 312 _sq._; mummies of dead relatives kept in the houses,
+313; seclusion of mourners and restrictions on their diet, 313 _sq._;
+tattooing in honour of the dead, 314; teeth and hair of the dead worn by
+relatives, 314 _sq._; rebirth of parents in their children, 315.
+
+The natives of islands off the west coast of New Guinea, their wooden
+images of dead ancestors and shrines for the residence of the ancestral
+spirits, 315 _sq._; their festivals in honour of the dead, 316; souls of
+ancestors supposed to reside in the images and to protect the house and
+household, 317.
+
+The natives of the Macluer Gulf, their images and bowls in honour of the
+dead, 317 _sq._
+
+The natives of the Mimika district, their burial and mourning customs,
+their preservation of the skulls of the dead, and their belief in
+ghosts, 318.
+
+The natives of Windessi, their burial customs, 318 _sq._; divination
+after a death, 319; mourning customs, 319 _sq._; festival of the dead,
+320 _sq._; wooden images of the dead, 321; doctrine of souls and of
+their fate after death, 321 _sq._; medicine-men inspired by the souls of
+the dead, 322 _sq._; ghosts of slain enemies driven away, 323.
+
+Lecture XV.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Southern
+Melanesia (New Caledonia)
+
+The Melanesians in general, their material culture, p. 324; Southern
+Melanesia, the New Caledonians, and Father Lambert's account of them,
+325; their ideas as to the spirit land and the way thither, 325 _sq._;
+burial customs, 326; cuttings and brandings for the dead, 326 _sq._;
+property of the dead destroyed, 327; seclusion of gravediggers and
+restrictions imposed on them, 327; sham fight in honour of the dead, 327
+_sq._; skulls of the dead preserved and worshipped on various occasions,
+such as sickness, fishing, and famine, 328-330; caves used as
+charnel-houses and sanctuaries of the dead in the Isle of Pines,
+330-332; prayers and sacrifices to the ancestral spirits, 332 _sq._;
+prayer-posts, 333 _sq._; sacred stones associated with the dead and used
+to cause dearth or plenty, madness, a good crop of bread-fruit or yams,
+drought, rain, a good catch of fish, and so on, 334-338; the religion of
+the New Caledonians mainly a worship of the dead tinctured with magic,
+338.
+
+Evidence as to the natives of New Caledonia collected by Dr. George
+Turner, 339-342; material culture of the New Caledonians, 339; their
+burial customs, the skulls and nails of the dead preserved and used to
+fertilise the yam plantations, 339 _sq._; worship of ancestors and
+prayers to the dead, 340; festivals in honour of the dead, 340 _sq._;
+making rain by means of the skeletons of the dead, 341; execution of
+sorcerers, 341 _sq._; white men identified with the spirits of the dead,
+342.
+
+Lecture XVI.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Central
+Melanesia
+
+Central Melanesia divided into two archipelagoes, the religion of the
+Western Islands (Solomon Islands) characterised by a worship of the
+dead, the religion of the Eastern Islands (New Hebrides, Banks' Islands,
+Torres Islands, Santa Cruz Islands) characterised by a worship of
+non-human spirits, pp. 343 _sq._; Central Melanesian theory of the soul,
+344 _sq._; the land of the dead either in certain islands or in a
+subterranean region called Panoi, 345; ghosts of power and ghosts of no
+account, 345 _sq._; supernatural power (_mana_) acquired through ghosts,
+346 _sq._
+
+Burial customs in the Western Islands (Solomon Islands), 347 _sqq._;
+land-burial and sea-burial, land-ghosts and sea-ghosts, 347 _sq._;
+funeral feasts and burnt-offerings to the dead, 348 _sq._; the land of
+the dead and the ghostly ferry, 350 _sq._; ghosts die the second death
+and turn into the nests of white ants, 350 _sq._; preservation of the
+skull and jawbone in order to ensure the protection of the ghost, 351
+_sq._; human heads sought in order to add fresh spiritual power (_mana_)
+to the ghost of a dead chief, 352.
+
+Beliefs and customs concerning the dead in the Eastern Islands (New
+Hebrides, Banks' Islands, Torres Islands), 352 _sqq._; Panoi, the
+subterranean abode of the dead, 353 _sq._; ghosts die the second death,
+354; different fates of the souls of the good and bad, 354 _sq._;
+descent of the living into the world of the dead, 355; burial customs of
+the Banks' Islanders, 355 _sqq._; dead sometimes temporarily buried in
+the house, 355; display of property beside the corpse and funeral
+oration, 355 _sq._; sham burial of eminent men, 356; ghosts driven away
+from the village, 356-358; deceiving the ghosts of women who have died
+in child-bed, 358; funeral feasts, 358 _sq._; funeral customs in the
+New Hebrides, 359 _sqq._; the aged buried alive, 359 _sq._; seclusion of
+mourners and restrictions on their diet, 360; sacrifice of pigs, 360
+_sq._; the journey of the ghost to the spirit land, 361 _sq._;
+provisions made by the living for the welfare of the dead, 362.
+
+Only ghosts of powerful men worshipped, 362 _sq._; institution of the
+worship of a martial ghost, 363 _sq._; offerings of food and drink to
+the dead, 364 _sq._; sacrifice of pigs to ghosts in the Solomon Islands,
+365 _sq._
+
+Lecture XVII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Central
+Melanesia (_concluded_)
+
+Public sacrifices to ghosts in the Solomon Islands, pp. 367 _sq._;
+offering of first-fruits to ghosts, 368 _sq._; private ghosts as
+distinguished from public ghosts, 369 _sq._; fighting ghosts kept as
+spiritual auxiliaries, 370; ghosts employed to make the gardens grow,
+370 _sq._; human sacrifices to ghosts, 371 _sq._; vicarious and other
+sacrifices to ghosts at Saa in Malanta, 372 _sq._; offerings of
+first-fruits to ghosts at Saa, 373 _sq._; vicarious sacrifices offered
+for the sick to ghosts in Santa Cruz, 374; the dead represented by
+stocks in the houses, 374; native account of sacrifices in Santa Cruz,
+374 _sq._; prayers to the dead, 376 _sq._; sanctuaries of ghosts in the
+Solomon Islands, 377-379; ghosts lodged in animals, birds, and fish,
+especially in sharks, 379 _sq._
+
+The belief in ghosts underlies the Melanesian conception of magic, 380
+_sq._; sickness commonly caused by ghosts and cured by ghost-seers,
+381-384; contrast between Melanesian and European systems of medicine,
+384; weather regulated by ghosts and spirits and by weather-doctors who
+have the ear of ghosts and spirits, 384-386; witchcraft or black magic
+wrought by means of ghosts, 386-388; prophets inspired by ghosts, 388
+_sq._; divination operating through ghosts, 389 _sq._; taboos enforced
+by ghosts, 390 _sq._; general influence which a belief in the survival
+of the soul after death has exercised on Melanesian life, 391 _sq._
+
+Lecture XVIII.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Northern
+and Eastern Melanesia
+
+The natives of Northern Melanesia or the Bismarck Archipelago (New
+Britain, New Ireland, etc.), their material culture, commercial habits,
+and want of regular government, pp. 393-395; their theory of the soul,
+395 _sq._; their fear of ghosts, 396; offerings to the dead, 396 _sq._;
+burial customs, 397 _sq._; preservation of the skulls, 398; customs and
+beliefs concerning the dead among the Sulka of New Britain, 398-400,
+among the Moanus of the Admiralty Islands, 400 _sq._ and among the
+natives of the Kaniet Islands, 401 _sq._; natural deaths commonly
+attributed to sorcery, 402; divination to discover the sorcerer who
+caused the death, 402; death customs in the Duke of York Island, cursing
+the sorcerer, skulls preserved, feasts and dances, 403; prayers to the
+dead, 403 _sq._; the land of the dead and the fate of the departed
+souls, hard lot of impecunious ghosts, 404-406.
+
+The natives of Eastern Melanesia (Fiji), their material culture and
+political constitution, 406-408; means of subsistence, 408; moral
+character, 408 _sq._; scenery of the Fijian islands, 409 _sq._; the
+Fijian doctrine of souls, 410-412; souls of rascals caught in scarves,
+412 _sq._; fear of sorcery and precautions against it, 413 _sq._;
+beneficial effect of the fear in enforcing habits of personal
+cleanliness, 414; fear of ghosts and custom of driving them away, 414
+_sq._; killing a ghost, 415 _sq._; outwitting grandfather's ghost, 416;
+special relation of grandfather to grandchild, 416; grandfather's soul
+reborn in his grandchild, 417 _sq._
+
+Lecture XIX.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Eastern
+Melanesia (Fiji) (_continued_)
+
+Indifference of the Fijians to death, p. 419; their custom of killing
+the sick and aged with the consent of the victims, 419-424; their
+readiness to die partly an effect of their belief in immortality, 422
+_sq._; wives strangled or buried alive to accompany their husbands to
+the spirit land, 424-426; servants and dependants killed to attend their
+dead lords, 426; sacrifices of foreskins and fingers in honour of dead
+chiefs, 426 _sq._; boys circumcised in order to save the lives of their
+fathers or fathers' brothers, 427; saturnalia attending such rites of
+circumcision, 427 _sq._; the _Nanga_, or sacred enclosure of stones,
+dedicated to the worship of ancestors, 428 _sq._; first-fruits of the
+yams offered to the ancestors in the _Nanga_, 429; initiation of young
+men in the _Nanga_, drama of death and resurrection, sacrament of food
+and water, 429-432; the initiation followed by a period of sexual
+licence, 433; the initiatory rites apparently intended to introduce the
+novices to the ancestral spirits and endow them with the powers of the
+dead, 434 _sq._; the rites seem to have been imported into Fiji by
+immigrants from the west, 435 _sq._; the licence attending these rites
+perhaps a reversion to primitive communism for the purpose of
+propitiating the ancestral spirits, 436 _sq._; description of the
+_Nanga_ or sacred enclosure of stones, 437 _sq._; comparison with the
+cromlechs and other megalithic monuments of Europe, 438.
+
+Lecture XX.--The Belief in Immortality among the Natives of Eastern
+Melanesia (Fiji) (_concluded_)
+
+Worship of parents and other dead relations in Fiji, pp. 439 _sq._;
+Fijian notion of divinity (_kalou_), 440; two classes of gods, namely,
+divine gods and human gods or deified men, 440 _sq._; temples (_bures_)
+441 _sq._; worship at the temples, 443; priests (_betes_), their
+oracular inspiration by the gods, 443-446; human sacrifices on various
+occasions, such as building a house or launching a new canoe, 446 _sq._;
+high estimation in which manslaughter was held by the Fijians, 447
+_sq._; consecration of manslayers and restrictions laid on them,
+probably from fear of the ghosts of their victims, 448 _sq._; certain
+funeral customs based apparently on the fear of ghosts, 450 _sqq._;
+persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food with their
+hands, 450 _sq._; seclusion of gravediggers, 451; mutilations,
+brandings, and fasts in honour of the dead, 451 _sq._; the dead carried
+out of the house by a special opening to prevent the return of the
+ghost, 452-461; the other world and the way thither, 462 _sqq._; the
+ghostly ferry, 462 _sq._; the ghost and the pandanus tree, 463 _sq._;
+hard fate of the unmarried dead, 464; the Killer of Souls, 464 _sq._;
+ghosts precipitated into a lake, 465 _sq._; Murimuria, an inferior sort
+of heaven, 466; the Fijian Elysium, 466 _sq._; transmigration and
+annihilation, the few that are saved, 467.
+
+Concluding observations, 467-471; strength and universality of the
+belief in immortality among savages, 468; the state of war among savage
+and civilised peoples often a direct consequence of the belief in
+immortality, 468 _sq._; economic loss involved in sacrifices to the
+dead, 469; how does the savage belief in immortality bear on the truth
+or falsehood of that belief in general? 469; the answer depends to some
+extent on the view we take of human nature, 469-471; the conclusion left
+open, 471.
+
+Note.--Myth of the Continuance of Death
+
+Index
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE I
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+[Sidenote: Natural theology, and the three modes of handling it, the
+dogmatic, the philosophical, and the historical.]
+
+The subject of these lectures is a branch of natural theology. By
+natural theology I understand that reasoned knowledge of a God or gods
+which man may be supposed, whether rightly or wrongly, capable of
+attaining to by the exercise of his natural faculties alone. Thus
+defined, the subject may be treated in at least three different ways,
+namely, dogmatically, philosophically, and historically. We may simply
+state the dogmas of natural theology which appear to us to be true: that
+is the dogmatic method. Or, secondly, we may examine the validity of the
+grounds on which these dogmas have been or may be maintained: that is
+the philosophic method. Or, thirdly, we may content ourselves with
+describing the various views which have been held on the subject and
+tracing their origin and evolution in history: that is the historical
+method. The first of these three methods assumes the truth of natural
+theology, the second discusses it, and the third neither assumes nor
+discusses but simply ignores it: the historian as such is not concerned
+with the truth or falsehood of the beliefs he describes, his business is
+merely to record them and to track them as far as possible to their
+sources. Now that the subject of natural theology is ripe for a purely
+dogmatic treatment will hardly, I think, be maintained by any one, to
+whatever school of thought he may belong; accordingly that method of
+treatment need not occupy us further. Far otherwise is it with the
+philosophic method which undertakes to enquire into the truth or
+falsehood of the belief in a God: no method could be more appropriate at
+a time like the present, when the opinions of educated and thoughtful
+men on that profound topic are so unsettled, diverse, and conflicting. A
+philosophical treatment of the subject might comprise a discussion of
+such questions as whether a natural knowledge of God is possible to man,
+and, if possible, by what means and through what faculties it is
+attainable; what are the grounds for believing in the existence of a
+God; and, if this belief is justified, what may be supposed to be his
+essential nature and attributes, and what his relations to the world in
+general and to man in particular. Now I desire to confess at once that
+an adequate discussion of these and kindred questions would far exceed
+both my capacity and my knowledge; for he who would do justice to so
+arduous an enquiry should not only be endowed with a comprehensive and
+penetrating genius, but should possess a wide and accurate acquaintance
+with the best accredited results of philosophic speculation and
+scientific research. To such qualifications I can lay no claim, and
+accordingly I must regard myself as unfitted for a purely philosophic
+treatment of natural theology. To speak plainly, the question of the
+existence of a God is too deep for me. I dare neither affirm nor deny
+it. I can only humbly confess my ignorance. Accordingly, if Lord Gifford
+had required of his lecturers either a dogmatic or a philosophical
+treatment of natural theology, I could not have undertaken to deliver
+the lectures.
+
+[Sidenote: The method followed in these lectures is the historical.]
+
+But in his deed of foundation, as I understand it, Lord Gifford left his
+lecturers free to follow the historical rather than the dogmatic or the
+philosophical method of treatment. He says: "The lecturers shall be
+under no restraint whatever in their treatment of their theme: for
+example, they may freely discuss (and it may be well to do so) all
+questions about man's conceptions of God or the Infinite, their origin,
+nature, and truth." In making this provision the founder appears to have
+allowed and indeed encouraged the lecturers not only to discuss, if they
+chose to do so, the philosophical basis of a belief in God, but also to
+set forth the various conceptions of the divine nature which have been
+held by men in all ages and to trace them to their origin: in short, he
+permitted and encouraged the lecturers to compose a history of natural
+theology or of some part of it. Even when it is thus limited to its
+historical aspect the theme is too vast to be mastered completely by any
+one man: the most that a single enquirer can do is to take a general but
+necessarily superficial survey of the whole and to devote himself
+especially to the investigation of some particular branch or aspect of
+the subject. This I have done more or less for many years, and
+accordingly I think that without being presumptuous I may attempt, in
+compliance with Lord Gifford's wishes and directions, to lay before my
+hearers a portion of the history of religion to which I have paid
+particular attention. That the historical study of religious beliefs,
+quite apart from the question of their truth or falsehood, is both
+interesting and instructive will hardly be disputed by any intelligent
+and thoughtful enquirer. Whether they have been well or ill founded,
+these beliefs have deeply influenced the conduct of human affairs; they
+have furnished some of the most powerful, persistent, and far-reaching
+motives of action; they have transformed nations and altered the face of
+the globe. No one who would understand the general history of mankind
+can afford to ignore the annals of religion. If he does so, he will
+inevitably fall into the most serious misconceptions even in studying
+branches of human activity which might seem, on a superficial view, to
+be quite unaffected by religious considerations.
+
+[Sidenote: An historical enquiry into the evolution of religion
+prejudices neither the question of the ethical value of religious
+practice nor the question of the truth or falsehood of religious
+belief.]
+
+Therefore to trace theological and in general religious ideas to their
+sources and to follow them through all the manifold influences which
+they have exerted on the destinies of our race must always be an object
+of prime importance to the historian, whatever view he may take of their
+speculative truth or ethical value. Clearly we cannot estimate their
+ethical value until we have learned the modes in which they have
+actually determined human conduct for good or evil: in other words, we
+cannot judge of the morality of religious beliefs until we have
+ascertained their history: the facts must be known before judgment can
+be passed on them: the work of the historian must precede the work of
+the moralist. Even the question of the validity or truth of religious
+creeds cannot, perhaps, be wholly dissociated from the question of their
+origin. If, for example, we discover that doctrines which we had
+accepted with implicit faith from tradition have their close analogies
+in the barbarous superstitions of ignorant savages, we can hardly help
+suspecting that our own cherished doctrines may have originated in the
+similar superstitions of our rude forefathers; and the suspicion
+inevitably shakes the confidence with which we had hitherto regarded
+these articles of our faith. The doubt thus cast on our old creed is
+perhaps illogical, since even if we should discover that the creed did
+originate in mere superstition, in other words, that the grounds on
+which it was first adopted were false and absurd, this discovery would
+not really disprove the beliefs themselves, for it is perfectly possible
+that a belief may be true, though the reasons alleged in favour of it
+are false and absurd: indeed we may affirm with great probability that a
+multitude of human beliefs, true in themselves, have been accepted and
+defended by millions of people on grounds which cannot bear exact
+investigation for a moment. For example, if the facts of savage life
+which it will be my duty to submit to you should have the effect of
+making the belief in immortality look exceedingly foolish, those of my
+hearers who cherish the belief may console themselves by reflecting
+that, as I have just pointed out, a creed is not necessarily false
+because some of the reasons adduced in its favour are invalid, because
+it has sometimes been supported by the despicable tricks of vulgar
+imposture, and because the practices to which it has given rise have
+often been in the highest degree not only absurd but pernicious.
+
+[Sidenote: Yet such an enquiry may shake the confidence with which
+traditional beliefs have been held.]
+
+Thus an historical enquiry into the origin of religious creeds cannot,
+strictly speaking, invalidate, still less refute, the creeds themselves,
+though it may, and doubtless often does weaken the confidence with which
+they are held. This weakening of religious faith as a consequence of a
+closer scrutiny of religious origins is unquestionably a matter of great
+importance to the community; for society has been built and cemented to
+a great extent on a foundation of religion, and it is impossible to
+loosen the cement and shake the foundation without endangering the
+superstructure. The candid historian of religion will not dissemble the
+danger incidental to his enquiries, but nevertheless it is his duty to
+prosecute them unflinchingly. Come what may, he must ascertain the facts
+so far as it is possible to do so; having done that, he may leave to
+others the onerous and delicate task of adjusting the new knowledge to
+the practical needs of mankind. The narrow way of truth may often look
+dark and threatening, and the wayfarer may often be weary; yet even at
+the darkest and the weariest he will go forward in the trust, if not in
+the knowledge, that the way will lead at last to light and to rest; in
+plain words, that there is no ultimate incompatibility between the good
+and the true.
+
+[Sidenote: To discover the origin of the idea of God we must study the
+beliefs of primitive man.]
+
+Now if we are indeed to discover the origin of man's conception of God,
+it is not sufficient to analyse the ideas which the educated and
+enlightened portion of mankind entertain on the subject at the present
+day; for in great measure these ideas are traditional, they have been
+handed down with little or no independent reflection or enquiry from
+generation to generation; hence in order to detect them in their
+inception it becomes necessary to push our analysis far back into the
+past. Large materials for such an historical enquiry are provided for us
+in the literature of ancient nations which, though often sadly mutilated
+and imperfect, has survived to modern times and throws much precious
+light on the religious beliefs and practices of the peoples who created
+it. But the ancients themselves inherited a great part of their religion
+from their prehistoric ancestors, and accordingly it becomes desirable
+to investigate the religious notions of these remote forefathers of
+mankind, since in them we may hope at last to arrive at the ultimate
+source, the historical origin, of the whole long development.
+
+[Sidenote: The beliefs of primitive man can only be understood through a
+comparative study of the various races in the lower stages of culture.]
+
+But how can this be done? how can we investigate the ideas of peoples
+who, ignorant of writing, had no means of permanently recording their
+beliefs? At first sight the thing seems impossible; the thread of
+enquiry is broken off short; it has landed us on the brink of a gulf
+which looks impassable. But the case is not so hopeless as it appears.
+True, we cannot investigate the beliefs of prehistoric ages directly,
+but the comparative method of research may furnish us with the means of
+studying them indirectly; it may hold up to us a mirror in which, if we
+do not see the originals, we may perhaps contemplate their reflections.
+For a comparative study of the various races of mankind demonstrates, or
+at least renders it highly probable, that humanity has everywhere
+started at an exceedingly low level of culture, a level far beneath that
+of the lowest existing savages, and that from this humble beginning all
+the various races of men have gradually progressed upward at different
+rates, some faster and some slower, till they have attained the
+particular stage which each of them occupies at the present time.
+
+[Sidenote: Hence the need of studying the beliefs and customs of
+savages, if we are to understand the evolution of culture in general.]
+
+If this conclusion is correct, the various stages of savagery and
+barbarism on which many tribes and peoples now stand represent, broadly
+speaking, so many degrees of retarded social and intellectual
+development, they correspond to similar stages which the ancestors of
+the civilised races may be supposed to have passed through at more or
+less remote periods of their history. Thus when we arrange all the known
+peoples of the world according to the degree of their savagery or
+civilisation in a graduated scale of culture, we obtain not merely a
+comparative view of their relative positions in the scale, but also in
+some measure an historical record of the genetic development of culture
+from a very early time down to the present day. Hence a study of the
+savage and barbarous races of mankind is of the greatest importance for
+a full understanding of the beliefs and practices, whether religious,
+social, moral, or political, of the most civilised races, including our
+own, since it is practically certain that a large part of these beliefs
+and practices originated with our savage ancestors, and has been
+inherited by us from them, with more or less of modification, through a
+long line of intermediate generations.
+
+[Sidenote: The need is all the more urgent because savages are rapidly
+disappearing or being transformed.]
+
+That is why the study of existing savages at the present day engrosses
+so much of the attention of civilised peoples. We see that if we are to
+comprehend not only our past history but our present condition, with all
+its many intricate and perplexing problems, we must begin at the
+beginning by attempting to discover the mental state of our savage
+forefathers, who bequeathed to us so much of the faiths, the laws, and
+the institutions which we still cherish; and more and more men are
+coming to perceive that the only way open to us of doing this
+effectually is to study the mental state of savages who to this day
+occupy a state of culture analogous to that of our rude progenitors.
+Through contact with civilisation these savages are now rapidly
+disappearing, or at least losing the old habits and ideas which render
+them a document of priceless historical value for us. Hence we have
+every motive for prosecuting the study of savagery with ardour and
+diligence before it is too late, before the record is gone for ever. We
+are like an heir whose title-deeds must be scrutinised before he can
+take possession of the inheritance, but who finds the handwriting of the
+deeds so fading and evanescent that it threatens to disappear entirely
+before he can read the document to the end. With what keen attention,
+what eager haste, would he not scan the fast-vanishing characters? With
+the like attention and the like haste civilised men are now applying
+themselves to the investigation of the fast-vanishing savages.
+
+[Sidenote: Savage religion is to be the subject of these lectures.]
+
+Thus if we are to trace historically man's conception of God to its
+origin, it is desirable, or rather essential, that we should begin by
+studying the most primitive ideas on the subject which are accessible to
+us, and the most primitive ideas are unquestionably those of the lowest
+savages. Accordingly in these lectures I propose to deal with a
+particular side or aspect of savage religion. I shall not trench on the
+sphere of the higher religions, not only because my knowledge of them is
+for the most part very slight, but also because I believe that a
+searching study of the higher and more complex religions should be
+postponed till we have acquired an accurate knowledge of the lower and
+simpler. For a similar reason the study of inorganic chemistry naturally
+precedes the study of organic chemistry, because inorganic compounds are
+much simpler and therefore more easily analysed and investigated than
+organic compounds. So with the chemistry of the mind; we should analyse
+the comparatively simple phenomena of savage thought into its
+constituent elements before we attempt to perform a similar operation on
+the vastly more complex phenomena of civilised beliefs.
+
+[Sidenote: But only a part of savage religion will be dealt with.]
+
+But while I shall confine myself rigidly to the field of savage
+religion, I shall not attempt to present you with a complete survey even
+of that restricted area, and that for more reasons than one. In the
+first place the theme, even with this great limitation, is far too large
+to be adequately set forth in the time at my disposal; the sketch--for
+it could be no more than a sketch--would be necessarily superficial and
+probably misleading. In the second place, even a sketch of primitive
+religion in general ought to presuppose in the sketcher a fairly
+complete knowledge of the whole subject, so that all the parts may
+appear, not indeed in detail, but in their proper relative proportions.
+Now though I have given altogether a good deal of time to the study of
+primitive religion, I am far from having studied it in all its branches,
+and I could not trust myself to give an accurate general account of it
+even in outline; were I to attempt such a thing I should almost
+certainly fall, through sheer ignorance or inadvertence, into the
+mistake of exaggerating some features, unduly diminishing others, and
+omitting certain essential features altogether. Hence it seems to me
+better not to commit myself to so ambitious an enterprise but to confine
+myself in my lectures, as I have always done in my writings, to a
+comparatively minute investigation of certain special aspects or forms
+of primitive religion rather than attempt to embrace in a general view
+the whole of that large subject. Such a relatively detailed study of a
+single compartment may be less attractive and more tedious than a
+bird's-eye view of a wider area; but in the end it may perhaps prove a
+more solid contribution to knowledge.
+
+[Sidenote: Introductory observations. The question of a supernatural
+revelation excluded.]
+
+But before I come to details I wish to make a few general introductory
+remarks, and in particular to define some of the terms which I shall
+have occasion to use in the lectures. I have defined natural theology as
+that reasoned knowledge of a God or gods which man may be supposed,
+whether rightly or wrongly, capable of attaining to by the exercise of
+his natural faculties alone. Whether there ever has been or can be a
+special miraculous revelation of God to man through channels different
+from those through which all other human knowledge is derived, is a
+question which does not concern us in these lectures; indeed it is
+expressly excluded from their scope by the will of the founder, who
+directed the lecturers to treat the subject "as a strictly natural
+science," "without reference to or reliance upon any supposed special
+exceptional or so-called miraculous revelation." Accordingly, in
+compliance with these directions, I dismiss at the outset the question
+of a revelation, and shall limit myself strictly to natural theology in
+the sense in which I have defined it.
+
+[Sidenote: Theology and religion, how related to each other.]
+
+I have called natural theology a reasoned knowledge of a God or gods to
+distinguish it from that simple and comparatively, though I believe
+never absolutely, unreasoning faith in God which suffices for the
+practice of religion. For theology is at once more and less than
+religion: if on the one hand it includes a more complete acquaintance
+with the grounds of religious belief than is essential to religion, on
+the other hand it excludes the observance of those practical duties
+which are indispensable to any religion worthy of the name. In short,
+whereas theology is purely theoretical, religion is both theoretical and
+practical, though the theoretical part of it need not be so highly
+developed as in theology. But while the subject of the lectures is,
+strictly speaking, natural theology rather than natural religion, I
+think it would be not only difficult but undesirable to confine our
+attention to the purely theological or theoretical part of natural
+religion: in all religions, and not least in the undeveloped savage
+religions with which we shall deal, theory and practice fuse with and
+interact on each other too closely to be forcibly disjoined and handled
+apart. Hence throughout the lectures I shall not scruple to refer
+constantly to religious practice as well as to religious theory, without
+feeling that thereby I am transgressing the proper limits of my subject.
+
+[Sidenote: The term God defined.]
+
+As theology is not only by definition but by etymology a reasoned
+knowledge or theory of a God or gods, it becomes desirable, before we
+proceed further, to define the sense in which I understand and shall
+employ the word God. That sense is neither novel nor abstruse; it is
+simply the sense which I believe the generality of mankind attach to the
+term. By a God I understand a superhuman and supernatural being, of a
+spiritual and personal nature, who controls the world or some part of it
+on the whole for good, and who is endowed with intellectual faculties,
+moral feelings, and active powers, which we can only conceive on the
+analogy of human faculties, feelings, and activities, though we are
+bound to suppose that in the divine nature they exist in higher degrees,
+perhaps in infinitely higher degrees, than the corresponding faculties,
+feelings, and activities of man. In short, by a God I mean a beneficent
+supernatural spirit, the ruler of the world or of some part of it, who
+resembles man in nature though he excels him in knowledge, goodness, and
+power. This is, I think, the sense in which the ordinary man speaks of a
+God, and I believe that he is right in so doing. I am aware that it has
+been not unusual, especially perhaps of late years, to apply the name of
+God to very different conceptions, to empty it of all implication of
+personality, and to reduce it to signifying something very large and
+very vague, such as the Infinite or the Absolute (whatever these hard
+words may signify), the great First Cause, the Universal Substance, "the
+stream of tendency by which all things seek to fulfil the law of their
+being,"[1] and so forth. Now without expressing any opinion as to the
+truth or falsehood of the views implied by such applications of the name
+of God, I cannot but regard them all as illegitimate extensions of the
+term, in short as an abuse of language, and I venture to protest against
+it in the interest not only of verbal accuracy but of clear thinking,
+because it is apt to conceal from ourselves and others a real and very
+important change of thought: in particular it may lead many to imagine
+that the persons who use the name of God in one or other of these
+extended senses retain certain theological opinions which they may in
+fact have long abandoned. Thus the misuse of the name of God may
+resemble the stratagem in war of putting up dummies to make an enemy
+imagine that a fort is still held after it has been evacuated by the
+garrison. I am far from alleging or insinuating that the illegitimate
+extension of the divine name is deliberately employed by theologians or
+others for the purpose of masking a change of front; but that it may
+have that effect seems at least possible. And as we cannot use words in
+wrong senses without running a serious risk of deceiving ourselves as
+well as others, it appears better on all accounts to adhere strictly to
+the common meaning of the name of God as signifying a powerful
+supernatural and on the whole beneficent spirit, akin in nature to man;
+and if any of us have ceased to believe in such a being we should
+refrain from applying the old word to the new faith, and should find
+some other and more appropriate term to express our meaning. At all
+events, speaking for myself, I intend to use the name of God
+consistently in the familiar sense, and I would beg my hearers to bear
+this steadily in mind.
+
+[Sidenote: Monotheism and polytheism.]
+
+You will have observed that I have spoken of natural theology as a
+reasoned knowledge of a God or gods. There is indeed nothing in the
+definition of God which I have adopted to imply that he is unique, in
+other words, that there is only one God rather than several or many
+gods. It is true that modern European thinkers, bred in a monotheistic
+religion, commonly overlook polytheism as a crude theory unworthy the
+serious attention of philosophers; in short, the champions and the
+assailants of religion in Europe alike for the most part tacitly assume
+that there is either one God or none. Yet some highly civilised nations
+of antiquity and of modern times, such as the ancient Egyptians, Greeks,
+and Romans, and the modern Chinese and Hindoos, have accepted the
+polytheistic explanation of the world, and as no reasonable man will
+deny the philosophical subtlety of the Greeks and the Hindoos, to say
+nothing of the rest, a theory of the universe which has commended itself
+to them deserves perhaps more consideration than it has commonly
+received from Western philosophers; certainly it cannot be ignored in an
+historical enquiry into the origin of religion.
+
+[Sidenote: A natural knowledge of God can only be acquired by
+experience.]
+
+If there is such a thing as natural theology, that is, a knowledge of a
+God or gods acquired by our natural faculties alone without the aid of a
+special revelation, it follows that it must be obtained by one or other
+of the methods by which all our natural knowledge is conveyed to us.
+Roughly speaking, these methods are two in number, namely, intuition and
+experience. Now if we ask ourselves, Do we know God intuitively in the
+same sense in which we know intuitively our own sensations and the
+simplest truths of mathematics, I think most men will acknowledge that
+they do not. It is true that according to Berkeley the world exists only
+as it is perceived, and that our perceptions of it are produced by the
+immediate action of God on our minds, so that everything we perceive
+might be described, if not as an idea in the mind of the deity, at least
+as a direct emanation from him. On this theory we might in a sense be
+said to have an immediate knowledge of God. But Berkeley's theory has
+found little acceptance, so far as I know, even among philosophers; and
+even if we regarded it as true, we should still have to admit that the
+knowledge of God implied by it is inferential rather than intuitive in
+the strict sense of the word: we infer God to be the cause of our
+perceptions rather than identify him with the perceptions themselves. On
+the whole, then, I conclude that man, or at all events the ordinary man,
+has, properly speaking, no immediate or intuitive knowledge of God, and
+that, if he obtains, without the aid of revelation, any knowledge of him
+at all, it can only be through the other natural channel of knowledge,
+that is, through experience.
+
+[Sidenote: The nature of experience.]
+
+In experience, as distinct from intuition, we reach our conclusions not
+directly through simple contemplation of the particular sensations,
+emotions, or ideas of which we are at the moment conscious, but
+indirectly by calling up before the imagination and comparing with each
+other our memories of a variety of sensations, emotions, or ideas of
+which we have been conscious in the past, and by selecting or
+abstracting from the mental images so compared the points in which they
+resemble each other. The points of resemblance thus selected or
+abstracted from a number of particulars compose what we call an abstract
+or general idea, and from a comparison of such abstract or general ideas
+with each other we arrive at general conclusions, which define the
+relations of the ideas to each other. Experience in general consists in
+the whole body of conclusions thus deduced from a comparison of all the
+particular sensations, emotions, and ideas which make up the conscious
+life of the individual. Hence in order to constitute experience the mind
+has to perform a more or less complex series of operations, which are
+commonly referred to certain mental faculties, such as memory,
+imagination, and judgment. This analysis of experience does not pretend
+to be philosophically complete or exact; but perhaps it is sufficiently
+accurate for the purpose of these lectures, the scope of which is not
+philosophical but historical.
+
+[Sidenote: Two kinds of experience, the experience of our own mind and
+the experience of an external world.]
+
+Now experience in the widest sense of the word may be conveniently
+distinguished into two sorts, the experience of our own mind and the
+experience of an external world. The distinction is indeed, like the
+others with which I am dealing at present, rather practically useful
+than theoretically sound; certainly it would not be granted by all
+philosophers, for many of them have held that we neither have nor with
+our present faculties can possibly attain to any immediate knowledge or
+perception of an external world, we merely infer its existence from our
+own sensations, which are as strictly a part of our mind as the ideas
+and emotions of our waking life or the visions of sleep. According to
+them, the existence of matter or of an external world is, so far as we
+are concerned, merely an hypothesis devised to explain the order of our
+sensations; it never has been perceived by any man, woman, or child who
+ever lived on earth; we have and can have no immediate knowledge or
+perception of anything but the states and operations of our own mind. On
+this theory what we call the world, with all its supposed infinitudes of
+space and time, its systems of suns and planets, its seemingly endless
+forms of inorganic matter and organic life, shrivels up, on a close
+inspection, into a fleeting, a momentary figment of thought. It is like
+one of those glass baubles, iridescent with a thousand varied and
+delicate hues, which a single touch suffices to shatter into dust. The
+philosopher, like the sorcerer, has but to wave his magic wand,
+
+ "And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,
+ The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces,
+ The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
+ Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve
+ And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
+ Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made on, and our little life
+ Is rounded with a sleep."
+
+[Sidenote: The distinction rather popular and convenient than
+philosophically strict.]
+
+It would be beyond my province, even if it were within my power, to
+discuss these airy speculations, and thereby to descend into the arena
+where for ages subtle dialecticians have battled with each other over
+the reality or unreality of an external world. For my purpose it
+suffices to adopt the popular and convenient distinction of mind and
+matter and hence to divide experience into two sorts, an inward
+experience of the acts and states of our own minds, and an outward
+experience of the acts and states of that physical universe by which we
+seem to be surrounded.
+
+[Sidenote: The knowledge or conception of God has been attained both by
+inward and by outward experience.]
+
+Now if a natural knowledge of God is only possible by means of
+experience, in other words, by a process of reasoning based on
+observation, it will follow that such a knowledge may conceivably be
+acquired either by the way of inward or of outward experience; in other
+words, it may be attained either by reflecting on the processes of our
+own minds or by observing the processes of external nature. In point of
+fact, if we survey the history of thought, mankind appears to have
+arrived at a knowledge, or at all events at a conception, of deity by
+both these roads. Let me say a few words as to the two roads which lead,
+or seem to lead, man to God.
+
+[Sidenote: The conception of God is attained by inward experience, that
+is, by the observation of certain remarkable thoughts and feelings which
+are attributed to the inspiration of a deity. Practical dangers of the
+theory of inspiration.]
+
+In the first place, then, men in many lands and many ages have
+experienced certain extraordinary emotions and entertained certain
+extraordinary ideas, which, unable to account for them by reference to
+the ordinary forms of experience, they have set down to the direct
+action of a powerful spirit or deity working on their minds and even
+entering into and taking possession of their bodies; and in this excited
+state--for violent excitement is characteristic of these
+manifestations--the patient believes himself to be possessed of
+supernatural knowledge and supernatural power. This real or supposed
+mode of apprehending a divine spirit and entering into communion with
+it, is commonly and appropriately called inspiration. The phenomenon is
+familiar to us from the example of the Hebrew nation, who believed that
+their prophets were thus inspired by the deity, and that their sacred
+books were regularly composed under the divine afflatus. The belief is
+by no means singular, indeed it appears to be world-wide; for it would
+be hard to point to any race of men among whom instances of such
+inspiration have not been reported; and the more ignorant and savage the
+race the more numerous, to judge by the reports, are the cases of
+inspiration. Volumes might be filled with examples, but through the
+spread of information as to the lower races in recent years the topic
+has become so familiar that I need not stop to illustrate it by
+instances. I will merely say that among savages the theory of
+inspiration or possession is commonly invoked to explain all abnormal
+mental states, particularly insanity or conditions of mind bordering on
+it, so that persons more or less crazed in their wits, and particularly
+hysterical or epileptic patients, are for that very reason thought to be
+peculiarly favoured by the spirits and are therefore consulted as
+oracles, their wild and whirling words passing for the revelations of a
+higher power, whether a god or a ghost, who considerately screens his
+too dazzling light under a thick veil of dark sayings and mysterious
+ejaculations.[2] I need hardly point out the very serious dangers which
+menace any society where such theories are commonly held and acted upon.
+If the decisions of a whole community in matters of the gravest
+importance are left to turn on the wayward fancies, the whims and
+vagaries of the insane or the semi-insane, what are likely to be the
+consequences to the commonwealth? What, for example, can be expected to
+result from a war entered upon at such dictation and waged under such
+auspices? Are cattle-breeding, agriculture, commerce, all the arts of
+life on which a people depend for their subsistence, likely to thrive
+when they are directed by the ravings of epilepsy or the drivellings of
+hysteria? Defeat in battle, conquest by enemies, death by famine and
+widespread disease, these and a thousand other lesser evils threaten the
+blind people who commit themselves to such blind guides. The history of
+savage and barbarous tribes, could we follow it throughout, might
+furnish us with a thousand warning instances of the fatal effects of
+carrying out this crude theory of inspiration to its logical
+conclusions; and if we hear less than might be expected of such
+instances, it is probably because the tribes who consistently acted up
+to their beliefs have thereby wiped themselves out of existence: they
+have perished the victims of their folly and left no record behind. I
+believe that historians have not yet reckoned sufficiently with the
+disastrous influence which this worship of insanity,--for it is often
+nothing less--has exercised on the fortunes of peoples and on the
+development or decay of their institutions.
+
+[Sidenote: The belief in inspiration leads to the worship of living men
+as gods. Outward experience as a source of the idea of God.]
+
+To a certain extent, however, the evil has provided its own remedy. For
+men of strong heads and ambitious temper, perceiving the exorbitant
+power which a belief in inspiration places in the hands of the
+feeble-minded, have often feigned to be similarly afflicted, and trading
+on their reputation for imbecility, or rather inspiration, have acquired
+an authority over their fellows which, though they have often abused it
+for vulgar ends, they have sometimes exerted for good, as for example by
+giving sound advice in matters of public concern, applying salutary
+remedies to the sick, and detecting and punishing crime, whereby they
+have helped to preserve the commonwealth, to alleviate suffering, and to
+cement that respect for law and order which is essential to the
+stability of society, and without which any community must fall to
+pieces like a house of cards. These great services have been rendered to
+the cause of civilisation and progress by the class of men who in
+primitive society are variously known as medicine-men, magicians,
+sorcerers, diviners, soothsayers, and so forth. Sometimes the respect
+which they have gained by the exercise of their profession has won for
+them political as well as spiritual or ghostly authority; in short, from
+being simple medicine-men or sorcerers they have grown into chiefs and
+kings. When such men, seated on the throne of state, retain their old
+reputation for being the vehicles of a divine spirit, they may be
+worshipped in the character of gods as well as revered in the capacity
+of kings; and thus exerting a two-fold sway over the minds of men they
+possess a most potent instrument for elevating or depressing the
+fortunes of their worshippers and subjects. In this way the old savage
+notion of inspiration or possession gradually develops into the doctrine
+of the divinity of kings, which after a long period of florescence
+dwindles away into the modest theory that kings reign by divine right, a
+theory familiar to our ancestors not long ago, and perhaps not wholly
+obsolete among us even now. However, inspired men need not always
+blossom out into divine kings; they may, and often do, remain in the
+chrysalis state of simple deities revered by their simple worshippers,
+their brows encircled indeed with a halo of divinity but not weighted
+with the more solid substance of a kingly crown. Thus certain
+extraordinary mental states, which those who experience and those who
+witness them cannot account for in any other way, are often explained by
+the supposed interposition of a spirit or deity. This, therefore, is one
+of the two forms of experience by which men attain, or imagine that they
+attain, to a knowledge of God and a communion with him. It is what I
+have called the road of inward experience. Let us now glance at the
+other form of experience which leads, or seems to lead, to the same
+goal. It is what I have called the road of outward experience.
+
+[Sidenote: Tendency of the mind to search for causes, and the necessity
+for their discovery.]
+
+When we contemplate the seemingly infinite variety, the endless
+succession, of events that pass under our observation in what we call
+the external world, we are led by an irresistible tendency to trace what
+we call a causal connexion between them. The tendency to discover the
+causes of things appears indeed to be innate in the constitution of our
+minds and indispensable to our continued existence. It is the link that
+arrests and colligates into convenient bundles the mass of particulars
+drifting pell-mell past on the stream of sensation; it is the cement
+that binds into an edifice seemingly of adamant the loose sand of
+isolated perceptions. Deprived of the knowledge which this tendency
+procures for us we should be powerless to foresee the succession of
+phenomena and so to adapt ourselves to it. We should be bewildered by
+the apparent disorder and confusion of everything, we should toss on a
+sea without a rudder, we should wander in an endless maze without a
+clue, and finding no way out of it, or, in plain words, unable to avoid
+a single one of the dangers which menace us at every turn, we should
+inevitably perish. Accordingly the propensity to search for causes is
+characteristic of man in all ages and at all levels of culture, though
+without doubt it is far more highly developed in civilised than in
+savage communities. Among savages it is more or less unconscious and
+instinctive; among civilised men it is deliberately cultivated and
+rewarded at least by the applause of their fellows, by the dignity, if
+not by the more solid recompenses, of learning. Indeed as civilisation
+progresses the enquiry into causes tends to absorb more and more of the
+highest intellectual energies of a people; and an ever greater number of
+men, renouncing the bustle, the pleasures, and the ambitions of an
+active life, devote themselves exclusively to the pursuit of abstract
+truth; they set themselves to discover the causes of things, to trace
+the regularity and order that may be supposed to underlie the seemingly
+irregular, confused, and arbitrary sequence of phenomena. Unquestionably
+the progress of civilisation owes much to the sustained efforts of such
+men, and if of late years and within our own memory the pace of progress
+has sensibly quickened, we shall perhaps not err in supposing that some
+part at least of the acceleration may be accounted for by an increase in
+the number of lifelong students.
+
+[Sidenote: The idea of cause is simply that of invariable sequence
+suggested by the observation of many particular cases of sequence.]
+
+Now when we analyse the conception of a cause to the bottom, we find as
+the last residuum in our crucible nothing but what Hume found there long
+ago, and that is simply the idea of invariable sequence. Whenever we say
+that something is the cause of something else, all that we really mean
+is that the latter is invariably preceded by the former, so that
+whenever we find the second, which we call the effect, we may infer that
+the first, which we call the cause, has gone before it. All such
+inferences from effects to causes are based on experience; having
+observed a certain sequence of events a certain number of times, we
+conclude that the events are so conjoined that the latter cannot occur
+without the previous occurrence of the former. A single case of two
+events following each other could not of itself suggest that the one
+event is the cause of the other, since there is no necessary link
+between them in the mind; the sequence has to be repeated more or less
+frequently before we infer a causal connexion between the two; and this
+inference rests simply on that association of ideas which is established
+in our mind by the reiterated observation of the things. Once the ideas
+are by dint of repetition firmly welded together, the one by sheer force
+of habit calls up the other, and we say that the two things which are
+represented by those ideas stand to each other in the relation of cause
+and effect. The notion of causality is in short only one particular case
+of the association of ideas. Thus all reasoning as to causes implies
+previous observation: we reason from the observed to the unobserved,
+from the known to the unknown; and the wider the range of our
+observation and knowledge, the greater the probability that our
+reasoning will be correct.
+
+[Sidenote: The savage draws his ideas of natural causation from
+observation of himself. Hence he explains the phenomena of nature by
+supposing that they are produced by beings like himself. These beings
+may be called spirits or gods of nature to distinguish them from living
+human gods.]
+
+All this is as true of the savage as of the civilised man. He too
+argues, and indeed can only argue on the basis of experience from the
+known to the unknown, from the observed to the hypothetical. But the
+range of his experience is comparatively narrow, and accordingly his
+inferences from it often appear to civilised men, with their wider
+knowledge, to be palpably false and absurd. This holds good most
+obviously in regard to his observation of external nature. While he
+often knows a good deal about the natural objects, whether animals,
+plants, or inanimate things, on which he is immediately dependent for
+his subsistence, the extent of country with which he is acquainted is
+commonly but small, and he has little or no opportunity of correcting
+the conclusions which he bases on his observation of it by a comparison
+with other parts of the world. But if he knows little of the outer
+world, he is necessarily somewhat better acquainted with his own inner
+life, with his sensations and ideas, his emotions, appetites, and
+desires. Accordingly it is natural enough that when he seeks to discover
+the causes of events in the external world, he should, arguing from
+experience, imagine that they are produced by the actions of invisible
+beings like himself, who behind the veil of nature pull the strings that
+set the vast machinery in motion. For example, he knows by experience
+that he can make sparks fly by knocking two flints against each other;
+what more natural, therefore, than that he should imagine the great
+sparks which we call lightning to be made in the same way by somebody up
+aloft, and that when he finds chipped flints on the ground he should
+take them for thunder-stones dropped by the maker of thunder and
+lightning from the clouds?[3] Thus arguing from his limited experience
+primitive man creates a multitude of spirits or gods in his own likeness
+to explain the succession of phenomena in nature of whose true causes he
+is ignorant; in short he personifies the phenomena as powerful
+anthropomorphic spirits, and believing himself to be more or less
+dependent on their good will he woos their favour by prayer and
+sacrifice. This personification of the various aspects of external
+nature is one of the most fruitful sources of polytheism. The spirits
+and gods created by this train of thought may be called spirits and gods
+of nature to distinguish them from the human gods, by which I mean the
+living men and women who are believed by their worshippers to be
+inspired or possessed by a divine spirit.
+
+[Sidenote: In time men reject polytheism as an explanation of natural
+processes and substitute certain abstract ideas of ethers, atoms,
+molecules, and so on.]
+
+But as time goes on and men learn more about nature, they commonly
+become dissatisfied with polytheism as an explanation of the world and
+gradually discard it. From one department of nature after another the
+gods are reluctantly or contemptuously dismissed and their provinces
+committed to the care of certain abstract ideas of ethers, atoms,
+molecules, and so forth, which, though just as imperceptible to human
+senses as their divine predecessors, are judged by prevailing opinion to
+discharge their duties with greater regularity and despatch, and are
+accordingly firmly installed on the vacant thrones amid the general
+applause of the more enlightened portion of mankind. Thus instead of
+being peopled with a noisy bustling crowd of full-blooded and
+picturesque deities, clothed in the graceful form and animated with the
+warm passions of humanity, the universe outside the narrow circle of our
+consciousness is now conceived as absolutely silent, colourless, and
+deserted. The cheerful sounds which we hear, the bright hues which we
+see, have no existence, we are told, in the external world: the voices
+of friends, the harmonies of music, the chime of falling waters, the
+solemn roll of ocean, the silver splendour of the moon, the golden
+glories of sunset, the verdure of summer woods, and the hectic tints of
+autumn--all these subsist only in our own minds, and if we imagine them
+to have any reality elsewhere, we deceive ourselves. In fact the whole
+external world as perceived by us is one great illusion: if we gave the
+reins to fancy we might call it a mirage, a piece of witchery, conjured
+up by the spells of some unknown magician to bewilder poor ignorant
+humanity. Outside of ourselves there stretches away on every side an
+infinitude of space without sound, without light, without colour, a
+solitude traversed only in every direction by an inconceivably complex
+web of silent and impersonal forces. That, if I understand it aright, is
+the general conception of the world which modern science has substituted
+for polytheism.
+
+[Sidenote: But while they commonly discard the hypothesis of a deity as
+an explanation of all the particular processes of nature, they retain it
+as an explanation of nature in general.]
+
+When philosophy and science by their combined efforts have ejected gods
+and goddesses from all the subordinate posts of nature, it might perhaps
+be expected that they would have no further occasion for the services of
+a deity, and that having relieved him of all his particular functions
+they would have arranged for the creation and general maintenance of the
+universe without him by handing over these important offices to an
+efficient staff of those ethers, atoms, corpuscles, and so forth, which
+had already proved themselves so punctual in the discharge of the minor
+duties entrusted to them. Nor, indeed, is this expectation altogether
+disappointed. A number of atheistical philosophers have courageously
+come forward and assured us that the hypothesis of a deity as the
+creator and preserver of the universe is quite superfluous, and that all
+things came into being or have existed from eternity without the help of
+any divine spirit, and that they will continue to exist without it to
+the end, if end indeed there is to be. But on the whole these daring
+speculators appear to be in a minority. The general opinion of educated
+people at the present day, could we ascertain it, would probably be
+found to incline to the conclusion that, though every department of
+nature is now worked by impersonal material forces alone, the universe
+as a whole was created and is still maintained by a great supernatural
+spirit whom we call God. Thus in Europe and in the countries which have
+borrowed their civilisation, their philosophy, and their religion from
+it, the central problem of natural theology has narrowed itself down to
+the question, Is there one God or none? It is a profound question, and I
+for one profess myself unable to answer it.
+
+[Sidenote: Whether attained by inward or outward experience, the idea of
+God is regularly that of a cause inferred, not perceived.]
+
+If this brief sketch of the history of natural theology is correct, man
+has by the exercise of his natural faculties alone, without the help of
+revelation, attained to a knowledge or at least to a conception of God
+in one of two ways, either by meditating on the operations of his own
+mind, or by observing the processes of external nature: inward
+experience and outward experience have conducted him by different roads
+to the same goal. By whichever of them the conception has been reached,
+it is regularly employed to explain the causal connexion of things,
+whether the things to be explained are the ideas and emotions of man
+himself or the changes in the physical world outside of him. In short, a
+God is always brought in to play the part of a cause; it is the
+imperious need of tracing the causes of events which has driven man to
+discover or invent a deity. Now causes may be arranged in two classes
+according as they are perceived or unperceived by the senses. For
+example, when we see the impact of a billiard cue on a billiard ball
+followed immediately by the motion of the ball, we say that the impact
+is the cause of the motion. In this case we perceive the cause as well
+as the effect. But, when we see an apple fall from a tree to the ground,
+we say that the cause of the fall is the force of gravitation exercised
+by the superior mass of the earth on the inferior mass of the apple. In
+this case, though we perceive the effect, we do not perceive the cause,
+we only infer it by a process of reasoning from experience. Causes of
+the latter sort may be called inferential or hypothetical causes to
+distinguish them from those which are perceived. Of the two classes of
+causes a deity belongs in general, if not universally, to the second,
+that is, to the inferential or hypothetical causes; for as a rule at all
+events his existence is not perceived by our senses but inferred by our
+reason. To say that he has never appeared in visible and tangible form
+to men would be to beg the question; it would be to make an assertion
+which is incapable of proof and which is contradicted by a multitude of
+contrary affirmations recorded in the traditions or the sacred books of
+many races; but without being rash we may perhaps say that such
+appearances, if they ever took place, belong to a past order of events
+and need hardly be reckoned with at the present time. For all practical
+purposes, therefore, God is now a purely inferential or hypothetical
+cause; he may be invoked to explain either our own thoughts and
+feelings, our impulses and emotions, or the manifold states and
+processes of external nature; he may be viewed either as the inspirer of
+the one or the creator and preserver of the other; and according as he
+is mainly regarded from the one point of view or the other, the
+conception of the divine nature tends to beget one of two very different
+types of piety. To the man who traces the finger of God in the workings
+of his own mind, the deity appears to be far closer than he seems to the
+man who only infers the divine existence from the marvellous order,
+harmony, and beauty of the external world; and we need not wonder that
+the faith of the former is of a more fervent temper and supplies him
+with more powerful incentives to a life of active devotion than the calm
+and rational faith of the latter. We may conjecture that the piety of
+most great religious reformers has belonged to the former rather than to
+the latter type; in other words, that they have believed in God because
+they felt, or imagined that they felt, him stirring in their own hearts
+rather than because they discerned the handiwork of a divine artificer
+in the wonderful mechanism of nature.
+
+[Sidenote: Besides the two sorts of gods already distinguished, namely
+natural gods and living human gods, there is a third sort which has
+played an important part in history, namely, the spirits of deified dead
+men. Euhemerism.]
+
+Thus far I have distinguished two sorts of gods whom man discovers or
+creates for himself by the exercise of his unaided faculties, to wit
+natural gods, whom he infers from his observation of external nature,
+and human gods or inspired men, whom he recognises by virtue of certain
+extraordinary mental manifestations in himself or in others. But there
+is another class of human gods which I have not yet mentioned and which
+has played a very important part in the evolution of theology. I mean
+the deified spirits of dead men. To judge by the accounts we possess not
+only of savage and barbarous tribes but of some highly civilised
+peoples, the worship of the human dead has been one of the commonest and
+most influential forms of natural religion, perhaps indeed the commonest
+and most influential of all. Obviously it rests on the supposition that
+the human personality in some form, whether we call it a soul, a spirit,
+a ghost, or what not, can survive death and thereafter continue for a
+longer or shorter time to exercise great power for good or evil over the
+destinies of the living, who are therefore compelled to propitiate the
+shades of the dead out of a regard for their own safety and well-being.
+This belief in the survival of the human spirit after death is
+world-wide; it is found among men in all stages of culture from the
+lowest to the highest; we need not wonder therefore that the custom of
+propitiating the ghosts or souls of the departed should be world-wide
+also. No doubt the degree of attention paid to ghosts is not the same in
+all cases; it varies with the particular degree of power attributed to
+each of them; the spirits of men who for any reason were much feared in
+their lifetime, such as mighty warriors, chiefs, and kings, are more
+revered and receive far more marks of homage than the spirits of common
+men; and it is only when this reverence and homage are carried to a very
+high pitch that they can properly be described as a deification of the
+dead. But that dead men have thus been raised to the rank of deities in
+many lands, there is abundant evidence to prove. And quite apart from
+the worship paid to those spirits which are admitted by their
+worshippers to have once animated the bodies of living men, there is
+good reason to suspect that many gods, who rank as purely mythical
+beings, were once men of flesh and blood, though their true history has
+passed out of memory or rather been transformed by legend into a myth,
+which veils more or less completely the real character of the imaginary
+deity. The theory that most or all gods originated after this fashion,
+in other words, that the worship of the gods is little or nothing but
+the worship of dead men, is known as Euhemerism from Euhemerus, the
+ancient Greek writer who propounded it. Regarded as a universal
+explanation of the belief in gods it is certainly false; regarded as a
+partial explanation of the belief it is unquestionably true; and perhaps
+we may even go further and say, that the more we penetrate into the
+inner history of natural religion, the larger is seen to be the element
+of truth contained in Euhemerism. For the more closely we look at many
+deities of natural religion, the more distinctly do we seem to perceive,
+under the quaint or splendid pall which the mythical fancy has wrapt
+round their stately figures, the familiar features of real men, who once
+shared the common joys and the common sorrows of humanity, who trod
+life's common road to the common end.
+
+[Sidenote: The deification of dead men presupposes the immortality of
+the human soul, or rather its survival for a longer or shorter time
+after death.]
+
+When we ask how it comes about that dead men have so often been raised
+to the rank of divinities, the first thing to be observed is that all
+such deifications must, if our theory is correct, be inferences drawn
+from experience of some sort; they must be hypotheses devised to explain
+the unperceived causes of certain phenomena, whether of the human mind
+or of external nature. All of them imply, as I have said, a belief that
+the conscious human personality, call it the soul, the spirit, or what
+you please, can survive the body and continue to exist in a disembodied
+state with unabated or even greatly increased powers for good or evil.
+This faith in the survival of personality after death may for the sake
+of brevity be called a faith in immortality, though the term immortality
+is not strictly correct, since it seems to imply eternal duration,
+whereas the idea of eternity is hardly intelligible to many primitive
+peoples, who nevertheless firmly believe in the continued existence, for
+a longer or shorter time, of the human spirit after the dissolution of
+the body. Now the faith in the immortality of the soul or, to speak more
+correctly, in the continued existence of conscious human personality
+after death, is, as I remarked before, exceedingly common among men at
+all levels of intellectual evolution from the lowest upwards; certainly
+it is not peculiar to adherents of the higher religions, but is held as
+an unquestionable truth by at least the great majority of savage and
+barbarous peoples as to whose ideas we possess accurate information;
+indeed it might be hard to point to any single tribe of men, however
+savage, of whom we could say with certainty that the faith is totally
+wanting among them.
+
+[Sidenote: The question of immortality is a fundamental problem of
+natural theology in the wider sense.]
+
+Hence if we are to explain the deification of dead men, we must first
+explain the widespread belief in immortality; we must answer the
+question, how does it happen that men in all countries and at all stages
+of ignorance or knowledge so commonly suppose that when they die their
+consciousness will still persist for an indefinite time after the decay
+of the body? To answer that question is one of the fundamental problems
+of natural theology, not indeed in the full sense of the word theology,
+if we confine the term strictly to a reasoned knowledge of a God; for
+the example of Buddhism proves that a belief in the existence of the
+human soul after death is quite compatible with disbelief in a deity.
+But if we may use, as I think we may, the phrase natural theology in an
+extended sense to cover theories which, though they do not in themselves
+affirm the existence of a God, nevertheless appear to be one of the
+deepest and most fruitful sources of the belief in his reality, then we
+may legitimately say that the doctrine of human immortality does fall
+within the scope of natural theology. What then is its origin? How is it
+that men so commonly believe themselves to be immortal?
+
+[Sidenote: If there is any natural knowledge of immortality, it must be
+acquired either by intuition or experience; it is apparently not given
+by intuition; hence it must be acquired, if at all, by experience.]
+
+If there is any natural knowledge of human immortality, it must be
+acquired either by intuition or by experience; there is no other way.
+Now whether other men from a simple contemplation of their own nature,
+quite apart from reasoning, know or believe themselves intuitively to be
+immortal, I cannot say; but I can say with some confidence that for
+myself I have no such intuition whatever of my own immortality, and that
+if I am left to the resources of my natural faculties alone, I can as
+little affirm the certain or probable existence of my personality after
+death as I can affirm the certain or probable existence of a personal
+God. And I am bold enough to suspect that if men could analyse their own
+ideas, they would generally find themselves to be in a similar
+predicament as to both these profound topics. Hence I incline to lay it
+down as a probable proposition that men as a rule have no intuitive
+knowledge of their own immortality, and that if there is any natural
+knowledge of such a thing it can only be acquired by a process of
+reasoning from experience.[4]
+
+[Sidenote: The idea of immortality seems to have been suggested to man
+both by his inward and his outward experience, notably by dreams, which
+are a case of inward experience.]
+
+What then is the kind of experience from which the theory of human
+immortality is deduced? Is it our experience of the operations of our
+own minds? or is it our experience of external nature? As a matter of
+historical fact--and you will remember that I am treating the question
+purely from the historical standpoint--men seem to have inferred the
+persistence of their personality after death both from the one kind of
+experience and from the other, that is, both from the phenomena of their
+inner life and from the phenomena of what we call the external world.
+Thus the savage, with whose beliefs we are chiefly concerned in these
+lectures, finds a very strong argument for immortality in the phenomena
+of dreams, which are strictly a part of his inner life, though in his
+ignorance he commonly fails to discriminate them from what we popularly
+call waking realities. Hence when the images of persons whom he knows to
+be dead appear to him in a dream, he naturally infers that these persons
+still exist somewhere and somehow apart from their bodies, of the decay
+or destruction of which he may have had ocular demonstration. How could
+he see dead people, he asks, if they did not exist? To argue that they
+have perished like their bodies is to contradict the plain evidence of
+his senses; for to the savage still more than to the civilised man
+seeing is believing; that he sees the dead only in dreams does not shake
+his belief, since he thinks the appearances of dreams just as real as
+the appearances of his waking hours. And once he has in this way gained
+a conviction that the dead survive and can help or harm him, as they
+seem to do in dreams, it is natural or necessary for him to extend the
+theory to the occurrences of daily life, which, as I have said, he does
+not sharply distinguish from the visions of slumber. He now explains
+many of these occurrences and many of the processes of nature by the
+direct interposition of the spirits of the departed; he traces their
+invisible hand in many of the misfortunes and in some of the blessings
+which befall him; for it is a common feature of the faith in ghosts, at
+least among savages, that they are usually spiteful and mischievous, or
+at least testy and petulant, more apt to injure than to benefit the
+survivors. In that they resemble the personified spirits of nature,
+which in the opinion of most savages appear to be generally tricky and
+malignant beings, whose anger is dangerous and whose favour is courted
+with fear and trembling. Thus even without the additional assurance
+afforded by tales of apparitions and spectres, primitive man may come in
+time to imagine the world around him to be more or less thickly peopled,
+influenced, and even dominated by a countless multitude of spirits,
+among whom the shades of past generations of men and women hold a very
+prominent, often apparently the leading place. These spirits, powerful
+to help or harm, he seeks either simply to avert, when he deems them
+purely mischievous, or to appease and conciliate, when he supposes them
+sufficiently good-natured to respond to his advances. In some such way
+as this, arguing from the real but, as we think, misinterpreted
+phenomena of dreams, the savage may arrive at a doctrine of human
+immortality and from that at a worship of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: It has also been suggested by the resemblance of the living
+to the dead, which is a case of outward experience.]
+
+This explanation of the savage faith in immortality is neither novel nor
+original: on the contrary it is perhaps the commonest and most familiar
+that has yet been propounded. If it does not account for all the facts,
+it probably accounts for many of them. At the same time I do not doubt
+that many other inferences drawn from experiences of different kinds
+have confirmed, even if they did not originally suggest, man's confident
+belief in his own immortality. To take a single example of outward
+experience, the resemblances which children often bear to deceased
+kinsfolk appear to have prompted in the minds of many savages the notion
+that the souls of these dead kinsfolk have been born again in their
+descendants.[5] From a few cases of resemblances so explained it would
+be easy to arrive at a general theory that all living persons are
+animated by the souls of the dead; in other words, that the human spirit
+survives death for an indefinite period, if not for eternity, during
+which it undergoes a series of rebirths or reincarnations. However it
+has been arrived at, this doctrine of the transmigration or
+reincarnation of the soul is found among many tribes of savages; and
+from what we know on the subject we seem to be justified in conjecturing
+that at certain stages of mental and social evolution the belief in
+metempsychosis has been far commoner and has exercised a far deeper
+influence on the life and institutions of primitive man than the actual
+evidence before us at present allows us positively to affirm.
+
+[Sidenote: The aim of these lectures is to collect a number of facts
+illustrative of the belief in immortality and of the customs based on it
+among some of the lower races.]
+
+Be that as it may--and I have no wish to dogmatise on so obscure a
+topic--it is certain that a belief in the survival of the human
+personality after death and the practice of a propitiation or worship of
+the dead have prevailed very widely among mankind and have played a very
+important part in the development of natural religion. While many
+writers have duly recognised the high importance both of the belief and
+of the worship, no one, so far as I know, has attempted systematically
+to collect and arrange the facts which illustrate the prevalence of this
+particular type of religion among the various races of mankind. A large
+body of evidence lies to hand in the voluminous and rapidly increasing
+literature of ethnology; but it is dispersed over an enormous number of
+printed books and papers, to say nothing of the materials which still
+remain buried either in manuscript or in the minds of men who possess
+the requisite knowledge but have not yet committed it to writing. To
+draw all those stores of information together and digest them into a
+single treatise would be a herculean labour, from which even the most
+industrious researcher into the dusty annals of the human past might
+shrink dismayed. Certainly I shall make no attempt to perform such a
+feat within the narrow compass of these lectures. But it seems to me
+that I may make a useful, if a humble, contribution to the history of
+religion by selecting a portion of the evidence and submitting it to my
+hearers. For that purpose, instead of accumulating a mass of facts from
+all the various races of mankind and then comparing them together, I
+prefer to limit myself to a few races and to deal with each of them
+separately, beginning with the lowest savages, about whom we possess
+accurate information, and gradually ascending to peoples who stand
+higher in the scale of culture. In short the method of treatment which I
+shall adopt will be the descriptive rather than the comparative. I shall
+not absolutely refrain from instituting comparisons between the customs
+and beliefs of different races, but for the most part I shall content
+myself with describing the customs and beliefs of each race separately
+without reference to those of others. Each of the two methods, the
+comparative and the descriptive, has its peculiar advantages and
+disadvantages, and in my published writings I have followed now the one
+method and now the other. The comparative method is unquestionably the
+more attractive and stimulating, but it cannot be adopted without a good
+deal of more or less conscious theorising, since every comparison
+implicitly involves a theory. If we desire to exclude theories and
+merely accumulate facts for the use of science, the descriptive method
+is undoubtedly the better adapted for the arrangement of our materials:
+it may not stimulate enquiry so powerfully, but it lays a more solid
+foundation on which future enquirers may build. It is as a collection of
+facts illustrative of the belief in immortality and of all the momentous
+consequences which have flowed from that belief, that I desire the
+following lectures to be regarded. They are intended to serve simply as
+a document of religious history; they make no pretence to discuss
+philosophically the truth of the beliefs and the morality of the
+practices which will be passed under review. If any inferences can
+indeed be drawn from the facts to the truth or falsehood of the beliefs
+and to the moral worth or worthlessness of the practices, I prefer to
+leave it to others more competent than myself to draw them. My sight is
+not keen enough, my hand is not steady enough to load the scales and
+hold the balance in so difficult and delicate an enquiry.
+
+[Footnote 1: Matthew Arnold, _Literature and Dogma_, ch. i., p. 31
+(Popular Edition, London, 1893).]
+
+[Footnote 2: For a single instance see L. Sternberg, "Die Religion der
+Giljaken," _Archiv fuer Religionswissenschaft_, viii. (1905) pp. 462
+_sqq._, where the writer tells us that the Gilyaks have boundless faith
+in the supernatural power of their shamans, and that the shamans are
+nearly always persons who suffer from hysteria in one form or another.]
+
+[Footnote 3: As to the widespread belief that flint weapons are
+thunderbolts see Sir E. B. Tylor, _Researches into the Early History of
+Mankind_, Third Edition (London, 1878), pp. 223-227; Chr. Blinkenberg,
+_The Thunderweapon in Religion and Folklore_ (Cambridge, 1911); W. W.
+Skeat "Snakestones and Thunderbolts," _Folk-lore_, xxiii. (1912) pp. 60
+_sqq._; and the references in _The Magic Art and the Evolution of
+Kings_, ii. 374.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Wordsworth, who argues strongly, almost passionately, for
+"the consciousness of a principle of Immortality in the human soul,"
+admits that "the sense of Immortality, if not a coexistent and twin
+birth with Reason, is among the earliest of her offspring." See his
+_Essay upon Epitaphs_, appended to _The Excursion_ (_Poetical Works_,
+London, 1832, vol. iv. pp. 336, 338). This somewhat hesitating admission
+of the inferential nature of the belief in immortality carries all the
+more weight because it is made by so warm an advocate of human
+immortality.]
+
+[Footnote 5: For instance, the Kagoro of Northern Nigeria believe that
+"a spirit may transmigrate into the body of a descendant born
+afterwards, male or female; in fact, this is common, as is proved by the
+likeness of children to their parents or grand-parents, and it is lucky,
+for the ghost has returned, and has no longer any power to frighten the
+relatives until the new body dies, and it is free again" (Major A. J. N.
+Tremearne, "Notes on some Nigerian Head-hunters," _Journal of the R.
+Anthropological Institute_, xlii. (1912) p. 159). Compare _Taboo and the
+Perils of the Soul_, pp. 88 _sq._; _The Dying God_, p. 287 (p. 288,
+Second Impression).]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE II
+
+THE SAVAGE CONCEPTION OF DEATH
+
+
+[Sidenote: The subject of these lectures is the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead.]
+
+Last day I explained the subject of which I propose to treat and the
+method which I intend to follow in these lectures. I shall describe the
+belief in immortality, or rather in the continued existence of the human
+soul after death, as that belief is found among certain of the lower
+races, and I shall give some account of the religion which has been
+based upon it. That religion is in brief a propitiation or worship of
+the human dead, who according to the degree of power ascribed to them by
+the living are supposed to vary in dignity from the humble rank of a
+mere common ghost up to the proud position of deity. The elements of
+such a worship appear to exist among all races of men, though in some
+they have been much more highly developed than in others.
+
+[Sidenote: Preliminary account of savage beliefs concerning the nature
+and origin of death.]
+
+But before I address myself to the description of particular races, I
+wish in this and the following lecture to give you some general account
+of the beliefs of savages concerning the nature and origin of death. The
+problem of death has very naturally exercised the minds of men in all
+ages. Unlike so many problems which interest only a few solitary
+thinkers this one concerns us all alike, since simpletons as well as
+sages must die, and even the most heedless and feather-brained can
+hardly help sometimes asking themselves what comes after death. The
+question is therefore thrust in a practical, indeed importunate form on
+our attention; and we need not wonder that in the long history of human
+speculation some of the highest intellects should have occupied
+themselves with it and sought to find an answer to the riddle. Some of
+their solutions of the problem, though dressed out in all the beauty of
+exquisite language and poetic imagery, singularly resemble the rude
+guesses of savages. So little, it would seem, do the natural powers even
+of the greatest minds avail to pierce the thick veil that hides the end
+of life.
+
+[Sidenote: The problem of death is one of universal interest.]
+
+In saying that the problem is thrust home upon us all, I do not mean to
+imply that all men are constantly or even often engaged in meditating on
+the nature and origin of death. Far from it. Few people trouble
+themselves about that or any other purely abstract question: the common
+man would probably not give a straw for an answer to it. What he wants
+to know, what we all want to know, is whether death is the end of all
+things for the individual, whether our conscious personality perishes
+with the body or survives it for a time or for eternity. That is the
+enigma propounded to every human being who has been born into the world:
+that is the door at which so many enquirers have knocked in vain. Stated
+in this limited form the problem has indeed been of universal interest:
+there is no race of men known to us which has not pondered the mystery
+and arrived at some conclusions to which it more or less confidently
+adheres. Not that all races have paid an equal attention to it. On some
+it has weighed much more heavily than on others. While some races, like
+some individuals, take death almost lightly, and are too busy with the
+certainties of the present world to pay much heed to the uncertainties
+of a world to come, the minds of others have dwelt on the prospect of a
+life beyond the grave till the thought of it has risen with them to a
+passion, almost to an obsession, and has begotten a contempt for the
+fleeting joys of this ephemeral existence by comparison with the
+hoped-for bliss of an eternal existence hereafter. To the sceptic,
+examining the evidence for immortality by the cold light of reason, such
+peoples and such individuals may seem to sacrifice the substance for the
+shadow: to adopt a homely comparison, they are like the dog in the fable
+who dropped the real leg of mutton, from his mouth in order to snap at
+its reflection in the water. Be that as it may, where such beliefs and
+hopes are entertained in full force, the whole activity of the mind and
+the whole energy of the body are apt to be devoted to a preparation for
+a blissful or at all events an untroubled eternity, and life becomes, in
+the language of Plato, a meditation or practising of death. This
+excessive preoccupation with a problematic future has been a fruitful
+source of the most fatal aberrations both for nations and individuals.
+In pursuit of these visionary aims the few short years of life have been
+frittered away: wealth has been squandered: blood has been poured out in
+torrents: the natural affections have been stifled; and the cheerful
+serenity of reason has been exchanged for the melancholy gloom of
+madness.
+
+ "Oh threats of Hell and Hopes of Paradise!
+ One thing at least is certain--_This_ Life flies;
+ One thing is certain and the rest is Lies;
+ The Flower that once has blown for ever dies."
+
+[Sidenote: The belief in immortality general among mankind.]
+
+The question whether our conscious personality survives after death has
+been answered by almost all races of men in the affirmative. On this
+point sceptical or agnostic peoples are nearly, if not wholly, unknown.
+Accordingly if abstract truth could be determined, like the gravest
+issues of national policy, by a show of hands or a counting of heads,
+the doctrine of human immortality, or at least of a life after death,
+would deserve to rank among the most firmly established of truths; for
+were the question put to the vote of the whole of mankind, there can be
+no doubt that the ayes would have it by an overwhelming majority. The
+few dissenters would be overborne; their voices would be drowned in the
+general roar. For dissenters there have been even among savages. The
+Tongans, for example, thought that only the souls of noblemen are saved,
+the rest perish with their bodies.[6] However, this aristocratic view
+has never been popular, and is not likely to find favour in our
+democratic age.
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of many savages that they would never die if their
+lives were not cut short by sorcery. Belief of the Abipones.]
+
+But many savage races not only believe in a life after death; they are
+even of opinion that they would never die at all if it were not for the
+maleficent arts of sorcerers who cut the vital thread prematurely short.
+In other words, they disbelieve in what we call a natural death; they
+think that all men are naturally immortal in this life, and that every
+death which takes place is in fact a violent death inflicted by the hand
+of a human enemy, though in many cases the foe is invisible and works
+his fell purpose not by a sword or a spear but by magic. Thus the
+Abipones, a now extinct tribe of horse Indians in Paraguay, used to
+allege that they would be immortal and that none of them would ever die
+if only the Spaniards and the sorcerers could be banished from America;
+for they were in the habit of attributing every death, whatever its
+cause, either to the baleful arts of sorcerers or to the firearms of the
+Spaniards. Even if a man died riddled with wounds, with his bones
+smashed, or through the exhaustion of old age, these Indians would all
+deny that the wounds or old age was the cause of his death; they firmly
+believed that the death was brought about by magic, and they would make
+careful enquiries to discover the sorcerer who had cast the fatal spell
+on their comrade. The relations of the deceased would move every stone
+to detect and punish the culprit; and they imagined that they could do
+this by cutting out the heart and tongue of the dead man and throwing
+them to a dog to be devoured. They thought that this in some way killed
+the wicked magician who had killed their friend. For example, it
+happened that in a squabble between two men about a horse a third man
+who tried to make peace between the disputants was mortally wounded by
+their spears and died in a few days. To us it might seem obvious that
+the peacemaker was killed by the spear-wounds which he had received, but
+none of the Abipones would admit such a thing for a moment. They stoutly
+affirmed that their comrade had been done to death by the magical arts
+of some person unknown, and their suspicions fell on a certain old
+woman, known to be a witch, to whom the deceased had lately refused to
+give a water-melon, and who out of spite had killed him by her spells,
+though he appeared to the European eye to have died of a spear-wound.[7]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Araucanians.]
+
+Similarly the warlike Araucanians of Chili are said to disbelieve in
+natural death. Even if a man dies peaceably at the age of a hundred,
+they still think that he has been bewitched by an enemy. A diviner or
+medicine-man is consulted in order to discover the culprit. Some of
+these wizards enjoy a great reputation and the Indians will send a
+hundred miles or more to get the opinion of an eminent member of the
+profession. In such cases they submit to him some of the remains of the
+dead man, for example, his eyebrows, his nails, his tongue, or the soles
+of his feet, and from an examination of these relics the man of skill
+pronounces on the author of the death. The person whom he accuses is
+hunted down and killed, sometimes by fire, amid the yells of an enraged
+crowd.[8]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Bakairi.]
+
+When the eminent German anthropologist was questioning a Bakairi Indian
+of Brazil as to the language of his tribe, he gave the sentence, "Every
+man must die" to be translated into the Bakairi language. To his
+astonishment, the Indian remained long silent. The same long pause
+always occurred when an abstract proposition, with which he was
+unfamiliar, was put before the Indian for translation into his native
+tongue. On the present occasion the enquirer learned that the Indian has
+no idea of necessity in the abstract, and in particular he has no
+conception at all of the necessity of death. The cause of death, in his
+opinion, is invariably an ill turn done by somebody to the deceased. If
+there were only good men in the world, he thinks that there would be
+neither sickness nor death. He knows nothing about a natural end of the
+vital process; he believes that all sickness and disease are the effects
+of witchcraft.[9]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Indians of Guiana in sorcery as the cause of
+sickness and death.]
+
+Speaking of the Indians of Guiana, an English missionary, who knew them
+well, says that the worst feature in their character is their proneness
+to blood revenge, "by which a succession of retaliatory murders may be
+kept up for a long time. It is closely connected with their system of
+sorcery, which we shall presently consider. A person dies,--and it is
+supposed that an enemy has secured the agency of an evil spirit to
+compass his death. Some sorcerer, employed by the friends of the
+deceased for that purpose, pretends by his incantations to discover the
+guilty individual or family, or at any rate to indicate the quarter
+where they dwell. A near relative of the deceased is then charged with
+the work of vengeance. He becomes a _kanaima_, or is supposed to be
+possessed by the destroying spirit so called, and has to live apart,
+according to strict rule, and submit to many privations, until the deed
+of blood be accomplished. If the supposed offender cannot be slain, some
+innocent member of his family--man, woman, or little child--must suffer
+instead."[10] The same writer tells us that these Indians of Guiana
+attribute sickness and death directly to the agency of certain evil
+spirits called _yauhahu_, who delight in inflicting miseries upon
+mankind. Pain, in the language of the Arawaks (one of the best-known
+tribes of Guiana), is called _yauhahu simaira_ or "the evil spirit's
+arrow."[11] It is these evil spirits whom wicked sorcerers employ to
+accomplish their fell purpose. Thus while the demon is the direct cause
+of sickness and death, the sorcerer who uses him as his tool is the
+indirect cause. The demon is thought to do his work by inserting some
+alien substance into the body of the sufferer, and a medicine-man is
+employed to extract it by chanting an invocation to the maleficent
+spirit, shaking his rattle, and sucking the part of the patient's frame
+in which the cause of the malady is imagined to reside. "After many
+ceremonies he will produce from his mouth some strange substance, such
+as a thorn or gravel-stone, a fish-bone or bird's claw, a snake's tooth,
+or a piece of wire, which some malicious _yauhahu_ is supposed to have
+inserted in the affected part. As soon as the patient fancies himself
+rid of this cause of his illness his recovery is generally rapid, and
+the fame of the sorcerer greatly increased. Should death, however,
+ensue, the blame is laid upon the evil spirit whose power and malignity
+have prevailed over the counteracting charms. Some rival sorcerer will
+at times come in for a share of the blame, whom the sufferer has
+unhappily made his enemy, and who is supposed to have employed the
+_yauhahu_ in destroying him. The sorcerers being supposed to have the
+power of causing, as well as of curing diseases, are much dreaded by the
+common people, who never wilfully offend them. So deeply rooted in the
+Indian's bosom is this belief concerning the origin of diseases, that
+they have little idea of sickness arising from other causes. Death may
+arise from a wound or a contusion, or be brought on by want of food, but
+in other cases it is the work of the _yauhahu_"[12] or evil spirit.
+
+[Sidenote: Some deaths attributed to sorcery and others to evil spirits:
+practical consequence of this distinction.]
+
+In this account it is to be observed that while all natural deaths from
+sickness and disease are attributed to the direct action of evil
+spirits, only some of them are attributed to the indirect action of
+sorcerers. The practical consequences of this theoretical distinction
+are very important. For whereas death by sorcery must, in the opinion of
+savages, be avenged by killing the supposed sorcerer, death by the
+action of a demon cannot be so avenged; for how are you to get at the
+demon? Hence, while every death by sorcery involves, theoretically at
+least, another death by violence, death by a demon involves no such
+practical consequence. So far, therefore, the faith in sorcery is far
+more murderous than the faith in demons. This practical distinction is
+clearly recognised by these Indians of Guiana; for another writer, who
+laboured among them as a missionary, tells us that when a person dies a
+natural death, the medicine-man is called upon to decide whether he
+perished through the agency of a demon or the agency of a sorcerer. If
+he decides that the deceased died through the malice of an evil spirit,
+the body is quietly buried, and no more is thought of the matter. But if
+the wizard declares that the cause of death was sorcery, the corpse is
+closely inspected, and if a blue mark is discovered, it is pointed out
+as the spot where the invisible poisoned arrow, discharged by the
+sorcerer, entered the man. The next thing is to detect the culprit. For
+this purpose a pot containing a decoction of leaves is set to boil on a
+fire. When it begins to boil over, the side on which the scum first
+falls is the quarter in which the supposed murderer is to be sought. A
+consultation is then held: the guilt is laid on some individual, and one
+of the nearest relations of the deceased is charged with the duty of
+finding and killing him. If the imaginary culprit cannot be found, any
+other member of his family may be slain in his stead. "It is not
+difficult to conceive," adds the writer, "how, under such circumstances,
+no man's life is secure; whilst these by no means unfrequent murders
+must greatly tend to diminish the number of the natives."[13]
+
+[Sidenote: Among the Indians of Guiana death is oftener attributed to
+sorcery than to demons.]
+
+However, it would seem that among the Indians of Guiana sickness and
+death are oftener ascribed to the agency of sorcerers than to the agency
+of demons acting alone. For another high authority on these Indians, Sir
+Everard F. im Thurn, tells us that "every death, every illness, is
+regarded not as the result of natural law, but as the work of a
+_kenaima_" or sorcerer. "Often indeed," he adds, "the survivors or the
+relatives of the invalid do not know to whom to attribute the deed,
+which therefore perforce remains unpunished; but often, again, there is
+real or fancied reason to fix on some one as the _kenaima_, and then the
+nearest relative of the injured individual devotes himself to retaliate.
+Strange ceremonies are sometimes observed in order to discover the
+secret _kenaima_. Richard Schomburgk describes a striking instance of
+this. A Macusi boy had died a natural death, and his relatives
+endeavoured to discover the quarter to which the _kenaima_ who was
+supposed to have slain him belonged. Raising a terrible and monotonous
+dirge, they carried the body to an open piece of ground, and there
+formed a circle round it, while the father, cutting from the corpse both
+the thumbs and little fingers, both the great and the little toes, and a
+piece of each heel, threw these pieces into a new pot, which had been
+filled with water. A fire was kindled, and on this the pot was placed.
+When the water began to boil, according to the side on which one of the
+pieces was first thrown out from the pot by the bubbling of the water,
+in that direction would the _kenaima_ be. In thus looking round to see
+who did the deed, the Indian thinks it by no means necessary to fix on
+anyone who has been with or near the injured man. The _kenaima_ is
+supposed to have done the deed, not necessarily in person, but probably
+in spirit."[14] For these Indians believe that each individual man has a
+body and a spirit within it, and that sorcerers can despatch their
+spirits out of their bodies to harm people at a distance. It is not
+always in an invisible form that these spirits of sorcerers are supposed
+to roam on their errands of mischief. The wizard can put his spirit into
+the shape of an animal, such as a jaguar, a serpent, a sting-ray, a
+bird, an insect, or anything else he pleases. Hence when an Indian is
+attacked by a wild beast, he thinks that his real foe is not the animal,
+but the sorcerer who has transformed himself into it. Curiously enough
+they look upon some small harmless birds in the same light. One little
+bird, in particular, which flits across the savannahs with a peculiar
+shrill whistle at morning and evening, is regarded by the Indians with
+especial fear as a transformed sorcerer. They think that for every one
+of these birds that they shoot they have an enemy the less, and they
+burn its little body, taking great care that not even a single feather
+escapes to be blown about by the wind. On a windy day a dozen men and
+women have been seen chasing the floating feathers of these birds about
+the savannah in order utterly to extinguish the imaginary wizard. Even
+the foreign substance, the stick, bone, or whatever it is, which the
+good medicine-man pretends to suck from the body of the sufferer "is
+often, if not always, regarded not simply as a natural body, but as the
+materialised form of a hostile spirit."[15]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Tinneh Indians in sorcery as the cause of
+death.]
+
+Beliefs and practices of the same general character are reported to have
+formerly prevailed among the Tinneh or Dene Indians of North-west
+America. When any beloved or influential person died, nobody, we are
+told, would think of attributing the death to natural causes; it was
+assumed that the demise was an effect of sorcery, and the only
+difficulty was to ascertain the culprit. For that purpose the services
+of a shaman were employed. Rigged out in all his finery he would dance
+and sing, then suddenly fall down and feign death or sleep. On awaking
+from the apparent trance he would denounce the sorcerer who had killed
+the deceased by his magic art, and the denunciation generally proved the
+death-warrant of the accused.[16]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Australian aborigines in sorcery as the cause
+of death.]
+
+Again, similar beliefs and customs in regard to what we should call
+natural death appear to have prevailed universally amongst the
+aborigines of Australia, and to have contributed very materially to thin
+the population. On this subject I will quote the words of an observer.
+His remarks apply to the Australian aborigines in general but to the
+tribes of Victoria in particular. He says: "The natives are much more
+numerous in some parts of Australia than they are in others, but nowhere
+is the country thickly peopled; some dire disease occasionally breaks
+out among the natives, and carries off large numbers.... But there are
+two other causes which, in my opinion, principally account for their
+paucity of numbers. The first is that infanticide is universally
+practised; the second, that a belief exists that no one can die a
+natural death. Thus, if an individual of a certain tribe dies, his
+relatives consider that his death has been caused by sorcery on the part
+of another tribe. The deceased's sons, or nearest relatives, therefore
+start off on a _bucceening_ or murdering expedition. If the deceased is
+buried, a fly or a beetle is put into the grave, and the direction in
+which the insect wings its way when released is the one the avengers
+take. If the body is burnt, the whereabouts of the offending parties is
+indicated by the direction of the smoke. The first unfortunates fallen
+in with are generally watched until they encamp for the night; when they
+are buried in sleep, the murderers steal quietly up until they are
+within a yard or two of their victims, rush suddenly upon and butcher
+them. On these occasions they always abstract the kidney-fat, and also
+take off a piece of the skin of the thigh. These are carried home as
+trophies, as the American Indians take the scalp. The murderers anoint
+their bodies with the fat of their victims, thinking that by that
+process the strength of the deceased enters into them. Sometimes it
+happens that the _bucceening_ party come suddenly upon a man of a
+strange tribe in a tree hunting opossums; he is immediately speared, and
+left weltering in his blood at the foot of the tree. The relatives of
+the murdered man at once proceed to retaliate; and thus a constant and
+never-ending series of murders is always going on.... I do not mean to
+assert that for every man that dies or is killed another is murdered;
+for it often happens that the deceased has no sons or relatives who care
+about avenging his death. At other times a _bucceening_ party will
+return without having met with any one; then, again, they are sometimes
+repelled by those they attack."[17]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the natives of Western Australia in sorcery as a
+cause of death. Beliefs of the tribes of Victoria and South Australia.]
+
+Again, speaking of the tribes of Western Australia, Sir George Grey
+tells us that "the natives do not allow that there is such a thing as a
+death from natural causes; they believe, that were it not for murderers
+or the malignity of sorcerers, they might live for ever; hence, when a
+native dies from the effect of an accident, or from some natural cause,
+they use a variety of superstitious ceremonies, to ascertain in what
+direction the sorcerer lives, whose evil practices have brought about
+the death of their relative; this point being satisfactorily settled by
+friendly sorcerers, they then attach the crime to some individual, and
+the funeral obsequies are scarcely concluded, ere they start to revenge
+their supposed wrongs."[18] Again, speaking of the Watch-an-die tribe of
+Western Australia, another writer tells us that they "possess the
+comfortable assurance that nearly all diseases, and consequently deaths,
+are caused by the enchantments of hostile tribes, and that were it not
+for the malevolence of their enemies they would (with a few exceptions)
+live for ever. Consequently, on the first approach of sickness their
+first endeavour is to ascertain whether the _boollia_ [magic] of their
+own tribe is not sufficiently potent to counteract that of their foes.
+Should the patient recover, they are, of course, proud of the
+superiority of their enchantment over that of their enemies: but should
+the _boollia_ [magical influence] within the sick man prove stronger
+than their own, as there is no help for it, he must die, the utmost they
+can do in this case is to revenge his death."[19] But the same writer
+qualifies this general statement as follows: "It is not true," he says,
+"that the New Hollanders impute _all_ natural deaths to the _boollia_
+[magic] of inimical tribes, for in most cases of persons wasting visibly
+away before death, they do not entertain the notion. It is chiefly in
+cases of sudden death, or when the body of the deceased is fat and in
+good condition, that this belief prevails, and it is only in such
+contingencies that it becomes an imperative duty to have revenge."[20]
+Similarly, speaking of the tribes of Victoria in the early days of
+European settlement among them, the experienced observer Mr. James
+Dawson says that "natural deaths are generally--but not
+always--attributed to the malevolence and the spells of an enemy
+belonging to another tribe."[21] Again, with regard to the Encounter Bay
+tribe of South Australia we read that "there are but few diseases which
+they regard as the consequences of natural causes; in general they
+consider them the effects of enchantment, and produced by
+sorcerers."[22] Similarly of the Port Lincoln tribes in South Australia
+it is recorded that "in all cases of death that do not arise from old
+age, wounds, or other equally palpable causes, the natives suspect that
+unfair means have been practised; and even where the cause of death is
+sufficiently plain, they sometimes will not content themselves with it,
+but have recourse to an imaginary one, as the following case will
+prove:--A woman had been bitten by a black snake, across the thumb, in
+clearing out a well; she began to swell directly, and was a corpse in
+twenty-four hours; yet, another woman who had been present when the
+accident occurred, stated that the deceased had named a certain native
+as having caused her death. Upon this statement, which was in their
+opinion corroborated by the circumstance that the snake had drawn no
+blood from the deceased, her husband and other friends had a fight with
+the accused party and his friends; a reconciliation, however, took place
+afterwards, and it was admitted on the part of the aggressors that they
+had been in error with regard to the guilty individual; but nowise more
+satisfied as to the bite of the snake being the true cause of the
+woman's death, another party was now suddenly discovered to be the real
+offender, and accordingly war was made upon him and his partisans, till
+at last the matter was dropped and forgotten. From this case, as well as
+from frequent occurrences of a similar nature, it appears evident that
+thirst for revenge has quite as great a share in these foul accusations
+as superstition."[23]
+
+[Sidenote: Other testimonies as to the belief of the natives of South
+Australia and Victoria.]
+
+However, other experienced observers of the Australian aborigines admit
+no such limitations and exceptions to the native theory that death is an
+effect of sorcery. Thus in regard to the Narrinyeri tribe of South
+Australia the Rev. George Taplin, who knew them intimately for years,
+says that "no native regards death as natural, but always as the result
+of sorcery."[24] Again, to quote Mr. R. Brough Smyth, who has collected
+much information on the tribes of Victoria: "Mr. Daniel Bunce, an
+intelligent observer, and a gentleman well acquainted with the habits of
+the blacks, says that no tribe that he has ever met with believes in the
+possibility of a man dying a natural death. If a man is taken ill, it is
+at once assumed that some member of a hostile tribe has stolen some of
+his hair. This is quite enough to cause serious illness. If the man
+continues sick and gets worse, it is assumed that the hair has been
+burnt by his enemy. Such an act, they say, is sufficient to imperil his
+life. If the man dies, it is assumed that the thief has choked his
+victim and taken away his kidney-fat. When the grave is being dug, one
+or more of the older men--generally doctors or conjurors
+(_Buk-na-look_)--stand by and attentively watch the laborers; and if an
+insect is thrown out of the ground, these old men observe the direction
+which it takes, and having determined the line, two of the young men,
+relations of the deceased, are despatched in the path indicated, with
+instructions to kill the first native they meet, who they are assured
+and believe is the person directly chargeable with the crime of causing
+the death of their relative. Mr. John Green says that the men of the
+Yarra tribe firmly believe that no one ever dies a natural death. A man
+or a woman dies because of the wicked arts practised by some member of a
+hostile tribe; and they discover the direction in which to search for
+the slayer by the movements of a lizard which is seen immediately after
+the corpse is interred."[25] Again, speaking of the aborigines of
+Victoria, another writer observes: "All deaths from natural causes are
+attributed to the machinations of enemies, who are supposed to have
+sought for and burned the excrement of the intended victim, which,
+according to the general belief, causes a gradual wasting away. The
+relatives, therefore, watch the struggling feet of the dying person, as
+they point in the direction whence the injury is thought to come, and
+serve as a guide to the spot where it should be avenged. This is the
+duty of the nearest male relative; should he fail in its execution, it
+will ever be to him a reproach, although other relatives may have
+avenged the death. If the deceased were a chief, then the duty devolves
+upon the tribe. Chosen men are sent in the direction indicated, who kill
+the first persons they meet, whether men, women, or children; and the
+more lives that are sacrificed, the greater is the honour to the
+dead."[26] Again, in his account of the Kurnai tribe of Victoria the
+late Dr. A. W. Howitt remarks: "It is not difficult to see how, among
+savages, who have no knowledge of the real causes of diseases which are
+the common lot of humanity, the very suspicion even of such a thing as
+death from disease should be unknown. Death by accident they can
+imagine; death by violence they can imagine; but I question if they can,
+in their savage condition, imagine death by mere disease. Rheumatism is
+believed to be produced by the machinations of some enemy. Seeing a
+Tatungolung very lame, I asked him what was the matter? He said, 'Some
+fellow has put _bottle_ in my foot.' I asked him to let me see it. I
+found he was probably suffering from acute rheumatism. He explained that
+some enemy must have found his foot track, and have buried in it a piece
+of broken bottle. The magic influence, he believed, caused it to enter
+his foot.... Phthisis, pneumonia, bowel complaints, and insanity are
+supposed to be produced by an evil spirit--Brewin--'who is like the
+wind,' and who, entering his victims, can only be expelled by suitable
+incantations.... Thus the belief arises that death occurs only from
+accident, open violence, or secret magic; and, naturally, that the
+latter can only be met by counter-charms."[27]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the aborigines of New South Wales in sorcery as the
+cause of sickness and death.]
+
+The beliefs and practices of the aborigines of New South Wales in
+respect of death were similar. Thus we are told by a well-informed
+writer that "the natives do not believe in death from natural causes;
+therefore all sickness is attributed to the agency of sorcery, and
+counter charms are used to destroy its effect.... As a man's death is
+never supposed to have occurred naturally, except as the result of
+accident, or from a wound in battle, the first thing to be done when a
+death occurs is to endeavour to find out the person whose spells have
+brought about the calamity. In the Wathi-Wathi tribe the corpse is asked
+by each relative in succession to signify by some sign the person who
+has caused his death. Not receiving an answer, they watch in which
+direction a bird flies, after having passed over the deceased. This is
+considered an indication that the sorcerer is to be found in that
+direction. Sometimes the nearest relative sleeps with his head on the
+corpse, which causes him, they think, to dream of the murderer. There
+is, however, a good deal of uncertainty about the proceedings, which
+seldom result in more than a great display of wrath, and of vowing of
+vengeance against some member of a neighbouring tribe. Unfortunately
+this is not always the case, the man who is supposed to have exercised
+the death-spell being sometimes waylaid and murdered in a most cruel
+manner."[28] With regard to the great Kamilaroi tribe of New South Wales
+we read that "in some parts of the country a belief prevails that death,
+through disease, is, in many, if not in all cases, the result of an
+enemy's malice. It is a common saying, when illness or death comes, that
+some one has thrown his belt (_boor_) at the victim. There are various
+modes of fixing upon the murderer. One is to let an insect fly from the
+body of the deceased and see towards whom it goes. The person thus
+singled out is doomed."[29]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the aborigines of Central Australia in sorcery as
+the cause of death.]
+
+Speaking of the tribes of Central Australia, Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+observe that "in the matter of morality their code differs radically
+from ours, but it cannot be denied that their conduct is governed by it,
+and that any known breaches are dealt with both surely and severely. In
+very many cases there takes place what the white man, not seeing beneath
+the surface, not unnaturally describes as secret murder, but, in
+reality, revolting though such slaughter may be to our minds at the
+present day, it is simply exactly on a par with the treatment accorded
+to witches not so very long ago in European countries. Every case of
+such secret murder, when one or more men stealthily stalk their prey
+with the object of killing him, is in reality the exacting of a life for
+a life, the accused person being indicated by the so-called medicine-man
+as one who has brought about the death of another man by magic, and
+whose life must therefore be forfeited. It need hardly be pointed out
+what a potent element this custom has been in keeping down the numbers
+of the tribe; no such thing as natural death is realised by the native;
+a man who dies has of necessity been killed by some other man, or
+perhaps even by a woman, and sooner or later that man or woman will be
+attacked. In the normal condition of the tribe every death meant the
+killing of another individual."[30]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the natives of the Torres Straits Islands and New
+Guinea in sorcery as the cause of death.]
+
+Passing from Australia to other savage lands we learn that according to
+the belief of the Torres Straits Islanders all sickness and death were
+due to sorcery.[31] The natives of Mowat or Mawatta in British New
+Guinea "do not believe in a natural death, but attribute even the
+decease of an old man to the agency of some enemy known or unknown."[32]
+In the opinion of the tribes about Hood Peninsula in British New Guinea
+no one dies a natural death. Every such death is caused by the evil
+magic either of a living sorcerer or of a dead relation.[33] Of the
+Roro-speaking tribes of British New Guinea Dr. Seligmann writes that
+"except in the case of old folk, death is not admitted to occur without
+some obvious cause such as a spear-thrust. Therefore when vigorous and
+active members of the community die, it becomes necessary to explain
+their fate, and such deaths are firmly believed to be produced by
+sorcery. Indeed, as far as I have been able to ascertain, the Papuasian
+of this district regards the existence of sorcery, not, as has been
+alleged, as a particularly terrifying and horrible affair, but as a
+necessary and inevitable condition of existence in the world as he knows
+it."[34] Amongst the Yabim of German New Guinea "every case of death,
+even though it should happen accidentally, as by the fall of a tree or
+the bite of a shark, is laid at the door of the sorcerers. They are
+blamed even for the death of a child. If it is said that a little child
+never hurt anybody and therefore cannot have an enemy, the reply is that
+the intention was to injure the mother, and that the malady had been
+transferred to the infant through its mother's milk."[35]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Melanesians in sorcery as the cause of sickness
+and death.]
+
+Again, in the island of Malo, one of the New Hebrides, a Catholic
+missionary reports that according to a belief deeply implanted in the
+native mind every disease is the effect of witchcraft, and that nobody
+dies a natural death but only as a consequence of violence, poison, or
+sorcery.[36] Similarly in New Georgia, one of the Solomon Islands, when
+a person is sick, the natives think that he must be bewitched by a man
+or woman, for in their opinion nobody can be sick or die unless he is
+bewitched; what we call natural sickness and death are impossible. In
+case of illness suspicion falls on some one who is supposed to have
+buried a charmed object with intent to injure the sufferer.[37] Of the
+Melanesians who inhabit the coast of the Gazelle Peninsula in New
+Britain it is said that all deaths by sickness or disease are attributed
+by them to the witchcraft of a sorcerer, and a diviner is called in to
+ascertain the culprit who by his evil magic has destroyed their
+friends.[38] "Amongst the Melanesians few, if any, are believed to die
+from natural causes only; if they are not killed in war, they are
+supposed to die from the effects of witchcraft or magic. Whenever any
+one was sick, his friends made anxious inquiries as to the person who
+had bewitched (_agara'd_) him. Some one would generally be found to
+admit that he had buried some portion of food or something belonging to
+the sick man, which had caused his illness. The friends would pay him to
+dig it up, and after that the patient would generally get well. If,
+however, he did not recover, it was assumed that some other person had
+also _agara'd_ him."[39]
+
+[Sidenote: The belief of the Malagasy in sorcery as a cause of death.]
+
+Speaking of the Malagasy a Catholic missionary tells us that in
+Madagascar nobody dies a natural death. With the possible exception of
+centenarians everybody is supposed to die the victim of the sorcerer's
+diabolic art. If a relation of yours dies, the people comfort you by
+saying, "Cursed be the sorcerer who caused his death!" If your horse
+falls down a precipice and breaks its back, the accident has been caused
+by the malicious look of a sorcerer. If your dog dies of hydrophobia or
+your horse of a carbuncle, the cause is still the same. If you catch a
+fever in a district where malaria abounds, the malady is still ascribed
+to the art of the sorcerer, who has insinuated some deadly substances
+into your body.[40] Again, speaking of the Sakalava, a tribe in
+Madagascar, an eminent French authority on the island observes: "They
+have such a faith in the power of talismans that they even ascribe to
+them the power of killing their enemies. When they speak of poisoning,
+they do not allude, as many Europeans wrongly suppose, to death by
+vegetable or mineral poisons; the reference is to charms or spells. They
+often throw under the bed of an enemy an _ahouli_ [talisman], praying it
+to kill him, and they are persuaded that sooner or later their wish will
+be accomplished. I have often been present at bloody vendettas which had
+no other origin but this. The Sakalava think that a great part of the
+population dies of poison in this way. In their opinion, only old people
+who have attained the extreme limits of human longevity die a natural
+death."[41]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of African tribes in sorcery as the cause of sickness
+and death.]
+
+In Africa similar beliefs are widely spread and lead, as elsewhere, to
+fatal consequences. Thus the Kagoro of Northern Nigeria refuse to
+believe in death from natural causes; all illnesses and deaths, in their
+opinion, are brought about by black magic, however old and decrepit the
+deceased may have been. They explain sickness by saying that a man's
+soul wanders from his body in sleep and may then be caught, detained,
+and even beaten with a stick by some evil-wisher; whenever that happens,
+the man naturally falls ill. Sometimes an enemy will abstract the
+patient's liver by magic and carry it away to a cave in a sacred grove,
+where he will devour it in company with other wicked sorcerers. A
+witch-doctor is called in to detect the culprit, and whomever he
+denounces is shut up in a room, where a fire is kindled and pepper
+thrown into it; and there he is kept in the fumes of the burning pepper
+till he confesses his guilt and returns the stolen liver, upon which of
+course the sick man recovers. But should the patient die, the miscreant
+who did him to death by kidnapping his soul or his liver will be sold as
+a slave or choked.[42] In like manner the Bakerewe, who inhabit the
+largest island in the Victoria Nyanza lake, believe that all deaths and
+all ailments, however trivial, are the effect of witchcraft; and the
+person, generally an old woman, whom the witch-doctor accuses of having
+cast the spell on the patient is tied up, severely beaten, or stabbed to
+death on the spot.[43] Again, we are told that "the peoples of the Congo
+do not believe in a natural death, not even when it happens through
+drowning or any other accident. Whoever dies is the victim of witchcraft
+or of a spell. His soul has been eaten. He must be avenged by the
+punishment of the person who has committed the crime." Accordingly when
+a death has taken place, the medicine-man is sent for to discover the
+criminal. He pretends to be possessed by a spirit and in this state he
+names the wretch who has caused the death by sorcery. The accused has to
+submit to the poison ordeal by drinking a decoction of the red bark of
+the _Erythrophloeum guiniense_. If he vomits up the poison, he is
+innocent; but if he fails to do so, the infuriated crowd rushes on him
+and despatches him with knives and clubs. The family of the supposed
+culprit has moreover to pay an indemnity to the family of the supposed
+victim.[44] "Death, in the opinion of the natives, is never due to a
+natural cause. It is always the result either of a crime or of sorcery,
+and is followed by the poison ordeal, which has to be undergone by an
+innocent person whom the fetish-man accuses from selfish motives."[45]
+
+[Sidenote: Effect of such beliefs in thinning the population by causing
+multitudes to die for the imaginary crime of sorcery.]
+
+Evidence of the same sort could be multiplied for West Africa, where the
+fear of sorcery is rampant.[46] But without going into further details,
+I wish to point out the disastrous effects which here, as elsewhere,
+this theory of death has produced upon the population. For when a death
+from natural causes takes place, the author of the death being of course
+unknown, suspicion often falls on a number of people, all of whom are
+obliged to submit to the poison ordeal in order to prove their
+innocence, with the result that some or possibly all of them perish. A
+very experienced American missionary in West Africa, the Rev. R. H.
+Nassau, the friend of the late Miss Mary H. Kingsley, tells us that for
+every person who dies a natural death at least one, and often ten or
+more have been executed on an accusation of witchcraft.[47] Andrew
+Battel, a native of Essex, who lived in Angola for many years at the end
+of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth century, informs us
+that "in this country none on any account dieth, but they kill another
+for him: for they believe they die not their own natural death, but that
+some other has bewitched them to death. And all those are brought in by
+the friends of the dead whom they suspect; so that there many times come
+five hundred men and women to take the drink, made of the foresaid root
+_imbando_. They are brought all to the high-street or market-place, and
+there the master of the _imbando_ sits with his water, and gives every
+one a cup of water by one measure; and they are commanded to walk in a
+certain place till they make water, and then they are free. But he that
+cannot urine presently falls down, and all the people, great and small,
+fall upon him with their knives, and beat and cut him into pieces. But I
+think the witch that gives the water is partial, and gives to him whose
+death is desired the strongest water, but no man of the bye-standers can
+perceive it. This is done in the town of Longo, almost every week
+throughout the year."[48] A French official tells us that among the
+Neyaux of the Ivory Coast similar beliefs and practices were visibly
+depopulating the country, every single natural death causing the death
+of four or five persons by the poison ordeal, which consisted in
+drinking the decoction of a red bark called by the natives _boduru_. At
+the death of a chief fifteen men and women perished in this way. The
+French Government had great difficulty in suppressing the ordeal; for
+the deluded natives firmly believed in the justice of the test and
+therefore submitted to it willingly in the full consciousness of their
+innocence.[49] In the neighbourhood of Calabar the poison ordeal, which
+here consists in drinking a decoction of a certain bean, the
+_Physostigma venenosum_ of botanists, has had similar disastrous
+results, as we learn from the testimony of a missionary, the Rev. Hugh
+Goldie. He tells us that the people have firm faith in the ordeal and
+therefore not only accept it readily but appeal to it, convinced that it
+will demonstrate their innocence. A small tribe named Uwet in the
+hill-country of Calabar almost swept itself off the face of the earth by
+its constant use of the ordeal. On one occasion the whole population
+drank the poison to prove themselves pure, as they said; about half
+perished, "and the remnant," says Mr. Goldie, "still continuing their
+superstitious practice, must soon become extinct"[50] These words were
+written a good many years ago, and it is probable that by this time
+these poor fanatics have actually succeeded in exterminating themselves.
+So fatal may be the practical consequences of a purely speculative
+error; for it is to be remembered that these disasters flow directly
+from a mistaken theory of death.
+
+[Sidenote: General conclusion as to the belief in sorcery as the great
+cause of death.]
+
+Much more evidence of the same kind could be adduced, but without
+pursuing the theme further I think we may lay it down as a general rule
+that at a certain stage of social and intellectual evolution men have
+believed themselves to be naturally immortal in this life and have
+regarded death by disease or even by accident or violence as an
+unnatural event which has been brought about by sorcery and which must
+be avenged by the death of the sorcerer. If that has been so, we seem
+bound to conclude that a belief in magic or sorcery has had a most
+potent influence in keeping down the numbers of savage tribes; since as
+a rule every natural death has entailed at least one, often several,
+sometimes many deaths by violence. This may help us to understand what
+an immense power for evil the world-wide faith in magic or sorcery has
+been among men.
+
+[Sidenote: But some savages have attributed death to other causes than
+sorcery.]
+
+But even savages come in time to perceive that deaths are sometimes
+brought about by other causes than sorcery. We have seen that some of
+them admit extreme old age, accidents, and violence as causes of death
+which are independent of sorcery. The admission of these exceptions to
+the general rule certainly marks a stage of intellectual progress. I
+will give a few more instances of such admissions before concluding this
+part of my subject.
+
+[Sidenote: Some savages dissect the corpse to ascertain whether death
+was due to natural causes or to sorcery.]
+
+In the first place, certain savage tribes are reported to dissect the
+bodies of their dead in order to ascertain from an examination of the
+corpse whether the deceased died a natural death or perished by magic.
+This is reported by Mr. E. R. Smith concerning the Araucanians of Chili,
+who according to other writers, as we saw,[51] believe all deaths to be
+due to sorcery. Mr. Smith tells us that after death the services of the
+_machi_ or medicine-man "are again required, especially if the deceased
+be a person of distinction. The body is dissected and examined. If the
+liver be found in a healthy state, the death is attributed to natural
+causes; but if the liver prove to be inflamed, it is supposed to
+indicate the machinations of some evil-intentioned persons, and it rests
+with the medicine-man to discover the conspirator. This is accomplished
+by much the same means that were used to find out the nature of the
+disease. The gall is extracted, put in the magic drum, and after various
+incantations taken out and placed over the fire, in a pot carefully
+covered; if, after subjecting the gall to a certain amount of roasting,
+a stone is found in the bottom of the pot, it is declared to be the
+means by which death was produced. These stones, as well as the frogs,
+spiders, arrows, or whatever else may be extracted from the sick man,
+are called _Huecuvu_--the 'Evil One.' By aid of the _Huecuvu_ the
+_machi_ [medicine-man] throws himself into a trance, in which state he
+discovers and announces the person guilty of the death, and describes
+the manner in which it was produced."[52]
+
+Again, speaking of the Pahouins, a tribe of the Gaboon region in French
+Congo, a Catholic missionary writes thus: "It is so rare among the
+Pahouins that a death is considered natural! Scarcely has the deceased
+given up the ghost when the sorcerer appears on the scene. With three
+cuts of the knife, one transverse and two lateral, he dissects the
+breast of the corpse and turns down the skin on the face. Then he
+grabbles in the breast, examines the bowels attentively, marks the last
+muscular contractions, and thereupon pronounces whether the death was
+natural or not." If he decides that the death was due to sorcery, the
+suspected culprit has to submit to the poison ordeal in the usual manner
+to determine his guilt or innocence.[53]
+
+[Sidenote: The possibility of natural death admitted by the
+Melanesians.]
+
+Another savage people who have come to admit the possibility of merely
+natural death are the Melanesians of the New Hebrides and other parts of
+Central Melanesia. Amongst them "any sickness that is serious is
+believed to be brought about by ghosts or spirits; common complaints
+such as fever and ague are taken as coming in the course of nature. To
+say that savages are never ill without supposing a supernatural cause is
+not true of Melanesians; they make up their minds as the sickness comes
+whether it is natural or not, and the more important the individual who
+is sick, the more likely his sickness is to be ascribed to the anger of
+a ghost whom he has offended, or to witchcraft. No great man would like
+to be told that he was ill by natural weakness or decay. The sickness is
+almost always believed to be caused by a ghost, not by a spirit....
+Generally it is to the ghosts of the dead that sickness is ascribed in
+the eastern islands as well as in the western; recourse is had to them
+for aid in causing and removing sickness; and ghosts are believed to
+inflict sickness not only because some offence, such as a trespass, has
+been committed against them, or because one familiar with them has
+sought their aid with sacrifice and spells, but because there is a
+certain malignity in the feeling of all ghosts towards the living, who
+offend them by being alive."[54] From this account we learn, first, that
+the Melanesians admit some deaths by common diseases, such as fever and
+ague, to be natural; and, second, that they recognise ghosts and spirits
+as well as sorcerers and witches, among the causes of death; indeed they
+hold that ghosts are the commonest of all causes of sickness and death.
+
+[Sidenote: The possibility of natural death admitted by the Caffres of
+South Africa.]
+
+The same causes of death are recognised also by the Caffres of South
+Africa, as we learn from Mr. Dudley Kidd, who tells us that according to
+the beliefs of the natives, "to start with, there is sickness which is
+supposed to be caused by the action of ancestral spirits or by fabulous
+monsters. Secondly, there is sickness which is caused by the magical
+practices of some evil person who is using witchcraft in secret.
+Thirdly, there is sickness which comes from neither of these causes, and
+remains unexplained. It is said to be 'only sickness, and nothing more.'
+This third form of sickness is, I think, the commonest. Yet most writers
+wholly ignore it, or deny its existence. It may happen that an attack of
+indigestion is one day attributed to the action of witch or wizard;
+another day the trouble is put down to the account of ancestral spirits;
+on a third occasion the people may be at a loss to account for it, and
+so may dismiss the problem by saying that it is merely sickness. It is
+quite common to hear natives say that they are at a loss to account for
+some special case of illness. At first they thought it was caused by an
+angry ancestral spirit; but a great doctor has assured them that it is
+not the result of such a spirit. They then suppose it to be due to the
+magical practices of some enemy; but the doctor negatives that theory.
+The people are, therefore, driven to the conclusion that the trouble has
+no ascertainable cause. In some cases they do not even trouble to
+consult a diviner; they speedily recognise the sickness as due to
+natural causes. In such a case it needs no explanation. If they think
+that some friend of theirs knows of a remedy, they will try it on their
+own initiative, or may even go off to a white man to ask for some of his
+medicine. They would never dream of doing this if they thought they were
+being influenced by magic or by ancestral spirits. The Kafirs quite
+recognise that there are types of disease which are inherited, and have
+not been caused by magic or by ancestral spirits. They admit that some
+accidents are due to nothing but the patient's carelessness or
+stupidity. If a native gets his leg run over by a waggon, the people
+will often say that it is all his own fault through being clumsy. In
+other cases, with delightful inconsistency, they may say that some one
+has been working magic to cause the accident. In short, it is impossible
+to make out a theory of sickness which will satisfy our European
+conception of consistency."[55]
+
+[Sidenote: The admission that death may be due to natural causes, marks
+an intellectual advance. The recognition of ghosts or spirits as a cause
+of disease, apart from sorcery, also marks a step in intellectual,
+moral, and social progress.]
+
+From the foregoing accounts we see that the Melanesians and the Caffres,
+two widely different and widely separated races, agree in recognising at
+least three distinct causes of what we should call natural death. These
+three causes are, first, sorcery or witchcraft; second, ghosts or
+spirits; and third, disease.[56] That the recognition of disease in
+itself as a cause of death, quite apart from sorcery, marks an
+intellectual advance, will not be disputed. It is not so clear, though I
+believe it is equally true, that the recognition of ghosts or spirits as
+a cause of disease, quite apart from witchcraft, marks a real step in
+intellectual, moral, and social progress. In the first place, it marks a
+step in intellectual and moral progress; for it recognises that effects
+which before had been ascribed to human agency spring from superhuman
+causes; and this recognition of powers in the universe superior to man
+is not only an intellectual gain but a moral discipline: it teaches the
+important lesson of humility. In the second place it marks a step in
+social progress because when the blame of a death is laid upon a ghost
+or a spirit instead of on a sorcerer, the death has not to be avenged by
+killing a human being, the supposed author of the calamity. Thus the
+recognition of ghosts or spirits as the sources of sickness and death
+has as its immediate effect the sparing of an immense number of lives of
+men and women, who on the theory of death by sorcery would have perished
+by violence to expiate their imaginary crime. That this is a great gain
+to society is obvious: it adds immensely to the security of human life
+by removing one of the most fruitful causes of its destruction.
+
+It must be admitted, however, that the gain is not always as great as
+might be expected; the social advantages of a belief in ghosts and
+spirits are attended by many serious drawbacks. For while ghosts or
+spirits are commonly, though not always, supposed to be beyond the reach
+of human vengeance, they are generally thought to be well within the
+reach of human persuasion, flattery, and bribery; in other words, men
+think that they can appease and propitiate them by prayer and sacrifice;
+and while prayer is always cheap, sacrifice may be very dear, since it
+can, and often does, involve the destruction of an immense deal of
+valuable property and of a vast number of human lives. Yet if we could
+reckon up the myriads who have been slain in sacrifice to ghosts and
+gods, it seems probable that they would fall far short of the untold
+multitudes who have perished as sorcerers and witches. For while human
+sacrifices in honour of deities or of the dead have been for the most
+part exceptional rather than regular, only the great gods and the
+illustrious dead being deemed worthy of such costly offerings, the
+slaughter of witches and wizards, theoretically at least, followed
+inevitably on every natural death among people who attributed all such
+deaths to sorcery. Hence if natural religion be defined roughly as a
+belief in superhuman spiritual beings and an attempt to propitiate them,
+we may perhaps say that, while natural religion has slain its thousands,
+magic has slain its ten thousands. But there are strong reasons for
+inferring that in the history of society an Age of Magic preceded an Age
+of Religion. If that was so, we may conclude that the advent of religion
+marked a great social as well as intellectual advance upon the preceding
+Age of Magic: it inaugurated an era of what might be described as mercy
+by comparison with the relentless severity of its predecessor.
+
+[Footnote 6: W. Martin, _An Account of the Natives of the Tonga
+Islands_, Second Edition (London, 1818), ii. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 7: M. Dobrizhoffer, _Historia de Abiponibus_ (Vienna, 1784),
+ii. 92 _sq._, 240 _sqq._ The author of this valuable work lived as a
+Catholic missionary in the tribe for eighteen years.]
+
+[Footnote 8: C. Gay, "Fragment d'un Voyage dans le Chili et au Cusco,"
+_Bulletin de la Societe de Geographie_ (Paris), Deuxieme Serie, xix.
+(1843) p. 25; H. Delaporte, "Une visite chez les Araucaniens," _Bulletin
+de la Societe de Geographie_ (Paris), Quatrieme Serie, x. (1855) p. 30.]
+
+[Footnote 9: K. von den Steinen, _Unter den Naturvoelkern
+Zentral-Brasiliens_ (Berlin, 1894), pp. 344, 348.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Rev. W. H. Brett, _The Indian Tribes of Guiana_ (London,
+1868), p. 357.]
+
+[Footnote 11: W. H. Brett, _op. cit._ pp. 361 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 12: Rev. W. H. Brett, _op. cit._ pp. 364 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 13: Rev. J. H. Bernau, _Missionary Labours in British Guiana_
+(London, 1847), pp. 56 _sq._, 58.]
+
+[Footnote 14: (Sir) E. F. im Thurn, _Among the Indians of Guiana_
+(London, 1883), pp. 330 _sq._ For the case described see R. Schomburgk,
+_Reisen in Britisch-Guiana_, i. (Leipsic, 1847) pp. 324 _sq._ The boy
+died of dropsy. Perhaps the mode of divination adopted, by boiling some
+portions of him in water, had special reference to the nature of the
+disease.]
+
+[Footnote 15: (Sir) E. F. im Thurn, _op. cit._ pp. 332 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 16: Father A. G. Morice, "The Canadian Denes," _Annual
+Archaeological Report, 1905_ (Toronto, 1906), p. 207.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Albert A. C. Le Souef, "Notes on the Natives of
+Australia," in R. Brough Smyth's _Aborigines of Victoria_ (Melbourne and
+London, 1878), ii. 289 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 18: (Sir) George Grey, _Journals of two Expeditions of
+Discovery in Northwest and Western Australia_ (London, 1841), ii. 238.]
+
+[Footnote 19: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. iii. (1865) p. 236.]
+
+[Footnote 20: A. Oldfield, _op. cit._ p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 21: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_ (Melbourne, Sydney and
+Adelaide, 1881), p. 63.]
+
+[Footnote 22: H. E. A. Meyer, "Manners and Customs of the Aborigines of
+the Encounter Bay Tribe," _Native Tribes of South Australia_ (Adelaide,
+1879), p. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 23: C. W. Schuermann, "The Aboriginal Tribes of Port Lincoln in
+South Australia," _Native Tribes of South Australia_, pp. 237 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 24: Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," _Native Tribes of South
+Australia_ (Adelaide, 1879), p. 25.]
+
+[Footnote 25: R. Brough Smyth, _The Aborigines of Victoria_ (Melbourne
+and London, 1878) i. 110.]
+
+[Footnote 26: W. E. Stanbridge, "Some Particulars of the General
+Characteristics, Astronomy, and Mythology of the Tribes in the Central
+Part of Victoria, Southern Australia," _Transactions of the Ethnological
+Society of London_, New Series, i. (1861) p. 299.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Lorimer Fison and A. W. Howitt, _Kamilaroi and Kurnai_
+(Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide, and Brisbane, 1880), pp. 250 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 28: A. L. P. Cameron, "Notes on some Tribes of New South
+Wales," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_ xiv. (1885) pp. 361,
+362 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 29: Rev. W. Ridley, _Kamilaroi_, Second Edition (Sydney,
+1875), p. 159.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Native Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1899), pp. 46-48.]
+
+[Footnote 31: _Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to
+Torres Straits_, v. (Cambridge, 1904) pp. 248, 323.]
+
+[Footnote 32: E. Beardmore, "The Natives of Mowat, British New Guinea,"
+_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xix. (1890) p. 461.]
+
+[Footnote 33: R. E. Guise, "On the Tribes inhabiting the Mouth of the
+Wanigela River, New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
+xxviii. (1899) p. 216.]
+
+[Footnote 34: C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_
+(Cambridge, 1910), p. 279.]
+
+[Footnote 35: K. Vetter, _Komm herueber und hilf uns! oder die Arbeit der
+Neuen-Dettelsauer Mission_, iii. (Barmen, 1898) pp. 10 _sq._; _id._, in
+_Nachrichten ueber Kaiser-Wilhelms-Land und den Bismarck-Archipel, 1897_,
+pp. 94, 98. Compare B. Hagen, _Unter den Papuas_ (Wiesbaden, 1899), p.
+256; _Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft fuer Anthropologie,
+Ethnologie, und Urgeschichte, 1900_, p. (415).]
+
+[Footnote 36: Father A. Deniau, "Croyances religieuses et moeurs des
+indigenes de l'Ile Malo," _Missions Catholiques_, xxxiii. (1901) pp. 315
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 37: C. Ribbe, _Zwei Jahre unter den Kannibalen der
+Salomo-Inseln_ (Dresden-Blasewitz, 1903), p. 268.]
+
+[Footnote 38: P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Kuestenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Muenster, N.D.), p. 344. As to beliefs of
+this sort among the Sulka of New Britain, see _P._ Rascher, "Die Sulka,"
+_Archiv fuer Anthropologie_, xxix. (1904) pp. 221 _sq._; R. Parkinson,
+_Dreissig Jahre in der Suedsee_ (Stuttgart, 1907), pp. 199-201.]
+
+[Footnote 39: G. Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), p. 176. Dr. Brown's account, of the Melanesians applies to the
+natives of New Britain and more particularly of the neighbouring Duke of
+York islands.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Father Abinal, "Astrologie Malgache," _Missions
+Catholiques_, xi. (1879) p. 506.]
+
+[Footnote 41: A. Grandidier, "Madagascar," _Bulletin de la Societe de
+Geographie_ (Paris), Sixieme Serie, iii. (1872) pp. 399 _sq._ The
+talismans (_ahouli_) in question consist of the horns of oxen stuffed
+with a variety of odds and ends, such as sand, sticks, nails, and so
+forth.]
+
+[Footnote 42: Major A. J. N. Tremearne, _The Tailed Head-hunters of
+Nigeria_ (London, 1912), pp. 171 _sq._; _id._, "Notes on the Kagoro and
+other Headhunters," _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute_,
+xlii. (1912) pp. 160, 161.]
+
+[Footnote 43: E. Hurel, "Religion et vie domestique des Bakerewe,"
+_Anthropos_, vi. (1912) pp. 85-87.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Father Campana, "Congo Mission Catholique de Landana,"
+_Missions Catholiques_, xxvii. (1895) pp. 102 _sq_.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Th. Masui, _Guide de la Section de l'Etat Independant du
+Congo a l'Exposition de Bruxelles--Tervueren en 1874_ (Brussels, 1897),
+p. 82.]
+
+[Footnote 46: See for example O. Lenz, _Skizzen aus Westafrika_ (Berlin,
+1878), pp. 184 _sq._; C. Cuny, "De Libreville au Cameroun," _Bulletin de
+la Societe de Geographie_ (Paris), Septieme Serie, xvii. (1896) p. 341;
+Ch. Wunenberger, "La mission et le royaume de Humbe, sur les bords du
+Cunene," _Missions Catholiques_, xx. (1888) p. 262; Lieut. Herold,
+"Bericht betreffend religioese Anschauungen und Gebraeuche der deutschen
+Ewe-Neger," _Mittheilungen aus den deutschen Schutzgebieten_, v. (1892)
+p. 153; Dr. R. Plehn, "Beitraege zur Voelkerkunde des Togo-Gebietes,"
+_Mittheilungen des Seminars fuer Orientalische Sprachen zu Berlin_, ii.
+Dritte Abtheilung (1899), p. 97; R. Fisch, "Die Dagbamba,"
+_Baessler-Archiv_, iii. (1912) p. 148. For evidence of similar beliefs
+and practices in other parts of Africa, see Brard, "Der
+Victoria-Nyanza," _Petermann's Mittheilungen_, xliii. (1897) pp. 79
+_sq._; Father Picarda, "Autour du Mandera," _Missions Catholiques_,
+xviii. (1886) p. 342.]
+
+[Footnote 47: Rev. R. H. Nassau, _Fetichism in West Africa_ (London,
+1904), pp. 241 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 48: "Strange Adventures of Andrew Battel," in John Pinkerton's
+_Voyages and Travels_, xvi. (London, 1814) p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 49: _Gouvernement General de l'Afrique Occidentale Francaise,
+Notices publiees par le Gouvernement Central a l'occasion de
+l'Exposition Coloniale de Marseille, La Cote d'Ivoire_ (Corbeil, 1906),
+pp. 570-572.]
+
+[Footnote 50: Hugh Goldie, _Calabar and its Mission_, New Edition
+(Edinburgh and London, 1901), pp. 34 _sq._, 37 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 51: Above, p. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 52: E. R. Smith, _The Araucanians_ (London, 1855), pp. 236
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 53: Father Trilles, "Milles lieues dans l'inconnu; a travers
+le pays Fang, de la cote aux rives du Djah," _Missions Catholiques_,
+xxxv. (1903) pp. 466 _sq._, and as to the poison ordeal, _ib._ pp. 472
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 54: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), p.
+194.]
+
+[Footnote 55: Dudley Kidd, _The Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), pp. 133
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 56: In like manner the Baganda generally ascribed natural
+deaths either to sorcery or to the action of a ghost; but when they
+could not account for a person's death in either of these ways they said
+that Walumbe, the God of Death, had taken him. This last explanation
+approaches to an admission of natural death, though it is still mythical
+in form. The Baganda usually attributed any illness of the king to
+ghosts, because no man would dare to practise magic on him. A
+much-dreaded ghost was that of a man's sister; she was thought to vent
+her spite on his sons and daughters by visiting them with sickness. When
+she proved implacable, a medicine-man was employed to catch her ghost in
+a gourd or a pot and throw it away on waste land or drown it in a river.
+See Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 98, 100, 101
+_sq._, 286 _sq._, 315 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE III
+
+MYTHS OF THE ORIGIN OF DEATH
+
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of savages in man's natural immortality.]
+
+In my last lecture I shewed that many savages do not believe in what we
+call a natural death; they imagine that all men are naturally immortal
+and would never die, if their lives were not cut prematurely short by
+sorcery. Further, I pointed out that this mistaken view of the nature of
+death has exercised a disastrous influence on the tribes who entertain
+it, since, attributing all natural deaths to sorcery, they consider
+themselves bound to discover and kill the wicked sorcerers whom they
+regard as responsible for the death of their friends. Thus in primitive
+society as a rule every natural death entails at least one and often
+several deaths by violence; since the supposed culprit being unknown
+suspicion may fall upon many persons, all of whom may be killed either
+out of hand or as a consequence of failing to demonstrate their
+innocence by means of an ordeal.
+
+[Sidenote: Savage stories of the origin of death.]
+
+Yet even the savages who firmly believe in man's natural immortality are
+obliged sorrowfully to admit that, as things are at the present day, men
+do frequently die, whatever explanation we may give of so unexpected and
+unnatural an occurrence. Accordingly they are hard put to it to
+reconcile their theory of immortality with the practice of mortality.
+They have meditated on the subject and have given us the fruit of their
+meditation in a series of myths which profess to explain the origin of
+death. For the most part these myths are very crude and childish; yet
+they have a value of their own as examples of man's early attempts to
+fathom one of the great mysteries which encompass his frail and
+transient existence on earth; and accordingly I have here collected, in
+all their naked simplicity, a few of these savage guesses at truth.
+
+[Sidenote: Four types of such stories.]
+
+Myths of the origin of death conform to several types, among which we
+may distinguish, first, what I will call the type of the Two Messengers;
+second, the type of the Waxing and Waning Moon; third, the type of the
+Serpent and his Cast Skin; and fourth, the type of the Banana-tree. I
+will illustrate each type by examples, and will afterwards cite some
+miscellaneous instances which do not fall under any of these heads.
+
+[Sidenote: I. The tale of the Two Messengers. Zulu story of the
+chameleon and the lizard. The same story among other Bantu tribes.]
+
+First, then, we begin with the type of the Two Messengers. Stories of
+this pattern are widespread in Africa, especially among tribes belonging
+to the great Bantu family, which occupies roughly the southern half of
+the continent. The best-known example of the tale is the one told by the
+Zulus. They say that in the beginning Unkulunkulu, that is, the Old Old
+One, sent the chameleon to men with a message saying, "Go, chameleon, go
+and say, Let not men die." The chameleon set out, but it crawled very
+slowly, and it loitered by the way to eat the purple berries of the
+_ubukwebezane_ tree, or according to others it climbed up a tree to bask
+in the sun, filled its belly with flies, and fell fast asleep. Meantime
+the Old Old One had thought better of it and sent a lizard posting after
+the chameleon with a very different message to men, for he said to the
+animal, "Lizard, when you have arrived, say, Let men die." So the lizard
+went on his way, passed the dawdling chameleon, and arriving first among
+men delivered his message of death, saying, "Let men die." Then he
+turned on his heel and went back to the Old Old One who had sent him.
+But after he was gone, the chameleon at last arrived among men with his
+glad tidings of immortality, and he shouted, saying, "It is said, Let
+not men die!" But men answered, "O! we have heard the word of the
+lizard; it has told us the word, 'It is said, Let men die.' We cannot
+hear your word. Through the word of the lizard, men will die." And died
+they have ever since from that day to this. That is why some of the
+Zulus hate the lizard, saying, "Why did he run first and say, 'Let
+people die?'" So they beat and kill the lizard and say, "Why did it
+speak?" But others hate the chameleon and hustle it, saying, "That is
+the little thing which delayed to tell the people that they should not
+die. If he had only brought his message in time we should not have died;
+our ancestors also would have been still living; there would have been
+no diseases here on the earth. It all comes from the delay of the
+chameleon."[57] The same story is told in nearly the same form by other
+Bantu tribes, such as the Bechuanas,[58] the Basutos,[59] the
+Baronga,[60] and the Ngoni.[61] To this day the Baronga and the Ngoni
+owe the chameleon a grudge for having brought death into the world, so
+when children find a chameleon they will induce it to open its mouth,
+then throw a pinch of tobacco on its tongue, and watch with delight the
+creature writhing and changing colour from orange to green, from green
+to black in the agony of death; for thus they avenge the wrong which the
+chameleon has done to mankind.[62]
+
+[Sidenote: Akamba story of the chameleon and the thrush.]
+
+A story of the same type, but with some variations, is told by the
+Akamba, a Bantu tribe of British East Africa; but in their version the
+lizard has disappeared from the legend and has been replaced by the
+_itoroko_, a small bird of the thrush tribe, with a black head, a
+bluish-black back, and a buff-coloured breast. The tale runs thus:--Once
+upon a time God sent out the chameleon, the frog, and the thrush to find
+people who died one day and came to life again the next. So off they
+set, the chameleon leading the way, for in those days he was a very
+important personage. Presently they came to some people lying like dead,
+so the chameleon went up to them and said, _Niwe, niwe, niwe_. The
+thrush asked him testily what he was making that noise for, to which the
+chameleon replied mildly, "I am only calling the people who go forward
+and then came back again," and he explained that the dead people would
+come to life again. But the thrush, who was of a sceptical turn of mind,
+derided the idea. Nevertheless, the chameleon persisted in calling to
+the dead people, and sure enough they opened their eyes and listened to
+him. But here the thrush broke in and told them roughly that dead they
+were and dead they must remain. With that away he flew, and though the
+chameleon preached to the corpses, telling them that he had come from
+God on purpose to bring them to life again, and that they were not to
+believe the lies of that shallow sceptic the thrush, they obstinately
+refused to pay any heed to him; not one of those dead corpses would
+budge. So the chameleon returned crestfallen to God and reported to him
+how, when he preached the gospel of resurrection to the corpses, the
+thrush had roared him down, so that the corpses could not hear a word he
+said. God thereupon cross-questioned the thrush, who stated that the
+chameleon had so bungled his message that he, the thrush, felt it his
+imperative duty to interrupt him. The simple deity believed the thrush,
+and being very angry with the chameleon he degraded him from his high
+position and made him walk very slow, lurching this way and that, as he
+does down to this very day. But the thrush he promoted to the office of
+wakening men from their slumber every morning, which he still does
+punctually at 2 A.M. before the note of any other bird is heard in the
+tropical forest.[63]
+
+[Sidenote: Togo story of the dog and the frog.]
+
+In this version, though the frog is sent out by God with the other two
+messengers he plays no part in the story; he is a mere dummy. But in
+another version of the story, which is told by the negroes of Togoland
+in German West Africa, the frog takes the place of the lizard and the
+thrush as the messenger of death. They say that once upon a time men
+sent a dog to God to say that when they died they would like to come to
+life again. So off the dog trotted to deliver the message. But on the
+way he felt hungry and turned into a house, where a man was boiling
+magic herbs. So the dog sat down and thought to himself, "He is cooking
+food." Meantime the frog had set off to tell God that when men died they
+would like not to come to life again. Nobody had asked him to give that
+message; it was a piece of pure officiousness and impertinence on his
+part. However, away he tore. The dog, who still sat watching the
+hell-broth brewing, saw him hurrying past the door, but he thought to
+himself, "When I have had something to eat, I will soon catch froggy
+up." However, froggy came in first and said to the deity, "When men die,
+they would like not to come to life again." After that, up comes the
+dog, and says he, "When men die, they would like to come to life again."
+God was naturally puzzled and said to the dog, "I really do not
+understand these two messages. As I heard the frog's request first, I
+will comply with it. I will not do what you said." That is the real
+reason why men die and do not come to life again. If the frog had only
+minded his own business instead of meddling with other people's, the
+dead would all have come to life again to this day.[64] In this version
+of the story not only are the persons of the two messengers different,
+the dog and the frog having replaced the chameleon and the lizard of the
+Bantu version, but the messengers are sent from men to God instead of
+from God to men.
+
+[Sidenote: Ashantee story of the goat and the sheep.]
+
+In another version told by the Ashantees of West Africa the persons of
+the messengers are again different, but as in the Bantu version they are
+sent from God to men. The Ashantees say that long ago men were happy,
+for God dwelt among them and talked with them face to face. For example,
+if a child was roasting yams at the fire and wanted a relish to eat with
+the yams, he had nothing to do but to throw a stick in the air and say,
+"God give me fish," and God gave him fish at once. However, these happy
+days did not last for ever. One unlucky day it happened that some women
+were pounding a mash with pestles in a mortar, while God stood by
+looking on. For some reason they were annoyed by the presence of the
+deity and told him to be off; and as he did not take himself off fast
+enough to please them, they beat him with their pestles. In a great huff
+God retired altogether from the world and left it to the direction of
+the fetishes; and still to this day people say, "Ah, if it had not been
+for that old woman, how happy we should be!" However, after he had
+withdrawn to heaven, the long-suffering deity sent a kind message by a
+goat to men upon earth to say, "There is something which they call
+Death. He will kill some of you. But even if you die, you will not
+perish completely. You will come to me in heaven." So off the goat set
+with this cheering intelligence. But before he came to the town he saw a
+tempting bush by the wayside and stopped to browse on it. When God in
+heaven saw the goat thus loitering by the way, he sent off a sheep with
+the same message to carry the glad tidings to men without delay. But the
+sheep did not give the message aright. Far from it: he said, "God sends
+you word that you will die and that will be an end of you." Afterwards
+the goat arrived on the scene and said, "God sends you word that you
+will die, certainly, but that will not be the end of you, for you will
+go to him." But men said to the goat, "No, goat, that is not what God
+said. We believe that the message which the sheep brought us is the one
+which God sent to us." That was the beginning of death among men.[65]
+However, in another Ashantee version of the tale the parts played by the
+sheep and the goat are reversed. It is the sheep who brings the tidings
+of immortality from God to men, but the goat overruns him and offers
+them death instead. Not knowing what death was, men accepted the seeming
+boon with enthusiasm and have died ever since.[66]
+
+[Sidenote: II. The story of the Waxing and Waning Moon. Hottentot story
+of the Moon, the hare, and death.]
+
+So much for the tale of the Two Messengers. In the last versions of it
+which I have quoted, a feature to be noticed is the perversion of the
+message by one of the messengers, who brings tidings of death instead of
+life eternal to men. The same perversion of the message reappears in
+some examples of the next type of story which I shall illustrate, namely
+the type of the Waxing and Waning Moon. Thus the Namaquas or Hottentots
+say that once the Moon charged the hare to go to men and say, "As I die
+and rise to life again, so shall you die and rise to life again." So the
+hare went to men, but either out of forgetfulness or malice he reversed
+the message and said, "As I die and do not rise to life again, so you
+shall also die and not rise to life again." Then he went back to the
+Moon, and she asked him what he had said. He told her, and when she
+heard how he had given the wrong message, she was so angry that she
+threw a stick at him and split his lip, which is the reason why the
+hare's lip is still split. So the hare ran away and is still running to
+this day. Some people, however, say that before he fled he clawed the
+Moon's face, which still bears the marks of the scratching, as anybody
+may see for himself on a clear moonlight night. So the Hottentots are
+still angry with the hare for bringing death into the world, and they
+will not let initiated men partake of its flesh.[67] There are traces of
+a similar story among the Bushmen.[68] In another Hottentot version two
+messengers appear, an insect and a hare; the insect is charged by the
+Moon with a message of immortality or rather of resurrection to men, but
+the hare persuades the insect to let him bear the tidings, which he
+perverts into a message of annihilation.[69] Thus in this particular
+version the type of the Two Messengers coincides with the Moon type.
+
+[Sidenote: Masai story of the moon and death.]
+
+A story of the same type, though different in details, is told by the
+Masai of East Africa. They say that in the early days a certain god
+named Naiteru-kop told a man named Le-eyo that if a child were to die he
+was to throw away the body and say, "Man, die, and come back again;
+moon, die, and remain away." Well, soon afterwards a child died, but it
+was not one of the man's own children, so when he threw the body away he
+said, "Man, die, and remain away; moon, die, and return." Next one of
+his own children died, and when he threw away the body he said, "Man,
+die, and return; moon, die, and remain away." But the god said to him,
+"It is of no use now, for you spoilt matters with the other child." That
+is why down to this day when a man dies he returns no more, but when the
+moon dies she always comes to life again.[70]
+
+[Sidenote: Nandi story of the moon, the dog, and death.]
+
+Another story of the origin of death which belongs to this type is told
+by the Nandi of British East Africa. They say that when the first people
+lived upon the earth a dog came to them one day and said: "All people
+will die like the moon, but unlike the moon you will not return to life
+again unless you give me some milk to drink out of your gourd, and beer
+to drink through your straw. If you do this, I will arrange for you to
+go to the river when you die and to come to life again on the third
+day." But the people laughed at the dog, and gave him some milk and beer
+to drink off a stool. The dog was angry at not being served in the same
+vessels as a human being, and though he put his pride in his pocket and
+drank the milk and the beer from the stool, he went away in high
+dudgeon, saying, "All people will die, and the moon alone will return to
+life." That is the reason why, when people die, they stay away, whereas
+when the moon goes away she comes back again after three days'
+absence.[71] The Wa-Sania of British East Africa believe that in days
+gone by people never died, till one unlucky day a lizard came and said
+to them, "All of you know that the moon dies and rises again, but human
+beings will die and rise no more." They say that from that day people
+began to die and have persisted in dying ever since.[72]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian story of the moon, the rat, and death. Caroline
+Islands story of the moon, death, and resurrection. Wotjobaluk story of
+the moon, death, and resurrection. Cham story of the moon, death, and
+resurrection.]
+
+With these African stories of the origin of death we may compare one
+told by the Fijians on the other side of the world. They say that once
+upon a time the Moon contended that men should be like himself (for the
+Fijian moon seems to be a male); that is, he meant that just as he grows
+old, disappears, and comes in sight again, so men grown old should
+vanish for a while and then return to life. But the rat, who is a Fijian
+god, would not hear of it. "No," said he, "let men die like rats." And
+he had the best of it in the dispute, for men die like rats to this
+day.[73] In the Caroline Islands they say that long, long ago death was
+unknown, or rather it was a short sleep, not a long, long one, as it is
+now. Men died on the last day of the waning moon and came to life again
+on the first appearance of the new moon, just as if they had awakened
+from a refreshing slumber. But an evil spirit somehow contrived that
+when men slept the sleep of death they should wake no more.[74] The
+Wotjobaluk of south-eastern Australia relate that, when all animals were
+men and women, some of them died and the moon used to say, "You
+up-again," whereupon they came to life again. But once on a time an old
+man said, "Let them remain dead"; and since then nobody has ever come to
+life again except the moon, which still continues to do so down to this
+very day.[75] The Chams of Annam and Cambodia say that the goddess of
+good luck used to resuscitate people as fast as they died, till the
+sky-god, tired of her constant interference with the laws of nature,
+transferred her to the moon, where it is no longer in her power to bring
+the dead to life again.[76]
+
+[Sidenote: Cycle of death and resurrection after three days, like the
+monthly disappearance and reappearance of the moon.]
+
+These stories which associate human immortality with the moon are
+products of a primitive philosophy which, meditating on the visible
+changes, of the lunar orb, drew from the observation of its waning and
+waxing a dim notion that under a happier fate man might have been
+immortal like the moon, or rather that like it he might have undergone
+an endless cycle of death and resurrection, dying then rising again from
+the dead after three days. The same curious notion of death and
+resurrection after three days is entertained by the Unmatjera and
+Kaitish, two savage tribes of Central Australia. They say that long ago
+their dead used to be buried either in trees or underground, and that
+after three days they regularly rose from the dead. The Kaitish tell how
+this happy state of things came to an end. It was all through a man of
+the Curlew totem, who finding some men of the Little Wallaby totem
+burying a Little Wallaby man, fell into a passion and kicked the body
+into the sea. Of course after that the dead man could not come to life
+again, and that is why nowadays nobody rises from the dead after three
+days, as everybody used to do long ago.[77] Although no mention is made
+of the moon in this Australian story, we may conjecture that these
+savages, like the Nandi of East Africa, fixed upon three days as the
+normal interval between death and resurrection simply because three days
+is the interval between the disappearance of the old and the
+reappearance of the new moon. If that is so, the aborigines of Central
+Australia may be added to the many races of mankind who have seen in the
+waning and waxing moon an emblem of human immortality. Nor does this
+association of ideas end with a mere tradition that in some former age
+men used to die with the old moon and come to life again with the new
+moon. Many savages, on seeing the new moon for the first time in the
+month, observe ceremonies which seem to be intended to renew and
+increase their life and strength with the renewal and the increase of
+the lunar light. For example, on the day when the new moon first
+appeared, the Indians of San Juan Capistrano in California used to call
+together all the young men and make them run about, while the old men
+danced in a circle, saying, "As the moon dieth and cometh to life again,
+so we also having to die will again live."[78] Again, an old writer
+tells us that at the appearance of every new moon the negroes of the
+Congo clapped their hands and cried out, sometimes falling on their
+knees, "So may I renew my life as thou art renewed."[79]
+
+[Sidenote: III. Story of the Serpent and his Cast Skin. New Britain
+story of immortality, the serpent, and death. Annamite story of
+immortality, the serpent, and death. Vuatom story of immortality, the
+lizard, the serpent, and death.]
+
+Another type of stories told to explain the origin of death is the one
+which I have called the type of the Serpent and his Cast Skin. Some
+savages seem to think that serpents and all other animals, such as
+lizards, which periodically shed their skins, thereby renew their life
+and so never die. Hence they imagine that if man also could only cast
+his old skin and put on a new one, he too would be immortal like a
+serpent. Thus the Melanesians, who inhabit the coast of the Gazelle
+Peninsula in New Britain, tell the following story of the origin of
+death. They say that To Kambinana, the Good Spirit, loved men and wished
+to make them immortal; but he hated the serpents and wished to kill
+them. So he called his brother To Korvuvu and said to him, "Go to men
+and take them the secret of immortality. Tell them to cast their skin
+every year. So will they be protected from death, for their life will be
+constantly renewed. But tell the serpents that they must thenceforth
+die." But To Korvuvu acquitted himself badly of his task; for he
+commanded men to die and betrayed to the serpents the secret of
+immortality. Since then all men have been mortal, but the serpents cast
+their skins every year and are immortal.[80] In this story we meet again
+with the incident of the reversed message; through a blunder or through
+the malice of the messenger the glad tidings of immortality are
+perverted into a melancholy message of death. A similar tale, with a
+similar incident, is told in Annam. They say that Ngoc hoang sent a
+messenger from heaven to men to say that when they had reached old age
+they should change their skins and live for ever, but that when serpents
+grew old they must die. The messenger came down to earth and said,
+rightly enough, "When man is old, he shall cast his skin; but when
+serpents are old, they shall die and be laid in coffins." So far, so
+good. But unfortunately there happened to be a brood of serpents within
+hearing, and when they heard the doom pronounced on their kind they fell
+into a fury and said to the messenger, "You must say it over again and
+just the contrary, or we will bite you." That frightened the messenger
+and he repeated his message, changing the words thus: "When he is old,
+the serpent shall cast his skin; but when he is old, man shall die and
+be laid in the coffin." That is why all creatures are now subject to
+death, except the serpent, who, when he is old, casts his skin and lives
+for ever.[81] The natives of Vuatom, an island in the Bismarck
+Archipelago, say that a certain To Konokonomiange bade two lads fetch
+fire, promising that if they did so they should never die, but that if
+they refused their bodies would perish, though their shades or souls
+would survive. They would not hearken to him, so he cursed them, saying,
+"What! You would all have lived! Now you shall die, though your soul
+shall live. But the iguana (_Goniocephalus_) and the lizard (_Varanus
+indicus_) and the snake (_Enygrus_), they shall live, they shall cast
+their skin and they shall live for evermore." When the lads heard that,
+they wept, for bitterly they rued their folly in not going to fetch the
+fire for To Konokonomiange.[82]
+
+[Sidenote: Nias story of immortality, the crab, and death. Arawak and
+Tamanachier stories of immortality, the serpent, the lizard, the beetle,
+and death.]
+
+Other peoples tell somewhat different stories to explain how men missed
+the boon of immortality and serpents acquired it. Thus the natives of
+Nias, an island off the coast of Sumatra, say that, when the earth was
+created, a certain being was sent down by God from heaven to put the
+last touches to the work of creation. He should have fasted for a month,
+but unable to withstand the pangs of hunger he ate some bananas. The
+choice of food was most unlucky, for had he only eaten river-crabs
+instead of bananas men would have cast their skins like crabs and would
+never have died.[83] The Arawaks of British Guiana relate that once upon
+a time the Creator came down to earth to see how his creature man was
+getting on. But men were so wicked that they tried to kill him so he
+deprived them of eternal life and bestowed it on the animals which renew
+their skin, such as serpents, lizards, and beetles.[84] A somewhat
+different version of the story is told by the Tamanachiers, an Indian
+tribe of the Orinoco. They say that after residing among them for some
+time the Creator took boat to cross to the other side of the great salt
+water from which he had come. Just as he was shoving off from the shore,
+he called out to them in a changed voice, "You will change your skins,"
+by which he meant to say, "You will renew your youth like the serpents
+and the beetles." But unfortunately an old woman, hearing these words,
+cried out "Oh!" in a tone of scepticism, if not of sarcasm, which so
+annoyed the Creator that he changed his tune at once and said testily,
+"Ye shall die." That is why we are all mortal.[85]
+
+[Sidenote: Melanesian story of the old woman who renewed her youth by
+casting her skin.]
+
+The natives of the Banks' Islands and the New Hebrides believe that
+there was a time in the beginning of things when men never died but cast
+their skins like snakes and crabs and so renewed their youth. But the
+unhappy change to mortality came about at last, as it so often does in
+these stories, through an old woman. Having grown old, this dame went to
+a stream to change her skin, and change it she did, for she stripped off
+her wizened old hide, cast it upon the waters, and watched it floating
+down stream till it caught on a stick. Then she went home a buxom young
+woman. But the child whom she had left at home did not know her and set
+up such a prodigious squalling that to quiet it the woman went straight
+back to the river, fished out her cast-off old skin, and put it on
+again. From that day to this people have ceased to cast their skins and
+to live for ever.[86] The same legend of the origin of death has been
+recorded in the Shortlands Islands[87] and among the Kai of German New
+Guinea.[88] It is also told with some variations by the natives of the
+Admiralty Islands. They say that once on a time there was an old woman
+and she was frail. She had two sons, and they went a-fishing, and she
+herself went to bathe. She stripped off her wrinkled old skin and came
+forth as young as she had been long ago. Her sons came home from the
+fishing, and very much astonished were they to see her. The one said,
+"It is our mother," but the other said, "She may be your mother, but she
+shall be my wife." Their mother heard them and said, "What were you two
+saying?" The two said, "Nothing! We only said that you are our mother."
+"You are liars," said she, "I heard you both. If I had had my way, we
+should have grown to be old men and women, and then we should have cast
+our skin and been young men and young women. But you have had your way.
+We shall grow old men and old women and then we shall die." With that
+she fetched her old skin, and put it on, and became an old woman again.
+As for us, her descendants, we grow up and we grow old. And if it had
+not been for those two young men there would have been no end of our
+days, we should have lived for ever and ever.[89]
+
+[Sidenote: Samoan story of the shellfish, two torches, and death.]
+
+The Samoans tell how the gods held a council to decide what was to be
+done with men. One of them said, "Bring men and let them cast their
+skin; and when they die, let them be turned to shellfish or to a
+coco-nut leaf torch, which when shaken in the wind blazes out again."
+But another god called Palsy (_Supa_) rose up and said, "Bring men and
+let them be like the candle-nut torch, which when it is once out cannot
+be blown up again. Let the shellfish change their skin, but let men
+die." While they were debating, a heavy rain came on and broke up the
+meeting. As the gods ran for shelter to their houses, they cried, "Let
+it be according to the counsel of Palsy! Let it be according to the
+counsel of Palsy!" So men died, but shellfish cast their skins.[90]
+
+[Sidenote: IV. The Banana Story. Poso story of immortality, the stone,
+the banana, and death. Mentra story of immortality, the banana, and
+death.]
+
+The last type of tales of the origin of death which I shall notice is
+the one which I have called the Banana type. We have already seen that
+according to the natives of Nias human mortality is all due to eating
+bananas instead of crabs.[91] A similar opinion is entertained by other
+people in that region of the world. Thus the natives of Poso, a district
+of Central Celebes, say that in the beginning the sky was very near the
+earth, and that the Creator, who lived in it, used to let down his good
+gifts to men at the end of a rope. One day he thus lowered a stone; but
+our first father and mother would have none of it and they called out to
+their Maker, "What have we to do with this stone? Give us something
+else." The Creator complied and hauled away at the rope; the stone
+mounted up and up till it vanished from sight. Presently the rope was
+seen coming down from heaven again, and this time there was a banana at
+the end of it instead of a stone. Our first parents ran at the banana
+and took it. Then there came a voice from heaven, saying: "Because ye
+have chosen the banana, your life shall be like its life. When the
+banana-tree has offspring, the parent stem dies; so shall ye die and
+your children shall step into your place. Had ye chosen the stone, your
+life would have been like the life of the stone changeless and
+immortal." The man and his wife mourned over their fatal choice, but it
+was too late; that is how through the eating of a banana death came into
+the world.[92] The Mentras or Mantras, a shy tribe of savages in the
+jungles of the Malay Peninsula, allege that in the early days of the
+world men did not die, but only grew thin at the waning of the moon and
+then waxed fat again as she waxed to the full. Thus there was no check
+whatever on the population, which increased to a truly alarming extent.
+So a son of the first man brought this state of things to his father's
+notice and asked him what was to be done. The first man said, "Leave
+things as they are"; but his younger brother, who took a more Malthusian
+view of the situation, said, "No, let men die like the banana, leaving
+their offspring behind." The question was submitted to the Lord of the
+Underworld, and he decided in favour of death. Ever since then men have
+ceased to renew their youth like the moon and have died like the
+banana.[93]
+
+[Sidenote: Primitive philosophy in the stories of the origin of death.]
+
+Thus the three stories of the origin of death which I have called the
+Moon type, the Serpent type, and the Banana type appear to be products
+of a primitive philosophy which sees a cheerful emblem of immortality in
+the waxing and waning moon and in the cast skins of serpents, but a sad
+emblem of mortality in the banana-tree, which perishes as soon as it has
+produced its fruit. But, as I have already said, these types of stories
+do not exhaust the theories or fancies of primitive man on the question
+how death came into the world. I will conclude this part of my subject
+with some myths which do not fall under any of the preceding heads.
+
+[Sidenote: Bahnar story of immortality, the tree, and death. Rivalry for
+the boon of immortality between men and animals that cast their skins,
+such as serpents and lizards.]
+
+The Bahnars of eastern Cochinchina say that in the beginning when people
+died they used to be buried at the foot of a tree called Long Blo, and
+that after a time they always rose from the dead, not as infants but as
+full-grown men and women. So the earth was peopled very fast, and all
+the inhabitants formed but one great town under the presidency of our
+first parents. In time men multiplied to such an extent that a certain
+lizard could not take his walks abroad without somebody treading on his
+tail. This vexed him, and the wily creature gave an insidious hint to
+the gravediggers. "Why bury the dead at the foot of the Long Blo tree?"
+said he; "bury them at the foot of Long Khung, and they will not come to
+life again. Let them die outright and be done with it." The hint was
+taken, and from that day the dead have not come to life again.[94] In
+this story there are several points to be noticed. In the first place
+the tree Long Blo would seem to have been a tree of life, since all the
+dead who were buried at its foot came to life again. In the second place
+the lizard is here, as in so many African tales, the instrument of
+bringing death among men. Why was that so? We may conjecture that the
+reason is that the lizard like the serpent casts its skin periodically,
+from which primitive man might infer, as he infers with regard to
+serpents, that the creature renews its youth and lives for ever. Thus
+all the myths which relate how a lizard or a serpent became the
+maleficent agent of human mortality may perhaps be referred to an old
+idea of a certain jealousy and rivalry between men and all creatures
+which cast their skin, notably serpents and lizards; we may suppose that
+in all such cases a story was told of a contest between man and his
+animal rivals for the possession of immortality, a contest in which,
+whether by mistake or by guile, the victory always remained with the
+animals, who thus became immortal, while mankind was doomed to
+mortality.
+
+[Sidenote: Chingpaw story of the origin of death. Australian story of
+the tree, the bat, and death. Fijian story of the origin of death.]
+
+The Chingpaws of Upper Burma say that death originated in a practical
+joke played by an old man who pretended to be dead in the ancient days
+when nobody really died. But the Lord of the Sun, who held the threads
+of all human lives in his hand, detected the fraud and in anger cut
+short the thread of life of the practical joker. Since then everybody
+else has died; the door for death to enter into the world was opened by
+the folly of that silly, though humorous, old man.[95] The natives about
+the Murray River in Australia used to relate how the first man and woman
+were forbidden to go near a tree in which a bat lived, lest they should
+disturb the creature. One day, however, the woman was gathering firewood
+and she went near the tree. The bat flew away, and after that death came
+into the world.[96] Some of the Fijians accounted for human mortality as
+follows. When the first man, the father of the human race, was being
+buried, a god passed by the grave and asked what it meant, for he had
+never seen a grave before. On learning from the bystanders that they had
+just buried their father, "Do not bury him," said he, "dig the body up
+again." "No," said they, "we cannot do that. He has been dead four days
+and stinks." "Not so," pleaded the god; "dig him up, and I promise you
+that he will live again." Heedless of the divine promise, these
+primitive sextons persisted in leaving their dead father in the grave.
+Then said the god to these wicked men, "By disobeying me you have sealed
+your own fate. Had you dug up your ancestor, you would have found him
+alive, and you yourselves, when you passed from this world, should have
+been buried, as bananas are, for the space of four days, after which you
+should have been dug up, not rotten, but ripe. But now, as a punishment
+for your disobedience, you shall die and rot." And still, when they hear
+this sad tale told, the Fijians say, "O that those children had dug up
+that body!"[97]
+
+[Sidenote: Admiralty Islanders' stories of the origin of death.]
+
+The Admiralty Islanders tell various stories to explain why man is
+mortal. One of them has already been related. Here is another. A Souh
+man went once to catch fish. A devil tried to devour him, but he fled
+into the forest and took refuge in a tree. The tree kindly closed on him
+so that the devil could not see him. When the devil was gone, the tree
+opened up and the man clambered down to the ground. Then said the tree
+to him, "Go to Souh and bring me two white pigs." He went and found two
+pigs, one was white and one was black. He took chalk and chalked the
+black pig so that it was white. Then he brought them to the tree, but on
+the way the chalk fell off the black pig. And when the tree saw the
+white pig and the black pig, he chid the man and said, "You are
+thankless. I was good to you. An evil will overtake you; you will die.
+The devil will fall upon you, and you will die." So it has been with us
+as it was with the man of Souh. An evil overtakes us or a spirit falls
+upon us, and we die. If it had been as the tree said, we should not have
+died.[98] Another story told by the Admiralty Islanders to account for
+the melancholy truth of man's mortality runs thus. Kosi, the chief of
+Moakareng, was in his house. He was hungry. He said to his two sons, "Go
+and climb the breadfruit trees and bring the fruit, that we may eat them
+together and not die." But they would not. So he went himself and
+climbed the breadfruit tree. But the north-west wind blew a storm, it
+blew and threw him down. He fell and his body died, but his ghost went
+home. He went and sat in his house. He tied up his hair and he painted
+his face with red ochre. Now his wife and his two sons had gone after
+him into the wood. They went to fetch home the breadfruits. They came
+and saw Kosi, and he was dead. The three returned home, and there they
+saw the ghost of Kosi sitting in his house. They said, "You there! Who's
+that dead at the foot of the breadfruit tree? Kosi, he is dead at the
+foot of the breadfruit tree." Kosi, he said, "Here am I. I did not fall.
+Perhaps somebody else fell down. I did not. Here I am." "You're a liar,"
+said they. "I ain't," said he. "Come," said they, "we'll go and see."
+They went. Kosi, he jumped into his body. He died. They buried him. If
+his wife had behaved well, we should not die. Our body would die, but
+our ghost would go about always in the old home.[99]
+
+[Sidenote: Stories of the origin of death: the fatal bundle or the fatal
+box.]
+
+The Wemba of Northern Rhodesia relate how God in the beginning created a
+man and a woman and gave them two bundles; in one of them was life and
+in the other death. Most unfortunately the man chose "the little bundle
+of death."[100] The Cherokee Indians of North America say that a number
+of beings were engaged in the work of creation. The Sun was made first.
+Now the creators intended that men should live for ever. But when the
+Sun passed over them in the sky, he told the people that there was not
+room enough for them all and that they had better die. At last the Sun's
+own daughter, who was with the people on earth, was bitten by a snake
+and died. Then the Sun repented him and said that men might live always;
+and he bade them take a box and go fetch his daughter's spirit in the
+box and bring it to her body, that she might live. But he charged them
+straitly not to open the box until they arrived at the dead body.
+However, moved by curiosity, they unhappily opened the box too soon;
+away flew the spirit, and all men have died ever since.[101] Some of the
+North American Indians informed the early Jesuit missionaries that a
+certain man had received the gift of immortality in a small packet from
+a famous magician named Messou, who repaired the world after it had been
+seriously damaged by a great flood. In bestowing on the man this
+valuable gift the magician strictly enjoined him on no account to open
+the packet. The man obeyed, and so long as the packet was unopened he
+remained immortal. But his wife was both curious and incredulous; she
+opened the packet to see what was in it, the precious contents flew
+away, and mankind has been subject to death ever since.[102]
+
+[Sidenote: Baganda story how death came into the world through the
+forgetfulness and imprudence of a woman.]
+
+As these American Indians tell how death came through the curiosity and
+incredulity of one woman, the Baganda of Central Africa relate how it
+came through the forgetfulness and imprudence of another. According to
+the Baganda the first man who came to earth in Uganda was named Kintu.
+He brought with him one cow and lived on its milk, for he had no other
+food. But in time a woman named Nambi, a daughter of Gulu, the king of
+heaven, came down to earth with her brother or sister, and seeing Kintu
+she fell in love with him and wished to have him for her husband. But
+her proud father doubted whether Kintu was worthy of his daughter's
+hand, and accordingly he insisted on testing his future son-in-law
+before he would consent to the marriage. So he carried off Kintu's cow
+and put it among his own herds in heaven. When Kintu found that the cow
+was stolen, he was in a great rage, but hunger getting the better of
+anger, he made shift to live by peeling the bark of trees and gathering
+herbs and leaves, which he cooked and ate. In time his future wife Nambi
+happened to spy the stolen cow among her father's herds and she told
+Kintu, who came to heaven to seek and recover the lost animal. His
+future father-in-law Gulu, Lord of Heaven, obliged him to submit to many
+tests designed to prove his fitness for marriage with the daughter of so
+exalted a being as the Lord of Heaven. All these tests Kintu
+successfully passed through. At last Gulu was satisfied, gave him his
+daughter Nambi to wife, and allowed him to return to earth with her.
+
+[Sidenote: The coming of Death.]
+
+But Nambi had a brother and his name was Death (_Walumbe_). So before
+the Lord of Heaven sent her away with her husband he called them both to
+him and said, "You must hurry away before Death comes, or he will wish
+to go with you. You must not let him do so, for he would only cause you
+trouble and unhappiness." To this his daughter agreed, and she went to
+pack up her things. She and her husband then took leave of the Lord of
+Heaven, who gave them at parting a piece of advice. "Be sure," said he,
+"if you have forgotten anything, not to come back for it; because, if
+you do, Death will wish to go with you, and you must go without him." So
+off they set, the man and his wife, taking with them his cow and its
+calves, also a sheep, a goat, a fowl, and a banana tree. But on the way
+the woman remembered that she had forgotten the grain to feed the fowl,
+so she said to her husband, "I must go back for the grain to feed the
+fowl, or it will die." Her husband tried to dissuade her, but in vain.
+She said, "I will hurry back and get it without any one seeing me." So
+back she went in an evil hour and said to her father the Lord of Heaven,
+"I have forgotten the grain for the fowl and I am come back to fetch it
+from the doorway where I put it." Her father said sadly, "Did I not tell
+you that you were not to return if you had forgotten anything, because
+your brother Death would wish to go with you? Now he will accompany
+you." The woman fled, but Death saw her and followed hard after her.
+When she rejoined her husband, he was angry, for he saw Death and said,
+"Why have you brought your brother with you? Who can live with him?"
+
+[Sidenote: The importunity of Death.]
+
+When they reached the earth, Nambi planted her garden, and the bananas
+sprang up quickly and formed a grove. They lived happily for a time till
+one day Death came and asked for one of their daughters, that she might
+go away with him and be his cook. But the father said, "If the Lord of
+Heaven comes and asks me for one of my children, what am I to say? Shall
+I tell him that I have given her to you to be your cook?" Death was
+silent and went away. But he came back another day and asked again for a
+child to be his cook. When the father again refused, Death said, "I will
+kill your children." The father did not know what that meant, so he
+asked Death, "What is that you will do?" However, in a short time one of
+the children fell ill and died, and then another and another. So the man
+went to the Lord of Heaven and complained that Death was taking away his
+children one by one. The Lord of Heaven said, "Did I not tell you, when
+you were going away, to go at once with your wife and not to return if
+you had forgotten anything, but you let your wife return to fetch the
+grain? Now you have Death living with you. If you had obeyed me, you
+would have been free from him and not lost any of your children."
+
+[Sidenote: The hunt for Death.]
+
+However, the man pleaded with him, and the Lord Heaven at last consented
+to send Death's brother Kaikuzi to help the woman and to prevent Death
+from killing her children. So down came Kaikuzi to earth, and when he
+met his brother Death they greeted each other lovingly. Then Kaikuzi
+told Death that he had come to fetch him away from earth to heaven.
+Death was willing to go, but he said, "Let us take our sister too."
+"Nay," said his brother, "that cannot be, for she is a wife and must
+stay with her husband." The dispute waxed warm, Death insisting on
+carrying off his sister, and his brother refusing to allow him to do so.
+At last the brother angrily ordered Death to do as he was bid, and so
+saying he made as though he would seize him. But Death slipped from
+between his hands and fled into the earth. For a long time after that
+there was enmity between the two brothers. Kaikuzi tried in every way to
+catch Death, but Death always escaped. At last Kaikuzi told the people
+that he would have one final hunt for Death, and while the hunt was
+going on they must all stay in their houses; not a man, a woman, a
+child, nor even an animal was to be allowed to pass the threshold; and
+if they saw Death passing the window, they were not to utter a cry of
+terror but to keep still. Well, for some days his orders were obeyed.
+Not a living soul, not an animal, stirred abroad. All without was
+solitude, all within was silence. Encouraged by the universal stillness
+Death emerged from his lair, and his brother was just about to catch
+him, when some children, who had ventured out to herd their goats, saw
+Death and cried out. Death's good brother rushed to the spot and asked
+them why they had cried out. They said, "Because we saw Death." So his
+brother was angry because Death had again made good his escape into the
+earth, and he went to the first man and told him that he was weary of
+hunting Death and wished to return home to heaven. The first man thanked
+him kindly for all he had done, and said, "I fear there is nothing more
+to be done. We must only hope that Death will not kill all the people."
+It was a vain hope. Since then Death has lived on earth and killed
+everybody who is born into the world; and always, after the deed of
+murder is done, he escapes into the earth at Tanda in Singo.[103]
+
+[Sidenote: In the preceding story Death is distinctly personified. Death
+personified in a West African story of the origin of death. Death and
+the spider and the spider's daughter.]
+
+If this curious tale of the origin of death reveals no very deep
+philosophy, it is at least interesting for the distinctness with which
+Death is conceived as a personal being, the son of the Lord of Heaven,
+the brother of the first man's wife. In this personification of Death
+the story differs from all the others which we have examined and marks
+an intellectual advance upon them; since the power of picturing abstract
+ideas to the mind with all the sharpness of outline and vividness of
+colour which are implied by personification is a faculty above the reach
+of very low intelligences. It is not surprising that the Baganda should
+have attained to this power, for they are probably the most highly
+cultured and intellectual of all the many Bantu tribes of Africa. The
+same conception of Death as a person occurs in a story of the origin of
+death which is told by the Hos, a negro tribe in Togoland, a district of
+West Africa. These Hos belong to the Ewe-speaking family of the true
+negroes, who have reached a comparatively high level of barbarism in the
+notorious kingdom of Dahomey. The story which the Hos tell as to the
+origin of death is as follows. Once upon a time there was a great famine
+in which even the hunters could find no flesh to eat. Then Death went
+and made a road as broad as from here to Sokode, and there he set many
+snares. Every animal that tried to pass that way fell into a snare. So
+Death had much flesh to eat. One day the Spider came to Death and said
+to him, "You have so much meat!" and she asked if she might have some to
+take home with her. Death gave her leave. So the Spider made a basket as
+long as from Ho to Akoviewe (a distance of about five miles), crammed it
+full of meat, and dragged it home. In return for this bounty the Spider
+gave Death her daughter Yiyisa to wife. So when Death had her for his
+wife, he gave her a hint. He said, "Don't walk on the broad road which I
+have made. Walk on the footpath which I have not made. When you go to
+the water, be sure to take none but the narrow way through the wood."
+Well, some time afterwards it had rained a little; the grass was wet,
+and Yiyisa wished to go to the watering-place. When she tried to walk on
+the narrow path through the forest, the tall damp grass wet her through
+and through, so she thought to herself, "In future I will only go on the
+broad road." But scarce had she set foot on the beautiful broad road
+when she fell into a snare and died on the spot. When Death came to the
+snare and saw his wife in it dead, he cut her up into bits and toasted
+them on the fire. One day the Spider paid a visit to her son-in-law
+Death, and he set a good meal before her. When she had eaten and drunk
+her fill and had got up to go home, she asked Death after her daughter.
+"If you take that meat from the fire," said Death, "you will see her."
+So the Spider took the flesh from the fire and there, sure enough, she
+found her dead daughter. Then she went home in great wrath and whetted
+her knife till it was so sharp that a fly lighting on the edge was cut
+in two. With that knife she came back to attack Death. But Death shot an
+arrow at her. She dodged it, and the arrow whizzed past her and set all
+the forest on fire. Then the Spider flung her sharp knife at Death, but
+it missed him and only sliced off the tops of the palms and all the
+other trees of the wood. Seeing that her stroke had failed, the Spider
+fled away home and shut herself up in her house. But Death waited for
+her on the edge of the town to kill her as soon as she ventured out.
+Next morning some women came out of the town to draw water at the
+watering-place, and as they went they talked with one another. But Death
+shot an arrow among them and killed several. The rest ran away home
+and said, "So and so is dead." Then Death came and looked at the bodies
+and said, "That is my game. I need go no more into the wood to hunt."
+That is how Death came into the world. If the Spider had not done what
+she did, nobody would ever have died.[104]
+
+[Sidenote: Death personified in a Melanesian story of the origin of
+death.]
+
+Again, the Melanesians of the Banks Islands tell a story of the origin
+of Death, in which that grim power is personified. They say that Death
+(_Mate_) used to live underground in a shadowy realm called Panoi, while
+men on earth changed their skins like serpents and so renewing their
+youth lived for ever. But a practical inconvenience of immortality was
+that property never changed hands; newcomers had no chance, everything
+was monopolised by the old, old stagers. To remedy this state of things
+and secure a more equitable distribution of property Death was induced
+to emerge from the lower world and to appear on earth among men; he came
+relying on an assurance that no harm would be done him. Well, when they
+had him, they laid him out on a board, covered him with a pall as if he
+were a corpse, and then proceeded with great gusto to divide his
+property and eat the funeral feast. On the fifth day they blew the conch
+shell to drive away the ghost, as usual, and lifted the pall to see what
+had become of Death. But there was no Death there; he had absconded
+leaving only his skeleton behind. They naturally feared that he had made
+off with an intention to return to his home underground, which would
+have been a great calamity; for if there were no Death on earth, how
+could men die and how could other people inherit their property? The
+idea was intolerable; so to cut off the retreat of the fugitive, the
+Fool was set to do sentinel duty at the parting of the ways, where one
+road leads down to the underworld, Death's home, and the other leads up
+to the upper world, the abode of the living. Here accordingly the Fool
+was stationed with strict orders to keep his eye on Death if he should
+attempt to sneak past him and return to the nether world. However, the
+Fool, like a fool as he was, sat watching the road to the upper world,
+and Death slipped behind him and so made good his retreat. Since then
+all men have followed Death down that fatal path.[105]
+
+[Sidenote: Thus according to savages death is not a necessary part of
+the order of nature. A similar view is held by some eminent modern
+biologists.]
+
+So much for savage stories of the origin of death. They all imply a
+belief that death is not a necessary part of the order of nature, but
+that it originated in a pure mistake or misdeed of some sort on
+somebody's part, and that we should all have lived happy and immortal if
+it had not been for that disastrous blunder or crime. Thus the tales
+reflect the same frame of mind which I illustrated in the last lecture,
+when I shewed that many savages still to this day believe all men to be
+naturally immortal and death to be nothing but an effect of sorcery. In
+short, whether we regard the savage's attitude to death at the present
+day or his ideas as to its origin in the remote past, we must conclude
+that primitive man cannot reconcile himself to the notion of death as a
+natural and necessary event; he persists in regarding it as an
+accidental and unnecessary disturbance of the proper order of nature. To
+a certain extent, perhaps, in these crude speculations he has
+anticipated certain views of modern biology. Thus it has been maintained
+by Professor August Weissmann that death is not a natural necessity,
+that many of the lowest species of living animals do in fact live for
+ever; and that in the higher animals the custom of dying has been
+introduced in the course of evolution for the purpose of thinning the
+population and preventing the degeneration of the species, which would
+otherwise follow through the gradual and necessary deterioration of the
+immortal individuals, who, though they could not die, might yet sustain
+much bodily damage through hard knocks in the hurly-burly of eternal
+existence on earth.
+
+[Sidenote: Weissmann's view that death is not a natural necessity but an
+adaptation acquired in the course of evolution for the advantage of the
+race.]
+
+On this subject I will quote some sentences from Professor Weissmann's
+essay on the duration of life. He says, "The necessity of death has been
+hitherto explained as due to causes which are inherent in organic
+nature, and not to the fact that it may be advantageous. I do not
+however believe in the validity of this explanation; I consider that
+death is not a primary necessity, but that it has been secondarily
+acquired as an adaptation. I believe that life is endowed with a fixed
+duration, not because it is contrary to its nature to be unlimited, but
+because the unlimited existence of individuals would be a luxury without
+any corresponding advantage. The above-mentioned hypothesis upon the
+origin and necessity of death leads me to believe that the organism did
+not finally cease to renew the worn-out cell material because the nature
+of the cells did not permit them to multiply indefinitely, but because
+the power of multiplying indefinitely was lost when it ceased to be of
+use.... John Hunter, supported by his experiments on _anabiosis_, hoped
+to prolong the life of man indefinitely by alternate freezing and
+thawing; and the Veronese Colonel Aless. Guaguino made his
+contemporaries believe that a race of men existed in Russia, of which
+the individuals died regularly every year on the 27th of November, and
+returned to life on the 24th of the following April. There cannot
+however be the least doubt, that the higher organisms, as they are now
+constructed, contain within themselves the germs of death. The question
+however arises as to how this has come to pass; and I reply that death
+is to be looked upon as an occurrence which is advantageous to the
+species as a concession to the outer conditions of life, and not as an
+absolute necessity, essentially inherent in life itself. Death, that is
+the end of life, is by no means, as is usually assumed, an attribute of
+all organisms. An immense number of low organisms do not die, although
+they are easily destroyed, being killed by heat, poisons, etc. As long,
+however, as those conditions which are necessary for their life are
+fulfilled, they continue to live, and they thus carry the potentiality
+of unending life in themselves. I am speaking not only of the Amoebae
+and the low unicellular Algae, but also of far more highly organized
+unicellular animals, such as the Infusoria."[106]
+
+[Sidenote: Similar view expressed by Alfred Russel Wallace.]
+
+A similar suggestion that death is not a natural necessity but an
+innovation introduced for the good of the breed, has been made by our
+eminent English biologist, Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace. He says: "If
+individuals did not die they would soon multiply inordinately and would
+interfere with each other's healthy existence. Food would become scarce,
+and hence the larger individuals would probably decompose or diminish in
+size. The deficiency of nourishment would lead to parts of the organism
+not being renewed; they would become fixed, and liable to more or less
+slow decomposition as dead parts within a living body. The smaller
+organisms would have a better chance of finding food, the larger ones
+less chance. That one which gave off several small portions to form each
+a new organism would have a better chance of leaving descendants like
+itself than one which divided equally or gave off a large part of
+itself. Hence it would happen that those which gave off very small
+portions would probably soon after cease to maintain their own existence
+while they would leave a numerous offspring. This state of things would
+be in any case for the advantage of the race, and would therefore, by
+natural selection, soon become established as the regular course of
+things, and thus we have the origin of _old age, decay, and death_; for
+it is evident that when one or more individuals have provided a
+sufficient number of successors they themselves, as consumers of
+nourishment in a constantly increasing degree, are an injury to their
+successors. Natural selection therefore weeds them out, and in many
+cases favours such races as die almost immediately after they have left
+successors. Many moths and other insects are in this condition, living
+only to propagate their kind and then immediately dying, some not even
+taking any food in the perfect and reproductive state."[107]
+
+[Sidenote: Savages and some men of science agree that death is not a
+natural necessity.]
+
+Thus it appears that two of the most eminent biologists of our time
+agree with savages in thinking that death is by no means a natural
+necessity for all living beings. They only differ from savages in this,
+that whereas savages look upon death as the result of a deplorable
+accident, our men of science regard it as a beneficent reform instituted
+by nature as a means of adjusting the numbers of living beings to the
+quantity of the food supply, and so tending to the improvement and
+therefore on the whole to the happiness of the species.
+
+[Footnote 57: H. Callaway, _The Religious System of the Amazulu_, Part
+i. pp. 1, 3 _sq._, Part ii. p. 138; Rev. L. Grout, _Zululand, or Life
+among the Zulu-Kafirs_ (Philadelphia, N.D.), pp. 148 _sq._; Dudley Kidd,
+_The Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), pp. 76 _sq._ Compare A. F.
+Gardiner, _Narrative of a Journey to the Zoolu Country_ (London, 1836),
+pp. 178 _sq._, T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, _Relation d'un voyage
+d'Exploration au Nord-Est de la Colonie du Cap de Bonne-Esperance_
+(Paris, 1842), p. 472; Rev. J. Shooter, _The Kafirs of Natal and the
+Zulu Country_ (London, 1857), p. 159; W. H. I. Bleek, _Reynard the Fox in
+South Africa_ (London, 1864), p. 74; D. Leslie, _Among the Zulus and
+Amatongas_, Second Edition (Edinburgh, 1875), p. 209; F. Speckmann, _Die
+Hermannsburger Mission in Afrika_ (Hermannsburg, 1876), p. 164.]
+
+[Footnote 58: J. Chapman, _Travels in the Interior of South Africa_
+(London, 1868), i. 47.]
+
+[Footnote 59: E. Casalis, _The Basutos_ (London, 1861), p. 242; E.
+Jacottet, _The Treasury of Ba-suto Lore_, i. (Morija, Basutoland, 1908),
+pp. 46 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 60: H. A. Junod, _Les Ba-Ronga_ Neuchatel (1898), pp. 401
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 61: W. A. Elmslie, _Among the Wild Ngoni_ (Edinburgh and
+London, 1899), p. 70.]
+
+[Footnote 62: H. A. Junod and W. A. Elmslie, _ll.cc._]
+
+[Footnote 63: C. W. Hobley, _Ethnology of A-Kamba and other East African
+Tribes_ (Cambridge, 1910), pp. 107-109.]
+
+[Footnote 64: Fr. Mueller, "Die Religionen Togos in Einzeldarstellungen,"
+_Anthropos_, ii. (1907) p. 203. In a version of the story reported from
+Calabar a sheep appears as the messenger of mortality, while a dog is
+the messenger of immortality or rather of resurrection. See "Calabar
+Stories," _Journal of the African Society_, No. 18 (January 1906), p.
+194.]
+
+[Footnote 65: E. Perregaux, _Chez les Achanti_ (Neuchatel, 1906), pp.
+198 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 66: E. Perregaux, _op. cit._ p. 199.]
+
+[Footnote 67: Sir J. E. Alexander, _Expedition of Discovery into the
+Interior of Africa_ (London, 1838), i. 169; C. J. Andersson, _Lake
+Ngami_, Second Edition (London, 1856), pp. 328 _sq._; W. H. I. Bleek,
+_Reynard the Fox in South Africa_ (London, 1864), pp. 71-73; Th. Hahn,
+_Tsuni-Goam, the Supreme Being of the Khoi-Khoi_ (London, 1881), p. 52.]
+
+[Footnote 68: W. H. I. Bleek, _A Brief Account of Bushman Folk-lore_
+(London, 1875), pp. 9 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 69: W. H. I. Bleek, _Reynard the Fox in South Africa_, pp. 69
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 70: A. C. Hollis, _The Masai_ (Oxford, 1905), pp. 271 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 71: A. C. Hollis, _The Nandi_ (Oxford, 1909), p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 72: Captain W. E. H. Barrett, "Notes on the Customs and
+Beliefs of the Wa-Giriama, etc., British East Africa," _Journal of the
+R. Anthropological Institute_, xli. (1911) p. 37.]
+
+[Footnote 73: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 74: _Lettres Edifiantes et Curieuses_, Nouvelle Edition, xv.
+(Paris, 1781) pp. 305 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 75: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_
+(London, 1904), pp. 428 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 76: Antoine Cabaton, _Nouvelles Recherches sur les Chams_
+(Paris, 1901), pp. 18 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 77: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Northern Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1904), pp. 513 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 78: Father G. Boscana, "Chinigchinich," in _Life in
+California, by an American_ [A. Robinson] (New York, 1846), pp. 298
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 79: Merolla, "Voyage to Congo," in J. Pinkerton's _Voyages and
+Travels_, xvi. (London, 1814) p. 273.]
+
+[Footnote 80: P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Kuestenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Muenster, N.D.), p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 81: A. Landes, "Contes et Legendes Annamites," _Cochinchine
+francaise, Excursions et Reconnaissances_, No. 25 (Saigon, 1886), pp.
+108 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 82: Otto Meyer, "Mythen und Erzaehlungen von der Insel Vuatom
+(Bismarck-Archipel, Suedsee)," _Anthropos_, v. (1910) p. 724.]
+
+[Footnote 83: H. Sundermann, "Die Insel Nias und die Mission daselbst,"
+_Allgemeine Missions-Zeitschrift_, xi. (1884) p. 451; E. Modigliani, _Un
+Viaggio a Nias_ (Milan, 1890), p. 295.]
+
+[Footnote 84: R. Schomburgk, _Reisen in Britisch-Guiana_ (Leipsig,
+1847-1848), ii. 319.]
+
+[Footnote 85: R. Schomburgk, _op. cit._ ii. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 86: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), p.
+265; W. Gray, "Some Notes on the Tannese," _Internationales Archiv fuer
+Ethnographie_, vii. (1894) p. 232.]
+
+[Footnote 87: C. Ribbe, _Zwei Jahre unter den Kannibalen der
+Salomo-Inseln_ (Dresden-Blasowitz, 1903), p. 148.]
+
+[Footnote 88: Ch. Keysser, "Aus dem Leben der Kaileute," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_ (Berlin, 1911), iii. 161 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 89: Josef Meier, "Mythen und Sagen der Admiralitaetsinsulaner,"
+_Anthropos_, iii. (1908) p. 193.]
+
+[Footnote 90: George Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), p. 365; George Turner, LL.D., _Samoa_ (London, 1884), pp. 8
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 91: See above, p. 70.]
+
+[Footnote 92: A. C. Kruijt, "De legenden der Poso-Alfoeren aangaande de
+erste menschen," _Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche
+Zendelinggenootschap_, xxxviii. (1894) p. 340.]
+
+[Footnote 93: D. F. A. Hervey, "The Mentra Traditions," _Journal of the
+Straits Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society_, No. 10 (December 1882), p.
+190; W. W. Skeat and C. O. Blagden, _Pagan Races of the Malay Peninsula_
+(London, 1906), ii. 337 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 94: Guerlach, "Moeurs et Superstitions des sauvages Ba-hnars,"
+_Missions Catholiques_, xix. (1887) p. 479.]
+
+[Footnote 95: (Sir) J. G. Scott and J. P. Hardiman, _Gazetteer of Upper
+Burma and the Shan States_, Part i. vol. i. (Rangoon, 1900) pp. 408
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 96: R. Brough Smyth, _The Aborigines of Victoria_ (Melbourne
+and London, 1878), i. 428. On this narrative the author remarks: "This
+story appears to bear too close a resemblance to the Biblical account of
+the Fall. Is it genuine or not? Mr. Bulmer admits that it may have been
+invented by the aborigines after they had heard something of Scripture
+history."]
+
+[Footnote 97: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 204 _sq._ For another Fijian story of the origin of
+death, see above, p. 67.]
+
+[Footnote 98: Josef Meier, "Mythen und Sagen der Admiralitaetsinsulaner,"
+_Anthropos_, iii. (1908) p. 194.]
+
+[Footnote 99: Josef Meier, _op. cit._ pp. 194 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 100: C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _The Great Plateau of
+Northern Rhodesia_ (London, 1911), pp. 80 _sq._ A like tale is told by
+the Balolo of the Upper Congo. See _Folk-lore_, xii. (1901) p. 461; and
+below, p. 472.]
+
+[Footnote 101: J. Mooney, "Myths of the Cherokee," _Nineteenth Annual
+Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology_, Part i. (Washington, 1900)
+p. 436, quoting "the Payne manuscript, of date about 1835." Compare
+_id._, pp. 252-254, 436 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 102: _Relations des Jesuites_, 1634, p. 13 (Canadian reprint,
+Quebec, 1858).]
+
+[Footnote 103: Sir Harry Johnston, _The Uganda Protectorate_ (London,
+1904), ii. 700-705 (the story was taken down by Mr. J. F. Cunningham);
+Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 460-464. The story is
+briefly told by Mr. L. Decle, _Three Years in Savage Africa_ (London,
+1898), pp. 439 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 104: J. Spieth, _Die Ewe-Staemme_ (Berlin, 1906), pp. 590-593.]
+
+[Footnote 105: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp.
+265 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 106: A. Weissmann, _Essays upon Heredity and Kindred
+Biological Problems_, vol. i. (Oxford, 1891) pp. 25 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 107: A. R. Wallace, quoted in A. Weissmann's _Essays upon
+Heredity_, i. (Oxford, 1891) p. 24 note.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE IV
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES OF CENTRAL AUSTRALIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Proposed survey of the belief in immortality and the worship
+of the dead, as these are found among the various races of men,
+beginning with the lowest savages.]
+
+In previous lectures we have considered the ideas which savages in
+general entertain of death and its origin. To-day we begin our survey of
+the beliefs and practices of particular races in regard to the dead. I
+propose to deal separately with some of the principal races of men and
+to shew in detail how the belief in human immortality and the worship of
+the dead, to which that belief naturally gives rise, have formed a more
+or less important element of their religion. And in order to trace as
+far as possible the evolution of that worship in history I shall begin
+with the lowest savages about whom we possess accurate information, and
+shall pass from them to higher races until, if time permitted, we might
+come to the civilised nations of antiquity and of modern times. In this
+way, by comparing the ideas and practices of peoples on different planes
+of culture we may be able approximately to reconstruct or represent to
+ourselves with a fair degree of probability the various stages through
+which this particular phase of religion may be supposed to have passed
+in the great civilised races before the dawn of history. Of course all
+such reconstructions must be more or less conjectural. In the absence of
+historical documents that is inevitable; but our reconstruction will be
+more or less probable according to the degree in which the corresponding
+stages of evolution are found to resemble or differ from each other in
+the various races of men. If we find that tribes at approximately the
+same level of culture in different parts of the world have approximately
+the same religion, we may fairly infer that religion is in a sense a
+function of culture, and therefore that all races which have traversed
+the same stages of culture in the past have traversed also the same
+stages of religion; in short that, allowing for many minor variations,
+which flow inevitably from varying circumstances such as climate, soil,
+racial temperament, and so forth, the course of religious development
+has on the whole been uniform among mankind. This enquiry may be called
+the embryology of religion, in as much as it seeks to do for the
+development of religion what embryology in the strict sense of the word
+attempts to do for the development of life. And just as biology or the
+science of life naturally begins with the study of the lowest sorts of
+living beings, the humble protozoa, so we shall begin our enquiry with a
+study of the lowest savages of whom we possess a comparatively full and
+accurate record, namely, the aborigines of Australia.
+
+[Sidenote: Savagery a case not of degeneracy but of arrested or rather
+retarded development.]
+
+At the outset I would ask you to bear in mind that, so far as evidence
+allows us to judge, savagery in all its phases appears to be nothing but
+a case of arrested or rather retarded development. The old view that
+savages have degenerated from a higher level of culture, on which their
+forefathers once stood, is destitute alike of evidence and of
+probability. On the contrary, the information which we possess as to the
+lower races, meagre and fragmentary as it unfortunately is, all seems to
+point to the conclusion that on the whole even the most savage tribes
+have reached their low level of culture from one still lower, and that
+the upward movement, though so slow as to be almost imperceptible, has
+yet been real and steady up to the point where savagery has come into
+contact with civilisation. The moment of such contact is a critical one
+for the savages. If the intellectual, moral, and social interval which
+divides them from the civilised intruders exceeds a certain degree, then
+it appears that sooner or later the savages must inevitably perish; the
+shock of collision with a stronger race is too violent to be withstood,
+the weaker goes to the wall and is shattered. But if on the other hand
+the breach between the two conflicting races is not so wide as to be
+impassable, there is a hope that the weaker may assimilate enough of the
+higher culture of the other to survive. It was so, for example, with our
+barbarous forefathers in contact with the ancient civilisations of
+Greece and Rome; and it may be so in future with some, for example, of
+the black races of the present day in contact with European
+civilisation. Time will shew. But among the savages who cannot
+permanently survive the shock of collision with Europe may certainly be
+numbered the aborigines of Australia. They are rapidly dwindling and
+wasting away, and before very many years have passed it is probable that
+they will be extinct like the Tasmanians, who, so far as we can judge
+from the miserably imperfect records of them which we possess, appear to
+have been savages of an even lower type than the Australians, and
+therefore to have been still less able to survive in the struggle for
+existence with their vigorous European rivals.
+
+[Sidenote: Physical causes which have retarded progress in Australia.]
+
+The causes which have retarded progress in Australia and kept the
+aboriginal population at the lowest level of savagery appear to be
+mainly two; namely, first, the geographical isolation and comparatively
+small area of the continent, and, second, the barren and indeed desert
+nature of a great part of its surface; for the combined effect of these
+causes has been, by excluding foreign competitors and seriously
+restricting the number of competitors at home, to abate the rigour of
+competition and thereby to restrain the action of one of the most
+powerful influences which make for progress. In other words, elements of
+weakness have been allowed to linger on, which under the sterner
+conditions of life entailed by fierce competition would long ago have
+been eliminated and have made way for elements better adapted to the
+environment. What is true of the human inhabitants of Australia in this
+respect is true also of its fauna and flora. It has long been recognised
+that the animals and plants of Australia represent on the whole more
+archaic types of life than the animals and plants of the larger
+continents; and the reason why these antiquated creatures have survived
+there rather than elsewhere is mainly that, the area of competition
+being so much restricted through the causes I have mentioned, these
+comparatively weak forms of animal and vegetable life have not been
+killed off by stronger competitors. That this is the real cause appears
+to be proved by the rapidity with which many animals and plants
+introduced into Australia from Europe tend to overrun the country and to
+oust the old native fauna and flora.[108]
+
+[Sidenote: In the centre of Australia the natural conditions of life are
+most unfavourable; hence the central aborigines have remained in a more
+primitive state than those of the coasts, where food and water are more
+plentiful.]
+
+I have said that among the causes which have kept the aborigines of
+Australia at a very low level of savagery must be reckoned the desert
+nature of a great part of the country. Now it is the interior of the
+continent which is the most arid, waste, and barren. The coasts are
+comparatively fertile, for they are watered by showers condensed from an
+atmosphere which is charged with moisture by the neighbouring sea; and
+this condensation is greatly facilitated in the south-eastern and
+eastern parts of the continent by a high range of mountains which here
+skirts the coast for a long distance, attracting the moisture from the
+ocean and precipitating it in the form of snow and rain. Thus the
+vegetation and hence the supply of food both animal and vegetable in
+these well-watered portions of the continent are varied and plentiful.
+In striking contrast with the fertility and abundance of these favoured
+regions are the stony plains and bare rocky ranges of the interior,
+where water is scarce, vegetation scanty, and animal life at certain
+seasons of the year can only with difficulty be maintained. It would be
+no wonder if the natives of these arid sun-scorched wildernesses should
+have lagged behind even their savage brethren of the coasts in respect
+of material and social progress; and in fact there are many indications
+that they have done so, in other words, that the aborigines of the more
+fertile districts near the sea have made a greater advance towards
+civilisation than the tribes of the desert interior. This is the view of
+men who have studied the Australian savages most deeply at first hand,
+and, so far as I can judge of the matter without any such first-hand
+acquaintance, I entirely agree with their opinion. I have given my
+reasons elsewhere and shall not repeat them here. All that I wish to
+impress on you now is that in aboriginal Australia a movement of social
+and intellectual progress, slow but perceptible, appears to have been
+setting from the coast inwards, and that, so far as such things can be
+referred to physical causes, this particular movement in Australia would
+seem to have been initiated by the sea acting through an abundant
+rainfall and a consequent abundant supply of food.[109]
+
+[Sidenote: Backward state of the Central Australian aborigines. They
+have no idea of a moral supreme being.]
+
+Accordingly, in attempting to give you some account of the belief in
+immortality and the worship of the dead among the various races of
+mankind, I propose to begin with the natives of Central Australia,
+first, because the Australian aborigines are the most primitive savages
+about whom we have full and accurate information, and, second, because
+among these primitive savages the inhabitants of the central deserts are
+on the whole the most primitive. Like their brethren in the rest of the
+continent they were in their native condition absolutely ignorant of
+metals and of agriculture; they had no domestic animals except the dog,
+and they subsisted wholly by the products of the chase and the natural
+fruits, roots, and seeds, which the ground yielded without cultivation
+of any sort. In regard to their intellectual outlook upon the world,
+they were deeply imbued, as I shewed in a former lecture, with a belief
+in magic, but it can hardly be said that they possessed any religion in
+the strict sense of the word, by which I mean a propitiation of real or
+imaginary powers regarded as personal beings superior to man: certainly
+the Australian aborigines appear to have believed in no beings who
+deserve to be called gods. On this subject Messrs. Spencer and Gillen,
+our best authorities on these tribes, observe as follows: "The Central
+Australian natives--and this is true of the tribes extending from Lake
+Eyre in the south to the far north and eastwards across to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria--have no idea whatever of the existence of any supreme being
+who is pleased if they follow a certain line of what we call moral
+conduct and displeased if they do not do so. They have not the vaguest
+idea of a personal individual other than an actual living member of the
+tribe who approves or disapproves of their conduct, so far as anything
+like what we call morality is concerned. Any such idea as that of a
+future life of happiness or the reverse, as a reward for meritorious or
+as a punishment for blameworthy conduct, is quite foreign to them.... We
+know of no tribe in which there is a belief of any kind in a supreme
+being who rewards or punishes the individual according to his moral
+behaviour, using the word moral in the native sense."[110]
+
+[Sidenote: Central Australian theory that the souls of the dead survive
+and are afterwards reborn as infants.]
+
+But if the aborigines of Central Australia have no religion properly so
+called, they entertain beliefs and they observe practices out of which
+under favourable circumstances a religion might have been developed, if
+its evolution had not been arrested by the advent of Europeans. Among
+these elements of natural religion one of the most important is the
+theory which these savages hold as to the existence and nature of the
+dead. That theory is a very remarkable one. With a single exception,
+which I shall mention presently, they unanimously believe that death is
+not the end of all things for the individual, but that the human
+personality survives, apparently with little change, in the form of a
+spirit, which may afterwards be reborn as a child into the world. In
+fact they think that every living person without exception is the
+reincarnation of a dead person who lived on earth a longer or shorter
+time ago. This belief is held universally by the tribes which occupy an
+immense area of Australia from the centre northwards to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria.[111] The single exception to which I have referred is
+furnished by the Gnanji, a fierce and wild-looking tribe who eat their
+dead enemies and perhaps also their dead friends.[112] These savages
+deny that women have spirits which live after death; when a woman dies,
+that, they say, is the end of her. On the other hand, the spirit of a
+dead man, in their opinion, survives and goes to and fro on the earth
+visiting the places where his forefathers camped in days of old and
+destined to be born again of a woman at some future time, when the rains
+have fallen and bleached his bones.[113] But why these primitive
+philosophers should deny the privilege of immortality to women and
+reserve it exclusively for men, is not manifest. All other Central
+Australian tribes appear to admit the rights of women equally with the
+rights of men in a life beyond the grave.
+
+[Sidenote: Central Australian theory as to the state of the dead.
+Certain conspicuous features of the landscape supposed to be tenanted by
+the souls of the dead waiting to be born again.]
+
+With regard to the state of the souls of the dead in the intervals
+between their successive reincarnations, the opinions of the Central
+Australian savages are clear and definite. Most civilised races who
+believe in the immortality of the soul have found themselves compelled
+to confess that, however immortal the spirits of the departed may be,
+they do not present themselves commonly to our eyes or ears, nor meddle
+much with the affairs of the living; hence the survivors have for the
+most part inferred that the dead do not hover invisible in our midst,
+but that they dwell somewhere, far away, in the height of heaven, or in
+the depth of earth, or in Islands of the Blest beyond the sea where the
+sun goes down. Not so with the simple aborigines of Australia. They
+imagine that the spirits of the dead continue to haunt their native land
+and especially certain striking natural features of the landscape, it
+may be a pool of water in a deep gorge of the barren hills, or a
+solitary tree in the sun-baked plains, or a great rock that affords a
+welcome shade in the sultry noon. Such spots are thought to be tenanted
+by the souls of the departed waiting to be born again. There they lurk,
+constantly on the look-out for passing women into whom they may enter,
+and from whom in due time they may be born as infants. It matters not
+whether the woman be married or unmarried, a matron or a maid, a
+blooming girl or a withered hag: any woman may conceive directly by the
+entrance into her of one of these disembodied spirits; but the natives
+have shrewdly observed that the spirits shew a decided preference for
+plump young women. Hence when such a damsel is passing near a plot of
+haunted ground, if she does not wish to become a mother, she will
+disguise herself as an aged crone and hobble past, saying in a thin
+cracked voice, "Don't come to me. I am an old woman." Such spots are
+often stones, which the natives call child-stones because the souls of
+the dead are there lying in wait for women in order to be born as
+children. One such stone, for example, may be seen in the land of the
+Arunta tribe near Alice Springs. It projects to a height of three feet
+from the ground among the mulga scrub, and there is a round hole in it
+through which the souls of dead plum-tree people are constantly peeping,
+ready to pounce out on a likely damsel. Again, in the territory of the
+Warramunga tribe the ghosts of black-snake people are supposed to gather
+in the rocks round certain pools or in the gum-trees which border the
+generally dry bed of a water-course. No Warramunga woman would dare to
+strike one of these trees with an axe, because she is firmly convinced
+that in doing so she would set free one of the lurking black-snake
+spirits, who would immediately dart into her body. They think that the
+spirits are no larger than grains of sand and that they make their way
+into women through the navel. Nor is it merely by direct contact with
+one of these repositories of souls, nor yet by passing near it, that
+women may be gotten with child against their wish. The Arunta believe
+that any malicious man may by magic cause a woman or even a child to
+become a mother: he has only to go to one of the child-stones and rub it
+with his hands, muttering the words, "Plenty of young women. You look
+and go quickly."[114]
+
+[Sidenote: As a rule, only the souls of persons of one particular
+totemic clan are thought to congregate in one place.]
+
+A remarkable feature in these gathering-places of the dead remains to be
+noticed. The society at each of them is very select. The ghosts are very
+clannish; as a rule none but people of one particular totemic clan are
+supposed to for-gather at any one place. For example, we have just seen
+that in the Arunta tribe the souls of dead people of the plum-tree totem
+congregate at a certain stone in the mulga scrub, and that in the
+Warramunga tribe the spirits of deceased persons who had black snakes
+for their totem haunt certain gum-trees. The same thing applies to most
+of the other haunts of the dead in Central Australia. Whether the totem
+was a kangaroo or an emu, a rat or a bat, a hawk or a cockatoo, a bee or
+a fly, a yam or a grass seed, the sun or the moon, fire or water,
+lightning or the wind, it matters not what the totem was, only the
+ghosts of people of one totemic clan meet for the most part in one
+place; thus one rock will be tenanted by the spirits of kangaroo folk
+only, and another by spirits of emu folk only; one water-pool will be
+the home of dead rat people alone, and another the haunt of none but
+dead bat people; and so on with most of the other abodes of the souls.
+However, in the Urabunna tribe the ghosts are not so exclusive; some of
+them consent to share their abode with people of other totems. For
+example, a certain pool of water is haunted by the spirits of folk who
+in their lifetime had for their totems respectively the emu, rain, and a
+certain grub. On the other hand a group of granite boulders is inhabited
+only by the souls of persons of the pigeon totem.[115]
+
+[Sidenote: Totemism defined.]
+
+Perhaps for the sake of some of my hearers I should say a word as to the
+meaning of totems and totemism. The subject is a large one and is still
+under discussion. For our present purpose it is not necessary that I
+should enter into details; I will therefore only say that a totem is
+commonly a class of natural objects, usually a species of animals or
+plants, with which a savage identifies himself in a curious way,
+imagining that he himself and his kinsfolk are for all practical
+purposes kangaroos or emus, rats or bats, hawks or cockatoos, yams or
+grass-seed, and so on, according to the particular class of natural
+objects which he claims as his totem. The origin of this remarkable
+identification of men with animals, plants, or other things is still
+much debated; my own view is that the key to the mystery is furnished by
+the Australian beliefs as to birth and rebirth which I have just
+described to you; but on that subject I will not now dwell.[116] All
+that I ask you to remember is that in Central Australia there is no
+general gathering-place for the spirits of the departed; the souls are
+sorted out more or less strictly according to their totems and dwell
+apart each in their own little preserve or preserves, on which ghosts of
+other totems are supposed seldom or never to trespass. Thus the whole
+country-side is dotted at intervals with these spiritual parks or
+reservations, which are respected by the natives as the abodes of their
+departed kinsfolk. In size they vary from a few square yards to many
+square miles.[117]
+
+[Sidenote: Traditionary origin of the local totem centres
+(_oknanikilla_) where the souls of the dead are supposed to assemble.
+The sacred sticks or stones (_churinga_) which the totemic ancestors
+carried about with them.]
+
+The way in which these spiritual preserves originated is supposed to be
+as follows. In the earliest days of which the aborigines retain a
+tradition, and to which they give the name of the _alcheringa_ or dream
+times, their remote ancestors roamed about the country in bands, each
+band composed of people of the same totem. Thus one band would consist
+of frog people only, another of witchetty grub people only, another of
+Hakea flower people only, and so on. Now in regard to the nature of
+these remote totemic ancestors of the _alcheringa_ or dream times, the
+ideas of the natives are very hazy; they do not in fact clearly
+distinguish their human from their totemic nature; in speaking, for
+example, of a man of the kangaroo totem they seem unable to discriminate
+sharply between the man and the animal: perhaps we may say that what is
+before their mind is a blurred image, a sort of composite photograph, of
+a man and a kangaroo in one: the man is semi-bestial, the kangaroo is
+semi-human. And similarly with their ancestors of all other totems: if
+the particular ancestors, for example, had the bean-tree for their
+totem, then their descendants in thinking of them might, like the blind
+man in the Gospel, see in their mind's eye men walking like trees and
+trees perambulating like men. Now each of these semi-human ancestors is
+thought to have carried about with him on his peregrinations one or more
+sacred sticks or stones of a peculiar pattern, to which the Arunta give
+the name of _churinga_: they are for the most part oval or elongated and
+flattened stones or slabs of wood, varying in length from a few inches
+to over five feet, and inscribed with a variety of patterns which
+represent or have reference to the totems. But the patterns are purely
+conventional, consisting of circles, curved lines, spirals, and dots
+with no attempt to represent natural objects pictorially. Each of these
+sacred stones or sticks was intimately associated with the spirit part
+of the man or woman who carried it; for women as well as men had their
+_churinga_. When these semi-human ancestors died, they went into the
+ground, leaving their sacred stones or sticks behind them on the spot,
+and in every case some natural feature arose to mark the place, it might
+be a tree, a rock, a pool of water, or what not. The memory of all such
+spots has been carefully preserved and handed down from generation to
+generation by the old men, and it is to these spots that down to the
+present day the souls of all the dead regularly repair in order to await
+reincarnation. The Arunta call the places _oknanikilla_, and we may call
+them local totem centres, because they are the centres where the spirits
+of the departed assemble according to their totems.[118]
+
+[Sidenote: Every living person has also his or her sacred stick or stone
+(_churinga_), with which his or her spirit is closely bound up.]
+
+But it is not merely the remote forefathers of the Central Australian
+savages who are said to have been possessed of these sacred sticks or
+stones: every man and woman who is born into the world has one of them,
+with which his or her spirit is believed to be closely bound up. This is
+intelligible when we remember that every living person is believed to be
+simply the reincarnation of an ancestor; for that being so he naturally
+comes to life with all the attributes which belonged to him in his
+previous state of existence on earth. The notion of the natives is that
+when a spirit child enters into a woman to be born, he immediately drops
+his sacred stick or stone on the spot, which is necessarily one of what
+we have called the local totem centres, since in the opinion of the
+natives it is only at or near them that a woman can conceive a child.
+Hence when her child is born, the woman tells her husband the place
+where she fancies that the infant entered into her, and he goes with
+some old men to find the precious object, the stick or stone dropped by
+the spirit of the infant when it entered into the mother. If it cannot
+be found, the men cut a wooden one from the nearest hard-wood tree, and
+this becomes the sacred stick or _churinga_ of the newborn child. The
+exact spot, whether a tree or a stone or what not, in which the child's
+spirit is supposed to have tarried in the interval between its
+incarnations, is called its _nanja_ tree or stone or what not. A
+definite relation is supposed to exist between each individual and his
+_nanja_ tree or stone. The tree or stone and any animal or bird that
+lights upon it is sacred to him and may not be molested. A native has
+been known earnestly to intercede with a white man to spare a tree
+because it was his _nanja_ or birth-tree, and he feared that evil would
+befall him if it were cut down.[119]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctity of the _churinga_.]
+
+Thus in these Central Australian tribes every man, woman, and child has
+his or her sacred birth-stone or stick. But though every woman, like
+every man, has her sacred birth-stone or stick, she is never allowed to
+see it under pain of death or of being blinded with a fire-stick. Indeed
+none but old women are aware even of the existence of such things.
+Uninitiated men are likewise forbidden under the same severe penalties
+ever to look upon these most sacred objects.[120] The sanctity ascribed
+to the sticks and stones is intelligible when we remember that the
+spirits of all the people both living and dead are believed to be
+intimately associated with them. Each of them, we are told, is supposed
+to be so closely bound up with a person's spirit that it may be regarded
+as his or her representative, and those of dead people are believed to
+be endowed with the attributes of their former owners and actually to
+impart them to any one who happens to carry them about with him. Hence
+these apparently insignificant sticks and stones are, in the opinion of
+the natives, most potent instruments for conveying to the living the
+virtues and powers of the dead. For example, in a fight the possession
+of one of these holy sticks or stones is thought to endow the possessor
+with courage and accuracy of aim and also to deprive his adversary of
+these qualities. So firmly is this belief held, that if two men were
+fighting and one of them knew that the other carried a sacred
+birth-stone or stick while he himself did not, he would certainly lose
+heart and be beaten. Again, when a man is sick, he will sometimes have
+one of these sacred stones brought to him and will scrape a little dust
+off it, mix the dust with water, and drink it. This is supposed to
+strengthen him. Clearly he imagines that with the scrapings of the stone
+he absorbs the strength and other qualities of the person to whom the
+stone belonged.[121]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacred store-houses (_ertnatulunga_) of the _churinga_.]
+
+All the birth-stones or sticks (_churinga_) belonging to any particular
+totemic group are kept together, hidden away from the eyes of women and
+uninitiated men, in a sacred store-house or _ertnatulunga_, as the
+Arunta and Unmatjera call it. This store-house is always situated in one
+of the local totem centres or _oknanikilla_, which, as we have seen,
+vary in size from a few yards to many square miles. In itself the sacred
+treasure-house is usually a small cave or crevice in some lonely spot
+among the rugged hills. The entrance is carefully blocked up with stones
+arranged so artfully as to simulate nature and to awake no suspicion in
+the mind of passing strangers that behind these tumbled blocks lie
+concealed the most prized possessions of the tribe. The immediate
+neighbourhood of any one of these sacred store-houses is a kind of haven
+of refuge for wild animals, for once they have run thither, they are
+safe; no hunter would spear a kangaroo or opossum which cowered on the
+ground at one of these hallowed spots. The very plants which grow there
+are sacred and may not be plucked or broken or interfered with in any
+way. Similarly, an enemy who succeeds in taking refuge there, is safe
+from his pursuer, so long as he keeps within the sacred boundaries: even
+the avenger of blood, pursuing the murderer hot-foot, would not dare to
+lift up his hand against him on the holy ground. Thus, these places are
+sanctuaries in the strict sense of the word; they are probably the most
+primitive examples of their class and contain the germ out of which
+cities of refuge for manslayers and others might be developed. It is
+instructive, therefore, to observe that these rudimentary sanctuaries in
+the heart of the Australian wilderness derive their sacredness mainly,
+it would seem, from their association with the spirits of the dead,
+whose repose must not be disturbed by tumult, violence, and bloodshed.
+Even when the sacred birth-stones and sticks have been removed from the
+store-house in the secret recesses of the hills and have been brought
+into the camp for the performance of certain solemn ceremonies, no
+fighting may take place, no weapons may be brandished in their
+neighbourhood: if men will quarrel and fight, they must take their
+weapons and go elsewhere to do it.[122] And when the men go to one of
+the sacred store-houses to inspect the treasures which it contains, they
+must each of them put his open hand solemnly over the mouth of the rocky
+crevice and then retire, in order to give the spirits due notice of the
+approach of strangers; for if they were disturbed suddenly, they would
+be angry.[123]
+
+[Sidenote: Exhibition of the _churinga_ to young men.]
+
+It is only after a young man has passed through the severe ceremonies of
+initiation, which include most painful bodily mutilations, that he is
+deemed worthy to be introduced to the tribal arcana, the sacred sticks
+and stones, which repose in their hallowed cave among the mountain
+solitudes. Even when he has passed through all the ordeals, many years
+may elapse before he is admitted to a knowledge of these mysteries, if
+he shews himself to be of a light and frivolous disposition. When at
+last by the gravity of his demeanour he is judged to have proved himself
+indeed a man, a day is fixed for revealing to him the great secret. Then
+the headman of his local group, together with other grave and reverend
+seniors, conducts him to the mouth of the cave: the stones are rolled
+away from the entrance: the spirits within are duly warned of the
+approach of visitors; and then the sacred sticks and stones, tied up in
+bundles, are brought forth. The bundles are undone, the sticks and
+stones are taken out, one by one, reverently scrutinised, and exhibited
+to the novice, while the old men explain to him the meaning of the
+patterns incised on each and reveal to him the persons, alive or dead,
+to whom they belong. All the time the other men keep chanting in a low
+voice the traditions of their remote ancestors in the far-off dream
+times. At the close the novice is told the secret and sacred name which
+he is thenceforth to bear, and is warned never to allow it to pass his
+lips in the hearing of anybody except members of his own totemic
+group.[124] Sometimes this secret name is that of an ancestor of whom
+the man or woman is supposed to be a reincarnation: for women as well as
+men have their secret and sacred names.[125]
+
+[Sidenote: Number of _churinga_ in a store-house. Significance of the
+_churinga_. Use of the _churinga_ in magic.]
+
+The number of sacred birth-stones and sticks kept in any one store-house
+naturally varies from group to group; but whatever their number, whether
+more or less, in any one store-house they all normally belong to the
+same totem, though a few belonging to other totems may be borrowed and
+deposited for a time with them. For example, a sacred store-house of the
+honey-ant totem was found to contain sixty-eight birth-sticks of that
+totem with a few of the lizard totem and two of the wild-cat totem.[126]
+Any store-house will usually contain both sticks and stones, but as a
+rule perhaps the sticks predominate in number.[127] Time after time
+these tribal repositories are visited by the men and their contents
+taken out and examined. On each examination the sacred sticks and stones
+are carefully rubbed over with dry and powdered red ochre or charcoal,
+the sticks being rubbed with red ochre only, but the stones either with
+red ochre or charcoal.[128] Further, it is customary on these occasions
+to press the sacred objects against the stomachs and thighs of all the
+men present; this is supposed to untie their bowels, which are thought
+to be tightened and knotted by the emotion which the men feel at the
+sight of these venerated sticks and stones. Indeed, the emotion is
+sometimes very real: men have been seen to weep on beholding these
+mystic objects for the first time after a considerable interval.[129]
+Whenever the sacred store-house is visited and its contents examined,
+the old men explain to the younger men the marks incised on the sticks
+and stones, and recite the traditions associated with the dead men to
+whom they belonged;[130] so that these rude objects of wood and stone,
+with the lines and dots scratched on them, serve the savages as
+memorials of the past; they are in fact rudimentary archives as well as,
+we may almost say, rudimentary idols; for a stone or stick which
+represents a revered ancestor and is supposed to be endowed with some
+portion of his spirit, is not far from being an idol. No wonder,
+therefore, that they are guarded and treasured by a tribe as its most
+precious possession. When a group of natives have been robbed of them by
+thoughtless white men and have found the sacred store-house empty, they
+have tried to kill the traitor who betrayed the hallowed spot to the
+strangers, and have remained in camp for a fortnight weeping and wailing
+for the loss and plastering themselves with pipeclay, which is their
+token of mourning for the dead.[131] Yet, as a great mark of friendship,
+they will sometimes lend these sacred sticks and stones to a
+neighbouring group; for believing that the sticks and stones are
+associated with the spiritual parts of their former and present owners,
+they naturally wish to have as many of them as possible and regard their
+possession as a treasure of great price, a sort of reservoir of
+spiritual force,[132] which can be turned to account not only in battle
+by worsting the enemy, but in various other ways, such as by magically
+increasing the food supply. For instance, when a man of the grass-seed
+totem wishes to increase the supply of grass-seed in order that it may
+be eaten by people of other totems, he goes to the sacred store-house,
+clears the ground all around it, takes out a few of the holy sticks and
+stones, smears them with red ochre and decorates them with birds' down,
+chanting a spell all the time. Then he rubs them together so that the
+down flies off in all directions; this is supposed to carry with it the
+magical virtue of the sticks or stones and so to fertilise the
+grass-seed.[133]
+
+[Sidenote: Elements of a worship of the dead. Marvellous powers
+attributed by the Central Australians to their remote ancestors of the
+_alcheringa_ or dream time.]
+
+On the whole, when we survey these practices and beliefs of the Central
+Australian aborigines, we may perhaps conclude that, if they do not
+amount to a worship of the dead, they at least contain the elements out
+of which such a worship might easily be developed. At first sight, no
+doubt, their faith in the transmigration of souls seems and perhaps
+really is a serious impediment to a worship of the dead in the strict
+sense of the word. For if they themselves are the dead come to life
+again, it is difficult to see how they can worship the spirits of the
+dead without also worshipping each other, since they are all by
+hypothesis simply these worshipful spirits reincarnated. But though in
+theory every living man and woman is merely an ancestor or ancestress
+born again and therefore should be his or her equal, in practice they
+appear to admit that their forefathers of the remote _alcheringa_ or
+dream time were endowed with many marvellous powers which their modern
+reincarnations cannot lay claim to, and that accordingly these ancestral
+spirits were more to be reverenced, were in fact more worshipful, than
+their living representatives. On this subject Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+observe: "The Central Australian native is firmly convinced, as will be
+seen from the accounts relating to their _alcheringa_ ancestors, that
+the latter were endowed with powers such as no living man now possesses.
+They could travel underground or mount into the sky, and could make
+creeks and water-courses, mountain-ranges, sand-hills, and plains. In
+very many cases the actual names of these natives are preserved in their
+traditions, but, so far as we have been able to discover, there is no
+instance of any one of them being regarded in the light of a 'deity.'
+Amongst the Central Australian natives there is never any idea of
+appealing for assistance to any one of these Alcheringa ancestors in any
+way, nor is there any attempt made in the direction of propitiation,
+with one single exception in the case of the mythic creature called
+Wollunqua, amongst the Warramunga tribe, who, it may be remarked, is
+most distinctly regarded as a snake and not as a human being."[134] Thus
+far Messrs. Spencer and Gillen. From their testimony it appears that
+with a single possible exception, to which I will return immediately,
+the Central Australian aborigines are not known to worship any of their
+dead ancestors; they indeed believe their remote forefathers of the
+_alcheringa_ age to have been endowed with marvellous powers which they
+themselves do not possess; but they do not regard these ancestral
+spirits as deities, nor do they pray and sacrifice to them for help and
+protection. The single possible exception to this general rule known to
+Messrs. Spencer and Gillen is the case of the mythical water-snake
+called Wollunqua, who is in a sense revered and propitiated by the
+Warramunga tribe. The case is interesting and instructive as indicative
+of an advance from magic towards religion in the strict sense of the
+word. Accordingly I propose to consider it somewhat fully.
+
+[Sidenote: The Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake, one of the Warramunga
+totems.]
+
+The Wollunqua is one of the many totems of the Warramunga tribe. It is
+to be borne in mind that, though every Australian tribe has many totems
+which are most commonly animals or plants and more rarely other natural
+objects, all the totems are not respected by all the members of the
+tribe; each totem is respected only by a particular group of men and
+women in the tribe, who believe themselves to be descended from the same
+totemic ancestor. Thus the whole tribe is broken up into many groups or
+bodies of men and women, each group knit together by a belief in a
+common descent from the totem, by a common respect for the totemic
+species, whether it be a species of animals or plants, or what not, and
+finally by the possession of a common name derived from the totem. Thus,
+for example, we have a group of men and women who believe themselves
+descended from an ancestor who had the bandicoot for his totem; they all
+respect bandicoots; and they are all called bandicoot people. Similarly
+with all the other totemic groups within the tribe. It is convenient to
+have a name for these totemic groups or tribal subdivisions, and
+accordingly we may call them clans, provided we remember that a totemic
+clan in this sense is not an independent political community such as the
+Scottish Highland clans used to be; it is merely a subdivision of the
+tribe, and the members of it do not usually keep to themselves but live
+more or less interfused with members of all the other totemic clans
+which together compose the tribe. Now amongst the Warramunga the
+Wollunqua or mythical water-snake is the totem of such a clan or tribal
+subdivision, the members of which believe themselves to be descended
+from the creature and call themselves by its name. So far, therefore,
+the Wollunqua is merely a totem of the ordinary sort, an object of
+respect for a particular section of the tribe. Like other totemic
+ancestors the Wollunqua is supposed to have wandered about the country
+leaving supplies of spirit individuals at various points, individuals
+who are constantly undergoing reincarnation. But on the other hand the
+Wollunqua differs from almost all other Australian totems in this, that
+whereas they are real objects, such as animals, plants, water, wind, the
+sun and moon, and so on, the Wollunqua is a purely mythical creature,
+which exists only in the imagination of the natives; for they believe it
+to be a water-snake so huge that if it were to stand up on its tail, its
+head would reach far up into the sky. It now lives in a large pool
+called Thapauerlu, hidden away in a lonely valley of the Murchison
+Range; but the Warramunga fear that it may at any moment sally out and
+do some damage. They say that it actually killed a number of them on one
+of its excursions, though happily they at last succeeded in beating it
+off. So afraid are they of the creature, that in speaking of it amongst
+themselves they will not use its proper name of Wollunqua but call it
+instead _urkulu nappaurinnia_, because, as they told Messrs. Spencer and
+Gillen, if they were to name it too often by its real name they would
+lose control over the beast and it would rush forth and devour
+them.[135] Thus the natives do not distinguish the Wollunqua from the
+rest of their actually existing totems, as we do: they have never beheld
+him with their bodily eyes, yet to them he is just as real as the
+kangaroos which they see hopping along the sands, as the flies which
+buzz about their heads in the sunshine, or as the cockatoos which flap
+screaming past in the thickets. How real this belief in the mythical
+snake is with these savages, was brought vividly home to Messrs. Spencer
+and Gillen when they visited, in company with some natives, the deep and
+lonely pool among the rocky hills in which the awful being is supposed
+to reside. Before they approached the spot, the natives had been talking
+and laughing freely, but when they drew near the water their voices were
+hushed and their demeanour became solemn. When all stood silent on the
+brink of the deep still pool, enclosed by a sandy margin on one side and
+by a line of red rocks on the other, two old men, the leaders of the
+totemic group of the Wollunqua, went down to the edge of the water and,
+with bowed heads, addressed the Wollunqua in whispers, asking him to
+remain quiet and do them no harm, for they were mates of his, and had
+brought two great white men to see where he lived and to tell them all
+about him. "We could plainly see," add Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, "that
+it was all very real to them, and that they implicitly believed that the
+Wollunqua was indeed alive beneath the water, watching them, though they
+could not see him."[136]
+
+[Sidenote: Religious character of the belief in the Wollunqua.]
+
+I need hardly point out what a near approach all this is to religion in
+the proper sense of the word. Here we have a firm belief in a purely
+imaginary being who is necessarily visible to the eye of faith alone,
+since I think we may safely assume that a water-snake, supposed to be
+many miles long and capable of reaching up to the sky, has no real
+existence either on the earth or in the waters under the earth. Yet to
+these savages this invisible being is just as real as the actually
+existing animals and men whom they perceive with their bodily senses;
+they not only pray to him but they propitiate him with a solemn ritual;
+and no doubt they would spurn with scorn the feeble attempts of shallow
+sceptics to question the reality of his existence or the literal truth
+of the myths they tell about him. Certainly these savages are far on the
+road to religion, if they have not already passed the Rubicon which
+divides it from the common workaday world. If an unhesitating faith in
+the unseen is part of religion, the Warramunga people of the Wollunqua
+totem are unquestionably religious.
+
+[Footnote 108: On the zoological peculiarities of Australia regarded as
+effects of its geographical isolation, see Alfred Newton, _Dictionary of
+Birds_ (London, 1893-96), pp. 317-319. He observes (p. 318) that "the
+isolation of Australia is probably the next oldest in the world to that
+of New Zealand, having possibly existed since the time when no mammals
+higher than marsupials had appeared on the face of the earth."]
+
+[Footnote 109: For details see _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 314 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 110: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Northern Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1904), p. 491.]
+
+[Footnote 111: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. xi.]
+
+[Footnote 112: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 545.]
+
+[Footnote 113: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 546.]
+
+[Footnote 114: Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen, _Native Tribes of
+Central Australia_ (London, 1899), pp. 119-127, 335-338, 552; _id.,
+Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, pp. 145-153, 162, 271, 330 _sq._,
+448-451, 512-515. Compare _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 188 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 115: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 116: See _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 155 _sqq._, iv. 40 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 117: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 123, 126.]
+
+[Footnote 118: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 119-127, 128 _sqq._, 513; _id., Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 145 _sqq._, 257 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 119: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 132-135; _id._, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, pp. 258, 268
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 120: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 128, 134.]
+
+[Footnote 121: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 134 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 122: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 133, 135; _id._, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 269.]
+
+[Footnote 123: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 267.]
+
+[Footnote 124: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 139 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 125: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 273.]
+
+[Footnote 126: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 141.]
+
+[Footnote 127: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 140]
+
+[Footnote 128: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, pp. 144, 145.]
+
+[Footnote 129: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, pp. 164, _sq._;
+_id._, _Northern Tribes_, pp. 261, 264.]
+
+[Footnote 130: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 145.]
+
+[Footnote 131: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 136.]
+
+[Footnote 132: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, pp. 158 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 133: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes_, pp. 271 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 134: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 490 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 135: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 226 _sq._ Another mythical being in which the Warramunga
+believe is _the pau-wa_, a fabulous animal, half human and somewhat
+resembling a dog. See Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 195, 197, 201,
+210 _sq._ But the creature seems not to be a totem, for it is not
+included in the list of totems given by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen (_op.
+cit._ pp. 768-773).]
+
+[Footnote 136: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 252 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE V
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES
+OF CENTRAL AUSTRALIA (_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Central Australian aborigines concerning the
+reincarnation of the dead. The mythical water-snake Wollunqua.]
+
+In the last lecture we began our survey of the belief in immortality and
+the practices to which it has given rise among the aboriginal tribes of
+Central Australia. I shewed that these primitive savages hold a very
+remarkable theory of birth and death. They believe that the souls of the
+dead do not perish but are reborn in human form after a longer or
+shorter interval. During that interval the spirits of the departed are
+supposed to congregate in certain parts of the country, generally
+distinguished by some conspicuous natural feature, which accordingly the
+natives account sacred, believing them to be haunted by the souls of the
+dead. From time to time one of these disembodied spirits enters into a
+passing woman and is born as an infant into the world. Thus according to
+the Central Australian theory every living person without exception is
+the reincarnation of a dead man, woman, or child. At first sight the
+theory seems to exclude the possibility of any worship of the dead,
+since it appears to put the living on a footing of perfect equality with
+the dead by identifying the one with the other. But I pointed out that
+as a matter of fact these savages do admit, whether logically or not,
+the superiority of their remote ancestors to themselves: they
+acknowledge that these old forefathers of theirs did possess many
+marvellous powers to which they themselves can lay no claim. In this
+acknowledgment, accordingly, we may detect an opening or possibility for
+the development of a real worship of ancestors. Indeed, as I said at the
+close of last lecture, something closely approaching to ancestor worship
+has actually grown up in regard to the mythical ancestor of the
+Wollunqua clan in the Warramunga tribe. The Wollunqua is a purely
+fabulous water-snake, of gigantic dimensions, which is supposed to haunt
+the waters of a certain lonely pool called Thapauerlu, in the Murchison
+Range of mountains. Unlike the ancestors of the other totemic clans,
+this mythical serpent is never reborn in human form; he always lives in
+his solitary pool among the barren hills; but the natives think that he
+has it in his power to come forth and do them an injury, and accordingly
+they pray to him to remain quiet and not to harm them. Indeed so afraid
+of him are they that speaking of the creature among themselves they
+avoid using his proper name of Wollunqua and call him by a different
+name, lest hearing himself called by his true name he should rush forth
+and devour them. More than that they even endeavour to propitiate him by
+the performance of certain rites, which, however childish and absurd
+they may seem to us, are very solemn affairs for these simple folk. The
+rites were witnessed by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, whose description I
+will summarise. It offers an interesting and instructive example of a
+ritual observed by primitive savages, who are clearly standing on, if
+they have not already crossed, the threshold of religion.
+
+[Sidenote: Wanderings of the Wollunqua. Dramatic ceremonies in honour of
+the Wollunqua.]
+
+Like all other totemic ancestors the Wollunqua is said to have arisen at
+a particular spot, to have wandered about the country, and finally to
+have gone down into the ground. Starting from the deep rocky pool in the
+Murchison Range he travelled at first underground, coming up, however,
+at various points where he performed ceremonies and left many spirit
+children, who issued from his body and remained behind, forming local
+totemic centres when he had passed on. It is these spirit children who
+have formed the Wollunqua clan ever since, undergoing an endless series
+of reincarnations. Now the ceremonies which the clan perform in honour
+of their mythical ancestor the Wollunqua all refer to his wanderings
+about the country. Thus there is a particular water-hole called
+Pitingari where the great old water-snake is said to have emerged from
+the ground and looked about him. Here, accordingly, two men performed a
+ceremony. Each of them was decorated with a broad band of red down,
+which curved round both the front and the back of the performer and
+stood sharply out from the mass of white down with which all the rest of
+the upper part of his body was covered. These broad red bands
+represented the Wollunqua. Each man also wore a tall, conical helmet
+adorned with a curved band of red down, which, no doubt, likewise
+symbolised the mythical serpent. When the two actors in the little drama
+had been attired in this quaint costume of red and white down, they
+retired behind a bush, which served for the side scenes of a theatre.
+Then, when the orchestra, composed of adult men, struck up the music on
+the ceremonial ground by chanting and beating boomerangs and sticks
+together, the performers ran in, stopping every now and then to shake
+themselves in imitation of the snake. Finally, they sat down close
+together with their heads bowed down on a few green branches of
+gum-trees. A man then stepped up to them, knocked off their
+head-dresses, and the simple ceremony came to an end.[137]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony in honour of the Wollunqua.]
+
+The next ceremony was performed on the following day at another place
+called Antipataringa, where the mythical snake is said to have halted in
+his wanderings. The same two men acted as before, but this time one of
+them carried on his head a curious curved bundle shaped like an enormous
+boomerang. It was made of grass-stalks bound together with human
+hair-string and decorated with white down. This sacred object
+represented the Wollunqua himself.[138] From this spot the snake was
+believed to have travelled on to another place called Tjunguniari, where
+he popped up his head among the sand-hills, the greater part of his body
+remaining underground. Indeed, of such an enormous length was the
+serpent, that though his head had now travelled very many miles his tail
+still remained at the starting-point and had not yet begun to take part
+in the procession. Here accordingly the third ceremony, perhaps we may
+say the third act in the drama, was performed on the third day. In it
+one of the actors personated the snake himself, while the other stood
+for a sand-hill.[139]
+
+[Sidenote: Further ceremony in honour of the Wollunqua: the white mound
+with the red wavy band to represent the mythical snake.]
+
+After an interval of three days a fourth ceremony was performed of an
+entirely different kind. A keel-shaped mound was made of wet sand, about
+fifteen feet long by two feet high. The smooth surface of the mound was
+covered with a mass of little dots of white down, except for a long wavy
+band of red down which ran all along both sides of the mound. This wavy
+red band represented the Wollunqua, his head being indicated by a small
+round swelling at one end and his tail by a short prolongation at the
+other. The mound itself represented a sand-hill beside which the snake
+is said to have stood up and looked about. The preparation of this
+elaborate emblem of the Wollunqua occupied the greater part of the day,
+and it was late in the afternoon before it was completed. When darkness
+fell, fires were lighted on the ceremonial ground, and as the night grew
+late more fires were kindled, and all of the men sat round the mound
+singing songs which referred to the mythical water-snake. This went on
+for hours. At last, about three o'clock in the morning, a ring of fires
+was lit all round the ceremonial ground, in the light of which the white
+trunks of the gum-trees and the surrounding scrub stood out weird and
+ghastly against the blackness of darkness beyond. Amid the wildest
+excitement the men of the Wollunqua totem now ranged themselves in
+single file on their knees beside the mound which bore the red image of
+their great mythical forefather, and with their hands on their thighs
+surged round and round it, every man bending in unison first to one side
+and then to the other, each successive movement being accompanied by a
+loud and simultaneous shout, or rather yell, while the other men, who
+were not of the Wollunqua totem, stood by, clanging their boomerangs
+excitedly, and one old man, who acted as a sort of choregus, walked
+backwards at the end of the kneeling procession of Wollunqua men,
+swaying his body about and lifting high his knees at every step. In this
+way, with shouts and clangour, the men of the totem surged twice round
+the mound on their knees. After that, as the fires died down, the men
+rose from their knees, and for another hour every one sat round the
+mound singing incessantly. The last act in the drama was played at four
+o'clock in the morning at the moment when the first faint streaks of
+dawn glimmered in the east. At sight of them every man jumped to his
+feet, the smouldering fires were rekindled, and in their blaze the long
+white mound stood out in strong relief. The men of the totem, armed with
+spears, boomerangs, and clubs, ranged themselves round it, and
+encouraged by the men of the other totems attacked it fiercely with
+their weapons, until in a few minutes they had hacked it to pieces, and
+nothing was left of it but a rough heap of sandy earth. The fires again
+died down and for a short time silence reigned. Then, just as the sun
+rose above the eastern horizon, the painful ceremony of subincision was
+performed on three youths, who had recently passed through the earlier
+stages of initiation.[140]
+
+[Sidenote: The rite aims both at pleasing and at coercing the mythical
+snake.]
+
+This remarkable rite is supposed, we are informed, "in some way to be
+associated with the idea of persuading, or almost forcing, the Wollunqua
+to remain quietly in his home under the water-hole at Thapauerlu, and to
+do no harm to any of the natives. They say that when he sees the mound
+with his representation drawn upon it he is gratified, and wriggles
+about underneath with pleasure. The savage attack upon the mound is
+associated with the idea of driving him down, and, taken altogether, the
+ceremony indicates their belief that, at one and the same time, they can
+both please and coerce the mythic beast. It is necessary to do things to
+please him, or else he might grow sulky and come out and do them harm,
+but at the same time they occasionally use force to make him do what
+they want."[141] In fact the ritual of the mound with its red image of
+the snake combines the principles of religion and magic. So far as the
+rite is intended to please and propitiate the mythical beast, it is
+religious; so far as it is intended to constrain him, it is magical. The
+two principles are contradictory and the attempt to combine them is
+illogical; but the savage is heedless, or rather totally unaware, of the
+contradiction and illogicality: all that concerns him is to accomplish
+his ends: he has neither the wish nor the ability to analyse his
+motives. In this respect he is in substantial agreement with the vast
+majority of mankind. How many of us scrutinise the reasons of our
+conduct with the view of detecting and eliminating any latent
+inconsistencies in them? And how many, or rather how few of us, on such
+a scrutiny would be so fortunate as to discover that there were no such
+inconsistencies to detect? The logical pedant who imagines that men
+cannot possibly act on inconsistent and even contradictory motives only
+betrays his ignorance of life. It is not therefore for us to cast stones
+at the Warramunga men of the Wollunqua totem for attempting to
+propitiate and constrain their mythical serpent at the same time. Such
+contradictions meet us again and again in the history of religion: it is
+interesting but by no means surprising to find them in one of its
+rudimentary stages.
+
+[Sidenote: Thunder the voice of the Wollunqua.]
+
+On the evening of the day which succeeded the construction of the
+emblematic mound the old men who had made the emblem said they had heard
+the Wollunqua talking, and that he was pleased with what had been done
+and was sending them rain. What they took for the voice of the Wollunqua
+was thunder rumbling in the distance. No rain fell, but a few days later
+thunder was again heard rolling afar off and a heavy bank of clouds lay
+low on the western horizon. The old men now said that the Wollunqua was
+growling because the remains of the mound had been left uncovered; so
+they hastily cut down branches and covered up the ruins. After that the
+Wollunqua ceased to growl: there was no more thunder.[142]
+
+[Sidenote: Ground drawings of the Wollunqua.]
+
+On the four following days ceremonies of an entirely different kind from
+all the preceding were performed in honour of the Wollunqua. A space of
+sandy ground was smoothed down, sprinkled with water, and rubbed so as
+to form a compact surface. The smooth surface was then overlaid with a
+coat of red or yellow ochre, and on this coloured background a number of
+designs were traced, one after the other, by a series of white dots,
+which together made up a pattern of curved lines and concentric circles.
+These patterns represented the Wollunqua and some of his traditionary
+adventures. The snake himself was portrayed by a broad wavy band, but
+all the other designs were purely conventional; for example, trees,
+ant-hills, and wells were alike indicated by circles. Altogether there
+were eight such drawings on the earth, some of them very elaborate and
+entailing, each of them, not less than six or seven hours' labour: one
+of them was ten feet long. Each drawing was rubbed out before the next
+one was drawn. Moreover, the drawings were accompanied by little dramas
+acted by decorated men. In one of these dramas no fewer than eight
+actors took part, some of whom wore head-dresses adorned with a long
+wavy band to represent the Wollunqua. The last drawing of all was
+supposed to portray the mythical snake as he plunged into the earth and
+returned to his home in the rocky pool called Thapauerlu among the
+Murchison Ranges.[143]
+
+[Sidenote: Religious importance of the Wollunqua.]
+
+I have dwelt at some length on these ceremonies of the Wollunqua totem,
+because they furnish a remarkable and perhaps unique instance in
+Australia of a totemic ancestor in the act of developing into something
+like a god. In the Warramunga tribe there are other snake totems besides
+the Wollunqua; for example, there is the black snake totem and the deaf
+adder totem. But this purely mythical water-snake, the Wollunqua, is the
+most important of them all and is regarded as the great father of all
+the snakes. "It is not easy," say Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, "to
+express in words what is in reality rather a vague feeling amongst the
+natives, but after carefully watching the different series of ceremonies
+we were impressed with the feeling that the Wollunqua represented to the
+native mind the idea of a dominant totem."[144] Thus he is at once a
+fabulous animal and the mythical ancestor of a human clan, but his
+animal nature apparently predominates over his semi-human nature, as
+shewn by the drawings and effigies of him, all of which are in serpent
+form. The prayers offered to him at the pool which he is supposed to
+haunt, and the attempt to please him by drawing his likeness can only be
+regarded as propitiatory rites and therefore as rudimentary forms of
+worship. And the idea that thunder is his voice, and that the rain is a
+gift sent by him in return for the homage paid to him by the people,
+appears to prove that in course of time, if left to himself, he might
+easily have been elevated to the sky and have ranked as a celestial
+deity, who dwells aloft and sends down or withholds the refreshing
+showers at his good pleasure. Thus the Wollunqua, a rude creation of the
+savage Australian imagination, possesses a high interest for the
+historian of religion, since he combines elements of ancestor worship
+and totem worship with a germ of heaven worship; while on the purely
+material side his representation, both in plastic form by a curved
+bundle of grass-stalks and in graphic form by broad wavy bands of red
+down, may be said in a sense to stand at the starting-point of that long
+development of religious art, which in so many countries and so many
+ages has attempted to represent to the bodily eye the mysteries of the
+unseen and invisible, and which, whatever we may think of the success or
+failure of that attempt, has given to the world some of the noblest
+works of sculpture and painting.
+
+[Sidenote: Possible religious evolution of totemism.]
+
+I have already pointed out the difficulty of seeing how a belief in the
+reincarnation of the dead, such as prevails universally among the
+aborigines of Central Australia, could ever be reconciled with or
+develop into a worship of the dead; for by identifying the living with
+the dead, the theory of reincarnation seems to abolish that distinction
+between the worshipper and the worshipped which is essential to the
+existence of worship. But, as I also indicated, what seems a loophole or
+mode of escape from the dilemma may be furnished by the belief of these
+savages, that though they themselves are nothing but their ancestors
+come to life again, nevertheless in their earliest incarnations of the
+_alcheringa_ or dream times their ancestors possessed miraculous powers
+which they have admittedly lost in their later reincarnations; for this
+suggests an incipient discrimination or line of cleavage between the
+living and the dead; it hints that perhaps after all the first
+ancestors, with their marvellous endowments, may have been entirely
+different persons from their feebler descendants, and if this vague hint
+could only grow into a firm conviction of the essential difference
+between the two, then the course would be clear for the development of
+ancestor worship: the dead forefathers, viewed as beings perfectly
+distinct from and far superior to the living, might easily come to
+receive from the latter the homage of prayer and sacrifice, might be
+besought by their descendants to protect them in danger and to succour
+them in all the manifold ills of life, or at least to abstain from
+injuring them. Now, this important step in religious evolution appears
+to have been actually taken by the Wollunqua, the mythical water-snake,
+who is the totem of one of the Warramunga clans. Unlike all the other
+totems he is supposed to exist only in his invisible and animal form and
+never to be reincarnated in a man.[145] Hence, withdrawn as he is from
+the real world of sense, the imagination is free to play about him and
+to invest him more and more with those supernatural attributes which men
+ascribe to their deities. And what has actually happened to this
+particular totemic ancestor might under favourable circumstances happen
+to many others. Each of them might be gradually detached from the line
+of his descendants, might cease to be reincarnated in them, and might
+gradually attain to the lonely pre-eminence of godhead. Thus a system of
+pure totemism, such as prevails among the aborigines of Central
+Australia, might develop through a phase of ancestor worship into a
+pantheon of the ordinary type.
+
+[Sidenote: Conspicuous features of the landscape associated with
+ancestral spirits.]
+
+Although none of the other totemic ancestors of the Central Australian
+aborigines appears to have advanced so far on the road to religion as
+the Wollunqua, yet they all contain in germ the elements out of which a
+religion might have been developed. It is difficult for us civilised men
+to conceive the extent to which the thoughts and lives of these savages
+are dominated by the memories and traditions of the dead. Every
+conspicuous feature in the landscape is not only associated with the
+legendary doings of some ancestors but is commonly said to have arisen
+as a direct result of their actions. The mountains, the plains, the
+rivers, the seas, the islands of ancient Greece itself were not more
+thickly haunted by the phantoms of a fairy mythology than are the barren
+sun-scorched steppes and stony hills of the Australian wilderness; but
+great indeed is the gulf which divides the beautiful creations of Greek
+fancy from the crude imaginings of the Australian savage, whose
+legendary tales are for the most part a mere tissue of trivial
+absurdities unrelieved by a single touch of beauty or poetry.
+
+[Sidenote: A journey through the Warramunga country.]
+
+To illustrate at once the nature and the abundance of these legends I
+will quote a passage in which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen describe a
+journey they took in company with some Warramunga natives over part of
+their country:--"For the first two days our way lay across miserable
+plain country covered with poor scrub, with here and there low ranges
+rising. Every prominent feature of any kind was associated with some
+tradition of their past. A range some five miles away from Tennant Creek
+arose to mark the path traversed by the great ancestor of the Pittongu
+(bat) totem. Several miles further on a solitary upstanding column of
+rock represented an opossum man who rested here, looked about the
+country, and left spirit children behind him; a low range of remarkably
+white quartzite hills indicated a large number of white ant eggs thrown
+here in the _wingara_[146] by the Munga-munga women as they passed
+across the country. A solitary flat-topped hill arose to mark the spot
+where the Wongana (crow) ancestor paused for some time to pierce his
+nose; and on the second night we camped by the side of a waterhole where
+the same crow lived for some time in the _wingara_, and where now there
+are plenty of crow spirit children. All the time, as we travelled along,
+the old men were talking amongst themselves about the natural features
+associated in tradition with these and other totemic ancestors of the
+tribe, and pointing them out to us. On the third day we travelled, at
+first for some hours, by the side of a river-bed,--perfectly dry of
+course,--and passed the spot where two hawks first made fire by rubbing
+sticks together, two fine gum-trees on the banks now representing the
+place where they stood up. A few miles further on we came to a
+water-hole by the side of which the moon-man met a bandicoot woman, and
+while the two were talking together the fire made by the hawks crept
+upon them and burnt the woman, who was, however, restored to life again
+by the moon-man, with whom she then went up into the sky. Late in the
+afternoon we skirted the eastern base of the Murchison Range, the rugged
+quartzite hills in this part being associated partly with the crow
+ancestor and partly with the bat. Following up a valley leading into the
+hills we camped, just after sunset, by the side of a rather picturesque
+water-pool amongst the ranges. A short distance before reaching this the
+natives pointed out a curious red cliff, standing out amongst the low
+hills which were elsewhere covered with thin scrub. This, which is
+called Tjiti, represents the spot where an old woman spent a long time
+digging for yams, the latter being indicated by great heaps of stones
+lying all around. On the opposite side of the valley a column of stone
+marks the spot where the woman went into the earth. The water-hole by
+which we were camped was called Wiarminni. It was in reality a deep pool
+in the bed of a creek coming down from the hills. Behind it the rocks
+rose abruptly, and amongst them there was, or rather would have been if
+a stream had been flowing, a succession of cascades and rocky
+water-holes. Two of the latter, just above Wiarminni, are connected with
+a fish totem, and represent the spot where two fish men arose in the
+_alcheringa_, fought one another, left spirit children behind, and
+finally went down into the ground. We were now, so to speak, in the very
+midst of _mungai_ [i.e. of places associated with the totems], for the
+old totemic ancestors of the tribe, who showed a most commendable
+fondness for arising and walking about in the few picturesque spots
+which their country contained, had apparently selected these rocky
+gorges as their central home. All around us the water-holes, gorges, and
+rocky crags were peopled with spirit individuals left behind by one or
+other of the following totemic ancestors:--Wollunqua, Pittongu (bat),
+Wongana (crow), wild dog, emu, bandicoot, and fish, whose lines of
+travel in the _alcheringa_ formed a regular network over the whole
+countryside."[147]
+
+[Sidenote: Dramatic ceremonies to commemorate the doings of ancestors.]
+
+Similar evidence could be multiplied, but this may suffice to teach us
+how to the minds of these Central Australian savages the whole country
+is haunted, in the literal sense, not merely by the memories of their
+dead, but by the spirits which they left behind them and which are
+constantly undergoing reincarnation. And not only are the minds of the
+aborigines preoccupied by the thought of their ancestors, who are
+recalled to them by all the familiar features of the landscape, but they
+spend a considerable part of their time in dramatically representing the
+legendary doings of their rude forefathers of the remote past. It is
+astonishing, we are told, how large a part of a native's life is
+occupied with the performance of these dramatic ceremonies. The older he
+grows, the greater is the share he takes in them, until at last they
+actually absorb the greater part of his thoughts. The rites which seem
+so trivial to us are most serious matters to him. They are all connected
+with the great ancestors of the tribe, and he is firmly convinced that
+when he dies his spirit will rejoin theirs and live in communion with
+them until the time comes for him to be born again into the world. With
+such solemnity does he look on the celebration of these commemorative
+services, as we may call them, that none but initiated men are allowed
+to witness them; women and children are strictly excluded from the
+spectacle. These sacred dramas are often, though by no means always,
+associated with the rites of initiation which young men have to pass
+through before they are admitted to full membership of the tribe and to
+participation in its deepest mysteries. The rites of initiation are not
+all undergone by a youth at the same time; they succeed each other at
+longer or shorter intervals of time, and at each of them he is
+privileged to witness some of the solemn ceremonies in which the
+traditions of the tribal ancestors are dramatically set forth before
+him, until, when he has passed through the last of the rites and
+ordeals, he is free to behold and to take part in the whole series of
+mystery plays or professedly historical dramas. Sometimes the
+performance of these dramas extends over two or three months, during
+which one or more of them are acted daily.[148] For the most part, they
+are very short and simple, each of them generally lasting only a few
+minutes, though the costumes of the actors are often elaborate and may
+have taken hours to prepare. I will describe a few of them as samples.
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of the Hakea flower totem.]
+
+We will begin with a ceremony of the Hakea flower totem in the Arunta
+tribe, as to which it may be premised that a decoction of the Hakea
+flower is a favourite drink of the natives. The little drama was acted
+by two men, each of whom was decorated on his bare body by broad bands
+of pearly grey edged with white down, which passed round his waist and
+over his shoulders, contrasting well with the chocolate colour of his
+skin. On his head each of them wore a kind of helmet made of twigs, and
+from their ears hung tips of the tails of rabbit-bandicoots. The two sat
+on the ground facing each other with a shield between them. One of them
+held in his hand some twigs representing the Hakea flower in bloom;
+these he pretended to steep in water so as to brew the favourite
+beverage of the natives, and the man sitting opposite him made believe
+to suck it up with a little mop. Meantime the other men ran round and
+round them shouting _wha! wha!_ This was the substance of the play,
+which ended as usual by several men placing their hands on the shoulders
+of the performers as a signal to them to stop.[149]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of a fish totem.]
+
+Again, to take another Arunta ceremony of a fish totem called
+_interpitna_. The fish is the bony bream (_Chatoessus horni_), which
+abounds in the water-holes of the country. The play was performed by a
+single actor, an old man, whose face was covered with a mass of white
+down contrasting strongly with a large bunch of black eagle-hawk
+feathers which he wore on his head. His body was decorated with bands of
+charcoal edged with white down. Squatting on the ground he moved his
+body and extended his arms from his sides, opening and closing them as
+he leaned forwards, so as to imitate a fish swelling itself out and
+opening and closing its gills. Then, holding twigs in his hands, he
+moved along mimicking the action of a man who drives fish before him
+with a branch in a pool, just as the natives do to catch the fish.
+Meantime an orchestra of four men squatted beside him singing and
+beating time with a stick on the ground.[150]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of a plum-tree totem.]
+
+Again, another Arunta ceremony of the plum-tree totem was performed by
+four actors, who simply pretended to knock down and eat imaginary plums
+from an imaginary plum-tree.[151] An interesting point in this very
+simple drama is that in it the men of the plum-tree totem are
+represented eating freely of their totem, which is quite contrary to the
+practice of the present day, but taken along with many similar
+ceremonies it goes far to prove that in the ancient days, to which all
+these dramatic ceremonies refer, it was the regular practice for men and
+women of a totem to eat their totemic animals or plants. As another
+example of a drama in which the performers are represented eating their
+totem we may take a ceremony of the ant totem in the Warramunga tribe.
+The legendary personages who figure in it are two women of the ant
+totem, ancestresses of the ant clan, who are said to have devoted all
+their time to catching and eating ants, except when they were engaged in
+the performance of ceremonies. The two men who personated these women in
+the drama (for no woman is allowed to witness, much less to act in,
+these sacred dramas) had the whole of the upper parts of their bodies,
+including their faces and the cylindrical helmets which they wore on
+their heads, covered with a dense mass of little specks of red down.
+These specks stood for the ants, alive or dead, and also for the stones
+and trees on the spots where the two women encamped. In the drama the
+two actors thus arrayed walked about the ground as if they were
+searching for ants to eat. Each of them carried a wooden trough and
+stooping down from time to time he turned over the ground and picked up
+small stones which he placed in the trough till it was full. The stones
+represented the masses of ants which the women gathered for food. After
+carrying on this pantomime for a time the two actors pretended to
+discover each other with surprise and to embrace with joy, much to the
+amusement of the spectators.[152]
+
+[Sidenote: In these ceremonies the action is appropriate to the totem.
+Ceremony of the witchetty grub totem.]
+
+In all these ceremonies you will observe that the action of the drama is
+strictly appropriate to the totem. In the drama of the Hakea flower
+totem the actors pretend to make and drink the beverage brewed from
+Hakea flowers; in the ceremony of the fish totem the actor feigns to be
+a fish and also to catch fish; in the ceremony of the plum-tree totem
+the actors pretend to knock down and eat plums; and in the ceremony of
+the ant totem the actors make believe to gather ants for food.
+Similarly, to take a few more examples, in a ceremony of the witchetty
+grub totem of the Arunta tribe the body of the actor was decorated with
+lines of white and red down, and he had a shield adorned with a number
+of concentric circles of down. The smaller circles represented the bush
+on which the grub lives first of all, and the larger circles represented
+the bush on which the adult insect lays its eggs. When all was ready,
+the performer seated himself on the ground and imitated the grub,
+alternately doubling himself up and rising on his knees, while he
+extended his arms and made them quiver in imitation of the insect's
+wings; and every now and then he would bend over the shield and sway to
+and fro, and up and down, in imitation of the insect hovering over the
+bushes on which it lays its eggs.[153] In another ceremony of the
+witchetty grub totem, which followed immediately the one I have just
+described, the actor had two shields beside him. The smaller of the
+shields was ornamented with zigzag lines of white pipe-clay which were
+supposed to indicate the tracks of the grub; the larger shield was
+covered with larger and smaller series of concentric circles, the larger
+representing the seeds of a bush on which the insect feeds, while the
+smaller stood for the eggs of the adult insect. As before, the actor
+wriggled and flapped his arms in imitation of the fluttering of the
+insect when it first leaves its chrysalis case in the ground and
+attempts to fly. In acting thus he was supposed to represent a
+celebrated ancestor of the witchetty grub totem.[154]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of the emu totem.]
+
+The last example of such ceremonies which I shall cite is one of the emu
+totem in the Arunta tribe. The body of the actor was decorated with
+perpendicular lines of white down reaching from his shoulders to his
+knees; and on his head he supported a towering head-piece tipped with a
+bunch of emu feathers in imitation of the neck and head of an emu. Thus
+arrayed he stalked backwards and forwards in the aimless fashion of the
+bird.[155]
+
+[Sidenote: These dramatic ceremonies were probably at first magical
+rites intended to supply the people with food and other necessaries.]
+
+What are we to think of the intention of these little dramas which the
+Central Australian aborigines regard as sacred and to the performance of
+which they devote so much time and labour? At first sight they are
+simply commemorative services, designed to represent the ancestors as
+they lived and moved in the far-past times, to recall their adventures,
+of which legend has preserved the memory, and to set them dramatically
+before the eyes of their living descendants. So far, therefore, the
+dramas might be described as purely historical in intention, if not in
+reality. But there are reasons for thinking that in all cases a deeper
+meaning underlies, or formerly underlay, the performance of all these
+apparently simple historical plays; in fact, we may suspect that
+originally they were all magical ceremonies observed for the practical
+purpose of supplying the people with food, water, sunshine, and
+everything else of which they stand in need. This conclusion is
+suggested first of all by the practice of the Arunta and other Central
+Australian tribes, who observe very similar ceremonies with the avowed
+intention of thereby multiplying the totemic animals and plants in order
+that they may be eaten by the tribe, though not by the particular clan
+which has these animals or plants for its totem. It is true that the
+Arunta distinguish these magical ceremonies for the multiplication of
+the totems from what we may call the more purely commemorative or
+historical performances, and they have a special name for the former,
+namely _intichiuma_, which they do not bestow on the latter. Yet these
+_intichiuma_ or magical ceremonies resemble the commemorative ceremonies
+so closely that it is difficult to suppose they can always have been
+wholly distinct. For example, in the magical ceremonies for the
+multiplication of witchetty grubs the performers pretend to be the
+insects emerging from their chrysalis cases,[156] just as the actors do
+in the similar commemorative ceremony which I have described; and again
+in a magical ceremony for the multiplication of emus the performers wear
+head-dresses to represent the long neck and small head of the bird, and
+they mimic its gait,[157] exactly as the actors do in the commemorative
+ceremony. It seems reasonable, therefore, to conjecture that the
+ceremonies which now are, or seem to be, purely commemorative or
+historical were originally magical in intention, being observed for the
+practical purpose of multiplying edible animals and plants or supplying
+other wants of the tribe.
+
+[Sidenote: Among the Warramunga these dramatic ceremonies are avowedly
+performed as magical rites.]
+
+Now this conjecture is strongly confirmed by the actual usage of the
+Warramunga tribe, amongst whom the commemorative or historical dramas
+are avowedly performed as magical rites: in other words, the Warramunga
+attribute a magical virtue to the simple performance of such dramas:
+they think that by merely acting the parts of their totemic ancestors
+they thereby magically multiply the edible animals or plants which these
+ancestors had for their totems. Hence in this tribe the magical
+ceremonies and the dramatic performances practically coincide: with
+them, as Messrs. Spencer and Gillen say, the _intichiuma_ or magical
+ceremonies (called by the Warramunga _thalamminta_) "for the most part
+simply consist in the performance of a complete series representing the
+_alcheringa_ history of the totemic ancestor. In this tribe each totemic
+group has usually one great ancestor, who arose in some special spot and
+walked across the country, making various natural features as he did
+so,--creeks, plains, ranges, and water-holes,--and leaving behind him
+spirit individuals who have since been reincarnated. The _intichiuma_
+[or magical] ceremony of the totem really consists in tracking these
+ancestors' paths, and repeating, one after the other, ceremonies
+commemorative of what are called the _mungai_ spots, the equivalent of
+the _oknanikilla_ amongst the Arunta--that is, the places where he left
+the spirit children behind."[158] Apparently the Warramunga imagine that
+by imitating a totemic ancestor at the very place where he left spirit
+children of the same totem behind him, they thereby enable these spirit
+children to be born again and so increase the food supply, whenever
+their totem is an edible animal or plant; for we must always remember
+that in the mind of these savages the idea of a man or woman is
+inextricably confused with the idea of his or her totem; they seem
+unable to distinguish between the two, and therefore they believe that
+in multiplying human beings at their local totemic centres (_mungai_ or
+_oknanikilla_) they simultaneously multiply their totems; and as the
+totems are commonly edible animals and plants, it follows that in the
+opinion of the Warramunga the general effect of performing these
+ancestral plays is to increase the supply of food of the tribe. No
+wonder, therefore, that the dramas are sacred, and that the natives
+attribute the most serious significance to their performance: the
+neglect to perform them might, in their judgment, bring famine and ruin
+on the whole tribe. As Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, speaking of these
+ceremonies, justly observe: "Their proper performance is a matter of
+very great importance in the eyes of the natives, because, not only do
+they serve to keep alive and hand down from generation to generation the
+traditions of the tribe, but they are, at least amongst the Warramunga,
+intimately associated with the most important object of maintaining the
+food supply, as every totemic group is held responsible for the
+maintenance of the material object the name of which it bears."[159]
+
+[Sidenote: General view of the attitude of the Central Australian
+natives towards their dead.]
+
+To sum up the attitude of the Central Australian natives towards their
+dead. They believe that their dead are constantly undergoing
+reincarnation by being born again of women into the world, in fact that
+every living man, woman, and child is nothing but a dead person come to
+life again, that so it has been from the beginning and that so it will
+be to the end. Of a special world of the departed, remote and different
+from the material world in which they live and from the familiar scenes
+to which they have been accustomed from infancy, they have no
+conception; still less, if that is possible, have they any idea of a
+division of the world of the dead into a realm of bliss and a realm of
+woe, where the spirits of the good live ineffably happy and the spirits
+of the bad live unspeakably miserable. To their simple minds the spirits
+of the dead dwell all about them in the rocky gorges, the barren plains,
+the wooded dells, the rustling trees, the still waters of their native
+land, haunting in death the very spots where they last entered into
+their mothers' wombs to be born, and where in future they will again
+enter into the wombs of other women to be born again as other children
+into the world. And so, they think, it will go on for ever and ever.
+Such a creed seems at first sight, as I have pointed out, irreconcilable
+with a worship of the dead in the proper sense of the word; and so
+perhaps it would be, if these savages were strictly consistent and
+logical in their theories. But they are not. They admit that their
+remote ancestors, in other words, that they themselves in former
+incarnations, possessed certain marvellous powers to which in the
+present degenerate days they can lay no claim; and in this significant
+admission we may detect a rift, a real distinction of kind, between the
+living and the dead, which in time might widen out into an impassable
+gulf. In other words, we may suppose that the Central Australians, if
+left to themselves, might come to hold that the dead return no more to
+the land of the living, and that, acknowledging as they do the vast
+superiority of their remote ancestors to themselves, they might end by
+worshipping them, at first simply as powerful ancestral spirits, and
+afterwards as supernatural deities, whose original connexion with
+humanity had been totally forgotten. In point of fact we saw that among
+the Warramunga the mythical water-snake Wollunqua, who is regarded as an
+ancestor of a totemic clan, has made some progress towards deification;
+for while he is still regarded as the forefather of the clan which bears
+his name, it is no longer supposed that he is born again of women into
+the world, but that he lives eternal and invisible under the water of a
+haunted pool, and that he has it in his power both to help and to harm
+his people, who pray to him and perform ceremonies in his honour. This
+awful being, whose voice is heard in the peal of thunder and whose
+dreadful name may not be pronounced in common life, is not far from
+godhead; at least he is apparently the nearest approach to it which the
+imagination of these rude savages has been able to conceive. Lastly, as
+I have pointed out, the reverence which the Central Australians
+entertain for their dead ancestors is closely bound up with their
+totemism; they fail to distinguish clearly or at all between men and
+their totems, and accordingly the ceremonies which they perform to
+commemorate the dead are at the same time magical rites designed to
+ensure an abundant supply of food and of all the other necessaries and
+conveniences which savage life requires or admits of; indeed, we may
+with some probability conjecture that the magical intention of these
+ceremonies is the primary and original one, and that the commemorative
+intention is secondary and derivative. If that could be proved to be so
+(which is hardly to be expected), we should be obliged to conclude that
+in this as in so many enquiries into the remote human past we detect
+evidence of an Age of Magic preceding anything that deserves to be
+dignified with the name of religion.
+
+That ends what I have to say at present as to the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead among the Central Australian aborigines. In
+my next lecture I propose to pursue the enquiry among the other tribes
+of Australia.
+
+[Footnote 137: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 228 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 138: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 229 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 139: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 230 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 140: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 231-238.]
+
+[Footnote 141: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 238.]
+
+[Footnote 142: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 238 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 143: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 239-247.]
+
+[Footnote 144: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 145: "On the other hand there is a great difference between
+the Wollunqua and any other totem, inasmuch as the particular animal is
+purely mythical, and except for the one great progenitor of the totemic
+group, is not supposed to exist at the present day" (Spencer and Gillen,
+_Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 248).]
+
+[Footnote 146: The _wingara_ is the equivalent of the Arunta
+_alcheringa_, that is, the earliest legendary or mythical times of which
+the natives profess to have knowledge.]
+
+[Footnote 147: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 249 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 148: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 33 _sq._, 177 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 149: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 297 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 150: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 316 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 151: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 152: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 199-204.]
+
+[Footnote 153: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 179 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 154: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 179 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 155: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 358 _sq._, and p. 343, fig 73.]
+
+[Footnote 156: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 176.]
+
+[Footnote 157: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ pp. 182 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 158: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 297.]
+
+[Footnote 159: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 197.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE VI
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE OTHER ABORIGINES OF AUSTRALIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Customs and beliefs concerning the dead in the other tribes
+of Australia.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded my account of the beliefs and practices
+of the Central Australian aborigines in regard to the dead. To-day I
+propose to consider the customs and beliefs concerning the dead which
+prevail among the native tribes in other parts of Australia. But at the
+outset I must warn you that our information as to these other tribes is
+far less full and precise than that which we possess as to the tribes of
+the centre, which have had the great advantage of being observed and
+described by two highly qualified scientific observers, Messrs. Spencer
+and Gillen. Our knowledge of all other Australian tribes is
+comparatively fragmentary, and accordingly it is impossible to give even
+an approximately complete view of their notions concerning the state of
+the human spirit after death, and of the rites which they observe for
+the purpose of disarming or propitiating the souls of the departed. We
+must therefore content ourselves with more or less partial glimpses of
+this side of native religion.
+
+[Sidenote: Belief in the reincarnation of the dead among the natives of
+Queensland. The _ngai_ spirits.]
+
+The first question we naturally ask is whether the belief in the
+reincarnation of the dead, which prevails universally among the Central
+tribes, reappears among tribes in other parts of the continent. It
+certainly does so, and although the evidence on this subject is very
+imperfect it suffices to raise presumption that a similar belief in the
+rebirth or reincarnation of the dead was formerly universal among the
+Australian aborigines. Unquestionably the belief is entertained by some
+of the natives of Queensland, who have been described for us by Mr. W.
+E. Roth. Thus, for example, the aborigines on the Pennefather River
+think that every person's spirit undergoes a series of reincarnations,
+and that in the interval between two reincarnations the spirit resides
+in one or other of the haunts of Anjea, a mythical being who causes
+conception in women by putting mud babies into their bodies. Such spots,
+haunted by the fabulous being Anjea and by the souls of the dead
+awaiting rebirth, may be a tree, a rock, or a pool of water; they
+clearly correspond to the local totem centres (_oknanikilla_ among the
+Arunta, _mungai_ among the Warramunga) of the Central Australian tribes
+which I described in former lectures. The natives of the Pennefather
+River observe a ceremony at the birth of a child in order to ascertain
+the exact spot where its spirit tarried in the interval since its last
+incarnation; and when they have discovered it they speak of the child as
+obtained from a tree, a rock, or a pool of water, according to the place
+from which its spirit is supposed to have passed into its mother.[160]
+Readers of the classics can hardly fail to be reminded of the Homeric
+phrase to be "born of an oak or a rock,"[161] which seems to point to a
+similar belief in the possibility of human souls awaiting reincarnation
+in the boughs of an oak-tree or in the cleft of a rock. In the opinion
+of the Pennefather natives all disembodied human spirits or _choi_, as
+they call them, are mischief-makers and evildoers, for they make people
+sick or crazy; but the medicine-men can sometimes control them for good
+or evil. They wander about in the bush, but there are certain hollow
+trees or clumps of trees with wide-spreading branches, which they most
+love to haunt, and they can be heard in the rustling of the leaves or
+the crackling of the boughs at night. Anjea himself, who puts babies
+into women, is never seen, but you may hear him laughing in the depths
+of the forest, among the rocks, in the lagoons, and along the mangrove
+swamps; and when you hear his laugh you may be sure that he has got a
+baby.[162] If a native happens to hurt himself near a tree, he imagines
+that the spirit of some dead person is lurking among the branches, and
+he will never cut that tree down lest a worse thing should befall him at
+the hands of the vengeful ghost.[163] A curious feature in the beliefs
+of these Pennefather natives is that apart from the spirit called
+_choi_, which lives in a disembodied state between two incarnations,
+every person is supposed to have a spirit of a different sort called
+_ngai_, which has its seat in the heart; they feel it beating within
+their breast; it talks to them in sleep and so is the cause of dreams.
+At death a man's _ngai_ spirit does not go away into the bush to await
+reincarnation like his _choi_ spirit; on the contrary, it passes at once
+into his children, boys and girls alike; for before their father's death
+children are supposed not to possess a _ngai_ spirit; if a child dies
+before its father, they think that it never had a _ngai_ spirit at all.
+And the _ngai_ spirit may leave a man in his lifetime as well as at
+death; for example, when a person faints, the natives think that he does
+so because his _ngai_ spirit has departed from him, and they will stamp
+on the ground to make it return. On the other hand the _choi_ spirit is
+supposed never to quit a man during life; it is thought to be in some
+undefined way related to the shadow, whereas the _ngai_ spirit, as we
+saw, manifests itself in the beating of the heart. When a woman dies,
+her _ngai_ spirit goes not into her children but into her sisters, one
+after the other; and when all the sisters are dead, the woman's _ngai_
+spirit goes away among the mangroves and perishes altogether.[164]
+
+Thus these savages explain the phenomena of birth and death, of
+conscious and unconscious life, by a theory of a double human spirit,
+one associated with the heart and the other with the shadow. The
+psychology is rudimentary, still it is interesting as an attempt to
+solve problems which still puzzle civilised man.
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the natives of Cape Bedford in Queensland.]
+
+Other Queensland aborigines associate the vital principle not with the
+heart but with the breath. For example, at Cape Bedford the natives call
+it _wau-wu_ and think that it never leaves the body sleeping or waking
+till death, when it haunts its place of burial for a time and may
+communicate with the living. Thus, like the ghost of Hamlet's father, it
+will often appear to a near kinsman or intimate friend, tell him the
+pitiful tale how he was done to death by an enemy, and urge him to
+revenge. Again, the soul of a man's dead father or friend may bear him
+company on a journey and, like the beryl-stone in Rossetti's poem _Rose
+Mary_, warn him of an ambuscade lurking for him in a spot where the man
+himself sees nothing. But the spirits of the dead do not always come
+with such friendly intent; they may drive the living distracted; a
+peculiar form of mental excitement and bewilderment is attributed to
+their action. Further, these aborigines at Cape Bedford, in Queensland,
+believe that all spirits of nature are in fact souls of the dead. Such
+spirits usually leave their haunts in the forests and caves at night.
+Stout-hearted old men can see and converse with them and receive from
+them warnings of danger; but women and children fear these spirits and
+never see them. But some spirits of the dead, when they have ceased to
+haunt their places of burial, go away eastward and are reincarnated in
+white people; hence these savages often look for a resemblance to some
+deceased tribesman among Europeans, and frequently wonder why it is that
+the white man, on whom their fancy has pitched, remembers nothing about
+his former life as a black man among blacks.[165]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the natives of the Tully River in Queensland.]
+
+The natives of the Tully River in Queensland associate the principle of
+life both with the breath and with the shadow. It departs from the body
+temporarily in sleep and fainting-fits and permanently in death, after
+which it may be heard at night tapping on the top of huts or creaking in
+the branches of trees. It is everlasting, so far as these savages have
+any idea of eternity, and further it is intangible; hence in its
+disembodied state it needs no food, and none is set out for it. The
+disposition of these disembodied spirits of the dead is good or bad,
+according to their disposition in life. Yet when a man is alone by
+himself, the spirit even of one of his own dead kinsfolk will sometimes
+come and do him a mischief. On the other hand it can do nothing to
+several people together; there is safety in numbers. They may all see
+and hear the ghost, but he will not attack them. Hence these savages
+have been taught from childhood to beware of going alone: solitary
+people are liable at any moment to be assailed by the spirits of the
+dead. The only means they know of warding off these ghostly assailants
+is by lighting good fires.[166]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Australian aborigines that their dead are
+reborn in white people.]
+
+I have mentioned the belief of the Cape Bedford natives that the spirits
+of their dead are sometimes reincarnated in white people. A similar
+notion is reported from other and widely separated parts of Australia,
+and wherever it exists may be taken as evidence of a general belief as
+to the rebirth or reincarnation of the dead, even where such a belief is
+not expressly recorded. This superstition has sometimes proved of
+service to white people who have been cast among the blacks, for it has
+ensured them a hospitable and even affectionate welcome, where otherwise
+they might have encountered suspicion and hostility, if not open
+violence. Thus, for example, the convict Buckley, who escaped from the
+penal settlement on Port Phillip Bay in 1803, was found by some of the
+Wudthaurung tribe carrying a piece of a broken spear, which he had
+abstracted from the grave of one of their people. So they took him to be
+the dead man risen from the grave; he received the name of the deceased,
+was adopted by his relations, and lived with the tribe for thirty-two
+years without ever conversing with a white man; when at last he met one,
+he had forgotten the English language.[167] Again, a Mr. Naseby, who
+lived in the Kamilaroi country for fifty years, happened to have the
+marks of cupping on his back, and the natives could not be persuaded
+that he was not one of themselves come to life again with the family
+scars on his body,[168] for the Australian aborigines commonly raise
+scars on the bodies of young men at initiation. The late Sir George Grey
+was identified by an old Australian woman as her dead son come to life
+again. It may be worth while to quote his account of this unlooked-for
+meeting with his long-lost mother; for it will impress on you, better
+than any words of mine could do, the firmness of the faith which these
+savages repose in the resurrection of the body, or at all events in the
+reincarnation of the soul. Grey writes as follows:--
+
+[Sidenote: Experience of Sir George Grey.]
+
+"After we had tethered the horses, and made ourselves tolerably
+comfortable, we heard loud voices from the hills above us: the effect
+was fine,--for they really almost appeared to float in the air; and as
+the wild cries of the women, who knew not our exact position, came by
+upon the wind, I thought it was well worth a little trouble to hear
+these savage sounds under such circumstances. Our guides shouted in
+return, and gradually the approaching cries came nearer and nearer. I
+was, however, wholly unprepared for the scene that was about to take
+place. A sort of procession came up, headed by two women, down whose
+cheeks tears were streaming. The eldest of these came up to me, and
+looking for a moment at me, said,--'_Gwa, gwa, bundo, bal_,'--'Yes, yes,
+in truth it is him'; and then throwing her arms round me, cried
+bitterly, her head resting on my breast; and although I was totally
+ignorant of what their meaning was, from mere motives of compassion, I
+offered no resistance to her caresses, however disagreeable they might
+be, for she was old, ugly, and filthily dirty; the other younger one
+knelt at my feet, also crying. At last the old lady, emboldened by my
+submission, deliberately kissed me on each cheek, just in the manner a
+Frenchwoman would have done; she then cried a little more, and at length
+relieving me, assured me that I was the ghost of her son, who had some
+time before been killed by a spear-wound in his breast. The younger
+female was my sister; but she, whether from motives of delicacy, or from
+any imagined backwardness on my part, did not think proper to kiss me.
+My new mother expressed almost as much delight at my return to my
+family, as my real mother would have done, had I been unexpectedly
+restored to her. As soon as she left me, my brothers, and father (the
+old man who had previously been so frightened), came up and embraced me
+after their manner,--that is, they threw their arms round my waist,
+placed their right knee against my right knee, and their breast against
+my breast, holding me in this way for several minutes. During the time
+that the ceremony lasted, I, according to the native custom, preserved a
+grave and mournful expression of countenance. This belief, that white
+people are the souls of departed blacks, is by no means an uncommon
+superstition amongst them; they themselves never having an idea of
+quitting their own land, cannot imagine others doing it;--and thus, when
+they see white people suddenly appear in their country, and settling
+themselves down in particular spots, they imagine that they must have
+formed an attachment for this land in some other state of existence; and
+hence conclude the settlers were at one period black men and their own
+relations. Likenesses, whether real or imagined, complete the delusion;
+and from the manner of the old woman I have just alluded to, from her
+many tears, and from her warm caresses, I feel firmly convinced that she
+really believed I was her son, whose first thought, upon his return to
+earth, had been to re-visit his old mother, and bring her a
+present."[169]
+
+[Sidenote: In South-eastern Australia the natives believed that the
+souls of the dead were not reborn but went up to the sky.]
+
+On the whole then we may conclude that a belief in the reincarnation of
+the dead has not been confined to the tribes of Central Australia, but
+has been held by the tribes in many, perhaps at one time in all, other
+parts of the continent. Yet, if we may judge from the imperfect records
+which we possess, this faith in the return of the dead to life in human
+form would seem to have given way and been replaced to some extent by a
+different creed among many tribes of South-eastern Australia. In this
+part of the continent it appears to have been often held by the natives
+that after death the soul is not born again among men, but goes away for
+ever to some distant country either in the sky or beyond the sea, where
+all the spirits of the dead congregate. Thus Lieutenant-Colonel Collins,
+who was Governor of New South Wales in the early days of the colony, at
+the end of the eighteenth century, reports that when the natives were
+often questioned "as to what became of them after their decease, some
+answered that they went either on or beyond the great water; but by far
+the greater number signified, that they went to the clouds."[170] Again,
+the Narrinyeri tribe of South Australia believed that all the dead went
+up to the sky and that some of them at least became stars. We possess an
+excellent description of the beliefs and customs of this tribe from the
+pen of a missionary, the Rev. George Taplin, who lived among them for
+many years. His account of their theory of the state of the dead is
+instructive. It runs thus:--
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Narrinyeri concerning the dead.]
+
+"The Narrinyeri point out several stars, and say that they are deceased
+warriors who have gone to heaven (_Wyirrewarre_). There are Wyungare,
+and Nepalle, and the Manchingga, and several others. Every native
+expects to go to _Wyirrewarre_ after death. They also believe that the
+dead descend from thence, and walk the earth; and that they are able to
+injure those whom they dislike. Consequently, men who have been
+notorious in life for a domineering and revengeful disposition are very
+much dreaded after death. For instance, there is Karungpe, who comes in
+the dead of night, when the camp fire has burned low, and like a rushing
+wind scatters the dying embers, and then takes advantage of the darkness
+to rob some sleeper of life; and it is considered dangerous to whistle
+in the dark, for Karungpe is especially attracted by a whistle. There is
+another restless spirit--the deceased father of a boy whom I well
+know--who is said to rove about armed with a rope, with which he catches
+people. All the Narrinyeri, old and young, are dreadfully afraid of
+seeing ghosts, and none of them will venture into the scrub after dark,
+lest he should encounter the spirits which are supposed to roam there. I
+have heard some admirable specimens of ghost stories from them. In one
+case I remember the ghost was represented to have set fire to a _wurley_
+[hut], and ascended to heaven in the flame. The Narrinyeri regard the
+disapprobation of the spirits of the dead as a thing to be dreaded; and
+if a serious quarrel takes place between near relatives, some of the
+friends are sure to interpose with entreaties to the contentious parties
+to be reconciled, lest the spirits of the dead should be offended at
+unseemly disputes between those who ought to be at peace. The name of
+the dead must not be mentioned until his body has decayed, lest a want
+of sorrow should seem to be indicated by the common and flippant use of
+his name. A native would have the deceased believe that he cannot hear
+or speak his name without weeping."[171]
+
+[Sidenote: Narrinyeri fear of the dead. Mourning customs.]
+
+From this account it would appear that the Narrinyeri have no belief in
+the reincarnation of the dead; they suppose that the souls of the
+departed live up aloft in the sky, from which they descend at night in
+the form of ghosts to haunt and trouble the living. On the whole the
+attitude of the Narrinyeri towards their dead kinsfolk seems to be
+dominated by fear; of affection there is apparently little or no trace.
+It is true that like most Australian tribes they indulge in extravagant
+demonstrations of grief at the death of their kinsfolk. A great
+lamentation and wailing is made by all the relations and friends of the
+deceased. They cut off their hair close to the head and besmudge
+themselves with oil and pounded charcoal. The women besmear themselves
+with the most disgusting filth. All beat and cut themselves and make a
+violent show of sorrow; and all the time that the corpse, rubbed over
+with grease and red ochre, is being dried over a slow fire in the hut,
+the women take it by turns to weep and wail before it, so that the
+lamentation never ceases for days. Yet Mr. Taplin was persuaded "that
+fear has more to do with most of these exhibitions than grief"; and he
+tells us that "for one minute a woman will appear in the deepest agony
+of grief and tears; a few minutes after, the conventional amount of
+weeping having been accomplished, they will laugh and talk with the
+merriest."[172] The principal motive, in fact, for all this excessive
+display of sorrow would seem to be a fear lest the jealous ghost should
+think himself slighted and should avenge the slight on the cold-hearted
+relatives who do not mourn sufficiently for the irreparable loss they
+have sustained by his death. We may conjecture that the same train of
+thought explains the ancient and widespread custom of hiring
+professional mourners to wail over the dead; the tears and lamentations
+of his kinsfolk are not enough to soothe the wounded feelings of the
+departed, they must be reinforced by noisier expressions of regret.
+
+[Sidenote: Deaths attributed by the Narrinyeri to sorcery.]
+
+But there is another powerful motive for all these violent
+demonstrations of grief, into the secret of which we are let by Mr.
+Taplin. He says that "all the relatives are careful to be present and
+not to be wanting in the proper signs of sorrow, lest they should be
+suspected of complicity in causing the death."[173] In fact the
+Narrinyeri, like many other savages, attribute all, or most, natural
+deaths to sorcery. When a person dies, they think that he or she has
+been killed by the evil magic of some ill-wisher, and one of the first
+things to be done is to discover the culprit in order that his life may
+be taken in revenge. For this purpose the Narrinyeri resort to a form of
+divination. On the first night after the death the nearest relation of
+the deceased sleeps with his head on the corpse, hoping thus to dream of
+the sorcerer who has done the mischief. Next day the corpse is placed on
+a sort of bier supported on men's shoulders. The friends of the deceased
+gather round and call out the names of suspected persons to see whether
+the corpse will give any sign. At last the next of kin calls out the
+name of the person of whom he has dreamed, and if at the sound the
+corpse makes a movement towards him, which the bearers say they cannot
+resist, it is regarded as a clear token that the man so named is the
+malefactor. It only remains for the kinsfolk of the dead to hunt down
+the culprit and kill him.[174] Thus not only the relations but everybody
+in the neighbourhood has the strongest motive for assuming at least an
+appearance of sorrow at a death, lest the suspicion of having caused it
+by sorcery should fall upon him.
+
+[Sidenote: Pretence made by the Narrinyeri of avenging the death of
+their friends on the guilty sorcerer.]
+
+It deserves to be noted, that while the Narrinyeri nominally
+acknowledged the duty of killing the sorcerer who in their opinion had
+caused the death of their friend, they by no means always discharged the
+duty, but sometimes contented themselves with little more than a
+pretence of revenge. Mr. Taplin's account of the proceedings observed on
+such an occasion is instructive. It runs thus: "The spirit of the dead
+is not considered to have been appeased until his relatives have avenged
+his death. They will kill the sorcerer who has caused it if they can
+catch him; but generally they cannot catch him, and often do not wish
+it. Most probably he belongs to some other tribe of the Narrinyeri.
+Messengers pass between the tribes relative to the affair, and the
+friends of the accused person at last formally curse the dead man and
+all his dead relatives. This constitutes a _casus belli_. Arrangements
+are forthwith made for a pitched battle, and the two tribes meet in
+company with their respective allies. The tribe to which the dead man
+belongs weep and make a great lamentation for him, and the opposing
+tribe sets some fellows to dance about and play antics in derision of
+their enemies. Then the whole tribe will set up a great laugh by way of
+further provocation. If there is any other cause of animosity between
+the tribes besides the matter of avenging the dead there will now be a
+pretty severe fight with spears. If, however, the tribes have nothing
+but the dead man to fight about, they will probably throw a few spears,
+indulge in considerable abuse of each other, perhaps one or two will get
+slightly wounded, and then some of the old men will declare that enough
+has been done. The dead man is considered to have been appeased by the
+efforts of his friends to avenge his death by fighting, and the two
+tribes are friendly again. In such a case the fight is a mere
+ceremony."[175] Thus among the Narrinyeri the duty of blood revenge was
+often supposed to be sufficiently discharged by a sham fight performed
+apparently for the satisfaction of the ghost, who was supposed to be
+looking on and to be gratified by the sight of his friends hurling
+spears at the author of his death. Merciful pretences of the same sort
+have been practised by other savages in order to satisfy the vengeful
+ghost without the effusion of blood. Examples of them will come before
+us later on.[176]
+
+[Sidenote: Magical virtue ascribed to the hair of the dead.]
+
+However, the attitude of the Narrinyeri towards their dead was not
+purely one of fear and aversion. They imagined that they could derive
+certain benefits from their departed kinsfolk, and the channel through
+which these benefits flowed was furnished by their hair. They cut off
+the hair of the dead and spun it into a cord, and this cord was commonly
+worn by the men as a head-band. They said that thereby they "smelled the
+dead," and that the smell made their eyes large and their sight keen, so
+that in a fight they could see the spears coming and could parry or
+avoid them.[177] Similar magical virtues are ascribed to the hair of the
+dead by the Arunta. Among them the hair of a dead man is cut off and
+made into a magic girdle, which is a valued possession and is only worn
+when a man is going out to engage in a tribal fight or to stalk a foe
+for the purpose of destroying him by witchcraft. The girdle is supposed
+to be endowed with magic power and to impart to its possessor all the
+warlike qualities of the dead man from whose hair it was made; in
+particular, it is thought to ensure accuracy of aim in the wearer, while
+at the same time it destroys that of his adversary.[178] Hence the
+girdle is worn by the man who takes the lead in avenging the death of
+the deceased on his supposed murderer; the mere sight of it, they think,
+so terrifies the victim that his legs tremble under him, he becomes
+incapable of fighting, and is easily speared.[179]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief that the souls of the dead go up to the sky.]
+
+Among the tribes of South-eastern Australia the Narrinyeri were not
+alone in holding the curious belief that the souls of the dead go up
+into the sky to live there for ever, but that their ghosts come down
+again from time to time, roam about their old haunts on earth, and
+communicate with the living. This, for example, was the belief of the
+Dieri, the Buandik, the Kurnai, and the Kulin tribes.[180] The Buandik
+thought that everything in skyland was better than on earth; a fat
+kangaroo, for example, was compared to a kangaroo of heaven, where, of
+course, the animals might be expected to abound.[181] The Kulin imagined
+that the spirits of the dead ascended to heaven by the bright rays of
+the setting sun.[182] The Wailwun natives in New South Wales used to
+bury their dead in hollow trees, and when they dropped the body into its
+place, the bearers and the bystanders joined in a loud whirring sound,
+like the rush of the wind. They said that this represented the upward
+flight of the soul to the sky.[183]
+
+[Sidenote: Appearance of the dead to the living, especially in dreams.]
+
+With regard to the ghosts on earth, some tribes of South-eastern
+Australia believe that they can be seen by the living, can partake of
+food, and can warm themselves at a fire. It is especially the graves,
+where their mouldering bodies are deposited, that these restless spirits
+are supposed to haunt; it is there that they shew themselves either to
+people generally or to such as have the second sight.[184] But it is
+most commonly in dreams that they appear to the living and hold
+communication with them. Often these communications are believed to be
+helpful. Thus the tribes of the Wotjobaluk nation thought that the
+ghosts of their dead relations could visit them in sleep to protect
+them. A Mukjarawaint man told Dr. Howitt that his father came to him in
+a dream and warned him to beware or he would be killed. This, the man
+believed, was the saving of his life; for he afterwards came to the
+place which he had seen in his dream; whereupon, instead of going on, he
+turned back, so that his enemies, who might have been waiting for him
+there, did not catch him.[185] Another man informed Dr. Howitt that his
+dead uncle appeared to him in sleep and taught him charms against
+sickness and other evils; and the Chepara tribe similarly believed that
+male ancestors visited sleepers and imparted to them charms to avert
+evil magic.[186]
+
+[Sidenote: Savage faith in the truth of dreams. Association of the stars
+with the souls of the dead.]
+
+Such notions follow naturally from the savage theory of dreams. Almost
+all savages appear to believe firmly in the truth of dreams; they fail
+to draw the distinction, which to us seems obvious, between the
+imaginary creations of the mind in sleep and the waking realities of the
+physical world. Whatever they dream of must, they think, be actually
+existing; for have they not seen it with their own eyes? To argue that
+the visions of sleep have no real existence is, therefore, in their
+opinion, to argue against the plain evidence of their senses; and they
+naturally treat such exaggerated scepticism with incredulity and
+contempt. Hence when they dream of their dead friends and relations they
+necessarily conclude that these persons are still alive somewhere and
+somehow, though they do not commonly appear by daylight to people in
+their waking hours. Unquestionably this savage faith in the reality of
+dreams has been one of the principal sources of the widespread, almost
+universal, belief in the survival of the human soul after death. It
+explains why ghosts are supposed to appear rather by night than by day,
+since it is chiefly by night that men sleep and dream dreams. Perhaps it
+may also partly account for the association of the stars with the souls
+of the dead. For if the dead appear to the living mainly in the hours of
+darkness, it seems not unnatural to imagine that the bright points of
+light which then bespangle the canopy of heaven are either the souls of
+the departed or fires kindled by them in their home aloft. For example,
+the Central Australian aborigines commonly suppose the stars to be the
+camp-fires of natives who live on the banks of the great river which we
+civilised men, by a survival of primitive mythology, call the Milky Way.
+However, these rude savages, we are told, as a general rule "appear to
+pay very little attention to the stars in detail, probably because they
+enter very little into anything which is connected with their daily
+life, and more especially with their food supply."[187] The same
+observation which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen here make as to the natives
+of Central Australia might be applied to most savages who have remained
+in the purely hunting stage of social development. Such men are not much
+addicted to star-gazing, since the stars have little or nothing to tell
+them that they wish to know. It is not till people have betaken
+themselves to sowing and reaping crops that they begin to scan the
+heavens more carefully in order to determine the season of sowing by
+observation of the great celestial time-keepers, the rising and setting
+of certain constellations, above all, apparently, of the Pleiades.[188]
+In short, the rise of agriculture favours the rise of astronomy.
+
+[Sidenote: Creed of the South-eastern Australians touching the dead.]
+
+But to return to the ideas of the Australian aborigines concerning the
+dead, we may say of the natives of the south-eastern part of the
+continent, in the words of Dr. Howitt, that "there is a universal belief
+in the existence of the human spirit after death, as a ghost, which is
+able to communicate with the living when they sleep. It finds its way to
+the sky-country, where it lives in a land like the earth, only more
+fertile, better watered, and plentifully supplied with game."[189] This
+belief is very different from that of the Central Australian natives,
+who think that the souls of the dead tarry on earth in their old
+familiar haunts until the time comes for them to be born again into the
+world. Of the two different creeds that of the south-eastern tribes may
+be regarded as the more advanced, since it admits that the dead do not
+return to life, and that their disembodied spirits do not haunt
+perpetually a multitude of spiritual parks or reservations dotted over
+the face of the country.
+
+[Sidenote: The creed seems to form part of a general advance of culture
+in this part of the continent.]
+
+But how are we to account for this marked difference of belief between
+the natives of the Centre and the natives of the South-east? Perhaps the
+most probable explanation is that the creed of the south-eastern tribes
+in this respect is part of a general advance of culture brought about by
+the more favourable natural conditions under which they live as compared
+with the forlorn state of the rude inhabitants of the Central deserts.
+That advance of culture manifests itself in a variety of ways. On the
+material side it is seen in more substantial and permanent dwellings and
+in warmer and better clothing. On the social side it is seen in an
+incipient tendency to the rise of a regular chieftainship, a thing which
+is quite unknown among the democratic or rather oligarchic savages of
+the Centre, who are mainly governed by the old men in council.[190] But
+the rise of chieftainship is a great step in political progress; since a
+monarchical government of some sort appears to be essential to the
+emergence of mankind from savagery. On the whole, then, the beliefs of
+the South-eastern Australian aborigines seem to mark a step on the
+upward road towards civilisation.
+
+[Sidenote: Possible influence of European teaching on native beliefs.]
+
+At the same time we must not forget that these beliefs may have been
+influenced by the lessons which they have learned from white settlers
+with whom in this part of Australia they have been so long in contact.
+The possibility of such a transfusion of the new wine of Europe into the
+old bottles of Australia did not escape the experienced Mr. James
+Dawson, an early settler in Victoria, who has given us a valuable
+account of the natives of that region in the old days when they were
+still comparatively little contaminated by intercourse with the whites.
+He describes as follows the views which prevailed as to the dead among
+the tribes of Western Victoria:--"After the disposal of the body of a
+good person, its shade walks about for three days; and although it
+appears to people, it holds no communication with them. Should it be
+seen and named by anyone during these three days, it instantly
+disappears. At the expiry of three days it goes off to a beautiful
+country above the clouds, abounding with kangaroo and other game, where
+life will be enjoyed for ever. Friends will meet and recognize each
+other there; but there will be no marrying, as the bodies have been left
+on earth. Children under four or five years have no souls and no future
+life. The shades of the wicked wander miserably about the earth for one
+year after death, frightening people, and then descend to Ummekulleen,
+never to return." After giving us this account of the native creed Mr.
+Dawson adds very justly: "Some of the ideas described above may possibly
+have originated with the white man, and been transmitted from Sydney by
+one tribe to another."[191] The probability of white influence on this
+particular doctrine of religion is increased by the frank confession
+which these same natives made of the religious deterioration (as they
+regarded it) which they had suffered in another direction through the
+teaching of the missionaries. On this subject, to quote again from Mr.
+Dawson, the savages are of opinion that "the good spirit, Pirnmeheeal,
+is a gigantic man, living above the clouds; and as he is of a kindly
+disposition, and harms no one, he is seldom mentioned, but always with
+respect. His voice, the thunder, is listened to with pleasure, as it
+does good to man and beast, by bringing rain, and making grass and roots
+grow for their benefit. But the aborigines say that the missionaries and
+government protectors have given them a dread of Pirnmeheeal; and they
+are sorry that the young people, and many of the old, are now afraid of
+a being who never did any harm to their forefathers."[192]
+
+[Sidenote: Vagueness and inconsistency of native beliefs as to the state
+of the dead. Custom or ritual as the interpreter of belief.]
+
+However, it is very difficult to ascertain the exact beliefs of savages
+as to the dead. The thought of the savage is apt to be vague and
+inconsistent; he neither represents his ideas clearly to his own mind
+nor can he express them lucidly to others, even if he wishes to do so.
+And his thought is not only vague and inconsistent; it is fluid and
+unstable, liable to shift and change under alien influence. For these
+and other reasons, such as the distrust of strangers and the difficulty
+of language, which often interposes a formidable barrier between savage
+man and the civilised enquirer, the domain of primitive beliefs is beset
+by so many snares and pitfalls that we might almost despair of arriving
+at the truth, were it not that we possess a clue to guide us on the dark
+and slippery way. That clue is action. While it is generally very
+difficult to ascertain what any man thinks, it is comparatively easy to
+ascertain what he does; and what a man does, not what he says, is the
+surest touchstone to his real belief. Hence when we attempt to study the
+religion of backward races, the ritual which they practise is generally
+a safer indication of their actual creed than the loudest profession of
+faith. In regard to the state of the human soul after death the beliefs
+of the Australian aborigines are clearly reflected in many of the
+customs which they observe at the death and burial of their friends and
+enemies, and it is accordingly with an account of some of these customs
+that I propose to conclude this part of my subject.
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the Australian aborigines as evidence of
+their beliefs concerning the state of the soul after death. Food placed
+on the grave for the use of the ghost and fires kindled to warm him.]
+
+Now some of the burial customs observed by the Australian savages reveal
+in the clearest manner their belief that the human soul survives the
+death of the body, that in its disembodied state it retains
+consciousness and feeling, and can do a mischief to the living; in
+short, they shew that in the opinion of these people the departed live
+in the form of dangerous ghosts. Thus, for example, when the deceased is
+a person of importance, the Dieri place food for many days on the grave,
+and in winter they kindle a fire in order that the ghost may warm
+himself at it. If the food remains untouched on the grave, they think
+that the dead is not hungry.[193] The Blanch-water section of that tribe
+fear the spirits of the dead and accordingly take steps to prevent their
+resurrection. For that purpose they tie the toes of the corpse together
+and the thumbs behind the back, which must obviously make it difficult
+for the dead man to arise in his might and pursue them. Moreover, for a
+month after the death they sweep a clear space round the grave at dusk
+every evening, and inspect it every morning. If they find any tracks on
+it, they assume that they have been made by the restless ghost in his
+nocturnal peregrinations, and accordingly they dig up his mouldering
+remains and bury them in some other place, where they hope he will sleep
+sounder.[194] The Kukata tribe think that the ghost may be thirsty, so
+they obligingly leave a drinking vessel on the grave, that he may slake
+his thirst. Also they deposit spears and other weapons on the spot,
+together with a digging-stick, which is specially intended to ward off
+evil spirits who may be on the prowl.[195] The ghosts of the natives on
+the Maranoa river were also thirsty souls, so vessels full of water were
+sometimes suspended for their use over the grave.[196] A custom of
+lighting a fire on the grave to warm the poor shivering ghost seems to
+have been not uncommon among the aboriginal Australians. The Western
+Victorians, for example, kept up large fires all night for this
+purpose.[197] In the Wiimbaio tribe two fires were kept burning for a
+whole month on the grave, one to the right and the other to the left, in
+order that the ghost might come out and warm himself at them in the
+chill night air. If they found tracks near the grave, they inferred,
+like the Dieri, that the perturbed spirit had quitted his narrow bed to
+pace to and fro in the long hours of darkness; but if no footprints were
+visible they thought that he slept in peace.[198] In some parts of
+Western Australia the natives maintained fires on the grave for more
+than a month for the convenience of the ghost; and they clearly expected
+him to come to life again, for they detached the nails from the thumb
+and forefinger of the corpse and deposited them in a small hole beside
+the grave, in order that they might know their friend at his
+resurrection.[199] The length of time during which fires were maintained
+or kindled daily on the grave is said to have varied, according to the
+estimation in which the man was held, from a few days to three or four
+years.[200] We have seen that the Dieri laid food on the grave for the
+hungry ghost to partake of, and the same custom was observed by the
+Gournditch-mara tribe.[201] However, some intelligent old aborigines of
+Western Victoria derided the custom as "white fellow's gammon."[202]
+
+[Sidenote: Property of the dead buried with them.]
+
+Further, in some tribes of South-eastern Australia it was customary to
+deposit the scanty property of the deceased, usually consisting of a few
+rude weapons or implements, on the grave or to bury it with him. Thus
+the natives of Western Victoria buried all a dead man's ornaments,
+weapons, and property with him in the grave, only reserving his stone
+axes, which were too valuable to be thus sacrificed: these were
+inherited by the next of kin.[203] The Wurunjerri also interred the
+personal property of the dead with him; if the deceased was a man, his
+spear-thrower was stuck in the ground at the head of the grave; if the
+deceased was a woman, the same thing was done with her digging-stick.
+That these implements were intended for the use of the ghost and not
+merely as headstones to mark the situation of the tomb and the sex of
+the departed, is clear from a significant exception to the custom. When
+the departed brother was a man of violent temper, who had been
+quarrelsome and a brawler in his life, no weapons were buried with him,
+obviously lest in a fit of ill-temper he should sally from the grave and
+assault people with them.[204] Similarly the Turrbal tribe, who
+deposited their dead in the forks of trees, used to leave a spear and
+club near the corpse "that the spirit of the dead might have weapons
+wherewith to kill game for his sustenance in the future state. A
+yam-stick was placed in the ground at a woman's grave, so that she might
+go away at night and seek for roots."[205] The Wolgal tribe were very
+particular about burying everything that belonged to a dead man with
+him; spears and nets, though valuable articles of property, were thus
+sacrificed; even a canoe has been known to be cut up in order that the
+pieces of it might be deposited in the grave. In fact "everything
+belonging to a dead man was put out of sight."[206] Similarly in the
+Geawe-gal tribe all the implements and inanimate property of a warrior
+were interred with him.[207] In the Gringai country not only was all a
+man's property buried with him, but every native present at the burial
+contributed something, and these contributions were piled together at
+the head of the corpse before the grave was filled in.[208] Among the
+tribes of Southern Victoria, when the grave has been dug and lined with
+fresh leaves and twigs so as to make a soft bed, the dead man's property
+is brought in two bags, and the sorcerer shakes out the contents. They
+consist of such small articles as pieces of hard stone suitable for
+cutting or paring skins, bones for boring holes, twine made of opossum
+wool, and so forth. These are placed in the grave, and the bags and rugs
+of the deceased are torn up and thrown in likewise. Then the sorcerer
+asks whether the dead man had any other property, and if he had, it is
+brought forward and laid beside the torn fragments of the bags and rugs.
+Everything that a man owned in life must be laid beside him in
+death.[209] Again, among the tribes of the Lower Murray, Lachlan, and
+Darling rivers in New South Wales, all a dead man's property, including
+his weapons and nets, was buried with his body in the grave.[210]
+Further, we are told that among the natives of Western Australia the
+weapons and personal property of the deceased are placed on the grave,
+"so that when he rises from the dead they may be ready to his
+hand."[211] In the Boulia district of Queensland the things which
+belonged to a dead man, such as his boomerangs and spears, are either
+buried with him, destroyed by fire, or sometimes, though rarely,
+distributed among his tribal brothers, but never among his
+children.[212]
+
+[Sidenote: Intention of destroying the property of the dead. The
+property of the dead not destroyed in Central Australia.]
+
+Thus among certain tribes of Australia, especially in the south-eastern
+part of the continent, it appears that the custom of burying or
+destroying a dead man's property has been very common. That the
+intention of the custom in some cases is to supply the supposed needs of
+the ghost, seems to be fairly certain; but we may doubt whether this
+explanation would apply to the practice of burning or otherwise
+destroying the things which had belonged to the deceased. More probably
+such destruction springs from an overpowering dread of the ghost and a
+wish to sever all connexion with him, so that he may have no excuse for
+returning and haunting the survivors, as he might do if his property
+were either kept by them or deposited in the grave. Whatever the motive
+for the burial or destruction of a dead man's property may be, the
+custom appears not to prevail among the tribes of Central Australia. In
+the eastern Arunta tribe, indeed, it is said that sometimes a little
+wooden vessel used in camp for holding small objects may be buried with
+the man, but this is the only instance which Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+could hear of in which any article of ordinary use is buried in the
+grave. Far from wasting property in that way, these economical savages
+preserve even a man's personal ornaments, such as his necklaces,
+armlets, and the fur string which he wore round his head; indeed, as we
+have seen, they go so far as to cut off the hair from the head of the
+deceased and to keep it for magical uses.[213] In the Warramunga tribe
+all the belongings of a dead man go to the tribal brothers of his
+mother.[214]
+
+[Sidenote: Property of the dead hung up on trees, then washed and
+distributed. Economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the dead.]
+
+The difference in this respect between the practice of the Central
+tribes and that of the tribes nearer the sea, especially in Victoria and
+New South Wales, is very notable. A custom intermediate between the two
+is observed by some tribes of the Darling River, who hang up the
+weapons, nets, and other property of the deceased on trees for about two
+months, then wash them, and distribute them among the relations.[215]
+The reason for hanging the things up and washing them is no doubt to rid
+them of the infection of death in order that they may be used with
+safety by the survivors. Such a custom points clearly to a growing fear
+of the dead; and that fear or reverence comes out still more clearly in
+the practice of either burying the property of the dead with them or
+destroying it altogether, which is observed by the aborigines of
+Victoria and other parts of Australia who live under more favourable
+conditions of life than the inhabitants of the Central deserts. This
+confirms the conclusion which we have reached on other grounds, that
+among the aboriginal population of Australia favourable natural
+conditions in respect of climate, food, and water have exercised a most
+important influence in stimulating social progress in many directions,
+and not least in the direction of religion. At the same time, while we
+recognise that the incipient tendency to a worship of the dead which may
+be detected in these regions marks a step forward in religious
+development, we must acknowledge that the practice of burying or
+destroying the property of the dead, which is one of the ways in which
+the tendency manifests itself, is, regarded from the side of economic
+progress, a decided step backward. It marks, in fact, the beginning of a
+melancholy aberration of the human mind, which has led mankind to
+sacrifice the real interests of the living to the imaginary interests of
+the dead. With the general advance of society and the accompanying
+accumulation of property these sacrifices have at certain stages of
+evolution become heavier and heavier, as the demands of the ghosts
+became more and more exacting. The economic waste which the belief in
+the immortality of the soul has entailed on the world is incalculable.
+When we contemplate that waste in its small beginnings among the rude
+savages of Australia it appears insignificant enough; the world is not
+much the poorer for the loss of a parcel of boomerangs, spears, fur
+string, and skin rugs. But when we pass from the custom in this its
+feeble source and follow it as it swells in volume through the nations
+of the world till it attains the dimensions of a mighty river of wasted
+labour, squandered treasure, and spilt blood, we cannot but wonder at
+the strange mixture of good and evil in the affairs of mankind, seeing
+in what we justly call progress so much hardly earned gain side by side
+with so much gratuitous loss, such immense additions to the substantial
+value of life to be set off against such enormous sacrifices to the
+shadow of a shade.
+
+[Footnote 160: W. E. Roth, _North Queensland Ethnography, Bulletin No.
+5, Superstition, Magic, and Medicine_ (Brisbane, 1903), pp. 18, 23,
+Secs. 68, 83.]
+
+[Footnote 161: Homer, _Odyssey_, xix. 163.]
+
+[Footnote 162: W. E. Roth, _ll. cc._]
+
+[Footnote 163: W. E. Roth, _North Queensland Ethnography, Bulletin No.
+5_ (Brisbane, 1903), p. 29. Sec. 116.]
+
+[Footnote 164: W. E. Roth. _op. cit._ p. 18, Sec. 68.]
+
+[Footnote 165: W. E. Roth, _op. cit._ pp. 17, 29, Secs. 65, 116.]
+
+[Footnote 166: W. E. Roth, _op. cit._ p. 17, Sec. 65.]
+
+[Footnote 167: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_ (Melbourne, Sydney,
+and Adelaide, 1881), pp. 110 _sq._; A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of
+South-East Australia_ (London, 1904), p. 442.]
+
+[Footnote 168: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 445.]
+
+[Footnote 169: (Sir) George Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery in North-West and Western Australia_ (London, 1841), i.
+301-303.]
+
+[Footnote 170: Lieutenant-Colonel David Collins, _An Account of the
+English Colony in New South Wales_, Second Edition (London, 1804), p.
+354.]
+
+[Footnote 171: Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," in _Native Tribes of
+South Australia_ (Adelaide, 1879), pp. 18 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 172: Rev. G. Taplin, "The Narrinyeri," _op. cit._ pp. 20
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 173: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ p. 20.]
+
+[Footnote 174: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ pp. 19 _sq._, 21.]
+
+[Footnote 175: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ p. 21.]
+
+[Footnote 176: See below, pp. 235 _sqq._, 327 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 177: Rev. G. Taplin, _op. cit._ p. 21.]
+
+[Footnote 178: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 538 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 179: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 544 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 180: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_,
+pp. 434, 436, 437, 438. Compare E. J. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of
+Discovery into Central Australia_ (London, 1845), ii. 357.]
+
+[Footnote 181: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 434.]
+
+[Footnote 182: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 438.]
+
+[Footnote 183: Rev. W. Ridley, _Kamilaroi_ (Sydney, 1875), p. 160.]
+
+[Footnote 184: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_,
+pp. 434, 438, 439; J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 185: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 435.]
+
+[Footnote 186: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 437.]
+
+[Footnote 187: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 628.]
+
+[Footnote 188: As to the place occupied by the Pleiades in primitive
+calendars, see _Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, i. 309-319.]
+
+[Footnote 189: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_,
+pp. 439 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 190: See _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 314 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 191: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 51. A man of the
+Ta-ta-thi tribe in New South Wales informed Mr. A. L. P. Cameron that
+the natives believed in a pit of fire where bad men were roasted after
+death. This reported belief, resting apparently on the testimony of a
+single informant, may without doubt be ascribed to the influence of
+Christian teaching. See A. L. P. Cameron, "Notes on some Tribes of New
+South Wales," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xiv. (1885)
+pp. 364 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 192: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 49.]
+
+[Footnote 193: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+448.]
+
+[Footnote 194: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._. p. 449. Compare E. M. Curr,
+_The Australian Race_, i. 87: "The object sought in tying up the remains
+of the dead is to prevent the deceased from escaping from the tomb and
+frightening or injuring the survivors."]
+
+[Footnote 195: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 451.]
+
+[Footnote 196: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 467.]
+
+[Footnote 197: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 198: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+452.]
+
+[Footnote 199: R. Salvado, _Memoires historiques sur l' Australie_
+(Paris, 1854), p. 261; _Missions Catholiques_, x. (1878) p. 247. For
+more evidence as to the lighting of fires for this purpose see A. W.
+Howitt, _op. cit._ pp. 455, 470.]
+
+[Footnote 200: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, New Series, iii. (1865) p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 201: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 455.]
+
+[Footnote 202: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, pp. 50 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 203: J. Dawson, _op. cit._ p. 63.]
+
+[Footnote 204: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+458.]
+
+[Footnote 205: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 470.]
+
+[Footnote 206: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ pp. 461 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 207: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 464.]
+
+[Footnote 208: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 464.]
+
+[Footnote 209: R. Brough Smyth, _The Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 104.]
+
+[Footnote 210: P. Beveridge, "Of the Aborigines Inhabiting the Great
+Lacustrine and Riverine Depression of the Lower Murray, Lower
+Murrumbidgee, Lower Lachlan, and Lower Darling," _Journal and
+Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales_, xvii. (1883) p.
+29.]
+
+[Footnote 211: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, New Series, iii. (1865) p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 212: W. E. Roth, _Ethnological Studies among the
+North-West-Central Queensland Aborigines_ (Brisbane and London, 1897),
+p. 164.]
+
+[Footnote 213: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 466, 497 _sq._, 538 _sq._ See above, p. 138.]
+
+[Footnote 214: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 524.]
+
+[Footnote 215: F. Bonney, "On some Customs of the Aborigines of the
+River Darling, New South Wales," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiii. (1884) p. 135.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE VII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE ABORIGINES OF AUSTRALIA
+(_concluded_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Attention to the comfort of the dead. Huts erected on graves
+for the use of the ghosts.]
+
+In the last lecture I shewed that in the maritime regions of Australia,
+where the conditions of life are more favourable than in the Central
+deserts, we may detect the germs of a worship of the dead in certain
+attentions which the living pay to the spirits of the departed, for
+example by kindling fires on the grave for the ghost to warm himself at,
+by leaving food and water for him to eat and drink, and by depositing
+his weapons and other property in the tomb for his use in the life after
+death. Another mark of respect shewn to the dead is the custom of
+erecting a hut on the grave for the accommodation of the ghost. Thus
+among the tribes of South Australia we are told that "upon the mounds,
+or tumuli, over the graves, huts of bark, or boughs, are generally
+erected to shelter the dead from the rain; they are also frequently
+wound round with netting."[216] Again, in Western Australia a small hut
+of rushes, grass, and so forth is said to have been set up by the
+natives over the grave.[217] Among the tribes of the Lower Murray, Lower
+Lachlan, and Lower Darling rivers, when a person died who had been
+highly esteemed in life, a neat hut was erected over his grave so as to
+cover it entirely. The hut was of oval shape, about five feet high, and
+roofed with thatch, which was firmly tied to the framework by cord many
+hundreds of yards in length. Sometimes the whole hut was enveloped in a
+net. At the eastern end of the hut a small opening was left just large
+enough to allow a full-grown man to creep in, and the floor was covered
+with grass, which was renewed from time to time as it became withered.
+Each of these graves was enclosed by a fence of brushwood forming a
+diamond-shaped enclosure, within which the tomb stood exactly in the
+middle. All the grass within the fence was neatly shaved off and the
+ground swept quite clean. Sepulchres of this sort were kept up for two
+or three years, after which they were allowed to fall into disrepair,
+and when a few more years had gone by the very sites of them were
+forgotten.[218] The intention of erecting huts on graves is not
+mentioned in these cases, but on analogy we may conjecture that they are
+intended for the convenience and comfort of the ghost. This is confirmed
+by an account given of a native burial on the Vasse River in Western
+Australia. We are told that when the grave had been filled in, the
+natives piled logs on it to a considerable height and then constructed a
+hut upon the logs, after which one of the male relations went into the
+hut and said, "I sit in his house."[219] Thus it would seem that the hut
+on the grave is regarded as the house of the dead man. If only these
+sepulchral huts were kept up permanently, they might develop into
+something like temples, in which the spirits of the departed might be
+invoked and propitiated with prayer and sacrifice. It is thus that the
+great round huts, in which the remains of dead kings of Uganda are
+deposited, have grown into sanctuaries or shrines, where the spirits of
+the deceased monarchs are consulted as oracles through the medium of
+priests.[220] But in Australia this development is prevented by the
+simple forgetfulness of the savages. A few years suffice with them to
+wipe out the memory of the deceased and with it his chance of developing
+into an ancestral deity. Like most savages, the Australian aborigines
+seem to fear only the ghosts of the recently departed; one writer tells
+us that they have no fear of the ghost of a man who has been dead say
+forty years.[221]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the dead and precautions taken by the living against
+them.]
+
+The burial customs of the Australian aborigines which I have described
+betray not only a belief in the existence of the ghost, but also a
+certain regard for his comfort and convenience. However, we may suspect
+that in most, if not in all, cases the predominant motive of these
+attentions is fear rather than affection. The survivors imagine that any
+want of respect for the dead, any neglect of his personal comforts in
+the grave, would excite his resentment and draw down on them his
+vengeance. That these savages are really actuated by fear of the dead is
+expressly affirmed of some tribes. Thus we are told that the Yuin "were
+always afraid that the dead man might come out of the grave and follow
+them."[222] After burying a body the Ngarigo were wont to cross a river
+in order to prevent the ghost from pursuing them;[223] obviously they
+shared the common opinion that ghosts for some reason are unable to
+cross water. The Wakelbura took other measures to throw the poor ghost
+off the scent. They marked all the trees in a circle round the place
+where the dead man was buried; so that when he emerged from the grave
+and set off in pursuit of his retiring relations, he would follow the
+marks on the trees in a circle and always come back to the point from
+which he had started. And to make assurance doubly sure they put coals
+in the dead man's ears, which, by bunging up these apertures, were
+supposed to keep his ghost in the body till his friends had got a good
+start away from him. As a further precaution they lit fires and put
+bushes in the forks of trees, with the idea that the ghost would roost
+in the bushes and warm himself at the fires, while they were hastening
+away.[224] Here, therefore, we see that the real motive for kindling
+fires for the use of the dead is fear, not affection. In this respect
+the burial customs of the tribes at the Herbert River are still more
+significant. These savages buried with the dead man his weapons, his
+ornaments, and indeed everything he had used in life; moreover, they
+built a hut on the grave, put a drinking-vessel in the hut, and cleared
+a path from it down to the water for the use of the ghost; and often
+they placed food and water on the grave. So far, these measures might be
+interpreted as marks of pure and disinterested affection for the soul of
+the departed. But such an interpretation is totally excluded by the
+ferocious treatment which these savages meted out to the corpse. To
+frighten the spirit, lest he should haunt the camp, the father or
+brother of the deceased, or the husband, if it was a woman, took a club
+and mauled the body with such violence that he often smashed the bones;
+further, he generally broke both its legs in order to prevent it from
+wandering of nights; and as if that were not enough, he bored holes in
+the stomach, the shoulders, and the lungs, and filled the holes with
+stones, so that even if the poor ghost should succeed by a desperate
+effort in dragging his mangled body out of the grave, he would be so
+weighed down by this ballast of stones that he could not get very far.
+However, after roaming up and down in this pitiable condition for a time
+in their old haunts, the spirits were supposed at last to go up aloft to
+the Milky Way.[225] The Kwearriburra tribe, on the Lynd River, in
+Queensland, also took forcible measures to prevent the resurrection of
+the dead. Whenever a person died, they cut off his or her head, roasted
+it in a fire on the grave, and when it was thoroughly charred they
+smashed it in bits and left the fragments among the hot coals. They
+calculated that when the ghost rose from the grave with the view of
+following the tribe, he would miss his head and go groping blindly about
+for it till he scorched himself in the embers of the fire and was glad
+to shrink back into his narrow bed.[226]
+
+Thus even among those Australian tribes which have progressed furthest
+in the direction of religion, such approaches as they have made towards
+a worship of the dead appear to be determined far more by fear than by
+affection and reverence. And we are told that it is the nearest
+relations and the most influential men whose ghosts are most
+dreaded.[227]
+
+[Sidenote: Cuttings and brandings of the flesh of the living in honour
+of the dead.]
+
+There is another custom observed by the Australian aborigines in
+mourning which deserves to be mentioned. We all know that the Israelites
+were forbidden to make cuttings in their flesh for the dead.[228] The
+custom was probably practised by the heathen Canaanites, as it has been
+by savages in various parts of the world. Nowhere, perhaps, has the
+practice prevailed more generally or been carried out with greater
+severity than in aboriginal Australia. For example, with regard to the
+tribes in the central part of Victoria we are told that "the parents of
+the deceased lacerate themselves fearfully, especially if it be an only
+son whose loss they deplore. The father beats and cuts his head with a
+tomahawk until he utters bitter groans. The mother sits by the fire and
+burns her breasts and abdomen with a small fire-stick till she wails
+with pain; then she replaces the stick in the fire, to use again when
+the pain is less severe. This continues for hours daily, until the time
+of lamentation is completed; sometimes the burns thus inflicted are so
+severe as to cause death."[229] It is especially the women, and above
+all the widows, who torture themselves in this way. Speaking of the
+tribes of Victoria, a writer tells us that on the death of her husband a
+widow, "becoming frantic, seizes fire-sticks and burns her breasts,
+arms, legs, and thighs. Rushing from one place to another, and intent
+only on injuring herself, and seeming to delight in the self-inflicted
+torture, it would be rash and vain to interrupt her. She would fiercely
+turn on her nearest relative or friend and burn him with her brands.
+When exhausted, and when she can scarcely walk, she yet endeavours to
+kick the embers of the fire, and to throw them about. Sitting down, she
+takes the ashes in her hands, rubs them into her wounds, and then
+scratches her face (the only part not touched by the fire-sticks) until
+the blood mingles with the ashes which partly hide her cruel
+wounds."[230] Among the Kurnai of South-eastern Victoria the relations
+of the dead would cut and gash themselves with sharp stones and
+tomahawks until their heads and bodies streamed with blood.[231] In the
+Mukjarawaint tribe, when a man died, his kinsfolk wept over him and
+slashed themselves with tomahawks and other sharp instruments for about
+a week.[232] In the tribes of the Lower Murray and Lower Darling rivers
+mourners scored their backs and arms, sometimes even their faces, with
+red-hot brands, which raised hideous ulcers; afterwards they flung
+themselves prone on the grave, tore out their hair by handfuls, rubbed
+earth over their heads and bodies in great profusion, and ripped up
+their green ulcers till the mingled blood and grime presented a ghastly
+spectacle. These self-inflicted sores remained long unhealed.[233] Among
+the Kamilaroi, a large tribe of eastern New South Wales, the mourners,
+and especially the women, used to cut their heads with tomahawks and
+allow the blood to dry on them.[234] Speaking of a native burial on the
+Murray River, a writer says that "around the bier were many women,
+relations of the deceased, wailing and lamenting bitterly, and
+lacerating their thighs, backs, and breasts, with shells or flint, until
+the blood flowed copiously from the gashes."[235] In the Boulia district
+of Queensland women in mourning score their thighs, both inside and
+outside, with sharp stones or bits of glass, so as to make a series of
+parallel cuts; in neighbouring districts of Queensland the men make much
+deeper cross-shaped cuts on their thighs.[236] In the Arunta tribe of
+Central Australia a man is bound to cut himself on the shoulder in
+mourning for his father-in-law; if he does not do so, his wife may be
+given away to another man in order to appease the wrath of the ghost at
+his undutiful son-in-law. Arunta men regularly bear on their shoulders
+the raised scars which shew that they have done their duty by their dead
+fathers-in-law.[237] The female relations of a dead man in the Arunta
+tribe also cut and hack themselves in token of sorrow, working
+themselves up into a sort of frenzy as they do so; yet in all their
+apparent excitement they take care never to wound a vital part, but vent
+their fury on their scalps, their shoulders, and their legs.[238]
+
+[Sidenote: Cuttings for the dead among the Warramunga.]
+
+In the Warramunga tribe of Central Australia Messrs. Spencer and Gillen
+witnessed the mourning for a dead man. Even before the sufferer had
+breathed his last the lamentations and self-inflicted wounds began. When
+it was known that the end was near, all the native men ran at full speed
+to the spot, and Messrs. Spencer and Gillen followed them to see what
+was to be seen. What they saw, or part of what they saw, was this. Some
+of the women, who had gathered from all directions, were lying prostrate
+on the body of the dying man, while others were standing or kneeling
+around, digging the sharp ends of yam-sticks into the crown of their
+heads, from which the blood streamed down over their faces, while all
+the time they kept up a loud continuous wail. Many of the men, rushing
+up to the scene of action, flung themselves also higgledy-piggledy on
+the sufferer, the women rising and making way for them, till nothing was
+to be seen but a struggling mass of naked bodies all mixed up together.
+Presently up came a man yelling and brandishing a stone knife. On
+reaching the spot he suddenly gashed both his thighs with the knife,
+cutting right across the muscles, so that, unable to stand, he dropped
+down on the top of the struggling bodies, till his mother, wife, and
+sisters dragged him out of the scrimmage, and immediately applied their
+mouths to his gaping wounds, while he lay exhausted and helpless on the
+ground. Gradually the struggling mass of dusky bodies untwined itself,
+disclosing the unfortunate sick man, who was the object, or rather the
+victim, of this well-meant demonstration of affection and sorrow. If he
+had been ill before, he was much worse when his friends left him: indeed
+it was plain that he had not long to live. Still the weeping and wailing
+went on; the sun set, darkness fell on the camp, and later in the
+evening the man died. Then the wailing rose louder than before, and men
+and women, apparently frantic with grief, rushed about cutting
+themselves with knives and sharp-pointed sticks, while the women
+battered each other's heads with clubs, no one attempting to ward off
+either cuts or blows. An hour later a funeral procession set out by
+torchlight through the darkness, carrying the body to a wood about a
+mile off, where it was laid on a platform of boughs in a low gum-tree.
+When day broke next morning, not a sign of human habitation was to be
+seen in the camp where the man had died. All the people had removed
+their rude huts to some distance, leaving the place of death solitary;
+for nobody wished to meet the ghost of the deceased, who would certainly
+be hovering about, along with the spirit of the living man who had
+caused his death by evil magic, and who might be expected to come to the
+spot in the outward form of an animal to gloat over the scene of his
+crime. But in the new camp the ground was strewed with men lying
+prostrate, their thighs gashed with the wounds which they had inflicted
+on themselves with their own hands. They had done their duty by the dead
+and would bear to the end of their life the deep scars on their thighs
+as badges of honour. On one man Messrs. Spencer and Gillen counted the
+dints of no less than twenty-three wounds which he had inflicted on
+himself at various times. Meantime the women had resumed the duty of
+lamentation. Forty or fifty of them sat down in groups of five or six,
+weeping and wailing frantically with their arms round each other, while
+the actual and tribal wives, mothers, wives' mothers, daughters,
+sisters, mothers' mothers, sisters' husbands' mothers, and
+grand-daughters, according to custom, once more cut their scalps open
+with yam-sticks, and the widows afterwards in addition seared the scalp
+wounds with red-hot fire-sticks.
+
+[Sidenote: Cuttings for the dead strictly regulated by custom.]
+
+In these mourning customs, wild and extravagant as the expression of
+sorrow appears to be, everything is regulated by certain definite rules;
+and a woman who did not thus maul herself when she ought to do so would
+be severely punished, or even killed, by her brother. Similarly with the
+men, it is only those who stand in certain relationships to the deceased
+who must cut and hack themselves in his honour, and these relationships
+are determined by the particular exogamous class to which the dead man
+happened to belong. Of such classes there are eight in the Warramunga
+tribe. On the occasion described by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen it was a
+man of the Tjunguri class who died; and the men who gashed their thighs
+stood to him in one or other of the following relationships: grandfather
+on the mother's side, mother's brother, brother of the dead man's wife,
+and her mother's brother.[239]
+
+[Sidenote: The cuttings and brandings which mourners inflict on
+themselves may be intended to convince the ghost of the sincerity of
+their sorrow.]
+
+We naturally ask, What motive have these savages for inflicting all this
+voluntary and, as it seems to us, wholly superfluous suffering on
+themselves? It can hardly be that these wounds and burns are merely a
+natural and unfeigned expression of grief. We have seen that by
+experienced observers such extravagant demonstrations of sorrow are set
+down rather to fear than to affection. Similarly Messrs. Spencer and
+Gillen suggest that at least one motive is a fear entertained by the
+native lest, if he does not make a sufficient display of grief, the
+ghost of the dead man will be offended and do him a mischief.[240] In
+the Kaitish tribe of Central Australia it is believed that if a woman
+does not keep her body covered with ashes from the camp fire during the
+whole time of mourning, the spirit of her deceased husband, who
+constantly follows her about, will kill her and strip all the flesh from
+her bones.[241] Again, in the Arunta tribe mourners smear themselves
+with white pipeclay, and the motive for this custom is said to be to
+render themselves more conspicuous, so that the ghost may see and be
+satisfied that he is being properly mourned for.[242] Thus the fear of
+the ghost, who, at least among the Australian aborigines, is commonly of
+a jealous temper and stands very firmly on his supposed rights, may
+suffice to explain the practice of self-mutilation at mourning.
+
+[Sidenote: Custom of allowing the blood of mourners to drip on the
+corpse or into the grave.]
+
+But it is possible that another motive underlies the drawing of blood on
+these occasions. For it is to be observed that the blood of the mourners
+is often allowed to drop directly either on the dead body or into the
+grave. Thus, for example, among the tribes on the River Darling several
+men used to stand by the open grave and cut each other's heads with a
+boomerang; then they held their bleeding heads over the grave so that
+the blood dripped on the corpse lying in it. If the deceased was highly
+esteemed, the bleeding was repeated after some earth had been thrown on
+the body.[243] Among the Arunta it is customary for the women kinsfolk
+of the dead to cut their own and each other's heads so severely with
+clubs and digging-sticks that blood streams from them on the grave.[244]
+Again, at a burial on the Vasse River, in Western Australia, a writer
+describes how, when the grave was dug, the natives placed the corpse
+beside it, then "gashed their thighs, and at the flowing of the blood
+they all said, 'I have brought blood,' and they stamped the foot
+forcibly on the ground, sprinkling the blood around them; then wiping
+the wounds with a wisp of leaves, they threw it, bloody as it was, on
+the dead man."[245] With these Australian practices we may compare a
+custom observed by the civilised Greeks of antiquity. Every year the
+Peloponnesian lads lashed themselves on the grave of Pelops at Olympia,
+till the blood ran down their backs as a libation in honour of the dead
+man.[246]
+
+[Sidenote: The blood intended to strengthen the dead.]
+
+Now what is the intention of thus applying the blood of the living to
+the dead or pouring it into the grave? So far as the ancient Greeks are
+concerned the answer is not doubtful. We know from Homer that the ghosts
+of the dead were supposed to drink the blood that was offered to them
+and to be strengthened by the draught.[247] Similarly with the
+Australian savages, their object can hardly be any other than that of
+strengthening the spirit of the dead; for these aborigines are in the
+habit of giving human blood to the sick and the aged to drink for the
+purpose of restoring them to health and strength;[248] hence it would be
+natural for them to imagine that they could refresh and fortify the
+feeble ghost in like manner. Perhaps the blood was intended specially to
+strengthen the spirits of the dead for the new birth or reincarnation,
+to which so many of these savages look forward.
+
+[Sidenote: Custom of burying people in the place where they were born.
+The custom perhaps intended to facilitate the rebirth of the soul.]
+
+The same motive may possibly explain the custom observed by some
+Australian tribes of burying people, as far as possible, at the place
+where they were born. Thus in regard to the tribes of Western Victoria
+we are informed that "dying persons, especially those dying from old
+age, generally express an earnest desire to be taken to their
+birthplace, that they may die and be buried there. If possible, these
+wishes are always complied with by the relatives and friends. Parents
+will point out the spot where they were born, so that when they become
+old and infirm, their children may know where they wish their bodies to
+be disposed of."[249] Again, some tribes in the north and north-east of
+Victoria "are said to be more than ordinarily scrupulous in interring
+the dead. If practicable, they will bury the corpse near the spot where,
+as a child, it first drew breath. A mother will carry a dead infant for
+weeks, in the hope of being able to bury it near the place where it was
+born; and a dead man will be conveyed a long distance, in order that the
+last rites may be performed in a manner satisfactory to the tribe."[250]
+Another writer, speaking of the Australian aborigines in general, says:
+"By what I could learn, it is considered proper by many tribes that a
+black should be buried at or near the spot where he or she was born, and
+for this reason, when a black becomes seriously ill, the invalid is
+carried a long distance to these certain spots to die, as in this case.
+They apparently object to place a body in strange ground." The same
+writer mentions the case of a blackfellow, who began digging a grave
+close beside the kitchen door of a Mr. Campbell. When Mr. Campbell
+remonstrated with him, the native replied that he had no choice, for the
+dead man had been born on that very spot. With much difficulty Mr.
+Campbell persuaded him to bury his deceased friend a little further off
+from the kitchen door.[251] A practice of this sort would be
+intelligible on the theory of the Central Australians, who imagine that
+the spirits of all the dead return to the very spots where they entered
+into their mothers' wombs, and that they wait there until another
+opportunity presents itself to them of being born again into the world.
+For if people really believe, as do many Australian tribes, that when
+they die they will afterwards come to life again as infants, it is
+perfectly natural that they should take steps to ensure and facilitate
+the new birth. The Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes of Central Australia do
+this in the case of dead children. These savages draw a sharp
+distinction between young children and very old men and women. When very
+old people die, their bodies are at once buried in the ground, but the
+bodies of children are placed in wooden troughs and deposited on
+platforms of boughs in the branches of trees, and the motive for
+treating a dead child thus is, we are informed, the hope "that before
+very long its spirit may come back again and enter into the body of a
+woman--in all probability that of its former mother."[252] The reason
+for drawing this distinction between the young and the old by disposing
+of their bodies in different fashions, is explained with great
+probability by Messrs. Spencer and Gillen as follows: "In the Unmatjera
+and Kaitish tribes, while every old man has certain privileges denied to
+the younger men, yet if he be decidedly infirm and unable to take his
+part in the performance of ceremonies which are often closely
+concerned--or so at least the natives believe them to be--with the
+general welfare of the tribe, then the feeling undoubtedly is that there
+is no need to pay any very special respect to his remains. This feeling
+is probably vaguely associated with the idea that, as his body is
+infirm, so to a corresponding extent will his spirit part be, and
+therefore they have no special need to consider or propitiate this, as
+it can do them no harm. On the other hand they are decidedly afraid of
+hurting the feelings of any strong man who might be capable of doing
+them some mischief unless he saw that he was properly mourned for.
+Acting under much the same feeling they pay respect to the bodies of
+dead children and young women, in the hope that the spirit will soon
+return and undergo reincarnation. It is also worth noticing that they do
+not bury in trees any young man who has violated tribal law by taking as
+wife a woman who is forbidden to him; such an individual is always
+buried directly in the ground."[253] Apparently these law-abiding
+savages are not anxious that members of the criminal classes should be
+born again and should have the opportunity of troubling society once
+more.
+
+[Sidenote: Different modes of disposing of the dead adopted in the same
+tribe.]
+
+I would call your attention particularly to the different modes of
+burial thus accorded by these two tribes to different classes of
+persons. It is too commonly assumed that each tribe has one uniform way
+of disposing of all its dead, say either by burning or by burying, and
+on that assumption certain general theories have been built as to the
+different views taken of the state of the dead by different tribes. But
+in point of fact the assumption is incorrect. Not infrequently the same
+tribe disposes of different classes of dead people in quite different
+ways; for instance, it will bury some and burn others. Thus amongst the
+Angoni of British Central Africa the corpses of chiefs are burned with
+all their household belongings, but the bodies of commoners are buried
+with all their belongings in caves.[254] In various castes or tribes of
+India it is the custom to burn the bodies of married people but to bury
+the bodies of the unmarried.[255] With some peoples of India the
+distinction is made, not between the married and the unmarried, but
+between adults and children, especially children under two years old; in
+such cases the invariable practice appears to be to burn the old and
+bury the young. Thus among the Malayalis of Malabar the bodies of men
+and women are burned, but the bodies of children under two years are
+buried, and so are the bodies of all persons who have died of cholera or
+small-pox.[256] The same distinctions are observed by the Nayars,
+Kadupattans, and other castes or tribes of Cochin.[257] The old rule
+laid down in the ancient Hindoo law-book _The Grihya-Sutras_ was that
+children who died under the age of two should be buried, not burnt.[258]
+The Bhotias of the Himalayas bury all children who have not yet obtained
+their permanent teeth, but they burn all other people.[259] Among the
+Komars the young are buried, and the old cremated.[260] The Coorgs bury
+the bodies of women and of boys under sixteen years of age, but they
+burn the bodies of men.[261] The Chukchansi Indians of California are
+said to have burned only those who died a violent death or were bitten
+by snakes, but to have buried all others.[262] The Minnetaree Indians
+disposed of their dead differently according to their moral character.
+Bad and quarrelsome men they buried in the earth that the Master of Life
+might not see them; but the bodies of good men they laid on scaffolds,
+that the Master of Life might behold them.[263] The Kolosh or Tlingit
+Indians of Alaska burn their ordinary dead on a pyre, but deposit the
+bodies of shamans in large coffins, which are supported on four
+posts.[264] The ancient Mexicans thought that all persons who died of
+infectious diseases were killed by the rain-god Tlaloc; so they painted
+their bodies blue, which was the rain-god's colour, and buried instead
+of burning them.[265]
+
+[Sidenote: Special modes of burial adopted to prevent or facilitate the
+return of the spirit.]
+
+These examples may suffice to illustrate the different ways in which the
+same people may dispose of their dead according to the age, sex, social
+rank, or moral character of the deceased, or the manner of his death. In
+some cases the special mode of burial adopted seems clearly intended to
+guard against the return of the dead, whether in the form of ghosts or
+of children born again into the world. Such, for instance, was obviously
+the intention of the old English custom of burying a suicide at a
+cross-road with a stake driven through his body. And if some burial
+customs are plainly intended to pin down the dead in the earth, or at
+least to disable him from revisiting the survivors, so others appear to
+be planned with the opposite intention of facilitating the departure of
+the spirit from the grave, in order that he may repair to a more
+commodious lodging or be born again into the tribe. For example, the
+Arunta of Central Australia always bury their dead in the earth and
+raise a low mound over the grave; but they leave a depression in the
+mound on the side which faces towards the spot where the spirit of the
+deceased is supposed to have dwelt in the intervals between his
+successive reincarnations; and we are expressly told that the purpose of
+leaving this depression is to allow the spirit to go out and in easily;
+for until the final ceremony of mourning has been performed at the
+grave, the ghost is believed to spend his time partly in watching over
+his near relations and partly in the company of its _arumburinga_ or
+spiritual double, who lives at the old _nanja_ spot, that is, at the
+place where the disembodied soul tarries waiting to be born again.[266]
+Thus the Arunta imagine that for some time after death the spirit of the
+deceased is in a sort of intermediate state, partly hovering about the
+abode of the living, partly visiting his own proper spiritual home, to
+which on the completion of the mourning ceremonies he will retire to
+await the new birth. The final mourning ceremony, which marks the close
+of this intermediate state, takes place some twelve or eighteen months
+after the death. It consists mainly in nothing more or less than a ghost
+hunt; men armed with shields and spear-throwers assemble and with loud
+shouts beat the air, driving the invisible ghost before them from the
+spot where he died, while the women join in the shouts and buffet the
+air with the palms of their hands to chase away the dead man from the
+old camp which he loves to haunt. In this way the beaters gradually
+advance towards the grave till they have penned the ghost into it, when
+they immediately dance on the top of it, beating the air downwards as if
+to drive the spirit down, and stamping on the ground as if to trample
+him into the earth. After that, the women gather round the grave and cut
+each other's heads with clubs till the blood streams down on it. This
+brings the period of mourning to an end; and if the deceased was a man,
+his widow is now free to marry again. In token that the days of her
+sorrow are over, she wears at this final ceremony the gay feathers of
+the ring-neck parrot in her hair. The spirit of her dead husband, lying
+in the grave, is believed to know the sign and to bid her a last
+farewell. Even after he has thus been hunted into the grave and trampled
+down in it, his spirit may still watch over his friends, guard them from
+harm, and visit them in dreams.[267]
+
+[Sidenote: Departure of the ghost supposed to coincide with the
+disappearance of the flesh from his bones.]
+
+We may naturally ask, Why should the spirit of the dead be supposed at
+first to dwell more or less intermittently near the spot where he died,
+and afterwards to take up his abode permanently at his _nanja_ spot till
+the time comes for him to be born again? A good many years ago I
+conjectured[268] that this idea of a change in the abode of the ghost
+may be suggested by a corresponding change which takes place, or is
+supposed to take place, about the same time in the state of the body; in
+fact, that so long as the flesh adheres to the bones, so long the soul
+of the dead man may be thought to be detained in the neighbourhood of
+the body, but that when the flesh has quite decayed, the soul is
+completely liberated from its old tabernacle and is free to repair to
+its true spiritual home. In confirmation of this conjecture I pointed to
+the following facts. Some of the Indians of Guiana bring food and drink
+to their dead so long as the flesh remains on the bones; but when it has
+mouldered away, they conclude that the man himself has departed.[269]
+The Matacos Indians of the Gran Chaco in Argentina believe that the soul
+of a dead man does not pass down into the nether world until his body is
+decomposed or burnt. Further, the Alfoors of Central Celebes
+suppose that the spirits of the departed cannot enter the spirit-land
+until all the flesh has been removed from their bones; for until that
+has been done, the gods (_lamoa_) in the other world could not bear the
+stench of the corpse. Accordingly at a great festival the bodies of all
+who have died within a certain time are dug up and the decaying flesh
+scraped from the bones. Comparing these ideas, I suggested that
+they may explain the widespread custom of a second burial, that is, the
+practice of disinterring the dead after a certain time and disposing of
+their bones otherwise.
+
+[Sidenote: Second burial of the bones among the tribes of Central
+Australia. Final burial ceremony among the Warramunga.]
+
+Now so far as the tribes of Central Australia are concerned, my
+conjecture has been confirmed by the subsequent researches of Messrs.
+Spencer and Gillen in that region. For they have found that the tribes
+to the north of the Arunta regularly give their dead a second burial,
+that a change in the state of the ghosts is believed to coincide with
+the second burial, and apparently also, though this is not so definitely
+stated, that the time for the second burial is determined by the
+disappearance of the flesh from the bones. Amongst the tribes which
+practise a second burial the custom is first to deposit the dead on
+platforms among the branches of trees, till the flesh has quite
+mouldered away, and then to bury the bones in the earth: in short, they
+practise tree-burial first and earth-burial afterwards.[270] For
+example, in the Unmatjera and Kaitish tribes, when a man dies, his body
+is carried by his relations to a tree distant a mile or two from the
+camp. There it is laid on a platform by itself for some months. When the
+flesh has disappeared from the bones, a kinsman of the deceased, in
+strictness a younger brother (_itia_), climbs up into the tree,
+dislocates the bones, places them in a wooden vessel, and hands them
+down to a female relative. Then the bones are laid in the grave with the
+head facing in the direction in which his mother's brother is supposed
+to have camped in days of old. After the bones have been thus interred,
+the spirit of the dead man is believed to go away and to remain in his
+old _alcheringa_ home until such time as he once more undergoes
+reincarnation.[271] But in these tribes, as we saw, very old men and
+women receive only one burial, being at once laid in an earthy grave and
+never set up on a platform in a tree; and we have seen reason to think
+that this difference in the treatment of the aged springs from the
+indifference or contempt in which their ghosts are held by comparison
+with the ghosts of the young and vigorous. In the Warramunga tribe, who
+regularly deposit their dead in trees first and in the earth afterwards,
+so long as the corpse remains in the tree and the flesh has not
+completely disappeared from the bones, the mother of the deceased and
+the women who stand to him or her in the relation of tribal motherhood
+are obliged from time to time to go to the tree, and sitting under the
+platform to allow its putrid juices to drip down on their bodies, into
+which they rub them as a token of sorrow. This, no doubt, is intended to
+please the jealous ghost; for we are told that he is believed to haunt
+the tree and even to visit the camp, in order, if he was a man, to see
+for himself that his widows are mourning properly. The time during which
+the mouldering remains are left in the tree is at least a year and may
+be more.[272] The final ceremony which brings the period of mourning to
+an end is curious and entirely different from the one observed by the
+Arunta on the same occasion. When the bones have been taken down from
+the tree, an arm-bone is put carefully apart from the rest. Then the
+skull is smashed, and the fragments together with all the rest of the
+bones except the arm-bone, are buried in a hollow ant-hill near the
+tree. Afterwards the arm-bone is wrapt up in paper-bark and wound round
+with fur-string, so as to make a torpedo-shaped parcel, which is kept by
+a tribal mother of the deceased in her rude hovel of branches, till,
+after the lapse of some days or weeks, the time comes for the last
+ceremony of all. On that day a design emblematic of the totem of the
+deceased is drawn on the ground, and beside it a shallow trench is dug
+about a foot deep and fifteen feet long. Over this trench a number of
+men, elaborately decorated with down of various colours, stand
+straddle-legged, while a line of women, decorated with red and yellow
+ochre, crawl along the trench under the long bridge made by the
+straddling legs of the men. The last woman carries the arm-bone of the
+dead in its parcel, and as soon as she emerges from the trench, the bone
+is snatched from her by a kinsman of the deceased, who carries it to a
+man standing ready with an uplifted axe beside the totemic drawing. On
+receiving the bone, the man at once smashes it, hastily buries it in a
+small pit beside the totemic emblem of the departed, and closes the
+opening with a large flat stone, signifying thereby that the season of
+mourning is over and that the dead man or woman has been gathered to his
+or her totem. The totemic design, beside which the arm-bone is buried,
+represents the spot at which the totemic ancestor of the deceased
+finally went down into the earth. When once the arm-bone has thus been
+broken and laid in its last resting-place, the soul of the dead person,
+which they describe as being of about the size of a grain of sand, is
+supposed to go back to the place where it camped long ago in a previous
+incarnation, there to remain with the souls of other men and women of
+the same totem until the time comes for it to be born again.[273]
+
+[Sidenote: General conclusion as to the belief in immortality and the
+worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines.]
+
+This must conclude what I have to say as to the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead among the aborigines of Australia. The
+evidence I have adduced is sufficient to prove that these savages firmly
+believe both in the existence of the human soul after death and in the
+power which it can exert for good or evil over the survivors. On the
+whole the dominant motive in their treatment of the dead appears to be
+fear rather than affection. Yet the attention which many tribes pay to
+the comfort of the departed by providing them with huts, food, water,
+fire, clothing, implements and weapons, may not be dictated by purely
+selfish motives; in any case they are clearly intended to please and
+propitiate the ghosts, and therefore contain the germs of a regular
+worship of the dead.
+
+[Footnote 216: E. J. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into
+Central Australia_ (London, 1845), ii. 349.]
+
+[Footnote 217: A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Victoria," _Transactions
+of the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. iii. (1865) p. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 218: P. Beveridge, in _Journal and Proceedings of the Royal
+Society of New South Wales_, xvii. (1883) pp. 29 _sq._ Compare R. Brough
+Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 100 note.]
+
+[Footnote 219: (Sir) G. Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery_, ii. 332 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 220: Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 109
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 221: E. M. Curr, _The Australian Race_ (Melbourne and London,
+1886-1887), i. 87.]
+
+[Footnote 222: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+463.]
+
+[Footnote 223: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 461.]
+
+[Footnote 224: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 473.]
+
+[Footnote 225: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit._ p. 474.]
+
+[Footnote 226: F. C. Urquhart, "Legends of the Australian Aborigines,"
+_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xiv. (1885) p. 88.]
+
+[Footnote 227: E. M. Curr, _The Australian Race_, i. 87.]
+
+[Footnote 228: Leviticus xix. 28; Deuteronomy xiv. 1.]
+
+[Footnote 229: W. Stanbridge, "Tribes in the Central Part of Victoria,"
+_Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. i. (1861) p.
+298.]
+
+[Footnote 230: R. Brough Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 105.]
+
+[Footnote 231: A. W. Howitt, _Native Tribes of South-East Australia_, p.
+459.]
+
+[Footnote 232: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit_. p. 453.]
+
+[Footnote 233: P. Beveridge, in _Journal and Proceedings of the Royal
+Society of New South Wales_, xvii. (1883) pp. 28, 29.]
+
+[Footnote 234: A. W. Howitt, _op. cit_. p. 466.]
+
+[Footnote 235: E. J. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into
+Central Australia_ (London, 1845), ii. 347.]
+
+[Footnote 236: W. E. Roth, _Studies among the North-West-Central
+Queensland Aborigines_ (Brisbane and London, 1897), p. 164; compare p.
+165.]
+
+[Footnote 237: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 500.]
+
+[Footnote 238: Spencer and Gillen, _op. cit._ p. 510.]
+
+[Footnote 239: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 516-552.]
+
+[Footnote 240: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 510.]
+
+[Footnote 241: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes_, p. 507.]
+
+[Footnote 242: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes_, p. 511.]
+
+[Footnote 243: F. Bonney, "On some Customs of the Aborigines of the
+River Darling," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xiii. (1884)
+pp. 134 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 244: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 507, 509 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 245: (Sir) G. Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery_, ii. 332, quoting Mr. Bussel.]
+
+[Footnote 246: Scholiast on Pindar, _Olymp._ i. 146.]
+
+[Footnote 247: Homer, _Odyssey_, xi. 23 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 248: _The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, i. 91 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 249: J. Dawson, _Australian Aborigines_, p. 62.]
+
+[Footnote 250: R. Brough Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, i. 108.]
+
+[Footnote 251: J. F. Mann, "Notes on the Aborigines of Australia,"
+_Proceedings of the Geographical Society of Australasia_, i. (Sydney,
+1885) p. 48.]
+
+[Footnote 252: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 506.]
+
+[Footnote 253: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes_, p. 512.]
+
+[Footnote 254: R. Sutherland Rattray, _Some Folk-lore Stories and Songs
+in Chinyanja_ (London, 1907), pp. 99-101, 182.]
+
+[Footnote 255: F. Fawcett, "The Kondayamkottai Maravars, a Dravidian
+Tribe of Tinnevelly, Southern India," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xxxiii. (1903) p. 64; Captain Wolsley Haig, "Notes on the
+Rangari Caste in Barar," _Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal_,
+lxx. Part iii. (1901) p. 8; E. Thurston, _Castes and Tribes of Southern
+India_ (Madras, 1909), iv. 226 (as to the Lambadis), vi. 244 (as to the
+Raniyavas); compare _id._, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_
+(Madras, 1906), p. 155.]
+
+[Footnote 256: E. Thurston, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_, p.
+207.]
+
+[Footnote 257: L. K. Anantha Krishna Iyer, _The Cochin Tribes and
+Castes_ (Madras, 1909-1912), ii. 91, 112, 157, 360, 378.]
+
+[Footnote 258: _The Grihya Sutras_, translated by H. Oldenberg, Part i.
+p. 355 (_Sacred Books of the East_, vol. xxix.). Compare W. Crooke,
+_Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern India_ (Westminster, 1896),
+i. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 259: Ch. A. Sherring, _Western Tibet and the British
+Borderland_ (London, 1906), pp. 123 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 260: P. N. Bose, "Chhattisgar," _Journal of the Asiatic
+Society of Bengal_, lix., Part i. (1891) p. 290.]
+
+[Footnote 261: E. Thurston, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_, p.
+205.]
+
+[Footnote 262: S. Powers, _Tribes of California_ (Washington, 1877), p.
+383.]
+
+[Footnote 263: Maximilian Prinz zu Wied, _Reise in das Innere
+Nord-America_ (Coblenz, 1839-1841), ii. 235.]
+
+[Footnote 264: T. de Pauly, _Description Ethnographique des Peuples de
+la Russie, Peuples de l'Amerique Russe_ (St. Petersburg, 1862), p. 13.]
+
+[Footnote 265: E. Seler, _Altmexikanische Studien_, ii. (Berlin, 1899)
+p. 42 (_Veroeffentlichungen aus dem Koeniglichen Museum fuer Voelkerkunde_,
+vi. 2/4).]
+
+[Footnote 266: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+p. 497; _id._, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 506.]
+
+[Footnote 267: Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_,
+pp. 503-508. The name of the final mourning ceremony among the Arunta is
+_urpmilchima_.]
+
+[Footnote 268: _The Golden Bough_, Second Edition (London, 1900), i. 434
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 269: A. Biet, _Voyage de la France Equinoxiale en l'Isle de
+Cayenne_ (Paris, 1664), p. 392.]
+
+[Footnote 270: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 505 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 271: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 506-508.]
+
+[Footnote 272: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, p. 530.]
+
+[Footnote 273: Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
+Australia_, pp. 530-543.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE VIII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF THE TORRES STRAITS
+ISLANDS
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Islanders of Torres Straits. The Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded my account of the belief in immortality
+and worship of the dead, or rather of the elements out of which such a
+worship might have grown, among the aborigines of Australia. To-day we
+pass to the consideration of a different people, the islanders of Torres
+Straits. As you may know, Torres Straits are the broad channel which
+divides Australia on the south from the great island of New Guinea on
+the north. The small islands which are scattered over the strait fall
+roughly into two groups, a Western and an Eastern, of which the eastern
+is at once the more isolated and the more fertile. In appearance,
+character, and customs the inhabitants of all these islands belong to
+the Papuan family, which inhabits the western half of New Guinea, but in
+respect of language there is a marked difference between the natives of
+the two groups; for while the speech of the Western Islanders is akin to
+that of the Australians, the speech of the Eastern Islanders is akin to
+that of the Papuans of New Guinea. The conclusion to be drawn from these
+facts appears to be that the Western Islands of Torres Straits were
+formerly inhabited by aborigines of the Australian family, and that at a
+later time they were occupied by immigrants from New Guinea, who adopted
+the language of the aboriginal inhabitants, but gradually extinguished
+the aboriginal type and character either by peaceful absorption or by
+conquest and extermination.[274] Hence the Western Islanders of Torres
+Straits form a transition both geographically and ethnographically
+between the aborigines of Australia on the one side and the aborigines
+of New Guinea on the other side. Accordingly in our survey of the belief
+in immortality among the lower races we may appropriately consider the
+Islanders of Torres Straits immediately after the aborigines of
+Australia and before we pass onward to other and more distant races.
+These Islanders have a special claim on the attention of a Cambridge
+lecturer, since almost all the exact knowledge we possess of them we owe
+to the exertions of Cambridge anthropologists and especially to Dr. A.
+C. Haddon, who on his first visit to the islands in 1888 perceived the
+urgent importance of procuring an accurate record of the old beliefs and
+customs of the natives before it was too late, and who never rested till
+that record was obtained, as it happily has been, first by his own
+unaided researches in the islands, and afterwards by the united
+researches of a band of competent enquirers. In the history of
+anthropology the Cambridge Expedition to Torres Straits in 1898 will
+always hold an honourable place, to the credit of the University which
+promoted it and especially to that of the zealous and devoted
+investigator who planned, organised, and carried it to a successful
+conclusion. Practically all that I shall have to tell you as to the
+beliefs and practices of the Torres Straits Islanders is derived from
+the accurate and laborious researches of Dr. Haddon and his colleagues.
+
+[Sidenote: Social culture of the Torres Straits Islanders.]
+
+While the natives of Torres Straits are, or were at the time of their
+discovery, in the condition which we call savagery, they stand on a far
+higher level of social and intellectual culture than the rude aborigines
+of Australia. To indicate roughly the degree of advance we need only say
+that, whereas the Australians are nomadic hunters and fishers, entirely
+ignorant of agriculture, and destitute to a great extent not only of
+houses but even of clothes, the natives of Torres Straits live in
+settled villages and diligently till the soil, raising a variety of
+crops, such as yams, sweet potatoes, bananas, sugar-cane, and
+tobacco.[275] Of the two groups of islands the eastern is the more
+fertile and the inhabitants are more addicted to agriculture than are
+the natives of the western islands, who, as a consequence of the greater
+barrenness of the soil, have to eke out their subsistence to a
+considerable extent by fishing.[276] And there is other evidence to shew
+that the Eastern Islanders have attained to a somewhat higher stage of
+social evolution than their Western brethren;[277] the more favourable
+natural conditions under which they live may possibly have contributed
+to raise the general level of culture. One of the most marked
+distinctions in this respect between the inhabitants of the two groups
+is that, whereas a regular system of totemism with its characteristic
+features prevails among the Western Islanders, no such system nor even
+any very clear evidence of its former existence is to be found among the
+Eastern Islanders, whether it be that they never had it or, what is more
+likely, that they once had but have lost it.[278]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Torres Straits Islanders in the existence of
+the human spirit after death.]
+
+On the other hand, so far as regards our immediate subject, the belief
+in immortality and the worship of the dead, a general resemblance may be
+traced between the creed and customs of the Eastern and Western tribes.
+Both of them, like the Australian aborigines, firmly believe in the
+existence of the human spirit after death, but unlike the Australians
+they seem to have no idea that the souls of the departed are ever born
+again into the world; the doctrine of reincarnation, so widespread among
+the natives of Australia, appears to have no place in the creed of their
+near neighbours the Torres Straits Islanders, whose dead, like our own,
+though they may haunt the living for a time, are thought to depart at
+last to a distant spirit-land and to return no more. At the same time
+neither in the one group nor in the other is there any clear evidence of
+what may be called a worship of the dead in the strict sense of the
+word, unless we except the cults of certain more or less mythical
+heroes. On this point the testimony of Dr. Haddon is definite as to the
+Western Islanders. He says: "In no case have I obtained in the Western
+Islands an indication of anything approaching a worship of deceased
+persons ancestral or otherwise, with the exception of the heroes shortly
+to be mentioned; neither is there any suggestion that their own
+ancestors have been in any way apotheosized."[279]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghosts of the recently departed.]
+
+But if these savages have not, with the possible exception of the cult
+of certain heroes, any regular worship of the dead, they certainly have
+the germ out of which such a worship might be developed, and that is a
+firm belief in ghosts and in the mischief which they may do to the
+living. The word for a ghost is _mari_ in the West and _mar_ in the
+East: it means also a shadow or reflection,[280] which seems to shew
+that these savages, like many others, have derived their notion of the
+human soul from the observation of shadows and reflections cast by the
+body on the earth or on water. Further, the Western Islanders appear to
+distinguish the ghosts of the recently departed (_mari_) from the
+spirits of those who have been longer dead, which they call
+_markai_;[281] and if we accept this distinction "we may assert,"
+according to Dr. Haddon, "that the Torres Straits Islanders feared the
+ghosts but believed in the general friendly disposition of the spirits
+of the departed."[282] Similarly we saw that the Australian aborigines
+regard with fear the ghosts of those who have just died, while they are
+either indifferent to the spirits of those who have died many years ago
+or even look upon them as beings of higher powers than their
+descendants, whom they can benefit in various ways. This sharp
+distinction between the spirits of the dead, according to the date at
+which they died, is widespread, perhaps universal among mankind. However
+truly the dead were loved in their lifetime, however bitterly they were
+mourned at their death, no sooner have they passed beyond our ken than
+the thought of their ghosts seems to inspire the generality of mankind
+with an instinctive fear and horror, as if the character of even the
+best friends and nearest relations underwent a radical change for the
+worse as soon as they had shuffled off the mortal coil. But among
+savages this belief in the moral deterioration of ghosts is certainly
+much more marked than among civilised races. Ghosts are dreaded both by
+the Western and the Eastern tribes of Torres Straits. Thus in Mabuiag,
+one of the Western Islands, the corpse was carried out of camp feet
+foremost, else it was thought that the ghost would return and trouble
+the survivors. Further, when the body had been laid upon a stage or
+platform on clear level ground away from the dwelling, the remains of
+any food and water of which the deceased might have been partaking in
+his last moments were carried out and placed beside the corpse lest the
+ghost should come back to fetch them for himself, to the annoyance and
+terror of his relations. This is the reason actually alleged by the
+natives for what otherwise might have been interpreted as a delicate
+mark of affection and thoughtful care for the comfort of the departed.
+If next morning the food was found scattered, the people said that the
+ghost was angry and had thrown it about.[283] Further, on the day of the
+death the mourners went into the gardens, slashed at the taro, knocked
+down coco-nuts, pulled up sweet potatoes, and destroyed bananas. We are
+told that "the food was destroyed for the sake of the dead man, it was
+'like good-bye.'"[284] We may suspect that the real motive for the
+destruction was the same as that for laying food and water beside the
+corpse, namely, a wish to give the ghost no excuse for returning to
+haunt and pester his surviving relatives. How could he have the heart to
+return to the desolated garden which in his lifetime it had been his
+pride and joy to cultivate?
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghosts of the recently departed among the Murray
+Islanders.]
+
+In Murray Island, also, which belongs to the Eastern group, the ghost of
+a recently deceased person is much dreaded; it is supposed to haunt the
+neighbourhood for two or three months, and the elaborate funeral
+ceremonies which these savages perform appear to be based on this belief
+and to be intended, in fact, to dismiss the ghost from the land of the
+living, where he is a very unwelcome visitor, to his proper place in the
+land of the dead.[285] "The Murray Islanders," says Dr. Haddon, "perform
+as many as possible of the necessary ceremonies in order that the ghost
+of the deceased might not feel slighted, for otherwise it was sure to
+bring trouble on the relatives by causing strong winds to destroy their
+gardens and break down their houses."[286] These islanders still believe
+that a ghost may feel resentment when his children are neglected or
+wronged, or when his lands or goods are appropriated by persons who have
+no claim to them. And this fear of the wrath of the ghost, Dr. Haddon
+tells us, no doubt in past times acted as a wholesome deterrent on
+evil-doers and helped to keep the people from crime, though now-a-days
+they look rather to the law than to ghosts for the protection of their
+rights and the avenging of their wrongs.[287] Yet here, as in so many
+places, it would seem that superstition has proved a useful crutch on
+which morality can lean until it is strong enough to walk alone. In the
+absence of the police the guardianship of law and morality may be
+provisionally entrusted to ghosts, who, if they are too fickle and
+uncertain in their temper to make ideal constables, are at least better
+than nothing. With this exception it does not appear that the moral code
+of the Torres Straits Islanders derived any support or sanction from
+their religion. No appeal was made by them to totems, ancestors, or
+heroes; no punishment was looked for from these quarters for any
+infringement of the rules and restraints which hold society
+together.[288]
+
+[Sidenote: The island home of the dead.]
+
+The land of the dead to which the ghosts finally depart is, in the
+opinion of the Torres Straits Islanders, a mythical island in the far
+west or rather north-west. The Western Islanders name it Kibu; the
+Eastern Islanders call it Boigu. The name Kibu means "sundown." It is
+natural enough that islanders should place the home of the dead in some
+far island of the sea to which no canoe of living men has ever sailed,
+and it is equally natural that the fabulous island should lie to
+westward where the sun goes down; for it seems to be a common thought
+that the souls of the dead are attracted by the great luminary, like
+moths by a candle, and follow him when he sinks in radiant glory into
+the sea. To take a single example, in the Maram district of Assam it is
+forbidden to build houses facing westward, because that is the direction
+in which the spirits of the dead go to their long home.[289] But the
+Torres Straits Islanders have a special reason, as Dr. Haddon has well
+pointed out, for thinking that the home of the dead is away in the
+north-west; and the reason is that in these latitudes the trade wind
+blows steady and strong from the south-east for seven or eight months of
+the year; so that for the most part the spirits have only to let
+themselves go and the wind will sweep them away on its pinions to their
+place of rest. How could the poor fluttering things beat up to windward
+in the teeth of the blast?[290]
+
+[Sidenote: Elaborate funeral ceremonies observed by the Torres Straits
+Islanders.]
+
+The funeral ceremonies observed by the Torres Straits Islanders were
+numerous and elaborate, and they present some features of special
+interest. They succeeded each other at intervals, sometimes of months,
+and amongst the Eastern Islanders in particular there were so many of
+them that, were it not that the bodies of the very young and the very
+old were treated less ceremoniously, the living would have been
+perpetually occupied in celebrating the obsequies of the dead.[291] The
+obsequies differed somewhat from each other in the East and the West,
+but they had two characteristics in common: first, the skulls of the
+dead were commonly preserved apart from the bodies and were consulted as
+oracles; and, second, the ghosts of the recently deceased were
+represented in dramatic ceremonies by masked men, who mimicked the gait
+and gestures of the departed and were thought by the women and children
+to be the very ghosts themselves. But in details there were a good many
+variations between the practice of the Eastern and the Western
+Islanders. We will begin with the customs of the Western Islanders.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral ceremonies observed by the Western Islanders. Removal
+and preservation of the skull. Skulls used in divination.]
+
+When a death had taken place, the corpse was carried out of the house
+and set on a staging supported by four forked posts and covered by a
+roof of mats. The office of attending to the body devolved properly on
+the brothers-in-law (_imi_) of the deceased, who, while they were
+engaged in the duties of the office, bore the special title of _mariget_
+or "ghost-hand." It deserves to be noticed that these men were always of
+a different totem from the deceased; for if the dead person was a man,
+the _mariget_ were his wife's brothers and therefore had the same totem
+as the dead man's wife, which, on account of the law of exogamy, always
+differed from the totem of her husband. And if the dead person was a
+woman, the _mariget_ were her husband's brothers and therefore had his
+totem, which necessarily differed from hers. When they had discharged
+the preliminary duties to the corpse, the brothers-in-law went and
+informed the relations and friends. This they did not in words but by a
+prescribed pantomime. For example, if the deceased had had the crocodile
+for his totem, they imitated the ungainly gait of crocodiles waddling
+and resting, if the deceased had the snake for his totem, they in like
+manner mimicked the crawling of a snake. The relations then painted
+their bodies with white coral mud, cut their hair, plastered mud over
+their heads, and cut off their ear ornaments or severed the distended
+lobe of the ear as a sign of mourning. Then, armed with bows and arrows,
+they came out to the stage where the corpse was lying and let fly arrows
+at the men who were in attendance on it, that is, at the brothers-in-law
+of the deceased, who warded off the shafts as best they could.[292] The
+meaning of this sham attack on the men who were discharging the last
+offices of respect to the dead comes out clearly in another ceremony
+which was performed some time afterwards, as we shall see presently. For
+five or six days the corpse remained on the platform or bier watched by
+the brothers-in-law, who had to prevent certain large lizards from
+devouring it and to frighten away any prowling ghosts that might be
+lured to the spot by the stench. After the lapse of several days the
+relations returned to the body, mourned, and beat the roof of the bier,
+while they raised a shout to drive off any part of the dead man's spirit
+that might be lingering about his mouldering remains. The reason for
+doing so was, that the time had now arrived for cutting off the head of
+the corpse, and they thought that the head would not come off easily if
+the man's spirit were still in the body; he might reasonably be expected
+to hold on tight to it and not to resign, without a struggle, so
+valuable a part of his person. When the poor ghost had thus been chased
+away with shouts and blows, the principal brother-in-law came forward
+and performed the amputation by sawing off the head. Having done so, he
+usually placed it in a nest of termites or white ants in order that the
+insects might pick it clean; but sometimes for the same purpose he
+deposited it in a creek. When it was thoroughly clean, the grinning
+white skull was painted red all over and placed in a decorated basket.
+Then followed the ceremony of formally handing over this relic of the
+dead to the relations. The brothers-in-law, who had been in attendance
+on the body, painted themselves black all over, covered their heads with
+leaves, and walked in solemn procession, headed by the chief
+brother-in-law, who carried the skull in the basket. Meantime the male
+relatives were awaiting them, seated on a large mat in the ceremonial
+ground, while the women grouped themselves in the background. As the
+procession of men approached bearing the skull, the mourners shot arrows
+over their heads as a sign of anger at them for having decapitated their
+relation. But this was a mere pretence, probably intended to soothe and
+flatter the angry ghost: the arrows flew over the men without hurting
+them.[293] Similarly in ancient Egypt the man who cut open a corpse for
+embalmment had no sooner done his office than he fled precipitately,
+pursued by the relations with stones and curses, because he had wounded
+and mangled the body of their kinsman.[294] Sometimes the skull was made
+up to resemble the head of a living man: an artificial nose of wood and
+beeswax supplied the place of a nose of flesh; pearl-shells were
+inserted in the empty eye-balls; and any teeth that might be missing
+were represented by pieces of wood, while the lower jaw was lashed
+firmly to the cranium.[295] Whether thus decorated or not, the skulls of
+the dead were preserved and used in divination. Whenever a skull was to
+be thus consulted, it was first cleaned, repainted, and either anointed
+with certain plants or placed upon them. Then the enquirer enjoined the
+skull to speak the truth, and placing it on his pillow at night went to
+sleep. The dream which he dreamed that night was the answer of the
+skull, which spoke with a clappering noise like that of teeth chattering
+together. When people went on voyages, they used to take a divining
+skull with them in the stern of the canoe.[296]
+
+[Sidenote: Great death-dance of the Western Islanders. The dead
+personated by masked actors.]
+
+The great funeral ceremony, or rather death-dance, of the Western
+Islanders took place in the island of Pulu. When the time came for it, a
+few men would meet and make the necessary preparations. The ceremony was
+always performed on the sacred or ceremonial ground (_kwod_), and the
+first thing to do was to enclose this ground, for the sake of privacy,
+with a screen of mats hung on a framework of wood and bamboos. When the
+screen had been erected, the drums which were to be used by the
+orchestra were placed in position beside it. Then the relations were
+summoned to attend the performance. The ceremony might be performed for
+a number of recently deceased people at once, and it varied in
+importance and elaboration according to the importance and the number of
+the deceased whose obsequies were being celebrated. The chief
+differences were in the number of the performers and the greater or less
+display of scenic apparatus. The head-dresses or leafy masks worn by the
+actors in the sacred drama were made secretly in the bush; no woman or
+uninitiated man might witness the operation. When all was ready, and the
+people were assembled, the men being stationed in front and the women
+and children in the background, the disguised actors appeared on the
+scene and played the part of the dead, each one of them mimicking the
+gait and actions of the particular man or woman whom he personated; for
+all the parts were played by men, no woman might act in these
+ceremonies. The order in which the various ghosts were to appear on the
+scene was arranged beforehand; so that when the actors came forward from
+behind the screen, the spectators knew which of the dead they were
+supposed to have before them. The performers usually danced in pairs,
+and vanished behind the screen when their dance was finished. Thus one
+pair would follow another till the play was over. Besides the actors who
+played the serious and solemn part of the dead, there was usually a
+clown who skipped about and cut capers, tumbling down and getting up
+again, to make the spectators laugh and so to relieve the strain on
+their emotions, which were deeply stirred by this dance of death. The
+beat of the drums proclaimed that the sacred drama was at an end. Then
+followed a great feast, at which special portions of food were assigned
+by the relatives of the deceased to the actors who had personated
+them.[297]
+
+[Sidenote: Intention of the ceremonies.]
+
+As to the intention of these curious dramatic performances we have no
+very definite information. Dr. Haddon says: "The idea evidently was to
+convey to the mourners the assurance that the ghost was alive and that
+in the person of the dancer he visited his friends; the assurance of his
+life after death comforted the bereaved ones."[298]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral ceremonies observed by the Eastern Islanders. The
+soul of the dead carried away by a masked actor.]
+
+In the Eastern Islands of Torres Straits the funeral ceremonies seem to
+have been even more numerous and elaborate. The body was at first laid
+on the ground on a mat outside the house, if the weather were fine.
+There friends wept and wailed over it, the nearest relations, such as
+the wife and mother, sitting at the head of the corpse. About an hour
+after the sun had set, the drummers and singers arrived. All night the
+drums beat and the people sang, but just as the dawn was breaking the
+wild music died away into silence. The wants of the living were now
+attended to: the assembled people breakfasted on green coco-nuts; and
+then, about an hour after sunrise, they withdrew from the body and took
+up a position a little further off to witness the next act of the drama
+of death. The drums now struck up again in quicker time to herald the
+approach of an actor, who could be heard, but not seen, shaking his
+rattle in the adjoining forest. Faster and faster beat the drums, louder
+and louder rose the singing, till the spectators were wound up to a
+pitch of excitement bordering on frenzy. Then at last a strange figure
+burst from the forest and came skipping and posturing towards the
+corpse. It was Terer, a spirit or mythical being who had come to fetch
+the soul of the departed and to bear it far away to its place of rest in
+the island beyond the sea. On his head he wore a wreath of leaves: a
+mask made of the mid-ribs of coco-nut leaves or of croton leaves hid his
+face: a long feather of the white tern nodded on his brow; and a mantle
+of green coco-nut leaves concealed his body from the shoulders to the
+knees. His arms were painted red: round his neck he wore a crescent of
+pearl-shell: in his left hand he carried a bow and arrows, and in his
+mouth a piece of wood, to which were affixed two rings of green coco-nut
+leaf. Thus attired he skipt forwards, rattling a bunch of nuts in his
+right hand, bending his head now to one side and now to another, swaying
+his body backwards and forwards, but always keeping time to the measured
+beat of the drums. At last, after a series of rapid jumps from one foot
+to the other, he ended his dance, and turning round fled away westward
+along the beach. He had taken the soul of the dead and was carrying it
+away to the spirit-land. The excitement of the women now rose to the
+highest pitch. They screamed and jumped from the ground raising their
+arms in air high above their heads. Shrieking and wailing all pursued
+the retreating figure along the beach, the mother or widow of the dead
+man casting herself again and again prostrate on the sand and throwing
+it in handfuls over her head. Among the pursuers was another masked man,
+who represented Aukem, the mother of Terer. She, or rather he, was
+dressed in dried banana leaves: long tufts of grass hung from her head
+over her face and shoulders; and in her mouth she carried a lighted
+bundle of dry coco-nut fibre, which emitted clouds of smoke. With an
+unsteady rickety gait the beldame hobbled after her rapidly retreating
+son, who turned round from time to time, skipping and posturing
+derisively as if to taunt her, and then hurrying away again westward.
+Thus the two quaint figures retreated further and further, he in front
+and she behind, till they were lost to view. But still the drums
+continued to beat and the singers to chant their wild song, when nothing
+was to be seen but the deserted beach with the sky and the drifting
+clouds above and the white waves breaking on the strand. Meantime the
+two actors in the sacred drama made their way westward till their
+progress was arrested by the sea. They plunged into it and swimming
+westward unloosed their leafy envelopes and let them float away to the
+spirit-land in the far island beyond the rolling waters. But the men
+themselves swam back to the beach, resumed the dress of ordinary
+mortals, and quietly mingled with the assembly of mourners.[299]
+
+[Sidenote: Personation of ghosts by masked men.]
+
+Such was the first act of the drama. The second followed immediately
+about ten o'clock in the morning. The actors in it were twenty or thirty
+men disguised as ghosts or spirits of the dead (_zera markai_). Their
+bodies were blackened from the neck to the ankles, but the lower part of
+their faces and their feet were dyed bright red, and a red triangle was
+painted on the front of their bodies. They wore head-dresses of grass
+with long projecting ribs of coco-nut leaves, and a long tail of grass
+behind reaching down to the level of the knees. In their hands they held
+long ribs of coco-nut leaf. They were preceded by a curious figure
+called _pager_, a man covered from head to foot with dry grass and dead
+banana leaves, who sidled along with an unsteady rolling gait in a
+zigzag course, keeping his head bowed, his red-painted hands clasped in
+front of his face, and his elbows sticking out from both sides of his
+body. In spite of his erratic course and curious mode of progression he
+drew away from the troop of ghosts behind him and came on towards the
+spectators, jerking his head from side to side, his hands shaking, and
+wailing as he went. Behind him marched the ghosts, with their hands
+crossed behind their backs and their faces looking out to sea. When they
+drew near to the orchestra, who were singing and drumming away, they
+halted and formed in two lines facing the spectators. They now all
+assumed the familiar attitude of a fencer on guard, one foot and arm
+advanced, the other foot and arm drawn back, and lunged to right and
+left as if they were stabbing something with the long ribs of the
+coco-nut leaves which they held in their hands. This manoeuvre they
+repeated several times, the orchestra playing all the time. Then they
+retreated into the forest, but only to march out again, form in line,
+stand on guard, and lunge again and again at the invisible foe. This
+appears to have been the whole of the second act of the drama. No
+explanation of it is given. We can only conjecture that the band of men,
+who seem from their name (_zera markai_) to have represented the ghosts
+or spirits of the dead, came to inform the living that the departed
+brother or sister had joined the majority, and that any attempt to
+rescue him or her would be vain. That perhaps was the meaning of the
+solemn pantomime of the lines of actors standing on guard and lunging
+again and again towards the spectators. But I must acknowledge that this
+is a mere conjecture of my own.[300]
+
+[Sidenote: Blood and hair offered to the dead.]
+
+Be that as it may, when this act of the drama was over, the mourners
+took up the body and with weeping and wailing laid it on a wooden
+framework resting on four posts at a little distance from the house of
+the deceased. Youths who had lately been initiated, and girls who had
+attained to puberty, now had the lobes of their ears cut. The blood
+streamed down over their faces and bodies and was allowed to drip on the
+feet of the corpse as a mark of pity or sorrow.[301] The other relatives
+cut their hair and left the shorn locks in a heap under the body. Blood
+and hair were probably regarded as offerings made to the departed
+kinsman or kinswoman. We saw that the Australian aborigines in like
+manner cut themselves and allow the blood to drip on the corpse; and
+they also offer their hair to the dead, cutting off parts of their
+beards, singeing them, and throwing them on the corpse.[302] Having
+placed the body on the stage and deposited their offerings of hair under
+it, the relatives took some large yams, cut them in pieces, and laid the
+pieces beside the body in order to serve as food for the ghost, who was
+supposed to eat it at night.[303] This notion seems inconsistent with
+the belief that the soul of the departed had already been carried off to
+Boigu, the island of the dead; but consistency in such matters is as
+little to be looked for among savages as among ourselves.
+
+[Sidenote: Mummification of the corpse.]
+
+When the body had remained a few days on the stage in the open air,
+steps were taken to convert it into a mummy. For this purpose it was
+laid in a small canoe manned by some young people of the same sex as the
+deceased. They paddled it across the lagoon to the reef and there rubbed
+off the skin, extracted the bowels from the abdomen and the brain from
+the skull, and having sewed up the hole in the abdomen and thrown the
+bowels into the sea, they brought the remains back to land and lashed
+them to the wooden framework with string, while they fixed a small stick
+to the lower jaw to keep it from drooping. The framework with its
+ghastly burden was fastened vertically to two posts behind the house,
+where it was concealed from public view by a screen of coco-nut leaves.
+Holes were pricked with an arrow between the fingers and toes to allow
+the juices of decomposition to escape, and a fire was kindled and kept
+burning under the stage to dry up the body.[304]
+
+[Sidenote: Garb of mourners. Cuttings for the dead.]
+
+About ten days after the death a feast of bananas, yams, and germinating
+coco-nuts was partaken of by the relations and friends, and portions
+were distributed to the assembled company, who carried them home in
+baskets. It was on this occasion that kinsfolk and friends assumed the
+garb of mourners. Their faces and bodies were smeared with a mixture of
+greyish earth and water: the ashes of a wood fire were strewn on their
+heads; and fringes of sago leaves were fastened on their arms and legs.
+A widow wore besides a special petticoat made of the inner bark of the
+fig-tree; the ends of it were passed between her legs and tucked up
+before and behind. She had to leave her hair unshorn during the whole
+period of her widowhood; and in time it grew into a huge mop of a light
+yellow colour in consequence of the ashes with which it was smeared.
+This coating of ashes, as well as the grey paint on her face and body,
+she was expected to renew from time to time.[305] It was also on the
+occasion of this feast, on or about the tenth day after death, that
+young kinsfolk of the deceased had certain patterns cut in their flesh
+by a sharp shell. The persons so operated on were young adults of both
+sexes nearly related to the dead man or woman. Women generally operated
+on women and men on men. The patients were held down during the
+operation, which was painful, and they sometimes fainted under it. The
+patterns were first drawn on the skin in red paint and then cut in with
+the shell. They varied a good deal in shape. Some consisted of
+arrangements of lines and scrolls; a favourite one, which was only
+carved on women, represented a centipede. The blood which flowed from
+the wounds was allowed to drip on the corpse, thus forming a sacrifice
+or tribute to the dead.[306]
+
+[Sidenote: The Dance of Death. The nocturnal dance.]
+
+When the body had remained some time, perhaps four or six months, on the
+scaffold, and the process of mummification was far advanced, a dance of
+death was held to celebrate the final departure of the spirit for its
+long home. Several men, seldom exceeding four in number, were chosen to
+act the part of ghosts, including the ghost of him or her in whose
+honour the performance was specially held. Further, about a dozen men
+were selected to form a sort of chorus; their business was to act as
+intermediaries between the living and the dead, summoning up the shades,
+serving as their messengers, and informing the people of their presence.
+The costume of the ghosts was simple, consisting of nothing but a
+head-dress and shoulder-band of leaves. The chorus, if we may call them
+so, wore girdles of leaves round their waists and wreaths of leaves on
+their heads. When darkness had fallen, the first act of the drama was
+played. The chorus stood in line opposite the mummy. Beyond them stood
+or sat the drummers, and beyond them again the audience was crowded on
+the beach, the women standing furthest from the mummy and nearest to the
+sea. The drummers now struck up, chanting at the same time to the beat
+of the drums. This was the overture. Then a shrill whistle in the forest
+announced the approach of a ghost. The subdued excitement among the
+spectators, especially among the women, was intense. Meantime the
+chorus, holding each other's hands, advanced sidelong towards the mummy
+with strange gestures, the hollow thud of their feet as they stamped on
+the ground being supposed to be the tread of the ghosts. Thus they
+advanced to the red-painted mummy with its grinning mouth. Behind it by
+this time stood one of the ghosts, and between him and the chorus a
+dialogue ensued. "Whose ghost is there?" called out the chorus; and a
+strident voice answered from the darkness, "The ghost of so and so is
+here." At that the chorus retreated in the same order as they had
+advanced, and again the hollow thud of their feet sounded in the ears of
+the excited spectators as the tramp of the dead. On reaching the
+drummers in their retreat the chorus called out some words of uncertain
+meaning, which have been interpreted, "Spirit of so-and-so, away at sea,
+loved little." At all events, the name of a dead person was pronounced,
+and at the sound the women, thrilled with excitement, leaped from the
+ground, holding their hands aloft; then hurled themselves prone on the
+sand, throwing it over their heads and wailing. The drums now beat
+faster and a wild weird chant rose into the air, then died away and all
+was silent, except perhaps for the lapping of the waves on the sand or
+the muffled thunder of the surf afar off on the barrier reef. Thus one
+ghost after another was summoned from the dusty dead and vanished again
+into the darkness. When all had come and gone, the leader of the chorus,
+who kept himself invisible behind the screen save for a moment when he
+was seen by the chorus to glide behind the mummy on its stage, blew a
+whistle and informed the spectators in a weird voice that all the ghosts
+that had been summoned that night would appear before them in broad day
+light on the morrow. With that the audience dispersed. But the men who
+had played the parts of the ghosts came forward and sat down with the
+chorus and the drummers on mats beside the body. There they remained
+singing to the beat of the drums till the first faint streaks of dawn
+glimmered in the east.
+
+[Sidenote: The noonday dance. The ghosts represented by masked actors.]
+
+Next morning the men assembled beside the body to inspect the actors who
+were to personate the ghosts, in order to make sure that they had
+learned their parts well and could mimick to the life the figure and
+gait of the particular dead persons whom they represented. By the time
+that these preparations were complete, the morning had worn on to noon.
+The audience was already assembled on the beach and on the long stretch
+of sand left by the ebbing tide; for the hour of the drama was always
+fixed at low water so as to allow ample space for the spectators to
+stand at a distance from the players, lest they should detect the
+features of the living under the masks of the dead. All being ready, the
+drummers marched in and took up their position just above the beach,
+facing the audience. The overture having been concluded, the first ghost
+was seen to glide from the forest and come dancing towards the beach. If
+he represented a woman, his costume was more elaborate than it had been
+under the shades of evening the night before. His whole body was painted
+red. A petticoat of leaves encircled his waist: a mask of leaves,
+surmounted by tufts of cassowary and pigeon feathers, concealed his
+head; and in his hands he carried brooms of coco-nut palm leaf. If he
+personated a man, he held a bow in one hand and an arrow in the other,
+and his costume was the usual dress of a dancer, with the addition of a
+head-dress of leaves and feathers and a diamond-shaped ornament of
+bamboo, which he held in his teeth and which entirely concealed his
+features. He approached dancing and mimicking the gestures of the person
+whom he represented. At the sight the women wailed, and the widow would
+cry out, "That's my husband," the mother would cry out, "That's my son."
+Then suddenly the drummers would call out, "Ah! Ah! Ai! Ai!" at which
+the women would fall to the ground, while the dancer retreated into the
+forest. In this way one ghost after the other would make his appearance,
+play his part, and vanish. Occasionally two of them would appear and
+dance together. The women and children, we are told, really believed
+that the actors were the ghosts of their dead kinsfolk. When the first
+dancer had thus danced before the people, he advanced with the drummers
+towards the framework on which the mummy was stretched, and there he
+repeated his dance before it. But the people were not allowed to witness
+this mystery; they remained wailing on the beach, for this was the
+moment at which the ghost of the dead man or woman was supposed to be
+departing for ever to the land of shades.[307]
+
+[Sidenote: Preservation of the mummy.]
+
+Some days afterwards the mummy was affixed to a new framework of bamboo
+and carried into the hut. In former times the huts were of a beehive
+shape, and the framework which supported the mummy was fastened to the
+central post on which the roof rested. The body thus stood erect within
+the house. Its dried skin had been painted red. The empty orbits of the
+eyes had been filled with pieces of pearl-shell of the nautilus to
+imitate eyes, two round spots of black beeswax standing for the pupils.
+The ears were decorated with shreds of the sago-palm or with grey seeds.
+A frontlet of pearl-shell nautilus adorned the head, and a crescent of
+pearl-shell the breast. In the darkness of the old-fashioned huts the
+body looked like a living person. In course of time it became almost
+completely mummified and as light as if it were made of paper. Swinging
+to and fro with every breath of wind, it turned its gleaming eyes at
+each movement of the head. The hut was now surrounded by posts and ropes
+to prevent the ghost from making his way into it and taking possession
+of his old body. Ghosts were supposed to appear only at night, and it
+was imagined that in the dark they would stumble against the posts and
+entangle themselves in the ropes, till in despair they desisted from the
+attempt to penetrate into the hut. In time the mummy mouldered away and
+fell to pieces. If the deceased was a male, the head was removed and a
+wax model of it made and given to the brother, whether blood or tribal
+brother, of the dead man. The head thus prepared or modelled in wax,
+with eyes of pearl-shell, was used in divination. The decaying remains
+of the body were taken to the beach and placed on a platform supported
+by four posts. That was their last resting-place.[308]
+
+[Sidenote: General summary. Dramas of the dead.]
+
+To sum up the foregoing evidence, we may say that if the beliefs and
+practices of the Torres Straits Islanders which I have described do not
+amount to a worship of the dead, they contain the elements out of which
+such a worship might easily have been developed. The preservation of the
+bodies of the dead, or at least their skulls, in the houses, and the
+consultation of them as oracles, prove that the spirits of the dead are
+supposed to possess knowledge which may be of great use to the living;
+and the custom suggests that in other countries the images of the gods
+may perhaps have been evolved out of the mummies of the dead. Further,
+the dramatic representation of the ghosts in a series of striking and
+impressive performances indicates how a sacred and in time a secular
+drama may elsewhere have grown out of a purely religious celebration
+concerned with the souls of the departed. In this connexion we are
+reminded of Professor Ridgeway's theory that ancient Greek tragedy
+originated in commemorative songs and dances performed at the tomb for
+the purpose of pleasing and propitiating the ghost of the mighty
+dead.[309] Yet the mortuary dramas of the Torres Straits Islanders can
+hardly be adduced to support that theory by analogy so long as we are
+ignorant of the precise significance which the natives themselves
+attached to these remarkable performances. There is no clear evidence
+that the dramas were acted for the amusement and gratification of the
+ghost rather than for the edification of the spectators. One important
+act certainly represented, and might well be intended to facilitate, the
+final departure of the spirit of the deceased to the land of souls. But
+the means taken to effect that departure might be adopted in the
+interests of the living quite as much as out of a tender regard for the
+welfare of the dead, since the ghost of the recently departed is
+commonly regarded with fear and aversion, and his surviving relations
+resort to many expedients for the purpose of ridding themselves of his
+unwelcome presence.
+
+[Footnote 274: S. H. Ray, in _Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological
+Expedition to Torres Straits_, iii. (Cambridge, 1907) pp. 509-511; A. C.
+Haddon, "The Religion of the Torres Straits Islanders," _Anthropological
+Essays presented to E. B. Tyler_ (Oxford, 1907), p. 175.]
+
+[Footnote 275: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+iv. 92 _sqq._, 144 _sqq._, v. 346, vi. 207 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 276: A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays presented to E.
+B. Tylor_, p. 186.]
+
+[Footnote 277: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 254 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 278: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 254 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 279: A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays presented to E.
+B. Tylor_, p. 181.]
+
+[Footnote 280: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 355 _sq._, vi. 251; A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays
+presented to E. B. Tylor_, p. 179.]
+
+[Footnote 281: For authorities see the references in the preceding
+note.]
+
+[Footnote 282: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 253.]
+
+[Footnote 283: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 248, 249.]
+
+[Footnote 284: _Id._, p. 250.]
+
+[Footnote 285: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 253; A. C. Haddon, in _Anthropological Essays presented to E. B.
+Tylor_, p. 180.]
+
+[Footnote 286: A. C. Haddon, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 287: A. C. Haddon, _op. cit._ pp. 182 _sq._; _Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_, vi. 127.]
+
+[Footnote 288: A. C. Haddon, _op. cit._ p. 183.]
+
+[Footnote 289: T. C. Hodson, _The Naga Tribes of Manipur_ (London,
+1911), p. 43.]
+
+[Footnote 290: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 355 _sq._, vi. 252. In the former passage Dr. Haddon seems to
+identify Boigu with the island of that name off the south coast of New
+Guinea; in the latter he prefers to regard it as mythical.]
+
+[Footnote 291: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 127.]
+
+[Footnote 292: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 248 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 293: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 250 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 294: Diodorus Siculus, i. 91.]
+
+[Footnote 295: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 258.]
+
+[Footnote 296: _Id._, p. 362.]
+
+[Footnote 297: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 252-256.]
+
+[Footnote 298: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+v. 256.]
+
+[Footnote 299: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 129-133.]
+
+[Footnote 300: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 133 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 301: _Id._, pp. 135, 154.]
+
+[Footnote 302: (Sir) George Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of
+Discovery in North-West and Western Australia_ (London, 1841), ii. 335.]
+
+[Footnote 303: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 135.]
+
+[Footnote 304: _Op. cit._ p. 136.]
+
+[Footnote 305: _Op. cit._ pp. 138, 153, 157 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 306: _Op. cit._ pp. 154 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 307: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 139-141.]
+
+[Footnote 308: _Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_,
+vi. 148 _sq._ As to divination with skulls or waxen models, see _id._,
+pp. 266 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 309: W. Ridgeway, _The Origin of Tragedy, with special
+reference to the Greek Tragedians_ (Cambridge, 1910), pp. 26 _sqq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE IX
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF BRITISH NEW GUINEA
+
+
+[Sidenote: The two races of New Guinea, the Papuan and the Melanesian.]
+
+In my last lecture I dealt with the islanders of Torres Straits, and
+shewed that these savages firmly believe in the existence of the human
+soul after death, and that if their beliefs and customs in this respect
+do not always amount to an actual worship of the departed, they contain
+at least the elements out of which such a worship might easily be
+developed. To-day we pass from the small islands of Torres Straits to
+the vast neighbouring island, almost continent, of New Guinea, the
+greater part of which is inhabited by a race related by physical type
+and language to the Torres Straits Islanders, and exhibiting
+approximately the same level of social and intellectual culture. New
+Guinea, roughly speaking, appears to be occupied by two different races,
+to which the names of Papuan and Melanesian are now given; and it is to
+the Papuan race, not to the Melanesian, that the Torres Straits
+Islanders are akin. The Papuans, a tall, dark-skinned, frizzly-haired
+race, inhabit apparently the greater part of New Guinea, including the
+whole of the western and central portions of the island. The
+Melanesians, a smaller, lighter-coloured, frizzly-haired race, inhabit
+the long eastern peninsula, including the southern coast from about Cape
+Possession eastward,[310] and tribes speaking a Melanesian language are
+also settled about Finsch Harbour and Huon Gulf in German New
+Guinea.[311] These Melanesians are most probably immigrants who have
+settled in New Guinea from the north and east, where the great chain of
+islands known as Melanesia stretches in an immense semicircle from New
+Ireland on the north to New Caledonia on the south-east. The natives of
+this chain of islands or series of archipelagoes are the true
+Melanesians; their kinsmen in New Guinea have undergone admixture with
+the Papuan aborigines, and accordingly should rather be called
+Papuo-Melanesians than Melanesians simply. Their country appears to be
+wholly comprised within the limits of British and German New Guinea; so
+far as I am aware, the vast area of Dutch New Guinea is inhabited solely
+by tribes of the Papuan race. In respect of material culture both races
+stand approximately on the same level: they live in settled villages,
+they practise agriculture, they engage in commerce, and they have a
+fairly developed barbaric art. Thus they have made some progress in the
+direction of civilisation; certainly they have far outstripped the
+wandering savages of Australia, who subsist entirely on the products of
+the chase and on the natural fruits of the earth.
+
+[Sidenote: Scantiness of our information as to the natives of New
+Guinea.]
+
+But although the natives of New Guinea have now been under the rule of
+European powers, Britain, Germany, and Holland, for many years, we
+unfortunately possess little detailed information as to their mental and
+social condition. It is true that the members of the Cambridge
+Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits visited some parts of the
+southern coasts of British New Guinea, and several years later, in 1904,
+Dr. Seligmann was able to devote somewhat more time to the investigation
+of the same region and has given us the results of his enquiries in a
+valuable book. But the time at his disposal did not suffice for a
+thorough investigation of this large region; and accordingly his
+information, eked out though it is by that of Protestant and Catholic
+missionaries, still leaves us in the dark as to much which we should
+wish to know. Among the natives of British New Guinea our information is
+especially defective in regard to the Papuans, who occupy the greater
+part of the possession, including the whole of the western region; for
+Dr. Seligmann's book, which is the most detailed and systematic work yet
+published on the ethnology of British New Guinea, deals almost
+exclusively with the Melanesian portion of the population. Accordingly I
+shall begin what I have to say on this subject with the Melanesian or
+rather Papuo-Melanesian tribes of south-eastern New Guinea.
+
+[Sidenote: The Motu, their beliefs and customs concerning the dead.]
+
+Amongst these people the best known are the Motu, a tribe of fishermen
+and potters, who live in and about Port Moresby in the Central District
+of British New Guinea. Their language conforms to the Melanesian type.
+They are immigrants, but the country from which they came is
+unknown.[312] In their opinion the spirits of the dead dwell in a happy
+land where parted friends meet again and never suffer hunger. They fish,
+hunt, and plant, and are just like living men, except that they have no
+noses. When they first arrive in the mansions of the blest, they are
+laid out to dry on a sort of gridiron over a slow fire in order to purge
+away the grossness of the body and make them ethereal and light, as
+spirits should be. Yet, oddly enough, though they have no noses they
+cannot enter the realms of bliss unless their noses were pierced in
+their lifetime. For these savages bore holes in their noses and insert
+ornaments, or what they regard as such, in the holes. The operation is
+performed on children about the age of six years; and if children die
+before it has been performed on them, the parents will bore a hole in
+the nose of the corpse in order that the spirit of the child may go to
+the happy land. For if they omitted to do so, the poor ghost would have
+to herd with other whole-nosed ghosts in a bad place called Tageani,
+where there is little food to eat and no betelnuts to chew. The spirits
+of the dead are very powerful and visit bad people with their
+displeasure. Famine and scarcity of fish and game are attributed to the
+anger of the spirits. But they hearken to prayer and appear to their
+friends in dreams, sometimes condescending to give them directions for
+their guidance in time of trouble.[313]
+
+[Sidenote: The Koita or Koitapu.]
+
+Side by side with the Motu live the Koita or Koitapu, who appear to be
+the aboriginal inhabitants of the country and to belong to the Papuan
+stock. Their villages lie scattered for a distance of about forty miles
+along the coast, from a point about seven miles south-east of Port
+Moresby to a point on Redscar Bay to the north-west of that settlement.
+They live on friendly terms with the Motu and have intermarried with
+them for generations. The villages of the two tribes are usually built
+near to or even in direct continuity with each other. But while the Motu
+are mainly fishers and potters, the Koita are mainly tillers of the
+soil, though they have learned some arts or adopted some customs from
+their neighbours. They say to the Motu, "Yours is the sea, the canoes,
+the nets; ours the land and the wallaby. Give us fish for our flesh, and
+pottery for our yams and bananas." The Motu look down upon the Koita,
+but fear their power of sorcery, and apply to them for help in sickness
+and for the weather they happen to require; for they imagine that the
+Koita rule the elements and can make rain or sunshine, wind or calm by
+their magic. Thus, as in so many cases, the members of the immigrant
+race confess their inability to understand and manage the gods or
+spirits of the land, and have recourse in time of need to the magic of
+the aboriginal inhabitants. While the Koita belong to the Papuan stock
+and speak a Papuan language, most of the men understand the Motu tongue,
+which is one of the Melanesian family. Altogether these two tribes, the
+Koita and the Motu, may be regarded as typical representatives of the
+mixed race to which the name of Papuo-Melanesian is now given.[314]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Koita concerning the human soul.]
+
+The Koita believe that the human spirit or ghost, which they call _sua_,
+leaves the body at death and goes away to live with other ghosts on a
+mountain called Idu. But they think that the spirit can quit the body
+and return to it during life; it goes away, for example, in dreams, and
+if a sleeper should unfortunately waken before his soul has had time to
+return, he will probably fall sick. Sneezing is a sign that the soul has
+returned to the body, and if a man does not sneeze for many weeks
+together, his friends look on it as a grave symptom; his soul, they
+imagine, must be a very long way off.[315] Moreover, a man's soul may be
+enticed from his body and detained by a demon or _tabu_, as the Koita
+call it. Thus, when a man who has been out in the forest returns home
+and shakes with fever, it is assumed that he has fallen down and been
+robbed of his soul by a demon. In order to recover that priceless
+possession, the sufferer and his friends repair to the exact spot in the
+forest where the supposed robbery was perpetrated. They take with them a
+long bamboo with some valuable ornaments tied to it, and two men support
+it horizontally over a pot which is filled with grass. A light is put to
+the grass, and as it crackles and blazes a number of men standing round
+the pot strike it with stones till it breaks, whereat they all groan.
+Then the company returns to the village, and the sick man lies down in
+his house with the bamboo and its ornaments hung over him. This is
+supposed to be all that is needed to effect a perfect cure; for the
+demon has kindly accepted the soul of the ornaments and released the
+soul of the sufferer, who ought to recover accordingly.[316]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Koita concerning the state of the dead.
+Alleged communications with the dead by means of mediums.]
+
+However, at death the soul goes away for good and all; at least there
+appears to be no idea that it will ever return to life in the form of an
+infant, as the souls of the Central Australian aborigines are supposed
+to do. All Koita ghosts live together on Mount Idu, and their life is
+very like the one they led here on earth. There is no distinction
+between the good and the bad, the righteous and the wicked, the strong
+and the weak, the young and the old; they all fare alike in the
+spirit-land, with one exception. Like the Motu, the Koita are in the
+habit of boring holes in their noses and inserting ornaments in the
+holes; and they think that if any person were so unfortunate as to be
+buried with his nose whole and entire, his ghost would have to go about
+in the other world with a creature like a slow-worm depending from his
+nostrils on either side. Hence, when anybody dies before the operation
+of nose-boring has been performed on him or her, the friends take care
+to bore a hole in the nose of the corpse in order that the ghost may not
+appear disfigured among his fellows in dead man's land. There the ghosts
+dwell in houses, cultivate gardens, marry wives, and amuse themselves
+just as they did here on earth. They live a long time, but not for ever;
+for they grow weaker and weaker and at last die the second death, never
+to revive again, not even as ghosts. The exact length of time they live
+in the spirit-land has not been accurately ascertained; but there seems
+to be a notion that they survive only so long as their names and their
+memories survive among the living. When these are utterly forgotten, the
+poor ghosts cease to exist. If that is so, it is obvious that the dead
+depend for their continued existence upon the recollection of the
+living; their names are in a sense their souls, so that oblivion of the
+name involves extinction of the soul.[317] But though the spirits of the
+dead go away to live for a time on Mount Idu, they often return to their
+native villages and haunt the place of their death. On these visits they
+shew little benevolence or lovingkindness to their descendants. They
+punish any neglect in the performance of the funeral rites and any
+infringement of tribal customs, and the punishment takes the form of
+sickness or of bad luck in hunting or fishing. This dread of the ghost
+commonly leads the Koita to desert a house after a death and to let it
+fall into decay; but sometimes the widow, or in rare cases a brother or
+sister, will continue to inhabit the house of the deceased. Children who
+play near dwellings which have been deserted on account of death may
+fall sick; and if people who are not members of the family partake of
+food which has been hung up in such houses, they also may sicken. It is
+in dreams that the ghosts usually appear to the survivors; but
+occasionally they may be seen or at least felt by people in the waking
+state. Some years ago four Motuan girls persuaded many natives of Port
+Moresby that they could evoke the spirit of a youth named Tamasi, who
+had died three years before. The mother and other sorrowing relatives of
+the deceased paid a high price to the principal medium, a young woman
+named Mea, for an interview with the ghost. The meeting took place in a
+house by night. The relations and friends squatted on the ground in
+expectation; and sure enough the ghost presented himself in the darkness
+and went round shaking hands most affably with the assembled company.
+However, a sceptic who happened to assist at this spiritual sitting, had
+the temerity to hold on tight to the proffered hand of the ghost, while
+another infidel assisted him to obtain a sight as well as a touch of the
+vanished hand by striking a light. It then turned out that the supposed
+apparition was no spirit but the medium Mea herself. She was brought
+before a magistrate, who sentenced her to a short term of imprisonment
+and relieved her of the property which she had amassed by the exercise
+of her spiritual talents.[318] It is hardly for us, or at least for some
+of us, to cast stones at the efforts of ignorant savages to communicate
+by means of such intermediaries with their departed friends. Similar
+attempts have been made in our own country within our lifetime, and I
+believe that they are still being made, in perfect good faith, by
+educated ladies and gentlemen, who like their black brethren and sisters
+in the faith are sometimes made the dupes of designing knaves. If New
+Guinea has its Meas, Europe has its Eusapias. Human credulity and vulgar
+imposture are much the same all the world over.
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the dead.]
+
+The fear of the dead is strongly marked in some funeral customs which
+are observed by the Roro-speaking tribes who occupy a territory at the
+mouth of the St. Joseph river in British New Guinea.[319] When a death
+takes place, the female relations of the deceased lacerate their skulls,
+faces, breasts, bellies, arms, and legs with sharp shells, till they
+stream with blood and fall down exhausted. Moreover, a fire is kindled
+on the grave and kept up almost continually for months for the purpose,
+we are told, of warming the ghost.[320] These attentions might be
+interpreted as marks of affection rather than of fear; but in other
+customs of these people the dread of the ghost is unmistakable. For when
+the corpse has been placed in the grave a near kinsman strokes it twice
+with a branch from head to foot in order to drive away the dead man's
+spirit; and in Yule Island, when the ghost has thus been brushed away
+from the body, he is pursued by two men brandishing sticks and torches
+from the village to the edge of the forest, where with a last curse they
+hurl the sticks and torches after him.[321]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghost of dead wife feared by widower.]
+
+Among these people the visits of ghosts, though frequent, are far from
+welcome, for all ghosts are supposed to be mischievous and to take no
+delight but in injuring the living. Hence, for example, a widower in
+mourning goes about everywhere armed with an axe to defend himself
+against the spirit of his dead wife, who might play him many an ill turn
+if she caught him defenceless and off his guard. And he is subject to
+many curious restrictions and has to lead the life of an outcast from
+society, apparently because people fear to come into contact with a man
+whose steps are dogged by so dangerous a spirit.[322] This account of
+the terrors of ghosts we owe to a Catholic missionary. But according to
+the information collected by Dr. Seligmann among these people the dread
+inspired by the souls of the dead is not so absolute. He tells us,
+indeed, that ghosts are thought to make people ill by stealing their
+souls; that the natives fear to go alone outside the village in the dark
+lest they should encounter a spectre; and that if too many quarrels
+occur among the women, the spirits of the dead may manifest their
+displeasure by visiting hunters and fishers with bad luck, so that it
+may be necessary to conjure their souls out of the village. On the other
+hand, it is said that if the ghosts abandoned a village altogether, the
+luck of the villagers would be gone, and if such a thing is supposed to
+have happened, measures are taken to bring back the spirits of the
+departed to the old home.[323]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Mafulu concerning the dead.]
+
+Inland from the Roro-speaking tribes, among the mountains at the head of
+the St. Joseph River, there is a tribe known to their neighbours as the
+Mafulu, though they call themselves Mambule. They speak a Papuan
+language, but their physical characteristics are believed to indicate a
+strain of Negrito blood.[324] The Mafulu hold that at death the human
+spirit leaves the body and becomes a malevolent ghost. Accordingly they
+drive it away with shouts. It is supposed to go away to the tops of the
+mountains there to become, according to its age, either a shimmering
+light on the ground or a large sort of fungus, which is found only on
+the mountains. Hence natives who come across such a shimmering light or
+such a fungus are careful not to tread on it; much less would they eat
+the fungus. However, in spite of their transformation into these things,
+the ghosts come down from the mountains and prowl about the villages and
+gardens seeking what they may devour, and as their intentions are always
+evil their visits are dreaded by the people, who fill up the crevices
+and openings, except the doors, of their houses at night in order to
+prevent the incursions of these unquiet spirits. When a mission station
+was founded in their country, the Mafulu were amazed that the
+missionaries should sleep alone in rooms with open doors and windows,
+through which the ghosts might enter.[325]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the Mafulu.]
+
+Common people among the Mafulu are buried in shallow graves in the
+village, and pigs are killed at the funeral for the purpose of appeasing
+the ghost. Mourners wear necklaces of string and smear their faces,
+sometimes also their bodies, with black, which they renew from time to
+time. Instead of wearing a necklace, a widow, widower, or other near
+relative may abstain during the period of mourning from eating a
+favourite food of the deceased. A woman who has lost a child, especially
+a first-born or dearly loved child, will often amputate the first joint
+of one of her fingers with an adze; and she may repeat the amputation if
+she suffers another bereavement. A woman has been seen with three of her
+fingers mutilated in this fashion.[326] The corpses of chiefs, their
+wives, and other members of their families are not buried in graves but
+laid in rude coffins, which are then deposited either on rough platforms
+in the village or in the fork of a species of fig-tree. This sort of
+tree, called by the natives _gabi_, is specially used for such burials;
+one of them has been seen supporting no less than six coffins, one above
+the other. The Mafulu never cut down these trees, and in seeking a new
+site for a village they will often choose a place where one of them is
+growing. So long as the corpse of a chief is rotting and stinking on the
+platform or the tree, the village is deserted by the inhabitants; only
+two men, relatives of the deceased, remain behind exposed to the stench
+of the decaying body and the blood of the pigs which were slaughtered at
+the funeral feast. When decomposition is complete, the people return to
+the village. Should the coffin fall to the ground through the decay of
+the platform or the tree on which it rests, the people throw away all
+the bones except the skull and the larger bones of the arms and legs;
+these they bury in a shallow grave under the platform, or put in a box
+on a burial tree, or hang up in the chief's house.[327]
+
+[Sidenote: Use made of the skulls and bones at a great festival.]
+
+The skulls and leg and arm bones of chiefs, their wives, and other
+members of their families, which have thus been preserved, play a
+prominent part in the great feasts which the inhabitants of a Mafulu
+village celebrate at intervals of perhaps fifteen or twenty years. Great
+preparations are made for such a celebration. A series of tall posts,
+one for each household, is erected in the open space which intervenes
+between the two rows of the village houses. Yams and taro are fastened
+to the upper parts of the posts; and below them are hung in circles the
+skulls and arm and leg bones of dead chiefs, their wives, and kinsfolk,
+which have been preserved in the manner described. Any skulls and bones
+that remain over when all the posts have been thus decorated are placed
+on a platform, which has either served for the ordinary exposure of a
+chief's corpse or has been specially erected for the purpose of the
+festival. At a given moment of the ceremony the chief of the clan cuts
+down the props which support the platform, so that the skulls and bones
+roll on the ground. These are picked up and afterwards distributed,
+along with some of the skulls and bones from the posts, by the chief of
+the clan to the more important of the invited guests, who wear them as
+ornaments on their arms in a great dance. None but certain of the male
+guests take part in the dance; the villagers themselves merely look on.
+All the dancers are arrayed in full dancing costume, including heavy
+head-dresses of feathers, and they carry drums and spears, sometimes
+also clubs or adzes. The dance lasts the whole night. When it is over,
+the skulls and bones are hung up again on the tall posts. Afterwards the
+fruits and vegetables which have been collected in large quantities are
+divided among the guests. On a subsequent morning a large number of pigs
+are killed, and certain of the hosts take some of the human bones from
+the posts and dip them in the blood which flows from the mouths of the
+slaughtered pigs. With these blood-stained bones they next touch the
+skulls and all the other bones on the posts, which include all the
+skulls and arm and leg bones of all the chiefs and members of their
+families and other prominent persons who have been buried in the village
+or in any other village of the community since the last great feast was
+held. These relics of mortality may afterwards be kept in the chief's
+house, or hung on a tree, or simply thrown away in the forest; but in no
+case are they ever again used for purposes of ceremony. The slaughtered
+pigs are cut up and the portions distributed among the guests, who carry
+them away for consumption in their own villages.[328]
+
+[Sidenote: Trace of ancestor worship among the Mafulu.]
+
+This preservation of the skulls and bones of chiefs and other notables
+for years, and the dipping of them in the blood of pigs at a great
+festival, must apparently be designed to propitiate or influence in some
+way the ghosts of the persons to whom the skulls and bones belonged in
+their lifetime. But Mr. R. W. Williamson, to whom we are indebted for
+the description of this interesting ceremony, was not able to detect any
+other clear indications of ancestor worship among the people.[329]
+
+[Sidenote: Worship of the dead among the natives of the Aroma district.]
+
+However, a real worship of the dead, or something approaching to it, is
+reported to exist among some of the natives of the Aroma district in
+British New Guinea. Each family is said to have a sacred place, whither
+they carry offerings for the spirits of dead ancestors, whom they
+terribly fear. Sickness in the family, death, famine, scarcity of fish,
+and so forth, are all set down to the anger of these dreadful beings,
+who must accordingly be propitiated. On certain occasions the help of
+the spirits is especially invoked and their favour wooed by means of
+offerings. Thus, when a house is being built and the central post has
+been erected, sacrifices of wallaby, fish, and bananas are presented to
+the souls of the dead, and a prayer is put up that they will be pleased
+to keep the house always full of food and to prevent it from falling
+down in stormy weather. Again, when the natives begin to plant their
+gardens, they first take a bunch of bananas and sugar-cane and standing
+in the middle of the garden call over the names of dead members of the
+family, adding, "There is your food, your bananas and sugar-cane; let
+our food grow well, and let it be plentiful. If it does not grow well
+and plentifully, you all will be full of shame, and so shall we." Again,
+before the people set out on a trading expedition, they present food to
+the spirits at the central post of the house and pray them to go before
+the traders and prepare the people, so that the trade may be good. Once
+more, when there is sickness in the family, a pig is killed and its
+carcase carried to the sacred place, where the spirits are asked to
+accept it. Sins, also, are confessed, such as that people have gathered
+bananas or coco-nuts without offering any of them to their dead
+ancestors. In presenting the pig they say, "There is a pig; accept it,
+and remove the sickness." But if prayers and sacrifices are vain, and
+the patient dies, then, while the relatives all stand round the open
+grave, the chief's sister or cousin calls out in a loud voice: "You have
+been angry with us for the bananas or the coco-nuts which we have
+gathered, and in your anger you have taken away this child. Now let it
+suffice, and bury your anger." So saying they lower the body into the
+grave and shovel in the earth on the top of it. The spirits of the
+departed, on quitting their bodies, paddle in canoes across the lagoon
+and go away to the mountains, where they live in perfect bliss, with no
+work to do and no trouble to vex them, chewing betel, dancing all night
+and resting all day.[330]
+
+[Sidenote: The Hood Peninsula. The town of Kalo.]
+
+Between the Aroma District in the south-east and Port Moresby on the
+north-west is situated the Hood Peninsula in the Central District of
+British New Guinea. It is inhabited by the Bulaa, Babaka, Kamali, and
+Kalo tribes, which all speak dialects of one language.[331] The village
+or town of Kalo, built at the base of the peninsula, close to the mouth
+of the Vanigela or Kemp Welch River, is said to be the wealthiest
+village in British New Guinea. It includes some magnificent native
+houses, all built over the water on piles, some of which are thirty feet
+high. The sight of these great houses perched on such lofty and massive
+props is very impressive. In front of each house is a series of large
+platforms like gigantic steps. Some of the posts and under-surfaces of
+the houses are carved with figures of crocodiles and so forth. The
+labour of cutting the huge planks for the flooring of the houses and the
+platforms must be immense, and must have been still greater in the old
+days, when the natives had only stone tools to work with. Many of the
+planks are cut out of the slab-like buttresses of tall forest trees
+which grow inland. So hard is the wood that the boards are handed down
+as heirlooms from father to son, and the piles on which the houses are
+built last for generations. The inhabitants of Kalo possess gardens,
+where the rich alluvial soil produces a superabundance of coco-nuts,
+bananas, yams, sweet potatoes, and taro. Areca palms also flourish and
+produce the betel nuts, which are in great demand for chewing with
+quick-lime and so constitute a source of wealth. Commanding the mouth of
+the Vanigela River, the people of Kalo absorb the trade with the
+interior; and their material prosperity is said to have rendered them
+conceited and troublesome.[332]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the natives of
+the Hood Peninsula. Seclusion of the widow or widower.]
+
+The tribes inhabiting the Hood Peninsula are reported to have no belief
+in any good spirit but an unlimited faith in bad spirits, amongst whom
+they include the souls of their dead ancestors. At death the ghosts join
+their forefathers in a subterranean region, where they have splendid
+gardens, houses, and so forth. Yet not content with their life in the
+underworld, they are always on the watch to deal out sickness and death
+to their surviving friends and relations, who may have the misfortune to
+incur their displeasure. So the natives are most careful to do nothing
+that might offend these touchy and dangerous spirits. Like many other
+savages, they do not believe that anybody dies a natural death; they
+think that all the deaths which we should call natural are brought about
+either by an ancestral ghost (_palagu_) or by a sorcerer or witch
+(_wara_). Even when a man dies of snake-bite, they detect in the
+discoloration of the body the wounds inflicted upon him by the fell art
+of the magician.[333] On the approach of death the house of the sick man
+is filled by anxious relatives and friends, who sit around watching for
+the end. When it comes, there is a tremendous outburst of grief. The men
+beat their faces with their clenched fists; the women tear their cheeks
+with their nails till the blood streams down. They usually bury their
+dead in graves, which among the inland tribes are commonly dug near the
+houses of the deceased. The maritime tribes, who live in houses built on
+piles over the water, sometimes inter the corpse in the forest. But at
+other times they place it in a canoe, which they anchor off the village.
+Then, when the body has dried up, they lay it on a platform in a tree.
+Finally, they collect and clean the bones, tie them in a bundle, and
+place them on the roof of the house. When the corpse is buried, a
+temporary hut is erected over the grave, and in it the widow or widower
+lives in seclusion for two or three months. During her seclusion the
+widow employs herself in fashioning her widow's weeds, which consist of
+a long grass petticoat reaching to the ankles. She wears a large
+head-dress made of shells; her head is shaved, and her body blackened.
+Further, she wears round her neck the waistband of her deceased husband
+with his lower jaw-bone attached to it. The costume of a widower is
+somewhat similar, though he does not wear a long grass petticoat.
+Instead of it he has a graceful fringe, which hangs from his waist half
+way to the knees. On his head he wears an elaborate head-dress made of
+shells, and on his arms he has armlets of the same material. His hair is
+cut off and his whole skin blackened. Round his neck is a string, from
+which depends his dead wife's petticoat. It is sewn up into small bulk
+and hangs under his right arm. While the widow or widower is living in
+seclusion on the grave, he or she is supplied with food by relations. At
+sundown on the day of the burial, a curious ceremony is performed. An
+old woman or man, supposed to be gifted with second-sight, is sent for.
+Seating herself at the foot of the grave she peers into the deepening
+shadows under the coco-nut palms. At first she remains perfectly still,
+while the relations of the deceased watch her with painful anxiety. Soon
+her look becomes more piercing, and lowering her head, while she still
+gazes into the depth of the forest, she says in low and solemn tones, "I
+see coming hither So-and-So's grandfather" (mentioning the name of the
+dead person). "He says he is glad to welcome his grandson to his abode.
+I see now his father and his own little son also, who died in infancy."
+Gradually, she grows more and more excited, waving her arms and swaying
+her body from side to side. "Now they come," she cries, "I can see all
+our forefathers in a fast-gathering crowd. They are coming closer and
+yet closer. Make room, make room for the spirits of our departed
+ancestors." By this time she has worked herself up into a frenzy. She
+throws herself on the ground, beating her head with her clenched fists.
+Foam flies from her lips, her eyes become fixed, and she rolls over
+insensible. But the fit lasts only a short time. She soon comes to
+herself; the vision is past, and the visionary is restored to common
+life.[334]
+
+[Sidenote: Application of the juices of the dead to the persons of the
+living.]
+
+Some of the inland tribes of this district have a peculiar way of
+disposing of their dead. A double platform about ten feet high is
+erected near the village. On the upper platform the corpse is placed,
+and immediately below it the widow or widower sleeps on the lower
+platform, allowing juices of the decaying body to stream down on her or
+him. This application of the decomposing juices of a corpse to the
+persons of the living is not uncommon among savages; it appears to be a
+form of communion with the dead, the survivors thus in a manner
+identifying themselves with their departed kinsfolk by absorbing a
+portion of their bodily substance. Among the tribes in question a
+widower marks his affection for his dead wife by never washing himself
+during the period of mourning; he would not rid himself of those
+products of decomposition which link him, however sadly, with her whom
+he has lost. Every day, too, reeking with these relics of mortality, he
+solemnly stalks through the village.[335]
+
+[Sidenote: Precautions taken by man-slayers against the ghosts of their
+victims.]
+
+But there is a distinction between ghosts. If all of them are feared,
+some are more dreadful than others, and amongst the latter may naturally
+be reckoned the ghosts of slain enemies. Accordingly the slayer has to
+observe special precautions to guard against the angry and vengeful
+spirit of his victim. Amongst these people, we are told, a man who has
+taken life is held to be impure until he has undergone certain
+ceremonies. As soon as possible after the deed is done, he cleanses
+himself and his weapon. Then he repairs to his village and seats himself
+on the logs of sacrificial staging. No one approaches him or takes any
+notice whatever of him. Meantime a house is made ready, in which he must
+live by himself for several days, waited on only by two or three small
+boys. He may eat nothing but toasted bananas, and only the central parts
+of them; the ends are thrown away. On the third day a small feast is
+prepared for him by his friends, who also provide him with some new
+waistbands. Next day, arrayed in all his finery and wearing the badges
+which mark him as a homicide, he sallies forth fully armed and parades
+the village. Next day a hunt takes place, and from the game captured a
+kangaroo is selected. It is cut open, and with its spleen and liver the
+back of the homicide is rubbed. Then he walks solemnly down to the
+nearest water and standing straddle-legs in it washes himself. All young
+untried warriors then swim between his legs, which is supposed to impart
+his courage and strength to them. Next day at early dawn he dashes out
+of his house fully armed and calls aloud the name of his victim. Having
+satisfied himself that he has thoroughly scared the ghost of the dead
+man, he returns to his house. Further, floors are beaten and fires
+kindled for the sake of driving away the ghost, lest he should still be
+lingering in the neighbourhood. A day later the purification of the
+homicide is complete and he is free to enter his wife's house, which he
+might not do before.[336] This account of the purification of a homicide
+suggests that the purificatory rites, which have been observed in
+similar cases by many peoples, including the ancient Greeks, are
+primarily intended to free the slayer from the dangerous ghost of his
+victim, which haunts him and seeks to take his life. Such rites in fact
+appear designed, not to restore the homicide to a state of moral
+innocence, but merely to guard him against a physical danger; they are
+protective, not reformatory, in character; they are exorcisms, not
+purifications in the sense which we attach to the word. This
+interpretation of the ceremonies observed by manslayers among many
+peoples might be supported by a large array of evidence; but to go into
+the matter fully would lead me into a long digression. I have collected
+some of the evidence elsewhere.[337]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs concerning the dead among the Massim of
+south-eastern New Guinea. Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead. Mourners bathe
+and shave their heads. Food deposited in the grave. Dietary restrictions
+imposed on mourners.]
+
+We now pass to that branch of the Papuo-Melanesian race which occupies
+the extreme south-eastern part of British New Guinea, and to which Dr.
+Seligmann gives the name of Massim. These people have been observed more
+especially at three places, namely Bartle Bay, Wagawaga, and Tubetube, a
+small island of the Engineer group lying off the south-eastern extremity
+of New Guinea. Among them the old custom was to bury the dead on the
+outskirts of the hamlet and sometimes within a few yards of the houses,
+and apparently the remains were afterwards as a rule left undisturbed;
+there was no general practice of exhuming the bones and depositing them
+elsewhere.[338] At Wagawaga the name for the spirit or soul of a dead
+person is _arugo_, which also signifies a man's shadow or reflection in
+a glass or in water; and though animals and trees are not supposed to
+have spirits, their reflections bear the same name _arugo_.[339] The
+souls of the dead are believed to depart to the land of Hiyoyoa, which
+is under the sea, near Maivara, at the head of Milne Bay. The land of
+the dead, as usual, resembles in all respects the land of the living,
+except that it is day there when it is night at Wagawaga, and the dead
+speak of the upper world in the language of Milne Bay instead of in that
+of Wagawaga. A certain being called Tumudurere receives the ghosts on
+their arrival and directs them where to make their gardens. The souls of
+living men and women can journey to the land of the dead and return to
+earth; indeed this happens not unfrequently. There is a man at Wagawaga
+who has often gone thither and come back; whenever he wishes to make the
+journey, he has nothing to do but to smear himself with a magical stuff
+and to fall asleep, after which he soon wakes up in Hiyoyoa. At first
+the ghosts whom he met in the other world did not invite him to partake
+of their food, because they knew that if he did so he could not return
+to the land of the living; but apparently practice has rendered him
+immune to the usually fatal effects of the food of the dead.[340] Though
+Hiyoyoa, at the head of Milne Bay, lies to the west of Wagawaga, the
+dead are buried in a squatting posture with their faces turned to the
+east, in order that their souls may depart to the other world.[341]
+Immediately after the funeral the relations who have taken part in the
+burial go down to the sea and bathe, and so do the widow and children of
+the deceased because they supported the dying husband and father in his
+extremity. After bathing in the sea the widow and children shave their
+heads.[342] Both the bathing and the shaving are doubtless forms of
+ceremonial purification; in other words, they are designed to rid the
+survivors of the taint of death, or perhaps more definitely to remove
+the ghost from their persons, to which he may be supposed to cling like
+a burr. At Bartle Bay the dead are buried on their sides with their
+heads pointing in the direction from which the totem clan of the
+deceased is said to have come originally; and various kinds of food, of
+which the dead man had partaken in his last illness, are deposited,
+along with some paltry personal ornaments, in the grave. Apparently the
+food is intended to serve as provision for the ghost on his journey to
+the other world. Curiously enough, the widow is forbidden to eat of the
+same kinds of food of which her husband ate during his last illness, and
+the prohibition is strictly observed until after the last of the funeral
+feasts.[343] The motive of the prohibition is not obvious; perhaps it
+may be a fear of attracting the ghost back to earth through the savoury
+food which he loved in the body. At Wagawaga, after the relatives who
+took part in the burial have bathed in the sea, they cut down several of
+the coco-nut trees which belonged to the deceased, leaving both nuts and
+trees to rot on the ground. During the first two or three weeks after
+the funeral these same relatives may not eat boiled food, but only
+roast; they may not drink water, but only the milk of young coco-nuts
+made hot, and although they may eat yams they must abstain from bananas
+and sugar-cane.[344] A man may not eat coco-nuts grown in his dead
+father's hamlet, nor pigs and areca-nuts from it during the whole
+remainder of his life.[345] The reasons for these dietary restrictions
+are not mentioned, but no doubt the abstinences are based on a fear of
+the ghost, or at all events on a dread of the contagion of death, to
+which all who had a share in the burial are especially exposed.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral customs at Tubetube. The fire on the grave. The happy
+land.]
+
+At Tubetube, in like manner, immediately after a funeral a brother of
+the deceased cuts down two or three of the dead man's coco-nut trees.
+There, also, the children of the deceased may not eat any coco-nuts from
+their father's trees nor even from any trees grown in his hamlet; nay,
+they may not partake of any garden produce grown in the vicinity of the
+hamlet; and similarly they must abstain from the pork of all pigs
+fattened in their dead father's village. But these prohibitions do not
+apply to the brothers, sisters, and other relatives of the departed. The
+relations who have assisted at the burial remain at the grave for five
+or six days, being fed by the brothers or other near kinsfolk of the
+deceased. They may not quit the spot even at night, and if it rains they
+huddle into a shelter built over the grave. During their vigil at the
+tomb they may not drink water, but are allowed a little heated coco-nut
+milk; they are supposed to eat only a little yam and other vegetable
+food.[346] On the day when the body is buried a fire is kindled at the
+grave and kept burning night and day until the feast of the dead has
+been held. "The reason for having the fire is that the spirit may be
+able to get warm when it rises from the grave. The natives regard the
+spirit as being very cold, even as the body is when the life has
+departed from it, and without this external warmth provided by the fire
+it would be unable to undertake the journey to its final home. The feast
+for the dead is celebrated when the flesh has decayed, and in some
+places the skull is taken from the grave, washed and placed in the
+house, being buried again when the feast is over. At Tubetube this
+custom of taking the skull from the grave is not regularly followed, in
+some instances it is, but the feast is always held, and on the night of
+the day on which the feast takes place, the fire, which has been in some
+cases kept burning for over a month, is allowed to burn out, as the
+spirit, being now safe and happy in the spirit-land, has no further need
+of it."[347] "In this spirit-land eternal youth prevails, there are no
+old men nor old women, but all are in the full vigour of the prime of
+life, or are attaining thereto, and having reached that stage never grow
+older. Old men and old women, who die as such on Tubetube, renew their
+youth in this happy place, where there are no more sickness, no evil
+spirits, and no death. Marriage, and giving in marriage, continue; if a
+man dies, his widow, though she may have married again, is at her death
+re-united to her first husband in the spirit-land, and the second
+husband when he arrives has to take one of the women already there who
+may be without a mate, unless he marries again before his death, in
+which case he would have to wait until his wife joins him. Children are
+born, and on arriving at maturity do not grow older. Houses are built,
+canoes are made but they are never launched, and gardens are planted and
+yield abundantly. The spirits of their animals, dogs, pigs, etc., which
+have died on Tubetube, precede and follow them to the spirit-land.
+Fighting and stealing are unknown, and all are united in a common
+brotherhood."[348]
+
+[Sidenote: The names of the dead not mentioned.]
+
+In the south-eastern part of New Guinea the fear of the dead is further
+manifested by the common custom of avoiding the mention of their names.
+If their names were those of common objects, the words are dropped from
+the language of the district so long as the memory of the departed
+persists, and new names are substituted for them. For example, when a
+man named Binama, which means the hornbill, died at Wagawaga, the name
+of the bird was changed to _ambadina_, which means "the plasterer."[349]
+In this way many words are either permanently lost or revived with
+modified or new meanings. Hence the fear of the dead is here, as in many
+other places, a fertile source of change in language. Another indication
+of the terror inspired by ghosts is the custom of abandoning or
+destroying the house in which a death has taken place; and this custom
+used to be observed in certain cases at Tubetube and Wagawaga.[350]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs concerning the dead in the island of
+Kiwai.]
+
+Thus far I have dealt mainly with the beliefs and practices of the
+Papuo-Melanesians in the eastern part of British New Guinea. With regard
+to the pure Papuan population in the western part of the possession our
+information is much scantier. However, we learn that in Kiwai, a large
+island at the mouth of the Fly River, the dead are buried in the
+villages and the ghosts are supposed to live in the ground near their
+decaying bodies, but to emerge from time to time into the upper air and
+look about them, only, however, to return to their abode beneath the
+sod. Nothing is buried with the corpse; but a small platform is made
+over the grave, or sticks are planted in the ground along its sides, and
+on these are placed sago, yams, bananas, coco-nuts, and cooked crabs and
+fish, all for the spirit of the dead to eat. A fire is also kindled
+beside the grave and kept up by the friends for nine days in order that
+the poor ghost may not shiver with cold at night. These practices prove
+not merely a belief in the survival of the soul after death but a desire
+to make it comfortable. Further, when the deceased is a man, his bow and
+arrows are stuck at the head of the grave; when the deceased is a woman,
+her petticoat is hung upon a stick. No doubt the weapons and the garment
+are intended for the use of the ghost, when he or she revisits the upper
+air. On the ninth day after the burial a feast is prepared, the drum is
+beaten, the conch shell blown, and the chief mourner declares that no
+more fires need be lighted and no more food placed on the grave.[351]
+
+[Sidenote: Adiri, the land of the dead, and Sido, the first man who went
+thither. The fear of ghosts.]
+
+According to the natives of Kiwai the land of the dead is called Adiri
+or Woibu. The first man to go thither and to open up a road for others
+to follow him, was Sido, a popular hero about whom the people tell many
+tales. But whereas in his lifetime Sido was an admired and beneficent
+being, in his ghostly character he became a mischievous elf who played
+pranks on such as he fell in with. His adventures after death furnish
+the theme of many stories. However, it is much to his credit that,
+finding the land of the dead a barren region without vegetation of any
+sort, he, by an act of generation, converted it into a garden, where
+bananas, yams, taro, coco-nuts and other fruits and vegetables grew and
+ripened in a single night. Having thus fertilised the lower region, he
+announced to Adiri, the lord of the subterranean realm, that he was the
+precursor of many more men and women who would descend thereafter into
+the spirit world. His prediction has been amply fulfilled; for ever
+since then everybody has gone by the same road to the same place.[352]
+However, when a person dies, his or her spirit may linger for a few days
+in the neighbourhood of its old home before setting out for the far
+country. During that time the spirit may occasionally be seen by
+ordinary people, and accordingly the natives are careful not to go out
+in the dark for fear of coming bolt on the ghost; and they sometimes
+adopt other precautions against the prowling spectre, who might
+otherwise haunt them and carry them off with him to deadland. Some
+classes of ghosts are particularly dreaded on account of their
+malignity; such, for example, are the spirits of women who have died in
+childbed, and of people who have hanged themselves or been devoured by
+crocodiles. Such ghosts loiter for a long time about the places where
+they died, and they are very dangerous, because they are for ever luring
+other people to die the same death which they died themselves. Yet
+another troop of evil ghosts are the souls of those who were beheaded in
+battle; for they kill and devour people, and at night you may see the
+blood shining like fire as it gushes from the gaping gashes in their
+throats.[353]
+
+[Sidenote: The path of the ghosts to Adiri. Adiri, the land of the
+dead.]
+
+The road to Adiri or deadland is fairly well known, and the people can
+point to many landmarks on it. For example, in the island of Paho there
+is a tree called _dani_, under which the departing spirits sit down and
+weep. When they have cried their fill and rubbed their poor
+tear-bedraggled faces with mud, they make little pellets of clay and
+throw them at the tree, and anybody can see for himself the pellets
+sticking to the branches. It is true that the pellets resemble the nests
+of insects, but this resemblance is only fortuitous. Near the tree is a
+rocking stone, which the ghosts set in motion, and the sound that they
+make in so doing is like the muffled roll of a drum. And while the stone
+rocks to and fro with a hollow murmur, the ghosts dance, the men on one
+side of the stone and the women on the other. Again at Mabudavane, where
+the Mawata people have gardens, you may sometimes hear, in the stillness
+of night, the same weird murmur, which indicates the presence of a
+ghost. Then everybody keeps quiet, the children are hushed to silence,
+and all listen intently. The murmur continues for a time and then ends
+abruptly in a splash, which tells the listeners that the ghost has
+leaped over the muddy creek. Further on, the spirits come to Boigu,
+where they swim in the waterhole and often appear to people in their
+real shape. But after Boigu the track of the ghosts is lost, or at least
+has not been clearly ascertained. The spirit world lies somewhere away
+in the far west, but the living are not quite sure of the way to it, and
+they are somewhat vague in their accounts of it. There is no difference
+between the fate of the good and the fate of the bad in the far country;
+the dead meet the friends who died before them; and people who come from
+the same village probably live together in the same rooms of the long
+house of the ghosts. However, some native sceptics even doubt whether
+there is such a place as Adiri at all, and whether death may not be the
+end of consciousness to the individual.[354]
+
+[Sidenote: Appearance of the dead to the living in dreams.]
+
+The dead often appear to the living in dreams, warning them of danger or
+furnishing them with useful information with regard to the cultivation
+of their gardens, the practice of witchcraft, and so on. In order to
+obtain advice from his dead parents a man will sometimes dig up their
+skulls from the grave and sleep beside them; and to make sure of
+receiving their prompt attention he will not infrequently provide
+himself with a cudgel, with which he threatens to smash their skulls if
+they do not answer his questions. Some persons possess a special faculty
+of communicating with the departing spirit of a person who has just
+died. Should they desire to question it they will lurk beside the road
+which ghosts are known to take; and in order not to be betrayed by their
+smell, which is very perceptible to a ghost, they will chew the leaf or
+bark of a certain tree and spit the juice over their bodies. Then the
+ghost cannot detect them, or rather he takes them to be ghosts like
+himself, and accordingly he may in confidence impart to them most
+valuable information, such for example as full particulars with regard
+to the real cause of his death. This priceless intelligence the
+ghost-seer hastens to communicate to his fellow tribesmen.[355]
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to the dead.]
+
+When a man has just died and been buried, his surviving relatives lay
+some of his weapons and ornaments, together with presents of food, upon
+his grave, no doubt for the use of the ghost; but some of these things
+they afterwards remove and bring back to the village, probably
+considering, with justice, that they will be more useful to the living
+than to the dead. But offerings to the dead may be presented to them at
+other places than their tombs. "The great power," says Dr. Landtman,
+"which the dead represent to the living has given rise to a sort of
+simple offering to them, almost the only kind of offering met with among
+the Kiwai Papuans. The natives occasionally lay down presents of food at
+places to which spirits come, and utter some request for assistance
+which the spirits are supposed to hear."[356] In such offerings and
+prayers we may detect the elements of a regular worship of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Dreams as a source of the belief in immortality.]
+
+With regard to the source of these beliefs among the Kiwai people Dr.
+Landtman observes that "undoubtedly dreams have largely contributed in
+supplying the natives with ideas about Adiri and life after death. A
+great number of dreams collected by me among the Kiwai people tell of
+wanderings to Adiri or of meetings with spirits of dead men, and as
+dreams are believed to describe the real things which the soul sees
+while roaming about outside the body, we understand that they must
+greatly influence the imagination of the people."[357]
+
+That concludes what I have to say as to the belief in immortality and
+the worship of the dead among the natives of British New Guinea. In the
+following lectures I shall deal with the same rudimentary aspect of
+religion as it is reported to exist among the aborigines of the vast
+regions of German and Dutch New Guinea.
+
+[Footnote 310: C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_
+(Cambridge, 1910), pp. 1 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 311: See below, pp. 242, 256, 261 _sq._, 291.]
+
+[Footnote 312: A. C. Haddon, _Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown_
+(London, 1901), pp. 249 _sq._ As to the Motu and their Melanesian or
+Polynesian affinities, see Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the
+Motu," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, vii. (1878) pp. 470
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 313: Rev. J. Chalmers, _Pioneering in New Guinea_ (London,
+1887), pp. 168-170. Compare Rev. W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the
+Motu," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, vii. (1878) pp. 484
+_sqq._; Rev. W. G. Lawes, "Ethnological Notes on the Motu, Koitapu and
+Koiari Tribes of New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, viii. (1879) pp. 370 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 314: A. C. Haddon, _Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown_, pp.
+249 _sq._; C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_, pp.
+16, 41. As to the Koita (or Koitapu) and the Motu, see further the Rev.
+W. Y. Turner, "The Ethnology of the Motu," _Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute_, vii. (1878) pp. 470 _sqq._; Rev. W. G.
+Lawes, "Ethnological Notes on the Motu, Koitapu and Koiari Tribes of New
+Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, viii. (1879) pp.
+369 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 315: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 189-191.]
+
+[Footnote 316: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 185 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 317: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 192.]
+
+[Footnote 318: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 190-192. As to the
+desertion of the house after death, see _id._, pp. 89 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 319: The territory of the Roro-speaking tribes extends from
+Kevori, east of Waimatuma (Cape Possession), to Hiziu in the
+neighbourhood of Galley Reach. Inland of these tribes lies a region
+called by them Mekeo, which is inhabited by two closely related tribes,
+the Biofa and Vee. Off the coast lies Yule Island, which is commonly
+called Roro. See C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 320: V. Jouet, _La Societe des Missionaires du Sacre Coeur
+dans les Vicariats Apostoliques de la Melanesie et de la Micronesie_
+(Issoudun, 1887), p. 30; Father Guis, "Les Canaques: Mort-deuil,"
+_Missions Catholiques_, xxxiv. (1902) pp. 186, 200.]
+
+[Footnote 321: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 274 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 322: Father Guis, "Les Canaques: Mort-deuil," _Missions
+Catholiques_, xxxiv. (1902) pp. 208 _sq._ See _Psyche's Task_, pp. 75
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 323: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 310.]
+
+[Footnote 324: R. W. Williamson, _The Mafulu Mountain People of British
+New Guinea_ (London, 1912), pp. 2 _sq._, 297 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 325: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 243 _sq._, 246,
+266-269.]
+
+[Footnote 326: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 245-250.]
+
+[Footnote 327: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 256-258, 261-263.]
+
+[Footnote 328: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 125-152.]
+
+[Footnote 329: R. W. Williamson, _op. cit._ pp. 270 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 330: J. Chalmers and W. Wyatt Gill, _Work and Adventure in New
+Guinea_ (London, 1885), pp. 84-86.]
+
+[Footnote 331: R. E. Guise, "On the Tribes inhabiting the Mouth of the
+Wanigela River, New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
+xxviii. (1899) p. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 332: A. C. Haddon, _Headhunters, Black, White, and Brown_, p.
+213.]
+
+[Footnote 333: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ pp. 216 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 334: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ pp. 210 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 335: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ p. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 336: R. E. Guise, _op. cit._ pp. 213 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 337: _Psyche's Task_, pp. 52 _sqq._; _Taboo and the Perils of
+the Soul_, pp. 167 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 338: C. G. Seligmann, _The Melanesians of British New Guinea_,
+p. 607.]
+
+[Footnote 339: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 655.]
+
+[Footnote 340: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 655 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 341: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 610.]
+
+[Footnote 342: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 611.]
+
+[Footnote 343: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 616 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 344: C. G. Seligmann. _op. cit._ p. 611.]
+
+[Footnote 345: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 618 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 346: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 613 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 347: The Rev. J. T. Field of Tubetube (Slade Island), quoted
+by George Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London, 1910), pp.
+442 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 348: Rev. J. T. Field, _op. cit._ pp. 443 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 349: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 629-631. Dr. Seligmann
+seems to think that the custom is at present dictated by courtesy and a
+reluctance to grieve the relatives of the deceased; but the original
+motive can hardly have been any other than a fear of the ghost.]
+
+[Footnote 350: C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 631 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 351: Rev. J. Chalmers, "Notes on the Natives of Kiwai Island,
+Fly River, British New Guinea," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xxxiii. (1903) pp. 119, 120.]
+
+[Footnote 352: G. Landtman, "Wanderings of the Dead in the Folk-lore of
+the Kiwai-speaking Papuans," _Festskrift tillaegnad Edvard Westermarck_
+(Helsingfors, 1912), pp. 59-66.]
+
+[Footnote 353: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 67 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 354: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 68-71.]
+
+[Footnote 355: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 77 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 356: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ pp. 78 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 357: G. Landtman, _op. cit._ p. 71.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE X
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Andrew Lang.]
+
+I feel that I cannot begin my second course of lectures without
+referring to the loss which the study of primitive religion has lately
+sustained by the death of one of my predecessors in this chair, one who
+was a familiar and an honoured figure in this place, Mr. Andrew Lang.
+Whatever may be the judgment of posterity on his theories--and all our
+theories on these subjects are as yet more or less tentative and
+provisional--there can be no question but that by the charm of his
+writings, the wide range of his knowledge, the freshness and vigour of
+his mind, and the contagious enthusiasm which he brought to bear on
+whatever he touched, he was a great power in promoting the study of
+primitive man not in this country only, but wherever the English
+language is spoken, and that he won for himself a permanent place in the
+history of the science to which he devoted so much of his remarkable
+gifts and abilities. As he spent a part of every winter in St. Andrews,
+I had thought that in the course on which I enter to-day I might perhaps
+be honoured by his presence at some of my lectures. But it was not to
+be. Yet a fancy strikes me to which I will venture to give utterance.
+You may condemn, but I am sure you will not smile at it. It has been
+said of Macaulay that if his spirit ever revisited the earth, it might
+be expected to haunt the flagged walk beside the chapel in the great
+court of Trinity College, Cambridge, the walk which in his lifetime he
+loved to pace book in hand. And if Andrew Lang's spirit could be seen
+flitting pensively anywhere, would it not be just here, in "the college
+of the scarlet gown," in the "little city worn and grey," looking out on
+the cold North Sea, the city which he knew and loved so well? Be that as
+it may, his memory will always be associated with St. Andrews; and if
+the students who shall in future go forth from this ancient university
+to carry St. Andrew's Cross, if I may say so, on their banner in the
+eternal warfare with falsehood and error,--if they cannot imitate Andrew
+Lang in the versatility of his genius, in the variety of his
+accomplishments, in the manifold graces of his literary art, it is to be
+hoped that they will strive to imitate him in qualities which are more
+within the reach of us all, in his passionate devotion to knowledge, in
+his ardent and unflagging pursuit of truth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: Review of preceding lectures.]
+
+In my last course of lectures I explained that I proposed to treat of
+the belief in immortality from a purely historical point of view. My
+intention is not to discuss the truth of the belief or to criticise the
+grounds on which it has been maintained. To do so would be to trench on
+the province of the theologian and the philosopher. I limit myself to
+the far humbler task of describing, first, the belief as it has been
+held by some savage races, and, second, some of the practical
+consequences which these primitive peoples have deduced from it for the
+conduct of life, whether these consequences take the shape of religious
+rites or moral precepts. Now in such a survey of savage creed and
+practice it is convenient to begin with the lowest races of men about
+whom we have accurate information and to pass from them gradually to
+higher and higher races, because we thus start with the simplest forms
+of religion and advance by regular gradations to more complex forms, and
+we may hope in this way to render the course of religious evolution more
+intelligible than if we were to start from the most highly developed
+religions and to work our way down from them to the most embryonic. In
+pursuance of this plan I commenced my survey with the aborigines of
+Australia, because among the races of man about whom we are well
+informed these savages are commonly and, I believe, justly supposed to
+stand at the foot of the human scale. Having given you some account of
+their beliefs and practices concerning the dead I attempted to do the
+same for the islanders of Torres Straits and next for the natives of
+British New Guinea. There I broke off, and to-day I shall resume the
+thread of my discourse at the broken end by describing the beliefs and
+practices concerning the dead, as these beliefs are entertained and
+these practices observed by the natives of German New Guinea.
+
+[Sidenote: German New Guinea.]
+
+As you are aware, the German territory of New Guinea skirts the British
+territory on the north throughout its entire length and comprises
+roughly a quarter of the whole island, the British and German
+possessions making up together the eastern half of New Guinea, while the
+western half belongs to Holland.
+
+[Sidenote: Information as to the natives of German New Guinea.]
+
+Our information as to the natives of German New Guinea is very
+fragmentary, and is confined almost entirely to the tribes of the coast.
+As to the inhabitants of the interior we know as yet very little.
+However, German missionaries and others have described more or less
+fully the customs and beliefs of the natives at various points of this
+long coast, and I shall extract from their descriptions some notices of
+that particular aspect of the native religion with which in these
+lectures we are specially concerned. The points on the coast as to which
+a certain amount of ethnographical information is forthcoming are, to
+take them in the order from west to east, Berlin Harbour, Potsdam
+Harbour, Astrolabe Bay, the Maclay Coast, Cape King William, Finsch
+Harbour, and the Tami Islands in Huon Gulf. I propose to say something
+as to the natives at each of these points, beginning with Berlin
+Harbour, the most westerly of them.
+
+[Sidenote: The island of Tumleo.]
+
+Berlin Harbour is formed by a group of four small islands, which here
+lie off the coast. One of the islands bears the name of Tumleo or
+Tamara, and we possess an excellent account of the natives of this
+island from the pen of a Catholic missionary, Father Mathias Josef
+Erdweg,[358] which I shall draw upon in what follows. We have also a
+paper by a German ethnologist, the late Mr. R. Parkinson, on the same
+subject,[359] but his information is in part derived from Father Erdweg
+and he appears to have erred by applying too generally the statements
+which Father Erdweg strictly limited to the inhabitants of Tumleo.[360]
+
+[Sidenote: The natives of Tumleo, their material and artistic culture.]
+
+The island of Tumleo lies in 142 deg. 25" of East Longitude and 3 deg. 15" of
+South Latitude, and is distant about sixty sea-miles from the
+westernmost point of German New Guinea. It is a coral island, surrounded
+by a barrier reef and rising for the most part only a few feet above the
+sea.[361] In stature the natives fall below the average European height;
+but they are well fed and strongly built. Their colour varies from black
+to light brown. Their hair is very frizzly. Women and children wear it
+cut short; men wear it done up into wigs. They number less than three
+hundred, divided into four villages. The population seems to have
+declined through wars, disease, and infanticide.[362] Like the Papuans
+generally, they live in settled villages and engage in fishing,
+agriculture, and commerce. The houses are solidly built of wood and are
+raised above the ground upon piles, which consist of a hard and durable
+timber, sometimes iron-wood.[363] The staple food of the people is sago,
+which they obtain from the sago-palm. These stately palms, with their
+fan-like foliage, are rare on the coral island of Tumleo, but grow
+abundantly in the swampy lowlands of the neighbouring mainland.
+Accordingly in the months of May and June, when the sea is calm, the
+natives cross over to the mainland in their canoes and obtain a supply
+of sago in exchange for the products of their island. The sago is eaten
+in the form both of porridge and of bread.[364] Other vegetable foods
+are furnished by sweet potatoes, taro, yams, bananas, sugar-cane, and
+coco-nuts, all of which the natives cultivate.[365] Fishing is a
+principal industry of the people; it is plied by both sexes and by old
+and young, with nets, spears, and bows and arrows.[366] Pottery is
+another flourishing industry. As among many other savages, it is
+practised only by women, but the men take the pots to market; for these
+islanders do a good business in pots with the neighbouring tribes.[367]
+They build large outrigger canoes, which sail well before the wind, but
+can hardly beat up against it, being heavy to row. In these canoes the
+natives of Tumleo make long voyages along the coast; but as the craft
+are not very seaworthy they never stand out to sea, if they can help it,
+but hug the shore in order to run for safety to the beach in stormy
+weather.[368] In regard to art the natives display some taste and skill
+in wood-carving. For example, the projecting house-beams are sometimes
+carved in the shape of crocodiles, birds, and grotesque human figures;
+and their canoes, paddles, head-rests, drums, drum-sticks, and vessels
+are also decorated with carving. Birds, fish, crocodiles, foliage, and
+scroll-work are the usual patterns.[369]
+
+[Sidenote: The temples (_paraks_) of Tumleo.]
+
+A remarkable feature in the villages of Tumleo and the neighbouring
+islands and mainland consists of the _paraks_ or temples, the high
+gables of which may be seen rising above the bushes in all the villages
+of this part of the coast. No such buildings exist elsewhere in this
+region. They are set apart for the worship of certain guardian spirits,
+and on them the native lavishes all the resources of his elementary arts
+of sculpture and painting. They are built of wood in two storeys and
+raised on piles besides. The approach to one of them is always by one or
+two ladders provided on both sides with hand-rails or banisters. These
+banisters are elaborately decorated with carving, which is always of the
+same pattern. One banister is invariably carved in the shape of a
+crocodile holding a grotesque human figure in its jaws, while on the
+other hand the animal's tail is grasped by one or more human figures.
+The other banister regularly exhibits a row of human or rather ape-like
+effigies seated one behind the other, each of them resting his arms on
+the shoulders of the figure in front. Often there are seven such figures
+in a row. The natives are so shy in speaking of these temples that it is
+difficult to ascertain the meaning of the curious carvings by which they
+are adorned. Mr. Parkinson supposed that they represent spirits, not
+apes. He tells us that there are no apes in New Guinea. The interior of
+the temple (_parak_) is generally empty. The only things to be seen in
+its two rooms, the upper and lower, are bamboo flutes and drums made out
+of the hollow trunks of trees. On these instruments men concealed in the
+temple discourse music in order to signify the presence of the
+spirit.[370]
+
+[Sidenote: The bachelors' houses (_alols_) of Tumleo.]
+
+Different from these _paraks_ or temples are the _alols_, which are
+bachelors' houses and council-houses in one. Like the temples, they are
+raised above the ground and approached by a ladder, but unlike the
+temples they have only one storey. In them the unmarried men live and
+the married men meet to take counsel and to speak of things which may
+not be mentioned before women. On a small stand or table in each of
+these _alols_ or men's clubhouses are kept the skulls of dead men. And
+as the temple (_parak_) is devoted to the worship of spirits, so the
+men's clubhouse (_alol_) is the place where the dead ancestors are
+worshipped. Women and children may not enter it, but it is not regarded
+with such superstitious fear as the temple. The dead are buried in their
+houses or beside them. Afterwards the bones are dug up and the skulls of
+grown men are deposited, along with one of the leg bones, on the stand
+or table in the men's clubhouse (_alol_). The skulls of youths, women,
+and children are kept in the houses where they died. When the table in
+the clubhouse is quite full of grinning trophies of mortality, the old
+skulls are removed to make room for the new ones and are thrown away in
+a sort of charnel-house, where the other bones are deposited after they
+have been dug up from the graves. Such a charnel-house is called a
+_tjoll paru_. There is one such place for the bones of grown men and
+another for the bones of women and children. Some bones, however, are
+kept and used as ornaments or as means to work magic with. For the dead
+are often invoked, for example, to lay the wind or for other useful
+purposes; and at such invocations the bones play a part.[371]
+
+[Sidenote: Spirits of the dead thought to be the causes of sickness and
+disease.]
+
+But while the spirits of the dead are thus invited to help their living
+relations and friends, they are also feared as the causes of sickness
+and disease. Any serious ailment is usually attributed to magic or
+witchcraft, and the treatment which is resorted to aims rather at
+breaking the spell which has been cast on the sick man than at curing
+his malady by the application of physical remedies. In short the remedy
+is exorcism rather than physic. Now the enchantment under which the
+patient is supposed to be labouring is often, though not always,
+ascribed to the malignant arts of the spirits of the dead, or the _mos_,
+as the natives of Tumleo call them. In such a case the ghosts are
+thought to be clinging to the body of the sufferer, and the object of
+the medical treatment is to detach them from him and send them far away.
+With this kindly intention some men will go into the forest and collect
+a number of herbs, including a kind of peppermint. These are tied into
+one or more bundles according to the number of the patients and then
+taken to the men's clubhouse (_alol_), where they are heated over a
+fire. Then the patient is brought, and two men strike him lightly with
+the packet of herbs on his body and legs, while they utter an
+incantation, inviting the ancestral spirits who are plaguing him to
+leave his body and go away, in order that he may be made whole. One such
+incantation, freely translated, runs thus: "Spirit of the
+great-grandfather, of the father, come out! We give thee coco-nuts,
+sago-porridge, fish. Go away (from the sick man). Let him be well. Do no
+harm here and there. Tell the people of Leming (O spirit) to give us
+tobacco. When the waves are still, we push off from the land, sailing
+northward (to Tumleo). It is the time of the north-west wind (when the
+surf is heavy). May the billows calm down in the south, O in the south,
+on the coast of Leming, that we may sail to the south, to Leming! Out
+there may the sea be calm, that we may push off from the land for home!"
+In this incantation a prayer to the spirit of the dead to relax his hold
+on the sufferer appears to be curiously combined with a prayer or spell
+to calm the sea when the people sail across to the coast of Leming to
+fetch a cargo of tobacco. When the incantation has been recited and the
+patient stroked with the bundle of herbs, one of his ears and both his
+arm-pits are moistened with a blood-red spittle produced by the chewing
+of betel-nut, pepper, and lime. Then they take hold of his fingers and
+make each of them crack, one after the other, while they recite some of
+the words of the preceding incantation. Next three men take each of them
+a branch of the _volju_ tree, bend it into a bow, and stroke the sick
+man from head to foot, while they recite another incantation, in which
+they command the spirit to let the sick man alone and to go away into
+the water or the mud. Often when a man is seriously ill he will remove
+from his own house to the house of a relation or friend, hoping that the
+spirit who has been tormenting him will not be able to discover him at
+his new address.[372]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs in Tumleo.]
+
+If despite of all these precautions the patient should die, he or she is
+placed in a wooden coffin and buried with little delay in a grave, which
+is dug either in the house or close beside it. The body is smeared all
+over with clay and decked with many rings or ornaments, most of which,
+however, are removed in a spirit of economy before the lid of the coffin
+is shut down. Sometimes arrows, sometimes a rudder, sometimes the bones
+of dead relations are buried with the corpse in the grave. When the
+grave is dug outside of the house, a small hut is erected over it, and a
+fire is kept burning on it for a time. In the house of mourning the
+wife, sister, or other female relative of the deceased must remain
+strictly secluded for a period which varies from a few weeks to three
+months. In token of mourning the widow's body is smeared with clay, and
+from time to time she is heard to chant a dirge in a whining, melancholy
+tone. This seclusion lasts so long as the ghost is supposed to be still
+on his way to the other world. When he has reached his destination, the
+fire is suffered to die down on the grave, and his widow or other female
+relative is free to quit the house and resume her ordinary occupations.
+Through her long seclusion in the shade her swarthy complexion assumes a
+lighter tint, but it soon deepens again when she is exposed once more to
+the strong tropical sunshine.[373]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Tumleo people as to the fate of the human soul
+after death.]
+
+The people of Tumleo firmly believe in the existence of the human soul
+after death, though their notions of the disembodied soul or _mos_, as
+they call it, are vague. They think that on its departure from the body
+the soul goes to a place deep under ground, where there is a great
+water. Over that water every soul must pass on a ladder to reach the
+abode of bliss. The ladder is in the keeping of a spirit called _Su asin
+tjakin_ or "the Great Evil," who takes toll of the ghosts before he lets
+them use his ladder. Hence an ear-ring and a bracelet are deposited with
+every corpse in the grave in order that the dead man may have
+wherewithal to pay the toll to the spirit at the great water. When the
+ghost arrives at the place of passage and begs for the use of the
+ladder, the spirit asks him, "Shall I get my bracelet if I let you
+pass?" If he receives it and happens to be in a good humour, he will let
+the ghost scramble across the ladder to the further shore. But woe to
+the stingy ghost, who should try to sneak across the ladder without
+paying toll. The ghostly tollkeeper detects the fraud in an instant and
+roars out, "So you would cheat me of my dues? You shall pay for that."
+So saying he tips the ladder up, and down falls the ghost plump into the
+deep water and is drowned. But the honest ghost, who has paid his way
+like a man and arrived on the further shore, is met by two other ghosts
+who ferry him in a canoe across to Sisano, which is a place on the
+mainland a good many miles to the north of Tumleo. A great river flows
+there and in the river are three cities of the dead, in one of which the
+newly arrived ghost takes up his abode. Then it is that the fire on his
+grave is allowed to go out and his widow may mingle with her fellows
+again. However, the ghosts are not strictly confined to the spirit-land.
+They can come back to earth and roam about working good or evil for the
+living and especially for their friends and relations.[374]
+
+[Sidenote: Monuments to the dead in Tumleo. Disinterment of the bones.]
+
+It is perhaps this belief not only in the existence but in the return of
+the spirits of the dead which induces the survivors to erect monuments
+or memorials to them. In Tumleo these monuments consist for the most
+part of young trees, which are cut down, stripped of their leaves, and
+set up in the ground beside the house of the deceased. The branches of
+such a memorial tree are hung with fruits, coco-nuts, loin-cloths, pots,
+and personal ornaments, all of which we may suppose are intended for the
+comfort and convenience of the ghost when he returns from deadland to
+pay his friends a visit.[375] But the remains of the dead are not
+allowed to rest quietly in the grave for ever. After two or three years
+they are dug up with much ceremony at the point of noon, when the sun is
+high overhead. The skull of the deceased, if he was a man, is then
+deposited, as we saw, with one of the thigh bones in the men's
+clubhouse, while of the remaining bones some are kept by the relations
+and the others thrown away in a charnel-house. Among the relics which
+the relations preserve are the lower arm bones, the shoulder-blades, the
+ribs, and the vertebra. The vertebra is often fastened to a bracelet; a
+couple of ribs are converted into a necklace; and the shoulder-blades
+are used to decorate baskets. The lower arm bones are generally strung
+on a cord, which is worn on solemn occasions round the neck so that the
+bones hang down behind. They are especially worn thus in war, and they
+are made use of also when their owner desires to obtain a favourable
+wind for a voyage. No doubt, though this is not expressly affirmed, the
+spirit of the departed is supposed to remain attached in some fashion to
+his bones and so to help the possessor of these relics in time of need.
+When the bones have been dug up and disposed of with all due ceremony,
+several men who were friends or relations of the deceased must keep
+watch and ward for some days in the men's clubhouse, where his grinning
+skull now stands amid similar trophies of mortality on a table or shelf.
+They may not quit the building except in case of necessity, and they
+must always speak in a whisper for fear of disturbing the ghost, who is
+very naturally lurking in the neighbourhood of his skull. However, in
+spite of these restrictions the watchers enjoy themselves; for baskets
+of sago and fish are provided abundantly for their consumption, and if
+their tongues are idle their jaws are very busy.[376]
+
+[Sidenote: Propitiation of the souls of the dead and other spirits.]
+
+The people think that if they stand on a good footing with the souls of
+the departed and with other spirits, these powerful beings will bring
+them good luck in trade and on their voyages. Now the time when trade is
+lively and the calm sea is dotted with canoes plying from island to
+island or from island to mainland, is the season when the gentle
+south-east monsoon is blowing. On the other hand, when the waves run
+high under the blast of the strong north-west monsoon, the sea is almost
+deserted and the people stay at home;[377] the season is to these
+tropical islanders what winter is to the inhabitants of northern
+latitudes. Accordingly it is when the wind is shifting round from the
+stormy north-west to the balmy south-east that the natives set
+themselves particularly to win the favour of ghosts and spirits, and
+this they do by repairing the temples and clubhouses in which the
+spirits and ghosts are believed to dwell, and by cleaning and tidying up
+the open spaces around them. These repairs are the occasion of a
+festival accompanied by dances and games. Early in the morning of the
+festive day the shrill notes of the flutes and the hollow rub-a-dub of
+the drums are heard to proceed from the interior of the temple,
+proclaiming the arrival of the guardian spirit and his desire to partake
+of fish and sago. So the men assemble and the feast is held in the
+evening. Festivals are also held both in the temples and in the men's
+clubhouses on the occasion of a successful hunt or fishing. Out of
+gratitude for the help vouchsafed them by the ancestral spirits, the
+hunters or fishers bring the larger game or fish to the temples or
+clubhouses and eat them there; and then hang up some parts of the
+animals or fish, such as the skeletons, the jawbones of pigs, or the
+shells of turtles, in the clubhouses as a further mark of homage to the
+spirits of the dead.[378]
+
+[Sidenote: Guardian spirits (_tapum_) in Tumleo.]
+
+So far as appears, the spirits who dwell in the temples are not supposed
+to be ancestors. Father Erdweg describes them as guardian spirits or
+goddesses, for they are all of the female sex. Every village has several
+of them; indeed in the village of Sapi almost every family has its own
+guardian spirit. The name for these guardian spirits is _tapum_, which
+seems to be clearly connected with the now familiar word _tapu_ or
+taboo, in the sense of sacred, which is universally understood in the
+islands of the Pacific. On the whole the _tapum_ are kindly and
+beneficent spirits, who bring good luck to such as honour them. A hunter
+or a fisherman ascribes his success in the chase or in fishing to the
+protection of his guardian spirit; and when he is away from home trading
+for sago and other necessaries of life, it is his guardian spirit who
+gives him favour in the eyes of the foreigners with whom he is dealing.
+Curiously enough, though these guardian spirits are all female, they
+have no liking for women and children. Indeed, no woman or child may set
+foot in a temple, or even loiter in the open space in front of it. And
+at the chief festivals, when the temples are being repaired, all the
+women and children must quit the village till the evening shadows have
+fallen and the banquet of their husbands, fathers, and brothers at the
+temple is over.[379]
+
+On the whole, then, we conclude that a belief in the continued existence
+of the spirits of the dead, and in their power to help or harm their
+descendants, plays a considerable part in the life of the Papuans of
+Tumleo. Whether the guardian spirits or goddesses, who are worshipped in
+the temples, were originally conceived as ancestral spirits or not, must
+be left an open question for the present.
+
+[Sidenote: The Monumbo of Potsdam Harbour.]
+
+Passing eastward from Tumleo along the northern coast of German New
+Guinea we come to Monumbo or Potsdam Harbour, situated about the 145th
+degree of East Longitude. The Monumbo are a Papuan tribe numbering about
+four hundred souls, who inhabit twelve small villages close to the
+seashore. Their territory is a narrow but fertile strip of country, well
+watered and covered with luxuriant vegetation, lying between the sea and
+a range of hills. The bay is sheltered by an island from the open sea,
+and the natives can paddle their canoes on its calm water in almost any
+weather. The villages, embowered on the landward side in groves of trees
+of many useful sorts and screened in front by rows of stately coco-nut
+palms, are composed of large houses solidly built of timber and are kept
+very clean and tidy. The Monumbo are a strongly-built people, of the
+average European height, with what is described as a remarkably Semitic
+type of features. The men wear their hair plaited about a long tube,
+decorated with shells and dogs' teeth, which sticks out stiffly from the
+head. The women wear their hair in a sort of mop, composed of countless
+plaits, which hang down in tangle. In disposition the Monumbo are
+cheerful and contented, proud of themselves and their country; they
+think they are the cleverest and most fortunate people on earth, and
+look down with pity and contempt on Europeans. According to them the
+business of the foreign settlers in their country is folly, and the
+teaching of the missionaries is nonsense. They subsist by agriculture,
+hunting, and fishing. Their well-kept plantations occupy the level
+ground and in some places extend up the hill-sides. Among the plants
+which they cultivate are taro, yams, sweet potatoes, bananas, various
+kinds of vegetables, and sugar-cane. Among their fruit-trees are the
+sago-palm, the coco-nut palm, and the bread-fruit tree. They make use
+both of earthenware and of wooden vessels. Their dances, especially
+their masked dances, which are celebrated at intervals of four or five
+years, have excited the warm admiration of the despised European.[380]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Monumbo concerning the spirits of the dead.
+Dread of ghosts.]
+
+With regard to their religion and morality I will quote the evidence of
+a Catholic missionary who has laboured among them. "The Monumbo are
+acquainted with no Supreme Being, no moral good or evil, no rewards, no
+place of punishment or joy after death, no permanent immortality....
+When people die, their souls go to the land of spirits, a place where
+they dwell without work or suffering, but which they can also quit.
+Betel-chewing, smoking, dancing, sleeping, all the occupations that they
+loved on earth, are continued without interruption in the other world.
+They converse with men in dreams, but play them many a shabby trick,
+take possession of them and even, it may be, kill them. Yet they also
+help men in all manner of ways in war and the chase. Men invoke them,
+pray to them, make statues in their memory, which are called _dva_
+(plural _dvaka_), and bring them offerings of food, in order to obtain
+their assistance. But if the spirits of the dead do not help, they are
+rated in the plainest language. Death makes no great separation. The
+living converse with the dead very much as they converse with each
+other. Time alone brings with it a gradual oblivion of the departed.
+Falling stars and lightning are nothing but the souls of the dead, who
+stick dry banana leaves in their girdles, set them on fire, and then fly
+through the air. At last when the souls are old they die, but are not
+annihilated, for they are changed into animals and plants. Such animals
+are, for example, the white ants and a rare kind of wild pig, which is
+said not to allow itself to be killed. Such a tree, for example, is the
+_barimbar_. That, apparently, is the whole religion of the Monumbo. Yet
+they are ghost-seers of the most arrant sort. An anxious superstitious
+fear pursues them at every step. Superstitious views are the motives
+that determine almost everything that they do or leave undone."[381]
+Their dread of ghosts is displayed in their custom of doing no work in
+the plantations for three days after a death, lest the ghost, touched to
+the quick by their heartless indifference, should send wild boars to
+ravage the plantations. And when a man has slain an enemy in war, he has
+to remain a long time secluded in the men's clubhouse, touching nobody,
+not even his wife and children, while the villagers celebrate his
+victory with song and dance. He is believed to be in a state of
+ceremonial impurity (_bolobolo_) such that, if he were to touch his wife
+and children, they would be covered with sores. At the end of his
+seclusion he is purified by washings and other purgations and is clean
+once more.[382] The reason of this uncleanness of a victorious warrior
+is not mentioned, but analogy makes it nearly certain that it is a dread
+of the vengeful ghost of the man whom he has slain. A similar fear
+probably underlies the rule that a widower must abstain from certain
+foods, such as fish and sauces, and from bathing for a certain time
+after the death of his wife.[383]
+
+[Sidenote: The Tamos of Astrolabe Bay. Mistake of attempting to combine
+descriptive with comparative anthropology.]
+
+Leaving Potsdam Harbour and the Monumbo, and moving still eastward along
+the coast of German New Guinea, we come to a large indentation known as
+Astrolabe Bay. The natives of this part of the coast call themselves
+Tamos. The largest village on the bay bears the name of Bogadyim and in
+1894 numbered about three hundred inhabitants.[384] Our principal
+authority on the natives is a German ethnologist, Dr. B. Hagen, who
+spent about eighteen months at Stefansort on Astrolabe Bay.
+Unfortunately he has mixed up his personal observations of these
+particular people not merely with second-hand accounts of natives of
+other parts of New Guinea but with discussions of general theories of
+the origin and migrations of races and of the development of social
+institutions; so that it is not altogether easy to disentangle the facts
+for which he is a first-hand witness, from those which he reports at
+second, third, or fourth hand. Scarcely anything, I may observe in
+passing, more impairs the value and impedes the usefulness of personal
+observations of savage races than this deplorable habit of attempting to
+combine the work of description with the work of comparison and
+generalisation. The two kinds of work are entirely distinct in their
+nature, and require very different mental qualities for their proper
+performance; the one should never be confused with the other. The task
+of descriptive anthropology is to record observations, without any
+admixture of theory; the task of comparative anthropology is to compare
+the observations made in all parts of the world, and from the comparison
+to deduce theories, more or less provisional, of the origin and growth
+of beliefs and institutions, always subject to modification and
+correction by facts which may afterwards be brought to light. There is
+no harm, indeed there is great positive advantage, in the descriptive
+anthropologist making himself acquainted with the theories of the
+comparative anthropologist, for by so doing his attention will probably
+be called to many facts which he might otherwise have overlooked and
+which, when recorded, may either confirm or refute the theories in
+question. But if he knows these theories, he should keep his knowledge
+strictly in the background and never interlard his descriptions of facts
+with digressions into an alien province. In this way descriptive
+anthropology and comparative anthropology will best work hand in hand
+for the furtherance of their common aim, the understanding of the nature
+and development of man.
+
+[Sidenote: The religion of the Tamos. Beliefs of the Tamos as to the
+souls of the dead.]
+
+Like the Papuans in general, the Tamos of Astrolabe Bay are a settled
+agricultural people, who dwell in fixed villages, subsist mainly by the
+produce of the ground which they cultivate, and engage in a commerce of
+barter with their neighbours.[385] Their material culture thus does not
+differ essentially from that of the other Papuans, and I need not give
+particulars of it. With regard to their religious views Dr. Hagen tells
+us candidly that he has great hesitation in expressing an opinion.
+"Nothing," he says very justly, "is more difficult for a European than
+to form an approximately correct conception of the religious views of a
+savage people, and the difficulty is infinitely increased when the
+enquirer has little or no knowledge of their language." Dr. Hagen had,
+indeed, an excellent interpreter and intelligent assistant in the person
+of a missionary, Mr. Hoffmann; but Mr. Hoffmann himself admitted that he
+had no clear ideas as to the religious views of the Tamos; however, in
+his opinion they are entirely destitute of the conception of God and of
+a Creator. Yet among the Tamos of Bogadyim, Dr. Hagen tells us, a belief
+in the existence of the soul after death is proved by their assertion
+that after death the soul (_gunung_) goes to _buka kure_, which seems to
+mean the village of ghosts. This abode of the dead appears to be
+situated somewhere in the earth, and the Tamos speak of it with a
+shudder. They tell of a man in the village of Bogadyim who died and went
+away to the village of the ghosts. But as he drew near to the village,
+he met the ghost of his dead brother who had come forth with bow and
+arrows and spear to hunt a wild boar. This boar-hunting ghost was very
+angry at meeting his brother, who had just died, and drove him back to
+the land of the living. From this narrative it would seem that in the
+other world the ghosts are thought to pursue the same occupations which
+they followed in life. The natives are in great fear of ghosts (_buka_).
+Travelling alone with them in the forest at nightfall you may mark their
+timidity and hear them cry anxiously, "Come, let us be going! The ghost
+is roaming about." The ghosts of those who have perished in battle do
+not go to the Village of Ghosts (_buka kure_); they repair to another
+place called _bopa kure_. But this abode of the slain does not seem to
+be a happy land or Valhalla; the natives are even more afraid of it than
+of the Village of Ghosts (_buka kure_). They will hardly venture at
+night to pass a spot where any one has been slain. Sometimes fires are
+kindled by night on such spots; and the sight of the flames flickering
+in the distance inspires all the beholders with horror, and nothing in
+the world would induce them to approach such a fire. The souls of men
+who have been killed, but whose death has not been avenged, are supposed
+to haunt the village. For some time after death the ghost is believed to
+linger in the neighbourhood of his deserted body. When Mr. Hoffmann went
+with some Tamos to another village to bring back the body of a fellow
+missionary, who had died there, and darkness had fallen on them in the
+forest, his native companions started with fear every moment, imagining
+that they saw the missionary's ghost popping out from behind a
+tree.[386]
+
+[Sidenote: Treatment of the corpse. Secret Society called _Asa_.]
+
+When death has taken place, the corpse is first exposed on a scaffold in
+front of the house, where it is decked with ornaments and surrounded
+with flowers. If the deceased was rich, a dog is hung on each side of
+the scaffold, and the souls of the animals are believed to accompany the
+ghost to the spirit-land. Taros, yams, and coco-nuts are also suspended
+from the scaffold, no doubt for the refreshment of the ghost. Then the
+melancholy notes of a horn are heard in the distance, at the sound of
+which all the women rush away. Soon the horn-blower appears, paints the
+corpse white and red, crowns it with great red hibiscus roses, then
+blows his horn, and vanishes.[387] He is a member of a secret society,
+called _Asa_, which has its lodge standing alone in the forest. Only men
+belong to the society; women and children are excluded from it and look
+upon it with fear and awe. If any one raises a cry, "_Asa_ is coming,"
+or the sound of the musical instruments of the society is heard in the
+distance, all the women and children scamper away. The natives are very
+unwilling to let any stranger enter one of the lodges of the society.
+The interior of such a building is usually somewhat bare, but it
+contains the wooden masks which are worn in the ceremonial dances of the
+society, and the horns and flutes on which the members discourse their
+awe-inspiring music. In construction it scarcely differs from the
+ordinary huts of the village; if anything it is worse built and more
+primitive. The secrets of the society are well kept; at least very
+little seems to have been divulged to Europeans. The most important of
+its ceremonies is that of the initiation of the young men, who on this
+occasion are circumcised before they are recognised as full-grown men
+and members of the secret society. At such times the men encamp and
+feast for weeks or even months together on the open space in front of
+the society's lodge, and masked dances are danced to the accompaniment
+of the instrumental music. These initiatory ceremonies are held at
+intervals of about ten or fifteen years, when there are a considerable
+number of young men to be initiated together.[388] Although we are still
+in the dark as to the real meaning of this and indeed of almost all
+similar secret societies among savages, the solemn part played by a
+member of the society at the funeral rites seems very significant. Why
+should he come mysteriously to the melancholy music of the horn, paint
+the corpse red and white, crown it with red roses, and then vanish again
+to music as he had come? It is scarcely rash to suppose that this
+ceremony has some reference to the state of the dead man's soul, and we
+may conjecture that just as the fruits hung on the scaffold are
+doubtless intended for the consumption of the ghost, and the souls of
+the dogs are expressly said to accompany him to the spirit-land, so the
+painting of the corpse and the crown of red roses may be designed in
+some way to speed the parting spirit on the way to its long home. In the
+absence of exact information as to the beliefs of these savages touching
+the state of the dead we can only guess at the meaning which they attach
+to these symbols. Perhaps they think that only ghosts who are painted
+red and white and who wear wreaths of red roses on their heads are
+admitted to the Village of the Ghosts, and that such as knock at the
+gate with no paint on their bodies and no wreath of roses on their brows
+are refused admittance and must turn sorrowfully away, to haunt their
+undutiful friends on earth who had omitted to pay the last marks of
+respect and honour to the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the Tamos. Removal of the lower jawbone.]
+
+When the corpse has lain in all its glory, with its ornaments, its paint
+and its flowers, for a short time on the scaffold, it is removed and
+buried. The exposure never lasts more than a day. If the man died in the
+morning, he is buried at night. The grave is dug in the house itself. It
+is only about three feet deep and four feet long. If the corpse is too
+long for the grave, as usually happens, the legs are remorselessly
+doubled up and trampled in. It is the relations on the mother's side who
+dig the grave and lower the body, shrouded in mats or leaves, into its
+narrow bed. Before doing so they take care to strip it of its ornaments,
+its rings, necklaces, boar's teeth, and so forth, which no doubt are
+regarded as too valuable to be sacrificed. Yet a regard for the comfort
+of the dead is shewn by the custom of covering the open grave with wood
+and then heaping the mould on the top, in order, we are told, that the
+earth may not press heavy on him who sleeps below. _Sit tibi terra
+levis!_ After some months the grave is opened and the lower jaw removed
+from the corpse and preserved. This removal of the jaw is the occasion
+of solemnities and ceremonial washings, in which the whole male
+population of the village takes part. But as to the meaning of these
+ceremonies, and as to what is done with the jawbone, we have no exact
+information.[389] According to the Russian traveller, Baron N. von
+Miklucho-Maclay, who has also given us an account of the Papuans of
+Astrolabe Bay,[390] though not apparently of the villages described by
+Dr. Hagen, the whole skull is dug up and separated from the corpse after
+the lapse of about a year, but only the lower jawbone is carefully kept
+by the nearest kinsman as a memorial of the deceased. Baron
+Miklucho-Maclay had great difficulty in inducing a native to part with
+one of these memorials of a dead relation.[391] In any case the
+preservation of this portion of the deceased may be supposed to have for
+its object the maintenance of friendly relations between the living and
+the dead. Similarly in Uganda the jawbone is the only part of the body
+of a deceased king which, along with his navel-string, is carefully
+preserved in his temple-tomb and consulted oracularly.[392] We may
+conjecture that the reason for preserving this part of the human frame
+rather than any other is that the jawbone is an organ of speech, and
+that therefore it appears to the primitive mind well fitted to maintain
+intercourse with the dead man's spirit and to obtain oracular
+communications from him.
+
+[Sidenote: Sham fight as a funeral ceremony at Astrolabe Bay.]
+
+The Russian traveller, Baron Miklucho-Maclay, has described a curious
+funeral ceremony which is observed by some of the Papuans of Astrolabe
+Bay. I will give the first part of his description in his own words,
+which I translate from the German. He says: "The death of a man is
+announced to the neighbouring villages by a definite series of beats on
+the drum. On the same day or the next morning the whole male population
+assembles in the vicinity of the village of the deceased. All the men
+are in full warlike array. To the beat of drum the guests march into the
+village, where a crowd of men, also armed for war, await the new-comers
+beside the dead man's hut. After a short parley the men divide into two
+opposite camps, and thereupon a sham fight takes place. However, the
+combatants go to work very gingerly and make no use of their spears. But
+dozens of arrows are continually discharged, and not a few are wounded
+in the sham fight, though not seriously. The nearest relations and
+friends of the deceased appear especially excited and behave as if they
+were frantic. When all are hot and tired and all arrows have been shot
+away, the pretended enemies seat themselves in a circle and in what
+follows most of them act as simple spectators." Thereupon the nearest
+relations bring out the corpse and deposit it in a crouching position,
+with the knees drawn up to the chin, on some mats and leaves of the
+sago-palm, which had previously been spread out in the middle of the
+open space. Beside the corpse are laid his things, some presents from
+neighbours, and some freshly cooked food. While the men sit round in a
+circle, the women, even the nearest relatives of the deceased, may only
+look on from a distance. When all is ready, some men step out from the
+circle to help the nearest of kin in the next proceedings, which consist
+in tying the corpse up tightly into a bundle by means of rattans and
+creepers. Then the bundle is attached to a stout stick and carried back
+into the house. There the corpse in its bundle is fastened under the
+roof by means of the stick, and the dead man's property, together with
+the presents of the neighbours and the food, are left beside it. After
+that the house is abandoned, and the guests return to their own
+villages. A few days later, when decomposition is far advanced, the
+corpse is taken down and buried in a grave in the house, which continues
+to be inhabited by the family. After the lapse of about a year, the body
+is dug up, the skull separated from it, and the lower jawbone preserved
+by the nearest relation, as I have already mentioned.[393]
+
+[Sidenote: The sham fight perhaps intended to deceive the ghost.]
+
+What is the meaning of this curious sham fight which among these people
+seems to be regularly enacted after a death? The writer who reports the
+custom offers no explanation of it. I would conjecture with all due
+caution that it may possibly be intended as a satisfaction to the ghost
+in order to make him suppose that his death has been properly avenged.
+In a former lecture I shewed that natural deaths are regularly imagined
+by many savages to be brought about by the magical practices of enemies,
+and that accordingly the relations of the deceased take vengeance on
+some innocent person whom for one reason or another they regard as the
+culprit. It is possible that these Papuans of Astrolabe Bay, instead of
+actually putting the supposed sorcerer to death, have advanced so far as
+to abandon that cruel and unjust practice and content themselves with
+throwing dust in the eyes of the ghost by a sham instead of a real
+fight. But that is only a conjecture of my own, which I merely suggest
+for what it is worth.
+
+Altogether, looking over the scanty notices of the beliefs and practices
+of these Papuans of Astrolabe Bay concerning the departed, we may say in
+general that while the fear of ghosts is conspicuous enough among them,
+there is but little evidence of anything that deserves to be called a
+regular worship of the dead.
+
+[Footnote 358: P. Mathias Josef Erdweg, "Die Bewohner der Insel Tumleo,
+Berlin-hafen, Deutsch-Neu-Guinea," _Mittheilungen der Anthropologischen
+Gesellschaft in Wien_, xxxii. (1902) pp. 274-310, 317-399.]
+
+[Footnote 359: R. Parkinson, "Die Berlinhafen Section, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographie der Neu-Guinea-Kueste," _Internationales Archiv fuer
+Ethnographie_, xiii. (1900) pp. 18-54.]
+
+[Footnote 360: See the note of Father P. W. Schmidt on Father Erdweg's
+paper, _op. cit._ p. 274.]
+
+[Footnote 361: Erdweg, _op. cit._ p. 274.]
+
+[Footnote 362: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 277 _sq_. The frizzly character of
+the hair is mentioned by Mr. R. Parkinson, _op. cit._]
+
+[Footnote 363: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 355 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 364: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 342-346.]
+
+[Footnote 365: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 335 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 366: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 330 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 367: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 350 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 368: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 363 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 369: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 374.]
+
+[Footnote 370: R. Parkinson, "Die Berlinhafen Section, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographie der Neu-Guinea-Kueste," _Internationales Archiv fuer
+Ethnographie_, xiii. (1900) pp. 33-35. Father Erdweg speaks of the
+_parak_ as a spirit-temple or spirit-house in which the deities of the
+Tumleo dwell (_op. cit._ p. 377): he tells us that as a rule each
+village has only one _parak_. As to the spirits which dwell in these
+temples, see below, pp. 226 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 371: R. Parkinson, _op. cit._ pp. 35, 42 _sq._; Erdweg, _op.
+cit._ pp. 292 _sq._, 306.]
+
+[Footnote 372: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 284-287.]
+
+[Footnote 373: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 288-291.]
+
+[Footnote 374: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 297 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 375: Erdweg, _op. cit._ p. 291.]
+
+[Footnote 376: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 291-293.]
+
+[Footnote 377: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 298, 371.]
+
+[Footnote 378: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 295 _sqq._, 299 _sq._, 334 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 379: Erdweg, _op. cit._ pp. 295-297.]
+
+[Footnote 380: P. Franz Vormann, "Dorf und Hausanlage beiden Monumbo,
+Deutsch-Neuguinea," _Anthropos_, iv. (1909) pp. 660 _sqq._; _id._, "Zur
+Psychologie, Religion, Soziologie und Geschichte der Monumbo-Papua,
+Deutsch-Neuguinea," _Anthropos_, v. (1910) pp. 407-409.]
+
+[Footnote 381: P. Franz Vormann, in _Anthropos_, v. (1910) pp. 409
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 382: P. Franz Vormann, in _Anthropos_, v. (1910) pp. 410,
+411.]
+
+[Footnote 383: P. Franz Vormann, _ibid._, p. 412.]
+
+[Footnote 384: B. Hagen, _Unter den Papua's_ (Wiesbaden, 1899), pp. 143,
+221.]
+
+[Footnote 385: For the evidence see B. Hagen, _op. cit._ pp. 193 _sqq._
+As to barter he tells us (p. 216) that all articles in use at Bogadyim
+are imported, nothing is made on the spot.]
+
+[Footnote 386: B. Hagen, _Unter den Papua's_ (Wiesbaden, 1899), pp.
+264-266.]
+
+[Footnote 387: B. Hagen, _op. cit._ pp. 258 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 388: B. Hagen, _op. cit._ pp. 270 _sq._ As to the period and
+details of the circumcision ceremonies see _id._, pp. 234-238.]
+
+[Footnote 389: B. Hagen, _op. cit._ p. 260.]
+
+[Footnote 390: N. von Miklucho-Maclay, "Ethnologische Bemerkungen ueber
+die Papuas der Maclay-Kueste in Neu-Guinea," _Natuurkundig Tijdschrift
+voor Nederlandsch Indie_, xxxv. (1875) pp. 66-93; _id._, xxxvi. (1876)
+pp. 294-333.]
+
+[Footnote 391: N. von Miklucho-Maclay, _op. cit._ xxxvi. (1876) p. 302.]
+
+[Footnote 392: Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 109
+_sqq._; _Totemism and Exogamy_, ii. 470.]
+
+[Footnote 393: N. von Miklucho-Maclay, _op. cit._ xxxvi. (1876) pp.
+300-302.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XI
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Papuans of Cape King William.]
+
+In my last lecture I gave you some account of the beliefs and practices
+concerning the dead which have been recorded among the Papuans of German
+New Guinea. To-day I resume the subject and shall first speak of the
+natives on the coast about Cape King William, at the foot of Mount
+Cromwell. We possess an account of their religion and customs from the
+pen of a German missionary, Mr. Stolz, who has lived three years among
+them and studied their language.[394] His description applies to the
+inhabitants of two villages only, namely Lamatkebolo and Quambu, or
+Sialum and Kwamkwam, as they are generally called on the maps, who
+together number about five hundred souls. They belong to the Papuan
+stock and subsist chiefly by the cultivation of yams, which they plant
+in April or May and reap in January or February. But they also cultivate
+sweet potatoes and make some use of bananas and coco-nuts. They clear
+the land for cultivation by burning down the grass and afterwards
+turning up the earth with digging-sticks, a labour which is performed
+chiefly by the men. The land is not common property; each family tills
+its own fields, though sometimes one family will aid another in the
+laborious task of breaking up the soil. Moreover they trade with the
+natives of the interior, who, inhabiting a more fertile and
+better-watered country, are able to export a portion of their
+superfluities, especially taro, sweet potatoes, betel-nuts, and tobacco,
+to the less favoured dwellers on the sea-coast, receiving mostly dried
+fish in return. Curiously enough the traffic is chiefly in the hands of
+old women.[395]
+
+[Sidenote: Propitiation of ghosts and spirits. The spirit Mate. Spirits
+called _Nai_.]
+
+With regard to the religion of these people Mr. Stolz tells us that they
+know nothing of a deity who should receive the homage of his
+worshippers; they recognise only spirits and the souls of the dead. To
+these last they bring offerings, not because they feel any need to do
+them reverence, but simply out of fear and a desire to win their favour.
+The offerings are presented at burials and when they begin to cultivate
+the fields. Their purpose is to persuade the souls of the dead to ward
+off all the evil influences that might thwart the growth of the yams,
+their staple food. The ghosts are also expected to guard the fields
+against the incursions of wild pigs and the ravages of locusts. At a
+burial the aim of the sacrifice is to induce the soul of the departed
+brother or sister to keep far away from the village and to do no harm to
+the people. Sacrifices are even offered to the souls of animals, such as
+dogs and pigs, to prevent them from coming back and working mischief.
+However, the ghosts of these creatures are not very exacting; a few
+pieces of sugar-cane, a coco-nut shell, or a taro shoot suffice to
+content their simple tastes and to keep them quiet. Amongst the spirits
+to whom the people pay a sort of worship there is one named Mate, who
+seems to be closely akin to Balum, a spirit about whom we shall hear
+more among the Yabim further to the east. However, not very much is
+known about Mate; his worship, if it can be called so, flourishes
+chiefly among the inland tribes, of whom the coast people stand so much
+in awe that they dare not speak freely on the subject of this mysterious
+being. Some of them indeed are bold enough to whisper that there is no
+such being as Mate at all, and that the whole thing is a cheat devised
+by sly rogues for the purpose of appropriating a larger share of roast
+pork at their religious feasts, from which women are excluded. Whatever
+may be thought of these sceptical views, it appears to be certain that
+the name of Mate is also bestowed on a number of spirits who disport
+themselves by day in open grassy places, while they retire by night to
+the deep shades of the forest; and the majority of these spirits are
+thought to be the souls of ancestors or of the recently departed. Again,
+there is another class of spirits called _Nai_, who unlike all other
+spirits are on friendly terms with men. These are the souls of dead
+villagers, who died far away from home. They warn people of danger and
+very obligingly notify them of the coming of trading steamers. When a
+man dies in a foreign land, his soul appears as a _Nai_ to his sorrowing
+relatives and announces his sad fate to them. He does so always at
+night. When the men are gathered round the fire on the open square of
+the village, the ghost climbs the platform which usually serves for
+public meetings and banquets, and from this coin of vantage, plunged in
+the deep shadow, he lifts up his voice and delivers his message of
+warning, news, or prediction, as the case may be.[396]
+
+[Sidenote: The creator Nemunemu. Sickness and death often regarded as
+the effects of sorcery.]
+
+However, ghosts of the dead are not the only spiritual beings with whom
+these people are acquainted. They know of a much higher being, of the
+name of Nemunemu, endowed with superhuman power, who made the heaven and
+the earth with the assistance of two brothers; the elder brother
+constructed the mainland of New Guinea, while the younger fashioned the
+islands and the sea. When the natives first saw a steamer on the horizon
+they thought it was Nemunemu's ship, and the smoke at the funnel they
+took to be the tobacco-smoke which he puffed to beguile the tedium of
+the voyage.[397] They are also great believers in magic and witchcraft,
+and cases of sickness and death, which are not attributed to the
+malignity of ghosts and spirits, are almost invariably set down to the
+machinations of sorcerers. Only the deaths of decrepit old folks are
+regarded as natural. When a man has died, and his death is believed to
+have been caused by magic, the people resort to divination in order to
+discover the wicked magician who has perpetrated the crime. For this
+purpose they place the corpse on a bier, cover it with a mat, and set it
+on the shoulders of four men, while a fifth man taps lightly with an
+arrow on the mat and enquires of the departed whether such and such a
+village has bewitched him to death. If the bier remains still, it means
+"No"; but if it rocks backward and forward, it means "Yes," and the
+avengers of blood must seek their victim, the guilty sorcerer, in that
+village. The answer is believed to be given by the dead man's ghost, who
+stirs his body at the moment when his murderer's village is named. It is
+useless for the inhabitants of that village to disclaim all knowledge of
+the sickness and death of the deceased. The people repose implicit faith
+in this form of divination. "His soul itself told us," they say, and
+surely he ought to know. Another form of divination which they employ
+for the same purpose is to put the question to the ghost, while two men
+hold a bow which belonged to him and to which some personal articles of
+his are attached. The answer is again yes or no according as the bow
+moves or is still.[398]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral and mourning customs.]
+
+When the author of the death has been discovered in one way or another,
+the corpse is decked with all the ornaments that can be collected from
+the relatives and prepared for burial. A shallow grave is dug under the
+house and lined with mats. Then the body is lowered into the grave: one
+of the sextons strikes up a lament, and the shrill voices of the women
+in the house join in the melancholy strain. When he lies in his narrow
+bed, the ornaments are removed from his person, but some of his tools,
+weapons, and other belongings are buried with him, no doubt for his use
+in the life hereafter. The funeral celebration, in which the whole
+village commonly takes part, lasts several days and consists in the
+bringing of offerings to the dead and the abstinence from all labour in
+the fields. Yams are brought from the field of the departed and cooked.
+A small pot filled with yams and a vessel of water are placed on the
+grave; the rest of the provisions is consumed by the mourners. The next
+of kin, especially the widow or widower, remain for about a week at the
+grave, watching day and night, lest the body should be dug up and
+devoured by a certain foul fiend with huge wings and long claws, who
+battens on corpses. The mourning costume of men consists in smearing the
+face with black and wearing a cord round the neck and a netted cap on
+the head. Instead of such a cap a woman in mourning wraps herself in a
+large net and a great apron of grass. While the other ensigns of woe are
+soon discarded or disappear, the cord about the neck is worn for a
+longer time, generally till next harvest. The sacrifice of a pig brings
+the period of mourning to an end and after it the cord may be laid
+aside. If any one were so hard-hearted as not to wear that badge of
+sorrow, the people believe that the angry ghost would come back and
+fetch him away. He would die.[399] Thus among these savages the mourning
+costume is regarded as a protection against the dangerous ghost of the
+departed; it soothes his wounded feelings and prevents him from making
+raids on the living.
+
+[Sidenote: Fate of the souls of the dead.]
+
+As to the place to which the souls of the dead repair and the fate that
+awaits them there, very vague and contradictory ideas prevail among the
+natives of this district. Some say that the ghosts go eastward to Bukaua
+on Huon Gulf and there lead a shadowy life very like their life on
+earth. Others think that the spirits hover near the village where they
+lived in the flesh. Others again are of opinion that they transmigrate
+into animals and prolong their life in one or other of the bodies of the
+lower creatures.[400]
+
+[Sidenote: The Yabim and Bukaua tribes.]
+
+Leaving Cape King William we pass eastward along the coast of German New
+Guinea and come to Finsch Harbour. From a point some miles to the north
+of Finsch Harbour as far as Samoa Harbour on Huon Gulf the coast is
+inhabited by two kindred tribes, the Yabim and the Bukaua, who speak a
+Melanesian language. I shall deal first with the Yabim tribe, whose
+customs and beliefs have been described for us with a fair degree of
+fulness by two German missionaries, Mr. Konrad Vetter and Mr. Heinrich
+Zahn.[401] The following account is based chiefly on the writings of Mr.
+Vetter, whose mission station is at the village of Simbang.
+
+[Sidenote: Material and artistic culture of the Yabim.]
+
+Like the other natives of New Guinea the Yabim build permanent houses,
+live in settled villages, and till the ground. Every year they make a
+fresh clearing in the forest by cutting down the trees, burning the
+fallen timber, and planting taro, bananas, sugar-cane, and tobacco in
+the open glade. When the crops have been reaped, the place is abandoned,
+and is soon overgrown again by the rank tropical vegetation, while the
+natives move on to another patch, which they clear and cultivate in like
+manner. This rude mode of tillage is commonly practised by many savages,
+especially within the tropics. Cultivation of this sort is migratory,
+and in some places, though apparently not in New Guinea, the people
+shift their habitations with their fields as they move on from one part
+of the forest to another. Among the Yabim the labour of clearing a patch
+for cultivation is performed by all the men of a village in common, but
+when the great trees have fallen with a crash to the ground, and the
+trunks, branches, foliage and underwood have been burnt, with a roar of
+flames and a crackling like a rolling fire of musketry, each family
+appropriates a portion of the clearing for its own use and marks off its
+boundaries with sticks. But they also subsist in part by fishing, and
+for this purpose they build outrigger canoes. They display considerable
+skill and taste in wood-carving, and are fond of ornamenting their
+houses, canoes, paddles, tools, spears, and drums with figures of
+crocodiles, fish, and other patterns.[402]
+
+[Sidenote: Men's clubhouses (_lum_).]
+
+The villages are divided into wards, and every ward contains its
+clubhouse for men, called a _lum_, in which young men and lads are
+obliged to pass the night. It consists of a bedroom above and a parlour
+with fireplaces below. In the parlour the grown men pass their leisure
+hours during the day, and here the councils are held. The wives cook the
+food at home and bring it for their husbands to the clubhouse. The
+bull-roarers which are used at the initiatory ceremonies are kept in the
+principal clubhouse of the village. Such a clubhouse serves as an
+asylum; men fleeing from the avenger of blood who escape into it are
+safe. It is said that the spirit (_balum_) has swallowed or concealed
+them. But if they steal out of it and attempt to make their way to
+another village, they carry their life in their hand.[403] Among the
+Yabim, according to Mr. Zahn, religion in the proper sense does not
+exist, but on the other hand the whole people is dominated by the fear
+of witchcraft and of the spirits of the dead.[404] The following is the
+account which Mr. Vetter gives of the beliefs and customs of these
+people concerning the departed.
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Yabim concerning the state of the dead. The
+ghostly ferry.]
+
+They do not believe that death is the end of all things for the
+individual; they think that his soul survives and becomes a spirit or
+ghost, which they call a _balum_. The life of human spirits in the other
+world is a shadowy continuation of the life on earth, and as such it has
+little attraction for the mind of the Papuan. Of heaven and hell, a
+place of reward and a place of punishment for the souls of the good and
+bad respectively, he has no idea. However, his world of the dead is to
+some extent divided into compartments. In one of them reside the ghosts
+of people who have been slain, in another the ghosts of people who have
+been hanged, and in a third the ghosts of people who have been devoured
+by a shark or a crocodile. How many more compartments there may be for
+the accommodation of the souls, we are not told. The place is in one of
+the islands of Siasi. No living man has ever set foot in the island, for
+smoke and mist hang over it perpetually; but from out the mist you may
+hear the sound of the barking of dogs, the grunting of swine, and the
+crowing of cocks, which seems to shew that in the opinion of these
+people animals have immortal souls as well as men. The natives of the
+Siasi islands say that the newly arrived ghosts may often be seen
+strolling on the beach; sometimes the people can even recognise the
+familiar features of friends with whom they did business in the flesh.
+The mode in which the spirits of the dead arrive at their destination
+from the mainland is naturally by a ferry: indeed, the prow of the
+ghostly ferry-boat may be seen to this day in the village of Bogiseng.
+The way in which it came to be found there was this. A man of the
+village lay dying, and on his deathbed he promised to give his friends a
+sign of his continued existence after death by appearing as a ghost in
+their midst. Only he stipulated that in order to enable him to do so
+they would place a stone club in the hand of his corpse. This was done.
+He died, the club was placed in his cold hand, and his sorrowing but
+hopeful relations awaited results. They had not very long to wait. For
+no sooner had the ghost, armed with the stone club, stepped down to the
+sea-shore than he called imperiously for the ferry-boat. It soon hove in
+sight, with the ghostly ferryman in it paddling to the beach to receive
+the passenger. But when the prow grated on the pebbles, the artful
+ghost, instead of stepping into it as he should have done, lunged out at
+it with the stone club so forcibly that he broke the prow clean off. In
+a rage the ferryman roared out to him, "I won't put you across! You and
+your people shall be kangaroos." The ghost had gained his point. He
+turned back from the ferry and brought to his friends as a trophy the
+prow of the ghostly canoe, which is treasured in the village to this
+day. I should add that the prow in question bears a suspicious
+resemblance to a powder-horn which has been floating about for some time
+in the water; but no doubt this resemblance is purely fortuitous and
+without any deep significance.
+
+[Sidenote: Transmigration of human souls into animals.]
+
+From this veracious narrative we gather that sometimes the souls of the
+dead, instead of going away to the spirit-land, transmigrate into the
+bodies of animals. The case of the kangaroos is not singular. In the
+village of Simbang Mr. Vetter knows two families, of whom the ghosts
+pass at death into the carcases of crocodiles and a species of fabulous
+pigs respectively. Hence members of the one family are careful not to
+injure crocodiles, lest the souls of their dead should chance to be
+lodged in the reptiles; and the members of the other family would be
+equally careful not to hurt the fabulous pigs if ever they fell in with
+them. However, the crocodile people, not to be behind their neighbours,
+assert that after death their spirits can also roam about the wood as
+ghosts and go to the spirit-land. In explanation they say that every
+human being has two souls; one of them is his reflection on the water,
+the other is his shadow on the land. No doubt it is the water-soul which
+goes to the island of Siasi, while the land-soul is free to occupy the
+body of a crocodile, a kangaroo, or some other animal.[405]
+
+[Sidenote: Return of the ghosts.]
+
+But even when the ghosts have departed to their island home, they are by
+no means strictly confined to it. They can return, especially at night,
+to roam about the woods and the villages, and the living are very much
+afraid of them, for the ghosts delight in doing mischief. It is
+especially in the first few days after a death that the ghost is an
+object of terror, for he is then still loitering about the village.
+During these days everybody is afraid to go alone into the forest for
+fear of meeting him, and if a dog or a pig strays in the wood and is
+lost, the people make sure that the ghost has made off with the animal,
+and the aggrieved owners roundly abuse the sorrowing family, telling
+them that their old father or mother, as the case may be, is no better
+than a thief. They are also very unwilling to mention the names of dead
+persons, imagining that were the ghost to hear his name pronounced he
+might fancy he was being called for and might accordingly suspend his
+habitual occupation of munching sour fruits in the forest to come and
+trouble the living.
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to ghosts.]
+
+Hence in order to keep the short-tempered ghost in good humour by
+satisfying his wants, lest he should think himself neglected and wreak
+his vexation on the survivors, the people go a-fishing after a death, or
+they kill a pig or a dog; sometimes also they cut down a fruit-tree. But
+it is only the souls of the animals which are destined for the
+consumption of the ghost; their bodies are roasted and eaten by the
+living. On a grave you may sometimes see a small basket suspended from a
+stick; but if you look into it you will find nothing but a little soot
+and some fish scales, which is all that remains of the fried fish.
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts provided with fire.]
+
+The Yabim also imagine that the ghost has need of fire to guide him to
+the door of the man who has done him to death by sorcery. Accordingly
+they provide the spirit with this necessary as follows. On the evening
+of the day on which the body has been buried, they kindle a fire on a
+potsherd and heap dry leaves on it. As they do so they mention the names
+of all the sorcerers they can think of, and he at whose name the
+smouldering leaves burst into a bright flame is the one who has done the
+deed. Having thus ascertained the true cause of death, beyond reach of
+cavil, they proceed to light up the ghost to the door of his murderer.
+For this purpose a procession is formed. A man, holding the smouldering
+fire in the potsherd with one hand and a bundle of straw with the other,
+leads the way. He is followed by another who draws droning notes from a
+water-bottle of the deceased, which he finally smashes. After these two
+march a number of young fellows who make a plumping sound by smacking
+their thighs with the hollow of their hands. This solemn procession
+wends its way to a path in the neighbouring forest. By this time the
+shades of night have fallen. The firebearer now sets the fire on the
+ground and calls on the ghost to come and take it. They firmly believe
+that he does so and that having got it he hies away to cast the glowing
+embers down at the door of the man who has done him to death. They even
+fancy they see the flickering light carried by the invisible hand
+retreating through the shadows into the depth of the forest; and in
+order to follow it with their eyes they will sometimes climb tall trees
+or launch a canoe and put out to sea, gazing intently at the glimmering
+ray till it vanishes from their sight in the darkness. Perhaps the gleam
+of fire-flies, which abound in these tropical forests, or the flashing
+of a meteor, as it silently drops from the starry heaven into the sea,
+may serve to feed this superstitious fancy.[406]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts thought to help in the cultivation of the land.]
+
+But the spirits of the dead are supposed to be able to help as well as
+harm the living. Good crops and a successful hunt are attributed to
+their influence. It is especially the spirits of the ancient owners of
+the land who are credited with the power of promoting the growth of the
+crops. Hence when a clearing has been made in the forest and planted
+with taro, and the plants are shewing a good head of leaves,
+preparations are made to feast the ghosts of the people to whom the land
+belonged in days gone by. For this purpose a sago-palm is cut down,
+sago-porridge made, and a wild boar killed. Then the men arrayed in all
+their finery march out in solemn procession by day to the taro field;
+and the leader invites the spirits in a loud voice to come to the
+village and partake of the sago-porridge and pork that have been made
+ready for them. But the invisible guests content themselves as usual
+with snuffing up the fragrant smell of the roast pork and the steam of
+the porridge; the substance of these dainties is consumed by the living.
+Yet the help which the ghosts give in the cultivation of the land would
+seem to be conceived as a purely negative one; the offerings are made to
+them for the purpose of inducing them to keep away and not injure the
+growing crops. It is also believed that the ghosts of the dead make
+communications to the living in dreams or by whistling, and even that
+they can bring things to their friends and relations. But on the whole,
+Mr. Vetter tells us, the dominant attitude of the living to the dead is
+one of fear; the power of the ghosts is oftener exerted for evil than
+for good.[407] The ghost of a murdered man in particular is dreaded,
+because he is believed to haunt his murderer and to do him a mischief.
+Hence they drive away such a dangerous ghost with shouts and the beating
+of drums; and by way of facilitating his departure they launch a model
+of a canoe, laden with taro and tobacco, in order to transport him with
+all comfort to the land of souls.[408]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs among the Yabim.]
+
+Among the Yabim the dead are usually buried in shallow graves close to
+the houses where they died. Some trifles are laid with the body in the
+grave, in order that the dead man or woman may have the use of them in
+the other world. But any valuables that may be deposited with the corpse
+are afterwards dug up and appropriated by the survivors. If the deceased
+was the householder himself or his wife, the house is almost always
+deserted, however solidly it may be built. The reason for thus
+abandoning so valuable a piece of property is not mentioned; but we may
+assume that the motive is a fear of the ghost, who is supposed to haunt
+his old home. A temporary hut is built on the grave, and in it the
+family of the deceased take up their abode for six weeks or more; here
+they cook, eat, and sleep. A widower sits in a secluded corner by
+himself, invisible to all and unwashed; during the period of full
+mourning he may not shew himself in the village. When he does come forth
+again, he wears a mourning hat made of bark in the shape of a cylinder
+without crown or brim; a widow wears a great ugly net, which wraps her
+up almost completely from the head to the knees. Sometimes in memory of
+the deceased they wear a lock of his hair or a bracelet. Other relations
+wear cords round their necks in sign of mourning. The period of mourning
+varies greatly; it may last for months or even years. Sometimes the
+bodies of beloved children or persons who have been much respected are
+not buried but tied up in bundles and set up in a house until the flesh
+has quite mouldered away; then the skull and the bones of the arms and
+legs are anointed, painted red, and preserved for a time. Mr. Vetter
+records the case of a chief whose corpse was thus preserved in the
+assembly-house of the village, after it had been dried over a fire. When
+it had been reduced to a mummy, the skull and the arm-bones and
+leg-bones were detached, oiled, and reddened, and then kept for some
+years in the house of the chief's eldest son, till finally they were
+deposited in the grave of a kinsman. In some of the inland villages of
+this part of New Guinea the widow is sometimes throttled by her
+relations at the death of her husband, in order that she may accompany
+him to the other world.[409]
+
+[Sidenote: Deaths attributed by the Yabim to sorcery.]
+
+The Yabim believe that except in the case of very old people every death
+is caused by sorcery; hence when anybody has departed this life, his
+relations make haste to discover the wicked sorcerer who has killed
+their kinsman. For that purpose they have recourse to various forms of
+divination. One of them has been already described, but they have
+others. For example, they put a powder like sulphur in a piece of bamboo
+tube and kindle a fire under it. Then an old man takes a bull-roarer and
+taps with it on the bamboo tube, naming all the sorcerers in the
+neighbouring villages. He at the mention of whose name the fire catches
+the powder and blazes up is the guilty man. Another way of detecting the
+culprit is to attach the feather of a bird of paradise to a staff and
+give the staff to two men to hold upright between the palms of their
+right hands. Then somebody names the sorcerers, and he at whose name the
+staff turns round and the feather points downwards is the one who caused
+the death. When the avengers of blood, wrought up to a high pitch of
+fury, fall in with the family of the imaginary criminal, they may put
+the whole of them to death lest the sons should afterwards avenge their
+father's murder by the black art. Sometimes a dangerous and dreaded
+sorcerer will be put out of the way with the connivance of the chief of
+his own village; and after a few days the murderers will boldly shew
+themselves in the village where the crime was perpetrated and will
+reassure the rest of the people, saying, "Be still. The wicked man has
+been taken off. No harm will befall you."[410]
+
+[Sidenote: Bull-roarers (_balum_). Initiation of young men.]
+
+It is very significant that the word _balum_, which means a ghost, is
+applied by the Yabim to the instrument now generally known among
+anthropologists as a bull-roarer. It is a small fish-shaped piece of
+wood which, being tied to a string and whirled rapidly round, produces a
+humming or booming sound like the roaring of a bull or the muttering of
+distant thunder. Instruments of this sort are employed by savages in
+many parts of the world at their mysteries; the weird sound which the
+implement makes when swung is supposed by the ignorant and uninitiated
+to be the voice of a spirit and serves to impress them with a sense of
+awe and mystery. So it is with the Papuans about Finsch Harbour, with
+whom we are at present concerned. At least one such bull-roarer is kept
+in the _lum_ or bachelors' clubhouse of every village, and the women and
+uninitiated boys are forbidden to see it under pain of death. The
+instrument plays a great part in the initiation of young men, which
+takes place at intervals of several years, when there are a number of
+youths ready to be initiated, and enough pigs can be procured to furnish
+forth the feasts which form an indispensable part of the ceremony. The
+principal initiatory rite consists of circumcision, which is performed
+on all youths before they are admitted to the rank of full-grown men.
+The age of the candidates varies considerably, from four years up to
+twenty. Many are married before they are initiated. The operation is
+performed in the forest, and the procession of the youths to the place
+appointed is attended by a number of men swinging bull-roarers. As the
+procession sets out, the women look on from a distance, weeping and
+howling, for they are taught to believe that the lads, their sons and
+brothers, are about to be swallowed up by a monster called a _balum_ or
+ghost, who will only release them from his belly on condition of
+receiving a sufficient number of roast pigs. How, then, can the poor
+women be sure that they will ever see their dear ones again? So amid the
+noise of weeping and wailing the procession passes into the forest, and
+the booming sound of the bull-roarers dies away in the distance.
+
+[Sidenote: The rite of circumcision; the lads supposed to be swallowed
+by a monster (_balum_). The sacred flutes.]
+
+The place where the operation is performed on the lads is a long hut,
+about a hundred feet in length, which diminishes in height towards the
+rear. This represents the belly of the monster which is to swallow up
+the candidates. To keep up the delusion a pair of great eyes are painted
+over the entrance, and above them the projecting roots of a betel-palm
+represent the monster's hair, while the trunk of the tree passes for his
+backbone. As the awe-struck lads approach this imposing creature, he is
+heard from time to time to utter a growl. The growl is in fact no other
+than the humming note of bull-roarers swung by men, who are concealed
+within the edifice. When the procession has come to a halt in front of
+the artificial monster, a loud defiant blast blown on shell-trumpets
+summons him to stand forth. The reply follows in the shape of another
+muffled roar of the bull-roarers from within the building. At the sound
+the men say that "Balum is coming up," and they raise a shrill song like
+a scream and sacrifice pigs to the monster in order to induce him to
+spare the lives of the candidates. When the operation has been performed
+on the lads, they must remain in strict seclusion for three or four
+months, avoiding all contact with women and even the sight of them. They
+live in the long hut, which represents the monster's belly, and their
+food is brought them by elder men. Their leisure time is spent in
+weaving baskets and playing on certain sacred flutes, which are never
+used except at such seasons. The instruments are of two patterns. One is
+called the male and the other the female, and they are supposed to be
+married to each other. No woman may see these mysterious flutes; if she
+did she would die. Even if she hears their shrill note in the distance,
+she will hasten to hide herself in a thicket. When the initiatory
+ceremonies are over, the flutes are carefully kept in the men's
+clubhouse of the village till the next time they are wanted for a
+similar occasion. On the other hand, if the women are obliged to go near
+the place where the lads are living in seclusion, they beat on certain
+bamboo drums in order to warn them to keep out of the way. Sometimes,
+though perhaps rarely, one of the lads dies under the operation; in that
+case the men explain his disappearance to the women by saying that the
+monster has a pig's stomach as well as a human stomach, and that
+unfortunately the deceased young man slipped by mistake into the wrong
+stomach and so perished miserably. But as a rule the candidates pass
+into the right stomach and after a sufficient period has been allowed
+for digestion, they come forth safe and sound, the monster having kindly
+consented to let them go free in consideration of the roast pigs which
+have been offered to him by the men. Indeed he is not very exacting, for
+he contents himself with devouring the souls of the pigs, while he
+leaves their bodies to be consumed by his worshippers. This is a kindly
+and considerate way of dealing with sacrifice, which our New Guinea
+ghost or monster shares with many deities of much higher social
+pretensions. However, lest he should prove refractory and perhaps run
+away with the poor young men in his inside, or possibly make a dart at
+any women or children who might be passing, the men take the precaution
+of tying him down tight with ropes. When the time of seclusion is up,
+one of the last acts in the long series of ceremonies is to cast off the
+ropes and let the monster go free. He avails himself of his liberty to
+return to his subterranean abode, and the young men are brought back to
+the village with much solemnity.
+
+[Sidenote: The return of the novices to the village.]
+
+An eye-witness has described the ceremony. The lads, now ranking as
+full-grown men, were first bathed in the sea and then elaborately
+decorated with paint and so forth. In marching back to the village they
+had to keep their eyes tightly shut, and each of them was led by a man
+who acted as a kind of god-father. As the procession moved on, an old
+bald-headed man touched each boy solemnly on the chin and brow with a
+bull-roarer. In the village preparations for a banquet had meanwhile
+been made, and the women and girls were waiting in festal attire. The
+women were much moved at the return of the lads; they sobbed and tears
+of joy ran down their cheeks. Arrived in the village the newly-initiated
+lads were drawn up in a row and fresh palm leaves were spread in front
+of them. Here they stood with closed eyes, motionless as statues. Then a
+man passed behind them, touching each of them in the hams with the
+handle of an axe and saying, "O circumcised one, sit down." But still
+the lads remained standing, stiff and motionless. Not till another man
+had knocked repeatedly on the ground with the stalk of a palm-leaf,
+crying, "O circumcised ones, open your eyes!" did the youths, one after
+another, open their eyes as if awaking from a profound stupor. Then they
+sat down on the mats and partook of the food brought them by the men.
+Young and old now ate in the open air. Next morning the circumcised lads
+were bathed in the sea and painted red instead of white. After that they
+might talk to women. This was the end of the ceremony.[411]
+
+[Sidenote: The essence of the initiatory rites seems to be a simulation
+of death and resurrection; the novice is supposed to be killed and to
+come to life or be born again. The new birth among the Akikuyu of
+British East Africa.]
+
+The meaning of these curious ceremonies observed on the return of the
+lads to the village is not explained by the writer who describes them;
+but the analogy of similar ceremonies observed at initiation by many
+other races allows us to divine it with a fair degree of probability. As
+I have already observed in a former lecture, the ceremony of initiation
+at puberty is very often regarded as a process of death and
+resurrection; the candidate is supposed to die or to be killed and to
+come to life again or be born again; and the pretence of a new birth is
+not uncommonly kept up by the novices feigning to have forgotten all the
+most common actions of life and having accordingly to learn them all
+over again like newborn babes. We may conjecture that this is why the
+young circumcised Papuans, with whom we are at present concerned, march
+back to their village with closed eyes; this is why, when bidden to sit
+down, they remain standing stiffly, as if they understood neither the
+command nor the action; and this, too, we may surmise, is why their
+mothers and sisters receive them with a burst of emotion, as if their
+dead had come back to them from the grave. This interpretation of the
+ceremony is confirmed by a curious rite which is observed by the Akikuyu
+of British East Africa. Amongst them every boy or girl at or about the
+age of ten years has solemnly to pretend to be born again, not in a
+moral or religious, but in a physical sense. The mother of the child,
+or, if she is dead, some other woman, goes through an actual pantomime
+of bringing forth the boy or girl. I will spare you the details of the
+pantomime, which is very graphic, and will merely mention that the
+bouncing infant squalls like a newborn babe. Now this ceremony of the
+new birth was formerly enacted among the Akikuyu at the rite of
+circumcision, though the two ceremonies are now kept distinct.[412]
+Hence it is not very rash to conjecture that the ceremony performed by
+the young Papuans of Finsch Harbour on their return to the village after
+undergoing circumcision is merely a way of keeping up the pretence of
+being born again and of being therefore as ignorant and helpless as
+babes.
+
+[Sidenote: The mock death of the novices as a preliminary to the mock
+birth.]
+
+But if the end of the initiation is a mock resurrection, or rather new
+birth, as it certainly seems to be, we may infer with some confidence
+that the first part of it, namely the act of circumcision, is a mock
+death. This is borne out by the explicit statement of a very good
+authority, Mr. Vetter, that "the circumcision is designated as a process
+of being swallowed by the spirit, out of whose stomach (represented by a
+long hut) the release must take place by means of a sacrifice of
+pigs."[413] And it is further confirmed by the observation that both the
+spirit which is supposed to operate on the lads, and the bull-roarer,
+which apparently represents his voice, are known by the name of _balum_,
+which means the ghost or spirit of a dead person. Similarly, among the
+Tugeri or Kaya-Kaya, a large Papuan tribe on the south coast of Dutch
+New Guinea, the name of the bull-roarer, which they call _sosom_, is
+given to a mythical giant, who is supposed to appear every year with the
+south-east monsoon. When he comes, a festival is held in his honour and
+bull-roarers are swung. Boys are presented to the giant, and he kills
+them, but brings them to life again.[414] Thus the initiatory rite of
+circumcision, to which all lads have to submit among the Yabim, seems to
+be closely bound up with their conception of death and with their belief
+in a life after death; since the whole ceremony apparently consists in a
+simulation of dying and coming to life again. That is why I have touched
+upon these initiatory rites, which at first sight might appear to have
+no connexion with our immediate subject, the belief in immortality and
+the worship of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: General summary as to the Yabim.]
+
+On the whole we may say that the Yabim have a very firm and practical
+belief in a life after death, and that while their attitude to the
+spirits of the departed is generally one of fear, they nevertheless look
+to these spirits also for information and help on various occasions.
+Thus their beliefs and practices contain at least in germ the elements
+of a worship of the dead.
+
+[Footnote 394: Stolz, "Die Umgebung von Kap Koenig Wilhelm," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch New-Guinea_ (Berlin, 1911), iii. 243-286.]
+
+[Footnote 395: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 252-254.]
+
+[Footnote 396: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 245-247.]
+
+[Footnote 397: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 247 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 398: Stolz, _op. cit._ pp. 248-250.]
+
+[Footnote 399: Stolz, _op. cit._ p. 258.]
+
+[Footnote 400: Stolz, _op. cit._ p. 259.]
+
+[Footnote 401: K. Vetter, in _Komm herueber und hilf uns! oder die Arbeit
+der Neuen-Dettelsauer Mission_, Nos. 1-4 (Barmen, 1898); _id._, in
+_Nachrichten ueber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land_, 1897, pp. 86-102; _id._, in
+_Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_, xi. (Jena, 1892)
+pp. 102-106; _id._, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu
+Jena_, xii. (Jena, 1893) pp. 95-97; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_, iii (Berlin, 1911) pp. 287-394.]
+
+[Footnote 402: K. Vetter, _Komm herueber und hilf uns!_ ii. (Barmen,
+1898) pp. 6-12.]
+
+[Footnote 403: K. Vetter, _op. cit._ ii. 8; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_, iii. 291, 308, 311.]
+
+[Footnote 404: H. Zahn, _op. cit._ iii. 291.]
+
+[Footnote 405: K. Vetter, _Komm herueber und hilf uns!_ iii. 21 _sq._
+According to Mr. H. Zahn (_op. cit._ p. 324) every village has its own
+entrance into the spirit-land.]
+
+[Footnote 406: K. Vetter, _Komm herueber und hilf uns!_ iii. 19-24;
+_id._, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_, xii.
+(1893) pp. 96 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 407: K. Vetter, _Komm herueber und hilf uns!_ ii. 7, iii. 24;
+_id._, in _Nachrichten ueber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land und den
+Bismarck-Archipel_, 1897, p. 94.]
+
+[Footnote 408: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten ueber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land_,
+1897, p. 94.]
+
+[Footnote 409: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten ueber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land_,
+1897, pp. 94 _sq._; _id._, _Komm herueber und hilf uns!_ iii. 15-19.
+Compare H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_,
+iii. 320 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 410: H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. 318-320.]
+
+[Footnote 411: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten ueber Kaiser Wilhelms-Land und
+den Bismarck-Archipel_, 1897, pp. 92 _sq._; _id._, in _Mitteilungen der
+Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_, xi. (1892) p. 105; _id._, _Komm
+herueber und hilf uns!_ ii. (1898) p. 18; _id._, cited by M. Krieger,
+_Neu-Guinea_, pp. 167-170; O. Schellong, "Das Barlum (_sic_)-fest der
+Gegend Finsch-hafens (Kaiserwilhelmsland), ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der
+Beschneidung der Melanesier," _Internationales Archiv fuer Ethnographie_,
+ii. (1889) pp. 145-162; H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. 296-298.]
+
+[Footnote 412: W. S. Routledge and K. Routledge, _With a Prehistoric
+People, the Akikuyu of British East Africa_ (London, 1910), pp. 151
+_sq._ Compare _Totemism and Exogamy_, iv. 228; C. W. Hobley, "Kikuyu
+Customs and Beliefs," _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute_,
+xl. (1910) pp. 440 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 413: K. Vetter, in _Nachrichten ueber Kaiser Wilhelmsland und
+den Bismarck-Archipel_, 1897, p. 93.]
+
+[Footnote 414: R. Poech, "Vierter Bericht ueber meine Reise nach
+Neu-Guinea," _Sitzungsberichte der mathematisch-naturwissenschaftlichen
+Klasse der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften_ (Vienna), cxv.
+(1906) Abteilung 1, pp. 901, 902.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Bukaua of German New Guinea.]
+
+In the last lecture I described the beliefs and practices concerning the
+dead as they are to be found among the Yabim of German New Guinea.
+To-day we begin with the Bukaua, a kindred and neighbouring tribe, which
+occupies the coast lands of the northern portion of Huon Gulf from
+Schollenbruch Point to Samoa Harbour. The language which the Bukaua
+speak belongs, like the language of the Yabim, to the Melanesian, not to
+the Papuan family. Their customs and beliefs have been reported by a
+German missionary, Mr. Stefan Lehner, whose account I follow.[415] In
+many respects they closely resemble those of their neighbours the Yabim.
+
+[Sidenote: Means of subsistence of the Bukaua. Men's clubhouses.]
+
+The Bukaua are an agricultural people who subsist mainly on the crops of
+taro which they raise. But they also cultivate many kinds of bananas and
+vegetables, together with sugar-cane, sago, and tobacco. From time to
+time they cut down and burn the forest in order to obtain fresh fields
+for cultivation. The land is not held in common. Each family has its own
+fields and patches of forest, and would resent the intrusion of others
+on their hereditary domain. Hunting and fishing supply them with animal
+food to eke out the vegetable nourishment which they draw from their
+fields and plantations.[416] Every village contains one or more of the
+men's clubhouses which are a common feature in the social life of the
+tribes on this coast. In these clubhouses the young men are obliged to
+sleep, and on the platforms in front of them the older men hold their
+councils. Such a clubhouse is called a _lum_.[417]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the Bukaua concerning the souls of the dead.
+Sickness and disease attributed to ghostly agency.]
+
+The Bukaua have a firm belief in the existence of the human soul after
+death. They think that a man's soul can even quit his body temporarily
+in his lifetime during sleep or a swoon, and that in its disembodied
+state it can appear to people at a distance; but such apparitions are
+regarded as omens of approaching death, when the soul will depart for
+good and all. The soul of a dead man is called a _balum_. The spirits of
+the departed are believed to be generally mischievous and spiteful to
+the living, but they can be appeased by sacrifice, and other measures
+can be taken to avert their dangerous influence.[418] They are very
+touchy, and if they imagine that they are not honoured enough by their
+kinsfolk, and that the offerings made to them are insufficient, they
+will avenge the slight by visiting their disrespectful and stingy
+relatives with sickness and disease. Among the maladies which the
+natives ascribe to the anger of ghosts are epilepsy, fainting fits, and
+wasting decline.[419] When a man suffers from a sore which he believes
+to have been inflicted on him by a ghost, he will take a stone from the
+fence of the grave and heat it in the fire, saying: "Father, see, thou
+hast gone, I am left, I must till the land in thy stead and care for my
+brothers and sisters. Do me good again." Then he dips the hot stone in a
+puddle on the grave, and holds his sore in the steam which rises from
+it. His pain is eased thereby and he explains the alleviation which he
+feels by saying, "The spirit of the dead man has eaten up the
+wound."[420]
+
+[Sidenote: Sickness and death often ascribed by the Bukaua to sorcery.]
+
+But like most savages the Bukaua attribute many illnesses and many
+deaths not to the wrath of ghosts but to the malignant arts of
+sorcerers; and in such cases they usually endeavour by means of
+divination to ascertain the culprit and to avenge the death of their
+friend by taking the life of his imaginary murderer.[421] If they fail
+to exact vengeance, the ghost is believed to be very angry, and they
+must be on their guard against him. He may meet them anywhere, but is
+especially apt to dog the footsteps of the sorcerer who killed him.
+Hence when on the occasion of a great feast the sorcerer comes to the
+village of his victim, the surviving relatives of the dead man are at
+particular pains to protect themselves and their property against the
+insidious attacks of the prowling ghost. For this purpose they bury a
+creeper with white blossoms in the path leading to the village; the
+ghost is thought to be filled with fear at the sight of it and to turn
+back, leaving his kinsfolk, their dogs, and pigs in peace.[422]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghosts of the slain.]
+
+Another class of ghosts who are much dreaded are the spirits of slain
+foes. They are believed to pursue their slayers to the village and to
+blind them so that sooner or later they fall an easy prey to their
+enemies. Hence when a party of warriors has returned home from a
+successful attack on a village, in which they have butchered all on whom
+they could lay their hands, they kindle a great fire, dance wildly about
+it, and hurl burning brands in the direction of the battlefield in order
+to keep the ghosts of their slaughtered foes at bay. Phosphorescent
+lights seen under the houses throw the inmates into great alarm, for
+they are thought to be the souls of the slain. Sometimes the vanquished
+in battle resort to a curious ruse for the purpose of avenging
+themselves on the victors by means of a ghost. They take the
+sleeping-mat of one of the slain, roll it up in a bundle along with his
+loin-cloth, apron, netted bag, or head-rest, and give the bundle to two
+cripples to carry. Then they steal quietly to the landing-place of their
+foes, peering warily about lest they should be observed. The bundle
+represents the dead man, and the cripples who carry it reel to and fro,
+and finally sink to the ground with their burden. In this way the ghost
+of the victim, whose things are carried in the bundle, is supposed to
+make their enemies weak and tottery. Strong young men are not given the
+bundle to carry, lest the ghost should spoil their manly figures;
+whereas if he should wound or maim a couple of poor cripples, no great
+harm is done.[423]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of ancestors appealed to for help, especially in the
+cultivation of the ground. First-fruits offered to the spirits of the
+dead.]
+
+However, the Bukaua also look on the ghosts of their ancestors in a more
+amiable light as beings who, if properly appealed to, can and will help
+them in the affairs of life, especially by procuring for them good
+crops. Hence when they are planting their fields, which are formed in
+clearings of the forest, they take particular care to insert shoots of
+all their crops in the ground near the tree stumps which remain
+standing, because the souls of their dead grandfathers and
+great-grandfathers are believed to be sitting on the stumps watching
+their descendants at their work. Accordingly in the act of planting they
+call out the names of these forefathers and pray them to guard the field
+in order that their living children may have food and not suffer from
+hunger. And at harvest, when the first-fruits of the taro, bananas,
+sugar-cane, and so forth have been brought back from the fields, a
+portion of them is offered in a bowl to the spirits of the forefathers
+in the house of the landowner, and the spirits are addressed in prayer
+as follows: "O ye who have guarded our field as we prayed you to do,
+there is something for you; now and henceforth behold us with favour."
+While the family are feasting on the rest of the first-fruits, the
+householder will surreptitiously stir the offerings in the bowl with his
+finger, and will then shew the bowl to the others as a proof that the
+souls of the dead have really partaken of the good things provided for
+them.[424] A hunter will also pray to his dead father to drive the wild
+pigs into his net.[425]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs of the Bukaua.]
+
+The Bukaua bury their dead in shallow graves, which are sometimes dug
+under the houses but more usually in front of or beside them. Along with
+the corpses are deposited bags of taro, nuts, drinking-vessels, and
+other articles of daily use. Only the stone axes are too valuable to be
+thus sacrificed. Over the grave is erected a rude hut in which the
+widower, if the deceased was a married woman, remains for a time in
+seclusion. A widow on the death of her husband remains in the house.
+Widow and widower may not shew themselves in public until they have
+prepared their mourning costume. The widower wears a black hat made of
+bark, cords round his neck, wicker work on his arms and feet, and a torn
+old bracelet of his wife in a bag on his breast. A widow is completely
+swathed in nets, one over the other, and she carries about with her the
+loincloth of her deceased husband. The souls of the dead dwell in a
+subterranean region called _lamboam_, and their life there seems to
+resemble life here on earth; but the ideas of the people on the subject
+are very vague.[426]
+
+[Sidenote: Initiation of young men among the Bukaua. Lads at
+circumcision supposed to be swallowed by a monster.]
+
+The customs and beliefs of the Bukaua in regard to the initiation of
+young men are practically identical with those of their neighbours the
+Yabim. Indeed the initiatory ceremonies are performed by the tribes
+jointly, now in the territory of the Bukaua, now in the territory of the
+Yabim, or in the land of the Kai, a tribe of mountaineers, or again in
+the neighbouring Tami islands. The intervals between the ceremonies vary
+from ten to eighteen years.[427] The central feature of the initiatory
+rites is the circumcision of the novices. It is given out that the lads
+are swallowed by a ferocious monster called a _balum_, who, however, is
+induced by the sacrifice of many pigs to vomit them up again. In spewing
+them out of his maw he bites or scratches them, and the wound so
+inflicted is circumcision. This explanation of the rite is fobbed off on
+the women, who more or less believe it and weep accordingly when their
+sons are led away to be committed to the monster's jaws. And when the
+time for the ceremony is approaching, the fond mothers busy themselves
+with rearing and fattening young pigs, so that they may be able with
+them to redeem their loved ones from the belly of the ravenous beast;
+for he must have a pig for every boy. When a lad bleeds to death from
+the effect of the operation, he is secretly buried, and his sorrowful
+mother is told that the monster swallowed him and refused to bring him
+up again. What really happens is that the youths are shut up for several
+months in a house specially built for the purpose in the village. During
+their seclusion they are under the charge of guardians, usually two
+young men, and must observe strictly a rule of fasting and chastity.
+When they are judged to be ready to undergo the rite, they are led forth
+and circumcised in front of the house amid a prodigious uproar made by
+the swinging of bull-roarers. The noise is supposed to be the voice of
+the monster who swallows and vomits up the novice at circumcision. The
+bull-roarer as well as the monster bears the name of _balum_, and the
+building in which the novices are lodged before and after the operation
+is called the monster's house (_balumslum_). After they have been
+circumcised the lads remain in the house for several months till their
+wounds are healed; then, painted and bedizened with all the ornaments
+that can be collected, they are brought back and restored to their
+joyful mothers. Women must vacate the village for a long time while the
+initiatory ceremonies are being performed.[428]
+
+[Sidenote: Novices at circumcision supposed to be killed and then
+restored to a new and higher life.]
+
+The meaning of the whole rite, as I pointed out in dealing with the
+similar initiatory rite of the Yabim, appears to be that the novices are
+killed and then restored to a new and better life; for after their
+initiation they rank no longer as boys but as full-grown men, entitled
+to all the privileges of manhood and citizenship, if we can speak of
+such a thing as citizenship among the savages of New Guinea. This
+interpretation of the rite is supported by the notable fact that the
+Bukaua, like the Yabim, give the name of _balum_ to the souls of the
+dead as well as to the mythical monster and to the bull-roarer; this
+shews how intimately the three things are associated in their minds.
+Indeed not only is the bull-roarer in general associated with the souls
+of the dead by a community of name, but among the Bukaua each particular
+bull-roarer bears in addition the name of a particular dead man and
+varies in dignity and importance with the dignity and importance of the
+deceased person whom it represents. The most venerated of all are
+curiously carved and have been handed down for generations; they bear
+the names of famous warriors or magicians of old and are supposed to
+reproduce the personal peculiarities of the celebrated originals in
+their shape and tones. And there are smaller bull-roarers which emit
+shriller notes and are thought to represent the shrill-voiced wives of
+the ancient heroes.[429]
+
+[Sidenote: The Kai tribe of Saddle Mountain in German New Guinea. The
+land of the Kai. Their mode of cultivation. Their villages.]
+
+The Bukaua and the Yabim, the two tribes with which I have been dealing
+in this and the last lecture, inhabit, as I have said, the coast about
+Finsch Harbour and speak a Melanesian language. We now pass from them to
+the consideration of another people, belonging to a different stock and
+speaking a different language, who inhabit the rugged and densely wooded
+mountains inland from Finsch Harbour. Their neighbours on the coast call
+these mountaineers by the name of Kai, a word which signifies forest or
+inland in opposition to the seashore; and this name of the tribe we may
+adopt, following the example of a German missionary, Mr. Ch. Keysser,
+who has laboured among them for more than eleven years and has given us
+an excellent description of their customs and beliefs. His account
+applies particularly to the natives of what is called Saddle Mountain,
+the part of the range which advances nearest to the coast and rises to
+the height of about three thousand feet. It is a rough, broken country,
+cleft by many ravines and covered with forest, bush, or bamboo thickets;
+though here and there at rare intervals some brown patches mark the
+clearings which the sparse inhabitants have made for the purpose of
+cultivation. Water is plentiful. Springs gush forth everywhere in the
+glens and valleys, and rushing streams of crystal-clear water pour down
+the mountain sides, and in the clefts of the hills are lonely tarns, the
+undisturbed haunts of wild ducks and other water fowl. During the wet
+season, which extends from June to August, the rain descends in sheets
+and the mountains are sometimes covered for weeks together with so thick
+a mist that all prospect is cut off at the distance of a hundred yards.
+The natives are then loth to leave their huts and will spend the day
+crouching over a fire. They are a shorter and sturdier race than the
+tribes on the coast; the expression of their face is less frank and
+agreeable, and their persons are very much dirtier. They belong to the
+aboriginal Papuan stock, whereas the Yabim and Bukaua on the coast are
+probably immigrants from beyond the sea, who have driven the indigenous
+population back into the mountains.[430] Their staple foods are taro and
+yams, which they grow in their fields. A field is cultivated for only
+one year at a time; it is then allowed to lie fallow and is soon
+overgrown with rank underwood. Six or eight years may elapse before it
+is again cleared and brought under cultivation. Game and fish abound in
+the woods and waters, and the Kai make free use of these natural
+resources. They keep pigs and dogs, and eat the flesh of both. Pork is
+indeed a favourite viand, figuring largely in the banquets which are
+held at the circumcision festivals.[431] The people live in small
+villages, each village comprising from two to six houses. The houses are
+raised on piles and the walls are usually constructed of pandanus
+leaves, though many natives now make them of boards. After eighteen
+months or two years the houses are so rotten and tumble-down that the
+village is deserted and a new one built on another site. Assembly-houses
+are erected only for the circumcision ceremonies, and the bull-roarers
+used on these occasions are kept in them. Husband and wife live
+together, often two couples in one hut; but each family has its own side
+of the house and its own fireplace. In times of insecurity the Kai used
+to build their huts for safety among the spreading boughs of great
+trees. A whole village, consisting of three or four huts, might thus be
+quartered on a single tree. Of late years, with the peace and protection
+for life introduced by German rule, these tree-houses have gone out of
+fashion.[432]
+
+[Sidenote: Observations of a German missionary on the animistic beliefs
+of the Kai.]
+
+After describing the manners and customs of the Kai people at some
+length, the German missionary, who knows them intimately, proceeds to
+give us a very valuable account of their old native religion or
+superstition. He prefaces his account with some observations, the fruit
+of long experience, which deserve to be laid to heart by all who attempt
+to penetrate into the inner life, the thoughts, the feelings, the
+motives of savages. As his remarks are very germane to the subject of
+these lectures, I will translate them. He says: "In the preceding
+chapters I have sketched the daily life of the Kai people. But I have
+not attempted to set forth the reasons for their conduct, which is often
+very peculiar and unintelligible. The explanation of that conduct lies
+in the animistic view which the Papuan takes of the world. It must be
+most emphatically affirmed that nobody can judge the native aright who
+has not gained an insight into what we may call his religious opinions.
+The native must be described as very religious, although his ideas do
+not coincide with ours. His feelings, thoughts, and will are most
+intimately connected with his belief in souls. With that belief he is
+born, he has sucked it in with his mother's milk, and from the
+standpoint of that belief he regards the things and occurrences that
+meet him in life; by that belief he regulates his behaviour. An
+objective way of looking at events is unknown to him; everything is
+brought by him into relation to his belief, and by it he seeks to
+explain everything that to him seems strange and rare."[433] "The
+labyrinth of animistic customs at first sight presents an appearance of
+wild confusion to him who seeks to penetrate into them and reduce them
+to order; but on closer inspection he will soon recognise certain
+guiding lines. These guiding lines are the laws of animism, which have
+passed into the flesh and blood of the Papuan and influence his thought
+and speech, his acts and his omissions, his love and hate, in short his
+whole life and death. When once we have discovered these laws, the whole
+of the superstitious nonsense falls into an orderly system which compels
+us to regard it with a certain respect that increases in proportion to
+the contempt in which we had previously held the people. We need not
+wonder, moreover, that the laws of animism partially correspond to
+general laws of nature."[434]
+
+[Sidenote: The essential rationality of the savage.]
+
+Thus according to Mr. Keysser, who has no theory to maintain and merely
+gives us in this passage the result of long personal observation, the
+Kai savages are thinking, reasoning men, whose conduct, however strange
+and at first sight unintelligible it may appear to us, is really based
+on a definite religious or if you please superstitious view of the
+world. It is true that their theory as well as their practice differs
+widely from ours; but it would be false and unjust to deny that they
+have a theory and that on the whole their practice squares with it.
+Similar testimony is borne to other savage races by men who have lived
+long among them and observed them closely;[435] and on the strength of
+such testimony I think we may lay it down as a well-established truth
+that savages in general, so far as they are known to us, have certain
+more or less definite theories, whether we call them religious or
+philosophical, by which they regulate their conduct, and judged by which
+their acts, however absurd they may seem to the civilised man, are
+really both rational and intelligible. Hence it is, in my opinion, a
+profound mistake hastily to conclude that because the behaviour of the
+savage does not agree with our notions of what is reasonable, natural,
+and proper, it must therefore necessarily be illogical, the result of
+blind impulse rather than of deliberate thought and calculation. No
+doubt the savage like the civilised man does often act purely on
+impulse; his passions overmaster his reason, and sweep it away before
+them. He is probably indeed much more impulsive, much more liable to be
+whirled about by gusts of emotion than we are; yet it would be unfair to
+judge his life as a whole by these occasional outbursts rather than by
+its general tenour, which to those who know him from long observation
+reveals a groundwork of logic and reason resembling our own in its
+operations, though differing from ours in the premises from which it
+sets out. I think it desirable to emphasise the rational basis of savage
+life because it has been the fashion of late years with some writers to
+question or rather deny it. According to them, if I understand them
+aright, the savage acts first and invents his reasons, generally very
+absurd reasons, for so doing afterwards. Significantly enough, the
+writers who argue in favour of the essential irrationality of savage
+conduct have none of them, I believe, any personal acquaintance with
+savages. Their conclusions are based not on observation but on purely
+theoretical deductions, a most precarious foundation on which to erect a
+science of man or indeed of anything. As such, they cannot be weighed in
+the balance against the positive testimony of many witnesses who have
+lived for years with the savage and affirm emphatically the logical
+basis which underlies and explains his seeming vagaries. At all events I
+for one have no hesitation in accepting the evidence of such men to
+matters of fact with which they are acquainted, and I unhesitatingly
+reject all theories which directly contradict that evidence. If there
+ever has been any race of men who invariably acted first and thought
+afterwards, I can only say that in the course of my reading and
+observation I have never met with any trace of them, and I am apt to
+suppose that, if they ever existed anywhere but in the imagination of
+bookish dreamers, their career must have been an exceedingly short one,
+since in the struggle for existence they would surely succumb to
+adversaries who tempered and directed the blind fury of combat with at
+least a modicum of reason and sense. The myth of the illogical or
+prelogical savage may safely be relegated to that museum of learned
+absurdities and abortions which speculative anthropology is constantly
+enriching with fresh specimens of misapplied ingenuity and wasted
+industry. But enough of these fantasies. Let us return to facts.
+
+[Sidenote: The Kai theory of the soul.]
+
+The life of the Kai people, according to Mr. Keysser, is dominated by
+their conception of the soul. That conception differs greatly from and
+is very much more extensive than ours. The Kai regards his reflection
+and his shadow as his soul or parts of it; hence you should not tread on
+a man's shadow for fear of injuring his soul. The soul likewise dwells
+in his heart, for he feels it beating. Hence if you give a native a
+friendly poke in the ribs, he protests, saying, "Don't poke me so; you
+might drive my soul out of my body, and then I should die." The soul
+moreover resides in the eye, where you may see it twinkling; when it
+departs, the eye grows dim and vacant. Moreover, the soul is in the foot
+as much as in the head; it lurks even in the spittle and the other
+bodily excretions. The soul in fact pervades the body just as warmth
+does; everything that a man touches he infects, so to say, with his
+soul; that mysterious entity exists in the very sound of his voice. The
+sorcerer catches a man's soul by his magic, shuts it up tight, and
+destroys it. Then the man dies. He dies because the sorcerer has killed
+his soul. Yet the Kai believes, whether consistently or not, that the
+soul of the dead man continues to live. He talks to it, he makes
+offerings to it, he seeks to win its favour in order that he may have
+luck in the chase; he fears its ill-will and anger; he gives it food to
+eat, liquor to drink, tobacco to smoke, and betel to chew. What could a
+reasonable ghost ask for more?[436]
+
+[Sidenote: Two kinds of human souls.]
+
+Thus, according to Mr. Keysser, whose exposition I am simply
+reproducing, the Kai believes not in one nor yet in many souls belonging
+to each individual; he implicitly assumes that there are two different
+kinds of souls. One of these is the soul which survives the body at
+death; in all respects it resembles the man himself as he lived on
+earth, except that it has no body. It is not indeed absolutely
+incorporeal, but it is greatly shrunken and attenuated by death. That is
+why the souls of the dead are so angry with the living; they repine at
+their own degraded condition; they envy the full-blooded life which the
+living enjoy and which the dead have lost. The second kind of soul is
+distinguished by Mr. Keysser from the former as a spiritual essence or
+soul-stuff, which pervades the body as sap pervades the tree, and which
+diffuses itself like corporeal warmth over everything with which the
+body is brought into contact.[437] In these lectures we are concerned
+chiefly with the former kind of soul, which is believed to survive the
+death of the body, and which answers much more nearly than the second to
+the popular European conception of the soul. Accordingly in what follows
+we shall confine our attention mainly to it.
+
+[Sidenote: Death thought by the Kai to be commonly caused by sorcery.]
+
+Like many other savages, the Kai do not believe in the possibility of a
+natural death; they think that everybody dies through the maleficent
+arts of sorcerers or ghosts. Even in the case of old people, we are
+told, they assume the cause of death to be sorcery, and to sorcery all
+misfortunes are ascribed. If a man falls on the path and wounds himself
+to death, as often happens, on the jagged stump of a bamboo, the natives
+conclude that he was bewitched. The way in which the sorcerer brought
+about the catastrophe was this. He obtained some object which was
+infected with the soul-stuff or spiritual essence of his victim; he
+stuck a pile in the ground, he spread the soul-stuff on the pile; then
+he pretended to wound himself on the pile and to groan with pain.
+Anybody can see for himself that by a natural and necessary
+concatenation of causes this compelled the poor fellow to stumble over
+that jagged bamboo stump and to perish miserably. Again, take the case
+of a hunter in the forest who is charged and ripped up by a wild boar.
+On a superficial view of the circumstances it might perhaps occur to you
+that the cause of death was the boar. But you would assuredly be
+mistaken. The real cause of death was again a sorcerer, who pounded up
+the soul-stuff of his victim with a boar's tooth. Again, suppose that a
+man is bitten by a serpent and dies. A shallow rationalist might say
+that the man died of the bite; but the Kai knows better. He is aware
+that what really killed him was the sorcerer who took a pinch of his
+victim's soul and bunged it up tight in a tube along with the sting of a
+snake. Similarly, if a woman dies in childbed, or if a man hangs
+himself, the cause of death is still a sorcerer operating with the
+appropriate means and gestures. Thus to make a man hang himself all that
+the sorcerer has to do is to get a scrap of his victim's soul--and the
+smallest scrap is quite enough for his purpose, it may be a mere shred
+or speck of soul adhering to a hair of the man's head, to a drop of his
+sweat, or to a crumb of his food,--I say that the sorcerer need only
+obtain a tiny little bit of his victim's soul, clap it in a tube, set
+the tube dangling at the end of a string, and go through a pantomime of
+gurgling, goggling and so forth, like a man in the last stage of
+strangulation, and his victim is thereby physically compelled to put his
+neck in the noose and hang himself in good earnest.[438]
+
+[Sidenote: Danger incurred by the sorcerer.]
+
+Where these views of sorcery prevail, it is no wonder that the sorcerer
+is an unpopular character. He naturally therefore shrinks from publicity
+and hides his somewhat lurid light under a bushel. Not to put too fine a
+point on it, he carries his life in his hand and may be knocked on the
+head at any moment without the tedious formality of a trial. Once his
+professional reputation is established, all the deaths in the
+neighbourhood may be set down at his door. If he gets wind of a plot to
+assassinate him, he may stave off his doom for a while by soothing the
+angry passions of his enemies with presents, but sooner or later his
+fate is sealed.[439]
+
+[Sidenote: Many hurts and maladies attributed by the Kai to the action
+of ghosts. In other cases the sickness is traced to witchcraft.
+Capturing a lost soul.]
+
+However, the Kai savage is far from attributing all deaths without
+distinction to sorcerers.[440] In many hurts and maladies he detects the
+cold clammy hand of a ghost. If a man, for example, wounds himself in
+the forest, perhaps in the pursuit of a wild beast, he may imagine that
+he has been speared or clubbed by a malignant ghost. And when a person
+falls ill, the first thing to do is naturally to ascertain the cause of
+the illness in order that it may be treated properly. In all such
+enquiries, Mr. Keysser tells us, suspicion first falls on the ghosts;
+they are looked upon as even worse than the sorcerers.[441] So when a
+doctor is called in to see a patient, the only question with him is
+whether the sickness is caused by a sorcerer or a ghost. To decide this
+nice point he takes a boiled taro over which he has pronounced a charm.
+This he bites, and if he finds a small stone in the fruit, he decides
+that ghosts are the cause of the malady; but if on the other hand he
+detects a minute roll of leaves, he knows that the sufferer is
+bewitched. In the latter case the obvious remedy is to discover the
+sorcerer and to induce him, for an adequate consideration, to give up
+the magic tube in which he has bottled up a portion of the sick man's
+soul. If, however, the magician turns a deaf ear alike to the voice of
+pity and the allurement of gain, the resources of the physician are not
+yet exhausted. He now produces his whip or scourge for souls. This
+valuable instrument consists, like a common whip, of a handle with a
+lash attached to it, but what gives it the peculiar qualities which
+distinguish it from all other whips is a small packet tied to the end of
+the lash. The packet contains a certain herb, and the sick man and his
+friends must all touch it in order to impregnate it with the volatile
+essence of their souls. Armed with this potent implement the doctor goes
+by night into the depth of the forest; for the darkness of night and the
+solitude of the woods are necessary for the success of the delicate
+operation which this good physician of souls has now to perform. Finding
+himself alone he whistles for the lost soul of the sufferer, and if only
+the sorcerer by his infernal craft has not yet brought it to death's
+door, the soul appears at the sound of the whistle; for it is strongly
+attracted by the soul-stuff of its friends in the packet. But the doctor
+has still to catch it, a feat which is not so easily accomplished as
+might be supposed. It is now that the whip of souls comes into play.
+Suddenly the doctor heaves up his arm and lashes out at the truant soul
+with all his might. If only he hits it, the business is done, the soul
+is captured, the doctor carries it back to the house in triumph, and
+restores it to the body of the poor sick man, who necessarily
+recovers.[442]
+
+[Sidenote: Extracting ghosts from a sick man.]
+
+But suppose that the result of the diagnosis is different, and that on
+mature consideration the doctor should decide that a ghost and not a
+sorcerer is at the bottom of the mischief. The question then naturally
+arises whether the sick man has not of late been straying on haunted
+ground and infected himself with the very dangerous soul-stuff or
+spiritual essence of the dead. If he remembers to have done so, some
+leaves are fetched from the place in the forest where the mishap
+occurred, and with them the whole body of the sufferer or the wound, as
+the case may be, is stroked or brushed down. The healing virtue of this
+procedure is obvious. The ghosts who are vexing the patient are
+attracted by the familiar smell of the leaves which come from their old
+home; and yielding in a moment of weakness to the soft emotions excited
+by the perfume they creep out of the body of the sick man and into the
+leaves. Quick as thought the doctor now whisks the leaves away with the
+ghosts in them; he belabours them with a cudgel, he hangs them up in the
+smoke, or he throws them into the fire. Such powerful disinfectants have
+their natural results; if the ghosts are not absolutely destroyed they
+are at least disarmed, and the sick is made whole.
+
+[Sidenote: Scraping ghosts from the patient's body.]
+
+Another equally effective cure for sickness caused by ghosts is this.
+You take a stout stick, cleave it down the middle so that the two ends
+remain entire, and give it to two men to hold. Then the sick man pokes
+his head through the cleft; after that you rub him with the stick from
+the crown of his head to the soles of his feet. In this way you
+obviously scrape off the bloodsucking ghosts who are clinging like flies
+or mosquitoes to his person, and having thus transferred them to the
+cleft stick you throw it away or otherwise destroy it. The cure is now
+complete, and if the patient does not recover, he cannot reasonably
+blame the doctor, who has done all that humanly speaking could be done
+to bring back the bloom of health to the poor sick man.[443]
+
+[Sidenote: Extravagant demonstrations of grief at the death of a sick
+man.]
+
+If, however, the sick man obstinately persists in dying, there is a
+great uproar in the village. For the fear of his ghost has now fallen
+like a thunderclap on all the people. His disembodied spirit is believed
+to be hovering in the air, seeing everything that is done, hearing every
+word that is spoken, and woe to the unlucky wight who does not display a
+proper degree of sorrow for the irreparable loss that has just befallen
+the community. Accordingly shrieks of despair begin to resound, and
+crocodile tears to flow in cataracts. The whole population assemble and
+give themselves up to the most frantic demonstrations of grief. Cries
+are raised on all sides, "Why must he die?" "Wherefore did they bewitch
+him?" "Those wicked, wicked men!" "I'll do for them!" "I'll hew them in
+pieces!" "I'll destroy their crops!" "I'll fell all their palm-trees!"
+"I'll stick all their pigs!" "O brother, why did you leave me?" "O
+friend, how can I live without you?" To make good these threats one man
+will be seen prancing wildly about and stabbing with a spear at the
+invisible sorcerers; another catches up a cudgel and at one blow shivers
+a water-pot of the deceased into atoms, or rushes out like one demented
+and lays a palm-tree level with the ground. Some fling themselves
+prostrate beside the corpse and sob as if their very hearts would break.
+They take the dead man by the hand, they stroke him, they straighten out
+the poor feet which are already growing cold. They coo to him softly,
+they lift up the languid head, and then lay it gently down. Then in a
+frenzy of grief one of them will leap to his feet, shriek, bellow, stamp
+on the floor, grapple with the roof beams, shake the walls, as if he
+would pull the house down, and finally hurl himself on the ground and
+roll over and over howling as if his distress was more than he could
+endure. Another looks wildly about him. He sees a knife. He grasps it.
+His teeth are set, his mind is made up. "Why need he die?" he cries,
+"he, my friend, with whom I had all things in common, with whom I ate
+out of the same dish?" Then there is a quick movement of the knife, and
+down he falls. But he is not dead. He has only slit the flap of one of
+his ears, and the trickling blood bedabbles his body. Meantime with the
+hoarse cries of the men are mingled the weeping and wailing, the shrill
+screams and lamentations of the women; while above all the din and
+uproar rises the booming sound of the shell trumpets blown to carry the
+tidings of death to all the villages in the neighbourhood. But gradually
+the wild tumult dies away into silence. Grief or the simulation of it
+has exhausted itself: the people grow calm; they sit down, they smoke or
+chew betel, while some engage in the last offices of attention to the
+dead.[444]
+
+[Sidenote: Hypocritical character of these demonstrations, which are
+intended to deceive the ghost.]
+
+A civilised observer who witnessed such a scene of boisterous
+lamentation, but did not know the natives well, might naturally set down
+all these frantic outbursts to genuine sorrow, and might enlarge
+accordingly on the affectionate nature of savages, who are thus cut to
+the heart by the death of any one of their acquaintance. But the
+missionary who knows them better assures us that most of these
+expressions of mourning and despair are a mere blind to deceive and
+soothe the dreaded ghost of the deceased into a comfortable persuasion
+that he is fondly loved and sadly missed by his surviving relatives and
+friends. This view of the essential hypocrisy of the lamentations is
+strongly confirmed by the threats which sick people will sometimes utter
+to their attendants. "If you don't take better care of me," a man will
+sometimes say, "and if you don't do everything you possibly can to
+preserve my valuable life, my ghost will serve you out." That is why
+friends and relations are so punctilious in paying visits of respect and
+condolence to the sick. Sometimes the last request which a dying man
+addresses to his kinsfolk is that they will kill this or that sorcerer
+who has killed him; and he enforces the injunction by threats of the
+terrible things he will do to them in his disembodied state if they fail
+to avenge his death on his imaginary murderer. As all the relatives of a
+dead man stand in fear of his ghost, the body may not be buried until
+all of them have had an opportunity of paying their respects to it. If,
+as sometimes happens, a corpse is interred before a relative can arrive
+from a distance, he will on arrival break out into reproaches and
+upbraidings against the grave-diggers for exposing him to the wrath of
+the departed spirit.[445]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs of the Kai. Preservation of the
+lower jawbone.]
+
+When all the relations and friends have assembled and testified their
+sorrow, the body is buried on the second or third day after death. The
+grave is usually dug under the house and is so shallow that even when it
+has been closed the stench is often very perceptible. The ornaments
+which were placed on the body when it was laid out are removed before it
+is lowered into the grave, and the dead takes his last rest wrapt in a
+simple leaf-mat. Often a dying man expresses a wish not to be buried. In
+that case his corpse, tightly bandaged, is deposited in a corner of the
+house, and the products of decomposition are allowed to drain through a
+tube into the ground. When they have ceased to run, the bundle is opened
+and the bones taken out and buried, except the lower jawbone, which is
+preserved, sometimes along with one of the lower arm bones. The lower
+jawbone reminds the possessor of the duty of blood revenge which he owes
+to the deceased, and which the dying man may have inculcated on him with
+his last breath. The lower arm bone brings luck in the chase, especially
+if the departed relative was a mighty hunter. However, if the hunters
+have a long run of bad luck, they conclude that the ghost has departed
+to the under world and accordingly bury the lower arm bone and the lower
+jawbone with the rest of the skeleton. The length of the period of
+mourning is similarly determined by the good or bad fortune of the
+huntsmen. If the ghost provides them with game in abundance for a long
+time after his death, the days of mourning are proportionately extended;
+but when the game grows scarce or fails altogether, the mourning comes
+to an end and the memory of the deceased soon fades away.[446] The
+savage is a thoroughly practical man and is not such a fool as to waste
+his sorrow over a ghost who gives him nothing in return. Nothing for
+nothing is his principle. His relations to the dead stand on a strictly
+commercial basis.
+
+[Sidenote: Mourning costume. Widows strangled to accompany their dead
+husbands.]
+
+The mourning costume consists of strings round the neck, bracelets of
+reed on the arms, and a cylindrical hat of bark on the head. A widow is
+swathed in nets. The intention of the costume is to signify to the ghost
+the sympathy which the mourner feels for him in his disembodied state.
+If the man in his lifetime was wont to crouch shivering over the fire, a
+little fire will be kept up for a time at the foot of the grave in order
+to warm his homeless spirit.[447] The widow or widower has to discharge
+the disagreeable duty of living day and night for several weeks in a
+hovel built directly over the grave. Not unfrequently the lot of a widow
+is much harder. At her own request she is sometimes strangled and buried
+with her husband in the grave, in order that her soul may accompany his
+on the journey to the other world. The other relations have no interest
+in encouraging the woman to sacrifice herself, rather the contrary; but
+if she insists they fear to balk her, lest they should offend the ghost
+of her husband, who would punish them in many ways for keeping his wife
+from him. But even such voluntary sacrifices, if we may believe Mr. Ch.
+Keysser, are dictated rather by a selfish calculation than by an impulse
+of disinterested affection. He mentions the case of a man named Jabu,
+both of whose wives chose thus to attend their husband in death. The
+deceased was an industrious man, a skilful hunter and farmer, who
+provided his wives with abundance of food. As such men are believed to
+work hard also in the other world, tilling fields and killing game just
+as here, the widows thought they could not do better than follow him as
+fast as possible to the spirit land, since they had no prospect of
+getting such another husband here on earth. "How firmly convinced," adds
+the missionary admiringly, "must these people be of the reality of
+another world when they sacrifice their earthly existence, not for the
+sake of a better life hereafter, but merely in order to be no worse off
+there than they have been on earth." And he adds that this consideration
+explains why no man ever chooses to be strangled at the death of his
+wife. The labour market in the better land is apparently not recruited
+from the ranks of women.[448]
+
+[Sidenote: House or village deserted after a death.]
+
+The house in which anybody has died is deserted, because the ghost of
+the dead is believed to haunt it and make it unsafe at night. If the
+deceased was a chief or a man of importance, the whole village is
+abandoned and a new one built on another site.[449]
+
+[Footnote 415: Stefan Lehner, "Bukaua," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. (Berlin, 1911) pp. 395-485.]
+
+[Footnote 416: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 399, 433 _sq._, 437 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 417: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 399.]
+
+[Footnote 418: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 414.]
+
+[Footnote 419: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 466, 468.]
+
+[Footnote 420: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 469.]
+
+[Footnote 421: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 462 _sqq._, 466, 467, 471
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 422: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 462.]
+
+[Footnote 423: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 444 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 424: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 434 _sqq._; compare _id._, pp.
+478 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 425: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 462.]
+
+[Footnote 426: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 430, 470, 472 _sq._, 474 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 427: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ p. 403.]
+
+[Footnote 428: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 402-410.]
+
+[Footnote 429: S. Lehner, _op. cit._ pp. 410-414.]
+
+[Footnote 430: Ch. Keysser, "Aus dem Leben der Kaileute," in R.
+Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_, iii. 3-6.]
+
+[Footnote 431: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 12 _sq._, 17-20.]
+
+[Footnote 432: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 9-12.]
+
+[Footnote 433: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 111.]
+
+[Footnote 434: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 113.]
+
+[Footnote 435: Compare Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of
+Borneo_ (London, 1912), ii. 221 _sq._: "It has often been attempted to
+exhibit the mental life of savage peoples as profoundly different from
+our own; to assert that they act from motives, and reach conclusions by
+means of mental processes, so utterly different from our own motives and
+processes that we cannot hope to interpret or understand their behaviour
+unless we can first, by some impossible or at least by some hitherto
+undiscovered method, learn the nature of these mysterious motives and
+processes. These attempts have recently been renewed in influential
+quarters. If these views were applied to the savage peoples of the
+interior of Borneo, we should characterise them as fanciful delusions
+natural to the anthropologist who has spent all the days of his life in
+a stiff collar and a black coat upon the well-paved ways of civilised
+society. We have no hesitation in saying that, the more intimately one
+becomes acquainted with these pagan tribes, the more fully one realises
+the close similarity of their mental processes to one's own. Their
+primary impulses and emotions seem to be in all respects like our own.
+It is true that they are very unlike the typical civilised man of some
+of the older philosophers, whose every action proceeded from a nice and
+logical calculation of the algebraic sum of pleasures and pains to be
+derived from alternative lines of conduct; but we ourselves are equally
+unlike that purely mythical personage. The Kayan or the Iban often acts
+impulsively in ways which by no means conduce to further his best
+interests or deeper purposes; but so do we also. He often reaches
+conclusions by processes that cannot be logically justified; but so do
+we also. He often holds, and upon successive occasions acts upon,
+beliefs that are logically inconsistent with one another; but so do we
+also." For further testimonies to the reasoning powers of savages, which
+it would be superfluous to affirm if it were not at present a fashion
+with some theorists to deny, see _Taboo and the Perils of the Soul_, pp.
+420 _sqq._ And on the tendency of the human mind in general, not of the
+savage mind in particular, calmly to acquiesce in inconsistent and even
+contradictory conclusions, I may refer to a note in _Adonis, Attis,
+Osiris_, Second Edition, p. 4. But indeed to observe such contradictions
+in practice the philosopher need not quit his own study.]
+
+[Footnote 436: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 111 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 437: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 112.]
+
+[Footnote 438: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 140. As to the magical tubes
+in which the sorcerer seals up some part of his victim's soul, see
+_id._, p. 135.]
+
+[Footnote 439: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 140 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 440: Mr. Keysser indeed affirms that in the mind of the Kai
+sorcery "is regarded as the cause of all deaths" (_op. cit._ p. 102),
+and again that "all men without exception die in consequence of the
+baneful acts of these sorcerers and their accomplices" (p. 134); and
+again that "even in the case of old people they assume sorcery to be the
+cause of death; to sorcery, too, all misfortunes whatever are ascribed"
+(p. 140). But that these statements are exaggerations seems to follow
+from Mr. Keysser's own account of the wounds, sicknesses, and deaths
+which these savages attribute to ghosts and not to sorcerers.]
+
+[Footnote 441: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 141.]
+
+[Footnote 442: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 133 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 443: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 141 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 444: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 80 _sq._, 142.]
+
+[Footnote 445: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 142.]
+
+[Footnote 446: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 82, 83.]
+
+[Footnote 447: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 82, 142 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 448: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 83 _sq._, 143.]
+
+[Footnote 449: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 83.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XIII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN NEW GUINEA
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to appease ghosts.]
+
+In the last lecture I gave you some account of the fear and awe which
+the Kai of German New Guinea entertain for the spirits of the dead.
+Believing that the ghost is endowed with all the qualities and faculties
+which distinguished the man in his lifetime, they naturally dread most
+the ghosts of warlike, cruel, violent, and passionate men, and take the
+greatest pains to soothe their anger and win their favour. For that
+purpose they give the departed spirit all sorts of things to take with
+him to the far country. And in order that he may have the use of them it
+is necessary to smash or otherwise spoil them. Thus the spear that is
+given him must be broken, the pot must be shivered, the bag must be
+torn, the palm-tree must be cut down. Fruits are offered to the ghost by
+dashing them in pieces or hanging a bunch of them over the grave.
+Objects of value, such as boars' tusks or dogs' teeth, are made over to
+him by being laid on the corpse; but the economical savage removes these
+precious things from the body at burial. All such offerings and
+sacrifices, we are told, are made simply out of fear of the ghost. It is
+no pleasure to a man to cut down a valuable palm-tree, which might have
+helped to nourish himself and his family for years; he does it only lest
+a worse thing should befall him at the hands of the departed
+spirit.[450]
+
+[Sidenote: Mode of discovering the sorcerer who caused a death.]
+
+But the greatest service that the Kai can render to a dead man is to
+take vengeance on the sorcerer who caused his death by witchcraft. The
+first thing is to discover the villain, and in the search for him the
+ghost obligingly assists his surviving kinsfolk. Sometimes, however, it
+is necessary to resort to a stratagem in order to secure his help. Thus,
+for example, one day while the ghost, blinded by the strong sunlight, is
+cowering in a dark corner or reposing at full length in the grave, his
+relatives will set up a low scaffold in a field, cover it with leaves,
+and pile up over it a mass of the field fruits which belonged to the
+dead man, so that the whole erection may appear to the eye of the
+unsuspecting ghost a heap of taro, yams, and so forth, and nothing more.
+But before the sun goes down, two or three men steal out from the house,
+and ensconce themselves under the scaffold, where they are completely
+concealed by the piled-up fruits. When darkness has fallen, out comes
+the ghost and prowling about espies the heap of yams and taro. At sight
+of the devastation wrought in his field he flies into a passion, and
+curses and swears in the feeble wheezy whisper in which ghosts always
+speak. In the course of his fluent imprecations he expresses a wish that
+the miscreants who have wasted his substance may suffer so and so at the
+hands of the sorcerer. That is just what the men in hiding have been
+waiting for. No sooner do they hear the name of the sorcerer than they
+jump up with a great shout; the startled ghost takes to his heels; and
+all the people in the village come pouring out of the houses. Very glad
+they are to know that the murderer has been found out, and sooner or
+later they will have his blood.[451]
+
+[Sidenote: Another way of detecting the sorcerer.]
+
+Another mode of eliciting the requisite information from the ghost is
+this. In order to allow him to communicate freely with his mouldering
+body, his relations insert a tube through the earth of the grave down to
+the corpse; then they sprinkle powdered lime on the grave. At night the
+ghost comes along, picks up the powdered lime, and makes off in a bee
+line for the village where the sorcerer who bewitched him resides. On
+the way he drops some of the powder here and there, so that next
+morning, on the principle of the paper-chase, his relatives can trace
+his footsteps to the very door of his murderer. In many districts the
+people tie a packet of lime to the knee of a corpse so that his ghost
+may have it to hand when he wants it.[452]
+
+[Sidenote: Cross-questioning the ghost by means of fire.]
+
+But the favourite way of cross-questioning the ghost on subject of his
+decease is by means of fire. A few men go out before nightfall from the
+village and sit down in a row, one behind the other, on the path. The
+man in front has a leaf-mat drawn like a hood over his head and back in
+order that the ghost may not touch him from behind unawares. In his hand
+he holds a glowing coal and some tinder, and as he puts the one to the
+other he calls to the ghost, "Come, take, take, take; come, take, take,
+take," and so on. Meantime his mates behind him are reckoning up the
+names of all the men near and far who are suspected of sorcery, and a
+portion of the village youth have clambered up trees and are on the
+look-out for the ghost. If they do not see his body they certainly see
+his eye twinkling in the gloom, though the uninstructed European might
+easily mistake it for a glow-worm. No sooner do they catch sight of it
+than they bawl out, "Come hither, fetch the fire, and burn him who burnt
+thee." If the tinder blazes up at the name of a sorcerer, it is flung
+towards the village where the man in question dwells. And if at the same
+time a glow-worm is seen to move in the same direction, the people
+entertain no doubt that the ghost has appeared and fetched the soul of
+the fire.[453]
+
+[Sidenote: Necessity of destroying the sorcerer who caused a death.]
+
+In whichever way the author of the death may be detected, the avengers
+of blood set out for the village of the miscreant and seek to take his
+life. Almost all the wars between villages or tribes spring from such
+expeditions. The sorcerer or sorcerers must be extirpated, nay all their
+kith and kin must be destroyed root and branch, if the people are to
+live in peace and quiet. The ghost of the dead calls, nay clamours for
+vengeance, and if he does not get it, he will wreak his spite on his
+negligent relations. Not only will he give them no luck in the chase,
+but he will drive the wild swine into the fields to trample down and
+root up the crops, and he will do them every mischief in his power. If
+rain does not fall, so that the freshly planted root crops wither; or if
+sickness is rife, the people recognise in the calamity the wrath of the
+ghost, who can only be appeased by the slaughter of the wicked magician
+or of somebody else. Hence the avengers of blood often do not set out
+until a fresh death, an outbreak of sickness, failure in the chase, or
+some other misfortune reminds the living of the duty they owe to the
+dead. The Kai is not by nature warlike, and he might never go to war if
+it were not that he dreads the vengeance of ghosts more than the wrath
+of men.[454]
+
+[Sidenote: Slayers dread the ghosts of the slain.]
+
+If the expedition has been successful, if the enemy's village has been
+surprised and stormed, the men and old women butchered, and the young
+women taken prisoners, the warriors beat a hasty retreat with their
+booty in order to be safe at home, or at least in the shelter of a
+friendly village, before nightfall. Their reason for haste is the fear
+of being overtaken in the darkness by the ghosts of their slaughtered
+foes, who, powerless by day, are very dangerous and terrible by night.
+Restlessly through the hours of darkness these unquiet spirits follow
+like sleuth-hounds in the tracks of their retreating enemies, eager to
+come up with them and by contact with the bloodstained weapons of their
+slayers to recover the spiritual substance which they have lost. Not
+till they have done so can they find rest and peace. That is why the
+victors are careful not at first to bring back their weapons into the
+village but to hide them somewhere in the bushes at a safe distance.
+There they leave them for some days until the baffled ghosts may be
+supposed to have given up the chase and returned, sad and angry, to
+their mangled bodies in the charred ruins of their old home. The first
+night after the return of the warriors is always the most anxious time;
+all the villagers are then on the alert for fear of the ghosts; but if
+the night passes quietly, their terror gradually subsides and gives
+place to the dread of their surviving enemies.[455]
+
+[Sidenote: Seclusion of man-slayers from fear of their victims' ghosts.]
+
+As the victors in a raid are supposed to have more or less of the
+soul-stuff or spiritual essence of their slain foes adhering to their
+persons, none of their friends will venture to touch them for some time
+after their return to the village. Everybody avoids them and goes
+carefully out of their way. If during this time any of the villagers
+suffers from a pain in his stomach, he thinks that he must have
+inadvertently sat down where one of the warriors had sat before him. If
+somebody endures the pangs of toothache, he makes sure that he must have
+eaten a fruit which had been touched by one of the slayers. All the
+refuse of the meals of these gallant men must be most carefully put away
+lest a pig should devour it; for if it did do so, the animal would
+certainly die, which would be a serious loss to the owner. Hence when
+the warriors have satisfied their hunger, any food that remains over is
+burnt or buried. The fighting men themselves are not very seriously
+incommoded, or at all events endangered, by the ghosts of their victims;
+for they have taken the precaution to disinfect themselves by the sap of
+a certain creeper, which, if it does not render them absolutely immune
+to ghostly influence, at least fortifies their constitution to a very
+considerable extent.[456]
+
+[Sidenote: Feigned indignation of a man who has connived at the murder
+of a relative.]
+
+Sometimes, instead of sending forth a band of warriors to ravage, burn,
+and slaughter the whole male population of the village in which the
+wicked sorcerer resides, the people of one village will come to a secret
+understanding with the people of the sorcerer's village to have the
+miscreant quietly put out of the way. A hint is given to the scoundrel's
+next of kin, it may be his brother, son, or nephew, that if he will only
+wink at the slaughter of his obnoxious relative, he will receive a
+handsome compensation from the slayers. Should he privately accept the
+offer, he is most careful to conceal his connivance at the deed of
+blood, lest he should draw down on his head the wrath of his murdered
+kinsman's ghost. So, when the deed is done and the murder is out, he
+works himself up into a state of virtuous sorrow and indignation, covers
+his head with the leaves of a certain plant, and chanting a dirge in
+tones of heart-rending grief, marches straight to the village of the
+murderers. There, on the public square, surrounded by an attentive
+audience, he opens the floodgates of his eloquence and pours forth the
+torrent of an aching heart. "You have slain my kinsman," says he, "you
+are wicked men! How could you kill so good a man, who conferred so many
+benefits on me in his lifetime? I knew nothing of the plot. Had I had an
+inkling of it, I would have foiled it. How can I now avenge his death? I
+have no property with which to hire men of war to go and punish his
+murderers. Yet in spite of everything my murdered kinsman will not
+believe in my innocence! He will be angry with me, he will pay me out,
+he will do me all the harm he can. Therefore do you declare openly
+whether I had any share whatever in his death, and come and strew lime
+on my head in order that he may convince himself of my innocence." This
+appeal of injured innocence meets with a ready response. The people dust
+the leaves on his head with powdered lime; and so, decorated with the
+white badge of spotless virtue, and enriched with a boar's tusk or other
+valuable object as the price of his compliance, he returns to his
+village with a conscience at peace with all the world, reflecting with
+satisfaction on the profitable transaction he has just concluded, and
+laughing in his sleeve at the poor deluded ghost of his murdered
+relative.[457]
+
+[Sidenote: Comedy acted to deceive the ghost of a murdered kinsman.]
+
+Sometimes the worthy soul who thus for a valuable consideration consents
+to waive all his personal feelings, will even carry his self-abnegation
+so far as to be present and look on at the murder of his kinsman. But
+true to his principles he will see to it that the thing is done decently
+and humanely. When the struggle is nearly over and the man is down,
+writhing on the ground with the murderers busy about him, his loving
+kinsman will not suffer them to take an unfair advantage of their
+superior numbers to cut him up alive with their knives, to chop him with
+their axes, or to smash him with their clubs. He will only allow them to
+stab him with their spears, repeating of course the stabs again and
+again till the victim ceases to writhe and quiver, and lies there dead
+as a stone. Then begins the real time of peril for the virtuous kinsman
+who has been a spectator and director of the scene; for the ghost of the
+murdered man has now deserted its mangled body, and, still blinded with
+blood and smarting with pain, might easily and even excusably
+misunderstand the situation. It is essential, therefore, in order to
+prevent a painful misapprehension, that the kinsman should at once and
+emphatically disclaim any part or parcel in the murder. This he
+accordingly does in language which leaves no room for doubt or
+ambiguity. He falls into a passion: he rails at the murderers: he
+proclaims his horror at their deed. All the way home he refuses to be
+comforted. He upbraids the assassins, he utters the most frightful
+threats against them; he rushes at them to snatch their weapons from
+them and dash them in pieces. But they easily wrench the weapons from
+his unresisting hands. For the whole thing is only a piece of acting.
+His sole intention is that the ghost may see and hear it all, and being
+convinced of the innocence of his dear kinsman may not punish him with
+bad crops, wounds, sickness, and other misfortunes. Even when he has
+reached the village, he keeps up the comedy for a time, raging, fretting
+and fuming at the irreparable loss he has sustained by the death of his
+lamented relative.[458]
+
+[Sidenote: Pretence of avenging the ghost of a murdered sorcerer.]
+
+Similarly when a chief has among his subjects a particular sorcerer whom
+he fears but with whom he is professedly on terms of friendship, he will
+sometimes engage a man to murder him. No sooner, however, is the murder
+perpetrated than the chief who bespoke it hastens in seeming indignation
+with a band of followers to the murderer's village. The assassin, of
+course, has got a hint of what is coming, and he and his friends take
+care not to be at home when the chief arrives on his mission of
+vengeance. Balked by the absence of their victim the avengers of blood
+breathe out fire and slaughter, but content themselves in fact with
+smashing an old pot or two, knocking down a deserted hut, and perhaps
+felling a banana-tree or a betel-palm. Having thus given the ghost of
+the murdered man an unequivocal proof of the sincerity of their
+friendship, they return quietly home.[459]
+
+[Sidenote: The Kai afraid of ghosts.]
+
+The habits of Kai ghosts are to some extent just the contrary of those
+of living men. They sleep by day and go about their business by night,
+when they frighten people and play them all kinds of tricks. Usually
+they appear in the form of animals. As light has the effect of blinding
+or at least dazzling them, they avoid everything bright, and hence it is
+easy to scare them away by means of fire. That is why no native will go
+even a short way in the dark without a bamboo torch. If it is absolutely
+necessary to go out by night, which he is very loth to do, he will hum
+and haw loudly before quitting the house so as to give notice to any
+lurking ghost that he is coming with a light, which allows the ghost to
+scuttle out of his way in good time. The people of a village live in
+terror above all so long as a corpse remains unburied in it; after
+nightfall nobody would then venture out of sight of the houses. When a
+troop of people go by night to a neighbouring village with flaring
+torches in their hands, nobody is willing to walk last on the path; they
+all huddle together for safety in the middle, till one man braver than
+the rest consents to act as rearguard. The rustling of a bush in the
+evening twilight startles them with the dread of some ghastly
+apparition; the sight of a pig in the gloaming is converted by their
+fears into the vision of a horrible spectre. If a man stumbles, it is
+because a ghost has pushed him, and he fancies he perceives the
+frightful thing in a tree-stump or any chance object. No wonder a Kai
+man fears ghosts, since he believes that the mere touch of one of them
+may be fatal. People who fall down in fits or in faints are supposed to
+have been touched by ghosts; and on coming to themselves they will tell
+their friends with the most solemn assurance how they felt the
+death-cold hand of the ghost on their body, and how a shudder ran
+through their whole frame at contact with the uncanny being.[460]
+
+[Sidenote: Services rendered to the living by ghosts of the dead.]
+
+But it would be a mistake to imagine that the ghosts of the dead are a
+source of danger, annoyance, and discomfort, and nothing more. That is
+not so. They may and do render the Kai the most material services in
+everyday life, particularly by promoting the supply of food both
+vegetable and animal. I have said that these practical savages stand
+towards their departed kinsfolk on a strictly commercial footing; and I
+will now illustrate the benefits which the Kai hope to receive from the
+ghosts in return for all the respect and attention lavished on them. In
+the first place, then, so long as a ghost remains in the neighbourhood
+of the village, it is expected of him that he shall make the crops
+thrive and neither tread them down himself nor allow wild pigs to do so.
+The expectation is reasonable, yet the conduct of the ghost does not
+always answer to it. Occasionally, whether out of sheer perverseness or
+simple absence of mind, he will sit down in a field; and wherever he
+does so, he makes a hollow where the fruits will not grow. Indeed any
+fruit that he even touches with his foot in passing, shrivels up. Where
+these things have happened, the people offer boiled taro and a few crabs
+to the ghosts to induce them to keep clear of the crops and to repose
+their weary limbs elsewhere than in the tilled fields.[461]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts help Kai hunters to kill game.]
+
+But the most important service which the dead render to the living is
+the good luck which they vouchsafe to hunters. Hence in order to assure
+himself of the favour of the dead the hunter hangs his nets on a grave
+before he uses them. If a man was a good and successful hunter in his
+lifetime, his ghost will naturally be more than usually able to assist
+his brethren in the craft after his death. For that reason when such a
+man has just died, the people, to adopt a familiar proverb, hasten to
+make hay while the sun shines by hunting very frequently, in the
+confident expectation of receiving ghostly help from the deceased
+hunter. In the evening, when they return from the chase, they lay a
+small portion of their bag near his grave, scatter a powder which
+possesses the special virtue of attracting ghosts, and call out,
+"So-and-so, come and eat; here I set down food for you, it is a part of
+all we have." If after such an offering and invocation the night wind
+rustles the tops of the trees or shakes the thatch of leaves on the
+roofs, they know that the ghost is in the village. The twinkle of a
+glow-worm near his grave is the glitter of his eye. In the morning, too,
+before they sally forth to the woods, one of the next of kin to the dead
+huntsman will go betimes to his grave, stamp on it to waken the sleeper
+below, and call out, "So-and-so, come! we are now about to go out
+hunting. Help us to a good bag!" If they have luck, they praise the
+deceased as a good spirit and in the evening supply his wants again with
+food, tobacco, and betel. The sacrifice, as usually happens in such
+cases, does not call for any great exercise of self-denial; since the
+spirit consumes only the spiritual essence of the good things, while he
+leaves their material substance to be enjoyed by the living.[462]
+
+[Sidenote: Ill-treatment of a ghost who fails to help hunters.]
+
+However, it sometimes happens that the ghost disappoints them, and that
+the hunters return in the evening hungry and empty-handed. This may even
+be repeated day after day, and still the people will not lose hope. They
+think that the ghost is perhaps busy working in his field, or that he
+has gone on a visit and will soon come home. To give him time to do his
+business or see his friends at leisure, they will remain in the village
+for several days. Then, when they imagine that he must surely have
+returned, they go out into the woods and try their luck again. But
+should there still be no ghost and no game, they begin to be seriously
+alarmed. They think that some evil must have befallen him. But if time
+goes on and still he gives no sign and the game continues scarce and
+shy, their feelings towards the ghost undergo a radical alteration.
+Passion getting the better of prudence, they will even reproach him with
+ingratitude, taunt him with his uselessness, and leave him to starve.
+Should he after that still remain deaf to their railing and regardless
+of the short commons to which they have reduced him, they will discharge
+a volley of abuse at his grave and trouble themselves about him no more.
+However, if, not content with refusing his valuable assistance in the
+chase, the ghost should actually blight the crops or send wild boars
+into the fields to trample them down, the patience of the long-suffering
+people is quite exhausted: the vials of their wrath overflow; and
+snatching up their cudgels in a fury they belabour his grave till his
+bones ache, or even drive him with blows and curses altogether from the
+village.[463]
+
+[Sidenote: The journey of ghosts to the spirit land.]
+
+Such an outcast ghost, if he does not seek his revenge by prowling in
+the neighbourhood and preying on society at large, will naturally
+bethink himself of repairing to his long home in the under world. For
+sooner or later the spirits of the dead congregate there. It is
+especially when the flesh has quite mouldered away from his bones that
+the ghost packs up his little traps and sets out for the better land.
+The entrance to the abode of bliss is a cave to the west of Saddle
+Mountain. Here in the gully there is a projecting tree-stump on which
+the ghosts perch waiting for a favourable moment to jump into the mouth
+of the cavern. When a slight earthquake is felt, a Kai man will often
+say, "A ghost has just leaped from the tree into the cave; that is why
+the earth is shaking." Down below the ghosts are received by Tulmeng,
+lord of the nether world. Often he appears in a canoe to ferry them over
+to the further shore. "Blood or wax?" is the laconic question which he
+puts to the ghost on the bank. He means to say, "Were you killed or were
+you done to death by magic?" For it is with wax that the sorcerer stops
+up the fatal little tubes in which he encloses the souls of his enemies.
+And the reason why the lord of the dead puts the question to the
+newcomer is that the ghosts of the slain and the ghosts of the bewitched
+dwell in separate places. Right in front of the land of souls rises a
+high steep wall, which cannot be climbed even by ghosts. The spirits
+have accordingly to make their way through it and thereupon find
+themselves in their new abode. According to some Kai, before the ghosts
+are admitted to ghost land they must swing to and fro on a rope and then
+drop into water, where they are washed clean of bloodstains and all
+impurity; after which they ascend, spick and span, the last slope to the
+village of ghosts.
+
+[Sidenote: Life of ghosts in the other world.]
+
+Tulmeng has the reputation of being a very stern ruler in his weird
+realm, but the Kai really know very little about him. He beats
+refractory souls, and it is essential that every ghost should have his
+ears and nose bored. The operation is very painful, and to escape it
+most people take the precaution of having their ears and noses bored in
+their lifetime. Life in the other world goes on just like life in this
+one. Houses are built exactly like houses on earth, and there as here
+pigs swarm in the streets. Fields are tilled and crops are got in;
+ghostly men marry ghostly women, who give birth to ghostly children. The
+same old round of love and hate, of quarrelling and fighting, of battle,
+murder and sudden death goes on in the shadowy realm below ground just
+as in the more solid world above ground. Sorcerers are there also, and
+they breed just as bad blood among the dead as among the living. All
+things indeed are the same except for their shadowy unsubstantial
+texture.[464]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts die and turn into animals.]
+
+But the ghosts do not live for ever in the nether world. They die the
+second death and turn into animals, generally into cuscuses. In the
+shape of animals they haunt the wildest, deepest, darkest glens of the
+rugged mountains. No one but the owner has the right to set foot on such
+haunted ground. He may even kill the ghostly animals. Any one else who
+dared to disturb them in their haunts would do so at the peril of his
+life. But even the owner of the land who has killed one of the ghostly
+creatures is bound to appease the spirit of the dead beast. He may not
+cut up the carcase at once, but must leave it for a time, perhaps for a
+whole night, after laying on it presents which are intended to mollify
+and soothe the injured spirit. In placing the gifts on the body he says,
+"Take the gifts and leave us that which was a game animal, that we may
+eat it." When the animal's ghost has appropriated the spiritual essence
+of the offerings, the hunter and his family may eat the carcase. Should
+one of these ghostly creatures die or be killed, its spirit turns either
+into an insect or into an ant-hill. Children who would destroy such an
+ant-hill or throw little darts at it, are warned by their elders not to
+indulge in such sacrilegious sport. When the insect also dies, the
+series of spiritual transformations is at an end.[465]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of persons eminent for good or evil in their lives are
+remembered and appealed to for help long after their deaths. Prayers to
+ghosts for rain, a good crop of yams, and so forth.]
+
+The ghosts whose help is invoked by hunters and farmers are commonly the
+spirits of persons who have lately died, since such spirits linger for a
+time in the neighbourhood, or rather in the memory of the people. But
+besides these spirits of the recent dead there are certain older ghosts
+who may be regarded as permanent patrons of hunting and other
+departments of life and nature, because their fame has survived long
+after the men or women themselves were gathered to their fathers. For
+example, men who were bold and resolute in battle during their life will
+be invoked long after their death, whenever a stout heart is needed for
+some feat of daring. And men who were notorious thieves and villains in
+the flesh will be invited, long after their bodies have mouldered in the
+grave, to lend their help when a deed of villainy is to be done. The
+names of men or women who were eminent for good or evil in their lives
+survive indefinitely in the memory of the tribe. Thus before a battle
+many a Kai warrior will throw something over the enemy's village and as
+he does so he will softly call on two ghosts, "We and Gunang, ye two
+heroes, come and guard me and keep the foes from me, that they may not
+be able to hurt me! But stand by me that I may be able to riddle them
+with spears!" Again, when a magician wishes to cause an earthquake, he
+will take a handful of ashes, wrap them in certain leaves, and pronounce
+the following spell over the packet: "Thou man Saiong, throw about
+everything that exists; houses, villages, paths, fields, bushes and tall
+forest trees, yams, and taro, throw them all hither and thither; break
+and smash everything, but leave me in peace!" While he utters this
+incantation or prayer, the sorcerer's body itself twitches and quivers
+more and more violently, till the hut creaks and cracks and his strength
+is exhausted. Then he throws the packet of ashes out of the hut, and
+after that the earthquake is sure to follow sooner or later. So when
+they want rain, the Kai call upon two ghostly men named Balong and Batu,
+or Dinding and Bojang, to drive away a certain woman named Yondimi, so
+that the rain which she is holding up may fall upon the earth. The
+prayer for rain addressed to the ghosts is combined with a magical spell
+pronounced over a stone. And when rain has fallen in abundance and the
+Kai wish to make it cease, they strew hot ashes on the stone or lay it
+in a wood fire. On the principle of homoeopathic magic the heat of the
+ashes or of the fire is supposed to dry up the rain. Thus in these
+ceremonies for the production or cessation of rain we see that religion,
+represented by the invocation of the ghosts, goes hand in hand with
+magic, represented by the hocus-pocus with the stone. Again, certain
+celebrated ghosts are invoked to promote the growth of taro and yams.
+Thus to ensure a good crop of taro, the suppliant will hold a bud of
+taro in his hand and pray, "O Mrs. Zewanong, may my taro leaves unfold
+till they are as broad as the petticoat which covers thy loins!" When
+they are planting yams, they pray to two women named Tendung and Molewa
+that they would cause the yams to put forth as long suckers as the
+strings which the women twist to make into carrying-nets. Before they
+dig up the yams, they take a branch and drive with it the evil spirits
+or ghosts from the house in which the yams are to be stored. Having
+effected this clearance they stick the branch in the roof of the house
+and appoint a certain ghostly man named Ehang to act as warden. Again,
+fowlers invoke a married pair of ghosts called Manze and Tamingoka to
+frighten the birds from the trees and drive them on the limed twigs. Or
+they pray to a ghostly woman named Lane, saying, "In all places of the
+neighbourhood shake the betel-nuts from the palms, that they may fall
+down to me on this fruit-tree and knock the berries from the boughs!"
+But by the betel-nuts the fowler in veiled language means the birds,
+which are to come in flocks to the fruit-tree and be caught fast by the
+lime on the branches. Again, when a fisherman wishes to catch eels, he
+prays to two ghosts called Yambi and Ngigwali, saying: "Come, ye two
+men, and go down into the holes of the pool; smite the eels in them, and
+draw them out on the bank, that I may kill them!" Once more, when a
+child suffers from enlarged spleen, which shews as a swelling on its
+body, the parent will pray to a ghost named Aidolo for help in these
+words: "Come and help this child! It is big with a ball of sickness. Cut
+it up and squeeze and squash it, that the blood and pus may drain away
+and my child may be made whole!" To give point to the prayer the
+petitioner simultaneously pretends to cut a cross on the swelling with a
+knife.[466]
+
+[Sidenote: Possible development of departmental gods out of ghosts.]
+
+From this it appears that men and women who impressed their
+contemporaries by their talents, their virtues, or their vices in their
+lifetime, are sometimes remembered long after their death and continue
+to be invoked by their descendants for help in the particular department
+in which they had formerly rendered themselves eminent either for good
+or for evil. Such powerful and admired or dreaded ghosts might easily
+grow in time into gods and goddesses, who are worshipped as presiding
+over the various departments of nature and of human life. There is good
+reason to think that among many tribes and nations of the world the
+history of a god, if it could be recovered, would be found to be the
+history of a spirit who served his apprenticeship as a ghost before he
+was promoted to the rank of deity.
+
+[Sidenote: Kai lads at circumcision supposed to be swallowed by a
+monster. Bull-roarers.]
+
+Before quitting the Kai tribe I will mention that they, like the other
+tribes on this coast, practise circumcision and appear to associate the
+custom more or less vaguely with the spirits of the dead. Like their
+neighbours, they impress women with the belief that at circumcision the
+lads are swallowed by a monster, who can only be induced to disgorge
+them by the bribe of much food and especially of pigs, which are
+accordingly bred and kept nominally for this purpose, but really to
+furnish a banquet for the men alone. The ceremony is performed at
+irregular intervals of several years. A long hut, entered through a high
+door at one end and tapering away at the other, is built in a lonely
+part of the forest. It represents the monster which is to swallow the
+novices in its capacious jaws. The process of deglutition is represented
+as follows. In front of the entrance to the hut a scaffold is erected
+and a man mounts it. The novices are then led up one by one and passed
+under the scaffold. As each comes up, the man overhead makes a gesture
+of swallowing, while at the same time he takes a great gulp of water
+from a coco-nut flask. The trembling novice is now supposed to be in the
+maw of the monster; but a pig is offered for his redemption, the man on
+the scaffold, as representative of the beast, accepts the offering, a
+gurgling sound is heard, and the water which he had just gulped descends
+in a jet on the novice, who now goes free. The actual circumcision
+follows immediately on this impressive pantomime. The monster who
+swallows the lads is named Ngosa, which means "Grandfather"; and the
+same name is given to the bull-roarers which are swung at the festival.
+The Kai bull-roarer is a lance-shaped piece of palm-wood, more or less
+elaborately carved, which being swung at the end of a string emits the
+usual droning, booming sound. When they are not in use, the instruments
+are kept, carefully wrapt up, in the men's house, which no woman may
+enter. Only the old men have the right to undo these precious bundles
+and take out the sacred bull-roarers. Women, too, are strictly excluded
+from the neighbourhood of the circumcision ground; any who intrude on it
+are put to death. The mythical monster who is supposed to haunt the
+ground is said to be very dangerous to the female sex. When the novices
+go forth to be swallowed by him in the forest, the women who remain in
+the village weep and wail; and they rejoice greatly when the lads come
+back safe and sound.[467]
+
+[Sidenote: The Tami Islanders of Huon Gulf.]
+
+The last tribe of German New Guinea to which I shall invite your
+attention are the Tami. Most of them live not on the mainland but in a
+group of islands in Huon Gulf, to the south-east of Yabim. They are of a
+purer Melanesian stock than most of the tribes on the neighbouring coast
+of New Guinea. The German missionary Mr. G. Bamler, who lived amongst
+them for ten years and knows the people and their language intimately,
+thinks that they may even contain a strong infusion of Polynesian
+blood.[468] They are a seafaring folk, who extend their voyages all
+along the coast for the purpose of trade, bartering mats, pearls, fish,
+coco-nuts, and other tree-fruits which grow on their islands for taro,
+bananas, sugar-cane, and sago, which grow on the mainland.[469]
+
+[Sidenote: The long soul and the short soul.]
+
+In the opinion of these people every man has two souls, a long one and a
+short one. The long soul is identified with the shadow. It is only
+loosely attached to its owner, wandering away from his body in sleep and
+returning to it when he wakes with a start. The seat of the long soul is
+in the stomach. When the man dies, the long soul quits his body and
+appears to his relations at a distance, who thus obtain the first
+intimation of his decease. Having conveyed the sad intelligence to them,
+the long soul departs by way of Maligep, on the west coast of New
+Britain, to a village on the north coast, the inhabitants of which
+recognise the Tami ghosts as they flit past.[470]
+
+[Sidenote: Departure of the short soul to Lamboam, the nether world.]
+
+The short soul, on the other hand, never leaves the body in life but
+only after death. Even then it tarries for a time in the neighbourhood
+of the body before it takes its departure for Lamboam, which is the
+abode of the dead in the nether world. The Tami bury their dead in
+shallow graves under or near the houses. They collect in a coco-nut
+shell the maggots which swarm from the decaying corpse; and when the
+insects cease to swarm, they know that the short soul has gone away to
+its long home. It is the short soul which receives and carries away with
+it the offerings that are made to the deceased. These offerings serve a
+double purpose; they form the nucleus of the dead man's property in the
+far country, and they ensure him a friendly reception on his arrival.
+For example, the soul shivers with cold, when it first reaches the
+subterranean realm, and the other ghosts, the old stagers, obligingly
+heat stones to warm it up.[471]
+
+[Sidenote: Dilemma of the Tami.]
+
+However, the restless spirit returns from time to time to haunt and
+terrify the sorcerer, who was the cause of its death. But its threats
+are idle; it can really do him very little harm. Yet it keeps its
+ghostly eye on its surviving relatives to see that they do not stand on
+a friendly footing with the wicked sorcerer. Strictly speaking the Tami
+ought to avenge his death, but as a matter of fact they do not. The
+truth of it is that the Tami do a very good business with the people on
+the mainland, among whom the sorcerer is usually to be found; and the
+amicable relations which are essential to the maintenance of commerce
+would unquestionably suffer if a merchant were to indulge his resentment
+so far as to take his customer's head instead of his sago and bananas.
+These considerations reduce the Tami to a painful dilemma. If they
+gratify the ghost they lose a customer; if they keep the customer they
+must bitterly offend the ghost, who will punish them for their
+disrespect to his memory. In this delicate position the Tami endeavour
+to make the best of both worlds. On the one hand, by loudly professing
+their wrath and indignation against the guilty sorcerer they endeavour
+to appease the ghost; and on the other hand, by leaving the villain
+unmolested they do nothing to alienate their customers.[472]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral and mourning customs of the Tami.]
+
+But if they do not gratify the desire for vengeance of the blood-thirsty
+ghost, they are at great pains to testify their respect for him in all
+other ways. The whole village takes part in the mourning and lamentation
+for a death. The women dance death dances, the men lend a hand in the
+preparations for the burial. All festivities are stopped: the drums are
+silent. As the people believe that when anybody has died, the ghosts of
+his dead kinsfolk gather in the village and are joined by other ghosts,
+they are careful not to leave the mourners alone, exposed to the too
+pressing attentions of the spectral visitors; they keep the bereaved
+family company, especially at night; indeed, if the weather be fine, the
+whole population of the village will encamp round the temporary hut
+which is built on the grave. This watch at the grave lasts about eight
+days. The watchers are supported and comforted in the discharge of their
+pious duty by a liberal allowance of food and drink. Nor are the wants
+of the ghost himself forgotten. Many families offer him taro broth at
+this time. The period of mourning lasts two or three years. During the
+first year the observances prescribed by custom are strictly followed,
+and the nearest relations must avoid publicity. After a year they are
+allowed more freedom; for example, the widow may lay aside the heavy
+net, which is her costume in full mourning, and may replace it by a
+lighter one; moreover, she may quit the house. At the end of the long
+period of mourning, dances are danced in honour of the deceased. They
+begin in the evening and last all night till daybreak. The mourners on
+these occasions smear their heads, necks, and breasts with black earth.
+A great quantity of food, particularly of pigs and taro broth, has been
+made ready; for the whole village, and perhaps a neighbouring village
+also, has been invited to share in the festivity, which may last eight
+or ten days, if the provisions suffice. The dances begin with a gravity
+and solemnity appropriate to a memorial of the dead; but towards the
+close the performers indulge in a lighter vein and act comic pieces,
+which so tickle the fancy of the spectators, that many of them roll on
+the ground with laughter. Finally, the temporary hut erected on the
+grave is taken down and the materials burned. As the other ghosts of the
+village are believed to be present in attendance on the one who is the
+guest of honour, all the villagers bring offerings and throw them into
+the fire. However, persons who are not related to the ghosts may snatch
+the offerings from the flames and convert them to their own use.
+Precious objects, such as boars' tusks and dogs' teeth, are not
+committed to the fire but merely swung over it in a bag, while the name
+of the person who offers the valuables in this economical fashion is
+proclaimed aloud for the satisfaction of the ghost. With these dances,
+pantomimes, and offerings the living have discharged the last duties of
+respect and affection to the dead. Yet for a while his ghost is thought
+to linger as a domestic or household spirit; but the time comes when he
+is wholly forgotten.[473]
+
+[Sidenote: Bones of the dead dug up and kept in the house for a time.]
+
+Many families, however, not content with the observance of these
+ordinary ceremonies, dig up the bodies of their dead when the flesh has
+mouldered away, redden the bones with ochre, and keep them bundled up in
+the house for two or three years, when these relics of mortality are
+finally committed to the earth. The intention of thus preserving the
+bones for years in the house is not mentioned, but no doubt it is to
+maintain a closer intimacy with the departed spirit than seems possible
+if his skeleton is left to rot in the grave. When he is at last laid in
+the ground, the tomb is enclosed by a strong wooden fence and planted
+with ornamental shrubs. Yet in the course of years, as the memory of the
+deceased fades away, his grave is neglected, the fence decays, the
+shrubs run wild; another generation, which knew him not, will build a
+house on the spot, and if in digging the foundations they turn up his
+bleached and mouldering bones, it is nothing to them: why should they
+trouble themselves about the spirit of a man or woman whose very name is
+forgotten?[474]
+
+[Footnote 450: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 142 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 451: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 143.]
+
+[Footnote 452: Ch. Keysser, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 453: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 143 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 454: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 62 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 455: Ch. Keysser, pp. 64 _sqq._, 147 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 456: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 132.]
+
+[Footnote 457: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 148.]
+
+[Footnote 458: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 148 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 459: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 149.]
+
+[Footnote 460: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 461: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 145.]
+
+[Footnote 462: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ p. 145.]
+
+[Footnote 463: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 145 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 464: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 149 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 465: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 112, 150 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 466: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 151-154. In this passage the
+ghosts are spoken of simply as spirits (_Geister_); but the context
+proves that the spirits in question are those of the dead.]
+
+[Footnote 467: Ch. Keysser, _op. cit._ pp. 34-40.]
+
+[Footnote 468: G. Bamler, "Tami," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_,
+iii. (Berlin, 1911) p. 489; compare _ib._ p. vii.]
+
+[Footnote 469: H. Zahn, "Die Jabim," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch
+Neu-Guinea_, iii. 315 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 470: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ p. 518.]
+
+[Footnote 471: G. Bamler, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 472: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 518 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 473: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 519-522.]
+
+[Footnote 474: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ p. 518.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XIV
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF GERMAN AND DUTCH NEW
+GUINEA
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Tami doctrine of souls and gods. The Tago spirits,
+represented by masked men.]
+
+At the close of the last lecture I dealt with the Tami, a people of
+Melanesian stock who inhabit a group of islands off the mainland of New
+Guinea. I explained their theory of the human soul. According to them,
+every man has two distinct souls, a long one and a short one, both of
+which survive his death, but depart in different directions, one of them
+repairing to the lower world, and the other being last sighted off the
+coast of New Britain. But the knowledge which these savages possess of
+the spiritual world is not limited to the souls of men; they are
+acquainted with several deities (_buwun_), who live in the otherwise
+uninhabited island of Djan. They are beings of an amorous disposition,
+and though their real shape is that of a fish's body with a human head,
+they can take on the form of men in order to seduce women. They also
+cause epidemics and earthquakes; yet the people shew them no respect,
+for they believe them to be dull-witted as well as lecherous. At most,
+if a fearful epidemic is raging, they will offer the gods a lean little
+pig or a mangy cur; and should an earthquake last longer than usual they
+will rap on the ground, saying, "Hullo, you down there! easy a little!
+We men are still here." They also profess acquaintance with a god named
+Anuto, who created the heaven and the earth together with the first man
+and woman. He is a good being; nobody need be afraid of him. At
+festivals and meat markets the Tami offer him the first portion in a
+little basket, which a lad carries away into the wood and leaves there.
+As usual, the deity consumes only the soul of the offering; the bearer
+eats the material substance.[475] The Tami further believe in certain
+spirits called Tago which are very old, having been created at the same
+time as the village. Every family or clan possesses its own familiar
+spirits of this class. They are represented by men who disguise their
+bodies in dense masses of sago leaves and their faces in grotesque masks
+with long hooked noses. In this costume the maskers jig it as well as
+the heavy unwieldy disguise allows them to do. But the dance consists in
+little more than running round and round in a circle, with an occasional
+hop; the orchestra stands in the middle, singing and thumping drums.
+Sometimes two or three of the masked men will make a round of the
+village, pelting the men with pebbles or hard fruits, while the women
+and children scurry out of their way. When they are not in use the masks
+are hidden away in a hut in the forest, which women and children may not
+approach. Their secret is sternly kept: any betrayal of it is punished
+with death. The season for the exhibition of these masked dances recurs
+only once in ten or twelve years, but it extends over a year or
+thereabout. During the whole of the dancing-season, curiously enough,
+coco-nuts are strictly tabooed; no person may eat them, so that the
+unused nuts accumulate in thousands. As coco-nuts ordinarily form a
+daily article of diet with the Tami, their prohibition for a year is
+felt by the people as a privation. The meaning of the prohibition and
+also of the masquerades remains obscure.[476]
+
+[Sidenote: The superhuman beings with whom the Tami are chiefly
+concerned are the souls of the dead. Offerings to the dead.]
+
+But while the Tami believe in gods and spirits of various sorts, the
+superhuman beings with whom they chiefly concern themselves are the
+souls of the dead. On this subject Mr. Bamler writes: "All the spirits
+whom we have thus far described are of little importance in the life and
+thought of the Tami; they are remembered only on special occasions. The
+spirits who fill the thoughts and attract the attention of the Tami are
+the _kani_, that is, the souls of the departed. The Tami therefore
+practise the worship of ancestors. Yet the memory of ancestors does not
+reach far back; people occupy themselves only with the souls of those
+relatives whom they have personally known. Hence the worship seldom
+extends beyond the grandfather, even when a knowledge of more remote
+progenitors survives. An offering to the ancestors takes the form of a
+little dish of boiled taro, a cigar, betel-nuts, and the like; but the
+spirits partake only of the image or soul of the things offered, while
+the material substance falls to the share of mankind. There is no fixed
+rule as to the manner or time of the offering. It is left to the caprice
+or childlike affection of the individual to decide how he will make it.
+With most natives it is a simple matter of business, the throwing of a
+sprat to catch a salmon; the man brings his offering only when he needs
+the help of the spirits. There is very little ceremony about it. The
+offerer will say, for example, 'There, I lay a cigar for you; smoke it
+and hereafter drive fish towards me'; or, 'Accompany me on the journey,
+and see to it that I do good business.' The place where the food is
+presented is the shelf for pots and dishes under the roof. Thus they
+imagine that the spirits exert a tolerably far-reaching influence over
+all created things, and it is their notion that the spirits take
+possession of the objects. In like manner the spirits can injure a man
+by thwarting his plans, for example, by frightening away the fish,
+blighting the fruits of the fields, and so forth. If the native is
+forced to conclude that the spirits are against him, he has no
+hesitation about deceiving them in the grossest manner. Should the
+requisite sacrifices be inconvenient to him, he flatly refuses them, or
+gives the shabbiest things he can find. In all this the native displays
+the same craft and cunning which he is apt to practise in his dealings
+with the whites. He fears the power which the spirit has over him, yet
+he tries whether he cannot outwit the spirit like an arrant
+block-head."[477]
+
+[Sidenote: Crude motives for sacrifice.]
+
+This account of the crude but quite intelligible motives which lead
+these savages to sacrifice to the spirits of their dead may be commended
+to the attention of writers on the history of religion who read into
+primitive sacrifice certain subtle and complex ideas which it never
+entered into the mind of primitive man to conceive and which, even if
+they were explained to him, he would in all probability be totally
+unable to understand.
+
+[Sidenote: Lamboam, the land of the dead.]
+
+According to the Tami, the souls of the dead live in the nether world.
+The spirit-land is called Lamboam; the entrance to it is by a cleft in a
+rock. The natives of the mainland also call Hades by the name of
+Lamboam; but whereas according to them every village has its own little
+Lamboam, the Tami hold that there is only one big Lamboam for everybody,
+though it is subdivided into many mansions, of which every village has
+one to itself. In Lamboam everything is fairer and more perfect than on
+earth. The fruits are so plentiful that the blessed spirits can, if they
+choose, give themselves up to the delights of idleness; the villages are
+full of ornamental plants. Yet on the other hand we are informed that
+life beneath the ground is very like life above it: people work and
+marry, they squabble and wrangle, they fall sick and even die, just as
+people do on earth. Souls which die the second death in Lamboam are
+changed into vermin, such as ants and worms; however, others say that
+they turn into wood-spirits, who do men a mischief in the fields. It is
+not so easy as is commonly supposed to effect an entrance into the
+spirit-land. You must pass a river, and even when you have crossed it
+you will be very likely to suffer from the practical jokes which the
+merry old ghosts play on a raw newcomer. A very favourite trick of
+theirs is to send him up a pandanus tree to look for fruit. If he is
+simple enough to comply, they catch him by the legs as he is swarming up
+the trunk and drag him down, so that his whole body is fearfully
+scratched, if not quite ripped up, by the rough bark. That is why people
+put valuable things with the dead in the grave, in order that their
+ghosts on arrival in Lamboam may have the wherewithal to purchase the
+good graces of the facetious old stagers.[478]
+
+[Sidenote: Return of the ghosts to earth, sometimes in the form of
+serpents.]
+
+However, even when the ghosts have succeeded in effecting a lodgment in
+Lamboam, they are not strictly confined to it. They can break bounds at
+any moment and return to the upper air. This they do particularly when
+any of their surviving relations is at the point of death. Ghosts of
+deceased kinsfolk and of others gather round the parting soul and attend
+it to the far country. Yet sometimes, apparently, the soul sets out
+alone, for the anxious relatives will call out to it, "Miss not the
+way." But ghosts visit their surviving friends at other times than at
+the moment of death. For example, some families possess the power of
+calling up spirits in the form of serpents from the vasty deep. The
+spirits whom they evoke are usually those of persons who have died quite
+lately; for such ghosts cannot return to earth except in the guise of
+serpents. In this novel shape they naturally feel shy and hide under a
+mat. They come out only in the dusk of the evening or the darkness of
+night and sit on the shelf for pots and dishes under the roof. They have
+lost the faculty of speech and can express themselves only in whistles.
+These whistles the seer, who is generally a woman, understands perfectly
+and interprets to his or her less gifted fellows. In this way a
+considerable body of information, more or less accurate in detail, is
+collected as to life in the other world. More than that, it is even
+possible for men, and especially for women, to go down alive into the
+nether world and prosecute their enquiries at first hand among the
+ghosts. Women who possess this remarkable faculty transmit it to their
+daughters, so that the profession is hereditary. When anybody wishes to
+ascertain how it fares with one of his dead kinsfolk in Lamboam, he has
+nothing to do but to engage the services of one of these professional
+mediums, giving her something which belonged to his departed friend. The
+medium rubs her forehead with ginger, muttering an incantation, lies
+down on the dead man's property, and falls asleep. Her soul then goes
+down in a dream to deadland and elicits from the ghosts the required
+information, which on waking from sleep she imparts to the anxious
+enquirer.[479]
+
+[Sidenote: Sickness caused by a spirit.]
+
+Sickness accompanied by fainting fits is ascribed to the action of a
+spirit, it may be the ghost of a near relation, who has carried off the
+"long soul" of the sufferer. The truant soul is recalled by a blast
+blown on a triton-shell, in which some chewed ginger or _massoi_ bark
+has been inserted. The booming sound attracts the attention of the
+vagrant spirit, while the smell of the bark or of the ginger drives away
+the ghost.[480]
+
+[Sidenote: Tami lads supposed to be swallowed by a monster at
+circumcision; the monster and the bull-roarer are both called _kani_.]
+
+The name which the Tami give to the spirits of the dead is _kani_; but
+like other tribes in this part of New Guinea they apply the same term to
+the bull-roarer and also to the mythical monster who is supposed to
+swallow the lads at circumcision. The identity of the name for the three
+things seems to prove that in the mind of the Tami the initiatory rites,
+of which circumcision is the principal feature, are closely associated
+with their conception of the state of the human soul after death, though
+what the precise nature of the association may be still remains obscure.
+Like their neighbours on the mainland of New Guinea, the Tami give out
+that the novices at initiation are swallowed by a monster or dragon, who
+only consents to disgorge his prey in consideration of a tribute of
+pigs, the rate of the tribute being one novice one pig. In the act of
+disgorging the lad the dragon bites him, and the bite is visible to all
+in the cut called circumcision. The voice of the monster is heard in the
+hum of the bull-roarers, which are swung at the ceremony in such numbers
+and with such force that in still weather the booming sound may be heard
+across the sea for many miles. To impress women and children with an
+idea of the superhuman strength of the dragon deep grooves are cut in
+the trunks of trees and afterwards exhibited to the uninitiated as the
+marks made by the monster in tugging at the ropes which bound him to the
+trees. However, the whole thing is an open secret to the married women,
+though they keep their knowledge to themselves, fearing to incur the
+penalty of death which is denounced upon all who betray the mystery.
+
+[Sidenote: The rite of circumcision. Seclusion and return of the newly
+circumcised lads.]
+
+The initiatory rites are now celebrated only at intervals of many years.
+When the time is come for the ceremony, women are banished from the
+village and special quarters prepared for them elsewhere; for they are
+strictly forbidden to set foot in the village while the monster or
+spirit who swallows the lads has his abode in it. A special hut is then
+built for the accommodation of the novices during the many months which
+they spend in seclusion before and after the operation of circumcision.
+The hut represents the monster; it consists of a framework of thin poles
+covered with palm-leaf mats and tapering down at one end. Looked at from
+a distance it resembles a whale. The backbone is composed of a betel-nut
+palm, which has been grubbed up with its roots. The root with its fibres
+represents the monster's head and hair, and under it are painted a pair
+of eyes and a great mouth in red, white, and black. The passage of the
+novices into the monster's belly is represented by causing them to
+defile past a row of men who hold bull-roarers aloft over the heads of
+the candidates. Before this march past takes place, each of the
+candidates is struck by the chief with a bull-roarer on his chin and
+brow. The operation of circumcising the lads is afterwards performed
+behind a screen set up near the monster-shaped house. It is followed by
+a great feast on swine's flesh. After their wounds are healed the
+circumcised lads have still to remain in seclusion for three or four
+months. Finally, they are brought back to the village with great pomp.
+For this solemn ceremony their faces, necks, and breasts are whitened
+with a thick layer of chalk, while red stripes, painted round their
+mouths and eyes and prolonged to the ears, add to the grotesqueness of
+their appearance. Their eyes are closed with a plaster of chalk, and
+thus curiously arrayed and blindfolded they are led back to the village
+square, where leave is formally given them to open their eyes. At the
+entrance to the village they are received by the women, who weep for joy
+and strew boiled field-fruits on the way. Next morning the newly
+initiated lads wash off the crust of chalk, and have their hair, faces,
+necks, and breasts painted bright red. This ends their time of
+seclusion, which has lasted five or six months; they now rank as
+full-grown men.[481]
+
+[Sidenote: Simulation of death and resurrection.]
+
+In these initiatory rites, as in the similar rites of the neighbouring
+tribes on the mainland of New Guinea, we may perhaps detect a simulation
+of death and of resurrection to a new and higher life. But why
+circumcision should form the central feature of such a drama is a
+question to which as yet no certain or even very probable answer can be
+given. The bodily mutilations of various sorts, which in many savage
+tribes mark the transition from boyhood to manhood, remain one of the
+obscurest features in the life of uncultured races. That they are in
+most cases connected with the great change which takes place in the
+sexes at puberty seems fairly certain; but we are far from understanding
+the ideas which primitive man has formed on this mysterious subject.
+
+[Sidenote: The natives of Dutch New Guinea.]
+
+That ends what I have to say as to the notions of death and a life
+hereafter which are entertained by the natives of German New Guinea. We
+now turn to the natives of Dutch New Guinea, who occupy roughly speaking
+the western half of the great island. Our information as to their
+customs and beliefs on this subject is much scantier, and accordingly my
+account of them will be much briefer.
+
+[Sidenote: Geelvink Bay and Doreh Bay. The Noofoor or Noomfor people.
+Their material culture and arts of life.]
+
+Towards the western end of the Dutch possession there is on the northern
+coast a deep and wide indentation known as Geelvink Bay, which in its
+north-west corner includes a very much smaller indentation known as
+Doreh Bay. Scattered about in the waters of the great Geelvink Bay are
+many islands of various sizes, such as Biak or Wiak, Jappen or Jobi, Run
+or Ron, Noomfor, and many more. It is in regard to the natives who
+inhabit the coasts or islands of Geelvink Bay that our information is
+perhaps least imperfect, and it is accordingly with them that I shall
+begin. In physical appearance, expression of the face, mode of wearing
+the hair, and still more in manners and customs these natives of the
+coast and islands differ from the natives of the mountains in the
+interior. The name given to them by Dutch and German writers is Noofoor
+or Noomfor. Their original home is believed to be the island of Biak or
+Wiak, which lies at the northern entrance of the bay, and from which
+they are supposed to have spread southwards and south-westwards to the
+other islands and to the mainland of New Guinea.[482] They are a
+handsomely built race. Their colour is usually dark brown, but in some
+individuals it shades off to light-brown, while in others it deepens
+into black-brown. The forehead is high and narrow; the eye is dark brown
+or black with a lively expression; the nose broad and flat, the lips
+thick and projecting. The cheekbones are not very high. The facial angle
+agrees with that of Europeans. The hair is abundant and frizzly. The
+people live in settled villages and subsist by agriculture, hunting, and
+fishing. Their large communal houses are raised above the ground on
+piles; on the coast they are built over the water. Each house has a long
+gallery, one in front and one behind, and a long passage running down
+the middle of the dwelling, with the rooms arranged on either side of
+it. Each room has its own fireplace and is occupied by a single family.
+One such communal house may contain from ten to twenty families with a
+hundred or more men, women, and children, besides dogs, fowls, parrots,
+and other creatures. When the house is built over the water, it is
+commonly connected with the shore by a bridge; but in some places no
+such bridge exists, and at high water the inmates can only communicate
+with the shore by means of their canoes. The staple food of the people
+is sago, which they extract from the sago-palm; but they also make use
+of bread-fruit, together with millet, rice, and maize, whenever they can
+obtain these cereals. Their flesh diet includes wild pigs, birds, fish,
+and trepang. While some of them subsist mainly by fishing and commerce,
+others devote themselves almost exclusively to the cultivation of their
+gardens, which they lay out in clearings of the dense tropical forest,
+employing chiefly axes and chopping-knives as their instruments of
+tillage. Of ploughs they, like most savages, seem to know nothing. The
+rice and other plants which they raise in these gardens are produced by
+the dry method of cultivation. In hunting birds they employ chiefly bows
+and arrows, but sometimes also snares. The arrows with which they shoot
+the birds of paradise are blunted so as not to injure the splendid
+plumage of the birds. Turtle-shells, feathers of the birds of paradise,
+and trepang are among the principal articles which they barter with
+traders for cotton-goods, knives, swords, axes, beads and so forth. They
+display some skill and taste in wood-carving. The art of working in iron
+has been introduced among them from abroad and is now extensively
+practised by the men. They make large dug-out canoes with outriggers,
+which seem to be very seaworthy, for they accomplish long voyages even
+in stormy weather. The making of pottery, basket-work, and weaving,
+together with pounding rice and cooking food, are the special business
+of women. The men wear waistbands or loin-cloths made of bark, which is
+beaten till it becomes as supple as leather. The women wear petticoats
+or strips of blue cotton round their loins, and as ornaments they have
+rings of silver, copper, or shell on their arms and legs.[483] Thus the
+people have attained to a fair degree of barbaric culture.
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of ghosts. Ideas of the spirit-world.]
+
+Now it is significant that among these comparatively advanced savages
+the fear of ghosts and the reverence entertained for them have developed
+into something which might almost be called a systematic worship of the
+dead. As to their fear of ghosts I will quote the evidence of a Dutch
+missionary, Mr. J. L. van Hasselt, who lived for many years among them
+and is the author of a grammar and dictionary of their language. He
+says: "That a great fear of ghosts prevails among the Papuans is
+intelligible. Even by day they are reluctant to pass a grave, but
+nothing would induce them to do so by night. For the dead are then
+roaming about in their search for gambier and tobacco, and they may also
+sail out to sea in a canoe. Some of the departed, above all the
+so-called _Mambrie_ or heroes, inspire them with especial fear. In such
+cases for some days after the burial you may hear about sunset a
+simultaneous and horrible din in all the houses of all the villages, a
+yelling, screaming, beating and throwing of sticks; happily the uproar
+does not last long: its intention is to compel the ghost to take himself
+off: they have given him all that befits him, namely, a grave, a funeral
+banquet, and funeral ornaments; and now they beseech him not to thrust
+himself on their observation any more, not to breathe any sickness upon
+the survivors, and not to kill them or 'fetch' them, as the Papuans put
+it. Their ideas of the spirit-world are very vague. Their usual answer
+to such questions is, 'We know not.' If you press them, they will
+commonly say that the spirit realm is under the earth or under the
+bottom of the sea. Everything there is as it is in the upper world, only
+the vegetation down below is more luxuriant, and all plants grow faster.
+Their fear of death and their helpless wailing over the dead indicate
+that the misty kingdom of the shades offers but little that is
+consolatory to the Papuan at his departure from this world."[484]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of ghosts in general and of the ghosts of the slain in
+particular.]
+
+Again, speaking of the natives of Doreh, a Dutch official observes that
+"superstition and magic play a principal part in the life of the Papuan.
+Occasions for such absurdities he discovers at every step. Thus he
+cherishes a great fear of the ghosts of slain persons, for which reason
+their bodies remain unburied on the spot where they were murdered. When
+a murder has taken place in the village, the inhabitants assemble for
+several evenings in succession and raise a fearful outcry in order to
+chase away the soul, in case it should be minded to return to the
+village. They set up miniature wooden houses here and there on trees in
+the forest for the ghosts of persons who die of disease or through
+accidents, believing that the souls take up their abode in them."[485]
+The same writer remarks that these savages have no priests, but that
+they have magicians (_kokinsor_), who practise exorcisms, work magic,
+and heal the sick, for which they receive a small payment in articles of
+barter or food.[486] Speaking of the Papuans of Dutch New Guinea in
+general another writer informs us that "they honour the memory of the
+dead in every way, because they ascribe to the spirits of the departed a
+great influence on the life of the survivors.... Whereas in life all
+good and evil comes from the soul, after death, on the other hand, the
+spirit works for the most part only evil. It loves especially to haunt
+by night the neighbourhood of its old dwelling and the grave; so the
+people particularly avoid the neighbourhood of graves at night, and when
+darkness has fallen they will not go out except with a burning brand....
+According to the belief of the Papuans the ghosts cause sickness, bad
+harvests, war, and in general every misfortune. From fear of such evils
+and in order to keep them in good humour, the people make provision for
+the spirits of the departed after death. Also they sacrifice to them
+before every important undertaking and never fail to ask their
+advice."[487]
+
+[Sidenote: Papuan ideas as to the state of the dead.]
+
+A Dutch writer, who has given us a comparatively full account of the
+natives of Geelvink Bay, describes as follows their views in regard to
+the state of the dead: "According to the Papuans the soul, which they
+imagine to have its seat in the blood, continues to exist at the bottom
+of the sea, and every one who dies goes thither. They imagine the state
+of things there to be much the same as that in which they lived on
+earth. Hence at his burial the dead man is given an equipment suitable
+to his rank and position in life. He is provided with a bow and arrow,
+armlets and body-ornaments, pots and pans, everything that may stand him
+in good stead in the life hereafter. This provision must not be
+neglected, for it is a prevalent opinion that the dead continue always
+to maintain relations with the world and with the living, that they
+possess superhuman power, exercise great influence over the affairs of
+life on earth, and are able to protect in danger, to stand by in war, to
+guard against shipwreck at sea, and to grant success in fishing and
+hunting. For such weighty reasons the Papuans do all in their power to
+win the favour of their dead. On undertaking a journey they are said
+never to forget to hang amulets about themselves in the belief that
+their dead will then surely help them; hence, too, when they are at sea
+in rough weather, they call upon the souls of the departed, asking them
+for better weather or a favourable breeze, in case the wind happens to
+be contrary."[488]
+
+[Sidenote: Wooden images of the dead (_korwar_).]
+
+In order to communicate with these powerful spirits and to obtain their
+advice and help in time of need, the Papuans of Geelvink Bay make wooden
+images of their dead, which they keep in their houses and consult from
+time to time. Every family has at least one such ancestral image, which
+forms the medium whereby the soul of the deceased communicates with his
+or her surviving relatives. These images or Penates, as we may call
+them, are carved of wood, about a foot high, and represent the deceased
+person in a standing, sitting, or crouching attitude, but commonly with
+the hands folded in front. The head is disproportionately large, the
+nose long and projecting, the mouth wide and well furnished with teeth;
+the eyes are formed of large green or blue beads with black dots to
+indicate the pupils. Sometimes the male figures carry a shield in the
+left hand and brandish a sword in the right; while the female figures
+are represented grasping with both hands a serpent which stands on its
+coiled tail. Rags of many colours adorn these figures, and the hair of
+the deceased, whom they represent, is placed between their legs. Such an
+ancestral image is called a _korwar_ or _karwar_. The natives identify
+these effigies with the deceased persons whom they portray, and
+accordingly they will speak of one as their father or mother or other
+relation. Tobacco and food are offered to the images, and the natives
+greet them reverentially by bowing to the earth before them with the two
+hands joined and raised to the forehead.
+
+[Sidenote: Such images carried on voyages and consulted as oracles. The
+images consulted in sickness.]
+
+Such images are kept in the houses and carried in canoes on voyages, in
+order that they may be at hand to help and advise their kinsfolk and
+worshippers. They are consulted on many occasions, for example, when the
+people are going on a journey, or about to fish for turtles or trepang,
+or when a member of the family is sick, and his relations wish to know
+whether he will recover. At these consultations the enquirer may either
+take the image in his hands or crouch before it on the ground, on which
+he places his offerings of tobacco, cotton, beads, and so forth. The
+spirit of the dead is thought to be in the image and to pass from it
+into the enquirer, who thus becomes inspired by the soul of the deceased
+and acquires his superhuman knowledge. As a sign of his inspiration the
+medium shivers and shakes. According to some accounts, however, this
+shivering and shaking of the medium is an evil omen; whereas if he
+remains tranquil, the omen is good. It is especially in cases of
+sickness that the images are consulted. The mode of consultation has
+been described as follows by a Dutch writer: "When any one is sick and
+wishes to know the means of cure, or when any one desires to avert
+misfortune or to discover something unknown, then in presence of the
+whole family one of the members is stupefied by the fumes of incense or
+by other means of producing a state of trance. The image of the deceased
+person whose advice is sought is then placed on the lap or shoulder of
+the medium in order to cause the soul to pass out of the image into his
+body. At the moment when that happens, he begins to shiver; and,
+encouraged by the bystanders, the soul speaks through the mouth of the
+medium and names the means of cure or of averting the calamity. When he
+comes to himself, the medium knows nothing of what he has been saying.
+This they call _kor karwar_, that is, 'invoking the soul;' and they say
+_karwar iwos_, 'the soul speaks.'" The writer adds: "It is sometimes
+reported that the souls go to the underworld, but that is not true. The
+Papuans think that after death the soul abides by the corpse and is
+buried with it in the grave; hence before an image is made, if it is
+necessary to consult the soul, the enquirer must betake himself to the
+grave in order to do so. But when the image is made, the soul enters
+into it and is supposed to remain in it so long as satisfactory answers
+are obtained from it in consultation. But should the answers prove
+disappointing, the people think that the soul has deserted the image, on
+which they throw the image away as useless. Where the soul has gone,
+nobody knows, and they do not trouble their heads about it, since it has
+lost its power."[489] The person who acts as medium in consulting the
+spirit may be either the house-father himself or a magician
+(_konoor_).[490]
+
+[Sidenote: Example of the consultation of an ancestral image.]
+
+As an example of these consultations we may take the case of a man who
+was suffering from a painful sore on his finger and wished to ascertain
+the cause of the trouble. So he set one of the ancestral images before
+him and questioned it closely. At first the image made no reply; but at
+last the man remembered that he had neglected his duty to his dead
+brother by failing to marry his widow, as, according to native custom,
+he should have done. Now the natives believe that the dead can punish
+them for any breach of customary law; so it occurred to our enquirer
+that the ghost of his dead brother might have afflicted him with the
+sore on his finger for not marrying his widow. Accordingly he put the
+question to the image, and in doing so the compunction of a guilty
+conscience caused him to tremble. This trembling he took for an answer
+of the image in the affirmative, wherefore he went off and took the
+widow to wife and provided for her maintenance.[491]
+
+[Sidenote: Ancestral images consulted as to the cause of death.
+Offerings to the images.]
+
+Again, the ancestral images are often consulted to ascertain the cause
+of a death; and if the image attributes the death to the evil magic of a
+member of another tribe, an expedition will be sent to avenge the wrong
+by slaying the supposed culprit. For the souls of the dead take it very
+ill and wreak their spite on the survivors, if their death is not
+avenged on their enemies. Not uncommonly the consultation of the images
+merely furnishes a pretext for satisfying a grudge against an individual
+or a tribe.[492] The mere presence of these images appears to be
+supposed to benefit the sick; a woman who was seriously ill has been
+seen to lie with four or five ancestral figures fastened at the head of
+her bed. On enquiry she explained that they did not all belong to her,
+but that some of them had been kindly lent to her by relations and
+friends.[493] Again, the images are taken by the natives with them to
+war, because they hope thereby to secure the help of the spirits whom
+the images represent. Also they make offerings from time to time to the
+effigies and hold feasts in their honour.[494] They observe, indeed,
+that the food which they present to these household idols remains
+unconsumed, but they explain this by saying that the spirits are content
+to snuff up the savour of the viands, and to leave their gross material
+substance alone.[495]
+
+[Sidenote: Images of persons who have died away from home.]
+
+In general, images are only made of persons who have died at home. But
+in the island of Ron or Run they are also made of persons who have died
+away from home or have fallen in battle. In such cases the difficulty is
+to compel the soul to quit its mortal remains far away and come to
+animate the image. However, the natives of Ron have found means to
+overcome this difficulty. They first carve the wooden image of the dead
+person and then call his soul back to the village by setting a great
+tree on fire, while the family assemble round it and one of them,
+holding the image in his hand, acts the part of a medium, shivering and
+shaking and falling into a trance after the approved fashion of mediums
+in many lands. After this ceremony the image is supposed to be animated
+by the soul of the deceased, and it is kept in the house with as much
+confidence as any other.[496]
+
+[Sidenote: Sometimes the head of the image is composed of the skull of
+the deceased.]
+
+Sometimes the head of the image consists of the skull of the deceased,
+which has been detached from the skeleton and inserted in a hole at the
+top of the effigy. In such cases the body of the image is of wood and
+the head of bone. It is especially men who have distinguished themselves
+by their bravery or have earned a name for themselves in other ways who
+are thus represented. Apparently the notion is that as a personal relic
+of the departed the skull is better fitted to retain his soul than a
+mere head of wood. But in the island of Ron or Run, and perhaps
+elsewhere, skull-topped images of this sort are made for all firstborn
+children, whether male or female, young or old, at least for all who die
+from the age of twelve years and upward. These images have a special
+name, _bemar boo_, which means "head of a corpse." They are kept in the
+room of the parents who have lost the child.[497]
+
+[Sidenote: Mode of preparing such skull-headed images.]
+
+The mode in which such images are prepared is as follows. The body of
+the firstborn child, who dies at the age of years or upwards, is laid in
+a small canoe, which is deposited in a hut erected behind the
+dwelling-house. Here the mother is obliged to keep watch night and day
+beside the corpse and to maintain a blazing fire till the head drops off
+the body, which it generally does about twenty days after the death.
+Then the trunk is wrapped in leaves and buried, but the head is brought
+into the house and carefully preserved. Above the spot where it is
+deposited a small opening is made in the roof, through which a stick is
+thrust bearing some rags or flags to indicate that the remains of a dead
+body are in the house. When, after the lapse of three or four months,
+the nose and ears of the head have dropped off, and the eyes have
+mouldered away, the relations and friends assemble in the house of
+mourning. In the middle of the assembly the father of the child crouches
+on his hams with downcast look in an attitude of grief, while one of the
+persons present begins to carve a new nose and a new pair of ears for
+the skull out of a piece of wood. The kind of wood varies according as
+the deceased was a male or a female. All the time that the artist is at
+work, the rest of the company chant a melancholy dirge. When the nose
+and ears are finished and have been attached to the skull, and small
+round fruits have been inserted in the hollow sockets of the eyes to
+represent the missing orbs, a banquet follows in honour of the deceased,
+who is now represented by his decorated skull set up on a block of wood
+on the table. Thus he receives his share of the food and of the cigars,
+and is raised to the rank of a domestic idol or _korwar_. Henceforth the
+skull is carefully kept in a corner of the chamber to be consulted as an
+oracle in time of need. The bodies of fathers and mothers are treated in
+the same way as those of firstborn children. On the other hand the
+bodies of children who die under the age of two years are never buried.
+The remains are packed in baskets of rushes covered with lids and
+tightly corded, and the baskets are then hung on the branches of tall
+trees, where no more notice is taken of them. Four or five such baskets
+containing the mouldering bodies of infants may sometimes be seen
+hanging on a single tree.[498] The reason for thus disposing of the
+remains of young children is said to be as follows. A thick mist hangs
+at evening over the top of the dense tropical forest, and in the mist
+dwell two spirits called Narwur and Imgier, one male and the other
+female, who kill little children, not out of malice but out of love,
+because they wish to have the children with them. So when a child dies,
+the parents fasten its little body to the branches of a tall tree in the
+forest, hoping that the spirit pair will take it and be satisfied, and
+will spare its small brothers and sisters.[499]
+
+[Sidenote: Mummification of the dead.]
+
+In some parts of Geelvink Bay, however, the bodies of the dead are
+treated differently. For example, on the south coast of the island of
+Jobi or Jappen and elsewhere the corpses are reduced to mummies by being
+dried on a bamboo stage over a slow fire; after which the mummies, wrapt
+in cloth, are kept in the house, being either laid along the wall or
+hung from the ceiling. When the number of these relics begins to
+incommode the living inmates of the house, the older mummies are removed
+and deposited in the hollow trunks of ancient trees. In some tribes who
+thus mummify their dead the juices of corruption which drip from the
+rotting corpse are caught in a vessel and given to the widow to drink,
+who is forced to gulp them down under the threat of decapitation if she
+were to reject the loathsome beverage.[500]
+
+[Sidenote: Restrictions observed by mourners. Tattooing in honour of the
+dead. Teeth of the dead worn by relatives.]
+
+The family in which a death has taken place is subject for a time to
+certain burdensome restrictions, which are probably dictated by a fear
+of the ghost. Thus all the time till the effigy of the deceased has been
+made and a feast given in his honour, they are obliged to remain in the
+house without going out for any purpose, not even to bathe or to fetch
+food and drink. Moreover they must abstain from the ordinary articles of
+diet and confine themselves to half-baked cakes of sago and other
+unpalatable viands. As these restrictions may last for months they are
+not only irksome but onerous, especially to people who have no slaves to
+fetch and carry for them. However, in that case the neighbours come to
+the rescue and supply the mourners with wood, water, and the other
+necessaries of life, until custom allows them to go out and help
+themselves. After the effigy of the dead has been made, the family go in
+state to a sacred place to purify themselves by bathing. If the journey
+is made by sea, no other canoe may meet or sail past the canoe of the
+mourners under pain of being confiscated to them and redeemed at a heavy
+price. On their return from the holy place, the period of mourning is
+over, and the family is free to resume their ordinary mode of life and
+their ordinary victuals.[501] That the seclusion of the mourners in the
+house for some time after the death springs from a fear of the ghost is
+not only probable on general grounds but is directly suggested by a
+custom which is observed at the burial of the body. When it has been
+laid in the earth along with various articles of daily use, which the
+ghost is supposed to require for his comfort, the mourners gather round
+the grave and each of them picks up a leaf, which he folds in the shape
+of a spoon and holds several times over his head as if he would pour out
+the contents upon it. As they do so, they all murmur, "_Rur i rama_,"
+that is, "The spirit comes." This exclamation or incantation is supposed
+to prevent the ghost from troubling them. The gravediggers may not enter
+their houses till they have bathed and so removed from their persons the
+contagion of death, in order that the soul of the deceased may have no
+power over them.[502] Mourners sometimes tattoo themselves in honour of
+the dead. For a father, the marks are tattooed on the cheeks and under
+the eyes; for a grandfather, on the breast; for a mother, on the
+shoulders and arms; for a brother, on the back. On the death of a father
+or mother, the eldest son or, if there is none such, the eldest daughter
+wears the teeth and hair of the deceased. When the teeth of old people
+drop out, they are kept on purpose to be thus strung on a string and
+worn by their sons or daughters after their death. Similarly, a mother
+wears as a permanent mark of mourning the teeth of her dead child strung
+on a cord round her neck, and as a temporary mark of mourning a little
+bag on her throat containing a lock of the child's hair.[503] The
+intention of these customs is not mentioned. Probably they are not
+purely commemorative but designed in some way either to influence for
+good the spirit of the departed or to obtain its help and protection for
+the living.
+
+[Sidenote: Rebirth of parents in their children.]
+
+Thus far we have found no evidence among the natives of New Guinea of a
+belief that the dead are permanently reincarnated in their human
+descendants. However, the inhabitants of Ayambori, an inland village
+about an hour distant to the east of Doreh, are reported to believe that
+the soul of a dead man returns in his eldest son, and that the soul of a
+dead woman returns in her eldest daughter.[504] So stated the belief is
+hardly clear and intelligible; for if a man has several sons, he must
+evidently be alive and not dead when the eldest of them is born, and
+similarly with a woman and her eldest daughter. On the analogy of
+similar beliefs elsewhere we may conjecture that these Papuans imagine
+every firstborn son to be animated by the soul of his father, whether
+his father be alive or dead, and every firstborn daughter to be animated
+by the soul of her mother, whether her mother be alive or dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Customs concerning the dead observed in the islands off the
+western end of New Guinea.]
+
+Beliefs and customs concerning the dead like those which we have found
+among the natives of Geelvink Bay are reported to prevail in other parts
+of Dutch New Guinea, but our information about them is much less full.
+Thus, off the western extremity of New Guinea there is a group of small
+islands (Waaigeoo, Salawati, Misol, Waigama, and so on), the inhabitants
+of which make _karwar_ or wooden images of their dead ancestors. These
+they keep in separate rooms of their houses and take with them as
+talismans to war. In these inner rooms are also kept miniature wooden
+houses in which their ancestors are believed to reside, and in which
+even Mohammedans (for some of the natives profess Islam) burn incense on
+Fridays in honour of the souls of the dead. These souls are treated like
+living beings, for in the morning some finely pounded sago is placed in
+the shrines; at noon it is taken away, but may not be eaten by the
+inmates of the house. Curiously enough, women are forbidden to set food
+for the dead in the shrines: if they did so, it is believed that they
+would be childless. Further, in the chief's house there are shrines for
+the souls of all the persons who have died in the whole village. Such a
+house might almost be described as a temple of the dead. Among the
+inhabitants of the Negen Negorijen or "Nine Villages" the abodes of the
+ancestral spirits are often merely frameworks of houses decorated with
+coloured rags. These frameworks are called _roem seram_. On festal
+occasions they are brought forth and the people dance round them to
+music. The mountain tribes of these islands to the west of New Guinea
+seldom have any such little houses for the souls of the dead. They think
+that the spirits of the departed dwell among the branches of trees, to
+which accordingly the living attach strips of red and white cotton,
+always to the number of seven or a multiple of seven. Also they place
+food on the branches or hang it in baskets on the boughs,[505] no doubt
+in order to feed the hungry ghosts. But among the tribes on the coast,
+who make miniature houses for the use of their dead, these little
+shrines form a central feature of the religious life of the people. At
+festivals, especially on the occasion of a marriage or a death, the
+shrines are brought out from the side chamber and are set down in the
+central room of the house, where the people dance round them, singing
+and making music for days together with no interruption except for
+meals.[506]
+
+[Sidenote: Wooden images of the dead.]
+
+According to the Dutch writer, Mr. de Clercq, whose account I am
+reproducing, this worship of the dead, represented by wooden images
+(_karwar_) and lodged in miniature houses, is, together with a belief in
+good and bad spirits, the only thing deserving the name of religion that
+can be detected among these people. It is certain that the wooden images
+represent members of the family who died a natural death at home; they
+are never, as in Ansoes and Waropen, images of persons who have been
+murdered or slain in battle. Hence they form a kind of Penates, who are
+supposed to lead an invisible life in the family circle. The natives of
+the Negen Negorijen, for example, believe that these wooden images
+(_karwar_), which are both male and female, contain the souls of their
+ancestors, who protect the house and household and are honoured at
+festivals by having portions of food set beside their images.[507] The
+Seget Sele, who occupy the extreme westerly point of New Guinea, bury
+their dead in the island of Lago and set up little houses in the forest
+for the use of the spirits of their ancestors. But these little houses
+may never be entered or even approached by members of the family.[508] A
+traveller, who visited a hut occupied by members of the Seget tribe in
+Princess Island, or Kararaboe, found a sick man in it and observed that
+before the front and back door were set up double rows of roughly hewn
+images painted with red and black stripes. He was told that these images
+were intended to keep off the sickness; for the natives thought that it
+would not dare to run the gauntlet between the double rows of figures
+into the house.[509] We may conjecture that these rude images
+represented ancestral spirits who were doing sentinel duty over the sick
+man.
+
+[Sidenote: Customs concerning the dead among the natives of the Macluer
+Gulf.]
+
+Among the natives of the Macluer Gulf, which penetrates deep into the
+western part of Dutch New Guinea, the souls of dead men who have
+distinguished themselves by bravery or in other ways are honoured in the
+shape of wooden images, which are sometimes wrapt in cloth and decorated
+with shells about the neck. In Sekar, a village on the south side of the
+gulf, small bowls, called _kararasa_ after the spirits of ancestors who
+are believed to lodge in them, are hung up in the houses; on special
+occasions food is placed in them. In some of the islands of the Macluer
+Gulf the dead are laid in hollows of the rocks, which are then adorned
+with drawings of birds, hands, and so forth. The hands are always
+painted white or yellowish on a red ground. The other figures are drawn
+with chalk on the weathered surface of the rock. But the natives either
+cannot or will not give any explanation of the custom.[510]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs in the Mimika district.]
+
+The Papuans of the Mimika district, on the southern coast of Dutch New
+Guinea, sometimes bury their dead in shallow graves near the huts;
+sometimes they place them in coffins on rough trestles and leave them
+there till decomposition is complete, when they remove the skull and
+preserve it in the house, either burying it in the sand of the floor or
+hanging it in a sort of basket from the roof, where it becomes brown
+with smoke and polished with frequent handling. The people do not appear
+to be particularly attached to these relics of their kinsfolk and they
+sell them readily to Europeans. Mourners plaster themselves all over
+with mud, and sometimes they bathe in the river, probably as a mode of
+ceremonial purification. They believe in ghosts, which they call
+_niniki_; but beyond that elementary fact we have no information as to
+their beliefs concerning the state of the dead.[511]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs at Windessi.]
+
+The natives of Windessi in Dutch New Guinea generally bury their dead
+the day after the decease. As a rule the corpse is wrapt in mats and a
+piece of blue cloth and laid on a scaffold; few are coffined. All the
+possessions of the dead, including weapons, fishing-nets, wooden bowls,
+pots, and so forth, according as the deceased was a man or a woman, are
+placed beside him or her. If the death is attributed to the influence of
+an evil spirit, they take hold of a lock of hair of the corpse and
+mention various places. At the mention of each place, they tug the hair;
+and if it comes out, they conclude that the death was caused by somebody
+at the place which was mentioned at the moment. But if the hair does not
+come out, they infer that evil spirits had no hand in the affair. Before
+the body is carried away, the family bathes, no doubt to purify
+themselves from the contagion of death. Among the people of Windessi it
+is a common custom to bury the dead in an island. At such a burial the
+bystanders pick up a fallen leaf, tear it in two, and stroke the corpse
+with it, in order that the ghost of the departed may not kill them. When
+the body has been disposed of either in a grave or on a scaffold, they
+embark in the canoe and sit listening for omens. One of the men in a
+loud voice bids the birds and the flies to be silent; and all the others
+sit as still as death in an attitude of devotion. At last, after an
+interval of silence, the man who called out tells his fellows what he
+has heard. If it was the buzz of the blue flies that he heard, some one
+else will die. If it was the booming sound of a triton shell blown in
+the distance, a raid must be made in that direction to rob and murder.
+Why it must be so, is not said, but we may suppose that the note of the
+triton shell is believed to betray the place of the enemy who has
+wrought the death by magic, and that accordingly an expedition must be
+sent to avenge the supposed crime on the supposed murderer. If the note
+of a bird called _kohwi_ is heard, then the fruit-trees will bear fruit.
+Though all the men sit listening in the canoe, the ominous sounds are
+heard only by the man who called out.[512]
+
+[Sidenote: Mourning customs at Windessi.]
+
+When the omens have thus been taken, the paddles again dip in the water,
+and the canoe returns to the house of mourning. Arrived at it, the men
+disembark, climb up the ladder (for the houses seem to be built on piles
+over the water) and run the whole length of the long house with their
+paddles on their shoulders. Curiously enough, they never do this at any
+other time, because they imagine that it would cause the death of
+somebody. Meantime the women have gone into the forest to get bark,
+which they beat into bark-cloth and make into mourning caps for
+themselves. The men busy themselves with plaiting armlets and leglets of
+rattan, in which some red rags are stuck. Large blue and white beads are
+strung on a red cord and worn round the neck. Further, the hair is shorn
+in sign of mourning. Mourners are forbidden to eat anything cooked in a
+pot. Sago-porridge, which is a staple food with some of the natives of
+New Guinea, is also forbidden to mourners at Windessi. If they would eat
+rice, it must be cooked in a bamboo. The doors and windows of the house
+are closed with planks or mats, just as with us the blinds are lowered
+in a house after a death. The surviving relatives make as many long
+sago-cakes as there are houses in the village and send them to the
+inmates; they also prepare a few for themselves. All who do not belong
+to the family now leave the house of mourning. Then the eldest brother
+or his representative gets up and all follow him to the back verandah,
+where a woman stands holding a bow and arrows, an axe, a paddle, and so
+forth. Every one touches these implements. Since the death, there has
+been no working in the house, but this time of inactivity is now over
+and every one is free to resume his usual occupations. This ends the
+preliminary ceremonies of mourning, which go by the name of _djawarra_.
+
+A month afterwards round cakes of sago are baked on the fire, and all
+the members of the family, their friends, and the persons who assisted
+at the burial receive three such cakes each. Only very young children
+are now allowed to eat sago-porridge. This ceremony is called _djawarra
+baba_.
+
+[Sidenote: Festival of the dead. Wooden images of the dead.]
+
+When a year or more has elapsed, the so-called festival of the dead
+takes place. Often the festival is held for several dead at the same
+time, and in that case the cost is borne in common. From far and near
+the people have collected sago, coco-nuts, and other food. For two
+nights and a day they dance and sing, but without the accompaniment of
+drums (_tifa_) and gongs. The first night, the signs of mourning are
+still worn, hence no sago-porridge may be eaten; only friends who are
+not in mourning are allowed to partake of it. The night is spent in
+eating, drinking, smoking, singing and dancing. Next day many people
+make _korwars_ of their dead, that is, grotesque wooden images carved in
+human form, which are regarded as the representatives of the departed.
+Some people fetch the head of the deceased person, and having made a
+wooden image with a large head and a hole in the back of it, they insert
+the skull into the wooden head from behind. After that friends feed the
+mourners with sago-porridge, putting it into their mouths with the help
+of the chopsticks which are commonly used in eating sago. When that is
+done, the period of mourning is at an end, and the signs of mourning are
+thrown away. A dance on the beach follows, at which the new wooden
+images of the dead make their appearance. But still the drums and gongs
+are silent. Dancing and singing go on till the next morning, when the
+whole of the ceremonies come to an end.[513]
+
+[Sidenote: Fear of the ghost.]
+
+The exact meaning of all these ceremonies is not clear, but we may
+conjecture that they are based in large measure on the fear of the
+ghost. That fear comes out plainly in the ceremony of stroking the
+corpse with leaves in order to prevent the ghost from killing the
+survivors. The writer to whom we are indebted for an account of these
+customs tells us in explanation of them that among these people death is
+ascribed to the influence of evil spirits called _manoam_, who are
+supposed to be incarnate in some human beings. Hence they often seek to
+avenge a death by murdering somebody who has the reputation of being an
+evil spirit incarnate. If they succeed in doing so, they celebrate the
+preliminary mourning ceremonies called _djawarra_ and _djawarra baba_,
+but the festival of the dead is changed into a memorial festival, at
+which the people dance and sing to the accompaniment of drums (_tifa_),
+gongs, and triton shells; and instead of carving a wooden image of the
+deceased, they make marks on the fleshless skull of the murdered
+man.[514]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the natives of Windessi as to the life after
+death. Medicine-men inspired by the spirits of the dead.]
+
+The natives of Windessi are said to have the following belief as to the
+life after death, though we are told that the creed is now known to very
+few of them; for their old beliefs and customs are fading away under the
+influence of a mission station which is established among them.
+According to their ancient creed, every man and every woman has two
+spirits, and in the nether world, called _sarooka_, is a large house
+where there is room for all the people of Windessi. When a woman dies,
+both her spirits always go down to the nether world, where they are
+clothed with flesh and bones, need do no work, and live for ever. But
+when a man dies, only one of his spirits must go to the under world; the
+other may pass or transmigrate into a living man or, in rare cases, into
+a living woman; the person so inspired by a dead man's spirit becomes an
+_inderri_, that is, a medicine-man or medicine-woman and has power to
+heal the sick. When a person wishes to become a medicine-man or
+medicine-woman, he or she acts as follows. If a man has died, and his
+friends are sitting about the corpse lamenting, the would-be
+medicine-man suddenly begins to shiver and to rub his knee with his
+folded hands, while he utters a monotonous sound. Gradually he falls
+into an ecstasy, and if his whole body shakes convulsively, the spirit
+of the dead man is supposed to have entered into him, and he becomes a
+medicine-man. Next day or the day after he is taken into the forest;
+some hocus-pocus is performed over him, and the spirits of lunatics, who
+dwell in certain thick trees, are invoked to take possession of him. He
+is now himself called a lunatic, and on returning home behaves as if he
+were half-crazed. This completes his training as a medicine-man, and he
+is now fully qualified to kill or cure the sick. His mode of cure
+depends on the native theory of sickness. These savages think that
+sickness is caused by a malicious or angry spirit, apparently the spirit
+of a dead person; for a patient will say, "The _korwar_" (that is, the
+wooden image which represents a particular dead person) "is murdering
+me, or is making me sick." So the medicine-man is called in, and sets to
+work on the sufferer, while the _korwar_, or wooden image of the spirit
+who is supposed to be doing all the mischief, stands beside him. The
+principal method of cure employed by the doctor is massage. He chews a
+certain fruit fine and rubs the patient with it; also he pinches him all
+over the body as if to drive out the spirit. Often he professes to
+extract a stone, a bone, or a stick from the body of the sufferer. At
+last he gives out that he has ascertained the cause of the sickness; the
+sick man has done or has omitted to do something which has excited the
+anger of the spirit.[515]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of slain enemies dreaded.]
+
+From all this it would seem that the souls of the dead are more feared
+than loved and reverenced by the Papuans of Windessi. Naturally the
+ghosts of enemies who have perished at their hands are particularly
+dreaded by them. That dread explains some of the ceremonies which are
+observed in the village at the return of a successful party of
+head-hunters. As they draw near the village, they announce their
+approach and success by blowing on triton shells. Their canoes also are
+decked with branches. The faces of the men who have taken a head are
+blackened with charcoal; and if several have joined in killing one man,
+his skull is divided between them. They always time their arrival so as
+to reach home in the early morning. They come paddling to the village
+with a great noise, and the women stand ready to dance in the verandahs
+of the houses. The canoes row past the _roem sram_ or clubhouse where
+the young men live; and as they pass, the grimy-faced slayers fling as
+many pointed sticks or bamboos at the house as they have killed enemies.
+The rest of the day is spent very quietly. But now and then they drum or
+blow on the conch, and at other times they beat on the walls of the
+houses with sticks, shouting loudly at the same time, to drive away the
+ghosts of their victims.[516]
+
+That concludes what I have to say as to the fear and worship of the dead
+in Dutch New Guinea.
+
+[Footnote 475: G. Bamler, "Tami," in R. Neuhauss's _Deutsch Neu-Guinea_,
+iii. (Berlin, 1911) pp. 489-492.]
+
+[Footnote 476: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 507-512.]
+
+[Footnote 477: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 513 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 478: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 514 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 479: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 515 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 480: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ p. 516.]
+
+[Footnote 481: G. Bamler, _op. cit._ pp. 493-507.]
+
+[Footnote 482: J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuastaemme an der Geelvinkbai
+(Neu-guinea)," _Mitteilungen der geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_,
+ix. (1890) p. 1; F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," _Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) pp. 587 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 483: J. L. van Hasselt, _op. cit._ pp. 2, 3, 5 _sq._; A.
+Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_ (Schiedam, 1863), pp. 28
+_sqq._, 33 _sqq._, 42 _sq._, 47 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 484: J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuastaemme an der Geelvinkbai
+(Neu-guinea)," _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Jena_,
+ix. (1891) p. 101.]
+
+[Footnote 485: H. van Rosenberg, _Der Malayische Archipel_ (Leipsic,
+1878), p. 461.]
+
+[Footnote 486: H. van Rosenberg, _op. cit._ p. 462.]
+
+[Footnote 487: M. Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_ (Berlin, N.D., preface dated
+1899), pp. 401, 402.]
+
+[Footnote 488: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_
+(Schiedam, 1863), p. 77. Compare O. Finsch, _Neu-Guinea und seine
+Bewohner_ (Bremen, 1865), p. 105.]
+
+[Footnote 489: F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West- en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," _Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) p. 631. On these
+_korwar_ or _karwar_ (images of the dead) see further A. Goudswaard, _De
+Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp. 72 _sq._, 77-79; O. Finsch,
+_Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner_, pp. 104-106; H. von Rosenberg, _Der
+Malayische Archipel_, pp. 460 _sq._; J. L. van Hasselt, "Die Papuastaemme
+an der Geelvinkbaai (Neu-Guinea)" _Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena_, ix. (1891) p. 100; M. Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_, pp.
+400 _sq._, 402 _sq._, 498 _sqq._ In the text I have drawn on these
+various accounts.]
+
+[Footnote 490: J. L. van Hasselt, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 491: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp.
+78 _sq._; O. Finsch, _Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner_, pp. 105 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 492: A. Goudswaard, _op. cit._ p. 79; O. Finsch, _op. cit._ p.
+106.]
+
+[Footnote 493: J. L. van Hasselt, _op. cit._ p. 100.]
+
+[Footnote 494: A. Goudswaard, _op. cit._ p. 78.]
+
+[Footnote 495: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 632.]
+
+[Footnote 496: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 632.]
+
+[Footnote 497: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 632.]
+
+[Footnote 498: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp.
+70-73; O. Finsch, _Neu-Guinea und seine Bewohner_ pp. 104 _sq._; M.
+Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_, p. 398.]
+
+[Footnote 499: J. L. van Hasselt, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena_, iv. (1886) pp. 118 _sq._ As to the spirit or
+spirits who dwell in tree tops and draw away the souls of the living to
+themselves, see further "Eenige bijzonderheden betreffende de Papoeas
+van de Geelvinksbaai van Nieuw-Guinea," _Bijdragen tot de Taal- Landen
+Volkenkunde van Neerlandsch-Indie_, ii. (1854) pp. 375 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 500: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, p.
+73; J. L. van Hasselt, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen Gesellschaft
+zu Jena_, iv. (1886) p. 118; M. Krieger, _Neu-Guinea_, pp. 398. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 501: A. Goudswaard, _De Papoewa's van de Geelvinksbaai_, pp.
+75 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 502: J. L. van Hasselt, in _Mitteilungen der Geographischen
+Gesellschaft zu Jena_, iv. (1886) 117 _sq._; M. Krieger, _op. cit._ pp.
+397 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 503: A. Goudswaard, _op. cit._ pp. 74 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 504: _Nieuw Guinea ethnographisch en natuurkundig onderzocht
+en beschreven_ (Amsterdam, 1862), p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 505: F. S. A. de Clercq, "De West- en Noordkust van
+Nederlandsch Nieuw-Guinea," _Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch
+Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_, Tweede Serie, x. (1893) pp. 198 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 506: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 201.]
+
+[Footnote 507: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ pp. 202, 205.]
+
+[Footnote 508: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ p. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 509: J. W. van Hille, "Reizen in West-Nieuw-Guinea,"
+_Tijdschrift van het Kon. Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap_,
+Tweede Serie, xxiii. (1906) p. 463.]
+
+[Footnote 510: F. S. A. de Clercq, _op. cit._ pp. 459 _sq._, 461 _sq._ A
+German traveller, Mr. H. Kuehn, spent some time at Sekar and purchased a
+couple of what he calls "old heathen idols," which are now in the
+ethnological Museum at Leipsic. One of them, about a foot high,
+represents a human head and bust; the other, about two feet high,
+represents a squat sitting figure. They are probably ancestral images
+(_korwar_ or _karwar_). The natives are said to have such confidence in
+the protection of these "idols" that they leave their jewellery and
+other possessions unguarded beside them, in the full belief that nobody
+would dare to steal anything from spots protected by such mighty beings.
+See H. Kuehn, "Mein Aufenthalt in Neu-Guinea," _Festschrift des
+25jaehrigen Bestehens des Vereins fuer Erdkunde zu Dresden_ (Dresden,
+1888), pp. 143 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 511: A. F. R. Wollaston, _Pygmies and Papuans_ (London, 1912),
+pp. 132 _sq._, 136-140.]
+
+[Footnote 512: J. L. D. van der Roest, "Uit the leven der bevolking van
+Windessi," _Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal- Landen Volkenkunde_, xl.
+(1898) pp. 159 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 513: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ pp. 161 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 514: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 515: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ pp. 164-166.]
+
+[Footnote 516: J. L. D. van der Roest, _op. cit._ pp. 157 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XV
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF SOUTHERN MELANESIA (NEW
+CALEDONIA)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Melanesia and the Melanesians.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded our survey of the beliefs and practices
+concerning death and the dead which are reported to prevail among the
+natives of New Guinea. We now pass to the natives of Melanesia, the
+great archipelago or rather chain of archipelagoes, which stretches
+round the north-eastern and eastern ends of New Guinea and southward,
+parallel to the coast of Queensland, till it almost touches the tropic
+of Capricorn. Thus the islands lie wholly within the tropics and are for
+the most part characterised by tropical heat and tropical luxuriance of
+vegetation. Only New Caledonia, the most southerly of the larger
+islands, differs somewhat from the rest in its comparatively cool
+climate and scanty flora.[517] The natives of the islands belong to the
+Melanesian race. They are dark-skinned and woolly-haired and speak a
+language which is akin to the Polynesian language. In material culture
+they stand roughly on the same level as the natives of New Guinea, a
+considerable part of whom in the south-eastern part of the island, as I
+pointed out before, are either pure Melanesians or at all events exhibit
+a strong infusion of Melanesian blood. They cultivate the ground, live
+in settled villages, build substantial houses, construct
+outrigger-canoes, display some aptitude for art, possess strong
+commercial instincts, and even employ various mediums of exchange, of
+which shell-money is the most notable.[518]
+
+[Sidenote: The New Caledonians.]
+
+We shall begin our survey of these islands with New Caledonia in the
+south, and from it shall pass northwards through the New Hebrides and
+Solomon Islands to the Bismarck Archipelago, which consists chiefly of
+the two great islands of New Britain and New Ireland with the group of
+the Admiralty Islands terminating it to the westward. For our knowledge
+of the customs and religion of the New Caledonians we depend chiefly on
+the evidence of a Catholic missionary, Father Lambert, who has worked
+among them since 1856 and has published a valuable book on the
+subject.[519] To be exact, his information applies not to the natives of
+New Caledonia itself, but to the inhabitants of a group of small
+islands, which lie immediately off the northern extremity of the island
+and are known as the Belep group. Father Lambert began to labour among
+the Belep at a time when no white man had as yet resided among them. At
+a later time circumstances led him to transfer his ministry to the Isle
+of Pines, which lies off the opposite or southern end of New Caledonia.
+A comparative study of the natives at the two extremities of New
+Caledonia revealed to him an essential similarity in their beliefs and
+customs; so that it is not perhaps very rash to assume that similar
+customs prevail among the aborigines of New Caledonia itself, which lies
+intermediate between the two points observed by Father Lambert.[520] The
+assumption is confirmed by evidence which was collected by Dr. George
+Turner from the mainland of New Caledonia so long ago as 1845.[521]
+Accordingly in what follows I shall commonly speak of the New
+Caledonians in general, though the statements for the most part apply in
+particular to the Belep tribe.
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs of the New Calendonians as to the land of the dead.]
+
+The souls of the New Caledonians, like those of most savages, are
+supposed to be immortal, at least to survive death for an indefinite
+period. They all go, good and bad alike, to dwell in a very rich and
+beautiful country situated at the bottom of the sea, to the north-east
+of the island of Pott. The name of the land of souls is Tsiabiloum. But
+before they reach this happy land they must run the gauntlet of a grim
+spirit called Kiemoua, who has his abode on a rock in the island of
+Pott. He is a fisherman of souls; for he catches them as they pass in a
+net and after venting his fury on them he releases them, and they pursue
+their journey to Tsiabiloum, the land of the dead. It is a country more
+fair and fertile than tongue can tell. Yams, taros, sugar-canes, bananas
+all grow there in profusion and without cultivation. There are forests
+of wild orange-trees, also, and the golden fruits serve the blessed
+spirits as playthings. You can tell roughly how long it is since a
+spirit quitted the upper world by the colour of the orange which he
+plays with; for the oranges of those who have just arrived are green;
+the oranges of those who have been longer dead are ripe; and the oranges
+of those who died long ago are dry and wizened. There is no night in
+that blessed land, and no sleep; for the eyes of the spirits are never
+weighed down with slumber. Sorrow and sickness, decrepitude and death
+never enter; even boredom is unknown. But it is only the nights, or
+rather the hours corresponding to nights on earth, which the spirits
+pass in these realms of bliss. At daybreak they revisit their old home
+on earth and take up their posts in the cemeteries where they are
+honoured; then at nightfall they flit away back to the spirit-land
+beneath the sea, there to resume their sport with oranges, green,
+golden, or withered, till dawn of day. On these repeated journeys to and
+fro they have nothing to fear from the grim fisherman and his net; it is
+only on their first passage to the nether world that he catches and
+trounces them.[522]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs of the New Calendonians.]
+
+The bodies of the dead are buried in shallow graves, which are dug in a
+sacred grove. The corpse is placed in a crouching attitude with the head
+at or above the surface of the ground, in order to allow of the skull
+being easily detached from the trunk, at a subsequent time. In token of
+sorrow the nearest relations of the deceased tear the lobes of their
+ears and inflict large burns on their arms and breasts. The houses,
+nets, and other implements of the dead are burnt; his plantations are
+ravaged, his coco-nut palms felled with the axe. The motive for this
+destruction of the property of the deceased is not mentioned, but the
+custom points to a fear of the ghost; the people probably make his old
+home as unattractive as possible in order to offer him no temptation to
+return and haunt them. The same fear of the ghost, or at all events of
+the infection of death, is revealed by the stringent seclusion and
+ceremonial pollution of the grave-diggers. They are two in number; no
+other persons may handle the corpse. After they have discharged their
+office they must remain near the corpse for four or five days, observing
+a rigorous fast and keeping apart from their wives. They may not shave
+or cut their hair, and they are obliged to wear a tall pyramidal and
+very cumbersome head-dress. They may not touch food with their hands. If
+they help themselves to it, they must pick it up with their mouths alone
+or with a stick, not with their fingers. Oftener they are fed by an
+attendant, who puts the victuals into their mouths as he might do if
+they were palsied. On the other hand they are treated by the people with
+great respect; common folk will not pass near them without
+stooping.[523]
+
+[Sidenote: Sham fight as a mourning ceremony.]
+
+A curious ceremony which the New Caledonians observe at a certain period
+of mourning for the dead is a sham fight. Father Lambert describes one
+such combat which he witnessed. A number of men were divided into two
+parties; one party was posted on the beach, the other and much larger
+party was stationed in the adjoining cemetery, where food and property
+had been collected. From time to time a long piercing yell would be
+heard; then a number of men would break from the crowd in the cemetery
+and rush furiously down to the beach with their slings and stones ready
+to assail their adversaries. These, answering yell with yell, would then
+plunge into the sea, armed with battle-axes and clubs, while they made a
+feint of parrying the stones hurled at them by the other side. But
+neither the shots nor the parries appeared to be very seriously meant.
+Then when the assailants retired, the fugitives pretended to pursue
+them, till both parties had regained their original position. The same
+scene of alternate attack and retreat was repeated hour after hour, till
+at last, the pretence of enmity being laid aside, the two parties joined
+in a dance, their heads crowned with leafy garlands. Father Lambert, who
+describes this ceremony as an eye-witness, offers no explanation of it.
+But as he tells us that all deaths are believed by these savages to be
+an effect of sorcery, we may conjecture that the sham fight is intended
+to delude the ghost into thinking that his death is being avenged on the
+sorcerer who killed him.[524] In former lectures I shewed that similar
+pretences are made, apparently for a similar purpose, by some of the
+natives of Australia and New Guinea.[525] If the explanation is correct,
+we can hardly help applauding the ingenuity which among these savages
+has discovered a bloodless mode of satisfying the ghost's craving for
+blood.
+
+[Sidenote: Preservation of the skulls of the dead.]
+
+About a year after the death, when the flesh of the corpse is entirely
+decayed, the skull is removed and placed solemnly in another
+burying-ground, or rather charnel-house, where all the skulls of the
+family are deposited. Every family has such a charnel-house, which is
+commonly situated near the dwelling. It appears to be simply an open
+space in the forest, where the skulls are set in a row on the
+ground.[526] Yet in a sense it may be called a temple for the worship of
+ancestors; for recourse is had to the skulls on various occasions in
+order to obtain the help of the spirits of the dead. "The true worship
+of the New Caledonians," says Father Lambert, "is the worship of
+ancestors. Each family has its own; it religiously preserves their name;
+it is proud of them and has confidence in them. Hence it has its
+burial-place and its pious hearth for the sacrifices to be offered to
+their ghosts. It is the most inviolable piece of property; an
+encroachment on such a spot by a neighbour is a thing unheard of."[527]
+
+[Sidenote: Examples of ancestor-worship among the New Caledonians.]
+
+A few examples may serve to illustrate the ancestor-worship of the New
+Caledonians. When a person is sick, a member of the family, never a
+stranger, is appointed to heal him by means of certain magical
+insufflations. To enable him to do so with effect the healer first
+repairs to the family charnel-house and lays some sugar-cane leaves
+beside the skulls, saying, "I lay these leaves on you that I may go and
+breathe upon our sick relative, to the end that he may live." Then he
+goes to a tree belonging to the family and lays other sugar-cane leaves
+at its foot, saying, "I lay these leaves beside the tree of my father
+and of my grandfather, in order that my breath may have healing virtue."
+Next he takes some leaves of the tree or a piece of its bark, chews it
+into a mash, and then goes and breathes on the patient, his breath being
+moistened with spittle which is charged with particles of the leaves or
+the bark.[528] Thus the healing virtue of his breath would seem to be
+drawn from the spirits of the dead as represented partly by their skulls
+and partly by the leaves and bark of the tree which belonged to them in
+life, and to which their souls appear in some manner to be attached in
+death.
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers for fish.]
+
+Again, when a shoal of fish has made its appearance on the reef, a
+number of superstitious ceremonies have to be performed before the
+people may go and spear them in the water. On the eve of the fishing-day
+the medicine-man of the tribe causes a quantity of leaves of certain
+specified plants to be collected and roasted in the native ovens. Next
+day the leaves are taken from the ovens and deposited beside the
+ancestral skulls, which have been arranged and decorated for the
+ceremony. All the fishermen, armed with their fishing-spears, repair to
+the holy ground or sacred grove where the skulls are kept, and there
+they draw themselves up in two rows, while the medicine-man chants an
+invocation or prayer for a good catch. At every verse the crowd raises a
+cry of approval and assent. At its conclusion the medicine-man sets an
+example by thrusting with his spear at a fish, and all the men
+immediately plunge into the water and engage in fishing.[529]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers for sugar-cane.]
+
+Again, in order that a sugar plantation may flourish, the medicine-man
+will lay a sugar-cane beside the ancestral skulls, saying, "This is for
+you. We beg of you to ward off all curses, all tricks of wicked people,
+in order that our plantations may prosper."[530]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers for yams.]
+
+Again, when the store of yams is running short and famine is beginning
+to be felt, the New Caledonians celebrate a festival called _moulim_ in
+which the worship of their ancestors is the principal feature. A staff
+is wreathed with branches, apparently to represent a yam, and a hedge of
+coco-nut leaves is made near the ancestral skulls. The decorated staff
+is then set up there, and prayers for the prosperity of the crops are
+offered over and over again. After that nobody may enter a yam-field or
+a cemetery or touch sea-water for three days. On the third day a man
+stationed on a mound chants an invocation or incantation in a loud
+voice. Next all the men go down to the shore, each of them with a
+firebrand in his hand, and separating into two parties engage in a sham
+fight. Afterwards they bathe and repairing to the charnel-house deposit
+coco-nut leaves beside the skulls of their ancestors. They are then free
+to partake of the feast which has been prepared by the women.[531]
+
+[Sidenote: Caverns used by the natives as charnel-houses in the Isle of
+Pines.]
+
+While the beliefs and customs of the New Caledonians in regard to the
+dead bear a general resemblance to each other, whether they belong to
+the north or to the south of the principal island, a special feature is
+introduced into the mortuary customs of the natives of the Isle of Pines
+by the natural caves and grottoes with which the outer rim of the
+island, to the distance of several miles from the shore, is riddled; for
+in these caverns the natives in the old heathen days were wont to
+deposit the bones and skulls of their dead and to use the caves as
+sanctuaries or chapels for the worship of the spirits of the departed.
+Some of the caves are remarkable both in themselves and in their
+situation. Most of those which the natives turned into charnel-houses
+are hidden away, sometimes at great distances, in the rank luxuriance of
+the tropical forests. Some of them open straight from the level of the
+ground; to reach others you must clamber up the rocks; to explore others
+you must descend into the bowels of the earth. A glimmering twilight
+illumines some; thick darkness veils others, and it is only by
+torchlight that you can explore their mysterious depths. Penetrating
+into the interior by the flickering gleam of flambeaus held aloft by the
+guides, and picking your steps among loose stones and pools of water,
+you might fancy yourself now in the great hall of a ruined castle, now
+in the vast nave of a gothic cathedral with its chapels opening off it
+into the darkness on either hand. The illusion is strengthened by the
+multitude of stalactites which hang from the roof of the cavern and,
+glittering in the fitful glow of the torches, might be taken for burning
+cressets kindled to light up the revels in a baronial hall, or for holy
+lamps twinkling in the gloom of a dim cathedral aisle before holy
+images, where solitary worshippers kneel in silent devotion. In the
+shifting play of the light and shadow cast by the torches the fantastic
+shapes of the incrustations which line the sides or rise from the floor
+of the grotto appear to the imagination of the observer now as the
+gnarled trunks of huge trees, now as statues or torsos of statues, now
+as altars, on which perhaps a nearer approach reveals a row of blanched
+and grinning skulls. No wonder if such places, chosen for the last
+resting-places of the relics of mortality, have fed the imagination of
+the natives with weird notions of a life after death, a life very
+different from that which the living lead in the glowing sunshine and
+amid the rich tropical verdure a few paces outside of these gloomy
+caverns. It is with a shiver and a sense of relief that the visitor
+escapes from them to the warm outer air and sees again the ferns and
+creepers hanging over the mouth of the cave like a green fringe against
+the intense blue of the sky.[532]
+
+[Sidenote: Sea-caves.]
+
+While this is the general character of the caves which are to be found
+hidden away in the forests, many of those near the shore consist simply
+of apertures hollowed out in the face of the cliffs by the slow but
+continuous action of the waves in the course of ages. On the beach
+itself sea-caves are found in which the rising tide precipitates itself
+with a hollow roar as of subterranean thunder; and at a point, some way
+back from the strand, where the roof of one of these caves has fallen
+in, the salt water is projected into the air in the form of intermittent
+jets of spray, which vary in height with the force of the wind and
+tide.[533]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers and sacrifices offered to the dead by the New
+Caledonians.]
+
+With regard to the use which the natives make of these caves as
+charnel-houses and mortuary chapels, Father Lambert tells us that any
+one of them usually includes three compartments, a place of burial, a
+place of skulls, and a place of sacrifice. But often the place of skulls
+is also the place of sacrifice; and in no case is the one far from the
+other. The family priest, who is commonly the senior member of the
+family, may address his prayers to the ancestors in the depth of the
+cavern, in the place of skulls, or in the place of sacrifice, whenever
+circumstances call for a ritual of unusual solemnity. Otherwise with the
+help of his amulets he may pray to the souls of the forefathers
+anywhere; for these amulets consist of personal and portable relics of
+the dead, such as locks of hair, teeth, and so forth; or again they may
+be leaves or other parts of plants which are sacred to the family; so
+that a wizard who is in possession of them can always and anywhere
+communicate with the ancestral spirits. The place of sacrifice would
+seem to be more often in the open air than in a cave, for Father Lambert
+tells us that in the centre of it a shrub, always of the same species,
+is planted and carefully cultivated. Beside it may be seen the pots and
+stones which are used in cooking the food offered to the dead. In this
+worship of the dead a certain differentiation of functions or division
+of labour obtains between the various families. All have not the same
+gifts and graces. The prayers of one family offered to their ancestral
+ghosts are thought to be powerful in procuring rain in time of drought;
+the prayers of another will cause the sun to break through the clouds
+when the sky is overcast; the supplications of a third will produce a
+fine crop of yams; the earnest entreaties of a fourth will ensure
+victory in war; and the passionate pleadings of a fifth will guard
+mariners against the perils and dangers of the deep. And so on through
+the whole gamut of human needs, so far as these are felt by savages. If
+only wrestling in prayer could satisfy the wants of man, few people
+should be better provided with all the necessaries and comforts of life
+than the New Caledonians. And according to the special purpose to which
+a family devotes its spiritual energies, so will commonly be the
+position of its oratory. For example, if rain-making is their strong
+point, their house of prayer will be established near a cultivated
+field, in order that the crops may immediately experience the benefit to
+be derived from their orisons. Again, if they enjoy a high reputation
+for procuring a good catch of fish, the family skulls will be placed in
+the mouth of a cave looking out over the great ocean, or perhaps on a
+bleak little wind-swept isle, where in the howl of the blast, the
+thunder of the waves on the strand, and the clangour of the gulls
+overhead, the fancy of the superstitious savage may hear the voices of
+his dead forefathers keeping watch and ward over their children who are
+tossed on the heaving billows.[534] Thus among these fortunate islanders
+religion and industry go hand in hand; piety has been reduced to a
+co-operative system which diffuses showers of blessings on the whole
+community.
+
+[Sidenote: Prayer-posts.]
+
+As it is clearly impossible even for the most devout to pray day and
+night without cessation, the weakness of the flesh requiring certain
+intervals for refreshment and repose, the New Caledonians have devised
+an ingenious method of continuing their orisons at the shrine in their
+own absence. For this purpose they make rods or poles of various
+lengths, carve and paint them rudely, wind bandages of native cloth
+about them, and having fastened large shells to the top, set them up
+either in the sepulchral caves or in the place of skulls. In setting up
+one of these poles the native will pray for the particular favour which
+he desires to obtain from the ancestors for himself or his family; and
+he appears to think that in some way the pole will continue to recite
+the prayer in the ears of the ghosts, when he himself has ceased to
+speak and has returned to his customary avocations. And when members of
+his family visit the shrine and see the pole, they will be reminded of
+the particular benefit which they are entitled to expect from the souls
+of the departed. A certain rude symbolism may be traced in the materials
+and other particulars of these prayer-posts. A hard wood signifies
+strength; a tall pole overtopping all the rest imports a wish that he
+for whose sake it was erected may out-top all his rivals; and so
+on.[535]
+
+[Sidenote: Religion combined with magic in the ritual of the New
+Caledonians. Sacred stones endowed with special magical virtues. The
+"stone of famine."]
+
+We may assume with some probability that in the mind of the natives such
+resemblances are not purely figurative or symbolic, but that they are
+also magical in intention, being supposed not merely to represent the
+object of the supplicant's prayer, but actually, on the principle of
+homoeopathic or imitative magic, to contribute to its accomplishment. If
+that is so, we must conclude that the religion of these savages, as
+manifested in their prayers to the spirits of the dead, is tinctured
+with an alloy of magic; they do not trust entirely to the compassion of
+the spirits and their power to help them; they seek to reinforce their
+prayers by a certain physical compulsion acting through the natural
+properties of the prayer-posts. This interpretation is confirmed by a
+parallel use which these people make of certain sacred stones, which
+apart from their possible character as representatives of the ancestors,
+seem to be credited with independent magical virtues by reason of their
+various shapes and appearances. For example, there is a piece of
+polished jade which is called "the stone of famine," because it is
+supposed capable of causing either dearth or abundance, but is oftener
+used by the sorcerer to create, or at least to threaten, dearth, in
+order thereby to extort presents from his alarmed fellow tribesmen. This
+stone is kept in a burial-ground and derives its potency from the dead.
+The worshipper or the sorcerer (for he combines the two characters) who
+desires to cause a famine repairs to the burial-ground, uncovers the
+stone, rubs it with certain plants, and smears one half of it with black
+pigment. Then he makes a small hole in the ground and inserts the
+blackened end of the stone in the hole. Next he prays to the ancestors
+that nothing may go well with the country. If this malevolent rite
+should be followed by the desired effect, the sorcerer soon sees
+messengers arriving laden with presents, who entreat him to stay the
+famine. If his cupidity is satisfied, he rubs the stone again, inserts
+it upside down in the ground, and prays to his ancestors to restore
+plenty to the land.[536]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to drive people mad.]
+
+Again, certain rough unhewn stones, which are kept in the sacred places,
+are thought to possess the power of driving people mad. To effect this
+purpose the sorcerer has only to strike one of them with the branches of
+a certain tree and to pray to the ancestral spirits that they would
+deprive so-and-so of his senses.[537]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to blight coco-nut palms. Stones to make bread-fruit
+trees bear fruit.]
+
+Again, there is a stone which they use in cursing a plantation of
+coco-nut palms. The stone resembles a blighted coco-nut, and no doubt it
+is this resemblance which is supposed to endow it with the magical power
+to blight coco-nut trees. In order to effect his malicious purpose the
+sorcerer rubs the stone in the cemetery with certain leaves and then
+deposits it in a hole at the foot of a coco-nut tree, covers it up, and
+prays that all the trees of the plantation may be barren. This ceremony
+combines the elements of magic and religion. The prayer, which is no
+doubt addressed to the spirits of the dead, though this is not expressly
+affirmed, is purely religious; but the employment of a stone resembling
+a blighted coco-nut for the purpose of blighting the coco-nut palms is a
+simple piece of homoeopathic or imitative magic, in which, as usual, the
+desired effect is supposed to be produced by an imitation of it.
+Similarly, in order to make a bread-fruit tree bear fruit they employ
+two stones, one of which resembles the unripe and the other the ripe
+fruit. These are kept, as usual, in a cemetery; and when the trees begin
+to put forth fruit, the small stone resembling the unripe fruit is
+buried at the foot of one of the trees with the customary prayers and
+ceremonies; and when the fruits are more mature the small stone is
+replaced by the larger stone which resembles the ripe fruit. Then, when
+the fruits on the tree are quite ripe, the two stones are removed and
+deposited again in the cemetery: they have done their work by bringing
+to maturity the fruits which they resemble. This again is a piece of
+pure homoeopathic or imitative magic working by means of mimicry; but
+the magical virtue of the stones is reinforced by the spiritual power of
+the dead, for the stones have been kept in a cemetery and prayers have
+been addressed to the souls of the departed.[538]
+
+[Sidenote: The "stone of the sun."]
+
+Again, the natives have two disc-shaped stones, each with a hole in the
+centre, which together make up what they call "the stone of the sun." No
+doubt it is regarded as a symbol of the sun, and as such it is employed
+to cause drought in a ceremony which, like the preceding, combines the
+elements of magic and religion. The sun-stone is kept in one of the
+sacred places, and when a sorcerer wishes to make drought with it, he
+brings offerings to the ancestral spirits in the sacred place. These
+offerings are purely religious, but the rest of the ceremony is purely
+magical. At the moment when the sun rises from the sea, the magician or
+priest, whichever we choose to call him (for he combines both
+characters), passes a burning brand in and out of the hole in the
+sun-stone, while he says, "I kindle the sun, in order that he may eat up
+the clouds and dry up our land, so that it shall no longer bear fruit."
+Here the putting of fire to the sun-stone is a piece of pure
+homoeopathic or imitative magic, designed to increase the burning heat
+of the sun by mimicry.[539]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to make rain.]
+
+On the contrary, when a wizard desires to make rain, he proceeds as
+follows. The place of sacrifice is decorated and enclosed with a fence,
+and a large quantity of provisions is deposited in it to be offered to
+the ancestors whose skulls stand there in a row. Opposite the skulls the
+wizard places a row of pots full of a medicated water, and he brings a
+number of sacred stones of a rounded form or shaped like a skull. Each
+of these stones, after being rubbed with the leaves of a certain tree,
+is placed in one of the pots of water. Then the wizard recites a long
+litany or series of invocations to the ancestors, which may be
+summarised thus: "We pray you to help us, in order that our country may
+revive and live anew." Then holding a branch in his hand he climbs a
+tree and scans the horizon if haply he may descry a cloud, be it no
+larger than a man's hand. Should he be fortunate enough to see one, he
+waves the branch to and fro to make the cloud mount up in the sky, while
+he also stretches out his arms to right and left to enlarge it so that
+it may hide the sun and overcast the whole heaven.[540] Here again the
+prayers and offerings are purely religious; while the placing of the
+skull-shaped stones in pots full of water, and the waving of the branch
+to bring up the clouds, are magical ceremonies designed to produce rain
+by mimicry and compulsion.
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to make or mar sea-voyages.]
+
+Again, the natives have a stone in the shape of a canoe, which they
+employ in ceremonies for the purpose of favouring or hindering
+navigation. If the sorcerer desires to make a voyage prosperous, he
+places the canoe-shaped stone before the ancestral skulls with the right
+side up; but if he wishes to cause his enemy to perish at sea, he places
+the canoe-shaped stone bottom upwards before the skulls, which, on the
+principles of homoeopathic or imitative magic, must clearly make his
+enemy's canoe to capsize and precipitate its owner into the sea.
+Whichever of these ceremonies he performs, the wizard accompanies the
+magical rite, as usual, with prayers and offerings of food to the
+ancestral spirits who are represented by the skulls.[541]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to help fishermen.]
+
+The natives of the Isle of Pines subsist mainly by fishing; hence they
+naturally have a large number of sacred stones which they use for the
+purpose of securing the blessing of the ancestral spirits on the
+business of the fisherman. Indeed each species of fish has its own
+special sacred stone. These stones are kept in large shells in a
+cemetery. A wizard who desires to make use of one of them paints the
+stone with a variety of colours, chews certain leaves, and then breathes
+on the stone and moistens it with his spittle. After that he sets up the
+stone before the ancestral skulls, saying, "Help us, that we may be
+successful in fishing." The sacrifices to the spirits consist of
+bananas, sugar-cane, and fish, never of taros or yams. After the fishing
+and the sacrificial meal, the stone is put back in its place, and
+covered up respectfully.[542]
+
+[Sidenote: Stones to make yams grow.]
+
+Lastly, the natives of the Isle of Pines cultivate many different kinds
+of yams, and they have a correspondingly large number of sacred stones
+destined to aid them in the cultivation by ensuring the blessing of the
+dead upon the work. In shape and colour these stones differ from each
+other, each of them bearing a resemblance, real or fanciful, to the
+particular species of yam which it is supposed to quicken. But the
+method of operating with them is much the same for all. The stone is
+placed before the skulls, wetted with water, and wiped with certain
+leaves. Yams and fish, cooked on the spot, are offered in sacrifice to
+the dead, the priest or magician saying, "This is your offering in order
+that the crop of yams may be good." So saying he presents the food to
+the dead and himself eats a little of it. After that the stone is taken
+away and buried in the yam field which it is designed to fertilise.[543]
+Here, again, the prayer and sacrifice to the dead are purely religious
+rites intended to propitiate the spirits and secure their help; while
+the burying of the yam-shaped stone in the yam-field to make the yams
+grow is a simple piece of homoeopathic or imitative magic. Similarly in
+order to cultivate taros and bananas, stones resembling taros and
+bananas are buried in the taro field or the banana grove, and their
+magical virtue is reinforced by prayers and offerings to the dead.[544]
+
+[Sidenote: The religion of the New Caledonians is mainly a worship of
+the dead tinctured with magic.]
+
+On the whole we may conclude that among the natives of New Caledonia
+there exists a real worship of the dead, and that this worship is indeed
+the principal element in their religion. The spirits of the dead, though
+they are supposed to spend part of their time in a happy land far away
+under the sea, are nevertheless believed to be near at hand, hovering
+about in the burial-grounds or charnel-houses and embodied apparently in
+their skulls. To these spirits the native turns for help in all the
+important seasons and emergencies of life; he appeals to them in prayer
+and seeks to propitiate them by sacrifice. Thus in his attitude towards
+his dead ancestors we perceive the elements of a real religion. But, as
+I have just pointed out, many rites of this worship of ancestors are
+accompanied by magical ceremonies. The religion of these islanders is in
+fact deeply tinged with magic; it marks a transition from an age of pure
+magic in the past to an age of more or less pure religion in the future.
+
+[Sidenote: Evidence as to the religion of the New Caledonians furnished
+by Dr. G. Turner.]
+
+Thus far I have based my account of the beliefs and customs of the New
+Caledonians concerning the dead on the valuable information which we owe
+to the Catholic missionary Father Lambert. But, as I pointed out, his
+evidence refers not so much to the natives of the mainland as to the
+inhabitants of certain small islands at the two extremities of the great
+island. It may be well, therefore, to supplement his description by some
+notes which a distinguished Protestant missionary, the Rev. Dr. George
+Turner, obtained in the year 1845 from two native teachers, one a Samoan
+and the other a Rarotongan, who lived in the south-south-eastern part of
+New Caledonia for three years.[545] Their evidence, it will be observed,
+goes to confirm Father Lambert's view as to the general similarity of
+the religious beliefs and customs prevailing throughout the island.
+
+[Sidenote: Material culture of the New Caledonians.]
+
+The natives of this part of New Caledonia were divided into separate
+districts, each with its own name, and war, perpetual war, was the rule
+between the neighbouring communities. They cultivated taro, yams,
+coco-nuts, and sugar-cane; but they had no intoxicating _kava_ and kept
+no pigs. They cooked their food in earthenware pots manufactured by the
+women. In former days their only edge-tools were made of stone, and they
+felled trees by a slow fire smouldering close to the ground. Similarly
+they hollowed out the fallen trees by means of a slow fire to make their
+canoes. Their villages were not permanent. They migrated within certain
+bounds, as they planted. A village might comprise as many as fifty or
+sixty round houses. The chiefs had absolute power of life and death.
+Priests did not meddle in political affairs.[546]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs; preservation of the skulls and teeth.]
+
+At death they dressed the corpse with a belt and shell armlets, cut off
+the nails of the fingers and toes, and kept them as relics. They spread
+the grave with a mat, and buried all the body but the head. After ten
+days the friends twisted off the head, extracted the teeth to be kept as
+relics, and preserved the skull also. In cases of sickness and other
+calamities they presented offerings of food to the skulls of the dead.
+The teeth of the old women were taken to the yam plantations and were
+supposed to fertilise them; and their skulls were set up on poles in the
+plantations for the same purpose. When they buried a chief, they erected
+spears at his head, fastened a spear-thrower to his forefinger, and laid
+a club on the top of his grave,[547] no doubt for the convenience of the
+ghost.
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers to ancestors.]
+
+"Their gods," we are told, "were their ancestors, whose relics they kept
+up and idolised. At one place they had wooden idols before the chiefs'
+houses. The office of the priest was hereditary. Almost every family had
+its priest. To make sure of favours and prosperity they prayed not only
+to their own gods, but also, in a general way, to the gods of other
+lands. Fishing, planting, house-building, and everything of importance
+was preceded by prayers to their guardian spirits for success. This was
+especially the case before going to battle. They prayed to one for the
+eye, that they might see the spear as it flew towards them. To another
+for the ear, that they might hear the approach of the enemy. Thus, too,
+they prayed for the feet, that they might be swift in pursuing the
+enemy; for the heart, that they might be courageous; for the body, that
+they might not be speared; for the head, that it might not be clubbed;
+and for sleep, that it might be undisturbed by an attack of the enemy.
+Prayers over, arms ready, and equipped with their relic charms, they
+went off to battle."[548]
+
+[Sidenote: "Grand concert of spirits."]
+
+The spirits of the dead were believed to go away into the forest. Every
+fifth month they had a "spirit night" or "grand concert of spirits."
+Heaps of food were prepared for the occasion. The people assembled in
+the afternoon round a certain cave. At sundown they feasted, and then
+one stood up and addressed the spirits in the cave, saying, "You spirits
+within, may it please you to sing a song, that all the women and men out
+here may listen to your sweet voices." Thereupon a strange unearthly
+concert of voices burst on their ears from the cave, the nasal squeak of
+old men and women forming the dominant note. But the hearers outside
+listened with delight to the melody, praised the sweet voices of the
+singers, and then got up and danced to the music. The singing swelled
+louder and louder as the dance grew faster and more furious, till the
+concert closed in a nocturnal orgy of unbridled license, which, but for
+the absence of intoxicants, might compare with the worst of the ancient
+bacchanalia. The singers in the cave were the old men and women who had
+ensconced themselves in it secretly during the day; but the hoax was not
+suspected by the children and young people, who firmly believed that the
+spirits of the dead really assembled that night in the cavern and
+assisted at the sports and diversions of the living.[549]
+
+[Sidenote: Making rain by means of the bones of the dead.]
+
+The souls of the departed also kindly bore a hand in the making of rain.
+In order to secure their co-operation for this beneficent purpose the
+human rain-maker proceeded as follows. He blackened himself all over,
+exhumed a dead body, carried the bones to a cave, jointed them, and
+suspended the skeleton over some taro leaves. After that he poured water
+on the skeleton so that it ran down and fell on the leaves underneath.
+They imagined that the soul of the deceased took up the water, converted
+it into rain, and then caused it to descend in refreshing showers. But
+the rain-maker had to stay in the cavern fasting till his efforts were
+crowned with success, and when the ghost was tardy in executing his
+commission, the rain-maker sometimes died of hunger. As a rule, however,
+they chose the showery months of March and April for the operation of
+rain-making, so that the wizard ran little risk of perishing a martyr to
+the cause of science. When there was too much rain, and they wanted fine
+weather, the magician procured it by a similar process, except that
+instead of drenching the skeleton with water he lit a fire under it and
+burned it up,[550] which naturally induced or compelled the ghost to
+burn up the clouds and let the sun shine out.
+
+[Sidenote: Execution of maleficent sorcerers. Reincarnation of the dead
+in white people.]
+
+Another class of magicians were the maleficent sorcerers who caused
+people to fall ill and die by burning their personal rubbish. When one
+of these rascals was convicted of repeated offences of that sort, he was
+formally tried and condemned. The people assembled and a great festival
+was held. The condemned man was decked with a garland of red flowers;
+his arms and legs were covered with flowers and shells, and his face and
+body painted black. Thus arrayed he came dashing forward, rushed through
+the people, plunged from the rocks into the sea, and was seen no more.
+The natives also ascribed sickness to the arts of white men, whom they
+identified with the spirits of the dead; and assigned this belief as a
+reason for their wish to kill the strangers.[551]
+
+[Footnote 517: F. H. H. Guillemard, _Australasia_, II. _Malaysia and the
+Pacific Archipelagoes_ (London, 1894), p. 458.]
+
+[Footnote 518: J. Deniker, _The Races of Man_ (London, 1900), pp. 498
+_sq._ As to the mediums of exchange, particularly the shell-money, see
+R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp. 323 _sqq._; R.
+Parkinson, _Dreissig Jaehre in der Suedsee_ (Stuttgart, 1907), pp. 82
+_sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 519: Le Pere Lambert, _Moeurs et Superstitions des
+Neo-Caledoniens_ (Noumea, 1900). This work originally appeared as a
+series of articles in the Catholic missionary journal _Les Missions
+Catholiques_.]
+
+[Footnote 520: Lambert, _Moeurs et Superstitions des Neo-Caledoniens_,
+pp. ii., iv. _sq._; 255.]
+
+[Footnote 521: George Turner, LL.D., _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before_ (London, 1884), pp. 340 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 522: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 13-16.]
+
+[Footnote 523: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 235-239.]
+
+[Footnote 524: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 238, 239 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 525: Above, pp. 136 _sq._, 235 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 526: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 24, 240.]
+
+[Footnote 527: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 274.]
+
+[Footnote 528: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 24, 26.]
+
+[Footnote 529: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 530: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 218.]
+
+[Footnote 531: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 224 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 532: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 275 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 533: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 276.]
+
+[Footnote 534: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 288 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 535: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 290, 292.]
+
+[Footnote 536: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 292 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 537: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 293 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 538: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 294.]
+
+[Footnote 539: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 296 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 540: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 297 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 541: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 298.]
+
+[Footnote 542: Lambert, _op. cit._ p. 300.]
+
+[Footnote 543: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 301 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 544: Lambert, _op. cit._ pp. 217 _sq._, 300.]
+
+[Footnote 545: George Turner, LL.D., _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before_ (London, 1884), pp. 340 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 546: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 340, 341, 343, 344.]
+
+[Footnote 547: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 342 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 548: G. Turner, _op. cit._ p. 345.]
+
+[Footnote 549: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 346 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 550: G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp. 345 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 551: G. Turner, _op. cit._ p. 342.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XVI
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF CENTRAL MELANESIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: The islands of Central Melanesia. Distinction between the
+religion of the Eastern and Western Islanders.]
+
+In our survey of savage beliefs and practices concerning the dead we now
+pass from New Caledonia, the most southerly island of Melanesia, to the
+groups of islands known as the New Hebrides, the Banks' Islands, the
+Torres Islands, the Santa Cruz Islands, and the Solomon Islands, which
+together constitute what we may call Central Melanesia. These groups of
+islands may themselves be distinguished into two archipelagoes, a
+western and an eastern, of which the Western comprises the Solomon
+Islands and the Eastern includes all the rest. Corresponding to this
+geographical distinction there is a religious distinction; for while the
+religion of the Western islanders (the Solomon Islanders) consists
+chiefly in a fear and worship of the ghosts of the dead, the religion of
+the Eastern islanders is characterised mainly by the fear and worship of
+spirits which are not supposed ever to have been incarnate in human
+bodies. Both groups of islanders, the Western and the Eastern, recognise
+indeed both classes of spirits, namely ghosts that once were men and
+spirits who never were men; but the religious bias of the one group is
+towards ghosts rather than towards pure spirits, and the religious bias
+of the other group is towards pure spirits rather than towards ghosts.
+It is not a little remarkable that the islanders whose bent is towards
+ghosts have carried the system of sacrifice and the arts of life to a
+higher level than the islanders whose bent is towards pure spirits; this
+applies particularly to the sacrificial system, which is much more
+developed in the west than in the east.[552] From this it would seem to
+follow that if a faith in ghosts is more costly than a faith in pure
+spirits, it is at the same time more favourable to the evolution of
+culture.
+
+[Sidenote: Dr. R. H. Codrington on the Melanesians.]
+
+For the whole of this region we are fortunate in possessing the evidence
+of the Rev. Dr. R. H. Codrington, one of the most sagacious, cautious,
+and accurate of observers, who laboured as a missionary among the
+natives for twenty-four years, from 1864 to 1887, and has given us a
+most valuable account of their customs and beliefs in his book _The
+Melanesians_, which must always remain an anthropological classic. In
+describing the worship of the dead as it is carried on among these
+islanders I shall draw chiefly on the copious evidence supplied by Dr.
+Codrington; and I shall avail myself of his admirable researches to
+enter into considerable details on the subject, since details recorded
+by an accurate observer are far more instructive than the vague
+generalities of superficial observers, which are too often all the
+information we possess as to the religion of savages.
+
+[Sidenote: Melanesian theory of the soul.]
+
+In the first place, all the Central Melanesians believe that man is
+composed of a body and a soul, that death is the final parting of the
+soul from the body, and that after death the soul continues to exist as
+a conscious and more or less active being.[553] Thus the creed of these
+savages on this profound subject agrees fundamentally with the creed of
+the average European; if my hearers were asked to state their beliefs as
+to the nature of life and death, I imagine that most of them would
+formulate them in substantially the same way. However, when the Central
+Melanesian savage attempts to define the nature of the vital principle
+or soul, which animates the body during life and survives it after
+death, he finds himself in a difficulty; and to continue the parallel I
+cannot help thinking that if my hearers in like manner were invited to
+explain their conception of the soul, they would similarly find
+themselves embarrassed for an answer. But an examination of the Central
+Melanesian theory of the soul would lead us too far from our immediate
+subject; we must be content to say that, "whatever word the Melanesian
+people use for soul, they mean something essentially belonging to each
+man's nature which carries life to his body with it, and is the seat of
+thought and intelligence, exercising therefore power which is not of the
+body and is invisible in its action."[554] However the soul may be
+defined, the Melanesians are universally of opinion that it survives the
+death of the body and goes away to some more or less distant region,
+where the spirits of all the dead congregate and continue for the most
+part to live for an indefinite time, though some of them, as we shall
+see presently, are supposed to die a second death and so to come to an
+end altogether. In Western Melanesia, that is, in the Solomon Islands,
+the abode of the dead is supposed to be in certain islands, which differ
+in the creed of different islanders; but in Eastern Melanesia the abode
+of the dead is thought to be a subterranean region called Panoi.[555]
+
+[Sidenote: Distinction between ghosts of power and ghosts of no
+account.]
+
+But though the souls of the departed go away to the spirit land,
+nevertheless, with a seeming or perhaps real inconsistency, their ghosts
+are also supposed to haunt their graves and their old homes and to
+exercise great power for good or evil over the living, who are
+accordingly often obliged to woo their favour by prayer and sacrifice.
+According to the Solomon Islanders, however, among whom ghosts are the
+principal objects of worship, there is a great distinction to be drawn
+among ghosts. "The distinction," says Dr. Codrington, "is between ghosts
+of power and ghosts of no account, between those whose help is sought
+and their wrath deprecated, and those from whom nothing is expected and
+to whom no observance is due. Among living men there are some who stand
+out distinguished for capacity in affairs, success in life, valour in
+fighting, and influence over others; and these are so, it is believed,
+because of the supernatural and mysterious powers which they have, and
+which are derived from communication with those ghosts of the dead gone
+before them who are full of those same powers. On the death of a
+distinguished man his ghost retains the powers that belonged to him in
+life, in greater activity and with stronger force; his ghost therefore
+is powerful and worshipful, and so long as he is remembered the aid of
+his powers is sought and worship is offered him; he is the _tindalo_ of
+Florida, the _lio'a_ of Saa. In every society, again, the multitude is
+composed of insignificant persons, '_numerus fruges consumeri nati_,' of
+no particular account for valour, skill, or prosperity. The ghosts of
+such persons continue their insignificance, and are nobodies after death
+as before; they are ghosts because all men have souls, and the souls of
+dead men are ghosts; they are dreaded because all ghosts are awful, but
+they get no worship and are soon only thought of as the crowd of the
+nameless population of the lower world."[556]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts of the great and of the recently dead are chiefly
+regarded. Supernatural power (_mana_) acquired through ghosts.]
+
+From this account of Dr. Codrington we see that it is only the ghosts of
+great and powerful people who are worshipped; the ghosts of ordinary
+people are indeed feared, but no worship is paid to them. Further, we
+are told that it is the ghosts of those who have lately died that are
+deemed to be most powerful and are therefore most regarded; as the dead
+are forgotten, their ghosts cease to be worshipped, their power fades
+away,[557] and their place in the religion of the people is taken by the
+ghosts of the more recently departed. In fact here, as elsewhere, the
+existence of the dead seems to be dependent on the memory of the living;
+when they are forgotten they cease to exist. Further, it deserves to be
+noticed that in the Solomon Islands what we should call a man's natural
+powers and capacities are regarded as supernatural endowments acquired
+by communication with a mighty ghost. If a man is a great warrior, it is
+not because he is strong of arm, quick of eye, and brave of heart; it is
+because he is supported by the ghost of a dead warrior, whose power he
+has drawn to himself through an amulet of stone tied round his neck, or
+a tuft of leaves in his belt, or a tooth attached to one of his fingers,
+or a spell by the recitation of which he can enlist the aid of the
+ghost.[558] And similarly with all other pre-eminent capacities and
+virtues; in the mind of the Solomon Islanders, they are all supernatural
+gifts and graces bestowed on men by ghosts. This all-pervading
+supernatural power the Central Melanesian calls _mana_.[559] Thus for
+these savages the whole world teems with ghostly influences; their minds
+are filled, we may almost say, obsessed, with a sense of the unseen
+powers which encompass and determine even in its minute particulars the
+life of man on earth: in their view the visible world is, so to say,
+merely a puppet-show of which the strings are pulled and the puppets
+made to dance by hands invisible. Truly the attitude of these savages to
+the universe is deeply religious.
+
+We may now consider the theory and practice of the Central Melanesians
+on this subject somewhat more in detail; and in doing so we shall begin
+with their funeral customs, which throw much light on their views of
+death and the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in the Solomon Islands. Land burial and sea
+burial. Land-ghosts and sea-ghosts.]
+
+Thus, for example, in Florida, one of the Solomon Islands, the corpse is
+usually buried. Common men are buried in their gardens or plantations,
+chiefs sometimes in the village, a chief's child sometimes in the house.
+If the ghost of the deceased is worshipped, his grave becomes a
+sanctuary (_vunuhu_); the skull is often dug up and hung in the house.
+On the return from the burial the mourners take a different road from
+that by which they carried the corpse to the grave; this they do in
+order to throw the ghost off the scent and so prevent him from following
+them home. This practice clearly shews the fear which the natives feel
+for the ghosts of the newly dead. A man is buried with money, porpoise
+teeth, and some of his personal ornaments; but, avarice getting the
+better of superstition, these things are often secretly dug up again and
+appropriated by the living. Sometimes a dying man will express a wish to
+be cast into the sea; his friends will therefore paddle out with the
+corpse, tie stones to the feet, and sink it in the depths. In the island
+of Savo, another of the Solomon Islands, common men are generally thrown
+into the sea and only great men are buried.[560] The same distinction is
+made at Wango in San Cristoval, another of the same group of islands;
+there also the bodies of common folk are cast into the sea, but men of
+consequence are buried, and some relic of them, it may be a skull, a
+tooth, or a finger-bone, is preserved in a shrine at the village. From
+this difference in burial customs flows a not unimportant religious
+difference. The souls of the great people who are buried on land turn
+into land-ghosts, and the souls of commoners who are sunk in the sea
+turn into sea-ghosts. The land-ghosts are seen to hover about the
+villages, haunting their graves and their relics; they are also heard to
+speak in hollow whispers. Their aid can be obtained by such as know
+them. The sea-ghosts have taken a great hold on the imagination of the
+natives of the south-eastern Solomon Islands; and as these people love
+to illustrate their life by sculpture and painting, they shew us clearly
+what they suppose these sea-ghosts to be like. At Wango there used to be
+a canoe-house full of sculptures and paintings illustrative of native
+life; amongst others there was a series of scenes like those which are
+depicted on the walls of Egyptian tombs. One of the scenes represented a
+canoe attacked by sea-ghosts, which were portrayed as demons compounded
+partly of human limbs, partly of the bodies and tails of fishes, and
+armed with spears and arrows in the form of long-bodied garfish and
+flying-fish. If a man falls ill on returning from a voyage or from
+fishing on the rocks, it is thought that one of these sea-ghosts has
+shot him. Hence when men are in danger at sea, they seek to propitiate
+the ghosts by throwing areca-nuts and fragments of food into the water
+and by praying to the ghosts not to be angry with them. Sharks are also
+supposed to be animated by the ghosts of the dead.[561] It is
+interesting and instructive to find that in this part of the world
+sea-demons, who might be thought to be pure spirits of nature, are in
+fact ghosts of the dead.
+
+[Sidenote: Burnt offerings in honour of the dead.]
+
+In the island of Florida, two days after the death of a chief or of any
+person who was much esteemed, the relatives and friends assemble and
+hold a funeral feast, at which they throw a bit of food into the fire
+for the ghost, saying, "This is for you."[562] In other of the Solomon
+Islands morsels of food are similarly thrown on the fire at the
+death-feasts as the dead man's share.[563] Thus, in the Shortlands
+Islands, when a famous chief named Gorai died, his body was burnt and
+his relatives cast food, beads, and other property into the fire. The
+dead chief had been very fond of tea, so one of his daughters threw a
+cup of tea into the flames. Women danced a funeral dance round the pyre
+till the body was consumed.[564] Why should the dead man's food and
+property be burnt? No explanation of the practice is given by our
+authorities, so we are left to conjecture the reason of it. Is it that
+by volatilising the solid substance of the food you make it more
+accessible to the thin unsubstantial nature of the ghost? Is it that you
+destroy the property of the ghost lest he should come back in person to
+fetch it and so haunt and trouble the survivors? Is it that the spirits
+of the dead are supposed to reside in the fire on the hearth, so that
+offerings cast into the flames are transmitted to them directly? Whether
+it is with any such ideas that the Solomon Islanders throw food into the
+fire for ghosts, I cannot say. The whole question of the meaning of
+burnt sacrifice is still to a great extent obscure.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral customs in the island of Florida. The ghostly ferry.]
+
+At the funeral feast of a chief in the island of Florida the axes,
+spears, shield and other belongings of the deceased are hung up with
+great lamentations in his house; everything remains afterwards untouched
+and the house falls into ruins, which as time goes on are thickly
+mantled with the long tendrils of the sprouting yams. But we are told
+that the weapons are not intended to accompany the ghost to the land of
+souls; they are hung up only as a memorial of a great and valued man.
+"With the same feeling they cut down a dead man's fruit-trees as a mark
+of respect and affection, not with any notion of these things serving
+him in the world of ghosts; he ate of them, they say, when he was alive,
+he will never eat again, and no one else shall have them." However, they
+think that the ghost benefits by burial; for if a man is killed and his
+body remains unburied, his restless ghost will haunt the place.[565] The
+ghosts of such Florida people as have been duly buried depart to
+Betindalo, which seems to be situated in the south-eastern part of the
+great island of Guadalcanar. A ship waits to ferry them across the sea
+to the spirit-land. This is almost the only example of a ferry-boat used
+by ghosts in Melanesia. On their way to the ferry the ghosts may be
+heard twittering; and again on the shore, while they are waiting for the
+ferry-boat, a sound of their dancing breaks the stillness of night; but
+no man can see the dancers. It is not until they land on the further
+shore that they know they are dead. There they are met by a ghost, who
+thrusts a rod into their noses to see whether the cartilage is pierced
+as it should be; ghosts whose noses have been duly bored in life follow
+the onward path with ease, but all others have pain and difficulty in
+making their way to the realm of the shades. Yet though the souls of the
+dead thus depart to Betindalo, nevertheless their ghosts as usual not
+only haunt their burial-places, but come to the sacrifices offered to
+them and may be heard disporting themselves at night, playing on pipes,
+dancing, and shouting.[566]
+
+[Sidenote: Belief of the Solomon Islanders that the souls of the dead
+live in islands. The second death.]
+
+Similarly at Bugotu in the island of Ysabel (one of the Solomon Islands)
+the ghosts of the dead are supposed to go away to an island, and yet to
+haunt their graves and shew themselves to the survivors by night. In the
+island of the dead there is a pool with a narrow tree-trunk lying across
+it. Here is stationed Bolafagina, the ghostly lord of the place. Every
+newly arrived ghost must appear before him, and he examines their hands
+to see whether they bear the mark of the sacred frigate-bird cut on
+them; if they have the mark, the ghosts pass across the tree-trunk and
+mingle with the departed spirits in the world of the dead. But ghosts
+who have not the mark on their hands are cast into the gulf and perish
+out of their ghostly life: this is the second death.[567] The same
+notion of a second death meets us in a somewhat different form among the
+natives of Saa in Malanta, another of the Solomon Islands. All the
+ghosts of these people swim across the sea to two little islands called
+Marapa, which lie off Marau in Guadalcanar. There the ghosts of children
+live in one island and the ghosts of grown-up people in another; for the
+older people would be plagued by the chatter of children if they all
+dwelt together in one island. Yet in other respects the life of the
+departed spirits in these islands is very like life on earth. There are
+houses, gardens, and canoes there just as here, but all is thin and
+unsubstantial. Living men who land in the islands see nothing of these
+things; there is a pool where they hear laughter and merry cries, and
+where the banks are wet with invisible bathers. But the life of the
+ghosts in these islands is not eternal. The spirits of common folk soon
+turn into the nests of white ants, which serve as food for the more
+robust ghosts. Hence a living man will say to his idle son, "When I die,
+I shall have ants' nests to eat, but then what will you have?" The
+ghosts of persons who were powerful on earth last much longer. So long
+as they are remembered and worshipped by the living, their natural
+strength remains unabated; but when men forget them, and turn to worship
+some of the more recent dead, then no more food is offered to them in
+sacrifice, so they pine away and change into white ants' nests just like
+common folk. This is the second death. However, while the ghosts survive
+they can return from the islands to Saa and revisit their village and
+friends. The living can even discern them in the form of dim and
+fleeting shadows. A man who wishes for any reason to see a ghost can
+always do so very simply by taking a pinch of lime from his betel-box
+and smearing it on his forehead. Then the ghost appears to him quite
+plainly.[568]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in Saa. Preservation of the skull and jawbone.
+Burial customs in Santa Cruz. Burial customs in Ysabel.]
+
+In Saa the dead are usually buried in a common cemetery; but when the
+flesh has decayed the bones are taken up and heaped on one side. But if
+the deceased was a very great man or a beloved father, his body is
+preserved for a time in his son's house, being hung up either in a canoe
+or in the carved effigy of a sword-fish. Very favourite children are
+treated in the same way. The corpse may be kept in this way for years.
+Finally, there is a great funeral feast, at which the remains are
+removed to the common burial-ground, but the skull and jawbone are
+detached from the skeleton and kept in the house enclosed in the hollow
+wooden figure of a bonito-fish. By means of these relics the survivors
+think that they can secure the aid of the powerful ghost. Sometimes the
+corpse and afterwards the skull and jawbone are preserved, not in the
+house of the deceased, but in the _oha_ or public canoe-house, which so
+far becomes a sort of shrine or temple of the dead.[569] At Santa Cruz
+in the Solomon Islands the corpse is buried in a very deep grave in the
+house. Inland they dig up the bones again to make arrow-heads; also they
+detach the skull and keep it in a chest in the house, saying that it is
+the man himself. They even set food before the skull, no doubt for the
+use of the ghost. Yet they imagine that the ghosts of the dead go to the
+great volcano Tamami, where they are burnt in the crater and thus being
+renewed stay in the fiery region. Nevertheless the souls of the dead
+also haunt the forests in Santa Cruz; on wet and dark nights the natives
+see them twinkling in the gloom like fire-flies, and at the sight they
+are sore afraid.[570] So little consistent with itself is the creed of
+these islanders touching the state of the dead. At Bugotu in the island
+of Ysabel (one of the Solomon Islands) a chief is buried with his head
+near the surface and a fire is kept burning over the grave, in order
+that the skull may be taken up and preserved in the house of his
+successor. The spirit of the dead chief has now become a worshipful
+ghost, and an expedition is sent out to cut off and bring back human
+heads in his honour. Any person, not belonging to the place, whom the
+head-hunters come across will be killed by them and his or her skull
+added to the collection, which is neatly arranged on the shore. These
+ghastly trophies are believed to add fresh spiritual power (_mana_) to
+the ghost of the dead chief. Till they have been procured, the people of
+the place take care not to move about. The grave of the chief is built
+up with stones and sacrifices are offered upon it.[571]
+
+[Sidenote: Beliefs and customs of the Eastern islanders concerning the
+dead. Panoi, the subterranean abode of the dead.]
+
+Thus far we have been considering the beliefs and practices concerning
+the dead which prevail among the Western Melanesians of the Solomon
+Islands and Santa Cruz. We now turn to those of the Eastern Melanesians,
+who inhabit the Torres Islands, the Banks' Islands, and the New
+Hebrides. A broad distinction exists between the ghosts of these two
+regions in as much as the ghosts of the Western Melanesians all live in
+islands, but the ghosts of all Eastern Melanesians live underground in a
+subterranean region which commonly bears the name of Panoi. The exact
+position of Panoi has not been ascertained; all that is regarded as
+certain is that it is underground. However, there are many entrances to
+it and some of them are well known. One of them, for example, is a rock
+on the mountain at Mota, others are at volcanic vents which belch flames
+on the burning hill of Garat over the lake at Gaua, and another is on
+the great mountain of Vanua Lava. The ghosts congregate on points of
+land before their departure, as well as at the entrances to the
+underworld, and there on moonlight nights you may hear the ghostly crew
+dancing, singing, shouting, and whistling on the claws of land-crabs. It
+is not easy to extract from the natives a precise and consistent account
+of the place of the dead and the state of the spirits in it; nor indeed,
+as Dr. Codrington justly observes, would it be reasonable to expect full
+and precise details on a subject about which the sources of information
+are perhaps not above suspicion. However, as far as can be made out,
+Panoi or the abode of the dead is on the whole a happy region. In many
+respects it resembles the land of the living; for there are houses there
+and villages, and trees with red leaves, and day and night. Yet all is
+hollow and unreal. The ghosts do nothing but talk and sing and dance;
+there is no clubhouse there, and though men and women live together,
+there is no marrying or giving in marriage. All is very peaceful, too,
+in that land; for there is no war and no tyrant to oppress the people.
+Yet the ghost of a great man goes down like a great man among the
+ghosts, resplendent in all his trinkets and finery; but like everything
+else in the underworld these ornaments, for all the brave show they
+make, are mere unsubstantial shadows. The pigs which were killed at his
+funeral feast and the food that was heaped on his grave cannot go down
+with him into that far country; for none of these things, not even pigs,
+have souls. How then could they find their way to the spirit world? It
+is clearly impossible. The ghosts in the nether world do not mix
+indiscriminately. There are separate compartments for such as died
+violent deaths. There is one compartment for those who were shot, there
+is another for those who were clubbed, and there is another for those
+who were done to death by witchcraft. The ghosts of those who were shot
+keep rattling the reeds of the arrows which dealt them their fatal
+wounds. Ghosts in the nether world have no knowledge of things out of
+their sight and hearing; yet the living call upon them in time of need
+and trouble, as if they could hear and help. Life, too, in the kingdom
+of shadows is not eternal. The ghosts die the second death. Yet some say
+that there are two such kingdoms, each called Panoi, the one over the
+other; and that when the dead die the second death in the upper realm
+they rise again from the dead in the nether realm, where they never die
+but only turn into white ants' nests.[572]
+
+[Sidenote: Distinction between the fate of the good and the fate of the
+bad in the other world.]
+
+It is interesting and not unimportant to observe that some of these
+islanders make a distinction between the fate of good people and the
+fate of bad people after death. The natives of Motlav, one of the Banks'
+Islands, think that Panoi is a good place and that only the souls of the
+good can enter it. According to them the souls of murderers, sorcerers,
+thieves, liars, and adulterers are not suffered to enter the happy land.
+The ghost of a murderer, for example, is met at the entrance by the
+ghost of his victim, who withstands him and turns him back. All the bad
+ghosts go away to a bad place, where they live, not indeed in physical
+pain, but in misery: they quarrel, they are restless, homeless,
+pitiable, malignant: they wander back to earth: they eat the foulest
+food, their breath is noisome: they harm the living out of spite, they
+eat men's souls, they haunt graves and woods. But in the true Panoi the
+souls of the good live in peace and harmony.[573] Thus these people
+believe that the state of the soul after death depends on the kind of
+life a man led on earth; if he was good, he will be happy; if he was
+bad, he will be miserable. If this creed is of purely native origin, and
+Dr. Codrington seems to entertain no doubt that it is so, it marks a
+considerable ethical advance among those who accept it.
+
+[Sidenote: Descent of the living to the world of the dead.]
+
+The Eastern Melanesians think that living people can go down to the land
+of the dead and return alive to the upper world. Sometimes they do this
+in the body, but at other times only in the spirit, when they are asleep
+or in a faint; for at such times their souls quit their bodies and can
+wander away down to Panoi. When the living thus make their way to the
+spirit land, they are sometimes cautioned by friendly ghosts to eat
+nothing there, no doubt lest by partaking of ghostly food they should be
+turned to ghosts and never return to the land of the living.[574]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead among the Eastern islanders. Burial
+customs of the Banks' Islanders.]
+
+We will now consider the various modes in which the Eastern Melanesians
+dispose of their dead; for funeral customs commonly furnish some
+indication of the ideas which a people entertain as to the state of the
+soul after death. The Banks' Islanders generally buried their dead in
+the forest not far from the village; but if the deceased was a great man
+or died a remarkable death, they might inter him in the village near the
+men's clubhouse (_gamal_). A favourite son or child might be buried in
+the house itself; but in such cases the grave would be opened after
+fifty or a hundred days and the bones taken up and hidden in the forest,
+though some of them might be hung up in the house. However, in some
+places there was, and indeed still is, a custom of keeping the
+putrefying corpse unburied in the house as a mark of affection. At Gaua,
+in Santa Maria, the body was dried over slow fires for ten days or more,
+till nothing but skin and bones remained; and the women who watched over
+it during these days drank the juices of putrefaction which dripped from
+the decaying flesh. The same thing used formerly to be done in Mota,
+another of the Banks' Islands. The corpses of great men in these islands
+were adorned in all their finery and laid out on the open space in the
+middle of the village. Here bunches of coco-nuts, yams, and other food
+were heaped up beside the body; and an orator of fluent speech addressed
+the ghost telling him that when he had gone down to Panoi, the spirit
+land, and the ghosts asked him after his rank, he was to give them a
+list of all the things heaped beside his dead body; then the ghosts
+would know what a great man he was and would treat him with proper
+deference. The orator dealt very candidly with the moral character of
+the deceased. If he had been a bad man, the speaker would say, "Poor
+ghost, will you be able to enter Panoi? I think not." The food which is
+piled up beside the body while the orator is pronouncing the eulogium or
+the censure of the departed is afterwards heaped up on the grave or
+buried in it. At Gaua they kill pigs and hang up the carcases or parts
+of them at the grave. The object of all this display is to make a
+favourable impression on the ghosts in the spirit land, in order that
+they may give the newly deceased man a good reception. When the departed
+was an eminent warrior or sorcerer, his friends will sometimes give him
+a sham burial and hide his real grave, lest people should dig up his
+bones and his skull to make magic with them; for the relics of such a
+man are naturally endowed with great magical virtue.[575]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts driven away from the village. Expulsion of the ghosts
+of persons who suffered from sores and ulcers.]
+
+In these islands the ghost does not at once leave the neighbourhood of
+his old body; he shews no haste to depart to the nether world. Indeed he
+commonly loiters about the house and the grave for five or ten days,
+manifesting his presence by noises in the house and by lights upon the
+grave. By the fifth day his relations generally think that they have had
+quite enough of him, and that it is high time he should set out for his
+long home. Accordingly they drive him away with shouts and the blowing
+of conch-shells or the booming sound of bull-roarers.[576] At
+Ureparapara the mode of expelling the ghost from the village is as
+follows. Missiles to be hurled at the lingering spirit are collected in
+the shape of small stones and pieces of bamboo, which have been charmed
+by wizards so as to possess a ghost-expelling virtue. The artillery
+having been thus provided, the people muster at one end of the village,
+armed with bags of enchanted stones and pieces of enchanted bamboos. The
+signal to march is given by two men, who sit in the dead man's house,
+one on either side, holding two white stones in their hands, which they
+clink together. At the sound of the clinking the women begin to wail and
+the men to march; tramp, tramp they go like one man through the village
+from end to end, throwing stones into the houses and all about and
+beating the bamboos together. Thus they drive the reluctant ghost step
+by step from the village into the forest, where they leave him to find
+his own way down to the land of the dead. Till that time the widow of
+the deceased was bound to remain on his bed without quitting it for a
+moment except on necessity; and if she had to leave it for a few minutes
+she always left a coco-nut on the bed to represent her till she came
+back. The reason for this was that her husband's ghost was believed to
+be lingering in the house all these days, and he would naturally expect
+to see his wife in the nuptial chamber. At Motlav the people are not so
+hard upon the poor ghosts: they do not drive away all ghosts from their
+old homes, but only the ghosts of such as had in their lifetime the
+misfortune to be afflicted with grievous sores and ulcers. The expulsion
+of such ghosts may therefore be regarded as a sanitary precaution
+designed to prevent the spirits from spreading the disease. When a man
+who suffers severely from sores or ulcers lies dying, the people of his
+village, taking time by the forelock, send word to the inhabitants of
+the next village westwards, warning them to be in readiness to give the
+ghost a warm reception. For it is well known that at their departure
+from the body ghosts always go westward towards the setting sun. So when
+the poor man is dead, they bury his diseased body in the village and
+devote all their energies to the expulsion of his soul. By blowing
+blasts on shell-trumpets and beating the ground with the stalks of
+coco-nut fronds they chase the ghost clean away from their own village
+and on to the next. The inhabitants of that village meantime are ready
+to receive their unwelcome visitor, and beating their bounds in the most
+literal sense they soon drive him onwards to the land of their next
+neighbours. So the chase goes on from village to village, till the ghost
+has been finally hunted into the sea at the point of the shore which
+faces the setting sun. There at last the beaters throw away the stalks
+which have served to whack the ghost, and return home in the perfect
+assurance that he has left the island and gone to his own place down
+below, so that he cannot afflict anybody with the painful disease from
+which he suffered. But as for his ulcerated corpse rotting in the grave,
+they do not give a thought to it. Their concern is with the spiritual
+and the unseen; they do not stoop to regard the material and
+carnal.[577]
+
+[Sidenote: Special treatment of the ghosts of women who died in
+childbed.]
+
+A special treatment is accorded to the ghosts of women who died in
+childbed. If the mother dies and the child lives, her ghost will not go
+away to the nether world without taking the infant with her. Hence in
+order to deceive the ghost, they wrap a piece of a banana-trunk loosely
+in leaves and lay it on the bosom of the dead mother when they lower her
+into the grave. The ghost clasps the bundle to her breast, thinking it
+is her baby, and goes away contentedly to the spirit land. As she walks,
+the banana-stalk slips about in the leaves and she imagines it is the
+infant stirring; for she has not all her wits about her, ghosts being
+naturally in a dazed state at first on quitting their familiar bodies.
+But when she arrives in deadland and finds she has been deceived, and
+when perhaps some heartless ghosts even jeer at her wooden baby, back
+she comes tearing to earth in grief and rage to seek and carry off the
+real infant. However, the survivors know what to expect and have taken
+the precaution of removing the child to another house where the mother
+will never find it; but she keeps looking for it always, and a sad and
+angry ghost is she.[578]
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral feasts.]
+
+After the funeral follows a series, sometimes a long series, of funeral
+feasts, which form indeed one of the principal institutions of these
+islands. The number of the feasts and the length of time during which
+they are repeated vary much in the different islands, and depend also on
+the consideration in which the deceased was held. The days on which the
+feasts are celebrated are the fifth and the tenth after the death, and
+afterwards every tenth day up to the hundredth or even it may be, in the
+case of a father, a mother, or a wife, up to the thousandth day. These
+feasts appear now to be chiefly commemorative, but they also benefit the
+dead; for the ghost is naturally gratified by seeing that his friends
+remember him and do their duty by him so handsomely. At these banquets
+food is put aside for the dead with the words "This is for thee." The
+practice of thus setting aside food for the ghost at a series of funeral
+feasts appears at first sight, as Dr. Codrington observes, inconsistent
+with the theory that the ghosts live underground.[579] But the objection
+thus suggested is rather specious than real; for we must always bear in
+mind that, to judge from the accounts given of them in all countries,
+ghosts experience no practical difficulty in obtaining temporary leave
+of absence from the other world and coming to this one, so to say, on
+furlough for the purpose of paying a surprise visit to their sorrowing
+friends and relations. The thing is so well known that it would be at
+once superfluous and tedious to illustrate it at length; many examples
+have incidentally met us in the course of these lectures.
+
+[Sidenote: Funeral customs in Vate or Efat. Old people buried alive.]
+
+The natives of Vate or Efat, one of the New Hebrides, set up a great
+wailing at a death and scratched their faces till they streamed with
+blood. Bodies of the dead were buried. When a corpse was laid in the
+grave, a pig was brought to the place and its head was chopped off and
+thrown into the grave to be buried with the body. This, we are told,
+"was supposed to prevent disease spreading to other members of the
+family." Probably, in the opinion of the natives, the pig's head was a
+sop thrown to the ghost to keep him from coming and fetching away other
+people to deadland. With the same intention, we may take it, they buried
+with the dead the cups, pillows, and other things which he had used in
+his lifetime. On the top of the grave they kindled a fire to enable the
+soul of the deceased to rise to the sun. If that were not done, the soul
+went to the wretched regions of Pakasia down below. The old were buried
+alive at their own request. It was even deemed a disgrace to the family
+of an aged chief if they did not bury him alive. When an old man felt
+sick and weak and thought that he was dying, he would tell his friends
+to get all ready and bury him. They yielded to his wishes, dug a deep
+round pit, wound a number of fine mats round his body, and lowered him
+into the grave in a sitting posture. Live pigs were then brought to the
+brink of the grave, and each of them was tethered by a cord to one of
+the old man's arms. When the pigs had thus, as it were, been made over
+to him, the cords were cut, and the animals were led away to be killed,
+baked, and eaten at the funeral feast; but the souls of the pigs the old
+man took away with him to the spirit land, and the more of them he took
+the warmer and more gratifying was the reception he met with from the
+ghosts. Having thus ensured his eternal welfare by the pig strings which
+dangled at his arms, the old man was ready; more mats were laid over
+him, the earth was shovelled in, and his dying groans were drowned amid
+the weeping and wailing of his affectionate kinsfolk.[580]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial and mourning customs in Aurora, one of the New
+Hebrides. Behaviour of the soul at death.]
+
+At Maewo in Aurora, one of the New Hebrides, when a death has taken
+place, the body is buried in a grave near the village clubhouse. For a
+hundred days afterwards the female mourners may not go into the open and
+their faces may not be seen; they stay indoors and in the dark and cover
+themselves with a large mat reaching to the ground. But the widow goes
+every day, covered with her mat, to weep at the grave; this she does
+both in the morning and in the afternoon. During this time of mourning
+the next of kin may not eat certain succulent foods, such as yams,
+bananas, and caladium; they eat only the gigantic caladium, bread-fruit,
+coco-nuts, mallows, and so forth; "and all these they seek in the bush
+where they grow wild, not eating those which have been planted." They
+count five days after the death and then build up great heaps of stones
+over the grave. After that, if the deceased was a very great man, who
+owned many gardens and pigs, they count fifty days and then kill pigs,
+and cut off the point of the liver of each pig; and the brother of the
+deceased goes toward the forest and calls out the dead man's name,
+crying, "This is for you to eat." They think that if they do not kill
+pigs for the benefit of their departed friend, his ghost has no proper
+existence, but hangs miserably on tangled creepers. After the sacrifice
+they all cry again, smear their bodies and faces all over with ashes,
+and wear cords round their necks for a hundred days in token that they
+are not eating good food.[581] They imagine that as soon as the soul
+quits the body at death, it mounts into a tree where there is a bird's
+nest fern, and sitting there among the fronds it laughs and mocks at the
+people who are crying and making great lamentations over his deserted
+tabernacle. "There he sits, wondering at them and ridiculing them. 'What
+are they crying for?' he says; 'whom are they sorry for? Here am I.' For
+they think that the real thing is the soul, and that it has gone away
+from the body just as a man throws off his clothes and leaves them, and
+the clothes lie by themselves with nothing in them."[582] This estimate
+of the comparative value of soul and body is translated from the words
+of a New Hebridean native; it singularly resembles that which is
+sometimes held up to our admiration as one of the finest fruits of
+philosophy and religion. So narrow may be the line that divides the
+meditations of the savage and the sage.
+
+When a Maewo ghost has done chuckling at the folly of his surviving
+relatives, who sorrow as those who have no hope, he turns his back on
+his old home and runs along the line of hills till he comes to a place
+where there are two rocks with a deep ravine between them. He leaps the
+chasm, and if he lands on the further side, he is dead indeed; but if he
+falls short, he returns to life. At the land's end, where the mountains
+descend into the sea, all the ghosts of the dead are gathered to meet
+him. If in his lifetime he had slain any one by club or arrow, or done
+any man to death by magic, he must now run the gauntlet of the angry
+ghosts of his victims, who beat and tear him and stab him with daggers
+such as people stick pigs with; and as they do so, they taunt him,
+saying, "While you were still in the world you thought yourself a
+valiant man; but now we will take our revenge on you." At another point
+in the path there is a deep gully, where if a ghost falls he is
+inevitably dashed to pieces; and if he escapes this peril, there is a
+ferocious pig waiting for him further on, which devours the ghosts of
+all persons who in their life on earth omitted to plant pandanus trees,
+from which mats are made. But the wise man, who planted pandanus
+betimes, now reaps the fruit of his labours; for when the pig makes a
+rush at his departed spirit, the ghost nimbly swarms up the pandanus
+tree and so escapes his pursuer. That is why everybody in Maewo likes to
+plant pandanus trees. And if a man's ears were not pierced in his life,
+his ghost will not be allowed to drink water; if he was not tattooed,
+his ghost may not eat good food. A thoughtful father will provide for
+the comfort of his children in the other world by building a miniature
+house for each of them in his garden when the child is a year old; if
+the infant is a boy, he puts a bow, an arrow, and a club in the little
+house; if the child is a girl, he plants pandanus for her beside the
+tiny dwelling.[583]
+
+[Sidenote: Only ghosts of powerful men are worshipped.]
+
+So much for the fate of common ghosts in Central Melanesia. We have now
+to consider the position of the more powerful spirits, who after death
+are believed to exercise great influence over the living, especially
+over their surviving relations, and who have accordingly to be
+propitiated with prayer and sacrifice. This worship of the dead, as we
+saw, forms the principal feature in the religion of the Solomon
+Islanders. "But it must not be supposed," says Dr. Codrington, "that
+every ghost becomes an object of worship. A man in danger may call upon
+his father, his grandfather, or his uncle: his nearness of kin is
+sufficient ground for it. The ghost who is to be worshipped is the
+spirit of a man who in his lifetime had _mana_ [supernatural or magical
+power] in him; the souls of common men are the common herd of ghosts,
+nobodies alike before and after death. The supernatural power abiding in
+the powerful living man abides in his ghost after death, with increased
+vigour and more ease of movement. After his death, therefore, it is
+expected that he should begin to work, and some one will come forward
+and claim particular acquaintance with the ghost; if his power should
+shew itself, his position is assured as one worthy to be invoked, and to
+receive offerings, till his cultus gives way before the rising
+importance of one newly dead, and the sacred place where his shrine once
+stood and his relics were preserved is the only memorial of him that
+remains; if no proof of his activity appears, he sinks into oblivion at
+once."[584]
+
+[Sidenote: Worship paid chiefly to the recent and well-remembered dead.]
+
+From this instructive account we learn that worship is paid chiefly to
+the recent and well-remembered dead, to the men whom the worshippers
+knew personally and feared or respected in their lifetime. On the other
+hand, when men have been long dead, and all who knew them have also been
+gathered to their fathers, their memory fades away and with it their
+worship gradually falls into complete desuetude. Thus the spirits who
+receive the homage of these savages were real men of flesh and blood,
+not mythical beings conjured up by the fancy of their worshippers, which
+some legerdemain of the mind has foisted into the shrine and encircled
+with the halo of divinity. Not that the Melanesians do not also worship
+beings who, so far as we can see, are purely mythical, though their
+worshippers firmly believe in their reality. But "they themselves make a
+clear distinction between the existing, conscious, powerful disembodied
+spirits of the dead, and other spiritual beings that never have been men
+at all. It is true that the two orders of beings get confused in native
+language and thought, but their confusion begins at one end and the
+confusion of their visitors at another; they think so much and
+constantly of ghosts that they speak of beings who were never men as
+ghosts; Europeans take the spirits of the lately dead for gods; less
+educated Europeans call them roundly devils."[585]
+
+[Sidenote: Way in which a dead warrior came to be worshipped as a
+martial ghost.]
+
+As an example of the way in which the ghost of a real man who has just
+died may come to be worshipped Dr. Codrington tells us the story of
+Ganindo, which he had from Bishop Selwyn. This Ganindo was a great
+fighting man of Honggo in Florida, one of the Solomon Islands. He went
+with other warriors on a head-hunting expedition against Gaeta; but
+being mortally wounded with an arrow near the collar-bone he was brought
+back by his comrades to the hill of Bonipari, where he died and was
+buried. His friends cut off his head, put it in a basket, built a house
+for it, and said that he was a worshipful ghost (_tindalo_). Afterwards
+they said, "Let us go and take heads." So they embarked on their canoe
+and paddled away to seek the heads of enemies. When they came to quiet
+water, they stopped paddling and waited till they felt the canoe rock
+under them, and when they felt it they said, "That is a ghost." To find
+out what particular ghost it was they called out the names of several,
+and when they came to the name of Ganindo, the canoe rocked again. So
+they knew that it was he who was making the canoe to rock. In like
+manner they learned what village they were to attack. Returning
+victorious with the heads of the foe they threw a spear into the roof of
+Ganindo's house, blew conch-shells, and danced round it, crying, "Our
+ghost is strong to kill!" Then they sacrificed fish and other food to
+him. Also they built him a new house, and made four images of him for
+the four corners, one of Ganindo himself, two of his sisters, and
+another. When it was all ready, eight men translated the relics to the
+new shrine. One of them carried Ganindo's bones, another his betel-nuts,
+another his lime-box, another his shell-trumpet. They all went into the
+shrine crouching down, as if burdened by a heavy weight, and singing in
+chorus, "Hither, hither, let us lift the leg!" At that the eight legs
+went up together, and then they sang, "Hither, hither!" and at that the
+eight legs went down together. In this solemn procession the relics were
+brought and laid on a bamboo platform, and sacrifices to the new martial
+ghost were inaugurated. Other warlike ghosts revered in Florida are
+known not to have been natives of the island but famous warriors of the
+western isles, where supernatural power is believed to be stronger.[586]
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to the dead.]
+
+Throughout the islands of Central Melanesia prayers and offerings are
+everywhere made to ghosts or spirits or to both. The simplest and
+commonest sacrificial act is that of throwing a small portion of food to
+the dead; this is probably a universal practice in Melanesia. A morsel
+of food ready to be eaten, for example of yam, a leaf of mallow, or a
+bit of betel-nut, is thrown aside; and where they drink kava, a libation
+is made of a few drops, as the share of departed friends or as a
+memorial of them with which they will be pleased. At the same time the
+offerer may call out the name of some one who either died lately or is
+particularly remembered at the time; or without the special mention of
+individuals he may make the offering generally to the ghosts of former
+members of the community. To set food on a burial-place or before some
+memorial image is a common practice, though in some places, as in Santa
+Cruz, the offering is soon taken away and eaten by the living.[587]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrificial ritual in the Solomon Islands.]
+
+In the Solomon Islands the sacrificial ritual is more highly developed.
+It may be described in the words of a native of San Cristoval. "In my
+country," he wrote, "they think that ghosts are many, very many indeed,
+some very powerful, and some not. There is one who is principal in war;
+this one is truly mighty and strong. When our people wish to fight with
+any other place, the chief men of the village and the sacrificers and
+the old men, and the elder and younger men, assemble in the place sacred
+to this ghost; and his name is Harumae. When they are thus assembled to
+sacrifice, the chief sacrificer goes and takes a pig; and if it be not a
+barrow pig they would not sacrifice it to that ghost, he would reject it
+and not eat of it. The pig is killed (it is strangled), not by the chief
+sacrificer, but by those whom he chooses to assist, near the sacred
+place. Then they cut it up; they take great care of the blood lest it
+should fall upon the ground; they bring a bowl and set the pig in it,
+and when they cut it up the blood runs down into it. When the cutting up
+is finished, the chief sacrificer takes a bit of flesh from the pig, and
+he takes a cocoa-nut shell and dips up some of the blood. Then he takes
+the blood and the bit of flesh and enters into the house (the shrine),
+and calls that ghost and says, 'Harumae! Chief in war! we sacrifice to
+you with this pig, that you may help us to smite that place; and
+whatsoever we shall carry away shall be your property, and we also will
+be yours.' Then he burns the bit of flesh in a fire upon a stone, and
+pours down the blood upon the fire. Then the fire blazes greatly upwards
+to the roof, and the house is full of the smell of pig, a sign that the
+ghost has heard. But when the sacrificer went in he did not go boldly,
+but with awe; and this is the sign of it; as he goes into the holy house
+he puts away his bag, and washes his hands thoroughly, to shew that the
+ghost shall not reject him with disgust." The pig was afterwards eaten.
+It should be observed that this Harumae who received sacrifices as a
+martial ghost, mighty in war, had not been dead many years when the
+foregoing account of the mode of sacrificing to him was written. The
+elder men remembered him alive, nor was he a great warrior, but a kind
+and generous man, believed to be plentifully endowed with supernatural
+power. His shrine was a small house in the village, where relics of him
+were preserved.[588] Had the Melanesians been left to themselves, it
+seems possible that this Harumae might have developed into the war-god
+of San Cristoval, just as in Central Africa another man of flesh and
+blood is known to have developed into the war-god of Uganda.[589]
+
+[Footnote 552: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp.
+122, 123, 124, 180 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 553: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), pp.
+247, 253.]
+
+[Footnote 554: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 555: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 255 _sqq_., 264 _sqq_.]
+
+[Footnote 556: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ 253 _sq_.]
+
+[Footnote 557: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 254, 258, 261; compare
+_id._, pp. 125, 130.]
+
+[Footnote 558: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 120, 254.]
+
+[Footnote 559: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 118 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 560: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 254 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 561: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 258 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 562: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 255.]
+
+[Footnote 563: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 259.]
+
+[Footnote 564: G. Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), pp. 214, 217.]
+
+[Footnote 565: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 255.]
+
+[Footnote 566: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 255 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 567: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 256 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 568: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 260 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 569: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 261 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 570: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 263 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 571: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 257.]
+
+[Footnote 572: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 264, 273 _sq._,
+275-277.]
+
+[Footnote 573: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 274 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 574: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 266, 276, 277, 286.]
+
+[Footnote 575: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 267-270.]
+
+[Footnote 576: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 269.]
+
+[Footnote 577: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 270 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 578: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 275.]
+
+[Footnote 579: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 271 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 580: G. Turner, _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long before_
+(London, 1884), pp. 335 _sq._ This account is based on information
+furnished by Sualo, a Samoan teacher, who lived for a long time on the
+island. The statement that the fire kindled on the grave was intended
+"to enable the soul of the departed to rise to the sun" may be doubted;
+it may be a mere inference of Dr. Turner's Samoan informant. More
+probably the fire was intended to warm the shivering ghost. I do not
+remember any other evidence that the souls of the Melanesian dead ascend
+to the sun; certainly it is much more usual for them to descend into the
+earth.]
+
+[Footnote 581: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 281 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 582: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 278 _sq._]
+
+[Sidenote: Journey of the ghost to the other world.]
+
+[Footnote 583: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 279 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 584: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 124 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 585: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 121.]
+
+[Footnote 586: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 125 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 587: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 127, 128.]
+
+[Footnote 588: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 129 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 589: Rev. J. Roscoe, "Kibuka, the War God of the Baganda,"
+_Man_, vii. (1907) pp. 161-166; _id._, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp.
+301 _sqq._ The history of this African war-god is more or less mythical,
+but his personal relics, which are now deposited in the Ethnological
+Museum at Cambridge, suffice to prove his true humanity.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XVII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF CENTRAL MELANESIA
+(_concluded_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Public sacrifices to ghosts in the Solomon Islands.]
+
+At the close of last lecture I described the mode in which sacrifices
+are offered to a martial ghost in San Cristoval, one of the Solomon
+Islands. We saw that the flesh of a pig is burned in honour of the ghost
+and that the victim's blood is poured on the flames. Similarly in
+Florida, another of the Solomon Islands, food is conveyed to worshipful
+ghosts by being burned in the fire. Some ghosts are known by name to
+everybody, others may be known only to individuals, who have found out
+or been taught how to approach them, and who accordingly regard such
+ghosts as their private property. In every village a public ghost is
+worshipped, and the chief is the sacrificer. He has learned from his
+predecessor how to throw or heave the sacrifice, and he imparts this
+knowledge to his son or nephew, whom he intends to leave as his
+successor. The place of sacrifice is an enclosure with a little house or
+shrine in which the relics are kept; it is new or old according as the
+man whose ghost is worshipped died lately or long ago. When a public
+sacrifice is performed, the people assemble near but not in the sacred
+place; boys but not women may be present. The sacrificer alone enters
+the shrine, but he takes with him his son or other person whom he has
+instructed in the ritual. Muttering an incantation he kindles a fire of
+sticks, but may not blow on the holy flame. Then from a basket he takes
+some prepared food, such as a mash of yams, and throws it on the fire,
+calling out the name of the ghost and bidding him take his food, while
+at the same time he prays for whatever is desired. If the fire blazes up
+and consumes the food, it is a good sign; it proves that the ghost is
+present and that he is blowing up the flame. The remainder of the food
+the sacrificer takes back to the assembled people; some of it he eats
+himself and some of it he gives to his assistant to eat. The people
+receive their portions of the food at his hands and eat it or take it
+away. While the sacrificing is going on, there is a solemn silence. If a
+pig is killed, the portion burned in the sacrificial fire is the heart
+in Florida, but the gullet at Bugotu. One ghost who is commonly known
+and worshipped is called Manoga. When the sacrificer invokes this ghost,
+he heaves the sacrifice round about and calls him, first to the east,
+where rises the sun, saying, "If thou dwellest in the east, where rises
+the sun, Manoga! come hither and eat thy _tutu_ mash!" Then turning he
+lifts it towards where sets the sun, and says, "If thou dwellest in the
+west, where sets the sun, Manoga! come hither and eat thy _tutu_!" There
+is not a quarter to which he does not lift it up. And when he has
+finished lifting it he says, "If thou dwellest in heaven above, Manoga!
+come hither and eat thy _tutu_! If thou dwellest in the Pleiades or
+Orion's belt; if below in Turivatu; if in the distant sea; if on high in
+the sun, or in the moon; if thou dwellest inland or by the shore,
+Manoga! come hither and eat thy _tutu_!"[590]
+
+[Sidenote: First-fruits of the canarium nuts sacrificed to ghosts.]
+
+Twice a year there are general sacrifices in which the people of a
+village take part. One of these occasions is when the canarium nut, so
+much used in native cookery, is ripe. None of the nuts may be eaten till
+the first-fruits have been offered to the ghost. "Devil he eat first;
+all man he eat behind," is the lucid explanation which a native gave to
+an English enquirer. The knowledge of the way in which the first-fruits
+must be offered is handed down from generation to generation, and the
+man who is learned in this lore has authority to open the season. He
+observes the state of the crop, and early one morning he is heard to
+shout. He climbs a tree, picks some nuts, cracks them, eats, and puts
+some on the stones in his sacred place for the ghost. Then the rest of
+the people may gather the nuts for themselves. The chief himself
+sacrifices the new nuts, mixed with other food, to the public ghost on
+the stones of the village sanctuary; and every man who has a private
+ghost of his own does the same in his own sacred place. About two months
+afterwards there is another public sacrifice when the root crops
+generally have been dug; pig or fish is then offered; and a man who digs
+up his yams, or whatever it may be, offers his private sacrifice
+besides.[591]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifice of first-fruits to ancestral spirits in Tanna.]
+
+In like manner the natives of Tanna, one of the Southern New Hebrides,
+offered the first-fruits to the deified spirits of their ancestors. On
+this subject I will quote the evidence of the veteran missionary, the
+Rev. Dr. George Turner, who lived in Tanna for seven months in 1841. He
+says: "The general name for gods seemed to be _aremha_; that means a
+_dead man_, and hints alike at the origin and nature of their religious
+worship. The spirits of their departed ancestors were among their gods.
+Chiefs who reach an advanced age were after death deified, addressed by
+name, and prayed to on various occasions. They were supposed especially
+to preside over the growth of the yams and the different fruit trees.
+The first-fruits were presented to them, and in doing this they laid a
+little of the fruit on some stone, or shelving branch of the tree, or
+some more temporary altar of a few rough sticks from the bush, lashed
+together with strips of bark, in the form of a table, with its four feet
+stuck in the ground. All being quiet, the chief acted as high priest,
+and prayed aloud thus: 'Compassionate father! here is some food for you;
+eat it; be kind to us on account of it.' And, instead of an _amen_, all
+united in a shout. This took place about mid-day, and afterwards those
+who were assembled continued together feasting and dancing till midnight
+or three in the morning."[592]
+
+[Sidenote: Private ghosts. Fighting ghosts kept as auxiliaries.]
+
+In addition to the public ghosts, each of whom is revered by a whole
+village, many a man keeps, so to say, a private or tame ghost of his own
+on leash. The art of taming a ghost consists in knowing the leaves,
+bark, and vines in which he delights and in treating him accordingly.
+This knowledge a man may acquire by the exercise of his natural
+faculties or he may learn it from somebody else. However he may obtain
+the knowledge, he uses it for his own personal advantage, sacrificing to
+the ghost in order to win his favour and get something from him in
+return. The mode of sacrificing to a private ghost is the same as to a
+public ghost. The owner has a sacred place or private chapel of his own,
+where he draws near to the ghost in prayer and burns his bit of food in
+the fire. A man often keeps a fighting ghost (_keramo_), who helps him
+in battle or in slaying his private enemy. Before he goes out to commit
+homicide, he pulls up his ginger-plant and judges from the ease or
+difficulty with which the plant yields to or resists his tug, whether he
+will succeed in the enterprise or not. Then he sacrifices to the ghost,
+and having placed some ginger and leaves on his shield, and stuffed some
+more in his belt and right armlet, he sallies forth. He curses his enemy
+by his fighting ghost, saying, "Siria (if that should be the name of the
+ghost) eats thee, and I shall slay thee"; and if he kills him, he cries
+to the ghost, "Thine is this man, Siria, and do thou give me
+supernatural power!" No prudent Melanesian would attempt to commit
+manslaughter without a ghost as an accomplice; to do so would be to
+court disaster, for the slain man's ghost would have power over the
+slayer; therefore before he imbrues his hands in blood he deems it
+desirable to secure the assistance of a valiant ghost who can, if need
+be, overcome the ghost of his victim in single combat. If he cannot
+procure such a useful auxiliary in any other way, he must purchase him.
+Further, he fortifies himself with some personal relic, such as a tooth
+or lock of hair of the deceased warrior, whose ghost he has taken into
+his service; this relic he wears as an amulet in a little bag round the
+neck, when he is on active service; at other times it is kept in the
+house.[593]
+
+[Sidenote: Garden ghosts.]
+
+Different from these truculent spirits are the peaceful ghosts who cause
+the garden to bear fruit. If the gardener happens to know such a ghost,
+he can pray and sacrifice to him on his own account; but if he has no
+such friend in the spirit world, he must employ an expert. The man of
+skill goes into the midst of the garden with a little mashed food in his
+left hand, and smiting it with his right hand he calls on the ghost to
+come and eat. He says: "This produce thou shall eat; give supernatural
+power (_mana_) to this garden, that food may be good and plentiful." He
+digs holes at the four corners of the garden, and in them he buries such
+leaves as the ghost loves, so that the garden may have ghostly power and
+be fruitful. And when the yams sprout, he twines them with the
+particular creeper and fastens them with the particular wood to which
+the ghost is known to be partial. These agricultural ghosts are very
+sensitive; if a man enters the garden, who has just eaten pork or cuscus
+or fish or shell-fish, the ghost of the garden manifests his displeasure
+by causing the produce of the garden to droop; but if the eater lets
+three or four days go by after his meal, he may then enter the garden
+with impunity, for the food has left his stomach. For a similar reason,
+apparently, when the yam vines are being trained, the men sleep near the
+gardens and never approach their wives; for should they tread the garden
+after conjugal intercourse, the yams would be blighted.[594]
+
+[Sidenote: Human sacrifices to ghosts.]
+
+Sometimes the favour of a ghost is obtained by human sacrifices. On
+these occasions the flesh of the victim does not, like the flesh of a
+pig, furnish the materials of a sacrificial banquet; but little bits of
+it are eaten by young men to improve their fighting power and by elders
+for a special purpose. Such sacrifices are deemed more effectual than
+the sacrifices of less precious victims; and advantage was sometimes
+taken of a real or imputed crime to offer the criminal to some ghost.
+So, for example, within living memory Dikea, chief of Ravu, convicted a
+certain man of stealing tobacco, and sentenced him to be sacrificed; and
+the grown lads ate pieces of him cooked in the sacrificial fire. Again,
+the same chief offered another human sacrifice in the year 1886. One of
+his wives had proved false, and he sent her away vowing that she should
+not return till he had offered a human sacrifice to Hauri. Also his son
+died, and he vowed to kill a man for him. The vow was noised abroad, and
+everybody knew that he would pay well for somebody to kill. Now the Savo
+people had bought a captive boy in Guadalcanar, but it turned out a bad
+bargain, for the boy was lame and nearly blind. So they brought him to
+Dikea, and he gave them twenty coils of shell money for the lad. Then
+the chief laid his hand on the victim's breast and cried, "Hauri! here
+is a man for you," and his followers killed him with axes and clubs. The
+cripple's skull was added to the chief's collection, and his legs were
+sent about the country to make known what had been done. In Bugotu of
+Ysabel, when the people had slain an enemy in fight, they used to bring
+back his head in triumph, cut slices off it, and burn them in sacrifice.
+And if they took a prisoner alive, they would bring him to the sacred
+place, the grave of the man whose ghost was to be honoured. There they
+bound him hand and foot and buffeted him till he died, or if he did not
+die under the buffets they cut his throat. As they beat the man with
+their fists, they called on the ghost to take him, and when he was dead,
+they burned a bit of him in the fire for the ghost.[595]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices to ghosts in Saa.]
+
+At Saa in Malanta, one of the Solomon Islands, sacrifices are offered to
+ghosts on various occasions. Thus on his return from a voyage a man will
+put food in the case which contains the relics of his dead father; and
+in the course of his voyage, if he should land in a desert isle, he will
+throw food and call on father, grandfather, and other deceased friends.
+Again, when sickness is ascribed to the anger of a ghost, a man of skill
+is sent for to discover what particular ghost is doing the mischief.
+When he has ascertained the culprit, he is furnished by the patient's
+relatives with a little pig, which he is to sacrifice to the ghost as a
+substitute for the sick man. Provided with this vicarious victim he
+repairs to the haunt of the ghost, strangles the animal, and burns it
+whole in a fire along with grated yam, coco-nut, and fish. As he does
+so, he calls out the names of all the ghosts of his family, his
+ancestors, and all who are deceased, down even to children and women,
+and he names the man who furnished the pig for the ghostly repast. A
+portion of the mixed food he preserves unburnt, wraps it in a dracaena
+leaf, and puts it beside the case which contains the relics of the man
+to whose ghost the sacrifice has been offered. Sometimes, however,
+instead of burning a pig in the fire, which is an expensive and wasteful
+form of sacrifice, the relatives of the sick man content themselves with
+cooking a pig or a dog in the oven, cutting up the carcase, and laying
+out all the parts in order. Then the sacrificer comes and sits at the
+animal's head, and calls out the names of all the dead members of the
+ghost's family in order downwards, saying, "Help, deliver this man, cut
+short the line that has bound him." Then the pig is eaten by all present
+except the women; nothing is burnt.[596]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices of first-fruits to ghosts in Saa.]
+
+The last sort of sacrifices to ghosts at Saa which we need notice is the
+sacrifice of first-fruits. Thus, when the yams are ripe the people fetch
+some of them from each garden to offer to the ghosts. All the male
+members of the family assemble at the holy place which belongs to them.
+Then one of them enters the shrine, lays a yam beside the skull which
+lies there, and cries with a loud voice to the ghost, "This is yours to
+eat." The others call quietly on the names of all the ancestors and give
+their yams, which are very many in number, because one from each garden
+is given to each ghost. If any man has besides a relic of the dead, such
+as a skull, bones, or hair, in his house, he takes home a yam and sets
+it beside the relic. Again, the first flying-fish of the season are
+sacrificed to ghosts, who may take the form of sharks; for we shall see
+presently that Melanesian ghosts are sometimes supposed to inhabit the
+bodies of these ferocious monsters. Some ghost-sharks have sacred places
+ashore, where figures of sharks are set up. In that case the first
+flying-fish are cooked and set before the shark images. But it may be
+that a shark ghost has no sacred place on land, and then there is
+nothing for it but to take the flying-fish out to sea and shred them
+into the water, while the sacrificer calls out the name of the
+particular ghost whom he desires to summon to the feast.[597]
+
+[Sidenote: Vicarious sacrifices for the sick.]
+
+Vicarious sacrifices for the sick are offered in San Cristoval to a
+certain malignant ghost called Tapia, who is believed to seize a man's
+soul and tie it up to a banyan tree. When that has happened, a man who
+knows how to manage Tapia intercedes with him. He takes a pig or fish to
+the sacred place and offers it to the grim ghost, saying, "This is for
+you to eat in place of that man; eat this, don't kill him." With that he
+can loose the captive soul and take it back to the sick man, who
+thereupon recovers.[598]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices to ghosts in Santa Cruz. The dead represented by a
+stock.]
+
+In Santa Cruz the sacrifices offered to ghosts are very economical; for
+if the offering is of food, the living eat it up after a decent
+interval; if it is a valuable, they remove it and resume the use of it
+themselves. The principle of this spiritual economy probably lies in the
+common belief that ghosts, being immaterial, absorb the immaterial
+essence of the objects, leaving the material substance to be enjoyed by
+men. When a man of mark dies in Santa Cruz, his relations set up a stock
+of wood in his house to represent him. This is renewed from time to
+time, till after a while the man is forgotten or thrown into the shade
+by the attractions of some newer ghost, so that the old stock is
+neglected. But when the stock is first put up, a pig is killed and two
+strips of flesh from the back bone are set before the stock as food for
+the ghost, but only to be soon taken away and eaten by the living.
+Similar offerings may be repeated from time to time, as when the stock
+is renewed. Again, when a garden is planted, they spread feather-money
+and red native cloth round it for the use of the ghost; but his
+enjoyment of these riches is brief and precarious.[599]
+
+[Sidenote: Native account of sacrifices to ghosts in Santa Cruz.]
+
+To supplement the foregoing account of sacrifices to ghosts in Santa
+Cruz, I will add a description of some of them which was given by a
+native of Santa Cruz in his own language and translated for us by a
+missionary. It runs thus: "When anyone begins to fall sick he seeks a
+doctor (_meduka_), and when the doctor comes near the sick man he
+stiffens his body, and all those in the house think a ghost has entered
+into the doctor, and they are all very quiet. Some doctors tell the sick
+man's relatives to kill a pig for the ghost who has caused the sickness.
+When they have killed the pig they take it into the ghost-house and
+invite some other men, and they eat with prayers to the ghost; and the
+doctor takes a little piece and puts it near the base of the ghost-post,
+and says to it: 'This is thy food; oh, deliver up again the spirit of
+thy servant, that he may be well again.' The little portion they have
+offered to the ghost is then eaten; but small boys may not eat of
+it."[600] "Every year the people plant yams and tomagos; and when they
+begin to work and have made ready the place and begun to plant, first,
+they offer to the ghost who they think presides over foods. There is an
+offering place in the bush, and they go there and take much food, and
+also feather money. Men, women, and children do this, and they think the
+ghost notices if there are many children, and gives much food at
+harvest; and the ghost to whom they offer is named Ilene. When the
+bread-fruit begins to bear they take great care lest anyone should light
+a fire near the bole of the tree, or throw a stone at the tree. The
+ghost, who they think protects the bread-fruit, is called Duka-Kane or
+Kae Tuabia, who has two names; they think this ghost has four
+eyes."[601] "The heathen thinks a ghost makes the sun to shine and the
+rain. If it is continual sunshine and the yams are withering the people
+assemble together and contribute money, and string it to the man with
+whom the rain-ghost abides, and food also, and beseech him not to do the
+thing he was doing. That man will not wash his face for a long time, he
+will not work lest he perspire and his body be wet, for he thinks that
+if his body be wet it will rain. Then this man, with whom the rain-ghost
+is, takes water and goes into the ghost-house and sprinkles it at the
+head of the ghost-post (_duka_), and if there are many ghost-posts in
+the house he pours water over them all that it may rain."[602]
+
+[Sidenote: Combination of magic with religion.]
+
+In these ceremonies for the making of rain we see a combination of magic
+with religion. The appeal to the rain-ghost is religious; but the
+pouring of the water on the ghost-post is magical, being an imitation of
+the result which the officiating priest or magician, whichever we choose
+to call him, desires to produce. The taboos observed by the owner of the
+rain-ghost so long as he wishes to prevent the rain from falling are
+also based on the principle of homoeopathic or imitative magic: he
+abstains from washing his face or working, lest the water or the sweat
+trickling down his body should mimick rain and thereby cause it to
+fall.[603]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers to the dead.]
+
+The natives of Aneiteum, one of the Southern New Hebrides, worshipped
+the spirits of their ancestors, chiefly on occasions of sickness.[604]
+Again, the people of Vate or Efat, another of the New Hebrides,
+worshipped the souls of their forefathers and prayed to them over the
+_kava_-bowl for health and prosperity.[605] As an example of prayers
+offered to the dead we may take the petition which the natives of
+Florida put up at sea to Daula, a well-known ghost, who is associated
+with the frigate-bird. They say: "Do thou draw the canoe, that it may
+reach the land; speed my canoe, grandfather, that I may quickly reach
+the shore whither I am bound. Do thou, Daula, lighten the canoe, that it
+may quickly gain the land and rise upon the shore." They also invoke
+Daula to help them in fishing. "If thou art powerful, O Daula," they
+say, "put a fish or two into this net and let them die there." After a
+good catch they praise him, saying, "Powerful is the ghost of the net."
+And when the natives of Florida are in danger on the sea, they call upon
+their immediate forefathers; one will call on his grandfather, another
+on his father, another on some dead friend, calling with reverence and
+saying, "Save us on the deep! Save us from the tempest! Bring us to the
+shore!" In San Cristoval people apply to ghosts for victory in battle,
+health in sickness, and good crops; but the word which they use to
+signify such an application conveys the notion of charm rather than of
+prayer. However, in the Banks' Islands what may be called prayer is
+strictly speaking an invocation of the dead; indeed the very word for
+prayer (_tataro_) seems to be identical with that for a powerful ghost
+(_'ataro_ in San Cristoval). A man in peril on the sea will call on his
+dead friends, especially on one who was in his lifetime a good sailor.
+And in Mota, when an oven is opened, they throw in a leaf of cooked
+mallow for a ghost, saying to him, "This is a lucky bit for your eating;
+they who have charmed your food or clubbed you (as the case may be),
+take hold of their hands, drag them away to hell, let them be dead." So
+when they pour water on the oven, they pray to the ghost, saying, "Pour
+it on the head of him down there who has laid plots against me, has
+clubbed me, has shot me, has stolen things of mine (as the case may be),
+he shall die." Again, when they make a libation before drinking, they
+pray, saying, "Grandfather! this is your lucky drop of kava; let boars
+come in to me; the money I have spent, let it come back to me; the food
+that is gone, let it come back hither to the house of you and me." And
+on starting for a voyage they will say, "Uncle! father! plenty of boars
+for you, plenty of money; kava for your drinking, lucky food for your
+eating in the canoe. I pray you with this, look down upon me, let me go
+on a safe sea." Or when the canoe labours with a heavy freight, they
+will pray, "Take off your burden from us, that we may speed on a safe
+sea."[606]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctuaries of ghosts in Florida.]
+
+In the island of Florida, the sanctuary of a powerful ghost is called a
+_vunuhu_. Sometimes it is in the village, sometimes in the
+garden-ground, sometimes in the forest. If it is in the village, it is
+fenced about, lest the foot of any rash intruder should infringe its
+sanctity. Sometimes the sanctuary is the place where the dead man is
+buried; sometimes it merely contains his relics, which have been
+translated thither. In some sanctuaries there is a shrine and in some an
+image. Generally, if not always, stones may be seen lying in such a holy
+place. The sight of one of them has probably struck the fancy of the man
+who founded the worship; he thought it a likely place for the ghost to
+haunt, and other smaller stones and shells have been subsequently added.
+Once a sanctuary has been established, everything within it becomes
+sacred (_tambu_) and belongs to the ghost. Were a tree growing within it
+to fall across the path, nobody would step over it. When a sacrifice is
+to be offered to the ghost on the holy ground, the man who knows the
+ghost, and whose duty it is to perform the sacrifice, enters first and
+all who attend him follow, treading in his footsteps. In going out no
+one will look back, lest his soul should stay behind. No one would pass
+such a sanctuary when the sun was so low as to cast his shadow into it;
+for if he did the ghost would seize his shadow and so drag the man
+himself into his den. If there were a shrine in the sanctuary, nobody
+but the sacrificer might enter it. Such a shrine contained the weapons
+and other properties which belonged in his lifetime to the man whose
+ghost was worshipped on the spot.[607]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctuaries of ghosts in Malanta.]
+
+At Saa in Malanta, another of the Solomon Islands, all burial-grounds
+where common people are interred are so far sacred that no one will go
+there without due cause; but places where the remains of nobles repose,
+and where sacrifices are offered to their ghosts, are regarded with very
+great respect, they may indeed be called family sanctuaries. Some of
+them are very old, the powerful ghosts who are worshipped in them being
+remote ancestors. It sometimes happens that the man who used to
+sacrifice in such a place dies without having instructed his son in the
+proper chant of invocation with which the worshipful ghost should be
+approached. In such a case the young man who succeeds him may fear to go
+to the old sanctuary, lest he should commit a mistake and offend the
+ghost; so he will take some ashes from the old sacrificial fire-place
+and found a new sanctuary. It is not common in that part of Malanta to
+build shrines for the relics of the dead, but it is sometimes done. Such
+shrines, on the other hand, are common in the villages of San Cristoval
+and in the sacred places of that island where great men lie buried. To
+trespass on them would be likely to rouse the anger of the ghosts, some
+of whom are known to be of a malignant disposition.[608]
+
+[Sidenote: Sanctuaries which are not burial-grounds.]
+
+But burial-grounds are not the only sanctuaries in the Solomon Islands.
+There are some where no dead man is known to be interred, though in Dr.
+Codrington's opinion there are probably none which do not derive their
+sanctity from the presence of a ghost. In the island of Florida the
+appearance of something wonderful will cause any place to become a
+sanctuary, the wonder being accepted as proof of a ghostly presence. For
+example, in the forest near Olevuga a man planted some coco-nut and
+almond trees and died not long afterwards. Then there appeared among the
+trees a great rarity in the shape of a white cuscus. The people took it
+for granted that the animal was the dead man's ghost, and therefore they
+called it by his name. The place became a sanctuary; no one would gather
+the coco-nuts and almonds that grew there, till two Christian converts
+set the ghost at defiance and appropriated his garden, with the
+coco-nuts and almonds. Through the same part of the forest ran a stream
+full of eels, one of which was so big that the people were quite sure it
+must be a ghost; so nobody would bathe in that stream or drink from it,
+except at one pool, which for the sake of convenience was considered not
+to be sacred. Again, in Bugotu, a district of Ysabel, which is another
+of the Solomon Islands, there is a pool known to be the haunt of a very
+old ghost. When a man has an enemy whom he wishes to harm he will obtain
+some scraps of his food and throw them into the water. If the food is at
+once devoured by the fish, which swarm in the pool, the man will die,
+but otherwise his life may be saved by the intervention of a man who
+knows the habits of the ghost and how to propitiate him. In these sacred
+places there are stones, on which people place food in order to obtain
+good crops, while for success in fishing they deposit morsels of cooked
+fish. Such stones are treated with reverence and seem to be in a fair
+way to develop into altars. However, when the old ghost is superseded,
+as he often is, by younger rivals, the development of an altar out of
+the stones is arrested.[609]
+
+[Sidenote: Ghosts in animals, such as sharks, alligators, snakes,
+bonitos, and frigate-birds.]
+
+From some of these instances we learn that Melanesian ghosts can
+sometimes take up their abode in animals, such as cuscuses, eels, and
+fish. The creatures which are oftenest used as vehicles by the spirits
+of the dead are sharks, alligators, snakes, bonitos, and frigate-birds.
+Snakes which haunt a sacred place are themselves sacred, because they
+belong to or actually embody the ghost. Sharks, again, in all these
+islands are very often thought to be the abode of ghosts; for men before
+their death will announce that they will appear as sharks, and
+afterwards any shark remarkable for size or colour which haunts a
+certain shore or coast is taken to be somebody's ghost and receives the
+name of the deceased. At Saa certain food, such as coco-nuts from
+particular trees, is reserved to feed such a ghost-shark; and men of
+whom it is known for certain that they will be sharks after their death
+are allowed to anticipate the posthumous honours which await them by
+devouring such food in the sacred place, just as if they were real
+sharks. Sharks are very commonly believed to be the abode of ghosts in
+Florida and Ysabel, and in Savo, where they are particularly numerous;
+hence, though all sharks are not venerated, there is no living creature
+so commonly held sacred by the Central Melanesians as a shark; and
+shark-ghosts seem even to form a class of powerful supernatural beings.
+Again, when a lizard was seen frequenting a house after a death, it
+would be taken for the ghost returning to its old home; and many ghosts,
+powerful to aid the mariner at sea, take up their quarters in
+frigate-birds.[610]
+
+[Sidenote: The belief in ghosts underlies the Melanesian conception of
+magic.]
+
+Again, a belief in powerful ghosts underlies to a great extent the
+Melanesian conception of magic, as that conception is expounded by Dr.
+Codrington. "That invisible power," he tells us, "which is believed by
+the natives to cause all such effects as transcend their conception of
+the regular course of nature, and to reside in spiritual beings, whether
+in the spiritual part of living men or in the ghosts of the dead, being
+imparted by them to their names and to various things that belong to
+them, such as stones, snakes, and indeed objects of all sorts, is that
+generally known as _mana_. Without some understanding of this it is
+impossible to understand the religious beliefs and practices of the
+Melanesians; and this again is the active force in all they do and
+believe to be done in magic, white or black. By means of this men are
+able to control or direct the forces of nature, to make rain or
+sunshine, wind or calm, to cause sickness or remove it, to know what is
+far off in time and space, to bring good luck and prosperity, or to
+blast and curse. No man, however, has this power of his own; all that he
+does is done by the aid of personal beings, ghosts or spirits."[611]
+
+[Sidenote: Illness generally thought to be caused by ghosts.]
+
+Thus, to begin with the medical profession, which is a branch of magic
+long before it becomes a department of science, every serious sickness
+is believed to be brought about by ghosts or spirits, but generally it
+is to the ghosts of the dead that illness is ascribed both by the
+Eastern and by the Western islanders. Hence recourse is had to ghosts
+for aid both in causing and in curing sickness. They are thought to
+inflict disease, not only because some offence, such as trespass, has
+been committed against them, or because one who knows their ways has
+instigated them thereto by sacrifice and spells, but because there is a
+certain malignity in the feeling of all ghosts towards the living, who
+offend them simply by being alive. All human faculties, apart from the
+mere bodily functions, are supposed to be enhanced by death; hence the
+ghost of a powerful and ill-natured man is only too ready to take
+advantage of his increased powers for mischief.[612] Thus in the island
+of Florida illness is regularly laid at the door of a ghost; the only
+question that can arise is which particular ghost is doing the mischief.
+Sometimes the patient imagines that he has offended his dead father,
+uncle, or brother, who accordingly takes his revenge by stretching him
+on a bed of sickness. In that case no special intercessor is required;
+the patient himself or one of his kinsfolk will sacrifice and beg the
+ghost to take the sickness away; it is purely a family affair. Sometimes
+the sick man thinks that it is his own private or tame ghost who is
+afflicting him; so he will leave the house in order to escape his
+tormentor. But if the cause of sickness remains obscure, a professional
+doctor or medicine-man will be consulted. He always knows, or at least
+can ascertain, the ghost who is causing all the trouble, and he takes
+his measures accordingly. Thus he will bind on the sick man the kind of
+leaves that the ghost loves; he will chew ginger and blow it into the
+patient's ears and on that part of the skull which is soft in infants;
+he will call on the name of the ghost and entreat him to remove the
+sickness. Should all these remedies prove vain, the doctor is by no
+means at the end of his resources. He may shrewdly suspect that
+somebody, who has an ill-will at the patient, has set his private ghost
+to maul the sick man and do him a grievous bodily injury. If his
+suspicions are confirmed and he discovers the malicious man who is
+egging on the mischievous ghost, he will bribe him to call off his
+ghost; and if the man refuses, the doctor will hire another ghost to
+assault and batter the original assailant. At Wango in San Cristoval
+regular battles used to be fought by the invisible champions above the
+sickbed of the sufferer, whose life or death depended on the issue of
+the combat. Their weapons were spears, and sometimes more than one ghost
+would be engaged on either side.[613]
+
+[Sidenote: Diagnosis of ghosts who have caused illness.]
+
+In Ysabel the doctor employs an ingenious apparatus for discovering the
+cause of sickness and ascertaining its cure. He suspends a stone at one
+end of a string while he holds the other end in his hand. Then he
+recites the names of all the people who died lately, and when the stone
+swings at anybody's name, he knows that the ghost of that man has caused
+the illness. It remains to find out what the ghost will take to relax
+his clutch on the sick man, it may be a mash of yams, a fish, a pig, or
+perhaps a human substitute. The question is put and answered as before;
+and whatever the oracle declares to be requisite is offered on the dead
+man's grave. Thus the ghost is appeased and the sufferer is made
+whole.[614] In these islands a common cause of illness is believed to be
+an unwarrantable intrusion on premises occupied by a ghost, who punishes
+the trespasser by afflicting him with bodily pains and ailments, or it
+may be by carrying off his soul. At Maewo in Aurora, one of the New
+Hebrides, when there is reason to think that a sickness is due to
+ghostly agency, the friends of the sick man send for a professional
+dreamer, whose business it is to ascertain what particular ghost has
+been offended and to make it up with him. So the dreamer falls asleep
+and in his sleep he dreams a dream. He seems to himself to be in the
+place where the patient was working before his illness; and there he
+spies a queer little old man, who is really no other than the ghost. The
+dreamer falls into conversation with him, learns his name, and winning
+his confidence extracts from him a true account of the whole affair. The
+fact is that in working at his garden the man encroached, whether
+wittingly or not is no matter, on land which the ghost regards as his
+private preserve; and to punish the intrusion the ghost carried off the
+intruder's soul and impounded it in a magic fence in his garden, where
+it still languishes in durance vile. The dreamer at once tenders a frank
+and manly apology on behalf of his client; he assures the ghost that the
+trespass was purely inadvertent, that no personal disrespect whatever
+was intended, and he concludes by requesting the ghost to overlook the
+offence for this time and to release the imprisoned soul. This appeal to
+the better feelings of the ghost has its effect; he pulls up the fence
+and lets the soul out of the pound; it flies back to the sick man, who
+thereupon recovers. Sometimes an orphan child is made sick by its dead
+mother, whose ghost draws away the soul of the infant to keep her
+company in the spirit land. In such a case, again, a dreamer is employed
+to bring back the lost soul from the far country; and if he can persuade
+the mother's ghost to relinquish the tiny soul of her baby, the child
+will be made whole.[615] Once more certain long stones in the Banks'
+Islands are inhabited by ghosts so active and robust that if a man's
+shadow so much as falls on one of them, the ghost in the stone will
+clutch the shadow and pull the soul clean out of the man, who dies
+accordingly. Such stones, dangerous as they unquestionably are to the
+chance passer-by, nevertheless for that very reason possess a valuable
+property which can be turned to excellent account. A man, for example,
+will put one of these stones in his house to guard it like a watch-dog
+in his absence; and if he sends a friend to fetch something out of it
+which he has forgotten, the messenger, on approaching the house, will
+take good care to call out the owner's name, lest the ghost in the
+stone, mistaking him for a thief and a robber, should pounce out on him
+and do him a mischief before he had time to explain.[616]
+
+[Sidenote: Contrast between Melanesian and European medicine.]
+
+Thus it appears that for a medical practitioner in Melanesia the first
+requisite is an intimate acquaintance, not with the anatomy of the human
+frame and the properties of drugs, but with ghosts, their personal
+peculiarities, habits, and haunts. Only by means of the influence which
+such a knowledge enables him to exert on these powerful and dangerous
+beings can the good physician mitigate and assuage the sufferings of
+poor humanity. His professional skill, while it certainly aims at the
+alleviation of physical evils, attains its object chiefly, if not
+exclusively, by a direct appeal to those higher, though invisible,
+powers which encompass the life of man, or at all events of the
+Melanesian. The firm faith in the spiritual and the unseen which these
+sable doctors display in their treatment of the sick presents a striking
+contrast to the procedure of their European colleagues, who trust
+exclusively to the use of mere physical remedies, such as drugs and
+lancets, now carving the body of the sufferer with knives, and now
+inserting substances, about which they know little, into places about
+which they know nothing. Has not science falsely so called still much to
+learn from savagery?
+
+[Sidenote: The weather believed to be regulated by ghosts and spirits.
+Weather-doctors.]
+
+But it is not the departments of medicine and surgery alone, important
+as these are to human welfare, which in Melanesia are directed and
+controlled by spiritual forces. The weather in those regions is also
+regulated by ghosts and spirits. It is they who cause the wind to blow
+or to be still, the sun to shine forth or to be overcast with clouds,
+the rain to descend or the earth to be parched with drought; hence
+fertility and abundance or dearth and famine prevail alternately at the
+will of these spiritual directors. From this it follows that men who
+stand on a footing of intimacy with ghosts and spirits can by judicious
+management induce them to adapt the weather to the varying needs of
+mankind. But it is to be observed that the supernatural beings, who are
+the real sources of atmospheric phenomena, have delegated or deputed a
+portion of their powers not merely to certain material objects, such as
+stones or leaves, but to certain set forms of words, which men call
+incantations or spells; and accordingly all such objects and formulas
+do, by virtue of this delegation, possess in themselves a real and we
+may almost say natural influence over the weather, which is often
+manifested in a striking congruity or harmony between the things
+themselves and the effects which they are calculated to produce. This
+adaptation of means to end in nature may perhaps be regarded as a
+beautiful proof of the existence of spirits and ghosts working their
+purposes unseen behind the gaily coloured screen or curtain of the
+physical universe. At all events men who are acquainted with the ghostly
+properties of material objects and words can turn them to account for
+the benefit of their friends and the confusion of their foes, and they
+do so very readily if only it is made worth their while. Hence it comes
+about that in these islands there are everywhere weather-doctors or
+weather-mongers, who through their familiarity with ghosts and spirits
+and their acquaintance with the ghostly or spiritual properties of
+things, are able to control the weather and to supply their customers
+with wind or calm, rain or sunshine, famine or abundance, at a
+reasonable rate and a moderate figure.[617] The advantages of such a
+system over our own blundering method of managing the weather, or rather
+of leaving it to its own devices, are too obvious to be insisted on. To
+take a few examples. In the island of Florida, when a calm is wanted,
+the weather-doctor takes a bunch of leaves, of the sort which the ghost
+loves, and hides the bunch in the hollow of a tree where there is water,
+at the same time invoking the ghost with the proper charm. This
+naturally produces rain and with the rain a calm. In the seafaring life
+of the Solomon Islanders the maker of calms is a really valuable
+citizen.[618] The Santa Cruz people are also great voyagers, and their
+wizards control the weather on their expeditions, taking with them the
+stock or log which represents their private or tame ghost and setting it
+up on a stage in the cabin. The presence of the familiar ghost being
+thus secured, the weather-doctor will undertake to provide wind or calm
+according to circumstances.[619] We have already seen how in these
+islands the wizard makes rain by pouring water on the wooden posts which
+represent the rain-ghosts.[620]
+
+[Sidenote: Black magic working through personal refuse or rubbish of the
+victim.]
+
+Such exercises of ghostly power for the healing of the sick and the
+improvement of the weather are, when well directed and efficacious,
+wholly beneficial. But ghostly power is a two-edged weapon which can
+work evil as well as good to mankind. In fact it can serve the purpose
+of witchcraft. The commonest application of this pernicious art is one
+which is very familiar to witches and sorcerers in many parts of the
+world. The first thing the wizard does is to obtain a fragment of food,
+a bit of hair, a nail-clipping, or indeed anything that has been closely
+connected with the person of his intended victim. This is the medium
+through which the power of the ghost or spirit is brought to bear; it
+is, so to say, the point of support on which the magician rests the
+whole weight of his infernal engine. In order to give effect to the
+charm it is very desirable, if not absolutely necessary, to possess some
+personal relic, such as a bone, of the dead man whose ghost is to set
+the machinery in motion. At all events the essential thing is to bring
+together the man who is to be injured and the ghost or spirit who is to
+injure him; and this can be done most readily by placing the personal
+relics or refuse of the two men, the living and the dead, in contact
+with each other; for thus the magic circuit, if we may say so, is
+complete, and the fatal current flows from the dead to the living. That
+is why it is most dangerous to leave any personal refuse or rubbish
+lying about; you never can tell but that some sorcerer may get hold of
+it and work your ruin by means of it. Hence the people are naturally
+most careful to hide or destroy all such refuse in order to prevent it
+from falling into the hands of witches and wizards; and this sage
+precaution has led to habits of cleanliness which the superficial
+European is apt to mistake for what he calls enlightened sanitation, but
+which a deeper knowledge of native thought would reveal to him in their
+true character as far-seeing measures designed to defeat the nefarious
+art of the sorcerer.[621]
+
+[Sidenote: Black magic working without any personal relic of the victim.
+The ghost-shooter.]
+
+Unfortunately, however, an adept in the black art can work his fell
+purpose even without any personal relic of his victim. In the Banks'
+Islands, for example, he need only procure a bit of human bone or a
+fragment of some lethal weapon, it may be a splinter of a club or a chip
+of an arrow, which has killed somebody. This he wraps up in the proper
+leaves, recites over it the appropriate charm, and plants it secretly in
+the path along which his intended victim is expected to pass. The ghost
+of the man who owned the bone in his life or perished by the club or the
+arrow, is now lurking like a lion in the path; and if the poor fellow
+strolls along it thinking no evil, the ghost will spring at him and
+strike him with disease. The charm is perfectly efficient if the man
+does come along the path, but clearly it misses fire if he does not. To
+remedy this defect in the apparatus a sorcerer sometimes has recourse to
+a portable instrument, a sort of pocket pistol, which in the Banks'
+Islands is known as a ghost-shooter. It is a bamboo tube, loaded not
+with powder and shot, but with a dead man's bone and other magical
+ingredients, over which the necessary spell has been crooned. Armed with
+this deadly weapon the sorcerer has only to step up to his unsuspecting
+enemy, whip out the pocket pistol, uncork the muzzle by removing his
+thumb from the orifice, and present it at the victim; the fatal
+discharge follows in an instant and the man drops to the ground. The
+ghost in the pistol has done his work. Sometimes, however, an accident
+happens. The marksman misses his victim and hits somebody else. This
+occurred, for example, not very many years ago in the island of Mota. A
+man named Isvitag was waiting with his ghost-shooter to pop at his
+enemy, but in his nervous excitement he let fly too soon, just as a
+woman with a child on her hip stepped across the path. The shot, or
+rather the ghost, hit the child point-blank, and it was his sister's
+child, his own next of kin! You may imagine the distress of the
+affectionate uncle at this deplorable miscarriage. To prevent
+inflammation of the wound he, with great presence of mind, plunged his
+pocket pistol in water, and this timely remedy proved so efficacious
+that the child took no hurt.[622]
+
+[Sidenote: Prophecy inspired by ghosts.]
+
+Another department of Melanesian life in which ghosts figure very
+prominently is prophecy. The knowledge of future events is believed to
+be conveyed to the people by a ghost or spirit speaking with the voice
+of a man, who is himself unconscious while he speaks. The predictions
+which emanate from the prophet under these circumstances are in the
+strictest sense inspired. His human personality is for the time being in
+abeyance, and he is merely the mouthpiece of the powerful spirit which
+has temporarily taken possession of his body and speaks with his voice.
+The possession is indeed painfully manifest. His eyes glare, foam bursts
+from his mouth, his limbs writhe, his whole body is convulsed. These are
+the workings of the mighty spirit shaking and threatening to rend the
+frail tabernacle of flesh. This form of inspiration is not clearly
+distinguishable from what we call madness; indeed the natives do not
+attempt to distinguish between the two things; they regard the madman
+and the prophet as both alike inspired by a ghost or spirit, and a man
+will sometimes pretend to be mad in order that he may get the reputation
+of being a prophet. At Saa a man will speak with the voice of a powerful
+man deceased, while he twists and writhes under the influence of the
+ghost; he calls himself by the name of the deceased who speaks through
+him, and he is so addressed by others; he will eat fire, lift enormous
+weights, and foretells things to come. When the inspiration, or
+insanity, is particularly violent, and the Banks' Islanders think they
+have had quite enough of it, the friends of the prophet or of the madman
+will sometimes catch him and hold him struggling and roaring in the
+smoke of strong-smelling leaves, while they call out the names of the
+dead men whose ghosts are most likely to be abroad at the time, for as
+soon as the right name is mentioned the ghost departs from the man, who
+then returns to his sober senses. But this method of smoking out a ghost
+is not always successful.[623]
+
+[Sidenote: Divination by means of ghosts.]
+
+There are many methods by which ghosts and spirits are believed to make
+known to men who employ them the secret things which the unassisted
+human intelligence could not discover; and some of them hardly perhaps
+need the intervention of a professional wizard. These methods of
+divination differ very little in the various islands. In the Solomon
+Islands, for instance, when an expedition has started in a fleet of
+canoes, there is sometimes a hesitation whether they shall proceed, or a
+doubt as to what direction they should take. Thereupon a diviner may
+declare that he has felt a ghost step on board; for did not the canoe
+tip over to the one side? Accordingly he asks the invisible passenger,
+"Shall we go on? Shall we go to such and such a place?" If the canoe
+rocks, the answer is yes; if it lies on an even keel, the answer is no.
+Again, when a man is sick and his friends wish to know what ghost is
+vexing or, as they say, eating him, a diviner or wizard is sent for. He
+comes bringing an assistant, and the two sit down, the wizard in front
+and the assistant at his back, and they hold a stick or bamboo by the
+two ends. The wizard then begins to slap the end of the bamboo he holds,
+calling out one after another the names of men not very long deceased,
+and when he names the one who is afflicting the sick man the stick of
+itself becomes violently agitated.[624] We are not informed, but we may
+probably assume, that it is the ghost and not the man who really
+agitates the stick. A somewhat different mode of divination was
+occasionally employed at Motlav in the Banks' Islands in order to
+discover a thief or other criminal. After a burial they would take a
+bag, put some Tahitian chestnut and scraped banana into it, and tie it
+to the end of a hollow bamboo tube about ten feet long in such a way
+that the end of the tube was inserted in the mouth of the bag. Then the
+bag was laid on the dead man's grave, and the diviners grasped the other
+end of the bamboo. The names of the recently dead were then called over,
+and while this was being done the men felt the bamboo grow heavy in
+their hands, for a ghost was scrambling up from the bag into the hollow
+of the bamboo. Having thus secured him they carried the imprisoned ghost
+in the bamboo into the village, where the roll of the recent dead was
+again called over in order to learn whose ghost had been caught in the
+trap. When wrong names were mentioned, the free end of the bamboo moved
+from side to side, but at the mention of the right name it revolved
+briskly. Having thus ascertained whom they had to deal with, they
+questioned the entrapped ghost, "Who stole so and so? Who was guilty in
+such a case?" Thereupon the bamboo, moved no doubt by the ghost inside,
+pointed at the culprit, if he was present, or made signs as before when
+the names of the suspected evildoers were mentioned.[625]
+
+[Sidenote: Taboo based on a fear of ghosts.]
+
+Of the many departments of Central Melanesian life which are permeated
+by a belief in ghostly power the last which I shall mention is the
+institution of taboo. In Melanesia, indeed, the institution is not so
+conspicuous as it used to be in Polynesia; yet even there it has been a
+powerful instrument in the consolidation of the rights of private
+property, and as such it deserves the attention of historians who seek
+to trace the evolution of law and morality. As understood in the Banks'
+Islands and the New Hebrides the word taboo (_tambu_ or _tapu_)
+signifies a sacred and unapproachable character which is imposed on
+certain things by the arbitrary will of a chief or other powerful man.
+Somebody whose authority with the people gives him confidence to make
+the announcement will declare that such and such an object may not be
+touched, that such and such a place may not be approached, and that such
+and such an action may not be performed under a certain penalty, which
+in the last resort will be inflicted by ghostly or spiritual agency. The
+object, place, or action in question becomes accordingly taboo or
+sacred. Hence in these islands taboo may be defined as a prohibition
+with a curse expressed or implied. The sanction or power at the back of
+the taboo is not that of the man who imposes it; rather it is that of
+the ghost or spirit in whose name or in reliance upon whom the taboo is
+imposed. Thus in Florida a chief will forbid something to be done or
+touched under a penalty; he may proclaim, for example, that any one who
+violates his prohibition must pay him a hundred strings of shell money.
+To a European such a proclamation seems a proof of the chief's power;
+but to the native the chiefs power, in this and in everything, rests on
+the persuasion that the chief has his mighty ghost at his back. The
+sense of this in the particular case is indeed remote, the fear of the
+chiefs anger is present and effective, but the ultimate sanction is the
+power of the ghost. If a common man were to take upon himself to taboo
+anything he might do so; people would imagine that he would not dare to
+make such an announcement unless he knew he could enforce it; so they
+would watch, and if anybody violated the taboo and fell sick afterwards,
+they would conclude that the taboo was supported by a powerful ghost who
+punished infractions of it. Hence the reputation and authority of the
+man who imposed the taboo would rise accordingly; for it would be seen
+that he had a powerful ghost at his back. Every ghost has a particular
+kind of leaf for his badge; and in imposing his taboo a man will set the
+leaf of his private ghost as a mark to warn trespassers of the spiritual
+power with which they have to reckon; when people see a leaf stuck, it
+may be, on a tree, a house, or a canoe, they do not always know whose it
+is; but they do know that if they disregard the mark they have to deal
+with a ghost and not with a man,[626] and the knowledge is a more
+effectual check on thieving and other crimes than the dread of mere
+human justice. Many a rascal fears a ghost who does not fear the face of
+man.
+
+[Sidenote: The life of the Central Melanesians deeply influenced by
+their belief in the survival of the human soul after death.]
+
+What I have said may suffice to impress you with a sense of the deep
+practical influence which a belief in the survival of the human soul
+after death exercises on the life and conduct of the Central Melanesian
+savage. To him the belief is no mere abstract theological dogma or
+speculative tenet, the occasional theme of edifying homilies and pious
+meditation; it is an inbred, unquestioning, omnipresent conviction which
+affects his thoughts and actions daily and at every turn; it guides his
+fortunes as an individual and controls his behaviour as a member of a
+community, by inculcating a respect for the rights of others and
+enforcing a submission to the public authorities. With him the fear of
+ghosts and spirits is a bulwark of morality and a bond of society; for
+he firmly believes in their unseen presence everywhere and in the
+punishments which they can inflict on wrongdoers. His whole theory of
+causation differs fundamentally from ours and necessarily begets a
+fundamental difference of practice. Where we see natural forces and
+material substances, the Melanesian sees ghosts and spirits. A great
+gulf divides his conception of the world from ours; and it may be
+doubted whether education will ever enable him to pass the gulf and to
+think and act like us. The products of an evolution which has extended
+over many ages cannot be forced like mushrooms in a summer day; it is
+vain to pluck the fruit of the tree of knowledge before it is ripe.
+
+[Footnote 590: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 130-132.]
+
+[Footnote 591: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 132 _sq._; C. M.
+Woodford, _A Naturalist among the Head-hunters_ (London, 1890), pp.
+26-28.]
+
+[Footnote 592: G. Turner, LL.D., _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long
+before_ (London, 1884), pp. 318 _sq._ Yams are the principal fruits
+cultivated by the Tannese, who bestow a great deal of labour on the
+plantation and keep them in fine order. See G. Turner, _op. cit._ pp.
+317 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 593: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 133 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 594: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 134.]
+
+[Footnote 595: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 135 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 596: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 137 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 597: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 138.]
+
+[Footnote 598: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 138 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 599: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 139.]
+
+[Footnote 600: "Native Stories of Santa Cruz and Reef Islands,"
+translated by the Rev. W. O'Ferrall, _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xxxiv. (1904) p. 223.]
+
+[Footnote 601: "Native Stories from Santa Cruz and Reef Islands," _op.
+cit._ p. 224.]
+
+[Footnote 602: "Native Stories from Santa Cruz and Reef Islands," _op.
+cit._ p. 225.]
+
+[Footnote 603: Compare _The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, i.
+269 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 604: G. Turner, _Samoa a Hundred Years Ago and long before_
+(London, 1884), p. 326.]
+
+[Footnote 605: G. Turner, _op. cit._ p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 606: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 145-148.]
+
+[Footnote 607: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 175 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 608: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 176 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 609: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ pp. 177 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 610: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 178-180.]
+
+[Footnote 611: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 612: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 194.]
+
+[Footnote 613: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 194-196.]
+
+[Footnote 614: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 196.]
+
+[Footnote 615: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 208 _sq._ As to
+sickness supposed to be caused by trespass on the premises of a ghost
+see further _id._, pp. 194, 195, 218.]
+
+[Footnote 616: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 184.]
+
+[Footnote 617: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, p. 200.]
+
+[Footnote 618: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 200, 201. The
+spirit whom the Florida wizard appeals to for good or bad weather is
+called a _vigona_; and the natives believe it to be always the ghost of
+a dead man. But it seems very doubtful whether this opinion is strictly
+correct. See R. H. Codrington, _op cit._ pp. 124, 134.]
+
+[Footnote 619: R. H. Codrington, _op. cit._ p. 201. The Santa Cruz name
+for such a ghost is _duka_ (_ibid._ p. 139).]
+
+[Footnote 620: Above, p. 375.]
+
+[Footnote 621: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 202-204.]
+
+[Footnote 622: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 205 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 623: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 209 _sq._,
+218-220.]
+
+[Footnote 624: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 210.]
+
+[Footnote 625: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 211 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 626: R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_, pp. 215 _sq._]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XVIII
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF NORTHERN AND EASTERN
+MELANESIA
+
+
+[Sidenote: Northern Melanesia. Material culture of the North
+Melanesians.]
+
+In the last lecture I concluded my account of the belief in immortality
+and the worship of the dead among the natives of Central Melanesia.
+To-day we pass to what may be called Northern Melanesia, by which is to
+be understood the great archipelago lying to the north-east of New
+Guinea. It comprises the two large islands of New Britain and New
+Ireland, now called New Pomerania and New Mecklenburg, with the much
+smaller Duke of York Island lying between them, and the chain of New
+Hanover and the Admiralty Islands stretching away westward from the
+north-western extremity of New Ireland. The whole of the archipelago,
+together with the adjoining island of Bougainville in the Solomon
+Islands, is now under German rule. The people belong to the same stock
+and speak the same language as the natives of Central and Southern
+Melanesia, and their level of culture is approximately the same. They
+live in settled villages and subsist chiefly by the cultivation of the
+ground, raising crops of taro, yams, bananas, sugar-cane, and so forth.
+Most of the agricultural labour is performed by the women, who plant,
+weed the ground, and carry the produce to the villages. The ground is,
+or rather used to be, dug by sharp-pointed sticks. The men hunt
+cassowaries, wallabies, and wild pigs, and they catch fish by both nets
+and traps. Women and children take part in the fishing and many of them
+become very expert in spearing fish. Among the few domestic animals
+which they keep are pigs, dogs, and fowls. The villages are generally
+situated in the midst of a dense forest; but on the coast the natives
+build their houses not far from the beach as a precaution against the
+attacks of the forest tribes, of whom they stand greatly in fear. A New
+Britain village generally consists of a number of small communities or
+families, each of which dwells in a separate enclosure. The houses are
+very small and badly built, oblong in shape and very low. Between the
+separate hamlets which together compose a village lie stretches of
+virgin forest, through which run irregular and often muddy foot-tracks,
+scooped out here and there into mud-holes where the pigs love to wallow
+during the heat of the tropical day. As the people of any one district
+used generally to be at war with their neighbours, it was necessary that
+they should live together for the sake of mutual protection.[627]
+
+[Sidenote: Commercial habits of the North Melanesians. Their
+backwardness in other respects.]
+
+Nevertheless, in spite of their limited intercourse with surrounding
+villages, the natives of the New Britain or the Bismarck Archipelago
+were essentially a trading people. They made extensive use of shell
+money and fully recognised the value of any imported articles as mediums
+of exchange or currency. Markets were held on certain days at fixed
+places, where the forest people brought their yams, taro, bananas and so
+forth and exchanged them for fish, tobacco, and other articles with the
+natives of the coast. They also went on long trading expeditions to
+procure canoes, cuscus teeth, pigs, slaves, and so forth, which on their
+return they generally sold at a considerable profit. The shell which
+they used as money is the _Nassa immersa_ or _Nassa calosa_, found on
+the north coast of New Britain. The shells were perforated and threaded
+on strips of cane, which were then joined together in coils of fifty to
+two hundred fathoms.[628] The rights of private property were fully
+recognised. All lands belonged to certain families, and husband and wife
+had each the exclusive right to his or her goods and chattels. But while
+in certain directions the people had made some progress, in others they
+remained very backward. Pottery and the metals were unknown; no metal or
+specimen of metal-work has been found in the archipelago; on the other
+hand the natives made much use of stone implements, especially adzes and
+clubs. In war they never used bows and arrows.[629] They had no system
+of government, unless that name may be given to the power wielded by the
+secret societies and by chiefs, who exercised a certain degree of
+influence principally by reason of the reputation which they enjoyed as
+sorcerers and magicians. They were not elected nor did they necessarily
+inherit their office; they simply claimed to possess magical powers, and
+if they succeeded in convincing the people of the justice of their
+claim, their authority was recognised. Wealth also contributed to
+establish their position in the esteem of the public.[630]
+
+[Sidenote: The Rev. George Brown on the Melanesians.]
+
+With regard to the religious ideas and customs of the natives we are not
+fully informed, but so far as these have been described they appear to
+agree closely with those of their kinsfolk in Central Melanesia. The
+first European to settle in the archipelago was the veteran missionary,
+the Rev. George Brown, D.D., who resided in the islands from 1875 to
+1880 and has revisited them on several occasions since; he reduced the
+language to writing for the first time,[631] and is one of our best
+authorities on the people. In what follows I shall make use of his
+valuable testimony along with that of more recent observers.
+
+[Sidenote: North Melanesian theory of the soul. Fear of ghosts,
+especially the ghosts of persons who have been killed and eaten.]
+
+The natives of the archipelago believe that every person is animated by
+a soul, which survives his death and may afterwards influence the
+survivors for good or evil. Their word for soul is _nio_ or _niono_,
+meaning a shadow. The root is _nio_, which by the addition of personal
+suffixes becomes _niong_ "my soul or shadow," _niom_ "your soul or
+shadow," _niono_ "his soul or shadow." They think that the soul is like
+the man himself, and that it always stays inside of his body, except
+when it goes out on a ramble during sleep or a faint. A man who is very
+sleepy may say, "My soul wants to go away." They believe, however, that
+it departs for ever at death; hence when a man is sick, his friends will
+offer prayers to prevent its departure. There is only one kind of soul,
+but it can appear in many shapes and enter into animals, such as rats,
+lizards, birds, and so on. It can hear, see, and speak, and present
+itself in the form of a wraith or apparition to people at the moment of
+or soon after death. On being asked why he thought that the soul does
+not perish with the body, a native said, "Because it is different; it is
+not of the same nature at all." They believe that the souls of the dead
+occasionally visit the living and are seen by them, and that they haunt
+houses and burial-places. They are very much afraid of the ghosts and do
+all they can to drive or frighten them away. Above all, being cannibals,
+they stand in great fear of the ghosts of the people whom they have
+killed and eaten. The man who is cutting up a human body takes care to
+tie a bandage over his mouth and nose during the operation of carving in
+order to prevent the enraged soul of the victim from entering into his
+body by these apertures; and for a similar reason the doors of the
+houses are shut while the cannibal feast is going on inside. And to keep
+the victim's ghost quiet while his body is being devoured, a cut from a
+joint is very considerately placed on a tree outside of the house, so
+that he may eat of his own flesh and be satisfied. At the conclusion of
+the banquet, the people shout, brandish spears, beat the bushes, blow
+horns, beat drums, and make all kinds of noises for the purpose of
+chasing the ghost or ghosts of the murdered and eaten men away from the
+village. But while they send away the souls, they keep the skulls and
+jawbones of the victims; as many as thirty-five jawbones have been seen
+hanging in a single house in New Ireland. As for the skulls, they are,
+or rather were placed on the branch of a dead tree and so preserved on
+the beach or near the house of the man who had taken them.[632]
+
+[Sidenote: Offerings to the souls of the dead.]
+
+With regard to the death of their friends they deem it very important to
+obtain the bodies and bury them. They offer food to the souls of their
+departed kinsfolk for a long time after death, until all the funeral
+feasts are over; but they do not hold annual festivals in honour of dead
+ancestors. The food offered to the dead is laid every day on a small
+platform in a tree; but the natives draw a distinction between offerings
+to the soul of a man who died a natural death and offerings to the soul
+of a man who was killed in a fight; for whereas they place the former on
+a living tree, they deposit the latter on a dead tree. Moreover, they
+lay money, weapons, and property, often indeed the whole wealth of the
+family, near the corpse of their friend, in order that the soul of the
+deceased may carry off the souls of these valuables to the spirit land.
+But when the body is carried away to be buried, most of the property is
+removed by its owners for their own use. However, the relations will
+sometimes detach a few shells from the coils of shell money and a few
+beads from a necklace and drop them in a fire for the behoof of the
+ghost. But when the deceased was a chief or other person of importance,
+some of his property would be buried with him. And before burial his
+body would be propped up on a special chair in front of his house,
+adorned with necklaces, wreaths of flowers and feathers, and gaudy with
+war-paint. In one hand would be placed a large cooked yam, and in the
+other a spear, while a club would be put on his shoulder. The yam was to
+stay the pangs of hunger on his long journey, and the weapons were to
+enable him to fight the foes who might resist his entrance into the
+spirit land. In the Duke of York Island the corpse was usually disposed
+of by being sunk in a deep part of the lagoon; but sometimes it was
+buried in the house and a fire kept burning on the spot.[633]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in New Ireland and New Britain. Preservation
+of the skull.]
+
+In New Ireland the dead were rolled up in winding-sheets made of
+pandanus leaves, then weighted with stones and buried at sea. However,
+at some places they were deposited in deep underground watercourses or
+caverns. Towards the northern end of New Ireland corpses were burned on
+large piles of firewood in an open space of the village. A number of
+images curiously carved out of wood or chalk were set round the blazing
+pyre, but the meaning of these strange figures is uncertain. Men and
+women uttered the most piteous wailings, threw themselves on the top of
+the corpse, and pulled at the arms and legs. This they did not merely to
+express their grief, but because they thought that if they saw and
+handled the dead body while it was burning, the ghost could not or would
+not haunt them afterwards.[634] Amongst the natives of the Gazelle
+Peninsula in New Britain the dead are generally buried in shallow graves
+in or near their houses. Some of the shell money which belonged to a man
+in life is buried with him. Women with blackened bodies sleep on the
+grave for weeks.[635] When the deceased was a great chief, his corpse,
+almost covered with shell money, is placed in a canoe, which is
+deposited in a small house. Thereupon the nearest female relations are
+led into the house, and the door being walled up they are obliged to
+remain there with the rotting body until all the flesh has mouldered
+away. Food is passed in to them through a hole in the wall, and under no
+pretext are they allowed to leave the hut before the decomposition of
+the corpse is complete. When nothing of the late chief remains but a
+skeleton, the hut is opened and the solemn funeral takes place. The
+bones of the dead are buried, but his skull is hung up in the taboo
+house in order, we are told, that his ghost may remain in the
+neighbourhood of the village and see how his memory is honoured. After
+the burial of the headless skeleton feasting and dancing go on, often
+for more than a month, and the expenses are defrayed out of the riches
+left by the deceased.[636] Even in the case of eminent persons who have
+been buried whole and entire in the usual way, a special mark of respect
+is sometimes paid to their memory by digging up their skulls after a
+year or more, painting them red and white, decorating them with
+feathers, and setting them up on a scaffold constructed for the
+purpose.[637]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead among the Sulka of New Britain.]
+
+Somewhat similar is the disposal of the dead among the Sulka, a tribe of
+New Britain who inhabit a mountainous and well-watered country to the
+south of the Gazelle Peninsula. When a Sulka dies, his plantation is
+laid waste, and the young fruit-trees cut down, but the ripe fruits are
+first distributed among the living. His pigs are slaughtered and their
+flesh in like manner distributed, and his weapons are broken. If the
+deceased was a rich man, his wife or wives will sometimes be killed. The
+corpse is usually buried next morning. A hole is dug in the house and
+the body deposited in it in a sitting posture. The upper part of the
+corpse projects from the grave and is covered with a tower-like
+structure of basket-work, which is stuffed with banana-leaves. Great
+care is taken to preserve the body from touching the earth. Stones are
+laid round about the structure and a fire kindled. Relations come and
+sleep for a time beside the corpse, men and women separately. Some while
+afterwards the soul of the deceased is driven away. The time for
+carrying out the expulsion is settled by the people in whispers, lest
+the ghost should overhear them and prepare for a stout resistance. The
+evening before the ceremony takes place many coco-nut leaves are
+collected. Next morning, as soon as a certain bird (_Philemon
+coquerelli_) is heard to sing, the people rise from their beds and set
+up a great cry. Then they beat the walls, shake the posts, set fire to
+dry coco-nut leaves, and finally rush out into the paths. At that
+moment, so the people think, the soul of the dead quits the hut. When
+the flesh of the corpse is quite decayed, the bones are taken from the
+grave, sewed in leaves, and hung up. Soon afterwards a funeral feast is
+held, at which men and women dance. For some time after a burial taro is
+planted beside the house of death and enclosed with a fence. The Sulka
+think that the ghost comes and gathers the souls of the taro. The ripe
+fruit is allowed to rot. Falling stars are supposed to be the souls of
+the dead which have been hurled up aloft and are now descending to bathe
+in the sea. The trail of light behind them is thought to be a tail of
+coco-nut leaves which other souls have fastened to them and set on fire.
+In like manner the phosphorescent glow on the sea comes from souls
+disporting themselves in the water. Persons who at their death left few
+relations, or did evil in their life, or were murdered outside of the
+village, are not buried in the house. Their corpses are deposited on
+rocks or on scaffolds in the forest, or are interred on the spot where
+they met their death. The reason for this treatment of their corpses is
+not mentioned; but we may conjecture that their ghosts are regarded with
+contempt, dislike, or fear, and that the survivors seek to give them a
+wide berth by keeping their bodies at a distance from the village. The
+corpses of those who died suddenly are not buried but wrapt up in leaves
+and laid on a scaffold in the house, which is then shut up and deserted.
+This manner of disposing of them seems also to indicate a dread or
+distrust of their ghosts.[638]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead among the Moanus of the Admiralty
+Islands. Prayers offered to the skull of a dead chief.]
+
+Among the Moanus of the Admiralty Islands the dead are kept in the
+houses unburied until the flesh is completely decayed and nothing
+remains but the bones. Old women then wash the skeleton carefully in
+sea-water, after which it is disjointed and divided. The backbone,
+together with the bones of the legs and upper arms, is deposited in one
+basket and put away somewhere; the skull, together with the ribs and the
+bones of the lower arms, is deposited in another basket, which is sunk
+for a time in the sea. When the bones are completely cleaned and
+bleached in the water, they are laid with sweet-smelling herbs in a
+wooden vessel and placed in the house which the dead man inhabited
+during his life. But the teeth have been previously extracted from the
+skull and converted into a necklace for herself by the sister of the
+deceased. After a time the ribs are distributed by the son among the
+relatives. The principal widow gets two, other near kinsfolk get one
+apiece, and they wear these relics under their arm-bands. The
+distribution of the ribs is the occasion of a great festival, and it is
+followed some time afterwards by a still greater feast, for which
+extensive preparations are made long beforehand. All who intend to be
+present at the ceremony send vessels of coco-nut oil in advance; and if
+the deceased was a great chief the number of the oil vessels and of the
+guests may amount to two thousand. Meantime the giver of the feast
+causes a scaffold to be erected for the reception of the skull, and the
+whole art of the wood-carver is exhausted in decorating the scaffold
+with figures of turtles, birds, and so forth, while a wooden dog acts as
+sentinel at either end. When the multitude has assembled, and the
+orchestra of drums, collected from the whole neighbourhood, has sent
+forth a far-sounding crash of music, the giver of the feast steps
+forward and pronounces a florid eulogium on the deceased, a warm
+panegyric on the guests who have honoured him by their presence, and a
+fluent invective against his absent foes. Nor does he forget to throw in
+some delicate allusions to his own noble generosity in providing the
+assembled visitors with this magnificent entertainment. For this great
+effort of eloquence the orator has been primed in the morning by the
+sorcerer. The process of priming consists in kneeling on the orator's
+shoulders and tugging at the hair of his head with might and main, which
+is clearly calculated to promote the flow of his rhetoric. If none of
+the hair comes out in the sorcerer's hands, a masterpiece of oratory is
+confidently looked forward to in the afternoon. When the speech, for
+which such painful preparations have been made, is at last over, the
+drums again strike up. No sooner have their booming notes died away over
+land and sea, than the sorcerer steps up to the scaffold, takes from it
+the bleached skull, and holds it in both his hands. Then the giver of
+the feast goes up to him, dips a bunch of dracaena leaves in a vessel of
+oil, and smites the skull with it, saying, "Thou art my father!" At that
+the drums again beat loudly. Then he strikes the skull a second time
+with the leaves, saying, "Take the food that has been made ready in
+thine honour!" And again there is a crash of drums. After that he smites
+the skull yet again and prays saying, "Guard me! Guard my people! Guard
+my children!" And every prayer of the litany is followed by the solemn
+roll of the drums. When these impressive invocations to the spirit of
+the dead chief are over, the feasting begins. The skull is thenceforth
+carefully preserved.[639]
+
+[Sidenote: Disposal of the dead in the Kaniet Islands. Preservation of
+the skull.]
+
+In the Kaniet Islands, a small group to the north-west of the Admiralty
+Islands, the dead are either sunk in the sea or buried in shallow
+graves, face downward, near the house. All the movable property of the
+deceased is piled on the grave, left there for three weeks, and then
+burnt. Afterwards the skull is dug up, placed in a basket, and having
+been decorated with leaves and feathers is hung up in the house. Thus
+adorned it not only serves to keep the dead in memory, but is also
+employed in many conjurations to defeat the nefarious designs of other
+ghosts, who are believed to work most of the ills that afflict
+humanity.[640] Apparently these islanders employ a ghost to protect them
+against ghosts on the principle of setting a thief to catch a thief.
+
+[Sidenote: Death attributed to witchcraft.]
+
+Amongst the natives of the Bismarck Archipelago few persons, if any, are
+believed to die from natural causes alone; if they are not killed in war
+they are commonly supposed to perish by witchcraft or sorcery, even when
+the cause of death might seem to the uninstructed European to be
+sufficiently obvious in such things as exposure to heavy rain, the
+carrying of too heavy a burden, or remaining too long a time under
+water. So when a man has died, his friends are anxious to discover who
+has bewitched him to death. In this enquiry the ghost is expected to
+lend his assistance. Thus on the night after the decease the friends
+will assemble outside the house, and a sorcerer will address the ghost
+and request him to name the author of his death. If the ghost, as
+sometimes happens, makes no reply, the sorcerer will jog his memory by
+calling out the name of some suspected person; and should the ghost
+still be silent, the wizard will name another and another, till at the
+mention of one name a tapping sound is heard like the drumming of
+fingers on a board or on a mat The sound may proceed from the house or
+from a pearl shell which the sorcerer holds in his hand; but come from
+where it may, it is taken as a certain proof that the man who has just
+been named did the deed, and he is dealt with accordingly. Many a poor
+wretch in New Britain has been killed and eaten on no other evidence
+than that of the fatal tapping.[641]
+
+[Sidenote: Burial customs in the Duke of York Island. Preservation of
+the skull.]
+
+When a man of mark is buried in the Duke of York Island, the masters of
+sorcery take leaves, spit on them, and throw them, with a number of
+poisonous things, into the grave, uttering at the same time loud
+imprecations on the wicked enchanter who has killed their friend. Then
+they go and bathe, and returning they fall to cursing again; and if the
+miscreant survived the first imprecations, it is regarded as perfectly
+certain that he will fall a victim to the second. Sometimes, when the
+deceased was a chief distinguished for bravery and wisdom, his corpse
+would be exposed on a high platform in front of his house and left there
+to rot, while his relatives sat around and inhaled the stench,
+conceiving that with it they absorbed the courage and skill of the
+departed worthy. Some of them would even anoint their bodies with the
+drippings from the putrefying corpse for the same purpose. The women
+also made fires that the ghost might warm himself at them. When the head
+became detached from the trunk, it was carefully preserved by the next
+of kin, while the other remains were buried in a shallow grave in the
+house. All the female relatives blackened their dusky faces for a long
+time, after which the skull was put on a platform, a great feast was
+held, and dances were performed for many nights in its honour. Then at
+last the spirit of the dead man, which till that time was supposed to be
+lingering about his old abode, took his departure, and his friends
+troubled themselves about him no more.[642]
+
+[Sidenote: Prayers to the spirits of the dead.]
+
+The souls of the dead are always regarded by these people as beings
+whose help can be invoked on special occasions, such as fighting or
+fishing or any other matter of importance; and since the spirits whom
+they invoke are always those of their own kindred they are presumed to
+be friendly to the petitioners. The objects for which formal prayers are
+addressed to the souls of ancestors appear to be always temporal
+benefits, such as victory over enemies and plenty of food; prayers for
+the promotion of moral virtue are seemingly unknown. For example, if a
+woman laboured hard in childbirth, she was thought to be bewitched, and
+prayers would be offered to the spirits of dead ancestors to counteract
+the spell. Again, young men are instructed by their elders in the useful
+art of cursing the enemies of the tribe; and among a rich variety of
+imprecations an old man will invoke the spirit of his brother, father,
+or uncle, or all of them, to put their fingers into the ears of the
+enemy that he may not hear, to cover his eyes that he may not see, and
+to stop his mouth that he may not cry for help, but may fall an easy
+prey to the curser and his friends.[643] More amiable and not less
+effectual are the prayers offered to the spirits of the dead over a sick
+man. At the mention of each name in the prayer the supplicants make a
+chirping or hissing sound, and rub lime over the patient. Before
+administering medicine they pray over it to the spirits of the dead;
+then the patient gulps it down, thus absorbing the virtue of the
+medicine and of the prayer in one. In New Britain they reinforce the
+prayers to the dead in time of need by wearing the jawbone of the
+deceased; and in the Duke of York Island people often wear a tooth or
+some hair of a departed relative, not merely as a mark of respect, but
+as a magical means of obtaining supernatural help.[644]
+
+[Sidenote: North Melanesian views as to the land of the dead.]
+
+Sooner or later the souls of all the North Melanesian dead take their
+departure for the spirit land. But the information which has reached the
+living as to that far country is at once vague and inconsistent. They
+call it _Matana nion_, but whereabout it lies they cannot for the most
+part precisely tell. All they know for certain is that it is far away,
+and that there is always some particular spot in the neighbourhood from
+which the souls take their departure; for example, the Duke of York
+ghosts invariably start from the little island of Nuruan, near Mioko.
+Wherever it may be, the land of souls is divided into compartments;
+people who have died of sickness or witchcraft go to one place, and
+people who have been killed in battle go to another. They do not go
+unattended; for when a man dies two friends sleep beside his corpse the
+first night, one on each side, and their spirits are believed to
+accompany the soul of the dead man to the spirit land. They say that on
+their arrival in the far country, betel-nut is presented to them all,
+but the two living men refuse to partake of it, because they know that
+were they to eat it they would return no more to the land of the living.
+When they do return, they have often, as might be expected, strange
+tales to tell of what they saw among the ghosts. The principal personage
+in the other world is called the "keeper of souls." It is said that once
+on a time the masterful ghost of a dead chief attempted to usurp the
+post of warden of the dead; in pursuance of this ambitious project he
+attacked the warden with a tomahawk and cut off one of his legs, but the
+amputated limb immediately reunited itself with the body; and a second
+amputation was followed by the same disappointing result. Life in the
+other world is reported to be very like life in this world. Some people
+find it very dismal, and others very beautiful. Those who were rich here
+will be rich there, and those who were poor on earth will be poor in
+Hades. As to any moral retribution which may overtake evil-doers in the
+life to come, their ideas are very vague; only they are sure that the
+ghosts of the niggardly will be punished by being dumped very hard
+against the buttress-roots of chestnut-trees. They say, too, that all
+breaches of etiquette or of the ordinary customs of the country will
+meet with certain appropriate punishments in the spirit land. When the
+soul has thus done penance, it takes possession of the body of some
+animal, for instance, the flying-fox. Hence a native is much alarmed if
+he should be sitting under a tree from which a flying-fox has been
+frightened away. Should anything drop from the bat or from the tree on
+which it was hanging, he would look on it as an omen of good or ill
+according to the nature of the thing which fell on or near him. If it
+were useless or dirty, he would certainly apprehend some serious
+misfortune. Sometimes when a man dies and his soul arrives in the spirit
+land, his friends do not want him there and drive him back to earth, so
+he comes to life again. That is the explanation which the natives give
+of what we call the recovery of consciousness after a faint or
+swoon.[645]
+
+[Sidenote: The land of the dead. State of the dead in the other world
+supposed to depend on the amount of money they left in this one.]
+
+Some of the natives of the Gazelle Peninsula in New Britain imagine that
+the home of departed spirits is in Nakanei, the part of the coast to
+which they sail to get their shell money. Others suppose that it is in
+the islands off Cape Takes. So when they are sailing past these islands
+they dip the paddles softly in the water, and observe a death-like
+stillness, cowering down in the canoes, lest the ghosts should spy them
+and do them a mischief. At the entrance to these happy isles is posted a
+stern watchman to see that no improper person sneaks into them. To every
+ghost that arrives he puts three questions, "Who are you? Where do you
+come from? How much shell money did you leave behind you?" On his
+answers to these three questions hangs the fate of the ghost. If he left
+much money, he is free to enter the realm of bliss, where he will pass
+the time with other happy souls smoking and eating and enjoying other
+sensual delights. But if he left little or no money, he is banished the
+earthly paradise and sent home to roam like a wild beast in the forest,
+battening on leaves and filth. With bitter sighs and groans he prowls
+about the villages at night and seeks to avenge himself by scaring or
+plaguing the survivors. To stay his hunger and appease his wrath
+relatives or friends will sometimes set forth food for him to devour.
+Yet even for such an impecunious soul there is hope; for if somebody
+only takes pity on him and gives a feast in his honour and distributes
+shell money to the guests, the ghost may return to the islands of the
+blest, and the door will be thrown open to him.[646]
+
+[Sidenote: Fiji and the Fijians.]
+
+So much for the belief in immortality as it is reported to exist among
+the Northern Melanesians of New Britain and the Bismarck Archipelago. We
+now pass to the consideration of a similar belief among another people
+of the same stock, who have been longer known to Europe, the Fijians.
+The archipelago which they occupy lies to the east of the New Hebrides
+and forms in fact the most easterly outpost of the black Melanesian race
+in the Pacific. Beyond it to the eastward are situated the smaller
+archipelagoes of Samoa and Tonga, inhabited by branches of the brown
+Polynesian race, whose members are scattered over the islands of the
+Pacific Ocean from Hawaii in the north to New Zealand in the south. Of
+all the branches of the Melanesian stock the Fijians at the date of
+their discovery by Europeans appear to have made the greatest advance in
+culture, material, social, and political. "The Fijian," says one who
+knew him long and intimately, "takes no mean place among savages in the
+social scale. Long before the white man visited his shores he had made
+very considerable progress towards civilisation. His intersexual code
+had advanced to the 'patriarchal stage': he was a skilful and diligent
+husbandman, who carried out extensive and laborious agricultural
+operations: he built good houses, whose interior he ornamented with no
+little taste, carved his weapons in graceful and intricate forms,
+manufactured excellent pottery, beat out from the inner bark of a tree a
+serviceable papyrus-cloth, upon which he printed, from blocks either
+carved or ingeniously pieced together, elegant and elaborate patterns in
+fast colours; and, with tools no better than a stone hatchet, a pointed
+shell, and a firestick, he constructed large canoes capable of carrying
+more than a hundred warriors across the open sea."[647]
+
+[Sidenote: Political superiority of the Fijians over the other
+Melanesians.]
+
+Politically the Fijians shewed their superiority to all the other
+Melanesians in the advance they had made towards a regular and organised
+government. While among the other branches of the same race government
+can hardly be said to exist, the power of chiefs being both slender and
+precarious, in Fiji the highest chiefs exercised despotic sway and
+received from Europeans the title of kings. The people had no voice in
+the state; the will of the king was generally law, and his person was
+sacred. Whatever he touched or wore became thereby holy and had to be
+made over to him; nobody else could afterwards touch it without danger
+of being struck dead on the spot as if by an electric shock. One king
+took advantage of this superstition by dressing up an English sailor in
+his royal robes and sending him about to throw his sweeping train over
+any article of food, whether dead or alive, which he might chance to
+come near. The things so touched were at once conveyed to the king
+without a word of explanation being required or a single remonstrance
+uttered. Some of the kings laid claim to a divine origin and on the
+strength of the claim exacted and received from their subjects the
+respect due to deities. In these exorbitant pretensions they were
+greatly strengthened by the institution of taboo, which lent the
+sanction of religion to every exertion of arbitrary power.[648]
+Corresponding with the growth of monarchy was the well-marked gradation
+of social ranks which prevailed in the various tribes from the king
+downwards through chiefs, warriors, and landholders, to slaves. The
+resulting political constitution has been compared to the old feudal
+system of Europe.[649]
+
+[Sidenote: Means of subsistence of the Fijians. Ferocity and depravity
+of the Fijians.]
+
+Like the other peoples of the Melanesian stock the Fijians subsist
+chiefly by agriculture, raising many sorts of esculent fruits and roots,
+particularly yams, taro, plantains, bread-fruit, sweet potatoes,
+bananas, coco-nuts, ivi nuts, and sugar-cane; but the chief proportion
+of their food is derived from yams (_Dioscorea_), of which they
+cultivate five or six varieties.[650] It has been observed that "the
+increase of cultivated plants is regular on receding from the Hawaiian
+group up to Fiji, where roots and fruits are found that are unknown on
+the more eastern islands."[651] Yet the Fijians in their native state,
+like all other Melanesian and Polynesian peoples, were entirely ignorant
+of the cereals; and in the opinion of a competent observer the
+consequent defect in their diet has contributed to the serious defects
+in their national character. The cereals, he tells us, are the staple
+food of all races that have left their mark in history; and on the other
+hand "the apathy and indolence of the Fijians arise from their climate,
+their diet and their communal institutions. The climate is too kind to
+stimulate them to exertion, their food imparts no staying power. The
+soil gives the means of existence for every man without effort, and the
+communal institutions destroy the instinct of accumulation."[652] Nor
+are apathy and indolence the only or the worst features in the character
+of these comparatively advanced savages. Their ferocity, cruelty, and
+moral depravity are depicted in dark colours by those who had the best
+opportunity of knowing them in the old days before their savagery was
+mitigated by contact with a milder religious faith and a higher
+civilisation. "In contemplating the character of this extraordinary
+portion of mankind," says one observer, "the mind is struck with wonder
+and awe at the mixture of a complicated and carefully conducted
+political system, highly finished manners, and ceremonious politeness,
+with a ferocity and practice of savage vices which is probably
+unparalleled in any other part of the world."[653] One of the first
+civilised men to gain an intimate acquaintance with the Fijians draws a
+melancholy contrast between the baseness and vileness of the people and
+the loveliness of the land in which they live.[654]
+
+[Sidenote: Scenery of the Fijian islands.]
+
+For the Fijian islands are exceedingly beautiful. They are of volcanic
+origin, mostly high and mountainous, but intersected by picturesque
+valleys, clothed with woods, and festooned with the most luxuriant
+tropical vegetation. "Among their attractions," we are told, "are high
+mountains, abrupt precipices, conical hills, fantastic turrets and crags
+of rock frowning down like olden battlements, vast domes, peaks
+shattered into strange forms; native towns on eyrie cliffs, apparently
+inaccessible; and deep ravines, down which some mountain stream, after
+long murmuring in its stony bed, falls headlong, glittering as a silver
+line on a block of jet, or spreading like a sheet of glass over bare
+rocks which refuse it a channel. Here also are found the softer features
+of rich vales, cocoa-nut groves, clumps of dark chestnuts, stately palms
+and bread-fruit, patches of graceful bananas or well-tilled taro-beds,
+mingling in unchecked luxuriance, and forming, with the wild
+reef-scenery of the girdling shore, its beating surf, and far-stretching
+ocean beyond, pictures of surpassing beauty."[655] Each island is
+encircled by a reef of white coral, on which the sea breaks, with a
+thunderous roar, in curling sheets of foam; while inside the reef
+stretches the lagoon, a calm lake of blue crystalline water revealing in
+its translucent depths beautiful gardens of seaweed and coral which fill
+the beholder with delighted wonder. Great and sudden is the contrast
+experienced by the mariner when he passes in a moment from the tossing,
+heaving, roaring billows without into the unbroken calm of the quiet
+haven within the barrier reef.[656]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian doctrine of souls.]
+
+Like most savages, the Fijians believed that man is animated by a soul
+which quits his body temporarily in sleep and permanently at death, to
+survive for a longer or a shorter time in a disembodied state
+thereafter. Indeed, they attributed souls to animals, vegetables,
+stones, tools, houses, canoes, and many other things, allowing that all
+of them may become immortal.[657] On this point I will quote the
+evidence of one of the earliest and best authorities on the customs and
+beliefs of the South Sea Islanders. "There seems," says William Mariner,
+"to be a wide difference between the opinions of the natives in the
+different clusters of the South Sea islands respecting the future
+existence of the soul. Whilst the Tonga doctrine limits immortality to
+chiefs, _matabooles_, and at most, to _mooas_, the Fiji doctrine, with
+abundant liberality, extends it to all mankind, to all brute animals, to
+all vegetables, and even to stones and mineral substances. If an animal
+or a plant die, its soul immediately goes to Bolotoo; if a stone or any
+other substance is broken, immortality is equally its reward; nay,
+artificial bodies have equal good luck with men, and hogs, and yams. If
+an axe or a chisel is worn out or broken up, away flies its soul for the
+service of the gods. If a house is taken down, or any way destroyed, its
+immortal part will find a situation on the plains of Bolotoo; and, to
+confirm this doctrine, the Fiji people can show you a sort of natural
+well, or deep hole in the ground, at one of their islands, across the
+bottom of which runs a stream of water, in which you may clearly
+perceive the souls of men and women, beasts and plants, of stocks and
+stones, canoes and houses, and of all the broken utensils of this frail
+world, swimming or rather tumbling along one over the other pell-mell
+into the regions of immortality. Such is the Fiji philosophy, but the
+Tonga people deny it, unwilling to think that the residence of the gods
+should be encumbered with so much useless rubbish. The natives of
+Otaheite entertain similar notions respecting these things, viz. that
+brutes, plants, and stones exist hereafter, but it is not mentioned that
+they extend the idea to objects of human invention."[658]
+
+[Sidenote: Reported Fijian doctrine of two human souls, a light one and
+a dark one.]
+
+According to one account, the Fijians imagined that every man has two
+souls, a dark soul, consisting of his shadow, and a light soul,
+consisting of his reflection in water or a looking-glass: the dark soul
+departs at death to Hades, while the light soul stays near the place
+where he died or was killed. "Probably," says Thomas Williams, "this
+doctrine of shadows has to do with the notion of inanimate objects
+having spirits. I once placed a good-looking native suddenly before a
+mirror. He stood delighted. 'Now,' said he, softly, 'I can see into the
+world of spirits.'"[659] However, according to another good authority
+this distinction of two human souls rests merely on a misapprehension of
+the Fijian word for shadow, _yaloyalo_, which is a reduplication of
+_yalo_, the word for soul.[660] Apparently the Fijians pictured to
+themselves the human soul as a miniature of the man himself. This may be
+inferred from the customs observed at the death of a chief among the
+Nakelo tribe. When a chief dies, certain men who are the hereditary
+undertakers call him, as he lies, oiled and ornamented, on fine mats,
+saying, "Rise, sir, the chief, and let us be going. The day has come
+over the land." Then they conduct him to the river side, where the
+ghostly ferryman comes to ferry Nakelo ghosts across the stream. As they
+attend the chief on his last journey, they hold their great fans close
+to the ground to shelter him, because, as one of them explained to a
+missionary, "His soul is only a little child."[661]
+
+[Sidenote: Absence of the soul in sleep. Catching the soul of a rascal
+in a scarf.]
+
+The souls of some men were supposed to quit their bodies in sleep and
+enter into the bodies of other sleepers, troubling and disturbing them.
+A soul that had contracted this bad habit was called a _yalombula_. When
+any one fainted or died, his vagrant spirit might, so the Fijians
+thought, be induced to come back by calling after it. Sometimes, on
+awaking from a nap, a stout man might be seen lying at full length and
+bawling out lustily for the return of his own soul.[662] In the windward
+islands of Fiji there used to be an ordeal called _yalovaki_ which was
+much dreaded by evil-doers. When the evidence was strong against
+suspected criminals, and they stubbornly refused to confess, the chief,
+who was also the judge, would call for a scarf, with which "to catch
+away the soul of the rogue." A threat of the rack could not have been
+more effectual. The culprit generally confessed at the sight and even
+the mention of the light instrument; but if he did not, the scarf would
+be waved over his head until his soul was caught in it like a moth or a
+fly, after which it would be carefully folded up and nailed to the small
+end of a chief's canoe, and for want of his soul the suspected person
+would pine and die.[663]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian dread of sorcery and witchcraft.]
+
+Further, the Fijians, like many other savages, stood in great terror of
+witchcraft, believing that the sorcerer had it in his power to kill them
+by the practice of his nefarious art. "Of all their superstitions," says
+Thomas Williams, "this exerts the strongest influence on the minds of
+the people. Men who laugh at the pretensions of the priest tremble at
+the power of the wizard; and those who become christians lose this fear
+last of all the relics of their heathenism."[664] Indeed "native agents
+of the mission who, in the discharge of their duty, have boldly faced
+death by open violence, have been driven from their posts by their dread
+of the sorcerer; and my own observation confirms the statement of more
+than one observer that savages not unfrequently die of fear when they
+think themselves bewitched."[665] Professed practitioners of witchcraft
+were dreaded by all classes, and by destroying mutual confidence they
+annulled the comfort and shook the security of society. Almost all
+sudden deaths were set down to their machinations. A common mode of
+effecting their object was to obtain a shred of the clothing of the man
+they intended to bewitch, some refuse of his food, a lock of his hair,
+or some other personal relic; having got it they wrapped it up in
+certain leaves, and then cooked or buried it or hung it up in the
+forest; whereupon the victim was supposed to die of a wasting disease.
+Another way was to bury a coco-nut, with the eye upward, beneath the
+hearth of the temple, on which a fire was kept constantly burning; and
+as the life of the nut was destroyed, so the health of the person whom
+the nut represented would fail till death put an end to his sufferings.
+"The native imagination," we are told, "is so absolutely under the
+control of fear of these charms, that persons, hearing that they were
+the object of such spells, have lain down on their mats, and died
+through fear."[666] To guard against the fell craft of the magician the
+people resorted to many precautions. A man who suspected another of
+plotting against him would be careful not to eat in his presence or at
+all events to leave no morsel of food behind, lest the other should
+secrete it and bewitch him by it; and for the same reason people
+disposed of their garments so that no part could be removed; and when
+they had their hair cut they generally hid the clippings in the thatch
+of their own houses. Some even built themselves a small hut and
+surrounded it with a moat, believing that a little water had power to
+neutralise the charms directed against them.[667]
+
+[Sidenote: The fear of sorcery has had the beneficial effect of
+enforcing habits of personal cleanliness.]
+
+"In the face of such instances as these," says one who knows the Fijians
+well, "it demands some courage to assert that upon the whole the belief
+in witchcraft was formerly a positive advantage to the community. It
+filled, in fact, the place of a system of sanitation. The wizard's tools
+consisting in those waste matters that are inimical to health, every man
+was his own scavenger. From birth to old age a man was governed by this
+one fear; he went into the sea, the graveyard or the depths of the
+forest to satisfy his natural wants; he burned his cast-off _malo_; he
+gave every fragment left over from his food to the pigs; he concealed
+even the clippings of his hair in the thatch of his house. This
+ever-present fear even drove women in the western districts out into the
+forest for the birth of their children, where fire destroyed every trace
+of their lying-in. Until Christianity broke it down, the villages were
+kept clean; there were no festering rubbish-heaps nor filthy
+_raras_."[668]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian dread of ghosts. Uproar made to drive away ghosts.]
+
+Of apparitions the Fijians used to be very much afraid. They believed
+that the ghosts of the dead appeared often and afflicted mankind,
+especially in sleep. The spirits of slain men, unchaste women, and women
+who died in childbed were most dreaded. After a death people have been
+known to hide themselves for a few days, until they supposed the soul of
+the departed was at rest. Also they shunned the places where people had
+been murdered, particularly when it rained, because then the moans of
+the ghost could be heard as he sat up, trying to relieve his pain by
+resting his poor aching head on the palms of his hands. Some however
+said that the moans were caused by the soul of the murderer knocking
+down the soul of his victim, whenever the wretched spirit attempted to
+get up.[669] When Fijians passed a spot in the forest where a man had
+been clubbed to death, they would sometimes throw leaves on it as a mark
+of homage to his spirit, believing that they would soon be killed
+themselves if they failed in thus paying their respects to the
+ghost.[670] And after they had buried a man alive, as they very often
+did, these savages used at nightfall to make a great din with large
+bamboos, trumpet-shells, and so forth, in order to drive away his spirit
+and deter him from loitering about his old home. "The uproar is always
+held in the late habitation of the deceased, the reason being that as no
+one knows for a certainty what reception he will receive in the
+invisible world, if it is not according to his expectations he will most
+likely repent of his bargain and wish to come back. For that reason they
+make a great noise to frighten him away, and dismantle his former
+habitation of everything that is attractive, and clothe it with
+everything that to their ideas seems repulsive."[671]
+
+[Sidenote: Killing a ghost.]
+
+However, stronger measures were sometimes resorted to. It was believed
+to be possible to kill a troublesome ghost. Once it happened that many
+chiefs feasted in the house of Tanoa, King of Ambau. In the course of
+the evening one of them related how he had slain a neighbouring chief.
+That very night, having occasion to leave the house, he saw, as he
+believed, the ghost of his victim, hurled his club at him, and killed
+him stone dead. On his return to the house he roused the king and the
+rest of the inmates from their slumbers, and recounted his exploit. The
+matter was deemed of high importance, and they all sat on it in solemn
+conclave. Next morning a search was made for the club on the scene of
+the murder; it was found and carried with great pomp and parade to the
+nearest temple, where it was laid up for a perpetual memorial. Everybody
+was firmly persuaded that by this swashing blow the ghost had been not
+only killed but annihilated.[672]
+
+[Sidenote: Dazing the ghost of a grandfather.]
+
+A more humane method of dealing with an importunate ghost used to be
+adopted in Vanua-levu, the largest but one of the Fijian islands. In
+that island, as a consequence, it is said, of reckoning kinship through
+the mother, a child was considered to be more closely related to his
+grandfather than to his father. Hence when a grandfather died, his ghost
+naturally desired to carry off the soul of his grandchild with him to
+the spirit land. The wish was creditable to the warmth of his domestic
+affection, but if the survivors preferred to keep the child with them a
+little longer in this vale of tears, they took steps to baffle
+grandfather's ghost. For this purpose when the old man's body was
+stretched on the bier and raised on the shoulders of half-a-dozen stout
+young fellows, the mother's brother would take the grandchild in his
+arms and begin running round and round the corpse. Round and round he
+ran, and grandfather's ghost looked after him, craning his neck from
+side to side and twisting it round and round in the vain attempt to
+follow the rapid movements of the runner. When the ghost was supposed to
+be quite giddy with this unwonted exercise, the mother's brother made a
+sudden dart away with the child in his arms, the bearers fairly bolted
+with the corpse to the grave, and before he could collect his scattered
+wits grandfather was safely landed in his long home.[673]
+
+[Sidenote: Special relation of grandfather to grandchild. Soul of a
+grandfather reborn in his grandchildren.]
+
+Mr. Fison, who reports this quaint mode of bilking a ghost, explains the
+special attachment of the grandfather to his grandchild by the rule of
+female descent which survives in Vanua-levu; and it is true that where
+exogamy prevails along with female descent, a child regularly belongs to
+the exogamous class of its grandfather and not of its father and hence
+may be regarded as more closely akin to the grandfather than to the
+father. But on the other hand it is to be observed that exogamy at
+present is unknown in Fiji, and at most its former prevalence in the
+islands can only be indirectly inferred from relics of totemism and from
+the existence of the classificatory system of relationship.[674] Perhaps
+the real reason why in Vanua-levu a dead grandfather is so anxious to
+carry off the soul of his living grandchild lies nearer to hand in the
+apparently widespread belief that the soul of the grandfather is
+actually reborn in his grandchild. For example, in Nukahiva, one of the
+Marquesas Islands, every one "is persuaded that the soul of a
+grandfather is transmitted by nature into the body of his grandchildren;
+and that, if an unfruitful wife were to place herself under the corpse
+of her deceased grandfather, she would be sure to become pregnant."[675]
+Again, the Kayans of Borneo "believe in the reincarnation of the soul,
+although this belief is not clearly harmonised with the belief in the
+life in another world. It is generally believed that the soul of a
+grandfather may pass into one of his grandchildren, and an old man will
+try to secure the passage of his soul to a favourite grandchild by
+holding it above his head from time to time. The grandfather usually
+gives up his name to his eldest grandson, and reassumes the original
+name of his childhood with the prefix or title _Laki_, and the custom
+seems to be connected with this belief or hope."[676]
+
+[Sidenote: A dead grandfather may reasonably reclaim his own soul from
+his grandchild.]
+
+Now where such a belief is held, it seems reasonable enough that a dead
+grandfather should reclaim his own soul for his personal use before he
+sets out for the spirit land; else how could he expect to be admitted to
+that blissful abode if on arriving at the portal he were obliged to
+explain to the porter that he had no soul about him, having left that
+indispensable article behind in the person of his grandchild? "Then you
+had better go back and fetch it. There is no admission at this gate for
+people without souls." Such might very well be the porter's retort; and
+foreseeing it any man of ordinary prudence would take the precaution of
+recovering his lost spiritual property before presenting himself to the
+Warden of the Dead. This theory would sufficiently account for the
+otherwise singular behaviour of grandfather's ghost in Vanua-levu. At
+the same time it must be admitted that the theory of the reincarnation
+of a grandfather in a grandson would be suggested more readily in a
+society where the custom of exogamy was combined with female descent
+than in one where the same custom coexisted with male descent; since,
+given exogamy and female descent, grandfather and grandson regularly
+belong to the same exogamous class, whereas father and son never do
+so.[677] Thus Mr. Fison may after all be right in referring the
+partiality of a Fijian grandfather for his grandson in the last resort
+to a system of exogamy and female kinship.
+
+[Footnote 627: G. Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London,
+1910), pp. 23 _sq._, 125, 320 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 628: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 294 _sqq._; P. A. Kleintitschen,
+_Die Kuestenbewohner der Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Muenster, N.D.),
+pp. 90 _sqq._ The shell money is called _tambu_ in New Britain, _diwara_
+in the Duke of York Island, and _aringit_ in New Ireland.]
+
+[Footnote 629: Rev. G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 307, 313, 435, 436.]
+
+[Footnote 630: Rev. G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 270 _sq._, compare pp. 127,
+200.]
+
+[Footnote 631: Rev. G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. v., 18.]
+
+[Footnote 632: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 141 _sq._, 144, 145, 190-193.]
+
+[Footnote 633: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 142, 192, 385, 386 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 634: G. Brown, _op. cit._ p. 390. The custom of cremating the
+dead in New Ireland is described more fully by Mr. R. Parkinson, who
+says that the life-sized figures which are burned with the corpse
+represent the deceased (_Dreissig Jahre in der Suedsee_, pp. 273 _sqq._).
+In the central part of New Ireland the dead are buried in the earth;
+afterwards the bones are dug up and thrown into the sea. See Albert
+Hahl, "Das mittlere Neumecklenburg," _Globus_, xci. (1907) p. 314.]
+
+[Footnote 635: R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Suedsee_ (Stuttgart,
+1907) p. 78; P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Kuestenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Muenster, N.D.), p. 222.]
+
+[Footnote 636: Mgr. Couppe, "En Nouvelle-Pomeranie," _Les Missions
+Catholiques_, xxiii. (1891) pp. 364 _sq._; J. Graf Pfeil, _Studien und
+Beobachtungen aus der Suedsee_ (Brunswick, 1899), p. 79.]
+
+[Footnote 637: R. Parkinson, _op. cit._ p. 81.]
+
+[Footnote 638: _P._ Rascher, _M.S.C._, "Die Sulka, ein Beitrag zur
+Ethnographic Neu-Pommern," _Archiv fuer Anthropologie_, xxix. (1904) pp.
+214 _sq._, 216; R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Suedsee_, pp.
+185-187.]
+
+[Footnote 639: R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Suedsee_, pp.
+404-406.]
+
+[Footnote 640: R. Parkinson, _op. cit._ pp. 441 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 641: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 176, 183, 385 _sq._ As to the
+wide-spread belief in New Britain that what we call natural deaths are
+brought about by sorcery, see further _P._ Rascher, _M.S.C._, "Die
+Sulka, ein Beitrag zur Ethnographic Neu-Pommern," _Archiv fuer
+Ethnographie_, xxix. (1904) pp. 221 _sq._; R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre
+in der Suedsee_, pp. 117 _sq._ 199-201; P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die
+Kuesten-bewohner der Gazellehalbinsel_ (Hiltrup bei Muenster, N.D.), p.
+215.]
+
+[Footnote 642: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 387-390.]
+
+[Footnote 643: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 35, 89, 196, 201.]
+
+[Footnote 644: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 177, 183, 184.]
+
+[Footnote 645: G. Brown, _op. cit._ pp. 192-195.]
+
+[Footnote 646: P. A. Kleintitschen, _Die Kuestenbewohner der
+Gazellehalbinsel_, pp. 225 _sq._ Compare R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre
+in der Suedsee_, p. 79.]
+
+[Footnote 647: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), p.
+xiv.]
+
+[Footnote 648: Thomas Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 22-26.]
+
+[Footnote 649: Charles Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 77; Th. Williams, _op.
+cit._ i. 18.]
+
+[Footnote 650: Charles Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 332 _sqq._; Thomas
+Williams _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition (London, 1860), i. 60
+_sqq._; Berthold Seeman, _Viti_ (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 279 _sqq._; Basil
+Thomson, _The Fijians_ (London, 1908), pp. 335 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 651: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 60 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 652: Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 338, 389 _sq._ The
+Fijians are in the main vegetarians, but the vegetables which they
+cultivate "contain a large proportion of starch and water, and are
+deficient in proteids. Moreover, the supply of the principal staples is
+irregular, being greatly affected by variable seasons, and the attacks
+of insects and vermin. Very few of them will bear keeping, and almost
+all of them must be eaten when ripe. As the food is of low nutritive
+value, a native always eats to repletion. In times of plenty a
+full-grown man will eat as much as ten pounds' weight of vegetables in
+the day; he will seldom be satisfied with less than five. A great
+quantity, therefore, is required to feed a very few people, and as
+everything is transported by hand, a disproportionate amount of time is
+spent in transporting food from the plantation to the consumer. The time
+spent in growing native food is also out of all proportion to its value"
+(Basil Thomson, _op. cit._ pp. 334 _sq._). The same writer tells us (p.
+335) that it has never occurred to the Fijians to dry any of the fruits
+they grow and to grind them into flour, as is done in Africa.]
+
+[Footnote 653: Capt. J. E. Erskine, _Journal of a Cruise among the
+Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London, 1853), pp. 272 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 654: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 46, 363. As to the cruelty
+and depravity of the Fijians in the old days see further Lorimer Fison,
+_Tales from Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), pp. xv. _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 655: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 6 _sq._ As to
+the scenery of the Fijian archipelago see further _id._, i. 4 _sqq._;
+Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 46, 322; _Stanford's Compendium of Geography
+and Travel, Australasia_, vol. ii. _Malaysia and the Pacific
+Archipelago_, edited by F. H. H. Guillemard (London, 1894), pp. 467
+_sqq._; Miss Beatrice Grimshaw, _From Fiji to the Cannibal Islands_
+(London, 1907), pp. 43 _sq._, 54 _sq._, 76-78, 106, 109 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 656: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 5 _sq._, 11; Ch.
+Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 46 _sq._ However, there is a remarkable
+difference not only in climate but in appearance between the windward
+and the leeward sides of these islands. The windward side, watered by
+abundant showers, is covered with luxuriant tropical vegetation; the
+leeward side, receiving little rain, presents a comparatively barren and
+burnt appearance, the vegetation dying down to the grey hues of the
+boulders among which it struggles for life. Hence the dry leeward side
+is better adapted for European settlement. See Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._
+iii. 320 _sq._; Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 10; B. Seeman, _Viti, an
+Account of a Government Mission to the Vitian or Fijian Islands in the
+years 1860-1861_ (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 277 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 657: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 241; J. E. Erskine, _op.
+cit._ p. 249; B. Seeman, _Viti_ (Cambridge, 1862), p. 398.]
+
+[Footnote 658: William Mariner, _An Account of the Natives of the Tonga
+Islands_, Second Edition (London, 1818), ii. 129 _sq._ The _matabooles_
+were a sort of honourable attendants on chiefs and ranked next to them
+in the social hierarchy; the _mooas_ were the next class of people below
+the _matabooles_. See W. Mariner, _op. cit._ ii. 84, 86. Bolotoo or Bulu
+was the mythical land of the dead.]
+
+[Footnote 659: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 241.]
+
+[Footnote 660: This is the opinion of my late friend, the Rev. Lorimer
+Fison, which he communicated to me in a letter dated 26th August, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote 661: Communication of the late Rev. Lorimer Fison in a letter
+to me dated 3rd November, 1898. I have already published it in _Taboo
+and the Perils of the Soul_, pp. 29 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 662: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 242; Lorimer Fison, _Tales
+from Old Fiji_, pp. 163 _sq._; _Taboo and the Perils of the Soul_, pp.
+39 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 663: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 250.]
+
+[Footnote 664: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 665: Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. xxxii.]
+
+[Footnote 666: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 248 _sq._; Lorimer Fison,
+_op. cit._ pp. xxxi. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 667: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 249.]
+
+[Footnote 668: Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_ (London, 1908), p. 166. A
+_rara_ is a public square (Rev. Lorimer Fison, in _Journal of the
+Anthropological Institute_, xiv. (1885) p. 17).]
+
+[Footnote 669: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 241.]
+
+[Footnote 670: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 671: Narrative of John Jackson, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+_Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London,
+1853), p. 477.]
+
+[Footnote 672: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 85.]
+
+[Footnote 673: Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ pp. 168 _sq_.]
+
+[Footnote 674: W. H. R. Rivers, "Totemism in Fiji," _Man_, viii. (1908)
+pp. 133 _sqq._; _Totemism and Exogamy_, ii. 134 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 675: U. Lisiansky, _A Voyage Round the World_ (London, 1814),
+p. 89.]
+
+[Footnote 676: Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of Borneo_
+(London, 1912), ii. 47.]
+
+[Footnote 677: Compare _Totemism and Exogamy_, iii. 297-299.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XIX
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF EASTERN MELANESIA (FIJI)
+(_continued_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian indifference to death.]
+
+At the close of last lecture I illustrated the unquestioning belief
+which the Fijians entertain with regard to the survival of the human
+soul after death. "The native superstitions with regard to a future
+state," we are told, "go far to explain the apparent indifference of the
+people about death; for, while believing in an eternal existence, they
+shut out from it the idea of any moral retribution in the shape either
+of reward or punishment. The first notion concerning death is that of
+simple rest, and is thus contained in one of their rhymes:--
+
+ "Death is easy:
+ Of what use is life?
+ To die is rest."[678]
+
+Again, another writer, speaking of the Fijians, says that "in general,
+the passage from life to death is considered as one from pain to
+happiness, and I was informed that nine out of ten look forward to it
+with anxiety, in order to escape from the infirmities of old age, or the
+sufferings of disease."[679]
+
+[Sidenote: John Jackson's account of the burying alive of a young Fijian
+man. Son buried alive by his father.]
+
+The cool indifference with which the Fijians commonly regarded their own
+death and that of other people might be illustrated by many examples. I
+will give one in the words of an English eye-witness, who lived among
+these savages for some time like one of themselves. At a place on the
+coast of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands, he says, "I
+walked into a number of temples, which were very plentiful, and at last
+into a _bure theravou_ (young man's _bure_), where I saw a tall young
+man about twenty years old. He appeared to be somewhat ailing, but not
+at all emaciated. He was rolling up the mat he had been sleeping upon,
+evidently preparing to go away somewhere. I addressed him, and asked him
+where he was going, when he immediately answered that he was going to be
+buried. I observed that he was not dead yet, but he said he soon should
+be dead when he was put under ground. I asked him why he was going to be
+buried? He said it was three days since he had eaten anything, and
+consequently he was getting very thin; and that if he lived any longer
+he would be much thinner, and then the women would call him a _lila_
+(skeleton), and laugh at him. I said he was a fool to throw himself away
+for fear of being laughed at; and asked him what or who his private god
+was, knowing it to be no use talking to him about Providence, a thing he
+had never heard of. He said his god was a shark, and that if he were
+cast away in a canoe and was obliged to swim, the sharks would not bite
+him. I asked him if he believed the shark, his god, had any power to act
+over him? He said yes. 'Well then,' said I, 'why do you not live a
+little longer, and trust to your god to give you an appetite?' Finding
+that he could not give me satisfactory answers, and being determined to
+get buried to avoid the jeers of the ladies, which to a Feejeean are
+intolerable, he told me I knew nothing about it, and that I must not
+compare him to a white man, who was generally insensible to all shame,
+and did not care how much he was laughed at. I called him a fool, and
+said the best thing he could do was to get buried out of the way,
+because I knew that most of them work by the rules of contrary; but it
+was all to no purpose. By this time all his relations had collected
+round the door. His father had a kind of wooden spade to dig the grave
+with, his mother a new suit of _tapa_ [bark-cloth], his sister some
+vermilion and a whale's tooth, as an introduction to the great god of
+Rage-Rage. He arose, took up his bed and walked, not for life, but for
+death, his father, mother, and sister following after, with several
+other distant relations, whom I accompanied. I noticed that they seemed
+to follow him something in the same way that they follow a corpse in
+Europe to the grave (that is, as far as relationship and acquaintance
+are concerned), but, instead of lamenting, they were, if not rejoicing,
+acting and chatting in a very unconcerned way. At last we reached a
+place where several graves could be seen, and a spot was soon selected
+by the man who was to be buried. The old man, his father, began digging
+his grave, while his mother assisted her son in putting on a new _tapa_
+[bark-cloth], and the girl (his sister) was besmearing him with
+vermilion and lamp-black, so as to send him decent into the invisible
+world, he (the victim) delivering messages that were to be taken by his
+sister to people then absent. His father then announced to him and the
+rest that the grave was completed, and asked him, in rather a surly
+tone, if he was not ready by this time. The mother then _nosed_ him, and
+likewise the sister. He said, 'Before I die, I should like a drink of
+water.' His father made a surly remark, and said, as he ran to fetch it
+in a leaf doubled up, 'You have been a considerable trouble during your
+life, and it appears that you are going to trouble us equally at your
+death.' The father returned with the water, which the son drank off, and
+then looked up into a tree covered with tough vines, saying he should
+prefer being strangled with a vine to being smothered in the grave. His
+father became excessively angry, and, spreading the mat at the bottom of
+the grave, told the son to die _faka tamata_ (like a man), when he
+stepped into the grave, which was not more than four feet deep, and lay
+down on his back with the whale's tooth in his hands, which were clasped
+across his belly. The spare sides of the mats were lapped over him so as
+to prevent the earth from getting to his body, and then about a foot of
+earth was shovelled in upon him as quickly as possible. His father
+stamped it immediately down solid, and called out in a loud voice, '_Sa
+tiko, sa tiko_ (You are stopping there, you are stopping there),'
+meaning 'Good-bye, good-bye.' The son answered with a very audible
+grunt, and then about two feet more earth was shovelled in and stamped
+as before by the loving father, and '_Sa tiko_' called out again, which
+was answered by another grunt, but much fainter. The grave was then
+completely filled up, when, for curiosity's sake, I said myself, '_Sa
+tiko_' but no answer was given, although I fancied, or really did see,
+the earth crack a little on the top of the grave. The father and mother
+then turned back to back on the middle of the grave, and, having dropped
+some kind of leaves from their hands, walked away in opposite directions
+towards a running stream of water hard by, where they and all the rest
+washed themselves, and made me wash myself, and then we returned to the
+town, where there was a feast prepared. As soon as the feast was over
+(it being then dark), began the dance and uproar which are always
+carried on either at natural or violent deaths."[680]
+
+[Sidenote: The readiness of the Fijians to die seems to have been partly
+a consequence of their belief in immortality.]
+
+The readiness with which the Fijians submitted to or even sought death
+appears to have been to some extent a direct consequence of their belief
+in immortality and of their notions as to the state of the soul
+hereafter. Thus we are informed by an early observer of this people that
+"self-immolation is by no means rare, and they believe that as they
+leave this life, so will they remain ever after. This forms a powerful
+motive to escape from decrepitude, or from a crippled condition, by a
+voluntary death."[681] Or, as another equally early observer puts it
+more fully, "the custom of voluntary suicide on the part of the old men,
+which is among their most extraordinary usages, is also connected with
+their superstitions respecting a future life. They believe that persons
+enter upon the delights of their elysium with the same faculties, mental
+and physical, that they possess at the hour of death, in short, that the
+spiritual life commences where the corporeal existence terminates. With
+these views, it is natural that they should desire to pass through this
+change before their mental and bodily powers are so enfeebled by age as
+to deprive them of their capacity for enjoyment. To this motive must be
+added the contempt which attaches to physical weakness among a nation of
+warriors, and the wrongs and insults which await those who are no longer
+able to protect themselves. When therefore a man finds his strength
+declining with the advance of age, and feels that he will soon be
+unequal to discharge the duties of this life, and to partake in the
+pleasures of that which is to come, he calls together his relations, and
+tells them that he is now worn out and useless, that he sees they are
+all ashamed of him, and that he has determined to be buried." So on a
+day appointed they met and buried him alive.[682]
+
+[Sidenote: The sick and aged put to death by their relatives.]
+
+The proposal to put the sick and aged to death did not always emanate
+from the parties principally concerned; when a son, for example, thought
+that his parents were growing too old and becoming a burden to him, he
+would give them notice that it was time for them to die, a notice which
+they usually accepted with equanimity, if not alacrity. As a rule, it
+was left to the choice of the aged and infirm to say whether they would
+prefer to be buried alive or to be strangled first and buried
+afterwards; and having expressed a predilection one way or the other
+they were dealt with accordingly. To strangle parents or other frail and
+sickly relatives with a rope was considered a more delicate and
+affectionate way of dispatching them than to knock them on the head with
+a club. In the old days the missionary Mr. Hunt witnessed several of
+these tender partings. "On one occasion, he was called upon by a young
+man, who desired that he would pray to his spirit for his mother, who
+was dead. Mr. Hunt was at first in hopes that this would afford him an
+opportunity of forwarding their great cause. On inquiry, the young man
+told him that his brothers and himself were just going to bury her. Mr.
+Hunt accompanied the young man, telling him he would follow in the
+procession, and do as he desired him, supposing, of course, the corpse
+would be brought along; but he now met the procession, when the young
+man said that this was the funeral, and pointed out his mother, who was
+walking along with them, as gay and lively as any of those present, and
+apparently as much pleased. Mr. Hunt expressed his surprise to the young
+man, and asked him how he could deceive him so much by saying his mother
+was dead, when she was alive and well. He said, in reply, that they had
+made her death-feast, and were now going to bury her; that she was old;
+that his brother and himself had thought she had lived long enough, and
+it was time to bury her, to which she had willingly assented, and they
+were about it now. He had come to Mr. Hunt to ask his prayers, as they
+did those of the priest. He added, that it was from love for his mother
+that he had done so; that, in consequence of the same love, they were
+now going to bury her, and that none but themselves could or ought to do
+so sacred an office! Mr. Hunt did all in his power to prevent so
+diabolical an act; but the only reply he received was, that she was
+their mother, and they were her children, and they ought to put her to
+death. On reaching the grave, the mother sat down, when they all,
+including children, grandchildren, relations, and friends, took an
+affectionate leave of her; a rope, made of twisted _tapa_ [bark-cloth],
+was then passed twice around her neck by her sons, who took hold of it,
+and strangled her; after which she was put into her grave, with the
+usual ceremonies. They returned to feast and mourn, after which she was
+entirely forgotten as though she had not existed."[683]
+
+[Sidenote: Wives strangled or buried alive at their husbands' funerals.]
+
+Again, wives were often strangled, or buried alive, at the funeral of
+their husbands, and generally at their own instance. Such scenes were
+frequently witnessed by white residents in the old days. On one occasion
+a Mr. David Whippy drove away the murderers, rescued the woman, and
+carried her to his own house, where she was resuscitated. But far from
+feeling grateful for her preservation, she loaded him with reproaches
+and ever afterwards manifested the most deadly hatred towards him. "That
+women should desire to accompany their husbands in death, is by no means
+strange when it is considered that it is one of the articles of their
+belief, that in this way alone can they reach the realms of bliss, and
+she who meets her death with the greatest devotedness, will become the
+favourite wife in the abode of spirits. The sacrifice is not, however,
+always voluntary; but, when a woman refuses to be strangled, her
+relations often compel her to submit. This they do from interested
+motives; for, by her death, her connexions become entitled to the
+property of her husband. Even a delay is made a matter of reproach.
+Thus, at the funeral of the late king Ulivou, which was witnessed by Mr.
+Cargill, his five wives and a daughter were strangled. The principal
+wife delayed the ceremony, by taking leave of those around her;
+whereupon Tanoa, the present king, chid her. The victim was his own
+aunt, and he assisted in putting the rope around her neck, and
+strangling her, a service he is said to have rendered on a former
+occasion to his own mother."[684] In the case of men who were drowned at
+sea or killed and eaten by enemies in war, their wives were sacrificed
+in the usual way. Thus when Ra Mbithi, the pride of Somosomo, was lost
+at sea, seventeen of his wives were destroyed; and after the news of a
+massacre of the Namena people at Viwa in 1839 eighty women were
+strangled to accompany the spirits of their murdered husbands.[685]
+
+[Sidenote: Human "grass" for the grave.]
+
+The bodies of women who were put to death for this purpose were
+regularly laid at the bottom of the grave to serve as a cushion for the
+dead husband to lie upon; in this capacity they were called grass
+(_thotho_), being compared to the dried grass which in Fijian houses
+used to be thickly strewn on the floors and covered with mats.[686] On
+this point, however, a nice distinction was observed. While wives were
+commonly sacrificed at the death of their husbands, in order to be
+spread like grass in their graves, it does not transpire that husbands
+were ever sacrificed at the death of their wives for the sake of serving
+as grass to their dead spouses in the grave. The great truth that all
+flesh is grass appears to have been understood by the Fijians as
+applicable chiefly to the flesh of women. Sometimes a man's mother was
+strangled as well as his wives. Thus Ngavindi, a young chief of Lasakau,
+was laid in the grave with a wife at his side, his mother at his feet,
+and a servant not far off. However, men as well as women were killed to
+follow their masters to the far country. The confidential companion of a
+chief was expected as a matter of common decency to die with his lord;
+and if he shirked the duty, he fell in the public esteem. When Mbithi, a
+chief of high rank and greatly esteemed in Mathuata, died in the year
+1840, not only his wife but five men with their wives were strangled to
+form the floor of his grave. They were laid on a layer of mats, and the
+body of the chief was stretched upon them.[687] There used to be a
+family in Vanua Levu which enjoyed the high privilege of supplying a
+hale man to be buried with the king of Fiji on every occasion of a royal
+decease. It was quite necessary that the man should be hale and hearty,
+for it was his business to grapple with the Fijian Cerberus in the other
+world, while his majesty slipped past into the abode of bliss.[688]
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrifices of foreskins and fingers in honour of the dead.
+Circumcision performed on a lad as a propitiatory sacrifice to save the
+life of his father or father's brother. The rite of circumcision
+followed by a licentious orgy.]
+
+A curious sacrifice offered in honour of a dead chief consisted in the
+foreskins of all the boys who had arrived at a suitable age; the lads
+were circumcised on purpose to furnish them. Many boys had their little
+fingers chopped off on the same occasion, and the severed foreskins and
+fingers were placed in the chief's grave. When this bloody rite had been
+performed, the chief's relatives presented young bread-fruit trees to
+the mutilated boys, whose friends were bound to cultivate them till the
+boys could do it for themselves.[689] Women as well as boys had their
+fingers cut off in mourning. We read of a case when after the death of a
+king of Fiji sixty fingers were amputated and being each inserted in a
+slit reed were stuck along the eaves of the king's house.[690] Why
+foreskins and fingers were buried with a dead chief or stuck up on the
+roof of his house, we are not informed, and it is not easy to divine.
+Apparently we must suppose that, when they were buried with the body,
+they were thought to be of some assistance to the departed spirit in the
+land of souls. At all events it deserves to be noted that according to a
+very good authority a similar sacrifice of foreskins used to be made not
+only for the dead but for the living. When a man of note was dangerously
+ill, a family council would be held, at which it might be agreed that a
+circumcision should take place as a propitiatory measure. Notice having
+been given to the priests, an uncircumcised lad, the sick man's own son
+or the son of one of his brothers, was then taken by his kinsman to the
+_Vale tambu_ or God's House, and there presented as a _soro_, or
+offering of atonement, in order that his father or father's brother
+might be made whole. His escort at the same time made a present of
+valuable property at the shrine and promised much more in future, should
+their prayers be answered. The present and the promises were graciously
+received by the priest, who appointed a day on which the operation was
+to be performed. In the meantime no food might be taken from the
+plantations except what was absolutely required for daily use; no pigs
+or fowls might be killed, and no coco-nuts plucked from the trees.
+Everything, in short, was put under a strict taboo; all was set apart
+for the great feast which was to follow the performance of the rite. On
+the day appointed the son or nephew of the sick chief was circumcised,
+and with him a number of other lads whose friends had agreed to take
+advantage of the occasion. Their foreskins, stuck in the cleft of a
+split reed, were taken to the sacred enclosure (_Nanga_) and presented
+to the chief priest, who, holding the reeds in his hand, offered them to
+the ancestral gods and prayed for the sick man's recovery. Then followed
+a great feast, which ushered in a period of indescribable revelry and
+licence. All distinctions of property were for the time being suspended.
+Men and women arrayed themselves in all manner of fantastic garbs,
+addressed one another in the foulest language, and practised
+unmentionable abominations openly in the public square of the town. The
+nearest relationships, even that of own brother and sister, seemed to be
+no bar to the general licence, the extent of which was indicated by the
+expressive phrase of an old Nandi chief, who said, "While it lasts, we
+are just like the pigs." This feasting and orgy might be kept up for
+several days, after which the ordinary restraints of society and the
+common decencies of life were observed once more. The rights of private
+property were again respected; the abandoned revellers and debauchees
+settled down into staid married couples; and brothers and sisters, in
+accordance with the regular Fijian etiquette, might not so much as speak
+to one another. It should be added that these extravagances in connexion
+with the rite of circumcision appear to have been practised only in
+certain districts of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands, where
+they were always associated with the sacred stone enclosures which went
+by the name of _Nanga_.[691]
+
+[Sidenote: These orgies were apparently associated with the worship of
+the dead, to whom offerings were made in the _Nanga_ or sacred enclosure
+of stones.]
+
+The meaning of such orgies is very obscure, but from what we know of the
+savage and his ways we may fairly assume that they were no mere
+outbursts of unbridled passion, but that in the minds of those who
+practised them they had a definite significance and served a definite
+purpose. The one thing that seems fairly clear about them is that in
+some way they were associated with the worship or propitiation of the
+dead. At all events we are told on good authority that the _Nanga_, or
+sacred enclosure of stones, in which the severed foreskins were offered,
+was "the Sacred Place where the ancestral spirits are to be found by
+their worshippers, and thither offerings are taken on all occasions when
+their aid is to be invoked. Every member of the _Nanga_ has the
+privilege of approaching the ancestors at any time. When sickness visits
+himself or his kinsfolk, when he wishes to invoke the aid of the spirits
+to avert calamity or to secure prosperity, or when he deems it advisable
+to present a thank-offering, he may enter the _Nanga_ with proper
+reverence and deposit on the dividing wall his whale's tooth, or bundle
+of cloth, or dish of toothsome eels so highly prized by the elders, and
+therefore by the ancestors whose living representatives they are: or he
+may drag into the Sacred _Nanga_ his fattened pig, or pile up there his
+offering of the choicest yams. And, having thus recommended himself to
+the dead, he may invoke their powerful aid, or express his thankfulness
+for the benefits they have conferred, and beg for a continuance of their
+goodwill."[692] The first-fruits of the yam harvest were presented with
+great ceremony to the ancestors in the _Nanga_ before the bulk of the
+crop was dug for the people's use, and no man might taste of the new
+yams until the presentation had been made. The yams so offered were
+piled up in the sacred enclosure and left to rot there. If any one were
+impious enough to appropriate them to his own use, it was believed that
+he would be smitten with madness. Great feasts were held at the
+presentation of the first-fruits; and the sacred enclosure itself was
+often spoken of as the _Mbaki_ or Harvest.[693]
+
+[Sidenote: Periodical initiation of young men in the _Nanga_.]
+
+But the most characteristic and perhaps the most important of the rites
+performed in the _Nanga_ or sacred stone enclosure was the periodical
+initiation of young men, who by participation in the ceremony were
+admitted to the full privileges of manhood. According to one account the
+ceremony of initiation was performed as a rule only once in two years;
+according to another account it was observed annually in October or
+November, when the _ndrala_ tree (_Erythrina_) was in flower. The
+flowering of the tree marked the beginning of the Fijian year; hence the
+novices who were initiated at this season bore the title of _Vilavou_,
+that is, "New Year's Men." As a preparation for the feasts which
+attended the ceremony enormous quantities of yams were garnered and
+placed under a strict taboo; pigs were fattened in large numbers, and
+bales of native cloth stored on the tie-beams of the house-roofs. Spears
+of many patterns and curiously carved clubs were also provided against
+the festival. On the day appointed the initiated men went first into the
+sacred enclosure and made their offerings, the chief priest having
+opened the proceedings by libation and prayer. The heads of the novices
+were clean shaven, and their beards, if they had any, were also removed.
+Then each youth was swathed in long rolls of native cloth, and taking a
+spear in one hand and a club in the other he marched with his comrades,
+similarly swathed and armed, in procession into the sacred enclosure,
+though not into its inner compartment, the Holy of Holies. The
+procession was headed by a priest bearing his carved staff of office,
+and it was received on the holy ground by the initiates, who sat
+chanting a song in a deep murmuring tone, which occasionally swelled to
+a considerable volume of sound and was thought to represent the muffled
+roar of the surf breaking on a far-away coral reef. On entering the
+enclosure the youths threw down their weapons before them, and with the
+help of the initiated men divested themselves of the huge folds of
+native cloth in which they were enveloped, each man revolving slowly on
+his axis, while his attendant pulled at the bandage and gathered in the
+slack. The weapons and the cloth were the offerings presented by the
+novices to the ancestral spirits for the purpose of rendering themselves
+acceptable to these powerful beings. The offerings were repeated in like
+manner on four successive days; and as each youth was merely, as it
+were, the central roller of a great bale of cloth, the amount of cloth
+offered was considerable. It was all put away, with the spears and
+clubs, in the sacred storehouse by the initiated men. A feast concluded
+each day and was prolonged far into the night.
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of death and resurrection.]
+
+On the fifth day, the last and greatest of the festival, the heads of
+the young men were shaven again and their bodies swathed in the largest
+and best rolls of cloth. Then, taking their choicest weapons in their
+hands, they followed their leader as before into the sacred enclosure.
+But the outer compartment of the holy place, where on the previous days
+they had been received by the grand chorus of initiated men, was now
+silent and deserted. The procession stopped. A dead silence prevailed.
+Suddenly from the forest a harsh scream of many parrots broke forth, and
+then followed a mysterious booming sound which filled the souls of the
+novices with awe. But now the priest moves slowly forward and leads the
+train of trembling novices for the first time into the inner shrine, the
+Holy of Holies, the _Nanga tambu-tambu_. Here a dreadful spectacle meets
+their startled gaze. In the background sits the high priest, regarding
+them with a stony stare; and between him and them lie a row of dead men,
+covered with blood, their bodies seemingly cut open and their entrails
+protruding. The leader steps over them one by one, and the awestruck
+youths follow him until they stand in a row before the high priest,
+their very souls harrowed by his awful glare. Suddenly he utters a great
+yell, and at the cry the dead men start to their feet, and run down to
+the river to cleanse themselves from the blood and filth with which they
+are besmeared. They are initiated men, who represent the departed
+ancestors for the occasion; and the blood and entrails are those of many
+pigs that have been slaughtered for that night's revelry. The screams of
+the parrots and the mysterious booming sound were produced by a
+concealed orchestra, who screeched appropriately and blew blasts on
+bamboo trumpets, the mouths of which were partially immersed in water.
+
+[Sidenote: Sacrament of food and water.]
+
+The dead men having come to life again, the novices offered their
+weapons and the bales of native cloth in which they were swathed. These
+were accordingly removed to the storehouse and the young men were made
+to sit down in front of it. Then the high priest, cheered perhaps by the
+sight of the offerings, unbent the starched dignity of his demeanour.
+Skipping from side to side he cried in stridulous tones, "Where are the
+people of my enclosure? Are they gone to Tongalevu? Are they gone to the
+deep sea?" He had not called long when an answer rang out from the river
+in a deep-mouthed song, and soon the singers came in view moving
+rhythmically to the music of their solemn chant. Singing they filed in
+and took their places in front of the young men; then silence ensued.
+After that there entered four old men of the highest order of initiates;
+the first bore a cooked yam carefully wrapt in leaves so that no part of
+it should touch the hands of the bearer; the second carried a piece of
+baked pork similarly enveloped; the third held a drinking-cup of
+coco-nut shell or earthenware filled with water and wrapt round with
+native cloth; and the fourth bore a napkin of the same material.
+Thereupon the first elder passed along the row of novices putting the
+end of the yam into each of their mouths, and as he did so each of them
+nibbled a morsel of the sacred food; the second elder did the same with
+the sacred pork; the third elder followed with the holy water, with
+which each novice merely wetted his lips; and the rear was brought up by
+the fourth elder, who wiped all their mouths with his napkin. Then the
+high priest or one of the elders addressed the young men, warning them
+solemnly against the sacrilege of divulging to the profane any of the
+high mysteries they had seen and heard, and threatening all such
+traitors with the vengeance of the gods.
+
+[Sidenote: Presentation of the pig.]
+
+That ceremony being over, all the junior initiated men (_Lewe ni Nanga_)
+came forward, and each man presented to the novices a yam and a piece of
+nearly raw pork; whereupon the young men took the food and went away to
+cook it for eating. When the evening twilight had fallen, a huge pig,
+which had been specially set aside at a former festival, was dragged
+into the sacred enclosure and there presented to the novices, together
+with other swine, if they should be needed to furnish a plenteous
+repast.
+
+[Sidenote: Acceptance of the novices by the ancestral spirits.]
+
+The novices were now "accepted members of the _Nanga_, qualified to take
+their place among the men of the community, though still only on
+probation. As children--their childhood being indicated by their shaven
+heads--they were presented to the ancestors, and their acceptance was
+notified by what (looking at the matter from the natives' standpoint) we
+might, without irreverence, almost call the _sacrament_ of food and
+water, too sacred even for the elders' hands to touch. This acceptance
+was acknowledged and confirmed on the part of all the _Lewe ni Nanga_
+[junior initiated men] by their gift of food, and it was finally
+ratified by the presentation of the Sacred Pig. In like manner, on the
+birth of an infant, its father acknowledges it as legitimate, and
+otherwise acceptable, by a gift of food; and his kinsfolk formally
+signify approval and confirmation of his decision on the part of the
+clan by similar presentations."
+
+[Sidenote: The initiation followed by a period of sexual license. Sacred
+pigs.]
+
+Next morning the women, their hair dyed red and wearing waistbands of
+hibiscus or other fibre, came to the sacred enclosure and crawled
+through it on hands and knees into the Holy of Holies, where the elders
+were singing their solemn chant. The high priest then dipped his hands
+into the water of the sacred bowl and prayed to the ancestral spirits
+for the mothers and for their children. After that the women crawled
+back on hands and feet the way they had come, singing as they went and
+creeping over certain mounds of earth which had been thrown up for the
+purpose in the sacred enclosure. When they emerged from the holy ground,
+the men and women addressed each other in the vilest language, such as
+on ordinary occasions would be violently resented; and thenceforth to
+the close of the ceremonies some days later very great, indeed almost
+unlimited, licence prevailed between the sexes. During these days a
+number of pigs were consecrated to serve for the next ceremony. The
+animals were deemed sacred, and had the run of the fleshpots in the
+villages in which they were kept. Indeed they were held in the greatest
+reverence. To kill one, except for sacrifice at the rites in the
+_Nanga_, would have been a sacrilege which the Fijian mind refused to
+contemplate; and on the other hand to feed the holy swine was an act of
+piety. Men might be seen throwing down basketfuls of food before the
+snouts of the worshipful pigs, and at the same time calling the
+attention of the ancestral spirits to the meritorious deed. "Take
+knowledge of me," they would cry, "ye who lie buried, our heads! I am
+feeding this pig of yours." Finally, all the men who had taken part in
+the ceremonies bathed together in the river, carefully cleansing
+themselves from every particle of the black paint with which they had
+been bedaubed. When the novices, now novices no more, emerged from the
+water, the high priest, standing on the river bank, preached to them an
+eloquent sermon on the duties and responsibilities which devolved on
+them in their new position.[694]
+
+[Sidenote: The intention of the initiatory rites seems to be to
+introduce the young men to the ancestral spirits. The drama of death and
+resurrection. The Fijian rites of initiation seem to have been imported
+by Melanesian immigrants from the west.]
+
+The general intention of these initiatory rites appears to be, as Mr.
+Fison has said in the words which I have quoted, to introduce the young
+men to the ancestral spirits at their sanctuary, to incorporate them, so
+to say, in the great community which embraces all adult members of the
+tribe, whether living or dead. At all events this interpretation fits in
+very well with the prayers which are offered to the souls of departed
+kinsfolk on these occasions, and it is supported by the analogy of the
+New Guinea initiatory rites which I described in former lectures; for in
+these rites, as I pointed out, the initiation of the youths is closely
+associated with the conceptions of death and the dead, the main feature
+in the ritual consisting indeed of a simulation of death and subsequent
+resurrection. It is, therefore, significant that the very same
+simulation figures prominently in the Fijian ceremony, nay it would seem
+to be the very pivot on which the whole ritual revolves. Yet there is an
+obvious and important difference between the drama of death and
+resurrection as it is enacted in New Guinea and in Fiji; for whereas in
+New Guinea it is the novices who pretend to die and come to life again,
+in Fiji the pretence is carried out by initiated men who represent the
+ancestors, while the novices merely look on with horror and amazement at
+the awe-inspiring spectacle. Of the two forms of ritual the New Guinea
+one is probably truer to the original purpose of the rite, which seems
+to have been to enable the novices to put off the old, or rather the
+young, man and to put on a higher form of existence by participating in
+the marvellous powers and privileges of the mighty dead. And if such was
+really the intention of the ceremony, it is obvious that it was better
+effected by compelling the young communicants, as we may call them, to
+die and rise from the dead in their own persons than by obliging them to
+assist as mere passive spectators at a dramatic performance of death and
+resurrection. Yet in spite of this difference between the two rituals,
+the general resemblance between them is near enough to justify us in
+conjecturing that there may be a genetic connexion between the one and
+the other. The conjecture is confirmed, first, by the very limited and
+definite area of Fiji in which these initiatory rites were practised,
+and, second, by the equally definite tradition of their origin. With
+regard to the first of these points, the _Nanga_ or sacred stone
+enclosure with its characteristic rites was known only to certain
+tribes, who occupied a comparatively small area, a bare third of the
+island of Viti Levu. These tribes are the Nuyaloa, Vatusila, Mbatiwai,
+and Mdavutukia. They all seem to have spread eastward and southward from
+a place of origin in the western mountain district. Their physical type
+is pure Melanesian, with fewer traces of Polynesian admixture than can
+be detected in the tribes on the coast.[695] Hence it is natural to
+enquire whether the ritual of the _Nanga_ may not have been imported
+into Fiji by Melanesian immigrants from the west. The question appears
+to be answered in the affirmative by native tradition. "This is the word
+of our fathers concerning the _Nanga_," said an old Wainimala grey-beard
+to Mr. Fison. "Long, long ago their fathers were ignorant of it; but one
+day two strangers were found sitting in the _rara_ (public square), and
+they said they had come up from the sea to give them the _Nanga_. They
+were little men, and very dark-skinned, and one of them had his face and
+bust painted red, while the other was painted black. Whether these two
+were gods or men our fathers did not tell us, but it was they who taught
+our people the _Nanga_. This was in the old old times when our fathers
+were living in another land--not in this place, for we are strangers
+here. Our fathers fled hither from Navosa in a great war which arose
+among them, and when they came there was no _Nanga_ in the land. So they
+built one of their own after the fashion of that which they left behind
+them." "Here," says Mr. Basil Thomson, "we have the earliest
+tradition of missionary enterprise in the Pacific. I do not doubt that
+the two sooty-skinned little men were castaways driven eastward by one
+of those strong westerly gales that have been known to last for three
+weeks at a time. By Fijian custom the lives of all castaways were
+forfeit, but the pretence to supernatural powers would have saved men
+full of the religious rites of their Melanesian home, and would have
+assured them a hearing. The Wainimala tribes can name six generations
+since they settled in their present home, and therefore the introduction
+of the _Nanga_ cannot have been less than two centuries ago. During that
+time it has overspread one third of the large island."
+
+[Sidenote: The general licence associated with the ritual of the _Nanga_
+may be a temporary revival of primitive communism.]
+
+A very remarkable feature in the _Nanga_ ritual consists in the
+temporary licence accorded to the sexes and the suspension of
+proprietary rites in general. What is the meaning of this curious and to
+the civilised mind revolting custom? Here again the most probable,
+though merely conjectural, answer is furnished by Mr. Fison. "We cannot
+for a moment believe," he says, "that it is a mere licentious outbreak,
+without an underlying meaning and purpose. It is part of a religious
+rite, and is supposed to be acceptable to the ancestors. But why should
+it be acceptable to them unless it were in accordance with their own
+practice in the far-away past? There may be another solution of this
+difficult problem, but I confess myself unable to find any other which
+will cover all the corroborating facts."[696] In other words, Mr. Fison
+supposes that in the sexual licence and suspension of the rights of
+private property which characterise these festivals we have a
+reminiscence of a time when women and property were held in common by
+the community, and the motive for temporarily resuscitating these
+obsolete customs was a wish to propitiate the ancestral spirits, who
+were thought to be gratified by witnessing a revival of that primitive
+communism which they themselves had practised in the flesh so long ago.
+Truly a religious revival of a remarkable kind!
+
+[Sidenote: Description of the _Nanga_ or sacred enclosure of stones.]
+
+To conclude this part of my subject I will briefly describe the
+construction of a _Nanga_ or sacred stone enclosure, as it used to exist
+in Fiji. At the present day only ruins of these structures are to be
+seen, but by an observation of the ruins and a comparison of the
+traditions which still survive among the natives on the subject it is
+possible to reconstruct one of them with a fair degree of exactness. A
+_Nanga_ has been described as an open-air temple, and the description is
+just. It consisted of a rough parallelogram enclosed by flat stones set
+upright and embedded endwise in the earth. The length of the enclosure
+thus formed was about one hundred feet and its breadth about fifty feet.
+The upright stones which form the outer walls are from eighteen inches
+to three feet high, but as they do not always touch they may be
+described as alignments rather than walls. The long walls or alignments
+run east and west, the short ones north and south; but the orientation
+is not very exact. At the eastern end are two pyramidal heaps of stones,
+about five feet high, with square sloping sides and flat tops. The
+narrow passage between them is the main entrance into the sacred
+enclosure. Internally the structure was divided into three separate
+enclosures or compartments by two cross-walls of stone running north and
+south. These compartments, taking them from east to west, were called
+respectively the Little Nanga, the Great Nanga, and the Sacred Nanga or
+Holy of Holies (_Nanga tambu-tambu_). The partition walls between them
+were built solid of stones, with battering sides, to a height of five
+feet, and in the middle of each there was an opening to allow the
+worshippers to pass from one compartment to another. Trees, such as the
+candlenut and the red-leaved dracaena, and odoriferous shrubs were
+planted round the enclosure; and outside of it, to the west of the Holy
+of Holies, was a bell-roofed hut called _Vale tambu_, the Sacred House
+or Temple. The sacred _kava_ bowl stood in the Holy of Holies.[697] It
+is said that when the two traditionary founders of the _Nanga_ in Fiji
+were about to erect the first structure of that name in their new home,
+the chief priest poured a libation of _kava_ to the ancestral gods,
+"and, calling upon those who died long, long ago by name, he prayed that
+the people of the tribe, both old and young, might live before
+them."[698]
+
+[Sidenote: Comparison of the _Nanga_ with the cromlechs and other
+megalithic monuments of Europe.]
+
+The sacred enclosures of stones which I have described have been
+compared to the alignments of stones at Carnac in Brittany and Merivale
+on Dartmoor, and it has been suggested that in the olden time these
+ancient European monuments may have witnessed religious rites like those
+which were till lately performed in the rude open-air temples of
+Fiji.[699] If there is any truth in the suggestion, which I mention for
+what it is worth, it would furnish another argument in favour of the
+view that our European cromlechs and other megalithic monuments were
+erected specially for the worship of the dead. The mortuary character of
+Stonehenge, for example, is at least suggested by the burial mounds
+which cluster thick around and within sight of it; about three hundred
+such tombs have been counted within a radius of three miles, while the
+rest of the country in the neighbourhood is comparatively free from
+them.[700]
+
+[Footnote 678: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 242 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 679: Charles Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 86.]
+
+[Footnote 680: John Jackson's Narrative, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+_Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London,
+1853), pp. 475-477. The narrator, John Jackson, was an English seaman
+who resided alone among the Fijians for nearly two years and learned
+their language.]
+
+[Footnote 681: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 96.]
+
+[Footnote 682: _United States Exploring Expedition, Ethnology and
+Philology_, by H. Hale (Philadelphia, 1846), p. 65. Compare Capt. J. E.
+Erskine, _op. cit._ p. 248: "It would also seem that a belief in the
+resurrection of the body, in the exact condition in which it leaves the
+world, is one of the causes that induce, in many instances, a desire for
+death in the vigour of manhood, rather than in the decrepitude of old
+age"; Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 183: "The heathen notion is, that, as
+they die, such will their condition be in another world; hence their
+desire to escape extreme infirmity."]
+
+[Footnote 683: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 94 _sq._ Compare Th.
+Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 183-186; Lorimer Fison, _Tales from
+Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), pp. xxv. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 684: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 96. Compare Th. Williams,
+_op. cit._ i. 188 _sq._, 193 _sqq._, 200-202; Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._
+pp. xxv. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 685: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 200.]
+
+[Footnote 686: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 189; Lorimer Fison, _op.
+cit._ p. xvi.]
+
+[Footnote 687: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 189.]
+
+[Footnote 688: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 197.]
+
+[Footnote 689: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 100. Williams also says (_op.
+cit._ i. 167) that the proper time for performing the rite of
+circumcision was after the death of a chief, and he tells us that "many
+rude games attend it. Blindfolded youths strike at thin vessels of water
+hung from the branch of a tree. At Lakemba, the men arm themselves with
+branches of the cocoa-nut, and carry on a sham fight. At Ono, they
+wrestle. At Mbau, they fillip small stones from the end of a bamboo with
+sufficient force to make the person hit wince again. On Vanua Levu,
+there is a mock siege."]
+
+[Footnote 690: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 691: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) pp. 27 _sq._ On the other hand Mr. Basil
+Thomson's enquiries, made at a later date, did not confirm Mr. Fison's
+statement that the rite of circumcision was practised as a propitiation
+to recover a chief from sickness. "I was assured," he says, "on the
+contrary, that while offerings were certainly made in the _Nanga_ for
+the recovery of the sick, every youth was circumcised as a matter of
+routine, and that the rite was in no way connected with sacrifice for
+the sick" (Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 156 _sq._). However, Mr.
+Fison was a very careful and accurate enquirer, and his testimony is not
+to be lightly set aside.]
+
+[Footnote 692: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) p. 26. Compare Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, p.
+147: "The _Nanga_ was the 'bed' of the Ancestors, that is, the spot
+where their descendants might hold communion with them; the _Mbaki_ were
+the rites celebrated in the _Nanga_, whether of initiating the youths,
+or of presenting the first-fruits, or of recovering the sick, or of
+winning charms against wounds in battle."]
+
+[Footnote 693: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. 27.]
+
+[Footnote 694: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) pp. 14-26. The _Nanga_ and its rites have also
+been described by Mr. A. B. Joske ("The Nanga of Viti-levu,"
+_Internationales Archiv fuer Ethnographie_, ii. (1889) pp. 254-266), and
+Mr. Basil Thomson (_The Fijians_, pp. 146-156). As to the interval
+between the initiatory ceremonies Mr. Fison tells us that it was
+normally two years, but he adds: "This period, however, is not
+necessarily restricted to two years. There are always a number of youths
+who are growing to the proper age, and the length of the interval
+depends upon the decision of the elders. Whenever they judge that there
+is a sufficient number of youths ready for admission, a _Nanga_ is
+appointed to be held; and thus the interval may be longer or shorter,
+according to the supply of novices" (_op. cit._ p. 19). According to Mr.
+Basil Thomson the rites were celebrated annually. Mr. Fison's evidence
+as to the gross license which prevailed between the sexes after the
+admission of the women to the sacred enclosure is confirmed by Mr. Basil
+Thomson, who says, amongst other things, that "a native of Mbau, who
+lived for some years near the _Nanga_, assured me that the visit of the
+women to the _Nanga_ resulted in temporary promiscuity; all tabus were
+defied, and relations who could not speak to one another by customary
+law committed incest" (_op. cit._ p. 154).]
+
+[Footnote 695: Rev. Lorimer Fison, "The Nanga, or Sacred Stone
+Enclosure, of Wainimala, Fiji," _Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute_, xiv. (1885) pp. 14 _sqq._; Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp.
+147, 149.]
+
+[Footnote 696: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. 30.]
+
+[Footnote 697: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ pp. 15, 17, with Plate I.;
+Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 147 _sq._ Mr. Fison had not seen a
+_Nanga_; his description is based on information received from natives.
+Mr. Basil Thomson visited several of these structures and found them so
+alike that one description would serve for all. He speaks of only two
+inner compartments, which he calls the Holy of Holies (_Nanga
+tambu-tambu_) and the Middle Nanga (_Loma ni Nanga_), but the latter
+name appears to imply a third compartment, which is explicitly mentioned
+and named by Mr. Fison. The bell-shaped hut or temple to the west of the
+sacred enclosure is not noticed by Mr. Thomson.]
+
+[Footnote 698: Rev. Lorimer Fison, _op. cit._ p. 17.]
+
+[Footnote 699: Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 700: As to these monuments see Sir John Lubbock (Lord
+Avebury), _Prehistoric Times_, Fifth Edition (London, 1890), p. 127.]
+
+
+
+
+LECTURE XX
+
+THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AMONG THE NATIVES OF EASTERN MELANESIA (FIJI)
+(_concluded_)
+
+
+[Sidenote: Worship of ancestors in Fiji.]
+
+In the last lecture I described the rites of ancestor worship which in
+certain parts of Fiji used to be celebrated at the sacred enclosures of
+stones known as _Nangas_. But the worship of ancestral spirits was by no
+means confined to the comparatively small area in Fiji where such sacred
+enclosures were erected, nor were these open-air temples the only
+structures where the homage of the living was paid to the dead. On the
+contrary we are told by one who knew the Fijians in the old heathen days
+that among them "as soon as beloved parents expire, they take their
+place amongst the family gods. _Bures_, or temples, are erected to their
+memory, and offerings deposited either on their graves or on rudely
+constructed altars--mere stages, in the form of tables, the legs of
+which are driven into the ground, and the top of which is covered with
+pieces of native cloth. The construction of these altars is identical
+with that observed by Turner in Tanna, and only differs in its inferior
+finish from the altars formerly erected in Tahiti and the adjacent
+islands. The offerings, consisting of the choicest articles of food, are
+left exposed to wind and weather, and firmly believed by the mass of
+Fijians to be consumed by the spirits of departed friends and relations;
+but, if not eaten by animals, they are often stolen by the more
+enlightened class of their countrymen, and even some of the foreigners
+do not disdain occasionally to help themselves freely to them. However,
+it is not only on tombs or on altars that offerings are made; often,
+when the natives eat or drink anything, they throw portions of it away,
+stating them to be for their departed ancestors. I remember ordering a
+young chief to empty a bowl containing _kava_, which he did, muttering
+to himself, 'There, father, is some _kava_ for you. Protect me from
+illness or breaking any of my limbs whilst in the mountains.'"[701]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian notion of divinity. Two classes of gods, namely, gods
+strictly so called, and deified men.]
+
+"The native word expressive of divinity is _kalou_, which, while used to
+denote the people's highest notion of a god, is also constantly heard as
+a qualificative of any thing great or marvellous, or, according to
+Hazlewood's Dictionary, 'anything superlative, whether good or bad.'...
+Often the word sinks into a mere exclamation, or becomes an expression
+of flattery. 'You are a _kalou_!' or, 'Your countrymen are gods!' is
+often uttered by the natives, when hearing of the triumphs of art among
+civilized nations."[702] The Fijians distinguished two classes of gods:
+first, _kalou vu_, literally "Root-gods," that is, gods strictly so
+called, and second, _kalou yalo_, literally, "Soul-gods," that is,
+deified mortals. Gods of the first class were supposed to be absolutely
+eternal; gods of the second class, though raised far above mere
+humanity, were thought nevertheless to be subject to human passions and
+wants, to accidents, and even to death. These latter were the spirits of
+departed chiefs, heroes, and friends; admission into their number was
+easy, and any one might secure his own apotheosis who could ensure the
+services of some one to act as his representative and priest after his
+death.[703] However, though the Fijians admitted the distinction between
+the two classes of gods in theory, they would seem to have confused them
+in practice. Thus we are informed by an early authority that "they have
+superior and inferior gods and goddesses, more general and local
+deities, and, were it not an obvious contradiction, we should say they
+have gods _human_, and gods _divine_; for they have some gods who were
+gods originally, and some who were originally men. It is impossible to
+ascertain with any degree of probability how many gods the Fijians have,
+as any man who can distinguish himself in murdering his fellow-men may
+certainly secure to himself deification after death. Their friends are
+also sometimes deified and invoked. I have heard them invoke their
+friends who have been drowned at sea. I need not advert to the absurdity
+of praying to those who could not save themselves from a watery grave.
+Tuikilakila, the chief of Somosomo, offered Mr. Hunt a preferment of
+this sort. 'If you die first,' said he, 'I shall make you my god.' In
+fact, there appears to be no certain line of demarcation between
+departed spirits and gods, nor between gods and living men, for many of
+the priests and old chiefs are considered as sacred persons, and not a
+few of them will also claim to themselves the right of divinity. 'I am a
+god,' Tuikilakila would sometimes say; and he believed it too. They were
+not merely the words of his lips; he believed he was something above a
+mere man."[704]
+
+Writers on Fiji have given us lists of some of the principal gods of the
+first class,[705] who were supposed never to have been men; but in their
+account of the religious ritual they do not distinguish between the
+worship which was paid to such deities and that which was paid to
+deified men. Accordingly we may infer that the ritual was practically
+the same, and in the sequel I shall assume that what is told us of the
+worship of gods in general holds good of the worship of deified men in
+particular.
+
+[Sidenote: The Fijian temple (_bure_).]
+
+Every Fijian town had at least one _bure_ or temple, many of them had
+several. Significantly enough the spot where a chief had been killed was
+sometimes chosen for the site of a temple. The structure of these
+edifices was somewhat peculiar. Each of them was built on the top of a
+mound, which was raised to the height of from three to twenty feet above
+the ground and faced on its sloping sides with dry rubble-work of stone.
+The ascent to the temple was by a thick plank, the upper surface of
+which was cut into notched steps. The proportions of the sacred edifice
+itself were inelegant, if not uncouth, its height being nearly twice as
+great as its breadth at the base. The roof was high-pitched; the
+ridge-pole was covered with white shells (_Ovula cypraea_) and projected
+three or four feet at each end. For the most part each temple had two
+doors and a fire-place in the centre. From some temples it was not
+lawful to throw out the ashes, however much they might accumulate, until
+the end of the year, which fell in November. The furniture consisted of
+a few boxes, mats, several large clay jars, and many drinking vessels. A
+temple might also contain images, which, though highly esteemed as
+ornaments and held sacred, were not worshipped as idols. From the roof
+depended a long piece of white bark-cloth; it was carried down the angle
+so as to hang before the corner-post and lie on the floor. This cloth
+formed the path down which the god was believed to pass in order to
+enter and inspire his priest. It marked the holy place which few but he
+dared to approach. However, the temples were by no means dedicated
+exclusively to the use of religion. Each of them served also as a
+council-chamber and town-hall; there the chiefs lounged for hours
+together; there strangers were entertained; and there the head persons
+of the village might even sleep.[706] In some parts of Viti Levu the
+dead were sometimes buried in the temples, "that the wind might not
+disturb, nor the rain fall upon them," and in order that the living
+might have the satisfaction of lying near their departed friends. A
+child of high rank having died under the charge of the queen of
+Somosomo, the little body was placed in a box and hung from the tie-beam
+of the principal temple. For some months afterwards the daintiest food
+was brought daily to the dead child, the bearers approaching with the
+utmost respect and clapping their hands when the ghost was thought to
+have finished his meal just as a chiefs retainers used to do when he had
+done eating.[707]
+
+[Sidenote: Worship at the temples.]
+
+Temples were often unoccupied for months and allowed to fall into ruins,
+until the chief had some request to make to the god, when the necessary
+repairs were first carried out. No regular worship was maintained, no
+habitual reverence was displayed at the shrines. The principle of fear,
+we are told, seemed to be the only motive of religious observances, and
+it was artfully fomented by the priests, through whom alone the people
+had access to the gods when they desired to supplicate the favour of the
+divine beings. The prayers were naturally accompanied by offerings,
+which in matters of importance comprised large quantities of food,
+together with whales' teeth; in lesser affairs a tooth, club, mat, or
+spear sufficed. Of the food brought by the worshippers part was
+dedicated to the god, but as usual he only ate the soul of it, the
+substance being consumed by the priest and old men; the remainder
+furnished a feast of which all might partake.[708]
+
+[Sidenote: The priests.]
+
+The office of priest (_mbete_, _bete_) was usually hereditary, but when
+a priest died without male heirs a cunning fellow, ambitious of enjoying
+the sacred character and of living in idleness, would sometimes simulate
+the convulsive frenzy, which passed for a symptom of inspiration, and if
+he succeeded in the imposture would be inducted into the vacant
+benefice. Every chief had his priest, with whom he usually lived on a
+very good footing, the two playing into each other's hands and working
+the oracle for their mutual benefit. The people were grossly
+superstitious, and there were few of their affairs in which the priest
+had not a hand. His influence over them was great. In his own district
+he passed for the representative of the deity; indeed, according to an
+early missionary, the natives seldom distinguished the idea of the god
+from that of his minister, who was viewed by them with a reverence that
+almost amounted to deification.[709]
+
+[Sidenote: Oracles given by the priest under the inspiration of the god.
+Paroxysm of inspiration.]
+
+The principal duty of the priest was to reveal to men the will of the
+god, and this he always did through the direct inspiration of the deity.
+The revelation was usually made in response to an enquiry or a prayer;
+the supplicant asked, it might be, for a good crop of yams or taro, for
+showers of rain, for protection in battle, for a safe voyage, or for a
+storm to drive canoes ashore, so that the supplicant might rob, murder,
+and eat the castaways. To lend force to one or other of these pious
+prayers the worshipper brought a whale's tooth to the temple and
+presented it to the priest. The man of god might have had word of his
+coming and time to throw himself into an appropriate attitude. He might,
+for example, be seen lying on the floor near the sacred corner, plunged
+in a profound meditation. On the entrance of the enquirer the priest
+would rouse himself so far as to get up and then seat himself with his
+back to the white cloth, down which the deity was expected to slide into
+the medium's body. Having received the whale's tooth he would abstract
+his mind from all worldly matters and contemplate the tooth for some
+time with rapt attention. Presently he began to tremble, his limbs
+twitched, his features were distorted. These symptoms, the visible
+manifestation of the entrance of the spirit into him, gradually
+increased in violence till his whole frame was convulsed and shook as
+with a strong fit of ague: his veins swelled: the circulation of the
+blood was quickened. The man was now possessed and inspired by the god:
+his own human personality was for a time in abeyance: all that he said
+and did in the paroxysm passed for the words and acts of the indwelling
+deity. Shrill cries of "_Koi au! Koi au!_" "It is I! It is I!" filled
+the air, proclaiming the actual presence of the powerful spirit in the
+vessel of flesh and blood. In giving the oracular response the priest's
+eyes protruded from their sockets and rolled as in a frenzy: his voice
+rose into a squeak: his face was pallid, his lips livid, his breathing
+depressed, his whole appearance that of a furious madman. At last sweat
+burst from every pore, tears gushed from his eyes: the strain on the
+organism was visibly relieved; and the symptoms gradually abated. Then
+he would look round with a vacant stare: the god within him would cry,
+"I depart!" and the man would announce the departure of the spirit by
+throwing himself on his mat or striking the ground with his club, while
+blasts on a shell-trumpet conveyed to those at a distance the tidings
+that the deity had withdrawn from mortal sight into the world
+invisible.[710] "I have seen," says Mr. Lorimer Fison, "this possession,
+and a horrible sight it is. In one case, after the fit was over, for
+some time the man's muscles and nerves twitched and quivered in an
+extraordinary way. He was naked except for his breech-clout, and on his
+naked breast little snakes seemed to be wriggling for a moment or two
+beneath his skin, disappearing and then suddenly reappearing in another
+part of his chest. When the _mbete_ (which we may translate 'priest' for
+want of a better word) is seized by the possession, the god within him
+calls out his own name in a stridulous tone, 'It is I! Katouviere!' or
+some other name. At the next possession some other ancestor may declare
+himself."[711]
+
+[Sidenote: Specimens of the oracular utterances of Fijian gods.]
+
+From this last description of an eye-witness we learn that the spirit
+which possessed a priest and spoke through him was often believed to be
+that of a dead ancestor. Some of the inspired utterances of these
+prophets have been recorded. Here are specimens of Fijian inspiration.
+Speaking in the name of the great god Ndengei, who was worshipped in the
+form of a serpent, the priest said: "Great Fiji is my small club.
+Muaimbila is the head; Kamba is the handle. If I step on Muaimbila, I
+shall sink it into the sea, whilst Kamba shall rise to the sky. If I
+step on Kamba, it will be lost in the sea, whilst Muaimbila would rise
+into the skies. Yes, Viti Levu is my small war-club. I can turn it as I
+please. I can turn it upside down." Again, speaking by the mouth of a
+priest, the god Tanggirianima once made the following observations: "I
+and Kumbunavannua only are gods. I preside over wars, and do as I please
+with sickness. But it is difficult for me to come here, as the foreign
+god fills the place. If I attempt to descend by that pillar, I find it
+pre-occupied by the foreign god. If I try another pillar, I find it the
+same. However, we two are fighting the foreign god; and if we are
+victorious, we will save the woman. I _will_ save the woman. She will
+eat food to-day. Had I been sent for yesterday, she would have eaten
+then," and so on. The woman, about whose case the deity was consulted
+and whom he announced his fixed intention of saving, died a few hours
+afterwards.[712]
+
+[Sidenote: Human sacrifices in Fiji.]
+
+Ferocious and inveterate cannibals themselves, the Fijians naturally
+assumed that their gods were so too; hence human flesh was a common
+offering, indeed the most valued of all.[713] Formal human sacrifices
+were frequent. The victims were usually taken from a distant tribe, and
+when war and violence failed to supply the demand, recourse was
+sometimes had to negotiation. However obtained, the victims destined for
+sacrifice were often kept for a time and fattened to make them better
+eating. Then, tightly bound in a sitting posture, they were placed on
+hot stones in one of the usual ovens, and being covered over with leaves
+and earth were roasted alive, while the spectators roared with laughter
+at the writhings and contortions of the victims in their agony. When
+their struggles ceased and the bodies were judged to be done to a
+nicety, they were raked out of the oven, their faces painted black, and
+so carried to the temple, where they were presented to the gods, only,
+however, to be afterwards removed, cut up, and devoured by the
+people.[714]
+
+[Sidenote: Human sacrifices offered when a king's house was built or a
+great new canoe launched.]
+
+However, roasting alive in ovens was not the only way in which men and
+women were made away with in the service of religion. When a king's
+house was built, men were buried alive in the holes dug to receive the
+posts: they were compelled to clasp the posts in their arms, and then
+the earth was shovelled over them and rammed down. And when a large new
+canoe was launched, it was hauled down to the sea over the bodies of
+living men, who were pinioned and laid out at intervals on the beach to
+serve as rollers on which the great vessel glided smoothly into the
+water, leaving a row of mangled corpses behind. The theory of both these
+modes of sacrifice was explained by the Fijians to an Englishman who
+witnessed them. I will quote their explanation in his words. "They said
+in answer to the questions I put respecting the people being buried
+alive with the posts, that a house or palace of a king was just like a
+king's canoe: if the canoe was not hauled over men, as rollers, she
+would not be expected to float long, and in like manner the palace could
+not stand long if people were not to sit down and continually hold the
+posts up. But I said, 'How could they hold the posts up after they were
+dead?' They said, if they sacrificed their lives endeavouring to hold
+the posts in their right position to their superior's _turanga kai na
+kalou_ (chiefs and god), that the virtue of the sacrifice would
+instigate the gods to uphold the house after they were dead, and that
+they were honoured by being considered adequate to such a noble
+task."[715] Apparently the Fijians imagined that the souls of the dead
+men would somehow strengthen the souls of the houses and canoes and so
+prolong the lives of these useful objects; for it is to be remembered
+that according to Fijian theology houses and canoes as well as men and
+women were provided with immortal souls.
+
+[Sidenote: High estimation in which murder was held by the Fijians.]
+
+Perhaps the same theory of immortality partially accounts for the high
+honour in which the Fijian held the act of murder and for the admiration
+which he bestowed on all murderers. "Shedding of blood," we are told,
+"to him is no crime, but a glory. Whoever may be the victim,--whether
+noble or vulgar, old or young, man, woman, or child,--whether slain in
+war, or butchered by treachery,--to be somehow an acknowledged murderer
+is the object of the Fijian's restless ambition."[716] It was customary
+throughout Fiji to give honorary names to such as had clubbed to death a
+human being, of any age or either sex, during a war. The new epithet was
+given with the complimentary prefix _Koroi_. Mr. Williams once asked a
+man why he was called _Koroi_. "Because," he replied, "I, with several
+other men, found some women and children in a cave, drew them out and
+clubbed them, and then was consecrated."[717] Mr. Fison learned from
+another stout young warrior that he had earned the honourable
+distinction of _Koroi_ by lying in wait among the mangrove bushes at the
+waterside and killing a miserable old woman of a hostile tribe, as she
+crept along the mudflat seeking for shellfish. The man would have been
+equally honoured, adds Mr. Fison, if his victim had been a child. The
+hero of such an exploit, for two or three days after killing his man or
+woman, was allowed to besmear his face and bust with a mixture of
+lampblack and oil which differed from the common black war-paint;
+decorated with this badge of honour he strutted proudly through the
+town, the cynosure of all eyes, an object of envy to his fellows and of
+tender interest to the girls. The old men shouted approval after him,
+the women would _lulilu_ admiringly as he passed by, and the boys looked
+up to him as a superior being whose noble deeds they thirsted to
+emulate. Higher titles of honour still were bestowed on such as had
+slain their ten, or twenty, or thirty; and Mr. Fison tells us of a chief
+whose admiring countrymen had to compound all these titles into one in
+order to set forth his superlative claims to glory. A man who had never
+killed anybody was of very little account in this life, and he received
+the penalty due to his sin in the life hereafter. For in the spirit land
+the ghost of such a poor-spirited wretch was sentenced to what the
+Fijians regarded as the most degrading of all punishments, to beat a
+heap of muck with his bloodless club.[718]
+
+[Sidenote: Ceremony of consecrating a manslayer. The temporary
+restrictions laid on a manslayer were probably dictated by a fear of his
+victim's ghost.]
+
+The ceremony of consecrating a manslayer was elaborate. He was anointed
+with red oil from the hair of his head to the soles of his feet; and
+when he had been thus incarnadined he exchanged clubs with the
+spectators, who believed that their weapons acquired a mysterious virtue
+by passing through his holy hands. Afterwards the anointed one, attended
+by the king and elders, solemnly stalked down to the sea and wetted the
+soles of his feet in the water. Then the whole company returned to the
+town, while the shell-trumpets sounded and the men raised a peculiar
+hoot. Custom required that a hut should be built in which the anointed
+man and his companions must pass the next three nights, during which the
+hero might not lie down, but had to sleep as he sat; all that time he
+might not change his bark-cloth garment, nor wash the red paint away
+from his body, nor enter a house in which there was a woman.[719] The
+reason for observing these curious restrictions is not mentioned, but in
+the light of similar practices, some of which have been noticed in these
+lectures,[720] we may conjecture that they were dictated by a fear of
+the victim's ghost, who among savages generally haunts his slayer and
+will do him a mischief, if he gets a chance. As it is especially in
+dreams that the naturally incensed spirit finds his opportunity, we can
+perhaps understand why the slayer might not lie down for the first three
+nights after the slaughter; the wrath of the ghost would then be at its
+hottest, and if he spied his murderer stretched in slumber on the
+ground, the temptation to take an unfair advantage of him might have
+been too strong to be resisted. But when his anger had had time to cool
+down or he had departed for his long home, as ghosts generally do after
+a reasonable time, the precautions taken to baffle his vengeance might
+be safely relaxed. Perhaps, as I have already hinted, the reverence
+which the Fijians felt for any man who had taken a human life, or at all
+events the life of an enemy, may have partly sprung from a belief that
+the slayer increased his own strength and valour either by subjugating
+the ghost of his victim and employing it as his henchman, or perhaps
+rather by simply absorbing in some occult fashion the vital energy of
+the slain. This view is confirmed by the permission given to the killer
+to assume the name of the killed, whenever his victim was a man of
+distinguished rank;[721] for by taking the name he, according to an
+opinion common among savages, assumed the personality of his namesake.
+
+[Sidenote: Other funeral customs based on a fear of the ghost.]
+
+The same fear of the ghost of the recently departed which manifested
+itself, if my interpretation of the customs is right, in the treatment
+of manslayers, seems to have imprinted itself, though in a more
+attenuated form, on some of the practices observed by Fijian mourners
+after a natural, not a violent, death.
+
+[Sidenote: Persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food.
+Seclusion of grave-diggers.]
+
+Thus all the persons who had handled a corpse were forbidden to touch
+anything for some time afterwards; in particular they were strictly
+debarred from touching their food with their hands; their victuals were
+brought to them by others, and they were fed like infants by attendants
+or obliged to pick up their food with their mouths from the ground. The
+time during which this burdensome restriction lasted was different
+according to the rank of the deceased: in the case of great chiefs it
+lasted from two to ten months; in the case of a petty chief it did not
+exceed one month; and in the case of a common person a taboo of not more
+than four days sufficed. When a chief's principal wife did not follow
+him to the other world by being strangled or buried alive, she might not
+touch her own food with her hands for three months. When the mourners
+grew tired of being fed like infants or feeding themselves like dogs,
+they sent word to the head chief and he let them know that he would
+remove the taboo whenever they pleased. Accordingly they sent him
+presents of pigs and other provisions, which he shared among the people.
+Then the tabooed persons went into a stream and washed themselves; after
+that they caught some animal, such as a pig or a turtle, and wiped their
+hands on it, and the animal thereupon became sacred to the chief. Thus
+the taboo was removed, and the men were free once more to work, to feed
+themselves, and to live with their wives. Lazy and idle fellows
+willingly undertook the duty of waiting on the dead, as it relieved them
+for some time from the painful necessity of earning their own
+bread.[722] The reason why such persons might not touch food with their
+hands was probably a fear of the ghost or at all events of the infection
+of death; the ghost or the infection might be clinging to their hands
+and might so be transferred from them to their food with fatal effects.
+In Great Fiji not every one might dig a chief's grave. The office was
+hereditary in a certain clan. After the funeral the grave-digger was
+shut up in a house and painted black from head to foot. When he had to
+make a short excursion, he covered himself with a large mantle of
+painted native cloth and was supposed to be invisible. His food was
+brought to the house after dark by silent bearers, who placed it just
+within the doorway. His seclusion might last for a long time;[723] it
+was probably intended to screen him from the ghost.
+
+[Sidenote: Hair cropped and finger-joints cut off in mourning.]
+
+The usual outward sign of mourning was to crop the hair or beard, or
+very rarely both. Some people merely made bald the crown of the head.
+Indeed the Fijians were too vain of their hair to part with it lightly,
+and to conceal the loss which custom demanded of them on these occasions
+they used to wear wigs, some of which were very skilfully made. The
+practice of cutting off finger-joints in mourning has already been
+mentioned; one early authority affirms and another denies that joints of
+the little toes were similarly amputated by the living as a mark of
+sorrow for the dead. So common was the practice of lopping off the
+little fingers in mourning that till recently few of the older natives
+could be found who had their hands intact; most of them indeed had lost
+the little fingers of both hands. There was a Fijian saying that the
+fourth finger "cried itself hoarse in vain for its absent mate"
+(_droga-droga-wale_). The mutilation was usually confined to the
+relations of the deceased, unless he happened to be one of the highest
+chiefs. However, the severed joints were often sent by poor people to
+wealthy families in mourning, who never failed to reward the senders for
+so delicate a mark of sympathy. Female mourners burned their skin into
+blisters by applying lighted rolls of bark-cloth to various parts of
+their bodies; the brands so produced might be seen on their arms,
+shoulders, necks, and breasts.[724] During the mourning for a king
+people fasted till evening for ten or twenty days; the coast for miles
+was tabooed and no one might fish there; the nuts also were made sacred.
+Some people in token of grief for a bereavement would abstain from fish,
+fruit, or other pleasant food for months together; others would dress in
+leaves instead of in cloth.[725]
+
+[Sidenote: Men whipped by women in time of mourning for a chief.]
+
+Though the motive for these observances is not mentioned, we may suppose
+that they were intended to soothe and please the ghost by testifying to
+the sorrow felt by the survivors at his decease. It is more doubtful
+whether the same explanation would apply to another custom which the
+Fijians used to observe in mourning. During ten days after a death,
+while the soul of a deceased chief was thought to be still lingering in
+or near his body, all the women of the town provided themselves with
+long whips, knotted with shells, and applied them with great vigour to
+the bodies of the men, raising weals and inflicting bloody wounds, while
+the men retorted by flirting pellets of clay from splinters of
+bamboo.[726] According to Mr. Williams, this ceremony was performed on
+the tenth day or earlier, and he adds: "I have seen grave personages,
+not accustomed to move quickly, flying with all possible speed before a
+company of such women. Sometimes the men retaliate by bespattering their
+assailants with mud; but they use no violence, as it seems to be a day
+on which they are bound to succumb."[727] As the soul of the dead was
+believed to quit his body and depart to his destined abode on the tenth
+day after death,[728] the scourging of the men by the women was probably
+supposed in some way to speed the parting guest on his long journey.
+
+[Sidenote: The dead taken out of the house by a special opening made in
+a wall. Examples of the custom among Aryan peoples.]
+
+When a certain king of Fiji died, the side of the house was broken down
+to allow the body to be carried out, though there were doorways wide
+enough for the purpose close at hand. The missionary who records the
+fact could not learn the reason of it.[729] The custom of taking the
+dead out of the house by a special opening, which is afterwards closed
+up, has not been confined to Fiji; on the contrary it has been practised
+by a multitude of peoples, savage, barbarous, and civilised, in many
+parts of the world. For example, it was an old Norse rule that a corpse
+might not be carried out of the house by the door which was used by the
+living; hence a hole was made in the wall at the back of the dead man's
+head and he was taken out through it backwards, or a hole was dug in the
+ground under the south wall and the body was drawn out through it.[730]
+The custom may have been at one time common to all the Aryan or
+Indo-european peoples, for it is mentioned in other of their ancient
+records and has been observed by widely separated branches of that great
+family down to modern times. Thus, the Zend-Avesta prescribes that, when
+a death has occurred, a breach shall be made in the wall and the corpse
+carried out through it by two men, who have first stripped off their
+clothes.[731] In Russia "the corpse was often carried out of the house
+through a window, or through a hole made for the purpose, and the custom
+is still kept up in many parts."[732] Speaking of the Hindoos a French
+traveller of the eighteenth century says that "instead of carrying the
+corpse out by the door they make an opening in the wall by which they
+pass it out in a seated posture, and the hole is closed up after the
+ceremony."[733] Among various Hindoo castes it is still customary, when
+a death has occurred on an inauspicious day, to remove the corpse from
+the house not through the door, but through a temporary hole made in the
+wall.[734] Old German law required that the corpses of criminals and
+suicides should be carried out through a hole under the threshold.[735]
+In the Highlands of Scotland the bodies of suicides were not taken out
+of the house for burial by the doors, but through an opening made
+between the wall and the thatch.[736]
+
+[Sidenote: Examples of the custom among non-Aryan peoples.]
+
+But widespread as such customs have been among Indo-european peoples,
+they have been by no means confined to that branch of the human race. It
+was an ancient Chinese practice to knock down part of the wall of a
+house for the purpose of carrying out a corpse.[737] Some of the
+Canadian Indians would never take a corpse out of the hut by the
+ordinary door, but always lifted a piece of the bark wall near which the
+dead man lay and then drew him through the opening.[738] Among the
+Esquimaux of Bering Strait a corpse is usually raised through the
+smoke-hole in the roof, but is never taken out by the doorway. Should
+the smoke-hole be too small, an opening is made in the rear of the house
+and then closed again.[739] When a Greenlander dies, "they do not carry
+out the corpse through the entry of the house, but lift it through the
+window, or if he dies in a tent, they unfasten one of the skins behind,
+and convey it out that way. A woman behind waves a lighted chip backward
+and forward, and says: 'There is nothing more to be had here.'"[740]
+Similarly the Hottentots, Bechuanas, Basutos, Marotse, Barongo, and many
+other tribes of South and West Africa never carry a corpse out by the
+door of the hut but always by a special opening made in the wall.[741] A
+similar custom is observed by the maritime Gajos of Sumatra[742] and by
+some of the Indian tribes of North-west America, such as the Tlingit and
+the Haida.[743] Among the Lepchis of Sikhim, whose houses are raised on
+piles, the dead are taken out by a hole made in the floor.[744] Dwellers
+in tents who practise this custom remove a corpse from the tent, not by
+the door, but through an opening made by lifting up an edge of the
+tent-cover: this is done by European gypsies[745] and by the Koryak of
+north-eastern Asia.[746]
+
+[Sidenote: The motive of the custom is a desire to prevent the ghost
+from returning to the house.]
+
+In all such customs the original motive probably was a fear of the ghost
+and a wish to exclude him from the house, lest he should return and
+carry off the survivors with him to the spirit land. Ghosts are commonly
+credited with a low degree of intelligence, and it appears to be
+supposed that they can only find their way back to a house by the
+aperture through which their bodies were carried out. Hence people made
+a practice of taking a corpse out not by the door, but through an
+opening specially made for the purpose, which was afterwards blocked up,
+so that when the ghost returned from the grave and attempted to enter
+the house, he found the orifice closed and was obliged to turn away
+disappointed. That this was the train of reasoning actually followed by
+some peoples may be gathered from the explanations which they themselves
+give of the custom. Thus among the Tuski of Alaska "those who die a
+natural death are carried out through a hole cut in the back of the hut
+or _yarang_. This is immediately closed up, that the spirit of the dead
+man may not find his way back."[747] Among the Esquimaux of Hudson Bay
+"the nearest relatives on approach of death remove the invalid to the
+outside of the house, for if he should die within he must not be carried
+out of the door but through a hole cut in the side wall, and it must
+then be carefully closed to prevent the spirit of the person from
+returning."[748] Again, "when a Siamese is dead, his relations deposit
+the body in a coffin well covered. They do not pass it through the door
+but let it down into the street by an opening which they make in the
+wall. They also carry it thrice round the house, running at the top of
+their speed. They believe that if they did not take this precaution, the
+dead man would remember the way by which he had passed, and that he
+would return by night to do some ill turn to his family."[749] In
+Travancore the body of a dead rajah "is taken out of the palace through
+a breach in the wall, made for the purpose, to avoid pollution of the
+gate, and afterwards built up again so that the departed spirit may not
+return through the gate to trouble the survivors."[750] Among the Kayans
+of Borneo, whose dwellings are raised on piles above the ground, the
+coffin is conveyed out of the house by lowering it with rattans either
+through the floor, planks being taken up for the purpose, or under the
+eaves at the side of the gallery. "In this way they avoid carrying it
+down the house-ladder; and it seems to be felt that this precaution
+renders it more difficult for the ghost to find its way back to the
+house."[751] Among the Cheremiss of Russia, "old custom required that
+the corpse should not be carried out by the door but through a breach in
+the north wall, where there is usually a sash-window. But the custom has
+long been obsolete, even among the heathen, and only very old people
+speak of it. They explain it as follows: to carry it out by the door
+would be to shew the _Asyren_ (the dead man) the right way into the
+house, whereas a breach in the wooden wall is immediately closed by
+replacing the beams in position, and thus the _Asyren_ would in vain
+seek for an entrance."[752] The Samoyeds never carry a corpse out of the
+hut by the door, but lift up a piece of the reindeer-skin covering and
+draw the body out, head foremost, through the opening. They think that
+if they were to carry a corpse out by the door, the ghost would soon
+return and fetch away other members of the family.[753] On the same
+principle, as soon as the Indians of Tumupasa, in north-west Bolivia,
+have carried a corpse out of the house, "they shift the door to the
+opposite side, in order that the deceased may not be able to find
+it."[754] Once more, in Mecklenburg "it is a law regulating the return
+of the dead that they are compelled to return by the same way by which
+the corpse was removed from the house. In the villages of Picher,
+Bresegard, and others the people used to have movable thresholds at the
+house-doors, which, being fitted into the door-posts, could be shoved
+up. The corpse was then carried out of the house under the threshold,
+and therefore could not return over it."[755]
+
+[Sidenote: Some people only remove in this manner the bodies of persons
+whose ghosts are especially feared.]
+
+Even without such express testimonies to the meaning of the custom we
+may infer from a variety of evidence that the real motive for practising
+it is a fear of the ghost and a wish to prevent his return. For it is to
+be observed that some peoples do not carry out all their dead by a
+special opening, but that they accord this peculiar mode of removal only
+to persons who die under unlucky or disgraceful circumstances, and whose
+ghosts accordingly are more than usually dreaded. Thus we have seen that
+some modern Hindoo castes observe the custom only in the case of people
+who have died on inauspicious days; and that in Germany and the
+Highlands of Scotland this mode of removal was specially reserved for
+the bodies of suicides, whose ghosts are exceedingly feared by many
+people, as appears from the stringent precautions taken against
+them.[756] Again, among the Kavirondo of Central Africa, "when a woman
+dies without having borne a child, she is carried out of the back of the
+house. A hole is made in the wall and the corpse is ignominiously pushed
+through the hole and carried some distance to be buried, as it is
+considered a curse to die without a child. If the woman has given birth
+to a child, then her corpse is carried out through the front door and
+buried in the verandah of the house."[757] In Brittany a stillborn child
+is removed from the house, not by the door, but by the window; "for if
+by ill-luck it should chance otherwise, the mothers who should pass
+through that fatal door would bear nothing but stillborn infants."[758]
+In Perche, another province of France, the same rule is observed with
+regard to stillborn children, though the reason for it is not
+alleged.[759] But of all ghosts none perhaps inspire such deep and
+universal terror as the ghosts of women who have died in childbed, and
+extraordinary measures are accordingly taken to disable these dangerous
+spirits from returning and doing a mischief to the living.[760] Amongst
+the precautions adopted to keep them at bay is the custom of carrying
+their corpses out of the house by a special opening, which is afterwards
+blocked up. Thus in Laos, a province of Siam, "the bodies of women dying
+in childbirth, or within a month afterwards, are not even taken out of
+the house in the ordinary way by the door, but are let down through the
+floor."[761] The Kachins of Burma stand in such fear of the ghosts of
+women dying in childbed that no sooner has such a death occurred than
+the husband, the children, and almost all the people in the house take
+to flight lest the woman's ghost should bite them. "The body of the
+deceased must be burned as soon as possible in order to punish her for
+dying such a death, and also in order to frighten her ghost (_minla_).
+They bandage her eyes with her own hair and with leaves to prevent her
+from seeing anything; they wrap her in a mat, and they carry her out of
+the house, not by the ordinary door, but by an opening made for the
+purpose in the wall or the floor of the room where she breathed her
+last. Then they convey her to a deep ravine, where no one dares to pass;
+they lay her in the midst of a great pyre with all the clothes,
+jewellery, and other objects which belonged to her and of which she made
+use; and they burn the whole to cinders, to which they refuse the rites
+of sepulture. Thus they destroy all the property of the unfortunate
+woman, in order that her soul may not think of coming to fetch it
+afterwards and to bite people in the attempt."[762] Similarly among the
+Kayans or Bahaus of Central Borneo "the corpses of women dying in
+childbed excite a special horror; no man and no young woman may touch
+them; they are not carried out of the house through the front gallery,
+but are thrown out of the back wall of the dwelling, some boards having
+been removed for the purpose."[763] Indeed so great is the alarm felt by
+the Kayans at a miscarriage of this sort that when a woman labours hard
+in childbed, the news quickly spreads through the large communal house
+in which the people dwell; and if the attendants begin to fear a fatal
+issue, the whole household is thrown into consternation. All the men,
+from the chief down to the boys, will flee from the house, or, if it is
+night, they will clamber up among the beams of the roof and there hide
+in terror; and, if the worst happens, they remain there until the
+woman's corpse has been removed from the house for burial.[764]
+
+[Sidenote: Sometimes the custom is observed when the original motive for
+it is forgotten.]
+
+Sometimes, while the custom continues to be practised, the idea which
+gave rise to it has either become obscured or has been incorrectly
+reported. Thus we are told that when a death has taken place among the
+Indians of North-west America "the body is at once taken out of the
+house through an opening in the wall from which the boards have been
+removed. It is believed that his ghost would kill every one if the body
+were to stay in the house."[765] Such a belief, while it would furnish
+an excellent reason for hurrying the corpse out of the house as soon as
+possible, does not explain why it should be carried out through a
+special opening instead of through the door. Again, when a Queen of Bali
+died, "the body was drawn out of a large aperture made in the wall to
+the right-hand side of the door, in the absurd opinion of _cheating the
+devil_, whom these islanders believe to lie in wait in the ordinary
+passage."[766] Again, in Mukden, the capital of Manchuria, the corpses
+of children "must not be carried out of a door or window, but through a
+new or disused opening, in order that the evil spirit which causes the
+disease may not enter. The belief is that the Heavenly Dog which eats
+the sun at an eclipse demands the bodies of children, and that if they
+are denied to him he will bring certain calamity on the household."[767]
+These explanations of the custom are probably misinterpretations adopted
+at a later time when its original meaning was forgotten. For a custom
+often outlives the memory of the motives which gave it birth. And as
+royalty is very conservative of ancient usages, it would be no matter
+for surprise if the corpses of kings should continue to be carried out
+through special openings long after the bodies of commoners were allowed
+to be conveyed in commonplace fashion through the ordinary door. In
+point of fact we find the old custom observed by kings in countries
+where it has apparently ceased to be observed by their subjects. Thus
+among the Sakalava and Antimerina of Madagascar, "when a sovereign or a
+prince of the royal family dies within the enclosure of the king's
+palace, the corpse must be carried out of the palace, not by the door,
+but by a breach made for the purpose in the wall; the new sovereign
+could not pass through the door that had been polluted by the passage of
+a dead body."[768] Similarly among the Macassars and Buginese of
+Southern Celebes there is in the king's palace a window reaching to the
+floor through which on his decease the king's body is carried out.[769]
+That such a custom is only a limitation to kings of a rule which once
+applied to everybody becomes all the more probable, when we learn that
+in the island of Saleijer, which lies to the south of Celebes, each
+house has, besides its ordinary windows, a large window in the form of a
+door, through which, and not through the ordinary entrance, every corpse
+is regularly removed at death.[770]
+
+[Sidenote: Another Fijian funeral custom.]
+
+To return from this digression to Fiji, we may conclude with a fair
+degree of probability that when the side of a Fijian king's house was
+broken down to allow his corpse to be carried out, though there were
+doors at hand wide enough for the purpose, the original intention was to
+prevent the return of his ghost, who might have proved a very unwelcome
+intruder to his successor on the throne. But I cannot offer any
+explanation of another Fijian funeral custom. You may remember that in
+Fiji it was customary after the death of a chief to circumcise such lads
+as had reached a suitable age.[771] Well, on the fifth day after a
+chief's death a hole used to be dug under the floor of a temple and one
+of the newly circumcised lads was secreted in it. Then his companions
+fastened the doors of the temple securely and ran away. When the lad
+hidden in the hole blew on a shell-trumpet, the friends of the deceased
+chief surrounded the temple and thrust their spears at him through the
+fence.[772] What the exact significance of this curious rite may have
+been, I cannot even conjecture; but we may assume that it had something
+to do with the state of the late chief's soul, which was probably
+supposed to be lingering in the neighbourhood.
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian notions concerning the other world and the way
+thither. The River of the Souls.]
+
+It remains to say a little as to the notions which the Fijians
+entertained of the other world and the way thither. After death the
+souls of the departed were believed to set out for Bulu or Bulotu, there
+to dwell with the great serpent-shaped god Ndengei. His abode seems to
+have been generally placed in the Nakauvandra mountains, towards the
+western end of Viti Levu, the largest of the Fijian Islands. But on this
+subject the ideas of the people were, as might be expected, both vague
+and inconsistent. Each tribe filled in the details of the mythical land
+and the mythical journey to suit its own geographical position. The
+souls had generally to cross water, either the sea or a river, and they
+were put across it by a ghostly ferryman, who treated the passengers
+with scant courtesy.[773] According to some people, the River of the
+Souls (_Waini-yalo_) is what mortals now call the Ndravo River. When the
+ghosts arrived on the bank, they hailed the ferryman and he paddled his
+canoe over to receive them. But before he would take them on board they
+had to state whether they proposed to ship as steerage or as cabin
+passengers, and he gave them their berths accordingly; for there was no
+mixing up of the classes in the ferry-boat; the ghosts of chiefs kept
+strictly to themselves at one end of the canoe, and the ghosts of
+commoners huddled together at the other end.[774] The natives of
+Kandavu, in Southern Fiji, say that on clear days they often see Bulotu,
+the spirit land, lying away across the sea with the sun shining sweetly
+on it; but they have long ago given up all hope of making their way to
+that happy land.[775] They seem to say with the Demon Lover,
+
+ "O yonder are the hills of heaven
+ Where you will never win."
+
+[Sidenote: The place of embarcation for the ghosts.]
+
+Though every island and almost every town had its own portal through
+which the spirits passed on their long journey to the far country, yet
+there was one called Nai Thombothombo, which appears to have been more
+popular and frequented than any of the others as a place of embarcation
+for ghosts. It is at the northern point of Mbua Bay, and the ghosts shew
+their good taste in choosing it as their port to sail from, for really
+it is a beautiful spot. The foreland juts out between two bays. A
+shelving beach slopes up to precipitous cliffs, their rocky face mantled
+with a thick green veil of creepers. Further inland the shade of tall
+forest trees and the softened gloom cast by crags and rocks lend to the
+scene an air of solemnity and hallowed repose well fitted to impress the
+susceptible native mind with an awful sense of the invisible beings that
+haunt these sacred groves. Natives have been known to come on pilgrimage
+to the spot expecting to meet ghosts and gods face to face.[776]
+
+[Sidenote: The ghost and the pandanus tree.]
+
+Many are the perils and dangers that beset the Path of the Souls (_Sala
+Ni Yalo_). Of these one of the most celebrated is a certain pandanus
+tree, at which every ghost must throw the ghost of the real whale's
+tooth which was placed for the purpose in his hand at burial. If he hits
+the tree, it is well for him; for it shews that his friends at home are
+strangling his wives, and accordingly he sits down contentedly to wait
+for the ghosts of his helpmeets, who will soon come hurrying to him. But
+if he makes a bad shot and misses the tree, the poor ghost is very
+disconsolate, for he knows that his wives are not being strangled, and
+who then will cook for him in the spirit land? It is a bitter thought,
+and he reflects with sorrow and anger on the ingratitude of men and
+especially of women. His reflections, as reported by the best authority,
+run thus: "How is this? For a long time I planted food for my wife, and
+it was also of great use to her friends: why then is she not allowed to
+follow me? Do my friends love me no better than this, after so many
+years of toil? Will no one, in love to me, strangle my wife?"[777]
+
+[Sidenote: Hard fate of unmarried ghosts.]
+
+But if the lot of a married ghost, whose wives have not been murdered,
+is hard, it is nevertheless felicity itself compared to the fate of
+bachelor ghosts. In the first place there is a terrible being called the
+Great Woman, who lurks in a shady defile, ready to pounce out on him;
+and if he escapes her clutches it is only to fall in with a much worse
+monster, of the name of Nangganangga, from whom there is, humanly
+speaking, no escape. This ferocious goblin lays himself out to catch the
+souls of bachelors, and so vigilant and alert is he that not a single
+unmarried Fijian ghost is known to have ever reached the mansions of the
+blest. He sits beside a big black stone at high-water mark waiting for
+his prey. The bachelor ghosts are aware that it would be useless to
+attempt to march past him when the tide is in; so they wait till it is
+low water and then try to sneak past him on the wet sand left by the
+retiring billows. Vain hope! Nangganangga, sitting by the stone, only
+smiles grimly and asks, with withering sarcasm, whether they imagine
+that the tide will never flow again? It does so only too soon for the
+poor ghosts, driving them with every breaking wave nearer and nearer to
+their implacable enemy, till the water laps on the fatal stone, and then
+he grips the shivering souls and dashes them to pieces on the big black
+block.[778]
+
+[Sidenote: The Killer of Souls.]
+
+Again, there is a very terrible giant armed with a great axe, who lies
+in wait for all and sundry. He makes no nice distinction between the
+married and the unmarried, but strikes out at all ghosts
+indiscriminately. Those whom he wounds dare not present themselves in
+their damaged state to the great God Ndengei; so they never reach the
+happy fields, but are doomed to roam the rugged mountains disconsolate.
+However, many ghosts contrive to slip past him unscathed. It is said
+that after the introduction of fire-arms into the islands the ghost of a
+certain chief made very good use of a musket which had been
+providentially buried with his body. When the giant drew near and was
+about to lunge out with the axe in his usual style, the ghost discharged
+the blunderbuss in his face, and while the giant was fully engaged in
+dodging the hail of bullets, the chief rushed past him and now enjoys
+celestial happiness.[779] Some lay the scene of this encounter a little
+beyond the town of Nambanaggatai; for it is to be remembered that many
+of the places in the Path of the Souls were identified with real places
+in the Fijian Islands. And the name of the giant is Samu-yalo, that is,
+the Killer of Souls. He artfully conceals himself in some mangrove
+bushes just beyond the town, from which he rushes out in the nick of
+time to fell the passing ghosts. Whenever he kills a ghost, he cooks and
+eats him and that is the end of the poor ghost. It is the second death.
+The highway to the Elysian fields runs, or used to run, right through
+the town of Nambanaggatai; so all the doorways of the houses were placed
+opposite each other to allow free and uninterrupted passage to the
+invisible travellers. And the inhabitants spoke to each other in low
+tones and communicated at a little distance by signs. The screech of a
+paroquet in the woods was the signal of the approach of a ghost or
+ghosts; the number of screeches was proportioned to the number of the
+ghosts,--one screech, one ghost, and so on.[780]
+
+[Sidenote: A trap for unwary ghosts.]
+
+Souls who escape the Killer of Souls pass on till they come to
+Naindelinde, one of the highest peaks of the Kauvandra mountains. Here
+the path ends abruptly on the brink of a precipice, the foot of which is
+washed by a deep lake. Over the edge of the precipice projects a large
+steer-oar, and the handle is held either by the great god Ndengei
+himself or, according to the better opinion, by his deputy. When a ghost
+comes up and peers ruefully over the precipice, the deputy accosts him.
+"Under what circumstances," he asks, "do you come to us? How did you
+conduct yourself in the other world?" Should the ghost be a man of rank,
+he may say, "I am a great chief. I lived as a chief, and my conduct was
+that of a chief. I had great wealth, many wives, and ruled over a
+powerful people. I have destroyed many towns, and slain many in war."
+"Good, good," says the deputy, "just sit down on the blade of that oar,
+and refresh yourself in the cool breeze." If the ghost is unwary enough
+to accept the invitation, he has no sooner seated himself on the blade
+of the oar with his legs dangling over the abyss, than the deputy-deity
+tilts up the other end of the oar and precipitates him into the deep
+water, far far below. A loud smack is heard as the ghost collides with
+the water, there is a splash, a gurgle, a ripple, and all is over. The
+ghost has gone to his account in Murimuria, a very second-rate sort of
+heaven, if it is nothing worse. But a ghost who is in favour with the
+great god Ndengei is warned by him not to sit down on the blade of the
+oar but on the handle. The ghost takes the hint and seats himself firmly
+on the safe end of the oar; and when the deputy-deity tries to heave it
+up, he cannot, for he has no purchase. So the ghost remains master of
+the situation, and after an interval for refreshment is sent back to
+earth to be deified.[781]
+
+[Sidenote: Murimuria, an inferior sort of heaven. The Fijian Elysium.]
+
+In Murimuria, which, as I said, is an inferior sort of heaven, the
+departed souls by no means lead a life of pure and unmixed enjoyment.
+Some of them are punished for the sins they committed in the flesh. But
+the Fijian notion of sin differs widely from ours. Thus we saw that the
+ghosts of men who did no murder in their lives were punished for their
+negligence by having to pound muck with clubs. Again, people who had not
+their ears bored on earth are forced in Hades to go about for ever
+bearing on their shoulders one of the logs of wood on which bark-cloth
+is beaten out with mallets, and all who see the sinner bending under the
+load jeer at him. Again, women who were not tattooed in their life are
+chased by the female ghosts, who scratch and cut and tear them with
+sharp shells, giving them no respite; or they scrape the flesh from
+their bones and bake it into bread for the gods. And ghosts who have
+done anything to displease the gods are laid flat on their faces in rows
+and converted into taro beds. But the few who do find their way into the
+Fijian Elysium are blest indeed. There the sky is always cloudless; the
+groves are perfumed with delicious scents; the open glades in the forest
+are pleasant; there is abundance of all that heart can desire. Language
+fails to describe the ineffable bliss of the happy land. There the souls
+of the truly good, who have murdered many of their fellows on earth and
+fed on their roasted bodies, are lapped in joy for ever.[782]
+
+[Sidenote: Fijian doctrine of transmigration.]
+
+Nevertheless the souls of the dead were not universally believed to
+depart by the Spirit Path to the other world or to stay there for ever.
+To a certain extent the doctrines of transmigration found favour with
+the Fijians. Some of them held that the spirits of the dead wandered
+about the villages in various shapes and could make themselves visible
+or invisible at pleasure. The places which these vagrant souls loved to
+haunt were known to the people, who in passing by them were wont to make
+propitiatory offerings of food or cloth. For that reason, too, they were
+very loth to go abroad on a dark night lest they should come bolt upon a
+ghost. Further, it was generally believed that the soul of a celebrated
+chief might after death enter into some young man of the tribe and
+animate him to deeds of valour. Persons so distinguished were pointed
+out and regarded as highly favoured; great respect was paid to them,
+they enjoyed many personal privileges, and their opinions were treated
+with much consideration.[783]
+
+[Sidenote: Few souls saved under the old Fijian dispensation.]
+
+On the whole, when we survey the many perils which beset the way to the
+Fijian heaven, and the many risks which the souls of the dead ran of
+dying the second death in the other world or of being knocked on the
+head by the living in this, we shall probably agree with the missionary
+Mr. Williams in concluding that under the old Fijian dispensation there
+were few indeed that were saved. "Few, comparatively," he says, "are
+left to inhabit the regions of Mbulu, and the immortality even of these
+is sometimes disputed. The belief in a future state is universal in
+Fiji; but their superstitious notions often border upon transmigration,
+and sometimes teach an eventual annihilation."[784]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: Concluding observations.]
+
+Here I must break off my survey of the natural belief in immortality
+among mankind. At the outset I had expected to carry the survey further,
+but I have already exceeded the usual limits of these lectures and I
+must not trespass further on your patience. Yet the enquiry which I have
+opened seems worthy to be pursued, and if circumstances should admit of
+it, I shall hope at some future time to resume the broken thread of
+these researches and to follow it a little further through the labyrinth
+of human history. Be that as it may, I will now conclude with a few
+general observations suggested by the facts which I have laid before
+you.
+
+[Sidenote: Strength and universality of the natural belief in
+immortality among savages. Wars between savage tribes spring in large
+measure from their belief in immortality. Economic loss involved in
+sacrifices to the dead.]
+
+In the first place, then, it is impossible not to be struck by the
+strength, and perhaps we may say the universality, of the natural belief
+in immortality among the savage races of mankind. With them a life after
+death is not a matter of speculation and conjecture, of hope and fear;
+it is a practical certainty which the individual as little dreams of
+doubting as he doubts the reality of his conscious existence. He assumes
+it without enquiry and acts upon it without hesitation, as if it were
+one of the best-ascertained truths within the limits of human
+experience. The belief influences his attitude towards the higher
+powers, the conduct of his daily life, and his behaviour towards his
+fellows; more than that, it regulates to a great extent the relations of
+independent communities to each other. For the state of war, which
+normally exists between many, if not most, neighbouring savage tribes,
+springs in large measure directly from their belief in immortality;
+since one of the commonest motives for hostility is a desire to appease
+the angry ghosts of friends, who are supposed to have perished by the
+baleful arts of sorcerers in another tribe, and who, if vengeance is not
+inflicted on their real or imaginary murderers, will wreak their fury on
+their undutiful fellow-tribesmen. Thus the belief in immortality has not
+merely coloured the outlook of the individual upon the world; it has
+deeply affected the social and political relations of humanity in all
+ages; for the religious wars and persecutions, which distracted and
+devastated Europe for ages, were only the civilised equivalents of the
+battles and murders which the fear of ghosts has instigated amongst
+almost all races of savages of whom we possess a record. Regarded from
+this point of view, the faith in a life hereafter has been sown like
+dragons' teeth on the earth and has brought forth crop after crop of
+armed men, who have turned their swords against each other. And when we
+consider further the gratuitous and wasteful destruction of property as
+well as of life which is involved in sacrifices to the dead, we must
+admit that with all its advantages the belief in immortality has
+entailed heavy economical losses upon the races--and they are
+practically all the races of the world--who have indulged in this
+expensive luxury. It is not for me to estimate the extent and gravity of
+the consequences, moral, social, political, and economic, which flow
+directly from the belief in immortality. I can only point to some of
+them and commend them to the serious attention of historians and
+economists, as well as of moralists and theologians.
+
+[Sidenote: How does the savage belief in immortality bear on the
+question of the truth or falsehood of that belief in general? The answer
+depends to some extent on the view we take of human nature. The view of
+the grandeur and dignity of man.]
+
+My second observation concerns, not the practical consequences of the
+belief in immortality, but the question of its truth or falsehood. That,
+I need hardly say, is an even more difficult problem than the other, and
+as I intimated at the outset of the lectures I find myself wholly
+incompetent to solve it. Accordingly I have confined myself to the
+comparatively easy task of describing some of the forms of the belief
+and some of the customs to which it has given rise, without presuming to
+pass judgment upon them. I must leave it to others to place my
+collections of facts in the scales and to say whether they incline the
+balance for or against the truth of this momentous belief, which has
+been so potent for good or ill in history. In every enquiry much depends
+upon the point of view from which the enquirer approaches his subject;
+he will see it in different proportions and in different lights
+according to the angle and the distance from which he regards it. The
+subject under discussion in the present case is human nature itself; and
+as we all know, men have formed very different estimates of themselves
+and their species. On the one hand, there are those who love to dwell on
+the grandeur and dignity of man, and who swell with pride at the
+contemplation of the triumphs which his genius has achieved in the
+visionary world of imagination as well as in the realm of nature.
+Surely, they say, such a glorious creature was not born for mortality,
+to be snuffed out like a candle, to fade like a flower, to pass away
+like a breath. Is all that penetrating intellect, that creative fancy,
+that vaulting ambition, those noble passions, those far-reaching hopes,
+to come to nothing, to shrivel up into a pinch of dust? It is not so, it
+cannot be. Man is the flower of this wide world, the lord of creation,
+the crown and consummation of all things, and it is to wrong him and his
+creator to imagine that the grave is the end of all. To those who take
+this lofty view of human nature it is easy and obvious to find in the
+similar beliefs of savages a welcome confirmation of their own cherished
+faith, and to insist that a conviction so widely spread and so firmly
+held must be based on some principle, call it instinct or intuition or
+what you will, which is deeper than logic and cannot be confuted by
+reasoning.
+
+[Sidenote: The view of the pettiness and insignificance of man.]
+
+On the other hand, there are those who take a different view of human
+nature, and who find in its contemplation a source of humility rather
+than of pride. They remind us how weak, how ignorant, how short-lived is
+the individual, how infirm of purpose, how purblind of vision, how
+subject to pain and suffering, to diseases that torture the body and
+wreck the mind. They say that if the few short years of his life are not
+wasted in idleness and vice, they are spent for the most part in a
+perpetually recurring round of trivialities, in the satisfaction of
+merely animal wants, in eating, drinking, and slumber. When they survey
+the history of mankind as a whole, they find the record chequered and
+stained by folly and crime, by broken faith, insensate ambition, wanton
+aggression, injustice, cruelty, and lust, and seldom illumined by the
+mild radiance of wisdom and virtue. And when they turn their eyes from
+man himself to the place he occupies in the universe, how are they
+overwhelmed by a sense of his littleness and insignificance! They see
+the earth which he inhabits dwindle to a speck in the unimaginable
+infinities of space, and the brief span of his existence shrink into a
+moment in the inconceivable infinities of time. And they ask, Shall a
+creature so puny and frail claim to live for ever, to outlast not only
+the present starry system but every other that, when earth and sun and
+stars have crumbled into dust, shall be built upon their ruins in the
+long long hereafter? It is not so, it cannot be. The claim is nothing
+but the outcome of exaggerated self-esteem, of inflated vanity; it is
+the claim of a moth, shrivelled in the flame of a candle, to outlive the
+sun, the claim of a worm to survive the destruction of this terrestrial
+globe in which it burrows. Those who take this view of the pettiness and
+transitoriness of man compared with the vastness and permanence of the
+universe find little in the beliefs of savages to alter their opinion.
+They see in savage conceptions of the soul and its destiny nothing but a
+product of childish ignorance, the hallucinations of hysteria, the
+ravings of insanity, or the concoctions of deliberate fraud and
+imposture. They dismiss the whole of them as a pack of superstitions and
+lies, unworthy the serious attention of a rational mind; and they say
+that if such drivellings do not refute the belief in immortality, as
+indeed from the nature of things they cannot do, they are at least
+fitted to invest its high-flown pretensions with an air of ludicrous
+absurdity.
+
+[Sidenote: The conclusion left open.]
+
+Such are the two opposite views which I conceive may be taken of the
+savage testimony to the survival of our conscious personality after
+death. I do not presume to adopt the one or the other. It is enough for
+me to have laid a few of the facts before you. I leave you to draw your
+own conclusion.
+
+[Footnote 701: Berthold Seeman, _Viti, an Account of a Government
+Mission to the Vitian or Fijian Islands_ (Cambridge, 1862), pp. 391
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 702: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 216.]
+
+[Footnote 703: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 216, 218 _sq._; Basil
+Thomson, _The Fijians_, p. 112.]
+
+[Footnote 704: Hazlewood, quoted by Capt. J. E. Erskine, _Journal of a
+Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London, 1853), pp. 246
+_sq._]
+
+[Footnote 705: Ch. Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 83 _sq._; Th. Williams,
+_Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 217 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 706: Ch. Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 49, 86, 351, 352; Th.
+Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 221-223; B. Seeman, _Viti_, pp.
+392-394.]
+
+[Footnote 707: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 191 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 708: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 223, 231.]
+
+[Footnote 709: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 87; Th. Williams, _op. cit._
+i. 226, 227; Basil Thomson, _The Fijians_, pp. 157 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 710: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 87 _sq._; Th. Williams, _op.
+cit._ i. 224 _sq._; Capt. J. E. Erskine, _op. cit._ p. 250; Lorimer
+Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_ (London, 1904), pp. 166 _sq._ As for the
+treatment of castaways, see J. E. Erskine, _op. cit._ p. 249; Th.
+Williams, _op. cit._ i. 210. The latter writer mentions a recent case in
+which fourteen or sixteen shipwrecked persons were cooked and eaten.]
+
+[Footnote 711: The Rev. Lorimer Fison, in a letter to me dated August
+26th, 1898. I have already quoted the passage in _The Magic Art and the
+Evolution of Kings_, i. 378.]
+
+[Footnote 712: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 225 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 713: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 231.]
+
+[Footnote 714: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 97; Th. Williams, _op. cit._
+i. 53.]
+
+[Footnote 715: John Jackson's Narrative, in Capt. J. E. Erskine's
+_Journal of a Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_ (London,
+1853), pp. 464 _sq._, 472 _sq._ The genital members of the men over whom
+the canoe was dragged were cut off and hung on a sacred tree
+(_akau-tambu_), "which was already artificially prolific in fruit, both
+of the masculine and feminine gender." The tree which bore such
+remarkable fruit was commonly an ironweed tree standing in a conspicuous
+situation. As to these sacrifices compare Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii.
+97; Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, pp. xvi. _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 716: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i, 112.]
+
+[Footnote 717: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 55.]
+
+[Footnote 718: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, pp. xx., xxi.
+_sq._; Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 247; B. Seeman, _Viti_ (Cambridge,
+1862), p. 401.]
+
+[Footnote 719: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 55 _sq._ The writer witnessed
+what he calls the ceremony of consecration in the case of a young man of
+the highest rank in Somosomo and he has described what he saw. In this
+case a special hut was not built for the manslayer, and he was allowed
+to pass the nights in the temple of the war god.]
+
+[Footnote 720: See above, pp. 205 _sq._, 229 _sq._, 258, 279 _sq._, 323,
+396, 415.]
+
+[Footnote 721: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 55.]
+
+[Footnote 722: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 98, 99 _sq._ Compare Lorimer
+Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 163: "A person who has defiled himself
+by touching a corpse is called _yambo_, and is not allowed to touch food
+with his hands for several days." The custom as to a surviving widow is
+mentioned by Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 723: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 167.]
+
+[Footnote 724: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 101; Th. Williams, _op. cit._
+i. 197 _sq._; Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 168; Basil
+Thomson, _The Fijian_, p. 375.]
+
+[Footnote 725: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 197, 198.]
+
+[Footnote 726: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 727: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 198 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 728: Ch. Wilkes, _l.c._]
+
+[Footnote 729: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 197.]
+
+[Footnote 730: K. Weinhold, _Altnordisches Leben_ (Berlin, 1856), p.
+476.]
+
+[Footnote 731: _The Zend-Avesta_, Part i. _The Vendidad,_ translated by
+James Darmesteter (Oxford, 1880), p. 95 (Fargard, viii. 2. 10) (_Sacred
+Books of the East_, vol. iv.).]
+
+[Footnote 732: W. R. S. Ralston, _The Songs of the Russian People_,
+Second Edition (London, 1872), p. 318.]
+
+[Footnote 733: Sonnerat, _Voyage aux Indes Orientales et a la Chine_
+(Paris, 1782), i. 86.]
+
+[Footnote 734: J. A. Dubois, _Moeurs, Institutions et Ceremonies des
+Peuples de l'Inde_ (Paris, 1825), ii. 225; E. Thurston, _Ethnographic
+Notes in Southern India_ (Madras, 1906), pp. 226 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 735: J. Grimm, _Deutsche Rechtsalterthuemer_ 3rd ed.
+(Goettingen, 1881), pp. 726 _sqq._]
+
+[Footnote 736: Rev. J. G. Campbell, _Superstitions of the Highlands and
+Islands of Scotland_ (Glasgow, 1900), p. 242.]
+
+[Footnote 737: _The Sacred Books of China_, translated by James Legge,
+Part iii. _The Li-Ki_, i.-x. (Oxford, 1885) pp. 144 _sq._ (Bk. ii. Sect.
+i. Pt. II. 33) (_Sacred Books of the East_, vol. xxvii.); J. F. Lafitau,
+_Moeurs des Sauvages Ameriquains_ (Paris, 1724), ii. 401 _sq._, citing
+Le Comte, _Nouv. Memoires de la Chine_, vol. ii. p. 187.]
+
+[Footnote 738: _Relations des Jesuites_, 1633, p. 11; _id._, 1634, p. 23
+(Canadian reprint, Quebec, 1858); J. G. Kohl, _Kitschi-Gami_ (Bremen,
+1859), p. 149 note.]
+
+[Footnote 739: E. W. Nelson, "The Eskimo about Bering Strait,"
+_Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology_, Part i.
+(Washington, 1899), p. 311.]
+
+[Footnote 740: David Crantz, _History of Greenland_ (London, 1767), i.
+237. Compare Hans Egede, _Description of Greenland_, Second Edition
+(London, 1818), pp. 152 _sq._; Captain G. F. Lyon, _Private Journal_
+(London, 1824), p. 370; C. F. Hall, _Narrative of the Second Arctic
+Expedition_ (Washington, 1879), p. 265 (Esquimaux).]
+
+[Footnote 741: P. Kolben, _The Present State of the Cape of Good Hope_
+(London, 1731-1738), i. 316; C. P. Thunberg, "An Account of the Cape of
+Good Hope," in Pinkerton's _Voyages and Travels_, xvi. (London, 1814) p.
+142; _Bulletin de la Societe de Geographie_ (Paris), ii, Serie, ii.
+(1834) p. 196 (Bechuanas); _id._, vii. Serie, vii. (1886) p. 587
+(Fernando Po); T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, _Relation d'un Voyage
+d'Exploration au Nord-est de la Colonie du Cap de Bonne-Esperance_
+(Paris, 1842), pp. 502 _sq._; C. J. Andersson, _Lake Ngami_, Second
+Edition (London, 1856), p. 466; G. Fritsch, _Die Eingeborenen
+Sued-Afrika's_ (Breslau, 1872), pp. 210, 335; R. Moffat, _Missionary
+Labours and Scenes in Southern Africa_ (London, 1842), p. 307; E.
+Casalis, _The Basutos_ (London, 1861), p. 202; Ladislaus Magyar, _Reisen
+in Sued-Afrika_ (Buda-Pesth and Leipsic, 1859), p. 350; Rev. J.
+Macdonald, _Light in Africa_, Second Edition (London, 1890), p. 166; E.
+Beguin, _Les Ma-Rotse_ (Lausanne and Fontaines, 1903), p. 115; Henri A.
+Junod, _Les Ba-Ronga_ (Neuchatel, 1898), p. 48; _id._, _The Life of a
+South African Tribe_, i. (Neuchatel, 1912) p. 138; Dudley Kidd, _The
+Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), p. 247; A. F. Mockler-Ferryman,
+_British Nigeria_ (London, 1902), p. 234; Ramseyer and Kuehne, _Four
+Years in Ashantee_ (London, 1875), p. 50; A. B. Ellis, _The Land of
+Fetish_ (London, 1883), p. 13; _id._, _The Tshi-speaking Peoples of the
+Gold Coast_ (London, 1887), p. 239; E. Perregaud, _Chez les Achanti_
+(Neuchatel, 1906), p. 127; J. Spieth, _Die Ewe-Staemme_ (Berlin, 1906),
+p. 756; H. R. Palmer, "Notes on the Kororofawa and Jukon," _Journal of
+the African Society_, No. 44 (July, 1912), p. 414. The custom is also
+observed by some tribes of Central Africa. See Miss A. Werner, _The
+Natives of British Central Africa_ (London, 1906), p. 161; B. Gutmann,
+"Trauer und Begraebnisssitten der Wadschagga," _Globus_, lxxxix. (1906)
+p. 200; Rev. N. Stam, "Religious Conceptions of the Kavirondo,"
+_Anthropos_, v. (1910) p. 361.]
+
+[Footnote 742: C. Snouck Hurgronje, _Het Gajoland en zijne Bewoners_
+(Batavia, 1903), p. 313.]
+
+[Footnote 743: Aurel Krause, _Die Tlinkit-Indianer_ (Jena, 1885), p.
+225; Franz Boas, in _Sixth Report of the Committee on the North-western
+Tribes of Canada_, p. 23 (separate reprint from the _Report of the
+British Association for the Advancement of Science_, Leeds Meeting,
+1890); J. R. Swanton, _Contributions to the Ethnology of the Haida_
+(Leyden and New York, 1905), pp. 52, 54 (_The Jesup North Pacific
+Expedition, Memoir of the American Museum of Natural History_).]
+
+[Footnote 744: J. A. H. Louis, _The Gates of Thibet_ (Calcutta, 1894),
+p. 114.]
+
+[Footnote 745: H. von Wlislocki, _Volksglaube und religioeser Brauch der
+Zigeuner_ (Muenster i. W., 1891), p. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 746: W. Jochelson, _The Koryak_ (New York and Leyden, 1908),
+pp. 110 _sq._ (_The Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Memoir of the
+American Museum of Natural History_).]
+
+[Footnote 747: W. H. Dall, _Alaska and its Resources_ (London, 1870), p.
+382.]
+
+[Footnote 748: Lucien M. Turner, "Ethnology of the Ungava District,
+Hudson Bay Territory," _Eleventh Annual Report of the Bureau of
+Ethnology_ (Washington, 1894), p. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 749: Mgr. Bruguiere, in _Annales de l'Association de la
+Propagation de la Foi_, v. (Lyons and Paris, 1831) p. 180. Compare Mgr.
+Pallegoix, _Description du royaume Thai ou Siam_ (Paris, 1854), i. 245;
+Adolf Bastian, _Die Volker des oestlichen Asien_, iii. (Jena, 1867) p.
+258; E. Young, _The Kingdom of the Yellow Robe_ (Westminster, 1898), p.
+246.]
+
+[Footnote 750: S. Mateer, _Native Life in Travancore_ (London, 1883), p.
+137. Compare A. Butterworth, "Royal Funerals in Travancore," _Indian
+Antiquary_, xxxi. (1902) p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 751: Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of Borneo_
+(London, 1912), ii. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 752: S. K. Kusnezow, "Ueber den Glauben vom Jenseits und den
+Todtencultus der Tscheremissen," _Internationales Archiv fuer
+Ethnographie_, ix. (1896) p. 157.]
+
+[Footnote 753: P. S. Pallas, _Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des
+Russischen Reichs_ (St. Petersburg, 1771-1776), iii. 75; Middendorff,
+_Reise in den aeussersten Norden und Osten Sibiriens_, iv. 1464.]
+
+[Footnote 754: _Exploraciones y Noticias hidrograficas de los Rios del
+Norte de Bolivia_, publicados por Manuel V. Ballivian, Segunda Parte,
+_Diario del Viage al Madre de Dios hecho por el P. Fr. Nicolas Armentia,
+en los anos de 1884 y 1885_ (La Paz, 1890), p. 20: _"Cuando muere
+alguno, apenas sacan el cadaver de la casa, cambian la puerta al lado
+opuesto, para que no de con ella el difunto."_]
+
+[Footnote 755: Karl Bartsch, _Sagen, Maerchen und Gebraeuche aus
+Meklenburg_ (Vienna, 1879-1880), ii. 100, Sec. 358.]
+
+[Footnote 756: For some evidence on this subject, see R. Lasch, "Die
+Behandlung der Leiche des Selbstmoerders," _Globus_, lxxxvi. (1899) pp.
+63-66; Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 20 _sq._; A.
+Karasek, "Beitraege zur Kenntnis der Waschamba," _Baessler-Archiv_, i.
+(1911) pp. 190 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 757: Rev. N. Stam, "The Religious Conceptions of the
+Kavirondo," _Anthropos_, v. (1910) p. 361.]
+
+[Footnote 758: Alfred de Nore, _Coutumes, Mythes, et Traditions des
+Provinces de France_ (Paris and Lyons, 1846), p. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 759: Felix Chapiseau, _Le Folk-lore de la Beauce et du Perche_
+(Paris, 1902), ii. 164.]
+
+[Footnote 760: For some evidence on this subject see _Psyche's Task_,
+pp. 64 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 761: Carl Bock, _Temples and Elephants_ (London, 1884), p.
+262.]
+
+[Footnote 762: Ch. Gilhodes, "Naissance et Enfance chez les Katchins
+(Birmanie)," _Anthropos_, vi. (1911) pp. 872 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 763: A. W. Nieuwenhuis, _Quer durch Borneo_ (Leyden,
+1901-1907), i. 91.]
+
+[Footnote 764: Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes of Borneo_
+(London, 1912), ii. 155.]
+
+[Footnote 765: Franz Boas, in _Sixth Report of the Committee on the
+North-western Tribes of Canada_, p. 23 (separate reprint from the
+_Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science_,
+Leeds Meeting, 1890).]
+
+[Footnote 766: Prevost, quoted by John Crawford, _History of the Indian
+Archipelago_ (Edinburgh, 1820), ii. 245. Compare Adolf Bastian, _Die
+Voelker des oestlichen Asien_, v. (Jena, 1869) p. 83.]
+
+[Footnote 767: Mrs. Bishop (Isabella L. Bird), _Korea and her
+Neighbours_ (London, 1898), i. 239 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 768: Arnold van Gennep, _Tabou et Totemisme a Madagascar_
+(Paris, 1904), p. 65, quoting Dr. Catat.]
+
+[Footnote 769: B. F. Matthes, _Bijdragen tot de Ethnologie van
+Zuid-Celebes_ (The Hague, 1875), p. 139; _id._, "Over de ada's of
+gewoonten der Makassaren en Boegineezen," _Verslagen en Mededeelingen
+der Koninklijke Akademie van Wetenschappen_, Afdeeling Letterkunde,
+Derde Reeks, ii. (Amsterdam, 1885) p. 142.]
+
+[Footnote 770: W. M. Donselaar "Aanteekeningen over het eiland
+Saleijer," _Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche
+Zendelinggenootschap_, i. (1857) p. 291.]
+
+[Footnote 771: See above, p. 426.]
+
+[Footnote 772: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, Second Edition
+(London, 1860), i. 167.]
+
+[Footnote 773: Ch. Wilkes, _Narrative of the United States Exploring
+Expedition_, New Edition (New York, 1851), iii. 83; Basil Thomson, _The
+Fijians_, p. 117.]
+
+[Footnote 774: Basil Thomson, _op. cit._ p. 121.]
+
+[Footnote 775: Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 163.]
+
+[Footnote 776: Th. Williams, _Fiji and the Fijians_, i. 239.]
+
+[Footnote 777: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 243 _sq._ Compare Berthold
+Seeman, _Viti, an Account of a Government Mission to the Vitian of
+Fijian Islands in the years 1860-1861_ (Cambridge, 1862), p. 399;
+Lorimer Fison, _Tales from Old Fiji_, p. 163; Basil Thomson, _The
+Fijians_, pp. 120 _sq._, 121 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 778: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i, 244 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 779: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 83.]
+
+[Footnote 780: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 245 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 781: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 246 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 782: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 247.]
+
+[Footnote 783: Ch. Wilkes, _op. cit._ iii. 85 _sq._]
+
+[Footnote 784: Th. Williams, _op. cit._ i. 248.]
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+MYTH OF THE CONTINUANCE OF DEATH[785]
+
+
+The following story is told by the Balolo of the Upper Congo to explain
+the continuance, if not the origin, of death in the world. One day,
+while a man was working in the forest, a little man with two bundles,
+one large and one small, went up to him and said, "Which of these
+bundles will you have? The large one contains knives, looking-glasses,
+cloth and so forth; and the small one contains immortal life." "I cannot
+choose by myself," answered the man; "I must go and ask the other people
+in the town." While he was gone to ask the others, some women arrived
+and the choice was left to them. They tried the edges of the knives,
+decked themselves in the cloth, admired themselves in the
+looking-glasses, and, without more ado, chose the big bundle. The little
+man, picking up the small bundle, vanished. So when the man came back
+from the town, the little man and his bundles were gone. The women
+exhibited and shared the things, but death continued on the earth. Hence
+the people often say, "Oh, if those women had only chosen the small
+bundle, we should not be dying like this!"[786]
+
+[Footnote 785: See above, p. 77.]
+
+[Footnote 786: Rev. John H. Weeks, "Stories and other Notes from the
+Upper Congo," _Folk-lore_, xii. (1901) p. 461; _id._, _Among Congo
+Cannibals_ (London, 1913), p. 218. The country of the Balolo lies five
+miles south of the Equator, on Longitude 18 deg. East.]
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Abinal, Father, 49
+
+Abipones, their belief in sorcery as a cause of death, 35
+
+Abnormal mental states explained by inspiration, 15
+
+Aborigines, magical powers attributed by immigrants to, 193
+
+Abstinence from certain food in mourning, 198, 208, 209, 230, 314, 360,
+452
+
+Abundance of food and water favourable to social progress, 90 _sq._
+
+Action as a clue to belief, 143
+
+Actors personating ghosts and spirits, 176, 179 _sq._, 180 _sqq._, 185
+_sqq._
+
+Adiri, the land of the dead, 211, 212, 213, 214
+
+Admiralty Islands, 393, 400, 401
+
+---- Islanders, their myths of the origin of death, 71, 76 _sq._
+
+Advance of culture among the aborigines of South-Eastern Australia, 141
+_sq._, 148 _sq._
+
+Africa, aborigines of, their ideas as to the cause of death, 49 _sqq._;
+ use of poison ordeal in, 50 _sqq._
+
+----, British Central, 162
+
+----, British East, 61, 66, 254
+
+Agriculture, rise of, favourable to astronomy, 140 _sq._;
+ Fijian, 408
+
+Akamba, their story of the origin of death, 61 _sq._
+
+Akikuyu, resurrection and circumcision among the, 254
+
+_Alcheringa_ or dream times, 96, 103, 114
+
+---- ancestors, their marvellous powers, 103
+
+---- home of the dead, 167
+
+Alfoors of Celebes, 166
+
+Alligators, ghosts in, 380
+
+_Alols_, bachelors' houses, 221, 222
+
+Altars, stones used as, 379
+
+Amputation of fingers in mourning, 199, 426 _sq._, 451
+
+Amulets consisting of relics of the dead, 332, 370
+
+Ancestor, totemic, developing into a god, 113
+
+Ancestor-worship possibly evolved from totemism, 114 _sq._
+
+Ancestors, reincarnation of, 92 _sqq._;
+ marvellous powers ascribed to remote, 103, 114 _sq._;
+ totemic, traditions concerning, 115 _sqq._;
+ dramatic ceremonies to commemorate the doings of, 118 _sqq._;
+ possible evolution of worship of, in Central Australia, 125 _sq._;
+ worshipped, 221, 297 _sq._, 328 _sqq._, 338, 340;
+ ghosts of, appealed to for help, 258 _sq._;
+ offerings to, 298;
+ prayers to, 329 _sq._, 332 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Dead
+
+Ancestral gods, foreskins of circumcised lads offered to, 427;
+ libations to, 430, 438
+
+---- images, 307 _sqq._, 315, 316 _sq._, 321, 322
+
+---- spirits help hunters and fishers, 226;
+ shrines for, 316, 317;
+ worshipped as gods, 369;
+ worshipped in the _Nanga_, 428 _sq._;
+ first-fruits offered to, 429;
+ cloth and weapons offered to, 430 _sq._;
+ novices presented to, at initiation, 432 _sq._, 434.
+
+Angola, the poison ordeal in, 51 _sq._
+
+Angoni, their burial customs, 162
+
+Animals, souls of sorcerers in, 39;
+ spirits of, go to the spirit land, 210;
+ sacrifices to the souls of, 239;
+ transmigration of dead into, 242, 245;
+ ghosts in the form of, 282;
+ ghosts turn into, 287;
+ ghosts incarnate in, 379 _sq._
+
+Animistic views of the Papuans, 264
+
+Anjea, a mythical being, 128
+
+Annam, 67, 69
+
+Anointing manslayers, 448
+
+Ant-hills, ghosts turn into, 287
+
+Ant totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, 120 _sq._
+
+Ants' nests, ghosts turn into, 351
+
+Anthropology, comparative and descriptive, 230 _sq._
+
+Antimerina of Madagascar, burial custom of the, 461
+
+Anuto, a creator, 296
+
+Apparitions, 396;
+ fear of, 414
+
+Appearance of the dead in dreams, 229
+
+Araucanians of Chili, their disbelief in natural death, 35, 53 _sq._
+
+Arawaks of Guiana, 36;
+ their myth of the origin of death, 70
+
+Arm-bone, final burial ceremony performed with the, 167 _sq._;
+ lower, of dead preserved, 274
+
+---- -bones, special treatment of the, 199;
+ of dead preserved, 225, 249
+
+Aroma district of British New Guinea, 201, 202
+
+Arrow-heads made of bones of the dead, 352
+
+Art, primitive religious, 114;
+ Papuan, 220
+
+_Arugo_, soul of dead, 207
+
+_Arumburinga_, spiritual double, 164
+
+Arunta, the, of Central Australia, 94;
+ ceremonies connected with totems, 119 _sqq._;
+ their magical ceremonies for the multiplication of the totems, 122
+ _sq._;
+ their customs as to the hair of the dead, 138;
+ their cuttings for the dead, 155 _sq._, 159;
+ burial customs of the, 164 _sq._, 166
+
+Aryan burial custom, 453
+
+_Asa_, Secret Society, 233
+
+Ashantee story of the origin of death, 63 _sq._
+
+Ashes smeared on mourners, 184, 361
+
+Astrolabe Bay in German New Guinea, 218, 230, 235, 237
+
+Astronomy, rise of, favoured by agriculture, 140 _sq._
+
+Asylums, 243
+
+_Asyren_, dead man, 457
+
+_Ataro_, a powerful ghost, 377
+
+Atonement for sick chief, 427
+
+Aukem, a mythical being, 181
+
+Aurora, one of the New Hebrides, 360, 382
+
+Australia, causes which retarded progress in, 89 _sq._;
+ germs of a worship of the dead in, 168 _sq._
+ _See also_ Central Australia, Western Australia
+
+----, the aborigines of, their ideas as to death from natural causes,
+ 40 _sqq._;
+ their primitive character, 88, 91;
+ the belief in immortality among, 127 _sqq._;
+ thought to be reborn in white people, 130, 131 _sqq._;
+ their burial customs, 144 _sqq._;
+ their primitive condition, 217
+
+----, South, beliefs as to the dead in, 134 _sqq._
+
+Australia, South-Eastern, beliefs as to the dead in, 133 _sq._, 139;
+ burial customs among the aborigines of, 145 _sqq._
+
+----, Western, burial customs in, 147, 150, 151
+
+Authority of chiefs based on their claim to magical powers, 395
+
+Avenging a death, pretence of, 282, 328
+
+
+Bachelor ghosts, hard fate of, 464
+
+Bachelors' houses, 221
+
+Bad and good, different fate of the, after death, 354
+
+Baganda, the, their ideas as to the causes of death, 56 _n._ 2;
+ their myth of the origin of death, 78 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Uganda
+
+Bahaus, the, of Borneo, 459
+
+Bahnars of Cochinchina, 74
+
+Bakairi, the, of Brazil, 35
+
+Bakerewe, the, of the Victoria Nyanza, 50
+
+Bali, burial custom in, 460
+
+Balking ghosts, 455 _sqq._
+
+Balolo, of the Upper Congo, their myth of the continuance of death, 472
+
+_Balum_, ghost or spirit of dead, 244;
+ name for bull-roarer, 250;
+ name for a ghost or monster who swallows lads at initiation, 251, 255,
+ 260, 261;
+ soul of a dead man, 257, 261
+
+Bamler, G., 291, 297 _sq._
+
+Bananas in myths of the origin of death, 60, 70, 72 _sq._
+
+Bandages to prevent entrance of ghosts, 396
+
+Bandaging eyes of corpse, 459
+
+Banks' Islands, 343, 353, 386;
+ myths of the origin of death in, 71, 83 _sq._
+
+---- Islanders, funeral customs of the, 355 _sqq._
+
+Bantu family, 60
+
+Baronga, the, 61;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+Bartle Bay, 206, 208
+
+Basutos, the, 61;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+Bat in myth of origin of death, 75
+
+Bathing in sea after funeral, 207 _sq._;
+ as purification after a death, 314, 319
+
+Battel, Andrew, 51 _sq._
+
+Bechuanas, the, 61;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+Beetles in myth of the origin of death, 70
+
+Belep tribe of New Caledonia, 325
+
+Belief, acts as a clue to, 143
+
+Belief in immortality, origin of belief in, 25 _sqq._;
+ almost universal among races of mankind, 33;
+ among the aborigines of Central Australia, 87 _sqq._;
+ among the islanders of Torres Straits, 170 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of British New Guinea, 190 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of German New Guinea, 216 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Southern Melanesia, 324 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Central Melanesia, 343 _sqq._;
+ its practical effect on the life of the Central Melanesians, 391
+ _sq._;
+ among the natives of Northern Melanesia, 393 _sqq._;
+ among the Fijians, 406 _sqq._;
+ strongly held by savages, 468;
+ destruction of life and property entailed by the, 468 _sq._;
+ the question of its truth, 469 _sqq._
+
+Belief in sorcery a cause of keeping down the population, 38, 40
+
+Berkeley, his theory of knowledge, 11 _sq._
+
+Berlin Harbour in German New Guinea, 218
+
+Bernau, Rev. J. H., 38
+
+Beryl-stone in _Rose Mary_, 130
+
+Betindalo, the land of the dead, 350
+
+Bhotias, the, of the Himalayas, 163
+
+Biak or Wiak, island, 303
+
+Bilking a ghost, 416
+
+Bird in divination as to cause of death, 45
+
+Birds, souls of sorcerers in, 39
+
+Birth, new, at initiation, pretence of, 254
+
+Birthplaces, the dead buried in their, 160
+
+Birth-stones and birth-sticks (_churinga_) of the Central Australians,
+96 _sqq._
+
+Bismarck Archipelago, 70, 394, 402
+
+Black, mourners painted, 178, 241, 293;
+ gravediggers painted, 451
+
+---- -snake people, 94
+
+Blackened, faces of mourners, 403
+
+Blood of mourners dropped on corpse or into grave, 158 _sq._, 183, 185;
+ and hair of mourners offered to the dead, 183;
+ of pigs smeared on skulls and bones of the dead, 200;
+ soul thought to reside in the, 307;
+ of sacrificial victim not allowed to fall on the ground, 365
+
+---- revenge, duty of, 274, 276 _sq._;
+ discharged by sham fight, 136 _sq._
+
+Bogadyim, in German New Guinea, 230, 231
+
+Boigu, the island of the dead, 175, 184, 213
+
+Bolafagina, the lord of the dead, 350
+
+Bolotoo, the land of souls, 411
+
+Bones of the dead, second burial of the, 166 _sq._;
+ kept in house, 203;
+ worn by survivors, 225;
+ disinterred and kept in house, 225, 294;
+ making rain by means of the, 341
+
+---- and skulls of dead smeared with
+ blood of pigs, 200
+
+Bonitos, ghosts in, 380
+
+_Boollia_, magic, 41 _sq._
+
+"Born of an oak or a rock," 128
+
+Bougainville, island of, 393
+
+Boulia district of Queensland, 147, 155
+
+Bow, divination by, 241
+
+Bread-fruit trees, stones to make them bear fruit, 335 _sq._
+
+Breaking things offered to the dead, 276
+
+Breath, vital principle associated with the, 129 _sq._
+
+Brett, Rev. W. H., 35 _sqq._
+
+Brewin, an evil spirit, 45
+
+Brittany, burial custom in, 458
+
+Brothers-in-law in funeral rites, 177
+
+Brown, Rev. Dr. George, 48, 395
+
+Buandik, the, 138
+
+Buckley, the convict, 131
+
+Buginese, burial custom of the, 461
+
+Bugotu, 350, 352;
+ in Ysabel, 372, 379
+
+Building king's house, men sacrificed at, 446
+
+Bukaua, the, of German New Guinea, 242, 256 _sqq._
+
+Bull-roarers, 243;
+ used in divination, 249;
+ described, 250;
+ used at initiation of young men among the Yabim, 250 _sqq._;
+ among the Kaya-Kaya, 255;
+ at initiation among the Bukaua, 260 _sq._;
+ associated with the spirits of the dead, 261;
+ at initiation among the Kai, 263, 291;
+ at initiation of young men among the Tami, 301, 302
+
+Bulotu or Bulu, the land of the dead, 462, 463
+
+Bundle, the fatal, 472;
+ story of, 77 _sq._
+
+_Bures_, Fijian temples, 439
+
+Burial different for old and young, married and unmarried, etc., 161
+ _sqq._;
+ and burning of the dead, 162 _sq._;
+ special modes of, intended to prevent or facilitate the return of the
+ spirit, 163 _sqq._;
+ second, custom of, 166 _sq._;
+ in trees, 203;
+ in island, 319;
+ in the sea, 347 _sq._
+
+---- customs of the Australian aborigines, 144 _sqq._;
+ in Tumleo, 223;
+ of the Kai, 274;
+ of the New Caledonians, 326 _sq._, 339 _sq._;
+ in New Ireland, 397 _sq._;
+ in the Duke of York Island, 403.
+ _See also_ Corpse, Grave
+
+---- -grounds, sacred, 378
+
+Buried alive, old people, 359 _sq._
+
+Burma, 75
+
+Burning and burial of the dead, 162 _sq._
+
+---- bodies of women who died in childbed, 459
+
+Burns inflicted on themselves by mourners, 154, 155, 157, 327, 451
+
+Burnt offerings to the dead, 294
+
+---- sacrifices, reasons for, 348 _sq._;
+ to ghosts, 366, 367 _sq._, 373
+
+Burying alive the sick and old, Fijian custom of, 420 _sqq._
+
+---- people in their birthplaces, 160
+
+Bushmen, 65
+
+_Buwun_, deities, 296
+
+
+Caffres of South Africa, their beliefs as to the causes of death, 55
+_sq._
+
+Calabar, poison ordeal in, 52
+
+California, Indians of, 68
+
+Calling back a lost soul, 312
+
+Calm and wind produced by weather-doctors, 385 _sq._
+
+Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits, 171, 191
+
+Canaanites, the heathen, 154
+
+Canadian Indians, burial custom of the, 454
+
+Canarium nuts, first-fruits of, offered to ghosts, 368 _sq._
+
+Cannibal feasts in Fiji, 446
+
+Cannibals fear the ghosts of their victims, 396
+
+Canoe, men sacrificed at launching a new, 446 _sq._
+
+Canoes, Papuan, 220
+
+Cape Bedford in Queensland, 129, 130, 131
+
+---- King William in German New Guinea, 218, 238
+
+Carnac in Brittany, 438
+
+Catching soul in a scarf, 412 _sq._
+
+Cause, Hume's analysis of, 18 _sq._
+
+Causes, the propensity to search for, 17 _sq._;
+ two classes of, 22
+
+Caves used as burial-places or charnel-houses, 330 _sqq._
+
+Celebes, Central, 72
+
+Central Australia, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, 46
+_sq._;
+ their ideas as to resurrection, 68;
+ their belief in immortality, 87 _sqq._;
+ their belief in reincarnation of the dead, 92 _sqq._;
+ their attitude towards the dead, 124 _sqq._
+
+Cereals unknown to Melanesians and Polynesians, 408
+
+Ceremonial impurity of manslayer, 229 _sq._
+
+Ceremonies performed in honour of the Wollunqua, a mythical water-snake,
+ 108 _sqq._;
+ dramatic, to commemorate the doings of ancestors, 118 _sqq._;
+ funeral, of the Torres Straits Islanders, 176 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Dramatic Ceremonies, Dramatic Representations, Funeral
+ Ceremonies, Totems
+
+Chameleon in myths of the origin of death, 60 _sqq._
+
+Chams of Annam, 67
+
+Charms imparted by dead in dreams, 139
+
+Charnel-houses, 221 _sq._, 225, 328
+
+Cheating the devil, 460
+
+Chepara, the, 139
+
+Cheremiss of Russia, burial custom of the, 457
+
+Cherokee Indians, 77
+
+Chief, spirit of dead, a worshipful ghost, 352
+
+Chief's power in Central Melanesia based on a fear of ghosts, 391
+
+Chiefs deified after death, 369
+
+Chiefs' authority based on their claim to magical powers, 395
+
+Chieftainship, rise of, 141
+
+Childbed, treatment of ghosts of women dying in, 358;
+ special fear of ghosts of women dying in, 458 _sqq._
+
+Childless women, burial of, 458
+
+Children, Central Australian theory of the birth of, 93 _sq._;
+ belief of Queensland natives as to the birth of, 128
+
+Children buried in trees, 161, 312 _sq._;
+ stillborn, burial of, 458
+
+Child-stones, 93 _sq._
+
+Chingpaws of Burma, 75
+
+_Choi_, disembodied human spirits, 128
+
+Chukchansi Indians, 163
+
+_Churinga_, sacred sticks or stones, 96 _sqq._
+
+Circumcision as initiatory rite of young men, 233;
+ among the Yabim, 250 _sqq._;
+ among the Akikuyu, 254;
+ among the Bukaua, 260 _sq._;
+ among the Kai, 290 _sq._;
+ among the Tami, 301 _sq._;
+ as a propitiatory sacrifice, 426 _sqq._
+
+Clans, totemic, 104
+
+Clay, widow's body smeared with, 223
+
+Cleanliness due to fear of sorcery, 386 _sq._, 414
+
+Cleft stick used in cure, 271
+
+Clercq, F. S. A. de, 316
+
+Cloth and weapons offered to ancestral spirits, 430 _sq._
+
+Clubhouses for men, 221, 225, 226, 243, 256 _sq._, 355
+
+Cochinchina, 74
+
+Coco-nut trees of dead cut down, 208, 209, 327;
+ stones to blight, 335
+
+---- -nuts tabooed, 297
+
+Codrington, Dr. R. H., 54 _sq._, 344, 345 _sq._, 353, 355, 359, 362
+_sq._, 368, 380 _sq._
+
+Collins, David, 133
+
+Commemorative and magical ceremonies combined, 122, 126
+
+Commercial habits of the North Melanesians, 394
+
+Communal houses, 304
+
+Communism, temporary revival of primitive, 436 _sq._
+
+Comparative and descriptive anthropology, their relation, 230 _sq._
+
+Comparative method applied to the study of religion, 5 _sq._;
+ in anthropology, 30
+
+Compartments in land of the dead, 244, 354, 404
+
+Competition as a cause of progress, 89 _sq._
+
+Conception in women, Central Australian theory of, 93 _sq._;
+ belief of Queensland natives concerning, 128
+
+Conception of death, the savage, 31 _sqq._
+
+Concert of spirits, 340 _sq._
+
+Confession of sins, 201
+
+Congo, natives of the, their ideas as to natural death, 50;
+ worship of the moon on the, 68
+
+Consecration of manslayers in Fiji, 448 _sq._
+
+Consultation of ancestral images, 308 _sqq._
+
+Continence, required in training yam vines, 371
+
+Continuance of death, myth of the, 472
+
+Contradictions and inconsistencies in reasoning not peculiar to savages,
+111 _sq._
+
+Convulsions as evidence of inspiration, 443, 444
+
+Co-operative system of piety, 333
+
+Coorgs, the, 163
+
+Cord worn round neck by mourners, 241, 242, 249, 259, 361
+
+Corpse inspected to discover sorcerer, 37, 38, 53 _sq._;
+ dried on fire, 135, 184, 249, 313, 355;
+ tied to prevent ghost from walking, 144;
+ mauled and mutilated in order to disable the ghost, 153;
+ putrefying juices of, received by mourners on their bodies, 167, 205;
+ carried out feet foremost, 174;
+ decked with ornaments and flowers, 232;
+ painted white and red, 233;
+ crowned with red roses, 233, 234;
+ stript of ornaments before burial, 234, 241;
+ kept in house, 355;
+ property displayed beside the, 397;
+ persons who have handled a corpse forbidden to touch food with their
+ hands, 450 _sq._;
+ carried out of house by special opening, 452 _sqq._
+
+Corpses mummified, 313;
+ of women dying in childbed burnt, 459
+
+Costume of mourners, 184, 198, 241 _sq._;
+ of widow and widower, 204
+
+Costumes of actors in dramatic ceremonies concerned with totems, 119
+_sqq._
+
+Crabs in myth of the origin of death, 70
+
+Cracking joints of fingers at incantation, 223
+
+Creator, the, and the origin of death, 73
+
+Crocodiles, transmigration of dead into, 245
+
+Cromlechs, 438
+
+Crops, ghosts expected to make the crops thrive, 259, 284, 288 _sq._
+
+Cross-questioning a ghost by means of fire, 278
+
+Cultivation of the ground, spirits of ancestors supposed to help in the,
+259
+
+Culture, advance of, among the aborigines of South-Eastern Australia,
+ 141 _sq._, 148 _sq._;
+ advanced, of the Fijians, 407
+
+Cursing enemies, 370, 403, 404
+
+Cutting down trees of the dead, 208, 209
+
+Cuttings of the flesh in honour of the dead, 154 _sqq._, 183, 184 _sq._,
+196, 272, 327, 359
+
+
+Dance of death, 185 _sqq._
+
+Dances as funeral rites, 179 _sqq._, 200;
+ masked, of the Monumbo, 228;
+ masked, of a Secret Society, 233;
+ at deaths, 293 _sq._;
+ of masked men in imitation of spirits, 297;
+ at festivals, 316;
+ at festivals of the dead, 321;
+ at funeral feasts, 399
+
+---- and games at festivals, 226
+
+Dark, ghosts dreaded in the, 197, 283, 306, 467;
+ female mourners remain in the, 360
+
+Daula, a ghost associated with the frigate-bird, 376
+
+Dawson, James, 42, 142, 143
+
+Dazing a ghost, 416
+
+Dead, worship of the, 23 _sqq._, 31, 328 _sqq._, 338;
+ seen in dreams, 27;
+ belief in the reincarnation of the, 92 _sqq._, 107;
+ spirits of, associated with conspicuous features of the landscape,
+ 115 _sqq._;
+ reincarnation of the, 124 _sq._, 127 _sqq._;
+ souls of the, supposed to go to the sky, 133 _sq._, 135, 138 _sq._,
+ 141, 142;
+ souls of the, supposed to be in stars, 134, 140;
+ names of the, not mentioned, 135;
+ magical virtue attributed to the hair of the, 137 _sq._;
+ appear to the living in dreams, 139, 195, 213, 229;
+ attentions paid to the, in regard to food, fire, property, etc.,
+ 144 _sqq._;
+ property of, deposited in grave, 145 _sqq._;
+ motive for destroying the property of the, 147 _sq._;
+ economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the, 149;
+ incipient worship of the, in Australia, 149, 150;
+ feared, 152 _sq._, 173 _sqq._, 196 _sq._, 201, 203, 244, 248;
+ cuttings of the flesh in honour of the, 154 _sqq._, 183, 184 _sq._,
+ 196, 327, 359;
+ thought to be strengthened by blood, 159;
+ disposed of in different ways according to their age, manner of death,
+ etc., 161 _sqq._;
+ fear of the, 168;
+ germs of a worship of the, in Australia, 168 _sq._;
+ destruction of the property of the, 174;
+ land of the, 175 _sq._, 192, 193, 194 _sq._, 202, 203, 207, 209 _sq._,
+ 211 _sqq._, 224, 228 _sq._, 244, 260, 286 _sq._, 292, 299, 305 _sq._,
+ 307, 322, 326, 345, 350 _sq._, 353 _sq._, 404 _sqq._, 462 _sqq._;
+ personated by masked men, 176, 179 _sq._, 182 _sq._, 185 _sqq._;
+ food offered to the, 183, 211, 214, 232, 241, 332, 338, 348 _sq._,
+ 364 _sq._, 367 _sq._, 372 _sq._, 396 _sq._, 429, 442, 467;
+ elements of a worship of the, in Torres Straits, 189;
+ laid on platforms, 199, 203, 205;
+ worshipped in British New Guinea, 201 _sq._;
+ prayers to the, 201 _sq._, 214, 259, 288, 307, 329 _sq._, 332 _sqq._,
+ 340, 376 _sq._, 401, 403 _sq._, 427, 441;
+ names of, not mentioned, 210, 246;
+ monuments of the, 225;
+ offerings of hunters and fishers to the, 226;
+ oracles of the, 235;
+ buried in the house, 236, 347, 352, 397, 398, 399;
+ offerings to the, 239, 276, 292, 298;
+ transmigrate into animals, 242, 245;
+ spirits of the, give good crops, 247 _sq._;
+ elements of a worship of the dead among the Yabim, 255;
+ spirits of the, believed to be mischievous, 257;
+ ancestors supposed to help in the cultivation of the ground, 259;
+ first-fruits offered to the, 259;
+ buried under houses, 259;
+ envious of the living, 267, 381;
+ burnt offerings to the, 294;
+ predominance of the worship of the, 297 _sq._;
+ power of the, over the living, 298, 306 _sq._, 307;
+ sacrifices to the, 307, 338;
+ wooden images (_korwar_) of the, 307 _sqq._, 315, 316 _sq._, 321, 322;
+ buried in island, 319;
+ festival of the, 320 _sq._;
+ medicine-men, inspired by spirits of the, 322;
+ spirits of the, embodied in their skulls, 338;
+ spirits of the, identified with white men, 342;
+ buried in the sea, 347 _sq._, 397;
+ relics of the, preserved, 348;
+ bodies of the, preserved for a time in the house, 351;
+ represented by wooden stocks, 374, 386;
+ burned in New Ireland, 397;
+ carried out of house by special opening, 452 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Ghost
+
+Dead kings of Uganda consulted as oracles, 151
+
+Death, the problem of, 31 _sqq._;
+ the savage conception of, 31 _sqq._;
+ thought to be an effect of sorcery, 33 _sqq._;
+ by natural causes, recognised by some savages, 55 _sq._;
+ myths of the origin of, 59 _sqq._;
+ personified in tales, 79 _sqq._;
+ not regarded as a natural necessity, 84 _sqq._;
+ the second, of the dead, 195, 286, 299, 345, 350, 351, 354;
+ attributed to sorcery, 249;
+ violent, ascribed to sorcery, 268 _sq._;
+ myth of the continuance of, 472
+
+Death and resurrection at initiation, ceremony of, 431, 434 _sq._;
+ pretence of, at initiation, 254 _sq._, 261, 302
+
+Death-dances, 293 _sq._;
+ of the Torres Straits Islanders, 179 _sqq._
+
+Deaths from natural causes, disbelief of savages in, 33 _sqq._;
+ attributed to sorcery, 136, 203;
+ set down to sorcery or ghosts, 203, 268, 270
+
+Deceiving the ghost, 237, 273, 280 _sqq._, 328
+
+Deceiving the spirits, 298
+
+Deification of the dead, 24, 25;
+ of parents, 439
+
+Deity consumes soul of offering, 297
+
+Demon carries off soul of sick, 194
+
+Demons as causes of disease and death, 36 _sq._
+
+Demonstrations, extravagant, of grief at a death, dictated by fear of
+the ghost, 271 _sqq._
+
+Dene or Tinneh Indians, their ideas as to death, 39 _sq._
+
+Departure of ghost thought to coincide with disappearance of flesh from
+bones, 165 _sq._
+
+Descent of the living into the nether world, 300, 355
+
+Descriptive and comparative anthropology, their relation, 230 _sq._
+
+Descriptive method in anthropology, 30
+
+Desertion of house after a death, 195, 196 _n._ 1, 210, 248, 275, 349,
+ 400;
+ of village after a death, 275
+
+Deserts as impediments to progress, 89, 90
+
+Design emblematic of totem, 168
+
+Destruction of house after a death, 210
+
+---- of life and property entailed by the belief in immortality, 468
+ _sq._
+
+---- of property of the dead, 174, 459;
+ motive for, 147 _sq._, 327
+
+Development arrested or retarded in savagery, 88 _sqq._
+
+Dieri, the, 138;
+ their burial customs, 144
+
+Differentiation of function in prayer, 332 _sq._
+
+Disbelief of savages in death from natural causes, 34 _sqq._
+
+Disease supposed to be caused by sorcery, 35 _sqq._;
+ demons regarded as causes of, 36 _sq._;
+ recognised by some savages as due to natural causes, 55 _sq._;
+ special modes of disposing of bodies of persons who die of, 162, 163.
+ _See also_ Sickness
+
+Diseases ascribed to ghosts, 257
+
+Disinterment of the bones of the dead, 225, 294
+
+Dissection of corpse to discover cause of death, 53 _sq._
+
+Divination to discover cause of death, 35, 36, 37 _sq._, 38, 39 _sq._,
+ 44, 45 _sq._, 50 _sqq._, 53 _sq._, 136;
+ by liver, 54;
+ by dreams, 136, 383;
+ by the skulls of the dead, 179;
+ to discover sorcerer who caused death, 240 _sq._, 249 _sq._, 257, 402;
+ by bow, 241;
+ by hair to discover cause of death, 319;
+ by means of ghosts, 389 _sq._;
+ to discover ghost who has caused sickness, 382
+
+Divinity of kings, 16;
+ of Fijian kings, 407 _sq._;
+ Fijian notion of, 440 _sq._
+
+Dog, in myth of the origin of death, 66;
+ the Heavenly, 460
+
+Dogs sacrificed to the dead, 232, 234;
+ sacrificed in epidemics, 296
+
+Doreh Bay in Dutch New Guinea, 303, 306
+
+Dragon supposed to swallow lads at initiation, 301.
+ _See also_ Monster
+
+Drama of death and resurrection at initiation, 431, 434 _sq._
+
+----, evolution of, 189
+
+Dramatic ceremonies in Central Australia, magical intention of, 122
+_sq._, 126
+
+---- concerned with totems, 119 _sqq._
+
+---- to commemorate the doings of ancestors, 118 _sqq._
+
+Dramatic representation of ghosts and spirits by masked men, 176, 179
+_sq._, 180 _sqq._, 185 _sqq._
+
+Drawings on ground in religious or magical ceremony, 112 _sq._
+
+---- on rocks, 318
+
+Dread of witchcraft, 413 _sq._
+
+Dreamer, professional, 383
+
+Dreams as a source of the belief in immortality and of the worship of
+ the dead, 27 _sq._, 214;
+ divination by, 136;
+ appearance of the dead to the living in, 139, 195, 213, 229;
+ savage faith in the truth of, 139 _sq._;
+ consultation of the dead in, 179;
+ danger of, 194;
+ the dead communicate with the living in, 248
+
+Driving away the ghost, 178, 197, 248, 305, 306, 323, 356 _sqq._, 396,
+399, 415
+
+Drowning of ghosts, 224
+
+Duke of York Island, 393, 397, 403, 404
+
+Dying, threats of the, 273
+
+
+Ears of corpse stopped with hot coals, 152;
+ of mourners cut, 183, 272, 327
+
+Earth-burial and tree-burial, 161, 166 _sq._
+
+Earthquakes ascribed to ghosts, 286, 288;
+ caused by deities, 296
+
+Eating totemic animals or plants, 120 _sq._
+
+Economic loss entailed by sacrifices to the dead, 149;
+ entailed by the belief in immortality, 468 _sq._
+
+Eel, ghost in, 379
+
+Eels offered to the dead, 429
+
+Egypt, custom at embalming a corpse in ancient, 178
+
+Elysium, the Fijian, 466 _sq._
+
+Embryology of religion, 88
+
+Emu totem, dramatic ceremonies concerned with, 122, 123
+
+Encounter Bay tribe of South Australia, 42
+
+Epilepsy ascribed to anger of ghosts, 257, 283
+
+---- and inspiration, 15
+
+Erdweg, Father Josef, 218, 219, 227
+
+Erskine, Capt. J. E., 409
+
+_Ertnatulunga_, sacred store-house, 99
+
+_Erythrophloeum guiniense_, in poison ordeal, 50
+
+Esquimaux, burial custom of the, 454, 456
+
+Essence, immaterial, of sacrifice absorbed by ghosts and spirits, 285,
+287, 374
+
+Euhemerism, 24 _sq._
+
+Euhemerus, 24
+
+European teaching, influence of, on native beliefs, 142 _sq._
+
+Evil spirits regarded as causes of death, 36 _sq._
+
+Excitement as mark of inspiration, 14
+
+Exogamy with female descent, 416, 418
+
+Exorcism as cure for sickness, 222 _sq._
+
+Experience defined, 12;
+ two sorts of, 13 _sq._
+
+---- and intuition, 11
+
+External world, question of the reality of, 13 _sq._;
+ an illusion, 21
+
+Eye, soul resides in the, 267
+
+Eyes of corpse bandaged, 459
+
+
+Faints ascribed to action of ghosts, 257, 283
+
+Faith, weakening of religious, 4
+
+Falling stars the souls of the dead, 229, 399
+
+Family prayers of the New Caledonians, 332 _sq._, 340
+
+---- priests, 332, 340
+
+Famine, the stone of, 334 _sq._
+
+Fasting in mourning for a king, 451 _sq._
+
+Father-in-law, mourning for a, 155
+
+Favourable natural conditions, their influence in stimulating social
+progress, 141 _sq._, 148 _sq._
+
+Fear of ghosts, 134, 135, 147, 151 _sqq._, 158, 173 _sqq._, 195, 196
+ _sq._, 201, 203, 229 _sq._, 232, 237, 276, 282 _sq._, 305, 321, 327,
+ 347, 396, 414 _sq._, 449, 455, 467;
+ a moral restraint, 175;
+ the source of extravagant demonstrations of grief at death, 271
+ _sqq._;
+ taboo based on, 390 _sq._;
+ a bulwark of morality, 392;
+ funeral customs based on, 450 _sqq._;
+ of women dying in childbed, 458 _sqq._
+
+Fear of the dead, 152 _sq._, 168, 173 _sqq._, 195, 196 _sq._, 201, 203,
+244, 248
+
+---- of witchcraft, 244
+
+---- the only principle of religious observances in Fiji, 443
+
+Feasts provided for ghosts, 247 _sq._
+ _See also_ Funeral Feasts
+
+Feather-money offered to ghosts, 374, 375
+
+Feet foremost, corpse carried out, 174
+
+Ferry for ghosts, 224, 244 _sq._, 350, 412, 462
+
+Festival of the dead, 320 _sq._
+
+Fig-trees, sacred, 199
+
+Fighting or warrior ghosts, 370
+
+Fiji and the Fijians, 406 _sqq._
+
+----, human sacrifices in, 446 _sq._
+
+Fijian islands, scenery of, 409 _sq._
+
+---- myths of origin of death, 66 _sq._, 75 _sq._
+
+Fijians, belief in immortality among the, 406 _sqq._;
+ their advanced culture, 407
+
+Fingers amputated in mourning, 199, 451
+
+---- of living sacrificed in honour of the dead, 426 _sq._
+
+Finsch Harbour in German New Guinea, 218, 242, 262
+
+Fire as a means of keeping off ghosts, 131
+
+---- -flies, ghosts as, 352
+
+---- kindled on grave, to warm ghost, 144 _sq._, 196 _sq._, 209, 211,
+223, 275, 359
+
+---- supplied to ghost, 246 _sq._;
+ used to keep off ghosts, 258, 283;
+ used in cross-questioning a ghost, 278
+
+Firstborn children, skull-topped images made of dead, 312
+
+First-fruits offered to the dead, 259;
+ of canarium nuts offered to ghosts, 368 _sq._;
+ offered to deified spirits of dead chiefs, 369;
+ offered to ghosts, 373 _sq._;
+ of yams offered to the ancestral spirits, 429
+
+Fish offered by fishermen to the dead, 226;
+ prayers for, 329;
+ ghost in, 379
+
+---- totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, 119 _sq._, 121
+
+Fishermen pray to ghosts, 289
+
+----, stones to help, 337
+
+Fison, Lorimer, 407, 412, 416, 418, 428 _n._ 1, 434, 435 _sqq._, 438
+_n._ 1, 445, 448
+
+Fits ascribed to contact with ghosts, 283.
+ _See also_ Epilepsy
+
+Florida, one of the Solomon Islands, 346, 347, 348, 349, 367, 368, 376,
+377, 379, 380
+
+Flutes, sacred, 221, 226, 233, 252
+
+Flying-foxes, souls of the dead in, 405
+
+Food placed on grave, 144;
+ offered to the dead, 183, 201, 208, 211, 214, 232, 241, 332, 338, 364
+ _sq._, 367 _sq._, 372 _sq._, 396 _sq._, 429, 442, 467;
+ abstinence from certain, in mourning, 198, 208, 209, 230, 314, 360,
+ 452;
+ supply promoted by ghosts, 283;
+ offered to ancestral spirits, 316;
+ offered to the skulls of the dead, 339 _sq._, 352;
+ offered to ghosts, 348 _sq._;
+ of ghosts, the living not to partake of the, 355
+
+---- not to be touched with the hands by gravediggers, 327;
+ not to be touched with hands by persons who have handled a corpse,
+ 450 _sq._
+
+---- and water, abundance of, favourable to social progress, 90 _sq._;
+ offered to the dead, 174
+
+Fool and Death, 83
+
+Footprints, magic of, 45
+
+Foundation-sacrifice of men, 446
+
+Fowlers pray to ghosts, 289
+
+Frenzy a symptom of inspiration, 443, 444 _sq._
+
+Frigate-bird, mark of the, 350;
+ ghost associated with the, 376
+
+Frigate-birds, ghosts in, 380
+
+Frog in stories of the origin of death, 61, 62 _sq._
+
+Fruit-trees cut down for ghost, 246
+
+---- of the dead cut down, 399
+
+Funeral ceremonies intended to dismiss the ghost from the land of the
+living, 174 _sq._
+
+---- ceremonies of the Torres Straits Islanders, 176 _sqq._
+
+---- customs of the Tami, 293 _sq._;
+ of the Central Melanesians, 347 _sqq._, 355 _sqq._;
+ based on fear of ghosts, 450 _sqq._
+
+---- feasts, 348, 351, 358 _sq._, 360, 396;
+ orations, 355 _sq._
+
+Forces, impersonal, the world conceived as a complex of, 21
+
+Foreskins sacrificed in honour of the dead, 426 _sq._;
+ of circumcised lads presented to ancestral gods, 427
+
+
+Gaboon, the, 54
+
+Gajos of Sumatra, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Gall used in divination, 54
+
+Game offered by hunters to the dead, 226
+
+Ganindo, a warrior ghost, 363 _sq._
+
+Gardens, ghosts of, 371
+
+Gazelle Peninsula, New Britain, 48, 69, 398, 405
+
+Geelvink Bay, in Dutch New Guinea, 303, 307
+
+Genital members of human victims hung on tree, 447 _n._ 1
+
+German burial custom, 453, 458
+
+Ghost appeased by sham fight, 137;
+ hunted into the grave, 164 _sq._;
+ thought to linger near body till flesh is decayed, 165 _sq._;
+ elaborate funeral ceremonies designed to get rid of, 174 _sq._;
+ driven away, 178, 197, 248;
+ extracted from body of patient, 271;
+ calls for vengeance, 278;
+ cursed and ill-treated, 285;
+ who causes sunshine and rain, 375
+
+---- -posts, 375
+
+---- -seer, 204 _sq._, 214, 229
+
+---- -shooter, 387 _sq._
+
+Ghostly ferry, 350, 412.
+ _See also_ Ferry
+
+Ghosts, mischievous nature of, 28;
+ as causes of sickness, 54 _sqq._, 195, 197, 222, 300, 305, 322, 389;
+ feared, 134, 135, 147, 151 _sqq._, 158, 173 _sqq._, 195, 196 _sq._,
+ 201, 203, 229 _sq._, 232, 237, 271 _sqq._, 276, 282 _sq._, 305, 321,
+ 327, 347, 396, 414 _sq._, 449, 457, 467;
+ attentions paid to, in regard to food, fire, property, etc., 144
+ _sqq._;
+ feared only of recently departed, 151 _sq._;
+ of nearest relations most feared, 153;
+ represented dramatically by masked men, 176, 179 _sq._, 182 _sq._,
+ 185 _sqq._;
+ should have their noses bored, 192, 194 _sq._;
+ return of the, 195, 198, 246, 300;
+ carry off the souls of the living, 197;
+ cause bad luck in hunting and fishing, 197;
+ identified with phosphorescent lights, 198, 258;
+ appear to seer, 204 _sq._;
+ of slain enemies especially dreaded, 205;
+ of the hanged specially feared, 212;
+ certain classes of ghosts specially feared, 212;
+ malignity of, 212, 381;
+ drowned, 224;
+ village of, 231 _sq._, 234;
+ give information, 240;
+ provided with fire, 246 _sq._;
+ feasts provided for, 247 _sq._;
+ thought to give good crops, 247 _sq._;
+ communicate with the living in dreams, 248;
+ diseases ascribed to action of, 257;
+ of the slain, special fear of, 258, 279, 306, 323;
+ of ancestors appealed to for help, 258 _sq._;
+ precautions taken against, 258;
+ expected to make the crops thrive, 259, 284, 288 _sq._;
+ natural death ascribed to action of, 268;
+ sickness ascribed to action of, 269 _sq._, 271, 279, 372, 375, 381
+ _sqq._;
+ deceived, 273, 280 _sqq._, 328;
+ thought to help hunters, 274, 284 _sq._;
+ in the form of animals, 282;
+ help the living by promoting supply of food, 283;
+ cause earthquakes, 286, 288;
+ as patrons of hunting and other departments, 287;
+ die the second death, 287;
+ turn into animals, 287;
+ turn into ant-hills, 287;
+ of warriors invoked by warriors, 288;
+ invoked by warriors, farmers, fowlers, fishermen, etc., 288 _sqq._;
+ of men may grow into gods, 289 _sq._;
+ of the dead in the form of serpents, 300;
+ driven away, 305, 306, 323, 356 _sqq._, 396, 399, 415;
+ cause all sorts of misfortunes, 306 _sq._;
+ call for vengeance, 310, 468;
+ sacrifices to, 328;
+ of power and ghosts of no account, distinction between, 345 _sq._;
+ of the recent dead most powerful, 346;
+ prayers to, 348;
+ of land and sea, 348;
+ food offered to, 348 _sq._;
+ live in islands, 350, 353;
+ live underground, 353 _sq._;
+ worshipful, 362 _sq._;
+ public and private, 367, 369 _sq._;
+ first-fruits offered to, 368 _sq._, 373 _sq._;
+ warlike, 370;
+ of gardens, 371;
+ human sacrifices to, 371 _sq._;
+ incarnate in sharks, 373;
+ sacrifices to, at planting, 375;
+ sanctuaries of, 377 _sq._;
+ incarnate in animals, 379 _sq._;
+ envious of the living, 381;
+ carry off souls, 383;
+ in stones, 383 _sq._;
+ inspiration by means of, 389 _sq._;
+ killed, 415 _sq._;
+ dazed, 416;
+ prevented from returning to the house, 455 _sq._;
+ unmarried, hard fate of, 464
+
+Ghosts and spirits, distinction between, in Central Melanesia, 343, 363;
+ regulate the weather, 384 _sq._
+
+---- of women dying in childbed, special fear of, 458 _sqq._;
+ special treatment of, 358.
+ _See also_ Dead _and_ Spirits
+
+Giant, mythical, thought to appear annually with the south-east monsoon,
+255
+
+Gifford, Lord, 2, 3
+
+Girdle made from hair of dead, 138
+
+Gnanji, the, of Central Australia, 92
+
+Goat in story of the origin of death, 64
+
+God, the question of his existence, 2;
+ defined, 9 _sq._;
+ knowledge of, how acquired, 11 _sqq._;
+ inferred as a cause, 22 _sq._;
+ and the origin of death, 61 _sqq._;
+ in form of serpent, 445, 462
+
+Gods created by man in his own likeness, 19 _sq._;
+ of nature, 20;
+ human, 20, 23 _sqq._;
+ unknown among aborigines of Australia, 91;
+ often developed out of ghosts, 289 _sq._;
+ ancestors worshipped as, 340, 369;
+ ancestral, sacrifice of foreskins to, 427;
+ ancestral, libations to, 438;
+ two classes of, in Fiji, 440
+
+---- and spirits, no certain demarcation between, 441
+
+Goldie, Rev. Hugh, 52
+
+Good crops given by ghosts, 247 _sq._
+
+---- spirit, 143
+
+---- and bad, different fate of the, after death, 354
+
+Gran Chaco, in Argentina, 165
+
+Grandfather, soul of, reborn in grandchild, 417;
+ his ghost dazed, 416
+
+Grandfather and grandchild, their relation under exogamy and female
+kinship, 416, 418
+
+Grandidier, A., 49
+
+Grass for graves, euphemism for human victims buried with the dead, 425
+_sq._
+
+---- -seed, magical ceremony for increasing, 102
+
+Grave, food placed on, 144, 145;
+ property of dead deposited in, 145 _sqq._;
+ hut erected on, 203;
+ of worshipful dead a sanctuary, 347;
+ stones heaped on, 360;
+ sacrifices to ghost on, 382
+
+Gravediggers, purification of, 314;
+ secluded, 327;
+ secluded and painted black, 451
+
+Graves, huts built on, for use of ghosts, 150 _sq._;
+ under the houses, 274.
+ _See also_ Huts
+
+Great Woman, the, 464
+
+Greek tragedy, W. Ridgeway on the origin of, 189
+
+Greeks, purificatory rites of ancient, 206
+
+Greenlanders, burial custom of the, 454
+
+Grey, Sir George, 41;
+ taken for an Australian aboriginal, 131 _sqq._
+
+Grief, extravagant demonstrations of grief in mourning, their motives,
+135 _sq._
+
+---- at a death, extravagant demonstrations of, dictated by fear of the
+ghost, 271 _sqq._
+
+_Grihya-Sutras_, 163
+
+Ground drawings in magical or religious ceremony, 112 _sq._
+
+Groves, sacred, the dead buried in, 326
+
+Guadalcanar, one of the Solomon Islands, 350, 372
+
+Guardian spirits, 227
+
+Guiana, Indians of, their ideas as to the cause of death, 35 _sqq._;
+ their offerings to the dead, 165
+
+Gullet of pig sacrificed, 368
+
+Gulu, king of heaven, 78
+
+Gypsies, European, burial custom of, 455
+
+
+Haddon, Dr. A. C., 171, 172 _sq._, 175, 176, 180
+
+Hagen, Dr. B., 230, 231
+
+Haida, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Hair burnt as charm, 43;
+ cut in mourning, 135, 320, 451;
+ of widow unshorn, 184;
+ of dead child worn by mother, 315;
+ of gravediggers not cut, 327;
+ used as amulet, 332
+
+---- of the dead, magical virtue attributed to, 137 _sq._;
+ worn by relatives, 249;
+ divination by means of, 319
+
+---- of mourners offered to the dead, 183;
+ cut off, 183, 204
+
+Hakea flower totem, dramatic ceremony concerned with, 119, 121
+
+Hands, gravediggers and persons who have handled a corpse not to touch
+food with their, 327, 450 _sq._
+
+Hanged, ghosts of the, specially feared, 212
+
+Hare in myth of the origin of death, 65
+
+Harumae, a warrior ghost, 365 _sq._
+
+Hasselt, J. L. van, 305
+
+Hauri, a worshipful ghost, 372
+
+Head-dress of gravediggers, 327
+
+Head-hunters, 352
+
+Head of corpse cut off in order to disable the ghost, 153;
+ removed and preserved, 178.
+ _See also_ Skulls
+
+Heads of mourners shaved, 208
+
+----, human, cut off in honour of the dead, 352
+
+Heaps of stones on grave, 360
+
+Heart supposed to be the seat of human spirit, 129
+
+---- of pig sacrificed, 368
+
+Heavenly Dog, 460
+
+Hebrew prophets, 14
+
+Hen in myth of the origin of death, 79
+
+Highlands of Scotland, burial custom in the, 453, 458
+
+Hindoos, burial custom of the, 453, 458
+
+Historical method of treating natural theology, 2 _sq._
+
+History of religion, its importance, 3
+
+Hiyoyoa, the land of the dead, 207
+
+Hole in the wall, dead carried out through a, 452 _sqq._
+
+Holy of Holies, 430, 431, 433, 437, 438
+
+Homer on blood-drinking ghosts, 159
+
+Homicides, precautions taken by, against the ghosts of their victims,
+ 205 _sq._;
+ purification of, 206;
+ honours bestowed on, in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+ _See also_ Manslayers
+
+Homoeopathic magic, 288, 376
+
+---- or imitative magic, 335, 336, 338
+
+Honorary titles of homicides in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+
+Hood Peninsula of British New Guinea, 47, 202, 203
+
+Hos of Togoland, their myth of the origin of death, 81 _sqq._
+
+Hose, Ch., and McDougall, W., quoted, 265 _n._, 417
+
+Hottentots, their myth of the origin of death, 65;
+ burial custom of the, 454
+
+House deserted after a death, 195, 196 _n._ 1, 248, 275, 349, 400;
+ deserted or destroyed after a death, 210;
+ dead buried in the, 236, 347, 352, 397, 398, 399;
+ dead carried out of, by special opening, 452 _sqq._
+
+Houses, native, at Kalo, 202;
+ communal, 304
+
+Howitt, Dr. A. W., 44 _sq._, 139, 141
+
+Human gods, 20, 23 _sqq._
+
+---- nature, two different views of, 469 _sqq._
+
+---- sacrifices to ghosts, 371 _sq._;
+ in Fiji, 446 _sq._
+
+Hume's analysis of cause, 18 _sq._
+
+Hunt, Mr., his experience in Fiji, 423 _sq._
+
+Hunters supposed to be helped by ghosts, 274, 284 _sq._
+
+Huon Gulf, in German New Guinea, 242, 256
+
+Hut built to represent mythical monster at initiation, 251, 290, 301
+_sq._
+
+Huts erected on graves for use of ghosts, 150 _sq._;
+ erected on graves, 203, 223, 248, 259, 275, 293, 294
+
+Hypocritical lamentations at a death, 273
+
+---- indignation of accomplice at a murder, 280 _sqq._
+
+
+Idu, mountain of the dead, 193, 194 _sq._
+
+Iguana in myth of origin of death, 70
+
+Ilene, a worshipful ghost, 373
+
+Ill-treatment of ghost who gives no help, 285
+
+Illusion of the external world, 21
+
+Images of the dead, wooden (_korwar_ or _karwar_), 307 _sqq._, 311, 315,
+ 316 _sq._, 321, 322;
+ of sharks, 373;
+ in temples, 442
+
+Imitation of totems by disguised actors, 119 _sqq._;
+ of totemic animals, 177
+
+Imitative magic, 335, 336, 338, 376
+
+Immortality, belief in, among the aborigines of Central Australia, 87
+ _sqq._;
+ among the islanders of Torres Straits, 170 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of British New Guinea, 190 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of German New Guinea, 216 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, 303 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Southern Melanesia, 324 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Central Melanesia, 343 _sqq._;
+ among the natives of Northern Melanesia, 393 _sqq._;
+ among the Fijians, 406 _sqq._;
+ strongly held by savages, 468
+
+Immortality, limited sense of, 25;
+ origin of belief in, 25 _sqq._;
+ belief in human, almost universal among races of mankind, 33;
+ rivalry between men and animals for gift of, 74 _sq._;
+ question of the truth of the belief in, 469 _sqq._;
+ destruction of life and property entailed by the belief in, 468 _sq._
+
+---- in a bundle, 77 _sq._
+
+Impecunious ghosts, hard fate of, 406
+
+Impurity, ceremonial, of manslayer, 229 _sq._
+
+Im Thurn, Sir Everard F., 38 _sq._
+
+Incantations or spells, 385
+
+Inconsistencies and contradictions in reasoning not peculiar to savages,
+111 _sq._
+
+Inconsistency of savage thought, 143
+
+Indians of Guiana, their ideas about death, 35 _sqq._;
+ their beliefs as to the dead, 165
+
+---- of North-West America, burial custom of the, 455, 460
+
+Indifference to death, 419;
+ a consequence of belief in immortality, 422 _sq._
+
+Indo-European burial custom, 453
+
+Infanticide as cause of diminished population, 40
+
+Influence of European teaching on native beliefs, 142 _sq._
+
+Initiation at puberty regarded as a process of death and resurrection,
+254, 261
+
+---- of young men, 233;
+ in Central Australia, 100;
+ among the Yabim, 250 _sqq._;
+ among the Bukaua, 260 _sq._;
+ among the Kai, 290 _sq._;
+ in Fiji, 429 _sqq._
+
+Insanity, influence of, in history, 15 _sq._
+
+---- and inspiration not clearly distinguished, 388
+
+Insect in divination as to cause of death, 44, 46
+
+Inspiration, theory of, 14 _sq._;
+ of medium by ancestral spirits, 308 _sqq._;
+ by spirits of the dead, 322;
+ by ghosts in Central Melanesia, 388 _sq._;
+ attested by frenzy, 443, 444 _sq._
+
+---- and insanity not clearly distinguished, 388
+
+Insufflations, magical, to heal the sick, 329
+
+_Intichiuma_, magical ceremonies for the multiplication of totems, 122
+_sq._
+
+Intuition and experience, 11
+
+Invocation of ghosts, 288 _sq._;
+ of the dead, 329 _sq._, 332 _sqq._, 377, 378, 401, 441
+
+Island, dead buried in, 319
+
+---- of the dead, fabulous, 175
+
+Islands, ghosts live in, 350, 353
+
+Isle of Pines, 325, 330, 337
+
+Israelites forbidden to cut themselves for the dead, 154
+
+Ivory Coast, 52
+
+
+Jackson, John, quoted, 419 _sqq._, 447
+
+Jappen or Jobi, island, 303
+
+Jawbone of husband worn by widow, 204;
+ lower, of corpse preserved, 234 _sq._, 236, 274;
+ of dead king of Uganda preserved and consulted oracularly, 235
+
+Jawbones of the dead preserved, 351 _sq._;
+ of dead worn by relatives, 404
+
+Journey of ghosts to the land of the dead, 286 _sq._, 361 _sq._, 462
+_sqq._
+
+Juices of putrefaction received by mourners on their bodies, 167, 205,
+403
+
+---- of putrefying corpse drunk by widow, 313;
+ drunk by women, 355
+
+
+Kachins of Burma, burial custom of the, 459
+
+Kafirs, their beliefs as to the causes of death, 56
+
+Kagoro, the, of Northern Nigeria, 28 _n._ 1, 49
+
+Kai, the, of German New Guinea, 71, 262 _sqq._;
+ theory of the soul, 267
+
+Kaikuzi, brother of Death, 80
+
+Kaitish, the, 68, 158, 166
+
+Kalo, in British New Guinea, 202 _sq._
+
+_Kalou_, Fijian word for "god," 440
+
+_Kalou vu_, "root gods," 440
+
+_Kalou yalo_, "soul gods," 440
+
+_Kami_, the souls of the dead, 297 _sq._
+
+Kamilaroi tribe of New South Wales, 46, 155
+
+_Kanaima_ (_kenaima_), 36, 38
+
+_Kani_, name applied to ghosts, to bull-roarers, and to the monster who
+is thought to swallow lads at circumcision, 301
+
+Kaniet islands, 401
+
+_Kava_ offered to ancestral spirits, 440
+
+Kavirondo, burial custom of the, 458
+
+Kaya-Kaya or Tugeri, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 255
+
+Kayans, the, of Borneo, 417;
+ burial custom of, 456 _sq._, 459
+
+Kemp Welch River, 202
+
+_Keramo_, a fighting ghost, 370
+
+Keysser, Ch., 262, 263 _sq._, 267, 269 _n._ 3
+
+Kibu, the land of the dead, 175
+
+Kibuka, war-god of Uganda, 366
+
+Kidd, Dudley, 55
+
+Kidney-fat, extraction of, 43
+
+Killer of Souls, the, 465 _sq._
+
+Killing a ghost, 415 _sq._
+
+King, mourning for a, 451 _sq._
+
+King's corpse not carried out through the door, 452, 461
+
+Kings, divinity of, 16;
+ sanctity of Fijian, 407 _sq._
+
+Kintu and the origin of death, 78 _sqq._
+
+Kiwai, beliefs and customs concerning the dead in island of, 211 _sqq._
+
+Koita or Koitapu, of British New Guinea, 193
+
+Kolosh Indians, 163
+
+Komars, the, 163
+
+_Koroi_, honorary title of homicides in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+
+_Korwar_, or _karwar_, wooden images of the dead, 307 _sqq._, 315, 316
+_sq._, 321, 322
+
+Koryak, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Kosi and the origin of death, 76 _sq._
+
+Knowledge, natural, how acquired, 11
+
+---- of God, how acquired, 11 _sqq._;
+ of ghosts essential to medical practitioners in Melanesia, 384
+
+Kulin, the, 138
+
+Kurnai tribe of Victoria, 44, 138
+
+Kweariburra tribe, 153
+
+_Kwod_, sacred or ceremonial ground, 179
+
+
+Lambert, Father, 325, 327, 328, 332, 339
+
+Lamboam, the land of the dead, 260, 292, 299
+
+Lamentations, hypocritical, at a death, 271 _sqq._, 280 _sqq._
+
+Land burial and sea burial, 347 _sq._
+
+---- cleared for cultivation, 238, 242 _sq._, 256, 262 _sq._, 304
+
+---- ghosts and sea ghosts, 348
+
+---- of the dead, 175 _sq._, 192, 193, 194 _sq._, 202, 203, 207, 209
+ _sq._, 211 _sqq._, 224, 228 _sq._, 244, 260, 286 _sq._, 292, 299, 305
+ _sq._, 307, 322, 326, 345, 350 _sq._, 353 _sq._, 404 _sqq._, 462
+ _sqq._;
+ journeys of the living to the, 207, 355;
+ way to the, 212 _sq._, 462 _sqq._
+
+Landtman, Dr. G., 214
+
+Lang, Andrew, 216 _sq._
+
+Laos, burial custom in, 459
+
+Leaf as badge of a ghost, 391
+
+Leaves thrown on scene of murder, 415
+
+Leg bones of the dead preserved, 221, 249
+
+Legs of corpse broken in order to disable the ghost, 153
+
+Lehner, Stefan, 256
+
+Lepchis of Sikhim, burial custom of the, 455
+
+Le Souef, A. A. C., 40 _sq._
+
+Libations to ancestral gods, 430, 438
+
+Licence, period of, following circumcision, 427 _sq._;
+ following initiation, 433, 434 _n._ 1, 436 _sq._
+
+Licentious orgy following circumcision, 427 _sq._
+
+Life in the other world like life in this, 286 _sq._
+
+Lightning, savage theory of, 19
+
+Lights, phosphorescent, thought to be ghosts, 198, 258
+
+Lime, powdered, used to dust the trail of a ghost, 277 _sq._
+
+_Lio'a_, a powerful ghost, 346
+
+Liver extracted by magic, 50;
+ divination by, 54
+
+Livers of pigs offered to the dead, 360 _sq._
+
+Lizard in divination as to cause of death, 44;
+ in myths of the origin of death, 60 _sq._, 70, 74 _sq._
+
+Lizards, ghosts in, 380
+
+Local totem centres, 97, 99, 124
+
+Long soul and short soul, 291 _sq._
+
+Lost souls, recovery of, 270 _sq._, 300 _sq._
+
+Luck, bad, in fishing and hunting, caused by ghosts, 197
+
+Luck of a village dependent on ghosts, 198
+
+_Lum_, men's clubhouse, 243, 250, 257
+
+
+Mabuiag, island of, 174
+
+Macassars, burial custom of the, 461
+
+Macluer Gulf in Dutch New Guinea, 317, 318
+
+Mad, stones to drive people, 335
+
+Madagascar, ideas as to natural death in, 48 _sq._
+
+Mafulu (Mambule), the, of British New Guinea, 198 _sqq._
+
+Maggots, appearance of, sign of departure of soul, 292
+
+Magic as a cause of death, 34 _sqq._;
+ Age of, 58;
+ attributed to aboriginal inhabitants of a country, 193;
+ homoeopathic or imitative, 288, 335, 336, 338, 376;
+ combined with religion, 111 _sq._, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 376;
+ Melanesian conception of, 380 _sq._;
+ working by means of personal refuse, 413 _sq._
+ _See also_ Sorcery _and_ Witchcraft
+
+---- and religion compared in reference to their destruction of human
+life, 56 _sq._
+
+Magical ceremonies for increasing the food supply, 102;
+ ceremonies for the multiplication of totems, 124 _sq._;
+ intention of dramatic ceremonies in Central Australia, 122 _sq._, 126;
+ virtues attributed to sacred stones in New Caledonia, 334 _sqq._
+
+Magician or priest, 336, 338.
+ _See also_ Sorcerer
+
+Magicians, their importance in history, 16;
+ but no priests at Doreh, 306
+
+Malagasy, their ideas as to natural death, 48 _sq._
+
+Malanta, one of the Solomon Islands, 350
+
+Malayalis, the, of Malabar, 162
+
+Malignity of ghosts, 212, 381
+
+Malo, island of, 48
+
+Man creates gods in his own likeness, 19 _sq._
+
+----, grandeur and dignity of, 469 _sq._;
+ pettiness and insignificance of, 470 _sq._
+
+_Mana_, supernatural or spiritual power, 346 _sq._, 352, 371, 380
+
+_Manoam_, evil spirits, 321
+
+Manoga, a worshipful ghost, 368
+
+Manslayers, precautions taken by, against the ghosts of their victims,
+ 205 _sq._, 258, 279, 323;
+ secluded, 279 _sq._,
+ consecration of, 448 _sq._;
+ restrictions imposed on, 449.
+ _See also_ Homicides
+
+_Mari_ or _mar_, ghost, 173
+
+_Mariget_, "ghost-hand," 177
+
+Mariner, William, 411
+
+Mariners, stones to help, 337
+
+Markets, native, 394
+
+Marotse, burial custom of the, 454
+
+Marquesas Islands, 417
+
+Married and unmarried, different modes of disposing of their corpses,
+162
+
+Masai, their myth of the origin of death, 65 _sq._
+
+Masked men, dramatic representation of ghosts and spirits by, 176, 179
+_sq._, 180 _sqq._, 185 _sqq._
+
+---- dances, 297;
+ of the Monumbo, 228
+
+Masks worn by actors in sacred ceremonies, 179;
+ used in dances, 233, 297
+
+Masquerades, 297
+
+Massim, the, of British New Guinea, 206
+
+Master of Life, 163
+
+Matacos Indians, 165
+
+Mate, a worshipful spirit, 239
+
+Material culture of the natives of New Guinea, 191;
+ of the natives of Tumleo, 219 _sq._;
+ of Papuans, 231;
+ of the Yabim, 242 _sq._;
+ of the Noofoor, 304 _sq._;
+ of the New Caledonians, 339;
+ of the North Melanesians, 393 _sqq._
+
+Mawatta or Mowat, 47
+
+_Mbete_, priest, 443, 445
+
+Mea, a spiritual medium, 196
+
+Mecklenburg, burial custom in, 457
+
+Medicine-men, their importance in history, 16;
+ inspired by spirits of the dead, 322
+
+Medium inspired by soul of dead, 308 _sq._
+
+Mediums, spiritual, 196
+
+Mediums who send their souls to deadland, 300
+
+Megalithic monuments, 438
+
+Melanesia, Central, belief in immortality among the natives of, 343
+ _sqq._
+
+----, Northern, belief in immortality among the natives of, 393 _sqq._
+
+----, Southern, belief in immortality among the natives of, 324 _sqq._
+
+Melanesian myths of the origin of death, 69, 71 _sq._, 83 _sq._;
+ theory of the soul, 344 _sq._
+
+Melanesians, their ideas as to natural deaths, 48, 54 _sq._;
+ Central, funeral customs of the, 347 _sqq._, 355 _sqq._;
+ and Papuans in New Guinea, 190 _sq._
+
+Memorial trees, 225
+
+Men sacrificed to support posts of new house, 446 _sq._;
+ whipped by women in mourning, 452
+
+Men's clubhouses, 221, 225, 226, 243, 256 _sq._, 355
+
+Mentras or Mantras of the Malay Peninsula, 73
+
+Merivale on Dartmoor, 438
+
+Messengers, the Two, myth of origin of death, 60 _sqq._
+
+Messou, Indian magician, 78
+
+Metals unknown in Northern Melanesia, 395
+
+Metempsychosis, widespread belief in, 29
+
+Methods of treating natural theology, 1 _sqq._
+
+---- of natural knowledge, 11
+
+Mexicans, the ancient, 163
+
+Meyer, H. E. A., 42
+
+Migration of villages, 339
+
+Migratory cultivation, 243
+
+Miklucho-Maclay, Baron N., 235
+
+Milky Way, Central Australian belief as to the, 140;
+ souls of dead go to, 153
+
+Milne Bay, 207
+
+Mimika district in Dutch New Guinea, 318
+
+Minnetaree Indians, 163
+
+Misfortunes of all kinds caused by ghosts, 306 _sq._
+
+Moanus, the, of the Admiralty Islands, 400
+
+Monarchical government, rise of, 141 _sq._
+
+Monsoon, south-east, festival at, 255
+
+Monsoons, seasons determined by, 216
+
+Monster supposed to swallow lads at initiation, 251 _sq._, 255, 260,
+261, 290 _sq._, 301 _sq._
+
+Monumbo, the, of German New Guinea, 227 _sq._
+
+Monuments of the dead, 225
+
+Moon, the waxing and waning, in myths of the origin of death, 60, 65
+_sqq._
+
+---- in relation to doctrine of resurrection, 67 _sq._;
+ worship of the, 68
+
+Moral restraint afforded by a fear of ghosts, 175
+
+---- depravity of the Fijians, 409
+
+Morality, superstition a crutch to, 175
+
+Mortuary dramas, 189
+
+_Mos_, a disembodied soul, 224
+
+Mota, island of, 387
+
+Motlav, in the Banks' Islands, 357
+
+Motu, the, of British New Guinea, 192
+
+Mound erected in a totemic ceremony, 110 _sq._
+
+Mounds on graves, 150, 164
+
+Mourners, professional, 136
+
+---- smeared with white clay, 158, 177;
+ painted black, 178, 293, 403;
+ garb of, 184, 198;
+ cut their hair, 183, 204, 320, 451;
+ abstain from certain foods, 198, 208, 209, 230, 314, 360, 452;
+ restrictions observed by, 313 _sq._;
+ tattooed, 314;
+ purified by bathing, 314, 319;
+ plastered with mud, 318;
+ cut or tear their ears, 183, 272, 327;
+ secluded, 360;
+ smeared with ashes, 361;
+ anoint themselves with juices of putrefying corpse, 403;
+ amputate their fingers, 199, 451;
+ burn their skin, 154, 155, 157, 327, 451.
+ _See also_ Cuttings _and_ Seclusion
+
+Mourning, hair cut in, 135;
+ extravagant demonstrations of grief in, 135 _sq._;
+ for a father-in-law, 155;
+ amputation of fingers in, 199;
+ varying period of, 274, 293;
+ for a king, 451 _sq._
+
+---- costume, 249, 274, 320;
+ a protection against ghosts, 241 _sq._;
+ of widower and widow, 259 _sq._
+
+Mowat or Mawatta, 47
+
+Mud, mourners plastered with, 318
+
+Mukden, burial custom in, 460
+
+Mukjarawaint tribe, 155
+
+Mummies of dead preserved in houses, 188
+
+Mummification of the dead, 184, 185, 313
+
+_Mungai_, places associated with totems, 117, 124
+
+Murder, leaves thrown on scene of, 415
+
+---- highly esteemed in Fiji, 447 _sq._
+
+Murdered man, ghost of, haunts murderer, 248
+
+Murimuria, a second-rate heaven, 466
+
+Murray Island, 174
+
+Mutilations, bodily, at puberty, 303
+
+Myth of the prelogical savage, 266
+
+---- of the continuance of death, 472
+
+Myths of the origin of death, 59 _sqq._
+
+
+_Nai_, souls of the dead, 240
+
+Nai Thombothombo, in Fiji, 463
+
+Nails of dead detached, 145;
+ preserved, 339
+
+Naindelinde in Fiji, 465
+
+Naiteru-kop, a Masai god, 65
+
+Namaquas, their myth of the origin of death, 65
+
+Nambanaggatai, in Fiji, 465
+
+Nambi and the origin of death, 78 _sqq._
+
+Name of mythical water-snake not uttered, 105
+
+Names of the dead not mentioned, 135, 210, 246
+
+Nandi, their myth of the origin of death, 66
+
+_Nanga_, sacred stone enclosure, 428 _sqq._;
+ description of, 437 _sq._
+
+Nangganangga, the foe of unmarried ghosts, 464
+
+_Nanja_ tree or stone, 98
+
+---- spot, 164, 165
+
+Narrinyeri tribe of South Australia, 43;
+ their beliefs as to the dead, 134 _sqq._
+
+Nassau, Rev. R. H., 51
+
+Native beliefs influenced by European teaching, 142 _sq._
+
+Natural theology defined, 1, 8
+
+---- death, disbelief of savages in, 33 _sqq._
+
+---- causes of death recognised by some savages, 55 _sq._
+
+---- features of landscape associated with traditions about the dead,
+115 _sqq._
+
+Nature, gods of, 20;
+ souls of the dead identified with spirits of, 130;
+ two different views of human, 469 _sqq._
+
+Nayars, the, of Cochin, 162 _sq._
+
+Ndengei, Fijian god in form of serpent, 445, 462, 464, 465, 466
+
+Necklaces worn in mourning, 198
+
+Negen Negorijen in Dutch New Guinea, 316, 317
+
+Negrito admixture in New Guinea, 198
+
+Nemunemu, a creator, 240
+
+Nether world, the lord of the, 286;
+ abode of the dead in the, 292, 299, 322, 326, 353 _sq._;
+ descent of the living into the, 300;
+ _See also_ Land of the Dead
+
+Nets worn by widows in mourning, 249, 260, 274, 293;
+ worn by women in mourning, 241
+
+New birth at initiation, pretence of, 254
+
+New Britain (New Pomerania), 48, 69, 393, 394, 402, 404
+
+---- Caledonia, natives of, 324;
+ their beliefs and customs concerning the dead, 325 _sqq._;
+ their system of family prayers, 332 _sq._, 340;
+ material culture of the, 339
+
+---- Georgia, 48
+
+---- Guinea, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, 47;
+ the races of, 190 _sq._;
+ belief in immortality among the natives of British, 190 _sqq._;
+ belief in immortality among the natives of Dutch, 303 _sqq._;
+ belief in immortality among the natives of German, 216 _sqq._
+
+New Hebrides, myth of the origin of death in, 71, 343, 353
+
+---- Ireland (New Mecklenburg), 393, 397
+
+---- South Wales, aborigines of, their ideas as to the causes of death,
+ 45 _sq._;
+ as to the home of the dead, 133 _sq._
+
+Newton, Alfred, 90 _n._ 1
+
+Neyaux, the, of the Ivory Coast, 52
+
+_Ngai_, human spirit, 129
+
+Ngoc, the, of Annam, 69
+
+Ngoni, the, 61
+
+Nias, island of, 70
+
+Nigeria, Northern, 28 _n._ 1, 49
+
+Niggardly people punished in the other world, 405
+
+Noblemen alone immortal, 33
+
+Noofoor, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 303
+
+Noomfor, island, 303
+
+Norse burial custom, 453
+
+Noses bored, ghosts should have their, 192, 194 _sq._
+
+Novices presented to ancestral spirits at initiation, 432 _sq._, 434
+
+Nukahiva, one of the Marquesas Islands, 417
+
+
+Objects offered to the dead broken, 276
+
+Offering, soul of, consumed by deity or spirit, 297, 298
+
+Offerings of food and water to the dead, 174;
+ of food to the dead, 183, 201, 208, 211, 214, 232, 241, 332, 338,
+ 364 _sq._, 367 _sq._, 372 _sq._, 396 _sq._, 429, 442, 467;
+ of blood and hair to the dead, 183;
+ of game and fish to the dead, 226;
+ to the dead, 239, 276, 292;
+ of first-fruits to the dead, 259;
+ to ancestors, 298;
+ of food to ghosts, 348 _sq._;
+ to ghosts, 364 _sq._;
+ of first-fruits to ancestral spirits, 429;
+ of cloth and weapons to ancestral spirits, 430 _sq._
+ _See also_ Sacrifices
+
+----, burnt, to the dead, 294
+
+_Oknanikilla_, local totem centre, 97, 99, 124
+
+Old and young, difference between the modes of burying, 161, 162 _sq._
+
+Old people buried alive, 359
+
+Olympia, Pelops at, 159
+
+Omens after a death, 319
+
+Opening, special, for carrying dead out of house, 452 _sqq._
+
+Oracles of dead kings, 151
+
+---- of the dead, 151, 176, 179, 235
+
+Oracular responses of Fijian priests, 443 _sqq._
+
+Oranges, spirits of the dead play with, 326
+
+Ordeal to detect sorcerer, 50 _sqq._
+
+Orgy, licentious, following circumcision, 427 _sq._
+
+Origin of belief in immortality, 26 _sqq._
+
+---- of death, myths of the, 59 _sqq._
+
+Orion's belt, 368
+
+Ornaments of corpse removed before burial, 223, 234, 241
+
+
+Pahouins, the, 54
+
+Palsy, a Samoan god, 72
+
+Pandanus, reason for planting, 362
+
+---- and ghosts, 463
+
+Panoi, Melanesian land of the dead, 83, 345, 353 _sq._, 355, 356
+
+Papuan art, 220
+
+Papuans, animistic views of the, 264
+
+---- and Melanesians in New Guinea, 190 _sq._
+
+_Paraks_, temples, 220
+
+Parents deified, 439
+
+Parkinson, R., 219, 221
+
+Pelops, human blood offered on grave of, 159
+
+Penates in New Guinea, 308, 317
+
+Pennefather River, natives of the, their belief in reincarnation of the
+dead, 128
+
+Perche, burial custom in, 458
+
+Personal refuse, magic working through, 386, 413 _sq._
+
+Personification of natural phenomena, 20;
+ of death, 81
+
+Phosphorescent lights supposed to be ghosts, 198, 258
+
+_Physostigma venenosum_ in poison ordeal, 52
+
+Piety, two types of, 23;
+ co-operative system of, 333
+
+Pigs, blood of, smeared on skulls and bones of the dead, 200;
+ sacrificed to the dead, 201;
+ sacrificed to monster who swallows lads at initiation, 251, 253, 260,
+ 290, 301;
+ sacrificed at grave, 356;
+ sacrificed at burial, 359;
+ sacrificed to ghosts, 365 _sq._;
+ sacrificed vicariously for the sick, 373, 374, 375;
+ sacred, 433
+
+----, livers of, offered to the dead, 360 _sq._
+
+Pines, Isle of, 325, 330, 337
+
+Pirnmeheel, good spirit, 143
+
+Place of sacrifice to ghosts, 370
+
+Planting, sacrifices to ghosts at, 375
+
+Platforms, dead laid on, 199, 203, 205
+
+Plato, on death, 33
+
+Pleiades, the, 368
+
+Plum-tree people, 94
+
+---- totem, dramatic ceremony connected with, 120, 121
+
+Poison ordeal to detect sorcerers, 50 _sqq._
+
+Political constitution of the Fijians, 407
+
+Pollution, ceremonial, of gravediggers, 327
+
+Polynesian blood, infusion of, in New Guinea, 291
+
+---- race, 406
+
+Polytheism and monotheism, 11
+
+Polytheism discarded, 20 _sq._
+
+Population, belief in sorcery a cause of keeping down the, 38, 40, 46
+_sq._, 51 _sqq._
+
+Port Lincoln tribe of S. Australia, 42
+
+---- Moresby, 193, 195
+
+Poso in Celebes, 72
+
+Posts of new house, men sacrificed to support, 446 _sq._
+
+Potsdam Harbour, in German New Guinea, 218, 227
+
+Pottery, native, 220;
+ in New Guinea, 305
+
+----, Fijian, 407
+
+---- unknown in Northern Melanesia, 395
+
+Practical character of the savage, 274
+
+Prayer-posts, 333 _sq._
+
+Prayers to the dead, 201 _sq._, 214, 222 _sq._, 259, 288, 307, 329
+ _sq._, 332 _sqq._, 340, 376 _sq._, 401, 403 _sq._, 427, 441;
+ to ghosts, 348
+
+Precautions taken against ghosts, 152 _sq._, 258;
+ against a wife's ghost, 197;
+ against ghosts of the slain, 205 _sq._
+
+Predominance of the worship of the dead, 297 _sq._
+
+Prelogical savage, myth of the, 266
+
+Pretence of attacking persons engaged in attending to a corpse, 177, 178
+
+---- of avenging the dead, 136 _sq._, 282, 328
+ _See also_ Sham fight
+
+Priest, family, 332, 340
+
+----, chief or high, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434
+
+---- or magician, 336, 338
+
+Priests, Fijian, 433 _sqq._
+
+Private or tame ghosts, 369 _sq._, 381, 382, 386
+
+---- property, rights of, consolidated by taboo, 390
+
+Problem of death, 31 _sqq._
+
+Progress partly determined by competition, 89 _sq._
+
+----, social, stimulated by favourable natural conditions, 148 _sq._
+
+Promiscuity, temporary, 427 _sq._, 433, 434 _n._ 1, 436 _sq._
+
+Property displayed beside the corpse, 397
+
+----, rights of private, consolidated by taboo, 390;
+ temporarily suspended, 427 _sq._
+
+Property of dead deposited in grave, 145 _sqq._, 359, 397;
+ motive for destroying, 147 _sq._;
+ hung up on trees, 148;
+ destroyed, 327, 459;
+ burnt, 401 _sq._
+
+Prophecy inspired by ghosts, 388
+
+Prophets inspired by ghosts, 388 _sq._
+
+----, Hebrew, 14
+
+Propitiation of the dead, 201, 307, 338;
+ of ghosts and spirits, 226, 239, 348
+
+Puberty, initiation at, 254 _sq._;
+ bodily mutilations at, 303
+
+Public ghosts, 367, 369
+
+Purification of homicides, 206, 229
+
+---- by bathing and shaving, 208
+
+---- of mourners by bathing, 314, 319
+
+
+Queensland, belief in reincarnation of the dead among the aborigines of,
+ 127 _sqq._;
+ burial customs in, 147
+
+
+Rain sent by a mythical water-snake, 112, 114;
+ prayers for, 288;
+ stones to make, 336 _sq._
+
+---- and sunshine caused by a ghost, 375
+
+---- -ghost, 375
+
+---- -making, 288;
+ by the bones of the dead, 341
+
+Rat in myth of the origin of death, 67
+
+Rationality of the savage, 264 _sqq._
+
+Rebirth of the dead, 93 _sq._, 107, 127 _sq._
+ _See also_ Reincarnation
+
+---- of parents in their children, 315
+
+Recovery of lost souls, 194, 270 _sq._, 300 _sq._
+
+Red, skulls painted, 178
+
+Red bark in poison ordeals, 50, 52
+
+---- paint, manslayers smeared with, 448, 449
+
+---- roses, corpse crowned with, 233, 234
+
+Reflection or shadow, soul associated with, 207, 267
+
+Refuse, personal, magic working by means of, 413 _sq._
+
+Reincarnation, widespread belief in, 29.
+ _See also_ Rebirth
+
+---- doctrine of, unknown in Torres Straits, 172
+
+---- of the dead, belief of Central Australians in, 92 _sqq._, 107
+
+---- of the dead, 124 _sq._, 127 _sq._;
+ of Australian aborigines in white people, 130, 131 _sqq._;
+ of parents in their children, 315;
+ of grandfather in grandchild, 417, 418
+
+Relics of the dead as amulets, 332, 370;
+ preserved, 348
+
+Religion, importance of the history of, 3;
+ embryology of, 88
+
+Religion and magic compared in reference to their destruction of human
+ life, 57 _sq._;
+ combined in ritual, 111 _sq._, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 376
+
+---- and theology, how related, 9
+
+Resemblance of children to the dead, a source of belief in the
+transmigration of souls, 28 _sq._
+
+Restrictions observed by mourners, 313 _sq._;
+ ceremonial, laid on gravediggers, 327;
+ imposed on manslayers, 449
+
+Resurrection, ceremony of, among the Akikuya, 254
+
+---- from the dead after three days, 67 _sq._;
+ of the dead, steps taken to prevent the, 144;
+ as an initiatory rite at puberty, 254 _sq._, 261, 302, 431, 434 _sq._
+
+Return of the ghosts, 195, 198, 246, 300
+
+Revelation, the question of a supernatural, 8 _sq._
+
+Revival, temporary, of primitive communism, 436 _sq._
+
+Rheumatism attributed to sorcery, 45
+
+Rhodesia, 77
+
+Ribs of dead distributed among relatives, 400
+
+Ridgeway, W., on the origin of Greek tragedy, 189
+
+Rights of property temporarily suspended, 427 _sq._
+
+Ritual combining elements of religion and magic, 111 _sq._
+
+Rivalry between man and animals for gift of immortality, 74 _sq._
+
+River crossed by souls of the dead, 299, 462
+
+Rocking stone, 213
+
+Roro-speaking tribes of British New Guinea, 47, 196, 198
+
+Roth, W. E., 128
+
+Run or Ron, island, 303, 311
+
+Russia, burial custom in, 453
+
+
+Saa, in Malanta, 350, 351, 372, 378
+
+Sacrament of pork and water at initiation, 432 _sq._
+
+Sacred stones in New Caledonia, magical virtues attributed to, 334
+_sqq._
+
+---- enclosure of stones (_Nanga_) in Fiji, 428 _sqq._, 437 _sq._
+
+---- pigs, 433
+
+Sacrifice, crude motives for, 298 _sq._;
+ place of, 332
+
+---- of dogs in epidemics, 296;
+ of foreskins and fingers in honour of the dead, 426 _sq._
+
+Sacrifices to the dead, economic loss entailed by, 149
+
+---- to the dead, 239, 307, 338.
+ _See also_ Offerings
+
+Sacrifices, burnt, reasons for, 348 _sq._;
+ burnt, to ghosts, 366, 367 _sq._, 373
+
+---- to ghosts, 328; at planting, 375
+
+----, human, to ghosts, 371 _sq._;
+ human, in Fiji, 446 _sq._
+
+Sacrificial ritual in the Solomon Islands, 365 _sq._
+
+Saddle Mountain in German New Guinea, 262
+
+St. Joseph River in New Guinea, 196, 198
+
+Sakalava, the, of Madagascar, 49;
+ burial custom of, 461
+
+Saleijer, island of, burial custom in, 461
+
+Samoa, 406
+
+---- Harbour, in German New Guinea, 256
+
+Samoan myth of the origin of death, 72
+
+Samoyeds, burial custom of the, 457
+
+Samu-yalo, the killer of souls, 465
+
+San Cristoval, one of the Solomon Islands, 347, 376
+
+Sanctuaries, primitive, 99
+
+---- of ghosts, 377 _sq._
+
+Sanctuary, grave of worshipful dead becomes a, 347
+
+Sanitation based on fear of sorcery, 386 _sq._, 414
+
+Santa Cruz Islands, 343
+
+Santa Cruz, in the Solomon Islands, burial customs at, 352;
+ sacrifices to ghosts in, 374 _sq._
+
+Savage, myth of the prelogical, 266
+
+----, practical character of the, 274
+
+----, rationality of the, 264 _sqq._
+
+---- notions of causality, 19 _sq._;
+ conception of death, 31 _sqq._;
+ disbelief in death from natural causes, 33 _sqq._;
+ thought vague and inconsistent, 143
+
+---- religion, the study of, 7
+
+Savagery, importance of the study of, 6 _sq._;
+ a case of arrested or retarded development, 88 _sq._;
+ rise of monarchy essential to emergence from, 142
+
+Savages pay little attention to the stars, 140;
+ strength and universality of belief in immortality among, 468
+
+Savo, one of the Solomon Islands, 347
+
+Scarf, soul caught in a, 412 _sq._
+
+Scenery of Fiji, 409 _sq._
+
+Schomburgk, Richard, 38
+
+Schuermann, C. W., 42 _sq._
+
+Scientific conception of the world as a system of impersonal forces, 20
+_sq._
+
+Scotland, burial custom in, 453, 458
+
+Sea, land of the dead at the bottom of the, 307, 326
+
+---- -burial, 397
+
+---- -burial and land-burial, 347 _sq._
+
+---- -ghosts and land-ghosts, 348
+
+Seclusion of widow and widower, 204, 248 _sq._, 259, 275;
+ of relatives at grave, 209;
+ of mourners, 223 _sq._, 313 _sq._, 360;
+ of novices at circumcision, 251 _sq._, 260 _sq._, 302;
+ of manslayers, 279 _sq._;
+ of gravediggers, 327, 451;
+ of female mourners, 398
+
+Seclusion and purification of manslayer, 229 _sq._
+
+Second death of the dead, 195, 287, 299, 345, 350, 351, 354
+
+Secret societies, 395
+
+---- Society (_Asa_), 233
+
+Seemann, Berthold, 439 _sq._
+
+Seer describes ghosts, 204 _sq._
+
+Seget Sele, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 317
+
+Seligmann, Dr. C. G., 47, 191, 197, 206
+
+Selwyn, Bishop, 363
+
+Serpent and his cast skin in myths of the origin of death, 60, 69
+_sqq._, 74 _sq._, 83
+
+----, god in form of, 445, 462
+
+Serpents, souls of the dead in the form of, 300
+
+Setting sun, ghosts attracted to the, 175 _sq._
+
+Sexual licence following initiation, 433, 434 _n._ 1, 436 _sq._
+
+Shadow or reflection, human soul associated with, 129, 130, 173, 207,
+267, 395, 412
+
+Shadows of people seized by ghosts, 378, 383
+
+Shaking of medium a symptom of inspiration, 308, 309, 311
+
+Sham attack on men engaged in attending to a corpse, 177, 178
+
+---- burial, 356
+
+---- fight to appease ghost, 136 _sq._;
+ as a funeral ceremony, 235 _sq._, 327 _sq._;
+ as a ceremony to promote the growth of yams, 330.
+ _See also_ Pretence
+
+Sharks animated by ghosts, 348
+
+----, ghosts incarnate in, 373, 380;
+ images of, 373
+
+Shaving heads of mourners, 208
+
+Sheep in story of the origin of death, 64
+
+Shell-money, 394;
+ laid on corpse and buried with it, 398
+
+Shortlands Islands, 71
+
+Shrine of warrior ghost, 365
+
+Shrines for ancestral spirits, 316, 317
+
+Siamese, burial custom of the, 456
+
+Siasi Islands, 244
+
+Sick and old buried alive in Fiji, 420 _sqq._
+
+Sickness caused by demons, 194;
+ caused by ghosts, 56 _sq._, 195, 197, 222, 269 _sq._, 271, 279, 300,
+ 305, 322, 372, 381 _sqq._, 389
+
+---- supposed to be an effect of witchcraft, 35 _sqq._
+
+Sickness and death set down to sorcery, 240, 257
+
+---- and disease recognised by some savages as due to natural causes,
+ 55 _sq._
+ _See also_ Disease
+
+Sido, his journey to the land of the dead, 211 _sq._
+
+Sins, confession of, 201
+
+Skin cast as a means of renewing youth, 69 _sqq._, 74 _sq._, 83
+
+Skull-shaped stones in rain-making, 336 _sq._
+
+Skulls, spirits of the dead embodied in their, 338
+
+---- and arm-bones, special treatment of the, 199 _sq._;
+ carried by dancers at funeral dance, 200
+
+---- of the dead preserved, 199 _sqq._, 209, 249, 318, 328, 339, 347,
+ 351 _sq._, 398, 400 _sq._, 403;
+ preserved and consulted as oracles, 176, 178 _sq._, 179;
+ used in divination, 213;
+ kept in men's clubhouses, 221, 225;
+ inserted in wooden images, 311 _sq._, 321;
+ religious ceremonies performed with the, 329 _sq._;
+ food offered to the, 339 _sq._, 352;
+ used to fertilise plantations, 340;
+ used in conjurations, 402
+
+Sky, souls of the dead thought to be in the, 133 _sq._, 135, 138 _sq._,
+141, 142
+
+Slain, ghosts of the, especially dreaded, 205, 258, 279, 306, 323
+
+Sleep, soul thought to quit body in, 257, 291, 395, 412
+
+Smith, E. R., 53
+
+Smyth, R. Brough, 43 _sq._
+
+Snakes, ghosts in, 380
+
+Sneezing, omens from, 194
+
+Social progress stimulated by favourable natural conditions, 141 _sq._,
+148 _sq._
+
+---- ranks, gradation of, in Fiji, 408
+
+Solomon Islands, 343, 346 _sqq._;
+ sacrificial ritual in the, 365 _sq._
+
+Somosomo, one of the Fijian islands, 425, 441, 442
+
+Sorcerers, their importance in history, 16
+
+---- catch and detain souls, 267, 268 _sq._, 270
+
+---- put to death, 35, 35 _sq._, 37 _sq._, 40 _sq._, 44, 50, 136, 250,
+ 269, 277, 278 _sq._, 341 _sq._
+ _See also_ Magician
+
+Sorcery as the supposed cause of natural deaths, 33 _sqq._, 136, 268,
+ 270, 402;
+ sickness and death ascribed to, 257
+
+---- a cause of keeping down the population, belief in, 38, 40, 46
+ _sq._, 51 _sqq._
+
+---- Fijian dread of, 413 _sq._;
+ _See also_ Magic _and_ Witchcraft
+
+Sores ascribed to action of ghosts, 257
+
+_Soro_, atonement, 427
+
+Soul, world-wide belief in survival of soul after death, 24, 25, 33
+
+Soul of sleeper detained by enemy, 49;
+ human, associated with shadow or reflection, 173, 267, 395, 412;
+ pretence of carrying away the, 181 _sq._;
+ detained by demon, 194;
+ recovery of a lost, 194, 270 _sq._;
+ thought to quit body in sleep, 257, 291, 395, 412;
+ resides in the eye, 267;
+ thought to pervade the body, 267;
+ two kinds of human, 267 _sq._;
+ caught and detained by sorcerer, 267, 268 _sq._, 270;
+ long soul and short soul, 291 _sq._;
+ of offering consumed by deity or spirit, 297, 298;
+ thought to reside in the blood, 307;
+ Melanesian theory of the, 344 _sq._;
+ of sick tied up by ghost, 374;
+ North Melanesian theory of the, 395 _sq._;
+ in form of animals, 396;
+ Fijian theory of the, 410 _sqq._;
+ caught in a scarf, 412 _sq._;
+ of grandfather reborn in grandchild, 417;
+ of offerings consumed by gods, 443
+
+---- -stuff or spiritual essence, 267 _sq._, 270, 271, 279.
+ _See also_ Spirit
+
+Souls, recovery of lost, 300 _sq._;
+ River of the, 462;
+ the killer of, 464 _sq._
+
+---- of animals, sacrifices to the, 239;
+ of animals offered to ghosts, 246
+
+---- attributed by the Fijians to animals, vegetables, and inanimate
+things, 410 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead identified with spirits of nature, 130;
+ turned into animals, 229;
+ as falling stars, 229;
+ live in trees, 316
+
+---- carried off by ghosts, 197, 383;
+ of sorcerers in animals, 39
+
+---- of noblemen only saved, 33;
+ of those who died from home called back, 311
+
+Spells or incantations, 385
+
+Spencer and Gillen, 46 _sq._, 91 _sq._, 103, 104, 105, 106, 108, 116
+_sqq._, 123 _sq._, 140, 148, 156, 157, 158
+
+Spider and Death, 82 _sq._
+
+Spirit, human, associated with the heart, 129;
+ associated with the shadow, 129, 130.
+ _See also_ Soul
+
+Spirits, ancestral, help hunters and fishers, 226;
+ worshipped in the _Nanga_, 428 _sq._;
+ cloth and weapons offered to, 430 _sq._;
+ novices presented to, at initiation, 432 _sq._, 434
+
+---- of animals go to the spirit land, 210
+
+---- consume spiritual essence of sacrifices, 285, 287, 297, 298
+
+---- of the dead thought to be strengthened by blood, 159;
+ reborn in women, 93 _sq._;
+ give information to the living, 240;
+ give good crops, 247 _sq._;
+ thought to be mischievous, 257
+
+Spirits and ghosts, distinction between, in Central Melanesia, 343, 363
+
+---- and gods, no certain demarcation between, 441
+
+----, grand concert of, 340 _sq._;
+ represented by masked dancers, 297;
+ in tree-tops, 313
+
+----, guardian, 227
+
+---- of nature identified with souls of the dead, 130.
+ _See also_ Dead _and_ Ghost
+
+Spiritual essence or soul-stuff, 267 _sq._, 279.
+ _See also_ Soul-stuff
+
+Squatting posture of corpse in burial, 207
+
+Stanbridge, W. E., 44
+
+Stars associated with the souls of the dead, 134, 140;
+ little regarded by savages, 140;
+ falling, the souls of the dead, 229
+
+Steinen, K. von den, 35
+
+Sternberg, L., 15 _n._ 1
+
+Stick, cleft, used in cure, 271
+
+Stillborn children, burial of, 458
+
+Stocks, wooden, as representatives of the dead, 374, 386
+
+Stolz, Mr., 238, 239
+
+Stomach, soul seated in, 291 _sq._
+
+Stone, a rocking, 213
+
+---- used in rain-making, 288
+
+---- of Famine, 334
+
+---- of the Sun, 336
+
+Stonehenge, 438
+
+Stones, sacred, in New Caledonia, magical virtues attributed to, 334
+ _sqq._;
+ sacred, in sanctuaries, 377 _sq._
+
+---- used as altars, 379
+
+Stones inhabited by ghosts, 383 _sq._
+
+Store-houses, sacred, in Central Australia, 99, 101
+
+Strangling the sick and aged in Fiji, 423 _sq._
+
+_Sua_, human spirit or ghost, 193
+
+Suicide to escape decrepitude of old age, 422 _sq._
+
+Suicides, burial of, 164, 453, 458
+
+Sulka, the, of New Britain, 398 _sq._
+
+Sumatra, the Gajos of, 455
+
+Sun and the origin of death, 77
+
+----, ghosts attracted to the setting, 175 _sq._
+
+----, Stone of the, 336
+
+Sunshine, the making of, 336
+
+---- and rain caused by a ghost, 375
+
+Supernatural or spiritual power (_mana_) acquired from ghosts, 346
+_sq._, 352, 371, 380
+
+Superstition a crutch to morality, 175
+
+Supreme Being unknown among aborigines of Central Australia, 91 _sq._;
+ among the Monumbo, 228
+
+Survival of human soul after death, world-wide belief in, 24, 25, 33
+
+Swallowed by monster, pretence that candidates at initiation are, 251
+_sqq._, 260 _sq._, 290 _sq._, 301 _sq._
+
+Swine sent to ravage fields by ghosts, 278
+
+Symbolism of prayer-posts, 333 _sq._
+
+
+Taboo, meaning of, 390;
+ in Central Melanesia based on a fear of ghosts, 390 _sq._;
+ a prop of monarchical power, 408
+
+_Tabu_, demon, 194
+
+Tago, spirits, 297
+
+Tahiti, 439
+
+Tamanachiers, an Indian tribe, 70 _sq._
+
+Tami Islanders of German New Guinea, 291 _sqq._
+
+Taming a ghost, 370
+
+Tamos, the, of German New Guinea, 230
+
+Tanna, one of the New Hebrides, 369, 439
+
+Tanoa, king of Fiji, 425
+
+Taplin, Rev. George, 43, 134 _sqq._
+
+_Tapum_, guardian spirits, 227
+
+Taro, prayer for good crop of, 289
+
+Tasmanians, the, 89
+
+Tattooing as sign of mourning, 314
+
+Teeth of dead worn by relatives, 314 _sq._, 400, 404;
+ used as amulets, 332;
+ preserved as relics, 339;
+ used to fertilise plantations, 340
+
+Temples (_paraks_) in Tumleo, 220 _sq._
+
+----, Fijian, 439, 441 _sq._
+
+Terer, a mythical being, 181
+
+Thapauerlu, a pool, 105, 108
+
+Theology, natural, defined, 1, 8
+
+---- and religion, how related, 9
+
+Thomson, Basil, 408, 414, 428 _n._ 1, 429 _n._ 1, 434 _n._ 1, 436
+
+Threats of the dying, 273
+
+Three days, resurrection after, 67 _sq._
+
+Threshold, the dead carried out under the, 453, 457;
+ movable, 457
+
+Thrush in story of the origin of death, 61 _sq._
+
+Thunder the voice of a mythical being, 112, 114, 143
+
+_Tindalo_, a powerful ghost, 346
+
+Tinneh or Dene Indians, their ideas as to death, 39 _sq._
+
+Tlaloc, Mexican rain-god, 163
+
+Tlingit Indians, 163;
+ burial custom of the, 455
+
+To Kambinana, 69
+
+To Korvuvu, 69
+
+Togoland, West Africa, 81
+
+Toll exacted from ghosts, 224
+
+Tollkeeper, ghostly, 224
+
+Tonga, 406, 411
+
+Tongans, their limited doctrine of immortality, 33
+
+Torres Islands, 343, 353
+
+---- Straits Islanders, their ideas as to sickness and death, 47;
+ their belief in immortality, 170 _sqq._;
+ their ethnological affinity and social culture, 170 _sqq._;
+ funeral ceremonies of the, 176 _sqq._
+
+Totem, a dominant, 113;
+ design emblematic of, 168
+
+Totemic ancestor developing into a god, 113;
+ ancestors, traditions concerning, 115 _sqq._
+
+---- animals, imitation of, 177
+
+---- clans, 104;
+ animals and plants eaten, 120 _sq._;
+ animals and plants dramatically represented by actors, 121 _sq._
+
+Totemism, 95;
+ possibly developing into ancestor worship, 114 _sq._;
+ in Torres Straits, 172
+
+Totems, dramatic ceremonies connected with, 119 _sqq._;
+ eaten, 120 _sqq._;
+ magical ceremonies for the multiplication of, 124 _sq._
+
+Tracking a ghost, 277 _sq._
+
+Traditions of the dead associated with conspicuous features of the
+landscape, 115 _sqq._
+
+Transmigration, widespread belief in, 29;
+ of dead into animals, 242, 245;
+ of souls, 322;
+ Fijian doctrine of, 467
+
+Travancore, burial custom in, 456
+
+Tree of immortality, 74
+
+Tree-burial, 161, 166, 167, 199, 203;
+ of young children, 312 _sq._
+
+---- -tops, spirits in, 313
+
+Trees, property of dead hung up on, 148;
+ as monuments of the dead, 225;
+ huts built in, 263;
+ souls of the dead live in, 316
+
+Tremearne, Major A. J. N., 28 _n._ 1
+
+Truth of the belief in immortality, question of the, 469 _sqq._
+
+Tsiabiloum, the land of the dead, 326
+
+Tube inserted in grave, 277
+
+Tubes, magical, 269, 270
+
+Tubetube, island of, 206, 209, 210
+
+Tugeri or Kaya-Kaya, the, of Dutch New Guinea, 255
+
+Tully River in Queensland, 130
+
+Tulmeng, lord of the nether world, 286
+
+Tumleo, island of, 218 _sqq._
+
+Tumudurere, a mythical being, 207
+
+Tumupasa, burial custom of the Indians of, 457
+
+Turner, Dr. George, 325, 339, 369
+
+Turrbal tribe, 146
+
+Tuski of Alaska, burial custom of the, 456
+
+Two Messengers, the, myth of the origin of death, 60 _sqq._
+
+
+Uganda, first man in, 78;
+ dead kings of, worshipped, 151;
+ jawbones of dead kings of, preserved, 235;
+ war-god of, 366.
+ _See also_ Baganda
+
+Unburied dead, ghosts of the, 349
+
+Unfruitful wife, mode of impregnating, 417
+
+Unkulunkulu, 60
+
+Unmarried ghosts, hard fate of, 464
+
+Umatjera tribe, 68, 166
+
+Urabunna, the, of Central Australia, 95
+
+
+Vagueness and inconsistency of savage thought, 143
+
+_Vale tambu_, the Sacred House, 438
+
+Vanigela River, 202, 203
+
+Vanua Lava, mountain, 355
+
+---- -levu, one of the Fijian Islands, 416, 417, 418, 426
+
+Vate or Efat, one of the New Hebrides, 359, 376
+
+Vengeance taken on enemies by means of a ghost, 258;
+ ghost calls for, 278, 310, 468
+
+Vetter, Konrad, 242, 244, 245, 248, 255
+
+Vicarious sacrifices of pigs for the sick, 372, 374, 375
+
+Victoria, aborigines of, their ideas as to natural death, 40 _sq._, 42;
+ their beliefs as to the dead, 142;
+ their burial customs, 145, 145 _sq._;
+ cuttings for the dead among the, 154 _sq._
+
+Views of human nature, two different, 469 _sqq._
+
+Village of ghosts, 231 _sq._, 234
+
+---- deserted after a death, 275
+
+Viti Levu, one of the Fijian Islands, 419, 428, 435, 445
+
+Vormann, Franz, 228 _sq._
+
+Vuatom, island, 70
+
+
+Wagawaga, in British New Guinea, 206 _sqq._
+
+Wainimala in Fiji, 436
+
+Wakelbura, the, 152
+
+Wallace, Alfred Russel, on death, 85 _sq._
+
+War, ancestral images taken to, 310, 315;
+ perpetual state of, 339
+
+---- -god of Uganda, 366
+
+Warramunga, the, of Central Australia, 94;
+ their totem the Wollunqua, 103 _sqq._, 108 _sqq._;
+ dramatic ceremonies connected with totems among the, 123 _sq._;
+ cuttings for the dead among the, 156 _sqq._;
+ burial customs of the, 167 _sq._
+
+Warrior ghost, 363 _sq._
+
+Warriors pray to ghosts, 288
+
+Wars among savages undertaken to appease angry ghosts, 468
+
+Wa-Sania, tribe of E. Africa, 66
+
+Washing body a rain-charm, 375
+
+Watch-an-die, tribe of W. Australia, 41
+
+Watch at the grave, 293
+
+---- of widow or widower on grave, 241
+
+Water as a barrier against ghosts, 152;
+ poured as a rain-charm, 375 _sq._
+
+---- great, to be crossed by ghosts, 224
+
+---- -snake, great mythical (Wollunqua), 104 _sqq._, 108 _sqq._
+
+Way to the land of the dead, 212 _sq._
+
+Weakening of religious faith, 4
+
+Weapons deposited with the dead, 145 _sqq._;
+ deposited at grave, 211;
+ of dead broken, 399
+
+Weather regulated by ghosts and spirits, 384 _sq._
+
+---- -doctors, 385 _sq._
+
+Weaving in New Guinea, 305
+
+Weismann, August, on death, 84 _sq._
+
+Wemba, the, of Northern Rhodesia, 77
+
+Western Australia, beliefs as to death among the natives of, 41 _sq._
+
+Whale's teeth as offerings, 420, 421, 429, 443, 444
+
+Whip of souls, 270
+
+Whipping men in mourning, 452
+
+White ants' nests, ghosts turn into, 351
+
+---- clay smeared on mourners, 158, 177
+
+---- men identified with the spirits of the dead, 342
+
+---- people, souls of dead Australian aborigines thought to be reborn
+in, 130, 131 _sqq._
+
+Whitened with chalk, bodies of lads after circumcision, 302
+
+Widow, mourning costume of, 184, 204;
+ seclusion of, 204;
+ killed to accompany the ghost of her husband, 249, 275;
+ drinks juices of putrefying corpse, 313
+
+Widower exposed to attacks of his wife's ghost, 197;
+ costume of, 204;
+ seclusion of, 204, 248 _sq._, 259
+
+Widows cut and burn their bodies in mourning, 176
+
+Wigs worn by Fijians, 451
+
+Wiimbaio tribe, 145
+
+Wilkes, Charles, 424 _sq._
+
+Williams, Thomas, 408, 412, 413, 452, 467
+
+Williamson, R. W., 201
+
+Wind, ghosts float down the, 176
+
+Windessi, in Dutch New Guinea, burial customs at, 318 _sq._
+
+_Wingara_, early mythical times, 116
+
+Witchcraft, fear of, 244;
+ death ascribed to, 277, 402;
+ Fijian terror of, 413 _sq._;
+ benefits derived from, 414
+
+Witchcraft or black magic in Central Melanesia, 386 _sq._
+
+---- as a cause of death, 34 _sqq._
+ _See also_ Sorcery
+
+Witchetty grub totem, dramatic ceremonies concerned with, 121 _sq._, 123
+
+Wives of the dead killed, 399;
+ strangled or buried alive at their husbands' funerals in Fiji, 424
+ _sq._
+
+Woibu, the land of the dead, 211
+
+Wolgal tribe, 146
+
+Wollunqua, mythical water-snake, totem of the Warramunga, 103 _sqq._,
+ 108 _sqq._, 125;
+ ceremonies in honour of the, 108 _sqq._
+
+Woman, old, in myths of the origin of death, 64, 71 _sq._
+
+----, the Great, 464
+
+Women thought not to have immortal spirits, 92;
+ cut and burn their bodies in mourning, 154 _sqq._, 196, 203;
+ excluded from circumcision ground, 291, 301;
+ dance at deaths, 293;
+ drink juices of putrefying corpse, 355;
+ not allowed to be present at sacrifices, 367;
+ whip men in mourning, 452;
+ burial of childless, 458;
+ the cause of death, 472
+
+---- dying in childbed, special treatment of their ghosts, 358;
+ their ghosts specially feared, 212, 458 _sqq._
+
+Wordsworth on immortality, 26 _n._ 1
+
+Worship of ancestors, 221, 328 _sqq._, 338;
+ predominance of the, 297 _sq._;
+ possibly evolved from totemism, 114 _sq._
+ _See also_ Worship of the dead.
+
+---- of ancestors in Central Australia, possible evolution of, 125
+ _sq._;
+ of ancestral spirits in the _Nanga_, 428 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead, 23 _sqq._, 328 _sqq._, 338;
+ in part based on a theory of dreams, 27 _sq._;
+ elements of it widespread, 31;
+ in British New Guinea, 201 _sq._;
+ predominance of the, 297 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead, incipient, in Australia, 149, 150, 168 _sq._
+
+---- of the dead in Torres Straits, elements of a, 189;
+ among the Yabim, elements of a, 255
+
+Worshipful ghosts, 362 _sq._
+
+Wotjobaluk, the, 67, 139
+
+Wraiths, 396
+
+Wurunjerri, the, 146
+
+
+Yabim, the, of German New Guinea, 242 _sqq._;
+ their ideas as to death, 47
+
+Yams, prayers for, 330;
+ stones to make yams grow, 337 _sq._
+
+Young children buried on trees, 312 _sq._
+
+Young and old, difference between the modes of burying, 161, 162 _sq._
+
+Youth supposed to be renewed by casting skin, 69 _sqq._, 74 _sq._, 83
+
+Ysabel, one of the Solomon Islands, 350, 372, 379, 380
+
+Yule Island, 196 _n._ 2, 197
+
+
+Zahn, Heinrich, 242, 244
+
+Zend-Avesta, 453
+
+Zulus, their story of the origin of death, 60 _sq._
+
+
+END OF VOL. I
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Works by J. G. FRAZER, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.
+
+
+THE GOLDEN BOUGH
+
+A STUDY IN MAGIC AND RELIGION
+
+Third Edition, revised and enlarged. 8vo.
+
+Part I. The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings. Two volumes, 20s. net.
+
+II. Taboo and the Perils of the Soul. One volume. 10s. net.
+
+III. The Dying God. One volume. Second Impression. 10s. net.
+
+IV. Adonis, Attis, Osiris. One volume. Second Edition. 10s. net.
+
+V. Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild. Two volumes. 20s. net.
+
+VI. The Scapegoat. (_Spring_, 1913.)
+
+VII. Balder the Beautiful. (_Spring_, 1913.)
+
+ _TIMES._--"The verdict of posterity will probably be that _The
+ Golden Bough_ has influenced the attitude of the human mind
+ towards supernatural beliefs and symbolical rituals more
+ profoundly than any other books published in the nineteenth
+ century except those of Darwin and Herbert Spencer."
+
+
+LECTURES ON THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE KINGSHIP. 8vo. 8s. 6d. net.
+
+ _ATHENAEUM._--"It is the effect of a good book not only to teach,
+ but also to stimulate and to suggest, and we think this the best
+ and highest quality, and one that will recommend these lectures
+ to all intelligent readers, as well as to the learned."
+
+
+PSYCHE'S TASK. A Discourse concerning the Influence of Superstition on
+the Growth of Institutions. 8vo. 2s. 6d. net.
+
+ _TIMES._--"Dr. Frazer has answered the question of how the moral
+ law has been safeguarded, especially in its infancy, with a
+ wealth of learning and a clearness of utterance that leave
+ nothing to be desired. Perhaps the uses of superstition is not
+ quite such a new theme as he seems to fancy. Even the most
+ ignorant of us were aware that many false beliefs of a religious
+ or superstitious character had had very useful moral or
+ physical, or especially sanitary, results. But if the theme is
+ fairly familiar, the curious facts which are adduced in support
+ of it will be new to most people, and will make the book as
+ interesting to read as the lectures must have been to hear."
+
+
+THE SCOPE OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY. 8vo. Sewed. 6d. net.
+
+ _OXFORD MAGAZINE._--"In his inaugural lecture the new Professor
+ of Social Anthropology in the University of Liverpool defines
+ his Science, states its aims, and puts in a spirited plea for
+ the scientific study of primitive man while there is still time,
+ before the savage in his natural state becomes as extinct as the
+ dodo."
+
+TOTEMISM AND EXOGAMY. A Treatise on Certain Early Forms of Superstition
+and Society. With Maps. Four vols. 8vo. 50s. net.
+
+ Mr. A. E. Crawley in _NATURE_.--"Prof. Frazer is a great artist
+ as well as a great anthropologist. He works on a big scale; no
+ one in any department of research, not even Darwin, has employed
+ a wider induction of facts. No one, again, has dealt more
+ conscientiously with each fact; however seemingly trivial, it is
+ prepared with minute pains and cautious tests for its destiny as
+ a slip to be placed under the anthropological microscope. He
+ combines, so to speak, the merits of Tintoretto and
+ Meissonier.... That portion of the book which is concerned with
+ totemism (if we may express our own belief at the risk of
+ offending Prof. Frazer's characteristic modesty) is actually
+ 'The Complete History of Totemism, its Practice and its Theory,
+ its Origin and its End.'... Nearly two thousand pages are
+ occupied with an ethnographical survey of totemism, an
+ invaluable compilation. The maps, including that of the
+ distribution of totemic peoples, are a new and useful feature."
+
+
+PAUSANIAS'S DESCRIPTION OF GREECE.
+Translated with a Commentary, Illustrations, and Maps.
+Second Edition. Six vols. 8vo. 126s. net.
+
+ _ATHENAEUM._--"All these writings in many languages Mr. Frazer
+ has read and digested with extraordinary care, so that his book
+ will be for years _the_ book of reference on such matters, not
+ only in England, but in France and Germany. It is a perfect
+ thesaurus of Greek topography, archaeology, and art. It is,
+ moreover, far more interesting than any dictionary of the
+ subject; for it follows the natural guidance of the Greek
+ traveller, examining every town or village which he describes;
+ analysing and comparing with foreign parallels every myth or
+ fairy tale which he records; citing every information which can
+ throw light on the works of art he admires."
+
+
+PAUSANIAS AND OTHER GREEK SKETCHES.
+Globe 8vo. 4s. net.
+
+ _GUARDIAN._--"Here we have material which every one who has
+ visited Greece, or purposes to visit it, most certainly should
+ read and enjoy.... We cannot imagine a more excellent book for
+ the educated visitor to Greece."
+
+
+LETTERS OF WILLIAM COWPER. Chosen and
+Edited with a Memoir and a few Notes by J. G. Frazer,
+D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D. Two vols. Globe 8vo. 8s. net.
+
+(_Eversley Series._)
+
+ Mr. Clement Shorter in the _DAILY CHRONICLE_.--"To the task Dr.
+ Frazer has given a scholarly care that will make the edition one
+ that is a joy to possess. His introductory Memoir, of some
+ eighty pages in length, is a valuable addition to the many
+ appraisements of Cowper that these later years have seen. It is
+ no mere perfunctory 'introduction' but a piece of sound
+ biographical work.... Dr. Frazer has given us two volumes that
+ are an unqualified joy."
+
+
+
+MacMillan and Co., Ltd., London.
+
+
+
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