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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78356 ***
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ ANDAMAN ISLANDERS
+
+ A STUDY IN SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY
+ (ANTHONY WILKIN STUDENTSHIP RESEARCH, 1906)
+
+
+ BY
+ A. R. BROWN, M.A.
+ FORMERLY FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
+
+
+ CAMBRIDGE
+ AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS
+ 1922
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ Dr A. C. HADDON, F.R.S.
+ AND
+ Dr W. H. R. RIVERS, F.R.S.
+
+ TO WHOSE INSTRUCTION AND KIND ENCOURAGEMENT IS DUE
+ WHATEVER VALUE IT MAY POSSESS,
+ THIS WORK OF APPRENTICESHIP IS DEDICATED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+This book contains some part of the results of anthropological research
+carried out in the Andaman Islands in the years 1906 to 1908, under the
+terms of the Anthony Wilkin Studentship in Ethnology of the University
+of Cambridge. The funds supplied by the studentship were supplemented
+by grants from the Royal Society and from the government of India. In
+its original form the monograph was presented as a fellowship thesis at
+Trinity College. The work of rewriting it was interrupted by absence
+from England and was only completed in 1914. There has since been a
+long delay in publication as a result of the war.
+
+The book deals with the social institutions of the tribes of the Great
+Andaman. These had previously been studied by Mr E. H. Man to whose
+work I have been obliged to make many references in order that my
+account may be as complete as possible. I should have preferred to
+devote my attention almost exclusively to the natives of the Little
+Andaman, about whom very little is known. I found, however, that it was
+not possible in the time at my disposal to do any satisfactory work
+amongst these people owing to the difficulty of language. The natives
+of the Little Andaman know no language but their own, and that is so
+little related to the languages of the Great Andaman that even a
+thorough knowledge of the latter is of almost no use in an attempt to
+learn the former. I spent nearly three months camped with natives of
+the Little Andaman, giving most of the time to learning their language.
+No one who has not actually made the attempt to learn the language of a
+savage people without the help of an interpreter, can form an adequate
+idea of the difficulties of the task. At the end of three months I
+found that at the same rate of progress it would take me two or three
+years to learn to speak the language sufficiently well to begin to
+question the natives about their customs and beliefs and understand
+their answers. I was therefore regretfully compelled to give up the
+idea of making a study of the people of the Little Andaman, and devoted
+the remainder of my time to the study of the tribes of the Great
+Andaman, particularly those of the North Andaman among whom Mr Man had
+not worked. I kept one boy from the Little Andaman with me for some
+months in the hope that he would learn sufficient Hindustani to act as
+an interpreter and so enable any future investigator to begin work with
+the great advantage that I had lacked.
+
+In my work amongst the natives of the Great Andaman I at first made use
+of Hindustani, which the younger men and women all speak more or less
+imperfectly, and gradually acquired a knowledge of the dialects of the
+North Andaman. Towards the end of my stay in the islands I was able to
+obtain the services as interpreter of a man of the Akar-Bale tribe who
+spoke English well and was of considerable intelligence. He is shown in
+the photographs of Plates V and XIII. With his help I was able to do
+some work with the Akar-Bale and A-Pučikwar tribes, and I found that
+with such an interpreter I was able to obtain much fuller and more
+reliable results than I could by using my own knowledge of the native
+language supplemented by Hindustani. If I had had his services from the
+outset my work would have been much easier and more thorough.
+
+The results of my researches on the physical anthropology of the
+Andaman Islanders have not been published. I hoped to be able to obtain
+the services of some one more competent in such matters than myself to
+assist or direct me in the measurement and study of the collection of
+skulls and skeletons that I brought to England and that is now in the
+Anthropological Museum at Cambridge. In this I was disappointed, and
+absence from England has prevented me from completing my work in this
+branch of research.
+
+The languages of the Andaman Islands are chiefly of interest as
+affording material for the study of comparative grammar and the
+psychology of language. I had hoped to be able to make some use of the
+large mass of linguistic material collected by Mr E. H. Man and
+arranged by Sir Richard Temple, which the latter was so kind as to
+permit me to examine. Mr Man, however, expressed the intention of
+publishing that material himself. Therefore, rather than delay longer,
+I began the publication of my own linguistic studies in a series of
+papers in the journal Anthropos, of which, however, only the first had
+appeared when the outbreak of war interrupted them [1]. I cannot say
+when the publication of these notes will be resumed.
+
+Chapters V and VI of the present work contain an attempt at an
+interpretation of the Andamanese customs and beliefs, which I regard as
+the most important and hope will be the most valuable part of the book.
+It is some years since they were written and although they have
+undergone some revision they now seem to me so inadequately to express
+my thought that I could wish to rewrite them entirely. At the time they
+were written (1910) they exhibited an attempt to develop a new method
+in the interpretation of the institutions of a primitive people. That
+method will not perhaps seem so novel now as it would have done then.
+However, I hope that the two chapters will still have value as an
+example of the method which I believe to be fundamental in the science
+that has lately come to be known as social anthropology [2].
+
+Of the many imperfections of the book I am, I think, only too well
+aware. It is indeed an apprentice work, for it was through my work in
+the Andamans that I really learnt anthropology. However good may be his
+preliminary training (and mine under Drs Haddon, Rivers and Duckworth
+at Cambridge was, I think, as thorough as possible) it is only by
+actually living with and working amongst a primitive people that the
+social anthropologist can acquire his real training. Naturally work
+done while learning how to do it must necessarily be faulty.
+
+It is very late now to place on record my obligations to the officers
+of the settlement of Port Blair, particularly to Colonel Herbert and
+Colonel Browning, the successive chief commissioners, for their
+kindness and help during my stay in the islands.
+
+To Dr Haddon and Dr Rivers I am obliged for reading the proofs and for
+many helpful suggestions.
+
+
+A. R. BROWN.
+
+University of Cape Town,
+January 1922.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+ Introduction 1
+ I. The Social Organisation 22
+ II. Ceremonial Customs 88
+ III. Religious and Magical Beliefs 136
+ IV. Myths and Legends 186
+ V. The Interpretation of Andamanese Customs and Beliefs:
+ Ceremonial 229
+ VI. The Interpretation of Andamanese Customs and Beliefs:
+ Myths and Legends 330
+ Appendix A. The Technical Culture of the Andaman Islanders 407
+ Appendix B. The Spelling of Andamanese Words 495
+ Index 499
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF PLATES AND MAPS
+
+
+Frontispiece. An Andaman Islander shooting fish with bow and arrow on
+the reefs at Port Blair
+
+PLATE
+I. A young man of the North Andaman To face p. 26
+II. A young married woman ,, ,, ,, 27
+III. A man of the North Andaman and his son. (The
+ man’s height is 1438 mm., 4 feet 8 inches) ,, ,, ,, 28
+IV. A married woman of the Great Andaman wearing
+ belts of Pandanus leaf and ornaments of
+ Dentalium shell ,, ,, ,, 29
+V. A man of the Akar-Bale tribe with South
+ Andaman bow and arrows, wearing belt and
+ necklace of netting and Dentalium shell.
+ (Height 1494 mm., 4 feet 9 inches) ,, ,, ,, 30
+VI. Portion of the village of Moi-lepto,
+ Akar-Bale tribe. On the right is an
+ unfinished mat of palm leaves for the roof of
+ a new hut ,, ,, ,, 32
+VII. A hut in the village of Moi-lepto, showing ,, ,, ,, 34
+ the mode of construction
+VIII. A village of the Middle Andaman ,, ,, ,, 36
+IX. Woman decorated with odu clay ,, ,, ,, 120
+X. Woman decorated with odu clay ,, ,, ,, 121
+XI. Three men and a young woman decorated with
+ odu clay ,, ,, ,, 122
+XII. A young man decorated with white clay in
+ readiness for a dance ,, ,, ,, 124
+XIII. A man with a pattern of white clay on his
+ face ,, ,, ,, 125
+XIV. A woman with her child ,, ,, ,, 126
+XV. A young married woman, showing pattern
+ scarified on body and arms ,, ,, ,, 127
+XVI. A girl during the ceremony at puberty,
+ decorated with strips of Pandanus leaf ,, ,, ,, 128
+XVII. A woman wearing clay on her forehead as a
+ sign of mourning ,, ,, ,, 129
+XVIII. A girl wearing her sister’s skull ,, ,, ,, 132
+XIX. The peace-making dance of the North Andaman ,, ,, ,, 134
+Map 1. South-eastern Asia, showing the present
+ distribution of the Negrito Race ,, ,, ,, 6
+Map 2. The Andaman Islands, showing the distribution
+ of tribes ,, ,, ,, 11
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF FIGURES IN THE TEXT
+
+
+ PAGE
+ Plan of Andamanese Village 34
+
+ Fig. 1. Section of Little Andaman bow, in the middle and
+ near the end 420
+ ,, 2. Shoulder of Little Andaman bow 420
+ ,, 3. Bow-string of twisted fibre, Little Andaman 421
+ ,, 4. Diagram showing the method of making the loop
+ in the end of the Little Andaman bow-string 421
+ ,, 5. Section of bow from North Sentinel Island 422
+ ,, 6. Section of Jarawa bow 422
+ ,, 7. Upper end of South Andaman bow 423
+ ,, 8. Section across the blade of a South Andaman bow 424
+ ,, 9. Loop of bow-string, South Andaman 425
+ ,, 10. Ornament on South Andaman bow 426
+ ,, 11. Section across the blade of a North Andaman bow 427
+ ,, 12. North Andaman bow seen from the front 429
+ ,, 13. North Andaman bow; A, in the half-strung or
+ reversed position; B, in the fully strung
+ position 429
+ ,, 14. Toy bow of the North Andaman 432
+ ,, 15. Section across the middle of four Semang bows 434
+ ,, 16. Fish-arrow of the Great Andaman 437
+ ,, 17. Head of pig-arrow, Great Andaman 437
+ ,, 18. Pig-arrow with detachable head, Great Andaman 437
+ ,, 19. Method of making the cord of the Great Andaman
+ pig-arrow 437
+ ,, 20. Pig-arrow, Little Andaman 440
+ ,, 21. Head of Jarawa pig-arrow 440
+ ,, 22. Arrow with head of Areca wood, Great Andaman 440
+ ,, 23. Harpoon, Great Andaman 440
+ ,, 24. Turtle net, South Andaman 442
+ ,, 25. Knot used in making the North Andaman turtle net 443
+ ,, 26. North Andaman fish-gig 444
+ ,, 27. Boar’s tusk, used as a spokeshave 448
+ ,, 28. Adze and knife 449
+ ,, 29. Method of making bamboo mat, Little Andaman 456
+ ,, 30. Diagram showing the technique used in making
+ mats of thatch 457
+ ,, 31. Diagram showing the technique used in Great
+ Andaman mats 457
+ ,, 32 a, 32 b. Pot, tied up for carrying, North
+ Andaman 459, 460
+ ,, 33. Basket for carrying pot, South Andaman 461
+ ,, 34. Portion of basket of Little Andaman 462
+ ,, 35. Portion of basket of South Andaman 464
+ ,, 36. Pig’s skull with basket-work, Jarawa 466
+ ,, 37. Diagram showing netting needle, and method of
+ netting 471
+ ,, 38. Shape of North Andaman pot 473
+ ,, 39. Shape of South Andaman pot 474
+ ,, 40. Necklaces of mangrove seed-tops, Great Andaman 480
+ ,, 41. Diagram showing method of making ornamental cord,
+ Little Andaman 481
+ ,, 42. Designs incised or painted on belts of Pandanus
+ leaf, Great Andaman 484
+ ,, 43. Designs on bamboo necklace from the North Andaman 485
+ ,, 44. Transverse section of canoe and outrigger 487
+ ,, 45. Showing manner in which the boom is connected
+ with the float 488
+ ,, 46. Paddle 489
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The Andaman Islands are part of a chain of islands stretching from Cape
+Negrais in Burma to Achin Head in Sumatra. This line of islands forms a
+single geographical system, as it were a submarine range of mountains,
+the highest points rising here and there above the surface of the
+ocean. Some 80 miles or so from Cape Negrais lies the first of the
+islands in the chain, Preparis Island, between which and the mainland
+the sea depth does not exceed 100 fathoms. Southwards of this the
+submarine ridge sinks to a depth of about 150 fathoms, rising again to
+form the small group of islands known as the Cocos, some 50 miles from
+Preparis. Geographically the Cocos may be regarded as part of the
+Andaman Group. Landfall Island, the most northerly point of the
+Andamans proper, is only distant from them some 30 miles, and the sea
+depth between does not exceed 45 fathoms. The Andaman Group itself
+consists of the Great and Little Andaman with their outlying islets,
+and occupies a distance approximately north and south of about 210
+miles. Eighty miles to the south of the Andamans lie the Nicobar
+Islands, a scattered archipelago occupying a distance of about 160
+miles from north to south. The sea between the Andamans and the
+Nicobars is over 700 fathoms deep. Deep sea also divides the Nicobars
+from Sumatra, which is about 110 miles distant from the most southerly
+point of Great Nicobar.
+
+This line of islands is part of a long fold extending from the eastern
+end of the Himalayas, which includes the Arakan Yomah Range of Burma
+and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and finds its continuation in the
+islands off the west coast of Sumatra [3].
+
+On the west the Andamans are separated from the coast of Madras, 700
+miles distant, by the Sea of Bengal. On the east the Andaman Sea, a
+depression with a depth of over 1000 fathoms, separates the Andamans
+and Nicobars from the Malay Isthmus and Peninsula. Across the Andaman
+Sea, less than 100 miles distant from the Andamans, there runs a line
+of volcanic activity, marked by two small islands, Barren Island in
+Lat. 12° 15´ N. and Long. 93° 50´ E., and Narkondam in Lat. 13° 26´ N.
+and Long. 95° 15´ E. [4]
+
+The Cocos, the Andamans and the Nicobars are now part of the Indian
+Empire. The Cocos Islands are occupied by a station for wireless
+telegraphy. In the Andaman Islands there is a penal settlement at Port
+Blair, to which are sent the criminals of India and Burma. The Nicobars
+are treated as one with the Andamans for administrative purposes.
+
+Until the nineteenth century the Cocos Islands were uninhabited. The
+Andamans and the Nicobars have for many centuries been inhabited by two
+entirely different races. The Andamanese belong to that branch of the
+human species known to anthropologists as the Negrito race. They are
+short of stature with black skins and frizzy hair. The Nicobarese, on
+the other hand, resemble the races of Indo-China and Malaya, and have
+brown skins and lank hair, and are of medium stature.
+
+The Andaman Islands consist of the Great Andaman and the Little
+Andaman, and a number of smaller islands. The Great Andaman may be
+regarded as one island, although it is divided by narrow sea water
+creeks into four areas, often spoken of as separate islands and called
+North Andaman, Middle Andaman, Baratang and South Andaman. It is a long
+narrow stretch of land with a much indented coast, surrounded by many
+smaller islands, of which the most important are Interview Island off
+the west coast, Ritchie’s Archipelago on the east, Rutland Island at
+the extreme south, and the outlying North Sentinel Island. The length
+of the Great Andaman with Rutland Island is nearly 160 miles, while the
+breadth from sea to sea is nowhere more than 20 miles. The Little
+Andaman lies to the south of the Great Andaman, about 30 miles distant
+from Rutland Island, from which it is separated by a shallow strait
+with a maximum depth of only 21 fathoms. The island is about 26 miles
+long from north to south and about 16 miles wide.
+
+Viewed from the sea the islands appear as a series of hills, nowhere of
+any great height, covered from sky-line to high-water mark with dense
+and lofty forest. The hill-ranges run approximately north and south, in
+the same direction as the islands themselves, and attain a greater
+elevation on the east than on the west. The highest point of the North
+Andaman is Saddle Peak (2402 feet), that of Middle Andaman is Mt
+Diavolo (1678 feet), while the South Andaman has the Mt Harriett Range
+(1505 feet), and in Rutland Island there is Mt Foord (1422 feet). There
+are no streams of any size. The water drains from the hills into tidal
+creeks running through mangrove swamps, often many miles in length. The
+coast is broken by a number of magnificent harbours. The shores are
+fringed with extensive coral reefs, and on these and in the creeks
+there is abundance of fish and molluscs.
+
+The islands, save for the clearings of the Penal Settlement, are
+covered with dense tropical forest. There are few mammals, the only two
+of any size being a species of pig (Sus andamanensis, Blyth) and a
+civet-cat (Paradoxurus tytlerii, Tytler). The other mammals are a few
+species of rats, a tree-shrew and some species of bats. Of birds there
+are many different species, some of them peculiar to the islands. The
+reptiles include a considerable number of species of snakes, and a few
+species of lizards, of which the most noteworthy is the large Monitor
+lizard (Varanus salvator).
+
+The climate is warm and moist, and fairly uniform throughout the year.
+The mean temperature for the year at Port Blair is about 86° F. (80° F.
+on the wet bulb thermometer). The lowest temperatures are recorded in
+January and February, and the highest in March, April, or May. The
+average lowest temperature in the South Andaman over a period of seven
+years is 66·7° F., the minimum during that period being 63° F. The
+average highest temperature in the shade for the same period was 96°
+F., the maximum being 97°. The average diurnal variation is 10°.
+
+The average rainfall of seven stations in the Penal Settlement of Port
+Blair, for a period of seven years, was 138 inches per annum, the
+averages of the different stations varying from 104 to 172 inches. For
+the same period the average number of rainy days in the year was 177,
+the minimum being 160 and the maximum 196.
+
+The islands are sufficiently far from the Equator to have a single
+well-defined rainy season. The greater part of the rain falls during
+the south-west monsoon, which lasts from the middle of May to the
+middle of November. The north-east monsoon extends over the other six
+months of the year, which include the dry and hot seasons.
+
+The average weather can be shown most conveniently by means of a
+calendar.
+
+
+January. Cool; little or no rain; wind N.N.E.; nights sometimes foggy.
+
+February. Cool; little or no rain; wind N.N.E.; very clear; light airs.
+
+March. Hot by day, cool nights; little or no rain; wind N.N.E.; light
+airs, occasional haze; the weather gets hotter as the month passes.
+
+April. Very hot; little or no rain; wind variable, off-shore at night
+and on-shore by day; calm and hazy.
+
+May. The first half of the month like April; the south-west monsoon
+sets in about the 15th; the remainder of the month cooler and with wind
+W.S.W.
+
+June. Fairly cool; heavy rains; wind W.S.W., squally.
+
+July. }
+ }
+August. } Do. do. do. do.
+ }
+September. }
+
+October. Variable wind and weather; generally some calm weather;
+waterspouts may occur.
+
+November. During the first half of the month the wind and weather are
+very uncertain; a cyclone may occur; after the middle of the month the
+north-east monsoon sets in.
+
+December. Fairly cool; not much rain; wind N.N.E.
+
+
+Many of the violent cyclonic storms that sweep across the Sea of Bengal
+seem to form themselves a little to the south of the Andamans. Cyclones
+of exceptional violence struck Port Cornwallis in 1844 and Port Blair
+in 1864 and 1891.
+
+The aborigines of the Andaman Islands have been in their present home
+for a great many centuries. It is not possible to say with any degree
+of certainty how or when they first reached the islands. Geological and
+other evidence would seem to show that the Andamans were united to the
+mainland along the line of the Arakan Fold in later Tertiary times, but
+even this is perhaps not quite certain [5]. In any case the period of
+past land connection seems to be so remote that it had probably ceased
+to exist at the time when the islands were peopled by the ancestors of
+the present natives. If the ancestors of the Andamanese reached the
+islands at the time of a past land connection, they can only have done
+so from the Arakan region of Burma. On the other hand, if they
+travelled by sea they must almost certainly have started from the
+Burmese coast (Pegu or Arakan). The north-east monsoon would drift them
+thence on to the Andamans. It is conceivable that they might have
+travelled from Sumatra by way of the Nicobars, but the north-east
+monsoon would have opposed their progress in this direction, while the
+south-west monsoon would have driven them to the east of the Andamans
+[6]. It is hardly possible to imagine them coming from the Malay
+Peninsula across the wide stretch of the Andaman Sea. The balance of
+probability is in favour of the view that the Andamans were peopled,
+either by sea or by land, from the region of Lower Burma.
+
+Of the Negrito race, to which the Andamanese belong, there are two
+other branches still in existence. The first of these consists of the
+people who may be conveniently spoken of as the Semang, inhabiting the
+interior of the Malay Peninsula between 5° and 7° N. Latitude. The
+other branch of this primitive race is found in the interior of the
+Philippine Islands. From their present distribution it is clear that
+the Negritos must at some long past time have wandered over a wide area
+in south-eastern Asia. The connection between the Andamanese and the
+Semang can only have been either through Sumatra and the Nicobars, or,
+more probably, by way of Lower Burma. Communication between the Malay
+Peninsula and the Philippine Islands must have been either by way of
+Borneo or Celebes, or else by way of Annam and Cochin China. It is
+certainly many centuries, and probably many thousands of years, since
+the three surviving branches of the race were cut off from all
+communication with each other [7].
+
+In the Malay Peninsula and in the Philippines the Negritos have for a
+long time been living in contact with other races. They have been
+driven back from the coasts and fertile valleys into the less
+accessible districts. There is ample evidence that they have adopted
+many of the customs of the races around them, and have even adopted to
+a great extent the language of their alien neighbours. The original
+Negrito culture and language and even perhaps the original physical
+type have been modified in these two branches of the race.
+
+In the case of the Andaman Islanders it is possible that they have been
+entirely isolated in their island home, and have not been affected by
+contact with other races, but have been free to develop their own
+culture in adaptation to their own environment. If a hypothesis to this
+effect were accepted we should see in the Andamanese the direct
+descendants, in physical character, in language, and in culture, of the
+original Negrito race. In historical times it is known that the islands
+have been avoided by mariners navigating the adjacent seas, owing to
+the fact that the natives attacked all strangers who landed or were
+wrecked upon their shores. Moreover, the islands offered little
+inducement to visitors or settlers. The coconut, which is one of the
+mainstays of life in tropical islands, was not found in the Andamans
+prior to the first European settlement.
+
+The earliest authentic reference to the Andaman Islands seems to be
+that of two Arab travellers dating from A.D. 871. In the eighteenth
+century the Abbé Renaudot translated the account of these travels. Of
+the Andamans we read, “Au de-là de ces deux Isles on trouve la mer
+appellée d’Andeman. Les peuples qui habitent sur la coste, mangent de
+la chair humaine, toute cruë. Ils sont noirs, ils ont les cheveux
+crespus, le visage et les yeux affreux, les pieds fort grands et
+presque longs d’une coudée, et ils vont tout nuds. Ils n’ont point de
+barques, et s’ils en avoient ils ne mangeroient pas tous les passants
+qu’ils peuvent attraper. Les vaisseaux se trouvant retardez dans leur
+route par les vents contraires, sont souvent obligez dans ces mers de
+mouiller à la coste où sont ces Barbares pour y faire de l’eau, lors
+qu’ils ont consommé celle qu’ils avoient à bord. Ils en attrapent
+souvent quelques-uns, mais la pluspart se sauvent [8].”
+
+It would seem that the Chinese and Japanese knew the islands in the
+first millenium A.D., and referred to them by the names Yeng-t’o-mang
+and Andaban respectively [9]. Marco Polo gives a brief notice of the
+islands. “Angaman is a very large island, not governed by a king. The
+inhabitants are idolaters, and are a most brutish and savage race,
+having heads, eyes, and teeth resembling those of the canine species.
+Their dispositions are cruel, and every person, not being of their own
+nation, whom they can lay their hands upon, they kill and eat [10].”
+Some of Marco Polo’s statements about the Andamans, as that the natives
+live on rice and milk, and that they have coconuts, and plantains, are
+incorrect. It is evident that all he knew of the islands was derived
+from hearsay. The passage quoted is only of importance as showing that
+the reputation of the Andamanese was such as to cause them to be feared
+and avoided.
+
+A more trustworthy account is that of Master Caesar Frederike, who
+passed near the Nicobars in 1566. “From Nicubar to Pegu is, as it were,
+a row or chain of an infinite number of islands, of which many are
+inhabited with wild people; and they call those islands the Islands of
+Andemaon, and they call their people savage or wild, because they eat
+one another: also, these islands have war one with another, for they
+have small barques, and with them they take one another, and so eat one
+another: and if by evil chance any ship be lost on those islands, as
+many have been, there is not one man of those ships lost there that
+escapeth uneaten or unslain. These people have not any acquaintance
+with any other people, neither have they trade with any, but live only
+of such fruits as those islands yield [11].”
+
+There are numerous references to the Andamans in the seventeenth and
+eighteenth century, and all of them show that the islands were feared
+and avoided. During these and the previous centuries wrecks must have
+occurred in considerable numbers, and it is probable, from what is now
+known of the natives, that the mariners would be immediately slain.
+Visits were also paid by ships whose water supply had run out, and by
+Malay pirates. There is evidence that boats, either Malay or Chinese,
+sometimes visited the islands in search of edible birds’ nests and
+trepang. In some cases Andamanese were captured and carried off as
+slaves. It is extremely improbable that such visitors ever succeeded in
+establishing friendly relations with the islanders.
+
+There is one way in which the life of the Andamanese was affected by
+the vessels that visited or were wrecked upon their shores, since it
+was by this means that they learnt the use of iron.
+
+It is impossible now to determine the date at which they became
+acquainted with the metal. The earliest reference to the subject is in
+an account of a visit to the Andamans in 1771, where it is shown that
+the natives were at that time aware of the value of iron [12]. Until
+the middle of the nineteenth century the only supply of the metal was
+from wrecks, of which there have always been a fair number.
+
+Until the end of the eighteenth century there was no attempt made to
+open up communication with the Andaman Islands, although the Nicobar
+Islands were the scene of several attempts to establish a colony. In
+1788, owing to the menace to shipping constituted by the islands and
+their inhabitants, the East India Company, under Lord Cornwallis,
+commissioned Archibald Blair to start a settlement, convicts being sent
+as labourers. The settlement was founded in September, 1789, in the
+harbour now known as Port Blair, but then called Port Cornwallis. In
+spite of the hostility of the natives the colony seems to have been
+successful. In 1792 it was transferred from the first site to the
+harbour in the North Andaman now known as Port Cornwallis. The transfer
+was made with the idea of creating a naval base, for which the spot
+chosen was well adapted. Unfortunately the new site proved to be very
+unhealthy, and in 1796 the scheme was abandoned, the convicts were
+transferred to Penang, and the settlers returned to India.
+
+During the next sixty years the islands remained unoccupied save by the
+aborigines. There were a number of wrecks in different parts of the
+islands, and in some cases the crews were slain. In 1839 a geologist,
+Dr Helfer, visited the islands in the hope of finding minerals, and was
+killed by the natives. In 1844 two transports, the Briton and the
+Runnymede, were wrecked in a cyclone on Ritchie’s Archipelago, one of
+the ships being thrown high up over a reef into a mangrove swamp. The
+crew and soldiers were safely landed, and were eventually rescued with
+hardly any loss of life. As they were a large party they were safe from
+the possible attacks of the natives, and they lived on stores rescued
+from the wrecks.
+
+In view of the number of wrecks that occurred on the islands and the
+desirability of establishing there some harbour where vessels might
+safely call for water or shelter from storms, the East India Company
+again considered the question of colonizing the Andamans. When the
+Company, at the end of the Indian Mutiny, found themselves with a large
+number of prisoners on their hands, it was decided to create a new
+Penal Settlement, and the site of the settlement of 1788 was chosen for
+this purpose, and renamed Port Blair.
+
+The Penal Settlement was established in March 1858, and has been in
+existence ever since. The aborigines were hostile from the outset, and
+gave much trouble by their raids. They made a determined effort to oust
+the invaders from their country. To establish friendly relations with
+them an institution known as the Andamanese Homes was founded, to
+provide free rations and lodging, and medical attendance, to such of
+them as could be induced to visit the Settlement. Through the efforts
+of successive officers in charge of these Homes friendly relations were
+established, first of all with the Aka-Bea tribe in the neighbourhood
+of Port Blair, then with other tribes of the South Andaman, and at a
+later date with the inhabitants of the North Andaman and the Little
+Andaman. At the present day there is only one body of Andamanese still
+persistently hostile, and these are the so-called J̌a̤rawa of the
+interior of the South Andaman. These J̌a̤rawa, since about 1870, have
+made repeated attacks on isolated parties of convicts and forest
+workers and on the friendly Andamanese. Punitive expeditions have been
+sent against them on several occasions, and attempts to set up friendly
+relations with them have been made by leaving presents in their huts,
+and by capturing some of them and keeping them for a time at Port
+Blair. At the present time the J̌a̤rawa are as hostile as ever.
+
+Although of one race throughout, the Andaman Islanders are divided into
+several groups, with differences of language and culture. There are two
+main divisions, which will be spoken of as the Great Andaman Group and
+the Little Andaman Group respectively. The Great Andaman Group includes
+all the natives of the Great Andaman with the exception of those of the
+interior of the South Andaman who are known as J̌a̤rawa. The Little
+Andaman Group includes all the inhabitants of the Little Andaman, those
+of the North Sentinel Island and the J̌a̤rawa of the South Andaman.
+
+These two different divisions exhibit many differences of language and
+culture. All the languages of the Great Andaman Group are closely
+related to one another. They have the same grammatical structure, and a
+large number of roots are the same in all or in several of them. In the
+same way the language of the J̌a̤rawa, so far as it is known, is very
+similar to that of the natives of the Little Andaman. On the other hand
+when the language of the Little Andaman is compared with the Great
+Andaman languages there is a very striking difference. Of a vocabulary
+of several hundred words collected in the Little Andaman there were
+less than a dozen in which the root or stem was clearly the same as
+that of words in the Great Andaman. While the grammatical structure of
+the languages of the two groups is fundamentally the same, this can
+only be shown in a somewhat detailed analysis, and there are many
+important differences.
+
+With regard to technical culture the same grouping appears. There is a
+general similarity between all the tribes of the Great Andaman Group,
+while the J̌a̤rawa and the inhabitants of the Little Andaman have a
+technical culture of their own that is markedly different from that of
+the other division.
+
+The natives of the Great Andaman Group are divided into tribes, of
+which there are ten, each with its own distinctive language or dialect,
+and with a name. The following is a list of these tribes, passing from
+north to south:—Aka-Čari, Aka-Ko̱ra, Aka-Bo, Aka-J̌eru, Aka-Kede,
+Aka-Ko̱l, O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i, A-Pučikwar, Akar-Bale, and Aka-Bea. In each case
+the name is given in the form in which it is used by the tribe itself.
+Thus the Aka-Bea speak of the A-Pučikwar as Aka-Boǰig-yab, and refer to
+the Akar-Bale as Aka-Bala-wa, and there are similar variants of other
+tribal names.
+
+The natives of the Little Andaman refer to themselves as Önge (men). It
+is probable that the so-called J̌a̤rawa of the South Andaman have the
+same word. In a vocabulary obtained by Colebrooke in 1790 from a J̌a̤rawa
+near Port Blair, the word Mincopie is given as meaning a native of the
+Andaman Islands. This would seem to be simply the same phrase as the
+Little Andaman M’önge-bi = I am Önge, or I am a “man.” The word J̌a̤rawa
+is apparently derived from the Aka-Bea language, but is now used by all
+the friendly natives (i.e. the natives of the Great Andaman Group) to
+denote those of the Little Andaman Group. In the official publications
+dealing with the Andamans, however, the term J̌a̤rawa has come to be
+applied solely to the hostile natives of the Great Andaman. It is in
+this sense that the word is used in the present work, the name Önge
+being reserved for the natives of the Little Andaman. It must be
+remembered, however, that the so-called J̌a̤rawa probably call themselves
+Önge, while the Önge of the Little Andaman are called J̌a̤rawa by the
+natives of the friendly tribes of the Great Andaman. The name Mincopie
+was at one time common in ethnological literature as a term for the
+Andaman Islanders.
+
+It is convenient to divide the tribes of the Great Andaman Group into
+two subdivisions, to be spoken of as the Northern Group (including the
+first four tribes mentioned above) and the Southern Group (including
+the other six tribes). Between these two divisions there are a number
+of differences of culture. They have, for example, different forms of
+bow, and different kinds of baskets. The differences between them are
+much slighter than those between the Great Andaman tribes and the
+natives of the Little Andaman, but they are of sufficient importance to
+make it necessary to distinguish them from one another.
+
+The different divisions of the Andamanese may for convenience be set
+out in the form of a table.
+
+
+ I. Great Andaman Group.
+
+ A. Northern Group, including the tribes:—
+
+ Aka-Čari,
+ Aka-Ko̱ra,
+ Aka-Bo,
+ Aka-J̌eru.
+
+ B. Southern Group, including the tribes:—
+
+ Aka-Kede,
+ Aka-Ko̱l,
+ O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i,
+ A-Pučikwar,
+ Akar-Bale,
+ Aka-Bea.
+
+ II. Little Andaman Group.
+
+ A. The inhabitants of the Little Andaman (Önge).
+ B. The J̌a̤rawa of the South Andaman.
+ C. The inhabitants of the North Sentinel Island.
+
+
+The distribution of these different groups as it was in 1858 is shown
+on the map.
+
+There is one important feature of this distribution that requires a few
+words of explanation, and that is the presence in the South Andaman of
+the J̌a̤rawa who are allied by language and technical culture to the
+natives of the Little Andaman. There can be no doubt that the J̌a̤rawa
+are the descendants of emigrants who at some time in the past made
+their way across from the Little Andaman and thrust themselves in upon
+the inhabitants of Rutland Island and the South Andaman, maintaining
+their footing in the new country by force of arms.
+
+The identity of the flora and fauna of the Little Andaman with those of
+the Great Andaman and the shallowness of the strait between the
+islands, suggests that at no very remote period they have been united
+by a continuous land connection. Whether or not this connection existed
+at the time when the islands were first peopled, it is at any rate
+reasonable to suppose that the original ancestors of the present
+Andamanese had one language and one culture. Once the Little Andaman
+was peopled, the strait between it and the Great Andaman seems to have
+acted as an effective barrier, to keep the two divisions of the race
+apart for many centuries. During the period of this separation each
+division followed its own line of development, with the result that
+there arose the considerable differences of language and culture that
+now exist.
+
+At a much later date than this separation of the Andamanese into two
+isolated groups, and after the typical differences of language and
+culture had been developed, a party of natives must have made their way
+by canoe from the north of the Little Andaman to Rutland Island. They
+would have found that country occupied by natives of the Great Andaman
+Group. In spite of this they succeeded in establishing themselves in
+the South Andaman, and became the progenitors of the present J̌a̤rawa.
+Owing to the difference of language all communication between the
+Little Andaman invaders and those already occupying the invaded country
+would be impossible. (At the present day a native of the Little Andaman
+cannot make himself understood to a native of one of the Great Andaman
+tribes.) The result has been that the J̌a̤rawa have lived in a state of
+constant warfare with their neighbours, and this hostility has lasted
+down to the present day.
+
+It is only on the above hypothesis that it is possible to explain how
+it comes about that we find in the South Andaman people with language
+and technical culture very similar to that of the Little Andaman, and
+differing from that of the remaining inhabitants of the Great Andaman.
+It is impossible to say how long it is since this invasion from the
+Little Andaman took place. At the end of the eighteenth century the
+J̌a̤rawa were to be found in the neighbourhood of Port Blair. Lieutenant
+Colebrooke in 1790 came across an individual of this tribe and obtained
+from him a vocabulary. A comparison of this vocabulary with the
+language of the Little Andaman shows it to be essentially the same
+language [13].
+
+A few words must be said on the position of the natives of the North
+Sentinel Island. Almost nothing is known of these people. What little
+information is available concerning their weapons and implements seems
+to point to their belonging to the Little Andaman Division. There is no
+communication between them and either the Great Andaman or the Little
+Andaman. It is possible that they have been separated from the other
+Andamanese as long as those of the Little Andaman have been separated
+from those of the Great Andaman, and would therefore constitute a third
+separate division. The South Sentinel Island is uninhabited.
+
+The total area of the Andamans is estimated to be about 2500 square
+miles. This area is divided as follows:—
+
+
+ Sq. miles.
+ North Andaman, being the territory of the four tribes 540
+ Aka-Cari, Aka-Kora, Aka-Bo, and Aka-Jeru
+ Middle Andaman and Baratang, occupied by four tribes, 790
+ Aka-Kede, Aka-Kol, Oko-Juwoi and A-Pucikwar
+ The Archipelago, occupied by the Akar-Bale tribe 140
+ The South Andaman, occupied by the Aka-Bea and the Jarawa 630
+ North Sentinel Island 30
+ Little Andaman 370
+ ----
+ 2500
+
+
+It is not possible to give accurately the area occupied by each tribe,
+as the boundaries are difficult to discover. The Aka-Bea is in an
+exceptional position, as there was no definite boundary between them
+and the J̌a̤rawa. The two parties of natives lived in the same territory
+at enmity with each other. It would seem that the Aka-Bea kept on the
+whole more to the coast, while the J̌a̤rawa lived in the interior.
+
+Leaving aside the Aka-Bea, the largest of the Great Andaman tribes, as
+regards area of territory, was the Aka-Kede, which possessed over 300
+square miles. After this tribe in order of size come the A-Pučikwar,
+Aka-J̌eru and Aka-Ko̱ra tribes, while the smaller ones are the O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i,
+Aka-Ko̱l, Aka-Bo, Akar-Bale and Aka-Čari, the last being perhaps the
+smallest of all.
+
+In 1901 an enumeration of the natives of the Great Andaman was
+attempted in connection with the census of India. Such an enumeration
+was of course very difficult, and liable to considerable error. The
+results are given in the following table:—
+
+
+ Name of Tribe Adults Children Total
+ Males Females Males Females
+ Aka-Cari 16 15 6 2 39
+ Aka-Kora 31 32 14 19 96
+ Aka-Bo 15 16 7 10 48
+ Aka-Jeru 98 80 26 14 218
+ Aka-Kede 24 30 3 2 59
+ Aka-Kol 6 2 3 11
+ Oko-Juwoi 21 19 7 1 48
+ A-Pucikwar 31 14 2 3 50
+ Akar-Bale 5 10 3 1 19
+ Aka-Bea 14 16 3 4 37
+ --- --- -- -- ---
+ Total 261 234 74 56 625
+
+
+These figures are likely to be more accurate for the southern tribes
+(the last five on the list) than for the northern tribes. It is
+probable that, in the North Andaman, some of the persons enumerated
+were entered under the wrong tribe. For many years the officers of the
+Andamans did not know of the existence of the Aka-Ko̱ra and Aka-Bo
+tribes, and members of these tribes have fallen into the habit of
+describing themselves to Europeans as either Aka-J̌eru or Aka-Čari. My
+own opinion is that the numbers given for the Aka-J̌eru tribe are too
+large, while those of the Aka-Ko̱ra and Aka-Bo, and perhaps also the
+Aka-Kede, are too small.
+
+For the census of 1901 an attempt was made to estimate the numbers of
+the J̌a̤rawa and the natives of the Little Andaman, any attempt at
+enumeration being impossible. The estimate given was as follows:—
+
+
+ Little Andaman 672
+ South Andaman Jarawa 117
+ Rutland Island Jarawa 351
+ North Sentinel Island 117
+ ----
+ Total 1257
+
+
+This estimate is not of any great value. As regards the Little Andaman,
+my own information would lead me to estimate their numbers at between
+600 and 700, thus agreeing with the estimate above. Concerning the
+North Sentinel Island nothing is known on which a satisfactory estimate
+could be based. The figures for the Rutland Island J̌a̤rawa are certainly
+very much too high. In 1907 I spent some weeks on Rutland Island trying
+to get into touch with the J̌a̤rawa there. At that time there were
+certainly not more than 50 all told on the island. I was only able to
+discover one camp, and that had been deserted just before it was
+discovered, but had not contained a dozen persons. The Rutland Island
+J̌a̤rawa have been cut off from the other J̌a̤rawa by the spread of the
+convict Settlement since about 1885. The majority of the J̌a̤rawa now
+inhabit the interior and western coast of the South Andaman north of
+Port Blair.
+
+During the last fifty years the numbers of the Andamanese have been
+greatly diminished. This has been the result of the European occupation
+of the islands, and is chiefly due to new diseases that have been
+introduced amongst them. Syphilis was introduced among the tribes of
+the South Andaman about 1870, and this has now spread among all the
+Great Andaman tribes (that is, excluding the hostile J̌a̤rawa). A large
+number of natives are infected, and the disease is responsible directly
+and indirectly for a considerable increase in the death-rate. In March,
+1877, an epidemic of measles broke out among the Andamanese, introduced
+with a batch of convicts from Madras, and spread rapidly from one end
+of the Great Andaman to the other. In six weeks 51 out of 184 cases
+treated in hospital proved fatal. It is almost certain that the
+proportion of deaths was much greater in the case of those, the vast
+majority, to whom no medical aid could be given. A writer on the
+Andamans [14] has estimated that the mortality from measles and its
+sequelae was one-half if not two-thirds of the whole population of the
+Great Andaman. Other diseases which were formerly unknown to the
+islands seem also to have been introduced, including influenza.
+
+While the death-rate amongst the friendly Andamanese has been
+enormously increased, the birth-rate has at the same time fallen to
+almost nothing. This is evident from the proportion of adults to
+children in the population table given above. In 1907, out of a total
+of about 500 natives whom I saw at different times, there were not more
+than a dozen children of less than five years old. A birth is a rare
+occurrence, and of the children born very few survive infancy.
+
+This decrease of population has not as yet affected the Little Andaman.
+The natives of this island have had very little contact with the Penal
+Settlement or with the tribes of the Great Andaman, and have thus
+escaped the diseases which are mainly responsible for the depopulation
+of the larger island.
+
+Several attempts have been made to estimate the former population of
+the Andamans. In the “Census Report” for 1901 the estimate given is
+4800 for the whole group. Mr M. V. Portman has given an estimate of
+8000. It seemed to me that one of these is too small and the other too
+large. Judging from what it is possible to learn about the habits of
+the natives, and the food supply available, I should estimate that the
+former population of the islands (in 1858) was about 5500 [15]. An
+estimate for the proportion of the different groups is as follows:—
+
+
+ Estimated former Density per
+ population. square mile.
+
+ North Andaman (four tribes) 1500 2·75
+ Middle Andaman with Baratang 2250 2·5
+ and Ritchie’s Archipelago
+ South Andaman (Aka-Bea and Jarawa) 1200 2·0
+ Little Andaman and North Sentinel 700 1·75
+ ---- ----
+ Total 5650 2·25
+
+
+With regard to the comparative density per square mile of the different
+groups it may be pointed out that the reason for the smaller density of
+the South Andaman is the fact that the Aka-Bea and J̌a̤rawa were living
+there at war with one another, and the territory was therefore probably
+not so fully occupied as in other parts of the islands where boundaries
+between neighbouring tribes were well defined. The food supply of the
+Little Andaman does not seem to be so abundant as that of the Great
+Andaman in proportion to its area. It must be remembered that length of
+coast-line is of more importance to the Andamanese than the actual area
+of their country. The natives of the Little Andaman are not able to
+harpoon turtle and large fish, which constitute an important element of
+the food supply of the tribes of the Great Andaman.
+
+If the figures of the above estimate be correct, it will be seen that
+the population of the North Andaman has been reduced in less than fifty
+years (1858–1901) to about 27 per cent. of its former volume, while in
+the same period the population of the Middle Andaman and South Andaman
+has been reduced to about 18 per cent. As the tribes in the south were
+the first to come into contact with the Settlement, their numbers have
+diminished more rapidly than those of the northern tribes. It is
+probable that in another fifty years the natives of the Great Andaman
+tribes will be extinct.
+
+The diminution of population has combined with other causes to alter
+considerably the mode of life of the islanders. What were formerly
+distinct and often hostile communities are now merged together. The
+different languages have become corrupt, and some tribes have adopted
+customs of other tribes and have abandoned their own. Most of the
+younger men and women of the friendly tribes of the Great Andaman now
+speak a little Hindustani (Urdu) in a somewhat corrupt form. The
+friendly natives are under the charge of an officer of the Settlement,
+known as the Officer in Charge of the Andamanese. A Home and Hospital
+are provided for them in Port Blair, and natives from all parts, even
+from the extreme north, go there either to be treated in the Hospital
+or to stay at the Home. During certain parts of the year some of the
+natives are employed in collecting trepang (bêche de mer) under the
+direction of petty officers, who are natives of India or Burma. The
+trepang, together with wild honey and shells collected by the
+Andamanese, is sold, and the money is devoted to the service of the
+Andamanese Department. There is also a grant of money from the
+Government of India, in return for which the Officer in Charge must,
+when necessary, provide Andamanese to track and capture any convicts
+who may run away from the Penal Settlement. The funds thus made
+available serve to provide the natives with blankets, cloth, iron tools
+and scrap iron, rice, sugar, tea and tobacco. The result of this system
+is that there is a free circulation of natives in all parts of the
+Great Andaman. Whereas, formerly, the natives kept carefully to their
+own part of the country, they now make long journeys, either in their
+own canoes, or in Government launches, and members of the northern
+tribes are to be found at Port Blair and elsewhere in the south, while
+men and women of the southern tribes are to be found engaged in
+collecting trepang in the north.
+
+The natives of the Little Andaman have as yet scarcely been affected by
+these changes. Within recent years, however, some of the natives of the
+northern part of the Little Andaman have been in the habit of making
+periodical visits to Rutland Island in their canoes, and occasionally
+come as far as Port Blair. Their chief reason for visiting the
+Settlement is to obtain iron for their arrows and adzes, but they have
+also begun to appreciate sugar and tobacco.
+
+The manners and customs of the Andaman Islanders have formed the
+subject of a number of writings. By far the most important of these is
+a work by Mr E. H. Man, who was for some years an officer of the Penal
+Settlement of Port Blair, and for four years of that time was in charge
+of the Andamanese Home. Mr Man made a special study of the language of
+the Aka-Bea tribe and compiled an extensive vocabulary, which, however,
+has never been published. His observations on the manners and customs
+of this tribe and others of the South Andaman were published in the
+Journal of the Anthropological Institute of the year 1882 (Volume XII),
+and were reprinted in the form of a book On the Aboriginal Inhabitants
+of the Andaman Islands. As the reprint is difficult to obtain, the
+references to Mr Man’s work in the chapters that follow are all to the
+pages of the Journal of the Anthropological Institute, Volume XII.
+
+Another writer on the Andamanese is Mr M. V. Portman, who was for some
+years an officer of the Andaman Commission, and was for a long time in
+charge of the Andamanese. His Manual of the Andamanese Languages,
+London, 1887, is full of errors and entirely unreliable. A later work,
+entitled Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of Tribes,
+Calcutta, 1898, is of much greater value, and though not entirely free
+from errors, is on the whole useful and accurate. Mr Portman has also
+compiled A History of Our Relations with the Andamanese (2 volumes,
+Calcutta, 1899), which contains a mass of information on the subject
+with which it deals, but does not add very much to our knowledge of the
+Andamanese themselves. The British Museum possesses an excellent
+collection of photographs of the Andamanese taken by Mr Portman.
+
+A good general description of the islands and of their inhabitants by
+Colonel Sir Richard Temple, who was for many years Chief Commissioner
+of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, is contained in Volume III of the
+Census of India, 1901, here referred to as “Census Report” 1901.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE SOCIAL ORGANISATION
+
+
+In the present chapter we are to deal with the customs and institutions
+by which the natives of the Great Andaman regulate the conduct of
+persons one to another. At the outset it is necessary to get as clear
+an idea as possible of the structure of the Andamanese society. That
+structure, as will be shown, is extremely simple.
+
+What is really of interest to the ethnologist is the social
+organisation of these tribes as it existed before the European
+occupation of the islands. The changes that have taken place in recent
+years have been extensive, the most important being the great
+diminution in numbers and the merging together of what were formerly
+distinct and often hostile communities. It is fairly easy, however, to
+discover from the natives themselves what was the constitution of the
+society in former times, though there remain a few points about which
+no satisfactory information can be obtained.
+
+When the islands were first occupied by the British, before
+depopulation had affected their institutions, the natives of the Great
+Andaman were to be found living in small communities scattered over the
+islands, mostly on the coast, but some of them in the forest of the
+interior of the island. Each such community, which will be spoken of as
+a “local group,” was independent and autonomous, leading its own life
+and regulating its own affairs. Each group had occasional relations
+with other neighbouring groups; visitors might pass from one to
+another; or the two groups might meet together for a few days and join
+in feasting and dancing. On the other hand there were often quarrels
+between neighbouring groups, which might result in a state of feud
+between them for many months. Between communities separated from one
+another by a distance of only 50 miles or even less there were no
+direct relations whatever. The members of one community kept to their
+own part of the country, only leaving it to visit their friends within
+a narrow radius.
+
+These local groups were united into what are here called tribes. A
+tribe consisted of a number of local groups all speaking what the
+natives themselves regard as one language, each tribe having its own
+language and its name. The tribe was of very little importance in
+regulating the social life, and was merely a loose aggregate of
+independent local groups.
+
+The local groups are further distinguished by the natives themselves as
+being of two kinds according as they lived on the coast or inland. This
+division was independent of that into tribes. Some tribes consisted of
+coast-dwellers only, while others included both coast-dwellers and
+forest-dwellers.
+
+Within the local group the only division was that into families. A
+family consists of a man and his wife and their unmarried children own
+or adopted.
+
+These were the only social divisions existing among the Andamanese, who
+were without any of those divisions known as “clans” which are
+characteristic of many primitive societies.
+
+The natives of the Great Andaman (leaving aside the J̌a̤rawa, who by
+language and culture belong to the Little Andaman division of the race)
+are divided into ten tribes, each occupying a certain area of country.
+Each tribe consists of a number of persons who speak what is regarded
+by the natives themselves as one language. That the tribe is
+fundamentally a linguistic group is shown by the tribal names. These
+are all formed from a stem with the prefix aka-, which prefix is used
+in the languages of the Great Andaman to convey a reference to the
+mouth and thereby to the function of speech. Thus in the Aka-J̌eru
+language the stem poŋ means “a hole of any kind,” and aka-poŋ means
+“the mouth,” there being no other word for that part of the body. In
+the same language the stem -ar- meaning “to talk” can only be used with
+the prefix aka-, as ak’-ar-ka, “he says.” The prefix which is
+characteristic of the tribal names, indicates, therefore, that these
+are really the names of languages.
+
+The meanings or derivations of some of the tribal names have not been
+ascertained with certainty. The name Aka-Čari is derived from the word
+čari meaning “salt water,” and therefore means “the salt-water
+language.” Similarly the name Aka-J̌eru is derived from ǰeru, a species
+of Sterculia from which canoes are made. In the Northern languages the
+word ot-bo means “the back” of anything, and oŋ-ko̱ra means “the hand.”
+It is possible that the names Aka-Bo and Aka-Ko̱ra are derived from
+these stems (the ot- and the oŋ- being prefixes), but there is no
+evidence that they are associated with them in the minds of the natives
+of the present day. Among the Southern tribes the name Akar-Bale is
+derived from a word meaning “the other side” of a creek or strait, thus
+referring to their position in the Archipelago. The name A-Pučik-war
+(of which the Aka-Bea equivalent is Aka-Boǰig-yab) means “those who
+speak our own language,” from a stem pučik (Aka-Bea, boǰig) which means
+“belonging to ourselves” as opposed to strangers of the same race. Mr
+Portman [16] gives the following meanings of the other tribal names of
+the South and Middle Andaman, but the derivations are somewhat
+doubtful.
+
+
+ Aka-Bea Fresh water.
+ O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i They cut patterns on their bows.
+ Aka-Ko̱l Bitter or salt taste.
+
+
+I may take this opportunity of pointing out two errors in the names of
+the tribes given in the “Census Report” of 1901. The name Aka-Čari is
+given as Aka-Chariar; the stem -ar- means “to talk” and is not an
+essential part of the tribal name; Aka-Čari-ar-bom means “he talks the
+Čari language.” The name Aka-Bo is given as Aka-Tabo; t’a-Bo means “I
+(am) Aka-Bo,” just as t’a-J̌eru means “I (am) Aka-J̌eru,” the prefix aka-
+being contracted to a- after the personal pronoun t’ = I or my.
+
+Although the natives themselves thus recognize and give names to ten
+distinct languages, all of them are closely related. There is, on the
+whole, not a great deal of difference between two neighbouring
+languages. A man of the Aka-J̌eru tribe could understand without any
+great difficulty a man speaking Aka-Bo. On the other hand many of the
+languages included two or even more distinct dialects. In the Akar-Bale
+tribe there were two dialects, one in the southern half of the
+Archipelago, which was allied to Aka-Bea, and the other in the northern
+half, showing affinities with A-Pučikwar. Even in such a small tribe as
+the Aka-Čari it would seem that there were differences of dialect.
+Thus, even from the point of view of language, the tribe was not
+entirely homogeneous.
+
+Leaving aside the Aka-Bea, the average extent of territory occupied by
+a tribe was about 165 square miles. Of the nine tribes the largest, as
+regards area, was the Aka-Kede, with over 300 square miles, while the
+smallest was probably the Aka-Čari, with less than 100 square miles.
+Save in the case of the Akar-Bale tribe, which occupied the islands of
+Ritchie’s Archipelago, it is difficult to find any marked geographical
+features that might be supposed to have determined the extent and the
+boundaries of the different tribes.
+
+The Aka-Bea tribe was in an abnormal position as there was no
+recognized boundary between them and the J̌a̤rawa. Together, these two
+divisions of the Andamanese occupied an area of about 600 square miles.
+The Aka-Bea seem to have kept more to the coast while the J̌a̤rawa
+occupied the interior of the South Andaman and Rutland Island.
+
+If the estimate previously given [17] of the former population of the
+islands be correct, the nine tribes (leaving aside the Aka-Bea) would
+have formerly contained about 3750 persons of all ages. At the present
+time the four tribes of the North Andaman number altogether about 400,
+of whom about 100 or less are children. The other six tribes taken
+together (including the almost extinct Aka-Bea) number about 200, of
+whom not more than 30 are children. Mr Man estimated the numbers of the
+Aka-Bea tribe (called by him Boǰig-ŋiǰi-da) in 1882 at about 400, and
+supposes them to have numbered about 1000 in 1858. In 1901 that tribe
+consisted of only 37 persons.
+
+Besides the division into tribes, and independent of it, the Andamanese
+recognize another division into coast-dwellers and forest-dwellers. In
+the Aka-Bea language the coast-dwellers are called Ar-yoto, while the
+forest-dwellers are called Erem-taga. The difference between them is
+due solely to the difference of their food supply. The Ar-yoto obtain
+much of their food from the sea. They are expert in fishing and turtle
+hunting. They make canoes and use them not only for hunting but also
+for travelling from one camp to another. Some portion of their food
+they also obtain from the forest, edible roots and fruits and the flesh
+of the wild pig being the chief. On the other hand the Erem-taga rely
+solely on the forest and the inland creeks for their food supply. Their
+only use for canoes is in the creeks. They are entirely ignorant of
+such matters as turtle or dugong hunting, but they are more at home
+than the coast-dwellers in the forest, and are generally more skilful
+at pig-hunting. The advantage certainly rests with the coast-dwellers,
+for they have both the sea and the forest to draw upon for their
+sustenance.
+
+Some tribes consist only of coast-dwellers, such as the Aka-Čari, the
+Akar-Bale and perhaps the Aka-Ko̱l. On the other hand the Aka-Bo,
+although their territory includes a part of the west coast, are, by
+their occupations and mode of life, forest-dwellers, and the same seems
+to have been the case of the O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i. The A-Pučikwar, the Aka-Kede,
+the Aka-J̌eru and perhaps also the Aka-Ko̱ra tribes contained both
+coast-dwellers and forest-dwellers.
+
+Each tribe formerly consisted of a number of independent local groups.
+The local group, and not the tribe, was the land-owning group, each one
+owning or exercising hunting rights over a certain recognized area. At
+the present time, owing to the breakdown of the local organisation,
+through the settlement of the islands and the resulting decrease of
+population, it is difficult to ascertain what area of country was
+occupied by each of these local groups. In many cases it would seem
+that the boundaries between two neighbouring groups are not very
+clearly defined, there being portions of forest over which the members
+of both hunted when the groups were at peace [18]. There is no doubt
+that in the more favourable localities, particularly on the coast, the
+country occupied by a single group was smaller than in places of less
+abundant food supply. It is probable that the forest-dwelling local
+groups occupied considerably larger areas in each case than the coast
+groups. Some of the coast-dwelling groups seem to have occupied areas
+of less than ten square miles.
+
+It is not easy to discover at this time exactly what number of persons
+would have been included in one local group. Mouat, who visited the
+islands in 1857–8, says of the natives, “They are rarely or never seen
+living alone, several of their little huts being raised in the same
+locality, where they dwell together in numbers varying between thirty
+and three hundred [19].” In another passage he states, “They are
+generally divided into small groups, the numbers of which vary
+considerably, some not containing more than ten individuals, while in
+others as many as two or three hundred may be found. The great majority
+of these groups of the natives consist on an average of from thirty to
+fifty men, women, and children, although sometimes as many as three
+hundred are found together [20].” It is probable that, if so small a
+party as ten were seen, they were a hunting party spending a day or a
+few days away from the main camp. On the other hand so large a number
+as three hundred could only be found together on the occasion of one of
+the periodical meetings of several local groups for purposes of
+festivity. Mouat’s statement that the groups consisted on the average
+of from thirty to fifty persons, agrees very well with the statements
+of the natives themselves, and may be taken as being fairly accurate.
+Mr Man, writing in 1882, speaks of the Andamanese as divided into
+communities “each consisting of from twenty to fifty individuals,” and
+elsewhere says that “permanent encampments vary in size and consist of
+several huts, which in all are rarely inhabited by more than from fifty
+to eighty persons [21].”
+
+From the information that I was able to obtain from the natives
+themselves I came to the conclusion that an average local group
+consisted of from 40 to 50 persons of all ages, the average number of
+local groups to a tribe being about 10. This would give the average
+extent of country occupied by each local group as about 16 square
+miles, but some groups certainly had a larger territory than this and
+some had smaller.
+
+Mr M. V. Portman speaks of the tribes of the southern part of the Great
+Andaman as being divided into what he calls “septs,” but he does not
+explain what he means by that term. He states that the Aka-Bea were
+divided into seven septs, the A-Pučikwar into four, the Akar-Bale into
+two, while the Aka-Ko̱l and O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i had no real subdivisions [22].
+Whatever Mr Portman may have meant by the term sept, it is clear that
+he did not use it to denote what is here called a local group, but some
+larger subdivision of the tribe. What these septs seem to have been are
+groups consisting each of four or five local groups having friendly
+relations with one another and meeting together occasionally at the
+festival gatherings to be described later in the present chapter.
+
+There were, strictly speaking, no distinctive names for the local
+groups. A local group might be denoted by a reference to the district
+that it occupied or to one of its chief camping places. Thus, in the
+Akar-Bale tribe, those occupying the island of Teb-ǰuru were spoken of
+as Teb-ǰuru-wa, the word wa meaning “people,” and the inhabitants of
+the east coast of Havelock Island were similarly denoted as
+Puluga-l’ar-mugu-wa from the name of the district that they occupied.
+In the tribes of the North Andaman the word equivalent to wa of the
+South is koloko. Some of the local groups of the Aka-Bo tribe were
+distinguished as Teraut buliu koloko, Kelera buliu koloko, Teradikili
+buliu koloko etc., from the names of the creeks (buliu) that they
+occupied. In the Aka-Čari tribe the local group occupying the island of
+To̱nmuket and the adjoining mainland were called Taroto̱lo koloko. When a
+man was asked to what part of the country he belonged he would
+generally answer by mentioning one of the chief camping places of his
+local group. Thus a man of the Taroto̱lo koloko might say that he
+belonged to Laropuli, this being one of the chief camps of that
+country. A man of the Teraut buliu koloko might similarly say that he
+belonged to the village of Čaičue.
+
+A man or woman is generally regarded as belonging to the local group in
+the country of which he or she was born. There is nothing, however, to
+prevent a person from taking up his residence with any other local
+group if he so wishes, and if the members of that group are willing to
+welcome him. It would seem that there were a fair number of such cases
+in which a man or a woman left his or her own local group to join
+another. In particular, when two young people belonging to different
+groups got married they might fix their residence either with his or
+with her parents.
+
+The local group, as stated above, was characterised as the land-owning
+group. A man might hunt over the country of his own group at all times,
+but he might not hunt over the country of another group without the
+permission of the members of that group. Even at the present day, when
+the local organisation has largely broken down, some of these hunting
+rights are still observed. I noticed a case in which some of the men
+asked and obtained permission to hunt pig in a certain part from a man
+who was explained to be the owner of that part of the country, being
+one of the few survivors of the local group to which it belonged. It
+would, in former times, have been an offence that might easily have led
+to a serious quarrel for the men of one group to hunt or fish in the
+country or the waters of another group without having been granted
+permission to do so.
+
+Within the territory of each local group there are a number of
+recognized camping places. During the greater part of every year the
+members of the local group would be found living together at one or
+other of these. Some of these camping-grounds have been in use for many
+centuries, as is shown by the heaps of refuse many feet deep, chiefly
+consisting of the shells of molluscs and the bones of animals. Such
+kitchen-middens, as they have been called, are to be found in numbers
+all around the coasts of the islands.
+
+In the case of the coast-dwelling communities the camping sites are
+always close to the sea-shore or to a creek, so that they can be
+reached by canoe. In the case of those dwelling inland this is of
+course not so. In any case one of the chief factors determining the
+choice of the site is the existence of a supply of fresh water. This is
+of extreme importance in the case of a site to be occupied during the
+dry season when fresh water becomes scarce.
+
+Within their own territory the local group is what we may speak of as
+semi-nomadic. The coast-dwellers rarely reside continuously at the same
+spot for more than a few months, but shift from one camp to another,
+moved by different causes. If a death occurs the camp is deserted for
+several months and a new one is occupied. A change of camp often takes
+place at a change of season, some spots presenting particular
+advantages, such as shelter from the prevailing wind, or better hunting
+or fishing, at certain times of the year. Another cause of the
+abandonment of a camp by the coast-dwellers is that all refuse is
+thrown away close to the camp, and after a few months the decaying
+animal matter thus accumulated renders the spot uninhabitable. The
+natives seem to find it easier to move their camp than to clear away
+their refuse. The truth is, perhaps, that they are so accustomed to
+change their camp from one spot to another, in order to make the best
+use of the natural resources available, that there is no necessity for
+them to take those sanitary measures that would be essential if they
+wished to remain for many months continuously at the same place.
+
+The forest-dwellers are less nomadic in their habits than the
+coast-dwellers. One of the reasons for this is that as they cannot
+convey their belongings from one place to another by canoe, but must
+carry them overland, the moving of a camp is a more tiresome business
+with them than it is with the coast-dwellers. During a great part of
+the year the forest-dwellers were accustomed to remain at one camp,
+which was thus the chief camp of the group. In particular they would
+spend there the whole of the rainy season. During the cool and hot
+seasons they would leave the chief camp for a few months, leading
+during that time a more nomadic life, living in temporary hunting camps
+and paying visits to their friends in other groups. At the opening of
+the rainy season they would return once more to the main camp.
+
+The camps of the natives of the Great Andaman may be distinguished as
+being of three kinds. Of the first kind are what may be spoken of as
+permanent encampments. Certainly every group of the forest-dwellers,
+and probably every group of the coast-dwellers had its permanent
+encampment, which was, so to speak, the headquarters of the group. At
+this spot there would be erected either a communal hut, or a carefully
+built village. Communal huts have in recent times fallen into disuse,
+as the natives now wander about the islands much more freely than was
+their wont. I did not see a single one in the Great Andaman during my
+visit, though I was told of one that was falling to ruins in the
+interior of the Middle Andaman. One such communal hut was photographed
+in 1895 by M. L. Lapicque, at a spot called Lekera-l’un-ta [23]. It was
+perhaps the last that the natives of the Great Andaman erected. What
+the communal hut was like it is possible to discover both from the
+statements of the natives and also from the fact that they are still to
+the present day used by the natives of the Little Andaman and by the
+J̌a̤rawa. The hut was roughly circular in form and might be as big as 60
+feet in diameter and 20 or 30 feet high at the centre. The shape was
+somewhat that of a beehive. Two concentric circles, one of tall posts
+near the centre and the other of shorter posts near the circumference,
+were connected by horizontal and sloping roof-timbers, and on these
+were laid and fastened a number of mats of palm-leaves. These mats
+reached, as a rule, as far as the ground, a small doorway being left on
+one side.
+
+Such communal huts, while still used in the Little Andaman and by the
+J̌a̤rawa, and formerly used by the forest-dwellers of the Great Andaman,
+were apparently not often erected by the coast-dwellers of the larger
+island at the time the islands were occupied in 1858. Mr Man seems to
+have regarded them as being peculiarly characteristic of the J̌a̤rawa and
+the natives of the Little Andaman [24]. There is evidence, however,
+that even the coast-dwellers formerly erected such huts, for in the
+Akar-Bale tribe there are several places with names such as Paruŋ Bud
+and Golugma Bud, which show that communal huts existed there at some
+time. The word bud is used to denote a communal hut, as compared with a
+village, which is called baraiǰ.
+
+A large communal hut took some little time to erect. The posts had to
+be cut and erected, this being the work of the men, and the palm-leaves
+had to be collected and then made into mats by the women. Once the hut
+was built it would last for several years, and if it were in fairly
+constant use, particularly if it were not abandoned in the rains, it
+might be used, with a little occasional patching, for ten years or even
+more.
+
+Among the coast-dwellers it was more usual to erect at the headquarters
+a semi-permanent village. A portion of such a village is shown in the
+photographs reproduced in Plates VI and VII.
+
+The village occupied a small clearing in the forest close to the
+sea-shore at a place called Mo̱i-lepto in the country of the Akar-Bale
+tribe. A spring or soak close to the village provided the fresh water.
+The site is a favourite one as it is well sheltered, and is within
+convenient distance of good fishing and turtle hunting grounds. It was
+formerly one of the chief camping places of the local group known as
+the Boroin wa (Hill people).
+
+The village was composed of eight huts, ranged round a central open
+space, and all of them facing inwards towards the centre. This open
+space is kept clear and clean for dancing, and is simply the village
+dancing ground. Each of the single huts was occupied by a family group,
+consisting of a man and his wife with their children and dependants.
+One hut was occupied by an old widower and a bachelor.
+
+The way the huts are built can be seen in the photographs. In the
+simplest form the hut consists of a sloping roof made of palm-leaves,
+erected on four posts, two taller ones at the front and two short ones
+at the back. A hut of this kind is shown in Plate VII. If more shelter
+is required a second roof is added in such a way that the top of one
+overhangs the top of the other. In some cases a third roof may be added
+on one side. In Plates VI and VII two mats of palm-leaf are shown in
+the course of construction, lying on the ground.
+
+Huts such as these, in which the leaves are first made into a mat which
+is then attached to the rafters, will last for some time. Even if the
+village be deserted for several weeks, at any rate in the dry weather,
+very little work will be needed to make it habitable again when the
+occupants return to it.
+
+A second kind of camp was made when the natives did not intend to stay
+more than two to three months. Such camps were erected by the forest
+folk during the dry season, or at any time when they were compelled to
+leave their chief camp through the death there of one of their number.
+Such a temporary camp is always put up in the form of a village, and
+never as a communal hut. The huts are similar to those already
+described, but are made more carelessly. The thatching leaves, instead
+of being made into mats, are simply tied in bundles on to the rafters.
+A hut of this kind will last quite well for three months or so and it
+can be built very rapidly at any place where there is a sufficient
+supply of thatching leaves. At the present day the natives rarely build
+a permanent camp for themselves, but are contented with temporary camps
+of the kind here described.
+
+A third kind of camp remains to be briefly mentioned, which we may call
+the hunting camp. A hunting party (which may include women as well as
+men) spending a few days away from one of the main camps will erect for
+themselves a few huts or shelters consisting of nothing more than a
+simple lean-to of leaves.
+
+Caves or rock shelters suitable for human occupation are almost unknown
+in the Andamans. In the Archipelago there are one or two small rock
+shelters that are occasionally used by a hunting party away from home
+for a night. I was told by the natives that on one of the islands off
+the west coast of the North Andaman there is a rock shelter of a fair
+size that was formerly used as one of their chief camps.
+
+The following figure will give an idea of the Andamanese village and
+its arrangement. In hunting camps which are intended only to be
+occupied for a few days or a few weeks, this arrangement is not
+observed, but the huts or shelters are placed so as to give shelter
+from the prevailing wind with no particular regard to the respective
+position of the different units.
+
+The constitution of the local group is illustrated by the arrangement
+of the village. The whole village consists of a number of separate
+huts, each hut occupied by a family. A family consists of a man and his
+wife and such of their children own or adopted as are not of an age to
+be independent. Besides the families each group necessarily contains a
+small number of unmarried men and widowers and some unmarried girls and
+widows. The unmarried men and widowers without children occupy a
+separate hut (or huts) which we may speak of as the bachelors’ hut. Mr
+Man states that the spinsters (i.e., the unmarried women who are of
+marriageable age) and widows occupy a hut of their own similarly to the
+bachelors [25]. In the camps that I visited I did not find any such
+spinsters’ hut. What unmarried females there were, I found attached to
+one or other of the families of the village, each one living in the hut
+of some married relative, generally the parent or foster-parent.
+
+All the huts face inwards towards an open space which is the dancing
+ground of the village, and, except in exposed situations, are generally
+entirely open in front. At some convenient spot on one side of the
+dancing ground is to be found the communal cooking place of the
+village. This is generally close to the bachelors’ hut, as it is the
+bachelors who attend to such cooking as is carried on there. Besides
+the public cooking place each family has its own fireplace in its own
+hut, on which a fire is kept continually alight. In the village two or
+more families may build their huts adjoining one another in such a way
+that they become for all practical purposes one hut, of which each
+family retains its own special portion. Two brothers will thus often
+make a sort of common household.
+
+The communal hut, in the way in which it is arranged, and even in the
+way in which it is built, is really a village with all the huts drawn
+together so that each one is joined to the one next to it and the roofs
+meet in the middle. In the centre of the hut there is an open space
+corresponding to the dancing ground of the village. It is even used as
+a dancing ground, though for this purpose it is somewhat small. It is
+the public part of the hut. Around this are arranged the different
+families, each occupying its own special portion of the hut, which is
+marked off by means of short lengths of wood laid on the floor. The
+public cooking place is sometimes inside the hut, and there is the
+space marked off for the unmarried men. The advantage of the communal
+hut is that it affords a better protection from the weather; its
+disadvantage is that it leaves almost no room for dancing.
+
+Thus it may be seen that the arrangement of the camp shows very plainly
+the constitution of a local group, consisting as it does of a few
+families. Each group seems to have contained, on an average, about ten
+families, with a few unmarried males and females.
+
+The Andaman Islanders depend for their subsistence entirely on the
+natural products of the sea and the forest. From the sea they obtain
+dugong, turtle (both green and hawksbill), an enormous variety of
+different sorts of fish, crustaceans (crabs, crayfish and prawns) and
+molluscs. Fish and crabs are also to be found in the salt-water creeks
+which in many places penetrate inland for some miles. From the forest
+they obtain the flesh of the wild pig, wild honey, and a large number
+of vegetable foods—roots, fruits, and seeds.
+
+The life of the forest folk is more simple and uniform than that of the
+coast people and we may therefore consider it first. During the rainy
+season, which lasts from the middle of May to the end of September, the
+local group lives at its headquarters camp, which, as we have seen,
+formerly often took the form of a communal hut. During this season
+animal food is plentiful, as the jungle animals are in good condition;
+on the other hand there is not much vegetable food to be obtained. The
+following brief account will give an idea of how the day is spent in
+such a camp at that time of year. Some time after sunrise the camp
+begins to be astir. The various members of the community make a meal of
+any food that may have been saved from the day before. The men start
+off for the day’s hunting. At the present time dogs are used for
+pig-hunting. These dogs were obtained in the first instance from the
+Settlement of Port Blair, and their use in pig-hunting was learnt from
+the Burmese convicts. Nowadays every married man has at least one dog
+[26]. Before the dogs were obtained, hunting was a pursuit requiring a
+great deal more skill than it does at present. A hunting party consists
+of from two to five men. Each man carries his bow and two or three pig
+arrows, and one of the party carries a smouldering fire-brand. They
+make their way through the jungle until they find the fresh tracks of a
+pig, or follow up some of the usual pig runs until they come upon the
+animal feeding. In former days much skill was required to creep
+noiselessly through the jungle until they were sufficiently near either
+to discharge an arrow, or, if the jungle were more open, to rush in
+upon the animal shouting and shoot it before it could escape. At the
+present day it is the dogs that scent out the pig and bring it to bay,
+when the natives shoot it with their arrows.
+
+When a pig has been killed it may be tied up and carried to the camp on
+the shoulders of one of the hunters, or a fire may be lighted then and
+there and the pig eviscerated and roasted. A cut is made in the abdomen
+and the viscera removed. The cavity is filled with leaves, the joints
+of the legs are half severed and the carcase is placed on the fire and
+turned over and shifted until every part is evenly roasted. It is then
+removed from the fire, the burnt skin is scraped clean and the meat is
+cut up. Meanwhile the intestines or some of the internal organs are
+cooked and eaten by the hunters. The meat is tied up in leaves and is
+carried to the camp. If the pig be carried home whole the process of
+roasting it and cutting it up is performed in exactly the same way at
+the public cooking place of the camp, the meat being distributed only
+after it has been thus partially cooked.
+
+If the hunting party should come across a civet cat (Paradoxurus) or a
+monitor lizard they would endeavour to kill it [27], but the main
+object of every hunting party is to obtain pork. Snakes and even rats
+are killed and eaten. Birds, though plentiful in the islands, are not
+often obtained, for the density of the jungle and the height of the
+trees in which the birds conceal themselves, make it very difficult for
+the natives to shoot them with their bows and arrows. A man does not
+care to risk the loss of his arrow in a chance shot at a bird. The
+Andamanese do not trap either birds or animals, though some of the
+birds, particularly the rail, might be very easily caught in traps.
+
+As the hunting party traverses the forest they may come across roots or
+fruits or seeds, or wild honey, and these are collected and carried
+home. In the rainy season only small combs of black honey are to be
+found [28], and these are generally consumed by the hunters on the
+spot.
+
+The provision of the vegetable food of the community is the work of the
+women, who must also supply the camp with firewood and water. While the
+men are away hunting the women, attended by the children, cut and carry
+the firewood, and either remain in the camp making baskets or nets or
+other objects, or else go into the forest to look for fruits and seeds.
+Thus by midday the camp may be quite deserted, save perhaps for one or
+two old men and women, and a few of the children.
+
+In the afternoon the women return with what food they have obtained and
+then the men come in with their provision. The camp, unless the hunters
+have been unsuccessful, is then busy with the preparation of the
+evening meal, which is the chief meal of the day. If a pig has been
+brought home whole it is cooked at the public cooking place and is then
+cut up. The meat is distributed amongst the members of the community
+and the woman of each family then proceeds to cook the family meal. The
+pork, after it has been roasted and cut up, is further cooked by being
+boiled. The family meal is prepared at the fire that each family has in
+its hut. The meal is a family one, partaken by a man and his wife and
+children. The bachelors cook and eat their own meal, and the unmarried
+women also eat by themselves.
+
+After the meal is over, darkness having by this time fallen, the men
+may spend an hour or two in dancing to the accompaniment of a song sung
+by one of them with the help of a chorus of women. In that case they
+would probably eat another meal after the dance was over. Another
+favourite amusement for the evening is what may be called “yarning.” A
+man sits down with a few listeners and tells them, with few words, and
+with many dramatic gestures, how he killed a pig. The same man may go
+on with tale after tale, till, by the time he finishes he has killed
+twenty or thirty pigs. Finally the whole camp retires to rest and
+nothing is to be seen but the dim light of the little fires burning in
+each hut or in each of the family quarters.
+
+On a day when there is plenty of food left from the day before, or on a
+day of stormy weather even when food is not too plentiful, the men may
+remain in camp instead of going hunting. They busy themselves with
+making weapons and implements, such as bows, arrows, adzes, etc.
+
+On occasions when game is not very plentiful a party of hunters may
+stay away from the camp for a few days, not returning till they have
+been successful in obtaining a fair supply of food. The women and
+children and old men, with perhaps a few of the able bodied men also,
+remain at home and provide for themselves as well as they can, the
+women devoting their time to collecting what vegetable foods are in
+season.
+
+At the end of the rainy season there comes a brief period of unsettled
+weather, called by the natives of the North Andaman Kimil, and by those
+of the South, Gumul. During this season some of the vegetable foods
+begin to be available, though not in any quantities. At this time of
+the year the natives are able to obtain and feast upon what they regard
+as great delicacies, the larvae of the cicada and of the great
+capricornis beetle. The cool season, when fruits and roots are
+plentiful, begins at the end of November. The forest dwellers leave
+their main encampment during this season. Some of them go off to pay
+visits to their friends of other local groups. Such visits may last two
+or three months. Those who remain occupy temporary camps in convenient
+places. The men join the women in looking for roots and fruits, and do
+not spend so much of their time in hunting. Some of the men visit the
+main camp at intervals of a few days to see that it is all right. As
+the cool season gives way to the hot season (March to May) honey begins
+to be plentiful. At that time hunting for pig is almost abandoned. The
+pigs are in poor condition, and even when one is killed it is often
+left in the jungle by the natives as not being good enough to eat. On
+the other hand everyone is busy collecting honey. This is work in which
+both men and women join, though it is the men who climb up the trees
+and cut down the honeycomb. The natives have no means of keeping the
+honey for more than a very short time, as it rapidly ferments. While it
+is plentiful they almost live on it, supplementing it with roots and
+fruits and with fish, if they are near a creek. Towards the end of the
+hot season the fruit of the Artocarpus chaplasha, which is a favourite
+food of the natives, becomes ripe. The men and women, at this time,
+spend much of their time collecting the fruit. When it is collected the
+fruit is broken open and each of the seeds is sucked to obtain the
+juicy pulp or aril with which it is surrounded, and which has a very
+pleasant taste. The seeds are then partly boiled and are buried in the
+ground to remain there for a few weeks, when they will be dug up again
+and cooked and eaten. Any natives who may have been away from home on a
+visit, return before the Artocarpus comes into fruit in order to take
+their share in collecting it and providing a supply of the seeds for
+consumption in the rainy season. The natives then return to the
+headquarters camp and make any necessary repairs to the hut in
+preparation for the rainy season, which begins about the middle of May.
+
+The coast-dwellers are not quite so much influenced by the seasons as
+the forest-dwellers. They can fish and collect molluscs all the year
+round. In the rainy season they divide their time between hunting pig
+in the forest and fishing or turtle hunting. They do not need, however,
+to remain at the same camp during the whole of the rainy season, but
+after a month or two at one place can move to what they hope to find
+better hunting grounds. During the cool and hot seasons they pay visits
+to one another. In the fine weather the men often go off on
+turtle-hunting expeditions for several days, leaving the women and
+children and older men in the village, where they provide for
+themselves with vegetable food and with fish and molluscs from the
+reefs.
+
+It is during the fine weather that there take place the meetings of two
+or more local groups that are an important feature of the social life
+of the Andaman Islanders. These meetings will be described later in the
+present chapter.
+
+Besides their food, which they must find from day to day, the natives
+have need of nothing save their weapons and implements. Of these each
+person makes his own, each man making his own bow, arrows, adze, etc.,
+while the wife makes her baskets, nets and so on.
+
+The economic life of the local group, though in effect it approaches to
+a sort of communism, is yet based on the notion of private property.
+Land is the only thing that is owned in common. The hunting grounds of
+a local group belong to the whole group, and all the members have an
+equal right to hunt over any part of it. There exists, however, a
+certain private ownership of trees. A man of one of the local groups of
+the coast may notice in the jungle a tree suitable for a canoe. He will
+tell the others that he has noticed such a tree, describing it and its
+whereabouts. Thenceforward that tree is regarded as his property, and
+even if some years should elapse, and he has made no use of it, yet
+another man would not cut it down without first asking the owner to
+give him the tree. In a similar way certain men claim to possess
+certain Artocarpus trees, though how the ownership in these cases had
+arisen I was unable to determine. No one would pick the fruit off such
+a tree without the permission of the owner, and having received
+permission and gathered the fruit he would give some part of it to the
+owner of the tree.
+
+A pig belongs to the man whose arrow first strikes it, though if the
+arrow merely glanced off and did not remain in the wound it would not
+give any claim to ownership. A turtle or a dugong or big fish belongs
+to the man who throws the harpoon with which it is taken. A honeycomb
+belongs to the man who climbs the tree and cuts it down. The fish that
+a man shoots belong to him, and to a woman belong the roots she digs
+up, the seeds that she collects, the fish or prawns that she takes in
+her net or the molluscs that she brings from the reefs. Any weapon that
+a man makes belongs to him alone to do what he pleases with, and
+anything that a woman makes is her own property. A man is not free to
+dispose of the personal property of his wife without her permission.
+
+In the village each family erects and keeps in repair its own hut, and
+the wife provides the hut with the firewood and water needed. In the
+case of a communal hut it would seem that this is really an example of
+a possession common to the whole group. This is so, however, only in
+appearance. The hut is built by all the different families, but each
+family is regarded as owning a certain portion of the hut when it is
+finished, and it is the family that keeps this part of the hut in
+repair.
+
+A canoe is cut by a number of men together. From the outset, however,
+it is the property of one man, who selects the tree and superintends
+the operation of cutting it into shape. He is always one of the older
+men, and he enlists the services of the younger men to help him. When
+finished the canoe is his property, and he can do with it what he
+pleases, giving it away, if he wishes, and no one has any share of
+ownership in a canoe on the ground that he helped to make it.
+
+While all portable property is thus owned by individuals, the
+Andamanese have customs which result in an approach to communism. One
+of these is the custom of constantly exchanging presents with one
+another. When two friends meet who have not seen each other for some
+time, one of the first things they do is to exchange presents with one
+another. Even in the ordinary everyday life of the village there is a
+constant giving and receiving of presents. A younger man or woman may
+give some article to an older one without expecting or receiving any
+return, but between equals a person who gives a present always expects
+that he will receive something of equal value in exchange. At the
+meetings that take place between neighbouring local groups the exchange
+of presents is of great importance. Each of the visitors brings with
+him a number of articles that he distributes amongst the members of the
+group that he visits. When the visitors depart they are loaded with
+presents received from their hosts. It requires a good deal of tact on
+the part of everyone concerned to avoid the unpleasantness that may
+arise if a man thinks that he has not received things as valuable as he
+has given, or if he fancies that he has not received quite the same
+amount of attention as has been accorded to others.
+
+It is considered a breach of good manners ever to refuse the request of
+another. Thus if a man be asked by another to give him anything that he
+may possess, he will immediately do so. If the two men are equals a
+return of about the same value will have to be made. As between an
+older married man and a bachelor or a young married man, however, the
+younger would not make any request of such a nature, and if the older
+man asked the younger for anything the latter would give it without
+always expecting a return.
+
+Almost every object that the Andamanese possess is thus constantly
+changing hands. Even canoes may be given away, but it is more usual for
+these to be lent by the owner to his friends.
+
+It has been stated above that all food is private property and belongs
+to the man or woman who has obtained it. Every one who has food is
+expected, however, to give to those who have none. An older married man
+will reserve for himself sufficient for his family, and will then give
+the rest to his friends. A younger man is expected to give away the
+best of what he gets to the older men. This is particularly the case
+with the bachelors. Should a young unmarried man kill a pig he must be
+content to see it distributed by one of the older men, all the best
+parts going to the seniors, while he and his companions must be
+satisfied with the inferior parts. The result of these customs is that
+practically all the food obtained is evenly distributed through the
+whole camp, the only inequality being that the younger men do not fare
+so well as their elders. Generosity is esteemed by the Andaman
+Islanders one of the highest of virtues and is unremittingly practised
+by the majority of them.
+
+Within the local group there is no such thing as a division of labour
+save as between the two sexes. In the coastal groups every man is
+expected to be able to hunt pig, to harpoon turtle and to catch fish,
+and also to cut a canoe, to make bows and arrows and all the other
+objects that are made by men. It happens that some men are more skilful
+in certain pursuits than in others. A skilful turtle-hunter, for
+example, may be an indifferent pig-hunter, and such a man will
+naturally prefer to devote himself to the pursuit in which he appears
+to most advantage.
+
+The division of labour between the sexes is fairly clearly marked. A
+man hunts and fishes, using the bow and arrow and the harpoon; he makes
+his own bows and arrows, his adze and knife, cuts canoes and makes rope
+for harpoon lines. A woman collects fruits and digs up roots with her
+digging stick; she catches prawns and crabs and small fish with her
+small fishing net; she provides the firewood and the water of the
+family and does the cooking (i.e. the family cooking, but not the
+common cooking, which is entirely done by men); she makes all such
+objects as baskets, nets of thread, and personal ornaments either for
+herself or her husband.
+
+There is no organised government in an Andamanese village. The affairs
+of the community are regulated entirely by the older men and women. The
+younger members of the community are brought up to pay respect to their
+elders and to submit to them in many ways. It has already been shown
+how, in the distribution of food, the elders get the best share. When
+it is a question of shifting camp to some better hunting ground the
+opinion of the older men would weigh against that of the younger if
+they disagreed. It must not be thought, however, that the older men are
+tyrannical or selfish. I only once heard a young man complain of the
+older men getting so much the best of everything. The respect for
+seniority is kept alive partly by tradition and partly by the fact that
+the older men have had a greater experience than the younger. It could
+probably not be maintained if it regularly gave rise to any tyrannical
+treatment of the younger by the elder.
+
+The respect for seniors is shown in the existence of special terms of
+address which men and women use when speaking to their elders. In the
+languages of the North Andaman there are two such terms, Mai or Maia,
+applied to men, with a meaning equivalent to “Sir,” and Mimi, applied
+to women. These words may be used either alone or prefixed to the
+personal name of the person addressed. A younger man speaking to an
+older one whose name was Bora would address him either as Mai (Sir), or
+as Maia Bora (Sir Bora).
+
+In the tribes of the South Andaman there are exactly similar terms. In
+the Aka-Bea tribe Maia or Maiola is used in addressing men and Čana or
+Čanola in speaking to women. In Akar-Bale the equivalent terms are Da
+and In. Besides these terms there is in these tribes another, Mam, Mama
+or Mamola, which may be used in speaking to either men or women, and
+which implies a higher degree of respect than Maia or Čana. In these
+tribes also there is a special way of showing respect by adding the
+suffix -la to the name of the person addressed, as Bia, Biala, Woičo,
+Woičo-la, etc.
+
+In the legends of the Andamanese these titles are nearly always
+prefixed to the names of the legendary ancestors, as Maia J̌utpu and
+Mimi Biliku in Aka-J̌eru, or Da Duku and In Bain in Akar-Bale. The moon
+is similarly spoken of as Sir Moon (Maia Ogar in Aka-Bea) and the sun
+as Lady Sun (Čana Bodo).
+
+Besides the respect for seniority there is another important factor in
+the regulation of the social life, namely the respect for certain
+personal qualities. These qualities are skill in hunting and in
+warfare, generosity and kindness, and freedom from bad temper. A man
+possessing them inevitably acquires a position of influence in the
+community. His opinion on any subject carries more weight than that of
+another even older man. The younger men attach themselves to him, are
+anxious to please him by giving him any presents that they can, or by
+helping him in such work as cutting a canoe, and to join him in hunting
+parties or turtle expeditions. In each local group there was usually to
+be found one man who thus by his influence could control and direct
+others. Amongst the chief men of several friendly local groups it would
+generally happen that one of them, by reason of his personal qualities,
+would attain to a position of higher rank than the others. Younger men
+would be desirous of joining the local group to which he belonged. He
+would find himself popular and respected at the annual meetings of the
+different groups, and his influence would thus spread beyond the narrow
+limits of his own small community.
+
+There was no special word to denote such men and distinguish them from
+others. In the languages of the North Andaman they were spoken of as
+er-kuro = “big.”
+
+Such men might perhaps be spoken of as “chiefs,” but the term is
+somewhat misleading, as it makes us think of the organised
+chieftainship of other savage races.
+
+The above statement is not quite in agreement with what has been
+written by Mr Man on the same subject, and what he says is therefore
+reproduced here. “Their domestic policy may be described as a communism
+modified by the authority, more or less nominal, of the chief. The head
+chief of a tribe is called maia igla, and the elders, or sub-chiefs,
+i.e. those in authority over each community, consisting of from 20 to
+50 individuals, maiola. The head chief, who usually resides at a
+permanent encampment, has authority over all the sub-chiefs, but his
+power, like theirs, is very limited. It is exercised mainly in
+organising meetings between the various communities belonging to his
+tribe, and in exerting influence in all questions affecting the welfare
+of his followers. It is the chief alone, as may be supposed, who
+directs the movements of a party while on hunting and fishing
+expeditions, or when migrating. It is usually through his intervention
+that disputes are settled, but he possesses no power to punish or
+enforce obedience to his wishes, it being left to all alike to take the
+law into their own hands when aggrieved. The aryoto and eremtaga in
+each tribe have their own head chief, who are independent the one of
+the other. As might be assumed from the results of observations made of
+other savage races, whose sole or chief occupation consists in hunting
+or fishing, the power of the chiefs is very limited, and not
+necessarily hereditary, though, in the event of a grown-up son being
+left who was qualified for the post, he would, in most instances, be
+selected to succeed his father in preference to any other individual of
+equal efficiency. At the death of a chief there is no difficulty in
+appointing a successor, there being always at least one who is
+considered his deputy or right-hand man. As they are usually, on these
+occasions, unanimous in their choice, no formal election takes place;
+however, should any be found to dissent, the question is decided by the
+wishes of the majority, it being always open to malcontents to transfer
+their allegiance to another chief, since there is no such thing as
+forced submission to the authority of one who is not a general
+favourite. Social status being dependent not merely on the accident of
+relationship, but on skill in hunting, fishing, etc., and on a
+reputation for generosity and hospitality, the chiefs and elders are
+almost invariably superior in every respect to the rest. They and their
+wives are at liberty to enjoy immunity from the drudgery incidental to
+their mode of life, all such acts being voluntarily performed for them
+by the young unmarried persons living under their headship [29].”
+
+Where Mr Man speaks of the “authority” of the chiefs it would be better
+to speak of “influence.” Of authority the leading men have little or
+none, but of influence they have a good deal. Should any one venture to
+oppose a popular chief he would find the majority of the natives,
+including many of his friends, siding against him. The words “chief”
+and “authority” seem to imply some sort of organised rule and
+procedure, and of this there is nothing in the Andamans. Mr Man also
+implies that in each tribe there is always one recognized headman, but
+in reality each tribe may possess two or three leading men in different
+parts of the country, each with his own following. In any case a man’s
+influence is largely confined to his own local group, for it is only at
+the annual meetings that the men of other groups come in contact with
+him.
+
+The early officers of the Andamanese Homes (before the time of Mr Man)
+established a system of chieftainship in the islands by selecting a few
+of the more trustworthy and intelligent men, whom they dignified with
+the title of raja, and who acted as the intermediaries between the
+Officer in Charge of the Andamanese and the natives. This system has
+been continued to the present day, and the natives have adopted the
+title raja for these men, having themselves no word for a chief. Where
+a man is selected who is already respected and esteemed by the natives
+his influence is considerably increased through the position thus
+assigned to him. The natives themselves do not recognize that he has
+any authority over them, but if he be a man of generosity and tact, the
+majority will always support him, and his advice in any matters of
+moment will be readily followed.
+
+Women may occupy a position of influence similar to that of the men.
+The wife of a leading man generally exercises the same sort of
+influence over the women as her husband does over the men. A woman,
+however, would not exercise any influence over the men in matters
+connected with hunting. They do have a good deal of influence in
+connection with quarrels either of individuals or of local groups.
+
+There are certain men, and possibly sometimes women, who have an
+influence over their fellows owing to their being credited with the
+possession of supernatural powers. These men, called in Aka-J̌eru
+oko-ǰumu (literally “one who speaks from dreams”), will be described in
+a later chapter. As they are believed to have command over the powers
+that produce and cure sickness everyone tries to be on good terms with
+them, avoiding giving them offence in any way, and seeking their favour
+by presents of food or other things. It sometimes happens that a chief
+(the leading man of a local group) is at the same time a medicine-man
+or oko-ǰumu, but the two positions are entirely distinct and separate,
+and a man may be a medicine-man who possesses none of the qualities
+that are necessary for a head man.
+
+There does not appear to have been in the Andamans any such thing as
+the punishment of crime. We may distinguish two kinds of anti-social
+actions which are regarded by the natives as being wrong. The first
+kind are those actions which injure in some way a private individual.
+The second are those, which, while they do not injure any particular
+person, are yet regarded with disapproval by the society in general.
+
+Amongst the anti-social actions of the first kind are murder, or
+wounding, theft and adultery, and wilful damage of the property of
+another.
+
+No case of one Andamanese killing another has occurred in recent years.
+Quarrels sometimes occur between two men of the same camp. A good deal
+of hard swearing goes on, and sometimes one of the men will work
+himself up to a high pitch of anger, in which he may seize his bow and
+discharge an arrow near to the one who has offended him, or may vent
+his ill-temper by destroying any property that he can lay his hands on,
+including not only that of his enemy but also that of other persons and
+even his own. At such a display of anger the women and children flee
+into the jungle in terror, and if the angry man be at all a formidable
+person the men occasionally do the same. It apparently requires more
+courage than the natives usually possess to endeavour to allay such a
+storm of anger. Yet I found that the slightest show of authority would
+immediately bring such a scene to an end. A man of influence in his
+village was probably generally equal to the task of keeping order and
+preventing any serious damage from taking place. It was probably rare
+for a man so far to give way to his anger as to kill his opponent.
+
+Such murders did, however, occasionally take place [30]. The murderer
+would, as a rule, leave the camp and hide himself in the jungle, where
+he might be joined by such of his friends as were ready to take his
+part. It was left to the relatives and friends of the dead man to exact
+vengeance if they wished and if they could. If the murderer was a man
+who was much feared it is probable that he would escape. In any case
+the anger of the Andamanese is short-lived, and if for a few months he
+could keep out of the way of those who might seek revenge, it is
+probable that at the end of that time he would find their anger cooled.
+
+A man who is liable to outbursts of violent anger is feared by his
+fellows, and unless he has other counterbalancing qualities, he is
+never likely to become popular. He is treated with outward respect, for
+every one is afraid of offending him, but he never acquires the esteem
+of others. There is a special nickname, Tarenǰek, in the North Andaman,
+to denote such a man [31].
+
+Quarrels were more likely to occur at the meetings of different local
+groups that took place in the fine weather, and such quarrels might
+occasionally end in the murder of some one. In such a case the quarrel
+would be taken up by the group of the murdered man, and a feud would be
+set up between them and the local group to which the murderer belonged.
+Such was one of the common causes of origin of the petty warfare that
+formerly existed in the Andamans, which will be referred to later in
+the present chapter.
+
+Cases of theft seem to have been rare. It was left to the aggrieved
+person to take vengeance upon the thief, but if he killed him or
+seriously wounded him he would have to expect the possible vengeance of
+the relatives and friends. Adultery was regarded as a form of theft. I
+gathered that a man had the right to punish his wife for
+unfaithfulness, but if the punishment were too severe it would be an
+occasion for a quarrel with her relatives. It was difficult for the
+aggrieved husband to punish the man who had offended against him. If he
+killed him he would lay himself open to the revenge of the relatives.
+The most he could do was to vent his anger in violent words.
+
+Women also occasionally quarrel with one another and swear forcibly at
+one another, or even get so far as to destroy one another’s belongings,
+or to fight with their fists or sticks. The men hesitate to interfere,
+and the quarrel can only be stopped by some woman of influence.
+
+The frequent occurrence of serious quarrels is prevented both by the
+influence of the older men and by the fear that everyone has of the
+possible vengeance of others should he in any way offend them.
+
+There are a number of actions which, while they do not offend any
+particular person, are regarded as being anti-social. One of these is
+laziness. Every man is expected to take his proper share in providing
+both himself and others with food. Should a man shirk this obligation,
+nothing would be said to him, unless he were a young unmarried man, and
+he would still be given food by others, but he would find himself
+occupying a position of inferiority in the camp, and would entirely
+lose the esteem of his fellows. Other qualities or actions that result
+in a similar loss of esteem are marital unfaithfulness, lack of respect
+to others and particularly to elders, meanness or niggardliness, and
+bad temper. One man was mentioned to me as being a bad man because he
+refused to take a wife after he had reached the age when it is
+considered proper for a man to marry. In recent times at least one
+young man has refused to undergo the privations connected with the
+initiation ceremonies. This was of course a case of gross rebellion
+against the customs of the tribe, but there was no way of punishing him
+or of compelling him to conform, save by showing him that he was an
+object of contempt and ridicule to others. Probably such a refusal to
+conform to tribal customs could not have taken place before the British
+occupation of the islands.
+
+Another class of wrong actions consists in the breaking of ritual
+prohibitions. There are, for example, as will be shown in a later
+chapter, a number of actions which it is believed may cause bad
+weather, such as burning bees’-wax or killing a cicada. There is,
+however, no punishment that can be meted out to any one who does any of
+these things. The punishment, if we may call it so, is a purely
+supernatural one, and it strikes not only the offender but every one
+else as well. In the legends of the Andamanese there are one or two
+stories related of how one of the ancestors, being angry, deliberately
+performed one of the forbidden actions and thus brought a storm that
+destroyed many human beings [32]. There are other ritual prohibitions
+the non-observance of which is supposed to bring its own punishment on
+the offender, who, it is believed, will be ill.
+
+The medicine-men (oko-ǰumu) are credited with the power to work evil
+magic, and by its means to make other people ill, and even to kill
+them. A man suspected of evil magic might be liable to the vengeance of
+those who thought that they had been injured by him, but though the
+practice was regarded as reprehensible it does not seem that the
+society ever acted as a whole to punish a man suspected of it.
+
+Children are reproved for improper behaviour, but they are never
+punished. During their years of infancy they are much spoilt, not only
+by their parents but by every one. During the period of adolescence
+every boy and girl has to undergo a somewhat severe discipline, to be
+described in a later chapter. This probation, if it may be so called,
+is enforced by a unanimous public opinion. The discipline lasts until
+the man or woman is married and a parent, or if childless as so many
+now are, until he or she has settled down to a position of
+responsibility.
+
+Thus, though the Andaman Islanders had a well developed social
+conscience, that is, a system of moral notions as to what is right and
+wrong, there was no such thing as the punishment of a crime by the
+society. If one person injured another it was left to the injured one
+to seek vengeance if he wished and if he dared. There were probably
+always some who would side with the criminal, their attachment to him
+overcoming their disapproval of his actions. The only painful result of
+anti-social actions was the loss of the esteem of others. This in
+itself was a punishment that the Andamanese, with their great personal
+vanity, would feel keenly, and it was in most instances sufficient to
+prevent such actions. For the rest, good order depended largely on the
+influence of the more prominent men and women.
+
+We have so far considered only the general regulation of conduct in the
+local group, without giving any attention to the more special
+regulations dependent on relationships by blood and by marriage. In all
+human societies there is a system of rights and duties regulating the
+conduct towards one another of persons who are related either by
+consanguinity or through marriage. In primitive societies these
+particular rights and duties occupy a position of preponderating
+importance, owing, no doubt, to the small number of persons with whom
+any single person comes into effective social contact. When a large
+proportion of the men and women with whom any person comes in contact
+are related to him, it is clear that relationship must count for a good
+deal in regulating the everyday life of the people.
+
+Different societies have different systems of relationship. This means,
+not only that they attach different duties to particular relations, but
+also that they have different ways of reckoning the relationships
+themselves. The vast majority of primitive peoples have some one or
+other form of what is known to ethnologists as the “classificatory
+system of relationship [33].” This system is intimately connected with
+the existence of the social divisions known as “clans.” In the Andamans
+there are no clans, and the system of relationship is fundamentally
+different from all the classificatory systems.
+
+To understand the Andamanese system it is necessary to examine the
+terms by which they denote the different kinds of relationship which
+are recognized [34]. In many societies having the classificatory system
+of relationship the terms which are used to denote relationship are
+also used as terms of address, just as we use the terms “Father” and
+“Mother.” In the Andamans this is not so. There are special words that
+are used as terms of address, but these do not imply any relationship
+between the speaker and the person spoken to. In the North Andaman
+those terms are Maia (= Sir) and Mimi (= Lady). These are used by
+younger men and women in speaking to older persons. For the rest,
+persons are addressed freely by their personal names. There are no
+terms of address that imply any relationship of consanguinity between
+the person speaking and the person whom he addresses. This is an
+important feature of the Andamanese system, distinguishing it from the
+systems of many other primitive societies.
+
+The following is a list of terms used to denote relationship in the
+North Andaman. There seems to be very little difference in this matter
+between the four tribes of the North (Aka-Čari, Aka-Ko̱ra, Aka-Bo and
+Aka-J̌eru).
+
+
+ aka-mai his father
+ aka-mimi his mother
+ ot-tire his child
+ ot-otoatue his older brother
+ ot-otoatue-čip his older sister
+ ot-arai-čulute his younger brother
+ ot-arai-čulute-čip his younger sister
+ ot-e-bui or e-bui his wife (her husband)
+ e-pota-čiu his father-in-law
+ e-pota-čip his mother-in-law
+ ot-otone his son-in-law.
+
+
+Aka-mai and aka-mimi. The words for “father” and “mother” are derived
+from the terms of address Maia and Mimi by the addition in each case of
+the prefix aka-. By itself the term Maia is used by any man or woman in
+speaking to a man older than himself or herself without implying any
+relation between them beyond that of respective age. The addition of
+the prefix aka- changes the word, giving it the meaning “the father of
+somebody.” Thus Maia Bora means “Mr Bora” or “Sir Bora,” if we may so
+translate it, but Bora aka-mai means “Bora’s father,” and aka-mai Bora
+means “his or her father Bora.” The Aka-J̌eru equivalent for “my father”
+is t’a-mai, the t’ being the personal pronoun “my,” after which the
+prefix aka- is contracted to a-. Similarly “thy father” is ŋ’a-mai and
+“their father” or “their fathers” is n’a-mai. The word aka-mimi is in
+every respect exactly parallel to aka-mai. These two terms are only
+used when it is necessary to refer to the actual father or mother of
+anybody. For example, if a man be asked Ačiu ŋ’a-mai bi? (Who your
+father is?), he will reply by giving the name of his own father.
+
+The stem maia clearly relates to the social position of the father of a
+family. A man who is a father, or while not having any children, is
+married and occupies an equivalent social position to a father, is
+addressed by the term which shows his social position, Maia. When I
+call a man Maia, I do not imply that he is my father nor that he is
+related to me at all, but only that he is a father. On the other hand,
+the prefix aka- added to the stem makes a possessive form, so that
+aka-mai means “his father” and t’a-mai means “my father.” The word mimi
+is exactly parallel. By itself, the stem simply shows that the person
+addressed is a mother, while aka-mimi means “his mother.”
+
+Ot-tire. The word “child,” when there is no reference to the child of
+some particular person, is translated e-tire, -tire being the stem and
+e- the prefix [35]. With a change of prefix from e- to ot-, a
+possessive form is made, so that ot-tire always means “his or her
+child,” with reference to some particular person understood. Thus Bora
+ot-tire would mean “the child of Bora,” while Bora e-tire or e-tire
+Bora would mean “the child Bora.” The phrase t’ot-tire (my child) is
+used by either a man or a woman to denote his or her child.
+
+Ot-otoatue and ot-arai-čulute. I was unable to find in the languages of
+the North Andaman any words which could properly be translated
+“brother” or “sister.” The two words here given are used by the
+Andamanese to denote persons older or younger than the speaker, whether
+they be brothers and sisters or not. The derivation of ot-otoatue could
+not be ascertained, but the word means “he who was born before me,” and
+it is used in this sense to denote any person of the speaker’s
+generation who is older than himself. If it is necessary to emphasise
+the female sex of the person spoken of, the suffix -čip is added. An
+alternative word of exactly the same meaning is ot-areupu (fem.
+ot-arep-čip). The word ot-arai-čulute is formed from the stem čulu or
+čulutu meaning “following” or “after,” which always takes the prefix
+arai-. (This prefix conveys a reference to position in time or space.)
+The stem is found in such phrases as tio ŋ’arai-čulutu-bom, “I will
+follow you” (literally tio = I, ŋ’ = thou, čulutu = after, and -bom,
+verbal suffix), and tarai-čulik “afterwards” (t-arai-čulu-ik). The
+prefix ot- added in front of the usual prefix arai- determines the
+particular use of the word as referring to human beings. Thus the word
+ot-arai-čulute means, literally, “he or she who was born after me.” It
+is used in this sense by a man or woman to denote any person of the
+same generation who is younger than himself. The suffix -čip may be
+added to denote a female. Alternative words of the same meaning are
+ot-ara-liču and ot-ara-bela.
+
+These words are not, properly speaking, terms of relationship, but
+serve only to denote the respective ages of two persons. I did not
+discover any terms whatever by which a man can distinguish his own
+brother or sister from any other man or woman of the same age.
+
+Ot-e-bui. The stem -bui means “to marry,” as in n’ e-bui-om = they are
+married. “My husband” or “my wife” is simply t’e-bui or t’ot-e-bui.
+
+E-pota-čiu and e-pota-čip. The derivation of these words was not
+discovered. They are the terms by which a man distinguishes his wife’s
+father and mother, and a woman her husband’s father and mother.
+
+Ot-otone. The word and its meaning are somewhat doubtful. It was
+sometimes used by a man to denote his daughter’s husband, and perhaps
+also his son’s wife. I once heard it applied to a younger sister’s
+husband. It may be compared with the same word as used in the South
+Andaman to be mentioned presently.
+
+So far as could be discovered, there are no words in the languages of
+the North Andaman for grandfather, grandmother, uncle, aunt, cousin,
+etc. The terms given above can be combined to describe relatives of
+this kind, as
+
+
+ T’a-mimi aka-mai my mother’s father
+ Ot-e-bui ot-arai-čulute his wife’s younger brother
+ Ŋ’ot-a-mai ot-arai-čulute thy father’s younger brother
+ T’ot-otoatue ot-tire my older brother’s child.
+
+
+These compound terms are not often used, however.
+
+The terms of relationship of the Akar-Bale tribe may be taken as
+representative of the tribes of the South Andaman. The following list
+contains all the more important of them.
+
+
+ da father
+ ab-atr father
+ in mother
+ ar-bua child
+ ar-kodire child (father speaking)
+ ab-atet child (mother speaking)
+ mama grandparent
+ ǰat grandchild
+ en-toaka-ŋa older brother or sister
+ ar-dotot younger brother or sister
+ otoni son-in-law
+ oten daughter-in-law
+ ab-i-ŋa consort (husband or wife)
+ aka-yat parent of child’s consort
+ aka-bua consort’s younger brother or sister
+ ep-taruo-ŋa step relative
+ ot-čat-ŋa relative by adoption
+ aka-kuam younger relative
+ ab-čuga older relative (male)
+ ab-čupal older relative (female).
+
+
+Da and in. Da is the common term of address used when speaking to an
+older man to whom the speaker wishes to show respect. A man will speak
+of his own father as dege da, dege being the personal pronoun “my” as
+used before a word that has no prefix. The term In is the common term
+of address used in speaking to women. A man or woman will refer to his
+or her own mother as deg’ in. The use of these two terms as applied to
+parents is very similar to the use of aka-mai and aka-mimi in the North
+Andaman, with the difference that in Akar-Bale the stem da or in does
+not take a prefix to modify its meaning. While the use of the terms Da
+and In as terms of address does not in the least imply that there is
+any relationship between the person speaking and the person addressed,
+yet the phrase dege da would in general be understood as referring to
+the speaker’s own father.
+
+Ab-atr. This is a word descriptive of the relationship of a father to
+his child. I never heard a man refer to his own father by this term,
+but it is heard in such phrases as deg’ in l’ab-atr = my mother’s
+father. It conveys a definite notion of the physiological relation
+between a father and his children, and might be translated “he who
+caused me to be conceived.” There is probably a feminine equivalent
+meaning “mother,” but it was not noted.
+
+Ar-bua, ar-kodire and ab-atet. The Akar-Bale word for “infant” is
+ab-liga or ab-dareka. The latter word is the phonetic equivalent of the
+e-tire of the Northern languages. A parent often speaks of his or her
+infant son as d’ab-bula, and of his infant daughter as d’ab-pal,
+ab-bula and ab-pal being the terms for “male” and “female [36].” The
+exact use of the term ar-bua is difficult to determine. The stem -bua
+may be used by itself without a prefix. Dege bua (my child) would
+refer, I believe, only to the child of the speaker. On the other hand,
+a man would use the term d’ar-bua as referring not only to his own
+child but also to the child of a brother or a sister, or even to a
+person who was not related to him at all. So far as it could be
+determined, it seems that a man or woman might apply this term (ar-bua)
+to any person of the same generation as his or her children, whether a
+relative or not. It thus means “a person of the same generation as my
+own children,” and describes, not relationship, but respective age. The
+word ar-kodire refers to the own child of a man, and ab-atet similarly
+refers to the own child of a woman. The two words together are thus
+equivalent to the ot-tire of the North Andaman, the Akar-Bale
+distinguishing between the offspring of a man (ar-kodire) and the
+offspring of a woman (ab-atet).
+
+Mama. The word is translated above as meaning “grandparent,” but it has
+a wider meaning than this. It is used as a term of address to convey
+more respect than is conveyed by the terms Da and In, and is thus used
+in addressing any man or woman who is considerably older than the
+speaker. With the personal pronoun, dege mama, it may be applied by a
+man or woman to any of his grandparents, and also to his father-in-law
+and mother-in-law, and to other senior relatives.
+
+J̌at. The word was explained to me by the natives as meaning
+“grandchild.” It seems to be a sort of reciprocal of mama, and is
+apparently applicable by any old man or woman to any child of the same
+generation as his or her own grandchildren.
+
+En-toaka-ŋa and ar-dotot. These two words are used in exactly the same
+way as the words ot-otoatue and ot-arai-čulute of the North Andaman.
+They are not properly terms of relationship, but may be equally used in
+referring to non-relatives. En-toaka-ŋa means “he who was born before
+me,” and ar-dotot means “he who was born after me.” I was not able to
+discover any word by which a person could distinguish his own brother
+or sister from others of the same age. It is not certain, however, that
+such a word does not exist.
+
+Otoni and oten. These are masculine and feminine forms of the same
+word, and are used to denote a daughter’s husband and a son’s wife.
+Otoni is also applied to a younger sister’s husband, and oten to a
+younger brother’s wife. The derivation of the words was not discovered.
+
+Aka-yat. This is the native name for the relationship subsisting
+between a person’s parents and his parents-in-law. My own mother or
+father is aka-yat to my wife’s father or mother.
+
+Aka-bua. The word is derived from the stem bua, meaning “child.” It is
+applied by a man to the younger brothers and sisters of his wife, and
+by a woman to the younger brothers and sisters of her husband.
+
+Ab-i-ŋa. The word is translated “consort,” and means either husband or
+wife. It is derived from the verbal stem -i- meaning “to marry”
+(on-i-re), ab- being the prefix, and -ŋa the verbal suffix.
+
+Ep-taruo-ŋa. The word is used to denote a step-child, or a younger
+step-brother or sister.
+
+Ot-čat-ŋa. The word means “adopted.” “My adopted child” is simply
+expressed as d’ot-čat-ŋa, while “my foster father” is dege da
+ot-čat-ŋa. The stem is -čat-, -ŋa being the verbal suffix and ot- the
+prefix.
+
+Aka-kuam. In spite of several enquiries, I was unable to ascertain the
+significance of this word. I heard it applied on different occasions to
+a younger brother or sister, to a younger first cousin, and to the
+brothers and sisters of a wife. The only suitable translation would
+seem to be “my younger relative,” but it is not certain that it even
+implies any relationship at all. It is perhaps really a term denoting
+respective social status and is used by a married man to denote other
+married men who are somewhat younger than himself, and with whom he is
+on friendly terms.
+
+Ab-čuga and ab-čupal. These are the masculine and feminine forms of one
+word. Mr Portman [37] gives them as meaning “married man” and “married
+woman.” I heard them used, however, with the personal pronoun. Thus a
+man applied the term ab-čuga to his older brother, his older sister’s
+husband, and to his father’s brother. In this usage these two terms
+seem to be in a sense reciprocal to aka-kuam. A younger married man
+will refer to older married men and women as his ab-čuga and ab-čupal,
+while they will call him aka-kuam.
+
+In his work on the Andamanese, Mr E. H. Man gives a long list of terms
+of relationship for the Aka-Bea tribe [38]. It will be of some interest
+to compare the terms there given with those of the Akar-Bale tribe
+described above.
+
+D’ab-maiola (D’ab-mai-ola). This is translated by Mr Man as “father.”
+In Aka-Bea the term Maia is the term of address corresponding to the Da
+of Akar-Bale and to the Mai of the North Andaman. The suffix -ola,
+added to this and other terms of address serves to convey additional
+respect, as Maia, Mai-ola, Čana, Čan-ola, Mama, Mam-ola. Thus
+ab-mai-ola corresponds to the aka-mai of the Northern languages.
+
+Dia Maia. This is given by Mr Man as applicable to the following
+relatives:—my father’s brother, my mother’s brother, my father’s
+sister’s husband, my mother’s sister’s husband, my father’s father’s
+brother’s (or sister’s) son, my husband’s grandfather, my wife’s
+grandfather, my wife’s sister’s husband (if elder), my husband’s
+sister’s husband (if elder).
+
+Dia maiola. My grandfather, my grandfather’s brother, my grandmother’s
+brother, my elder sister’s husband.
+
+It must be remembered that these terms are not properly terms of
+relationship at all. Any man who is older than the speaker is Maia or
+Mai-ola to him, the latter implying a slightly higher degree of respect
+than the former. It is probable that the three different terms given
+above are not used by the natives with the very precise distinctions
+that are drawn by Mr Man. It may be noted that Mr Portman writes in
+this connection:—”Maia is an Honorific, equivalent to the English
+‘Sir,’ and is used when addressing a male elder. A son calls his father
+‘Sir,’ and uses no other word in speaking to, or of, him. A pronoun
+ Dia maiola [39].”
+emphasises the relationship, as: My Father
+
+D’ ab-čanola. Given by Mr Man as meaning “my mother.” It is the
+feminine equivalent of d’ ab-mai-ola, Čana being the feminine of Maia,
+and corresponding to the In of Akar-Bale and the Mimi of Aka-J̌eru.
+
+Dia čanola. This is given as the Aka-Bea translation of the
+following:—my father’s sister, my mother’s sister, my father’s
+brother’s wife, my mother’s brother’s wife, my grandmother, my great
+aunt, my father’s father’s sister’s daughter, my mother’s mother’s
+sister’s daughter, my husband’s grandmother, my wife’s grandmother, my
+husband’s sister (if senior and a mother), my elder brother’s wife (if
+a mother). In its formation the term is the feminine equivalent of dia
+mai-ola, while in its use it is the equivalent both of this term and of
+dia maia. This serves to show that there is no real precise distinction
+between dia maia and dia mai-ola, such as Mr Man’s list would seem to
+imply. Dia čan-ola is not, properly speaking, a term of relationship.
+Any married woman senior to the speaker is entitled to be addressed as
+Čana or Čan-ola.
+
+D’ ab-čabil. Mr Man gives this as translating “my father, my
+step-father.” The feminine equivalent would seem to be d’ ab-čanola,
+which is given for “my mother” and “my step-mother.” Mr Portman gives
+ab-čabil and ab-čana as the Aka-Bea terms for “married man” and
+“married woman [40].” The two words are the equivalents of the
+Akar-Bale ab-čuga and ab-čupal.
+
+D’ ar-odi-ŋa. This word is given by Mr Man as one of the equivalents
+for “my father.” It is parallel to the Akar-Bale term ab-atr, and is
+strictly a term of physiological relationship, meaning “he who caused
+me to be conceived.”
+
+D’ab-eti-ŋa. This is translated by Mr Man as “my mother.” It is the
+corresponding term to d’ar-odi-ŋa, and refers to the physiological
+relationship.
+
+D’ab-weǰi-ŋa or d’ab-weǰeri-ŋa. This also means “my mother,” and is
+only an alternative word for the above. The stems eti and weǰi or
+weǰeri seem to be two stems meaning the same thing.
+
+D’ar-odi-re or d’ar-odi-yate. Given by Mr Man as meaning “my son” (if
+over three years of age, father speaking). It is the equivalent of the
+Akar-Bale ar-kodire.
+
+D’ab-eti-re, d’ab-eti-yate, d’ab-weǰi-re, d’ab-weǰi-yate,
+d’ab-weǰeri-re, d’ab-weǰeri-yate. These are all given by Mr Man as
+translating “my son” (if over three years of age, mother speaking).
+They are equivalent to the Akar-Bale ab-atet.
+
+The above words seem to be derived from three stems, -odi-, -eti-, and
+-weǰi- (or -weǰeri-), the stems -eti- and -weǰi- having exactly the
+same meaning, and belonging, perhaps, to different dialects. The words
+are formed by the addition of the prefixes ar- and ab-, and the verbal
+suffixes -ŋa, -re, -yate. Thus we have ar-odi-ŋa, “father,” and
+ar-odi-re or ar-odi-yate, “son.” Similarly we have ab-eti-ŋa, “mother,”
+and ab-eti-re or ab-eti-yate, “son” (mother speaking), while similar
+equivalents are made from the stem -weǰi-. The words given as meaning
+“son” may also be used to mean “daughter,” but when it is necessary to
+emphasise the female sex, the suffix -pail (meaning “female”) is added,
+as d’ar-odi-re-pail, d’ab-eti-re-pail.
+
+Dia ota and dia kata. These are given by Mr Man as meaning respectively
+“my son” and “my daughter” (if under three years of age, either parent
+speaking). Ota and kata are the terms for the male and female genitals.
+
+Dia ba. This is given by Mr Man as meaning “my daughter” (if over three
+years of age, either parent speaking). It is the phonetic equivalent of
+dege bua in Akar-Bale.
+
+Dia ba-lola. Given as the equivalent of:—my grandson (either
+grandparent speaking), my brother’s grandson (male or female speaking),
+my sister’s grandson (male or female speaking). The same phrase with
+the addition of -pail, meaning “female,” is given as equivalent to:—my
+granddaughter, my brother’s granddaughter, and my sister’s
+granddaughter (male or female speaking).
+
+D’ar-ba. According to Mr Man this term is applicable by a male or
+female to the son of a brother, a sister, a half-brother, a
+half-sister, or of a male or female first cousin. With the addition of
+-pail, meaning “female,” it is applicable to the daughter of any of the
+above.
+
+Ad en-toba-re, ad en-toba-ŋa, ad en-toka-re, ad en-toka-ŋa. These terms
+are given by Mr Man as alternative equivalents for “my elder brother
+(male or female speaking).” The stem is -toba- or -toka-, with the
+prefix en- and the verbal suffix -re or -ŋa. The ad is a special form
+of the first personal pronoun, generally d’. With the addition of
+-pail, meaning “female,” the term is applicable to an elder sister. The
+word corresponds, both phonetically and in meaning, to the Akar-Bale
+en-toaka-ŋa.
+
+D’ar-doati-ŋa. Given as meaning “my younger brother (male or female
+speaking).” With the addition of -pail, it is applied to a younger
+sister. Mr Man gives the word as being also applicable to a first
+cousin, if younger than the speaker.
+
+D’ar-weǰi-ŋa or d’ar-weǰeri-ŋa. These are given by Mr Man as
+alternative terms for “younger brother,” and, with the addition of
+-pail, for “younger sister.” It is to be noted that the stem -weǰi- or
+-weǰeri- is the same that occurs in one of the terms for “mother,” but
+that the prefix is different, being in this case ar- instead of ab-.
+
+Dia mama. This is given as meaning “my wife’s brother, or my husband’s
+brother (if of equal standing).”
+
+Dia mam-ola. Given as the equivalent of the following:—my husband’s
+father, my husband’s mother, my wife’s father, my wife’s mother, my
+husband’s elder brother, my wife’s brother (if older), my husband’s
+sister’s husband (if older), my wife’s sister (if older and a mother),
+my husband’s brother’s wife (if older), my wife’s brother’s wife (if
+older).
+
+Mama and Mam-ola are terms of address in Aka-Bea. Mam-ola implies a
+somewhat greater degree of respect than Mama, and this in its turn is
+more respectful than Mai-ola or Maia.
+
+D’aka-kam. Mr Man gives this as a term applicable to the following
+relatives:—my younger brother, my younger half-brother. With the
+addition of -pail, it is applicable to a younger sister or half-sister.
+
+Dia otoniya and dia otin. The first of these terms is given as
+meaning:—my son-in-law (male or female speaking), and my younger
+sister’s husband (male or female speaking). The second term is
+feminine, and is given as applicable to the following:—daughter-in-law,
+husband’s sister (if younger), husband’s brother’s wife (if younger),
+wife’s brother’s wife (if younger). The terms are thus equivalent,
+phonetically and in meaning, to the Akar-Bale terms otoni and oten.
+
+Aka-yakat. This is given as the relationship subsisting between a
+married couple’s fathers-in-law, and between their mothers-in-law. It
+is the equivalent of the Akar-Bale word aka-yat.
+
+D’aka-ba-bula and d’aka-ba-pail. The meaning of the first of these is
+given as “my husband’s brother (if younger),” and of the second as “my
+younger brother’s wife.” The suffixes -bula and -pail mean “male” and
+“female” respectively. The term aka-ba is the phonetic equivalent of
+the Akar-Bale word aka-bua. The latter seems to be applied to the
+younger brothers and sisters of a man’s wife or of a woman’s husband,
+and to these alone. The use of these terms and of the terms otoni and
+oten, as recorded from the Akar-Bale tribe, may be compared with the
+usage stated by Mr Man, as there is some disagreement. In the following
+table the Aka-Bea terms are given as they are found in Mr Man’s list,
+while those of the Akar-Bale tribe are given from my own information.
+
+
+ Aka-Bea Akar-Bale
+
+ Husband’s younger brother aka-ba-bula aka-bua
+ Husband’s younger sister otin aka-bua
+ Wife’s younger brother aka-bua
+ Wife’s younger sister aka-bua
+ Younger brother’s wife aka-ba-pail oten
+ Younger sister’s husband otoniya otoni.
+
+
+It will be observed that the Akar-Bale list is consistent and logical
+throughout. It seems probable that there is an error in Mr Man’s list,
+and that “husband’s younger sister” should be aka-ba-pail instead of
+otin, while “younger brother’s wife” should be otin instead of
+aka-ba-pail. This would make the Aka-Bea list consistent with itself
+and with the Akar-Bale list.
+
+Mr Man gives, in addition to the terms discussed above, a number of
+compound terms, which we may examine briefly.
+
+D’ar-čabil-entoba-re. This is given as applicable to any first cousin
+or half-brother who is older than the speaker. The feminine form is
+given as d’ar-čanol-a-entoba-yate.
+
+D’ar-čabil-entoba-re lai-ik-yate. This is applicable to the wife of any
+first cousin or half-brother, if older than the speaker. As lai-ik-yate
+means “his wife,” this is a descriptive term. There is a similar term
+dia čanol a-entoba-yate lai-ik-yate for the husband of an older female
+cousin or half-sister.
+
+D’ar-ba lai-ik-yate. This means “the wife of my ar-ba,” and is
+therefore applicable to the wife of the son of a brother or sister or
+cousin, and to the husband of a daughter of a brother or sister or
+cousin.
+
+There are a few other similar compounds that need not be given.
+
+In Mr Man’s list a step-son is given as eb-aden-ire. The word for
+adoption is ot-čat-ŋa, d’ot-čat-ŋa meaning “my adopted child” and
+d’ab-mai-ot-čat-ŋa “my adopted father.”
+
+The system of terms of relationship of the Andamanese is of great
+interest as being fundamentally different from the systems of other
+uncivilized peoples. It is by no means easy to discover the exact usage
+of the different terms that are mentioned above. It is, however,
+possible to gain a general idea, probably accurate in essentials, of
+the way in which the Andamanese languages express the notions of
+kinship.
+
+We may consider first the terms of address and the terms of
+relationship formed from them. The terms of address are:—
+
+
+ Aka-Jeru Aka-Bea Akar-Bale
+
+ Maia or Mai Da Maia Sir
+ Mimi In Cana Lady
+ ...... Mama Mama or mamola.
+
+
+The first of these is used in addressing males and the second in
+addressing females, while the third may be used either for males or for
+females and implies a higher degree of respect than the others.
+
+In all the languages of the Great Andaman a man refers to his own
+father and mother by adding a personal pronoun to the words meaning
+“Sir” and “Lady.” In Aka-J̌eru a man speaks of his father as t’a-mai,
+and of his mother as t’a-mimi, the a- being a contracted form of the
+prefix aka-. This prefix is always used in this way in the Northern
+languages. It is not possible to say tičo maia, which would be the
+literal equivalent of dege da in Akar-Bale. In the Akar-Bale language
+the translation of “my father” and “my mother” is dege da and deg’ in,
+the dege being the personal pronoun “my” as used before a word that has
+no prefix. The same formation is present also in the A-Pučikwar and
+Aka-Ko̱l languages. For example in Aka-Ko̱l “my father” is tiye tao, and
+“my mother” tiye in. In the Aka-Bea language, according to the
+information given by Mr Man, the word maia (or maiola) may be used
+combined with a prefix, as in d’ab-maiola = “my father,” or it may be
+used simply with the personal pronoun as dia maia or dia maiola.
+According to Mr Man these last two terms are applied not to a man’s own
+father, but to the other persons whom he addresses as maia. This is
+contradicted by Mr Portman who gives dia maiola as the Aka-Bea for “my
+father.”
+
+In the Aka-Bea and Akar-Bale languages (as also in A-Pučikwar and
+Aka-Ko̱l) a man always addresses his grandparent or his father-in-law or
+mother-in-law by the term Mama or Mamola. He is therefore able to refer
+to these persons by adding the personal pronoun to the term of address,
+as dege mama in Akar-Bale. This cannot, however, be regarded as
+properly a term denoting relationship, for a man may apply the term
+Mama to a man or woman to whom he is not related at all [41].
+
+The next kind of words that we may consider are those that describe the
+respective social position of two persons. Such are the words
+ot-otoatue and ot-arai-čulute in Aka-J̌eru, meaning “he who was born
+before me” and “he who was born after me” respectively. These terms do
+not, strictly speaking, convey any idea of consanguinity, although they
+are commonly used to refer to a brother or a sister. Exactly equivalent
+terms are found in all the languages, for example the en-toaka-ŋa and
+ar-dot-ot of Akar-Bale. I was not able to discover in Aka-J̌eru nor yet
+in Akar-Bale any term to denote a brother or a sister. In Aka-Bea,
+however, Mr Man records the term ar-weǰi-ŋa or ar-weǰeri-ŋa. The stem
+-weǰi- or -weǰeri-, as we shall shortly see, is a verbal stem referring
+to the act of birth, -ŋa is a verbal suffix, and the prefix ar- conveys
+a reference to position in space or time. The whole word seems to mean
+“he or she who was born in the same womb as myself,” and is therefore
+strictly a word meaning “brother or sister.” It is possible that
+similar words exist in Akar-J̌eru and Akar-Bale, but I never came across
+them.
+
+Other terms descriptive of social status are the Akar-Bale terms
+ab-čuga and ab-čupal which refer to married men and women particularly
+those older than the speaker. These also are not properly terms of
+relationship, though a man may refer to some of his relatives as
+d’ab-čuga, adding the personal pronoun to what is properly a word
+descriptive of the social position of the person in question. In
+Aka-Bea the equivalent terms are ab-čabil and ab-čana. It would seem
+that the term aka-kuam (aka-kam in Aka-Bea) is of the same kind, being
+applicable by an older married man to a younger. At any rate I was
+unable to discover that it conveyed to the natives any notion of
+relationship.
+
+There are a certain number of terms that are descriptive of definite
+relationships. In the North ot-e-bui, and in Akar-Bale ab-i-ŋa are both
+of them derived from verbal stems meaning “to marry” and are used to
+denote a husband or a wife. In the North I did not discover any term
+descriptive of a father or a mother save those derived from the terms
+of address. In Akar-Bale and Aka-Bea there are such terms; ab-atr in
+Akar-Bale means “father” while the word for “mother” was not noted; in
+Aka-Bea a father is ar-odi-ŋa, and a mother is ab-eti-ŋa. These words
+are descriptive of the physiological relation between a parent and a
+child. A man’s adopted mother could not be his ab-eti-ŋa, for this term
+applies only to the woman from whose womb he issued. Similarly an
+adopted father or a step-father could not be ab-atr or ar-odi-ŋa. There
+are similar words for child, which also refer to the physiological
+relation of a child to its parent. In the North the stem -tire means
+“offspring.” The offspring of a plant, that is the young shoots, are
+denoted by the term era-tire, the prefix era- serving to convey a
+reference to trees and plants. The offspring of an animal or of a human
+being is e-tire. The word e-tire means “the child of somebody” without
+reference to any particular person as the parent. In the form ot-tire
+the word means “his or her child” with reference to some person
+understood. A man or woman cannot in strict accuracy apply the term
+ot-tire to his adopted child, though I believe that it might be used in
+this loose sense at times. An adopted child is “he whom I have
+adopted,” t’oi-čolo-kom. In Akar-Bale and Aka-Bea there are different
+terms for “child” according as the reference is to the child of a man
+or to that of a woman. Thus in Akar-Bale the child (in the
+physiological sense) of a father is ar-kodire, and the child of a
+mother is ab-atet. In Aka-Bea the physiological relation of a father
+and child is denoted by the verbal stem -odi-. This stem takes the
+prefix ar-. The word for father is formed by adding the verbal suffix
+-ŋa (ar-odi-ŋa). The word for child (father speaking) is formed by
+means of the verbal suffix -re or -yate (ar-odi-re or ar-odi-yate). We
+may translate d’ar-odi-ŋa as meaning “he who caused me to be conceived”
+while d’ar-odi-re or d’ar-odi-yate means “him whom I caused to be
+conceived.” In the same language the physiological relation of a mother
+and a child is denoted by the stem -eti-. This stem takes the prefix
+ab-. A mother is ab-eti-ŋa, and the child of a mother is ab-eti-re or
+ab-eti-yate, the verbal suffixes being used in a way similar to that in
+the case of the terms for father and child. In Aka-Bea there is also a
+stem -weǰi- or -weǰeri- which has exactly the same meaning as -eti- and
+can be substituted for it in the terms meaning mother and child, as
+ab-weǰi-ŋa = mother, ab-weǰi-re = child.
+
+Other descriptive words used to denote specific relationships are
+e-pota-čiu and e-pota-čip and ot-otone in the Northern languages. The
+derivations of these words have not been ascertained. Similar terms in
+Akar-Bale are otoni and oten and aka-yat. In this language I did not
+discover any word descriptive of the relationship of father-in-law or
+mother-in-law. Finally there are such terms as ot-čat-ŋa (adopted) and
+ep-taruo-ŋa (step-relative).
+
+The most noteworthy feature of these terms is that it is impossible by
+means of them to deal with relationships that are at all distant. Thus
+there is no term by which a man can describe his grandfather. In
+Akar-Bale the phrase dege mama might mean a grandfather, but it might
+equally refer to a father-in-law. It is true that the simple terms may
+be combined as Aka-J̌eru “aka-mimi aka-mai” = “his mother’s father,” or
+Akar-Bale “deg’ in l’ab-atr” = “my mother’s father,” but these
+compounded terms are apparently not often used by the natives. A second
+noteworthy feature is the existence of terms to denote physiological
+relationships (as opposed to merely juridical relationships) such as
+the Aka-Bea ar-odi-ŋa, etc. Finally there is the apparent entire
+absence, so far as could be determined, of any classification of
+relatives such as is characteristic of the classificatory systems of
+relationship. Where there does seem to be some sort of approach to such
+classification, as in the use of the Akar-Bale term dege mama, we find
+that it is really based not on relationships of consanguinity and
+marriage, but on respective social status [42].
+
+As, in the languages of the Andamans, there are few words serving to
+denote relationship, and on the contrary a developed system of terms
+denoting social status, so in the social organisation of the Andamans
+there are very few special duties between relatives, and the conduct of
+persons to one another is chiefly determined by their respective social
+positions. This will become evident as we proceed, and it will thus be
+shown that there is a close connection between the way the natives
+denote relationships and the way in which their social life is affected
+by questions of relationship.
+
+We have already seen that in the Andamanese social organisation the
+family is of great importance. A family is constituted by a permanent
+union between one man and one woman. In one of its aspects this union
+is a sexual one. By marriage a man acquires the sole right to sexual
+congress with the woman who becomes his wife. At the same time it is
+the duty of a married man to avoid sexual relations with other women
+whether married or unmarried. Promiscuous intercourse between the sexes
+is the rule before marriage, and no harm is thought of it. The love
+affairs of the boys and girls are carried on in secret, but the older
+members of the camp are generally fully aware of all that goes on. What
+generally happens is that after a time a youth forms an attachment with
+some girl and a marriage between them results from their love affair.
+
+It is impossible, at the present time, to discover exactly how the
+Andamanese formerly regarded infidelity on the part of a wife or
+husband. In the Great Andaman there is great laxity in this matter at
+the present day. Quarrels sometimes arise when a husband discovers an
+intrigue between his wife and another man, but very often the husband
+seems to condone the adultery of his wife. Mr E. H. Man, writing on
+this subject, says that “conjugal fidelity till death is not the
+exception, but the rule,” and adds, “It is undoubtedly true that
+breaches of morality have occasionally taken place among a few of the
+married persons who have resided for any length of time at Port Blair,
+but this is only what might be expected from constant association with
+the Indian convict attendants at the various homes; justice, however,
+demands that in judging of their moral characteristics we should
+consider only those who have been uninfluenced by the vices or virtues
+of alien races [43].” At the present time conjugal infidelity is very
+common and is lightly regarded. It is almost certain that the
+establishment of the Penal Settlement amongst them has affected their
+morals in this particular, but there does not seem to be any very
+satisfactory evidence that their former morality was quite so strict as
+Mr Man would have us believe. One piece of evidence in this matter is
+that the spread of syphilis, when it was first introduced amongst them
+seems to have been very rapid, and yet this was before many of the
+tribes had been very seriously affected by the Settlement.
+
+Besides the special sexual relation between a husband and wife there is
+a special economic relation, if we may speak of it as such. The two
+share one hut between them, or one portion of a communal hut. It is the
+duty of the wife to provide the fire-wood and the water for cooking and
+drinking, and to cook the meals at the family fire. It is the duty of
+the husband to provide flesh food for himself and for his wife, while
+it is her duty to provide and prepare vegetable food.
+
+A marriage is not regarded as fully consummated until the birth of a
+child. Mr Man states that the survivor of a childless couple is not
+looked upon as the chief mourner. A father who has been away from home
+greets his wife first on his return and then greets his other
+relatives; but if no child has been born to him a husband first greets
+his blood-relatives (father, mother, brothers, etc.) and only after
+that does he visit his wife.
+
+The only regulation of marriage is on the basis of relationship.
+Marriage is forbidden between near consanguinei. The exact rules, in
+this matter, if indeed there be any exact rules, are difficult to
+discover. It is quite clear that a man would not be permitted to marry
+his sister or half-sister, nor his father’s or mother’s sister, nor his
+brother’s or sister’s daughter. The question is more difficult when it
+comes to the matter of cousins. In 1908 I only found one pair of first
+cousins who were married to one another, this being in the Aka-Bo
+tribe. The husband and wife were the son and daughter of two brothers.
+Mr E. H. Man writes that “marriage is only permissible between those
+who are known to be not even distantly connected, except by wedlock,
+with each other; so inexorable indeed is this rule, that it extends and
+applies equally to such as are related merely by the custom of
+adoption.” He adds that marriage between first cousins is forbidden. I
+was not able to satisfy myself on this point, but it seemed to me that
+while such a marriage as that of first cousins was not actually
+regarded as wrong, and therefore forbidden, it was regarded as
+preferable that a man should marry a woman not so nearly related to
+him. No distinction is made between different kinds of cousin [44].
+
+My observations did not confirm Mr Man’s statement that persons related
+by adoption are forbidden to marry. It is necessary, however, to
+distinguish two different kinds of adoption. When the parents of a
+child of less than six or seven years of age die, the child is adopted
+into some other family. We may call this “orphan adoption.” As will be
+explained later, there is another custom by which children of over
+seven or eight are adopted by a married couple belonging to a local
+group other than that of the parents, and live with them till they come
+of age. The parents of the child are still alive and they visit him or
+her at frequent intervals. No bar to marriage is set up by this kind of
+adoption. An adopted son may marry the daughter of his foster-parents.
+Indeed when children are betrothed it is the rule for the girl to be
+adopted by the boy’s parents, at any rate for a time. On the other hand
+it is quite possible that a child adopted when of tender years (as an
+orphan) would not be permitted to marry a child of his or her
+foster-parents. I was unable to satisfy myself on this point.
+
+There seems to be a prejudice against a woman marrying a man younger
+than herself. Some of the women with whom I talked expressed strong
+contempt at the idea of marrying a man younger than themselves.
+Unfortunately, I neglected to obtain statistics as to the frequency
+with which such marriages occur, if they occur at all.
+
+Beyond the prohibition of the marriage of near kin, I could not find
+any restriction on marriage. A man may marry a woman from his own local
+group or from another, from his own or from another tribe. That
+marriages between persons belonging to the same local group did occur
+in former times I was able to ascertain with certainty but I was not
+able to determine the proportion of such marriages to the whole number.
+It is probable that the majority of marriages, or at any rate a large
+proportion, were between persons belonging to different local groups.
+
+Marriages are arranged by the older men and women. Children are
+sometimes betrothed by their parents while they are still infants. I
+found one such case in the North Andaman, and the betrothed couple,
+though they were yet small children, were spoken of as being “married.”
+Such betrothals are not very common at the present time.
+
+When the parents of a youth who is of suitable age to be married
+perceive that he has formed an attachment with a girl, they take it
+upon them to arrange a marriage. The matter is first of all talked over
+between the young man and his parents. The man’s parents do not
+themselves speak to the girl’s parents of the matter, but request some
+one or more of their friends to do so. From the moment that the
+possibility of a marriage exists the man’s parents avoid speaking to
+the girl’s parents. Any communication between them is carried on
+through a third person. They send presents to each other, of food and
+other objects. The recipient of such a present hastens to make a return
+of equal value. If the marriage is arranged the parents on each side
+become related to one another by the relationship denoted in Akar-Bale
+by the word aka-yat. The duties implied by this relationship will be
+described later.
+
+When a marriage has finally been arranged an evening is appointed for
+the ceremony. In the North Andaman this is as follows. The bride is
+seated on a mat at one end of the dancing ground, her relatives and
+friends sitting near her. Torches or heaps of resin are lighted near
+by, so that the ceremony may be seen by the on-lookers. The bridegroom
+is seated with his friends at the other end of the dancing ground. One
+of the older and more respected men addresses the bride, telling her
+that she must make a good wife, must provide for her husband such
+things as it is the duty of a wife to obtain or make, must see that he
+does not run after other women, and must herself remain faithful to
+him. He then addresses the bridegroom to the same effect, and taking
+him by the hand or arm, leads him to where the bride is seated and
+makes him sit down beside her. The relatives and friends weep loudly,
+and the young couple look very self-conscious and uncomfortable. The
+shyness of the young man is such that he often attempts to run away,
+but he is caught by his friends, who are prepared for such an attempt.
+After some minutes the officiating elder takes the arms of the bride
+and bridegroom and places them around each other’s necks. After a
+further interval he again approaches and makes the bridegroom sit on
+the bride’s lap [45]. They sit so for some minutes and the ceremony is
+over. The other members of the community generally have a dance on such
+an occasion, but in this the newly wedded pair do not join. A hut has
+already been prepared for them, and all their friends make them
+presents of useful objects with which to start housekeeping. They
+retire shyly to their new hut, while their friends continue dancing.
+The day after the ceremony the bride and bridegroom are decorated by
+their friends with white clay. For a few days the newly married couple
+are very shy of each other, hardly venturing to speak to or look at one
+another: but they soon settle down to their new position in the life of
+the community. During the early days of their marriage they are
+abundantly supplied with food by their friends. They are not addressed
+or spoken of by name, but if their names be A and B, the husband is
+called “the husband of B” while the wife is called “the wife of A.”
+
+In the South Andaman the ceremony is much the same as in the North, the
+only difference being that the bridegroom is led to where the bride is
+sitting and is made to sit on her lap straightway, remaining there for
+a few minutes.
+
+When a husband dies his widow may marry again if she wishes. As a rule
+I believe that it is not considered fitting that she should take
+another husband before the end of her mourning for her former one. Mr
+Man says “it is not considered decorous that any fresh alliance should
+be contracted until about a year had elapsed from the date of
+bereavement [46].” I knew of one case, however, of a woman with a young
+child who married again only a fortnight or so after her husband’s
+death.
+
+Mr Man speaks of a custom “which all but compels a bachelor or widower
+to propose to the childless widow of his elder brother or cousin (if
+she be not past her prime), while she has no choice beyond remaining
+single or accepting him; should she have no younger brother-in-law (or
+cousin by marriage), however, she is free to wed whom she will. It
+should be added that marriage with a deceased wife’s younger sister is
+equally a matter of necessity on the part of a childless widower [47].”
+
+I was not able to come across a case in which a man had actually
+married his elder brother’s widow in recent years. The natives whom I
+questioned confirmed Mr Man’s statement, which, moreover, was based on
+at least one instance known to him as having occurred. It may be noted
+that in his description of this instance Mr Man says that the woman
+married her husband’s “brother or cousin,” leaving us in doubt as to
+which of these two relatives it really was. There is an ambiguity in
+the use of the term “younger brother,” for the Andamanese have no word
+meaning simply “younger brother,” but only such terms as ot-arai-čulute
+and the equivalents in other languages, which apply to any younger
+person, whether actually a brother or cousin or not.
+
+The recent changes in the social life of the Andamanese render it
+difficult to determine what was the former practice in matters of this
+sort, but I believe that the custom was this, that when a man of a
+local group died the older men selected one of the unmarried men and
+required him to marry the widow. They selected a man who was younger
+than the deceased, that is who was his ot-arai-čulute, and gave the
+preference to an unmarried younger brother if there were one, or to a
+relative of the deceased, such as a father’s brother’s son.
+
+It may be noted that this custom may conflict with the other custom,
+previously mentioned, that a woman objects to marrying a man younger
+than herself. In the case mentioned by Mr Man a young man was compelled
+to marry a woman who was considerably his senior [48].
+
+I believe that, in connection with, or underlying this custom there was
+an objection against a widow marrying a man who was older than her
+former husband (and who would therefore be his ot-otoatue). I regret
+that I cannot speak with certainty on these matters.
+
+We may turn now to the duties to one another of parents and children.
+During their infancy the children are in the care of the mother.
+Children are, however, such favourites with the Andamanese that a child
+is played with and petted and nursed not only by his own father and
+mother but by everyone in the village. A woman with an unweaned child
+will often give suck to the children of other women. Babies are not
+weaned till they are three or four years old.
+
+Before the children can walk, they are carried about by the mother, and
+sometimes by the father or other persons, in a bark sling (called čiba
+in Aka-J̌eru), which is shown in Plate XIV. After they can walk the
+children generally accompany their mothers in their expeditions near
+the camp for firewood or vegetables. When they are not with their
+mothers they amuse themselves with games in the village or on the
+beach. All the children of the coast villages learn to swim when they
+are very young, in fact almost as soon as they learn to walk, and many
+of their games are conducted in the water.
+
+When a boy reaches the age of five or six his father makes him a toy
+bow and arrows, and sometimes a toy canoe. From this time the boy
+begins to learn the occupations of men and begins to pick up knowledge
+about the animals and trees and fishes of his country. The girl,
+accompanying her mother on her expeditions to gather roots and seeds,
+or to catch fish or pick up molluscs on the reefs, learns what it is
+necessary for women to know.
+
+Until the age of about eight to ten a child lives with his parents,
+having a place in the family hut, and a share of the family meal. The
+children are treated with extreme kindness, and are never punished, and
+hardly ever scolded. Should the parents die the children are adopted by
+friends or relatives, and such adopted children are treated by the
+foster-parents in exactly the same way as their own children.
+
+At the age of ten, or a little before, a change is often brought about
+in the life of a child, owing to the custom of adoption. Mr Man writes
+of this custom as follows:
+
+“It is said to be of rare occurrence to find any child above six or
+seven years of age residing with its parents, and this because it is
+considered a compliment and also a mark of friendship for a married
+man, after paying a visit, to ask his hosts to allow him to adopt one
+of their children. The request is usually complied with, and
+thenceforth the child’s home is with his (or her) foster-father: though
+the parents in their turn adopt the children of other friends, they
+nevertheless pay continual visits to their own child, and occasionally
+ask permission (!) to take him (or her) away with them for a few days.
+A man is entirely at liberty to please himself in the number of
+children he adopts, but he must treat them with kindness and
+consideration, and in every respect as his own sons and daughters, and
+they, on their part, render him filial affection and obedience. It not
+unfrequently happens that in course of time permission to adopt a
+foster-child is sought by a friend of the soi-disant father, and is at
+once granted (unless any exceptional circumstance should render it
+personally inconvenient), without even the formality of a reference to
+the actual parents, who are merely informed of the change, in order
+that they may be enabled to pay their periodical visits [49].”
+
+The above passage is quoted because Mr Man had better opportunities of
+observation in this matter than myself. At the present day there are
+not many children in the Andamans, and this is an obstacle in the way
+of this custom of adoption. From my own observation, however, I should
+put the age at which it is customary for children to be adopted at
+higher than six or seven. I found children of about seven or eight
+still living with their own parents. The usual age of adoption seemed
+to me to be from nine or ten years upwards.
+
+A man and his wife adopt in this way children belonging to a local
+group other than their own. The adopted child lives with his or her
+foster-parents, having a place in their hut and a share of their meals.
+From about the age of ten children of both sexes begin to be of service
+to their parents or foster-parents in many ways. The foster-parents
+treat their adopted children in exactly the same way that they would
+treat their own children, and the children on the other hand show the
+same regard and affection to their foster-parents that they do to their
+own parents, and assist them in every way that they can. Their own
+parents come to visit them at regular intervals.
+
+The period of childhood is brought to an end at about the age of
+puberty by certain ceremonies to be described in the next chapter.
+After the beginning of these ceremonies a boy ceases to live in the hut
+of his parents or his foster-parents, and must live with the young
+unmarried men and widowers in what has been called the bachelors’ hut.
+From this time until he marries, his services are constantly required
+by his parents or by his foster-parents, and he is expected to obey
+them and help them in any way he can. It is only after his marriage
+that he becomes relatively independent and free to please himself in
+his own actions, and even then he is required to provide his parents or
+his foster-parents with food, and to serve them in any way they may
+need.
+
+A girl, during the period between the beginning of the initiation
+ceremonies and her marriage, continues, at any rate, in some cases, and
+in these days, to live with her parents or with foster-parents. Mr Man
+states that the unmarried women and girls occupy a spinsters’ hut
+similar to the bachelors’ hut. It is possible that this was the former
+custom. I found instances of an unmarried girl occupying a place in the
+hut of a married couple who made use of her services and controlled her
+conduct, regarding her in the light of a foster-daughter. On one
+occasion I found two unmarried girls occupying a separate hut adjoining
+that of a married couple, who looked after the girls who occupied it.
+
+The position of an unmarried girl is very similar to that of an
+unmarried youth. She is required to help her elders, in particular
+either her parents or her foster-parents, i.e. the married couple under
+whose care she is for the time being.
+
+After marriage a son continues to help his parents, providing them with
+food and seeing that they are comfortable. If either a man or a woman
+lives in a local group other than that of his or her parents, he or she
+pays frequent visits to them.
+
+From the time that a youth or girl ceases to belong to the family
+household, his or her duties to the parents are really only the same in
+kind as the duties that every young man and woman owes to all the older
+men and women. Though there is no difference in kind, yet a man or
+woman is expected to show more affection and respect for his or her own
+parents than to other persons of the same social standing.
+
+The only other relationship, besides that of husband and wife and that
+of parents and children, which exists inside the family, is that
+between children of the same parents. The conduct of brothers to one
+another depends on their respective ages. The younger is expected to
+give way to the elder, while the latter protects and looks after the
+former. The relation of sisters to one another is similar.
+
+The duties of a man and woman to his or her relatives, other than those
+to parents, brothers and sisters, and even to some extent the duties to
+these near relatives, are not distinguishable in kind from the duties
+he or she owes to other persons who are not relatives. Thus a young
+married man owes certain duties to all the older married men of about
+the age of his father. These duties are the same in kind as those
+towards his own father and his foster-father, the only difference being
+that he must defer more to his own father than to other men, and must
+be more constant in his attentions to him. I could not discover any way
+in which a man distinguished, in his dealings with them, his father’s
+brother from his mother’s brother. They are both of them older men whom
+he must respect and to whom he must make presents of food. Similarly a
+father’s sister is not distinguished, so far as I could discover, from
+a mother’s sister. A man treats both of them in much the same way that
+he treats his own mother, or any other woman of the same age. There is
+only a slight difference in connection with parents-in-law. A man would
+not be so familiar with his parents-in-law as he would with his parents
+or their brothers or sisters, and treats them with more deference and
+respect. This is borne out by the Akar-Bale custom of applying to a
+father-in-law or mother-in-law the same term of address (Mama) that is
+used in speaking to grandparents and others to whom it is required to
+show particular deference.
+
+In the same way there is very little difference between the way a man
+conducts himself towards his elder brother and his conduct towards any
+other man of the same age. Brothers are often close comrades, putting
+their huts next to one another in the same village, joining together
+whenever possible in hunting or fishing expeditions, and so on; but a
+man may have a comrade who is not his brother, whom he will treat in
+exactly the same way.
+
+The general attitude of a married man to other married men somewhat
+younger than himself is very much that towards a younger brother. As
+between men and women one special duty appears in this connection. A
+married man may not and will not have any close dealings with the wife
+of a man younger than himself. It is not considered fitting that he
+should speak to her. If he wished to have any communication with her,
+he would do so through some third person. It would be regarded as a
+wrong thing to do if he were ever to touch her. The only explanation
+that the natives give of this custom is by saying that a man feels
+“shy” or “ashamed” towards his younger brother’s or friend’s wife. The
+custom is exactly the same with respect to the wife of any younger man,
+whether a brother, a cousin, or a stranger.
+
+This custom depends on the distinction between older and younger. A man
+may be on terms of familiarity with the wife of a man older than
+himself, whom he would treat much as he would an elder sister.
+
+There is one special relationship which has peculiar duties attaching
+to it, and this is the relationship between the father and mother of a
+man on the one hand and the father and mother of the man’s wife on the
+other. In the Akar-Bale language such persons are said to be aka-yat to
+one another. A man or a woman will not have any immediate dealings with
+a person who is his aka-yat. He will not speak to him, and if they
+should meet or be sitting near to one another they would avoid looking
+at each other. On the other hand a man is constantly sending presents
+to his aka-yat. The natives say that two persons in this relation feel
+“shy” or “ashamed.” (There is only one word in Andamanese for these two
+English words, ot-ǰete in Aka-J̌eru.) The shyness begins at the moment
+when a marriage between their respective children is first discussed as
+a possibility, and lasts apparently till death.
+
+As throwing a little light on this peculiar relation it may be
+mentioned that a similar relation exists between two men who have been
+through either the turtle-eating ceremony or the pig-eating ceremony
+(to be described in the next chapter) on the same occasion. Two such
+men will avoid any contact with one another, not speaking to nor
+looking at each other when they chance to meet, but on the other hand
+they will be constantly giving each other presents of all kinds,
+sending them through some third person.
+
+The main features of the relationship system of the Andaman Islanders
+may be briefly summed up. The duties that one person owes to another
+are determined much less by their relation to one another by
+consanguinity and marriage, than by their respective ages and social
+status. Even within the family, which nevertheless is of importance,
+the duty of a child to a parent is very little different from his duty
+to any other person of the same age. There is very little of any
+special customs relating to conduct towards different kinds of
+relatives. Corresponding to this we find very few terms to denote
+relationships and a considerable development of the terms which denote
+age and social status. Thus a man’s duties to his elder brother are
+much the same as those towards the other men of the same age, and we
+find that there is no word for “elder brother” but only a term by which
+a man distinguishes all the men of his own generation older than
+himself from those who are younger. Similarly there are no duties that
+a man owes to his father’s brother or to his mother’s brother which he
+does not also owe, in perhaps a less degree, to other men of the same
+age, and there is no term by which he can distinguish his father’s
+brother from those others.
+
+If this account of the system of relationship be accurate it will be
+seen that the Andamanese society contrasts very strongly, in this
+matter, with other primitive societies [50].
+
+It remains for us only to examine the social relations between the
+different local groups. Two neighbouring groups, whether of the same
+tribe or of different tribes, might be either friendly towards one
+another or unfriendly. Friendly relations were kept alive by several of
+the customs of the Andamanese, by the intermarriage of members of
+different groups, by the adoption of children from one group to
+another, and by the fact that a man of one group might take up his
+residence more or less permanently with another (particularly when he
+married a woman of that group, or was adopted when a boy by one of the
+men belonging to it). All these customs served to bind some persons in
+the one group to persons in the other, and thus prevent the two groups
+from becoming entirely unfriendly to one another.
+
+When two neighbouring local groups were friendly to one another
+communication between them was kept up by visitors from one group to
+another, and by occasional meetings of the whole of the two groups.
+
+Either a single person or a family might at any time pay a visit to
+another camp, staying a few days or weeks or even longer. A man would,
+however, only go visiting when he was sure of a welcome. Such visits
+were most frequent in the fine months of the year (December to May). As
+a husband and wife in many instances belonged to different local groups
+they would, if living with the man’s parents, pay a visit every year to
+the parents or other relatives of the wife. The parents of a child that
+had been adopted by a member of another local group would make a point
+of visiting the child when they could. Visitors to a camp would always
+take with them presents to be given to their hosts. A visitor was
+hospitably entertained, being given the best of the food, and joined
+his hosts in their hunting and fishing expeditions. The duty of
+hospitality is one upon which the Andamanese lay stress.
+
+The meetings of two or more local groups were organised from time to
+time by the more prominent men. The time and place of the meeting would
+be fixed and invitations sent out to the neighbours. The visitors, men,
+women and children, would arrive at the appointed time, and would be
+accommodated as well as possible by the hosts. During the first few
+hours, as the natives themselves told me, everyone would feel a little
+shy and perhaps frightened, and it would take some time for this
+feeling to wear off. The visitors would bring with them various
+objects, such as bows, arrows, adzes, baskets, nets, red paint, white
+clay, and so on. These were given by the visitors to their hosts, and
+other presents were received in return. Although the natives themselves
+regarded the objects thus given as being presents, yet when a man gave
+a present to another he expected that he would receive something of
+equal value in return, and would be very angry if the return present
+did not come up to his expectations. A man would sometimes mention,
+when giving his present, that he would like some particular object in
+exchange, but this was the exception and not the rule, and the process
+cannot be spoken of as barter. In certain cases it undoubtedly served a
+useful economic purpose. Thus if a local group had no red ochre or
+white clay in their own country they could obtain these commodities by
+exchange with others who had. In the case of a meeting between forest
+and coast dwellers, the former could obtain such things as shells, red
+paint made with turtle fat, and other objects with which they could not
+provide themselves in any other way. It was in this way also that the
+iron obtained from a wreck on one part of the coast would be spread
+over a large area. For the most part, however, as each local group, and
+indeed each family, was able to provide itself with everything that it
+needed in the way of weapons and utensils, the exchange of presents did
+not serve the same purpose as trade and barter in more developed
+communities.
+
+The purpose that it did serve was a moral one. The object of the
+exchange was to produce a friendly feeling between the two persons
+concerned, and unless it did this it failed of its purpose. It gave
+great scope for the exercise of tact and courtesy. No one was free to
+refuse a present that was offered to him. Each man and woman tried to
+out-do the others in generosity. There was a sort of amiable rivalry as
+to who could give away the greatest number of valuable presents.
+
+The visitors remained with their hosts for a few days. The time was
+spent in hunting, feasting and dancing, and in the exchange of presents
+above described. The hosts made every effort to provide the camp with
+plenty of good things. The guests took their share in the hunting and
+fishing expeditions. Every evening was spent in singing and dancing.
+Some of the men were sure to have composed new songs for such an
+occasion.
+
+Such meetings as these were sometimes the means of bringing to an end
+past quarrels between the local groups, but occasionally they were the
+cause of new quarrels. The hosts, or some of them, might think that
+they had been shabbily treated in the matter of presents, or the guests
+might complain that they were not well enough entertained. It often
+needed a man of strong influence to maintain harmony in the camp. Angry
+words might lead to the rapid breaking up of a meeting, and even result
+in a feud between the two groups.
+
+Quarrels between individuals, as we have seen, were often taken up by
+friends on each side. This was particularly the case when the two
+opponents belonged to different local groups. Before the days of the
+settlement of the islands there often arose in this way petty quarrels
+between neighbouring local groups. In some instances there appear to
+have been feuds of long standing; in others there was a quarrel, a
+fight or two, and the enemies made peace with one another, until a
+fresh cause of disagreement should arise.
+
+It does not seem that there was ever such a thing as a stand-up fight
+between two parties. The whole art of fighting was to come upon your
+enemies by surprise, kill one or two of them and then retreat. A local
+group that had some grievance against another would decide to make an
+attack. They might seek and obtain the aid of friends from other local
+groups. The men who were to take part in the expedition would paint
+themselves and put on various ornaments and join in a dance [51]. They
+would then set out, either by land or by sea, in the direction of the
+encampment they meant to attack. Their weapons consisted of bows and
+arrows, and they carried no shields or other defensive weapons. They
+would not venture to attack the enemy’s camp unless they were certain
+of taking it by surprise. For this reason such attacks were generally
+made either in the evening when the camp would be busy with the
+preparation of the evening meal, or at early dawn, when every one would
+be asleep. The attacking party would rush the camp and shoot as many
+men as they could. If they met with any serious resistance or lost one
+of their own number they would immediately retire. Those attacked, if
+they were really taken by surprise, were generally compelled to save
+themselves by flight. Though the aim of the attacking party was to kill
+the men, it often happened that women or children were killed. The
+whole fight would last only a few minutes, ending either with the
+retirement of the attackers before resistance, or the flight of those
+attacked into the jungle. A wounded enemy would be killed if found.
+
+Such attacks and counter-attacks might be continued for some years,
+thus establishing a feud between two neighbouring local groups. More
+usually, however, after one or two such fights peace would be made. In
+the tribes of the North Andaman there was a special peace-making
+ceremony, that will be described in the next chapter. All peace
+negotiations were conducted through the women. One or two of the women
+of the one group would be sent to interview the women of the other
+group to see if they were willing to forget the past and make friends.
+It seems that it was largely the rancour of the women over their slain
+relatives that kept the feud alive, the men of the two parties being
+willing to make friends much more readily than the women.
+
+An example of a long-continued feud, which, to all appearance, has been
+in existence for several centuries, is that between the Aka-Bea and the
+J̌a̤rawa of the South Andaman. The J̌a̤rawa have the advantage over the
+Aka-Bea that their camps are situated in the dense forest and are
+difficult to find, while the camps of the Aka-Bea are mostly along the
+sea-coast. At the present day the J̌a̤rawa take some precautions against
+being surprised in their camp by a hostile party. The camp is often
+placed on the top of a hill and the trees in the neighbourhood are cut
+down so that they have a good view. The paths leading to the camp are
+also cleared and made wider than is usual in a native path. At times it
+would seem that they keep sentries on the look-out.
+
+The Aka-Bea and the J̌a̤rawa were inveterate enemies. Whenever two
+parties of them met by any chance, or came in the neighbourhood of one
+another, the larger party would attack the other. When the Settlement
+of Port Blair was established, friendly relations were set up with the
+Aka-Bea, and since that time the hostility of the J̌a̤rawa has been
+directed not only against the friendly Andamanese (Aka-Bea, etc.) but
+also against the inhabitants of the Settlement [52].
+
+Such a thing as fighting on a large scale seems to have been unknown
+amongst the Andamanese. In the early days of the Penal Settlement of
+Port Blair, the natives of the South Andaman combined in large numbers
+to make an attack on the Settlement, but this seems to have been an
+unusual course of action in order to meet what was to them an
+altogether unusual contingency, their territory having been invaded by
+a large force of foreigners. Their only fights amongst themselves seem
+to have been the brief and far from bloody skirmishes described above,
+where only a handful of warriors were engaged on each side and rarely
+more than one or two were killed. Of such a thing as a war in which the
+whole of one tribe joined to fight with another tribe I could not find
+any evidence in what the natives were able to tell me of their former
+customs.
+
+As showing within what narrow limits the different local groups held
+communication with one another, it may be mentioned that till the year
+1875 the Aka-Bea natives of Port Blair did not know of the existence of
+the Aka-Ko̱l tribe, less than fifty miles distant, nor of any of the
+tribes further north. As a general rule it may be said that no man knew
+anything of any of the natives living more than twenty miles from his
+own part of the country.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+CEREMONIAL CUSTOMS
+
+
+In such a society as that of the Andaman Islanders it is possible to
+distinguish three different ways in which the actions of individuals
+are regulated or determined by the society. There are, first of all,
+what we may distinguish as “moral customs,” whereby the actions of
+individuals in relation to one another are regulated on principles of
+right and wrong conduct. It was with customs of this kind that we were
+concerned in the last chapter. Secondly, the activities by which the
+natives obtain their food and make the various objects of which they
+have need are determined by tradition. Such activities are purely
+utilitarian and they are regulated, not by commandments similar to
+those of the moral law, but by accumulated technical knowledge as to
+the means by which a particular object may be attained. These we may
+speak of as the “technical customs” of the society.
+
+There are customs of a third kind which are distinguishable both from
+moral customs and from technical customs. For example, when a man dies,
+his near relatives observe certain mourning customs, such as covering
+their bodies with clay. Such customs are distinguished from technical
+customs by having no utilitarian purpose. They are distinguished from
+moral customs by this, that they are not immediately concerned with the
+effects of the action of one person upon another.
+
+It is difficult to find a satisfactory name for all the customs of this
+kind. A large number of them may be spoken of as “ceremonial customs,”
+and it is this that explains the title of the present chapter.
+
+It is not pretended that this division of social customs into three
+different kinds is of any great or permanent value, and it is only
+introduced as an aid to the exposition of the customs of the
+Andamanese. It will be argued in a later chapter that many of the
+customs described in the present chapter have a common psychological
+basis.
+
+Of any customs in connection with the birth of children I was able to
+learn very little, as no births at which I could be present occurred
+during my stay at the islands. Earlier writers have given very little
+information on this subject.
+
+During the latter part of the period of pregnancy, and for about a
+month after the birth of the child, the mother and father must observe
+certain restrictions. In particular there are certain foods that they
+may not eat. The statements of different informants on this matter did
+not quite agree with each other, and it seems that there were slightly
+different rules in different tribes. According to an Akar-Bale
+informant the man and woman may not eat dugong, honey and yams; they
+may eat the flesh of small but not of full-grown pigs and turtle. An
+informant of one of the Northern tribes said that the woman may not eat
+full-grown pig, Paradoxurus, turtle, dugong, the fish komar, monitor
+lizard, honey and yams; her husband may eat these things but must
+carefully avoid eating certain fishes.
+
+The natives give two different reasons for these rules. One is that if
+these foods be eaten by the parents the child will be ill. The other is
+that the parents themselves will be ill. The latter is the explanation
+most commonly offered.
+
+The baby is named some time before it is born, and from that time the
+parents are not addressed or spoken of by name. For example, if the
+name chosen be Rea, the father will be spoken of as Rea aka-mai (Rea’s
+father) instead of by his own name. The mother may be referred to as
+Rea it-pet, from the word it-pet meaning “belly.” This practice is
+continued till some weeks after the birth, when the use of the names of
+the parents is once more resumed.
+
+In child-birth the woman is assisted by the matrons of the camp. She is
+seated in her hut in the village on fresh leaves, and a piece of wood
+is placed at her back for her to lean against. Her legs are flexed so
+that her knees may be clasped by her arms. The only manipulation is
+pressure exerted on the upper part of the abdomen by one of the
+attendant women. The umbilical cord is severed with a knife, formerly
+of cane or bamboo, but in these days of iron. The after-birth is buried
+in the jungle. The infant is washed and then scraped with a Cyrena
+shell. After a few days he (or she) is given a coating of clay (odu).
+
+If a baby dies and within a year or two the mother again becomes
+pregnant, it is said that it is the same baby born again, and the name
+of the deceased child is given to it. Thus one woman had three children
+of the same name, the first two having died soon after birth. According
+to the native ideas this was really the same child born three times. It
+is only those who die in infancy that are thus reincarnated.
+
+In the Northern tribes it is believed that a woman can tell the sex of
+her unborn child. If she feels it on the left side it is a male,
+because men hold the bow (the typical masculine implement) in the left
+hand. If she feels it on the right side it is a female, because it is
+in her right hand that a woman holds her fishing net.
+
+A married man who is childless and desires a child will wear a čiba
+(sling of bark used for carrying children) round his shoulders when he
+is sitting in camp. The čiba and the way it is used for carrying
+children may be seen in the photograph in Plate XIV. If a childless
+woman wishes to have a child she may catch, cook and eat a certain
+species of small frog.
+
+At a place called Tonmuket in the North Andaman there is a spot to
+which it is said that women may resort if they wish to become pregnant.
+On the reef at this spot there are a large number of stones which,
+according to the legend, were once little children. The woman who
+desires a child walks out on to the reef when the tide is low and
+stands upon these stones. It is believed that one of the baby souls
+will enter her body and become incarnate [53].
+
+In the North Andaman there is some sort of association between the
+unborn souls of babies, the green pigeon and the Ficus laccifera tree.
+The same name, Reŋko, is used to denote both the green pigeon and also
+the Ficus laccifera, of the fruit of which the pigeon is very fond. The
+belief of the natives is sometimes stated by saying that the souls of
+unborn children live in the Ficus trees, and that if a baby dies before
+it has been weaned its soul goes back to the tree. Another statement of
+the natives is that it is when the green pigeon is calling that the
+soul of a baby goes into its mother. The Ficus is to a certain extent
+tabu. I was told that the tree must not be cut or damaged. Nevertheless
+the natives do cut the tree in order to obtain the bark of the aerial
+roots from which they prepare a fibre that they use for making personal
+ornaments. There is no tabu in connection with the green pigeon, which
+may be killed and eaten.
+
+In most primitive societies, if not in all, there are ritual or
+ceremonial observances in connection with the change by which a boy or
+girl becomes a man or woman. The ceremonies that are performed to mark
+this change are commonly spoken of in ethnological literature as
+“initiation ceremonies.” The term is not perhaps the best that could be
+chosen, but usage has rendered it familiar.
+
+The life of an Andaman Islander is divided into three well-marked
+periods, corresponding roughly with the physiological periods of
+childhood, adolescence, and maturity. The first period lasts from birth
+till about the advent of puberty; the second lasts from puberty till
+after marriage; the third extends from marriage to death.
+
+During the period of childhood the boy or girl lives with his or her
+parents, or, in the later years of the period, with adopted parents,
+having a place in the family hut and a share in the family meal. A girl
+continues to live with her parents or with her adopted parents until
+she marries. When boys have finished growing, and have reached the
+condition of young men, they cease to live with their parents or
+adopted parents and, until they are married, they occupy a bachelors’
+hut of their own, and have their own meal.
+
+Every boy and girl has to undergo the operation of scarification. This
+is begun when the child is quite young, and a small portion of the body
+is operated on. The operation is repeated at intervals during
+childhood, until the whole body has been scarified. A small flake of
+quartz or glass is used, and a series of fine incisions are made in the
+skin. The usual method is to cover a small portion of the skin with a
+number of parallel rows of short cuts. The choice of the design (if it
+can be called such) rests entirely with the person who performs the
+operation, who is in all cases a woman. The incisions leave scars that
+can usually only be seen when close to the person. In the photograph of
+Plate XV a pattern of scars may be seen. In this case the incisions
+became infected and raised scars were produced, and it is for this
+reason that they are visible in the photograph. In ordinary cases
+raised scars are not produced and the scarification is hardly visible
+in a photograph.
+
+The only reason that the natives give for this custom is either that it
+improves the personal appearance, or else that it helps to make the
+child grow strong.
+
+In the case of a girl the period of childhood is brought to a close by
+a ceremony that takes place on the occasion of her first menstrual
+discharge. The ceremony I describe is that in use in the Northern
+tribes, but I believe that the ceremony of the Southern tribes is very
+similar. On the occurrence of the first menstrual discharge the girl
+tells her parents, who weep over her. She must then go and bathe in the
+sea for an hour or two by herself. After that she goes back to her
+parents’ hut or to a special shelter that is put up for the occasion.
+She is not required to go away from the camp. All ornaments are removed
+from her, only a single belt of Pandanus leaf being left, with an apron
+of čainyo leaves. Strips of Pandanus leaf are attached round her arms
+near the shoulders and round her wrists, and others are placed as bands
+crossing her chest from the shoulder to the waist on the opposite side,
+and crossing her abdomen from the iliac crest on the one side to the
+trochanter on the other. These are so attached that the long loose ends
+hang down at the girl’s side. Bunches of leaves, either čelmo
+(Tetranthera lancæfolia) or, if these be not obtainable, poramo
+(Myristica longifolia) are fastened beneath her belt before and behind.
+Other leaves of the same kind are placed for her to sit upon. The
+strips of Pandanus leaf and the bundle of leaves are visible in the
+photograph reproduced in Plate XVI.
+
+Thus covered with leaves the girl must sit in the hut allotted to her,
+with her legs doubled up beneath her and her arms folded. A piece of
+wood or bamboo is placed at her back for her to lean against, as she
+may not lie down. If she is cramped she may stretch one of her legs or
+one of her arms, but not both arms or both legs at the same time. To
+feed herself she may release one of her hands, but she must not take up
+the food with her fingers; a skewer of čainyo wood [54] is given her
+with which to feed herself. She may not speak nor sleep for 24 hours.
+Her wants are attended to by her parents and their friends, who sit
+near her to keep her from falling asleep.
+
+The girl sits thus for three days. Early every morning she leaves the
+hut to bathe for an hour in the sea. At the end of the three days she
+resumes her life in the village. For a month following she must bathe
+in the sea every morning at dawn.
+
+During the ceremony and for a short time afterwards the girl is not
+addressed or spoken of by name, but is referred to as Alebe or Toto.
+The meaning of the first word is not known. Toto is the name of the
+species of Pandanus from which women’s belts are made and the leaves of
+which are used in the ceremony. On the occasion of this ceremony the
+girl is given a new name, her “flower-name,” and from this time till
+after the birth of her first child she is never addressed or spoken of
+by the name which she had as a child, but only by the name given to her
+at this ceremony. The name given is that of a plant or tree which is in
+flower at the time. If the ceremony takes place when the ǰili is in
+flower she is called J̌ili; if when the ǰeru is in flower she is named
+J̌eru, and so on. These names will be mentioned again later in the
+present chapter.
+
+After this ceremony the girl is said to be aka-ndu-kolo̱t. For some time
+afterwards she must not have her head shaved, and she must not use red
+paint or white clay.
+
+I was not able to learn much about the native ideas in connection with
+the menstrual function. According to the account given me by one
+informant I gathered that the girl’s first menstrual discharge is
+supposed to be due to sexual intercourse. The man’s breath goes into
+her nose and this produces the discharge. It is believed that if a man
+were to touch a girl during this period, either during the ceremony or
+for some time after it, his arm would swell up.
+
+At every recurrence of the menstrual period a woman is required to
+abstain from eating certain foods. According to an Akar-Bale informant
+these are, in that tribe, pork, turtle, Paradoxurus, honey and yams. An
+Aka-Čari informant added to the above list dugong, monitor lizard, and
+the fish komar. If she ate any of these things at such a time she would
+be ill. This continues throughout her life till the climacteric. A
+menstruating woman is not required to leave the camp, as she is in many
+savage communities.
+
+From the moment of the ceremony just described the girl enters a new
+condition which is denoted in the Aka-J̌eru language by the word aka-op
+(aka-yaba in Aka-Bea). This word means that the person to whom it is
+applied is under certain ritual restrictions, chiefly concerned with
+foods that may not be eaten.
+
+In the case of a boy there is no physiological event so clearly marked
+as there is in that of a girl. It rests with the relatives and friends
+to decide when the boy is to become aka-op. It would seem that in the
+Southern tribes there is no ceremony on this occasion. Among the
+Northern tribes the boy is made aka-op by means of a ceremony that
+consists of making the scars on his back that are customary in these
+tribes [55].
+
+When the friends and relatives of a boy decide that he is old enough to
+have the incisions made in his back a dance is held in the evening, and
+the boy is required to dance through the whole night till he is tired.
+As soon as morning breaks he is made to bathe in the sea for two hours
+or so. He is then seated in some convenient place, not in a hut. The
+boy kneels down and bends forward till his elbows rest on the ground in
+front. One of the older men takes a pig-arrow and with the sharpened
+blade makes a series of cuts on the boy’s back. Each cut is horizontal,
+and they are arranged in three vertical rows, each row consisting of
+from 20 to 30 cuts. When the cutting is finished the boy sits up, with
+a fire at his back, until the bleeding stops. During the operation and
+for a few hours following it the boy must remain silent. There is no
+treatment of the wounds to produce raised scars. The scars are much
+more noticeable on some men than on others.
+
+The boy does not receive a new name on this occasion, but for a few
+weeks his own name is dropped and he is addressed and spoken of as
+Eǰido. From this time the boy is described as being oko-taliŋ-kolo̱t,
+this being the masculine term corresponding to aka-ndu-kolo̱t for girls.
+From the time the cuts are made on his back the boy becomes aka-op and
+is under certain restrictions as to what foods he may eat.
+
+When the wounds on his back are thoroughly healed similar cuts are made
+on his chest. I found a certain number of men who had no visible scars
+on their chests, but in the North Andaman every man has the three rows
+of scars on his back. Some of the women of the North Andaman have
+similar scars on their chests and a very few have them also on the
+back. These scars on women are not regularly made as part of the
+initiation ceremonies, and may be made after the woman has been married
+for some years.
+
+During the period that a boy or girl is aka-op he or she is required by
+the customs of the tribe to abstain from eating certain foods. The
+exact rules in this matter differ from tribe to tribe. More
+particularly there are important differences between the coast-dwellers
+on the one hand and the jungle-dwellers on the other. The general
+principle, however, is in all cases the same. The boy (or girl) must
+abstain from all the chief foods of the people, and since he could not
+abstain from them all at one time without starving, he takes them in
+turn. It is in the order in which the different foods are forbidden
+that the chief differences occur.
+
+In the Aka-Čari tribe of the North Andaman, where all are
+coast-dwellers, the boy or girl, during the first part of the aka-op
+period must not eat turtle, dugong, porpoise, komar (a fish), hawksbill
+turtle, the two kinds of edible grubs (pata and čokele), the monitor
+lizard, the flying fox (Pteropus), certain birds (perhaps all birds),
+certain shell-fish, the four varieties of mangrove seed (kao, čimi,
+kabal and kaplo), three edible roots (mino, labo and mikulu), and a
+large number of other vegetable foods, including lo̱itok, poroto (if
+cooked, but it may be eaten raw), biǰo, čoroŋo, celet, buroŋ, bui,
+bakle, čo, čatali, and kata. A certain number of fishes must be added
+to this list. This period is brought to a end by the turtle-eating
+ceremony which will be presently described. After this ceremony,
+turtle, which is one of the chief foods of the Aka-Čari, may be eaten,
+although certain parts of the turtle (such as the intestinal fat) are
+still forbidden, and the youth is also allowed to eat many of the other
+foods previously forbidden. On the other hand he is now required not to
+eat pork and a number of other foods both animal and vegetable. During
+this second period certain minor ceremonies take place, as for instance
+on the first occasion on which turtle’s eggs are eaten. This period is
+brought to an end by the pig-eating ceremony. After that the youth is
+again free to eat pork. As turtle and pork are the two most important
+foods the ceremonies and observances in connection with these occupy a
+position of greater importance. After the pig-eating ceremony the youth
+is made free of one food after another, until some time after he is
+married he becomes free to partake of any of the foods available. In
+the case of some of the more important foods, such as honey, dugong,
+porpoise, the fish komar, etc., there is a sort of minor ceremony. The
+only ceremonies of any great importance in this tribe are the
+turtle-eating and the pig-eating ceremonies.
+
+In the forest-dwelling communities of the North Andaman things are
+necessarily different. These people only eat such foods as turtle,
+dugong, etc. when they are visiting their friends on the coast. The
+three most important ceremonies amongst these people are the
+ńyuri-eating, the pig-eating and the honey-eating ceremonies. (The
+ńyuri is a fish that is found in the creeks.) According to my
+informants of the Aka-Bo tribe the foods that must be avoided during
+the first part of the abstention period are all species of fish found
+in inland creeks (ńyuri, burto, bari, bol, kuato), the monitor lizard,
+sucking-pig, two species of snake (or-čubi and uluku-čubi), a number of
+vegetable foods and also honey. After the ńyuri-eating ceremony the
+different kinds of fish mentioned may be eaten, but the youth or girl
+must then abstain from pork.
+
+These examples, without entering into further details, will suffice to
+show what is the nature of the aka-op period. During that period the
+youth must abstain for a certain length of time from each one of the
+more important foods of his community. After a certain period of
+abstention he is permitted to eat the particular food. On each occasion
+of thus eating a food for the first time after the abstention, there
+are certain ritual customs that must be observed, and these customs are
+more important in some cases (such as pig, turtle and honey) than in
+others. In the case of some of the foods the only ritual observed is
+that the food must be given by an older man, who is himself free to eat
+it, that it must be eaten in silence, and that the man must be painted
+afterwards with clay (odu). In the case of pork and turtle, however,
+there are fairly elaborate ceremonies. The ceremonies are very similar
+in different parts of the islands. The description given below applies
+to the coast-dwellers of the North Andaman. In these communities the
+period of abstention from turtle and other foods begins in the case of
+a girl at the first menstruation, and in the case of a boy when his
+back is cut. It may last only one year or several years, according to
+circumstances, and is brought to a close by the turtle-eating ceremony.
+The details of this are exactly the same in the case of a girl and a
+boy.
+
+When the older men decide that it is time for a boy who has been
+abstaining from turtle to be released from the restriction, a
+turtle-hunting expedition is arranged, and this is continued until a
+fair number of good turtle are captured. The best of these is selected,
+killed, and cooked. The youth is seated in a hut, either that of his
+parents, or one placed at his disposal by a friend or one specially
+built [56]. All his ornaments are removed. (In the case of a girl one
+belt of Pandanus leaf is retained.) He is seated on leaves of the
+Hibiscus tiliaceus, or if these be not obtainable, on those of the
+Myristica longifolia, and a bundle of the same leaves is placed under
+his folded arms so as to cover his belly, while another bundle is
+placed at his back where there is some sort of rest provided for him to
+lean against. He must sit still with folded arms and with legs
+stretched out in front, the two big toes clasping each other. He sits
+facing towards the open sea, and a fire is placed near him, generally
+just beyond his feet.
+
+Some man is chosen to take charge of the ceremony. This may be one of
+the older men of the community to which the youth belongs or a
+distinguished visitor, if there be any such present in the camp at the
+time. This man selects some of the meat and fat of the cooked turtle,
+placing them in a wooden dish. He comes to where the youth is seated,
+while the friends and relatives gather round. Taking some of the fat he
+rubs it first over the lips and then over the whole body of the youth,
+while the female relatives of the latter sit near and weep loudly. When
+the youth’s body is thoroughly covered with fat the man who is
+performing the ceremony takes some burnt oxide of iron, such as is used
+for making red paint, and rubs it over the youth’s whole body, except
+the hair of his head. He then takes a piece of turtle fat and places it
+in the youth’s mouth, feeding him thus with a few mouthfuls which the
+youth eats in silence. At this point the weeping of the relatives is
+taken up again with renewed vigour and then gradually comes to an end.
+Having fed the youth the man then proceeds to massage him. He first
+stands behind him and placing his hands on his shoulders presses down
+on them with all his weight. Then he seizes a roll of flesh on each
+side of the youth’s belly and shakes it up and down as though to shake
+down what has been eaten. The arms are next massaged and the wrists and
+knuckles are forcibly flexed so as to make the joints “crack.” The legs
+are similarly massaged, either with the hands or with the feet, the
+performer (in the latter case) standing on the outstretched legs of the
+youth and rolling the muscles beneath his feet [57]. The joints of the
+toes are forcibly bent with the hand to make them “crack” if possible.
+A mixture of clay (odu) and water has been prepared in a wooden dish.
+The performer dips his hands into this and spatters it over the youth’s
+body from head to foot, either by holding his hands near the youth and
+clapping them together, or by jerking the clay off his fingers with a
+flicking motion. During the whole of these proceedings the youth sits
+passive and silent.
+
+The first part of the ceremony is now over. The food tray containing
+turtle meat and fat, cut into small pieces, is placed beside the youth
+and he is provided with a skewer of the wood of the Hibiscus tiliaceus,
+as he may not touch the meat with his fingers. He must sit in the same
+position with legs outstretched and arms folded and surrounded with
+Hibiscus leaves. To feed himself he may unloose one arm, and when his
+legs are cramped he may double them up beneath him. He may not lie down
+nor speak nor sleep for 48 hours. During this period he may eat nothing
+but turtle and drink nothing but water [58]. The man in charge of the
+ceremony sits behind him and gives him instructions as to what foods he
+may and what he may not eat after the ceremony. Some of the men and
+women take it in turn to sit beside the youth, attending to his wants
+and talking or singing to keep him awake.
+
+On the morning of the third day a belt and necklace are made of pieces
+of the creeper called terkobito-balo, i.e. “centipede creeper” (Pothos
+scandens), and these are placed round the youth’s waist and neck. On
+this day he is permitted to sleep. Either on the same day, or early the
+next morning, he has a bath in the sea, to remove some of the red paint
+and clay, and he is then decorated with red paint made of red ochre and
+turtle fat, and with white clay (to̱l-odu). The red paint is put on in
+stripes over his body, and his ears are daubed with it. The white clay
+is put on in a zig-zag pattern to be described later, the lines of
+white clay alternating with those of red paint. This decoration is done
+by female relatives.
+
+Early on the morning of the fourth day, soon after daybreak, the whole
+village is astir. One of the older men takes his stand by the
+sounding-board used for marking time at dances, and the women sit down
+near him. The youth comes out from his hut and stands in the middle of
+the dancing ground, and five or six men stand round him in a circle,
+each of them facing towards the youth. Each of the men, including the
+youth, holds in each hand a bundle of twigs of the Hibiscus tiliaceus
+or, if such be not obtainable, of the Myristica longifolia. The man at
+the sounding-board sings a song, beating time with his foot, in the
+usual way, on the sounding-board, and at the chorus the women join in
+and mark the time by clapping their hands on their thighs. The song may
+be on any subject and is selected by the singer from his own repertory.
+A song referring to turtle-hunting is preferred. During the first song
+the dancers stand at their positions on the dancing ground, lifting up
+their leaf bundles at short intervals and bringing them down against
+their knees. The singer then commences a new song or repeats the former
+one, and when the song comes to an end the youth and those with him
+begin their dance. Each dancer flexes his hips so that his back is
+nearly horizontal. He raises his hands to the back of his neck so that
+the two bundles of leaves in his hands rest on his back. With knees
+flexed he leaps from the ground with both feet, keeping time to the
+beating of the sounding-board, which is about 144 beats to the minute.
+At the end of every eight jumps or so, the dancer brings his hands
+forwards, downwards and backwards, giving a vigorous sweep with the
+bundles of leaves, which scrape the ground at each side of his feet,
+and then brings back the bundles to their former position. They dance
+thus for 15 or 30 seconds and then pause to rest. The dance is repeated
+several times, until the youth is tired out. As the dance is extremely
+fatiguing this does not take long [59].
+
+The youth then returns to his hut and resumes his former position. He
+may now, if he wishes, talk to his friends and he may sleep. He must
+retain the bundles of Hibiscus leaves and the necklace and belt of
+Pothos leaves. The dance is sometimes repeated in the afternoon. It is
+in any case repeated on each of the two days following, and after that
+the youth resumes his ordinary life. For a week or two he may not touch
+a bow and arrow. The Pothos leaves are worn till they are faded and are
+then discarded. The paint on the body wears off and is not renewed, but
+his ears are kept painted with red paint. For some weeks the youth is
+supposed to be in an abnormal condition and is carefully watched by his
+friends.
+
+At the turtle-eating ceremony a new name is given to the youth. This
+name, however, never seems to be used afterwards either in speaking of
+or to the person to whom it belongs. A youth of the Aka-J̌eru tribe
+whose birth name was Čop (from a species of tree) and whose nick-name
+or second name was Komar (from a species of fish) had two new names
+given to him on the occasion of the turtle-eating ceremony, Čokbi-čiro
+(meaning turtle-liver) and Pilečar (high-tide). Neither of these names
+was ever used in addressing him.
+
+The turtle-eating ceremony is called in the Northern tribes either
+Čokbi-ǰo, Čokbi-kimil, or Kimil-ǰo. The word čokbi means “turtle,” and
+ǰo means “eating.” The word kimil is more difficult to translate. With
+the prefix ot- or er- it means “hot” as in T’ ot-kimil-bom, “I am hot.”
+From the time of the commencement of the ceremony the youth or girl is
+said to be in a condition denoted by the word aka-kimil. During this
+time, i.e. during the ceremony and for some months afterwards, he or
+she is not addressed or spoken of by name but is referred to as
+“Kimil,” the word being thus used as a term of address or a substitute
+for the personal name. A person who is in this condition is described
+as aka-kimil-kolo̱t. (Before the ceremony the youth is oko-taliŋ-kolo̱t
+and the girl is aka-ndu-kolo̱t.) In the Aka-Bea tribe the turtle-eating
+ceremony is called Yadi-gumul or Gumul-leke, yadi being the word for
+“turtle” in that language, and leke being the equivalent of the ǰo of
+Aka-J̌eru, that is “eating.” A youth or girl who is passing or has
+recently passed through the ceremony is said to be aka-gumul, and is
+addressed and spoken of, not by name, but by the term Guma [60].
+
+In the coast-dwelling communities of the Northern tribes, the youth or
+girl who has passed through the turtle-eating ceremony is thereafter
+free to eat turtle flesh (though not the liver nor the intestinal fat
+of the turtle) and a certain number of the other foods that were
+previously forbidden. On the other hand, he or she is now forbidden to
+eat pork and a number of other foods which previously were permitted.
+The period during which these new prohibitions are in force may last
+for a few months or for a year or even longer. It is, however,
+generally shorter than the first period of abstention from turtle. It
+is brought to an end by a pig-eating ceremony which is similar in many
+ways to the turtle-eating ceremony already described. A boar must be
+killed if the initiate be a youth, or a sow if it be a girl who is to
+go through the ceremony. The youth is seated in a hut on leaves of the
+čelmo (Tetranthera) and the carcase of the boar is brought and pressed
+upon the youth’s shoulders and back by one of the men. The girl is not
+treated in this way. The pork is then cooked and the youth is first
+anointed and then fed with some of the fat. He is then rubbed with red
+ochre, massaged and splashed with clay, just as in the turtle-eating
+ceremony. He must sit silent with arms crossed, and covered with
+Tetranthera leaves for a day and a night. During this time he may only
+eat pork, and must not touch his food with his hands but must use a
+skewer of Tetranthera wood. On the following day he is decorated with
+white clay (to̱l-odu) and with red paint, and takes part in a dance. The
+dance is almost exactly the same as the dance on the occasion of the
+turtle-eating ceremony, the only differences being that instead of
+Hibiscus leaves those of the Tetranthera are used, and that the dancer
+does not leap with both feet from the ground, but raises one foot and
+stamps with it.
+
+In the Northern tribes these are the two most important ceremonies.
+After the pig-eating ceremony the youth is free to eat pork and a
+certain number of previously forbidden foods. There remain a
+considerable number of foods, however, which he is still forbidden. In
+connection with each of these there is some sort of minor ceremony. The
+older men, when occasion arises, offer the youth or girl some of the
+forbidden food, first rubbing it over his or her mouth. The food is
+then eaten in silence. I only saw one such ceremony, when a man ate for
+the first time after his abstention the intestinal fat of the turtle.
+The man was about 24 years of age and had long since been through the
+chief ceremonies, and was married. The ceremony is perhaps more
+elaborate in the case of the similar first eating of honey, dugong and
+a few other foods. One after another of the food prohibitions is
+removed until the man or woman is free to eat anything. There is no
+regular order in which this takes place, as in each case it is
+determined by chance circumstances. The only order that is rigorously
+observed is that of the two chief ceremonies connected with pork and
+turtle. These two are the principal meat foods of the coast-dwellers.
+
+The above description applies strictly only to the coast-dwellers of
+the North Andaman (Aka-Čari, Aka-J̌eru and Aka-Ko̱ra). I was not able to
+see any ceremonies performed by the jungle-dwellers. The old men of the
+Aka-Bo tribe told me that the period of abstention begins when a boy or
+girl is forbidden to eat the fish ńyuri (Plotosus sp., probably P.
+arab), and a certain number of other foods, not including pork. The
+first ceremony is the eating of the ńyuri. The boy or girl is seated on
+leaves (kibir or tare or ra-čiro) and bundles of these are placed in
+his belt before and behind. A belt of Pandanus leaf is worn by the boys
+at this ceremony as well as by the girls. The initiate sits with his
+legs doubled up beneath him, and is fed with the fish. The ceremony
+lasts only one day. There is no special dance, but the initiate joins
+in an ordinary dance at the end of the ceremony, being decorated for
+this purpose with white clay. After this ceremony the youth must
+abstain from pork and other foods. The pig-eating ceremony, which
+closes this period of abstention, lasts altogether for three or four
+days, the initiate remaining awake for one night. The leaves used are
+the same as those of the first (fish-eating) ceremony. The third
+important ceremony of these communities is the honey-eating. The
+initiate sits cross-legged and honey is rubbed over his or her
+shoulders and chest, and he or she is fed with it.
+
+I was told by one of my informants that in the Aka-Kede tribe the
+pig-eating ceremony precedes the turtle-eating, but I could not obtain
+reliable information about the ceremonies of this tribe.
+
+My informants of the Akar-Bale tribe, which consists of coast-dwelling
+communities only, told me that the period of abstention begins with
+turtle, honey, turtle’s eggs, yams, and a number of fruits and seeds.
+This period lasts for three or four years. Then comes the turtle-eating
+ceremony, which is said to be similar in its details to that already
+described from the North Andaman. After this ceremony the initiate may
+not eat dugong, porpoise and a considerable number of fishes (including
+Tetrodon sp., Plotosus sp., Anguilla bengalensis, Trygon bleekari, T.
+siphen, Urogymnus asperrimus, Carcharias gangeticus, etc.). He must
+also abstain from turtle’s eggs, pig, yams, honey, and certain fruits
+(e.g. Artocarpus chaplasha, Mimusops littoralis, Baccaurea sapida,
+etc.). A few months after the turtle-eating ceremony there is a minor
+ceremony of eating turtle’s eggs, the eggs being eaten in silence and
+the meal followed by a dance. After another period follows the ceremony
+of eating pig’s kidney-fat. Then, as opportunity occurs, the initiate
+eats dugong, honey and the other forbidden foods, one after another.
+The ceremony in each case is not elaborate except in connection with
+such important foods as dugong and honey.
+
+Mr E. H. Man has given a description of the ceremonies of the Aka-Bea
+tribe, which shows that they are essentially similar to those of the
+North. He does not distinguish between the ceremonies of the aryoto
+(coast-dwellers) and those of the eremtaga (jungle-dwellers). He states
+that the fasting period (aka-yaba) is divided into three parts, the
+first ending with the yadi- (turtle) gumul, the second with the aǰa-
+(honey) gumul, and the third with the reg-ǰiri- (kidney-fat of pig)
+gumul.
+
+As I was not able to witness the honey-eating ceremony, I venture to
+reproduce below the description that Mr Man gives of this ceremony as
+it is conducted in the Aka-Bea tribe.
+
+“When the honey fast is to be broken a quantity of honeycombs,
+according to the number assembled, are on the appointed day procured:
+the aka-yab being placed in the midst of the group, the chief or other
+elder goes to him with a large honeycomb wrapped in leaves; after
+helping the novice to a large mouthful, which he does by means of a
+bamboo or iron knife, he presents the remainder to him, and then leaves
+him to devour it in silence: this he does, not, however, by the
+ordinary method, for it is an essential part of the ceremony that he
+should not use his fingers to break off pieces, but eat it
+bear-fashion, by holding the comb up to his mouth and attacking it with
+his teeth and lips. After satisfying his present requirements, he wraps
+what is left of the comb in leaves for later consumption. The chief
+then takes another comb and anoints the youth by squeezing it over his
+head, rubbing the honey well into his body as it trickles down. The
+proceedings at this stage are interrupted by a bath, in order to remove
+all traces of the honey, which would otherwise be a source of
+considerable inconvenience by attracting ants. Beyond the observance of
+silence, and continued abstention from reg-ǰiri (pig’s kidney-fat), the
+youth is under no special restrictions, being able to eat, drink and
+sleep as much as he pleases. Early the following morning the lad
+decorates himself with leaves of a species of Alpinia, called ǰini
+[61], and then, in the presence of his friends, goes into the sea (or,
+if he be an eremtaga, into a creek) up to his waist, where, locking his
+thumbs together, he splashes as much water as possible over himself and
+the by-standers, occasionally ducking his head under the surface as
+well. This is considered a safeguard or charm against snakes, and the
+onlookers cry “o̱to-pedike, kinig wara-ǰobo lo̱tike” (Go and splash
+yourself, or Wara-ǰobo [62] will get inside you), for they imagine that
+unless they go through this splashing performance, this snake will by
+some means enter their stomachs and so cause death. The only difference
+between the sexes with respect to the aǰa-gumul is that with females it
+cannot take place until after the birth of the first child; they are
+also required to abstain from honey during each subsequent pregnancy;
+and in their case, too, a chief or elder (preferably a relative)
+officiates, and not a woman [63].”
+
+We may now proceed to the ritual customs connected with death and
+burial. In all the Great Andaman tribes disease and death are supposed
+to be due to the spirits of the jungle and the sea. The subject will be
+dealt with in the next chapter.
+
+On the occurrence of a death the news quickly spreads through the camp,
+and all the women collect round the body and, sitting down, weep loudly
+until they are exhausted. The women then retire and the men come and
+weep over the corpse. All the adult members of the community then
+proceed to cover themselves with a wash of common clay smeared evenly
+over their bodies and limbs. This clay is of the kind called odu in
+Aka-J̌eru and og in Aka-Bea. The nearer relatives and more intimate
+friends of the deceased also plaster some of the same clay on their
+heads.
+
+Some of the women, generally, but not necessarily, relatives, remove
+any ornaments the dead person may have been wearing, shave the head and
+decorate the body. This decoration consists of lines of fine pattern in
+white clay alternating with bands of red paint. A band of red paint is
+placed across the upper lip passing from ear to ear and the ears
+themselves are smeared with the pigment. The greater the estimation in
+which the deceased person is held the greater is the care lavished upon
+this the last decoration.
+
+Thus decorated the body is prepared for burial. The legs and arms are
+flexed so that the knees come up under the chin and the fists rest
+against the cheeks. A Cyrena shell (or sometimes in these days a steel
+knife) is placed in the closed hand. A sleeping mat is wrapped round
+the body, and over this a number of the large palm leaves known as ko̱bo
+(Aka-J̌eru) are arranged and the whole is made into a bundle and tied up
+with rope. Before the ropes are all tied the relatives of the dead
+person take their last farewell by gently blowing on the face of the
+corpse.
+
+The male relatives and friends then proceed to the spot selected for
+the burial, one of them carrying the corpse slung on his back. If the
+burial place can be reached by canoe, no hesitation is shown in making
+use of a canoe for the purpose. There are not, so far as could be
+discovered, any rules as to which of the men shall undertake the
+burial. Such relatives as brother, father, son or husband generally
+take the leading part. The women take no part in the actual burial.
+There are two modes of disposing of the body, in a grave dug in the
+ground, or upon a platform placed in a tree. The latter is considered
+the more honourable form of burial, and is only adopted in the case of
+a man or woman dying in the prime of life. The same grave is not used
+twice, in the case of interment, though a new grave may be made close
+to an old one. The natives said that the same tree might be used
+several times for platform-burial, but there was no opportunity of
+proving this statement. There are not, generally speaking, any regular
+burying grounds. Any convenient spot may be chosen so long as it is at
+some little distance from the camp. It does happen, however, that
+certain spots are fairly regularly used. In the case of one burial that
+I witnessed the spot chosen was about a mile distant from the camp, the
+journey being made in a canoe, and there were already five or six
+graves at the same place.
+
+In the case of interment a hole is dug three or four feet in depth, the
+digging being done with an adze and a digging stick, and sometimes a
+wooden dish is used to scoop out the soil. The body is placed in the
+hole and the ropes tied round it are severed. The body is placed
+slightly on its side facing the east. I asked some of the natives the
+reason for this orientation, and was told that if the custom were not
+observed the sun would not rise and the world would be left in
+darkness. A pillow of wood is placed under the head, and a log of wood
+at each side of the corpse. Sometimes some object that has been worn by
+the deceased, such as a belt or necklace, is placed in the grave. The
+soil is then replaced, all present helping. Beside the grave a fire is
+lighted and some water contained in a bamboo vessel or in a nautilus
+shell is left for the corpse. In some cases the bow belonging to the
+deceased, if it be a man, and a few arrows are placed on the grave. In
+the Aka-Čari tribe a harpoon and line are substituted for the bow and
+arrows, and a bamboo harpoon shaft is erected vertically in the grave
+near the right hand of the body. In the same tribe it is usual to
+suspend near the grave a bundle of the prepared fibre of Anadendron
+paniculatum such as is used for making thread. There are probably
+slight variations of custom in this respect in different tribes or even
+in different cases in the same tribe.
+
+In the case of platform-burial a platform of sticks is erected in a
+tree, twelve feet or so above the ground, and the body is placed
+thereon, lying sideways facing the east. Water and fire are placed
+beneath the tree. Mr Man states that in cases of tree-burial they are
+careful not to select a fruit tree or one of a species used for the
+manufacture of their canoes, bows and other implements. Such natives as
+I questioned on this point said that this was not so and that they
+would use any suitable tree whether one that was useful or not. I was
+unable definitely to prove the point, as I did not see a single
+instance of tree-burial during my stay in the islands. A tree that is
+sometimes used for this purpose is the Ficus laccifera, which as we
+have seen has a special connection with the spirits of new-born
+children. On the coast, mangrove trees, such as the Rhizophora or
+Bruguiera, are said to be used.
+
+When the burial is completed, whether in a grave or a tree, plumes made
+of shredded palm-leaf stem koro (Aka-J̌eru) or ara (Aka-Bea) are
+attached near the graves to the branches of trees or shrubs or to
+sticks put up for the purpose. This is done, it is said, to show any
+native, who might inadvertently approach, that there has been a burial
+at the spot. The undergrowth is cleared for a short distance round the
+grave.
+
+The men then return to the camp, where the women have been busy packing
+up all belongings. Plumes of shredded palm-leaf stem (koro) are put up
+at the entrance to the camp, to show chance visitors that there has
+been a death. The camp is then deserted, the natives moving to some
+other camping ground until the period of mourning is over, when they
+may, if they wish, return to the deserted village. No one goes near the
+grave again until the period of mourning is over.
+
+In the case of very young children the burial ceremony is different.
+There is no general mourning of the whole camp. Only the father and
+mother and a few other relatives weep over the dead body. The head of
+the corpse is shaved and the body is decorated in the same way as that
+of an adult. The body is wrapped up in palm leaves (Licuala), the limbs
+being flexed. The fire is then removed from its customary place and a
+grave is dug there in the floor of the hut. In this the child’s body is
+placed, the grave is filled in and the fire replaced above it. Not only
+is the camp not deserted, but there seems to be an obligation on the
+parents not to leave the place until the bones have been dug up, or at
+any rate for some weeks after the death. If the mother went away, the
+natives say, the baby would cry for its mother’s milk. This is the
+custom of the Northern tribes. Referring to the Southern tribes, Mr Man
+says that the baby is buried beneath the fireplace and the camp is then
+deserted, the mother placing beside the grave a shell containing some
+milk squeezed from her breasts. Some of my informants of the Southern
+tribes (Akar-Bale, etc.) told me however that the camp would not be
+deserted in the case of the death of an infant, thus contradicting Mr
+Man’s statement. As there was no opportunity of testing the point by
+reference to an actual case, it must be left as doubtful. In the
+Northern tribes when an older child dies the body is buried away from
+the camp, but the latter is not, at any rate in all instances,
+deserted, though the hut in which the death occurred may be destroyed
+and a new one built a short distance away. It is only in the case of
+the death of an adult that the camp is abandoned.
+
+In connection with the burial of a baby beneath the hearth there is a
+belief that the soul of the dead baby may re-enter the mother and be
+born again. This would seem to be one of the reasons why the mother
+does not leave the camp when her baby dies.
+
+Should a person die while on a visit, he or she is buried in the usual
+way and news of the death and place of burial is sent to the relatives.
+A stranger who dies or is killed is buried unceremoniously or is cast
+into the sea. Among the Northern tribes the body of such a one used in
+former days to be disposed of by cutting it into pieces and burning it
+on a fire. The natives say that if this be done the ‘blood’ and the
+‘fat’ of the dead man go up to the sky and this removes all danger to
+the living from the dead man. The blood of persons so burnt is seen in
+the sky at sunset. If a man were killed in a fight between two
+communities and his body remained with the enemy, they would dispose of
+it in this way. If the friends secured the body they would bury it in
+the usual way. It may be worthy of remark that this custom of burning
+the bodies of slain enemies is perhaps the real origin of the belief
+that the Andamanese are or were cannibals. We can well imagine that
+when, as must have often happened, sailors venturing to land on the
+islands have been killed and the survivors have seen the bodies of
+their companions cut up and placed on fires, they would readily
+conclude that they were witnessing a cannibal feast. There can be no
+doubt whatever that since the islands were occupied in 1858 the
+inhabitants have not practised cannibalism, and there is no good reason
+to suppose that they once followed the custom and then abandoned it.
+
+The burial is conducted, if possible, on the day of the death. If it
+has to be deferred till the morrow all the inhabitants of the camp keep
+awake. The relatives sit round the corpse weeping at intervals, while
+some of the men take it in turn to sing songs during the hours of
+darkness. This, so they say, is to keep away the spirits that have
+caused the death, and so prevent them from further mischief. When a man
+or woman dies in the prime of life after a short illness the friends
+and relatives often break out in anger which they express in different
+ways. A man will shout threats and curses at the spirits that he
+conceives to be responsible for the death of his friend. He may pick up
+his bow and discharge his arrows in all directions, or in some other
+way give expression to his angry feelings. On the occasion of a death
+in one of the Akar-Bale villages the relatives expressed their grief by
+cutting down a coconut tree that grew there.
+
+The period of mourning for near relatives—parent, adult child, consort,
+brother or sister—lasts for several months. In the case of a young
+child only the parents mourn. The essentials of mourning are (1) the
+use of clay (odu), and (2) abstention from certain foods, from dancing,
+and from the use of white clay (to̱l) and red paint. As stated above,
+every adult in the camp covers himself or herself with clay on the
+death of an adult member of the community, but when this wears off, or
+is washed off in the course of two or three days, it is not renewed.
+The near relatives retain this covering of clay for many weeks,
+constantly renewing it. The clay is smeared evenly over the body, and
+is not put on in patterns, as on other occasions. The relatives, but
+not the others, plaster some of the same clay on their heads. A widow
+mourning for her husband covers her whole head with a thick layer of
+clay, renewing it from time to time. For a lesser degree of mourning,
+the custom is to plaster clay on the forehead only. After some weeks or
+months of mourning, the near relatives discontinue the use of clay on
+their bodies, but retain a band of clay over the forehead as shown in
+Plates IX, X, and XVII.
+
+The name of the clay thus used is odu in the Northern languages, and a
+mourner is called aka-odu. In the Aka-Bea language the name of the clay
+is og and the term for a mourner is aka-og.
+
+During the period of mourning the name of the dead person is carefully
+avoided and no one uses it. If it is necessary to refer to the dead
+this is done by using some such phrase as “he who is buried by the big
+rock” or “he who is laid in the fig tree” or by mentioning the name of
+the place of burial. There is no prohibition against mentioning the
+name itself in other connections. Thus if a man were called Buio, from
+the name of a species of Mucuna, it is not necessary to avoid the word
+buio when speaking of the plant. Further if there is another person
+alive of the same name as the dead man it is not necessary to avoid the
+name in referring to the living individual. The custom is that a dead
+person must not be spoken of unless it is absolutely necessary, and
+then must not be spoken of by name. After the period of mourning is
+over the dead person may again be spoken of by name.
+
+During the period of mourning a near relative of the deceased is never
+addressed or spoken of by name. There are certain terms which are used
+for this purpose, being terms of address that can be substituted for
+the names that are avoided. Thus in the Aka-J̌eru language one such term
+is Bolok, meaning “orphan,” used in addressing or speaking of a person
+who has lately lost a parent. Another term of the same language is
+Ropuč, applicable to one who has lost a brother or sister. After the
+period of mourning is over the use of the personal name of the mourner
+is resumed.
+
+During the period of mourning the near relatives of the deceased are
+required by custom to abstain from dancing and from using red paint or
+white clay. The white clay here referred to is that called to̱l or
+to̱l-odu in Aka-J̌eru and tala-og in Aka-Bea, and is used for decorating
+the body on ceremonial occasions, such as that of a big dance. Further,
+the mourners must abstain from eating certain foods. The customs with
+regard to the foods to be avoided are different in different parts.
+There is however the universal rule that coast-dwellers must not eat
+turtle, and jungle-dwellers must avoid pork. Other foods that are
+included amongst those to be avoided are dugong, certain fishes such as
+that called komar in Aka-J̌eru, and in some parts yams and honey.
+
+The exact duration of the period of mourning is difficult to discover.
+It seems to vary considerably in different cases. In all cases it must
+last long enough for the flesh to decay from the bones. The proceedings
+at the end of mourning consist of (1) digging up the bones of the dead
+man or woman and (2) a dance in which all the mourners join. The bones
+are generally dug up by the men who performed the burial. They cover
+themselves with clay (odu) and proceed to the grave or tree and dig up
+or take down the bones and weep over them. These are then washed in the
+sea or a creek and are taken back to camp. Here they are received by
+the women who weep over them in their turn. The skull and jawbone are
+decorated with red paint and white clay, and each separately has a band
+of ornamental netting attached to it so that it may be worn around the
+neck. Additional ornament is frequently added in the form of strings of
+Dentalium or other shells. The skulls and jawbones of deceased
+relatives are preserved for a long time, and are worn round the neck
+either in front or behind. The photograph in Plate XVIII shows a woman
+wearing the skull of her deceased sister. Like all their other
+possessions these relics are lent or exchanged, passing from one person
+to another, until sometimes a skull may be found in the possession of a
+man who does not know to whom it belonged. The other bones are also
+preserved. The limb bones are generally painted with red paint and
+white clay and are kept in the roof of the hut. They are not treasured
+as much as the skull and jaw, and are often mislaid. Thus, while every
+camp is sure to contain a number of skulls and jaw-bones it is
+comparatively rarely that the limb bones are to be found. The other
+bones are made into strings, such bones as those of the hand and foot
+being used as they are, while ribs and vertebrae are broken up into
+pieces of convenient size. The bones or pieces of bone are attached to
+a length of rope by means of thread and the string thus produced is
+often ornamented with the dried yellow skin of the Dendrobium and with
+shells. The whole is covered with red paint. These strings of bone are
+worn as cures for and preventives of illness. If a man has a head-ache,
+for instance, he will attach one of the strings round his head. They
+are in almost constant use in every camp and every man and woman is
+sure to possess one or two. The bones are made into strings by the
+female relatives of the deceased and are then given away as presents.
+
+In the North Andaman the skull of a baby is preserved by enclosing it
+in a small basket just big enough to contain it, the top of the basket,
+which is narrower than the lower part, being only finished after the
+skull is placed inside, so that it cannot fall out and can only be
+removed by unfastening the rim of the basket. Mr Man states that
+children’s skulls are not carried in baskets, except temporarily as
+when travelling, fishing, etc., but are preserved from injury by being
+entirely covered with string [64]. This applies only to the tribes of
+the South and Middle Andaman.
+
+At about the time that the bones are recovered there takes place a
+special ceremony referred to as “taking off the clay” or “the shedding
+of tears.” The object of this ceremony is to release the mourners from
+the restrictions that they have had to observe. The ceremony takes
+place in the evening, and an occasion is chosen when there are plenty
+of people in the camp. The mourners, male and female, remove the odu
+clay from their foreheads and decorate themselves with red paint and
+white clay in the way described in connection with dancing. They also
+put on what ornaments of Pandanus leaf or netting and Dentalium shell
+they may possess or be able to borrow. When all the members of the camp
+are assembled around the dancing ground one of the male mourners takes
+his stand at the sounding-board and sings a song. This song does not
+refer in any way to the dead man or woman; it is just an ordinary song
+of hunting or canoe-cutting or any other subject, though it may have
+been specially composed for the occasion. Those women who are not in
+mourning sit near the singer and take up the chorus. When the song is
+fairly started the mourners, male and female, begin to dance. There is
+nothing special about the dance, which is exactly like any other dance.
+After dancing for a short time the mourners seat themselves at one end
+of the dancing ground and their friends begin to weep and wail.
+Everybody present joins in the lamentation until they are tired. The
+mourners then rise and again dance. After a time the women retire and
+seat themselves with the chorus, but the men continue the dance (in
+which they are joined by the other men present), till they are tired,
+which often means till near dawn. After this ceremony the mourners are
+free to eat any of the foods up till then forbidden, and are free once
+more to use red paint and white clay and to take their part in all
+dances and other festivities.
+
+It has been seen from the preceding descriptions that the Andamanese
+have a number of ritual customs relating to food. There are certain
+occasions in the life of every individual when he or she must abstain
+from eating certain foods. A person mourning for the death of a
+relative is subjected to restrictions of this kind, and so are the
+parents of a new-born child for a short period before and after the
+birth. A woman must not eat certain things when she is menstruating.
+Restrictions as to diet are imposed by custom on all persons who are
+ill. The most important restrictions, however, are those imposed on
+every boy and girl during the period of adolescence. During this period
+of life, as we have seen, the initiate is required to abstain for a
+longer or shorter period from all the most important foods of the
+Andamanese.
+
+Mr Man states that “every Andamanese man or woman is prohibited all
+through life from eating some one (or more) fish or animal: in most
+cases the forbidden dainty is one which in childhood was observed (or
+imagined) by the mother to occasion some functional derangement; when
+of an age to understand it the circumstance is explained, and cause and
+effect being clearly demonstrated, the individual in question
+thenceforth considers that particular meat his yat-tub, and avoids it
+carefully. In cases where no evil consequences have resulted from
+partaking of any kind of food, the fortunate person is privileged to
+select his own yat-tub, and is of course shrewd enough to decide upon
+some fish, such as shark or skate, which is little relished, and to
+abstain from which consequently entails no exercise of self-denial
+[65].”
+
+Although I made repeated enquiries amongst the natives of both the
+North and the South Andaman I was not able to confirm this observation
+of Mr Man. It is quite true that if a certain food is observed to
+disagree with a child he or she is taught to avoid that food for the
+rest of life, but it is not necessary for every person to have some
+forbidden food. Many men told me that they were under no such
+prohibition and might eat any food they liked, apart from the
+restrictions on special occasions. On a minor point it may be noted
+that skate and even shark are not by any means so little relished as
+the statement of Mr Man would imply. The liver of skates and rays, and
+even the liver of sharks is rather regarded as a delicacy.
+
+I noticed on several occasions that men would not eat certain foods
+when they were away from their own part of the islands. Thus one man of
+the North Andaman told me that he would not eat dugong when he was with
+me in the South Andaman. Another said that though he would eat the fish
+komar when he was at home, he would not eat it when he was in a strange
+place, as at the Settlement of Port Blair, for fear that it would make
+him ill.
+
+In the North Andaman I was told that when a dugong is caught and the
+people feast on it they do not leave the camp till some hours after the
+meat is all finished, either to go fishing or hunting. The reason they
+give for this is that the spirits of the jungle and the sea may smell
+them, attracted by the odour of the food they have eaten and may cause
+them to be ill. They therefore remain in the camp and eat up all the
+dugong and do not venture out till they begin to feel hungry and must
+go in search of food. I believe that the same custom is observed in the
+South Andaman also.
+
+A few other customs connected with food may be mentioned here. There is
+only one way in which a turtle may be killed [66]. It must be laid on
+its back with its head pointing towards the open sea, and a skewer of
+wood is then thrust through the eye-socket into the brain. The natives
+say that if a turtle were killed in any other way than this, the meat
+would be “bad,” i.e., uneatable.
+
+Turtle meat may only be cooked on a fire of the wood of the Hibiscus
+tiliaceus.
+
+A pig is killed as it runs, without ceremony, but there is one special
+way in which it must be cut up. The pig is first disembowelled, and the
+joints of the legs are severed. The abdominal cavity is then filled
+with leaves, of which only certain special kinds are used. It is placed
+on a fire and roasted whole, and is then cut up. Should the carcase be
+cut up by any other than the traditional method, the natives believe
+that the meat would be “bad,” and they would not eat it.
+
+A number of beliefs relating to vegetable foods will be mentioned in
+the next chapter.
+
+In several of the ceremonies described in this chapter it will be
+noticed that the weeping of relatives and friends occurs as an
+essential part of the ceremony. The female relatives of a youth or girl
+who is being initiated come and weep over him or her at the
+turtle-eating ceremony. Their friends weep over, or with, the mourners
+at the dance at the end of mourning. The friends of a bride and
+bridegroom weep over them when they are married. The friends and
+relatives weep over a corpse before it is buried and over the bones
+when they are recovered. In all cases it is real weeping. The man or
+woman sits down and wails or howls, and the tears stream down his or
+her face. On one occasion I asked the natives to show how it was done
+and two or three of them sat down and were immediately weeping real
+tears at my request. The weeping in this way is really a ceremony or
+rite. When two friends or relatives meet who have been separated from
+one another for a few weeks or longer, they greet each other by sitting
+down, one on the lap of the other, with their arms around each other’s
+necks, and weeping and wailing for two or three minutes till they are
+tired. Two brothers greet each other in this way, and so do father and
+son, mother and son, mother and daughter, and husband and wife. When
+husband and wife meet, it is the man who sits on the lap of the woman.
+When two friends part from one another, one of them lifts up the hand
+of the other towards his mouth and gently blows on it.
+
+Reference has already been made in this chapter to a number of customs
+relating to personal names. It will be useful to bring together the
+scattered references, and give a general account of the whole matter.
+
+Every Andaman Islander has a personal name that is given to him or her
+before birth, and which we may speak of as the birth-name. As soon as a
+woman realises that she is pregnant, she and her husband begin to think
+of a name for the child. The name is selected by the parents, but the
+suggestions of their friends and relatives are always considered. It is
+regarded as a compliment to name the child after some man or woman.
+Sometimes a man may request the parents that the child shall be named
+after him, and such a request is rarely, if ever, refused. The names
+given before birth are of course applicable to both sexes, there being
+no difference between the names of men and those of women. There are a
+considerable number of names in common use, but some of them are more
+popular at a given time and place than others. It therefore happens
+that there are several persons, both men and women, bearing the same
+name.
+
+Each of the names in common use has a meaning, but it is not always
+easy to obtain an adequate and accurate explanation of the meaning from
+the natives themselves [67]. In a certain number the derivation is
+obvious. Many names are the names of objects such as trees, fish or
+other animals, or even such objects as rope or mats. A few examples
+from the North Andaman are:—
+
+
+ Buio Mucuna sp., a plant with edible beans.
+ Bol Hibiscus tiliaceus.
+ Čop a tree with edible nuts.
+ Ko̱nmo Dioscorea sp.
+ Čokbi turtle.
+ Maro honey.
+ Meo a stone.
+ Čeo a knife.
+ Bani the oriole.
+
+
+In the case of a number of names it is not possible to discover with
+certainty the derivation, and the statements of the natives regarding
+them do not always agree. Such names in the North Andaman, with their
+meanings as stated by the natives, are:—
+
+
+ Kea one who turns in his sleep.
+ Bo̱ičo one who wrestles.
+ Elpe one who comes and goes.
+ Kiǰe̱ri one who walks backwards and forwards.
+ Nimi one who catches hold.
+
+
+Some time after a child is born it is given a nick-name. Nick-names may
+be given at any time of life, and some persons may have several
+nick-names given to them at different times. New nick-names are from
+time to time invented, but there are a certain number of recognized
+names from which a choice is usually made. A few examples from the
+North Andaman are:—
+
+
+ Ra-t’ot-betč pig’s hair.
+ Renya-čope much baggage, or many possessions.
+ Po̱ičo-tomo the wood (literally flesh) of the Sterculia
+ (po̱ičo) tree.
+ Lau-tei spirit blood.
+ Luremo rope.
+ Remu-to̱i a piece of iron.
+ Čokbi-čiro turtle liver.
+ Tarenǰek angry.
+
+
+During childhood boys and girls are addressed by either the birth-name
+or the nick-name.
+
+When a girl reaches the age of puberty she receives a new name. This is
+one of a limited number of names, each of which is the name of a tree
+or plant. The name given to the girl is that of the tree or plant that
+is in flower at the time of her first menstruation.
+
+There is a succession of trees and plants flowering one after another
+throughout the year. The natives describe the different parts of the
+year by reference to the plants in flower at the time. The plants
+selected as typical of the different seasons all have flowers from
+which the native bees make honey. Each of them has a distinctive scent
+and gives to the honey made from it a distinctive flavour. The
+flower-names are given below in Aka-Bea and Aka-J̌eru.
+
+
+ Aka-Bea Aka-J̌eru
+
+ Čilipa Čelibi From the middle of November to the middle of
+ February.
+ Moda Mukui }
+ Ora Oko̱r }
+ Jidga } From the middle of February to the middle of
+ Yere J̌eru } May, in order.
+ Pataka Bo̱tek }
+ Balya Puliu }
+
+ Reče Re } From the middle of May to the end of August.
+ Čagara Čokoro }
+
+ Čarapa Čarap } September, October and the first half of
+ Čenra To̱ro̱k? } November.
+ Yulu J̌ili }
+
+
+From the time that a girl receives her flower-name her birth-name and
+nick-name fall entirely out of use. No one would address an unmarried
+girl by any name except the flower-name. This continues until some time
+after the girl is married. Properly speaking a woman should be known by
+her flower-name from the advent of puberty until after the birth of her
+first child. In these days of childless women the flower-name drops out
+of use after a few years of married life. After the birth of her first
+child the woman is known by her birth-name or by a nick-name. Thus a
+woman who was named before her birth Kaba (from kabal, a species of
+mangrove) was called by that name until puberty; thereafter she was
+called J̌ili (her flower-name) until the birth of her first child; after
+this event she is again called Kaba, and no one would think of
+addressing her as J̌ili. A woman named Ele (lightning) at birth was
+known by this name until puberty, and thereafter was called Bo̱tek. When
+I knew her she had been married for three years or so, but had not had
+a child. A few of the younger men and women addressed her as Ele, but
+the older people still called her Bo̱tek. If she should bear a child,
+the name Bo̱tek would fall entirely out of use and she would be known as
+Ele by both her juniors and her seniors.
+
+In the case of a boy there is nothing corresponding to the flower-names
+of girls. He continues to be known by his birth-name and his nick-name
+from the time he is born until he dies. During adolescence a youth has
+to pass through certain ceremonies of initiation as described in the
+present chapter. At the turtle-eating ceremony the youth is given a new
+name, of the nature of a nick-name. The name given in this way is never
+used either in addressing the youth or in speaking of him. It is
+possible that he also receives a new name on the occasion of the
+pig-eating ceremony, but of this I am not sure. Though girls pass
+through the same ceremonies as boys, I did not discover whether or not
+they also are given new names on these occasions.
+
+Names are used freely in speaking of and to one another. An older
+person always speaks of or to the younger one by the name alone. When a
+younger person is speaking to an older one it is customary and polite
+to use one of the terms of address, either by itself, or prefixed to
+the name of the person spoken to, as Maia Buio, Mimi Kaba, etc. A
+native generally hesitates to tell his own name, and if asked the
+question “What is your name?” often asks a bystander to give the
+required information. There is, however, no hesitation about mentioning
+the name of any other person, except under certain special conditions.
+
+There are certain occasions when the name of a man or woman is
+temporarily avoided. After the death of a relative and during the
+period of mourning, a mourner’s name is not mentioned, either in
+speaking to him or of him. There are a few terms that may be used
+instead. One who has lost a parent is addressed as Bolok, one who has
+lost a brother or sister as Ropuč. For a short time before and after
+the birth of a child the names of the father and mother are not
+mentioned. A bride and bridegroom are not addressed or spoken of by
+name for a short period after their marriage, though if their names be
+A and B there seems to be no harm in referring to A as “the husband of
+B,” or to B as “the wife of A.” During the initiation ceremonies
+through which every boy and girl must pass, the name of the initiate is
+avoided. Thus on the occasion of the turtle-eating ceremony or the
+pig-eating ceremony, during the few days the ceremony lasts and for a
+few weeks afterwards, the youth or girl is never addressed or spoken of
+by name, but is referred to as Kimil. During the ceremony that takes
+place on the occasion of the advent of puberty, and for some weeks
+after, a girl is not spoken of or to either by her birth-name or her
+flower-name, but is called Toto. When a boy, in the Northern tribes,
+has the scars made on his back, which show him to be no longer a child,
+his name is avoided for a few weeks and he is called Eǰido.
+
+The name of a dead man or woman is not mentioned during the period of
+mourning, which lasts for some months after the death.
+
+In the preceding portions of the chapter reference has been made
+several times to the ornamentation of the body with clay and pigment.
+In the Great Andaman three different substances are used for painting
+the body. These are (1) a common clay of which different specimens are
+gray, yellow or pink, called odu in Aka-J̌eru and og in Aka-Bea; (2) a
+fine white pipe-clay which is rarer than the common clay and is more
+highly prized, called to̱l or to̱l-odu in Aka-J̌eru and tala-og in
+Aka-Bea; (3) a red pigment made by mixing burnt oxide of iron with
+animal or vegetable fat or oil, called keyip in Aka-J̌eru and ko̱iob in
+Aka-Bea.
+
+The common clay (odu) is used in three different ways. After the death
+of a relative a man or woman smears himself all over with this clay and
+plasters it on his head. From this custom a person who is mourning for
+a dead relative is called aka-odu in Aka-J̌eru or aka-og in Aka-Bea. The
+same clay is used at a certain stage of the initiation ceremonies, as
+described above, being spattered over the initiate in the turtle-eating
+and pig-eating ceremonies. The third and most common use of this clay
+is to decorate the bodies of men and women with patterns called (in
+Aka-J̌eru) e̱ra-puli. These patterns are always made by the women, who
+decorate each other and their male relatives. The clay is mixed with
+water in a wooden dish or a shell and the mixture is applied to the
+body with the fingers. There is an almost indefinite variety in the
+patterns employed, although there are a certain number of what may be
+called usual designs. Each woman vies with others in her endeavours to
+produce some novelty of detail in her designs, and a successful
+innovation is immediately copied by others. I was able to watch the
+rise and development and ultimate disappearance of “fashions” in this
+connection in one of the camps of the North Andaman.
+
+The design is made in one of two ways. It may, in some cases, be formed
+by painting with the finger on the body, that is by tracing white (or
+gray) lines on a black surface. A design of this kind is shown on the
+back of the man on the right in the photograph of Plate XI. On the
+other hand, an equally common method is to cover a part of the body
+with an even smear of clay and then to scrape it away either with the
+fingers or with a small fish-bone or with a little instrument made of
+small strips of bamboo, so as to leave a design of black lines where
+the skin shows through the smeared clay. Two not very striking designs
+of this kind are shown in Plates IX and X. As a rule the designs are
+more or less symmetrical, the right and the left sides of the body
+being treated alike, but in a few cases different patterns are made on
+the two sides, and I have seen a man with one side of his body painted
+and the other not. The painting may cover the whole of the body and
+limbs with the exception of the hands and feet, or it may be confined
+to the front and back of the trunk, or it may be on the front only. The
+face is often painted, the designs being made with greater care than
+those on the body.
+
+These patterns are made in the afternoon after the men return from
+their day’s hunting, and always either just before or just after a
+meal.
+
+If a man be asked what pattern he is painted with, he replies by
+mentioning the food that he has just eaten. A man who has been eating
+turtle will say that the painting on his body is čokbi-t’e̱ra-puli,
+turtle pattern, while if he has been eating pork he will call it
+ra-t’e̱ra-puli, pig pattern. There is not, however, a strict uniformity
+in the use of particular patterns in connection with special foods.
+When the whole camp has been feasting on turtle many different and
+(apparently) unrelated designs are to be seen on the bodies of the men
+and women. I did not find it possible, even after a study of the
+matter, to distinguish by means of the design a man who has been eating
+turtle from one who has been eating pork. There is one design, or group
+of closely related designs, that seemed to be based on the pattern of
+the plates on a turtle’s carapace. A pattern of this distinctive kind
+was never, so far as my experience went, used except after eating
+turtle. Other patterns, however, which were used after eating turtle,
+did not seem to me to be related in any way to what I may call the
+specific turtle pattern. In some of the patterns used after eating pork
+I noticed a tendency to make use of vertical lines or bands on the back
+and chest. There may be a connection here with the longitudinal
+markings on the back of the wild pig.
+
+Of special patterns I was only able to discover two. One of these is
+called kimil-t’e̱ra-puli and is only used to paint a person who is
+aka-kimil, i.e., who has just been through one of the initiation
+ceremonies. This pattern is shown on the back of a man in the
+photograph reproduced as Plate XI (the second figure from the left).
+Another special pattern is called toto-t’e̱ra-puli (Pandanus pattern),
+and is used, I believe, to decorate a girl after the ceremony at her
+first menstruation.
+
+The fine white clay called to̱l-odu in Aka-J̌eru is used in a different
+way and on different occasions. When it is used to ornament the body it
+is always applied in one customary pattern. The name of this pattern in
+Aka-J̌eru is o̱r-čubi-t’e̱ra-bat, from the name of a species of snake,
+o̱r-čubi. Exactly the same name is used in A-Pučikwar,
+wara-čupi-l’ar-par. Mr Man gives the Aka-Bea name as ǰobo-tartaŋa, from
+ǰobo the name for snake in general. A man decorated with this “snake
+pattern,” as it may be called, is shown in Plate XII, and a pattern of
+the same kind is shown on the head of the man in Plate XIII. The
+pattern is built up of zig-zag lines. They are made by taking a little
+of the clay mixed with water between the thumb and first finger; by a
+movement of the thumb the space between the nail and the skin of the
+finger is filled with the clay, and the end of the finger is then
+applied to the skin so that it leaves a short and fine line of clay. A
+zig-zag line is thus built up of short lines each a finger’s breadth in
+length. A second line is then added, not parallel to the first, but
+opposed to it, so that the two lines together form a row of lozenges. A
+third and sometimes a fourth or fifth line are similarly added. As
+shown in Plate XII the lines of pattern are carried down the front of
+the body, down the sides of the arms, and down the front of the legs,
+and they are similarly worked on the back of the body, and the back of
+the legs. The face also is decorated. These patterns are made by the
+women. It is one of the duties of a wife to decorate her husband in
+this way when occasion requires.
+
+The only reason that the natives give for ornamenting themselves in
+this way is that it makes them “look well.” On the occasion of a big
+dance many of the performers are thus ornamented. This is always so at
+the dances held when two or more local groups meet together. There are
+certain special occasions, already mentioned in this chapter, when the
+use of the “snake pattern” is required by custom. One of these is the
+dance at the end of mourning. During the period of mourning the
+mourners are forbidden to make use of this form of decoration. The same
+pattern is used to decorate a bride and bridegroom after their
+marriage. In the initiation ceremonies the youth or girl is decorated
+in this way before the dances at the turtle-eating and pig-eating
+ceremonies. The same pattern is also made on a corpse before burial.
+
+In all these cases the whole body is decorated. On less ceremonial
+occasions, such as an ordinary dance when there are no visitors of
+importance in the camp, a man frequently has his face alone decorated
+with white clay, as in the photograph of Plate XIII.
+
+The third kind of material used for painting the body is red paint.
+This is applied in two different ways. When a man or woman is ill he or
+she is generally to be seen with some part of his body smeared with red
+paint. For colds and coughs the chest and neck are painted. In fevers
+red paint is smeared on the upper lip. Besides the medical use of red
+paint, if we may call it so, there is a ceremonial use, the pigment
+being used in combination with white clay, lines of red paint being
+applied to the body between the lines of clay of the snake pattern. It
+is used in this way to decorate the body of a dead person for burial,
+and on ceremonial occasions such as the dance at the end of mourning
+and the dances in connection with the initiation ceremonies.
+
+Most of the ornaments worn at various times by the Andaman Islanders
+have a ceremonial or a magical purpose. The only things worn by men
+that can be considered to have a utilitarian value are the belt of rope
+and the necklet of string. The belt may be a plain piece of rope, or it
+may be ornamented with the yellow skin of a species of Dendrobium. It
+serves as a receptacle in which the natives carry such things as adzes,
+fish, roots, or even arrows. It is the one object that is constantly
+worn by men. The string necklet is simply a length of thin string tied
+round the neck. It serves as a means of carrying a knife and skewer.
+The knife, in former days made of a slip of cane, but in these times
+from a piece of scrap iron, is attached to a skewer of Areca wood by a
+short length of rope or stout string. By sliding either the knife or
+the skewer under the necklet at the back of the neck the double
+implement hangs securely in a position where it is not likely to get
+lost when running through the jungle, and where it is immediately
+accessible when wanted. The necklet also serves as a means of carrying
+bees’-wax, which is in constant use amongst the natives, a small ball
+of the wax being attached to one of the ends of the string of which the
+necklet is made.
+
+As a rule, in everyday life, the men wear only a belt, or a belt and
+necklace. Those natives who visit the Settlement of Port Blair have
+been required by the European officers to wear a strip of cloth over
+the genitals. It has now become the rule to wear such a loin cloth
+whenever they are in the neighbourhood of a European. This, however, is
+a modern custom, and in former times the men went freely with no
+covering whatever, as do the inhabitants of the Little Andaman at the
+present time. As showing the extent to which the natives have been
+influenced in this matter by outside opinion, it may be mentioned that
+at the present day many of the younger men, particularly those who have
+been brought up at Port Blair, regard it as very immodest to be seen
+without some covering over the genitals.
+
+On ceremonial occasions, such as the dance at the end of mourning, or a
+big dance-meeting, the men put on a number of ornaments. A common
+costume on such occasions consists of a belt, necklace, bracelets, and
+garters of netting and Dentalium shell. A belt and necklace of this
+kind are to be seen in Plate V, and garters are worn by the woman in
+Plate IX. An alternative costume for men consists of a set of ornaments
+of Pandanus leaf (belt, chaplet, bracelets and garters), decorated with
+Dentalium and other shells. Garters of this kind are shown in Plate
+XII.
+
+Other objects are worn by the natives for magical purposes. Chief
+amongst these are the strings made of human bones which are worn to
+prevent and cure sickness. The bones are attached to a length of rope,
+and this is generally decorated with shells or with Dendrobium skin.
+These strings of bones are worn most commonly as chaplets, necklaces or
+belts, but they may also be made into garters and bracelets. The bones
+of animals, such as pig, turtle, dugong, etc., are treated in exactly
+the same way as human bones, and ornaments made of them are commonly
+worn.
+
+There are a number of other ornaments that are commonly worn, not only
+on ceremonial occasions, which, unlike the strings of human bones, do
+not obviously have a magical purpose. Such are necklaces made of
+various kinds of shells, and of mangrove seeds. At the present time the
+natives obtain beads from Port Blair and make ornaments of these.
+
+The ordinary costume of the women is different from that of the men.
+Every woman and girl wears at least one belt of Pandanus leaf. There is
+one kind of belt that is always worn by married women and which may not
+be worn by unmarried girls. There is another kind of belt that may only
+be worn by unmarried girls. The women of the Southern tribes wear a
+bundle of leaves of the Mimusops littoralis laid one over another
+suspended from the front of the belt so as to cover the pudenda. In the
+Northern tribes it was formerly the custom for the women to wear a
+similar apron of the leaves of a plant called čainyo, and over this
+they also wore a tassel of shredded palm-leaf stem (koro). Within
+recent years the Northern tribes have given up their own custom in this
+matter and have adopted the custom of the Southern tribes.
+
+Women often wear round the neck a piece of string similar to that worn
+by the men, but as they do not carry knives it does not serve the same
+purpose. It is more usual for a woman to wear a necklace of some sort.
+Nowadays they are rather fond of necklaces of beads which they obtain
+from the Settlement at Port Blair. In former times different kinds of
+shells were used, such as the Dentalium octogonum.
+
+With the exception that men wear the belt of rope, and women wear the
+belt of Pandanus leaf and the apron of leaves, there is no difference
+between the ornaments worn by men and by women. On the occasion of a
+dance or other ceremony a woman may wear any of the objects described
+as being worn by men on such occasions. They also wear in the same way
+strings of human or animal bones.
+
+One object which would seem to have a purely utilitarian purpose is the
+sling used for carrying children (called in Aka-J̌eru čiba). This
+object, however, seems to have its ceremonial uses also. In one of the
+initiation ceremonies that I saw, the man who was officiating wore such
+a sling round his shoulders during the ceremony.
+
+In the earlier parts of this chapter reference has been made several
+times to the dance of the Andaman Islanders. For the natives the dance
+is both a means of enjoyment and also a ceremony. The period of
+mourning for the dead is brought to a close by a dance, in which all
+the mourners join. As will be shown later, a dance was generally held
+before a fight, in former times when fights occurred. The ceremony by
+which two hostile local groups made peace with one another was a dance.
+
+In the initiation ceremonies there are special dances, which have
+already been described, in connection with the pig-eating and
+turtle-eating ceremonies. With the exception of these special dances,
+and the peace-making dance to be described later, there is only one
+kind of dance in any given tribe. Thus the dance at the end of
+mourning, or before setting out on an attack on enemies, is in all
+essentials exactly the same as the dance in which the natives indulge
+when the day’s hunting has been successful and the evening is fine.
+
+The time for dancing, except in connection with certain ceremonies, is
+at night, after the evening meal. The dance takes place on the open
+ground in the centre of the village. This is swept clean by the women
+and the younger men. One or two fires are lighted, and little heaps of
+resin are placed in convenient situations to provide lights. These have
+to be replenished from time to time as the dance proceeds. Near one end
+of the dancing ground is placed a sounding-board, upon which it is the
+duty of one man to beat time with his foot. A sounding-board is a piece
+of wood somewhat of the shape of a large shield, cut from the hard
+Pterocarpus tree. One is shown in Plate VI. Behind the sounding-board,
+or a little to one side of it, the women, who form the chorus, sit in a
+row, with their legs stretched out in front of them, facing the
+dancing-ground. The men who intend to dance sit or stand round the edge
+of the space reserved for the dance.
+
+When all is ready a man who has volunteered to sing the first song
+takes his stand at the sounding-board, and sings his song through. When
+he reaches the chorus the women take it up and repeat it after him, and
+as they do so each woman marks time by clapping her hands on the hollow
+formed by her thighs, the legs being crossed one over the other at the
+ankle. The singer continues to sing, thus leading the chorus, and at
+the same time marks the time of the song by beating on the
+sounding-board with his foot. As soon as the chorus begins the dancers
+begin to dance. The step of each dancer is the same, but there is very
+little attempt to form a figure. When the singer and the chorus get
+tired, the singing ceases, but the man at the sounding-board continues
+to mark time for the dancers. The singer repeats his song several
+times, and he may sing several songs, each repeated several times. When
+he gets tired he is relieved by another man. In a dance that lasts for
+any time, one singer succeeds another, and the singing and dancing are
+kept up continuously, sometimes for five or six hours.
+
+The above description applies to all the tribes of the Great Andaman,
+but there are some differences between the four tribes of the North
+Andaman, and the tribes of the Middle and South Andaman.
+
+In the North Andaman the song is sung through once from beginning to
+end by the singer, and is then repeated three or four times by the
+chorus. In the South Andaman each song consists of one verse and a
+refrain, if we may speak of them thus. The singer sings the verse and
+the refrain, and then the refrain only is repeated an indefinite number
+of times by the chorus.
+
+In the dance of the Southern tribes, each dancer dances alternately on
+the right foot or on the left. When dancing on the right foot the first
+movement is a slight hop with the right foot, then the left foot is
+raised and brought down with a backward scrape along the ground, then
+another hop on the right foot. These three movements, which occupy the
+time of two beats of the song, are repeated until the right leg is
+tired, and the dancer then changes the movement to a hop with the left
+foot, followed by a scrape with the right and another hop with the
+left. The time of the movement is as follows, the upper line being the
+rhythm of the dance, while the lower line shows the beats of the song,
+which is marked on the sounding-board and by the clapping of the women.
+
+ [Music Notes] or [Music Notes]
+
+The body of the dancer is bent slightly forward from the hips, the legs
+being flexed at the knees and the back being curved well inwards. There
+are several ways of holding the hands and arms, one of the commonest
+being to hold the arms outstretched in front on a level with the
+shoulders, while the thumb and forefinger of one hand are interlocked
+with those of the other. When a man does not wish to cease altogether
+from dancing but desires to have a short rest, he marks the time by
+raising each heel alternately from the ground. As a man dances he
+remains in one spot for a short time, and then, still continuing the
+same step, moves for a yard or two around the circle of the dancing
+ground. Every now and then a dancer is to be seen trotting from one
+position to another across the dancing ground, abandoning the step of
+the dance, but still keeping time to the song.
+
+The Northern tribes have now adopted the same kind of dance as the
+tribes of the South, but formerly their dance was slightly different.
+There was a little more attempt at forming a figure, the dancers moving
+for the most part in a circle, some in one direction and others in the
+other. The step was as follows: a step forward with the right foot, a
+hop on the right foot, a scrape with the left, then another hop with
+the right, a step forward with the left foot, a hop with the left, a
+scrape with the right and a hop with the left. The rhythm is as
+follows:—
+
+ [Music Notes]
+
+The lower line shows the beats on the sounding-board.
+
+Some of the dancers occasionally break into the regular Southern step.
+A dancer sometimes changes from the usual step to another called ko̱i,
+in which each foot is alternately struck on the ground and scraped
+backwards. Other slight variations of the movement may be introduced.
+
+In both the Southern and the Northern dance each dancer pleases himself
+as to the direction in which he moves, and the step that he adopts at
+any given moment. All the dancers, however independently of one another
+they dance, keep strict time to the music.
+
+Women do not, as a rule, join in the ordinary dances held in the
+evening. Their share in the entertainment consists of forming the
+chorus. When they do dance, as they do on certain occasions, such as
+the dance at the end of mourning, their step is different from that of
+the men. In the Southern tribes the female dancer stands at one spot
+with knees flexed and lifts her heels alternately from the ground in
+time to the music, thus producing a slight swaying or swinging motion
+of the hips. After dancing thus at one spot for a few moments, she
+moves forward a few steps to a new position, keeping time to the music
+in all her movements, and then repeats the same performance. The arms
+are swung in time to the dance, or else are held before the breast with
+one wrist crossed over the other.
+
+In the Northern tribes the common dance of the women is a sort of
+modification of that of the men. A woman advances across the ground in
+regular time, but at every third step she gives a peculiar little hop
+which has something of the effect of a bobbing curtsey. The time is as
+follows:—
+
+ [Music Notes]
+
+l and r standing for left and right foot, and the accent indicating the
+hop or curtsey. Every now and then a dancer stops and remains at one
+spot, alternately scraping each foot backwards, holding her knees
+flexed, and swinging both arms together.
+
+The ordinary dance of the Andamanese, as described above, must always
+be accompanied by a song, and the purpose of every song is to serve as
+the accompaniment to a dance. Every man composes his own songs. No one
+would ever sing (at a dance) a song composed by any other person. There
+are no traditional songs. Women occasionally compose songs, but I never
+heard a woman sing at a dance except in the chorus.
+
+Every man composes songs, and the boys begin to practise themselves in
+the art of composition when they are still young. A man composes his
+song as he cuts a canoe or a bow or as he paddles a canoe, singing it
+over softly to himself, until he is satisfied with it. He then awaits
+an opportunity to sing it in public, and for this he has to wait for a
+dance. Before the dance he takes care to teach the chorus to one or two
+of his female relatives so that they can lead the chorus of women. He
+sings his song, and if it is successful he repeats it several times,
+and thereafter it becomes part of his repertory, for every man of any
+age has a repertory of songs that he is prepared to repeat at any time.
+If the song is not successful, if the chorus and dancers do not like
+it, the composer abandons it and does not repeat it. Some men are
+recognized as being more skilful song-makers than others.
+
+The songs all deal with everyday subjects such as hunting or cutting a
+canoe. The important thing about a song is not its sense, but its
+sound, i.e., its rhythm and melody. A translation of an Akar-Bale song,
+which is quite typical, is “Po̱io, the son of Mam Golat, wants to know
+when I am going to finish my canoe. He comes every day. That is why I
+make haste to get it launched as soon as possible.” Another on the same
+subject runs: “Knots are very hard to cut with an adze. They blunt the
+edge of the adze. How hard I am working cutting these knots.” The
+singer here refers to the cutting of a canoe. A number of songs in the
+native languages with translations, are given by Mr Portman [68]. To
+these the reader may refer for further information.
+
+According to the statements of the natives it was formerly the custom
+to have a dance before setting out to a fight. There was no special
+war-dance, the warriors joining in an ordinary dance such as has just
+been described. Those who intended to take part in the attack on their
+enemies, i.e., all the able-bodied adult males, decorated themselves
+with red paint and white clay, and put on ornaments of Pandanus leaf or
+netting and shells. Each man held in his hands or placed in his belt or
+head-dress plumes of shredded Tetranthera wood (called čelmo in
+Aka-J̌eru, uǰ in Aka-Bea). These plumes of shredded wood are now often
+worn or carried in an ordinary dance, but I believe that in former
+times they were the distinctive sign of a war-dance. To make them, a
+short length of the wood is taken (generally a piece of an old broken
+pig-arrow) and the wood is carefully shredded with a Cyrena shell, care
+being taken not to break any of the longitudinal fibres. One end is
+then tied with a piece of string or fibre. Similar plumes are made from
+Pandanus wood, and are carried or worn in a similar manner.
+
+When the attacking party set out from their village each man wears a
+plume of shredded Tetranthera wood thrust into the back of his belt.
+They rub their bows with the shredded wood, and say that this has the
+effect of making their own bows shoot well and those of their enemies
+shoot badly.
+
+If a man kills another in a fight between two villages, or in a private
+quarrel, he leaves his village and goes to live by himself in the
+jungle, where he must stay for some weeks, or even months. His wife,
+and one or two of his friends may live with him or visit him and attend
+to his wants. For some weeks the homicide must observe a rigorous tabu.
+He must not handle a bow or arrow. He must not feed himself or touch
+any food with his hands, but must be fed by his wife or a friend. He
+must keep his neck and upper lip covered with red paint, and must wear
+plumes of shredded Tetranthera wood (čelmo) in his belt before and
+behind, and in his necklace at the back of his neck. If he breaks any
+of these rules it is supposed that the spirit of the man he has killed
+will cause him to be ill. At the end of a few weeks the homicide
+undergoes a sort of purification ceremony. His hands are first rubbed
+with white clay (to̱l-odu) and then with red paint. After this he may
+wash his hands and may then feed himself with his hands and may handle
+bows and arrows. He retains the plumes of shredded wood for a year or
+so.
+
+In the North Andaman, and possibly in the South also, there was a
+ceremony by which two hostile local groups made peace with one another.
+When the two groups have agreed to make friends and bring their quarrel
+to an end, arrangements are made for this ceremony. The arrangements
+are made through the women of the two parties. A day is fixed for the
+ceremony, which takes place in the country of the group that made the
+last attack. In the village of this group the dancing ground is
+prepared, and across it is erected what is called a koro-čop. Posts are
+put up in a line, to the tops of these is attached a length of strong
+cane, and from the cane are suspended bundles of shredded palm-leaf
+(koro). The appearance of this construction may be seen from the
+photograph reproduced in Plate XIX. The women of the camp keep a
+look-out for the approach of the visitors. When they are known to be
+near the camp, the women sit down on one side of the dancing ground,
+and the men take up positions in front of the decorated cane. Each man
+stands with his back against the koro-čop, with his arms stretched out
+sideways along the top of it. None of them has any weapons.
+
+The visitors, who are, if we may so put it, the forgiving party, while
+the home party are those who have committed the last act of hostility,
+advance into the camp dancing, the step being that of the ordinary
+dance. The women of the home party mark the time of the dance by
+clapping their hands on their thighs. I was told that the visitors
+carry their weapons with them, but when the dance was performed at my
+request the dancers were without weapons. The visitors dance forward in
+front of the men standing at the koro-čop, and then, still dancing all
+the time, pass backwards and forwards between the standing men, bending
+their heads as they pass beneath the suspended cane. The dancers make
+threatening gestures at the men standing at the koro-čop, and every now
+and then break into a shrill shout. The men at the koro stand silent
+and motionless and are expected to show no sign of fear.
+
+After they have been dancing thus for a little time, the leader of the
+dancers approaches the man at one end of the koro and, taking him by
+the shoulders from the front, leaps vigorously up and down to the time
+of the dance, thus giving the man he holds a good shaking. The leader
+then passes on to the next man in the row while another of the dancers
+goes through the same performance with the first man. This is continued
+until each of the dancers has “shaken” each of the standing men. The
+dancers then pass under the koro and shake their enemies in the same
+manner from the back. After a little more dancing the dancers retire,
+and the women of the visiting group come forward and dance in much the
+same way that the men have done, each woman giving each of the men of
+the other group a good shaking.
+
+When the women have been through their dance the two parties of men and
+women sit down and weep together.
+
+The two groups remain camped together for a few days, spending the time
+in hunting and dancing together. Presents are exchanged, as at the
+ordinary meetings of different groups. The men of the two groups
+exchange bows with one another.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+RELIGIOUS AND MAGICAL BELIEFS
+
+
+The Andaman Islanders believe in the existence of a class of
+supernatural beings which I propose to denote by the term “spirits.”
+The native name for these spirits is lau, lao or yau in the languages
+of the North and Middle Andaman, and čauga in the South Andaman. While
+all spirits are denoted together by the term lau or čauga, there are
+certain special classes of spirits. There are, for instance, spirits
+that haunt the jungles of the islands. These are called in the North
+Andaman Ti-miku Lau, from the word ti-miku meaning the forest, or more
+accurately “land.” (The only land known to the Andamanese is covered
+with forest.) In Aka-Bea the name for these jungle spirits is E̱rem
+Čauga, the word e̱rem being the equivalent in that language of the
+Northern ti-miku. In the North Andaman the Ti-miku Lau are often called
+Bido Teč Lau, i.e., spirits of the Calamus leaf, bido being the name of
+the Calamus tigrinus. This cane is armed with strong thorns, and in
+some parts of the jungle forms absolutely impenetrable thickets. The
+natives say that the spirits haunt these thickets, and hence their
+name.
+
+There are other spirits that live in the sea. Although these may be
+included under the term Lau or Čauga, when it is used in a general
+sense, yet there is a special name for the sea spirits, J̌urua in the
+North Andaman, and J̌uruwin in Aka-Bea. The J̌urua are beings of the same
+nature as the Ti-miku Lau, with the difference that they live in the
+sea, while the latter live in the forest.
+
+In the South Andaman the natives also speak of another class of spirits
+who live in the sky and are called Mo̱rua or Mo̱rowin.
+
+
+When an Andamanese man or woman dies he or she becomes a spirit, i.e.,
+a Lau or Čauga. The bones of a dead person, which are dug up after the
+flesh has decayed, are called Lau to̱i in the North Andaman, to̱i being
+the word for “bone.” The skull is Lau t’e̱r-čo, from the word e̱r-čo
+meaning “head.” Exactly similar terms are in use in Aka-Bea, the bones
+of a dead man being called Čauga ta (spirit bones).
+
+The Andamanese relate legends, to be described in the next chapter,
+which concern the doings of mythical ancestors. As all Andamanese, when
+they die, become Lau, these ancestors are of course included under that
+term. They are often distinguished from the spirits of persons recently
+dead by being denoted as Lau t’e̱r-kuro, from the word e̱r-kuro meaning
+“big,” and applied to human beings to denote importance of social
+position. Just as a man who occupies a prominent position in his tribe
+is called a “big” man (e̱r-kuro), so the ancestors of the Andamanese
+legends are called “big” spirits. The Aka-Bea use a similar term, Čauga
+tabaŋa, to distinguish the ancestors from the spirits of ordinary
+persons.
+
+The name Lau or Čauga is also applied by the Andamanese to the natives
+of India and Burma whom they see in the Penal Settlement of Port Blair.
+The Aka-J̌eru name for the Penal Settlement is Lau-t’ara-nyu, literally
+“the village of the spirits.” At the present time the term Lau or Čauga
+is not applied to Europeans, who are generally spoken of in the North
+Andaman by the Hindustani word “sahib.” Natives of the North Andaman
+told me that in former times (before 1875) they applied the term Lau to
+Europeans also not distinguishing them from other light-skinned aliens.
+The necessity for distinguishing between Asiatics, such as natives of
+India, and Europeans, has only arisen since they have come to have
+dealings with the Penal Settlement.
+
+The term Lau is not applied by the Andamanese to aliens of their own
+race. Nor would it be applied, I believe, to men of other black races
+such as the African negro. I showed the natives photographs of Semang
+from the Malay Peninsula and also of natives of Africa and New Guinea,
+and in all cases they called them J̌a̤rawa, that being the term applied
+by the Great Andaman tribes to the natives of the Little Andaman. On
+the other hand they called Polynesians Lau.
+
+For many centuries the Andaman Islanders have been accustomed to see
+light-skinned men visit their shores in ships, Europeans, natives from
+the coasts of India, Burma and Malaya, and occasionally perhaps
+Chinese. To these aliens they gave the name of Lau, apparently
+regarding them as visitors from the only other world they knew of, the
+world of spirits [69]. The clothes that these “spirits” wore they
+called Lau ot-ǰulu, the word ot-ǰulu meaning “cold.”
+
+The spirits of the forest and the sea are believed to be generally
+invisible, but there are tales of men and women who have seen them, and
+their personal appearance is sometimes described. The descriptions vary
+considerably from one informant to another. One of the commonest
+statements is that they are light or white skinned. (The Andamanese
+vocabulary does not allow of any distinction between white and a light
+gray or a light shade of colour.) One man, however, said that the
+forest spirits are black (or dark), while the sea spirits are white (or
+light). I was told several times that the spirits have long hair and
+beards (the Andamanese having, as a rule, no beard, and their hair,
+being frizzy, never growing to any length). Their arms and legs are
+said to be abnormally long, while they have only small bodies. Though
+there is no uniformity in the way in which the natives describe the
+spirits of the jungle and the sea, there is a notable tendency to
+associate them with the grotesque, the ugly, and the fearful. There is
+a common belief that the spirits, both of the jungle and of the sea,
+carry about with them lights, which several men and women claim to have
+seen.
+
+In reply to the question as to how the spirits of the forest and the
+sea originated, the natives all agree in saying that they are the
+spirits of dead men and women.
+
+The jungle spirits live in a village (or villages) in the forest. There
+is a belief that mortals wandering by themselves in the jungle have
+been captured by the spirits. Should the captive show any fear, my
+informants said, the spirits would kill him, but if he were brave they
+would take him to their village, detaining him for a time, and then
+releasing him to return to his friends. A man to whom such an adventure
+has happened will be endowed for the rest of his life with power to
+perform magic. He will pay occasional visits to his friends the
+spirits. The natives told me of one such man who died not many years
+ago. At irregular intervals he used to wander off into the jungle by
+himself and remain absent for a few hours, sometimes for a day or two.
+He returned to the village after such an absence looking strange and
+wearing ornaments of shredded palm-leaf (koro) which he claimed had
+been placed upon him by the spirits.
+
+Save for persons who have made friends with them, and have thereby
+become endowed with magical powers, all contact with the spirits of the
+jungle and the sea, or with the spirit of a dead man, is dangerous. The
+spirits are believed to be the cause of all sickness and of all deaths
+resulting from sickness. As a man wanders in the jungle or by the sea,
+the spirits come invisibly and strike him, whereupon he falls ill, and
+may die. A man or woman is more likely to be attacked by the spirits if
+he or she is alone, and it is therefore always better to be in company
+when away from the village. The spirits rarely venture into the village
+itself, though they may prowl round it, particularly at night. They are
+more dangerous at night than during the day.
+
+There are many objects that are believed to have the power of keeping
+spirits at a distance, and thus of preserving human beings from the
+danger of sickness. Amongst the most important of these are fire,
+arrows, human bones, bees’-wax, and red paint. A man or a woman leaving
+a hut to go only a few yards at night will always carry a fire-brand as
+a protection against spirits that may be prowling in the neighbourhood.
+If the night be dark a torch is carried in addition to the fire-stick.
+
+The Andamanese will never whistle at night, as they believe that the
+noise of whistling would attract spirits. On the other hand they
+believe that singing will keep the spirits away.
+
+The spirits that haunt the woods and waters of a man’s own home are
+regarded as being less dangerous to him than those of a country in
+which he is a stranger. A man of the Aka-Čari tribe who was with me in
+Rutland Island had a cold on his chest. He asked me for permission to
+return to his own country, explaining that the spirits of Rutland
+Island were, so to speak, at enmity with him, and that if he stayed
+longer he would be seriously ill, and perhaps die, while on the other
+hand, the spirits of his own country were friendly towards him, and
+once he was amongst them he would quickly recover.
+
+There is a belief that the spirits feed on the flesh of dead men and
+women. The jungle spirits eat those who are buried on land, and the
+J̌urua devour those who are drowned or otherwise lost in the sea.
+
+Mr Man’s account of the spirits of the jungle and sea contains an
+important error, which needs to be pointed out. He writes as though
+there were only one E̱rem Čauga (jungle spirit) and only one J̌uruwin
+(sea spirit), whereas each of these names is the name not of a single
+individual but of a class of supernatural beings of which there is an
+indefinite number. The following is Mr Man’s account:—E̱rem-čauga-la,
+the “evil spirit of the woods, has a numerous progeny by his wife Čana
+Badgi-lola, who remains at home with her daughters and younger
+children, while her husband and grown up sons roam about the jungles
+with a lighted torch attached to their left legs, in order that the
+former may injure any unhappy wights who may meet them unprotected, and
+in the dark; he generally makes his victims ill, or kills them by
+wounding them internally with invisible arrows, and if he is successful
+in causing death, it is supposed that they feast upon the raw flesh.”
+“As regards J̌uruwin, the evil spirit of the sea, they say that he too
+is invisible, and lives in the sea with his wife and children, who help
+him to devour the bodies of those who are drowned or buried at sea;
+fish constitute the staple of his food, but he also occasionally, by
+way of variety, attacks the aborigines he finds fishing on the shores
+or by the creeks. The weapon he uses is a spear, and persons who are
+seized with cramp or any sudden illness, on returning from, or while on
+the water are said to have been ‘speared’ by J̌uruwin. He has various
+submarine residences, and boats for travelling under the surface of the
+sea, while he carries with him a net, in which he places all the
+victims, human or piscine, he may succeed in capturing [70].”
+
+Mr Portman correctly translates the word J̌uruwin as meaning “the
+spirits of the sea” using the plural and not the singular [71].
+
+Further references to the Andamanese beliefs about the spirits will be
+found later in the chapter. It is necessary at this point to consider
+an entirely different class of beings.
+
+The Andaman Islanders personify the phenomena of nature with which they
+are acquainted, such as the sun and the moon. Before relating in detail
+what could be learnt about their beliefs on these matters, it is
+necessary to call attention to one feature of these beliefs. Different
+statements, not only of different informants, but even of the same
+informant, are often quite contradictory. For example, it is sometimes
+said that lightning is a person, and at other times it is said that
+lightning is a fire-brand thrown across the sky by a mythical being
+named Biliku. These two statements, which to all logical thinking are
+incompatible, are both given, and apparently both equally believed, by
+the same person. Many examples of such contradictions will be found in
+what follows, and it is important to point out their existence
+beforehand.
+
+About the sun and moon, the most usual statement in all the tribes is
+that the sun is the wife of the moon and the stars are their children.
+In the North Andaman the moon is Maia Dula (Aka-Čari) or Maia Čirikli
+(Aka-J̌eru), the sun is Mimi Diu and their children the stars are Čatlo,
+the larger ones, and Katań the smaller. Čatlo is the name of a species
+of finely marked beetle, and katań is the name of the common fire-fly.
+Individual stars or constellations are not recognized.
+
+Another version from the same tribes is that the moon (Dula) is female,
+and has a husband named Maia Tok, while the sun (Diu or To̱rodiu) is
+male.
+
+In the Aka-J̌eru tribe there is a belief that the moon (Maia Čirikli)
+can, when he wishes, turn himself into a pig, and come down to earth
+and feed on the things that the pigs eat. There is a legend that on one
+occasion the moon thus turned himself into a pig and came down to earth
+to eat the čuei fruit. A man named Maia Čoinyop met the moon (in the
+form of a pig) in the forest, and shot him with an arrow. Čirikli (the
+moon) took out his knife and killed the unfortunate Čoinyop, cutting
+off his head, which he left behind, and taking the body up to the sky
+where he ate it.
+
+In the A-Pučikwar tribe the most common statement is that the moon
+(Puki) is male and that the sun (Puto) is his wife. A different
+statement from the same tribe is that the moon is female and is the
+wife of a being named Tomo. Tomo seems to be to some extent identified
+with the sun. Thus one informant said that it is Tomo who sends the
+fine weather, and that it is he who sends the daylight every day. Where
+Tomo lives, in the sky, it is always day and is always fine. When the
+natives die their spirits go up to the sky and live with Tomo. We shall
+see in the next chapter that, according to some of the legends, Tomo is
+the first ancestor of the Andamanese.
+
+Yet another version is that the moon was made by Tomo out of opalescent
+stone, and it is Tomo who, in some way, regulates its passage across
+the sky.
+
+A belief about the moon which is found in all the tribes, both of the
+North and the South, is that he will be very angry if there is any
+fire, or any bright light, visible when he rises in the evening shortly
+after sundown. At such times the natives are careful to cover up their
+fires so that they only smoulder without flame. Mr Man refers to this
+custom. “From fear of displeasing Maia Ogar (Mr Moon), during the first
+few evenings of the third quarter, when he rises after sundown, they
+preserve silence, cease from any work on which they may be engaged—even
+halting should they be travelling—and almost extinguishing any light or
+fire that may be burning. This is owing to the belief that he is
+jealous of attention being distracted to other objects than himself at
+such a time, or of any other light being employed than that which he
+had been graciously pleased to afford so abundantly. By the time the
+moon has ascended a few degrees, however, they restore their fires and
+resume their former occupations, as they consider that they have
+sufficiently complied with Maia Ogar’s wishes and requirements. The
+glowing aspect of the full moon on its first appearance above the
+horizon is supposed to indicate that Maia Ogar is enraged at finding
+some persons neglecting to observe these conciliatory measures; there
+is also an idea that, if he be greatly annoyed, he will punish them by
+withdrawing or diminishing the light of his countenance [72].”
+
+As regards the waxing and waning of the moon, Mr Man says that these
+are explained by the Aka-Bea “by saying that they are occasioned by
+‘his’ applying a coating of cloud to his person by degrees, after the
+manner of their own use of ko̱iob (red paint) and tala-o̱g (white clay)
+and then gradually wiping it off [73].” In the Aka-Kede tribe the
+natives say that as Maia Čirike (Sir Moon) goes across the sky, his
+tongue hangs out of his mouth, sometimes more, sometimes less, and that
+it is the tongue that is visible, that gives the light. I did not hear
+any explanation of the waxing and waning of the moon in the tribes of
+the North Andaman. In these tribes the new moon is called Dula e-tire,
+i.e. the “baby moon,” the word e-tire denoting the young offspring of
+an animal or a human being.
+
+With regard to a lunar eclipse Mr Man writes that “in case Maia Ogar
+should be so ill-advised as permanently to withhold his light or render
+himself in other ways still more disagreeable, whenever the moon is
+eclipsed some persons at once seize their bows and twang them as
+rapidly as possible, thereby producing a rattling sound as if
+discharging a large number of arrows, while others commence at once
+sharpening their rata (arrows). Of course this hostile demonstration is
+never lost upon the moon, who does not venture to hurt those who show
+themselves ready to give him so uncomfortable a reception. Their
+immunity from harm on these occasions has given rise to some joking at
+the expense of the luminary in question, for, during the continuance of
+the eclipse, they shout in inviting tones to the hidden orb as
+follows:—Ogar, laden balak ban lebe ŋ’idoati! doati! doati! (O Moon, I
+will give you the seed of the balak! show yourself! appear! appear!)
+This is said derisively, for, although these seeds are largely consumed
+by the pigs, the aborigines do not consider them fit for food [74].”
+
+It may be noted that the invitation to the moon to eat balak seeds is
+not perhaps derisive, but may be connected with the belief that the
+moon can turn himself into a pig in order to feed on the things that
+pigs eat.
+
+There was no eclipse of the moon during my stay in the islands. The
+natives of the North Andaman told me that on such an occasion they
+frighten the moon into showing himself again by lighting the end of a
+bamboo arrow-shaft, and shooting it from a bow in the direction of the
+moon. Another custom of which they told me is to take plumes of
+shredded Tetranthera wood (čelmo or uǰ) and blow on them towards the
+moon.
+
+Mr Man states that “a solar eclipse alarms them too much to allow of
+their indulging in jests or threats, &c.: during the time it lasts they
+all remain silent and motionless, as if in momentary expectation of
+some calamity [75].”
+
+There are several different accounts in the North Andaman of the
+phenomena of day and night. The night is often personified and is
+called Mimi Bat (Lady Night). One version is that it is she who makes
+the night while Maia To̱rodiu makes the day. Diu is the name of the sun,
+and to̱ro-diu really means “the full sun” and refers to the middle part
+of the day when the sun is well up in the sky.
+
+Another Northern version is that the daylight is made by a being named
+Tauto̱bitatmo̱ who lives in the sky. He shuts up the day under a stone
+every evening and lets it out every morning. Of Tauto̱bitatmo̱ I was told
+that he is sometimes to be seen in the evening sky, but I was not able
+to discover to what natural phenomenon reference was made. I was also
+unable to discover the meaning of the name, which is a compound, tau
+being the sky.
+
+Still another version from the same tribes is that it is a being named
+Maia Čara who makes the daylight. Čara seems to be the equivalent of
+the Tomo of the A-Pučikwar and other Southern tribes. He is sometimes
+said to have been the first ancestor, and sometimes the creator, of the
+Andamanese. He lives in the sky.
+
+Another belief about the night connects it with the spirits. The Lau
+(spirits) in the sky, wrap up the night in a cloth or mat. When they
+unroll the cloth it becomes dark. The natives of the North Andaman
+formerly called cloth lau-ot-ǰulu, from a stem -ǰulu meaning “cold.”
+They were only acquainted with cloth through seeing it used by the
+aliens who visited their shores, and whom they called spirits (Lau).
+
+In the North Andaman thunder and lightning are commonly personified.
+The lightning is Ele or Ali, and the thunder is Korude or Korule. Some
+of the natives spoke of Mimi Ele (female) and others of Maia Ele
+(male). He lives in the sky, which is regarded as being made of stone
+(or rock) and is called tau-meo (the sky-stone). The lightning is due
+to his shaking his foot. One rather obscure statement was to the effect
+that Ele spends most of his time asleep or lying down and doing
+nothing. When the weather gets bad Lato (a being that I could not
+identify), comes and worries Ele and wakes him up. Then Ele gets angry
+and shakes his leg. This is the lightning.
+
+Thunder (Korude) also lives in the sky. It is said that he makes the
+thunder by means of a large round stone. One account is that he rolls
+the stone about over the sky. Another is that he makes the stone hot,
+and this produces the thunder.
+
+An entirely different explanation of thunder and lightning, which is
+found in all the tribes, is that they are made by two beings named
+Tarai and Biliku, to be described later on in this chapter.
+
+I never heard the rain (ǰiče̱r) spoken of as a person in the same way as
+thunder and lightning. One explanation of rain is that the sky-stone
+(tau-meo) gets cold, and this turns the mist (milite) into rain.
+Another is that in the sky there is a large hollow or pool, which gets
+filled with water and then overflows. Still another version is that the
+rain is made by a being (or beings) named Čaitoŋ, who seems to be
+female and lives in the sky. I could not obtain any satisfactory
+information about her.
+
+In all parts of the islands the rainbow is believed to have some
+connection with the spirits of the jungle or of the sea. One very
+common statement is that it is a bridge of cane that stretches between
+this world and the world of departed spirits. It is along the rainbow
+that the spirits travel when they visit the earth. It is necessary to
+correct a statement by Mr Portman on this matter. In connection with
+the Aka-Bea word for the rainbow, pidga-l’ar-čauga, he says “The root
+pidga (a rainbow) must not be confounded with the root pidga ‘a cane’
+or ‘rattan.’ The Andamanese have certain legends regarding the uses of
+the rainbow, and these have been hitherto understood as referring to
+‘canes.’ Pidga-l’ar-čauga means ‘the rainbow (bridge) by which the
+spirits (cross)’ [76].” Mr Portman is in error. The word pidga means
+“cane” and the whole word means “the cane of the spirits.” It is the
+whole word that is the name of the rainbow, and not the word pidga. An
+exactly similar compound name for the rainbow exists in each of the
+languages of the Great Andaman. The name of the particular species of
+large cane varies, being pidga in Aka-Bea, peta in A-Pučikwar, pir in
+Aka-J̌eru, and so on. Apart from the fact that the natives themselves
+say that the rainbow is a “cane,” Mr Portman would have us believe that
+in each of the different languages there are two exactly similar words,
+different in the different languages, one of which means “cane” and the
+other “rainbow,” while there is no connection between the words. Thus
+Aka-Bea would have pidga meaning “a kind of cane” and pidga meaning “a
+rainbow.” Aka-J̌eru would have pir meaning “cane” and pir meaning
+“rainbow.”
+
+The rainbow is generally regarded as an evil omen, being believed to be
+a precursor of sickness. One Aka-J̌eru statement is that it is made by a
+being called To̱lito̱ŋ and that when it appears somebody will be ill.
+
+The only explanation of the tides that I heard was to the effect that
+they are caused by a fish, a species of Tetrodon, called čolmo in
+Aka-J̌eru and pit in Aka-Kede, which drinks up the water and then lets
+it out again.
+
+The Andaman Islands are occasionally visited by earthquakes. An
+Aka-Kede account of how earthquakes are caused is that when a man dies
+he goes to the spirit world which is beneath the earth. The spirits
+hold a ceremony. My informant spoke of the ceremony as Kimil, which is
+the name of the initiation ceremonies. At this ceremony they have a
+dance similar to the peace-making dance described in the last chapter,
+but instead of erecting a screen such as is used in that ceremony, they
+make use of the rainbow. As they shake the rainbow in dancing this
+causes earthquakes. The ceremony which newly-arrived spirits have to
+undergo in the world after death is a po̱ro̱to kimil, i.e., the initiate
+eats po̱ro̱to (Caryota sobolifera).
+
+Among the most important of the Andamanese beliefs are those relating
+to the weather and the seasons. These are under the control of two
+beings named Biliku, Bilik or Puluga, and Tarai, Teriya, or Daria.
+There are a certain number of points in which the statements of one
+informant may differ from those of another in connection with these two
+mythical beings, but there are also a certain number of points on which
+there is absolute unanimity in all the tribes of the Great Andaman.
+
+The first belief in which there is entire unanimity is that of the
+connection of Biliku and Tarai with the two chief winds that are known
+in the Andamans. Biliku lives in the north-east and is connected with
+the north-east monsoon. Tarai lives in the south-west and is connected
+with the south-west monsoon. The connection is shown in the names of
+these winds, which are as follows:—
+
+
+ Language N.E. Wind S.W. Wind
+
+ Aka-Cari, Aka-Bo, Aka-Kora, Aka-Jeru Biliku boto Tarai boto
+ Oko-Juwoi, Aka-Kol and A-Pucikwar Bilik to Teriya
+ Akar-Bale Puluga toa Daria
+ Aka-Bea Puluga ta Deria
+
+
+In the Northern tribes the word bo̱to means “wind.” Biliku bo̱to must be
+translated “the Biliku wind,” and Tarai bo̱to is similarly “the Tarai
+wind.” It would be incorrect to translate the name Biliku bo̱to as “the
+wind of Biliku,” for this would be rendered in Aka-J̌eru by Biliku ičo
+bo̱to. In A-Pučikwar the south-west wind is called Teriya simply, the
+name of the mythical being connected with the wind being used as the
+name of the wind itself, just as is the case with the name Ele
+(lightning). On the other hand the north-east wind is called not Bilik
+but Bilik to̱. The same thing occurs also in the Akar-Bale and Aka-Bea
+languages.
+
+Mr Portman translates the Aka-Bea term Puluga ta as “God’s wind,” and
+he adds, in explanation, “Puluga ta means ‘God’s wind,’ and the reason
+for the name is not known. Some vague ideas regarding the direction of
+God’s dwelling in the sky are the probable origin of the term [77].” As
+regards the translation of the Andamanese name Puluga by the English
+“God” more will be said later. Leaving that aside, it is important to
+note that Puluga ta does not mean “Puluga’s wind.” The word for wind in
+Aka-Bea is given by Mr Portman himself as wul-ŋa, and the Akar-Bale and
+A-Pučikwar equivalents are poat-ŋa and po̱te, being forms of the same
+stem as the Northern bo̱to. The translation of “Puluga’s wind” in
+A-Pučikwar would be Bilik l’iye po̱te, but this is not a phrase that the
+natives ever use. It is not possible to translate “Puluga’s wind”
+accurately in Akar-Bale. Puluga poat-ŋa would mean “Puluga blowing” the
+-ŋa being a verbal ending. In any case Bilik to̱, and Puluga toa are not
+to be translated as meaning “Puluga’s wind.”
+
+It may be observed, in reference to Mr Portman’s statement, that the
+notions of the Andamanese as to the direction of the dwelling of Puluga
+in the sky are very far from vague. The natives all agree that Puluga
+or Biliku lives in the direction from which the north-east wind blows,
+really N.N.E. This is shown in geographical names. For example the side
+of Havelock Island that faces north-east is called Puluga-l’ar-mugu,
+meaning “the side that faces Puluga,” from ar-mugu meaning “front” or
+“face.”
+
+There are two matters, then, on which there is absolute unanimity in
+all the tribes of the Great Andaman, one being the connection of Biliku
+(or Puluga) with the north-east and of Tarai (or Deria) with the
+south-west, and the other being the connection of these two beings with
+the winds that blow from these two opposite points of the compass.
+
+The connection of these two beings with winds is shown in another way
+in the A-Pučikwar tribe, where the winds are divided into two
+divisions. One division contains only the south-west wind, which is of
+extreme regularity, and blows steadily for about five months in every
+year. This wind is called Teriya. The other division contains all the
+other winds, and they are collectively denoted by the term Bilik. They
+are distinguished by names, as J̌ila Bilik (the east Bilik, from ǰila,
+east), Ko̱ico Bilik (the west Bilik), Me̱tepur Bilik, Čo̱liatum Bilik,
+Rartear Bilik, and Ko̱ičor-to̱ŋ Bilik. Here we find the name Bilik used
+not as the name of a single person, but as a common name for a class of
+beings who are the winds personified. The same use of the term is found
+also in the Aka-Ko̱l tribe.
+
+Even in the Akar-Bale tribe something of the same kind is found. One
+Akar-Bale man said that Puluga has two brothers, J̌ila Puluga (East
+Puluga) and Koaičo Puluga (West Puluga); the one sends all the easterly
+winds and the other all the westerly ones.
+
+In the Andamans the year is divided into two nearly equal portions.
+During the season of the south-west monsoon, which lasts from May to
+September, the wind blows steadily from the south-west. This is the
+rainy season. Violent storms never or only very rarely occur during the
+season of the south-west wind. From December to March the wind blows
+mostly from the N.N.E., occasionally changing to E.N.E. or N.E. In the
+periods at the change of the monsoon (from N.E. to S.W. in April and
+May, and from S.W. to N.E. in October and November) the wind is
+variable, and may blow at times from E.S.E. or W.N.W.
+
+The south-west wind (properly speaking W.S.W.) is identified, as we
+have seen with Tarai (Deria). Although Biliku (Puluga) is specially
+connected with the north-east wind, yet all the winds other than the
+south-west are commonly supposed to be sent by Biliku. Thus we have
+seen that in the A-Pučikwar tribe the different winds are named, each
+of them (with the exception of the south-west) being a Bilik.
+
+It comes about, in this way, that the year is divided into two
+portions, one of which is specially connected with Biliku (Puluga),
+while the other is specially connected with Tarai (Deria). These two
+seasons are not quite of equal length. The Tarai season lasts only
+while the south-west monsoon is blowing, which, in an average year, is
+between four and five months. The other seven months are connected with
+Biliku and are divided into three portions, (1) the stormy season of
+October and November, (2) the cold season of December to February, and
+(3) the hot season of March and April.
+
+There are many points relating to Biliku and Tarai about which there is
+no general agreement amongst the tribes, or, in some cases, even within
+the same tribe. In the North Andaman Biliku is regarded as female, and
+is called Mimi Biliku, while Tarai is male and is called Maia Tarai.
+This is so in all the four tribes, Aka-Čari, Aka-Bo, Aka-Ko̱ra and
+Aka-J̌eru. A statement that is frequently made by the natives of these
+tribes is that Tarai and Biliku are husband and wife. While this is the
+most common statement, there are, however, other versions of the
+matter. In order to show the lack of uniformity in statements about
+Biliku and Tarai in the Northern tribes I reproduce a few extracts from
+my note-books written down exactly as they were given to me.
+
+(1) Biliku is the wife of Tarai and they have a child named Perǰido.
+(This statement was made to me a great many times in the North Andaman,
+and may be regarded as the most usual form of the belief.)
+
+(2) Biliku is the wife of Tarai. Their children are the sun and moon.
+(Heard only once.)
+
+(3) The husband of Biliku is Perǰido and her children are Totaimo, Mite
+(cicada) and Tarai.
+
+(4) Biliku is unmarried, but she has a son Perǰido, and her other
+children are To̱ro̱i, Čelene, Čoto̱t, and Čerei. These four are the names
+of birds.
+
+(5) Biliku is the wife of Tarai. Their children are To̱ro̱i, Taka, Čoto̱t,
+Poruato̱ko, Kelil, Co̱pcura, Benye, Biratkoro, Čereo, Milidu, Bobelo,
+Ko̱lo. These are all names of birds.
+
+(6) Biliku has a husband To̱ro̱i (a bird). Tarai has a wife Kelil (a
+bird).
+
+In the Aka-Kede tribe the most common statement, at any rate in the
+northern part of the tribe, is that Bilika is female, and that Tarai is
+male. One Aka-Kede man, from the southern part of the tribe said that
+Bilika was male.
+
+In the Aka-Ko̱l and A-Pučikwar tribes Bilik is generally spoken of as
+being male, and Teriya is also male. Other versions from these tribes
+are as follows:—
+
+(1) Bilik is female and Teriya is her husband. Their children are the
+winds, Čoliatum Bilik, Me̱tepur Bilik, and Wo̱ičo-l’arpat Bilik.
+
+(2) There is a male Bilik and a female Bilik, who are husband and wife.
+Their children are Ko̱ičo̱r-to̱ŋ Bilik, Ko̱ičo Bilik, Jila Bilik, Me̱tepur
+Bilik, Rartear Bilik, and Teriya. These are the winds.
+
+(3) Bilik is male. His wife is In Čaria, and their children are Kao
+(prawn) and Mo̱rua (the sky).
+
+In the Akar-Bale tribe the most usual statement is that both Puluga and
+Daria are male, and this was apparently also the common belief of the
+Aka-Bea.
+
+In the North Andaman the name Biliku is also the word for “spider,” but
+no meaning (save as the name of the mythical being) was discovered for
+the name Tarai. In the South and Middle Andaman no meaning was
+discovered, either for the name Bilik or Puluga, or for the name Teriya
+or Deria. Although this book does not deal with the Little Andaman, it
+is worth while to mention that there also the natives believe in a
+mythical person who lives in the north-east and sends the storms. This
+being is female and is named Öluga. The monitor lizard is also called
+öluga in the language of the Little Andaman. It is obvious, however,
+that the names Biliku, Puluga, Öluga are all of them different forms of
+the same word.
+
+As we have already seen, it is Biliku and Tarai who send the winds.
+Tarai sends the south-west wind, which brings the rain. Biliku sends
+the other winds which bring either fine weather, or, at times, violent
+storms. One Akar-Bale account of the matter (literally translated as
+told to me) is as follows. “Once upon a time Puluga and Daria were
+great friends, but they quarrelled. Puluga said that he was the bigger
+(more important). Daria said that he was. So now they are always
+quarrelling. Puluga sends the wind for one period. Then Daria sends his
+wind.”
+
+According to the statement of an Akar-Bale man, Puluga makes the wind
+by fanning with a very large kwar-toŋ leaf.
+
+Rain and thunder and lightning that come with the south-west wind are
+believed to be due to Tarai. Storms that come during the season
+connected with Biliku are made by Biliku and are due to her anger. When
+a big storm comes the natives say “Biliku is angry.” Lightning is
+explained as being a fire-brand thrown by Biliku across the sky when
+she is angry, and thunder is said to be her voice growling. Another
+explanation of lightning is that it is a pearl-shell, called be in the
+North Andaman, thrown by Biliku, the bright flash of the
+mother-of-pearl being seen as it crosses the sky. Still another
+statement from the North Andaman is that Biliku makes the lightning by
+striking a pearl-shell (be) against a stone.
+
+Although Biliku is generally mentioned when a native is asked about
+lightning, yet Tarai also wields the lightning and the thunder. On one
+occasion when I was talking to a native I referred to the thunder and
+lightning that were at the moment coming up from the south-west, making
+a remark to the effect that Biliku was getting angry about something,
+and was corrected by him with “No, that is Tarai.”
+
+There are a certain number of actions that are believed by the natives
+to arouse the anger of Biliku (Puluga), and thereby cause storms. There
+are three of these that are of importance.
+
+(1) Burning or melting bees’-wax.
+
+(2) Killing a cicada, or making a noise, particularly a noise of
+cutting or banging wood, during the time that the cicada is “singing”
+in the morning and evening.
+
+(3) The use of certain articles of food, of which the chief are the
+seeds of the Entada scandens, the pith of the Caryota sobolifera, two
+species of Dioscorea (yam), and certain edible roots, of which may be
+mentioned those called in Aka-J̌eru, labo, mikulu, ǰi and lo̱ito.
+
+In this matter there is an entire unanimity of belief in all the tribes
+of the Great Andaman. All the natives agree in saying that any of these
+three actions causes the anger of Biliku or Puluga and so brings bad
+weather.
+
+The natives do, as a matter of fact, melt all the bees’-wax they
+obtain, in order to purify it, and render it suitable for use in the
+various ways in which they employ it. Also they do make use of all the
+plants mentioned under (3) whenever they are in season. They give
+various explanations of this variance between their precepts and their
+actions. Some of my informants said that though these actions may bring
+rain and storms, yet they would rather submit to the bad weather than
+go without some of their most prized vegetable foods. Others again say
+that there is always a chance that Biliku may not notice that the
+plants have been disturbed, particularly if no fragments are left lying
+about the camp, and if, when taking the roots, the creepers are not
+disturbed. Another statement is that it is really only during the
+season of storms, called the Kimil season in Aka-J̌eru, that it is
+dangerous to eat these foods, that is, during the months of October and
+November. After this season has passed there is no longer any danger of
+violent storms and the foods in question may be freely eaten.
+Nevertheless the natives do eat these foods in the months of October
+and November.
+
+Mr Man records the native beliefs about bees’-wax and the plants in
+question. “There is an idea current that if during the first half of
+the rainy season they eat the Caryota sobolifera, or pluck or eat the
+seeds of the Entada pursœtha, or gather yams or other edible roots,
+another deluge would be the consequence, for Puluga is supposed to
+require these for his own consumption at that period of the year; the
+restriction, however does not extend to the fallen seeds of the Entada
+pursœtha, which may be collected and eaten at any time with impunity.
+Another of the offences visited by Puluga with storms is the burning of
+bee’s wax, the smell of which is said to be peculiarly obnoxious to
+him. Owing to this belief it is a common practice secretly to burn wax
+when a person against whom they bear ill-will is engaged in fishing,
+hunting, or the like, the object being to spoil his sport and cause him
+as much discomfort as possible; hence arises the saying amongst them,
+when suddenly overtaken by a storm, that some one must be burning wax
+[78].”
+
+It must be noted that it is not only the “burning,” but also the
+melting of bees’-wax that angers Puluga. As regards the plants
+mentioned by Mr Man none of these is available for food during the
+early part of the rainy season. At that time the yams are not formed,
+the pith of the Caryota palm is not ripe and is uneatable, and the only
+available seeds of the Entada would be those of the last season that
+had not fallen from the pods or that had lain on the ground without
+having germinated. Thus the prohibition as stated by Mr Man amounts to
+nothing. The subject will be discussed in a later chapter. It may be
+remarked, however, that it is a fact easily to be observed that the
+natives do regard the gathering of these vegetable foods during the
+later portion of the rainy season and during the first part of the cool
+season (i.e. from October to December), as being an action that may
+offend Biliku. I was myself able to observe this on several occasions,
+as when once, at the very end of the rainy season, I, not then knowing
+the belief, asked a native to cut for me one of the pods of the Entada
+as a botanical specimen, whereupon the native, after fulfilling my
+request, explained to me that there would probably be a storm next day
+as the result of our action.
+
+In all the tribes of the Great Andaman I found a belief that Biliku or
+Puluga will be angry if anybody makes a noise, particularly a noise of
+chopping, breaking or banging wood, during the time the cicada is
+singing. The cicada “sings” as the natives call it, during the short
+interval between dawn and sunrise, and during that between sunset and
+darkness. It is at these times that no noise may be made. The
+Andamanese do observe this custom, and refrain from making any noise at
+such times. For instance, if a man were singing, he would cease until
+the cicada were silent again. In all the tribes I found that this
+prohibition was connected in the minds of the natives with Puluga, the
+reason of the custom being always explained to me by saying that any
+breach of it would infallibly bring bad weather. In the North Andaman
+the cicada (mite) is commonly spoken of as the “child” of Biliku,
+Biliku ot-tire.
+
+Mr Man refers to this custom. In one place he says that the first
+parents of the Andamanese were told by Puluga “that, though they were
+to work in the wet months, they must not do so after sundown, because
+by doing so they would worry the butu, which are under Puluga’s special
+protection. Any noise, such as working (kopke) with an adze, would
+cause the butu’s head to ache, and that would be a serious matter.
+During the cold and dry seasons work may be carried on day and night,
+as the butu is then seldom seen, and cannot be disturbed [79].”
+
+The butu here mentioned is the cicada. The prohibition is not, however,
+as Mr Man says, against working, but against making a noise. Nor does
+the prohibition against noise extend to the whole night, but only to
+the short interval between sunset and darkness, for it is during this
+interval that the cicada is singing. As soon as the cicada is silent
+you may make as much noise as you please.
+
+Another reference by Mr Man to the same custom is as follows: “Between
+dawn and sunrise they will do no work, save what is noiseless, lest the
+sun should be offended and cause an eclipse, storm, or other misfortune
+to overtake them. If, therefore, they have occasion to start on a
+journey or hunting expedition at so early an hour, they proceed as
+quietly as possible, and refrain from the practice, observed at other
+times of the day, of testing the strength of their bow-strings, as the
+snapping noise caused thereby is one of those to which the sun objects
+[80].”
+
+This is really the same prohibition as that already mentioned, against
+making a noise when the cicada is singing. The interesting point, which
+will be discussed in a later chapter, is that Mr Man’s informant
+associated the prohibition not with Puluga, but with the sun. All the
+natives with whom I talked on the matter said that they would make no
+noise at such a time for fear of offending the cicada, and therefore
+Puluga or Biliku, and so bringing a storm.
+
+As regards the prohibition against killing the cicada, this seems to
+refer only to the imago. So far as I was able to observe, the natives
+do carefully avoid killing the cicada in its full-grown form. On the
+other hand the grub of the cicada is regularly killed and eaten, being
+regarded as a delicacy. It is only eaten during the months of October
+and November.
+
+In connection with the cicada, and with the weather, there is a rite
+which was described to me, but which I did not see performed. According
+to the account given of this rite, which is called “killing the
+cicada,” its purpose is to produce fine weather. It takes place in
+December, at the end of the season during which they eat the grub. When
+the time agreed upon for the performance of the ceremony arrives, all
+the members of the community are careful to be in the camp before
+sunset. As soon as the sun sets and the cicadæ begin their shrill cry,
+all the men, women and children present begin to make as much noise as
+they possibly can, by banging on the sounding-board, striking the
+ground with bamboos, beating pieces of wood together, or hammering on
+the sides of canoes, while at the same time shouting. They continue the
+noise, which entirely drowns that of the cicada, until after darkness
+has fallen. The rite may be performed, I believe, two or more times, on
+successive evenings. My informant explained the rite by saying that the
+natives have been eating the cicada, and the rite is intended to “kill”
+those that are left. After the rite the cicada disappears and is not
+seen or heard for some weeks, and there follow four months of fine
+weather with little rain.
+
+The beliefs relating to bees’-wax, to the various edible roots, and to
+the cicada, are the same in all the Great Andaman tribes, and are by
+far the most important of those connected with Biliku. In the North
+Andaman Biliku is supposed to be angry if any one kills a biliku
+(spider), a reo (a species of insect making a noise like a cicada,
+during the daytime, which I often heard, but never saw), or a čatlo (a
+species of beetle). There is also a bird, which I was not able to
+identify, called to̱ro̱i, which belongs to Biliku and may not be killed.
+
+In the A-Pučikwar tribe it is said that two species of fish, called
+unakoro and liwat belong to Bilik and may not be killed. A mollusc,
+called towa, also belongs to Bilik, and is for that reason never eaten.
+A bird called Bilik-l’ar-dala (probably the same bird that is called
+to̱ro̱i in the North Andaman) may not be killed.
+
+In the Akar-Bale tribe I was told that two kinds of wood, bukura and
+worago, must not be used for firewood, for fear of offending Puluga, to
+whom they belong. Bukura is a species of Diospyros (ebony).
+
+The only punishment that Biliku ever inflicts on human beings when she
+is angry with them for any reason, is to send violent storms. The way
+to stop a storm seems to be to frighten Biliku. One means of doing this
+is to throw the leaves of the Mimusops littoralis in the fire. These
+leaves explode with the heating of the juices and make a crackling or
+popping noise, which it is said that Biliku dislikes. I believe,
+however, that if any one were thus to burn Mimusops leaves during fine
+weather, it would be regarded as likely to cause a storm. The most
+efficacious means of stopping a storm is to do some of the things that
+Biliku most dislikes. To burn bees’-wax, or to go into the jungle and
+damage or destroy the creepers that belong to her, these are the heroic
+remedies against Biliku’s anger.
+
+The question of the Andamanese beliefs about storms is complicated by
+the fact that although all storms are said to be made by Puluga or
+Biliku, yet there is an alternative and contradictory belief that
+storms are made by the spirits of the sea (J̌urua). It is said that if a
+piece of the Anadendron paniculatum creeper were to be burnt there
+would be a great cyclone, but this appears to be associated, not with
+Biliku, but with the spirits of the sea. It will be shown later that
+there is a special connection between the J̌urua and this plant. The
+belief that a storm will arise if turtle fat be allowed to burn in the
+fire seems also to be connected with the J̌urua and not with Biliku. The
+same is probably the case with a belief that rain will come if a Ficus
+laccifera tree be damaged.
+
+Some of the methods used to stop storms are also probably connected
+with the spirits and not with Biliku. One such method is to go into the
+sea and swish arrows about in the water. One oko-ǰumu (medicine-man) of
+the North Andaman is reputed to have stopped a big cyclone by taking a
+few pieces of Anadendron paniculatum and crushing them, and then diving
+into the sea and placing the crushed creeper under a stone. An oko-ǰumu
+who died while I was in the islands is supposed to have been able to
+stop a storm by similarly placing leaves and twigs of the Ficus
+laccifera (reŋko) under a rock in the sea.
+
+To complete the account of this part of the Andamanese beliefs it is
+necessary to quote what Mr Man writes about the tribes of the South
+Andaman. Mr Man describes Puluga as a “Supreme Being” and says that
+some of the beliefs of the Andamanese relating to him “approximate
+closely to the true faith concerning the Deity.” Mr Portman, following
+Mr Man, in this as in many other matters, translates the name Puluga by
+the English word “God.” Mr Man’s statements are as follows:—
+
+“Of Puluga they say that—
+
+“I. Though His appearance is like fire, yet He is (nowadays) invisible.
+
+“II. He was never born and is immortal.
+
+“III. By him the world and all objects, animate and inanimate were
+created, excepting only the powers of evil.
+
+“IV. He is regarded as omniscient while it is day, knowing even the
+thoughts of their hearts.
+
+“V. He is angered by the commission of certain sins, while to those in
+pain or distress he is pitiful, and sometimes deigns to afford relief.
+
+“VI. He is the Judge from whom each soul receives its sentence after
+death, and to some extent, the hope of escape from the torments of
+J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu is said to affect their course of action in the present
+life.
+
+“Puluga is believed to live in a large stone house in the sky, with a
+wife whom he created for himself: she is green in appearance and has
+two names, Čana Aulola (Mother Fresh-water Shrimp), and Čana Palak
+(Mother Eel); by her he has a large family, all, except the eldest,
+being girls; these last, known as morowin (sky spirits or angels), are
+said to be black in appearance, and, with their mother, amuse
+themselves from time to time by throwing fish and prawns into the
+streams and sea for the use of the inhabitants of the world. Puluga’s
+son is called Piǰčor: he is regarded as a sort of archangel, and is
+alone permitted to live with his father, whose orders it is his duty to
+make known to the morowin.
+
+“Puluga is said to eat and drink, and, during the dry months of the
+year, to pass much of his time in sleep, as is proved by his voice
+(thunder) being rarely heard at that season; he is the source whence
+they receive all their supplies of animals, birds, and turtles; when
+they anger him he comes out of his house and blows, and growls, and
+hurls burning faggots at them—in other words, visits their offences
+with violent thunderstorms and heavy squalls; except for this purpose
+he seldom leaves home, unless it be during the rains, when he descends
+to earth to provide himself with certain kinds of food; how often this
+happens they do not know since, nowadays, he is invisible [81].”
+
+Mr Man’s comparison between the Andamanese belief in Puluga and the
+Christian belief in a God, will be discussed in a later chapter when we
+come to deal with the interpretation of the Andamanese beliefs. It is
+to be noted that Mr Man does not make any reference to Deria (Tarai),
+nor does he mention the association of Puluga with the north-east.
+
+As regards the personal appearance of Puluga, the statements of
+different informants are not in agreement. One A-Pučikwar man described
+Bilik as being very big, about the height of one of the posts of my hut
+(which was eighteen feet), white-skinned like a European, having a long
+beard, and carrying a bow of the J̌a̤rawa type.
+
+The legends connecting Puluga with the creation of the world will be
+given in the next chapter.
+
+I am not able to confirm Mr Man’s statement that Puluga is omniscient,
+and in fact there are some customs of the natives that are in
+contradiction with any such belief. When they dig up yams (which belong
+to Puluga) they take the tuber and replace the “crown” with the
+attached stem in the ground, and explain this by saying that if they do
+so Puluga will not notice that the yam has been taken. Whenever they do
+any of the things that displease Puluga, they seem to believe that
+there is a possibility that Puluga may not discover what has been done.
+It may be noted that there is no means of distinguishing in Andamanese
+between “all” and “a great deal.” Thus a statement the Puluga knows
+“everything” may be equally well translated “Puluga knows a great
+deal.” Between these two statements there is no difference for the
+Andamanese, but there is a great difference for us, and for this reason
+the use of the word “omniscient” is misleading.
+
+Mr Man says that Puluga “is angered by the commission of certain sins.”
+In this connection it is necessary to refer to another passage in Mr
+Man’s work. “That they are not entirely devoid of moral consciousness
+may, I think, in some measure, be demonstrated by the fact of their
+possessing a word, yub-da, signifying sin or wrong-doing, which is used
+in connection with falsehood, theft, grave assault, murder, adultery,
+and—burning wax (!), which deeds are believed to anger Puluga-la, the
+Creator [82].” Although I made very careful and repeated enquiries, I
+was unable to meet with a single native who believed that such actions
+as the murder of one man by another, or adultery, aroused the anger of
+Puluga. The only actions at which Puluga is angry are those purely
+ritual offences, such as burning or melting wax, killing a cicada,
+digging up yams, etc., which have already been mentioned.
+
+The Andamanese beliefs connected with the life after death will be
+described later in the present chapter.
+
+As regards the “stone house” in which Puluga is said to live, this
+really means, I believe, a cave. In the North Andaman Biliku is
+frequently spoken of as living in a cave (e̱ra-poŋ). Also, it may be
+recalled, the sky is generally regarded as consisting of stone or rock,
+and it is in the sky the Puluga lives.
+
+The son of Puluga, mentioned by Mr Man, Piǰčor, is a being about whom I
+was able to learn very little. In the North Andaman the same being is
+named Perǰido, and is said to be the son of Biliku. The Morowin, whom
+Mr Man describes as the daughters of Puluga, are sky spirits. The most
+usual belief in the South Andaman is that there are both male and
+female Morowin. They are beings of somewhat the same nature as the
+jungle spirits and the sea spirits. An Akar-Bale informant told me,
+“The Morua are sky spirits. They eat only pork and nothing else. They
+are angry if pork is roasted, and make the people ill. They used to
+live in the big baǰa (Sterculia) trees, but now they live in the sky.”
+
+In this connection it may be mentioned that there is a belief
+throughout the Andamans that it is dangerous to roast pork. In the
+North Andaman the natives commonly say that the spirits of the jungle
+are angry if pork be roasted, and may be attracted to the spot and
+cause the natives to be ill. An Akar-Bale belief, connecting the danger
+with the spirits of the sky has just been mentioned. Mr Man’s version
+of the matter is as follows:— “... there is a company of evil spirits
+who are called čol, and who are much dreaded. They are believed to be
+descendants of Maia Čol who lived in antediluvian times. They generally
+punish those who offend them by baking or roasting pig’s flesh, the
+smell of which is particularly obnoxious to them, as it is also to
+Puluga, who therefore, often assists them in discovering the
+delinquent; the same risk does not attend boiling pork, which the
+olfactory nerves of the fastidious čol are not keen enough to detect.
+While the Andamanese say that they are liable to be struck by
+E̱rem-čauga-la or J̌uruwin at any time or in any place, the čol strike
+those only who offend them, and that during the day while they are
+stationary, this being necessitated by the distance from the earth of
+their abode, whence they hurl their darts; an invisible spear is the
+weapon they always use, and this is thrown with unerring aim at the
+head of their victims, and is invariably fatal. As these demons are
+considered especially dangerous on the hottest days, they are
+apparently held accountable for the deaths from sunstroke which happen
+from time to time [83].”
+
+It may be remarked that Čol is the name of a species of bird (probably
+the racket-tailed drongo), which is named from its call—čol, čol, čol.
+I did not hear the name used to denote what Mr Man calls demons, except
+in so far as the birds themselves are supposed to have supernatural
+powers. There is, perhaps, some sort of connection between the čol (the
+birds, that is) and the sky-spirits, Morowin or Morua, but I was not
+able to satisfy myself on the point. The connection of them both with
+Puluga is still more obscure.
+
+Another belief in connection with pigs is that any person who cuts up a
+pig badly is liable to be punished. Mr Man states, on this subject,
+“Puluga never himself puts any one to death, but he objects so strongly
+to seeing a pig badly quartered and carved that he invariably points
+out those who offend him in this respect to a class of malevolent
+spirits called Čol, one of whom forthwith despatches the unfortunate
+individual [84].”
+
+I was not able to find any evidence that Puluga is believed to be angry
+if a pig is badly quartered. From the natives with whom I talked on the
+subject I received two different statements. One was to the effect that
+if a pig is badly cut up the meat will be bad and anyone who eats it
+will be ill. The other was that if a pig is badly cut up the spirits of
+the jungle will be angry and will punish the offender. In neither case
+was there any reference to Puluga or Biliku.
+
+In general it may be said that the natives believe that the only
+punishment that Puluga or Biliku ever sends against those who offend
+him or her in any way is bad weather, and I did not myself meet with
+any exception to this rule.
+
+One other observation by Mr Man may be mentioned. He says, “When they
+see a dark cloud approaching at a time when rain would prove very
+inconvenient, as when hunting, travelling, etc., they advise Puluga to
+divert its course by shouting ‘Wara-J̌obo kopke, kopke, kopke’
+(Wara-J̌obo will bite, bite, bite (you)). If in spite of this a shower
+falls they imagine that Puluga is undeterred by their warning [85].”
+
+It is clear from the above discussion of the matter that there is not
+any complete agreement in the beliefs concerning Puluga (Biliku) even
+in any one tribe of the Andamans. There are many different statements
+about this being which cannot be made consistent with one another
+without doing violence to the evidence. At the same time, amid all the
+differences and inconsistencies there are a certain number of points
+about which there is a general agreement throughout the whole of the
+tribes of the Great Andaman. One of these is the connection of Puluga
+and Daria with the weather, with the two chief winds, and with the
+points of the compass from which these winds blow. The other is the
+belief that certain actions, such as melting bees’-wax, digging up
+yams, etc., are disliked by Puluga, and are punished by him (or her)
+with stormy weather. On these matters there is entire agreement amongst
+the natives of all the tribes, and they are to the natives themselves
+by far the most important part of the beliefs concerning Puluga.
+
+We have seen that the Andamanese believe in two different kinds of what
+may be called, for want of a better term, supernatural beings. In the
+first place there are the spirits, the Lau or Čauga, and the J̌urua,
+inhabiting the forest and the sea respectively. These are all
+associated by the natives with ghosts, i.e. with the spirits of dead
+men and women. In the second place there are other beings connected
+with the sun and moon, lightning and thunder and the monsoons (Biliku
+and Tarai). These are all associated with the phenomena of nature.
+There are many points of contact between these two classes of beings.
+Thus there are two alternative explanations of bad weather, one that it
+is due to the spirits (particularly the spirits of the sea), the other
+that it is due to the anger of Biliku. This is a point that will be
+referred to again in a later chapter.
+
+It is possible that there are beliefs in other supernatural beings who
+are neither spirits of the dead nor connected with natural phenomena.
+The only being of such a nature that I was able to discover anything
+about is one called Nila or Ńila. This is the name of an evil being who
+is supposed to live in hollow Pterocarpus trees. When he smells human
+beings near his tree he comes out and kills them with his knife. I
+found this belief in the A-Pučikwar tribe, but was not able to find any
+trace of a similar belief in the North Andaman, though of course I
+cannot say that it does not exist there. Mr Man mentions this same
+being. “This spirit Nila is supposed to live in ant-hills, and to have
+neither wife nor child; he is not regarded as such a malevolent
+personage as Erem-čauga-la, and, though he is always armed with a
+knife, he rarely injures human beings with it, or when he does so, it
+is not in order to feed upon their bodies, for he is said to eat earth
+only [86].” Mr Man adds, in a footnote that “cases have been cited of
+persons who have been found stabbed, whose deaths have been attributed
+to Nila: the possibility of the individuals in question having been
+murdered is scouted.”
+
+The version given by Mr Man is not quite in agreement with the
+information given to me, but I was unfortunately not able to learn
+anything more about the nature of Nila.
+
+As throwing some additional light on the way in which the Andamanese
+think of the supernatural beings that have been mentioned above, I add
+here a brief description of a sort of dramatic or pantomimic dance that
+I witnessed in the North Andaman. Many savage tribes in different parts
+of the world are in the habit of performing dances or pantomimes in
+which the performer represents a supernatural being. In the Andamans
+there are no regular performances of this kind. The solitary one that I
+witnessed was entirely exceptional.
+
+The performer was a man named Kobo. This man, according to the
+statements of the natives, had, at one time of his life, died and come
+back to life again. Owing to this fact he was endowed with special
+magical powers, and had some reputation as a magician or medicine-man
+(oko-ǰumu). During the time that he was dead (probably a few hours of
+unconsciousness), he is supposed to have visited the world of spirits,
+and while there he saw many things and learnt much about the spirits.
+Among other things he witnessed a dance in which the spirits and other
+supernatural beings took part. All these things he was able to remember
+when he returned to life.
+
+The performance was given one afternoon on the ordinary dancing ground
+of the village. The performer sat on his haunches in a hut at one end
+of the dancing ground. Thrust into the back of his belt he wore a bunch
+of leaves sticking out somewhat after the manner of a cock’s tail, but
+he had no other ornament. The spectators, consisting of men, women and
+children, were seated round the edge of the dancing ground, which had
+been swept clean. On one side sat a few women who acted as chorus.
+There was no sounding-board.
+
+The performer began to sing a song, composed on the model of the songs
+of the South Andaman (with a short refrain) which has now for some
+years been adopted by the Northern tribes in preference to their own.
+As he finished the song the women of the chorus took up the refrain,
+repeating it over and over again, and marking time by clapping their
+hands on their thighs. The performer came out of his hut and performed
+a dance. At a signal from him the chorus ceased and he returned to his
+hut. In this way he sang several songs, repeating each one several
+times, and performed a number of short dances. In nearly every case the
+step of the dance was some simple modification of the step in common
+use at an ordinary dance. Thus in one dance he danced very violently
+and pretended to hurt his leg through the violence of his dancing,
+making angry signs to the chorus to stop their clapping, of which, of
+course, they took no notice. In another dance he stopped at short
+intervals and violently scratched his sides and then doubled himself up
+with laughter. In yet another, he danced with the step of the women’s
+dance, covering his face with his hands and pretending to be very
+bashful. In still another he stood on tiptoe on the right foot and
+stamped with his left foot in time to the chorus of women. In some of
+the dances he walked round the open space within the circle of
+spectators, sometimes in a crouching attitude, and at other times in
+other attitudes. All these dances aroused great amusement amongst the
+spectators. It was unfortunately impossible for me to understand them
+all or to obtain an adequate explanation of them either at the time or
+later.
+
+Of the songs that were sung one was “The tide has gone down over the
+reef. I walk round the world. There is great wind and rain.”
+
+Some of these dances I was able to understand even without explanation.
+One of them represented Biliku. The performer held in his right hand a
+shell, and as he danced grotesquely round the open space he looked
+fiercely at the spectators and threatened to throw the shell at them.
+Many of the women and children could not prevent themselves from
+starting backwards when he thus threatened them, but their fears were
+immediately dispelled in laughter. The shell was not a pearl-shell (be)
+but a Cyrena shell (bun), but I believe that this was because there was
+no pearl-shell available. The representation of Biliku was thus reduced
+to a single gesture, that of threatening the natives with her
+pearl-shell (lightning).
+
+Another dance represented the jungle spirits (Bido-teč Lau). In this he
+first hid himself behind a screen of bido leaves (Calamus tigrinus)
+that had been prepared, singing a song. The leaves represented a clump
+of the Calamus palm such as is supposed to be the favourite haunt of
+the jungle spirits. After having sung for some time behind his screen
+of leaves, he came out with a bow and arrow in his hand, and as he
+danced in front of the spectators he pretended to shoot at them.
+
+In another dance he represented Ele, the lightning. He sat on a stone
+that had been placed in the middle of the open space, swinging his arms
+to the time of the chorus, and every now and then shaking his leg.
+
+This observation is an important one in several ways. Although I asked
+the man to repeat it, in order that I might make fuller notes and
+obtain explanations of many obscure points, and although he grudgingly
+said that he would, yet he did not do so. He was, moreover, very
+reserved over the matter, and not very willing to talk about his own
+performance.
+
+I believe that the performance was an entirely exceptional affair. I
+never at any other time either saw or heard of one man or even several
+men, giving a dance for the amusement of others. I think that the whole
+thing was entirely the invention of the performer. He had given the
+same performance, or one very similar, at least once before the
+occasion on which I saw it.
+
+We may now turn to the Andamanese beliefs relating to the soul and the
+life after death.
+
+The vital principle is at different times identified by the Andamanese
+with the pulse, the breath, with the blood and with the fat,
+particularly the kidney-fat. Thus the body of a slain enemy is burnt so
+that the blood and fat may be consumed in smoke and ascend to the sky
+where they will no longer be a danger to those who have slain him.
+
+The nearest approach to our notion of a soul that the natives possess
+is their belief concerning the double or reflection seen in a mirror.
+In the Northern tribes the word ot-ǰumulo means “reflection,” and also
+“shadow,” and is also nowadays applied to a photograph. The word
+ot-ǰumu, in the same languages, means “a dream” or “to dream.” We may
+perhaps translate the word ot-ǰumulo as meaning “soul.” In the Aka-Bea
+language ot-yolo is “reflection,” while there is a different word,
+ot-diya or ot-lere, for “shadow,” and neither of the words has any
+connection with the word “dream” which is taraba. Mr Man translates the
+word ot-yolo as “soul.”
+
+The fact that the words for dream and reflection, double or shadow are
+from the same root in the Northern languages is of interest. Dreams are
+sometimes explained by saying that the sleeper’s double (ot-ǰumulo) has
+left his body and is wandering elsewhere. Dreams are regarded as being
+veridical, or at any rate, as having importance. One man told me how,
+in a dream the night before, his ot-ǰumulo had travelled from where we
+were to his own country and had there seen the death of the baby of a
+woman of his own tribe. He was fully convinced that the baby must
+really have died.
+
+An Andamanese will never, or only with the very greatest reluctance,
+awaken another from sleep. One explanation of this that was given to me
+was that the ot-ǰumulo or double of the sleeper may be wandering far
+from his body, and to waken him suddenly might cause him to be ill.
+
+The principle on which dreams are interpreted is a very simple one. All
+unpleasant dreams are bad, all pleasant ones are good. The natives
+believe that sickness is often caused by dreams. A man in the early
+stages of an attack of fever, for instance, may have a bad dream. When
+the fever develops he explains it as due to the dream. If a man has a
+painful dream he will often not venture out of the camp the following
+day, but will stay at home until the effect has worn off. The natives
+believe that they can communicate in dreams with the spirits, but the
+power to do this regularly is the privilege of certain special
+individuals, known as oko-ǰumu (dreamers). However, an ordinary
+individual may occasionally have dreams of this kind.
+
+I found that any attempt to study the dreams of such a people as the
+Andamanese is made very difficult by the fact that it is never possible
+to tell how far the original dream has been arranged and altered by the
+waking imagination. So far as my observations went the majority of
+dreams are either visual or motor, or both. Further reference to dreams
+will be made later in connection with magic.
+
+When a man or woman dies the double (or as some of the natives explain
+it, the breath) leaves the body and becomes a spirit (lau or čauga). By
+death a man ceases to exist as a man, and begins a new existence as a
+spirit.
+
+Whenever I asked the natives whence came the spirits of the jungle and
+the sea I received the answer that they are the spirits of dead men and
+women. On the other hand, when I put in another form what might seem to
+be the same question, and asked what became of a man’s spirit after his
+death, I received many different and inconsistent answers. As it would
+take too much space to transcribe every answer that I received to this
+question, a number of typical ones are selected. Any attempt to
+reconcile the statements of different men or of the same men on
+different occasions can only produce a false impression of the real
+condition of the native beliefs, and therefore the statements are kept
+separate, and each one is given as it was taken down.
+
+The first is from the Northern tribes. Exactly similar statements were
+made to me by men of several tribes. “When a man dies he becomes a Lau
+and wanders about the jungle. At first he keeps near the grave or the
+place where he died, but after a while he finds that is no good, and so
+he goes to live with the other spirits. If he is drowned he becomes a
+J̌urua.” A second account, varying from the above in only one
+particular, is also from one of the Northern tribes (Aka-Čari). “When a
+man dies he becomes a Lau or a J̌urua and lives with the other spirits.
+If he be a jungle-dweller he becomes a Lau and lives in the jungle. If
+he be a coast-dweller he becomes a J̌urua and lives in the sea. All the
+Aka-Čari become J̌urua when they die. The spirit stays in his own
+country. The spirits of a man’s own country (whether Lau or J̌urua) are
+friendly to him, but those of another country are dangerous and will
+make him ill.”
+
+An entirely different statement frequently made to me by men of the
+Northern tribes is that when a man dies the spirit (Lau) either
+immediately, or after the lapse of some time, goes to another world
+that lies under this one and is called Maramiku. This world of spirits
+is said to be just like the actual world, with forest and sea, and all
+the familiar animal and vegetable species. The inhabitants spend their
+time just as the Andamanese do on earth, hunting, fishing and dancing.
+
+Still another statement that is commonly made in the North is that the
+spirits of the dead go to live in the sky. Two such statements are as
+follows: “When a man dies his ot-ǰumulo (double) goes up to the sky and
+becomes a Lau (spirit).” “A man’s spirit wanders in the jungle till the
+flesh has rotted from the bones, and then goes away to the sky.” Other
+statements were very similar to these two.
+
+Turning now to the Southern tribes, one informant of the A-Pučikwar
+tribe gave me the following account: “When a man or woman dies the
+spirit goes away to the east or north-east and goes over the edge of
+the world, remaining in a place called Lau-l’uŋ-ciŋ (Spirit’s House)
+where there is a large hut in a jungle similar to that on earth. There
+they live just as men do on earth, hunting and fishing, and so on.
+Beyond the home of the spirits is Puta-ko̱iča, the home of the sun and
+moon. The rainbow is the path by which the spirits come to visit their
+friends on earth, which they do in dreams. The rainbow is made of canes
+(? a cane).”
+
+Another version from the same tribe was to the effect that after death
+the spirits of the dead go to live in the sky with a mythical being
+named Tomo. This Tomo, according to some of the legends, was the first
+ancestor of the Andamanese. By one of my best informants he was
+identified to some extent with the sun, and consequently with light and
+with fine weather. This man stated that in the world of the spirits it
+is never night as Tomo is always there. The spirits always have plenty
+of pork and turtle, and spend their time dancing and enjoying
+themselves.
+
+One old man of the A-Pučikwar tribe, who had some reputation as a
+medicine-man, said that the spirits of medicine-men lived apart from
+the spirits of ordinary men and women, and are called not Lau but
+Bilik. He told me how he had been visited in a dream by Bo̱ičo Bilik;
+that is by the spirit of one Bo̱ičo who had, when he lived, been a great
+medicine-man, and who, now that he was dead, had become a Bilik, as
+distinguished from an ordinary Lau. It is the Bilik who control the
+weather. They can also cause or cure sickness in living men. The Bo̱ičo
+mentioned above was alive when my informant was a young man.
+
+In the Akar-Bale tribe one man told me that the breath (ig-peti) of a
+dying person goes up to the sky and becomes a spirit. Another belief of
+the same tribe is that the spirits of the dead go to J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu,
+which is under the earth. From the same tribe comes the following
+account: “When a man or woman dies, the spirit first of all goes
+southward to the country of the Aka-Bea, and then returns to
+Gudna-l’ar-boŋ in Kuaičo-bur (in the Akar-Bale country). It then goes
+to J̌ila-buaro in J̌ila (East Island) and from there to Kere-tuaur. The
+inhabitants of the last-named place are warned of the approach of the
+spirit by the cries of the birds tao (Eudynamis honorata, Indian koel
+or brain-fever bird) and bil (Australian goggle-eyed plover). At one
+time the people of Luŋ-tauar used to catch the spirits in big nets made
+for the purpose. They were taught to do this by a wise woman named In
+Golat. The spirits try to run away, but they get caught at the place
+called Guamo-leber. The people then throw them into the sea, and they
+(the spirits) then go to Čauga-l’uŋ-jiŋa (Spirit’s Home) and remain
+there.” The above is given exactly as it was translated to me by an
+Akar-Bale man who knew English and who acted as my interpreter on the
+occasion. There is much in it that I do not understand and that my
+questions failed to elucidate. It is given as an example of the nature
+of some of the more obscure of the Andamanese beliefs. To understand
+fully many of their statements on this and other matters would need a
+more complete knowledge of the language than I possessed, and a longer
+time than I was able to give.
+
+The various examples given above are sufficient to show the general
+nature of the Andamanese beliefs. In every tribe there are alternative
+and inconsistent beliefs as to the place where spirits go, which by
+different accounts is in the sky, beneath the earth, out to the east
+where the sun and moon take their rise, or in the jungle and sea of
+their own country. One thing is clear, that the Andamanese ideas on the
+subject are floating and lacking in precision. There is no fixity or
+unanimity of belief amongst them.
+
+To these various accounts from the natives themselves, must be added
+the description of the beliefs of the Aka-Bea tribe as recorded by Mr
+Man. This may best be given in the writer’s own words. “The world,
+exclusive of the sea, is declared to be flat and to rest on an immense
+palm-tree (Caryota sobolifera) called barata, which stands in the midst
+of a jungle comprising the whole area under the earth. This jungle,
+čaitan (Hades) is a gloomy place, for, though visited in turn by the
+sun and moon, it can, in consequence of its situation, be only
+partially lighted: it is hither the spirits (čauga) of the departed are
+sent by Puluga to await the Resurrection.
+
+“No change takes place in čaitan in respect to growth or age; all
+remain as they were at the time of their departure from the earth, and
+the adults are represented as engaged in hunting, after a manner
+peculiar to disembodied spirits. In order to furnish them with sport
+the spirits of animals and birds are also sent to čaitan, but as there
+is no sea there, the čauga of fish and turtle remain in their native
+element and are preyed upon by ǰuruwin. The spirits (čauga) and souls
+(ot-yolo) of all children who die before they cease to be entirely
+dependent on their parents (i.e. under six years of age) go to čaitan,
+and are placed under a rau tree (Ficus laccifera) on the fruit of which
+they subsist. As none can quit čaitan who have once entered, they
+support their stories regarding it by a tradition that in ages long
+past an oko-paiad was favoured in a dream with a vision of the regions
+and of the pursuits of the disembodied spirits.
+
+“Between the earth and the eastern sky there stretches an invisible
+cane bridge (pidga-l’ar-čauga) which steadies the former and connects
+it with ǰereg (paradise); over this bridge the souls (ot-yolo) of the
+departed pass into paradise, or to ǰereg-l’ar-mugu, which is situated
+below it: this latter place might be described as purgatory, for it is
+a place of punishment for those who have been guilty of heinous sins,
+such as murder. Like Dante, they depict it as very cold, and therefore
+a most undesirable region for mortals to inhabit. From all this it will
+be gathered that these despised savages believe in a future state, in
+the resurrection, and in the threefold constitution of man.
+
+“In serious illness the sufferer’s spirit (čauga) is said to be
+hovering between this world and Hades, but does not remain permanently
+in the latter place until some time after death, during which interval
+it haunts the abode of the deceased and the spot where the remains have
+been deposited. In dreams it is the soul which, having taken its
+departure through the nostrils, sees or is engaged in the manner
+represented to the sleeper.
+
+“The Andamanese do not regard their shadows but their reflections (in
+any mirror) as their souls. The colour of the soul is said to be red,
+and that of the spirit black, and, though invisible to human eyes, they
+partake of the form of the person to whom they belong. Evil emanates
+from the soul, and all good from the spirit; at the resurrection they
+will be re-united and live permanently on the new earth, for the souls
+of the wicked will then have been reformed by the punishments inflicted
+on them during their residence in ǰereg-l’ar-mugu.
+
+“The future life will be but a repetition of the present, but all will
+then remain in the prime of life, sickness and death will be unknown,
+and there will be no more marrying or giving in marriage. The animals,
+birds, and fish will also re-appear in the new world in their present
+form.
+
+“This blissful state will be inaugurated by a great earthquake, which,
+occurring by Puluga’s command, will break the pidga-l’ar-čauga and
+cause the earth to turn over: all alive at the time will perish,
+exchanging places with their deceased ancestors [87].”
+
+This account given by Mr Man, must, I think, be received with great
+caution. To one who has talked to the Andamanese on these subjects it
+seems probable that Mr Man has here combined into a single consistent
+version, a number of independent statements, which, as the natives
+believe them, are not parts of an organised doctrine, but are separate
+from and often inconsistent with each other. Added to this there is the
+fact that Mr Man has so written down the native beliefs as to bring out
+the greatest possible degree of resemblance to the Christian mythology.
+This is clear from his use of the words Hades, paradise, etc. Allowance
+must therefore be made for the fact that Mr Man evidently found some
+pleasure in tracing analogies between the mythology of the Andamanese
+and the Christian doctrines.
+
+Owing to the importance attaching to all Mr Man’s statements it is
+necessary to examine critically the account transcribed above. We may
+begin with what is said of the doctrine of the threefold nature of man.
+By this it would seem to be meant that man is regarded as composed of
+body, soul and spirit. It is quite certain that the Andamanese mean
+different things by the words ot-yolo (reflection) here translated
+“soul,” and čauga translated “spirit.” The difference is this, that a
+man, while he is still alive, has a “double” or “soul” if the latter
+word be preferred, while when he is dead he becomes a spirit. Thus the
+spirit is not a part of a man while he is alive. The word čauga (or
+lau) is simply the name of a particular class of beings which includes
+all dead men and women. The bones of a man become “spirit-bones”
+(čauga-ta) when he dies, just as he becomes a spirit. To compare the
+Andamanese belief with the Christian doctrine that each man possesses,
+while he is alive, both a soul and a spirit, these being different
+things, is therefore misleading. For this reason it is perhaps
+unfortunate to translate the Andamanese čauga as meaning spirit, but
+there does not seem to be any other convenient English word.
+
+Mr Man’s account would seem to imply that the native belief is that at
+death the soul (reflection) of a man goes to one place (J̌ereg or
+J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu) while his spirit goes elsewhere (to Čaitan). In the
+case of children however, Mr Man makes a difference, for both the souls
+and spirits of children go to Čaitan. Mr Man compares Čaitan to Hades,
+J̌ereg to paradise and J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu to purgatory.
+
+I do not think that the Andamanese have any such complicated doctrine
+as this. It seems to me almost certain that Mr Man has received from
+the natives several different statements, similar to some of those
+given earlier, and that he has combined and reconciled them as well as
+he could. Some of his informants, apparently, described the world after
+death as being beneath the earth, and gave the name of it as Čaitan
+[88]. Other informants seem to have spoken of [vJ]ereg or
+J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu. I think it improbable that any one native should have
+stated, as Mr Man’s account would seem to imply, that the soul of a
+dead man goes to one place, while the man himself (now a spirit) goes
+somewhere else. Mr Man’s description of Čaitan corresponds almost
+exactly to the descriptions given to me by the Akar-Bale and A-Pučikwar
+of J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu, and to the descriptions of Maramiku given by the
+Northern tribes. If Čaitan be really an Aka-Bea word, it would seem to
+be only another name for J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu.
+
+One of the most important points in Mr Man’s statement is that while
+the souls of good men go to paradise as he puts it, the souls of bad
+men are condemned to torture in purgatory [89]. In my own enquiries I
+did not come across any definite belief of this nature, but I am not
+prepared to deny its existence. All that I can say is that I did not
+find any evidence whatever that good men and bad men (in any meanings
+in which those words could be used by the natives) receive different
+treatment after death. In talking to men of the Akar-Bale and
+A-Pučikwar tribes I did not hear of J̌ereg as a distinct place from
+J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu. The latter name is of course a compound, from ar-mugu
+= front, and might mean either “the place fronting or facing J̌ereg” or
+“the place J̌ereg, fronting us.”
+
+Mr Man states that the souls and spirits of young children go to Čaitan
+where they subsist on the fruit of a rau tree (Ficus laccifera). In the
+North Andaman I found a belief that the souls of children, before they
+are born, live in the Ficus trees, but these are the real trees on
+earth that are in question, and not a mythical tree in the next world.
+It is commonly believed that if a baby dies the soul enters the mother
+again and is born a second time. It is possible that what Mr Man
+relates as to the souls of children after death living in a Ficus tree
+in Čaitan may really refer to real fig trees on earth.
+
+As regards the resurrection spoken of by Mr Man, I was also so
+unfortunate as to obtain no information. As will be shown in a later
+chapter, there are several myths of the world coming to an end and
+starting afresh, and these myths are generally associated with Puluga
+or Biliku. All the versions that I heard, however, referred to the past
+and not to the future [90].
+
+The Andamanese speak of unconsciousness as “death,” and regard a person
+who has been unconscious for some time as having been dead and returned
+to life again. I was once told that an old man in the village was
+“dead” and found him in a state of coma from which he recovered and
+lived for several days. There are stories of persons having returned to
+life even after they have been buried. One such tale was told me in the
+North Andaman. A man died and was buried. As his friends and relatives,
+after packing up their belongings, were leaving the camp in their
+canoes, the man’s voice was heard calling. His wife and mother turned
+back and met him and took him in their canoe. He lived for some time
+after this and then he died and was buried again. Again the same thing
+happened, the dead man re-appearing just as they were setting off in
+their canoes from the camp that they were deserting on account of his
+death. Finally the man died a third time. When he was buried this time
+the men dug a very deep hole some distance from the camp, and then
+hurried back to the camp and hastily gathered up their belongings and
+left it. Nothing more was seen of the dead man, but when, after the
+lapse of some months, they went to dig up the bones, they found the mat
+and leaves and rope in which the corpse had been bound, but there were
+no bones.
+
+Amongst the coast-dwellers of the North Andaman I found a belief that
+the soul of a dying man goes out with the ebbing tide.
+
+There are, amongst the Andamanese, certain individuals who are
+distinguished from their fellows by the supposed possession of
+supernatural powers. These specially favoured persons correspond, to
+some degree, with the medicine-men, magicians or shamans of other
+primitive societies. The name for these medicine-men in the North
+Andaman is oko-ǰumu, meaning literally “dreamer” or “one who speaks
+from dreams” from a stem -ǰumu the primary meaning of which refers to
+the phenomena of dreams. In Aka-Bea the corresponding term is
+oko-paiad, and according to Mr Man, this term also means “dreamer.” Mr
+Portman, however, gives taraba as the Aka-Bea word for “dream” or “to
+dream.”
+
+According to a statement by Mr Man, only men can possess the powers
+that entitle them to be regarded as oko-paiad [91]. The natives whom I
+questioned told me that a woman may possess the same powers, though it
+is more usual for men to become famous in this way than women. There is
+no very clear dividing line between those who are oko-ǰumu or oko-paiad
+and those who are not; one person may possess the powers in only a
+slight degree, so as scarcely to differentiate him from others, while
+another may be much more highly gifted.
+
+At the present time it is no longer possible to obtain full and
+satisfactory information on this subject. Most of the old oko-ǰumu and
+oko-paiad are now dead. Amongst the younger men there are a few who
+pretend to the position, but the recent intercourse with foreigners has
+produced a degree of scepticism in such matters that makes it difficult
+or nearly impossible to obtain any reliable information as to the
+former beliefs from any but the very old men. To this difficulty must
+be added that in talking to some of the very few old men who could have
+given more valuable information I had to make use of an interpreter,
+and though they might have been willing to confide to me some of the
+secrets of their profession they would not do so before a younger man
+of their own race.
+
+The powers of a dreamer, supernatural as they are, can only be acquired
+by supernatural means, through contact in one way or another with the
+spirits (i.e. the Lau or Čauga). One way of coming into contact with
+the spirits is by death. If a man should, as the natives put it, die
+and then come back to life again, he is, by that adventure, endowed
+with the power that makes a medicine-man. One man of the Aka-Ko̱ra tribe
+was pointed out to me as having obtained his powers in this way. It
+would seem that during a serious illness he was unconscious for some
+twelve hours or so, and his friends thought that he was dead. A
+medicine-man whom I met with in the A-Pučikwar tribe was said to have
+died and come to life again three times. Another man, whom I did not
+meet, was described to me as a great oko-ǰumu, and from the description
+given it seemed to me that he was subject to epileptic fits. As against
+this, however, Mr Man states that “epilepsy is a recognised form of
+malady, but the fits are not regarded in a superstitious light [92].”
+
+Another way in which a man can acquire magical powers is by direct
+communication with the spirits. A man who died a few years ago was
+believed by the natives to have once met with some spirits in the
+jungle, and to have acquired in this way the powers of an oko-ǰumu. He
+used to go off into the jungle by himself at intervals and hold
+communication with the spirits with whom he had made friends. From such
+a visit he had returned with his head decorated with shredded palm-leaf
+fibre (ko̱ro) which had, so he said, been placed on him by the spirits.
+This man had a reputation as a powerful oko-ǰumu.
+
+In a less degree the powers of an oko-ǰumu may be obtained through
+dreams. It is believed that certain men have the power of communicating
+with the spirits in dreams, and such men are oko-ǰumu. If a man or boy
+experiences dreams that are in any way extraordinary, particularly if,
+in his dreams he sees spirits, either the spirits of dead persons known
+to him when alive, or spirits of the forest or the sea, he may acquire
+in time the reputation of a medicine-man.
+
+A man may claim some degree of magical power, and yet his claims may
+not be recognized by others. Each oko-ǰumu has to make his own
+reputation, and to sustain it when made. This he can only do by
+demonstrating his power to others. Once this reputation is his, he not
+only receives the respect of others but also makes a considerable
+personal profit. Every one is anxious to be on good terms with one who
+is believed to have extraordinary powers. Hence a man who is an
+acknowledged oko-ǰumu is sure to receive a good share of the game
+caught by others, and presents of all kinds from those who seek his
+good-will.
+
+As the name implies, and in whatever way his power may have been
+obtained, an oko-ǰumu is privileged to dream in a way that less
+favoured persons do not. In his dreams he can communicate with the
+spirits of the dead. In dreams, also, so the natives say, he is able to
+cause the illness of an enemy or to cure that of a friend.
+
+By his communication with the spirits, in dreams, or in waking life,
+the oko-ǰumu acquires magical knowledge that he is able to turn to
+account in curing illness and in preventing bad weather. When a person
+is ill the oko-ǰumu is often consulted as to the best means of treating
+the patient. His treatment is often limited to the recommendation, or
+the application, of some one or other of the recognized remedies. He
+may undertake to dispel the spirits that are supposed to be the cause
+of the disease, which he does by addressing them and conjuring them to
+go away, or by the use of one or other of the substances and objects
+that are believed to have the power of keeping spirits at a distance.
+Sometimes the oko-ǰumu will promise to cure the patient by means of
+dreams. It is believed that in his dreams he can communicate with the
+spirits and can persuade them to help him to cure the sick person.
+
+Besides their power of causing or curing sickness, the oko-ǰumu are
+credited with being able to control the weather. As has been shown, the
+Andamanese believe that the weather is under the control of two beings
+named Biliku and Tarai. There is, however, an alternative and
+contradictory belief, which is also held, that the weather is
+controlled by the spirits, and particularly by those of the sea. The
+means taken by magicians or others to prevent bad weather can be
+divided into two kinds according as they are directed against Biliku or
+Tarai, or against the spirits of the sea. As an example of the very
+simple rites which are performed for this purpose, two cases may be
+quoted. One of the oko-ǰumu of the Northern tribes, now dead, once
+stopped a very violent storm by crushing between two stones a piece of
+the Anadendron paniculatum and diving with it into the sea where he
+placed it under a rock on the reef. A more recent example is very
+similar. A man still living, named J̌ire Pilečar, who was, in a way, the
+successor of the man formerly mentioned, is said to have stopped a
+violent storm by using the leaves and bark of the Ficus laccifera in
+the same way, that is by crushing them and placing them under a rock in
+the sea. In both these cases it would seem that the rite was directed
+not against Biliku and Tarai, but against the J̌urua.
+
+Apart from his power to communicate directly with the spirits, the
+oko-ǰumu owes his position to a superior knowledge of the magical
+properties of common substances and objects. This knowledge he is
+supposed to obtain from the spirits. However, a lesser degree of
+knowledge on such matters is possessed by everybody. Thus in the
+treatment of sickness there are a number of magical remedies of which
+anyone can make use without consulting an oko-ǰumu.
+
+A complete enumeration of all the things that are believed to possess
+magical properties is, of course, not possible, but the following notes
+refer to all the most important.
+
+We may consider first of all the magical properties of mineral
+substances. One of the most important of these is red ochre. Yellow
+ochre, which is found in pockets in many parts of the islands, is
+collected and burnt, when it turns red, and the powder so obtained is
+either used by itself or is made into a paint with pig or turtle fat.
+The powder is mixed with water and taken internally. Red paint is
+applied to the throat and chest for coughs and colds and sore throats,
+and round the ear for ear-ache. When a man feels unwell he often smears
+red paint on his upper lip just below his nostrils. In this way, the
+natives say, the “smell” of the paint cures his sickness. The paint is
+sometimes used as a dressing for wounds or centipede bites. Its use for
+ornamenting the body on ceremonial occasions has already been noted in
+the last chapter.
+
+In the North Andaman a soft red stone is found, called talar. This is
+used as a substitute for red paint. It is rubbed on the body, or it is
+powdered and the powder is mixed with water and taken internally.
+
+White clay (to̱l-odu in Aka-J̌eru) is sometimes used medicinally, both
+externally and internally. The commoner clay (odu in Aka-J̌eru) is
+plastered on sores, and has the effect of keeping off flies, if it does
+nothing else.
+
+An olive-coloured earth (called čulŋa in Aka-Bea), found in certain
+springs, is prized as a remedy. It is mixed with water and taken
+internally as a general remedy for all sorts of complaints.
+
+Turning now to the magical properties of vegetable substances, there
+are a large number of these, and some of them have not been botanically
+identified.
+
+The Anadendron paniculatum is a plant from which the Andamanese obtain
+a valuable fibre, which they use for their bow-strings, and for thread
+with which to make their arrows and harpoons. A number of magical
+properties are attributed to this plant. Rheumatism is supposed to be
+due to the “smell” of the plant getting into the system when the fibre
+is being prepared [93]. The “smell” of the green plant, or of the fibre
+until it has been thoroughly dried for some days, is believed to
+frighten away turtle. A man who has been preparing the fibre would not
+dream of joining a turtle-hunting expedition, for his presence in the
+canoe would be sufficient to drive away all the turtle. A
+turtle-hunting expedition would be a failure if a piece of the green
+creeper were in the canoe. A man who has been handling the plant may
+not cook turtle, for the meat would be “bad,” i.e., uneatable. The same
+thing would happen if turtle meat accidentally came in contact with a
+piece of the plant. All this applies only to the green creeper, and not
+to the fibre after it has been properly prepared and dried. The fibre
+itself is used for binding the heads of turtle-harpoons, so it is
+evidently regarded as harmless.
+
+If a piece of the Anadendron creeper were burnt in the fire the natives
+believe that it would drive all the turtle away from the neighbourhood,
+or, according to another statement, that there would be a great storm.
+
+So far we have considered the properties of the plant only in so far as
+they make it dangerous to handle. It has other and beneficial
+properties. It is said that a man swimming in waters infested with
+sharks would be safe from them if he had a piece of the Anadendron
+creeper with him, in his belt or necklace. The creeper is also supposed
+to preserve anyone who carries it from the attacks of the sea spirits
+(J̌urua).
+
+The Hibiscus tiliaceus is a small tree from which the natives obtain
+the fibre which they make into rope, used now for harpoon lines and in
+former times for turtle-nets. The leaves of this tree are believed to
+have the power of keeping away the spirits of the sea. They have no
+efficacy, however, against the spirits of the forest. Leaves of the
+Hibiscus tiliaceus are used in the turtle-eating ceremony described in
+the last chapter. For cooking turtle the only wood that may be used is
+the Hibiscus. If any other wood were used the meat would not be good.
+In this connection it is necessary to point out an error in the
+statements of Mr Man. He says that the wood of the alaba must never be
+used for cooking turtle, though it may be used for cooking pig, and
+that Puluga is angry if this commandment is not observed and sends
+either the sun or moon to punish the offender [94]. There is evidently
+an error here. The alaba is the Hibiscus tiliaceus. Mr Man identifies
+it with the Melochia velutina, but this is an error. Now the custom in
+connection with the Hibiscus (alaba) is not that it may not be used for
+cooking turtle, but that no other kind of wood must be used. It is
+difficult to see how Mr Man fell into the error, unless he mistook a
+statement regarding the yo̱lba (Anadendron paniculatum) for a statement
+relating to alaba (Hibiscus tiliaceus). We have just seen that if the
+Anadendron comes in contact with turtle meat the meat will be bad, and
+that if it is burnt there will be a storm.
+
+Another plant that provides fibre for thread is the Gnetum edule. There
+is a belief that the green creeper of this plant will drive away
+turtle, if a piece of it be taken in a canoe.
+
+Magical properties are attributed to the Ficus laccifera tree. These
+trees are believed to be the home of the yet unborn souls of children.
+I was told in the North Andaman that if a tree of the species were cut
+there would be a storm. The bark of the aerial roots of the tree
+affords a fibre used in the Little Andaman for bow-strings, but only
+used in the Great Andaman for making personal ornaments. It is possible
+that some magical properties are attributed to the ornaments made from
+this fibre.
+
+The Pterocarpus dalbergioides is one of the most striking trees of the
+Andamans. It has a very hard red wood, from which the natives make
+their sounding-boards. There is an obscure belief in the A-Pučikwar
+tribe (and possibly also in other tribes) that it is dangerous to look
+at the tree when it is in flower. I was twice told a story of how some
+people were affected by looking at the flowers, and either went mad or
+died. On one occasion my interpreter translated the words of my
+informant by saying “They saw the flowers, and went giddy, and they all
+went to hell (J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu).” Men must be careful when the tree is
+in flower, not to look at it too long. In the North Andaman I was told
+that string games (ǰipre) must not be played when the Pterocarpus tree
+is in flower. They may be indulged in with safety at any other time of
+the year. (String games, according to one statement, were invented by
+the Lau, while another account attributes the invention to the crab.)
+
+The Tetranthera lancæfolia is a small tree from which the natives
+obtain the wood for the shafts of their pig arrows. The leaves of this
+tree are believed to have the power to keep away the spirits of the
+forest. They are used in the pig-eating ceremony described in the last
+chapter. The wood is shredded and made into plumes, and these plumes
+are believed to have magical properties. They are worn by a man who has
+killed another, and are believed to protect him from the vengeance of
+the spirit of the dead man.
+
+A common remedy for sickness of different kinds is a small tree called
+gugma in Aka-Bea, which Mr Man identifies as being Trigonostemon
+longifolius. The leaves of this tree are made into a bed for the
+patient to lie upon. They are also crushed and rubbed over the
+patient’s body, or he is made to inhale the odour of the crushed
+leaves. The natives say that it is the “smell” of the plant that
+possesses medical properties. The “smell” will drive away turtle, and
+leaves should therefore not be taken in a canoe. A man who has been
+handling the leaves would not go turtle-hunting.
+
+Another remedy is a species of Alpinia. The leaves and stems of this
+plant are chewed and the juice swallowed for certain ailments. The
+plant is also used when taking honey. A man takes some of the leaves in
+his mouth and chews them well. Before taking the honeycomb he sprays
+the saliva from his mouth over and around it. He may also rub the
+chewed leaves over his body. The natives say that in this way they are
+able to prevent the bees from stinging them.
+
+Magical properties are attributed to a number of plants that have not
+been botanically identified. Thus the leaves of a small tree called
+tare in Aka-J̌eru are crushed and moistened with water and rubbed over
+the body as a remedy for illness. A strip of bark from the same tree is
+tied round the chest of a man with a pain in his chest. The bark of two
+trees called (in Aka-J̌eru) tip and laro is crushed and moistened and
+rubbed over a sick man’s body. The leaves of a plant called pare are
+crushed with water and the infusion is drunk by persons suffering from
+diarrhœa and abdominal pains. A creeper called korotli is crushed and
+tied round a limb in cases of snake-bite. The seeds of the Entada
+scandens are heated in the fire and applied (while hot) to such wounds
+as that from the tusk of a boar.
+
+There are a certain number of trees and plants about which the natives
+say that any person cutting them will become blind. The names of four
+of these in Aka-J̌eru are ǰin, burut, deŋ, and mit.
+
+We may turn now to animals and animal substances. Magical properties
+are attributed to bees’-wax, particularly to black bees’-wax. In a case
+of pleurisy black bees’-wax was heated until it was soft, and then
+smeared over the man’s chest. Bees’-wax is believed to keep away the
+spirits of the forest.
+
+If a man be bitten by a snake and the snake be killed it is skinned and
+the inner surface of the skin is applied to the wound.
+
+A hiccough is supposed to be the result of inadvertently swallowing a
+tree lizard, whose call rather resembles the sound of a person
+hiccoughing.
+
+The condition popularly called “pins and needles” or described as an
+arm or leg “going to sleep” is believed by the Andamanese to be due to
+the bite of a rat. If a man wakes up in the night with one of his limbs
+benumbed in this way, he believes that a rat has bitten him while he
+slept.
+
+The Andamanese say that the bite of a civet-cat (Paradoxurus) will
+produce cramp. I was once told that if a man eats the flesh of the
+civet-cat and then goes into the water he will become “lame.” This
+means, I think, that he will have cramp, and so will be unable to swim.
+
+The flesh and particularly the fat of the flying fox (Pteropus) is
+believed to be a remedy for rheumatism. An old man who was suffering
+from this ailment once asked me to shoot for him some of these bats,
+which he cooked and ate.
+
+If turtle-fat be permitted to burn in the fire there will be a storm.
+
+Mention has already been made of the magical value attributed to human
+bones. They are esteemed as a means of driving away spirits, and
+therefore of curing or preventing sickness. A human jaw-bone was
+hanging in my hut in such a position that it could swing in the wind.
+The natives attributed to this the illness from which I and several of
+them were suffering at the time, and asked me to put the bone away in a
+basket, where it could not move.
+
+Bones of animals are made into ornaments in the same way as human
+bones, and magical properties of a similar kind seem to be attributed
+to them.
+
+Of other objects possessing magical properties the most important is
+fire. Fire is believed to have the power of keeping away spirits of the
+sea and of the forest. A fire is always kept alight beside a sick man
+or woman. For dysentery stones are heated in a fire and the patient is
+required to defecate on to these.
+
+In conclusion, mention must be made of one favourite remedy of the
+Andamanese, namely scarification. The part of the body that is the seat
+of pain is scarified, as the forehead for headaches, the cheek for
+toothache. A number of very small incisions are made in the skin close
+together, with a sharp flake of quartz or glass. The incisions are just
+deep enough to cut through the skin and cause a little blood to ooze
+out, but not so deep as to produce a flow of blood. The operation is
+the work of women. It is probably more frequently used than any other
+remedy except red paint and human bones.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+MYTHS AND LEGENDS
+
+
+The Andamanese have a number of stories which are told to the younger
+people by their elders and relate to the doings of their ancestors in a
+time long ago. Some of these stories are recorded in the present
+chapter. A difficulty in the way of giving any clear and readable
+account of them is the fact that there are many slightly different
+versions of one and the same legend. To some extent the variations are
+local, each tribe, and even each portion of a tribe having its own set
+of legendary stories. Besides these local variations there are also
+individual variations. Two men of the same tribe may relate what is
+substantially the same story, yet each chooses his own words and
+gestures, and to some extent they may even arrange the incidents
+differently.
+
+In the last chapter it was mentioned that there are certain
+individuals, known as oko-ǰumu in the North Andaman and oko-paiad in
+the South, who are believed to have special knowledge as to the spirits
+and as to the magical efficacy of remedies for sickness. It is these
+oko-ǰumu also who are the authorities on the legendary lore of the
+Andamanese. In the case of magical remedies there is a certain common
+stock of beliefs as to the efficacy to be attributed to different
+substances, such as leaves of different plants, and on the basis of
+these beliefs the oko-ǰumu elaborates the remedies that he uses in
+particular cases. Each oko-ǰumu, however, prides himself on being, to
+some extent, original. An example of this has been already mentioned.
+When a great storm arose an oko-ǰumu of one of the Northern tribes
+succeeded in stopping it (in the belief of the natives) by placing a
+piece of the crushed stem of the Anadendron creeper under a particular
+stone in the sea. On a later occasion another storm arose, and the
+successor of the first-mentioned oko-ǰumu was appealed to that he might
+exert his powers. He did not simply imitate his predecessor, but he
+placed a piece of crushed bark and twigs of the Ficus laccifera in the
+sea under a different stone. In very much the same way there is a
+common stock of beliefs as to the events that took place in the time of
+the ancestors, but each oko-ǰumu builds up on this basis his own
+particular set of legends, so that it is rarely that two of them tell
+the same story in the same way. An oko-ǰumu may obtain for himself a
+reputation by relating legends of the ancestors in a vivid and amusing
+way. Such a man would be able to invent new stories by combining
+together in his own way some of the traditional incidents. The desire
+on the part of each oko-ǰumu to be original and so to enhance his own
+reputation is a fertile source of variation in the legends.
+
+This lack of traditional form, which is a very important characteristic
+of the Andamanese mythology, may be compared with their lack of
+traditional songs. Just as every man composes his own songs, so, within
+certain limits, every oko-ǰumu relates in his own way the legends of
+his tribe. But whereas every man is a composer of songs, only a certain
+number are regarded as having authority to speak on the legends.
+
+Underlying the legends of any tribe there are a certain number of
+beliefs or representations with which every native is familiar. It is
+on the basis of these that the oko-ǰumu elaborates his own doctrine, if
+we may call it so, which he hands on to his followers, who in turn may
+become oko-ǰumu and produce further slight modifications of their own.
+Thus the legends are continually being changed, though in any one
+generation the changes introduced are slight, and it would take a long
+time for important changes in belief to be brought about. There is
+evidence, however, that a succession of leading men in the A-Pučikwar
+tribe have succeeded in introducing a new doctrine as to the weather,
+making Bilik the name of a class of beings instead of the name of a
+single being, and that this doctrine, while it has not entirely ousted
+the former beliefs, has yet succeeded in gaining currency not only in
+the A-Pučikwar tribe, but also in the Aka-Ko̱l and O̱ko̱-J̌uwo̱i tribes.
+
+At the present time it is only possible to recover a small part of the
+many different legends with their variants. The introduction of many
+new interests into the lives of the natives, through the European
+settlement and the many changes it has produced, has caused the ancient
+legends to be neglected. Most of the old oko-ǰumu have died without
+leaving any followers to take their place. Many of the legends recorded
+here are merely what some of the men not specially skilled in legendary
+lore can remember of the stories told them in former days by oko-ǰumu
+who are now dead.
+
+One feature of the legends that must be pointed out is their
+unsystematic nature. The same informant may give, on different
+occasions, two entirely different versions of such a thing as the
+origin of fire, or the beginning of the human race. The Andamanese, to
+all appearance, regard each little story as independent, and do not
+consciously compare one with another. They thus seem to be entirely
+unconscious of what are obvious contradictions to the student of the
+legends. It is necessary to emphasise the fragmentary and unsystematic
+nature of the Andaman mythology because Mr Man, in his work on the
+Andamanese, has brought together a number of legends from the tribes of
+the South Andaman and has combined them into a continuous and fairly
+consistent narrative, and has thus, undoubtedly not intentionally,
+given a wrong impression to the reader of what the nature of the
+disconnected stories really is. While each of the stories included in
+Mr Man’s account is derived directly from the natives, it would seem
+certain that the arrangement of them into a more or less consistent
+narrative is due to Mr Man.
+
+In recording the legends in this chapter, only the English translation
+is given. In some cases the legends were translated on the spot and
+written down in English. In other cases they were written down in the
+native language and then translated. When I was recording the legends I
+very frequently had to ask what was meant by a particular statement,
+the meaning of which might be quite clear to a native, but which was
+obscure to one not accustomed to thinking in the same way as the
+natives. In some cases I could obtain no satisfactory explanation, and
+such legends are given in this chapter in as nearly as possible an
+exact literal translation of the original. In other cases the
+explanations given by the natives have been incorporated in the
+translation itself.
+
+In order to give the reader a fair idea of the nature of the legends as
+they are told, one is here given in the native language (Aka-Čari) with
+a word-for-word translation.
+
+
+ A Maia Dik iǰokoduko; o ko̱nmo teč inǰukte̱rto̱ia;
+ Sir Prawn makes fire; yam leaf catches fire;
+
+ ko̱nmo teč bi ikterbie; kete uiǰoko; uiǰokobiko;
+ yam leaf is dry; that one it burns; he makes a fire;
+
+ Maia Dik ubenoba; Maia Totemo emato; uǰokil uektebalo;
+ Sir Prawn slept; Sir Kingfisher takes; he fire with he runs away
+
+ Maia Totemo ǰokobiko; Maia Totemo taǰeo ubiko;
+ Sir Kingfisher makes a fire; Sir Kingfisher fish (food) cooks;
+
+ upetil ubeno; Maia Mite ǰuktebalo uemato.
+ his belly in he sleeps; Sir Dove runs away taking.
+
+
+The above translation is hardly comprehensible without a little
+explanation. The word iǰoko means “something burns,” the word ubiko
+means “he cooks (by roasting).” The compound iǰokobiko may mean either
+“he makes a fire and cooks something at it” or it may simply mean “he
+makes up a fire (by adding firewood).” The word iǰokoduko has a quite
+different meaning, “to produce fire.” The derivation of inǰukte̱rto̱ia is
+uncertain, as I am not sure of the proper use of er-to̱ia; it is
+translated on the basis of the explanation given me by the man who told
+the story. The word ikterbie is descriptive of the dryness of dead
+leaves.
+
+A free translation would be as follows: “It was Sir Prawn who first
+produced or obtained fire. Some yam leaves, being shrivelled and dry by
+reason of the hot weather, caught fire and burnt. The prawn made a fire
+with some firewood and went to sleep. The kingfisher stole fire and ran
+away with it. He made a fire and cooked some fish. When he had filled
+his belly he went to sleep. The dove stole fire from the kingfisher and
+ran away.” It is implied that it was the dove who gave the fire to the
+ancestors of the Andamanese.
+
+Versions of legends of the origin of fire are given by Mr Portman, in
+each of the languages of the Southern group of tribes. [95]
+
+All the legends relate to events that are supposed to have happened in
+the past, and deal with the doings of the ancestors of the Andamanese.
+In the North Andaman the ancestors are sometimes called Lau t’er-kuro,
+i.e. the big spirits, “big” being used in the sense of our word
+“chief.” Another term for them is N’a-mai-koloko, from n’ or nio =
+they, aka-mai = father, and koloko = people, so that the phrase
+literally means “the father people,” or the ancestors. In the South
+Andaman the ancestors are sometimes called Čauga tabaŋa, which is the
+equivalent of Lau t’er-kuro. Mr Man seems to have misunderstood the
+exact meaning of this term. He writes: “Lači Lora-lola, the chief of
+the survivors from the Deluge [96], gave, at his death, the name of
+Čauga tabaŋa to their descendants.... The Čauga tabaŋa are described as
+fine tall men with large beards, and they are said to have been long
+lived, but, in other respects and in their mode of living they did not
+differ from the present inhabitants. The name seems to have been borne
+till comparatively recent times, as a few still living are said to
+remember having seen the last of the so-called Čauga tabaŋa [97].”
+
+Mr Man has evidently not realised that the term čauga cannot be applied
+to any living Andamanese, but may be applied to every dead one. The
+Čauga are the spirits of dead natives, and new Čauga are continually
+coming into existence by death. Any person who is of such importance
+when alive as to form the subject of legends or stories after his death
+may be distinguished (after his death only) as a Čauga tabaŋa. The name
+may thus be applied to the purely mythical ancestors of the legends,
+and also to the spirits of men recently dead whose memory is preserved
+owing to fame acquired in some way when they were alive. It is thus
+possible that some of the natives with whom Mr Man formerly conversed
+are now Čauga tabaŋa, i.e. big spirits, having been “big men” when they
+were alive.
+
+Another name sometimes used in the South Andaman to denote the
+ancestors is Tomo-la [98]. This word, however, is sometimes used in the
+singular to denote the mythical first man. Its use is thus similar to
+that of the name Bilik in the A-Pučikwar tribe, which is used both as
+the name of a single mythical being and also as the name of a class of
+beings. Only the early ancestors of the Andamanese, i.e. those about
+whom the legends are related, can be called Tomo-la.
+
+Among the ancestors who appear in the legends there are a few who bear
+names that are used as personal names of men and women at the present
+time, and who appear in the legends simply as men and women. The larger
+number of the ancestors, however, bear names that are those of species
+of animals. In each case the ancestor is identified with the species
+which bears the same name. Yet others of the mythical ancestors have
+names that are neither personal names at the present day, nor names of
+animals. It may perhaps be supposed that in all such cases the name has
+some sort of meaning, but in many instances it was not found possible
+to discover the meaning with certainty.
+
+When speaking of the ancestors, the natives generally add to the name
+the appropriate title. These titles are, in the North Andaman Maia
+(Sir) and Mimi (Lady), in Akar-Bale Da (Sir) and In (Lady), and in
+Aka-Bea Maia and Čana.
+
+There are legends as to the origin of mankind, i.e., of their own race,
+for they did not recognize, until recently, the existence of any men of
+other races than their own, calling aliens Lau (spirits). There is,
+however, no unanimity in their beliefs as to how mankind originated,
+even in any one tribe. An Aka-Bo legend is as follows:
+
+“The first man was J̌utpu [99]. He was born inside the joint of a big
+bamboo, just like a bird in an egg [100]. The bamboo split and he came
+out. He was a little child. When it rained he made a small hut for
+himself and lived in it. He made little bows and arrows. As he grew
+bigger he made bigger huts, and bigger bows and arrows. One day he
+found a lump of quartz and with it he scarified himself. J̌utpu was
+lonely, living all by himself. He took some clay (ko̱t) from a nest of
+the white ants and moulded it into the shape of a woman. She became
+alive and became his wife. She was called Ko̱t. They lived together at
+Teraut-buliu. Afterwards J̌utpu made other people out of clay. These
+were the ancestors. J̌utpu taught them how to make canoes and bows and
+arrows, and how to hunt and fish. His wife taught the women how to make
+baskets and nets and mats and belts, and how to use clay for making
+patterns on the body.”
+
+The same story was told me by Aka-J̌eru men, the only difference being
+that they gave the name of the place where J̌utpu lived differently,
+mentioning a spot in the Aka-J̌eru country.
+
+From the Aka-J̌eru I also obtained what is really another version of the
+same legend, though the name of the first ancestor is given
+differently. “The first man came out of the buttress of a po̱ičo
+(Sterculia) tree, and was called Po̱ičotobut (Sterculia buttress). He
+had no wife, so he cohabited with an ant’s nest (ko̱t) and thus obtained
+a large number of children. These were the first Andamanese, and
+Po̱ičotobut taught them all their arts and customs. Po̱ičotobut lived at
+Bo̱ro̱ŋ Buliu (in Aka-J̌eru country).”
+
+The association between the origin of the Andamanese and an ant’s nest
+(ko̱t) is retained in another legend, told by an Aka-J̌eru man. “Tarai
+(the south-west monsoon) was the first man. His wife was Ko̱t. They
+lived at Tarai-era-poŋ [101]. Their children were Tau (the sky), Bo̱to
+(wind), Piribi (storm), and Air (the foam on a rough sea).”
+
+An entirely different legend, of which, however, I could not obtain a
+detailed version, is also found in the Aka-J̌eru tribe. This is to the
+effect that the first living being was Maia Čara [102]. He made the
+earth, and caused it to be peopled with inhabitants. He also made the
+sun and moon. In the last chapter Čara was mentioned as a mythical
+being associated with the sun, with daylight and with fine weather. One
+of my informants of the Aka-J̌eru tribe said that Čara had a wife named
+Nimi (a common personal name), and that his children were Čeo (knife),
+Ino (water), Loto, and Luk. It is Maia Čara, according to one commonly
+received account, who makes the daylight every day.
+
+I could not obtain any Aka-Kede legend as to the origin of mankind. One
+informant of that tribe said that it was Bilika (the north-east
+monsoon) who made the world and the first men and women, but he could
+give me no detailed legend.
+
+In the Aka-Ko̱l and A-Pučikwar tribes there are several versions of a
+legend that makes the monitor lizard (Varanus salvator) the progenitor
+of the Andaman race. In all the versions there is no mention of how the
+lizard himself originated. The following was told me by an Aka-Ko̱l man.
+“When Ta Pe̱tie (Sir Monitor Lizard) was aka-go̱i (i.e. unmarried, but
+having completed the initiation ceremonies), he went into the jungle to
+hunt pig. He climbed up a Dipterocarpus tree, and got stuck there
+[103]. Beyan (civet-cat, Paradoxurus) found him there, stuck in the
+tree. She released him and helped him to get down. The two got married.
+Their children were the Tomo-la (i.e. the ancestors).”
+
+Another legend telling how the monitor lizard obtained a wife was
+related to me on more than one occasion by A-Pučikwar men. “The first
+of the ancestors (Tomo-la) was Ta Pe̱tie (Sir Monitor Lizard). He lived
+at Tomo-la-tog. At first he had no wife. One day, when he was out
+fishing, he found a piece of black wood of the kind called ko̱lotat
+(Diospyros sp.). He found it in the creek, and brought it to his hut,
+where he put it on the little platform over the fire [104]. He sat down
+by the fire and set to work over an arrow that he was making. As he
+bent over his work he did not see what was happening. By and by he
+heard some one laugh, and looked up. Then he saw that the piece of wood
+had turned into a woman. He got up and took her down from the platform.
+She sat down with him and became his wife. They had a son named Po̱i (a
+species of small bird, possibly a woodpecker), and afterwards many
+other children. They lived together for a long time at Tomo-la-tog. One
+day Ta Pe̱tie went fishing and was drowned in the creek. He turned into
+a kara-duku.”
+
+There is some doubt about the translation of the word kara-duku. It is
+an Aka-Bea word, although it was used as given above, by an A-Pučikwar
+man. Mr Man translates it “cachalot.” Mr Portman says that kara-duku is
+“crocodile,” but that the cachalot, the proper name of which is
+biriga-ta, is also sometimes called kara-duku [105]. The only authority
+for the existence of crocodiles in the Andamans is the statement of Mr
+Portman, who says that the natives killed one in the Middle Andaman and
+brought the bones to him. Although I was in many of the creeks of the
+Andamans at different times I never saw a crocodile, and none of the
+other officers of the Settlement, who have repeatedly explored a large
+part of the islands, ever seems to have seen one, so that the one
+recorded by Mr Portman may possibly have been a single one that had
+come oversea from the mainland of Asia.
+
+Another A-Pučikrwa account of the origin of the first woman Ko̱lotat, is
+as follows: “At first there were no women, only men. A man called
+Ko̱lotat came to live in the A-Pučikwar country. Ta Pe̱tie (Sir Monitor
+Lizard) caught him and cut off his genitals and made him into a woman.
+She became his wife. Their children were the first of the ancestors
+(Tomo-la).”
+
+Another account given by members of the A-Pučikwar tribe is that the
+first man was Tomo, or Tomo-la. One version that I heard is that Tomo
+made the world and peopled it with the ancestors. He made the moon
+(Puki) who is his wife. Tomo and his wife invented all the arts of the
+Andamanese and taught them to the ancestors. After his death Tomo went
+to live in the sky, where he now is. It is Tomo who sends the fine
+weather, while Bilik sends the bad weather. In the world where Tomo now
+lives it is always daylight and is always fine. When men die their
+spirits go up to the sky and live with Tomo. The man who gave me this
+version said that he did not know how Tomo originated, but was quite
+sure that he was not made by Bilik. Tomo came first and Bilik came
+afterwards. The Andamanese are all the children of Tomo [106].
+
+In disagreement with this story, another man of the same tribe said
+that Tomo was made by Bilik. He (i.e., Tomo) had a wife Mita (Dove),
+and they were the ancestors of the Andamanese. Yet another informant
+said: “Ta Tomo was the first man. He made bows and arrows and canoes.
+His canoes were made of the wood of the Pandanus tree. Mita (Dove) was
+his wife. It was she who first made nets and baskets and discovered the
+uses of red paint and white clay.” When I asked how Tomo and his wife
+originated my informant replied that he did not know.
+
+A species of bird (perhaps a woodpecker), called Po̱i in A-Pučikwar and
+Ko̱io in Aka-Ko̱l, is often said to have been the son of Tomo. I was once
+told that Ko̱io was the first of the Andamanese, from whom they are all
+descended, and that his wife was Mita. Another informant said that
+Pe̱tie (Monitor Lizard) was the first man and Mita was his wife, while
+still another stated that Ta Mita (Sir Dove) was the progenitor of the
+race, making the dove male instead of female. These different versions
+will give some idea of the contradictory nature of the statements of
+the Andamanese. All of them come from only two tribes, the A-Pučikwar
+and the Aka-Ko̱l.
+
+From the Akar-Bale tribe I obtained the following legend. “Puluga made
+the first of the ancestors. He made one man and one woman called Nyali
+and Irap [107]. He gave them fire, and taught them how to hunt and
+fish, and how to make bows and arrows and baskets and nets. The place
+where they lived is called Irap because they lived there [108].”
+
+Another Akar-Bale version is that the first man was Da Duku (Sir
+Monitor Lizard), and that his wife was In Bain (Lady Civet-cat).
+
+Mr E. H. Man, in his account of the South Andaman, says that there are
+a few discrepancies in their accounts of the creation and origin of the
+human species, but in the main features all the natives with whom he
+spoke are agreed. The world was created by Puluga, who then made a man
+named Tomo, the first of the human race. Tomo was black, like the
+present Andamanese, but was much taller and bearded. Puluga showed him
+the various fruit-trees in the jungle, which then existed only at
+Wota-emi, a spot in the country of the A-Pučikwar tribe. The wife of
+Tomo was Čana Elewadi (Lady Crab), and as to her origin there are
+different legends. According to some, Puluga created her after he had
+taught Tomo how to sustain life; others say that Tomo saw her swimming
+near his home and called to her, whereupon she landed and lived with
+him; while a third story represents her as coming pregnant to Kyd
+Island, where she gave birth to several male and female children, who
+subsequently became the progenitors of the present race. Tomo had two
+sons and two daughters by Čana Elewadi; the names of the former were
+Biro-la and Bo̱ro-la, and of the latter Rie-la and Čo̱rmi-la.
+
+A story that tells how Tomo came to his end states that one day, while
+hunting, he fell into the creek called Yara-tig-ǰig and was drowned. He
+was at once transformed into a kara-duku (which Mr Man translates as
+“cachalot”). Čana Elewadi, ignorant of the accident that had befallen
+her husband, went in a canoe with some of her grandchildren to
+ascertain the cause of his continued absence; on seeing them, Kara-duku
+upset their skiff and drowned his wife and most of her companions. She
+became a small crab, of a description still named after her, elewadi,
+and the others were transformed into lizards (duku). Another version of
+this story is that, wearied with an unsuccessful day’s hunting, Tomo
+went to the shore, where he found a čidi (Pinna) shell-fish; while
+playing with it, it fastened on him, and he was unable to free himself
+until a baian (Paradoxurus) seized the čidi and liberated him at the
+expense of one of his members. Shortly after this he saw his wife and
+some of their children coming after him in a canoe; unwilling that they
+should become aware of the misfortune that had befallen him he upset
+the canoe, drowning its occupants and himself. He then became
+kara-duku, and the others duku, which are now plentiful in the jungles
+[109].
+
+In some of the preceding legends reference is made to Biliku or Puluga.
+There is a very general belief, in all parts of the islands, that in
+the time of the ancestors, Biliku or Puluga lived on earth. Each tribe
+has at least one spot in its territory that is pointed out as the place
+where Biliku (or Puluga) lived. In some tribes there are three or four
+such places, each of which is claimed as the original home of Biliku by
+the people living in the neighbourhood. In many cases the name of the
+spot contains a reference to the legend, as Puluga l’od-baraiǰ (the
+village of Puluga) in Akar-Bale or Biliku era-poŋ (the cave of Biliku)
+in the North Andaman.
+
+I was able to obtain a few legends relating to the time when Biliku
+lived on earth, though there were probably many more that I was not
+fortunate enough to hear.
+
+The following is an Aka-J̌eru legend:
+
+“In the time of the ancestors Biliku lived at Ar-ko̱l. One day the
+people caught a turtle and brought it to the camp. Biliku was sitting
+there. They asked her if she would eat some of it. She said ‘No.’ They
+put the meat in the roof of the hut and went away. When they had gone
+Biliku ate the whole turtle. Then she went to sleep. The people came
+back and found the turtle gone. They said ‘Biliku has eaten it.’ They
+left the camp and all went to Tebi-čiro. They left Biliku asleep. Some
+of the people went to hunt for turtle. Their canoe passed near Ar-ko̱l.
+Biliku saw the people in the canoe. She called to them and asked to be
+taken with them. The people refused saying ‘You ate up all the turtle.’
+Biliku had a round stone and several be shells (pearl shells). She
+threw the shells at the people in the canoe. The first shell did not
+hit them but came back and fell at her feet; and so also with the
+second. Then Biliku got very angry and threw a third time. The shell
+struck the canoe and killed all the people in it. The canoe and its
+occupants became a reef of rocks that is still there. The other people
+at Tebi-čiro called across to Biliku saying ‘Come over here.’ She
+answered ‘Very well! I am coming.’ She took the stone that she had and
+put it in the sea, and it floated. She got on to it to cross over. When
+she had got half way across Biliku and her stone sank in the sea. They
+became two big rocks that are there still.” This legend refers to the
+west coast of the North Andaman. The pearl shells that Biliku throws
+seem to be lightning, and the round stone the one that she rolls about
+to make thunder.
+
+A few other statements about Biliku and Tarai from the four tribes of
+the North Andaman are given below just as they were taken down in my
+note-books.
+
+(1) “Biliku lived at Pura-’ra-poŋ in the time of the ancestors. Her
+husband was Pe̱rǰido and her children Totaimo, Mite (cicada) and Tarai.
+She made the sun and the moon. It was she who first invented all the
+things that are now made and used by women, such as baskets, nets,
+etc., and it was she who discovered fire, and who first discovered the
+use of edible roots such as ko̱nmo and mino (two species of Dioscorea).”
+
+(2) “Biliku used to live at Čaura. She had a husband Tarai and a son
+Pe̱rǰido, and a daughter Mite. She used to live only on certain
+vegetable foods, lo̱ito, pata, bui, čo, ko̱nmo and mino and others. It
+was Biliku who made the earth (the forest, ti-miku). She began at
+Čaura.”
+
+(3) “Biliku lived at Ar-Ko̱l in the time of the ancestors. Her husband
+was Tarai and their children were the birds, To̱ro̱i, Taka, Čoto̱t,
+Poruatoko, Kelil, Mite, Čo̱pčura, Benye, Biratkoro, Čereo, Milidu,
+Bobelo, Ko̱lo, and Teo.” (Aka-J̌eru.)
+
+(4) “Biliku lived at Poroket. She was unmarried. She had a son Pe̱rǰido,
+and her other children were To̱ro̱i, Čelene, Čoto̱t and Čerei. (These four
+are the names of birds.) It was Pe̱rǰido who invented all the arts of
+the Andamanese such as their bows and arrows, etc.” (Aka-Bo?)
+
+(5) “Biliku used to live at Peč-meo with her husband To̱ro̱i (a bird).
+She used to eat lo̱ito, and when anyone else ate that root she was
+angry. Tarai lived at Čaroŋa with his wife Kelil (a bird). He ate only
+mikulu.” (Aka-Ko̱ra.)
+
+(6) “Tarai has very long legs and a short body. He used to live on a
+small island beyond Interview Island, which is now submerged. When
+Tarai goes to sleep he breathes very heavily and this makes the wind.”
+
+The next is an Aka-Kede legend. “In the days of the ancestors Bilika
+lived at Purum-at-čape in the Aka-Kede country, with her husband
+Po̱ro̱kul. One day Po̱ro̱kul was out hunting. He returned with a pig that
+he had killed and came to the creek on the other side of which was his
+home (Co̱ti-te̱r-buli Buliu). Laden as he was with the pig he could not
+swim across the creek. Bilika was sleeping, but her children were
+playing near and saw their father on the other side of the creek. They
+ran and told their mother that their father was coming but could not
+cross the creek. Bilika went and lay down on one bank of the creek and
+stretched out her leg so that it reached the other bank. Po̱ro̱kul walked
+across her leg and so reached home.”
+
+While it is clear from this legend that Bilika was of super-human size,
+the same was also true of her husband, if we may judge from another
+legend. “Po̱ro̱kul made for himself a bow (of the large southern
+pattern), with which to shoot pig. At this time the sky was low down
+near the earth, only just above the tops of the trees. When Po̱ro̱kul had
+finished his bow he lifted it upright. The top of it struck the sky and
+lifted it up to its present position where it has remained ever since.”
+
+In another legend from another part of the Aka-Kede tribe Bilika is
+spoken of as being male. “Bilika lived at Po̱ro̱ŋ-et-čo with his wife
+Mite. They had a child. The ancestors ate Bilika’s food, lo̱ito and kata
+and other plants. Bilika was very angry. He used to smell their mouths
+to see if they had eaten his food. When he found a man or woman who had
+done so he would cut his throat. The ancestors were very angry with
+Bilika, because he killed the men and women when they ate his foods.
+They all came together and killed Bilika and his wife Mite. Maia Burto
+(a species of fish) took the child (of Bilika) away to the north-east.”
+
+Owing to my lack of knowledge of the Aka-Kede language there are some
+points of the above legend that remain obscure. I think that the child
+of Bilika is also named Bilika, and that it is he (or she) who now
+lives in the north-east and sends the storms. The plants (lo̱ito, kata,
+etc.), called here the “food” of Bilika, are those mentioned in the
+last chapter as specially belonging to Bilika, who is angry when the
+natives eat them. As regards the name, Mite, of Bilika’s wife, I do not
+know whether this is the name of the bronze-winged dove, or of the
+cicada. In some of the Andamanese languages the names of these two are
+very similar, the only difference being a very slight one in the way of
+pronouncing the two vowels.
+
+The A-Pučikwar people who live on the east coast of Baratang Island say
+that in the beginning the ancestors lived at a place called Wota-emi,
+and Bilik lived opposite to them across the strait at a place called
+To̱l-l’oko-tima. In a rock at Wota-emi there is a large peculiarly
+shaped hollow. This is said to be where Bilik used to sit when he was
+on earth.
+
+An Akar-Bale legend is as follows. “In the days of the ancestors Puluga
+lived at J̌ila off the east coast of Henry Lawrence Island and the
+ancestors lived at Puluga l’od-baraiǰ (the village of Puluga) on the
+main island just opposite to J̌ila. Puluga was always getting angry with
+the ancestors, because they dug up yams and ate čakan (Entada scandens)
+and barata (Caryota sobolifera). When he was angry he used to destroy
+their huts and property. So the people sent him out of the world,
+saying ‘We do not want you here. You are always angry with us.’ Puluga
+went away to the north-east.”
+
+It is worth while to note that J̌ila is north-east from Puluga
+l’od-baraiǰ, just as To̱l-l’oko-tima is north-east from Wota-emi. In
+both cases there is a narrow strait between the place where the
+ancestors lived and the home of Puluga or Bilik.
+
+There are a number of different legends that relate how the ancestors
+first obtained fire [110]. In many of these legends there is a
+reference to Biliku or Puluga. A common statement in the North Andaman
+is that “Fire was stolen from Biliku by Maia Tiritmo (Sir Kingfisher).”
+Some of the legends give further details. An Aka-Čari legend is as
+follows:
+
+“Biliku had a red stone and a pearl shell (be). She struck them
+together and obtained fire. She collected firewood and made a fire. She
+went to sleep. Mite (the bronze-winged dove) came and stole fire. He
+made a fire for himself. He gave fire to all the people in the village.
+Afterwards fire was given to all the places. Each village had its own.”
+
+The next is an Aka-J̌eru version.
+
+“In the days of the ancestors they had no fire. Biliku had fire. While
+Biliku slept Maia Lirčitmo (Sir Kingfisher) came and stole fire. As he
+was taking the fire Biliku awoke and saw him. Lirčitmo swallowed the
+fire. Biliku took a pearl shell (be) and threw it at Lirčitmo and cut
+off his head. The fire came out (of his neck). The ancestors got the
+fire. Lirčitmo became a bird.”
+
+The next is also, I believe, an Aka-J̌eru story. “Maia Tiritmo (Sir
+Kingfisher) lived at Tolepar Buruin. He had no fire. When he caught
+fish he had no fire with which to cook it. He went to the place where
+Čo̱kčura (heron) lived. There was no fire there. Tiritmo took some
+rotten wood of the piń tree and hit it on a rock, and thus made fire.
+He gave fire to Čo̱kčura. Čo̱kčura gave fire to Totemo (a species of
+kingfisher). Totemo gave it to all the others.”
+
+A slightly different and less detailed version of the same story is as
+follows:
+
+“Tiritmo made fire. Totemo stole fire (from Tiritmo) and gave it to
+Mo̱ičo (Rail). Mo̱ičo gave fire to all the people.”
+
+The next version, which was taken down in Aka-J̌eru, I did not fully
+understand.
+
+“Some one shot an arrow. The arrow hit the hill of fire. Tiriń (a
+species of kingfisher) found the arrow. It was on fire. He took the
+fire to his camp. He would not give fire to any one. The others asked
+him. They went to their homes. At night they came to Tiriń’s hut and
+stole fire. They went away, each to his own place.”
+
+There is a certain amount of obscurity about two other versions, which
+are given in a translation as nearly literal as possible. “Maia Dik
+(Sir Prawn) made fire. Some ko̱nmo (yam) leaves caught fire, being dry.
+Maia Dik made a fire. Maia Dik slept. Maia Totemo (Sir Kingfisher)
+stole fire and ran away. Maia Totemo made a fire. He cooked fish. When
+he had eaten, he slept. Maia Mite (Sir Dove) stole fire (from Totemo)
+and ran away.”
+
+The other is as follows. “Piribi got fire from a stone. He threw fire
+at Bilika. It set some ko̱nmo (yam) leaves on fire. Čo̱rolo (Parrot) got
+fire (from the burning leaves). He gave it to the ancestors.”
+
+These two legends were taken down in Aka-Čari, but they are perhaps
+really Aka-Ko̱ra or Aka-J̌eru stories. I have the word piribi in my notes
+as meaning a storm, but the translation is doubtful.
+
+The next is an Aka-Kede version of what is the most widespread of the
+legends.
+
+“The ancestors had no fire. Bilika had fire. The ancestors tried to
+steal fire from Bilika. Lirtit (Kingfisher) went one night while Bilika
+was sleeping and stole fire. Bilika awoke and saw him going away with
+the fire. She threw a pearl shell (ba) at him, which cut off his wings
+and his tail. Lirtit dived into the water and swam with the fire to
+Bet-’ra-kudu and gave it to Te̱pe. Te̱pe gave fire to Mite (the
+bronze-winged dove). Mite gave it to the others [111].”
+
+An Aka-Kede legend of the origin of the sun may conveniently be given
+in this place, as it is connected with the possession of fire by
+Bilika. “Bilika made fire of purum wood. One day, when she was very
+angry, she started throwing fire about. One large fire-brand she threw
+into the sky, and there it became the sun.” This legend explains the
+name of the place Purum-at-čape, at which Bilika is said to have lived
+when on earth. Purum is the name of a tree, not identified; at means
+either “fire” or “fire-wood,” and čape means a village or a hut. The
+whole word therefore means “Purum fire village.”
+
+I did not obtain any legend of the origin of fire from the Oko̱-J̌uwo̱i
+and Aka-Ko̱l tribes, but a version from each of these tribes has been
+given by Mr Portman. A translation of Mr Portman’s Oko̱-J̌uwo̱i story is
+as follows [112]. “Mo̱m Mirit [113] stole a fire-brand from
+Kuro-t’on-mika while Bilik was sleeping. He gave the brand to the late
+Leč, who then made fire at Karat-tatak-emi.”
+
+Mr Portman’s Aka-Ko̱l story is somewhat obscure. “Bilik was sleeping at
+To̱l-l’oko-tima. Luratut (Kingfisher) took away fire to Oko-emi. Ko̱lotat
+went to Min-to̱ŋ-ta (taking with him fire from Oko-emi). At Min-to̱ŋ-ta
+the fire went out. Ko̱lotat broke up the charred firewood and made fire
+again (by blowing up the embers). They (the people there) became alive.
+Owing to the fire they became alive. The ancestors (Jaŋil) thus got
+fire at Min-to̱ŋ-ta village.”
+
+From the A-Pučikwar tribe I only obtained one version of the fire
+legend. “When the ancestors lived at Wota-emi, Bilik lived at
+To̱l-l’oko-tima across the strait. In those days the ancestors had no
+fire. Bilik took some wood of the tree called pe̱rat and broke it and
+made fire for himself. Luratut (Kingfisher) came to To̱l-l’oko-tima
+while Bilik was sleeping and stole some fire. Bilik awoke and saw
+Luratut. He (Bilik) took up a lighted brand and threw it at Luratut. It
+hit him in the back of the neck and burnt him. Luratut gave the fire to
+the people at Wota-emi. Bilik was very angry about this and went away
+to live in the sky.”
+
+The kingfisher of the story (Alcedo beavani?) has a patch of bright red
+feathers on its neck. This is where it was burnt by the brand thrown by
+Bilik.
+
+Mr Portman gives a slightly different version from the same tribe
+[114]. “Bilik was sleeping at To̱l-l’oko-tima. Luratut went to bring
+fire. He caught hold of the fire, and in doing so burnt Bilik. Bilik
+awoke and seized some fire. He hit Luratut with the fire. Then he hit
+Tarčal (a fish) with the fire. Čalter (another species of kingfisher)
+caught hold of the fire. He gave it to the ancestors at Wota-emi. The
+ancestors made fires.”
+
+From the Akar-Bale tribe I obtained the following legend: “The people
+had no fire. Dim-do̱ri (a fish) went and fetched fire from
+J̌ereg-l’ar-mugu (the place of departed spirits). He came back and threw
+the fire at the people and burnt them, and marked them all. The people
+ran into the sea and became fishes. Dim-do̱ri went to shoot them with
+his bow and arrows, and he also became a fish.” This story is supposed
+to account for the bright colouring of certain species of fish.
+
+Mr Portman gives a somewhat similar version from the same tribe [115].
+“Dim-do̱ra (a fish), a very long time ago, at Keri-l’oŋ-tower, was
+bringing fire from Puluga’s platform (fireplace). He, taking the fire,
+burnt everybody with it. Bolub and Tarko̱r and Biličau fell into the sea
+and became fishes. They took the fire to Rokwa-l’ar-toŋa village and
+made fires there.”
+
+Another Akar-Bale legend is that fire was given to the first ancestors
+(Da Duku and In Bain) by Puluga. Still another is that fire was
+obtained by the ancestors from Aga, the skink (Mabuia tytleri). The
+mist that is often seen hanging over the jungle in small patches, after
+rain or at dawn, is said to be the smoke of Aga’s fire. An island in
+the Archipelago is called Aga l’od-baraij, Aga’s village.
+
+Mr Portman gives an Aka-Bea legend, which, however, relates that the
+events took place at Wota-emi in the A-Pučikwar country [116].
+
+“Puluga was asleep at To̱l-l’oko-tima. Luratut came, stealing fire. The
+fire burnt Puluga. Puluga awoke. Puluga seized some fire. Taking the
+fire he burnt Luratut with it. Luratut took the fire. He burnt
+Tar-čeker (another kind of kingfisher) with it in Wota-emi village. The
+ancestors lit fires. They (the ancestors) were the Tomo-la.”
+
+Mr Man gives three different versions of legends as to the origin of
+fire. According to the first of these, Puluga, after he had made the
+first man, Tomo, gave him fire and taught him its use. Puluga obtained
+fire by stacking in alternate layers two kinds of wood known as co̱r and
+ber, and then bidding the sun to come and sit on or near the pile until
+she ignited it, after which she returned to her place in the sky [117].
+The second version is that Puluga came to Tomo with a spirit named Lači
+Puŋa Ablola to instruct Tomo, who at his direction, prepared a pyre and
+then struck it, on which the fire was kindled and Puŋa Ablola proceeded
+to teach him how to cook food [118]. This legend contains an obvious
+contradiction. Lači Puŋa Ablola, as is shown by the name itself (Lači =
+the late), is the name of some one who is supposed to have lived and
+died and so become a spirit. Yet at the same time Tomo is supposed to
+have been the first of the Andamanese. There is the possibility,
+however, that this inconsistency is due not to the natives themselves,
+but to Mr Man’s transcription. It is possible that the legend is that
+fire was discovered and was given to the ancestors (the Tomo) by a
+person who, being dead, is now Lači Puŋa Ablola, but who was then alive
+and one of the ancestors (Tomo) themselves.
+
+A third legend about fire given by Mr Man is associated by him with
+another legend about a flood that once overwhelmed the ancestors.
+According to Mr Man’s version the fires were all extinguished by the
+flood, so that the few survivors were left without fire. “At this
+juncture one of their recently deceased friends appeared in their midst
+in the form of a bird named Luratut. Seeing their distress he flew up
+to Mo̱ro, the sky, where he discovered Puluga seated beside his fire; he
+thereupon seized and attempted to carry away in his beak a burning log,
+but the heat, or weight, or both, rendered the task impossible, and the
+blazing brand fell on Puluga, who, incensed with pain, hurled it at the
+intruder; happily for those concerned, the missile missed its mark and
+fell near the very spot where the survivors were deploring their
+condition. As Luratut alighted in their midst at the same moment, he
+gained the full credit for having removed the chief cause of their
+distress [119].”
+
+We may now consider a group of legends that relate how a great
+catastrophe overwhelmed the ancestors. In many of the versions the
+legend relates how the ancestors were transformed into animals. Some of
+the legends are connected with Biliku or Puluga and others are
+connected with the first discovery of fire. Beginning with the North
+Andaman, the following is, I believe, an Aka-J̌eru version. “Mimi Čara
+once broke some firewood in the evening (while the cicada was singing).
+A great storm came and killed many people, who were turned into fishes
+and birds. The water rose up till it covered the trees. Mimi Čara and
+Mimi Kota took the fire and went up the hill to the cave at Ŋaram. They
+carried the fire under a cooking-pot. They kept the fire alight in the
+cave, until the storm was over.”
+
+Another Aka-J̌eru legend was taken down hurriedly and the full details
+were not obtained. “The people made a noise in the evening when Mite
+(the cicada) was singing. Mite went to see her mother Biliku. Her
+mother saw her eyes and face. She looked bad. Her eyes were red (with
+weeping). Biliku was very angry. There was a big storm and heavy rain.
+Biliku threw her pearl shells (lightning). She went mad. She destroyed
+the whole world. Biliku went up to live in the sky. The earth was bare
+(literally, empty). One day Biliku dropped a Dipterocarpus seed from
+the sky. Out of this all the different kinds of tree grew, and the
+earth was again covered with forest.” There was more of the legend,
+which I was unable at the time to understand, and which I did not hear
+again. My informant added “It was on this occasion that Maia Taolu
+saved the fire.”
+
+An Aka-Čari legend relates how the birds and beasts and fishes arose.
+“Maia Dik (Sir Prawn) once got angry and threw fire at the people (the
+ancestors). They all turned into birds and fishes. The birds flew into
+the jungle. The fishes jumped into the sea. Maia Dik [120] himself
+became a large prawn which is still called by the same name.” In
+connection with this legend it must be remembered that it was Maia Dik,
+according to one legend, who first discovered the use of fire. One
+version of the story said that he made fire by striking a piece of
+paraŋo wood. Then he threw the burning wood about amongst the ancestors
+and they turned into birds and fishes.
+
+An Aka-J̌eru version is very similar. “The people were all asleep. Maia
+Ko̱lo (Sir Sea-eagle) came and threw fire amongst them. They awoke in a
+fright and all ran in different directions. Some ran into the sea and
+became fishes and turtle; others ran into the jungle and became birds.”
+
+The Aka-Kede version of the catastrophe that overtook the ancestors is
+as follows. “It was at the place called Čilpet. The people collected a
+lot of honey. They refused to give any to Ko̱po-tera-wat (a bird, not
+identified). The latter got very angry, and in the evening, when the
+cicadæ were singing he made a great noise and disturbed their song.
+Then there arose a great storm, and it rained very heavily, and the sea
+rose over the land. It rose very rapidly till only the top of a big
+Dipterocarpus tree showed above the water. The people took refuge in
+the branches of this tree. Mima Mite (Lady Dove) managed to rescue some
+fire and keep it alight under a cooking pot. The waters at length
+subsided. Then the people did not know how to get down from the tree.
+Mima Čarami-lebek made a long piece of string and with this she lowered
+the people safely to the ground.” The čarami-lebek, which was not
+identified, is a species of bird that lives, so the natives say, only
+at the top of the very tallest trees of the forest.
+
+An Aka-Ko̱l version of the same legend is as follows: “At first there
+were no birds in the jungle and no fish in the sea. The ancestors were
+playing one evening and making a noise while the peti (cicada) was
+singing. Then Bilik got angry and sent a great cyclone. All the people
+were turned into birds and fishes and turtles and jungle beasts.”
+
+There is an A-Pučikwar legend that, in the days of the ancestors, there
+was a big cyclone. There was a flood at Wota-emi and the water rose up
+over the trees. Some of the ancestors climbed up into a big
+Dipterocarpus tree and remained there till the waters had subsided. I
+was not able to hear any more detailed version of the legend.
+
+The following legend explaining how the ancestors were turned into
+animals was told me by an A-Pučikwar man, but it is probably really of
+Akar-Bale origin.
+
+“It was in the days of the ancestors. Ta Ko̱lwo̱t (Sir Tree-lizard) went
+over to a big meeting at Teb-ǰuru (in the Archipelago). There was a lot
+of dancing. Ko̱lwo̱t decided to give a big dancing party of his own. He
+invited everybody and they all came to his place. Ko̱lwo̱t danced a great
+deal. He began to get wild. All the people were afraid, because he was
+very strong. They caught hold of him by the arms. Ko̱lwo̱t got very
+angry. He threw the people from him. He threw them so violently that
+some fell in the sea and became fishes and turtle. Others fell on
+different islands and became birds and animals. No one could hold
+Ko̱lwo̱t. At last Berep (a species of crab) caught hold of his arm and
+would not let go. And thus Berep stopped him. Before this there had
+been no birds in the jungles nor any fish in the sea.”
+
+A more complete version of this story was obtained from the Akar-Bale
+tribe. “Da Tigbul (Sir Dugong) took all the people to dance at Kwaičo.
+In Bain (Lady Civet-cat) told Da Kwo̱ko̱l (Sir Tree-lizard) that people
+were coming from Tar-mugu to dance and that Da Karami [121] would
+quarrel with him. Da Kwo̱ko̱l replied ‘Oh! I don’t care. I can fight all
+those people easily enough.’ All the people came together for the dance
+and Karami quarrelled with Kwo̱ko̱l. The latter got very angry. The
+people were afraid. Tigbul (Dugong) caught hold of Kwo̱ko̱l by the arm.
+Kwo̱ko̱l threw him from him with such force that Tigbul fell into the sea
+and became a dugong. Then Kočurag-boa caught hold of Kwo̱ko̱l and Kwo̱ko̱l
+threw him into the jungle [122]. Kwo̱ko̱l threw all the people into the
+sea or into the jungle and they became birds and beasts and fishes. No
+one could hold him. Da Kwo̱ko̱l went away to Teb-ǰuru. The people told Da
+Berag (Sir Crab) what had happened at Kwaičo and how no one could hold
+Da Kwo̱ko̱l. Da Berag went after him to Teb-ǰuru. Da Kwo̱ko̱l had covered
+himself with ko̱iob (red paint) [123]. Da Berag pretended that he wanted
+some paint to put on his upper lip, saying that he was sick. There was
+no more red paint in the place, so Da Kwo̱ko̱l said ‘You had better come
+and take some off me.’ Da Berag put his nose to Kwo̱ko̱l’s arm as though
+to get some paint, and bit deeply into Kwo̱ko̱l’s shoulder. Kwo̱ko̱l could
+not get loose, and so he died. The people at Teb-ǰuru attacked Da Berag
+and beat him. They could not kill him, because his skin was too hard,
+so they threw him into the sea. When Kwo̱ko̱l’s mother, Kegŋa, came and
+found her son dead she was very angry. She wept for a long time. Then
+she went into the jungle and cut the plant to̱kul which belongs to
+Puluga. Puluga was angry because the to̱kul was cut and sent a big storm
+which killed Kegŋa and all the other people in that place.”
+
+Mr Man records another version of this legend.
+
+“To explain the origin of certain fish, they say that one day before
+the Deluge, Maia Ko̱lwo̱t went to visit an encampment of the Tomola
+situated in the Archipelago. While engaged in his song the women,
+through inattention to his instructions, marred the effect of the
+chorus, so, to punish them, he seized his bow, whereupon the whole
+party in terror fled in all directions; some escaping into the sea were
+changed into dugongs, porpoises, sharks, and various other fish which
+till then had not been seen [124].”
+
+Mr Man gives still another version of the same story. “One day, at the
+commencement of the rainy season, a tomola named Berebi came to visit
+Ko̱lwo̱t’s mother, Čana Erep, with the express intention of seeing her
+son, of whom he was extremely jealous. When he appeared Berebi
+treacherously bit him in the arm, but his teeth became fixed in the
+flesh and he was therefore unable to detach himself from his victim,
+whose friends promptly avenged his murder, and disposed of the corpses
+by throwing them into the sea. (Ko̱lwo̱t, after death, was transformed
+into a species of tree-lizard, which is still named after him, and
+Berebi became a fish called Koŋo, which is armed with a row of
+poisonous barbs in its back.) The bereaved mother, in her rage, grief
+and despair, committed various acts, against which Tomo had been warned
+by Puluga, and while so doing incited others to follow her example by
+the following words:—
+
+
+ e, e, e, dia ra-gumul l’ab-dala,
+ e, e, e, ŋul kaǰa piǰ pugatken,
+ e, e, e, ŋul čoaken toaiken,
+ e, e, e, ŋul boarato aga-kolaken,
+ e, e, e, ŋul gono boaŋken,
+ e, e, e, ŋul toŋ čoara boaŋken,
+ e, e, e, ŋig arlot pulaiǰoken.
+
+
+The translation of which is:—
+
+
+ e, e, e (sobbing)— My grown-up handsome son,
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, Burn the wax,
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, Grind the seed of the čakan (Entada),
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, Destroy the barata (Caryota),
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, Dig up the gono (yam),
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, Dig up the čati (yam),
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, Destroy everything.
+
+
+Thereupon Puluga was exceeding wroth, and sent the flood, that which
+destroyed all living things with the exception of two men and two
+women.
+
+“This tradition is preserved in the following lines:—
+
+
+ Keledoat ibaji lar čora,
+ Ra-gumul ab-gorga en ig-boadi
+ Ra-gumul le liga koarna
+ Ra-gumul ab-gorka
+ Toala arbo eb dagan čoarpo.
+
+
+The meaning of which is:—
+
+
+ Bring the boat to the beach
+ I will see your fine grown-up son,
+ The grown-up son who threw the youths (into the sea)
+ The fine grown-up son,
+ My adze is rusty, I will stain my lips with his blood.
+
+
+In this, as in all their songs and chants, a good deal is left to the
+imagination, but from their explanations which have been given by the
+aborigines, the following appear to afford some light on the
+subject:—Berebi, being jealous of the renown Ko̱lwo̱t had won for himself
+by his numerous accomplishments and great strength, took advantage of
+meeting him and his mother one day on the water to ask them to let him
+enter their boat. On their complying with his request, he provided
+himself with a rusty adze and hone, remarking on the rusty condition of
+the former; then taking Ko̱lwo̱t by the arm he sniffed it from the wrist
+to the shoulder as if admiring the development of the muscles; while
+doing so he muttered the threat of staining his lips with blood, which
+he shortly after fulfilled in the manner already described [125].”
+
+As the songs given in this legend are in the Akar-Bale language
+(Southern dialect), it is probable that the legend is an Akar-Bale one.
+It is really another version of the legend already given.
+
+Another Akar-Bale story tells how the first ancestors Duku, the monitor
+lizard, and Bain the civet-cat, managed to keep the fire alight when a
+flood overwhelmed them. “One day in the time of the ancestors there
+came a great storm, and the water rose over the land. The rain put out
+the fires. Da Duku (Sir Monitor Lizard) took a smouldering log and
+tried to climb up a tree with it. He could not climb with the fire in
+his hand. His wife In Bain (Lady Civet-cat) took the fire from him and
+took it up to the top of a hill and there kept it alight till the rain
+stopped and the water went away. The hill is called Bain l’it-čapa
+(Bain’s fire) to the present day.” The hill is a rather steep-sided
+hill of no great height in Havelock Island.
+
+Mr Portman [126] connects the story of the flood with the story of the
+dispersion of the ancestors over the islands. Referring to the names of
+the tribes he says, “The Andamanese state that these names were given
+to the different tribes by Maia Tomo-la when they were dispersed after
+a cataclysm. They have a tradition that this group of tribes was once
+all one tribe, and that the Andaman Islands were much larger than at
+present. Some great cataclysm occurred during which part of the islands
+subsided and many aborigines were drowned, the remainder being
+separated into different territories as at present by the orders of
+Maia Tomo-la, apparently the chief at that time of the collected tribe.
+(The above is of course a matter-of-fact version of the fanciful and
+impossible legends of the Andamanese.)”
+
+The dispersion legend in the South Andaman is connected with the name
+of the A-Pučikwar tribe. The name (of which the Aka-Bea equivalent is
+Aka-Boǰig-yab) means “those who talk the original language,” it being
+believed that the A-Pučikwar language was the one originally spoken by
+the ancestors.
+
+The only version of the dispersion legend that I heard was from the
+Aka-Kede tribe. It was to the effect that Bilika once seized all the
+ancestors and put them in a netted bag (such as the natives use for
+carrying small objects of various kinds). She (or he) took them out a
+few at a time and put them in different parts of the country, where
+their descendants have been ever since.
+
+Mr Man speaks of a legend of how the tribes came to be dispersed over
+the islands. From his account it would seem that there were two
+different dispersions, one before the Deluge, and a second after it. Mr
+Man’s account is as follows. “Tomo lived to a great age, but even
+before his death his offspring became so numerous that their home could
+no longer accommodate them. At Puluga’s bidding they were furnished
+with all necessary weapons, implements, and fire, and then scattered in
+pairs all over the country. When this exodus occurred Puluga provided
+each party with a distinct dialect. It would almost seem that, without
+straining the legend to suit facts, we might discern in this a faint
+echo of the Biblical account of the confusion of tongues and dispersion
+at Babel [127].”
+
+“Consequent on the disappearance of Tomo and his wife, the duties of
+headship over the community at Wota-emi devolved on one of their
+grandchildren, named Ko̱lwo̱t, who was distinguished by being the first
+to spear and catch turtles. The tomola remained on the islands long
+after Tomo’s transformation, but after Ko̱lwo̱t’s death, according to one
+legend, they grew disobedient, and as Puluga ceased to visit them,
+became more and more remiss in their observance of the commands given
+at the creation. At last Puluga’s anger burst forth, and, without any
+warning, he sent a great flood that covered the whole land, and
+destroyed all living. Four persons (two men, Lo̱ra-lola and Po̱i-lola,
+and two women, Ka-lola and Rima-lola), who happened to be in a canoe
+when the catastrophe occurred, were able to effect an escape. When the
+waters subsided, they found themselves near Wota-emi, where they landed
+and discovered that every living thing on earth had perished; but
+Puluga re-created the animals, birds, etc. [128].”
+
+“When, for the second time in their history, their numbers had
+increased to so great an extent that it became impossible for them to
+remain together in one spot, an exodus, similar to the first, took
+place; each party being furnished with fire and every other essential,
+started in a different direction, and on settling down adopted a new
+and distinct dialect. They each received a tribal name, and from them
+have sprung the various tribes still existing on the islands [129].”
+
+In the Southern tribes there is a legend to account for the origin of
+night. The following version was obtained from the A-Pučikwar tribe.
+“In the early days of the world, in the time of the ancestors, there
+was no night; it was always day. Ta Pe̱tie (Sir Monitor Lizard) went
+into the jungle to dig up yams. He found some yams. He also found some
+resin (teki), and a cicada (ro̱to). He brought them to the camp of the
+ancestors at Wota-emi. He sat down and the people came round him. Ta
+Pe̱tie took the cicada and rubbed it between his hands and crushed it.
+As he did this the cicada uttered its cry. Then the day went away and
+it was dark. It remained dark for several days. The ancestors came
+together and tried to get back the day. They made torches of resin, and
+danced and sang songs. First Kotare (a bird) sang a song, but he could
+not get back the daylight. Then Bumu (a beetle?) sang, but the day
+would not come. Then Pecero̱l (the bulbul, Otocompsia emeria) sang, and
+after him Ko̱io (a bird), but both in vain. Then Ko̱ŋoro (a species of
+ant) sang a song and morning came. After that, day and night followed
+one another alternately.”
+
+A similar legend was obtained from the Akar-Bale tribe. “Da Teŋat [130]
+lived at Golugma Bud. He went fishing one day and got only one small
+fish of the kind called čelau (Glyphidodon sordidus?). He turned to go
+home, and as he went he shot his arrows before him into the jungle
+[131]. Then he went after his arrows to find them again. As he went he
+spoke to the fruits of the jungle, asking them their names. In those
+days the ancestors did not know the names of the fruits and trees.
+First he asked the puiam, and then the guluba, and then the čakli, but
+none of them replied to him. Then he found his first arrow. It was
+stuck fast in a big yam (gono). He took the arrow and said to the yam
+‘What is your name?’ At first the yam did not answer. Teŋat turned to
+go away. He had gone a few steps when the yam called him back, saying
+‘My name is gono.’ Teŋat replied ‘Oh! I did not know. Why did not you
+say so before?’ He dug up the yam, which was a very big one. He went
+off to look for his second arrow. As he went he spoke to the stones of
+the jungle, asking their names, but none of them replied. Then he found
+his second arrow fixed in a large lump of resin (tug) [132]. He took
+the arrow, and as he was going away the resin called him back, saying
+‘Here! my name is tug; you can take me along with you.’ So Teŋat took
+the resin. Then Teŋat found a cicada (rita), and he took that also.
+When Teŋat got to the hut (bud), everyone came to look at the things he
+had brought. He showed them the yam. He told them its name and showed
+them how to cook it. This was the first time that the ancestors ate
+gono. Then Teŋat took in his hand the cicada and squashed it between
+his palms. As he killed it the cicada uttered its cry and the whole
+world became dark. When the people saw that it was dark they tried to
+bring back the daylight. Teŋat took some of the resin and made torches.
+He taught the people how to dance and sing. When Da Ko̱ŋoro (Sir Ant)
+sang a song the day came back. After that the day and night came
+alternately.”
+
+Mr Man records a different version of this story.
+
+“The manner in which the world was illuminated at the beginning is not
+clearly to be ascertained from their legends, for one story states that
+the sun and moon were subsequently created at Tomo’s request, as he
+found that, under the then existing circumstances, it was impossible to
+catch fish by night or to hunt by day; while, in direct disagreement
+with this, another story tells us that night was a punishment brought
+upon mankind by certain individuals who angered Puluga by killing a
+caterpillar. The tale informs us that the sun, one day, burned so
+fiercely as to cause great distress. Two women named Čana Limi and Čana
+J̌araŋud, became exceedingly irritable, and while in this unhappy frame
+of mind they discovered a caterpillar (gurug) and a certain plant
+called utura. By way of venting their spleen, one crushed the helpless
+grub, and the other destroyed the plant. These wanton acts so
+displeased Puluga that he determined to punish them, and to teach them
+to appreciate the privilege of daylight, which they had hitherto
+uninterruptedly enjoyed. He accordingly visited the earth with a
+long-continued darkness, which caused every one much inconvenience and
+distress. At last their chief, Maia Ko̱lwo̱t, to whom reference has
+already been made, hit upon a happy expedient of inducing Puluga to
+restore the former state of things by trying to assure him that they
+were quite unconcerned, and could enjoy themselves in spite of light
+being withheld from them. To accomplish this, he invented the custom of
+dancing and singing, the result of which was that Puluga, finding that
+they had frustrated his intention, granted, as a first concession
+alternate periods of day and night, and subsequently, moved by the
+difficulties often occasioned by the latter, created the moon to
+mitigate their troubles. It is in this way that they account for the
+same word being used to denote a caterpillar and night [133].”
+
+From the Akar-Bale tribe I obtained a legend about the origin of death.
+No other version of the same legend was obtained.
+
+“At J̌o̱ŋo-l’ar-bo̱ŋ lived In Kalwadi with her sons Yaramurud and Toau
+[134]. Yaramurud went to hunt pig for his mother, but was unsuccessful.
+When he came home his mother brought him some pork that was in the hut.
+As he took his knife from the back of his neck to cut the meat with it,
+he cut himself [135]. Then his mother knew that he was dead. She said
+to him ‘You are dead now. You had better go away. We do not want you
+here any more.’ She took him up and carried him into the jungle and
+buried him, returning home. Very soon Yaramurud returned. His mother
+exclaimed ‘Oh! I thought you had gone.’ He replied ‘Mother, I did not
+die. Why did you bury me?’ But she knew he was dead, so she took him
+and buried him again. He came back again. This happened three times.
+Then Kalwadi took him into the jungle to a big dumla tree (Pisonia
+excelsa), in which there was a big hole. She kicked the tree with her
+foot and said ‘You go in there.’ Yaramurud went inside. ‘Well! Have you
+gone?’ his mother asked. He answered ‘Yes!’ ‘Tell me how the spirits
+(čauga) talk’ she asked him, and he replied ‘To̱ kit [136].’ Then his
+mother knew that he was with the spirits, and said ‘Oh! my child, you
+are finished now. You will never come back again.’ After a few days
+Yaramurud came back (as a spirit) to see his brother Toau. Toau was
+busy building a hut. When Yaramurud saw him he killed him. Before this
+there had been no death. But In Kalwadi told the people, saying ‘You
+see what has happened; well, we shall all of us die like this, like
+these two have done’.”
+
+There is a widespread legend to account for the origin of creeks and
+islands. The following is an A-Pučikwar version.
+
+“At first there was only one big island with the sea all round it.
+There were no small islands and no creeks. Ko̱ŋoro (a species of ant)
+made a turtle net and went fishing. He caught a very big fish of the
+kind called ko̱ro-ŋiti-čau in his net, and dived down and attached a
+rope to its tail. The fish got very angry and made furious plunges to
+get away, striking the land in its struggles, and each time knocking
+off a bit of the land or making a long split. This is the origin of the
+smaller islands and the creeks.”
+
+Mr Man records the same legend, but says it was Tomo who caught the
+fish [137]. In an Akar-Bale version it was Da Pečero̱l who caught the
+fish (ko̱roŋadi). Pečero̱l is the bulbul (Otocompsia emeria). I have the
+name ko̱roŋadi in my notes as being Sphyraena acutipinnis, but the
+identification is a doubtful one. In the Aka-Kede tribe there is a
+version in which it is stated that one of the ancestors captured a fish
+called talepo. This does not seem to be the same species of fish as
+that called ko̱ro-ŋiti-čau or ko̱roŋadi in the South. In the North
+Andaman the legend is that Pe̱rǰido, the son of Biliku, shot a large eel
+(bol) with an arrow, and in its endeavours to get free from the arrow
+the eel wriggled about till it made all the creeks.
+
+In the Southern tribes there is a legend that relates how the pig first
+got its senses. A version from the A-Pučikwar tribe is as follows.
+
+“Ta Mita (Sir Dove) went into the jungle and found a lot of pigs. They
+did not run away when he came because they had no eyes to see him, no
+ears to hear, and no nostrils with which to smell. They had no mouths.
+Mita made mouths for them and gave them tusks which he made of tobur
+wood. He made eyes and ears and nostrils in their heads and taught them
+how to grunt and how to sneeze [138].”
+
+Another version from the same tribe is as follows.
+
+“At first the pigs had neither nose nor ears nor eyes. They used to
+stand about at Wota-emi when the ancestors lived there. The people ate
+a great many of them. They were such a nuisance that Mita (Dove), the
+wife of Tomo, thought of a plan to get them out of the way. She bored
+holes in their heads, two for eyes, two for ears, and two for nostrils.
+The pigs ran off into the forest where they have been ever since.”
+
+I did not obtain any version of this legend from the Northern tribes.
+The Aka-Kede have a different legend about the pigs.
+
+“At first there were no pigs. One of the ancestors, Mimi Čau (Lady
+Civet-cat), invented a new game, and made the ancestors run on all
+fours and grunt. Those playing were turned into pigs, and went to live
+in the jungle. Mimi Čau became a civet-cat (čau).”
+
+In the North Andaman there is a legend connected with the pig which
+explains the origin of the dugong.
+
+“Pe̱rǰido was the first man to catch a pig. He went into the forest and
+found a pig. Pe̱rǰido was hungry. He caught the pig and took it home.
+The pig had no eyes nor ears nor mouth. Pe̱rǰido did not disembowel the
+pig, nor did he sever the joints of its legs [139]. He made a fire and
+put the pig on it. The pig swelled up in the heat of the fire and
+burst. This made holes in the pig’s head, two for ears, two for eyes,
+two for nostrils. The pig perceived that it was being burnt. It jumped
+up from the fire and ran away. Pe̱rǰido threw a ko̱bo (Licuala) leaf at
+it. The pig ran into the sea and became a dugong. The leaf became its
+flipper.”
+
+In the Aka-Čari tribe there is a legend describing the origin of
+turtles.
+
+“At first there was only one big turtle. He came to the camp of the
+Aka-Čari people and called them, saying ‘Bring your canoes and catch
+me.’ They got into their canoes and followed the turtle. They could not
+catch him. The turtle swam away and the canoes followed. When the
+canoes were far from land the big turtle came and upset the canoes. The
+men were all turned into turtles of the same kind and size as those
+that are seen now. The canoes (and the big turtle?) were turned into a
+reef.”
+
+In the South Andaman it is supposed that the custom of scarifying the
+skin was invented by the first ancestor of the Andamanese, the monitor
+lizard. An Akar-Bale version of the story is as follows.
+
+“Duku (Monitor Lizard) lived with his wife Bain (Civet-cat). Duku said
+‘I am going to scarify myself.’ His wife tried to dissuade him. He
+would not listen to her. He went into the jungle and found a piece of
+to̱lma (quartz) and scarified himself all over. His wife was very angry
+and asked him why he had done it. Duku replied ‘I look very well like
+this, and you will see, all the other people will do the same’.”
+
+Mr Man gives a version of the same legend.
+
+“Maia Duku, who appears to be identical with Tomo, is said to have been
+the first to tattoo himself. One day, while out on a fishing
+expedition, he shot an arrow; missing its object it struck a hard
+substance which proved to be a piece of iron, the first ever found.
+With it Duku made an arrow-head and tattooed himself, after which he
+sang the ditty:—
+
+
+ To̱ŋ ma lir pireŋa? to̱ŋ yitiken! to̱ŋ yitiken!
+ to̱ŋ ma lir pireŋa? to̱ŋ yitiken!
+
+
+the interpretation of which is
+
+
+ ‘What can now strike me?
+ I am tattooed, I am tattooed!’ etc. (Da capo) [140].”
+
+
+It would seem that Mr Man, or else his informant, was not very clear
+about the details of the legend. In the South Andaman scarification is
+never performed with an arrow-head, nor with any instrument of iron,
+but with a flake of quartz or glass. It is only in the North and Middle
+Andaman that an arrow-head is used for such a purpose, and even then it
+is only so used to make the big scars on the back and chest, the
+ordinary scarification being performed with a flake of stone or glass.
+The legend is certainly a Southern one, and the song given is in the
+Aka-Bea language. The accuracy of the transcription of the legend
+therefore seems very doubtful.
+
+Yams and honey, being two of the most important foods of the Andaman
+Islanders, are the subject of several legends. A common belief about
+yams is that they were made, or their qualities were first discovered,
+by Biliku or Puluga. We have already seen that there is a special
+connection between Biliku (or Puluga) and the yams and other edible
+roots. There are also other legends, however, on the same subject. An
+account of the first discovery of the yam called gono is contained in
+the Akar-Bale legend of the origin of night, already given [141].
+
+In the North Andaman the following tale is told about the discovery of
+one kind of yam.
+
+“Maia Dik (Sir Prawn) discovered ko̱nmo (Dioscorea sp.). He was very
+hungry and went to look for something to eat. He found a very large
+ko̱nmo. There was only one ko̱nmo. He cooked it in the fire and ate as
+much as he could. He dashed the remainder on a rock, and the fragments
+scattered everywhere and grew into fresh plants. After this there were
+plenty of ko̱nmo everywhere.”
+
+A legend is also told in the North Andaman about the first discovery of
+another kind of yam.
+
+“Maia Pulimu (Sir Fly) and Maia Mo̱ičo (Sir Rail) went to hunt pig. They
+killed one pig. There was nothing to tie up the pig (to carry it home).
+Maia Pulimu went to look for a creeper (with which to tie up the pig).
+He caught hold of a creeper and pulled it and found it was a mino
+(Dioscorea sp.). Maia Pulimu was a long time away. Maia Mo̱ičo went and
+found some creeper for himself and tied up the pig and carried it home.
+When Maia Pulimu came back he found that Maia Mo̱ičo had gone and taken
+the pig. He followed him and went home. He showed the ancestors how to
+cook and eat mino.”
+
+I believe that there is a fuller version of this legend, which I was
+unable, however, to obtain. Another of my informants told me the story
+as follows.
+
+“Mimi Mo̱ičo (Lady Rail) had a son Pulimu (Fly). Pulimu found a mino in
+the forest and brought it to his mother. They roasted it in the fire.”
+
+Mr Man gives a story from the South Andaman.
+
+“Another of their antediluvian ancestors was famous for propagating
+yams. This was Maia Bumroag, who in shooting an arrow, struck the
+creeper belonging to the favourite variety called gono; his curiosity
+being excited he dug up the root, and tasted it: the result being
+satisfactory, he informed his friends of his discovery, and they all
+feasted upon it; when they had had sufficient, he scattered the remains
+in different directions; this apparent waste so angered his mother
+that, on pretence of shaving him, she split his head open with a flint.
+After his death it was found that the act for which he had suffered had
+tended to the spread of the plant which is now plentiful [142].”
+
+In the North Andaman it is supposed that honey was discovered by
+Pe̱rǰido the son of Biliku.
+
+“Pe̱rǰido was the first to eat honey. One day he went to shoot fish. He
+saw a nyuri (Plotosus sp.). The nyuri disappeared amongst the roots of
+the mangrove trees. Pe̱rǰido was looking for the fish. There was a
+honeycomb in a mangrove tree. Pe̱rǰido saw its reflection in the water.
+He took some fire and tried to get the honey out of the water [143].
+The water put out the fire. He could not get the honey. He went home
+and told his mother what he had been doing. She went with him and saw
+the honey. ‘What a fool you are’ she said, ‘don’t you see that it is in
+the trees.’ Pe̱rǰido took some fire and smoked out the bees and took the
+honey. After that Pe̱rǰido used to go and collect honey. He ate it all
+himself. He did not tell the others (the ancestors) about it. Maia
+Po̱rubi (Sir Frog) found out that Pe̱rǰido was getting honey and eating
+it. He went in to the forest to look for some. He found five or six
+combs. He ate them all and brought none home to his children. Be̱re̱t (a
+smaller species of frog) was the child of Po̱rubi. One day Be̱re̱t said to
+his father ‘Bring us some honey.’ The children went with their father
+and showed him the combs in the trees. Po̱rubi went up the tree, and
+each time he ate the honey in the tree and did not bring any of it down
+for his children. Then Be̱re̱t saw another honeycomb in a very tall tree.
+He pointed it out to his father. Po̱rubi went up to get it. Be̱re̱t cut
+the creeper up which his father had climbed [144]. Po̱rubi wrapped up
+the honeycomb to bring it down. Be̱re̱t said ‘Father, this creeper is
+bad. How will you come down?’ Po̱rubi replied ‘How can it be bad, when I
+have just climbed up it?’ Be̱re̱t made some sharp stakes of čo̱m (Areca)
+wood, and put them round the tree. Po̱rubi jumped (or fell) from the
+tree on to the stakes and was killed. Be̱re̱t took the honey and ran away
+home.”
+
+In the Aka-Čari tribe there is another legend connected with the frog
+(po̱rubi) which may conveniently be given here.
+
+“The ancestors were at enmity with Maia Po̱rubi. They went to kill him.
+They shot him with their arrows, but they could not kill him. Maia
+Po̱rubi caught hold of them all in his arms, and jumped into the sea. He
+jumped from the hill called Čauanara. He found a big round stone
+(boulder) and put the people under it and left them there. All the
+people turned into stone, and may be seen there now. The next night
+some more of the people went to hunt turtle near Maia Po̱rubi’s place.
+They caught a turtle and shouted [145]. Maia Po̱rubi heard them
+shouting. ‘They are coming again to kill me,’ he said. While they were
+catching turtle he threw a round stone at them. The stone sank the
+canoe. The canoe and the people in it were turned to stone.”
+
+A story in which there is a connection between honey and a toad is
+given by Mr Man.
+
+“Another curious fable is told to account for a drought from which
+their early ancestors suffered: it relates that once upon a time, in
+the dry season, a woodpecker discovered a black honeycomb in the hollow
+of a tree; while regaling himself on this dainty he observed a toad
+eyeing him wistfully from below, so he invited him to join in the
+feast; the toad gladly accepted, whereupon the woodpecker lowered a
+creeper, giving instructions to his guest to fasten his bucket (dakar)
+thereto, and then to seat himself in it, so that he might be drawn up.
+The toad complied with the directions and the woodpecker proceeded to
+haul him up; but just when he had brought him near the comb he
+mischievously let go the creeper, and his confiding and expectant guest
+experienced an unpleasant fall. The trick so exasperated him that he at
+once repaired to the streams far and near in the island and drained
+them, the result of which was that great distress was occasioned to all
+the birds, as well as to the rest of the animate creation. The success
+of his revenge so delighted the toad that, to show his satisfaction,
+and to add to the annoyance of his enemies, he thoughtlessly began to
+dance, whereupon all the water flowed from him, and the drought soon
+terminated [146].”
+
+One of the incidents of the North Andaman story of the frog (Po̱rubi)
+and his son (Be̱re̱t) appears in a different story from the South and
+Middle Andaman. The following is an Aka-Ko̱l version of this legend.
+
+“Ta Mita (Sir Dove) and Ta Ko̱io (a species of small bird) went hunting
+together and got a great number of pigs. Ta Ko̱io told Ta Mita to get
+some canes to tie up all the pigs. As soon as Ta Mita had gone to look
+for the cane, Ta Ko̱io went up a big Dipterocarpus tree, taking half the
+pigs with him. He came down and took the rest of the pigs. He stayed up
+in the tree with the pigs. When Ta Mita came back he found that the
+pigs had disappeared. He was very angry and went home. As there was
+nothing to eat, Mita and his two children, Čada and Čoda (two species
+of fish) went fishing. Ko̱io was still up the tree. He was cooking the
+pigs up there. Mita and his children passed under the tree and some
+burning resin [147] fell on them. In this way they discovered that Ko̱io
+was in the tree. Mita planned to punish Ko̱io. He cut a great number of
+sharp stakes of Areca wood and fixed them all round the tree, pointing
+upwards. Ko̱io was asleep. Mita made the tree sink into the ground. As
+soon as it was low enough he took some water and threw it into the ear
+of the sleeping Ko̱io, who awoke in a fright and jumped from the tree.
+He was impaled on the stakes of wood and so died.”
+
+Another version of the same tale was obtained from the Akar-Bale tribe.
+
+“Da Bumu (a species of bird) went hunting pig with Da Berakwe (another
+species of bird), and they got a large number of pigs. Then Berakwe
+said to Bumu ‘We want some cane to tie up all these pigs. You go and
+get it.’ When Bumu had gone Berakwe climbed up into a big Dipterocarpus
+tree, taking all the pigs with him, except one very small one which he
+left behind. When Bumu came back with the cane he found only one small
+pig, and he was very angry. He went home with the pig. Bumu’s wife
+Yakoŋ (a species of fish) said ‘I am very hungry. We will go and get
+some fish by night.’ At night Yakoŋ went out to get some fish and she
+passed under the tree where Berakwe was cooking his pigs. Some burning
+resin fell on her and burnt her. She looked up and saw Berakwe and said
+‘Oh! there you are; you stole all my husband’s pigs.’ She went home and
+told Bumu. In the morning Bumu got up very early and cut a number of
+pointed stakes of Areca (čam) wood, and fixed them all round the tree
+where Berakwe was, with the sharp points upwards. Then Bumu made the
+tree sink gradually into the ground. Berakwe fell from the tree on to
+the stakes and so was killed. Bumu and his wife got the pigs.”
+
+Mr Man records a version of the same story.
+
+“The legend regarding the origin of the evil spirits known as Čo̱l is as
+follows:—Their ancestor, Maia Čo̱l, one day stole a pig which had been
+captured by Maia Ko̱lwo̱t, and climbed up into a gurjon-tree with his
+prize. Now Maia Ko̱lwo̱t was remarkable for his great strength, and being
+enraged, determined to revenge himself; he thereupon planted a number
+of spikes all round the tree in which the thief had taken refuge, and
+then proceeded to force it into the ground. On finding that if he
+remained where he was, he must inevitably be buried alive, Maia Čo̱l
+sprang off the tree, and thereby met a more terrible fate, for he was
+impaled on the spikes, and perished miserably. His disembodied spirit
+did not pass to Čaitan (Hades), but took up its abode on the invisible
+bridge, where, by Puluga’s orders, numbers of his descendants were sent
+to join him, in the form of black birds with long tails [148].”
+
+In reference to this version it may be noted that the Čo̱l are not
+“spirits” if that word is used to translate the native term čauga or
+lau. Čo̱l is the name of a species of bird, which I believe is the
+racket-tailed drongo. These birds, though according to Mr Man they live
+on the rainbow, are to be seen every day in the jungle, and may be
+heard calling čo̱l! čo̱l! čo̱l!
+
+Throughout the Great Andaman there is a belief in a huge animal that
+haunts the jungles, or that haunted them in the days of the ancestors.
+In the North Andaman this beast is called J̌irmu. In the days of the
+ancestors it is supposed to have lived at Ulibi-taŋ, where it attacked
+and killed any men and women who came in its way. No detailed legend
+about the J̌irmu was obtained.
+
+In the Akar-Bale language Kočurag-boa is the name of the same or a
+similar monster. In the A-Pučikwar language it is called Uču. This is
+the name applied to two rocks of limestone which are situated about two
+or three miles south of Wota-emi, one being in a mangrove swamp, and
+the other some little way out in the sea. The following legend is told
+about these rocks.
+
+“In the early days of the Andamanese, Ta Pe̱tie (Sir Monitor Lizard),
+the first ancestor, went into the jungle and found a čo̱ti tree, up
+which he climbed to eat the fruit. The other people (who lived with him
+at Wota-emi) came and found him, and Ta Pe̱tie threw down some of the
+fruit to them, which they ate. The people began to bully Pe̱tie to make
+him throw down more of the fruit. Pe̱tie got angry and said ‘If you
+bully me like that I will call the Uču, and they will kill you all.’
+The people only laughed at him. Pe̱tie called the Uču, calling ‘Dire!
+dire!’ The Uču came, one male and one female. They caught all the
+people and ate them. Only Pe̱tie they did not eat because he was up in
+the high tree. The Uču went off to cross the strait to To̱l-l’oko-tima.
+They had eaten so much that they were very heavy and stuck in the sand
+and mud at the edge of the mangrove swamp. When Pe̱tie came down from
+the tree he found all the people gone. He said ‘Hallo! the Uču must
+have eaten them all.’ He went to look. He found the Uču stuck fast at
+the edge of the mangrove swamp, so that they could not move. He cut
+open their bellies and all the people came out, for the Uču had
+swallowed them whole. The Uču are there to this day.”
+
+When elephants were first introduced into the Andamans for the use of
+the Forest Department, they were named Uču by the natives, and have
+ever since retained that name. Similarly the natives of the Northern
+tribes call them J̌irmu.
+
+In the Akar-Bale tribe there is a legend to account for the origin of a
+rock standing in the sea at a place called Kwaičo-bur.
+
+“Ra-gumul Kwo̱ko̱l went fishing with his bow and arrows in the sea. His
+bow and arrows and he himself were turned into stone, and may be seen
+there to the present day.”
+
+Kwo̱ko̱l is the common tree-lizard. Ra-gumul is the term applied to a
+youth or girl who has just passed through the pig-eating ceremony
+described in Chap. II. A youth is not permitted to handle a bow for
+some days after the ceremony in question. A version of the same legend
+is recorded by Mr Man.
+
+“The story regarding certain Tomola who failed to observe the rules for
+neophytes, states that, on the day after they broke their fast of
+reg-ǰiri (kidney-fat of pig), they left the encampment without giving
+notice of their intention to their friends, and the result was that,
+when they were missed and searched for, it was found that they had gone
+to the shore to fish, and had there met a sad fate; the body of one was
+discovered adhering to a large boulder, and turned into stone, while
+the other, likewise in a state of petrifaction, was standing erect
+beside it [149].”
+
+A reef on the east side of Ritchie’s Archipelago is said to have
+originated as follows.
+
+“The people of Kwaičo went to J̌ila to hunt turtle, taking two canoes.
+While they were away their wives made up a big fire in the evening at
+Kwaičo. The hunters and their canoes were turned to stone, and formed
+the reefs that are now there.”
+
+I believe that the explanation of this story is the belief that the
+moon is angry when a bright fire is visible at the time when he rises
+in the evening shortly after sunset [150].
+
+There seems to be a legend relating to a large snake called o̱r-čubi in
+the North Andaman, but I was not able to obtain a detailed version. The
+following was told me in Aka-J̌eru.
+
+“At Dalamio, in the time of the ancestors, there used to be a big snake
+of the kind called o̱r-čubi. He used to catch men and women when they
+were gathering honey, and kill them and eat them.”
+
+An Akar-Bale version is a little fuller.
+
+“There was a man named Biča who went to look for honey in the jungle.
+He saw a big snake (wara-ǰobo) and from its neck was hanging a
+honeycomb. The snake was as big as a tree. ‘Why don’t you make your
+honey in the trees?’ Biča said to the bees. He went home and called
+several of the men. They took their bows and arrows. They found the
+snake, and shot it with a great many arrows. They could not kill the
+snake, which ran away and was never seen again.”
+
+An Akar-Bale story relates how the first murder came to pass.
+
+“Da Ko (Sir Crow) was the first of the Andamanese. He lived at
+Kared-čar-buaro with his wife In Mud (Lady Dove). He had a friend,
+Badgi-beria (Hawk). Badgi-beria had no wife and was jealous of Da Ko
+and wanted to get his wife. When Da Ko knew this he was very angry. He
+went into the jungle and hid himself. By and by he saw Badgi-beria and
+Mud coming along the path together. He took his bow and arrows and
+killed them.”
+
+Another Akar-Bale story about the dove is as follows.
+
+“Mud and Kulal were cooking pig and got very hot. They went to bathe
+and were turned into birds.”
+
+Mud is the bronze-winged dove, Chalcophaps indica, and kulal is the
+teal, Nettium albigulare.
+
+In the North Andaman there are tales about the sea-eagle (ko̱lo). One is
+to the effect that at first he used ko̱bo (Licuala) leaves to fly with.
+This was before he had wings of his own. Another story is as follows.
+
+“Maia Ko̱lo (Sir Sea-eagle) lived at Čona in Tau-’ra-miku. He had a hut
+in the top of a to̱ro̱ktato tree. He was unmarried. When the men went
+fishing he used to steal their wives. He would only take good-looking
+girls. He would call out to a girl to come and catch hold of his foot,
+saying ‘I have a fish for you.’ If an old or ugly woman came, he would
+say ‘No! not you; go away.’ When a young woman came and caught hold of
+his foot he flew away with her to his hut in the tree.”
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE INTERPRETATION OF ANDAMANESE CUSTOMS AND BELIEFS: CEREMONIAL
+
+
+The present chapter is devoted to an attempt to interpret some of the
+beliefs and customs of the Andaman Islanders, as they have been
+described in the earlier part of this work. By the interpretation of a
+custom is meant the discovery, not of its origin, but of its meaning.
+The system of beliefs and customs that exists to-day in the Andamans is
+the result of a long process of evolution. To seek the origin of these
+customs, as the word origin is here used, is to seek to know the
+details of the historical process by which they have come into
+existence. In the absence of all historical records, the most that we
+could do would be to attempt to make a hypothetical reconstruction of
+the past, which, in the present state of ethnological science, would be
+of very doubtful utility [151].
+
+It is otherwise with the meaning of these customs. Every custom and
+belief of a primitive society plays some determinate part in the social
+life of the community, just as every organ of a living body plays some
+part in the general life of the organism. The mass of institutions,
+customs and beliefs forms a single whole or system that determines the
+life of the society, and the life of a society is not less real, or
+less subject to natural laws, than the life of an organism. To continue
+the analogy, the study of the meaning of savage customs is a sort of
+social physiology, and is to be distinguished from the study of
+origins, or changes of custom in just the same way that animal
+physiology is distinguished from the biology that deals with the origin
+of species, the causes of variation, and the general laws of evolution.
+
+The problems that this chapter presents are therefore not historical
+but psychological or sociological. We have to explain why it is that
+the Andamanese think and act in certain ways. The explanation of each
+single custom is provided by showing what is its relation to the other
+customs of the Andamanese and to their general system of ideas and
+sentiments.
+
+Thus the subject of the present chapter is not in any way affected by
+questions of the historical origin of the customs with which it deals,
+but is concerned only with those customs as they exist at the present
+day. Nor are we concerned with the comparison of the customs of the
+Andamanese with those of other savage races. Such comparisons are not
+only valueless for our purpose, but might be misleading. To draw any
+valid conclusion from the comparison of two apparently similar customs
+in two different societies, we must be sure that they are really
+similar, and to do this we need to know the true meaning of each of
+them considered by itself. The true comparative method consists of the
+comparison, not of one isolated custom of one society with a similar
+custom of another, but of the whole system of institutions, customs and
+beliefs of one society with that of another. In a word, what we need to
+compare is not institutions but social systems or types.
+
+It is often urged that in ethnology description and interpretation
+should be most carefully separated. So far as this means that the facts
+observed by the ethnologist should be recorded free from all bias of
+interpretation, the necessity cannot be too often or too strongly
+urged. If, however, it is meant to imply that efforts at interpretation
+are to be excluded from works of descriptive ethnology, there is much
+to be said against such an opinion. In trying to interpret the
+institutions of a primitive society the field ethnologist has a great
+advantage over those who know the facts only at second hand. However
+exact and detailed the description of a primitive people may be, there
+remains much that cannot be put into such a description. Living, as he
+must, in daily contact with the people he is studying, the field
+ethnologist comes gradually to “understand” them, if we may use the
+term. He acquires a series of multitudinous impressions, each slight
+and often vague, that guide him in his dealings with them. The better
+the observer the more accurate will be his general impression of the
+mental peculiarities of the race. This general impression it is
+impossible to analyse, and so to record and convey to others. Yet it
+may be of the greatest service when it comes to interpreting the
+beliefs and practices of a primitive society. If it does not give any
+positive aid towards a correct interpretation, it at least prevents
+errors into which it is only too easy for those to fall who have not
+the same immediate knowledge of the people and their ways. Indeed it
+may be urged, with some reason, that attempts to interpret the beliefs
+of savages without any first-hand knowledge of the people whose beliefs
+are in question, are at the best unsatisfactory and open to many
+possibilities of error.
+
+The present position of ethnological studies may well be regarded as
+anomalous. Many of the observers engaged in recording the customs of
+primitive people are very imperfectly acquainted with modern theories
+of sociology. One result of this is that they often neglect to record
+anything concerning matters that are of fundamental importance for the
+theorist [152]. On the other hand those engaged in elaborating
+hypotheses do not, as a rule, observe for themselves the facts to be
+explained, but have to rely on what are in many cases imperfect
+documents, being thus unwittingly led into errors that might have been
+avoided. In this science, as in others, if progress is to be made, the
+elaboration of hypotheses and the observation and classification of
+facts must be carried on as interdependent parts of one process, and no
+advantage, but rather great disadvantage, results from the false
+division of labour whereby theorists and observers work independently
+and without systematic cooperation. The most urgent need of ethnology
+at the present time is a series of investigations of the kind here
+attempted, in which the observation and the analysis and interpretation
+of the institutions of some one primitive people are carried on
+together by the ethnologist working in the field.
+
+It is clear that such studies need to be based on a scientific and
+carefully elaborated method. Unfortunately ethnologists are not yet
+agreed as to the methods of their science. The question of method is
+therefore, at the present time, of the greatest importance, and for
+this reason I have tried, in the present chapter, to present the
+argument in such a way that the various steps of the analysis shall be
+immediately apparent, so that the reader may be able not only to judge
+the value of the conclusions, but also to form a clear idea of the
+psychological methods by which they are reached.
+
+Any attempt to explain or interpret the particular beliefs and customs
+of a savage people is necessarily based on some general psychological
+hypothesis as to the real nature of the phenomena to be explained. The
+sound rule of method is therefore to formulate clearly and explicitly
+the working hypothesis on which the interpretation is based. It is only
+in this way that its value can be properly tested.
+
+The hypothesis that seems to be most usually adopted by English writers
+on anthropology is that the beliefs of savage peoples are due to
+attempts on the part of primitive man to explain to himself the
+phenomena of life and nature. The student of human customs, examining
+his own mind, finds that one of the motives most constantly present in
+his consciousness is the desire to understand, to explain—in other
+words what we call scientific curiosity. He concludes that this motive
+is equally insistent in the mind of primitive man. Thus he supposes
+that primitive man, wishing to explain the phenomena of death and of
+sleep and dreams, framed a hypothesis that every man possesses a soul
+or spiritual double [153]. The hypothesis, once formulated, is supposed
+to have been accepted and believed because it satisfied this need of
+comprehension. On this view the belief in a soul (animism) is exactly
+similar in character to the scientific belief in atoms, let us say. The
+same general hypothesis appears in the explanation of totemism as
+having arisen as a theory invented by primitive man in order to explain
+the phenomena of pregnancy and childbirth [154].
+
+On this hypothesis the beliefs are primary, arising first merely as
+beliefs and then acquiring the power to influence action and so giving
+rise to all sorts of ceremonies and customs. Thus these customs are
+only to be explained by showing that they depend on particular beliefs.
+This hypothesis, which we may call the intellectualist hypothesis, has
+never, so far as I am aware, been very clearly formulated or defended,
+but it does seem to underlie many of the explanations of the customs of
+primitive man to be found in works on ethnology.
+
+A second hypothesis explains the beliefs of primitive man as being due
+to emotions of surprise and terror [155], or of awe and wonder [156]
+aroused by the contemplation of the phenomena of nature.
+
+Both these hypotheses may be held together, one being used to explain
+some primitive beliefs and the other to explain others [157].
+
+Doubtless there are other psychological hypotheses underlying the many
+attempts that have been made to explain the customs of primitive
+peoples, but these two seem to be the most important and the most
+widespread. They are mentioned here, not in order to criticise them,
+but in order to contrast them with the hypothesis to be formulated in
+the present chapter [158].
+
+Stated as briefly as possible the working hypothesis here adopted is as
+follows. (1) A society depends for its existence on the presence in the
+minds of its members of a certain system of sentiments [159] by which
+the conduct of the individual is regulated in conformity with the needs
+of the society. (2) Every feature of the social system itself and every
+event or object that in any way affects the well-being or the cohesion
+of the society becomes an object of this system of sentiments. (3) In
+human society the sentiments in question are not innate but are
+developed in the individual by the action of the society upon him. (4)
+The ceremonial customs of a society are a means by which the sentiments
+in question are given collective expression on appropriate occasions.
+(5) The ceremonial (i.e. collective) expression of any sentiment serves
+both to maintain it at the requisite degree of intensity in the mind of
+the individual and to transmit it from one generation to another.
+Without such expression the sentiments involved could not exist.
+
+Using the term “social function” to denote the effects of an
+institution (custom or belief) in so far as they concern the society
+and its solidarity or cohesion, the hypothesis of this chapter may be
+more briefly resumed in the statement that the social function of the
+ceremonial customs of the Andaman Islanders is to maintain and to
+transmit from one generation to another the emotional dispositions on
+which the society (as it is constituted) depends for its existence.
+
+The present chapter contains an attempt to apply this hypothesis to the
+ceremonial customs of the Andaman Islanders. An attempt will be made to
+show that there is a correspondence between the customs and beliefs of
+the Andamanese and a certain system of social sentiments, and that
+there is also a correspondence between these sentiments and the manner
+in which the society is constituted. It is an attempt to discover
+necessary connections between the different characters of a society as
+they exist in the present. No attempt will be made to discover or
+imagine the historical process by which these customs have come into
+existence.
+
+For the clearer understanding of the argument it is necessary to draw
+attention to a few rules of method that will be observed. (1) In
+explaining any given custom it is necessary to take into account the
+explanation given by the natives themselves. Although these
+explanations are not of the same kind as the scientific explanations
+that are the objects of our search yet they are of great importance as
+data. Like the civilised man of Western Europe the savage of the
+Andamans seeks to rationalise his behaviour; being impelled to certain
+actions by mental dispositions of whose origin and real nature he is
+unaware, he seeks to formulate reasons for his conduct, or even if he
+does not so when left to himself he is compelled to when the enquiring
+ethnologist attacks him with questions. Such a reason as is produced by
+this process of rationalisation is rarely if ever identical with the
+psychological cause of the action that it justifies, yet it will nearly
+always help us in our search for the cause. At any rate the reason
+given as explaining an action is so intimately connected with the
+action itself that we cannot regard any hypothesis as to the meaning of
+a custom as being satisfactory unless it explains not only the custom
+but also the reasons that the natives give for following it. (2) The
+assumption is made that when the same or a similar custom is practised
+on different occasions it has the same or a similar meaning in all of
+them. For example, there are different occasions on which a personal
+name is avoided; it is assumed that there is something in common to all
+these occasions and that the meaning of the custom is to be discovered
+by ascertaining what that common element is. (3) It is assumed that
+when different customs are practised together on one and the same
+occasion there is a common element in the customs. This rule is the
+inverse of the last. As an example may be mentioned the different
+customs observed by mourners, which may be assumed to be all related to
+one another. The discovery of what is common to them all will explain
+the meaning of each. (4) I have avoided, as being misleading as well as
+unnecessary, any comparison of Andamanese customs with similar customs
+of other races. Only in one or two instances have I broken this rule,
+and in those I believe I am justified by special considerations.
+
+We can conveniently begin by considering the Andamanese marriage
+ceremony, which is one of the simplest and most easily understood. The
+main feature of it is that the bride and bridegroom are required
+publicly to embrace each other. In the North Andaman the embrace is
+made gradually, by stages as it were, each stage being more intimate
+than the preceding. At first the two sit side by side, then their arms
+are placed around each other, and finally the bridegroom is made to sit
+on the bride’s lap [160].
+
+Everywhere in human life the embrace is employed as an expression of
+such feelings as love, affection, friendship, i.e. of feelings of
+attachment between persons. There is no need to enquire into the
+psycho-physical basis of this expression. It is probably intimately
+related to the nursing of the infant by the mother, and is certainly
+very closely connected with the development of the sex instinct. It is
+sufficient for our purpose to satisfy ourselves that the embrace in all
+its forms does always express feelings of one generic kind. Nor is it
+necessary for us to consider the peculiar form of the Andamanese
+embrace, in which one person sits down and extends his or her legs,
+while the other person sits on the lap so formed and the two wrap their
+arms round one another’s necks and shoulders.
+
+The meaning of the marriage ceremony is readily seen. By marriage the
+man and woman are brought into a special and intimate relation to one
+another; they are, as we say, united. The social union is symbolised or
+expressed by the physical union of the embrace. The ceremony brings
+vividly to the minds of the young couple and also to those of the
+spectators the consciousness that the two are entering upon a new
+social relation of which the essential feature is the affection in
+which they must hold one another.
+
+The rite has two aspects according as we regard it from the standpoint
+of the witnesses or from that of the couple themselves. The witnesses,
+by their presence, give their sanction to the union that is thus
+enacted before them. The man who conducts the ceremony is merely the
+active representative of the community; in what he does and says he
+acts as a deputy and not as a private individual. Thus the ceremony
+serves to make it clear that the marriage is a matter which concerns
+not only those who are entering into it, but the whole community, and
+its occasional performance serves to keep alive this sentiment with
+regard to marriage in general. The existence of the sentiment is shown
+in the reprobation felt and often expressed at an irregular marriage,
+in which the couple unite without a ceremony; such a union showing a
+contemptuous or careless thrusting aside of an important social
+principle.
+
+For the witnesses, then, the ceremony serves to awaken to activity and
+to express this sentiment; but it also serves as a recognition on their
+part of the change of status of the marrying pair. It makes them
+realise that henceforward the young couple must be treated no longer as
+children but as responsible adults, and it is thus the occasion of a
+change of sentiment towards those whose social position is being
+changed. For in the society of the Andamans there is a very marked
+division between married and unmarried persons in the way in which they
+are regarded by others, and in respect of their place in the community.
+
+The married couple are made to realise, in a different way and with a
+much greater intensity of feeling, these same two things; first, that
+their union in marriage is a matter that concerns the whole community,
+and second, that they are entering a new condition, with new privileges
+but also with new duties and obligations. For them, indeed, the
+ceremony is a sort of ordeal from which they would only too gladly
+escape, and which, by the powerful emotions it evokes in them very
+vividly impresses upon them what their marriage means.
+
+The wedding gifts that are bestowed upon the young couple are an
+expression of the general good-will towards them. The giving of
+presents is a common method of expressing friendship in the Andamans.
+Thus when two friends meet after separation, the first thing they do
+after having embraced and wept together, is to give one another
+presents. In most instances the giving is reciprocal, and is therefore
+really an exchange. If a present be given as a sign of good-will the
+giver expects to receive a present of about equal value in return. The
+reason for this is obvious; the one has expressed his good-will towards
+the other, and if the feeling is reciprocated a return present must be
+given in order to express it. So also it would be an insult to refuse a
+present offered, for to do so would be equivalent to rejecting the
+good-will it represents. At marriage the giving is one-sided, no return
+being expected, for it is an expression not of personal friendship on
+the part of the givers, but of the general social good-will and
+approval. It is for this reason that it is the duty of everybody who is
+present to make some gift to the newly-married pair.
+
+In another simple ceremony, the peace-making ceremony of the North
+Andaman [161], the meaning is again easily discovered; the symbolism of
+the dance being indeed at once obvious to a witness, though perhaps not
+quite so obvious from the description given. The dancers are divided
+into two parties. The actions of the one party throughout are
+expressions of their aggressive feelings towards the other. This is
+clear enough in the shouting, the threatening gestures, and the way in
+which each member of the “attacking” party gives a good shaking to each
+member of the other party. On the other side what is expressed may be
+described as complete passivity; the performers stand quite still
+throughout the whole dance, taking care to show neither fear nor
+resentment at the treatment to which they have to submit. Thus those of
+the one side give collective expression to their collective anger,
+which is thereby appeased. The others, by passively submitting to this,
+humbling themselves before the just wrath of their enemies, expiate
+their wrongs. Anger appeased dies down; wrongs expiated are forgiven
+and forgotten; the enmity is at an end.
+
+The screen of fibre against which the passive participants in the
+ceremony stand has a peculiar symbolic meaning that will be explained
+later in the chapter. The only other elements of the ceremony are the
+weeping together, which will be dealt with very soon, and the exchange
+of weapons, which is simply a special form of the rite of exchanging
+presents as an expression of good-will. The special form is
+particularly appropriate as it would seem to ensure at least some
+months of friendship, for you cannot go out to fight a man with his
+weapons while he has yours.
+
+The purpose of the ceremony is clearly to produce a change in the
+feelings of the two parties towards one another, feelings of enmity
+being replaced through it by feelings of friendship and solidarity. It
+depends for its effect on the fact that anger and similar aggressive
+feelings may be appeased by being freely expressed. Its social function
+is to restore the condition of solidarity between two local groups that
+has been destroyed by some act of offence.
+
+The marriage ceremony and the peace-making dance both afford examples
+of the custom which the Andamanese have of weeping together under
+certain circumstances. The principal occasions of this ceremonial
+weeping are as follows: (1) when two friends or relatives meet after
+having been for some time parted, they embrace each other and weep
+together; (2) at the peace-making ceremony the two parties of former
+enemies weep together, embracing each other; (3) at the end of the
+period of mourning the friends of the mourners (who have not themselves
+been mourning) weep with the latter; (4) after a death the relatives
+and friends embrace the corpse and weep over it; (5) when the bones of
+a dead man or woman are recovered from the grave they are wept over;
+(6) on the occasion of a marriage the relatives of each weep over the
+bride and bridegroom; (7) at various stages of the initiation
+ceremonies the female relatives of a youth or girl weep over him or
+her.
+
+First of all it is necessary to note that not in any of the
+above-mentioned instances is the weeping simply a spontaneous
+expression of feeling. It is always a rite the proper performance of
+which is demanded by custom. (As mentioned in an earlier chapter, the
+Andamanese are able to sit down and shed tears at will.) Nor can we
+explain the weeping as being an expression of sorrow. It is true that
+some of the occasions are such as to produce sorrowful feelings (4 and
+5, for example), but there are others on which there would seem to be
+no reason for sorrow but rather for joy. The Andamanese do weep from
+sorrow and spontaneously. A child cries when he is scolded or hurt; a
+widow weeps thinking of her recently dead husband. Men rarely weep
+spontaneously for any reason, though they shed tears abundantly when
+taking part in the rite. The weeping on the occasions enumerated is
+therefore not a spontaneous expression of individual emotion but is an
+example of what I have called ceremonial customs. In certain
+circumstances men and women are required by custom to embrace one
+another and weep, and if they neglected to do so it would be an offence
+condemned by all right-thinking persons.
+
+According to the postulate of method laid down at the beginning of the
+chapter we have to seek such an explanation of this custom as will
+account for all the different occasions on which the rite is performed,
+since we must assume that one and the same rite has the same meaning in
+whatever circumstances it may take place. It must be noted, however,
+that there are two varieties of the rite. In the first three instances
+enumerated above the rite is reciprocal, i.e. two persons or two
+distinct groups of persons weep together and embrace each other, both
+parties to the rite being active. In the other four instances it is
+one-sided; a person or group of persons weeps over another person (or
+the relics of a person) who has only a passive part in the ceremony.
+Any explanation, to be satisfactory, must take account of the
+difference between these two varieties.
+
+I would explain the rite as being an expression of that feeling of
+attachment between persons which is of such importance in the almost
+domestic life of the Andaman society. In other words the purpose of the
+rite is to affirm the existence of a social bond between two or more
+persons.
+
+There are two elements in the ceremony, the embrace and the weeping. We
+have already seen that the embrace is an expression, in the Andamans as
+elsewhere, of the feeling of attachment, i.e. the feeling of which
+love, friendship, affection are varieties. Turning to the second
+element of the ceremony, we are accustomed to think of weeping as more
+particularly an expression of sorrow. We are familiar, however, with
+tears of joy, and I have myself observed tears that were the result
+neither of joy nor of sorrow but of a sudden overwhelming feeling of
+affection. I believe that we may describe weeping as being a means by
+which the mind obtains relief from a condition of emotional tension,
+and that it is because such conditions of tension are most common in
+feelings of grief and pain that weeping comes to be associated with
+painful feelings. It is impossible here to discuss this subject, and I
+am therefore compelled to assume without proof this proposition on
+which my explanation of the rite is based [162]. My own conclusion,
+based on careful observation, is that in this rite the weeping is an
+expression of what has been called the tender emotion [163]. Without
+doubt, on some of the occasions of the rite, as when weeping over a
+dead friend, the participants are suffering a painful emotion, but this
+is evidently not so on all occasions. It is true, however, as I shall
+show, that on every occasion of the rite there is a condition of
+emotional tension due to the sudden calling into activity of the
+sentiment of personal attachment.
+
+When two friends or relatives meet after having been separated, the
+social relation between them that has been interrupted is about to be
+renewed. This social relation implies or depends upon the existence of
+a specific bond of solidarity between them. The weeping rite (together
+with the subsequent exchange of presents) is the affirmation of this
+bond. The rite, which, it must be remembered, is obligatory, compels
+the two participants to act as though they felt certain emotions, and
+thereby does, to some extent, produce those emotions in them. When the
+two friends meet their first feeling seems to be one of shyness mingled
+with pleasure at seeing each other again. This is according to the
+statements of the natives as well as my own observation. Now this
+shyness (the Andamanese use the same word as they do for “shame”) is
+itself a condition of emotional tension, which has to be relieved in
+some way. The embrace awakens to full activity that feeling of
+affection or friendship that has been dormant and which it is the
+business of the rite to renew. The weeping gives relief to the
+emotional tension just noted, and also reinforces the effect of the
+embrace. This it does owing to the fact that a strong feeling of
+personal attachment is always produced when two persons join together
+in sharing and simultaneously expressing one and the same emotion
+[164]. The little ceremony thus serves to dispel the initial feeling of
+shyness and to reinstate the condition of intimacy and affection that
+existed before the separation.
+
+In the peace-making ceremony the purpose of the whole rite is to
+abolish a condition of enmity and replace it by one of friendship. The
+once friendly relations between the two groups have been interrupted by
+a longer or shorter period of antagonism. We have seen that the effect
+of the dance is to dispel the wrath of the one group by giving it free
+expression. The weeping that follows is the renewal of the friendship.
+The rite is here exactly parallel to that on the meeting of two
+friends, except that not two individuals but two groups are concerned,
+and that owing to the number of persons involved the emotional
+condition is one of much greater intensity [165]. Here therefore also
+we see that the rite is an affirmation of solidarity or social union,
+in this instance between the groups, and that the rule is in its nature
+such as to make the participants feel that they are bound to each other
+by ties of friendship.
+
+We now come to a more difficult example of the rite, that at the end of
+mourning. It will be shown later in the chapter that during the period
+of mourning the mourners are cut off from the ordinary life of the
+community. By reason of the ties that still bind them to the dead
+person they are placed, as it were, outside the society and the bonds
+that unite them to their group are temporarily loosened. At the end of
+the mourning period they re-enter the society and take up once more
+their place in the social life. Their return to the community is the
+occasion on which they and their friends weep together. In this
+instance also, therefore, the rite may be explained as having for its
+purpose the renewal of the social relations that have been interrupted.
+This explanation will seem more convincing when we have considered in
+detail the customs of mourning. If it be accepted, then it may be seen
+that in the first three instances of the rite of weeping (those in
+which the action is reciprocal) we have conditions in which social
+relations that have been interrupted are about to be renewed, and the
+rite serves as a ceremony of aggregation.
+
+Let us now consider the second variety of the rite, and first of all
+its meaning as part of the ceremony of marriage. By marriage the social
+bonds that have to that time united the bride and bridegroom to their
+respective relatives, particularly their female relatives such as
+mother, mother’s sister, father’s sister and adopted mother, are
+modified. The unmarried youth or girl is in a position of dependence
+upon his or her older relatives, and by the marriage this dependence is
+partly abolished. Whereas the principal duties of the bride were
+formerly those towards her mother and older female relatives,
+henceforth her chief duties in life will be towards her husband. The
+position of the bridegroom is similar, and it must be noted that his
+social relations with his male relatives are less affected by his
+marriage than those with his female relatives. Yet, though the ties
+that have bound the bride and bridegroom to their relatives are about
+to be modified or partially destroyed by the new ties of marriage with
+its new duties and rights they will still continue to exist in a
+weakened and changed condition. The rite of weeping is the expression
+of this. It serves to make real (by feeling), in those taking part in
+it, the presence of the social ties that are being modified.
+
+When the mother of the bride or bridegroom weeps at a marriage she
+feels that her son or daughter is being taken from her care. She has
+the sorrow of a partial separation and she consoles herself by
+expressing in the rite her continued feeling of tenderness and
+affection towards him in the new condition that he is entering upon.
+For her the chief result of the rite is to make her feel that her child
+is still an object of her affection, still bound to her by close ties,
+in spite of the fact that he or she is being taken from her care.
+
+Exactly the same explanation holds with regard to the weeping at the
+initiation ceremonies. By these ceremonies the youth (or girl) is
+gradually withdrawn from a condition of dependence on his mother and
+older female relatives and is made an independent member of the
+community. The initiation is a long process that is only completed by
+marriage. At every stage of the lengthy ceremonies therefore, the
+social ties that unite the initiate to these relatives are modified or
+weakened, and the rite of weeping is the means by which the
+significance of the change is impressed upon those taking part in it.
+For the mother the weeping expresses her resignation at her necessary
+loss, and acts as a consolation by making her feel that her son is
+still hers, though now being withdrawn from her care. For the boy the
+rite has a different meaning. He realises that he is no longer merely a
+child, dependent upon his mother, but is now entering upon manhood. His
+former feelings towards his mother must be modified. That he is being
+separated from her is, for him, the most important aspect of the
+matter, and therefore while she weeps he must give no sign of
+tenderness in return but must sit passive and silent. So also in the
+marriage ceremony, the rite serves to impress upon the young man and
+woman that they are, by reason of the new ties that they are forming
+with one another, severing their ties with their families.
+
+When a person dies the social bonds that unite him to the survivors are
+profoundly modified. They are not in an instant utterly destroyed, as
+we shall see better when we deal with the funeral and mourning customs,
+for the friends and relatives still feel towards the dead person that
+affection in which they held him when alive, and this has now become a
+source of deep grief. It is this affection still binding them to him
+that they express in the rite of weeping over the corpse. Here rite and
+natural expression of emotion coincide, but it must be noted that the
+weeping is obligatory, a matter of duty. In this instance, then, the
+rite is similar to that at marriage and initiation. The man is by death
+cut off from the society to which he belonged, and from association
+with his friends, but the latter still feel towards him that attachment
+that bound them together while he lived, and it is this attachment that
+they express when they embrace the lifeless corpse and weep over it.
+
+There remains only one more instance of the rite to be considered. When
+the period of mourning for a dead person is over and the bones are
+recovered the modification in the relations between the dead and the
+living, which begins at death, and is, as we shall see, carried out by
+the mourning customs and ceremonies, is finally accomplished. The dead
+person is now entirely cut off from the world of the living, save that
+his bones are to be treasured as relics and amulets. The weeping over
+the bones must be taken, I think, as a rite of aggregation whereby the
+bones as representative of the dead person (all that is left of him)
+are received back into the society henceforth to fill a special place
+in the social life. It really constitutes a renewal of social relations
+with the dead person, after a period during which all active social
+relations have been interrupted owing to the danger in all contact
+between the living and the dead. By the rite the affection that was
+once felt towards the dead person is revived and is now directed to the
+skeletal relics of the man or woman that once was their object. If this
+explanation seem unsatisfactory, I would ask the reader to suspend his
+judgment until the funeral customs of the Andamans have been discussed,
+and then to return to this point.
+
+The proffered explanation of the rite of weeping should now be plain. I
+regard it as being the affirmation of a bond of social solidarity
+between those taking part in it, and as producing in them a realisation
+of that bond by arousing the sentiment of attachment. In some instances
+the rite therefore serves to renew social relations when they have been
+interrupted, and in such instances the rite is reciprocal. In others it
+serves to show the continued existence of the social bond when it is
+being weakened or modified, as by marriage, initiation or death. In all
+instances we may say that the purpose of the rite is to bring about a
+new state of the affective dispositions that regulate the conduct of
+persons to one another, either by reviving sentiments that have lain
+dormant, or producing a recognition of a change in the condition of
+personal relations.
+
+The study of these simple ceremonies has shown us several things of
+importance. (1) In every instance the ceremony is the expression of an
+affective state of mind shared by two or more persons. Thus the weeping
+rite expresses feelings of solidarity, the exchange of presents
+expresses good-will. (2) But the ceremonies are not spontaneous
+expressions of feeling; they are all customary actions to which the
+sentiment of obligation attaches, which it is the duty of persons to
+perform on certain definite occasions. It is the duty of everyone in a
+community to give presents at a wedding; it is the duty of relatives to
+weep together when they meet. (3) In every instance the ceremony is to
+be explained by reference to fundamental laws regulating the affective
+life of human beings. It is not our business here to analyse these
+phenomena but only to satisfy ourselves that they are real. That
+weeping is an outlet for emotional excitement, that the free expression
+of aggressive feelings causes them to die out instead of smouldering
+on, that an embrace is an expression of feelings of attachment between
+persons: these are the psychological generalisations upon which are
+based the explanations given above of various ceremonies of the
+Andamanese. (4) Finally, we have seen that each of the ceremonies
+serves to renew or to modify in the minds of those taking part in it
+some one or more of the social sentiments. The peace-making ceremony is
+a method by which feelings of enmity are exchanged for feelings of
+friendship. The marriage rite serves to arouse in the minds of the
+marrying pair a sense of their obligations as married folk, and to
+bring about in the minds of the witnesses a change of feeling towards
+the young people such as should properly accompany their change of
+social status. The weeping and exchange of presents when friends come
+together is a means of renewing their feelings of attachment to one
+another. The weeping at marriage, at initiation, and on the occasion of
+a death is a reaction of defence or compensation when feelings of
+solidarity are attacked by a partial breaking of the social ties that
+bind persons to one another.
+
+In the ceremonial life of the Andamans some part is played by dancing,
+and it will be convenient to consider next the meaning and function of
+the dance. It is necessary, however, to deal very briefly with this
+subject and omit much that would have to be included in an exhaustive
+study. Thus the ordinary Andaman dance may be looked upon as a form of
+play; it also shows us the beginnings of the arts of dancing, music and
+poetry; and therefore in any study pretending to completeness it would
+be necessary to discuss the difficult problem of the relation between
+art, play and ceremonial in social life, a subject of too wide a scope
+to be handled in such an essay as this. For our present purpose we are
+concerned with the dance only as a form of social ceremonial.
+
+If an Andaman Islander is asked why he dances he gives an answer that
+amounts to saying that he does so because he enjoys it. Dancing is
+therefore in general a means of enjoyment. It is frequently a
+rejoicing. The Andaman Islanders dance after a successful day of
+hunting; they do not dance if their day has been one of disappointment.
+
+Pleasurable mental excitement finds its natural expression in bodily
+activity, as we see most plainly in young children and in some animals.
+And in its turn mere muscular activity is itself a source of pleasure.
+The individual shouts and jumps for joy; the society turns the jump
+into a dance, the shout into a song.
+
+The essential character of all dancing is that it is rhythmical, and it
+is fairly evident that the primary function of this rhythmical nature
+of the dance is to enable a number of persons to join in the same
+actions and perform them as one body. In the Andamans at any rate it is
+clear that the spectacular dance (such as the performance described on
+page 164) is a late development out of the common dance. And it is
+probable that the history of the dance is everywhere the same, that it
+began as a common dance in which all present take some active part, and
+from this first form (still surviving in our ball-room dances) arose
+the spectacular dance in which one or more dancers perform before
+spectators who take no part themselves.
+
+In the Andamans the song is an accompaniment of the dance. The dancing
+and singing and the marking of the rhythm by clapping and by stamping
+on the sounding-board are all parts of the one common action in which
+all join and which for convenience is here spoken of as the dance. It
+is probable that here again the Andamanese practice shows us the
+earliest stage in the development of the song, that song and music at
+first had no independent existence but together with dancing formed one
+activity. It is reasonable to suppose that the song first came into
+general use in human society because it provides a means by which a
+number of persons can utter the same series of sounds together and as
+with one voice, this being made possible by the fixed rhythm and the
+fixed pitch of the whole song and of each part of it (i.e. by melody).
+Once the art of song was in existence its further development was
+doubtless largely dependent upon the esthetic pleasure that it is able
+to give. But in the Andamans the esthetic pleasure that the natives get
+from their simple and monotonous songs seems to me of quite secondary
+importance as compared with the value of the song as a joint social
+activity.
+
+The movements of the ordinary Great Andaman dance do not seem to me to
+be in themselves expressive, or at any rate they are not obviously
+mimetic like the movements of the dances of many primitive folk. Their
+function seems to be to bring into activity as many of the muscles of
+the body as possible. The bending of the body at the hips and of the
+legs at the knees, with the slightly backward poise of the head and the
+common position of the arms held in line with the shoulders with the
+elbows crooked and the thumb and first finger of each hand clasping
+those of the other, produce a condition of tension of a great number of
+the muscles of the trunk and limbs. The attitude is one in which all
+the main joints of the body are between complete flexion and complete
+extension so that there is approximately an equal tension in the
+opposing groups of flexor and extensor muscles. Thus the whole body of
+the dancer is full of active forces balanced one against another,
+resulting in a condition of flexibility and alertness without strain.
+
+While the dance thus brings into play the whole muscular system of the
+dancer it also requires the activity of the two chief senses, that of
+sight to guide the dancer in his movements amongst the others and that
+of hearing to enable him to keep time with the music. Thus the dancer
+is in a condition in which all the bodily and mental activities are
+harmoniously directed to one end.
+
+Finally, in order to understand the function of the Andamanese dance it
+must be noted that every adult member of the community takes some part
+in it. All the able-bodied men join in the dance itself; all the women
+join in the chorus. If anyone through ill-health or old age is unable
+to take any active part, he or she is at least necessarily a spectator,
+for the dance takes place in the centre of the village in the open
+space towards which the huts usually face [166].
+
+The Andamanese dance (with its accompanying song) may therefore be
+described as an activity in which, by virtue of the effects of rhythm
+and melody, all the members of a community are able harmoniously to
+cooperate and act in unity; which requires on the part of the dancer a
+continual condition of tension free from strain; and which produces in
+those taking part in it a high degree of pleasure. We must now proceed
+to examine very briefly the chief effects on the mental condition of
+those taking part [167].
+
+First let us consider some of the effects of rhythm. Any marked rhythm
+exercises over those submitted to its influence a constraint, impelling
+them to yield to it and to permit it to direct and regulate the
+movements of the body and even those of the mind. If one does not yield
+to this constraining influence it produces a state of restlessness that
+may become markedly unpleasant. One who yields himself utterly to it,
+as does the dancer when he joins in the dance, still continues to feel
+the constraint, but so far from being unpleasant it now produces a
+pleasure of a quite distinct quality. The first point for us to note
+therefore is that through the effect of rhythm the dance affords an
+experience of a constraint or force of a peculiar kind acting upon the
+individual and inducing in him when he yields himself to it a pleasure
+of self-surrender. The peculiarity of the force in question is that it
+seems to act upon the individual both from without (since it is the
+sight of his friends dancing and the sound of the singing and marking
+time that occasions it), and also from within (since the impulse to
+yield himself to the constraining rhythm comes from his own organism).
+
+A second effect of the rhythm of the dance is due to the well-known
+fact that a series of actions performed rhythmically produces very much
+less fatigue than actions not rhythmical requiring the same expenditure
+of muscular energy. So the dancer feels that in and through the dance
+he obtains such an increase of his personal energy that he is able to
+accomplish strenuous exertions with a minimum of fatigue. This effect
+of rhythm is reinforced by the excitement produced by the rapid
+movements of the dancers, the loud sounds of the song and clapping and
+sounding-board, and intensified, as all collective states of emotion
+are intensified, by reason of being collective; with the result that
+the Andaman Islanders are able to continue their strenuous dancing
+through many hours of the night [168].
+
+There is yet a third most important effect of rhythm. Recent psychology
+shows that what are called the esthetic emotions are largely dependent
+upon motor images. We call a form beautiful when, through the movements
+of the eye in following it, we feel it as movement, and as movement of
+a particular kind which we can only describe at present by using such a
+word as ‘harmonious.’ Similarly our esthetic appreciation of music
+seems to be largely dependent on our feeling the music as movement, the
+sounds appealing not to the ear only but to stored-up unconscious motor
+memories. With regard to dancing, our pleasure in watching the
+graceful, rhythmical and harmonious movements of the dancer is an
+esthetic pleasure of similar nature to that obtained from the
+contemplation of beautiful shapes or listening to music. But when the
+individual is himself dancing it does not seem quite fitting to call
+his pleasure esthetic. Yet the dance, even the simple dance of the
+Andamans, does make, in the dancer himself, partly by the effect of
+rhythm, partly by the effect of the harmonious and balanced tension of
+the muscles, a direct appeal to that motor sense to which the
+contemplation of beautiful forms and movements makes only an indirect
+appeal. In other words the dancer actually feels within himself that
+harmonious action of balanced and directed forces which, in the
+contemplation of a beautiful form we feel as though it were in the
+object at which we look. Hence such dancing as that of the Andaman
+Islanders may be looked upon as an early step in the training of the
+esthetic sense, and to recognize all that the dance means we must make
+allowance for this fact that the mental state of the dancer is closely
+related to the mental state that we call esthetic enjoyment.
+
+Let us now consider the effects of the dance as a social or collective
+activity. First, the dance affords an opportunity for the individual to
+exhibit before others his skill and agility and so to gratify his
+personal vanity. It is very easy to observe the action of this harmless
+vanity in the dancers, and particularly in the man who takes the place
+at the sounding-board and acts as soloist or leader of the chorus. The
+dancer seeks to feel, and does feel, that he is the object of the
+approbation and admiration of his friends. His self-regarding
+sentiments are pleasantly stimulated, so that he becomes conscious, in
+a state of self-satisfaction and elation, of his own personal value.
+This stimulation of the self-regarding sentiment is an important factor
+in the total effect produced by the dance.
+
+Secondly, the dance, at the same time that it stimulates pleasantly the
+self-regarding sentiment, also affects the sentiments of the dancer
+towards his fellows. The pleasure that the dancer feels irradiates
+itself over everything around him and he is filled with geniality and
+good-will towards his companions. The sharing with others of an intense
+pleasure, or rather the sharing in a collective expression of pleasure,
+must ever incline us to such expansive feelings. It is certainly a
+readily observable fact that in the Andamans the dance does produce a
+condition of warm good-fellowship in those taking part in it. There is
+no need to enquire more closely into the mental mechanisms by which
+this is brought about.
+
+The Andaman dance, then, is a complete activity of the whole community,
+in which every able-bodied adult takes some part, and is also an
+activity in which, so far as the dancer himself is concerned, the whole
+personality is involved, by the innervation of all the muscles of the
+body, by the concentration of attention required, and by its action on
+the personal sentiments. In the dance the individual submits to the
+action upon him of the community; he is constrained, by the immediate
+effect of rhythm as well as by custom, to join in, and he is required
+to conform in his own actions and movements to the needs of the common
+activity. The surrender of the individual to this constraint or
+obligation is not felt as painful, but on the contrary as highly
+pleasurable. As the dancer loses himself in the dance, as he becomes
+absorbed in the unified community, he reaches a state of elation in
+which he feels himself filled with energy or force immensely beyond his
+ordinary state, and so finds himself able to perform prodigies of
+exertion. This state of intoxication, as it might almost be called, is
+accompanied by a pleasant stimulation of the self-regarding sentiment,
+so that the dancer comes to feel a great increase in his personal force
+and value. And at the same time, finding himself in complete and
+ecstatic harmony with all the fellow-members of his community,
+experiences a great increase in his feelings of amity and attachment
+towards them.
+
+In this way the dance produces a condition in which the unity, harmony
+and concord of the community are at a maximum, and in which they are
+intensely felt by every member. It is to produce this condition, I
+would maintain, that is the primary social function of the dance. The
+well-being, or indeed the existence, of the society depends on the
+unity and harmony that obtain in it, and the dance, by making that
+unity intensely felt, is a means of maintaining it. For the dance
+affords an opportunity for the direct action of the community upon the
+individual, and we have seen that it exercises in the individual those
+sentiments by which the social harmony is maintained.
+
+It was formerly the custom, I was told, always to have a dance before
+setting out to a fight. The reason for this should now be clear. When a
+group engages in a fight with another it is to revenge some injury that
+has been done to the whole group. The group is to act as a group and
+not merely as a collection of individuals, and it is therefore
+necessary that the group should be conscious of its unity and
+solidarity. Now we have seen that the chief function of the dance is to
+arouse in the mind of every individual a sense of the unity of the
+social group of which he is a member, and its function before setting
+out to a fight is therefore apparent. A secondary effect of the dance
+before a fight is to intensify the collective anger against the hostile
+group, and thereby and in other ways to produce a state of excitement
+and elation which has an important influence on the fighting quality of
+the Andaman warrior.
+
+An important feature of the social life of the Andamans in former times
+was the dance-meetings that were regularly held and at which two or
+more local groups met together for a few days. Each local group lived
+for the greater part of the year comparatively isolated from others.
+What little solidarity there was between neighbouring groups therefore
+tended to become weakened. Social relations between two groups were for
+the most part only kept up by visits of individuals from one group to
+another, but such visits did not constitute a relation between group
+and group. The function of the dance-meetings was therefore to bring
+the two groups into contact and renew the social relations between them
+and in that way to maintain the solidarity between them. Those
+meetings, apart from the provision of the necessary food, were entirely
+devoted to the exchange of presents and to dancing, the two or more
+parties of men and women joining together every night in a dance. We
+have already seen that the exchange of presents is a means of
+expressing solidarity or mutual good-will. It is now clear that the
+dance serves to unite the two or more groups into one body, and to make
+that unity felt by every individual, so creating for a few days a
+condition of close solidarity. The effects of the meeting would
+gradually wear out as months went by, and therefore it was necessary to
+repeat the meeting at suitable intervals.
+
+Thus it appears that not only the ordinary dance, but also the
+war-dance, and the dance-meetings owe their place in the life of the
+Andaman Islanders to the fact that dancing is a means of uniting
+individuals into a harmonious whole and at the same time making them
+actually and intensely experience their relation to that unity of which
+they are the members. The special dances at initiation ceremonies and
+on other occasions will be dealt with later in the chapter, on the
+basis of the general explanation given above.
+
+On the occasion of a dance, particularly if it be a dance of some
+importance, such as a war-dance, or a dance of two groups together, the
+dancers decorate themselves by putting on various ornaments and by
+painting their bodies with red paint and white clay. The explanation of
+the dance cannot therefore be regarded as complete till we have
+considered the meaning of this personal adornment connected with it.
+
+If the Andaman Islander be asked why he adorns himself for the dance,
+his reply is invariably that he wishes to look well, to improve his
+personal appearance. In other words his conscious motive is personal
+vanity.
+
+One of the features of the dance, and a not unimportant one, is that it
+offers an opportunity for the gratification of personal vanity. The
+dancer, painted, and hung over with ornaments, becomes pleasantly
+conscious of himself, of his own skill and agility, and of his striking
+or at least satisfactory appearance, and so he becomes also conscious
+of his relation to others, of their admiration, actual or possible, and
+of the approval and good-will that go with admiration. In brief, the
+ornamented dancer is pleasantly conscious of his own personal value. We
+may therefore say that the most important function of any such adorning
+of the body is to express or mark the personal value of the decorated
+individual.
+
+This explanation only applies to certain bodily ornaments and to
+certain ways of painting the body. It applies to the painting of white
+clay, with or without red paint, that is adopted at dances and on other
+ceremonial occasions. It applies to such personal ornaments as those
+made of netting and Dentalium shell which constitute what may be called
+the ceremonial costume of the Andamanese. It is of these that the
+natives say that they use them in order to look well.
+
+The occasions on which such personal decoration is used are strictly
+defined by custom. In other words the society dictates to the
+individual when and how he shall be permitted to express his own
+personal value. It is obvious that personal vanity is of great
+importance in directing the conduct of the individual in his dealings
+with his fellows, and much more amongst a primitive people such as the
+Andamanese than amongst ourselves, and it is therefore necessary that
+the society should have some means of controlling the sentiment and
+directing it towards social ends. We have seen that the dance is the
+expression of the unity and harmony of the society, and by permitting
+at the dance the free expression of personal vanity the society ensures
+that the individual shall learn to feel, even if only subconsciously,
+that his personal value depends upon the harmony between himself and
+his fellows.
+
+The bride and bridegroom are painted with white clay, and wear
+ornaments of Dentalium shell on the day following their marriage. We
+have seen that marriage involves a change of social status, and we may
+say that it gives an increased social value to the married pair, the
+social position of a married man or woman being of greater importance
+and dignity than that of a bachelor or spinster. They are, after
+marriage, the objects of higher regard on the part of their fellows
+than they were before. It is therefore appropriate that the personal
+value of the bride and bridegroom should be expressed so that both they
+themselves and their fellows should have their attention drawn to it,
+and this is clearly the function of the painting and ornaments.
+
+After the completion of any of the more important of the initiation
+ceremonies, such as the eating of turtle, the initiate is painted with
+white clay and red paint and wears ornaments of Dentalium shell. This
+is exactly parallel to the painting of the bride and bridegroom. The
+initiate, by reason of the ceremony he has been through, has acquired
+new dignity and importance, and by having fulfilled the requirements of
+custom has deserved the approval of his fellows. The decoration of his
+body after the ceremony is thus the expression of his increased social
+value.
+
+A corpse, before burial, is decorated in the same manner as the body of
+a dancer. This, we may take it, is the means by which the surviving
+relatives and friends express their regard for the dead, i.e. their
+sense of his value. We need not suppose that they believe the dead man
+to be conscious of what they are doing. It is to satisfy themselves
+that they decorate the corpse, not to satisfy the spirit. When a man is
+painted he feels that he has the regard and good-will of his fellows,
+and those who see him, at any rate in the instance of a bridegroom or
+initiate, realise that he has deserved their regard. So, to express
+their regard for the dead man they paint the inanimate body. Hence it
+is that the greater the esteem in which the dead man or woman is held,
+the greater is the care bestowed on the last painting.
+
+We may conclude therefore that the painting of the body with white clay
+and the wearing of ornaments of Dentalium shell is a rite or ceremony
+by which the value of the individual to the society is expressed on
+appropriate occasions. We shall find confirmation of this later in the
+chapter.
+
+Before passing on to consider the meaning of other methods of
+decorating the body there is one matter that is worthy of mention. It
+is often assumed or stated that both personal ornament and dancing,
+amongst uncivilised peoples, are connected with sexual emotion. It is,
+of course, extremely difficult to disprove a statement of this sort. So
+far as the Andamanese are concerned I was unable to find any trace
+whatever of a definitely sexual element in either their dances or their
+personal adornment. It may be recalled that both men and women wear
+exactly the same ornaments on ceremonial occasions, and this is to some
+extent evidence that such have no sexual value. It is possible that
+some observers might see in the dance of the women (which is only
+performed on rare occasions) a suggestion of something of a sexual
+nature. I was unable to find that the natives themselves consider that
+there is anything suggestive of sex in either the dance of the men or
+that of the women. If it were true that the most important feature of
+the dance was that it appealed in some way to sexual feelings it is
+difficult to see how we are to explain the different occasions on which
+dancing takes place, as before a fight, at the end of mourning, etc.,
+whereas these are adequately accounted for by the hypothesis that the
+dance is a method of expressing the unity and harmony of the society.
+Similarly the explanation of personal ornament as being connected with
+sexual feeling would fail to account for the occasions on which it is
+regarded as obligatory. There is therefore, I believe, no special
+connection between the dancing and personal ornament of the Andamanese
+and sexual feeling. It would still be possible to hold that there is a
+general connection of great importance between the affective
+dispositions underlying these and other customs and the complex
+affective disposition that we call the sex instinct. The nature of that
+connection, important as it is, lies outside the scope of this work.
+
+I remarked above that the explanation which I have given of the meaning
+of personal ornament does not apply to all the objects that the Andaman
+Islanders wear on their body, but only to certain of them. If an
+Andaman Islander be asked why he paints himself with white clay, or why
+he wears a belt or necklace of Dentalium shell he replies that he does
+so in order to look well; but if he be asked why he wears a string of
+human bones round his head or neck or waist, he gives quite a different
+answer, to the effect that he does so in order to protect himself from
+dangers of a special kind. According to circumstances he will say
+either that he is wearing the bones to cure himself of illness, or else
+that he wears them as a protection against spirits. Thus while some
+things are worn on the body in order to improve the personal
+appearance, and consequently, as explained above, to give the
+individual a sense of his own value, others are worn because they are
+believed to have a protective power, and thereby arouse in the person a
+sense of security. Exactly the same sort of protective power is
+attributed to things that cannot be worn on the body, such as fire, and
+it will therefore be convenient to consider together all the things
+that afford this kind of protection, whether they can be worn on the
+body or not.
+
+The interpretation here offered is that the customs connected with this
+belief in the protective power of objects of various kinds are means by
+which is expressed and thereby maintained at the necessary degree of
+energy a very important social sentiment, which, for lack of a better
+term, I shall call the sentiment of dependence. In such a primitive
+society as that of the Andamans one of the most powerful means of
+maintaining the cohesion of the society and of enforcing that
+conformity to custom and tradition without which social life is
+impossible, is the recognition by the individual that for his security
+and well-being he depends entirely upon the society. Now for the
+Andaman Islander the society is not sufficiently concrete and
+particular to act as the object of such a sentiment, and he therefore
+feels his dependence upon the society not directly but in a number of
+indirect ways. The particular way with which we are now concerned is
+that the individual experiences this feeling of dependence towards
+every important possession of the society, towards every object which
+for the society has constant and important uses.
+
+The most prominent example of such an object is fire. It may be said to
+be the one object on which the society most of all depends for its
+well-being. It provides warmth on cold nights; it is the means whereby
+they prepare their food, for they eat nothing raw save a few fruits; it
+is a possession that has to be constantly guarded, for they have no
+means of producing it, and must therefore take care to keep it always
+alight; it is the first thing they think of carrying with them when
+they go on a journey by land or sea; it is the centre around which the
+social life moves, the family hearth being the centre of the family
+life, while the communal cooking place is the centre round which the
+men often gather after the day’s hunting is over. To the mind of the
+Andaman Islander, therefore, the social life of which his own life is a
+fragment, the social well-being which is the source of his own
+happiness, depend upon the possession of fire, without which the
+society could not exist. In this way it comes about that his dependence
+on the society appears in his consciousness as a sense of dependence
+upon fire and a belief that it possesses power to protect him from
+dangers of all kinds.
+
+The belief in the protective power of fire is very strong. A man would
+never move even a few yards out of camp at night without a fire-stick.
+More than any other object fire is believed to keep away the spirits
+that cause disease and death. This belief, it is here maintained, is
+one of the ways in which the individual is made to feel his dependence
+upon the society.
+
+Now this hypothesis is capable of being very strictly tested by the
+facts, for if it is true we must expect to find that the same
+protective power is attributed to every object on which the social life
+depends. An examination of the Andamanese beliefs shows that this is
+so, and thereby confirms the hypothesis.
+
+In their daily life the Andamanese depend on the intrinsic qualities of
+the materials they use for their bows and arrows and harpoons and other
+hunting implements, and it can be shown that they do attribute to these
+implements and to the materials from which they are made powers of
+protection against evil. Moreover it is even possible to apply a
+quantitative test and show that the more important the place a thing
+occupies in the social life the greater is the degree of protective
+power attributed to it. Finally I shall be able to show that as
+different materials are used for special purposes so they are supposed
+to have certain special powers of protection against certain sorts of
+danger. Thus the hypothesis I have stated is capable of being as nearly
+demonstrated as is possible in such psychological enquiries as the one
+we are engaged in.
+
+A man carrying his bow and arrows is supposed to be less likely to fall
+a victim to the spirits than one who has no weapons with him. One way
+of stopping a violent storm is to go into the sea (storms being
+supposed to be due to the spirits of the sea) and swish the water about
+with arrows. The natives sometimes wear a necklace formed of short
+lengths of the bamboo shaft of a fish-arrow. All the examples of such
+necklaces that I met with had been made from an old arrow. I asked a
+native to make one for me, and although he could readily have made one
+from bamboo that had never served as an arrow he did not do so, but
+used the shaft of one of his arrows. Such a necklace may therefore be
+described as an arrow in such a form that it can be worn round the neck
+and thus carried continually without trouble. The protective power of
+the bow is at first sight not quite so evident, but the material used
+for the string is regarded as possessing protective power, and to this
+I shall return shortly.
+
+The best demonstration of the truth of the explanation offered is to be
+found by considering the different vegetable fibres of which use is
+made. The most important of these are the Anadendron paniculatum (used
+for bow-strings and for fine string), the Hibiscus tiliaceus (used for
+rope) and the Gnetum edule (used for string, and inferior to the
+Anadendron). All these fibres are believed to possess power to keep
+away dangers, but there is a sort of specialisation in their use.
+
+The fibre of the Hibiscus is used mainly in the hunting of turtle and
+big fish. Consequently the tree itself from which the fibre is obtained
+is believed to possess the power of warding off all dangers connected
+with turtle and the sea. There is a custom that turtle flesh may only
+be cooked with wood of the Hibiscus, otherwise it will be uneatable. In
+the turtle-eating ceremony the initiate who, as we shall see later, is
+in a condition of danger by reason of having eaten turtle for the first
+time after a period of abstention, is seated on Hibiscus leaves and
+holds a bundle of the same leaves before him. At the same ceremony the
+leaves of this tree are used in the dance, and the initiate is given a
+skewer made from its wood with which to feed himself. If for any reason
+the leaves of the Hibiscus are not obtainable when the ceremony is
+performed those of the Myristica longifolia are used instead. Now this
+is the tree from which the natives always make their canoe paddles,
+which, like ropes of Hibiscus fibre, are used in hunting turtle. This
+specialisation is therefore easy to understand; the natives habitually
+make use of the Hibiscus and the Myristica in turtle-hunting; they use
+the intrinsic qualities of these trees in their actual struggles with
+turtle and large fish, and by means of these qualities they are able to
+succeed in overcoming their prey; they therefore come to believe that
+these trees possess special powers which not only enable them to
+conquer the turtle itself but also are able to protect them from the
+evil influences that they believe (for reasons to be explained later)
+result from the eating of its flesh.
+
+This explanation is readily verified by considering an exactly parallel
+instance. In the pig-eating ceremony at initiation the leaves of the
+Hibiscus or the Myristica are not used, and are regarded as valueless.
+Paddles and ropes are of no use in hunting pigs. The leaves that are
+used in this ceremony are those of the Tetranthera lancæfolia. It is
+from this tree that are obtained the shafts of pig-arrows. Hence the
+relation of the tree to the pig is exactly parallel to that of the
+Hibiscus to turtle. It is by making use of the qualities of the wood
+that they are able to destroy the pig and so they believe that its
+leaves will enable them to destroy the dangers that result from the
+eating of the animal.
+
+The leaves of the Tetranthera are also used, however, in the ceremony
+at a girl’s first menstruation, and I cannot pass over this without an
+explanation. It is to be found in the fact that pig-arrows are used in
+fighting, so that the tree comes to have a special relation to the
+shedding of blood. Plumes of shredded Tetranthera wood (made from an
+old arrow-shaft) must be worn by a homicide during the period of
+“purification” as a protection against the dangers that are believed to
+threaten him because he has shed blood. The same plumes were formerly
+always carried in a dance preceding a fight, and at such times the
+natives used to rub their bows with the shredded wood in order to
+ensure success in battle. Thus it is clear that there is a special
+connection between this tree and the shedding of blood, due to the fact
+that pig-arrows, of which the shafts are made from it, are used in
+fighting as well as for killing pigs and other animals. It is probable
+that this is the explanation of the use of the leaves during the
+ceremony at a girl’s first menstruation.
+
+These examples afford a crucial test of the hypothesis here maintained.
+Not only is the protective power of these substances explicable by the
+fact that they are things on which the society depends in its daily
+life, but the special uses of each of them as amulets are only
+explicable when we consider the different uses to which they are put as
+materials.
+
+The fibre of the Anadendron paniculatum is used for making thread,
+bow-strings, the cords of pig-arrows, and for binding the heads and
+barbs of harpoons and arrows. It has therefore no special relation to
+either pig or turtle. There is a belief, however, that the plant does
+possess special protective powers that make it efficacious against
+certain dangers coming from the sea. A piece of the plant tied round
+the neck or worn in the belt of a swimmer is believed to protect him
+from sharks and other dangerous fish. A piece of it crushed and placed
+in the sea is said to have stopped a violent storm on one occasion.
+Thus the Anadendron seems to possess a special power which makes it a
+source of protection against dangers from the sea. The same is true of
+the Gnetum edule, though, as this fibre is less valued than that of the
+Anadendron, it is not supposed to be so powerful in its effects. In
+regard to the specialisation in the use of these two plants as amulets
+it seems likely that it is due to a notion of opposition between the
+things of the forest and the things of the sea. The Andamanese live in
+a double environment; the jungle-dwellers live entirely in the forest
+and have dealings with forest things; they develop knowledge and powers
+that make them better woodsmen than the coast-dwellers. The latter live
+by the sea and are chiefly occupied with things of the sea, being
+skilled in the occupations of fishing and canoeing. There is thus a
+contrast or opposition between the life of the forest and the life of
+the shore that runs through all the social life, and I believe that it
+is this opposition which explains the belief that the Anadendron and
+the Gnetum, which are essentially forest things, are possessed of a
+quality that makes them contrary or opposed to all things of the sea.
+
+Personal ornaments are made from the fibres that have been mentioned
+(Hibiscus, Anadendron, Gnetum), and we are justified, I think, in
+regarding such ornaments as being to some extent amulets. I purchased
+from a man in the Little Andaman a charm that was hanging round his
+neck, which he seemed to value highly. I imagined that it might contain
+a human bone, but when I had unwound the ornamental thread with which
+it was bound and opened out the covering of bark I found inside the
+parcel only a carefully folded length of rope made from Hibiscus fibre.
+
+There is one fibre from which the natives of the Great Andaman make
+themselves ornaments, which they do not regularly use in any other way,
+namely that of the Ficus laccifera. We may perhaps regard this as a
+genuine and demonstrable example of a survival in custom. The natives
+of the Little Andaman, who, until their recent contact with those of
+the Great Andaman, did not know the use of the Anadendron, use the
+fibre of the Ficus for their bow-strings. We are justified in assuming,
+I believe, that the natives of the Great Andaman made a similar use of
+the same fibre before they had learnt to use the Anadendron. In those
+days much of the power that is now attributed to the Anadendron,
+because of its service as the material for bow-strings, must then have
+been attributed to the Ficus. When the substitution of the superior
+Anadendron fibre came about, the belief in the efficacy of the Ficus
+did not disappear, although the ground of the belief (if we may call it
+so) had ceased to exist. If this be so, then the present use of the
+Ficus fibre as an amulet is an example of survival. It may be noted
+that the qualities of the Ficus are supposed to be similar to those of
+the Anadendron. Thus while one medicine-man stopped a storm with
+Anadendron, another did the same thing on another occasion with Ficus.
+
+The above examples are sufficient to justify the generalisation that
+the Andamanese attribute protective power to all those substances on
+the strength and other qualities of which they rely in order to obtain
+their food or overcome their enemies. There are one or two other
+positive instances that have not been mentioned. Bees’-wax, which is
+used for waxing thread and bow-strings, is believed to have power to
+keep spirits away and to cure sickness. Cane, which is used by the
+natives for many different purposes, seems also to have its use as an
+amulet, for belts and other personal ornaments are made of pieces of
+cane attached to a length of rope.
+
+Negative instances are more difficult to discover. When I was in the
+Andamans I had not formulated the explanation that is offered here, and
+I therefore did not make any search for negative instances that might
+have afforded a means of testing the value of the hypothesis. I have no
+satisfactory evidence that protective power is attributed to iron, or
+to the shells that were formerly used, as iron now is, for the heads
+and barbs of arrows, but it is quite possible that I may have
+overlooked evidence that was really there. I do not think that any
+particular protective properties are attributed to such things as the
+materials from which baskets are made and the clay that is used for
+pottery. These things, however, may be regarded as luxuries rather than
+necessities; they are not of the same immediate service to the society
+in its fundamental activity (that of providing food) as are weapons and
+the materials used in them.
+
+There are still two important kinds of amulets that remain to be
+considered. First, protective power is attributed to the bones of
+animals, which are made into personal ornaments; these cannot be dealt
+with until we have considered some of the beliefs relating to food.
+Secondly, a very high degree of protective power is attributed to human
+bones, but the discussion of this belief must wait till we have
+discovered the meaning of the funeral customs of the Andamanese.
+
+To conclude the present argument, it would seem that the function of
+the belief in the protective power of such things as fire and the
+materials from which weapons are made is to maintain in the mind of the
+individual the feeling of his dependence upon the society; but viewed
+from another aspect the beliefs in question may be regarded as
+expressing the social value of the things to which they relate. This
+term—social value—will be used repeatedly in the later part of this
+chapter, and it is therefore necessary to give an exact definition. By
+the social value of anything I mean the way in which that thing affects
+or is capable of affecting the social life. Value may be either
+positive or negative, positive value being possessed by any thing that
+contributes to the well-being of the society, negative value by
+anything that can adversely affect that well-being.
+
+The social value of a thing (such as fire) is a matter of immediate
+experience to every member of the society, but the individual does not
+of necessity consciously and directly realise that value. He is made to
+realise it indirectly through the belief, impressed upon him by
+tradition, that the thing in question affords protection against
+danger. A belief or sentiment which finds regular outlet in action is a
+very different thing from a belief which rarely or never influences
+conduct. Thus, though the Andaman Islander might have a vague
+realisation of the value of Hibiscus, for example, that would be
+something very different from the result on the mind of the individual
+of the regular use of the leaves of that tree in initiation ceremonies
+as a protection against unseen dangers. So that the protective uses of
+such things are really rites or ceremonies by means of which the
+individual is made to realise (1) his own dependence on the society and
+its possessions, and (2) the social value of the things in question.
+
+I have had to postpone to the later parts of the chapter the
+consideration of some of the objects possessing protective power, but I
+venture to state here three propositions some part of the evidence for
+which has already been examined, and which will be sufficiently
+demonstrated, I hope, before the end of the chapter. They are as
+follows: (1) any object that contributes to the well-being of the
+society is believed to afford protection against evil; (2) the degree
+of protective power it is believed to possess depends on the importance
+of the services it actually renders to the society; (3) the kind of
+special protection it is supposed to afford is often related to the
+kind of special service that it does actually render.
+
+We were led to the consideration of the protective power of objects
+through an attempt to understand the meaning of the methods of
+ornamenting the body in the Andamans. We have seen that some ornaments
+are worn in order to express the personal value of the individual,
+while others are worn for the sake of the protection they are believed
+to afford. We have also seen that one method of painting the body (with
+white clay) is a means of expressing the personal value of the painted
+individual. We will next consider the use of the clay called odu. This
+clay is painted on the body of a mourner and is the outward sign of
+mourning; it is used at certain stages of the initiation ceremonies; it
+is also regularly used for painting the body with the designs known as
+e̱ra-puli. According to the rule of method laid down at the beginning of
+the chapter we must seek some common explanation of these different
+uses of the same substance.
+
+We may consider, first of all, the patterns (e̱ra-puli) that are made
+with this clay on the body and face after eating certain foods such as
+pork and turtle.
+
+Mr Man gives two explanations of the use of these paintings of clay.
+During the hot season, he says, the natives “endeavour to lessen the
+discomfort caused by the heat by smearing their bodies with a
+white-wash of common white clay and water.” He adds: “it has long been
+erroneously believed that they have recourse to this expedient in order
+to allay the inconvenience which they would otherwise suffer from the
+bites of mosquitoes and other jungle pests; but the true reason for the
+practice is, I am well assured, that which I have given above [169].”
+In another place he says: “After eating pork or turtle they are in the
+habit of smearing og over their bodies with their fingers, in the
+belief that it affects their breath, and that evil spirits will be
+unable to detect, and therefore will not be attracted to, them by the
+savoury smell of the food of which they have partaken. Again, when
+heated by travelling or by hunting or dancing, they have recourse to
+the same wash, but in these cases it is applied thinly [170].”
+
+There are here two explanations of fundamentally different character.
+First the Andamanese practice of painting their bodies with clay is
+explained as having a purely utilitarian purpose, being intended to
+cool them when they are heated. In the second statement the explanation
+given is that the custom is intended to protect them from danger.
+
+My own observations do not altogether agree with the statements of Mr
+Man. I found that the natives painted themselves just as much in the
+cold season as in the hot season. The principal, if not the sole,
+occasion on which the clay is used is after or immediately before a
+meal, and therefore generally in the late afternoon or evening when the
+heat of the day is past. I do not feel so satisfied as Mr Man appears
+to be, that the clay really has the effect of keeping a person cool,
+particularly when it is remembered that the painting may consist of a
+few lines each as broad as a finger. Moreover, Mr Man’s explanation
+does not afford any reason for the fact that the clay is always applied
+in some sort of pattern. If it were merely to keep himself cool, we
+should expect to see a man cover himself all over with a plain coating
+evenly spread over the body. Such an even coating is never used, in the
+Great Andaman tribes, except by persons mourning for the dead, and is
+the essential mark of a mourner.
+
+It is easy to explain how Mr Man has fallen into an error in this
+matter. On many occasions, when I questioned the natives as to their
+reason for painting themselves with clay I received the answer, “When
+we have eaten pork or turtle or dugong, we become ot-kimil and so we
+take clay and paint ourselves.” Now the word ot-kimil in the Aka-J̌eru
+language is the word that the natives use to express what we mean by
+the word “hot.” But while “hot” may always be translated by ot-kimil or
+er-kimil, the latter word cannot always be adequately rendered in
+English by the word “hot.” Mr Man seems to have supposed that when an
+Andaman Islander says “hot” he means by the word only what we mean,
+whereas he really means a great deal more.
+
+Let us examine briefly the word in question. In the languages of the
+North Andaman the stem is -kimil. With the prefix ot- or er- it is used
+to mean “hot” as in T’ot-kimil-bom, “I am hot,” or Ino ot-kimil bi or
+Ino er-kimil bi, “The water is hot.” Used by itself the stem kimil is
+the name of the latter part of the rainy season, when the weather is
+not hot but cool. A youth or girl who is passing through the initiation
+ceremonies is said to be aka-kimil, and is addressed or spoken of as
+Kimil, instead of by his or her proper name. The turtle-eating ceremony
+is called čokbi-kimil, or čokbi-ǰo or kimil-ǰo, čokbi meaning “turtle”
+and ǰo meaning “eating.” The word “hot” is used by the natives in
+several unusual ways when they are talking their own language or
+Hindustani. Thus a stormy or rough sea is said to be “hot,” and one
+native in describing to me (in Hindustani) the cessation of a cyclone
+said “the sea became cold.” A person who is ill is said to be hot, and
+getting well is expressed by the phrase “getting cool.”
+
+In the Aka-Bea language the word “hot” is translated by Mr Portman by
+the stem uya. The stem kimil appears in the form gumul in only some of
+the uses it has in the Northern languages. Gumul is the name of the
+latter part of the rainy season. A youth passing through the initiation
+ceremonies is said to be aka-gumul and is addressed or spoken of as
+Guma. The turtle-eating ceremony is called gumul-le-ke, le-ke meaning
+“eating.” The word thus means “the gumul eating” and is the literal
+equivalent of the kimil-ǰo of the North.
+
+The uses of the word kimil may be summarised as follows:
+
+(1) to mean “hot” in the sense of the English word;
+
+(2) in connection with illness;
+
+(3) in speaking of stormy weather;
+
+(4) as the name of the latter part of the rainy season;
+
+(5) to denote the condition of a youth or girl who is passing through
+or has recently passed through the initiation ceremonies, and to denote
+the ceremonies themselves;
+
+(6) to denote a condition in a person consequent on eating certain
+foods, and perhaps sometimes due to other causes, to remedy or obviate
+which the natives make use of clay painted in patterns on their bodies.
+
+It is probable, then, that when a native says that after eating food he
+is ot-kimil and therefore paints himself with clay he does not mean
+simply that he is hot. This will be still more evident when we consider
+the second explanation of the custom that is given by the natives. Many
+of those whom I questioned stated that after eating dugong, pork,
+turtle, etc., the body emits an odour, that this odour may attract the
+spirits of the jungle or the sea, and that to obviate this they paint
+themselves with clay. This agrees exactly with what Mr Man says in the
+second passage quoted above. It is confirmed by other customs. I was
+told that a man who has eaten dugong will not leave the camp until some
+time after the dugong meat is all finished, for fear that the spirits
+may smell him and do him harm. It is to be noted in passing that
+painting the body with clay does not by any means remove the odour that
+does actually characterise a native after he has been eating fat meat
+of any kind. We must be careful, in this instance also, not to assume
+that an Andaman Islander means by “smell” exactly what we mean by it
+and nothing more. It will be shown later in the chapter that the
+Andamanese identify the smell of an object with its active magical
+principle. One example may be given here to show this. The origin of
+rheumatism in the legs is explained by the natives as being the result
+of the common practice of preparing the fibre of the Anadendron
+paniculatum by scraping it on the thigh. During this process, they say,
+the “smell” of the plant enters the thigh and is the cause of rheumatic
+or sciatic pains.
+
+The natives give yet a third statement of their reasons for using clay.
+On many occasions I asked them what would happen if they ate pork or
+turtle and did not paint themselves. In every case I received the reply
+that any man who did such a thing would almost certainly be ill.
+
+When a number of persons give three different reasons for one and the
+same action, and are equally sincere throughout, it is to be presumed
+that the three different statements are so many different ways of
+saying one and the same thing. We may therefore conclude that the
+Andaman Islanders believe that there is a peculiar power in foods (or
+in some foods) which makes it dangerous to eat them. This danger may be
+expressed by saying that the person who has eaten food will, unless he
+takes certain precautions, be liable to be ill. Now sickness is
+believed to be caused by the spirits of the jungle and the sea, and
+therefore an alternative or equivalent statement of the same belief is
+that after a person has eaten food he is in danger from the spirits. We
+may therefore conclude that the word ot-kimil, when it is used to
+describe the condition of a person who has eaten food, denotes simply
+this condition of danger, and nothing more. For this we shall find
+ample confirmation later on. Subject to such later confirmation I will
+here state what has been maintained, which is (1) that the e̱ra-puli
+patterns are to be explained as being protective, (2) that the eating
+of food is regarded as dangerous, and (3) that this danger is
+associated in the minds of the natives with sickness and with the
+spirits. It will be convenient to leave the first of these three
+propositions for later discussion and take up the second, seeking to
+find the meaning of this belief in the dangerous properties of food.
+
+Not all foods are equally dangerous. I was able to establish roughly a
+sort of scale. The most dangerous foods are dugong; the fish called
+komar; some of the snakes; the internal fat such as the kidney-fat or
+the intestinal fat of pig, turtle, monitor lizard and Paradoxurus; the
+liver of sharks, sting-rays and Plotosus; and honey. Next in order come
+the flesh of pigs, turtle, monitor lizard and Paradoxurus and of the
+fishes mentioned above; also the eggs of turtle. To these should
+perhaps be added the edible grubs and some vegetable foods such as the
+yams and the Artocarpus fruit and seed. Lowest in the scale, that is,
+least dangerous, are molluscs and the commoner sorts of fish and
+vegetable foods.
+
+The principles underlying this grading of foods are two. Those foods
+that are difficult or dangerous to procure are considered more
+dangerous than others. Thus all the fishes that are thought most
+dangerous to eat are actually dangerous, such as the sharks, the
+sting-rays, the armed Plotosus, and the fish komar that has a powerful
+spike on its head with which it can inflict a dangerous wound. Secondly
+the foods that are most prized are regarded as being more dangerous
+than those that are less prized. The internal fat of animals is
+regarded as a great delicacy and therefore occupies a high place in the
+scale. It is this also that explains the position of honey and of the
+edible grubs. The dugong, which is of all foods the most difficult and
+dangerous to procure, and is at the same time more highly prized than
+any other, is regarded as more dangerous to eat than any other.
+
+It is this difference in the danger attributed to different foods that
+gives the clue to the explanation of the beliefs relating to them. The
+hypothesis I wish to put forward is that the custom of painting the
+body after eating food is an expression of the social value of food.
+
+In a simple community such as that of the Andaman Islands, in which the
+necessary food has to be provided from day to day, food occupies a
+predominant position, and is the chief source of those variations or
+oscillations between conditions of euphoria and dysphoria that
+constitute the emotional life of the society. Food is obtainable only
+by the expenditure of effort, and the effort is a communal one. The
+obtaining of food is the principal social activity and it is an
+activity in which every able-bodied member of the community is required
+by custom to join. A man’s first duty to the society may be defined as
+the duty of providing food for himself and others, and no one is looked
+on with more contempt than one who is lazy or careless in this respect.
+On the contrary the man who stands highest in the esteem of others is
+the skilful hunter who is generous in distributing to others the food
+he obtains. The food provides the community with its chief joys and
+sorrows. When food is scarce the whole community suffers. The men spend
+all their time in hunting but are disappointed. They have to fall back
+upon foods that are little relished, such as the commoner kinds of
+molluscs. On the contrary when there is plenty of food the whole
+society rejoices together. Every one has as much as he or she can eat.
+Hunting and fishing become pleasant sports instead of arduous labour.
+
+Viewing the matter from its relation to the feelings of the individual
+we may say that it is particularly in connection with food that he is
+made to feel that he is a member of the community, sharing with others
+their joys and sorrows, taking part in a common activity, often
+dependent upon others for the satisfaction of his hunger, and obliged
+by custom to share with those others what he himself obtains. Thus food
+is, for the Andaman Islander, the one object above all others that
+serves to awaken in him day after day the feeling of his relation to
+his fellows. It is also the source of a very large proportion of his
+joys and sorrows, his excitements and disappointments. Thus it is that
+when the natives wish to amuse each other it is by tales of hunting
+that they do so, and a large proportion of their songs relate to the
+getting of food.
+
+It is thus clear that food becomes an important secondary object of the
+fundamental affective dispositions that regulate the emotional attitude
+of the individual to the society to which he belongs. It is connected
+very closely with the feeling of moral obligation; the most valued
+moral qualities in the Andaman Islands are energy in providing food and
+generosity in distributing it; among the worst faults are laziness in
+hunting and meanness in giving to others. Similarly food is closely
+associated with the feeling of dependence. During childhood,
+particularly, the individual has to depend on others for his food; even
+later in life the food that a man eats is more often provided by others
+than by himself; he depends on the community even for his daily
+nourishment.
+
+Different foods have different social values. Thus a dugong provides a
+large supply of a highly-prized delicacy, but on the other hand can
+only be obtained by strenuous and dangerous efforts of skilful hunters.
+At the other end of the scale the social value of shell-fish is very
+little. They are not relished and are only eaten when there is nothing
+better, while the labour of obtaining them is simply one of drudgery
+requiring little skill.
+
+Finally it must be pointed out that the value of food is both positive
+and negative. It is the source of conditions of social euphoria when it
+is plentiful; while it is equally the source of social dysphoria when
+it is lacking. In other words, on different occasions it is the source
+of both pleasurable and painful states of the fundamental social
+sentiments.
+
+All these experiences connected with food organise themselves around
+the notion that foods, or the animals that are used for food, are
+things to be treated carefully, with respect, or, in other words, with
+ritual precautions. The sense of the social value of food reveals
+itself as a belief that food may be a source of danger unless it is
+approached with circumspection, and this belief, translated into
+action, gives rise to the rite of painting the body after eating. This
+does not mean that when the Andaman Islander eats turtle he is actually
+in a state of fear; he feels that he would have reason to be afraid if
+it were not that the society has provided him with a means of avoiding
+the dangers of turtle eating. What he does feel, then, as I have tried
+to show, is not a fear of food but a sense of the value of food.
+
+This interpretation will, I hope, be amply justified later, and the
+psychological processes assumed by it will be further illustrated. One
+point needs to be emphasised here, namely that the suggested
+interpretation affords, as no other would seem to do, an explanation of
+the fact that some foods are believed to be more dangerous than others,
+and that while it is obligatory to paint the body after eating the more
+dangerous foods, it is not necessary to do so after eating those that
+are less dangerous. If the rite is simply the expression of the social
+value of foods, it will follow that different food substances, having
+different social values, must be subject to differences in ritual
+treatment.
+
+There are a few other customs connected with food, recorded in an
+earlier chapter, which show that in general food is regarded as
+something that may only be approached with ritual precautions. A turtle
+must be killed with its head towards the open sea, and must be cut up
+in one particular way, otherwise the meat would be “bad.” A pig must
+also be cut up in a particular way, and must be stuffed with certain
+leaves before it is roasted. A man will not eat certain foods when he
+is away from his own country, as he is afraid that to do so might make
+him ill. (This corresponds to the belief that there is less chance of
+illness in one’s own country than away from it, and that the spirits of
+a strange place are more dangerous than those that haunt the jungles
+and the waters of a man’s own home.) All these customs, I believe, are
+so many different expressions of the social value of food.
+
+I have maintained earlier in the chapter that the sense of the social
+value of such things as fire and the materials used for weapons
+translates itself into the belief that these things afford protection
+against danger. This would seem, at first sight, to be contradicted by
+the explanation that I have just given of the belief in the danger of
+food. The apparent contradiction must be faced and resolved before we
+can proceed further.
+
+First, it can be shown that the various things that are regarded as
+affording protection when used according to custom, are also believed
+to be dangerous, just in the same way that food is dangerous. One
+example of this will suffice. The fibre of the Anadendron paniculatum,
+which is used for bow-strings and other purposes, has been shown to
+possess a power which gives it efficacy against dangers of the sea such
+as sharks. This same power, however, may have injurious effects if the
+plant is handled without proper precautions. Thus, if a piece of the
+green creeper, or a person who has recently been handling it, should be
+in a canoe, it would be impossible to capture turtle from that canoe,
+as they would be driven away by the “smell” of the plant. If a piece of
+the creeper were burnt in the fire there would be a great storm,
+according to one statement, or all the turtle would be driven away from
+the vicinity, according to another. The handling of the plant in the
+preparation of the fibre, by scraping it on the thigh, is believed to
+be the cause of rheumatism. Turtle meat that might by accident come in
+contact with the plant would be dangerous and would therefore not be
+eaten. These different beliefs show us that while this plant possesses
+powers that make it of service to the society, both directly as a
+material for weapons, and indirectly as a magical protection against
+evil, it is also dangerous, i.e. it will produce undesirable effects
+unless treated with the proper ritual precautions.
+
+Now just as materials such as the Anadendron are dangerous but may yet
+be used protectively, so it can be shown that the things used for food
+are also capable of affording protection against evil. It may be
+recalled that an important element of the treatment of sickness is by
+the use of special foods. Yams, honey, the fat of turtle and dugong and
+other foods are believed to possess curative properties. The flesh of
+the flying-fox is used as a remedy for rheumatism. But the clearest
+evidence is provided by the custom of wearing ornaments made of the
+bones of animals that have been eaten. These ornaments are believed to
+possess protective powers of the same kind as those attributed to human
+bones, but they are considered to be more particularly of value to the
+hunter when he is in the forest or on the sea. They are made chiefly
+from the bones of those animals that are believed to be most dangerous
+to eat. These animals are difficult and often dangerous to capture or
+kill. When obtained they become very important sources of well-being to
+the society. The Andamanese express their sense of the social value of
+these animals in the belief that it is necessary to adopt certain
+measures of ritual precaution in dealing with them. When these due
+precautions are taken, however, then the society is able to make use of
+the flesh to serve its own ends. So, when an animal has been eaten, and
+has thus been made to serve as a source of advantage, of strength, the
+bones, which are the permanent remains of the feast, acquire a symbolic
+value as evidence of past social well-being, and omens of future
+security. They are a visible proof of the ability of the society to
+protect itself and its members from the dangers that are believed to
+threaten the human being in the most important activity of his life,
+the obtaining and eating of food.
+
+Formerly the Andamanese preserved the skulls of all large animals such
+as pigs, turtle and dugong. At the present day they no longer preserve
+the skulls of pigs, giving as their reason that owing to the dogs
+obtained from Europeans they now have little difficulty in killing
+pigs; but they still preserve the skulls of dugongs, and a fair
+proportion of the skulls of turtle. The J̌a̤rawa still seem to preserve
+with great care the skulls of all the pigs they kill, going to the
+pains of enclosing each one in a case of basket-work. These skulls, we
+must conclude, are more than mere trophies of the chase. As visible
+proofs of the ability of the society in the past to overcome the
+hostile powers of nature, they form, as it were, the guarantee of a
+similar ability in the future, and I believe that their preservation is
+regarded as a means of ensuring success in hunting as well as
+protection for the hunters. The turtle skulls that are often suspended
+under the forward platform of a canoe, are, I believe, intended both to
+protect the occupants of the canoe from the dangers of the sea and to
+help them to obtain a good catch.
+
+The Andamanese belief in the power of the bones of animals to protect
+them from danger and to bring them luck, is therefore very similar to
+their belief in the protective power of the materials used for weapons
+and implements. The consideration of the apparent contradiction
+mentioned above has led us to a more exact statement of the real
+beliefs in these matters. They believe, we may say, that all the things
+from the jungle and the sea of which they make use as food or as
+materials, are dangerous unless approached with proper ritual
+precautions, but when so approached they become sources of strength and
+well-being and also of protection from unseen dangers.
+
+To return to the main argument, which was concerned with the meaning of
+the patterns of clay painted on the body after eating the more
+dangerous foods, it would seem that this action is really a rite or
+ceremony, of the same general character as other ceremonial customs of
+the Andamans. It is an action required by custom, the performance of
+which on appropriate occasions serves to keep alive in the mind of the
+individual a certain system of sentiments necessary for the regulation
+of conduct in conformity to the needs of the society. By it the
+individual is made to feel (or to act as though he felt) that his life
+is one of continually repeated dangers from which he can only be
+preserved by conforming to the customs of the society as they have been
+handed down by tradition. He is made to feel that the eating of food is
+not merely the satisfaction of an animal appetite, but an act of
+communion, that the food itself is something “sacred” (if we may use
+that word in the sense of the original Latin “sacer”). It serves also,
+like any other rite in which all join, to make the individual feel the
+solidarity and unity of the community; all share in the common repast
+and the common danger, and each man sees on his neighbour the clay with
+which he himself is daubed.
+
+Of course it is probable that the Andamanese custom of painting the
+body after eating, like our own grace before and after meat, with which
+it is parallel, tends to become a formality accompanied by little real
+feeling, but it can be shown, I believe, that such customs do possess a
+real value—a real psychological function—in keeping alive ideas and
+sentiments that will on occasion play an important part in influencing
+conduct.
+
+We have not yet completed the study of the Andamanese beliefs about
+food. To do so we must examine the initiation ceremonies. I hope to
+show that these ceremonies are the means by which the society
+powerfully impresses upon the initiate the sense of the social value of
+food, and keeps the same sense alive in the minds of the spectators of
+the ceremony.
+
+The position in the social life occupied by a child is different from
+that of an adult; the child is dependent upon and closely united to his
+parents, and is not an independent member of the community. To this
+difference in social position there corresponds a difference in the
+attitude of a person towards a child and towards an adult, and also a
+difference in the attitude of a child and that of an adult towards the
+society. As the child grows up a change takes place in his position in
+the social life, and this must be accompanied by a change in the
+emotional dispositions of the child himself in so far as these regulate
+his attitude towards the society, and by a change in the attitude
+towards the child of the other members of the group. The initiation
+ceremonies are the means by which these changes are brought about, and
+by which, therefore, the child is made an independent member of the
+society.
+
+The ceremonies have two aspects according as we regard them from the
+point of view of the society or from that of the initiate. For the
+society they are to be described as the recognition of the change of
+status of the initiate, just as the marriage ceremony is the social
+recognition of the change of status by marriage. For the initiate they
+constitute a sort of moral or social education.
+
+To fit a child for his proper place in the community he needs to be
+educated. Part of the process consists of learning how to hunt, how to
+make bows and arrows, and so on. This necessary knowledge he acquires
+gradually by imitation of his elders, in which he is guided and
+encouraged by them. But in addition to this he has to acquire those
+sentiments or emotional dispositions which regulate the conduct of
+members of the society and constitute morality. Part of this education
+in morality, this education of the sentiments, takes place gradually as
+the child grows up, less by any actual instruction than by processes of
+imitation and suggestion; but in this connection an extremely important
+part is played by the initiation ceremonies. That the long series of
+abstentions and ceremonies does have a very powerful emotional effect
+on the youth or girl may be readily observed by an eye-witness; that
+their permanent effect is to create in his or her mind a number of
+sentiments that previously existed not at all or only in an undeveloped
+condition will be shown in the course of the present argument.
+
+Since in the life of the Andamans by far the most important social
+activity is the getting of food, and it is in connection with food that
+the social sentiments are most frequently called into action, it is
+therefore appropriate that it should be through his relation to food
+that the child should be taught his relation to the society, and thus
+have those sentiments implanted in him or brought to the necessary
+degree of strength. During his infancy the child is almost entirely
+unrestrained and acts with great comparative freedom. He does not
+realise, in any adequate manner, that the food with which he is freely
+provided (for children are the last to suffer hunger) is only obtained
+by skill and effort, nor does he realise that he will one day be
+required to labour to supply food for others. There follows a period of
+restraint, during which the growing boy or girl has to give up eating
+certain relished foods, and has to pass through a number of ceremonies,
+some of them painful, and all solemn and awe-inspiring. These
+restraints on the action of the individual are not imposed by one
+person, but by the whole society backed by the whole force of
+tradition. Through a series of years, just at what is, for
+physiological reasons, the most impressionable age, the individual
+learns to subordinate his own desires to the requirements of the
+society or of custom, as explained to him by his elders. He is thus
+impressed, in a forcible manner, with the importance of the moral law,
+and at the same time he is impressed with a sense of the social value
+of food. The ceremonies thus afford a moral education adapted to the
+requirements of life as it is lived in the Andamans. It would need a
+very lengthy analysis to show all the effects of the ceremonies on the
+emotional life of those who undergo them, and for the purpose of this
+chapter such an analysis is unnecessary. It will suffice merely to
+mention a few of the more important. As stated above, the ceremonies
+teach the boy or girl self-control or self-restraint, and they do so in
+relation to one of the two fundamental human instincts,—hunger. The
+cutting of the boy’s back in the North Andaman gives a still sharper
+lesson in self-control in the endurance of pain. Secondly the
+ceremonies teach the initiate, for the first time in life, to view life
+and its duties and obligations seriously. The various ceremonies are
+all very solemn affairs for the initiate. Again, the growing boy or
+girl is made to feel very strongly the importance of conforming to the
+customs of the community to which he belongs, thus having implanted in
+his mind what is certainly one of the most powerful of the sentiments
+that regulate conduct in the Andamans. In this connection there may
+also be mentioned the respect for elders which is a most important
+element in the regulation of social life in all savage communities, and
+which is strongly impressed on the initiate throughout the ceremonies.
+And yet again, the ceremonies awaken and develop in the adolescent that
+fear of unseen danger which, as we shall see later, has a very
+important place in the mental life of the Andamanese and an important
+function in their moral life. Finally, the whole series of abstentions
+and ceremonies serves to develop in the mind of every new member of the
+society that sense of the social value of foods with which our argument
+has been concerned, which may be briefly described as being a
+realisation that food is a possession of the society, that not only the
+power to obtain food, but also the power to use it without danger is
+something that the individual owes to the society, and that the
+bestowal upon him of this power involves the acceptance on his part of
+corresponding obligations.
+
+We may say, to look at the matter under another aspect, that the
+initiation ceremonies teach the youth or girl to realise what is
+implied in being a member of the society by putting him or her during
+the period of adolescence in an exceptional position, and, as it were,
+outside the society. The youth is no longer a child and may not act as
+a child; but he is not yet an adult and may not act as adults do. He
+feels himself cut off, as it were, from the ordinary life of the group,
+having as yet no share in it. As a child he was not yet aware of what
+it means to be a member of a society, but now, by means of the
+ceremonies, his attention is directed to the society and its life, by
+his being placed in a position of isolation outside it. He begins to
+look forward to the time when he will take his proper place as an
+adult, and his share in the common life of the camp. At each step of
+the ceremonies he feels that he is brought a little closer, until at
+last he can feel himself a man amongst men. Thus he is brought to a
+consciousness of all that it must mean to him to be a member of the
+community; he is taught the significance and value of social communion.
+
+Since the greater part of social life is the getting and eating of
+food, to place a person outside the social life would be to forbid him
+from partaking of the food that is obtained by the society and consumed
+by it. This, however, would result in his starvation. The same object
+is attained, however, by making the initiate abstain for a period from
+a number of the most important and relished foods, and then making him
+abstain for a second period from the others. This is not the only way
+however in which the initiate is cut off from social communion. A youth
+or girl who is aka-op is not permitted to dance, nor to be decorated
+with red paint and white clay. It is in the dance that the community
+expresses most completely its own unity. Being forbidden to join in the
+dance is therefore to be excluded from the common life. Painting the
+body with red paint and white clay is, as we have seen, a way of
+expressing that the individual is aware of his own position as a member
+of the group having the approval and good-will of his fellows. Thus
+these other prohibitions reinforce and supplement the prohibition
+against eating certain foods during the period of adolescence, and the
+consideration of them serves to confirm the interpretation just given.
+I believe that the aka-op is also forbidden to use odu clay as a sign
+of mourning, and if this be so it is of considerable significance, as
+will be evident after we have considered the meaning of this use of
+clay. Unfortunately I am not quite sure of the facts, and so the point
+must be left.
+
+To discuss in detail all the features of these ceremonies would take
+much space. I propose therefore to take as typical of the others the
+ceremony of turtle-eating and to explain its various features. When
+this ceremony is performed the youth has been compelled for many months
+to abstain from eating turtle, and has thus learnt to realise the
+social value of food in general and of turtle in particular. He is now
+to have the same lesson impressed upon him in a different way. The
+previous part of his education has been the continuous action over a
+long period of a not very powerful emotion. He has had to sit quietly
+while others regaled themselves with turtle meat and to be satisfied
+with less tasty food. At times he has probably gone hungry because the
+only food in camp was of kinds that were forbidden to him. The ceremony
+he is now to go through acts by producing in the space of a few days a
+very intense emotional experience. We have seen that the sense of the
+social value of food takes the form of a belief that food is dangerous
+to eat, and that its dangers may only be avoided by ritual precautions.
+At the turtle-eating ceremony the initiate is eating turtle for the
+first time as an adult, and is therefore exposed to great danger which
+makes it necessary to guard him with every possible ritual precaution.
+This, at any rate, is what the initiate himself is made to feel, and it
+is through this that the ceremony has its emotional effects. The
+initiate is not, of course, himself possessed by a simple feeling of
+fear, though the emotional state of his mind is built up on the basis
+of the fear instinct. What he is about to do is a matter of great
+danger to himself, but at the same time the precautions that are to be
+taken are such as entirely to remedy that danger if they are properly
+observed. Thus what he experiences is an intense feeling of the
+importance and solemnity of the ritual in which he is to take part.
+
+All the details of the ceremony are readily to be explained as so many
+different ways of warding off the danger that threatens the initiate.
+He is seated on leaves of the Hibiscus tiliaceus, which, as we have
+seen, possess special efficacy against dangers connected with turtle.
+Leaves of the same kind are placed under his arms so as to cover his
+belly, where, we may suppose, the danger is most intense. A fire is
+placed near him, between him and the open sea. It has already been
+shown that fire is believed to afford protection against dangers of
+this sort, and the appropriateness of the position is due to the fact
+that in this instance it is from the sea and the things of the sea that
+danger is to be feared. He may not feed himself with his fingers, but
+must use a skewer of Hibiscus wood. This is clearly only one more
+precaution against danger, though the ideas connected with it are
+somewhat obscure. At the beginning of the ceremony the initiate is fed
+with turtle by a man who conducts the ceremony and who represents the
+society, that latter fact being sometimes symbolised by his wearing
+round his shoulders a bark sling such as is used for carrying children.
+This means, I think, that it is the society that “gives” the food to
+the initiate, giving him at the same time the power to use it with
+safety. The older man hands on to the younger the right and the power
+to eat which he himself possesses. He makes himself responsible, as it
+were, for the action of the initiate. At one stage of the performance
+the initiate is rubbed over with red ochre. This is to be understood by
+recalling that red ochre and red paint are regarded by the natives as
+valuable remedies against sickness and against the spirits that cause
+sickness. Immediately afterwards the body of the initiate is spattered
+with odu clay. The use of this clay after eating food was explained as
+a method of avoiding the dangers supposed to result from eating such
+foods as turtle. It is clear that exactly the same explanation will
+apply to its use in the initiation ceremonies. I have not found a
+satisfactory explanation of the peculiar manner in which it is applied.
+That the youth is not allowed to sleep for the first two days of the
+ceremony will be explained later in the chapter, when it will be shown
+that sleep itself is regarded as a condition of danger.
+
+A notable incident is that at the beginning of the ceremony the female
+relatives of the initiate are required by custom to come and weep over
+him. An explanation of this has already been given, but may well be
+repeated. At each stage of the initiation ceremonies the initiate is
+withdrawn from the position of dependence that the child necessarily
+occupies, and as children are, for the most part, under the care of
+their elder female relatives, the ceremonies result in a partial
+destruction of those bonds that unite the initiate to his mother or his
+foster-mother and her sisters or to his own elder sisters. The weeping
+of the female relatives is as it were a reaction against this lessening
+of solidarity. It is evident why the rite is necessarily one-sided. The
+female relatives need to feel that they are not being entirely cut off
+from the initiate, and so they affirm their attachment to him by
+weeping over him. On the other hand the important thing for the
+initiate himself is to feel that the bonds that united him as a child
+to the women who cared for him are now severed or modified; he must no
+longer depend on them but must learn to depend on himself; hence it is
+necessary that he should not weep but should remain passive and as it
+were indifferent under the tears that are shed over him.
+
+The last part of the ceremony consists of a dance, in which the youth
+dances in the middle surrounded by a ring of men. As we have seen that
+dancing is in general an affirmation of solidarity between those taking
+part, and an expression of the unity of the society, we may well regard
+this dance as an affirmation of the solidarity that now exists between
+the youth and the other dancers, who are representatives of the society
+of adults. There is something more in the dance than this however. I
+pointed out that one of the results of taking part in a dance is to
+produce in the individual an experience of increased personal force,
+and it is obvious that this is a very appropriate feeling for the
+initiate who, by his long abstention from turtle, and by the ceremony
+he has just been through, has acquired an increase of personal force,
+an addition to his social personality. Before the dance the initiate is
+decorated with white clay (the snake pattern) and red paint. I have
+explained this particular method of painting the body as being a means
+of expressing and so producing or reinforcing the feeling of elation
+accompanying the recognition by an individual of his own social value,
+of the fact that he has deserved and obtained the good-will and regard
+of his fellows. The youth who has been through the period of restraint
+and the ordeal of the ceremony has done his duty and has earned the
+approbation of his friends. It is for this reason that he alone of the
+dancers is decorated with the painting that serves to express or arouse
+the elation or self-satisfaction that it is right for him to feel. The
+painting is the mark of the increase in social value of the initiate
+brought about by the turtle-eating ceremony.
+
+There is one aspect of the dance that may be mentioned as being of
+importance, and which will be referred to again later, namely that the
+movements seem to be in a way imitative of the movements of turtle in
+the water. The leaves used in the dance are those that possess magical
+efficacy against dangers from turtle.
+
+I have not been able to satisfy myself as to the meaning of the belt
+and necklace of Pothos scandens worn by the initiate in the dance and
+for some days afterwards. It is probable that the clue to this lies in
+the resemblance of the leaves to the shape of a phallus, but I have no
+clear evidence that this is the real explanation, and therefore offer
+it as merely a surmise.
+
+If the natives be asked the reason for these ceremonies they often
+reply that their purpose is to make the youth or girl grow up strong.
+By this word “strong” they seem to mean in the first instance
+able-bodied, skilful (in hunting, etc.) and above all able to avoid or
+resist disease. They believe that anyone who did not pass through the
+ceremonies would be certain to die at an early age, and they recall the
+instance of one young man who refused to submit to the ceremonies who
+died before reaching maturity. Now, since the danger that they fear in
+eating food is said to be sickness, we may translate their statement
+into other terms by saying that the purpose of the initiation
+ceremonies is to endow the initiate with the power to eat the dangerous
+foods with comparative safety.
+
+It would seem that an infant, being completely dependent upon his
+parents, is protected by that dependence from the danger of foods, but
+the adult is only able to make use of food with safety by reason of the
+possession within himself of a special power with which it is the
+purpose of the initiation ceremonies to endow him. Each kind of food
+has its own kind of dangerous power, and therefore every individual
+needs to be endowed with the special power to avoid each kind of
+danger. For this reason there is a separate ceremony for each of the
+important kinds of food. Thus we see very clearly that, for the
+Andamanese, food, or the power to make use of food without danger, is
+essentially a possession of the society, and one function of the
+initiation ceremonies is to keep alive this sentiment.
+
+But there is a further meaning, I think, lying behind the statement
+that the initiation ceremonies endow the youth or girl with strength. I
+have already argued that all the most important social sentiments are
+closely associated with the sense of the social value of food, and
+although the initiation ceremonies are chiefly concerned with food,
+that is only because that is the easiest way by which to get at the
+main system of social sentiments. So that behind the special meaning of
+the ceremonies with relation to food we must look for a more general
+meaning in relation to the social life in general. This may be
+conveniently stated by saying that the purpose of the ceremonies is to
+endow the individual with a social personality. By the social
+personality of a person I mean the sum of those qualities by which he
+is able to affect the society. It is, in other words, what gives him
+his social value. The social personality depends in the first place on
+the social status of the individual. A young child seems to be regarded
+as having no social personality. He is not an independent member of the
+society, and therefore has no immediate social value, no direct effect
+on the general social life. At any rate the social personality of a
+child is something very different from that of an adult. So, since the
+initiation ceremonies provide the passage from childhood to manhood or
+womanhood we may describe them as the means by which the society endows
+the child with an adult social personality.
+
+But the social personality of an individual also depends on his
+personal qualities, his strength and intelligence, his skill as a
+hunter, and on his moral qualities, whether he is mean or generous,
+quarrelsome or good-tempered, and so on, for all these things help to
+determine the place he occupies in the social life and the effects he
+has upon it. Above all, the social personality depends upon the
+development in the individual of those sentiments by which the social
+life is regulated and by which the social cohesion is preserved. Now we
+have seen that the initiation ceremonies do serve to develop these
+sentiments in the mind of the initiate, and we may therefore say that
+in this respect also it is true that the initiation ceremonies serve to
+develop in the child the social personality of an adult.
+
+The consideration of the initiation ceremonies has served to confirm
+the hypothesis that the Andamanese customs relating to food are all of
+them different modes of expressing the social value of foods. We have
+now to consider the nature of the dangers that are supposed to accrue
+from the eating of food if due precautions be not taken. One statement
+of the natives is that the danger they fear is sickness. Now sickness
+of all kinds is believed by the Andamanese to be caused by certain
+supernatural beings called Lau or Čauga,—the spirits of the dead; and
+further, we have seen that the danger connected with food is sometimes
+said to be the danger of an attack by the spirits. So that it is
+evident that to understand the meaning of the fear of foods it is first
+of all necessary to understand the notions they have about the spirits,
+and to do this we shall have to consider the various customs relating
+to death and burial.
+
+For the society a death is the loss of one of its members, one of its
+constituent parts. A person occupies a definite position in society,
+has a certain share in the social life, is one of the supports of the
+network of social relations. His death constitutes a partial
+destruction of the social cohesion, the normal social life is
+disorganised, the social equilibrium is disturbed. After the death the
+society has to organise itself anew and reach a new condition of
+equilibrium. In reference to the small community of the Andamans we may
+translate the above statement into terms of personal feeling by saying
+that the death removes a person who was the object of feelings of
+affection and attachment on the part of others and is thus a direct
+offence against those sentiments in the survivors.
+
+Though the dead man has ceased to exist as a member of the society, it
+is clear that he has by no means ceased to influence the society. On
+the contrary he has become the source of intense painful emotions.
+Where the affection that was felt towards him was previously a source
+of pleasure it now becomes a source of pain. Defining the “social
+personality” of an individual as being the sum of characteristics by
+which he has an effect upon the social life and therefore on the social
+sentiments of others, we may say that by death the social personality
+is not annihilated but undergoes a profound change, so that from being
+an object of pleasurable states of the social sentiments it becomes an
+object of painful states. This is expressed by the Andamanese by saying
+that by death a man or woman becomes a Lau.
+
+The burial customs of the Andaman Islanders, however, are not to be
+regarded as simply the expression of natural personal feeling. They are
+a collective and ritual expression of a collective feeling. This is
+evident from the fact that they are regulated in every detail by
+custom. It is the duty of the relatives and friends to mourn, whether
+they feel sorrow or not, and it is equally their duty to mourn only for
+a certain period.
+
+The cohesion of a social group, by which is maintained its existence as
+a group, depends directly on the existence of a collective system of
+sentiments or affective dispositions that bind every member to every
+other. The death, or removal by any other means, of a member of the
+group is a direct attack against these sentiments. Now whenever a
+sentiment of any kind is subjected to an attack of such a kind as this
+there are only two possible alternatives; either the sentiment must
+suffer a diminution of its intrinsic energy, and thus be less capable
+of controlling behaviour in the future; or it must find an outlet in an
+expressive action of some sort which serves as a reaction of defence or
+compensation and restores the sentiment to its former condition of
+strength. The typical example of such an emotional reaction is anger;
+anything that wounds our self-regarding feelings arouses our anger; if
+it did not do so those feelings would gradually weaken. This law holds
+true of collective sentiments as well as of individual sentiments. If
+the society permitted its solidarity to be attacked, whether by death
+or by any other means, without reacting in such a way as to give relief
+to wounded social feelings and so to reinstate them in their former
+condition, these sentiments would lose their strength and the society
+its cohesion. The burial customs of the Andamanese are to be explained,
+I believe, as a collective reaction against the attack on the
+collective feeling of solidarity constituted by the death of a member
+of the social group.
+
+The man being dead, the first thing that the society does is to sever
+its connection with him, and the first step in this process is to get
+rid of the body by burying it or placing it in a tree, to abandon the
+camp at which he died, and temporarily to drop the use of his name. It
+is often supposed that customs such as these, which are found in many
+primitive societies, are due to the fear of the dead man’s spirit. That
+there is an element of fear present is undoubtedly true, but this fear
+does not seem to be by any means instinctive, and therefore comparable
+to the fear that some animals exhibit towards the dead body of one of
+their species. On the contrary the fear itself needs to be explained,
+and this will have to be attempted later.
+
+There is one group of facts which show very clearly that the burial
+customs are not solely due to an instinctive fear of dead bodies,
+namely that the customs vary according to the social position of the
+deceased. A child plays very little part in the general life of the
+community; hence on the death of a child the camp is not deserted and
+only the parents are subjected to the mourning ritual. Similarly the
+death of a person who has for long been so ill as not to be able to
+take any important part in social life has very little effect on the
+community as a whole; the body of such a one is disposed of with scant
+ceremony and mourning is perfunctory. On the other hand the death of a
+noted hunter in the prime of life, of a man who is esteemed as a
+leader, is a much greater loss; the whole community mourns for him; his
+body is placed on a tree instead of in the ground, showing that his
+death is regarded as something different from the death of a person who
+is interred. The body of a stranger who dies or is killed is not
+buried, but is thrown into the sea or cut up and burnt. The explanation
+that the natives give of this custom of burning the body is that it
+serves to dispel danger that might accrue from the presence of the dead
+body of a stranger. The blood and the fat of the dead man, from which
+they appear to fear evil influences, are, they say, driven up to the
+sky in the smoke of the fire and are thus rendered harmless.
+
+There is, then, a close correspondence between the manner of burial and
+the social value of the person buried, and it is evident that the
+differences in the mode of disposing of the body are quite inexplicable
+on the assumption that the funeral customs are solely due to the fear
+of the dead.
+
+Before burial the corpse is decorated with white clay and red paint. We
+have already seen that this is an expression on the part of the
+survivors of their regard for the deceased. A living man or woman is
+decorated in this way when, for some special reason, it is desired to
+express the fact that he or she has the good-will and regard of others,
+and it is applied to the dead body with exactly the same meaning. Fire
+and water are placed beside the grave. It is not necessary to suppose
+that the Andamanese believe that the spirit of the dead man makes any
+use of these, any more than it is necessary for us to believe that the
+spirit enjoys the flowers that it is our custom to place upon the
+grave. The action in each case is symbolical.
+
+The dead man was bound by ties of solidarity to those still living. Now
+that he is dead those ties have not ceased to exist, but continue until
+the society has recovered from the effects of the death, for they are
+based on deep-seated and elaborately organised sentiments. I believe
+that the mourning customs of the Andamanese are to be explained on this
+basis, as being the means by which the social sentiments of the
+survivors are slowly reorganised and adapted to the new condition
+produced by the death. The severance of the dead man from the society
+is not a sudden but a gradual process, during which his relatives and
+friends, being still attached to him by social ties, are in an abnormal
+condition which may be defined as a partial separation from the world
+of living men and women and a partial aggregation to the world of the
+dead (i.e. the spirit world). This abnormal condition of the mourner is
+shown chiefly in his or her withdrawal from participation in the
+ordinary life of the society. We have seen that the eating of food is,
+for the Andamanese, one of the most important of social actions, a kind
+of communion of the society, and that during the period of adolescence
+a youth is separated or withdrawn from the common life of the group by
+being forbidden to eat certain foods. So, in strict conformity with the
+same set of notions, the mourner is separated from the normal life of
+the society by being forbidden to eat pork or turtle, these being the
+most important foods that the Andamanese have [171]. Like the aka-op,
+also, the mourner is forbidden to take part in a dance, or to decorate
+himself with red paint and white clay, for by these actions the Andaman
+Islander becomes conscious of his position as a member of a closely
+unified group, and it is necessary for the mourner, as for the aka-op,
+to feel that for the time being he is cut off from the ordinary life of
+the group. The disuse, during the period of mourning, of the name of a
+mourner is to be explained, as we shall see more plainly later, on the
+same principle, the personal name being what marks the person’s
+position in the social life, so that the temporary dropping of the name
+shows that for the time being the person is not occupying his normal
+social position.
+
+The distinctive sign of a mourner is the use of clay, which is smeared
+over the body and head, and from the name of this clay is derived the
+term that denotes a mourner (aka-odu). It is possible to explain this
+also as a symbolic expression of the separation of the mourner from the
+world of living men and his aggregation to the world of the dead. In
+his everyday life the Andaman Islander is black from head to foot.
+During mourning he turns himself as nearly as possible white from head
+to foot, by covering his body all over with clay. It must be remembered
+that the spirits of the dead are said to be white or light in colour.
+This is undoubtedly one of the reasons why the (light-coloured) natives
+of India are called spirits (Lau), while men of such a dark-coloured
+race as the African negroes are not referred to by this term. The use
+of clay would therefore seem to serve not only to make the mourner
+unlike his ordinary self, but to make him like the spirits of the dead.
+
+Of course, the natives explain all these customs of mourning as being
+expressions of sorrow for their loss, and this is, from the simple
+standpoint of everyday life, an adequate and true explanation. From the
+standpoint of psychology, however, what we need to know is why the
+sorrow is expressed in just these ways and no others. Moreover, the
+natives give as a further reason for the mourning customs that if they
+did not observe them they would be liable to sickness or even death.
+
+I have said that the Andamanese believe that by death a man or woman
+becomes a Lau, but there is a little uncertainty in the statements of
+the natives as to whether he becomes a spirit at once, immediately
+after the death, or whether he does so only after the flesh of the body
+has decayed. Both statements are sometimes made, but it seems common to
+think of the dead person during the period of mourning not as a spirit
+(Lau) but as a dead man (empilo). We may best express the ideas of the
+natives by saying that the process by which a man becomes a spirit is
+one that takes some months to complete, and is only ended when the
+bones are dug up. An interesting insight into their notions in this
+matter is afforded by a belief, about which unfortunately I have very
+scanty information, to the effect that when a man dies he is initiated
+into the world of the dead by a ceremony resembling the ceremonies by
+which a youth is initiated into manhood. In the statement of an
+Aka-Kede informant the ceremony was spoken of by the term kimil, which
+is generally used for the initiation ceremonies, and was described as a
+po̱ro̱to-kimil, i.e., a ceremony in which the dead man ate po̱ro̱to
+(Caryota sobolifera) in just the same way that a youth eats turtle
+(čokbi) at the čokbi-kimil. There is independent evidence that there is
+a special connection between the spirits of the dead and the Caryota
+palm [172].
+
+The description of this ceremony (of initiation into the world of the
+dead) that was given to me stated that in it the shredded fibre named
+ko̱ro was used in just the same way as the leaves of the Hibiscus are
+used in the turtle-eating ceremony. Further, as in the peace-making
+ceremony men stand against a suspended cane from which depend bunches
+of this same ko̱ro, so in the initiation into the spirit world the
+initiate has to stand against the rainbow while the dancing spirits
+shake it and him. It is this shaking of the rainbow (according to my
+informant) that causes earthquakes. It may be recalled that the rainbow
+is regarded as a sort of bridge between this world and the spirit
+world, and that its name is “the spirit’s cane,” so that it would seem
+that it is regarded as like a cane with ko̱ro fibre suspended from it,
+such as is used in the peace-making ceremony.
+
+The explanation of the use of this ko̱ro fibre was postponed earlier in
+the chapter, and may well be undertaken here. It serves as a sign that
+the spot where it is placed is tabu, or, in more precise terms, that
+the spot must be avoided because of the presence there of a force or
+power that makes things dangerous. This force is present at the grave
+of a dead man, and therefore the fibre is placed at the grave to mark
+the fact, while a bunch is similarly suspended at the entrance to a
+village that is deserted after a death. In the peace-making ceremony
+the members of the one party stand against a suspended cane to which
+are attached strips of the fibre. The meaning of this, I think, is that
+it thus forbids the members of the other party from attacking them. If
+a man were to leave the screen of ko̱ro, he would, I believe, be liable
+to be killed by the enemy party; it is only as long as he stands
+against it with his arms outstretched that he is safe, because while
+there he is tabu.
+
+How then does this belief in the fibre as a mark of tabu come about?
+The fibre is worn by the women of the Little Andaman to cover their
+pudenda, and it was formerly worn in this way by the women of the North
+Andaman. We may conclude that this was an old element in the Andaman
+culture dating back to the remote period when the inhabitants of the
+Little Andaman became separated from those of the Great Andaman. Now in
+a very special sense the sexual organs of women are tabu, and, without
+discussing the matter in detail, we may suppose that the Andaman
+Islander regards the genitals of women as a spot in which resides the
+same sort of force or power that makes the spirits, or the body of a
+dead man, dangerous. One point may be mentioned as throwing light on
+this subject, and helping forward the argument, namely that the natives
+of the North Andaman often use the expression Lau-buku (meaning
+literally “spirit-women” or “female spirits”) to denote women
+collectively instead of the phrase that might be expected—n’e-buku. It
+would seem that by reason of their sex and the special ideas that are
+associated with it, women are regarded as having a very special
+relation with the world of spirits. We may conclude that the ko̱ro
+fibre, being a convenient material for the purpose, was first used as a
+covering for the women, and in this way came to be used as a sign of
+tabu in general, or else that for some unknown reason the fibre was
+selected as a suitable material to mark any kind of tabu, and so came
+to be used both as a covering for women and also as a sign of warning
+at the grave and the village that has been visited by death [173].
+
+To return from this digression to the question of the initiation of the
+dead man into the world of spirits, it is clear that since such
+ceremonies take time to accomplish there is a period during which the
+dead man is in an indeterminate position; he is no longer a member of
+the society of the living, and has not yet become a member of the
+society of the dead. As long as he is thus situated his relatives and
+friends are still attached to him, so that he still remains as it were
+in partial contact with the living. During this time the society is
+still suffering the ill effects of the death, and the process of
+readjustment by means of the customs of mourning is still taking place.
+At the end of it the dead man becomes completely absorbed in the spirit
+world, and as a spirit he has no more part in or influence over the
+social life than any other spirit, and the mourning is brought to a
+close by means of a ceremony.
+
+This ceremony has two parts. One is the recovery of the bones and their
+reaggregation to the society, a rite which we may regard as the final
+settling of the dead man in his proper place. All that is left of him,
+who was once a source of strength to the community, who had once—as it
+is here expressed—a social value, are the bones, his name, and the
+memory of him that his friends retain. We may suppose that the bones
+still have something of the value that originally attached to their
+owner, and indeed it is evident that they have, for after they are
+recovered they are affectionately treasured as relics by the relatives.
+By the end of the period of mourning the painful feelings aroused by
+the death have died down, so that the dead man is now the object only
+of memories that are pleasant, or, at the worst, bitter-sweet. The
+bones, then, are visible evidences of the fact that the society has
+recovered from the disruptive shock of the death, and this is why they
+are dug up as soon as the recovery is complete, or rather in order to
+complete it, and are thereafter treasured. It should now be clear why
+the Andamanese attribute to the bones of dead persons the power to
+protect them from unseen dangers. Like the bones of animals that have
+been eaten they are visible and wearable signs of past dangers overcome
+through the protective action of the society itself, and are therefore
+a guarantee of similar protection in the future. And as the death of a
+member is an enormously more important event for the community than the
+mere killing and eating of a dugong, so an enormously greater
+protective power is attributed to the human bones than to those of any
+animal.
+
+The bones, then, are dug up, and brought into camp, where they are wept
+over just as a friend who has been absent is wept over. All that is
+left of the former person returns to the social life, henceforward to
+occupy a definite place in it, and the weeping is the rite of
+aggregation, the expression of the attachment of those who weep to the
+bones that now return to them from the grave. The skull and jawbone and
+the long bones are then decorated with red paint and white clay, this
+being the way in which the relatives express their sense of the value
+of them. The other bones are made up into strings and distributed to be
+used on occasion as amulets.
+
+Soon after the digging up of the bones the other part of the ceremony
+of the end of mourning takes place. We have seen that while the dead
+man was in an indeterminate position his relatives were still attached
+to him by social bonds, but now that he has finally become a spirit,
+and is for ever definitely cut off from the human society, these bonds
+cease to exist. The mourners, therefore, who have been cut off from the
+normal social life are free to return to it and even if they should not
+so desire, yet it is their duty to do so. The return of the mourners to
+the society is marked by a dance. The clay that has marked their
+condition is taken off, and they are decorated with white clay and red
+paint and all the ornaments usual on ceremonial occasions. Thus
+decorated they dance, the women on this occasion being required to
+dance as well as the men. The dance is interrupted shortly after it is
+begun in order that those who have not been mourning may weep with the
+mourners. The weeping, according to the explanation at the beginning of
+the chapter is a rite of aggregation by which the mourners are welcomed
+back to the society, just as returning friends are welcomed after an
+absence. It has nothing whatever to do, I believe, with the dead person
+for whom they have been mourning, but is merely an expression of
+solidarity between those still alive. Dancing and the decorations used
+in the dance, I have argued, are means by which the society expresses
+its own unity, and makes the individual realise what it means to be one
+of a group, so that in this dance we see the society once more coming
+together to continue its common life, and compelling those who have
+been cut off from it to feel, even against their inclinations, that
+they have become once more units of the social body. After this
+ceremony the mourners are relieved from the restrictions to which they
+were subjected.
+
+In order to complete this discussion of the burial customs it is
+necessary to explain why a person’s name should be dropped from use
+after his death, and although this will require a digression of some
+length, this seems the most convenient point at which to deal with it.
+There is a very special relation between the name of anything and its
+fundamental characteristics, which in logic we describe by saying that
+the latter are included in the connotation of the name. The way in
+which the Andamanese represent this relation to themselves is shown in
+one of the legends. At a time when the ancestors did not know either
+the names or the uses of the different objects to be found in their
+country, one of them, Da Teŋat by name, walked through the forest
+enquiring of the objects he met what were their names. From most of
+them he received no reply, but the yam and the resin replied to him and
+gave him their names. The legend shows that as soon as the hero of the
+tale knew the name of the yam he immediately knew that it was of use as
+a food and that it required to be cooked in a particular way, although
+he was till then ignorant of those important properties. Similarly,
+having discovered the name of the resin he knew that it could be made
+into a torch and so used to give light.
+
+There is, to the mind of the Andaman Islander, a somewhat similar and
+very important connection between a person’s name and what is here
+called his social personality, and this is exhibited in the customs
+whereby the name is avoided on certain occasions. A consideration of
+the different instances will show, I think, that the name is always
+avoided whenever the owner is for any reason prevented from taking his
+or her usual place in the life of the society. At such times the social
+personality is as it were suppressed, and the name which represents it
+is therefore also suppressed.
+
+From the moment of her first menstruation to the date of her marriage,
+or more strictly to the date of her first parturition, the birth-name
+of a woman is dropped from use and she is called by her flower-name. A
+woman only attains her complete social personality as a mother. As a
+child she has not the power to become a mother. She acquires that power
+at her first menstruation and therefore from that time until this new
+virtue is actively exercised she is in a position in which one of her
+virtues, one of the qualities making up her social personality, is in
+abeyance. Therefore her name (her birth-name) is not used and she is
+given a temporary name in its place, a flower-name. She is, as it were,
+in blossom, and only when her body ripens to its fruit is she a
+complete woman.
+
+At certain stages of the initiation ceremonies the name of a youth or
+of a girl (the flower-name in this instance) is avoided for a certain
+period. Such occasions are during, and for some time after, any of the
+more important ceremonies, such as the cutting of the boy’s back, the
+puberty ceremony of the girl, the turtle-eating and pig-eating
+ceremonies. After a boy’s back is cut he is addressed and spoken of for
+some time as Eǰido, his own name not being spoken. Similarly during and
+after the turtle-eating or the pig-eating ceremony he is addressed and
+spoken of by the name Kimil. The explanation of these customs is that
+at these times the initiate is in an abnormal position by reason of the
+ceremony that has taken place, and is not permitted to take an ordinary
+part in social life. After the initiation ceremony, for example, the
+youth is not permitted to handle a bow for some weeks (the bow being
+the typical masculine implement).
+
+The names of a newly-married couple are avoided for a few days after
+their marriage. Marriage produces an important change in the social
+personality, and this change is expressed in the marriage ceremony, but
+all such changes take time, and it is some days at least before the
+married couple can be expected to have settled down in their new
+positions. For these days, therefore, their names are not used. The
+same sort of explanation will hold for the custom of dropping the names
+of a father and mother before and after the birth of a child,
+particularly the first born.
+
+At the turtle-eating ceremony of the North Andaman coast-dwellers the
+youth is given a new name. It is possible that a girl is also given a
+new name at this time, and that another name is also given to the youth
+at the pig-eating ceremony, but on these points I neglected to make
+sufficient enquiry. The name given at the turtle-eating ceremony is
+never used and is not likely to be known except to those who were
+present at the ceremony, and therefore serves no such purpose as the
+flower-name of the girl. The giving of the name is simply the mark of
+the change of social personality brought about by the ceremony. The
+youth receives an addition to his personality and therefore receives an
+additional name. It is significant that all the names given at this
+ceremony have reference to the sea and to things of the sea,
+particularly to turtle, such as Čokbi-čiro, turtle-liver, Čokbi-tei,
+turtle-blood, etc.
+
+During the period of mourning, when, as we have seen, the mourner is
+withdrawn from the ordinary life of the society, his name is not used,
+showing that during this period his social personality is in a state of
+partial suppression. After the mourning period is over the mourner,
+when he resumes his social personality, resumes at the same time his
+name.
+
+Now death is the most fundamental modification of the social
+personality that is possible and therefore the name of a person
+recently dead is strictly avoided. Death, however, does not destroy the
+social personality utterly and for ever, but produces in it a profound
+change, which begins at the death itself and is only completed at the
+end of and by means of the customs of mourning. After the mourning is
+over the virtues of the dead man affect the survivors through memory,
+and his bones form a precious possession of the community, thus
+constituting for him a new social value, a new personality. During the
+period of change, while the personality does not exist in the same form
+as before the death, but does not yet exist in the form in which it
+will when he lives only in the memory of his friends, the name is not
+used. After the mourning period is over the name may again be used.
+
+In general then, it may be said that at any period in which a person is
+undergoing a critical change in his condition in so far as it affects
+the society his name falls out of use, to be resumed when the period of
+change is over. The reason for this is that during such periods of
+change the social personality is suppressed or latent and therefore the
+name which is closely associated with the social personality must be
+suppressed also.
+
+The customs of burial and mourning are therefore seen to be not simply
+the result of natural feelings of fear and sorrow but ritual actions
+performed under a sense of obligation and strictly regulated by
+tradition. They are means by which the society acts upon its members,
+compelling them to feel emotions appropriate to the occasion. Since the
+dead person has, by his death, become a cause of social disruption, all
+contact with him must be avoided. But the dead man had a certain value
+to the society, and as a thing of any kind cannot be valued unless its
+loss is felt as a source of pain, so if the community did not mourn
+when it lost one of its members that feeling of the social value of
+individuals on which the existence of the society depends would soon
+diminish in strength, thereby weakening the social cohesion.
+
+It is now possible for us to understand the Andamanese beliefs about
+the spirits. The basis of these beliefs, I wish to maintain, is the
+fact that at the death of an individual his social personality (as
+defined above) is not annihilated, but is suddenly changed. This
+continuance after death is a fact of immediate experience to the
+Andaman Islanders and not in any way a deduction. The person has not
+ceased to exist. For one thing his body is still there. But above all
+he is still the object of the social sentiments of the survivors, and
+thereby he continues to act upon the society. The removal of a member
+of the group is felt not as something negative but as the positive
+cause of great social disturbance.
+
+The spirits are feared or regarded as dangerous. The basis of this fear
+is the fact that the spirit (i.e. the social personality of a person
+recently dead) is obviously a source of weakness and disruption to the
+community, affecting the survivors through their attachment to him, and
+producing a condition of dysphoria, of diminished social activity. The
+natural impulse of the Andaman Islander or of any other human being,
+would be, I believe, not to shun the dead body of a loved one, but to
+remain near it as long as possible. It is the society, acting under a
+quite different set of impulses, that compels the relatives to separate
+themselves from the remains of the one they loved. The death of a small
+child has very little influence on the general activity of the
+community, and the motive for severing connection with the dead that is
+present in the case of an adult, either does not exist or is so weak as
+to be overruled by the private feelings of affection, and so the child
+is buried in the hut of the parents, that they may continue to keep it
+near them. This affords a good test of the hypothesis, and gives strong
+support to the view that the fear of the dead man (his body and his
+spirit) is a collective feeling induced in the society by the fact that
+by death he has become the object of a dysphoric condition of the
+collective consciousness.
+
+If the Andamanese are asked what they fear from the spirit of a dead
+man they reply that they fear sickness or death, and that if the burial
+and mourning customs are not properly observed the relatives of the
+dead person will fall sick and perhaps die.
+
+The basis of this notion of the spirits is that the near relatives of
+the deceased, being bound to him by close social ties, are influenced
+by everything that happens to him, and share in his good or evil
+fortune. So that when by sickness and resulting death he is removed
+from the community, they are as it were drawn after him. For this
+reason they are, during the period of mourning, between life and death,
+being still attached to the dead man. Contact with the world of the
+dead is therefore regarded as dangerous for the living because it is
+believed that they may be drawn completely into that world. Death is a
+process by which a person leaves the living world and enters the world
+of the spirits, and since no one dies willingly he is conceived as
+being under a compulsive force acting from the world of spirits. Now
+sickness is a condition that often ends in death, a first stage of the
+way leading to the world of spirits. Hence sickness is conceived by the
+Andamanese as a condition of partial contact with that world. This is
+what is meant by the statement that sickness and death come from the
+spirits.
+
+The way the Andamanese think about the spirits is shown in the
+Akar-Bale legend of the origin of death [174]. Yaramurud, having died
+through an accident, self-caused, becomes a spirit, but he does so only
+under the compulsion exercised upon him by his mother, who, now that he
+is dead, insists that he must go away from the world of the living and
+become a spirit. The spirit then comes back to see his brother and by
+this contact causes the brother’s death. The story implies that it was
+not because Yaramurud was evilly disposed towards his brother that he
+killed him, but on the contrary it was his attachment to his relative
+that caused him to return to visit him, and death followed as a result
+of this contact of the living man with the spirit. Since that time
+deaths have continued to occur in the same way. Thus it appears that
+the Andamanese conceive that the spirits do not cause death and
+sickness through evil intention, but through their mere proximity, and,
+as the legend very clearly shows, the burial customs are intended to
+cut off the unwilling spirit from contact with the living. This
+explains also why during the period of mourning the relatives of a dead
+person are thought to be in danger of sickness, and have more to fear
+from the spirit than others, for since it is they who were most
+attached to him during life it is they who are most likely to suffer
+from contact with him after he is dead. It was Yaramurud’s brother who
+was the first to die through the influence of the spirits.
+
+The feelings of the living towards the spirits of the dead are
+therefore ambivalent, compounded of affection and fear, and this must
+be clearly recognized if we are to understand all the Andamanese
+beliefs and customs. We may compare the relation between the society of
+the living and the society of the dead to that between two hostile
+communities having occasional friendly relations. That the Andamanese
+themselves look upon it in some such way is shown by the belief that
+the ceremony by which a dead man is initiated into the world of spirits
+resembles the peace-making ceremony. The dead man, up to the time of
+his death, has been living in a state of enmity with the spirits, and
+before he can enter their community and share their life he has to make
+peace with them in the same way that men make peace with one another
+after they have been at war.
+
+This notion of hostility between the society and the world of spirits
+is found in other primitive societies, and seems everywhere to have a
+definite social function. The removal of a member of the community
+either by death or otherwise is a direct attack on the social
+solidarity and produces in primitive societies an emotional reaction of
+the same general character as anger. This collective anger, if freely
+expressed, serves as a compensating mechanism, satisfying and restoring
+the damaged sentiment [175]. But this can only happen if there is some
+object against which the anger can be directed. In the instance of
+homicide the social anger is directed against the person responsible
+for the death and against the social group to which he belongs. In the
+instance of death from sickness some other object has to be found, and
+amongst primitive peoples there are two chief ways in which this is
+done. An example of one method is afforded by the tribes of Australia,
+amongst whom there is a strong and constant hostility between
+neighbouring local groups, with a result that the anger at a death from
+sickness directs itself against some community with which the group of
+the dead man is at enmity and it is believed that some member of that
+community has caused the death by magic. The Andamans afford an example
+of the second method. Amongst them it would seem that the enmity
+between different local groups (except as concerns the J̌a̤rawa in the
+South Andaman) was never very strong and the belief in evil magic was
+not highly developed, so that the anger at a death is directed against
+the spirits, and sometimes find expression in violent railings against
+them, accompanied by all the bodily manifestations of extreme rage and
+hatred.
+
+Now though the Andamanese regard the spirits with fear and hatred, and
+believe that all contact with them is dangerous for living men, yet
+they do not look on them as essentially evil, for that would conflict
+with their own feelings of attachment to their dead friends.
+
+I gathered a few hints that they even believe that at times the spirits
+can and will help them. Thus a man will call on the sea-spirits of his
+own country to send plenty of turtle (over which the spirits seem to be
+assumed to have power) when he is going hunting. A very important fact
+in this connection is the different way in which a native regards the
+spirits of his own country and of other parts, the latter being thought
+to be much more dangerous than the former because presumably they are
+the spirits not of relatives and friends but of strangers at the best
+or enemies at the worst.
+
+There is other evidence that the Andamanese do not regard the power
+that is possessed by the spirits as being essentially evil. This power,
+whereby the spirits are able to cause sickness, seems to be shared by
+the bones of dead men. Indeed the Andamanese call such bones
+“spirit-bones” (lau-to̱i, čauga-ta). Now this power in the bones (though
+it may at times be supposed to cause sickness) is more commonly made
+use of in order to prevent or cure it.
+
+The most conclusive evidence that the power of the spirits is not
+intrinsically evil, but may be used to produce both good and evil is
+afforded by the beliefs about medicine-men or dreamers (oko-ǰumu).
+There are three ways in which a man can become a medicine-man. The
+first is (as the natives put it) by dying and coming back to life. Now
+when a man dies he becomes a spirit and therefore acquires the peculiar
+powers and qualities of a spirit, which he retains if he returns to
+life. Secondly, if a man straying in the jungle by himself be affronted
+by the spirits, and if he show no fear (for if he is afraid they will
+kill him) they may keep him with them for a time and then let him go.
+Such a man, on his return, is regarded as being a medicine-man, and
+possessing all the powers of medicine-men. I was told of one man who
+became a medicine-man in this way within living memory, and it was
+stated that when he returned from the forest where he had been kept by
+the spirits for two or three days he was decorated with ko̱ro fibre. We
+have seen that this fibre is used by the spirits in the ceremony by
+which they initiate dead men, and its presence on the returned warrior
+was perhaps accepted by his friends as evidence that he had been
+initiated by the spirits. The third and last way in which a man may
+become a medicine-man is by having intercourse with the spirits in his
+dreams. This is a point to which it will be necessary to return later.
+For the present it is sufficient to note that in every instance the
+power of the medicine-man is believed to be derived from his contact
+with the spirits in one of the three possible ways.
+
+We are justified in concluding that the special power of the
+medicine-man, by which he is distinguished from his fellows, is simply
+the same power that is possessed by the spirits, from contact with whom
+he has obtained it. The medicine-man is believed to be able both to
+cause and to cure sickness, to arouse and to dispel storms. In other
+words he has power for both good and evil, and we must conclude that
+the spirits have the same. Moreover, it is commonly said that the
+medicine-man is able to produce the effects he does, whether they be
+harmful or beneficial to his fellows, by communicating with the spirits
+in dreams and enlisting their aid. This would seem to prove the point
+that I am here concerned with, that the power possessed by the spirits,
+though contact with it is always dangerous, may yet in certain
+circumstances be of benefit to the society, and is therefore not
+essentially evil in nature.
+
+The Andamanese believe that a medicine-man communicates with the
+spirits in sleep, and this is not the only evidence that they believe
+sleep to be a condition in which contact with the world of spirits is
+easier than in waking life. It is believed that sickness is more likely
+to begin during sleep than when awake. During the initiation ceremonies
+the initiate is required to abstain from sleep after eating pork or
+turtle, and this would seem to be because sleep is regarded as
+generally dangerous and therefore to be avoided on such occasions as
+this when every precaution needs to be taken.
+
+The explanation of this belief seems to lie in the fact that sleep is a
+condition of diminished social activity, in which the individual is
+withdrawn from active social life, and is therefore also withdrawn from
+the protection of the society. After eating turtle the initiate is in
+urgent need of the protection of the society, which would be lost to
+him if he were permitted to sleep. After a death, when the corpse
+remains in the camp all night the people remain awake, and since there
+is no other common activity in which they can join, they sing, and thus
+protect themselves from the spirits that are present as the cause of
+the death.
+
+This explanation implies that all conditions of diminished social
+activity on the part of an individual are dangerous. One example of
+such a condition is sickness, in which the sick person is unable to
+pursue his ordinary occupations. Other examples are afforded by a
+mother, and to a certain extent a father during the period preceding
+and following the birth of a child, and by a woman during the menstrual
+period. All these, as various customs show, are believed by the
+Andamanese to be conditions of danger in which it is necessary to take
+ritual or magical precautions. A better example for our purpose is that
+of an adolescent during the period covered by the initiation
+ceremonies, when, as we have seen, he is as it were cut off from the
+society, and there is abundant evidence that the Andamanese believe
+this to be a state of danger. Another example is the condition of a
+homicide during the period of his isolation. Lastly, we have seen that
+a mourner is cut off from the ordinary social life, and it may now be
+noted that the native explanation of the restrictions observed in that
+state is that if things were not done thus the mourner would be ill; in
+other words the condition of mourning is one of danger, and the ritual
+referring to it is the means by which the danger (from the spirit
+world) is avoided. This explanation does not conflict with the one
+previously given but on the contrary we can now see that the notion
+that the mourner is in a position partly withdrawn from active
+participation in social life necessarily involves the belief that he is
+in a condition of danger.
+
+We may conclude that every condition in which the individual is
+withdrawn from full participation in active social life is regarded as
+dangerous for him, and that this is at least one of the reasons why
+sleep is so regarded. We have already noted that all conditions of
+danger tend to be thought of as due to contact with the spirits, and
+sleep is therefore supposed to be a state in which such contact is
+easier than in waking life. Now sleep is visited by dreams and it comes
+about that the dream-life, by reason of its contrast with waking-life,
+is seized upon by the Andamanese as a means by which the nature of the
+spirit world may be represented to the imagination.
+
+The Andaman Islander seems to regard the dream-world as a world of
+shadows or reflections, for he uses the same word to denote a shadow, a
+reflection in a mirror, and a dream (the stem -ǰumu in Aka-J̌eru). Now
+when a man enters this shadow-world in sleep he is, as we have seen,
+conceived as coming into partial contact with the world of spirits.
+Hence the Andaman Islander believes that in dreams he may communicate
+with the spirits, that dreams may be a cause of sickness, and that in
+dreams a medicine-man can cause or cure sickness in his fellows. In
+this shadow-world the man himself becomes as it were a shadow, a mere
+reflection of himself; it is not he that lives and acts in his dreams
+but his ot-ǰumulo, his double, his shadow-self, or, as we might say,
+his soul. It is but a step from this to the representation of the
+spirit-world as a similar world of shadows and dream-shapes, and to the
+conclusion that when a man dies it is his ot-ǰumulo that becomes the
+spirit.
+
+To summarise the argument, the belief in the world of spirits rests on
+the actual fact that a dead person continues to affect the society. As
+the effect is one of disorganisation, whereby the social sentiments are
+wounded, the dead are avoided and the spirits are regarded with fear.
+But as a recently dead person is still regarded with feelings of
+attachment by his friends, the resulting final attitude towards the
+spirits is ambivalent. By a simple step the spirits come to be regarded
+as the cause of sickness and death, and therefore as hostile to living
+men. Yet, as the beliefs about medicine-men show, it is possible for
+exceptional individuals to be on terms of friendship with the spirits.
+Finally, the dream-life affords a means by which the spirit-world may
+be represented in a simple and concrete manner. This last feature (the
+association of the spirits with dreams) I believe to be a secondary
+elaboration of the primary or fundamental belief which shows itself in
+the ritual of death and mourning, serving only to rationalise it and
+make it more concrete. This need of concrete representation of the
+spirit-world shows itself in other beliefs, in which may be seen the
+tendency to become self-contradictory that is often the mark of ideas
+that arise as the result of attempts to rationalise conative and
+affective impulses. The spirits are, on the one hand, as it were
+shadows or images of living men, and yet, since they are feared and
+disliked, they are often represented as being repulsive and inhuman,
+with long legs and short bodies, with long beards and ugly faces [176].
+The spirits must be thought of as somewhere, but there is no
+consistency in the statements as to where that somewhere is; one man
+will say that they live in the sky, another that they are under the
+earth, a third will point to a particular island as their home; at the
+same time it is evident from other statements that they vaguely
+conceive them as being everywhere, in the forest and the sea.
+
+We are now in a position to understand what the Andaman Islander means
+when he says that the danger he fears from food is from the spirits.
+The greatest evil that can happen to the community is the sickness or
+death of its members, and these are believed to be the work of the
+spirits. The sense of the social value of food takes the form of a
+belief that food is dangerous, and inevitably the danger comes to be
+conceived as that of sickness or death, and is therefore associated in
+their minds with the spirits.
+
+But there is a more fundamental reason than this. I have tried to show
+that it is because food has such important effects for good and evil on
+the social life that it is believed to be endued with a peculiar power
+which makes it necessary to approach it with ritual precautions. If
+this thesis be valid it should be capable of generalisation, and we
+should find the same power attributed to every object or being that is
+capable of affecting in important ways the well-being of the society.
+We should expect that the Andamanese would attribute this power not
+only to the more important things used for food but also to such things
+as the weather and dead men (i.e., the spirits). Now this, if the
+argument has been correct, is exactly what we do find, and we have here
+the reason why the Andaman Islander, when asked what he fears from
+eating dangerous foods, replies that he fears sickness or the spirits
+of the dead.
+
+We may formulate in precise language the beliefs that underlie the
+ceremonial, remembering always that the Andaman Islanders themselves
+are quite incapable of expressing these beliefs in words and are
+probably only vaguely conscious of them. (1) There is a power or force
+in all objects or beings that in any way affect the social life. (2) It
+is by virtue of this power that such things are able to aid or harm the
+society. (3) The power, no matter what may be the object or being in
+which it is present, is never either essentially good or essentially
+evil, but is able to produce both good and evil results. (4) Any
+contact with the power is dangerous, but the danger is avoided by
+ritual precautions. (5) The degree of power possessed by anything is
+directly proportioned to the importance of the effects that it has on
+the social life. (6) The power in one thing may be used to counteract
+the danger due to contact with the power in some other thing.
+
+We have studied this power in the animals and plants used for food and
+the things used as materials. It is this that makes turtle dangerous to
+eat and Anadendron fibre dangerous to prepare, and it is this also that
+makes animal bones or the leaves of Hibiscus available for protection.
+We have now seen that the same power is present in dead men, in their
+bodies, their bones, and in the spirit-world to which dead men go. All
+contact with the world of the dead is highly dangerous, and yet we have
+seen that human bones may be used for protection and that even the
+spirits may be induced to heal sickness or allay storms. We have also
+seen that the same power is present in the oko-ǰumu, and we have made
+the important discovery that it is through contact with the spirits
+that he acquires the power. This reveals another important principle.
+(7) If an individual comes into contact with the power in any thing and
+successfully avoids the danger of such contact, he becomes himself
+endowed with power of the same kind as that with which he is in
+contact. Now although the oko-ǰumu possesses a very special social
+value, yet every man and woman has some social value, some of that
+power which makes any being capable of affecting the society for good
+or ill, and we can now see that the initiation ceremonies are the means
+by which the individual is endowed with power (or, as the natives say,
+made strong) by being brought into contact with the special power
+present in each of the important kinds of food. The initiation of the
+ordinary man or woman is parallel to the initiation of the oko-ǰumu
+save that in one instance it is the power in foods and in the other
+that in the spirits with which the initiation is concerned.
+
+It has been held in this chapter that the society or the social life
+itself is the chief source of protection against danger for the
+individual. If this be so then the society itself possesses this same
+power with which we are dealing, and we must expect to find that
+contact with this power is also dangerous for the individual. Now the
+occasion on which the individual comes into contact with the power in
+the society is in the dance, and I found evidence that the natives
+believe that dancing is dangerous in exactly the same way as eating
+food. Confirmation of this will appear later.
+
+It would seem that for the Andaman Islander the social life is a
+process of complex interaction of powers or forces present in the
+society itself, in each individual, in animals and plants and the
+phenomena of nature, and in the world of spirits, and on these powers
+the well-being of the society and its members depends. By the action of
+the principle of opposition the society—the world of the living—comes
+to be opposed to the spirits—the world of the dead. The society itself
+is the chief source of protection to the individual; the spirits are
+the chief source of danger. Hence all protection tends to be referred
+to the society and all danger to the spirits. In the initiation
+ceremonies it is the society that protects the initiate against the
+dangers of food, and those dangers are referred, generally if not quite
+consistently, to the spirits, with which at first sight they would seem
+to have nothing to do.
+
+It is now at last possible to understand the uses of the word ot-kimil
+which were first discussed on page 267 above. When the word is used in
+reference to a person who has just partaken of food it denotes a
+condition of danger produced by contact with the power in foods. This
+condition results at any time from the eating of any of the more
+important foods, but is clearly produced in an extreme form when a food
+such as turtle or pork is being eaten for the first time at a ceremony
+of initiation. Hence the initiate is most intensely kimil and is
+therefore addressed and spoken of by that term, or as we might say “the
+kimil person.”
+
+Used in reference to sickness the word denotes a condition of danger
+due to contact with that power (in the spirits or in food) which is the
+cause of sickness. Used in reference to storms it again denotes a
+condition of danger for the society. Storms are sometimes said to be
+caused by the spirits [177]. This is also the explanation of the use of
+the word to denote a particular season of the year. The Kimil season is
+by no means hot, but cool; it is, however, the season at which violent
+cyclones are most likely to occur, being the period of the change from
+the south-west to the north-east monsoon. It is therefore a season of
+danger to the society from that power which produces storms.
+
+Finally, a man who has joined in a dance is said to be ot-kimil and
+seems to be regarded as being in a condition of danger similar to that
+produced by food. It might be thought that in this instance the word is
+only used in its literal meaning of “hot,” but I believe that this is
+not so. The dance is the occasion on which the individual comes most
+closely into contact with the power in the society itself, and I
+believe that this contact is regarded as dangerous and therefore as
+making the individual ot-kimil.
+
+Thus we see that in its various uses the word ot-kimil denotes a
+condition of danger due to contact with that power on the interaction
+of the different manifestations of which the well-being of the society
+depends.
+
+How is it then that to denote this condition the Andamanese use a word
+which, primarily, seems to mean “heat”? The answer is that they
+conceive the qualities that give to objects their social values as
+being the manifestations of a kind of energy, and as being similar to
+the kind of energy which they know best, that of heat. The
+psychological basis of this is not difficult to discover. The eating of
+food is productive of bodily heat (the Andamanese live in a hot climate
+and eat much fat, it must be remembered), so that the power present in
+foods is inevitably thought of as a sort of heat or heat-producing
+energy. In the dance the Andaman Islander experiences, as we have seen,
+an increase in his own personal force or energy, and this also is
+associated with the sensation of bodily heat produced by dancing. All
+other bodily activities result in the sensation of heat (in hunting and
+work of all kinds) and as it is in his activities that the social value
+of the individual is manifested this value is itself conceived as a
+sort of heat-producing energy. Further the Andamanese seem to associate
+with the idea of heat all conditions of mental activity and excitement.
+We ourselves do the same, as shown by such words as “ardour,” “zeal,”
+etc. and such phrases as “the heat of anger, or enthusiasm,” and there
+is good ground for thinking that all such associations or symbolisms
+(sensory metaphors) have a physiological basis. Finally, fire which (as
+we shall see better in the next chapter) is regarded by the Andamanese
+as the most important possession of the society, and which (as we have
+already seen) has in a very high degree the power that makes objects
+capable of affecting the society, is for this reason in a suitable
+position to become the archetype of all forms of energy, activity or
+force. This system of notions of the Andamanese that the world is the
+arena of a continual struggle of forces present in the society itself,
+in each individual, in the substances that are used for foods and
+materials, in fire, in storms and sunshine, and in the spirits and
+bones of the dead, is, as I have tried to show, the result not of any
+process of reasoning but of the immediate social experience, and as it
+is in the heat of his own body, and in states of excitement of his own
+mind, that the individual does actually experience the effects of these
+forces upon himself he uses the same word to denote all conditions of
+heat and all conditions of the manifestation of this energy, organising
+around that word as well as he can his somewhat vague conceptions.
+
+In case this symbolism should still seem strange, and the explanation
+of it unsatisfactory, it is as well to show by means of a couple of
+quotations that in other primitive societies differing widely from the
+Andamanese similar uses of the words hot and heat are to be found. In
+his work on the Achehnese (Vol. I, p. 305) C. Snouck Hurgronje writes
+thus of the natives of the Malay Archipelago: “In the native language
+of the E. Archipelago all happiness, rest and well-being are united
+under the concept of ‘coolness,’ while the words ‘hot’ and ‘heat’
+typify all the powers of evil. Thus when a person has either just
+endured the attack of a ‘hot’ influence or has luckily contrived to
+escape it, the adat prescribes methods of ‘cooling’ in order to confirm
+him in the well-being which he has recovered or escaped losing. The
+same methods are also adopted for charming away evil things and baneful
+influences, the removal of which is regarded as an imperative
+necessity. For instance, the completion of a house, and various
+domestic festivities, are made the occasion for a process of ‘cooling’;
+so also with a ship when newly built or after holding of a kanduri on
+board; and before the padi is planted out the ground must be purified
+from ‘hot’ or dangerous influences.” In this instance we find the word
+“hot” used only in reference to evil forces. In the Andamans there is
+no line drawn between good and evil forces. In spite of the differences
+between them it is clear that the same mental process is responsible
+for the symbolic use of the word “hot” in the Andamans and in the Malay
+Archipelago.
+
+In Codrington’s The Melanesians, p. 191, we find an example of the same
+mode of thought. “That invisible power 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. 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 or prosperity or to blast and curse. In the New
+Hebrides, the Banks’ Islands, the Solomon Islands about Florida as in
+New Zealand and many of the Pacific Islands the word in use is mana. In
+Santa Cruz a different word malete is used, which bears however the
+same meaning. At Saa in Malanta all persons and things in which this
+supernatural power resides are said to be saka, that is, hot. Ghosts
+that are powerful are saka; a man who has knowledge of the things which
+have spiritual power is himself saka; one who knows a charm which is
+saka mutters it over water, saru’e and makes the water ‘hot,’ ha’asaka.
+The people of Mala Masiki, the lesser part of the island, which is cut
+in two not far from its south-eastern end by a narrow channel, think
+that the men of the larger part, Mala Paina, are very saka. If one of
+these visiting the Saa people points with his finger, suisui, there is
+danger of death or calamity; if one of them spits on a man he dies at
+once.” Here again there are important differences, as might be expected
+in such different cultures as those of Melanesia and the Andamans, and
+yet it is clear that there is a fundamental similarity of mental
+process.
+
+The nature of this symbolic representation of the forces that affect
+the social life may be made clear by considering another example. The
+natives say that they use odu clay after eating because their bodies
+give off an odour which would attract the spirits if they did not paint
+themselves. The power of an object, by virtue of which it has what may
+be called magical efficacy, is sometimes identified with its odour. A
+number of the plants that are used as remedies for sickness, such as
+the Trigonostemon, are possessed of strong and characteristic odours,
+and the natives think that it is through the odour that they effect a
+cure. Similarly the powerful properties attributed to the Anadendron,
+whereby it will cause rheumatism, keep away sharks and spirits, and
+turn turtle-meat bad, or stop a storm, are all said to be the results
+of its “smell.” The stimulating power of olfactory sensations probably
+has much to do with the development of these beliefs, but the
+discussion of their psycho-physiological basis would lead us too far
+away from the main subject, interesting as it would be.
+
+In the jungles of the Andamans it is possible to recognize a distinct
+succession of odours during a considerable part of the year as one
+after another the commoner trees and lianas come into flower. When, for
+example, the species of Sterculia called in the North Andaman ǰeru
+comes into blossom, it is almost impossible to get away from the smell
+of it except on the sea-shore when the wind is from the sea. Moreover
+these various flowers give their scent to the honey that is made from
+them, so that there is also a succession of differently flavoured kinds
+of honey. The Andamanese have therefore adopted an original method of
+marking the different periods of the year by means of the different
+odoriferous flowers that are in bloom at different times. Their
+calendar is a calendar of scents [178].
+
+Now they seem to regard each flower-period as possessing its own
+particular kind of force, of which the scent is the manifest sign, and
+to think that the succession of these different forces produces the
+succession of different fruits, the whole generative energy of nature
+being conceived as the result not of one force but of many, following
+one another in regular rotation. When a girl reaches puberty the
+natives think of her as having blossomed as it were, the later ripening
+being the birth of her children, and so she, like the plants of the
+jungle, is under the influence of the same natural forces that produce
+the successive blossoming and fruiting of the different species.
+Therefore, when a girl reaches her blossoming time she is given, for a
+name, to be used until she bears her fruit, the name of that particular
+odoriferous plant that is in flower at the time, it being this
+particular one of the successive forces of the forest life that has
+brought her childhood to an end.
+
+Under the influence of muscular exertion the human body gives off a
+characteristic odour, of one generic kind, but differing somewhat in
+every individual. The odour of the body, being the immediate result of
+activity, may therefore well be regarded by the Andamanese as being
+closely connected with the virtue or energy of the person. Further, the
+eating of certain foods, such as dugong, turtle and pork, causes the
+body of the Andaman Islander to give out a noticeable and recognizable
+odour, different from that of mere perspiration. The natives themselves
+seem to distinguish different odours for these different foods, but I
+was not myself able to appreciate such differences. The Andamanese see
+in this odour given off after eating a manifestation of the energy that
+has been absorbed with the food, which energy it is that makes the food
+both necessary for life and also a source of danger. This seems to be
+the meaning of the belief that the spirits are attracted to a man by
+the odour of the food he has eaten unless he paint himself with clay.
+
+We can now at last return to the rite of painting the body with odu
+clay after eating. I have suggested that the use of this clay in
+mourning is a means by which the mourner marks the fact that he is in a
+peculiar relation to the spirit-world, spirits being believed to be
+light in colour. The mourner is in contact with the spirit-world
+through his connection with the dead person, and to mark his condition
+he paints himself to resemble the spirits, thereby affirming his
+solidarity with them. The clay protects him from the danger that
+results from any contact with the spirit-world. According to the rule
+of method laid down at the beginning of the chapter we must find a
+similar explanation of the use of odu after eating.
+
+We have seen that it is the same kind of force in the spirits and in
+the animals used for food that makes them both dangerous. Yet at the
+same time there is a sense in which it is true that each kind of thing
+has its own peculiar kind of force. The ceremony of turtle-eating
+endows a youth with power to avoid the dangers of turtle but it does
+not give him the power to avoid the dangers of pork. Hibiscus leaves
+are efficacious against turtle, but against the pig Tetranthera leaves
+must be used. In describing the patterns painted on the body after
+eating it was stated that there is a tendency to connect particular
+types of pattern with particular kinds of food. Thus a design commonly
+used after eating turtle suggests the plates of the turtle’s carapace,
+and a pattern used after eating pork similarly suggests the
+longitudinal markings on the pig’s back. This would seem to indicate
+that when a man has eaten turtle he paints himself so as to identify
+himself with the animal he has eaten, and similarly with other foods,
+just as in mourning he paints himself so as to identify himself with
+the spirit-world. In other words, the painting of the body with odu
+serves to show that there is a relation between the individual and some
+source of power, which relation can best be described as one of
+solidarity with the species, whether of animals or supernatural beings,
+in which the power resides. The mourner is in contact with the
+dangerous powers of the world of death, and by expressing his
+solidarity with that world he avoids the dangers that might result from
+his condition. For the fear of any being and a feeling of solidarity
+towards that being are incompatible with one another. Similarly a man
+who has eaten turtle is in contact with the power that resides in the
+turtle species, a power that may be dangerous, but which when mastered
+and made use of by proper precautions is a source of well-being, of
+strength. By painting himself with a pattern that reminds him in some
+way of the turtle he expresses his solidarity with the turtle species
+and so obviates the dangers of his condition.
+
+This interpretation is made more probable by the consideration of the
+dances of the initiation ceremonies. In the dance at the turtle-eating
+ceremony the movements of the dancers suggest the movements of a turtle
+swimming. If the resemblance be not imaginary we may regard this as
+another method of affirming the solidarity of the dancers with the
+turtle species. We should then have to conclude that the dance at the
+pig-eating ceremony is similarly imitative of the movements of a pig,
+and though this is quite possible it is not so obvious.
+
+This same kind of clay is used in the initiation ceremonies. At the
+turtle-eating and pig-eating ceremonies it is spattered over the body
+of the initiate from head to foot. I have no explanation to offer for
+this peculiar method of application. After the ceremony is over the
+initiate is painted with clay in a pattern called kimil-t’e̱ra-puli
+which consists of a background of the clay on which a pattern of
+separate spirals is made with the finger. The pattern is to be seen in
+Plate XI. I cannot put forward with any confidence the explanation I
+have to offer of this pattern, for I have no means of confirming it,
+and it is therefore little more than a guess. It is that the spiral or
+circle is a symbol of the camp and therefore of the society and the
+social life in general, the basis of the symbolism being the roughly
+circular or elliptical form of the village or communal hut, and the
+circular form of the dance (more noticeable in the Little Andaman than
+in the Great Andaman). If this be really the meaning of the symbol then
+the explanation of its use in the initiation ceremonies would be that
+in these ceremonies the youth is preserved from danger by the force
+inherent in the society, which affords protection to all its members,
+and the use of the symbol of the society would therefore be most
+appropriate.
+
+The act of painting the body with odu clay is therefore a rite which
+advertises the fact that an individual is in intimate contact with some
+source of that power which belongs to the things that affect the social
+life, and it thereby serves to keep alive the sentiments associated
+with that notion of power. The painting after eating reminds the
+individual of his dependence upon and obligation towards the society,
+and, since all join in the rite, it serves also to maintain the unity
+of the community.
+
+We may now return to the question of the meaning of personal ornament
+in general. It is a commonplace of psychology that the development of
+the sense of self is closely connected with the perception of one’s own
+body. It is also generally recognized that the development of the moral
+and social sentiments in man is dependent upon the development of
+self-consciousness, of the sense of self. These two important
+principles will help us to appreciate the hypothesis to which the
+discussion has now led, that in the Andamans the customary regulation
+of personal ornament is a means by which the society acts upon,
+modifies, and regulates the sense of self in the individual.
+
+There are three methods of ornamenting the body in the Andamans, (1) by
+scarification, (2) by painting, and (3) by the putting on of ornaments.
+
+The natives give two reasons for the custom of scarification, that it
+improves the personal appearance and that it makes the boy or girl grow
+up strong. Both these mean that scarification gives or marks an added
+value. The explanation of the rite would therefore seem to be that it
+marks the passage from childhood to manhood and is a means by which the
+society bestows upon the individual that power, or social value, which
+is possessed by the adult but not by the child. The individual is made
+to feel that his value—his strength and the qualities of which he may
+be proud—is not his by nature but is received by him from the society
+to which he is admitted. The scars on his body are the visible marks of
+his admission. The individual is proud or vain of the scars which are
+the mark of his manhood, and thus the society makes use of the very
+powerful sentiment of personal vanity to strengthen the social
+sentiments.
+
+Turning now to the painting of the body, we have seen that the pattern
+of white clay serves to make both the painted individual and those who
+see him feel his social value, and we have seen that this
+interpretation explains the occasions on which such painting is used.
+To complete the argument it is necessary to consider the occasions on
+which the use of white clay is forbidden.
+
+Those to whom this prohibition applies are (1) a youth or girl who is
+aka-op, i.e., who is abstaining from certain foods during the
+initiation period, (2) a mourner, (3) a homicide during the period of
+isolation, and (4) a person who is ill. All these persons are excluded
+from full participation in the active social life, and therefore the
+social value of each of them is diminished. It would obviously be wrong
+for a person in such a condition to express by decorating himself a
+social value that he did not at the time possess.
+
+The occasions on which this style of painting is used or forbidden are
+thus all satisfactorily explained by our hypothesis. It remains to
+consider the nature of the painting itself, and how far it is an
+appropriate means of expression. To do this we must discuss very
+briefly some of the processes of symbolic thought of the Andamanese.
+Conditions of well-being (both individual and social) are associated in
+the minds of the Andamanese with fine weather, both directly (through
+physiological action) and indirectly (through the effect of fine
+weather on the social life). Hence Tomo, who, as we shall see in the
+next chapter, is a personification of fine weather, is a being who is
+connected with goodness and happiness. With fine weather, and therefore
+with individual and social well-being, the Andamanese associate
+brightness and whiteness (for which they have only one word) and any
+bright or light colour. The association of light and dark with euphoric
+and dysphoric conditions respectively has a psycho-physical basis, for
+it seems to be universal in human nature. Now the clay that the
+Andamanese call to̱l-odu is the whitest substance they know, and is for
+this reason fitted to be symbolical of conditions of well-being. Fine
+weather is associated, in the minds of the Andamanese with honey,
+because in the season of fine weather honey is plentiful, and is also
+associated for a similar reason with snakes. Sweetness itself is
+universally associated with pleasant things, again through a
+psycho-physical link. The Andamanese believe in a special connection
+between honey and a species of large snake called wara-ǰobo or or-čubi
+[179], so that this snake comes to be representative of fine weather
+and sweetness and therefore generally of states of well-being. Now,
+throughout the Great Andaman the pattern in which white clay is painted
+on the body is called after this snake, and the zig-zags of which the
+pattern is composed may be supposed to be representative of the snake
+itself. When, therefore, a man paints himself with white clay in a
+pattern which he regards as representing the snake wara-ǰobo, it is
+evident that the painting is meant to express a condition of
+well-being, with which the snake itself, and whiteness, are, by a
+number of links, closely associated. This is not all, however. The
+Andamanese, we may not doubt, derive from the painted pattern an
+esthetic pleasure due to its rhythmical character, its shape as an
+arrangement of lines and spaces. Further it provides the pleasure that
+we obtain from a thing elegantly and skilfully made, and this explains
+why so much care is taken in the making of the pattern. This pleasure
+at what we may call the beauty of the pattern heightens the effect
+produced by its symbolic references. The real value of the pattern, its
+pleasure-giving quality, is transferred to the man on whose body it is
+executed. He himself is pleased with it, proud of it, and so becomes
+pleased with and proud of himself, for the pattern by being imprinted
+on his body becomes part of him. The sense of self attaches to it, as
+with us the sense of self attaches to our clothes.
+
+It would be interesting to carry the analysis of the mental processes
+involved in all this a stage or two further, but enough has been said,
+I hope, to show that the nature of the painting with clay is
+appropriate to its use as marking or expressing value.
+
+Patterns are sometimes painted with this same white clay on the face
+alone, such patterns being built up either of the zig-zags of the snake
+pattern, or of rhythmically arranged series of short lines. The use of
+such paintings is regulated by a sort of etiquette. By so having his
+face decorated a man expresses that he is pleased with himself, and
+obviously there are occasions on which it is appropriate and others on
+which it is inappropriate that he should feel thus. A man who has been
+successful in the day’s hunting, for example, is quite justified in
+having his face ornamented in this way, and it is on such occasions as
+this that the custom is observed.
+
+When a man is painted for a dance, or on any other ceremonial occasion,
+with white clay, he is also painted at the same time with red paint. In
+these instances we must suppose that the red paint serves the same
+purpose as the pattern of white clay with which it is combined, namely
+to make the decorated person pleasantly aware of his or her social
+value. Red paint is also used, however, in sickness, and on other
+occasions, as affording protection against evil, particularly evil from
+the spirit-world.
+
+This double use of red paint is to be explained by reference to the
+colour symbolism of the Andaman Islanders. For them the colour red is
+pre-eminently the colour of blood and of fire. There is ample evidence
+of this which it is perhaps not necessary to state. Now blood is
+identified with the warmth of the body and with life; the blood and the
+fat are sometimes spoken of as the two vital principles. Fire, as I
+have already shown, is taken as a symbol of activity and of mental
+excitement. Thus the colour comes to be associated in the minds of the
+Andamanese with all euphoric conditions, with excitement, vitality,
+mental and bodily activity, and with energy or force in general. It is
+possible that this symbolism, which seems to be much the same in all
+divisions of mankind, has a psycho-physical basis in the stimulating
+dynamogenic power of sensations of redness.
+
+When a person is sick he is in need of vitality, of energy, and so his
+body is daubed with the red paint that is a symbol of the things that
+he needs, and by a simple mental process he comes to believe that by
+applying the paint to his body he increases his energy and vitality,
+and so helps himself to get rid of the sickness. At a dance, or on
+other ceremonial occasions, it is required that the individual shall
+have a sense of his own value, and for this he must experience that
+sense of personal force and vitality that is produced, as we have seen,
+by the action of the dance. This effect is reinforced by the use of the
+red paint which is the symbol of that condition of energy and vitality
+that it is (for some special reason) necessary for him to feel. As the
+value of the individual depends upon his strength or force, the red
+paint is thus a suitable means of expressing the value of him on whose
+body it is painted, and really expresses, though by different means,
+exactly the same thing as the pattern of white clay with which it is
+combined.
+
+We are now in a position to understand the use of white clay and red
+paint in the purification of a homicide. This takes place at the end of
+a period of isolation, during which the man is entirely cut off from
+the social life, and lives in a condition of supposed extreme danger on
+account of the blood that he has shed. During this time he may not use
+his hands to touch food, and at the end his hands are purified by the
+application to them of red paint and white clay. It is clearly because
+these two substances are both of them in different ways symbols of
+conditions of well-being that magical virtue is ascribed to their use
+in this instance. It is perhaps worth while to recall that both red
+ochre and white clay are sometimes given internally as remedies against
+sickness.
+
+For the sake of the argument it has been necessary to separate the two
+motives underlying the use of personal ornament, the desire for
+protection and the desire for display. But we now see that these two
+motives are very intimately related and are really both involved in
+every kind of ornament. All ornament in some way marks the relation of
+the individual to the society and to that force or power in the society
+to which he owes his well-being and happiness. When painting or
+ornament is used to give protection, it is, as we have seen, the
+protective power of the society itself that is appealed to, and what is
+expressed is the dependence of the individual on the society. When
+ornament or paint is used for display it is again the dependence on the
+society that is expressed, though in a different way and on occasions
+of a different kind. We have seen that scarification is also a means of
+marking the dependence of the individual on the society, and it is very
+important to note that the Andamanese sometimes explain it as due to
+the desire for display and sometimes to the need of protection
+(enabling the child to grow strong and so avoid the dangers of
+sickness), showing very clearly that there is some intimate connection
+between these two motives, or at any rate that one and the same method
+of ornamentation can satisfy both. There is the further example of red
+paint, which is combined with the pattern of white clay for purposes of
+display, and is also constantly used in many ways as affording
+protection.
+
+We are thus brought to the final conclusion that the scarification and
+painting of the body and the wearing of most if not all of the
+customary ornaments are rites which have the function of marking the
+fact that the individual is in a particular permanent or temporary
+relation to that power in the society and in all things that affect the
+social life, the notion of which we have seen to underlie so much of
+the Andaman ceremonial.
+
+The scarification of a boy or girl leaves permanent marks of the
+permanent relation between the adult and the society. By means of it
+and the initiation ceremonies that follow or accompany it, and of which
+it may really be considered to be a part, the society gives the
+individual his social value, of which the scars remain as a visible
+sign for him to be proud of, and at the same time endows him with the
+power to avoid the dangers with which his life is beset.
+
+The paintings of clay after food mark the temporary relation between
+the individual and the power present in the food he has eaten. It is
+chiefly thought of by the natives themselves as protective, as we have
+seen, but it also gives an opportunity for the exercise of personal
+vanity, for much care is taken in the designing and execution of the
+pattern, which therefore affords the painted individual much the same
+sort of satisfaction as the snake pattern of white clay. It calls his
+attention to his own appearance, and makes him feel pleased or
+satisfied with himself, conscious of his own personal value. A
+condition of unity and harmony is produced in the community by a feast
+as well as by a dance, and in each instance that harmony is expressed
+by the painting of every member with the same material in a similar
+design. The relation of the individual to the society is made visible
+on his body. By means of the paintings after food the society not only
+protects itself from danger but also rejoices in the well-being that is
+produced by a supply of relished food. Inversely it can now also be
+shown that the painting of white clay and red paint worn at a dance and
+after marriage and initiation is not only a means of display but is
+also protective. Both red paint and white clay are used to give
+protection in sickness, and they are similarly used in the purification
+of the hands of a homicide. Moreover we have seen, in reference to the
+word ot-kimil, that the dance is a condition of danger by reason of the
+contact it involves between the individual and the power of the
+society. The few days following an initiation ceremony are definitely
+believed to be a period of danger for the initiate, and during this
+time the pattern of white clay and red paint must not be washed off but
+must be allowed to wear off. By the time the last traces of the pattern
+have disappeared the danger is considered to be over. There is evidence
+that the first few days of marriage are regarded as a period of danger.
+It would seem that the natives do attribute to the painting with white
+clay and red paint some power of protection, but this is hidden under
+the importance of such painting as a means of display.
+
+Of the various ornaments that are worn on the body some would seem to
+be worn almost solely for purposes of display, because they are
+pleasing to the eye. Such are the necklaces and other ornaments of
+small shells. It would seem that the same motive is also responsible
+for the use of the yellow skin of the Dendrobium of which the
+Andamanese are so fond. The ornaments of netting and shell seem to be
+worn primarily for display, but it is quite possible that some
+protective power is attributed to them, as to the paintings of white
+clay with which they are regularly worn. The belts of Pandanus leaf
+that are worn by women are a mark of the sex, and the style of belt
+worn differs with the social status of the woman. They thus serve to
+exhibit the special social value of the woman in so far as it depends
+upon her sex and her social status, but I believe that the Andamanese
+attribute to the belt and to the apron of leaves worn with it a power
+of protection against the special dangers to which women are believed
+to be subject. This is suggested by the use of the Pandanus leaf in the
+ceremony at a girl’s first menstruation [180]. I failed to discover any
+special ideas connected with the ornaments of Pandanus leaf that are
+sometimes worn by both men and women at dances. The ornaments that are
+worn primarily for their protective power are those made of human and
+animal bones and those of pieces of canes or of fibres of Hibiscus or
+Ficus. These are always made decorative by the addition of shells and
+yellow Dendrobium skin, and therefore besides their primary function
+also serve as means of display.
+
+It is clear then that in the various methods of ornamenting the body
+the two chief motives that we have considered are so combined that they
+can hardly be estimated separately, and it is this mingling of motives
+that has led us to the final understanding of the meaning and social
+function of bodily ornament. Each of the different kinds of ornament
+serves to make manifest the existence of some special relation between
+the individual and the society, and therefore of some special relation
+between him and that system of powers on which the welfare of the
+society and of the individual depends. One of the most important
+aspects of the relation of the individual to the society is his
+dependence upon it for his safety and well-being and this is revealed
+in all painting and ornament worn for protection. But the society not
+only protects the individual from danger; it is the direct source of
+his well-being; and this makes itself felt in the customary regulation
+by which the use of the more important ornaments used for display is
+confined to occasions on which it is quite clear that his happiness is
+directly due to the society, such as a dance or feast. Thus the customs
+relating to the ornamentation of the body are of the kind that I have
+here called ceremonial. They are means by which the society exercises
+on appropriate occasions some of the important social sentiments,
+thereby maintaining them at the necessary degree of energy required to
+maintain the social cohesion.
+
+To complete the discussion of ornament in general it is necessary to
+refer very briefly to the ornamentation of objects such as bows, canoes
+and baskets. Such ornamentation consists of (1) incised patterns (on
+bows, etc.), which may be compared with the scarification of the body,
+(2) painting with red paint and white clay (bows, canoes, skulls,
+etc.), or with prepared wax (Nautilus shell cups, etc.), (3) patterns
+made with the yellow skin of the Dendrobium (baskets, etc.), and (4)
+shells attached by thread (baskets, baby-sling, etc.). The important
+point to note is that the decoration applied to utensils is of the same
+character throughout as that which, when applied to the body, has been
+shown to be an expression of the social value of the person. Thus the
+pattern painted on a canoe with white clay and red paint is the same as
+that on the body of a dancer. It would seem, therefore, that the
+ornamentation of utensils is a means of expressing or marking the
+social value of the decorated object, and it might even be held that
+the application of ornament to utensils is really a matter of
+ceremonial. Just as a newly married man is painted with the snake
+pattern which wears off and is not renewed, so a new canoe or a new
+South Andaman bow is painted with the same pattern as soon as it is
+finished, and after this pattern wears off it is not renewed. It is the
+act of bringing a new canoe or bow into use that is the occasion of the
+ceremonial expression of its value, if we may so regard the painting. A
+new relation is established between the society and an object, which
+thereby acquires a special social value, just as a youth acquires a
+special new social value at the conclusion of one of the initiation
+ceremonies. This example is sufficient to show that at least there is
+nothing in the ornamentation of utensils that conflicts with the
+explanation of bodily ornament given in this chapter [181].
+
+It is time to bring the argument to a conclusion. It should now, I
+hope, be evident that the ceremonial customs of the Andaman Islands
+form a closely connected system, and that we cannot understand their
+meaning if we only consider each one by itself, but must study the
+whole system to arrive at an interpretation. This in itself I regard as
+a most important conclusion, for it justifies the contention that we
+must substitute for the old method of dealing with the customs of
+primitive people,—the comparative method by which isolated customs from
+different social types were brought together and conclusions drawn from
+their similarity,—a new method by which all the institutions of one
+society or social type are studied together so as to exhibit their
+intimate relations as parts of an organic system.
+
+I have tried to show that the ceremonial customs are the means by which
+the society acts upon its individual members and keeps alive in their
+minds a certain system of sentiments. Without the ceremonial those
+sentiments would not exist, and without them the social organisation in
+its actual form could not exist. There is great difficulty, however, in
+finding a suitable method of describing these sentiments. In attempting
+to put into precise words the vague feelings of the Andaman Islander
+there is always the danger that we may attribute to him conceptions
+that he does not possess. For he is not himself capable of thinking
+about his own sentiments.
+
+In the attempt to exhibit the meaning of the ceremonial I have shown
+that it implies a complex system of beliefs about what I have called
+power, and have stated those beliefs in more or less precise terms. But
+the Andaman Islander is of course quite incapable of making similar
+statements or even of understanding them. In his consciousness appear
+only the very vaguest conceptions, such as those associated with the
+word kimil or with odours. We, in order to understand his customs must
+substitute for such vague notions others capable of precise statement,
+must formulate in words the beliefs that are revealed in his actions,
+but we must be careful not to fall into the error of attributing to him
+the conceptions by which we make clear to ourselves his indefinite
+sentiments and notions and the ceremonies in which they are expressed.
+
+With this qualification, then, the ceremonial of the Andaman Islands
+may be said to involve the assumption of a power of a peculiar kind,
+and we have been able to formulate certain principles which, although
+the native is quite incapable of stating them as principles, are
+revealed in the ceremonial. This power, though in itself neither good
+nor evil, is the source of all good and all evil in human life. It is
+present in the society itself and in everything that can affect in
+important ways the social life. All occasions of special contact with
+it are dangerous, i.e., are subject to ritual precautions.
+
+It should already, from the course of the argument, be plain that this
+power or force, the interaction of whose different manifestations
+constitutes the process of social life, is not imaginary, is not even
+something the existence of which is surmised as the result of
+intellectual processes, but is real, an object of actual experience. It
+is, in a few words, the moral power of the society acting upon the
+individual directly or indirectly and felt by him in innumerable ways
+throughout the whole course of his life [182].
+
+One of the most important ways in which the individual experiences the
+moral force of the society of which he is a member is through the
+feeling of moral obligation, which gives him the experience of a power
+compelling him to subordinate his egoistic desires to the demands of
+social custom. The individual feels this force acting upon him both
+from outside and from inside himself. For he recognizes that it is the
+society with its traditions and customs that constrains him through the
+force of public opinion, and yet the conflict between customary duty
+and selfish inclination takes place in his own mind and is experienced
+as the clash of antagonistic mental forces. The moral sense within
+impels towards the same end as the social opinion without.
+
+This force of moral obligation is felt not only in relation to right
+and wrong conduct towards other persons, but is also felt in all
+ritual, whether negative or positive.
+
+The moral force of the society is also felt, in a quite different way,
+in all states of intense collective emotion, of which the dance affords
+a good example. I have shown how in the dance the individual feels the
+society acting upon him, constraining him to join in the common
+activity and regulate his actions to conform with those of others, and,
+when he so acts in harmony with them, giving him the experience of a
+great increase of his own personal force or energy. All ceremonies in
+which the whole community takes part give the individual the experience
+of the moral force of the society acting upon him in somewhat the same
+way as the dance.
+
+Thus in these and other ways the individual does experience the action
+of the society upon himself as a sort of force, not however as a
+physical force, but as a moral force, acting directly in his own mind
+and yet clearly felt as something outside his own self, and with which
+that self may be in conflict.
+
+How is it, then, that this force comes to be projected into the world
+of nature? The answer to that question, which can only be very briefly
+indicated here, is to be found in the conclusions at which we have
+arrived with regard to social values. The moral force of the society is
+experienced by the individual not only directly but also as acting upon
+him indirectly through every object that has social value. The best
+example of this process is found in the things used for food. Thus, in
+the Andamans, food is very closely connected with the feeling of moral
+obligation, as we have seen. Further, food is one of the principal
+sources of those alternations of social euphoria and dysphoria in
+which, through the action of the collective emotion, the individual
+experiences the action of the society upon his own well-being. When
+food is plentiful happiness spreads through the community and the time
+is spent in dancing and feasting so that the individual feels a great
+increase in his own personal force coming to him from the society or
+from the food. On the other hand, when food is scarce and hunting
+unsuccessful the community feels itself thwarted and restrained and
+experiences a sense of weakness, which collective feeling has for its
+immediate object the food the lack of which is its origin.
+
+Similarly with the phenomena of the weather and all other objects that
+have social value, they are all associated in the mind of the
+individual with his experience of the action of the society upon
+himself, so that the moral force of the society is actually felt as
+acting through them.
+
+But it is really through the ceremonial that this is mainly brought
+about. It is in the initiation ceremonies that the moral force of the
+society acting through foods is chiefly felt, and the same experience
+is repeated in a less intense form in the rite of painting the body
+after food. It is similarly through the protective use of the materials
+used for weapons and through the various ritual prohibitions connected
+with them that the moral force of the society acting through them is
+chiefly felt. The argument has been that it is by means of the
+ceremonial that the individual is made to feel the social value of the
+various things with which the ceremonial is concerned. Putting this in
+other words we can now define the ceremonial as the means by which the
+individual is made to feel the moral force of the society acting upon
+him either directly, or in some instances indirectly through those
+things that have important effects on the social life. By its action
+upon the individual the ceremonial develops and maintains in existence
+in his mind an organised system of dispositions by which the social
+life, in the particular form it takes in the Andamans, is made
+possible, using for the purpose of maintaining the social cohesion all
+the instinctive tendencies of human nature, modifying and combining
+them according to its needs.
+
+As an example of such modification of primary instincts let us briefly
+consider that of fear, to which, from the time of Petronius [183] to
+the present day, so much importance has been attributed in relation to
+the origin of religion. In childhood any fear of danger makes the child
+run to its mother or father for protection, and thus the instinct of
+fear becomes an important component of that feeling of dependence that
+the child has towards its parents. The primitive society uses the fear
+instinct in much the same way. The Andaman Islander, through the
+ceremonies and customs of his people, is made to feel that he is in a
+world full of unseen dangers,—dangers from the foods he eats, from the
+sea, the weather, the forest and its animals, but above all from the
+spirits of the dead,—which can only be avoided by the help of the
+society and by conformity with social custom. As men press close to one
+another in danger, the belief in and fear of the spirit-world make the
+Andaman Islander cling more firmly to his fellows, and make him feel
+more intensely his own dependence on the society to which he belongs,
+just as the fear of danger makes the child feel its dependence upon its
+parents. So the belief in the spirit-world serves directly to increase
+the cohesion of the society through its action on the mind of the
+individual. An important law of sociology is that the solidarity of a
+group is increased when the group as a whole finds itself opposed to
+some other group; so, enmity between two tribes or nations increases
+the solidarity of each; and so also, the antagonism between the society
+of the living and the world of the dead increases the solidarity of the
+former.
+
+The argument is now concluded. I have examined, as fully as space would
+permit, all the more important features of the Andaman ceremonial, and
+have tried to show what part they play in the social life of the
+Andamans. At the end of our enquiry it is well to ask if any definition
+of ceremonial can be given more exact than the vague one with which we
+started. The chapter has shown that what I have denoted as ceremonial
+consists of (1) collective actions, (2) required by custom, (3)
+performed on occasions of changes in the course of social life, and (4)
+expressing the collective sentiments relating to such social change. By
+the first part of the definition we exclude the magical practices of
+the medicine-men, which however it has been convenient to consider in
+connection with the ceremonial, as it has helped us to understand some
+of the ideas underlying both magic and ceremonial. If we are not to
+exclude the rite of painting after eating food we must regard the
+obtaining of a good supply of food as being a change in the course of
+social life even though it occurs very frequently, and even every day
+for weeks together. It must be admitted, however, that the definition
+does not give us any very clear dividing line between ceremonial and
+art, play, or morals. The painting of the body with white clay after
+marriage or initiation must, I think, be regarded as ceremonial, while
+the painting of a new bow or canoe with the same clay in the same
+pattern should perhaps more conveniently be called art. But what are we
+to say of the painting worn at a dance or the face-painting that a man
+occasionally wears when there is no special reason? The dance at the
+end of mourning is clearly a ceremony, but can we say the same of the
+ordinary dance after a successful hunt? And if it be not ceremonial,
+shall we call it art or play? When friends are required to give
+presents to a newly-married couple are we to call this obligation one
+of ceremonial, of etiquette or of morals? These and similar questions
+are perhaps incapable of a satisfactory answer, nor does it seem
+necessary to attempt to find one. Those elements of culture that we now
+differentiate and call by different names were, in primitive societies,
+undifferentiated and not clearly to be distinguished from one another,
+and a striving after too great a precision of definition in dealing
+with such a culture as that of the Andamans leads, I think, not to a
+clearer understanding, but to the opposite. The main thing is to keep
+close to the facts. In this chapter I have examined a number of facts
+which are plainly related and the question of how we are to label them
+is one that may well be left till such time as we shall have acquired a
+more profound insight into the nature of culture in general and the
+complex forces involved in its existence and growth. For the present,
+some vagueness in our provisional classifications need not greatly
+perturb us.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE INTERPRETATION OF ANDAMANESE CUSTOMS AND BELIEFS: MYTHS AND LEGENDS
+
+
+In the last chapter I tried to explain, by reference to psychological
+principles, the more important ritual and ceremonial observances of the
+Andamanese; in the present chapter I shall deal in a similar manner
+with the legends recorded in Chapter IV. That is to say, I propose to
+explain, not how the legends arose, but what they mean, what part they
+play at the present time in the mental life of the Andaman Islander.
+Customs that seem at first sight meaningless or ridiculous have been
+shown to fulfil most important functions in the social economy, and
+similarly I hope to prove that the tales that might seem merely the
+products of a somewhat childish fancy are very far indeed from being
+merely fanciful and are the means by which the Andamanese express and
+systematise their fundamental notions of life and nature and the
+sentiments attaching to those notions.
+
+I propose to analyse a few of the more important legends, and will
+begin with the Akar-Bale story of the origin of night and day [184].
+The explanation of this story depends on the connection of day and
+night with the cicada. This species of cicada, of which I do not know
+the scientific name, always makes a noise (“sings” as the natives say)
+during the short interval of twilight between sunset and darkness and
+between dawn and sunrise. It is possible that individual insects of the
+species make a noise at other times of the day and night, but I do not
+remember to have heard them, and it is only at the beginning and end of
+the day that they are all to be heard singing together. The song of the
+cicada, as day gives place to night and as night changes to day is one
+of the most familiar of all natural phenomena to the Andamanese.
+Another fact that is made use of in the legend is that if one of these
+insects be crushed as was the cicada of the story, or even if it be
+taken up in the hand, it will utter its shrill and plaintive note, not
+unlike the cry of a human being in pain. Finally, fully to understand
+the tale, it is necessary to remember that in all the tribes of the
+Great Andaman Division there is a prohibition against killing the
+cicada. The meaning of this prohibition will have to be discussed in
+connection with the legend.
+
+The facts stated above enable us to understand what may be called the
+skeleton of the legend. One of the ancestors killed a cicada (a
+forbidden act), the cicada uttered its cry (as it does when hurt), and
+as a result, darkness covered the world (as it always does when the
+cicada sings in the evening). Leaving aside, for the present, the rest
+of the story, we may try to make clear to ourselves just what this part
+of it expresses. The explanation that I propose is to the effect that
+the legend is simply an expression or a statement of the “social value”
+of the phenomenon of the alternation of day and night. By the social
+value of anything I mean, as explained in the last chapter, the way in
+which that thing affects the life of the society (either beneficially
+or adversely) and therefore the way in which it affects the social
+sentiments of the individuals who compose the society. There is no need
+to discuss at length and in all its bearings, the way in which the
+alternation of day and night affects the social life of the Andamanese.
+The one outstanding feature of first importance is that the day is the
+time of social activity whereas the night is a period when the society
+is, as a rule, not active. It was shown in the last chapter that one of
+the most important elements in the mental complex revealed by a study
+of the ceremonial is the recognition of the fact that it is on the
+activity of the society that the individual depends for his security
+and well-being. So long as he can feel that he is an active member of
+an active community the individual feels that he has for his support
+(morally and physically) a great force on which he can rely. If, for
+any reason, he is temporarily cut off from the society and from
+participation in its life, he is in a position of insecurity, and
+believes himself to be in danger from the powers of the world of
+spirits. It is an inevitable result of this that the daytime, when the
+society is active, should be felt to be a period of comparative
+security, while the night, when all social activity ceases, should be
+felt to be a period of comparative insecurity. That the day and night
+are so regarded is shown in the belief of the natives that the spirits
+are more to be dreaded during the night than during the day.
+
+The Andaman Islander, like many other savages, is afraid of the dark.
+It might perhaps be thought that this fear is immediate and
+instinctive, a result of the physiology of the human nervous system,
+but that, I think, would be a false assumption. Many infants would seem
+not to be at first afraid of darkness, but to learn to fear it, as they
+learn to fear many other things. It is not possible here to enter into
+a discussion of the matter, but I would hold that in the Andaman
+Islanders and probably in other savages, the fear of darkness, of
+night, is a secondary or induced feeling, not by any means instinctive,
+and is in large part due to the social sentiments, to the fact that at
+night the social life ceases. The savage feels, and rightly so, that
+for everything he has and is, for the safety and well-being of his body
+and the comfort of his soul, he depends on the communal life in which
+his own life is merged. When, at the close of day, the social life
+ceases, he feels, should anything occur to direct his attention to his
+own condition, less secure than when the social life is proceeding
+actively around him [185].
+
+The interpretation that I would offer of the Akar-Bale legend is that
+it is an expression of these sentiments relating to the night, an
+expression that takes advantage of the connection between the song of
+the cicada and the alternation of night and day. One feature of the
+manner of expression will be explained later in the chapter, namely
+that it takes the form of a story relating to a mythical period of the
+past. For the present the necessity of this particular form must be
+accepted as a postulate. Granting this it remains only to show that the
+legend does express the social value of night as defined above.
+
+The fear of night, or rather, since that fear is rarely more than
+potential, the feeling that night is a time of insecurity, is part of
+the general attitude of fear or respect towards the forces of nature
+that are believed to be possible sources of danger to the society. Now
+it has been shown that this particular attitude to nature finds
+expression in ritual prohibitions of various kinds. For instance, the
+Andaman Islander translates his feeling of the social value of food
+substances into the belief that such things must be treated with ritual
+precautions. Applying this to the case before us, we must first
+recognize that to the Andaman Islander the alternation of day and night
+and the singing of the cicada are not separate phenomena but are two
+parts or aspects of one and the same recurring event. Now, the night
+and the day are things that cannot be handled, i.e., cannot be
+immediately subject to the actions of human beings, while the cicada
+can be handled. Hence it is to the cicada that the need of precaution
+is referred. Any interference with the cicada is forbidden, and this
+prohibition serves as a mark or expression of the social value of that
+alternation of night and day with which the cicada is so intimately
+associated [186].
+
+The legend of the Akar-Bale tribe is simply an elaboration of this
+theme. In the beginning there was no night, no darkness. Social life
+was continuous and was not subject to periods of diminished intensity.
+Then one of the ancestors (apparently in a fit of temper owing to his
+lack of success in fishing) crushed a cicada, and the cry of the insect
+brought darkness upon the world. The darkness, with its inhibition of
+activity, is clearly regarded as an evil, i.e., as a manifestation of
+force hostile to the society, and this accords with the definition of
+the social value of night given above, where it was shown that this
+value is negative, that night is a source of social dysphoria.
+
+This interpretation is confirmed by the statements about the night made
+in the North Andaman (where this legend does not seem to exist), such
+as that the night is made by the spirits (Lau) who draw a mat or cloth
+across the sky. When we remember that the spirits are the embodiment of
+the forces hostile to the society we see how this statement expresses
+the feeling that night is the time when such hostile forces are in the
+ascendant.
+
+The Akar-Bale story, besides giving an account of the origin of night,
+relates the invention of singing and dancing. There is no specific
+reference to dancing in the story as recorded from my Akar-Bale
+informant. The reference is found, however, in the version recorded by
+Mr Man [187] and it is implicit even in the Akar-Bale version. Dancing
+is always accompanied by a song, and every song is composed with the
+express intention of being sung at a dance. Thus, for the Andamanese,
+singing and dancing are merely two aspects of one and the same
+activity.
+
+Dancing, except on a few special ceremonial occasions, always takes
+place at night. Night, as we have seen, is a source of social
+dysphoria. It prevents the pursuit of the common social activities,
+such as hunting or making canoes or weapons. The condition produced by
+darkness can be neutralised by means of singing and dancing, the dance
+being a condition of intense social euphoria, in which social activity
+is at its maximum, and all the social sentiments are pleasurably and
+intensely excited.
+
+This belief that dancing and singing are means by which the evil
+influence of darkness can be overcome is shown in the custom observed
+when a corpse remains in a camp all night, of sitting round it and
+singing, in order (so the natives say) to keep away the spirits that
+have caused the death. They do not dance, because the pleasurable
+excitement of the more intense activity would be incompatible with the
+condition naturally resulting from a death. This custom affords clear
+evidence that singing, and in a yet higher degree the combined activity
+of singing and dancing, possess magical efficacy against the dangers
+prevalent at night.
+
+This relation between the (negative) social value of night and the
+(positive) social value of dancing and singing is simply and clearly
+expressed in the legend. It was the “singing” of the cicada that
+produced the darkness. The ancestors, finding themselves overwhelmed
+with darkness, set to work to remedy this evil by singing (and, it is
+to be presumed, by dancing to the song). One after another they sang a
+song, just as at a dance one man after another sings until he is tired.
+Finally, after the dance had gone on for a number of hours, Ko̱ŋoro took
+his turn at singing and the night came to an end and day appeared. So
+effectual was the means adopted of neutralising the evils of darkness
+that it finally resulted in the return of the daylight in which
+ordinary social life is possible.
+
+The reference to resin in the legend can be easily understood. The
+Andamanese use resin to provide the light by which they dance, as well
+as for torches for fishing on dark nights. It is their only artificial
+light, and without resin a dance would be a very poor affair. Thus the
+social value of resin is that it affords a means of neutralising to a
+certain extent the effects of darkness.
+
+These are, I think, all the essential elements of the story. One of the
+ancestors, under the influence of an anti-social passion, killed a
+cicada, which uttered its cry, and thereupon the world was covered with
+darkness. The ancestors then made torches of resin which enabled them
+to neutralise the darkness to some extent. They then invented dancing
+and singing and after they had continued for a number of hours the
+light came back. Since that time day and night regularly alternate with
+one another, and the cicada sings at each period of change. Men have
+learnt how to use resin for artificial light, and how to remedy the
+effects of darkness by dancing and singing.
+
+The legend is thus simply the expression in a particular form of the
+relation between the society and a certain natural phenomenon in terms
+of what have been called social values. We find expressed the social
+values of night and of resin and dancing. It may be noted that the
+legend also gives a special social value to the ancestors, different
+from and greater than that of men or women at the present day. The
+ancestors of the Andamanese were able to do many things that men cannot
+do now; they were able to affect the processes of nature in a way that
+is no longer possible. This notion of the social value of the
+ancestors, of the past, will be shown to be one of the most important
+elements in the legends, it being this that is responsible for the
+general form of the stories. The consideration of this subject,
+however, must be postponed.
+
+There are still a number of points of the legend that have not been
+considered. It is not easy to account for the inclusion in this story
+of the discovery of the yam. It is possible that there is some ground
+of association between the yam and the cicada, but I do not certainly
+know of any such. There is a legend recorded by Mr Man from the Aka-Bea
+tribe, and given above [188], in which an account is given of the lucky
+discovery of the first yam by the chance shooting of an arrow. It is
+therefore quite likely that the yam story first existed quite
+independently, and that it has become incorporated in the legend of the
+origin of night on account of the fact that the incident of the
+shooting of an arrow was found in both of them.
+
+There is one reason for the inclusion of the yam incident that it is
+worth while to note. By its means it is told how Da Teŋat discovered a
+new object of each of the three kinds—animal, vegetable, and mineral.
+The new animal was the cicada, the new vegetable was the yam, and the
+new mineral was the resin, which, as the story shows, the natives
+classify as a “stone,” although they know its vegetable origin. The
+story is thus rounded off and given an air of completeness and
+symmetry.
+
+The incident of the shooting of the three arrows is of some interest as
+giving us an idea of how the Andamanese think of chance or luck.
+Arrows, it must be remembered, are regarded as being possessed of
+magical power. Further, the ancestors themselves possessed powers that
+do not belong to living men, as is shown repeatedly in the legends. The
+ancestor shoots an arrow, and, by reason of his power and that of the
+arrow, it strikes an important object and leads him to a discovery. The
+mere striking of the object by the arrow seems to give him a certain
+degree of power over the object, whereby he forces it to reveal its
+name. (We have already seen, by a reference to this very story, that
+there is an important connection between the name of an object and its
+social value [189].) Thus, in common with other primitive peoples, the
+Andaman Islanders regard what we call luck or chance as due to the
+action of the magical powers possessed by objects and by human beings.
+
+There is one point that is not very plain in the Akar-Bale version, but
+I think we must take it that Da Teŋat was disgusted at his lack of
+success in fishing. His irritation was not diminished but rather
+increased by the fact that he did succeed in procuring one small and
+worthless fish. His shooting of the arrows must be regarded, I think,
+as the result of his anger. He might be supposed to address his arrows
+as follows: “You have not succeeded in hitting any fish at which I
+aimed you; let me see if you can hit anything on your own account, when
+I take no aim.” In this way he was led to the discovery of the yam, the
+resin and the cicada, for though it is not explicit, it is evident that
+it was the third arrow that led him to the cicada. His irritation was
+not yet appeased however, and he crushed the cicada, thus bringing
+darkness over the world. We must infer that he was aware of what he was
+doing, for as soon as he had discovered the yam and the resin he learnt
+their names and thereby learnt all there was to know about them and
+their properties, and we must suppose that he similarly learnt the name
+of the cicada, and that to injure it would cause darkness. In the
+Aka-Bea legend recorded by Mr Man it is expressly stated that the
+ancestors who performed the actions that led to the first darkness did
+so because they were annoyed by the continuous heat of the sun [190].
+
+Now we have here a very important feature of the legend which it will
+not do to overlook. We shall find that it is a principle of the Andaman
+legends that evil results follow from evil actions. Night, which, by
+reason of its negative social value, is regarded as an evil, is shown
+to be the result of the misbehaviour of one of the ancestors in giving
+way to anti-social feelings of anger or annoyance. It is a case of like
+producing like. When an individual gives way to such feelings as anger
+he becomes a source of danger to the society, or at any rate a source
+of social dysphoria by disturbing the harmony of the community. Thus,
+in the legend, it was the wickedness of the ancestor in giving way to
+his feeling of irritation that led to the social disaster. Inversely,
+it was through the combined effort of the ancestors joining in a
+harmonious action (singing and dancing) that the day was brought back.
+
+The events of the legend are supposed to have taken place at a spot
+named Golugma. I only visited this spot once and did not take
+particular note of it, nor have I information about the position it
+occupied in the social life of that part of the island in former times.
+We do know, however, from the name Golugma Bud, that at one time it was
+the site of a communal hut and was therefore an important camping
+place. It may have been a place at which dance-meetings were frequently
+held, and this would be a sufficient reason for its selection as the
+legendary site of the first dance.
+
+One of the minor motives of the Akar-Bale version of this story is the
+identity of the ancestor who appears as the chief actor. I regret to
+say that I have never found the exact meaning of the word teŋat. Though
+I asked the natives to bring me a specimen they did not do so. It is
+probably either a species of spider or of ant. However, even if I had
+succeeded in identifying the teŋat, it is possible that I should not
+have discovered the reason why this particular creature was selected as
+the hero of the story. This can be shown by considering another of the
+incidents of the story. All the ancestors who sang and tried to bring
+back the day failed except the ko̱ŋoro. This is a species of small red
+ant. Whenever I heard this story told or referred to, this particular
+incident (the successful singing of ko̱ŋoro) caused great amusement
+amongst the listeners. It was obvious that it was a good joke. Yet in
+spite of my endeavours on more than one occasion I was unable to see
+what the joke was.
+
+In the A-Pučikwar version of the same legend [191] it was Pe̱tie, the
+monitor lizard, who crushed the cicada and brought darkness. This is to
+be explained not on the basis of any particular characteristic of the
+lizard, but as being due to the position that this animal occupies in
+the A-Pučikwar mythology in general as the first ancestor of the
+Andamanese. As the first progenitor he is made responsible for the
+origin of all sorts of things. The story of the origin of night must
+have a chief actor, and in the absence of any important ground for
+selecting any other of the ancestors the A-Pučikwar story-teller falls
+back on the monitor lizard.
+
+In the above analysis I have drawn a distinction between what may be
+called major and minor motives of the story. The validity of the
+interpretation of the legends offered in this chapter depends on the
+validity of this distinction, and it is therefore important to provide
+a method by which we can separate major from minor motives. This can
+only be done when there are several versions of the same legend. Major
+motives may be defined as those which appear in all the versions of one
+legend, while minor motives are those which may vary from one version
+to another without producing any fundamental change in the legend
+itself. Thus, by a comparison of the Akar-Bale and the A-Pučikwar
+versions it can be shown that the identity of the chief actor is a
+minor and not a major motive.
+
+If we compare the Akar-Bale legend with the Aka-Bea version recorded by
+Mr Man we see that they have in common (1) the explanation of the
+origin of night as due to the breaking of a rule, (2) the tracing back
+of the trouble to the anti-social passion of anger on the part of the
+actor or actors, (3) the account of the origin of dancing and singing
+as a means of neutralising the effects of darkness. All the other
+elements of the story are different in the two versions. In the Aka-Bea
+story it is the killing of a grub (gurug) that brings on the night,
+which is itself called gurug. What the meaning of this may be I cannot
+say. I did not hear this version of the story, and was not able to make
+any enquiries concerning it. All that it is necessary to note is that
+both the legends express the social value of night, and they both
+express it in very much the same way, the difference being that the
+Akar-Bale version makes use of the connection between night and day and
+the cicada, while the Aka-Bea story makes a similar use of some
+connection (not yet explained) between the night and a grub.
+
+Thus the comparison of different versions confirms the interpretation
+here given. The legend expresses the negative social value of night as
+a period when social activity is diminished and the power of protection
+of the society therefore lessened. It does so by telling how the night
+first arose as the result of disobedience to a ritual prohibition,
+i.e., of meddling with the forces of nature. It traces the original
+cause yet further back to the anger of one of the ancestors, anger
+being itself a source of social disturbance. It passes on to express
+the social value of the dance, with its accompanying song, and exhibits
+the relation, within the system of social values, of dancing and
+darkness. Thus, although the manner of expression may differ, yet what
+is expressed is the same in both versions, and we are therefore
+justified in regarding this as the essential content of them.
+
+An exactly parallel explanation can be given of the Andaman notions
+relating to the moon. The social value of moonlight is due to the fact
+that it enables the natives to fish and catch turtle and dugong by
+night. A clear moonlight night affords the best opportunity for
+harpooning dugong. During the second quarter the light of the moon
+steadily increases, and the period of moonlight falls in the first part
+of the night. After the change to the third quarter the light steadily
+diminishes, and moreover there is a gradually increasing period of
+complete darkness at the beginning of the night. The natives do not
+care to get up in the middle of the night to go fishing or hunting
+turtle. Therefore the second quarter is the time when they undertake
+such expeditions, and after the change to the third quarter they
+abandon them largely or entirely, and if they do go out they have to
+depend on torches. Therefore we may say that during the second quarter
+the moon gives valuable help to the natives, but during the third
+quarter withdraws that help.
+
+At the beginning of the third quarter the moon rises in the evening
+with a ruddy hue. The natives explain this red and swollen appearance
+by saying that the moon is angry. When a man does something that hurts
+or damages another it is generally (in Andamanese life) because he is
+angry. So to say that the moon is angry is equivalent to saying that he
+is damaging or hurting someone, as he is indeed damaging the society by
+withdrawing the light by which for the past week or so they have been
+able to capture fish and turtle. The phenomena of the change of the
+moon in so far as they affect the social life are represented as if
+they were the actions of a human being. We may describe this briefly by
+saying that the moon is personified, using that term in a special sense
+to be defined more exactly later. Amongst the Andamanese, as amongst
+ourselves, anger is associated with heat, and this explains why the red
+glow of the moon when he rises during the first few nights of the third
+quarter is regarded as the visible sign of his anger.
+
+Even the moon, however, is not to be expected to be angry without a
+cause. The natives say that the anger is due to some bright light
+having been visible at the time the moon rises. The personification is
+thus further elaborated. The moon gives the light by which fishing and
+turtle hunting at night are possible. This light has a positive social
+value, and its withdrawal is an evil. They therefore regard the moon as
+jealous, so jealous that if anyone makes use of an artificial light, as
+of a fire or torch or burning resin, the moon immediately is consumed
+with anger and withdraws the light that has been of so much use and has
+not been sufficiently appreciated. This belief is a means by which the
+value of the moonlight is recognized. Thus the beliefs about the moon
+can be interpreted in exactly the same way as the legend about night;
+both express, in accordance with the same psychological laws, the
+social values of natural phenomena.
+
+I will next consider not a single legend but a number of different
+stories, running through all of which we can find a single major
+motive. I have recorded [192] three legends which relate, with some
+differences of detail, how in the beginning the ancestors had no fire,
+how fire was introduced by one of them, and how many of them, being
+burnt or frightened, were turned into animals of different kinds. In
+one version [193] the sea-eagle came into the camp of the ancestors and
+threw fire amongst them; whereby many of them being frightened were
+turned into animals. Another version is very similar, the chief actor,
+however, being the prawn [194]. In an Akar-Bale version Dim-do̱ri, now a
+fish, obtained the fire and burnt some of the ancestors with it so that
+they became fishes [195].
+
+This legend is a widespread one, being found both in the north and in
+the south of the islands. The fact that the actor is different in the
+three recorded versions proves that the identity of the hero of the
+tale is a minor motive, i.e., one that may be varied without affecting
+the essential meaning of the myth.
+
+The story serves as an explanation of the markings on birds and fishes,
+these being where the ancestor who became the species was burnt by the
+fire. Thus the legend is of the kind that is often called etiological.
+The common method of explaining such legends is to say that they are
+crude attempts on the part of primitive man to explain the natural
+phenomena with which they deal, in this case the bright colours of
+birds and fishes. Such an interpretation cannot be regarded as
+adequate. Why should the Andaman Islanders want to explain the markings
+of animals? Why should they explain them in the form of a legend, and
+why should the legend take this peculiar form?
+
+The clue to the true interpretation of the three stories mentioned must
+be sought in the social value of fire. It was shown in the last chapter
+that fire is regarded as the symbol of social life and social activity,
+the centre around which the social life revolves, the source from which
+it draws its force. We may say, in a word, that it is the possession of
+fire that makes social life (as the Andamanese know it) possible. It
+was shown that it is on account of this relation of the society to fire
+that the latter is believed to be a source of security, of protection
+against the spirits. Now amongst all the creatures that inhabit the
+world, man is the only one that possesses and makes use of fire. Here,
+then, is the fundamental notion that is expressed in these legends. At
+first, so the story runs, animals and human beings were one, were not
+distinguished. Then came the discovery of fire. Some of the
+(undifferentiated) ancestors fled from the fire, because they were
+afraid of it, or because it burnt them. They became birds and beasts
+and fishes, retaining their fear of the fire, and being cut off for
+ever from the human society which, from that moment, constitutes itself
+around the fire. It is the possession of the fire that makes human
+beings what they are, that makes life as they live it possible. It is
+equally (according to the legend) the lack of fire, or the lack of
+ability to make use of fire, that makes the animals what they are, that
+cuts them off from participation in human life.
+
+This, briefly, is the way I would explain the legend mentioned above,
+and ample confirmation will be forthcoming when we consider some of the
+other legends. Attention may be called here to a very significant
+phrase in a version of the fire legend recorded by Mr Portman [196] to
+the effect that “it was on account of the fire (i.e. of the possession
+of fire) that the ancestors became alive.”
+
+The three stories considered above contain three motives. (1) They
+express the social value of fire, by making the foundation of human
+society (through the differentiation of men and animals) depend on the
+discovery of fire. (2) They express a peculiar notion as to the
+relation of the human species to other animals, which is found also in
+other legends. (3) They give a legendary explanation of some of the
+characteristics of animals, such as the bright colours of certain birds
+and fishes.
+
+It would seem that these same motives are present in many of the
+legends relating to the origin of fire. In the common version of the
+fire legend the fire is stolen from Biliku (Puluga) by the kingfisher.
+This bird has a patch of bright red feathers at the neck and these are
+explained as being where he was struck by the fire or the pearl-shell
+(lightning) flung by Biliku. In one variant the kingfisher swallowed
+the fire and had his head cut off by the lightning, whereupon the fire
+came out of his neck where the red feathers now are. In most of the
+versions it would seem to be implied that though the kingfisher
+succeeded in obtaining fire for the use of the ancestors, he was
+himself unable to profit by his own exertions, for he was turned into a
+bird condemned to eat his fish raw for ever. In one story, however,
+from the Aka-Kede tribe, it would seem that the kingfisher, by the
+possession of fire, and through the loss of his wings and tail, became
+a man. There is a lack of logic here which it is worth while to note.
+Although the kingfisher became a man yet the legend is clearly based on
+the explanation of the red feathers of the bird’s neck as due to the
+action of the fire. The psychological significance of such
+inconsistencies as this will have to be discussed later on.
+
+Let us now consider another group of legends. We have seen that one
+explanation (in the mythological sense) of how the birds arose is that
+they were ancestors who fled from the fire. There are other stories
+that give a different account and relate that the animals came into
+existence through a great flood or storm that overwhelmed the
+ancestors. Both of these legends are to be found in the same tribes.
+Their incompatibility does not prevent them from being both equally
+accepted. If it can be shown that the story of the flood is simply an
+alternative method of expressing the same set of representations that
+underlie the story of the origin of the animals through the discovery
+of fire, the interpretation of the latter will be in some degree
+confirmed.
+
+One account of the flood or storm, variants of which were obtained from
+both the north and south of the islands, tells how the ancestors only
+with great difficulty succeeded in saving the fire. Although it is not
+explicitly stated, we may conclude, I think, that it was because some
+of the ancestors kept their fire alight that they remained human, while
+those who lost their fire were turned into animals. If my personal
+impressions are of any value, this is really the idea that does
+underlie the legend in the native mind. Thus it would appear that this
+version of the flood myth is simply a reversal of the fire legend
+previously considered. They both express the same thing in different
+ways. They both make the possession of fire the thing on which social
+(i.e., human) life depends, the fundamental difference between man and
+animals.
+
+It may be objected to this interpretation that in some of the versions
+of the flood myth there is no reference to the ancestors being turned
+into animals, while in others there is no reference to the saving of
+the fire. The reply to this is that if we are to understand the legends
+we must not consider each separately, but must seek out the connections
+between the different stories, connections that are not always obvious.
+Thus, as there are, in each of the tribes, different versions of a
+flood myth it might be supposed that the natives believe in several
+different floods having taken place in the times of the ancestors. Mr
+Man seems to have come to the conclusion that there were two distinct
+floods. I am fully satisfied, from personal knowledge, that the natives
+think of only one flood or catastrophe, and refer to it all the
+different legends. Sometimes a man will relate how the flood came and
+the fire was nearly lost, but will make no mention of the origin of
+animals at this time. At another time the same man will relate how the
+flood turned the ancestors into animals, but will make no mention of
+the saving of the fire. To understand the meaning of the legends we
+must connect these different stories together, for we know that they
+are connected in the minds of the Andaman Islanders themselves. Every
+native knows that it was at the time of the flood that the animals came
+into existence and he may remember this fact when he hears the story of
+how the fire was nearly lost. Similarly, when he hears the story of how
+the animals came into existence he remembers the other story of how the
+fire was nearly lost. Thus one man gave me a legend of the flood which
+explained the origin of the animals, and at the very end he mentioned
+as an afterthought “It was at this time that the fire was saved by Maia
+Taolu.”
+
+When we thus connect the different stories relating to the flood we see
+that they express a definite system of representations or beliefs,
+which are found in all the tribes, and that this system is sometimes
+completely and sometimes partially expressed in the different versions.
+On the interpretation here suggested the major motives of the flood
+myth are (1) the social value of fire as expressed by making the
+difference between man and the animals depend on its possession by the
+former and not by the latter, and (2) the notion of the animals as
+having once been one with the ancestors. These two motives are both
+present in the legends of the origin of fire that were previously
+considered. It can be shown that even the third motive of the fire
+legend manages to creep into the flood story. In the Aka-Kede version
+[197] the dove is mentioned as having saved the fire. The connection
+between the dove and the fire (which appears in other legends) [198]
+would seem to have its basis in the shining plumage of the bird, just
+as the kingfisher is connected with the fire through the red feathers
+of its neck.
+
+The details of the legends may be briefly mentioned. One Aka-J̌eru
+version [199] explains how one of the ancestors made a noise by
+breaking firewood while the cicada was singing and so raised a great
+storm, in which the fire was nearly lost, and in which many of the
+ancestors were turned into animals. This version is a fairly complete
+expression of the fundamental representations on which the whole group
+of legends is based. There is an elaboration of one point in that an
+account is given of how the cyclone was brought about. This is a
+separate motive which will be discussed and explained later in
+connection with the Biliku myth.
+
+Another legend from the same tribe [200] relates to a storm that was
+caused in the same way, and that resulted in the destruction of the
+whole world. The fire, which was nearly extinguished, was saved by one
+of the ancestors. No mention was made of the ancestors being turned
+into animals. This version, however, as I have recorded it, is
+incomplete. I was unfortunately unable to understand some of what the
+narrator told me.
+
+The Aka-Kede version [201] similarly does not distinctly state that the
+ancestors who were destroyed by the flood were turned into animals, but
+the fact that the three persons mentioned in the legend are all birds
+suggests that it was at this time that the birds originated. The bird
+called čarami-lebek, having lowered the surviving ancestors to the
+ground with their fire, remained at the top of the Dipterocarpus tree
+and has been there ever since. The Aka-Ko̱l version of the same story
+[202] simply states that the ancestors were turned into animals in a
+cyclone, but contains no mention of the rescue of the fire.
+
+In a number of these legends it is stated that the ancestors saved
+themselves by climbing up into a tall tree or into the trees. This is
+to be explained by the fact that the birds all live up in the trees,
+and a great many of them can never be seen save overhead. The top of
+the forest is where the birds live, it is their world, raised above the
+world of men and women. The flood drove the inhabitants up to the tops
+of the trees. The birds remained there and only the human beings came
+down again. As the original inhabitants were driven up into the trees
+by water covering the land we may complete the myth by saying that
+those who failed to reach the upper world were on that account
+compelled to spend the rest of their existence in the water as fish and
+turtle. This is, I think, what the legend really means. Thus the story
+of the flood gives a picture of a threefold world, the waters below
+with their inhabitants the fishes and turtle and other marine
+creatures, the solid earth, and the upper region of the top of the
+forest where the flowers bloom and the butterflies and other insects
+and the birds pass their lives. This representation of the top of the
+forest as a world in itself may seem strange to one who has never seen
+a tropical forest, but to one who has spent months beneath it the
+forest-top of the Andamans does seem a world in itself, near yet
+inaccessible, a world where there is a gay and interesting life in the
+sunshine above, of which the wanderer in the deep shade beneath can
+only catch occasional glimpses as he gazes up through the tangle of
+boughs and leaves. For the natives of the islands therefore the top of
+the forest is an alien world into which they can only penetrate with
+extreme difficulty, by climbing, and with the life of which they have
+little to do. Similarly the waters of the sea are another world into
+which they can only penetrate for a few moments at a time by diving
+[203].
+
+It may be said that, on this view, no allowance is made for the
+existence of terrestrial animals. That is true, but it must be
+remembered that there are very few such animals in the Andamans. The
+civet-cat and the monitor lizard and some of the snakes are as much
+arboreal in their habits as they are terrestrial. There remain only the
+pig and the rat as true terrestrial animals, and it may be noted that
+neither of these two animals ever figures in the legends as an
+ancestor. There are independent legends that relate to the origin of
+the pig, and the rat seems to be of so little importance that no
+explanation of its origin would seem to be necessary. Moreover the
+monitor lizard and the civet-cat, which are partly terrestrial, occupy
+for this reason exceptional positions in the legends. Thus there is a
+legend recorded from the Aka-Kede tribe which accounts for the
+simultaneous origin of the civet-cat and the pigs through a game of the
+ancestors [204]. The monitor lizard is in an altogether exceptional
+position in that it is equally at home in the trees, on the ground and
+in the water of a creek. It is in a way free of all the three divisions
+of the world. This helps us to understand why in some of the tribes the
+monitor lizard is regarded as the original ancestor not only of the
+Andamanese but also of all the animals, including the birds of the
+forest and the fishes of the sea. The civet-cat cannot live in the
+water as the lizard can [205], but can climb trees and run on the
+ground. In many of the legends the civet-cat is said to be the wife of
+the monitor lizard. It will be remembered that in the Akar-Bale story
+it is the civet-cat, the wife of the first ancestor (the monitor
+lizard), who saved the fire from the flood by climbing up to the top of
+a steep hill with it. Thus it may be seen that the position of the
+monitor lizard and the civet-cat in the legends of the Andamanese is
+partly determined by the position that these two animals occupy in
+relation to the threefold division of the world revealed in the story
+of the flood.
+
+The repeated mention of the Dipterocarpus tree in these legends would
+seem to indicate that it is a motive of importance. The tree is the
+tallest tree of the Andaman forests, and is very common, but it is
+probable that this does not afford an adequate explanation, and that
+there are other ideas connected with it in the minds of the Andamanese
+that would justify the place it occupies in the mythology. In one
+Aka-J̌eru story the whole forest is said to have sprung from a
+Dipterocarpus seed dropped by Biliku after she had destroyed the
+original forest in her anger. It may be noted in passing that in the
+languages of the North Andaman the word for this tree is the same as
+the word for dugong.
+
+Let us now briefly examine the story of the origin of animals as
+recorded from the Akar-Bale tribe [206]. There are three variants of
+this story. The one recorded from an A-Pučikwar informant [207] must
+really be regarded, I believe, as an imperfect reproduction of the
+Akar-Bale version. The version given by Mr Man [208] is also of
+Akar-Bale origin, as is shown by the fact that the phrases in it are in
+the Akar-Bale language. A comparison of these variants shows that the
+main purpose of the story is to relate how a great storm or cyclone
+visited the islands in the times of the ancestors and turned many of
+them into animals. The storm was brought about by the action of one of
+the ancestors who in anger did some of the things that are known to
+anger Puluga and cause a storm.
+
+In some of the other legends we find the same motive. Thus in an
+Aka-J̌eru legend [209] the flood is said to have been caused by one of
+the ancestors breaking firewood while the cicada was singing. In an
+Aka-Kede version [210] this part of the story is further elaborated,
+and a reason is given for this action on the part of the ancestor.
+Ko̱po-tera-wat was angry with the rest of the ancestors because they
+refused to give him any of the honey they had collected, and he
+therefore deliberately performed the action that brought the storm. The
+purpose of these elements of the legend is to explain how the great
+flood came about, by tracing it to the anti-social action of some one
+or more of the ancestors, just as the night is supposed to have been
+produced by an ancestor who performed a forbidden action. In the
+Aka-Kede version and also, as we shall see, in the Akar-Bale story, the
+matter is traced still further back and the anti-social action of the
+ancestor is explained as being caused by his anger which had been
+aroused by a disagreement with the ancestors. The origin of the
+catastrophe that separated the once united ancestors into animals and
+human beings is thus traced to the fact that they could not live
+together sociably and in harmony.
+
+In the Akar-Bale story the part which explains how one of the ancestors
+came to give way to anger is highly elaborated. It starts with the
+quarrel of the tree-lizard with some of the ancestors. (It may be noted
+in passing that the tree-lizard is quarrelsome in reality.) This leads
+to the death of the lizard (or his transformation into an animal that
+still bears the name), and so to the grief of his mother and her anger
+against the ancestors who have killed her son. This elaboration of one
+part of the story tends to obscure the meaning of the whole. This is
+particularly the case in the version recorded by myself in which the
+anger of the tree-lizard is the direct cause of the change of some of
+the ancestors into animals. The narrator sets out to explain how a
+flood or cyclone came and turned the ancestors into fishes and birds.
+He elaborates the details of the first part of the story to such an
+extent that he loses sight of the conclusion. The purpose of the story
+as explaining the origin of animals remains in his mind, however, and
+gives rise to the description of how some of the animals had their
+origin as animals (i.e., were cut off from the human society) by being
+thrown by the lizard into the forest or into the sea. The legend in
+this form may therefore be regarded as giving an alternative
+explanation of the separation of the animals from the human society,
+the cause of the separation being a great quarrel in which they were
+all involved. In other words, human society is only possible if
+personal anger be subordinated to the need of good order; the animals
+are cut off from human society because they could not live peaceably
+together without quarrelling.
+
+The examination of the variants of the flood-myth has taken us away
+from the main argument. In the various stories there are two separable
+elements. There is first the explanation of how a disastrous flood or
+storm was caused by the non-observance of ritual prohibitions connected
+with Biliku (Puluga). This element will have to be considered in
+relation to the Biliku myth. There is secondly the account of how
+through the flood or storm the birds and fishes became separated from
+the human race, and the three regions of the world, as the Andaman
+Islander knows it, became established. It is this second element that I
+have sought to explain. To repeat the argument, I would hold that it is
+really through the loss of the fire that the birds and fishes became
+cut off from mankind, and that therefore this element of the legends of
+the flood expresses exactly the same notion as the legend of the
+catastrophe that followed the discovery of fire. The two groups of
+legends result from the way the Andaman Islander feels about the fire
+as being the one thing on which the society most completely depends for
+its welfare.
+
+The preceding analysis has shown that the legends relating to the
+origin of animals, whether through the action of fire, or by the flood,
+serve to express the social value of fire. If this interpretation be
+correct we have a close parallel to the explanation of the story of the
+origin of night. In both cases, it has been argued, what the legend
+really expresses is the way in which a particular phenomenon (fire, in
+one case, the alternation of day and night in the other) affects the
+life of the society and the sentiments on which that life depends. The
+legends of the catastrophe, however, obviously contain another element
+of importance, revealing as they do a certain way of thinking about the
+animals. This element has not yet been explained. The representation of
+the birds, etc., as ancestors is not confined to one particular legend
+or group of legends, but runs through them all. Its explanation is
+therefore better postponed until we come to deal with the general
+features of the mythology, and will then have to be undertaken.
+
+Let us now turn to the legends that concern Biliku (Puluga) and Tarai
+(Deria), which are of capital importance in the Andaman mythology. The
+clue to the understanding of them lies in the Andamanese notions about
+the weather and the seasons. In the Andaman Islands the year may be
+divided into four seasons. There is the cool season lasting from the
+beginning of December to the middle of February; immediately following
+this is the hot season from February to the middle of May; then comes
+the rainy season, from May to the end of September; October and
+November constitute a short season to themselves. In the cool season
+the weather is uniformly cool; there is very little rain, and storms
+are almost unknown; the wind blows uniformly from the N.E. In the hot
+season there is little or no rain; the wind is generally N.E., but may
+be variable; summer lightning is frequent, but there are no violent
+storms except at the very end of the season. During the rainy season,
+after a short period of uncertain stormy weather with which it begins,
+the wind blows uniformly from the S.W.; it rains heavily, sometimes
+every day for weeks together, but violent storms (cyclones) are very
+rare. Between the rainy season proper and the cool season there is a
+period of six or eight weeks in which the weather is unsettled; the
+wind is variable; fine weather alternates with storms that are
+sometimes of terrific violence; waterspouts are frequent; it is at this
+season that violent cyclonic storms are likely to occur. This season is
+called by the Andamanese Kimil (Gumul of Aka-Bea). We have seen in the
+last chapter that the word kimil denotes a condition of social danger,
+or of contact with the power possessed by all things that can affect
+the life and safety of the society. It is obviously in this sense, and
+not as meaning “hot,” that it is applied to the season in question, for
+the months of October and November are fairly cool, certainly very much
+cooler than February and March. We shall find that this is an important
+point in connection with the Biliku myth.
+
+The life of the Andaman Islander is profoundly affected by the
+alternation of the seasons. There are, first of all, the violent
+cyclonic storms that occasionally occur. Such a storm may uproot the
+jungle for miles, making it impassable for years to come, and thus
+destroying some of the native hunting grounds. The wind is sometimes so
+violent as to tear every leaf from the trees in its path. While the
+storm lasts there is danger to the lives of the natives. An old man
+recounted to me how on the occasion of a violent cyclone he and the
+others of his village took refuge in the sea and on the open shore from
+the danger of falling trees, and remained there till the violence of
+the storm had abated. The usual name for a cyclone in Aka-J̌eru is
+to̱ko-po̱r, i.e. “falling wood” or “falling trees.” Even if all the
+natives escape the danger of death or injury, there is still the
+extreme fear and discomfort of the experience. If a storm lasts for any
+length of time the natives, who are unable or afraid to go out hunting,
+have to do without food until it is over. Incidentally the storm may
+destroy their huts, canoes, and other property and thus cause loss that
+has to be made up by toil.
+
+The second important effect of the seasons on the life of the
+Andamanese is through the food supply. During the cool season, and the
+succeeding hot season, a number of vegetable foods, including the very
+important roots and some of the most prized fruits, are available. On
+the other hand, during these seasons the land animals are in poor
+condition. In the hot season, at any rate, lizards, snakes and the
+civet-cat are not eaten. Pigs are breeding and are in such poor
+condition that often a pig that has been killed is left in the jungle
+as being not good enough to eat. The hot season is pre-eminently the
+season of honey, which is so abundant that the natives are able to
+obtain much more than they can consume. In the rainy season there are
+few vegetable foods and very little honey, but on the other hand the
+jungle animals are in good condition and flesh food is abundant; fish
+are more plentiful in this season than during the dry weather. In the
+Kimil season (October and November) the natives add to their food
+supply two varieties of grub (the larvæ of the cicada and of a beetle)
+which are regarded as great delicacies. Roughly we can say that the
+rainy season is the season of flesh food, the Kimil season is the
+season of grubs, the cool season is the season of fruits and roots, and
+the hot season is the season of honey.
+
+By reference to the prevailing wind the year may be divided into two
+parts, the N.E. monsoon from November to May, and the S.W. monsoon from
+May to November.
+
+I propose to show that the Andaman Islanders express the social value
+of the phenomena of the weather and the seasons, i.e., the way these
+phenomena affect the social life and the social sentiments, by means of
+legends and beliefs relating to the two mythical beings whom they call
+Biliku and Tarai. Using the word personification in a sense to be
+defined later in the chapter, we may say that the Andamanese personify
+the weather and the seasons in the persons of Biliku and Tarai. Biliku
+is associated with the N.E. monsoon; she lives in the N.E.; the wind
+from that quarter is called “the Biliku wind”; to Biliku, therefore,
+belong the cool and the hot seasons, these being the seasons of the
+N.E. monsoon. Tarai is associated with the S.W. monsoon; he lives in
+the S.W.; the wind from that quarter is called “the Tarai wind,” or, in
+Aka-Bea, simply Deria; to Tarai therefore belongs the rainy season. It
+is possible to show that the Andaman Islanders associate with these two
+beings all the phenomena of the weather and the seasons, and are able
+to represent the changes of the latter as though they were the actions
+of human or anthropomorphic beings.
+
+In the mass of beliefs and stories relating to Biliku and Tarai there
+are some elements on which there is absolute agreement in all the
+tribes of the Great Andaman Division. I propose to treat these as being
+the most important elements. There is absolute unanimity, for instance,
+as to the connection of Biliku and Tarai with the N.E. and the S.W.
+respectively, and with the winds that blow from these two points of the
+compass. Further, this belief does not conflict in any way with any
+other belief of the Andamanese. There is similar unanimity in the
+beliefs that Biliku is angry at the digging up of yams, and at the
+melting of bees’-wax. There are other matters on which the agreement is
+fairly general but not absolute. For instance, there is a common belief
+that it was Biliku who first discovered fire, but there are also
+legends as to the origin of fire in which Biliku does not figure. I
+propose to treat such elements as these as being of secondary
+importance. Finally there are other elements with regard to which the
+beliefs of different tribes are not in agreement. For instance, in the
+South Andaman Puluga is regarded as male, while in the North Andaman
+Biliku is female. I propose to regard such elements as being of only
+minor importance, i.e., as not being closely connected with the central
+notion or notions expressed in the myth.
+
+Applying the strict method outlined above, we may begin by noting that
+there is complete unanimity in regard to the connection of Biliku and
+Tarai with the N.E. and the S.W. respectively, and therefore with the
+monsoons. No interpretation of the myth can be adequate unless it sets
+out from this fact. The connection is so firmly fixed that it appears
+in the names of the winds themselves [211]. Even in this matter of the
+winds, however, there is a slight difference in the detail of the
+beliefs in different tribes. In the North Andaman it would seem that
+only the two principal winds are recognized; the S.W. wind (more
+accurately W.S.W.) is called “the Tarai wind” (not, be it noted, “the
+wind of Tarai”); the N.E. (or more accurately N.N.E.) wind is called
+“the Biliku wind.” These two winds are by far the most important, as
+the former blows steadily throughout the rainy season and the latter
+blows with almost equal steadiness throughout a good part of the cool
+and hot seasons. In the Aka-Bea and Akar-Bale tribes the general belief
+seems to be precisely the same as in the North Andaman. Only the two
+principal winds are considered to be of importance and one is
+associated with Deria and the other with Puluga. In these two tribes,
+as in the North Andaman, practically no notice is taken of the
+existence of winds from other quarters. In the A-Pučikwar tribe there
+is a notable difference, of great importance to the true interpretation
+of the legend. There is a dual division of the winds; the S.W. wind is
+called Teria; the other winds (of which a number are recognized) are
+all called Bilik. Thus Bilik is a generic name for a number of winds,
+namely for all the northerly or easterly winds, including not only the
+N.E., but also the N.W. and S.E. winds. The S.W. wind is called by a
+simple name, Teria, or as it would be better rendered in English “the
+Teria.” The other winds are called by compound names such as Me̱tepur
+Bilik, Ko̱ičo Bilik, etc., which we can only translate as “the N.E.
+Bilik,” “the East Bilik,” etc.
+
+Two things of importance are shown by the consideration of these facts.
+The first is that there is a sense in which it may be said that the
+Andaman Islanders personify the winds in the persons of Biliku and
+Tarai; they apply to the natural phenomenon a name which is also the
+name of a mythological person, and they apply it directly and not in a
+possessive form, i.e., they say “the Bilik” or “the Biliku wind” and
+not “Biliku’s wind.” The second is that only the S.W. wind is
+associated with Tarai and all the other winds are associated with
+Biliku.
+
+The last point is one of considerable importance in the interpretation
+of the myth. If we divide the year by reference to the prevailing
+winds, then the rainy season, with the exception of its beginning and
+its end, belongs to the S.W. wind; the hot season (save its end) and
+the cool season may be regarded as belonging to the N.E. wind, though
+the wind may be variable in the hot season; there remain two portions
+of the year, at the change of the monsoon, when the wind is variable,
+which cannot be classified as belonging strictly to the S.W. or to the
+N.E. wind. The fact that all these variable winds are denoted in the
+A-Pučikwar tribe by the name Bilik shows that in this tribe they are
+all classified with the N.E. wind. In this way the year is divided into
+two slightly unequal parts, one belonging to Teria or Tarai including
+the whole of the rainy season except the end and the very beginning,
+the other belonging to Bilik (Biliku) including the Kimil season, the
+cool season, the hot season, and even the first few days of the rainy
+season. This strict division only appears in the A-Pučikwar tribe, but
+it will be shown that an approximation to the same notion is found in
+the other tribes.
+
+There is general agreement in all the tribes in the belief that storms
+are due to Biliku or Tarai. Both of them send rain and thunder and
+lightning, but whenever mention is made in the legends of a violent
+storm it is always Biliku who is mentioned as causing it, and never by
+any chance Tarai. Thus, in regard to this matter of storms, it is
+evident that Biliku is more important than Tarai, and this is only one
+example of the preponderance of Biliku over her consort. This
+preponderance will need to be explained as one of the essentials of the
+myth [212].
+
+We have already seen how the Andaman Islander represents any natural
+phenomenon having negative social value as though it were the result of
+the action of a person in anger, this being the one anti-social passion
+with which he is most familiar in his own life. Thus the withdrawing of
+the light of the moon after the full is explained as being due to the
+anger of the moon. The negative social value of a violent storm is
+obvious. In accordance with the general principles of his mythology the
+Andaman Islander therefore explains the storm as being due to the anger
+of a personal mythical being. But storms are intimately connected with
+the winds, so that it must be Biliku and Tarai (in whom the winds are
+personified) who are responsible for the storms. Further, in the
+Andamans, violent storms are very rare except at two special periods of
+the year, at the change of the monsoon. This gives a further ground of
+association with Biliku and Tarai between whom the seasons are divided.
+We have seen that in classifying the winds the natives (of one tribe at
+any rate) associate with Tarai only the steady S.W. wind which brings
+not cyclones and violent storms but steady rain, while all the other
+winds are associated with Biliku. If this be so it is clear that a
+cyclone, with its wind veering from one quarter to another, must be the
+work of Biliku. Further, if the Biliku season be regarded as including
+all the periods of variable northerly and easterly winds as well as the
+period of the steady N.E., then we can say that it is only in the
+Biliku period that violent storms are likely to occur. It is evident
+therefore that an examination of the natural phenomena themselves gives
+us an adequate reason for the preponderance of Biliku over Tarai in the
+legends. This will be made even more evident as we proceed.
+
+Another law of the Andaman mythology is that a person, such as the
+moon, is never angry without cause. There are a number of actions that
+are believed by the Andamanese to cause the anger of Biliku; of these
+there are three of extreme importance, all the others being certainly
+of much less importance. It is necessary, therefore, to examine these
+three carefully and find their meaning.
+
+There is absolute agreement in all the tribes with regard to the belief
+that Biliku is angry and sends bad weather when bees’-wax is melted or
+burnt. The season of honey is the hot season from February to May.
+During the rainy season scarcely any honey is to be found and that only
+of the inferior (black) variety. It is clear therefore that honey
+belongs particularly to the Biliku portion of the year. During the hot
+season honey is abundant and large quantities are collected. As the
+natives make use of the wax, and as this is useless till it has been
+melted, this is the special season of the melting of bees’-wax. At the
+beginning of the season the Biliku wind blows calmly from the N.N.E. As
+the season draws to a close the wind becomes variable, uncertain, and
+in some years violent storms occur ushering in the rains of the S.W.
+monsoon. Year after year the wax-melting season comes to a close in
+stormy weather. Now stormy weather and the anger of Biliku are, for the
+Andaman Islander, one and the same thing, so that to say that the anger
+of Biliku follows the melting of bees’-wax is in one sense simply a
+statement of actual observable fact.
+
+Another belief about which there is absolute unanimity in all parts of
+the Islands is that Biliku is angry when certain plants are cut down or
+dug up. These plants include some of the most valuable vegetable foods
+of the Andamanese, such as the yams and the pith of the Caryota palm.
+Amongst the roots and fruits associated with Biliku there are one or
+two that were not botanically identified. All of them, however, about
+which I was able to obtain any information whatever, are available as
+food during the cool and hot seasons, and either not at all or in very
+small quantities during the rainy season. On the other hand, of the
+vegetable foods that are available during the rainy season, not one is
+ever mentioned as being in any way connected with Biliku. Further,
+amongst all the foods of the cool and hot seasons only those are
+intimately connected with Biliku which begin to be available during the
+Kimil season. A few examples may be mentioned. The yams and other
+edible roots are not found at all in the rainy season, but the tubers
+begin to form in the Kimil season (October and November) and small
+quantities of these roots are available for food at that time. By the
+time the cool season has set in the roots become abundant, and they
+continue to be found until well on into the hot season. All these roots
+are regarded as being specially connected with Biliku and are spoken of
+as her foods. The same thing applies to the Caryota sobolifera of which
+the pith is eaten either raw or cooked. The pith begins to form in the
+Kimil season, and this highly prized food is available right through
+the cool season. The fruit of the Cycas, which is another of those
+belonging to Biliku, also begins to ripen at the beginning of the cool
+weather. As regards the Entada scandens, Kurz, in his Burmese Flora,
+mentions it as seeding in the “cold season.” I neglected to take note
+of the relation of this plant to the seasons, but the statement of Kurz
+may be relied on. Thus it is seen that the vegetable foods that are
+associated with Biliku are those that begin to be available for food
+during the Kimil season and are abundant during the cool season. Now
+the Kimil season, which is really the opening of the N.E. or Biliku
+monsoon, is the season at which cyclonic storms are likely to occur.
+Here again therefore, as in the case of bees’-wax, there is a definite
+ground of association in familiar natural phenomena. Year after year,
+as these foods begin to ripen and to be eaten, the islands are visited
+with stormy weather, sometimes of exceptional violence. When the
+Andaman Islander says that the stormy weather which is the sign of the
+anger of Biliku follows the digging up of yams and the cutting down of
+the Caryota palm or the gathering of the seeds of the Cycas or Entada,
+he is stating what is an actual fact.
+
+The case of these vegetable foods is in one way different from that of
+bees’-wax. The melting of the wax goes on for some weeks before the
+anger of Biliku is finally aroused, when storms come to punish the
+offenders, and the change of season cuts short the supply of honey. In
+the case of the roots, etc., it would seem that it is only the first
+step that counts. The danger lies in the beginning of the season. Once
+the anger of Biliku has burst forth the bad weather ceases, the danger
+is past, and weeks of fine weather ensue, during which the natives may
+eat freely of the foods in question without fear of consequences. In
+this connection considerable importance may be attached to a statement
+made to me on more than one occasion, to the effect that the most
+efficient way of stopping a storm is to go into the forest and destroy
+the plants that belong to Biliku, i.e., do the very things that make
+her angry. We may apply this to the events of the Kimil season. The
+natives begin to dig up yams and collect other vegetable foods, and
+thereupon Biliku becomes angry and stormy weather follows. All that the
+natives have to do is to show sufficient persistence in continuing to
+eat yams, etc., and the anger of Biliku is bound to subside and the
+stormy weather to cease.
+
+There is a third belief that is generally accepted in all parts of the
+Great Andaman, that Biliku is angry if a cicada be killed, or if a
+noise be made while the cicada is singing in the morning or the
+evening. The interpretation of this belief is made difficult by the
+fact that there is also an association between the cicada and the day
+and night. Thus Mr Man states that the prohibition against making a
+noise at dawn (while the cicada is singing) is associated not with
+Puluga but with the sun [213].
+
+The grub of the cicada is eaten during the Kimil season, and at no
+other time of the year. Here the association is simple enough. The
+killing of the cicada (grub) takes place only during a brief season,
+and this is the season when cyclones occur. However, the grub of a
+beetle is eaten at the same season and yet I never heard of any
+connection between Biliku and this other grub. Certainly if there is a
+belief in such a connection it is very much less important than the
+belief relating to the cicada. Further, there is the belief that if the
+imago of the cicada be killed or if a noise be made while the cicada is
+singing, Biliku will be angry and will send bad weather, which is
+obviously not simply the result of the custom of eating the grub of the
+cicada during the Kimil season.
+
+The relation of the cicada to Biliku is almost certainly due to the
+connection of the insect with the seasons. Unfortunately, not then
+recognizing the importance of the matter, I did not, while in the
+Andamans, take particular note of the relation of the life-cycle of the
+cicada to the revolution of the seasons, and I am reluctant to trust to
+vague memories of matters to which I did not pay special attention. Mr
+Man states, apparently on the authority of a native, that during the
+cold and dry seasons the cicada is seldom seen (and is therefore
+presumably also seldom heard). What I believe to be the life-cycle of
+the insect is as follows. During the rainy season only the adult
+insects are to be found. They lay their eggs at some period during the
+rainy season, possibly towards the end. In October and November the
+eggs have developed into pupæ, and it is these that the natives eat;
+but apparently the adult insects, or some of them, still survive at
+this time and are to be seen and heard. By about December the last of
+the adult insects die out and the grubs have not yet attained the adult
+form, so that there is a period during which no adult insects are
+either seen or heard. It is probable that the new generation makes its
+first appearance in adult form as soon as the first rains of the rainy
+season begin.
+
+The essential point, on which we can base an interpretation of the
+myth, is that the cicada is not seen or heard during the fine weather
+(December to March). It probably, as stated above, makes its
+reappearance just at the period of the stormy weather that ushers in
+the rainy season. Similarly, it does not disappear until after the end
+of the stormy period of the Kimil season. (I have certainly heard and
+seen the insect in October, and to the best of my recollection in
+November also.) Thus the cicada is definitely associated with the part
+of the year including the rainy season and the two stormy periods at
+its beginning and end. I believe that this is the fundamental fact that
+explains the Andamanese beliefs about the connection of the insect with
+the weather.
+
+I was told of a ceremony that was held at the end of the Kimil season
+in the Akar-Bale tribe (and possibly in other tribes also) the purpose
+of which was said to be to ensure fine weather for some months and
+which is called “Killing the cicada.” The ceremony consists of doing
+the very thing that is believed to produce storms, viz., making a noise
+while the cicada is singing in the evening. As soon as the cicadæ begin
+to sing all the persons in camp make as much noise as they can by
+banging bamboos on the ground, striking the sounding-board, or
+hammering on the sides of canoes, thus making just the kinds of noise
+that are said to be most disliked by the cicada. According to the
+statement of my informant this ceremony results in “killing” all the
+cicadæ so that they are not heard again for many weeks, and while this
+silence lasts fine weather is assured. The meaning of this little
+ceremony is plain when we recall the fact that though the digging up of
+yams and the cutting down of the Caryota palm anger Biliku and result
+in storms yet sufficient persistence in these actions, and therefore in
+any others that are displeasing to Biliku, results in dispelling the
+bad weather. Thus it is seen that although the matter is a little more
+complicated, yet the belief in the connection of the cicada with Biliku
+and with bad weather can be explained on exactly the same lines as the
+beliefs about bees’-wax and vegetable foods. The fact that the same
+explanation can be given of the three most important prohibitions
+connected with Biliku gives a high degree of probability to the
+interpretation here offered. These three beliefs are the only ones of
+real importance. I am unable to explain the connection of Biliku with
+the species of fish, the bird and the two kinds of wood mentioned on
+page 156. In the North Andaman there is a definite association between
+Biliku and spiders, the generic name for “spider” being biliku. I
+believe that this could be explained on the same basis as the
+connection with the cicada, i.e., through the connection of spiders
+with the changes of the seasons, but as I unfortunately neglected to
+take note of the habits of the spiders of the Andamans I cannot speak
+with any certainty and therefore prefer not to enter into a discussion
+of the subject [214].
+
+The explanation that I have to offer of these beliefs relating to
+Biliku and to the things that offend her is that they are simply the
+statement in a special form of observable facts of nature. The rainy
+season comes to an end, the wind becomes variable, yams and other
+vegetable products begin to ripen and are used for food, and stormy
+weather comes, some years bringing cyclones of exceptional violence.
+Then follows a period of steady N.E. winds with fine weather and
+abundance of vegetable foods, during which the noise of the cicada is
+not to be heard. Then comes the honey season, when everyone is busy
+collecting honey and melting bees’-wax. The wind becomes very variable,
+storms come, the fine weather comes to an end and the rainy season
+begins again. These facts affect the feelings of the Andaman Islander
+and he expresses his impressions by regarding all these happenings as
+if they were the actions of an anthropomorphic being. The vegetable
+products, the cicada, and the honey all belong to Biliku. When the yams
+are dug up she is angry, or in other words, storms occur; a storm is
+the anger of Biliku. The cessation of the song of the cicada removes
+one of the possible causes of the anger of Biliku, and therefore marks
+the period of fine weather. That anger appears once more when the
+natives busy themselves with melting bees’-wax.
+
+It may be noted that these beliefs about Biliku give an expression of
+the social value of honey and bees’-wax and of vegetable foods such as
+yams. The Andaman Islands provide few fruits containing natural sugar.
+Yet the natives are inordinately fond of sweet things; they greatly
+enjoy the sugar that they now obtain from the Settlement of Port Blair.
+Honey, which was almost their only sweet food in former times, was
+therefore very greatly valued. Apart from the yams and other foods
+associated with Biliku there are very few productions of the Andamans
+containing starch in a palatable form. To the native who has been
+living during the rainy season almost entirely on meat and fish, the
+starchy foods of the stormy season (yams, Caryota, etc.) are of great
+value, and they are very highly prized. Thus the foods associated with
+Biliku all have a high value.
+
+We all know how the value of an object is increased if, in order to
+obtain it, we have to make some considerable effort or sacrifice, or
+put ourselves in danger of some evil. Reversing this mental process,
+the Andaman Islander expresses his sense of the value of honey and yams
+by the statement that to obtain them he must be prepared to risk the
+anger of Biliku with its results. It was shown in the last chapter that
+the value of food in general is expressed in the belief that all food
+is more or less dangerous to eat, and that ritual precautions must be
+observed if the danger is to be avoided. Here in the Biliku myth, we
+have a further example of the same sort of mental process, in relation
+not to all foods in general but to a few foods of special value. Yet
+another example may be given. Roast pork is highly relished by the
+natives, and they believe that the roasting of pork offends certain
+spirits of the sky and is therefore dangerous [215].
+
+Returning now to the subject of Biliku as the sender of cyclones, it is
+necessary for the argument, even at the risk of repetition, to show (1)
+that this is by far the most important attribute of Biliku, and (2)
+that it follows immediately from her connection with the N.E. monsoon.
+
+Taking the second point first, we may note, in the first place, that
+while Tarai is associated with the steady S.W. wind which blows with
+very little variation for months at a time, Biliku is associated with
+the variable winds of the hot season. Now a characteristic of a
+cyclonic storm is the way in which the wind veers from one quarter to
+another. Further, as most of the cyclones that cross the Andamans
+travel from the south-east in a north-westerly direction, and the
+movement of the cyclone is in a counter-clockwise direction, the first
+wind of a cyclonic storm when it strikes the islands comes from the
+north-east. This may be seen from the accompanying diagram. It is only
+at the very end of the storm, when the storm centre has passed, that
+the wind blows from the south-west. Thus it is clear that the
+association of cyclones with Biliku and not with Tarai is determined by
+the nature of the phenomena which the Biliku-Tarai myth sets out to
+explain.
+
+That the most important attribute of Biliku is her connection with the
+cyclones is evident when we consider the legends in which she is
+mentioned. In most of the legends in which her name occurs [216] she is
+spoken of as being angry with the ancestors, and we know that a cyclone
+and the anger of Biliku are, for the Andaman Islander, one and the same
+thing. In some of the stories mention is made of a great storm that
+Biliku sent which nearly destroyed the world. All through the legends
+we find her pictured as a being whose anger is to be feared, who has
+the power to destroy human life and human property. Tarai is never
+mentioned in this way, for the rains of the south-west monsoon
+themselves have no such power.
+
+We are now in a position to compare the characters of Biliku and Tarai
+and explain their relative positions in the myth. The reason for the
+preponderance of Biliku lies in the fact that it is she who sends
+cyclones, while Tarai sends nothing more than heavy showers of rain.
+Tarai is never responsible for the destruction of life and property,
+whereas Biliku is. Thus the preponderance of Biliku follows from the
+essentials of the myth. Secondly, Tarai is constant, ever the same,
+whereas Biliku is changeable. The rainy season of one year is exactly
+like that of another, and during the time it lasts the weather is
+consistent throughout. On the contrary, one year the Biliku season
+brings a terrific storm, and another year it is much less violent,
+while, from day to day during certain parts of the Biliku season the
+weather is unsettled, so that you cannot tell what the morrow will
+bring with it. It is obvious that this uncertainty about the actions of
+Biliku, the fact that she cannot altogether be reckoned with, would
+tend to make her of greater importance in the eyes of the Andamanese
+than her consort Tarai.
+
+Let us now consider the question of the sex of Biliku. On this matter
+there is a lack of agreement. In the North Andaman Tarai is declared to
+be male and Biliku female. It can readily be shown that this results
+from the position of Biliku and Tarai as regulating the seasons. Tarai
+rules over the rainy season, in which the chief food is the flesh of
+animals of the land and of the sea; it is the business of men to
+provide flesh-food. On the contrary Biliku rules over the seasons in
+which the chief foods are vegetable products of different kinds; it is
+the business of women to provide such foods. It is only men who go out
+hunting for pigs or turtle or who harpoon or shoot fish, and it is
+always the men who attend to the first part of the cooking of pig,
+turtle and dugong; it is the women who dig up the yams and collect the
+fruits and seeds, and it is the women also who cook them. There is a
+very real sense, then, in which flesh foods may be called the foods of
+men, and vegetable foods may be called the foods of women, and, since
+flesh foods are the foods of Tarai and vegetable foods are the foods of
+Biliku, there is a sound reason for calling Tarai male and Biliku
+female.
+
+This way of thinking of Biliku as female is in harmony with her
+character as outlined above. Women (in the Andamans) are notoriously
+uncertain, changeable creatures. You can always reckon fairly well what
+a man will do, but not so with a woman. Moreover, when the Andaman
+Islander wishes to picture to himself a pair of closely associated
+beings, it is natural that he should compare them to the most closely
+associated couple with which he is familiar,—husband and wife. This
+tendency leads him to make the sun and moon man and wife in many of his
+legends, and it may well be expected to have its influence on the
+Biliku myth also.
+
+In the South Andaman however, both Puluga and Daria are said to be
+male. It can be shown that this view is also appropriate in its way.
+The Akar-Bale say that Puluga and Daria were once friends, but have
+quarrelled and now live at opposite ends of the earth and are
+perpetually renewing their quarrel. Daria has things to himself for a
+few months (the S.W. monsoon) and sends his wind; then Puluga makes an
+attack on him; some weeks of unsettled weather ensue while they are
+fighting, until Daria is beaten and Puluga takes over the control of
+the weather and sends the N.E. wind. By and by, however, Daria shows
+himself again and there is another quarrel, with its unsettled and
+stormy weather, which ends in the defeat of Puluga and the
+reinstatement for a period of Daria. Even the bald language in which it
+is stated does not quite hide the poetical grandeur of this conception
+of the world as the arena of two battling giants in a never-ending
+quarrel. Those who have lived through a tropical cyclone with its wind
+changing from one quarter to another, its consummate violence, its
+sudden onslaught, its pause (that is felt to be merely a pause) as the
+centre of the disturbance reaches and passes you, and then its sudden
+renewal of the mad combat with the wind coming now from the opposite
+quarter, cannot but recognize in the Akar-Bale myth a successful
+attempt to describe such a storm in figurative language.
+
+Such a combat could only be pictured by the Andamanese as taking place
+between two men, and the myth in this form therefore necessarily
+involves the belief that both Puluga and Daria are male. It is evident,
+therefore, that this view has some justification, that it does enable
+the Andaman Islander to express the feelings and impressions evoked in
+him by the phenomena of the weather. I venture to think, however, that
+the southern myth is not quite so satisfactory as the northern one,
+does not translate quite so well all the different features of the
+natural phenomena with which it deals [217].
+
+A most important element of the myth is the connection of Biliku
+(Puluga) with fire. In all the tribes there are legends that represent
+Biliku as the first possessor of fire, which was, according to some
+versions, given by her to the ancestors, and according to others stolen
+from her by one of them. There can be no doubt that these legends owe
+their origin to the connection between Biliku the storm-sender and
+lightning.
+
+There are several different beliefs about the lightning. According to
+one of these the lightning (Ele) and the thunder (Korude) are persons,
+who produce the phenomena of the same name. Another belief is that
+thunder and lightning are produced by Biliku and Tarai. On the whole,
+it would seem that the latter belief is the one which is most
+frequently present to the minds of the natives. A man seeing lightning
+in the sky will say, according to the season, the prevailing wind,
+etc., Biliku čatobom, or Tarai čatobom; “Biliku (or Tarai) is at work.”
+There are different accounts, however, of the way in which Biliku makes
+the lightning. One belief is that it is a fire-brand flung by her
+through the sky; a second is that it is a mother-of-pearl shell (be)
+similarly flung; yet a third statement is that she produces the
+lightning by striking a pearl shell (be) on a red stone.
+
+There is no doubt that the Andamanese regard lightning as fire; the
+charring of trees struck by it is sufficient to convince them of this.
+Thus lightning and the sun are the only two natural fires that they
+know. (With the relation of Biliku to the sun I shall deal later.) As
+the wielder of lightning Biliku thus becomes the possessor of fire. The
+simplest of the different beliefs, the one following immediately from
+the natural phenomena, would be, therefore, that which makes the
+lightning a fire-brand. This is, on the whole, the one that is most
+usually expressed, at any rate in the South Andaman.
+
+The explanation of lightning as a shell depends not only upon the
+pearly lustre of this kind of shell, but also on other features of it.
+The shell in question (be) is used by women alone, and its use is
+confined to slicing yams and other vegetables in preparing them for
+food. Its association with Biliku therefore follows from the view of
+Biliku as female and as being especially associated with yams and other
+vegetable foods. Granting this fundamental connection, then the
+brightness of the shell, its keen edge and the way in which it can be
+made to skim through the air, will explain the statement that lightning
+is just such a shell thrown by Biliku. In the South Andaman, where
+Puluga is regarded as male, this belief about the pearl shell would be
+out of harmony with the rest of the myth, and, as we should expect, it
+is not found. However, the Aka-Bea word for lightning (be-iŋa, the -iŋa
+or -ŋa being a suffix) suggests that they may have had a similar belief
+in the past [218].
+
+In the North Andaman the two views of lightning as a fire-brand and as
+a shell are both held, because they both, in different ways, fit in
+well with the rest of the myth. There is yet a third view in which
+these two contradictory beliefs are, as it were, reconciled. This is
+that Biliku produces lightning by striking a pearl shell against a red
+stone.
+
+In the North Andaman the action of throwing a shell or a fire-brand is
+regarded as typical of Biliku; this is the way in which she is pictured
+by the native, and in which she would doubtless be portrayed if the
+Andamanese had a pictorial art. In the dance described in an earlier
+chapter, in which the dancer gave representations of various mythical
+beings, Biliku was represented by the dancer holding a shell in his
+hand and dancing round threatening to throw the shell at the
+spectators.
+
+The representation of Biliku or Puluga as throwing her lightning in the
+form of a fire-brand or a shell appears in several of the legends of
+the origin of fire, and in particular in the legend of which different
+versions are found in all parts of the islands that tells how the
+kingfisher stole fire from Biliku and how the latter flung a fire-brand
+or a shell at the thief.
+
+The most usual form of the fire legend, and the only one that I ever
+heard, is that in which the fire is stolen. Mr Man has recorded a
+version in which Puluga is represented as giving the fire to the
+ancestors. Considerable importance attaches to this motive of the story
+as it reveals to us the way in which the Andamanese usually think of
+Biliku and of their own relation to her. She is not, so far as these
+stories go, a benefactress who by the invention of fire has earned the
+gratitude of men, but rather a person with whom the human society, both
+in the time of the ancestors and at the present day, is in a condition
+of opposition. Though Biliku had fire, yet she kept it for herself and
+it was only obtained from her by stealth. She was angry when her fire
+was stolen and tried to punish the offender.
+
+This opposition between Biliku and the ancestors is shown in other
+legends. In some of the stories she is represented not as living with
+the ancestors, but as living on one side of a narrow strait while the
+ancestors lived on the other, as in the Akar-Bale and A-Pučikwar
+legends. She is thus separated from the ancestors in the minds of the
+natives. In the Aka-Kede legend the ancestors eat the foods that Bilika
+regards as specially belonging to her, and she kills them. As a result
+the ancestors join together and kill Bilika. In the Akar-Bale version
+something of the same sort appears; Puluga is always getting angry with
+the ancestors because they eat vegetable foods, and in his anger he
+destroys their huts and other property (as a cyclone does, and as an
+Andaman Islander is sometimes known to do in a fit of temper); at last
+the ancestors send him away out of the world. In the A-Pučikwar legend
+Bilik goes away from the world in anger because the ancestors steal his
+fire. In the Aka-J̌eru version Biliku eats up all the food of the
+ancestors, and so they go away and leave her; she then destroys them
+with her shells (lightning) and finally perishes in an attempt to cross
+the sea on a stone. All these legends seem to express much the same
+thing in different ways, namely the existence of a condition of
+hostility between Biliku and human beings, based on the fact that the
+latter venture to make use of the things (yams, etc.) that Biliku
+regards as peculiarly her property. There can be no doubt that this is
+the usual way in which the Andamanese conceive the relation between
+Biliku and the ancestors, and therefore, since the ancestors represent
+the society in its beginnings, between Biliku and themselves. This
+relation is quite in agreement with what we have seen to be the
+essential basis of the myth. The natives obtain from the N.E. monsoon
+things highly valued, such as yams and honey, but they are given as it
+were grudgingly after a period of storms, and finally taken away in
+another period of storms.
+
+This view of Biliku as hostile to mankind is not, however, absolutely
+universal if we are to accept Mr Man’s account of the myths of the
+South Andaman. Mr Man describes Puluga as the creator of the world and
+the beneficent ruler of mankind. Although I could not find a native who
+held exactly the same views about Puluga as those that Mr Man
+represents as being the views commonly held in the tribes he studied
+(Aka-Bea and A-Pučikwar), yet there is no doubt that at times, and more
+particularly in the southern tribes, the natives do regard Puluga as
+the benefactor and even the creator of the human race [219].
+
+The representation of Biliku as hostile to mankind depends upon her
+position as the angry storm-sender, and this, as the legends show, does
+seem to be the more usual way of regarding her. But there is another
+and contrary aspect of Biliku. The revolution of the seasons brings to
+the Andamanese new supplies of relished foods,—the grubs of the Kimil
+season, the yams and honey of the cool and hot seasons. One of the
+Andamanese names for the season of the N.E. monsoon means “the season
+of abundance.” Therefore Biliku, as the personification of this season,
+is herself the giver of good things. This aspect finds a partial
+expression in the legends. Biliku is regarded as having created or
+discovered the use of all the natural productions associated with her.
+(In one legend it is Pe̱rǰido, the son of Biliku, who discovers honey
+with his mother’s help.) She thus occupies a position similar to that
+of the other ancestors, towards whom the men of the present feel
+grateful for the benefits they have bestowed on mankind. This view of
+Biliku as benefactress is often extended in the North Andaman to the
+belief that it was she who invented all the arts now practised by
+women, and there are traces of a belief that it was her son Pe̱rǰido who
+was similarly responsible for the arts practised by men.
+
+This view of Biliku as a benefactress, although it conflicts to some
+extent with the view of her as on the whole hostile to mankind, yet,
+since it springs from the essential basis of the myth, cannot be
+overlooked. During the stormy season the Andaman Islander may well
+forget every aspect of Biliku save that she is responsible for the
+storms of which he goes in fear, but during the fine weather of the
+N.E. monsoon, when there is no longer any fear of a violent storm and
+when he is enjoying an abundance of the good things that he regards as
+especially belonging to Biliku, his feeling towards her must be of a
+very different nature; she is then the being who gives him the fine
+weather, the relished foods. Thus, contrary though they be, these two
+aspects of Biliku are both integral parts of the myth.
+
+But Biliku is also the first possessor of fire, and we have seen that
+fire is regarded by the Andamanese as the source of the life of
+society, and therefore, in a way, of all life. Biliku as the source
+from which comes the fire is also the source of life. This view of
+Biliku is certainly to be found in all parts of the islands, though it
+has been developed more in the South than in the North. Biliku thus
+becomes responsible for the beginning of the society, and since the
+whole universe centres in the society, of the whole universe. She
+becomes the being who created or arranged the order in which men live.
+
+For the honour of this position Biliku has, however, a competitor.
+Besides the lightning there is another natural source of fire, the sun.
+We find therefore two different (and contrary) developments of the myth
+of the beginning of the world. In one of these the sun is associated
+with Biliku, is regarded as belonging to her or made by her. For
+instance, in an Aka-Kede legend, she is stated to have made the sun by
+throwing a flaming brand into the sky. By this means Biliku becomes the
+sole source of fire and therefore of life. This is the position that
+Puluga occupies in the versions of the legends recorded by Mr Man. In
+those legends Puluga gives fire to the first human beings by making the
+sun come down to earth and ignite a pile of wood. The alternative
+development makes the sun independent of Biliku and it is then the sun,
+or a mythical person associated directly with the sun, who becomes the
+maker of the world, the source of life. Unfortunately, I did not obtain
+much detailed information about this development of the myth. In the
+North Andaman the being named Čara is associated with the sun and with
+fine weather, and is certainly sometimes regarded as the maker of the
+world. In the South Andaman it is Tomo who is associated with the sun.
+Men and women, when they die, go to live with Tomo in the sky. It is
+Tomo who is responsible for all things being as they are. He was the
+first being; it was he who arranged the order of nature; and similarly
+it was he who created the social order, so that a question as to why
+some custom is observed is often answered by saying that it was Tomo
+who made it so. In Mr Man’s account Tomo is degraded to the position of
+being merely the first man made by Puluga, but in the accounts that
+were given to me by the natives of the Akar-Bale and A-Pučikwar tribes
+Tomo was a rival of Puluga; sometimes one and sometimes the other was
+spoken of as being the supreme maker of all things. An Akar-Bale man of
+very high intelligence, who had been educated as a Christian, in trying
+to explain to me statements about Tomo made by another Akar-Bale who
+was regarded as an authority on the legends of his tribe, said that
+Tomo was the same thing to the Akar-Bale that God is to the Christian.
+When I asked him if it was not rather Puluga who was the Andaman
+equivalent of God, he said that some people might think so, but that
+according to the old man to whom I was talking it was Tomo and not
+Puluga who occupied the position [220].
+
+There is only one more point that needs to be discussed, and that is
+the connection of Biliku with the spirits. It is clear that Biliku and
+Tarai must be distinguished from the spirits (Lau), yet at the same
+time Biliku is brought into relation with the spirits by the existence
+of two alternative explanations of bad weather. One of the explanations
+is that storms are due to Biliku, while the other is that they are due
+to the spirits, particularly the spirits of the sea. Both these
+beliefs, contradictory as they seem, are held by the Andamanese. The
+connection of the spirits with the weather is due to the fact that the
+weather is a thing that can limit the activity of the society, and we
+saw in the last chapter that there is a tendency to associate with the
+spirits of the dead all things that in any way interfere with the
+smooth progress of social life. When it is said that a storm can be
+stopped by swishing arrows in the sea, or by placing in the sea a piece
+of Anadendron creeper, it is to the spirits of the sea, who are afraid
+of arrows and of the Anadendron, that the storm is attributed, and not
+to Biliku.
+
+In the A-Pučikwar tribe I found an association of Bilik with the
+spirits. One man of this tribe (a medicine-man or dreamer) stated that
+the Bilik are a distinct class of spirits, distinct from the Lau and
+the J̌urua, yet similar to them. It is the Bilik who control the
+weather. Certain men, when they die, become not Lau or J̌urua, but
+Bilik. Thus in one of his dreams that he related to me he met and
+conversed with the spirit of a deceased friend whom he spoke of as
+Boičo Bilik, Boičo having been his name when he was alive. A
+medicine-man is able to control the weather through his communication
+with the Bilik in dreams. In this tribe therefore we find a doctrine
+according to which Bilik is not the name of a single being but of a
+class of beings similar in essentials to the other two classes of
+spirits. It seemed to me possible that these beliefs are a
+comparatively late introduction by some of the medicine-men of the
+tribe. The Boičo about whom my informant Tora dreamed seemed to have
+had some part in the development of the doctrine. This does not,
+however, in the least detract from its value as affording us an insight
+into the beliefs of the Andamanese.
+
+These beliefs clearly spring from an attempt to distinguish from one
+another the different northerly and easterly winds, each of the
+recognizable winds being regarded as a separate person, and from the
+merging together of the two contrary beliefs in the weather as
+regulated by spirits and by Bilik and Teria. The general system of
+beliefs about spirits as being responsible for all things that may
+affect human well-being inevitably leads to the notion that the weather
+is controlled by the spirits, and this is implied also in the belief
+that a medicine-man (whose power is derived from contact with the
+spirits) is also able to influence the weather to some extent. This
+doctrine, however, conflicts with the view of the weather and the
+seasons as controlled by Biliku and Tarai, who are not spirits but
+personifications of natural phenomena. It is perhaps this conflict
+between doctrines, both of them important and indeed necessary, that
+has led to the elaboration of the peculiar beliefs met with in the
+A-Pučikwar tribe.
+
+I have dealt with most of the more important details of the
+Biliku-Tarai myth, and have tried to show that the whole myth is an
+expression of the social value of the phenomena of the weather and the
+seasons. These phenomena affect the social life in certain definite
+ways and thereby become the objects of certain sentiments; these
+sentiments are expressed in the legends. Biliku and Tarai are
+personifications of the N.E. and S.W. monsoons; as such they are
+responsible for the weather; feelings awakened by the weather are
+therefore referred to Biliku and Tarai; thus the fear of a cyclone at
+certain periods of the year is expressed as a fear of the anger of
+Biliku. Since the time when men go in fear of storms is also the time
+when they are just beginning to dig up yams and eat them, the myth
+connects the anger of Biliku with the digging up of yams, and similarly
+in the cases of honey and the cicada. As Biliku is associated with
+vegetable foods, and these are things with which women chiefly have to
+do, Biliku (in the North Andaman) is regarded as female; Tarai, being
+associated with flesh foods, is male; the two are therefore conceived
+as wife and husband. As the maker of storms Biliku is responsible for
+the lightning and is therefore possessed of fire. She thus comes to be
+regarded as the first possessor of fire. This gives rise to stories of
+how the ancestors obtained their fire from Biliku, and as she is
+generally regarded as being hostile rather than friendly towards
+mankind, the stories relate how the fire was stolen from her. But
+besides being the maker of storms Biliku is also the dispenser of the
+good things of the season of the N.E. monsoon and when this aspect of
+the procession of the seasons is prominent before their minds the
+natives think of Biliku as a benefactress of mankind. As she is the
+possessor of fire, and as fire is the source of the life of the
+society, she comes to be regarded as herself the source of life, though
+there is an alternative myth that gives this position to a being
+associated with the sun.
+
+Such is a brief outline of the explanation that I have tried to
+demonstrate. It may be objected that there are a few important details
+and several minor details that I have not explained. To that extent my
+explanation is incomplete, but I hope that I have given sufficient
+evidence for it to justify us in using it as an integral part of the
+explanation of the meaning and function of the Andaman mythology in
+general.
+
+It is not necessary, for the purpose of this chapter, to examine one by
+one all the legends recorded. Indeed, there are many details of the
+Andaman mythology that I cannot explain, owing simply, I believe, to my
+lack of insight into the ways of thought of the natives. The examples
+already considered are sufficient for the argument. If the
+interpretations given of these be correct we can base on them certain
+general conclusions.
+
+I have explained some of the more important of the legends as being
+expressions or statements of the social value of natural phenomena. The
+alternation of day and night, for example, affects the life of the
+society in a certain definite manner and this gives rise to a certain
+way of thinking and feeling about the phenomenon in question. These
+thoughts and feelings, however, remain vague and without fixity until
+they are formulated and expressed either in the form of some definite
+rule of behaviour, such as the prohibition against noise while the
+cicada is singing, or in some concrete statement, such as that afforded
+by the legend of the origin of night. Similarly the legends relating to
+the origin of fire or the saving of the fire during the flood serve to
+give definite and permanent form to the vague feelings that result from
+the way in which the possession of fire affects the social life.
+Finally, I have tried to show that the myths relating to Biliku and
+Tarai are nothing but the expression in concrete form of the ideas and
+feelings that result from the effects of the weather and the seasons on
+the life of the Andaman Islanders. From these examples I now propose to
+draw a general conclusion. All the legends, I wish to maintain, are
+simply the expression in concrete form of the feelings and ideas
+aroused by things of all kinds as the result of the way in which these
+things affect the moral and social life of the Andaman Islanders. In
+other words the legends have for their function to express the social
+values of different objects,—to express in general the system of social
+values that is characteristic of the Andaman social organisation. To
+justify this general statement it will be necessary to show how it
+comes about that these representations are expressed in the form of
+myths and legends dealing with the ancestors and with such
+anthropomorphic beings as Biliku and Tarai.
+
+Throughout the myths we meet with examples of what I have called the
+personification of natural phenomena. It is now necessary to give a
+more exact definition of this term. By it I mean the association of a
+natural phenomenon with the idea of a person in such a way that the
+characteristics of the phenomenon may be regarded as though they were
+actions or characteristics of the person. The simplest form is that in
+which the phenomenon itself is spoken of and thought of as if it were
+an actual person. Thus the sun and the moon are spoken of as Lady Sun
+and Sir Moon. Similarly, in the North Andaman, the night is personified
+and is called Lady Night (Mimi Bat). In many cases of personification
+however, while the person may or may not possess the same name as the
+phenomenon, the latter is said to be produced by the former. Thus, in
+the North Andaman, Ele is the name of the lightning, and Ele is spoken
+of as a person; yet, if we enquire further, we are told that Ele (the
+person) produces the lightning by shaking his leg. A somewhat similar
+case is that of Biliku and Tarai. These two beings are said to produce
+the winds that blow from the different quarters of the compass. But
+when we enquire as to the names of the winds, we find that in the South
+Andaman (A-Pučikwar tribe) the S.W. wind is called Teria, and the other
+winds are all called Bilik. Thus the name of the person is also used as
+the name of the phenomenon of which he is (in the phraseology here
+used) the personification. In the North Andaman we find a difference,
+the winds being called “the Biliku wind” and “the Tarai wind.” It is
+necessary to insist on this translation of the native Biliku bo̱to and
+Tarai bo̱to. We should expect, if Biliku were simply a person who
+produced the winds, that the latter would be called “the wind of
+Biliku,” a possessive form (Biliku ičo bo̱to) being used, but this is
+not so, and the phrase habitually used can only be properly translated
+“the Biliku wind” just as we might say “the north wind.” Thus, even in
+the North Andaman Biliku and Tarai are used as the names of the two
+chief winds.
+
+In all these cases, sun and moon, Biliku and Tarai, etc., I propose to
+use the term personification, as being the most convenient and not
+liable to be misunderstood after having been carefully defined. We have
+now to seek an explanation of this process of personification. A great
+deal has been written on the subject of personification in mythology,
+and it is therefore not without diffidence that I venture to put
+forward an explanation which can only be very briefly stated in this
+place and would require for its full exhibition a lengthy psychological
+explanation.
+
+An insight into the process of personification is afforded by
+considering our own use of figurative language. We talk of the angry
+storm, the raging sea. In such cases we allow ourselves for a moment to
+regard the natural phenomenon as if it were a person or the action of a
+person, and we do not even trouble distinctly to express the “as if.”
+We use such phrases in order to attain a more forcible expression of
+our thoughts and feelings. How is it that such expressions succeed in
+the purpose for which they are used?
+
+The reason would seem to be that our knowledge and understanding of
+persons is much more intimate than our knowledge of things. The fact
+that we are able, by the action of sympathy, to know what persons with
+whom we are in contact are feeling, gives us an understanding of them
+that we can never reach with inanimate objects.
+
+In all human society the most important elements of the experience of
+the individual are due to his relations with other persons. In the
+development of the emotional life of the child, persons intervene at
+every turn, and there is thus built up a system of sentiments and
+representations which forms the very foundation of the individual’s
+affective life. In other words the first organised experience that the
+individual attains is all connected with persons and their relations to
+himself. This early experience provides a basis on which we may and do
+organise later experiences. The perception of the leaping waves and
+lashing spray of a sea in tempest arouses in us a vague emotional
+reaction, but it is an experience that we have not learned to formulate
+exactly. The feeling awakened in us is, so to speak, unclassified,
+there is no exact word by which we can express it. We therefore fall
+back upon that system of affective experiences that have been
+classified, and for which we do have adequate words, and we apply the
+word “angry” to the scene before us. At the utterance of the word, with
+its appeal to infantile memories and to the long series of experiences
+that have been associated with it, the emotion becomes more definite,
+if not more intense. We are thus enabled to classify our present
+experience, to associate it with past experiences that have been
+arranged in our minds in an organised system, and to find a place for
+it in that system.
+
+Applying this to the case of the myths we must first of all note that
+the Andaman Islander has no interest in nature save in so far as it
+directly affects the social life. Scientific and artistic interest in
+nature are products of civilisation. The Andaman Islander has no desire
+to understand the processes of nature as a scientist would wish to do,
+nor has he any conception of nature as a subject of esthetic
+contemplation. Natural phenomena affect him immediately by their
+influence on his own life and on the life of his fellows, and are
+thereby the source of a number of emotional experiences. In order to
+express these he has to make use of that part of his own experience
+that is already thoroughly organised, namely, that relating to the
+actions of one person as affecting another or as affecting the society.
+Only in this way is he able to organise his experiences arising from
+the processes of nature, to classify and render definite the vague
+impressions that are aroused in him. He interprets nature in terms of
+the world with which he is most familiar, the world of persons, being
+enabled to do so by the presence within him of a regulated and definite
+body of experience which he has derived from his relations with persons
+from the time of his first awakening to the consciousness of the
+external world.
+
+There is a parallelism here, as in many other matters, between the
+psychological development of the individual and that of the race. The
+fundamental need for the child is to learn to accommodate himself to
+his environment. In this environment by far the most important objects
+are persons—parents and other children—and the first business of the
+growing child is to learn to adapt his actions to the requirements of
+this intercourse with persons. This is so overwhelmingly important that
+the other need (of adapting himself to inanimate objects) is quite
+overshadowed by it. The child has to make experiments and observations
+upon persons, to learn how they will act. He meets with such a
+phenomenon as anger, for example, the anger of a parent, or of another
+child, and by means of a succession of experiences he comes to a
+satisfactory understanding of this particular thing, and what it means
+with reference to himself and his actions. This notion of the anger of
+a parent becomes the nucleus around which is organised the experience
+of similar phenomena. In play or sometimes in earnest, the child treats
+all sorts of inanimate objects and events connected with them as if
+they were persons or the actions of persons. By this means, and by this
+means alone, he is able to exercise himself in his newly acquired
+experience and to extend and organise it yet further.
+
+In the history of the race the development of society depends upon the
+organisation of personal relations. The task of man in primitive
+society is therefore similar to the task of the child. The needs of his
+life compel him above everything else to devote himself to organising
+that part of his experience that relates to the actions of persons upon
+one another; all else is subordinated to this supreme need; and just as
+the child organises and develops his experience by treating inanimate
+objects as if they were persons in such a way that we can hardly tell
+if he is in play or in earnest, so primitive man, in exactly the same
+way, organises and develops his social experience by conceiving the
+whole universe as if it were the interaction of personal forces.
+
+This explanation of the nature of personification helps us to
+understand some of the Andamanese beliefs. Natural phenomena such as
+the alternation of day and night, the changes of the moon, the
+procession of the seasons, and variations of the weather, have
+important effects on the welfare of the society. The latter, in so far
+as it is regulated from within, depends on the adaptation of persons to
+one another. Men must learn to live in harmony, to sacrifice their own
+desires at times to the needs of others, to avoid occasions of giving
+offence, and not readily to give way to anger when offence is given.
+The Andaman Islander represents this fundamental law of the society as
+though it were the fundamental law of the whole universe. When any evil
+befalls the society it is as though some personal power were in
+question, as though some one were angry at some offence. Thus the moon
+and Biliku are represented as persons who can be offended and whose
+anger has unpleasant results. Conversely when all goes well it is
+because there is harmony or solidarity between men and the nature
+beings which affect men’s lives. In a word, the forces with which the
+Andaman Islander is most familiar as affecting his welfare are those of
+solidarity and opposition; it is solidarity that maintains the harmony
+of social life, opposition that destroys it. The forces of nature in so
+far as they affect the society are therefore represented as being of
+the same nature; there can be either solidarity or opposition between
+men and nature; the former leads to well-being, the latter to
+misfortune.
+
+Thus the personification of natural phenomena is one of the methods by
+which the Andaman Islander projects into the world of nature the moral
+forces that he experiences in the society. The process is essentially
+similar to that described in the last chapter in connection with the
+ceremonial, save that there the forces we were considering were largely
+impersonal. Perhaps, rather than speaking of it as a projection of
+moral forces into nature, we should regard it as a process of bringing
+within the circle of the social life those aspects of nature that are
+of importance to the well-being of the society, making the moon and the
+monsoons a part of the social order and therefore subject to the same
+moral forces that have sway therein.
+
+The personification of natural phenomena is not, however, the only
+method by which their social value can be expressed. The Akar-Bale
+legend of the origin of day and night, as we saw at the beginning of
+the chapter, expresses the social value of the alternation of light and
+darkness by means of a story of how it originated in the time of the
+ancestors. If we seek to understand all that this legend means we must
+ask why the Andaman Islanders believe in the existence of the
+ancestors, and why they attribute to them the characteristics that are
+exhibited in the stories they tell about them. The ground of the belief
+in the ancestors is to be found in the existence of a sentiment
+fundamental in all human society, which I shall call the feeling of
+tradition. When an Andaman Islander is asked the question “Why do you
+do so and so?” he very frequently replies “Because our fathers did so
+before us.” This answer expresses in its simplest form the feeling of
+tradition. In all his actions, in the way he obtains and cooks his
+food, in the way in which he makes his various implements and weapons,
+in the moral and ritual customs that he is required to observe, the
+native acts in accordance with tradition. If he should ever feel
+inclined to deviate from it he finds himself in conflict with a
+powerful compulsive force. In tradition, therefore, the individual is
+aware of a force stronger than himself, to which he must submit whether
+he will or not. Further, he is aware that the power which he possesses,
+as a member of the society, whereby he is able to face the hostile or
+at best indifferent forces of nature and provide himself with food and
+maintain himself in security and happiness, is not simply a product of
+his own personality, but is derived by him from the past. Towards this
+past, therefore, on which his own life so obviously depends, he feels a
+grateful dependence. So long as he acts in conformity with tradition he
+can enjoy safety and happiness, because he is relying on something much
+greater than his own qualities of mind and body.
+
+To put the matter in a few words, the individual finds himself in
+relation with an ordered system—the social order—to which he has to
+adapt himself. The two chief moments in his affective attitude towards
+that order are his sense of his own dependence upon it and of the need
+of conforming to its requirements in his actions. It is this,—his sense
+of his own relation to the social order,—that the Andaman Islander
+expresses in the legends about the ancestors, which recount how that
+order came into existence as the result of actions of anthropomorphic
+beings.
+
+Some of the legends recount the invention of weapons or implements or
+the discovery of the uses of natural objects. In one of the North
+Andaman stories it is said that all the weapons and implements now used
+by men were invented by the first man, whose name, J̌utpu, probably
+means “alone,” i.e., the man who was at first by himself. This first
+man made himself a wife from the nest of the white ant. The regulated
+society of the ants, and the numerous population that a nest contains,
+give this story its symbolic meaning.
+
+Besides what may be called general culture legends, of which the story
+of J̌utpu is an example, there are several special culture legends
+relating to various discoveries and inventions, such as the tale of how
+the use of yams for food was first discovered, or that which tells how
+the monitor lizard discovered quartz and scarified himself with it. By
+means of these legends the Andaman Islander expresses his sense of his
+own dependence on the past. He pictures a time when the social order as
+it now is had not begun, or was just beginning; the knowledge he now
+possesses was then being acquired, the weapons he uses were being
+invented, the moral and ritual laws that he obeys were in process of
+being formulated.
+
+It is obvious that the Andaman Islander cannot regard the ancestors as
+being persons exactly like himself, for they were responsible for the
+establishment of the social order to which he merely conforms and of
+which he has the advantage. He says, therefore, that they were bigger
+men than himself, meaning by this that they were bigger mentally or
+spiritually, rather than physically, that they were endowed with powers
+much greater than those even of the medicine-men of the present time.
+This explains the magical powers that are attributed to many, or indeed
+to all, of the ancestors; the belief in the existence in the past of
+men or beings endowed with what we may almost call supernatural powers
+is the inevitable result of the way in which the man of to-day feels
+towards the men of the past on whose inventions and discoveries he is
+dependent for his daily nourishment [221].
+
+Besides the social order there is another, the order of nature, which
+is constantly acting upon the social order. To this also the individual
+has to adapt himself, and his knowledge of how to do so is equally
+derived from the past. The order of nature only affects him through the
+social order, and the two therefore necessarily seem to him merely two
+parts of one whole,—the order of the universe. In the legends he tells
+how not only the social order but also the order of nature came into
+existence; an example is the story of the origin of night.
+
+The Andaman Islander finds himself in an ordered world, a world subject
+to law, controlled by unseen forces. The laws are not to him what
+natural laws are to the scientist of to-day, they are rather of the
+nature of moral laws. He recognizes only one meaning of the word right
+and of the word wrong; right action is that which is in conformity with
+law, wrong action is that in opposition to the law; it is wrong to give
+way to anger, it is wrong to kill a cicada, or to have a bright light
+in camp when the moon is rising in the third quarter, and it is wrong
+also to try and use unsuitable material for an implement or weapon.
+Wrong actions always lead to harm; if you use unsuitable wood for your
+bow it will break and your labour be wasted; if you kill a cicada it
+will rain heavily; if you give way to anger readily you will earn the
+dislike of your fellows that may some day lead to your undoing. Right
+and wrong mean acting in accordance with the laws of the world or in
+opposition to them, and this means acting in accordance with or in
+opposition to custom. Custom and law are indeed here two words for the
+same thing.
+
+The forces of the world, as the Andaman Islander conceives them, are
+not the blind mechanical forces of modern science: rather are they
+moral forces. Their action upon human beings is not only to be
+witnessed in external events, but is to be experienced in the man’s own
+consciousness or conscience. He feels within himself their compulsion
+when he would run counter to them, and their support when he leans upon
+them. The law of the world, then, is a moral law, its forces are moral
+forces, its values moral values; its order is a moral order.
+
+This view of the world is the immediate and inevitable result of the
+experience of man in society. It is a philosophy not reached by painful
+intellectual effort, by the searching out of meanings and reasons and
+causes; it is impressed upon him in all the happenings of his life, is
+assumed in all his actions; it needs only to be formulated. And the
+argument of this chapter has been that it is as the expression or
+formulation of this view of the world as an order regulated by law that
+the legends have their meaning, fulfil their function.
+
+The legends of the Andamanese then, as I understand them, set out to
+give an account of how the order of the world came into existence. But
+the Andaman Islander has no interest in any part of it except in so far
+as it affects his own life. He is interested in the procession of the
+seasons or the alternation of day and night, or the phases of the moon,
+only in so far as these things have effects upon the community. In
+other words he is interested in natural phenomena only in so far as
+such phenomena are really parts of the social order. This I have
+expressed earlier in the chapter by saying that the legends deal not
+with all aspects of natural phenomena but only with their social
+values.
+
+A fundamental character of the natural order (as of the social order)
+is uniformity; the same processes are for ever repeated. This character
+of nature the legends take for granted; they assume that if a force is
+once set into action it will continue to act indefinitely. They assume
+also a period in which the present order did not exist. Anything that
+happened in that period has gone on happening ever since. One of the
+ancestors discovered how to cook yams, and men have been cooking yams
+in the same way down to the present day. A cicada was crushed and cried
+out and the night came, and since then the darkness has come every
+evening as soon as the cicada sings. In one of the legends the tree
+lizard was quarrelsome, and has remained so. Thus the legends represent
+the social order, including such natural phenomena as may be said to
+belong to it, as being due to the interaction of forces of a special
+character that came into existence in the beginning and have continued
+to act uniformly ever since. In this way they express two most
+important conceptions, that of uniformity (or law) and that of the
+dependence of the present on the past.
+
+It is the need of expressing these two conceptions that gives the
+legends their function. They are not merely theoretical principles but
+are both intensely practical. The law of uniformity means that certain
+actions must be done and others not done if life is to run smoothly;
+any deviation from uniformity in conduct is dangerous as being contrary
+to the law that regulates the universe. What actions are to be done and
+what are to be left undone was determined once for all in the past when
+the present order came into existence. The knowledge of what to do and
+what to avoid doing is what constitutes the tradition of the society,
+to which every individual is required to conform.
+
+The legends, then, set out to express and to justify these two
+fundamental conceptions. They do so by telling how the social order
+itself came into existence, and how, also, all those natural phenomena
+that have any bearing on the social well-being came to be as they are
+and came to have the relation to the society that they possess.
+
+One group of facts that have an obvious relation to the society
+consists of the geographical features of the islands. The more notable
+features of the part of the country in which a man lives, and which he
+regards as his own, are intimately connected with his moral sentiments.
+His attachment to his group necessarily involves an attachment to the
+country of the group. The same sort of thing exists amongst ourselves.
+This attachment of the members of a group to their own country
+explains, I think, the part played by what may be called “local
+motives” in the legends of the Andamanese. Such motives are of
+considerable importance, of much more importance than would appear from
+the stories that I have transcribed. The recent changes in their mode
+of life have had far more influence on the local organisation of the
+tribes than on any other part of their social organisation, and this
+has not been without its effect on the legends. We may say, briefly,
+that the local motives of the legends serve to express the social
+values of localities. In general each locality has its own versions of
+the legends, in which the events related are supposed to have taken
+place at some spot or other in the neighbourhood. Thus all the more
+prominent features of a locality are associated with the events of the
+legends. In some cases tales are told that explain these features as
+having come into existence when the ancestors were alive; a reef of
+rocks was formerly a canoe, for instance. A few such legends were
+recorded in an earlier chapter, but it is probable that there were a
+vast number of similar tales that I did not hear. In some cases a
+locality has a special social value and therefore a special place in
+the legends. Thus Wota-Emi was the great meeting-place for the natives
+who lived on Baratang and on parts of the South Andaman and the Middle
+Andaman, and was also sometimes visited by the natives of the
+Archipelago. Consequently Wota-Emi is represented in the legends of the
+A-Pučikwar tribe as being the great meeting-place or dwelling-place of
+the ancestors. The effect of these associations between the places with
+which he is familiar and the events of the legendary epoch in the mind
+of the Andaman Islander probably is similar to the effect on ourselves
+of the historical associations of our own country; they serve to make
+him aware of his attachment to his country or to express his sense of
+that attachment.
+
+There still remains a most important feature of the legends which has
+not yet been explained, namely the position of the animals as
+ancestors. Many of the actors in the legends bear the names of animals
+but at the same time are spoken of as though they were human beings.
+Many of the legends explain how some species of animal arose from some
+one of the ancestors who became an animal and the progenitor of the
+species. Thus, in the North Andaman, Kolo was one of the ancestors; he
+made wings for himself out of palm-leaves, and so was able to fly; he
+lived a solitary life in his home at the top of a tree, and was in the
+habit of stealing men’s wives; in the end he became the sea-eagle, and
+this species still bears the name kolo. It is necessary to define as
+exactly as possible what meaning these stories have to the natives. It
+is not simply that the legendary person is a man with the name and some
+of the characteristics of an animal; nor is it simply that the
+legendary person is the ancestor of the species of which he bears the
+name. We can only adequately express the thought of the Andamanese by
+saying that he regards the whole species as if it were a human being.
+When, in the legends, he speaks of “Sea-eagle” he is thereby
+personifying the species in the sense in which the word personification
+has been used throughout this chapter; he is regarding the
+characteristics of the species as if they were characteristics or
+actions or results of actions of a person. Admittedly this is a vague
+description, but the vagueness is in the mental phenomenon described;
+the Andamanese do not, in this matter, think clearly and analyse their
+own thoughts. However, we can help ourselves to understand their
+thoughts by recalling the tales that amused us as children, in which
+the fox or the rabbit of the tale was an embodiment of the whole
+species.
+
+The part played in the legends by any particular animal is determined
+either immediately or indirectly by its observable characteristics.
+Thus the connection of the kingfisher with fire is due to the fact that
+he is a fish-eating bird, and that he has a patch of bright red
+feathers, red being, in the Andamanese mind, always associated with
+fire. The other birds that are mentioned in the different versions of
+the fire legend either possess remarkable plumage (as the dove, and the
+parrot) or are fish-eating birds. The Andamanese regard fish as the
+fundamental human food, having only one word for “food” and “fish,” and
+they never eat their fish raw as the kingfisher does. In the Akar-Bale
+story of the origin of the animals the tree lizard is characterised by
+his quarrelsomeness, and by the fact that he is very difficult to catch
+hold of; these are both actual characteristics of the animal itself.
+The crab appears in the same legend as a person with a very powerful
+grip, and with a hard shell to his body. The monitor lizard has his
+place in the legends determined by the fact that he can climb trees,
+run on the ground and swim in the water, and is thus equally at home at
+the top of the trees, on the ground, or in the creek. I have already
+given this as one of the reasons why he is chosen as the first ancestor
+of all the animals and of human beings. The lizard also seems to be
+regarded by the Andamanese as a particularly libidinous animal, and is
+therefore regarded as the inventor of sexual intercourse and of
+procreation. Why he should have this sexual reputation I do not know
+[222]. The tale of how the lizard invented scarification depends on the
+fact that the marks on the lizard’s skin bear a strong resemblance to
+the marks that the natives make on their own skins with sharp fragments
+of quartz. The position of the Paradoxurus or civet-cat in the stories
+in which she appears is due to the fact that while she can live in the
+trees or on the ground she cannot swim; hence, when the flood came, she
+fled from the water and climbed a steep hill and thus kept the fire
+alight. In the light of these examples we are justified, I think, in
+assuming that in all cases, even when the meaning is not clear, the
+part played by any animal in the legends is due to some actual
+characteristic of it.
+
+There is thus a parallelism between the personification of natural
+phenomena and the personification of animal species. I have shown that
+the characteristics of such beings as Biliku and Tarai are all to be
+explained by a consideration of the actual characteristics of the
+phenomena of which they are the personification (the winds) and of the
+phenomena immediately connected therewith. The same thing has now been
+shown to be true with regard to the personified animals. The process of
+personification is carried out in exactly the same way in the two
+different classes of cases. I gave as the reason for personifying
+natural phenomena the fact that in this way, and in this way only, the
+Andaman Islander is able to express the sentiments that are aroused in
+him by them. We must see if we can justify the personification of
+animals by a similar argument.
+
+The habits of observation fostered in the mind of the Andaman Islander
+by his method of winning his sustenance lead him to take a lively
+interest in all the creatures of the jungle and the sea, about whose
+ways he therefore has a great store of knowledge. Every tree and plant
+of the forest, every bird and insect, every creature that lives in the
+sea or on the reef has its name. His interest, however, in the case of
+many of the animals has little or no relation to practical life, for he
+does not make use of them for food or in any other way. There is here
+therefore something that contradicts the fundamental assumption of the
+philosophy that is expressed in the legends, there is a lack of mental
+unity. These interests in the birds and insects are not correlated with
+the central mass of interests that control the Andamanese mind and give
+it its unity. Although his philosophy assumes that everything in which
+he takes an interest has some meaning in reference to his own life, yet
+here are things that at first sight have no such meaning. The
+correlation that is lacking in his experience is brought about by means
+of the legends; a meaning is provided for the apparently meaningless.
+The fundamental interest of the Andaman Islander, as of all men in
+primitive societies, is his interest in persons and personal relations.
+By regarding the animals as persons and relating stories about them he
+is able to correlate his interest in them with the fundamental basis of
+his mental life.
+
+This explanation does not perhaps sound very satisfactory. We do not at
+present understand the forces that compel the normal mind to strive
+after unity in its experience. Let us examine the matter a little more
+closely. All the thoughts and feelings of the Andaman Islander (or at
+any rate all those that are expressed in the legends) centre in the
+society; for him the world is merely a stage on which the social drama
+is perpetually enacted. He coordinates all his thoughts, emotions, and
+interests around the society, and in the legends he builds up a picture
+showing the connection between the society and those phenomena of
+nature that affect it. The majority of the animals (the birds, the
+insects, and innumerable kinds of fish), not being used for food, or in
+any other way, bear no apparent relation to the social life. Yet by
+reason of the woodcraft developed by the necessities of his life he is
+compelled to take notice of these creatures and to become interested in
+their ways. Here, therefore, are two conflicting elements in his
+consciousness, (1) his belief that the whole of nature derives its
+meaning and interest from its relation to the society, and (2) his
+consciousness of an alien world (of the birds, etc.) which seems to
+have no direct relation to the society, and which nevertheless he
+cannot help being constantly aware of. The Andaman Islander, as I have
+stated more than once, does not possess any scientific or abstract
+interest in nature. He never asks himself “What is the meaning of
+this?” in the same way that a scientist of our own civilisation might
+do. He asks “What is the meaning of this thing in relation to me and my
+interests and feelings, and to the social life of which my life is a
+fragment?” It is because he does feel the need of answers to questions
+of this kind that the conflict we have noticed arises. This conflict
+has to be resolved, and there are apparently three alternatives: (1) to
+admit that there is a meaning in nature apart from its relation to the
+society, (2) to refuse to take any interest in birds and insects, (3)
+to explain away the apparent lack of relation. It is this third
+alternative that is chosen by the Andaman Islander, and there are
+obvious reasons why it should be so. The explanation is accomplished in
+a direct and simple manner. In the beginning men and animals were one;
+then came an event or series of events (the discovery of fire, the
+great flood, or a great quarrel amongst the ancestors) whereby the men
+and the animals became cut off from one another, to live henceforward
+in the same world, but separated by an unseen barrier.
+
+The argument may be put in another way that may perhaps be more
+convincing. The actual sentiment that is aroused in the mind of the
+native by the animals is that here is an important and interesting part
+of the universe that is alien to him, from which he is cut off in some
+strange way. It is this real sentiment, itself the inevitable result of
+his life and his surroundings, that is expressed in the belief in the
+animals as ancestors.
+
+If this explanation be correct we should expect to find that the
+animals that figure in the legends are those that have no immediate
+social value either as food or in any other way, while on the other
+hand the animals that are used for food will not appear in the legends,
+or will occupy therein a very different place from the others. The only
+land animal that is regularly used for food is the pig. It is therefore
+a confirmation of the explanation that we find that the pig is never
+under any circumstances regarded as one of the ancestors, that is to
+say, is never personified in the same way that other animals are. One
+legend about the pig [223] explains, not how the animal came into
+existence (that seems to be assumed), but how it acquired its senses.
+Another legend [224] tells how the civet-cat persuaded some of the
+ancestors to play a game in which they pretended to be pigs, and they
+were turned into these animals. Here we are clearly dealing with
+something different from the ordinary process of personification, for
+we have not one ancestor in whom the species is personified, but a
+number of persons who were suddenly changed from men and women into
+pigs by the magical performance of the civet-cat. In the sea there are
+several animals that are regularly used for food. The dugong is spoken
+of as an ancestor in an Akar-Bale legend, but in the North Andaman
+there is a story of how the dugong originated from a pig that Pe̱rǰido
+tried to roast without first disembowelling it and cutting the joints
+of its legs. There is also in the North Andaman a story of how turtles
+originated [225]. The existence of these legends shows that the pig,
+the turtle and the dugong occupy a different position in the minds of
+the Andamanese from that of the other animals. This serves, in some
+measure, to confirm the explanation given above.
+
+We may briefly consider what may be regarded as a kind of negative
+instance by which to test the argument. The world of the stars
+constitutes a part of the universe just as alien, just as devoid of
+apparent meaning as that of the birds. We may ask therefore how it is
+that the Andaman Islanders have no star myths of the kind that are
+common in other primitive societies. The answer is, I think, that the
+Andamanese do not have their attention called to the stars. As their
+camps are in the dense forest there are very few occasions on which
+they see the sky at night. When fishing at night on the reefs or in
+canoes they are too busy to pay much attention to the stars. They have
+not learnt to relate the procession of the stars and the change of the
+seasons, nor have they learnt to tell the time at night from their
+declination. Their navigation is only along the coast and they have
+therefore no use for the stars as guides of direction. On the contrary,
+wherever we find a developed star-mythology we find that the stars are
+studied either as guides to navigation or journeying overland, or as
+giving indications of the changes of the seasons.
+
+We have considered all the more important aspects of the subject matter
+of the legends; it remains for us to turn to the form and enquire how
+it comes about that the representations which analysis reveals are
+expressed in just the way they are, in a word, why the expression takes
+the form of a story. It is obvious that in this place no attempt can be
+made to deal with the general problems of the psychology of
+story-telling. All that I wish to do is to point out one or two reasons
+why the legend is an appropriate form (perhaps we might say, the only
+possible form) for the expression of the view of the world that is
+revealed in the Andaman mythology.
+
+The Andamanese, like other savages, have not acquired the power of
+thinking abstractly. All their thought necessarily deals with concrete
+things. Now the story form provides a means of expressing concretely
+what could otherwise only be put in an abstract statement. (A large
+part of the interpretation of the legends, as here undertaken, consists
+in restating the content of the legends in abstract terms.) Moreover,
+even if the Andaman Islanders were capable of thinking abstractly, yet,
+since what they need to express are not thoughts so much as feelings
+(not intellectual so much as affective processes), they would still
+need a concrete form of expression. For it is a familiar fact that the
+concrete has a much greater power of awakening or appealing to our
+feelings than has the abstract. In particular the story has ever been a
+popular medium by which to appeal to sentiments of all kinds.
+
+The chief ground for the interest in stories shown by children and by
+savages is, I believe, that they afford the means of exercising the
+imagination in certain specific directions and thereby play an
+important part in enabling the individual to organise his experience.
+The course of the development of the human mind (from childhood to
+adolescence, and from the earliest human ancestor to ourselves) depends
+upon or involves the existence at certain stages of growth (and to a
+certain extent throughout the whole process) of a conscious egoistic
+interest. Mankind, to develop what we call character and conscience,
+must learn to take a conscious interest in himself, in his own actions,
+and their motives. The development of this self-consciousness in
+children is a process of great interest to the psychologist and has
+already been studied in an imperfect fashion. You have only to watch a
+child playing a game in which he or she enacts some imaginary part to
+see how such games afford a means by which the child develops and
+widens his interest in himself. Children, and many grown-up people
+(particularly during conditions of lessened mental activity), indulge
+in what are called daydreams, which take the form of an imaginary
+succession of adventures of which the dreamer is always the hero. The
+character of daydreams is that they are always frankly egoistic and
+boastful. Now this sort of interest in stories is found in the
+Andamanese, though not in the legends. At the end of a day a group of
+Andamanese may often be seen seated round a fire listening while one of
+them recounts adventures. The narration may be merely an exaggerated
+account of real happenings, but is more often purely fictitious. The
+narrator will tell, with few words, but with many expressive gestures,
+how he harpooned a turtle or shot a pig. He may, if his hearers are
+content to remain and listen, as they sometimes are, go on killing pig
+after pig for an hour or two together. The point to be noted is that
+these tales are always frankly egoistic and boastful, and it is for
+this reason that they may well be compared with the daydreams of the
+more civilised.
+
+Besides this egoistic interest in stories there is another that is
+closely connected with it in origin and function. The necessities of
+social life, particularly in childhood and in primitive societies where
+a small number of people are constantly reacting upon one another,
+involve an intense degree of interest in persons and personal
+qualities. This interest is aroused and fostered by the constant play
+of personal forces in the social life. Its strength accounts, I
+believe, for the power of appeal to sentiments that is possessed by
+stories.
+
+It is a commonplace that in many forms of play the child or the adult
+(and it is also true of animals) exercises faculties that are important
+parts of the system of habits or dispositions by which the individual
+adapts himself to his surroundings. We may regard the interest in
+stories as similar to play-interests in general. Life in society
+requires the individual to develop a faculty of what may be called
+character-estimation, whereby he may judge the motives that are likely
+to influence the conduct of another person. I have myself noticed that
+savages such as the Andaman Islanders and the Australian aborigines are
+as a rule good judges of character. They can quickly estimate how to
+adapt their conduct and conversation to the character of a person they
+meet for the first time. They are often excellent mimics, being able to
+imitate exactly the tone of voice or manner of walking or any other
+idiosyncrasy of a person whom they have only seen for a short time. I
+believe, then, that the legends of the Andamanese may be regarded as a
+means whereby they give exercise to their interest in human character,
+just as in other kinds of play they exercise other interests and
+faculties that are integral parts of their adaptation to their
+environment. By means of the personification of natural phenomena and
+of species of animals, and through the assumption of the existence of
+the ancestors and their times, they are able to develop a special kind
+of unwritten literature, which has for them just the same sort of
+appeal that much of our own literature has for us. Doubtless it is not
+a very polished form of art; the characterisation that it exhibits is
+simple and even crude; the story is not told very skilfully, and indeed
+the story-teller relies much on his use of expressive gesture to convey
+his meaning; nevertheless it does fulfil amongst the Andamanese the
+same sort of function that more developed literary art does in
+civilised society.
+
+There remains one other matter to be dealt with briefly. I have pointed
+out on several occasions that the legends contain inconsistencies. Some
+of these only appear when the real meaning of the legend is discovered,
+but others are on the surface. It is clear that the Andamanese do not
+always apply to their legends the laws of logical consistency. It must
+not, however, be supposed that they are equally illogical in other
+matters, for this is not so. In matters of everyday practical life the
+Andamanese show just as much sound commonsense as the inhabitants of a
+civilised country. They are excellent observers of natural phenomena
+and are capable of putting their observations to practical use. In any
+attempt to explain their mythology, therefore, it is necessary to show
+why in this sphere they do not apply their powers of reasoning. We can
+understand this when we recall the purpose of the legends as here
+described, which is, not to give rational explanations, but to express
+sentiments. When there are two alternative rational explanations of a
+phenomenon between which we cannot definitely choose we say that either
+one or other is probably true. In those mental processes in which the
+purpose is to find a symbolic expression for sentiments or desires, the
+either-or relation is inadmissible owing to the very nature of the
+thought-process itself. If two expressions of the same sentiment are
+present, both equally adequate, we must either reject one of them or by
+making use of both on different occasions admit the possibility of
+inconsistency. Where the inconsistency becomes more or less obvious we
+expect the reason to step in and insist that a choice shall be made.
+But a mind intent on expressing certain feelings, faced with two
+alternative and equally satisfactory but inconsistent symbols, will
+hesitate to choose between them even at the command of the desire for
+logical consistency. It will cling as long as possible to both of them.
+This is just what the Andaman Islander seems to do in his mythology.
+The view of lightning as a person who shakes his leg seems to express
+in some way certain notions of the natives about the lightning. The
+alternative explanation of lightning as a fire-brand thrown by Biliku
+also satisfies in some way his need of expressing the impressions that
+the phenomena make upon him. In spite of the inconsistency he clings to
+both symbols as best he can.
+
+The very existence of inconsistencies of this kind proves without any
+doubt that the mental processes underlying the legends of the
+Andamanese are not similar to those that we ourselves follow when we
+attempt to understand intelligently the facts of nature and of life,
+but rather are to be compared to those that are to be found in dreams
+and in art,—processes of what might conveniently be called symbolic
+thought. It would perhaps hardly be necessary to point this out were it
+not that many ethnologists still try to interpret the beliefs of
+savages as being the result of attempts to understand natural facts,
+such as dreams, death, birth, etc. Such writers assume that the savage
+is impelled by the same motive that so strongly dominates themselves,
+the desire to understand,—scientific curiosity—and that such beliefs as
+animism or totemism are of the nature of scientific hypotheses invented
+to explain the facts of dreaming and of death on the one hand and of
+conception and birth on the other. If this view of the nature of
+primitive thought were correct it would be impossible to conceive how
+such inconsistencies as those that we meet with among the Andamanese
+could be permitted. On the view that the myths of primitive societies
+are merely the result of an endeavour to express certain ways of
+thinking and feeling about the facts of life which are brought into
+existence by the manner in which life is regulated in society, the
+presence of such inconsistencies need not in the least surprise us, for
+the myths satisfactorily fulfil their function not by any appeal to the
+reasoning powers of the intellect but by appealing, through the
+imagination, to the mind’s affective dispositions.
+
+The thesis of this chapter has been that the legends are the expression
+of social values of objects of different kinds. By the social value of
+an object is meant the way in which it affects the life of the society,
+and therefore, since every one is interested in the welfare of the
+society to which he belongs, the way in which it affects the social
+sentiments of the individual. The system of social values of a society
+obviously depends upon the manner in which the society is constituted,
+and therefore the legends can only be understood by constant reference
+to the mode of life of the Andamanese.
+
+The legends give us in the first place a simple and crude valuation of
+human actions. Anger, quarrelsomeness, carelessness in observing ritual
+requirements are exhibited as resulting in harm. This is the moral
+element of the stories strictly so called, and is to be observed in
+many of them. The young men who failed to observe the rules laid down
+for those who have recently been through one of the initiation
+ceremonies were turned to stone. The quarrelsomeness of the lizard led
+to the ancestors being turned into animals. The bad temper of one of
+the ancestors resulted in darkness covering the earth, or in a great
+cyclone in which many were destroyed.
+
+Secondly, the legends as a whole give expression to the social value of
+the past, of all that is derived from tradition, whether it be the
+knowledge by which men win their sustenance, or the customs that they
+observe. In the wonderful times of the ancestors all things were
+ordered, all necessary knowledge was acquired, and the rules that must
+guide conduct were discovered. It remains for the individual of the
+present only to observe the customs with which his elders are familiar.
+
+The legends of a man’s own tribe serve also to give a social value to
+the places with which he is familiar. The creeks and hills that he
+knows, the camping sites at which he lives, the reefs and rocks that
+act as landmarks by reason of any striking feature they may present,
+are all for him possessed of a historic interest that makes them dear
+to him. The very names, in many cases, recall events of the far-off
+legendary epoch.
+
+Again, many of the legends express the social value of natural
+phenomena. By reference to Biliku and Tarai, for instance, the native
+can express what he feels with respect to the weather and the seasonal
+changes that so profoundly affect the common life. Finally, in the
+legends he is able to express what he feels about the bright plumaged
+birds and the other creatures with which he is constantly meeting in
+the jungles, which are a source of perennial interest, and are yet so
+clearly a part of the world cut off from himself and his life, having
+no immediately discernible influence upon his welfare.
+
+This system of social values, or rather this system of sentiments, that
+we find expressed in the legends is an essential part of the life of
+the Andamanese; without it they could not have organised their social
+life in the way they have. Moreover the sentiments in question need to
+be regularly expressed in some way or another if they are to be kept
+alive and passed on from one generation to another. The legends, which
+are related by the elders to the young folk, are one of the means (the
+various ceremonial customs analysed in the last chapter being another)
+by which they are so expressed, and by which their existence is
+maintained.
+
+Although the term “social value” has been used as a convenient
+expression, yet the meaning of the legends might be expressed in other
+ways. We may say, for instance, that they give a representation of the
+world as regulated by law. The conception of law which they reveal is
+not, however, that to which we are accustomed when we think of natural
+law. We may perhaps adequately state the Andaman notion by saying that
+moral law and natural law are not distinguished from one another. The
+welfare of the society depends upon right actions; wrong actions
+inevitably lead to evil results. Giving way to anger is a wrong action,
+as being a cause of social disturbance. In the legends the catastrophes
+that overwhelmed the ancestors are in many instances represented as
+being caused by some one giving way to anger. There is a right way and
+a wrong way to set about making such a thing as a bow. We should
+explain this by saying that the right way will give a good serviceable
+weapon, whereas the wrong way will give an inferior or useless one. The
+Andaman Islander tends to look at the matter from a different angle;
+the right way is right because it is the one that has been followed
+from time immemorial, and any other way is wrong, is contrary to
+custom, to law. Law, for the Andaman Islander, means that there is an
+order of the universe, characterised by absolute uniformity; this order
+was established once for all in the time of the ancestors, and is not
+to be interfered with, the results of any such interference being evil,
+ranging from merely minor ills such as disappointment or discomfort to
+great calamities. The law of compensation is absolute. Any deviation
+from law or custom will inevitably bring its results, and inversely any
+evil that befalls must be the result of some lack of observance. The
+legends reveal to our analysis a conception of the universe as a moral
+order.
+
+Here I must conclude my attempt to interpret the customs and beliefs of
+the Andaman Islanders, but in doing so I wish to point out, though
+indeed it must already be fairly obvious, that if my interpretation be
+correct, then the meaning of the customs of other primitive peoples is
+to be discovered by similar methods and in accordance with the same
+psychological principles. It is because I have satisfied myself of the
+soundness of these methods and principles, by applying them to the
+interpretation of other cultures, that I put forward the hypotheses of
+these two chapters with an assurance that would not perhaps be
+justified if I relied solely on a study of the Andamanese. To put the
+matter in another way, I have assumed a certain working hypothesis, and
+I have shown that on the basis of this hypothesis there can be built up
+a satisfactory explanation of the customs and beliefs of the
+Andamanese. But the hypothesis is of such a nature, stating or
+involving as it does certain sociological or psychological laws and
+principles, that if it be true for one primitive people it must be true
+for others, and indeed, with necessary modifications, must be true of
+all human society. Such a hypothesis, it is obvious, cannot be
+adequately tested by reference only to one limited set of facts, and it
+will therefore be necessary, if it is to become something more than a
+hypothesis, to test its application over a wider range of ethnological
+facts.
+
+The matter is so important that it is necessary, even at the risk of
+wearisome repetition, to give a final statement of the hypothesis that,
+in this chapter and the last, has been applied to and tested by the
+facts known to us concerning the Andaman Islanders.
+
+In an enquiry such as this, we are studying, I take it, not isolated
+facts, but a “culture,” understanding by that word the whole mass of
+institutions, customs and beliefs of a given people. For a culture to
+exist at all, and to continue to exist, it must conform to certain
+conditions. It must provide a mode of subsistence adequate to the
+environment and the existing density of population; it must provide for
+the continuance of the society by the proper care of children; it must
+provide means for maintaining the cohesion of the society. All these
+things involve the regulation of individual conduct in certain definite
+ways; they involve, that is, a certain system of moral customs.
+
+Each type of social organisation has its own system of moral customs,
+and these could be explained by showing how they serve to maintain the
+society in existence. Such an explanation would be of the
+psychological, not of the historical type; it would give not the cause
+of origin of any custom, but its social function. For example it is
+easy to see the function of the very strong feelings of the Andamanese
+as to the value of generosity in the distribution of food and of energy
+in obtaining it, and as to the highly reprehensible nature of laziness
+and greediness (meaning by the latter word, eating much when others
+have little). It has only been by the cultivation of these virtues, or
+by the eradication of the opposite vices, that the Andaman society has
+maintained itself in existence in an environment where food is only
+obtainable by individual effort, where it cannot be preserved from day
+to day, and where there are occasional times of scarcity. It could be
+shown, to take a further example, how the manner in which the life of
+the family is organised is closely related to certain fundamental
+social needs. If we were attempting an explanation of the Andamanese
+culture as a whole and in all its details it would be necessary to
+examine all the moral customs of the people and show their relations
+one to another and to the fundamental basis on which the society is
+organised.
+
+The necessary regulation of conduct in a given society depends upon the
+existence in each individual of an organised system of sentiments. That
+system of sentiments or motives will clearly be different in different
+cultures, just as the system of moral rules is different in societies
+of different types. Yet there is, so to speak, a general substratum
+that is the same in all human societies. No matter how the society may
+be organised there must be in the individual a strong feeling of
+attachment to his own group, to the social division (nation, village,
+clan, tribe, caste, or what not) to which he belongs. The particular
+way in which that sentiment is revealed in thought and action will
+depend upon the nature of the group to which it refers. Similarly, no
+society can exist without the presence in the minds of its members of
+some form or other of the sentiment of moral obligation—the sentiment
+that certain things must be done, certain other things must not be
+done, because those are right, good, virtuous, these are wrong, bad,
+vicious or sinful. Further, though perhaps less important, yet not less
+necessary, there is the sentiment of dependence in its various
+forms—dependence on others, on the society, on tradition or custom.
+
+For a culture to exist, then, these sentiments (and others connected
+with them, that need not be enumerated) must exist in the minds of
+individuals in certain definite forms, capable of influencing action in
+the direction required to maintain the cohesion of the society on its
+actual basis of organisation. This, we may say, is the social function
+of these sentiments.
+
+Leaving aside altogether the question of how sentiments of these kinds
+come into existence, we may note that they involve the existence of an
+experience of a particular type. The individual experiences the action
+upon himself of a power or force—constraining him to act in certain
+ways not always pleasant, supporting him in his weakness, binding him
+to his fellows, to his group. This force is clearly something not
+himself—something outside of him therefore, and yet equally clearly it
+makes itself felt not as mere external compulsion or support, but as
+something within his own consciousness—within himself, therefore. If we
+would give a name to this force we can only call it the moral force of
+society. The very existence of a human society, the argument has run,
+necessarily involves the existence of this actual experience of a moral
+force, acting through the society upon the individual, and yet acting
+within his own consciousness. The experience, then, is there, but it
+does not follow that the primitive man can analyse his own experience;
+it is obvious enough that such analysis is beyond him. Still the
+experience does lead him to form certain notions or representations,
+and it is possible to show how these notions are psychologically
+related to the experience of a moral force.
+
+The experience of this moral force comes to the individual in definite
+concrete experiences only. We first learn to experience our own
+dependence in our dealings with our parents, and thus we derive the
+concrete form in which we clothe our later adult feeling of our
+dependence upon our God. Or, to take an example from the vast number
+provided by the customs of the Andamanese, the Andaman Islander, like
+other savages, the main concern of whose lives is the getting and
+eating of food, inevitably finds his experience of a moral force most
+intimately associated with the things he uses for food. Inevitably,
+therefore, he regards food as a substance in which, in some way, the
+moral force is inherent, since it is often through food that the force
+actually affects him and his actions. The psychology of the matter can
+be traced, I hope, in the arguments of the last chapter. From the
+analysis there given of different customs and beliefs it should be
+obvious that the way in which the Andaman Islander regards all the
+things that influence the social life is due to the way in which they
+are associated with his experience of the moral force of the society.
+
+In this way there arises in the mind of primitive man, as the result of
+his social life and the play of feeling that it involves, the more or
+less crude and undefined notion of a power in society and in nature
+having certain attributes. It is this power that is responsible for all
+conditions of social euphoria or dysphoria because in all such
+conditions the power itself is actually experienced. It is the same
+power that compels the individual to conform to custom in his conduct,
+acting upon him both within as the force of conscience and without as
+the force of opinion. It is the same force on which the individual
+feels himself to be dependent, as a source of inner strength to him in
+times of need. It is this force also that carries him away during
+periods of social excitement such as dances, ceremonies or fights, and
+which gives him the feeling of a sudden great addition to his own
+personal force.
+
+The Andamanese have not reached the point of recognizing by a special
+name this power of which they are thus aware. I have shown that in some
+of its manifestations they regard it, symbolically, as being a sort of
+heat, or a force similar to that which they know in fire and heat. In
+more developed societies, however, we find a nearer approach to a
+definite recognition of this power or force in its different
+manifestations by means of a single name. The power denoted by the word
+mana in Melanesia, and by the words orenda, wakan, nauala, etc.,
+amongst different tribes of North America, is this same power of which
+I have tried to show that the notion arises from the actual experience
+of the moral force of the society.
+
+These sentiments and the representations connected with them, upon the
+existence of which, as we have seen, the very existence of the society
+depends, need to be kept alive, to be maintained at a given degree of
+intensity. Apart from the necessity that exists of keeping them alive
+in the mind of the individual, there is the necessity of impressing
+them upon each new individual added to the society, upon each child as
+he or she develops into an adult. Even individual sentiments do not
+remain in existence in the mind unless they are exercised by being
+expressed. Much more is this the case with collective sentiments, those
+shared by a number of persons. The only possible way by which such
+collective sentiments can be maintained is by giving them regular and
+adequate expression.
+
+Here then, according to the argument of the last chapter, we find the
+function of the ceremonial customs of primitive peoples such as the
+Andamanese. All these customs are simply means by which certain ways of
+feeling about the different aspects of social life are regularly
+expressed, and, through expression, kept alive and passed on from one
+generation to another. Thus the customs connected with foods serve to
+maintain in existence certain ways of feeling about foods and the moral
+duties connected with them, and similarly with other customs.
+
+Affective modes of experience (sentiments, feelings or emotions) can be
+expressed not only in bodily movements but also by means of language. I
+have tried to show that the function of the myths and legends of the
+Andamanese is exactly parallel to that of the ritual and ceremonial.
+They serve to express certain ways of thinking and feeling about the
+society and its relation to the world of nature, and thereby to
+maintain these ways of thought and feeling and pass them on to
+succeeding generations. In the case of both ritual and myth the
+sentiments expressed are those that are essential to the existence of
+the society.
+
+Throughout these two chapters I have avoided the use of the term
+religion. My reason for this is that I have not been able to find a
+definition of this term which would render it suitable for use in a
+scientific discussion of the beliefs of such primitive peoples as the
+Andamanese.
+
+When we use the term religion we inevitably think first of what we
+understand by that term in civilised society. It is not possible, I
+believe, to give an exact definition which shall retain all the
+connotations of the word as commonly used and which shall at the same
+time help us in the study of the customs of undeveloped societies. The
+definition of religion that seems to me on the whole most satisfactory
+is that it consists of (1) a belief in a great moral force or power
+(whether personal or not) existing in nature, and (2) an organised
+relation between man and this Higher Power. If this definition be
+accepted it is clear that the Andamanese have religious beliefs and
+customs. They do believe in a moral power regulating the universe, and
+they have organised their relations to that power by means of some of
+their simple ceremonies. Yet it does not seem possible to draw a sharp
+dividing line between those beliefs and customs that properly deserve
+to be called religious, and others which do not deserve the adjective.
+It is not possible, in the Andamans, to separate a definite entity
+which we can call religion from things that may more appropriately be
+regarded as art, morality, play, or social ceremonial.
+
+Nevertheless the purpose of these two chapters has been to explain the
+nature and function of the Andamanese religion. Amongst the fundamental
+conditions that must be fulfilled if human beings are to live together
+in society is the existence of this thing that we call religion, the
+belief in a great Unseen Power, between which and ourselves it must
+ever be the great concern of life to establish and maintain harmony.
+The Andaman Islander with his somewhat childish faith, the Australian
+black-fellow decorated with paint and feathers impersonating his
+totemic ancestor, the Polynesian sacrificing human victims on the marae
+of his god, the Buddhist following the Holy Eight-Staged Path, are all
+following in however different ways the same eternal quest.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A
+
+THE TECHNICAL CULTURE OF THE ANDAMAN ISLANDERS
+
+
+In this appendix I shall give a brief account of the technical culture
+of the Andaman Islanders, with a few comparative notes on the
+technology of the Semang of the Malay Peninsula and the Negritos of the
+Philippine Islands. The Andamanese, the Semang and the Philippine
+Negritos are so similar in physical characteristics that it is
+reasonable to suppose that they are descended from a single stock. It
+is on the basis of this hypothesis that they are all spoken of as
+belonging to one race, the Negrito race. It is therefore of some
+interest to compare the culture of these three different peoples to see
+if we can determine what was the culture of their ancestors.
+
+In such hypothetical reconstructions of the past it is necessary to
+proceed with extreme caution, as there is no means of controlling
+results. The method I have adopted is to compare first of all the
+different types of technological products or activities found in
+different parts of the Andamans in order to determine as far as
+possible what was the technical culture of the ancestors of the
+Andamanese when they first reached the islands, and what changes have
+taken place since the islands were occupied. It is only this primitive
+or generalised Andamanese culture that can be compared with that of the
+Semang or the Philippine Negritos.
+
+From the point of view of technical culture the natives of the Andamans
+must be separated into two main divisions, which will be spoken of as
+the Great Andaman Division and the Little Andaman Division respectively
+[226]. The most plausible explanation of the differences of culture and
+language between these two divisions has been mentioned already. We
+must assume that when the islands were first peopled, or at some later
+time, the inhabitants of the Little Andaman became isolated from those
+of the Great Andaman. The language and the technical culture of each of
+the two groups underwent a number of changes during the many centuries
+that followed. At a much later date, after the differences between the
+two divisions had been developed, and probably not many centuries ago,
+a party or several parties of natives must have made their way from the
+Little Andaman as far as Rutland Island. Here they came in conflict
+with the natives of the Great Andaman Division, and in this way arose
+the antagonism between the Jarawa (the immigrants from the Little
+Andaman) and the other natives of the South Andaman (who formed in 1858
+the Aka-Bea tribe), which has lasted down to the present day. We shall
+find that the technical culture of the Jarawa has been only very
+slightly influenced by contact with the natives of the Great Andaman
+Division, and therefore differs very little from that of the Little
+Andaman at the present day.
+
+
+ Primitive Andaman Culture
+ |
+ _____________/ \____________
+ / / \
+ ________/|\________ / \
+ / | \ / \
+ N. Sentinel Little Jarawa Southern Northern
+ Andaman Group Group
+ \____________ ____________/ \_____ _____/
+ \/ \/
+ Little Andaman Division Great Andaman
+ Division
+
+
+I have provisionally included the natives of the North Sentinel Island
+in the Little Andaman Division. The ground for so doing is that the
+form of bow in use in the North Sentinel Island is similar to that of
+the Little Andaman and unlike that of the Great Andaman. Unfortunately,
+almost nothing is known about the technology of the North Sentinel, and
+nothing whatever about the language. It is possible that the natives of
+this outlying islet have been isolated for many centuries from both the
+Little Andaman and the Great Andaman, and further information about
+them might show that their technology is different in important
+respects from that of the Little Andaman.
+
+Within the Great Andaman Division there are a number of differences in
+technology between the tribes of the North Andaman and those of the
+South Andaman and Middle Andaman.
+
+In order to render the exposition and argument that follows more easily
+understood the supposed relations of the different types of culture are
+shown in the form of a diagram or tree. The justification for this
+arrangement will appear as we proceed.
+
+There is only very scanty information available about the technical
+culture of the Negritos of the Malay Peninsula, whom we may speak of as
+the Semang. There are differences of technology between the Semang of
+different parts, and a careful study of these differences would serve
+to throw much light on changes that have been introduced since the
+Semang were isolated from the rest of their race. There is no doubt
+that the Semang have adopted many elements of their present culture
+from their neighbours the Sakai and others. In some instances it is
+possible to trace this external influence, but in others it is doubtful
+whether we are dealing with a primitive Semang form or with a form
+adopted from their neighbours [227].
+
+The same thing must be said about the Philippine Negritos. Our
+information is not sufficient to enable us to discuss the local
+differences, nor to determine what elements of the culture have been
+introduced by contact with other races [228].
+
+
+
+HABITATIONS.
+
+The huts of the Andamanese are best understood by considering first of
+all the simplest and most temporary structures. A man away from the
+main camp at night (on a hunting expedition) erects for himself a
+simple shelter of leaves. Such hunting shelters vary considerably
+according to circumstances. In the rainy season they are built much
+more substantially than in the dry season. Sometimes shelter is found
+between the buttresses of large trees, a few leaves being added. There
+is, however, one type of hunting shelter that is usual. Two poles are
+cut and erected perpendicularly in the ground so that they stand about
+four feet apart and about four feet high. To the top of these is tied,
+with cane or creeper, a horizontal pole. A few poles or sticks of
+sufficient length are placed so as to lean against the horizontal pole
+at an angle of about 45°, the ends resting on the ground. On these are
+placed any leaves that can be obtained, preferably the leaves of canes
+and other palms. The shelter thus consists of a single rectangular
+roof, one end of which rests on the ground, while the other rests on a
+horizontal bar attached to the top of two perpendicular supports. The
+shelter is built facing to leeward.
+
+The usual family hut of the Andamans is built on exactly the same
+principles as a hunter’s shelter, but, being intended for occupation
+for some weeks or even months, is more carefully built. For a small
+hut, to be occupied by one family, four posts are erected, two at the
+back being from two to four feet high above the ground, while two at
+the front are from five to seven feet high. Two horizontal poles are
+attached, one to the top of the front posts and the other to the back
+posts, with strips of cane. If poles of a convenient size and forked at
+the top are available these may be used for the posts of the hut, the
+horizontal poles being supported in the forks, but a native would not
+trouble to search for such timbers, being satisfied with an unforked
+post. A few slender timbers, preferably of mangrove wood (Bruguiera),
+are placed on the two horizontal poles and bound to them with cane.
+These rafters, as they may be called, project for a foot or two above
+or beyond the higher horizontal, and similarly project a foot beyond
+the lower one so as almost to reach the ground.
+
+In the better kind of hut a mat is made of palm leaves, and this mat is
+placed on the rafters and tied to them with strips of cane. To make a
+mat a number of strips of bamboo or cane of sufficient length are taken
+and placed on the ground parallel to each other. Leaves of a species of
+cane are collected and each leaf is divided into two parts down the
+middle. These half-leaves are then attached to the strips of bamboo or
+cane, by means of strips of the outside of canes, the technique being
+wrapped-twined work. The half-leaves are attached so that the leaflets,
+which are attached to the leaf-stem at an angle, incline alternately to
+one side and the other. The photograph reproduced in Plate VII shows a
+hut of the kind here described. Mats in course of making are shown
+lying on the ground in Plates VI and VII.
+
+A quicker, but less efficient way of thatching the hut is to take the
+half-leaves such as are used for making a mat and fasten them in
+bundles of five or six directly to the rafters.
+
+Huts of this type, each occupied by a single family, are built by the
+natives of the Great Andaman Division in the form of villages. The
+Jarawa and the natives of the Little Andaman build similar huts in
+their hunting camps, occupied during the fine weather.
+
+Some huts of this type are provided with a floor raised above the
+ground. Such a floor is erected on short posts, and may be made of
+bamboos or of planks or pieces of broken-up canoes. A floor of this
+kind, raised a foot or so above the ground, is shown in Plate VII. Huts
+are sometimes to be seen with a floor raised as much as three feet
+above the ground.
+
+The simple Andaman hut as above described is entirely open at the front
+and on each side. In an exposed situation screens of palm-leaves may be
+erected at the side. If still more shelter is required, a hut may be
+built with two roofs. Such a hut requires six posts, two taller ones
+six or seven feet high, and four shorter ones, two on each side. For
+such a hut two mats are made, and are so attached that one mat projects
+above the other. No attempt is made to fasten the two mats together at
+the top, but on the contrary a space of several inches is left between
+them to allow the smoke of the fire to escape, rain being excluded by
+the overhang of one of the mats. Huts of this type may be seen in Plate
+VI.
+
+Each of the huts hitherto described is occupied by a single family. In
+order to understand the communal huts it is necessary to consider the
+arrangement of small huts in a camp or village. In the tribes of the
+Great Andaman there are two main types of such arrangement. The first
+type is that of the hunting camp, which is occupied for a few nights
+only. In this all the huts are placed facing in the same direction (to
+leeward) and in a line with one another. The second type is that of a
+village to be occupied for some weeks or months. In this the huts are
+arranged round an open space, all facing inwards, as described earlier
+in this book [229]. All encampments in the Great Andaman tend to
+conform to one or other of these types, but variations are introduced
+according to the nature of the site occupied. Thus in a hunting camp
+the site may not permit of the erection of the huts in one line. A
+village is, as a rule, only put up at a spot that has been used from
+time immemorial, where there is an open space of sufficient size, but
+if, for any reason, a site is selected where there is not room to
+arrange all the huts around the dancing ground, the arrangement of the
+village may be irregular.
+
+The hunting camps of the Jarawa are sometimes arranged on the same
+principle as those of the tribes of the Great Andaman Division, i.e.,
+all facing in one direction and as nearly in one line side by side as
+the site will allow.
+
+The natives of the Little Andaman erect hunting camps in the fine
+weather. In the only one that I have seen the huts were arranged
+irregularly so as to make the best use of the available space.
+
+A few words must be said on the sites chosen for encampments. It must
+be remembered that the islands are entirely covered with forest. The
+natives will not, if they can avoid it, put their camp under high
+trees, for fear of the danger of falling branches in a storm. At the
+same time they prefer a situation where there is an open space
+surrounded with forest so that they are sheltered from the wind. The
+coast-dwellers always camp immediately within the jungle on the shore
+of the sea or of a creek. The forest-dwellers usually choose a position
+on a hill or ridge, and this is particularly the case with the Jarawa.
+The camp must be close to a supply of fresh water. In the tribes of the
+Great Andaman Division no precautions are taken against a possible
+attack by enemies, but the Jarawa do take precautions, clearing the
+trees around their camps so that they have a good view of the
+approaches, and even, apparently, placing look-out stations at the tops
+of the paths [230].
+
+Amongst the coast-dwelling tribes there are sites that have been used
+for encampments for many centuries. At these spots there are found
+heaps of refuse that have accumulated year by year. These
+kitchen-middens, as they are sometimes called, consist of the shells of
+molluscs, bones of animals, stones that have been used for cooking,
+fragments of pottery, and loam produced from decayed wood and other
+refuse.
+
+The two types of camp arrangement which are seen in the village and the
+hunting camp are exhibited in two different types of communal hut. One
+of these, corresponding to the hunting camp, may be termed the long
+shelter. It is apparently only used in the North Sentinel Island. A hut
+of this type was seen by Mr Gilbert Rogers in 1903. It was rectangular,
+40 feet long and 12 feet wide. The roof was supported on three rows of
+small posts ranging in height from 3 feet at the back to 6 feet at the
+front of the hut. The roof projected about 2 feet in either direction
+beyond the posts and was about 2 feet from the ground at the back and 7
+feet above the ground at the front. There were twelve places for fires,
+six in front and six at the back of the hut, and near each, on the
+right-hand side, was a platform supported on four sticks, of the usual
+Andamanese type, for keeping food. There were two rows of sleeping
+places which were separated by small poles, making rectangles on the
+ground about 5 feet by 4 feet, each of which was probably occupied by a
+man and his wife and small children [231].
+
+The relation of this type of communal hut, in which all the members of
+one local group are brought together under a single roof of one slope,
+to the ordinary family hut of the Andamans, and the arrangement of the
+hunting camp in a line, is obvious.
+
+To the arrangement of huts in a village around a central open space
+corresponds the second type of communal hut, which may be called the
+round hut. Communal huts of this type were formerly built by the
+natives of the Great Andaman Division, but have fallen into disuse in
+recent times, owing to the natives having become much more migratory in
+their habits. Huts of the same type are built at the present day by the
+natives of the Little Andaman and by the Jarawa.
+
+In its typical form this kind of hut is built by erecting two circles
+of posts, a smaller circle of tall posts, and a wider circle of shorter
+posts. The tops of these posts are connected by horizontal and sloping
+timbers, which make the framework of the roof. The roof is made of a
+number of mats of palm-leaves, which are laid on the rafters and tied
+to them with strips of cane. The mats are made in exactly the same way
+as the smaller mats used for the small huts and already described. They
+are sometimes rectangular in shape, though occasionally an attempt is
+made to make them narrower at the top and broader at the bottom. They
+are arranged on the roof so as to overlap one another and thus make the
+hut rain-proof. They are not joined in the centre, but a small space is
+left for the smoke of the fires to escape, and the rain is prevented
+from entering by letting one or two of the mats overhang the others at
+the top.
+
+In the round huts of the Jarawa and the Little Andaman there is no
+centre-post, and according to the statements made to me by the natives
+of the Great Andaman they did not use a centre-post for their huts. In
+the description attached to a photograph in the British Museum Mr
+Portman speaks of the centre-post of a communal hut, which is shown in
+the photograph still standing, although the hut had been pulled down.
+It would therefore seem that in the Great Andaman the natives did
+sometimes erect a centre-post for their round huts. The typical round
+hut, however, has no centre-post.
+
+It is clear that the round hut has been developed from the village. If
+all the small huts of a village be drawn together so as to touch each
+other, and if the mats of thatching be lengthened so as to meet and
+overlap in the middle, we have a round hut in its typical form. The
+evidence that this is so is afforded by the thatching, consisting of
+separate mats, often rectangular in shape (like the mats used for
+family huts), placed so as to overlap one another. This crude way of
+thatching could hardly have originated in any other way. Further
+evidence is afforded, as we shall see, by the internal arrangement of
+the hut.
+
+Although the hut is here called a round hut, it must not be supposed
+that the shape is always regularly circular. It may be somewhat oval,
+and in any case is rarely very regularly constructed. In general,
+however, the shape approaches more or less nearly to a circle.
+
+Huts of this kind vary in size according to the number of families
+occupying them. The height in the middle may be as much as 30 feet and
+the diameter may be 60 feet. The smallest I have seen was a Jarawa hut
+on Rutland Island, which was only nine feet high and 15 feet maximum
+diameter. In exposed situations the mats of thatching reach as far as
+the ground, but huts are sometimes built in sheltered situations with a
+space of a foot or two left between the ends of the thatch and the
+ground. A low doorway is provided on one side.
+
+Within the hut there is a central space that is the common part of the
+hut and corresponds to the dancing ground of the village. In the wet
+season the communal fire is situated in this open space, and here the
+communal cooking is performed. In Jarawa huts the roof of the central
+part of the hut is hung with trophies of the chase consisting of pigs’
+skulls bound with cane. In former times the natives of the Great
+Andaman Division hung similar trophies in their round huts. Around the
+central space are the spaces allotted to the different families, these
+being marked off by means of short lengths of wood laid on the ground.
+
+It is thus clear that the basis of Andamanese architecture is the use
+of a single rectangular roof giving a shelter open at the front. This
+is the usual form of the hunter’s shelter and of the family hut in the
+village. For additional shelter two such roofs may be used, but no
+attempt is made to join them, one being made to overlap the other.
+There are two customary modes of arranging huts, either side by side
+facing in the same direction or round an open space facing inwards.
+Where, instead of separate roofs for each family, we have a united
+roof, these two arrangements of the camp give rise to two different
+types of communal hut, the long hut and the round hut.
+
+In a village each hut is occupied by one family. In the communal hut
+(of either type) each family has a special portion of the hut marked
+off for its special use. Whether in a village or in a communal hut each
+family has its own small fire, at which the family meals are prepared.
+At one side of this fire is erected a small platform about a foot above
+the ground, supported on either three or four upright sticks. This
+platform is used for storing food. The natives of the Little Andaman
+erect low bamboo platforms to serve as beds, arranged round the
+communal hut, each family having its own. In the Great Andaman the
+natives, as a rule, make a bed of leaves on the ground and lay a
+sleeping mat on the top of this. In damp situations, however, they
+sometimes, as already mentioned, make a floor to the hut, raised a foot
+or two above the ground, and sleep on that. The Jarawa have a habit of
+sleeping in the wood-ashes of their fires in their cold weather hunting
+camps.
+
+Turning now to the Semang, we find some differences in respect to their
+habitations. Those of the Semang who have not been influenced to a
+great extent by their neighbours and have not settled down to
+agricultural pursuits, never camp in the same spot for more than a few
+days, and have therefore no need to build anything except temporary
+shelters [232].
+
+The Semang often erect their shelters in trees, well above the surface
+of the ground. This is a feature which distinguishes them from the
+Andamanese. It seems probable that these tree-shelters have been
+adopted by the Semang as a protection against wild beasts [233]. As
+there are no dangerous beasts in the Andamans, the extra labour
+involved in building a shelter in the branches of a tree instead of on
+the ground would serve no useful purpose. The difference in this
+respect between the Semang and the Andamanese is therefore due to a
+difference in the circumstances in which they live.
+
+The typical form of Semang shelter, occupied by one family, is erected
+by planting three or four stout sticks or poles in the ground in a row
+at an angle of about 60° or 75° and lashing palm-leaves across these.
+The screen or roof thus formed is further supported, if necessary, with
+one or two poles used as props in front [234]. These shelters are
+similar to the Andaman shelters in having a single sloping rectangular
+roof, but differ from them in being supported, not by upright posts,
+but in an altogether less adequate manner. However, the Semang shelters
+are apparently very easy to erect, and as they are only occupied for a
+night or two there is no inducement to the natives to make them more
+substantial.
+
+The Semang sometimes make a shelter by planting a number of palm-leaves
+in the ground in a semicircle so that the overhanging ends meet in the
+centre [235].
+
+As the Semang are constantly moving from place to place, they have
+little use for a communal hut of substantial build. One communal
+shelter has been described, which contained eleven sleeping-places
+arranged in two long rows. The upright timbers of the shelter consisted
+of young saplings planted in two opposite rows, across them being
+lashed the leaves of a palm. There were, besides, two central posts or
+pillars, each about a third of the distance from either end of the
+shelter, and a dozen poles placed as props or wind-braces in various
+positions and at various angles, in order to strengthen the structure
+and keep it from being blown over in a high wind. The two slopes of the
+roof were not united over a ridge-pole, but a longitudinal aperture was
+left between them for about two-thirds of the entire length of the
+roof, and through the gap thus caused the greater part of the smoke
+from the many fireplaces issued. All round the walls were ranged a
+number of bamboo sleeping-platforms, five to six feet in length by
+about three feet in breadth. The owner of each sleeping-platform or
+family unit possessed a separate fire or hearth [236].
+
+We have only scanty information about the huts of the Philippine
+Negritos. In Zambales (Luzon) a certain number of the Negritos have
+adopted a settled mode of life and depend on agriculture for some part
+of their subsistence. The most advanced of these have adopted the form
+of hut common amongst their neighbours. The less settled Negritos of
+Zambales erect huts which are almost exactly the same as the family
+huts of the Andamanese. Two short upright posts are erected for the
+back of the hut, and two taller ones for the front, and on these four
+posts a rectangular roof of one slope is erected. A bamboo floor or
+platform is erected a foot or so above the ground, just as in some
+Andaman huts [237]. In the Zambales huts the upright posts are forked
+and the horizontal poles are supported in the fork.
+
+At Casiguran the Negritos erect palm-leaf shelters similar to those of
+the Semang. A few poles are thrust into the ground at an angle and in a
+row and palm-leaves are attached to these, the screen being further
+supported with props [238].
+
+A comparison of the three branches of the Negrito race in the light of
+present information shows that the usual form of habitation amongst
+them is a sloping roof or screen of palm-leaves. One form of this, the
+simplest to construct, but only suitable as a temporary shelter, is in
+common use amongst the Semang and is found amongst the Negritos of
+Casiguran. The other form, more permanent but requiring more labour to
+erect, is in common use in the Andamans and amongst the Negritos of
+Zambales. Of communal huts we have no evidence in the Philippines. The
+communal shelter of the Semang consists of two screens leaning towards
+one another. The two types of communal hut of the Andamans are both
+derived from the family hut.
+
+
+
+HUNTING, FISHING, ETC.
+
+The Andaman Islanders depend for their subsistence entirely upon the
+natural productions of the forest and the sea. They make no attempt
+whatever to cultivate the soil. Until the introduction of dogs in 1858
+they had no domestic animals. Young pigs are occasionally kept in
+captivity till they are grown, but they are killed for food and are not
+bred in captivity. Thus the Andamanese provide themselves with food by
+three different forms of activity: (1) collecting such things as roots
+and fruits and honey, (2) fishing in the sea and in the creeks, (3)
+hunting the wild animals of the forest.
+
+For hunting the Andamanese rely entirely on the bow and arrow. Since
+they have had dogs they occasionally make hunting spears, but they did
+not do so in former times. They make no use whatever of any method of
+trapping game or birds. For fishing they also make use of the bow and
+arrow, wading out on to the reefs and shooting the fish, and in this
+they are very skilful. Crustaceans, such as crabs and crayfish, are
+captured in the same way. In the North Andaman a sort of short fish
+spear was formerly in use as an occasional substitute for the bow and
+arrow. In all parts of the islands small nets are used by the women for
+catching small fish and prawns. In the Great Andaman large nets were
+formerly used for capturing turtle, dugong and large fish near the
+shore. At the present time the natives of the Great Andaman Division
+make use of harpoons with which they capture turtle, dugong and large
+fish from their canoes. Harpoons are not used in the Little Andaman.
+The Andamanese are also aware of methods of poisoning or stupefying
+fish in pools by means of certain plants that they crush and place in
+the water, but I have never seen them use this method of fishing,
+although they say that they formerly did so. They have no fish hooks
+and no fish traps. At the present time a few of the natives have learnt
+to take fish with hook and line, but they are unable to make hooks for
+themselves, and have to obtain them from the Settlement at Port Blair.
+
+In collecting roots a digging stick is used, and a hooked pole is used
+for gathering fruit, but they have no other special implements in use
+in collecting natural productions, and have no need of any. The adze is
+used for obtaining molluscs and for cutting honey-combs from hollow
+trees.
+
+It is thus clear that by far the most important utensil of the
+Andamanese is the bow and arrow. We may say that they are essentially a
+bow and arrow people. This is even more true of the natives of the
+Little Andaman Division than of those of the Great Andaman Division.
+
+It may be noted here that the Andamanese have no weapons that are used
+only for fighting. They fight with their chief hunting weapon, the bow
+and arrow. Nor have they any special defensive weapons, the shield
+being unknown.
+
+The Semang in their natural condition depend for their subsistence on
+collecting roots and fruits from the forest, on catching fish in the
+streams, and on hunting animals. Their mode of subsistence is thus
+essentially the same as that of the Andamanese. One difference is that
+they have not the sea from which to draw supplies, and another is that
+the forests in which they live afford a much larger variety of game. A
+number of the Semang now practice a little rude agriculture which they
+have undoubtedly adopted in imitation of their neighbours of other
+races [239].
+
+The principal weapon of the Semang, as of the Andamanese, is the bow
+and arrow. In hunting they also use spears [240], thus showing a
+difference from the Andamanese. Some of the Semang make use of the
+blow-pipe with poisoned darts, but it is practically certain that they
+have adopted the use of this weapon from their neighbours the Sakai
+[241]. They also make use to some extent of traps with which to capture
+jungle animals and birds. The wilder Semang living in the mountains
+have little opportunity of obtaining fish. Those of them that dwell
+near rivers use fish-spears and harpoons for catching large fish, and a
+small basket-work scoop for catching small fry [242]. They also fish
+with rod and line, the hooks being, as a rule, roughly manufactured
+from bits of brass or other wire [243]. The Semang have no special
+fighting weapons either offensive or defensive.
+
+In the Philippines some of the Negritos practice a little rude
+agriculture [244]. It is practically certain that they have only
+adopted this mode of subsistence through contact with agricultural
+peoples of other races. They originally depended entirely upon
+collecting, fishing and hunting, and even those who now grow a few
+scanty crops devote a large part of their energies to hunting and
+collecting the natural products of the jungles [245]. The chief weapon
+of the Negritos of the Philippines, as of the Andamanese and the
+Semang, is the bow and arrow. They use the bow and arrow for shooting
+fish, having special fish-arrows [246]. It seems doubtful if they use
+spears, unless they have adopted them from their neighbours. In hunting
+deer the Negritos of Zambales use large nets like fish nets. They are
+acquainted with the use of traps for game but they seem to prefer to
+depend on the bow and arrow [247]. In the larger streams of Zambales
+they make fishing weirs of bamboo, after the manner of the
+Christianised natives of the same part [248].
+
+As the most important weapon of the Andamanese, and indeed of the
+Negritos in general, is the bow, we may consider this first. Different
+kinds of bow are in use in different parts of the Andamans, but by a
+careful comparison of them it is possible to show how they are all
+derived from one original pattern.
+
+The first kind of bow to be described is that in use in the Little
+Andaman. These bows are all made of a reddish-brown wood (possibly
+Mimusops littoralis). They are cut with an adze from a straight piece
+of wood, and are planed but not polished. The length varies within
+fairly wide limits. Six specimens selected as typical have lengths of
+131, 150, 159·5, 163, 168 and 188 centimetres, giving an average of
+about 160 centimetres (= 63 inches). In section the bow is markedly
+convex on the one side and slightly convex on the other. The two
+figures (Fig. 1) show the section at the middle and at a point 7 cm.
+from the end of a typical specimen. The shape in section varies a
+little from one example to another, and the dimensions of breadth and
+thickness also vary. At the broadest point, which is in the middle, the
+average breadth of six bows is 3·2 cm., the broadest being 3·7 cm., and
+the narrowest 2·3 cm. The average thickness in the middle is 1·8 cm.,
+the actual figures ranging from 2·1 to 1·3 cm. From the middle the bow
+tapers slightly towards each end. At a distance of 7 cm. from the end
+of the bow the average breadth is 1·8 cm., and the average thickness
+1·2 cm.
+
+The flatter side is the inside of the bow. Referring to the figures,
+the side marked A is that which faces a man as he holds the bow ready
+to shoot (called here the inside). C is thus the right-hand side and D
+the left-hand. By breadth is meant the distance from C to D, and by
+thickness the distance from A to B.
+
+At each end of the bow there is a shoulder, as shown in Fig. 2. The
+length from the shoulder to the end of the bow, i.e. the length of the
+point on which the string is looped, is about 10 to 12 mm. Both ends
+are the same. For a few centimetres below the shoulder the bow is
+served over with string or fibre. In a carefully finished bow the
+serving is usually done with ornamental string, i.e. with string round
+which is twisted the dried yellow skin of the Dendrobium. In other
+examples plain string is used, or a strip of twisted Ficus fibre, or
+even nowadays a twisted strip of cotton cloth.
+
+Bows are never ornamented in the Little Andaman either with paint or
+with incised patterns.
+
+The bow-string of the Little Andaman is made of strips of the bark of
+the Ficus laccifera. The number and width of the strips used depend on
+the size of the bow. In a small bow now in the Cambridge Museum the
+string is made of a single strip of bark about 1 cm. in width. This
+strip is simply twisted, the twist being that of a right-hand or male
+screw. When two strips are used they are not twisted around one another
+in the way that a two-ply rope is made, but are laid flat together and
+twisted together, so that when the string is finished only one of the
+strips is visible, the other being inside. In a stout string for a
+large bow three or four strips may be twisted together in this way. The
+bow-string is not a rope, but a twisted strand (Fig. 3.)
+
+At one end of the string a loop is made, as shown in Fig. 4. The end is
+doubled over to make a loop of the right size, a round turn is made
+over the standing part (A) and the end (B) is twisted in with the
+standing part by untwisting the latter, laying the end in, and twisting
+up again. If this splicing, as it may perhaps be loosely called, be not
+sufficiently secure, it is served over or stopped with finer fibre of
+the same kind. This loop is of sufficient size to slip down over the
+shoulders. At the other end the string is attached to the peg either
+with a knot, or else by means of a small loop (just large enough to go
+over the peg, but not large enough to slip over the shoulder) made in
+exactly the same way as the loop already described. When the bow is to
+be strung the larger loop is slipped over the peg at the top end of the
+bow and is pushed down over the shoulder. The other end (with the
+smaller loop) is then slipped on the peg at the lower end, resting on
+the shoulder. The lower end is placed on the ground, while the top end
+is held in the hand. The man places his foot against the middle of the
+bow and draws the top towards him until he is able to slip the top loop
+of the string up over the shoulder so that it catches the peg or tip.
+The bow is then ready for use.
+
+Toy bows are made for small boys of exactly the same general pattern as
+the large bows. A toy bow of this kind, now in the Cambridge Museum, is
+107 cm. long and 18 mm. broad in the middle.
+
+The next type of bow to be considered is that used by the natives of
+the North Sentinel Island. I have only been able to see one specimen of
+this type, which is in the British Museum. It is made of a different
+kind of wood from that used in the Little Andaman. The length is 155·5
+cm., and the breadth at the middle is 4·3 cm. The section in the
+middle, which is shown in Fig. 5, is slightly different from that of
+the average Little Andaman bow, but it has the same feature of greater
+convexity on the outside and less convexity on the inside, and it lies
+just within the range of variation of the Little Andaman type. The ends
+of the bow are shaped in the same way as those of the Little Andaman
+bow. The breadth at the shoulder, however, is 2·5 cm., which is greater
+than the corresponding measurement of the Little Andaman bow. The bow
+is not ornamented either with a painted or incised pattern. The string
+is missing. There is no binding at the ends below the shoulders, but
+this has possibly been present and come off, as the specimen is one
+that has been thrown away by its owner owing to the wood having split.
+So far as we can tell from this single specimen the bow of the North
+Sentinel differs very little from that of the Little Andaman.
+
+We now come to the bows of the Jarawa of the South Andaman. The Jarawa
+of Rutland Island, of whom there are now very few, but of whom there
+were a larger number twenty or thirty years ago, make bows exactly like
+those of the Little Andaman, and apparently do not make any other kind.
+The Jarawa to the north of Port Blair, who have been driven northwards
+by the spread of the Penal Settlement, also make bows of this type,
+which it is not possible to distinguish from Little Andaman bows. These
+northern Jarawa, however, also make bows of a different kind. These
+will be spoken of as belonging to the “modified Jarawa type.” They are
+larger than Little Andaman bows, having an average length of about 185
+cm., with a breadth of about 5 cm. The section, throughout the greater
+part of the length, is either plano-convex, or, more frequently,
+concavo-convex. The section of a typical example is shown in Fig. 6. At
+the middle of the bow, where it is held in the hand, there is a slight
+thickening produced by a protuberance on the inside, i.e. on the flat
+or concave side. In a certain number of specimens the bow, instead of
+being straight, is slightly recurved outwards. Finally, the wood from
+which these bows are cut is not the same as that used in the Little
+Andaman.
+
+The Little Andaman bow, the North Sentinel bow and the Jarawa bow are
+all varieties of one type. The Little Andaman form is probably nearest
+to the original of the type, and I shall show later how the
+modifications found in the modified Jarawa type came to be adopted.
+
+We now come to bows of a different type, of which there are two
+varieties, one used in the South and Middle Andaman, and the other used
+in the North Andaman.
+
+The bow of the South Andaman tribes is not cut from a straight piece of
+wood, but is cut from a tree that has bent in the course of its growth
+into a suitable curve. A tree has to be found that will provide a piece
+of wood of the required shape. From this the bow is shaped with an
+adze, and is finished by planing with a boar’s tusk.
+
+Bows of this kind vary in length between 180 and 210 cm., the most
+usual length being between 190 and 195 cm. At the upper end the bow is
+brought to a point approximately circular in section. From this point
+it broadens out until, at a distance of about 50 or 55 cm., or between
+one-quarter and one-third of the length of the bow, it reaches its
+maximum breadth, which is, on the average, about 5·5 cm. The section of
+the bow at this point is convex on the outer side, while on the inner
+side it may be flat or slightly concave, or even in rare instances
+slightly convex. In many specimens there is a very slightly raised keel
+running down the middle of the inside of the bow. The thickness of the
+bow at the point mentioned is usually 1·5 to 1·75 cm., and there is
+little variation in this respect in different specimens. (See Fig. 8.)
+
+At the middle the bow decreases in breadth and increases in thickness
+to form a handle. At the handle the usual section may be described as
+pear-shaped, the greatest diameter being the thickness (from inside to
+outside) and not the breadth.
+
+From the handle towards the lower end the bow again increases in
+breadth, so that the lower portion is about the same breadth and
+thickness as the upper portion. At the lower end it tapers to a point,
+circular in section, but the point is blunter than at the upper end.
+
+Thus the whole bow consists of a leaf-shaped upper portion or blade
+which is straight (i.e. neither curved inwards nor outwards), a waist
+or handle, and a lower blade that is curved backwards or outwards at
+about its middle, this being the position of the bend in the wood from
+which it is cut. A bow of this type is shown in Plate V.
+
+Near each end the bow is served over with string for a distance of 3 or
+4 cm., leaving a bare point at the upper end of about 7 cm. long, and a
+point at the lower end of about 1·5 cm. (Fig. 7.)
+
+A bow-string is made from the fibre of the Anadendron. A number of
+strands of the fibre are taken and are waxed with black bees’-wax. Four
+of these strands are taken, three of them are placed together and the
+fourth is wound spirally round them. When the end of the active strand
+(the one being twisted round the others) is neared, a new strand is
+taken and laid in. The twisting is continued for a few turns and the
+newly inserted one is then taken, the end of the first active strand
+being laid in and wound over in its turn. The process continues in this
+way, new strands being added until a cord of sufficient length has been
+made. This is again waxed over on the outside.
+
+At one end of the cord a knot is tied. At the other end a loop or eye
+is formed. To make this eye, when the cord is of sufficient length, the
+end of it is bent over to form a loop of about 1 cm. or a little more
+in diameter. This loop is then served over with thread made of
+Anadendron fibre. The serving is continued over the neck of the loop
+for about 1·5 cm. This gives an eye with the appearance shown in Fig.
+9. A loose strand of fibre is left at the neck of the loop. This is
+wound spirally over the cord, as described before, new strands being
+added one after another until the cord has been treated in this way for
+about 35 cm. from the eye. It is then stopped by serving it over for
+about 2 cm. with Anadendron thread. It is clear from this description
+that the cord is somewhat thicker for about 35 cm. from the end with
+the eye than it is in the rest of its length.
+
+To string the bow the knotted end of the bow-string is fastened round
+the top end of the bow with a slip knot, so that it rests on the top of
+the string serving. The bow is then turned upside down and the top end
+(now temporarily at the bottom) is fixed in the ground or against a
+stone, so that it will not slip. The other end of the bow is taken by
+the left hand, while the cord is held in the right, the right foot is
+placed against the handle or middle of the bow and the bow is bent, the
+end held by the hand being drawn towards the operator until he is able
+to slip over it the eye or loop at the end of the string.
+
+After the bow has been strung the upper portion, which before was
+straight, is now curved inwards, and the bow therefore appears as
+S-shaped when seen from the side. When a man starts out hunting or
+fishing he strings his bow and tests it, and it remains strung till he
+returns, when he unstrings it and places it in his hut.
+
+The advantage of having a knot at one end of the string seems to be
+that should the string be stretched by use it can be tightened by
+altering the position of the knot.
+
+At the point where the nock of the arrow is placed when the bow is
+drawn, it is usual to serve the string over with thread of Anadendron
+fibre.
+
+The peculiar features of the South Andaman bow depend on the fact that
+the bow takes advantage of the greater toughness and elasticity of wood
+that has been compressed in the course of its growth. When the bow is
+drawn the strain does not fall evenly, but, by reason of the shape of
+the bow, is concentrated on one portion, namely the lower portion of
+the bow where it is curved outwards. This is easily seen when a bow is
+strongly drawn, for from the S-shape that it has before, it becomes
+very nearly true arc-shaped when fully drawn. The lower portion of the
+bow works as though hinged, and thus the strain is largely borne by the
+curved portion of the bow. Now this portion is cut from the concave
+side of a tree that has been bent while growing, and consequently the
+fibres of the wood are here stronger, tougher and more elastic. The
+result is that for a given amount of energy spent in drawing the bow a
+greater force of propulsion is given to the arrow than with a bow of
+the Little Andaman type.
+
+The breadth of the bow is necessitated by its shape, for if it were
+narrow the string would slip round on to the outside of the bow. The
+narrowing at the handle is necessary for holding the bow. The adoption
+of tapered ends instead of shoulders is a definite improvement as it
+makes the bow less liable to split at the ends.
+
+The bows of the South Andaman group of tribes are always decorated with
+incised patterns. The conventional pattern is shown in Fig. 10. One
+line of such pattern runs down each edge of both the inside and the
+outside of the bow, and on the inside a similar line of pattern runs
+down the middle. When bows are newly made they are often also decorated
+with designs in red paint and white clay, particularly if they are
+intended as gifts. These painted designs soon wear off and are not
+renewed.
+
+In these tribes bows are sometimes made of a size so large as to be
+almost useless for hunting. One such bow, now in the Cambridge Museum,
+is 220 cm. long and with a maximum breadth of 10 cm. Such bows are very
+carefully made and decorated and are intended as gifts. A man generally
+makes such a bow with the deliberate intention of giving it to some
+person whom he wishes to please. The bow that I have was specially made
+to give to me in this way. A man who possessed such a bow would not
+dream of using it in hunting, but he might use it in a shooting match,
+in order to show his skill.
+
+In the South Andaman tribes toy bows are made for boys of somewhat the
+same shape as the ordinary hunting bow. An example of such a bow, now
+in the Cambridge Museum, is 121 cm. long. It is cut from a bent piece
+of wood in such a way that the lower portion is curved outwards. The
+section in the middle is plano-convex, very nearly the half of a
+circle, the breadth being 26 mm. and the thickness 13 mm. It is
+broadest in the middle, and tapers towards each end. When strung it
+assumes the typical S-shape of the South Andaman bow. It is served over
+with thread at one end and with a strip of cotton cloth at the other,
+leaving two points for the string. The latter is of the usual South
+Andaman type, but of smaller dimensions.
+
+We must turn now to the bow used by the four tribes of the North
+Andaman, which is of a somewhat different pattern from that just
+described. It is, in the first place, shorter, lighter and more
+slenderly made. Of ten typical specimens the shortest is 153 cm. long,
+and the longest is 182 cm. The usual length is about 160 to 165 cm. In
+its broadest part the North Andaman bow is broader than the South
+Andaman bow, the breadth varying from 6·5 to 7·5 cm. in different
+specimens.
+
+Although the North Andaman bow is, as a rule, cut from a curved piece
+of wood, it may, on occasion, be cut from a piece that is practically
+straight.
+
+At the upper end of the bow there is a long point. In a specimen that
+is in every way typical, at about 5 cm. from the point the section is
+circular and the diameter is about 5 mm.; at about 30 cm. from the end
+the section is slightly flattened or oval, and the maximum diameter
+(the breadth from side to side) is about 1·5 cm. From this the bow
+broadens fairly rapidly, until at a distance of about 60 cm. from the
+end it is 7 cm. broad. The section at a point 60 cm. from the end is
+shown in Fig. 11, where it may be seen to be convex on the outside and
+only very slightly convex on the inside. At about 75 cm. from the end
+the bow narrows in breadth to form a handle, at the same time
+increasing slightly in thickness. The handle is approximately circular
+in section in the middle, which is about 95 cm. from the upper end, and
+about 80 cm. from the lower end, the diameter being about 2·2 cm. Below
+the handle the bow broadens out once more into a lower blade which in
+shape and section is similar to the upper blade. At a distance of about
+30 cm. from the lower end the bow once more narrows off to a point
+approximately circular in section. The lower point of the bow is not so
+long or so tapering as the upper point.
+
+The whole bow thus consists of two blade-shaped portions tapering to a
+point at each end, and with a waist or handle between them. The upper
+blade is straight, i.e. is not curved either outwards or inwards. The
+lower blade is curved outwards (like that of the South Andaman bow) in
+nearly every newly made bow and in every bow that has been in use.
+
+The upper part of the bow is served over with string for about 1·5 cm.
+(at a distance of 15·5 cm. from the end in the bow that has been
+described), and the lower end is similarly served (at a distance of 6
+cm. from the end). The general shape of the bow as seen from inside is
+shown in Fig. 12.
+
+The bow-string of the North Andaman is made from Anadendron fibre in
+much the same way as described in connection with the South Andaman
+bow, but in the North there is a loop or eye at both ends of the
+string. As soon as the first few centimetres of the cord have been made
+(by the method previously described) it is bent over into a loop, and
+this loop is served with Anadendron thread, just as in the case of the
+South Andaman string. The making of the string then proceeds in the
+usual way until a sufficient length has been made, this depending, of
+course, on the length of the bow for which it is intended. The end is
+then bent over into a loop, and this loop is served over with thread.
+The loose end of fibre is not in this case (as it is in the South
+Andaman string) twisted round the standing part of the cord, but is
+laid beside it, and the thread that has been used for serving is wound
+spirally round them both for a distance of about 10 cm. from the neck
+of the loop, so that the end is stopped.
+
+When the bow is to be strung the first made loop is slipped over the
+top end of the bow so that it rests on the thread serving already
+mentioned, the neck of the loop being on the inside of the bow. The bow
+is then laid on the ground, inside downwards, a foot is placed on the
+middle, and the lower end of the bow is bent upwards (and therefore
+outwards) far enough to allow the other loop of the cord to be slipped
+over the end. The bow is now in what may be called the half-strung
+position, and in order to understand the mechanical principles of this
+type of bow it is necessary to make quite clear what this position is.
+It is shown in Fig. 13, A. The string passes from the top to the bottom
+on the outside of the bow, so that the bow is, so to speak, reversed,
+and is subjected to a strain that causes it to curve outwards. In most
+bows, when they are first made, there is an outward curve in the lower
+portion, owing to the bow having been cut from a curved piece of wood.
+When the bow is half strung this outward curvature is increased. If a
+bow be made from a straight piece of wood, an outward curve is produced
+by the operation of stringing it, as described above.
+
+As soon as a bow is completed it is strung in the reversed position
+described, and is then placed over a fire, in such a position that the
+lower (curved) blade is immediately above the fire. The smoke and heat
+of the fire season the wood of this portion of the bow. Any specimen of
+a bow of this type, unless it has been newly made and not seasoned, is
+blackened on the inner surface of its lower part. The bow is left to
+season in this way for some time. A man places his bow over the fire of
+his own hut, which is kept constantly burning day and night. It must be
+remembered that all the time it is being seasoned the bow is subjected
+to a slight strain curving it outwards.
+
+After the bow has been sufficiently seasoned it is brought into use.
+When a bow that is half strung or strung in a reversed way is to be
+used, it is taken by the handle in the left hand, with the string away
+from the body, the bow being upside down. The lower part of the bow
+(i.e. what is really the top of the bow when it is in its normal
+position) is rested against the thigh. The string is taken in the right
+hand and pulled over towards the body, so that the bow reverses itself
+and appears in the fully strung position shown in Fig. 13, B. It is
+then ready for immediate use.
+
+A bow of this type is hardly ever entirely unstrung. When a man has
+finished with his bow for the time being, he puts it once more in the
+half-strung position, by an action the reverse of that described above,
+and then hangs the bow over the fire. Thus while the bow is in active
+use it is in the fully strung position, and at all other times it is
+kept in the half-strung position.
+
+It is clear that the North Andaman bow depends on a principle that is
+not made use of in the South Andaman bow, which we may state by saying
+that if a piece of wood be subjected to the influence of heat and smoke
+while it is bent in one position it will acquire greater strength and
+elasticity to react against a strain that bends it in the opposite
+direction. When the bow is fully strung it is S-shaped. When it is
+drawn the greater part of the strain falls on the lower portion where
+it is curved outwards. It is this portion of the bow that is
+strengthened by seasoning.
+
+The North Andaman bow is very much lighter than the South Andaman bow
+and is much more elastic. I always found it very difficult to shoot
+with a South Andaman bow, but on the other hand I found the North
+Andaman bow very easy to use. In drawing it only a slight pull is
+required in order to send an arrow with considerable velocity. The
+disadvantage of the northern bow is that, owing to its slighter build,
+it does not last very long, and is liable to be broken. However, it
+only takes a man a few days to make a new bow, string included, and the
+very definite superiority of the North Andaman bow over that of the
+South Andaman amply compensates for its shorter life.
+
+Bows of exactly the same shape but of smaller dimensions are made in
+the North Andaman for boys, the length varying from about 90 cm. to
+about 120 cm. For very small boys toy bows of a different pattern are
+made. The bow is formed of a piece of wood about 90 cm. long and from 2
+to 2·5 cm. broad in the middle. The section in the middle is
+convexo-convex, with a high degree of convexity on the outside and a
+much slighter convexity on the inside. The bow tapers to a point at
+each end, but it tapers more gradually at the top than at the bottom.
+The bow-string is a simple piece of string (two-ply) made of Anadendron
+fibre. It is tied to the lower end of the bow at a distance of 1·5 to 3
+cm. from the end, and at the top it is tied at from 4 to 7 cm. from the
+end. The shape of a toy bow of this kind as seen from the side is shown
+in Fig. 14. It is not S-shaped, like the toy bow of the South Andaman
+previously described, but the curvature is asymmetrical.
+
+I obtained a specimen of a toy bow made of bamboo. Unfortunately there
+was no string, but it was probably intended to be strung in the fashion
+of the North Andaman toy bow just described. The outer surface of the
+bamboo was the outside of the bow, with the result that in section the
+inner side of the bow was more convex than the outer side. This is the
+only bow in the whole of the Andamans in which I ever saw this feature.
+In all other bows of whatever type the outer side is markedly convex
+and the inner side is either concave, flat or only slightly convex.
+
+It is now possible to compare one with another the different forms of
+bow in use in the Andamans. It would seem almost certain that the North
+Andaman bow can only have been derived from the form in use in the
+South Andaman or from one very similar to it. It is only after they
+were in the habit of making bows with an outward curve in the lower
+portion that the natives could have devised the method of seasoning
+this portion of the bow and keeping it in the reversed or half-strung
+position. It is unnecessary to argue the matter in detail, and we may
+conclude that the North Andaman type is derived from the South Andaman
+type.
+
+It is less certain, but still highly probable, that the South Andaman
+form was derived from a bow similar to that still in use in the Little
+Andaman. The South Andaman toy bow shows a stage intermediate between
+the Little Andaman bow and the usual South Andaman form. The section of
+this toy bow is very similar to that of the Little Andaman bow. It has
+no blades, and therefore no waist for the handle. The shape, however,
+is asymmetrical. Owing to the different method of stringing it, the
+shoulder at the end of the bow is unnecessary, and the bow is
+strengthened (prevented from splitting so easily) by tapering the end
+to a point instead. The difference between the toy bow and the general
+South Andaman bow is the presence in the latter of the two blades and
+the waist. The broadening of the bow into the blades is necessary in
+order to prevent it from accidentally reversing itself.
+
+We have still to consider the modified form of the Jarawa bow. The
+origin of this is easy to discover by the examination of a few typical
+specimens. Since the Jarawa have been in the South Andaman they have
+been in hostile contact with the tribes of the South Andaman Division.
+They have had opportunities of handling bows of the kind made by these
+tribes, and they have apparently discovered that these bows are more
+efficient than their own, but they have had no opportunity, such as
+only friendly intercourse would give, of discovering the principles on
+which the South Andaman bow is made. They have attempted to imitate it
+to the best of their ability, and this they have done (1) by making
+their bows longer and broader, (2) by making them concavo-convex in
+section instead of convexo-convex, (3) by cutting them occasionally
+from wood that gives them an outward curve in the lower portion, (4) by
+imitating the shape of the handle without, however, giving the bow a
+waist, (5) by serving over the bow-string with thread at the point
+where the arrow touches it, (6) by ornamenting their bows with incised
+and painted patterns. These are the only differences between the
+modified Jarawa type and the Little Andaman type, and all these may be
+explained as attempts to imitate the bows of the South Andaman
+Division. In not a single one of the modified Jarawa bows that I have
+seen is the fundamental principle of the South Andaman bow successfully
+applied.
+
+We may conclude that the ancestors of the Andamanese at one time used a
+bow resembling that in use in the Little Andaman at the present day,
+and that the S-shaped bow of the Great Andaman has been invented since
+the separation of the two main divisions of the race.
+
+It is not possible, owing to lack of sufficient information, to
+determine exactly the types of bow used by the Semang. The following
+notes are based on only six specimens, two of which are in the Museum
+of Ethnology at Cambridge [249], while the others are in the British
+Museum. Four of the specimens are sufficiently similar to one another
+to be regarded as belonging to one type, which seems to be the usual
+type of Semang bow. In length they are 165, 174·5, 182 and 197·5 cm.,
+and at the middle they vary in breadth between 2·5 and 3 cm. Three are
+of palm-wood, and the other is of a light-coloured but tough kind of
+wood. The shape of the section in the middle of the bow varies
+considerably in the different specimens, as shown in Fig. 15. There is
+some uncertainty as to which is the inside, and which is the outside of
+the bow. At each end there is a shoulder, the point or tip at one end
+being in every instance considerably longer than the other. The string
+in each case is a three-ply rope, having a spliced eye at one end and
+being fastened to the bow with a knot at the other end.
+
+The other two specimens do not conform to this type. One is of wood,
+134 cm. long, and 3·5 cm. broad in the middle. One end is provided with
+a notch on each side for the string, while the other end has three
+pairs of notches. The string is a three-ply cord with a loop or eye at
+each end. The other specimen is made of bamboo, and is 147 cm. long and
+2·25 cm. broad in the middle. One end has one pair of notches and the
+other has two pairs. The string is two-ply with a loop at each end.
+
+What we may perhaps regard as the usual type of Semang bow thus differs
+from the bow of the Little Andaman in three important respects, (1) in
+having a longer point at one end than at the other [250], (2) in having
+a string of three-ply rope instead of a strand of twisted fibre, and
+(3) in the variations in the section at the middle. From the four
+specimens available it is not possible to determine around what norm or
+norms the section of different specimens varies.
+
+Turning to the Negritos of the Philippine Islands, although a number of
+bows have been described by Meyer [251], the available information is
+not sufficient to enable us to determine what are the different types,
+and what is their relation one to another. Amongst the different
+varieties of bow used by the Negritos there is one which is very
+similar to the bow of the Little Andaman. It has a rounded or convex
+outer side, and a flattened inner side. The string loops on to a point
+at each end, and the string itself is formed of twisted fibre.
+
+From a study of the available material it seems that we are justified
+in concluding that the primitive Negrito bow was made of wood, with a
+shoulder at each end, probably with a section rounded on one side and
+flattened or keeled on the other, and that it had a string of twisted
+fibre with a loop or eye at one end, the other end being attached with
+a knot.
+
+The Andaman Islanders use two different kinds of arrows, one for
+shooting fish and the other for shooting pigs.
+
+The common fish-arrow, as at present used in all parts of the Great
+Andaman Division, consists of three parts—a shaft, a fore-shaft, and a
+point. The shaft is a length of bamboo straightened by means of heat,
+and may vary in length from 70 to 110 cm. At one end the bamboo is cut
+off about 3 cm. beyond one of the nodes, and a nock is made (Fig. 16).
+At this end the shaft is roughened with a Cyrena shell so as to give a
+firm grip for the fingers. At the other end the shaft is tapered for
+about a centimetre. At this end the bamboo is roughened with a shell to
+give a hold to the thread with which it is bound. The fore-shaft is a
+length of wood from 15 to 40 cm. long. One end is slightly tapered so
+that it fits tightly into the end of the bamboo shaft. The other end is
+tapered to a point, which is flattened on one side. The fore-shaft is
+inserted into the end of the shaft and the joint is bound over for a
+distance of about 2·5 cm. with thread. The point consists of a piece of
+iron wire, sharply pointed at both ends. This is laid against the
+flattened side of the fore-shaft and is bound to it with thread in such
+a way that one point projects at the back to form a barb (Fig. 16).
+When the binding is completed it is covered entirely over with a
+composition made by melting together bees’-wax, resin and red ochre.
+The composition is melted over a fire, is applied with a short piece of
+wood and is then smoothed over with a hot Cyrena shell. Only the
+binding attaching the point to the fore-shaft is covered with
+composition, and not that at the joining of the fore-shaft and the
+shaft.
+
+Arrows of this kind are used for shooting fish, but they also serve to
+shoot snakes or rats and on rare occasions birds.
+
+Similar fish-arrows are made in the Little Andaman, but they are larger
+(i.e. both longer and thicker) than those of the Great Andaman
+Division. The two ends of the bamboo shaft are not roughened, and the
+binding attaching the point to the fore-shaft is not covered with
+composition (which seems to be unknown in the Little Andaman) but with
+bees’-wax only.
+
+This seems to be the traditional form of fish-arrow of the Andamans.
+Before iron was plentiful the point consisted either of the serrated
+bone from the tail of the sting-ray or of a piece of the tibia of a pig
+ground down to the requisite dimensions on a piece of stone, and
+sharpened at each end.
+
+In the Little Andaman fish-arrows are sometimes used with two or four
+prongs attached to a bamboo shaft. In the British Museum there is an
+arrow from the North Sentinel Island with four prongs tied on to a
+wooden shaft, each prong being barbed by a detached piece of wood at
+the end.
+
+A simple form of arrow is made in both the Great Andaman and the Little
+Andaman consisting of a bamboo shaft with a pointed wooden head, the
+point being hardened in the fire. Such arrows are now very rarely used,
+save for shooting at a mark, but it is probable that before iron was
+plentiful they were used as a substitute for the fish-arrow described
+above, being easier to make although less serviceable.
+
+The pig-arrow in use in the Great Andaman consists of a shaft, and a
+fore-shaft to which is attached a head. The shaft is a piece of the
+wood of the Tetranthera lancæfolia, cut from the tree and straightened
+by means of heat. At the narrower end a nock about 1 cm. deep is cut,
+and the arrow is served with thread of Anadendron fibre for about 1·6
+cm. above the nock, in order to prevent splitting. At the other end the
+shaft is hollowed out to a depth of about a centimetre. This hollowing
+is done with the point of a fish-arrow or other similar piece of
+pointed iron. For a distance of about 1·5 cm. the end of the shaft is
+served over with thread of Anadendron fibre, so as to prevent it from
+splitting.
+
+The fore-shaft consists of a piece of tough wood one end of which is
+cut to such a size that it will fit fairly tightly into the hollow at
+the end of the shaft. At the other end it is split so as to admit the
+head.
+
+The head consists of a piece of iron broken into shape with the aid of
+a stone hammer and then ground down and sharpened on a whet-stone or
+with a file if one be obtainable. The usual shape is shown in Fig. 17.
+The head is inserted into the split end of the fore-shaft and the end
+of the latter is then served over with thread. A few centimetres below
+the head either one or two sharp-pointed pieces of iron wire are placed
+against the fore-shaft in the same plane as the head and are bound
+firmly to it with the thread, so as to provide a barb or barbs.
+
+A cord is made and one end of it is attached to the shaft and the other
+end to the fore-shaft. This cord is made as follows. A number of
+strands of Anadendron fibre are taken and waxed with bees’-wax. These
+are made into a cord by the same method as that described in connection
+with the Great Andaman bow-string, one strand being wrapped round the
+others. About 40 cm. of single cord is made in this way and the two
+ends are tied together. A piece of elastic wood is bent into the form
+of an arc and the loop of cord is placed over this so that it is
+stretched tight. A length of thread (of Anadendron fibre) is made and
+wound on to a fine netting needle or on to a thin slip of wood, and the
+two cords as they are stretched side by side are bound together with
+this thread by the process known as “nippering” (Fig. 19). In this way
+a firm and strong flattened cord is produced. One end of this is
+fastened to the fore-shaft immediately above the end that fits into the
+shaft. The other end is fastened to the shaft a few centimetres from
+the end, leaving a short length of the shaft around which the cord may
+be spirally wound when the arrow is in use. (Fig. 18.)
+
+Finally, the thread on the fore-shaft, i.e. that which holds the head
+and barbs in place, and also that which serves to attach the end of the
+cord, are covered with the composition already described as used on
+fish-arrows.
+
+Arrows of this kind are used in pig-hunting. The fore-shaft is inserted
+into the end of the shaft, the cord attaching the two being wound
+spirally round the end of the shaft. When a pig is struck the barbs
+prevent the head from coming out of the wound. As the pig attempts to
+run away the shaft catches against the undergrowth of the jungle and
+comes loose from the fore-shaft. Sooner or later the shaft becomes
+entangled in the undergrowth and holds the wounded pig fast till the
+hunters can come up with it and despatch it. It is obvious that the
+cord of the arrow needs to be so strong that the pig cannot break it.
+
+The natives of the Great Andaman tribes say that before they had plenty
+of iron they made similar pig-arrows with heads of shell and barbs of
+pig’s bone.
+
+The natives of the Little Andaman make a pig-arrow very similar to that
+of the Great Andaman tribes, but on the average somewhat longer. The
+cord attaching the fore-shaft to the shaft consists of a length of
+double two-ply rope of Hibiscus fibre. The binding of the arrow is done
+with thread of the Gnetum fibre instead of Anadendron, and is not
+coated with composition but is smeared with bees’-wax. The barb (there
+being usually only one) is not fixed in the same plane as the head, but
+in the plane at right angles to it. (Fig. 20.)
+
+Amongst the Jarawa the head of the pig-arrow is attached to the
+fore-shaft by a different method, holes being made in the iron through
+which the thread that holds it is passed. (Fig. 21.)
+
+Another kind of pig-arrow is sometimes made in the Great Andaman that
+has not a detachable head. The shaft is a length of bamboo into one end
+of which is fitted a fore-shaft of wood. The end of this fore-shaft is
+split and a head of iron is inserted into it and bound there. Such an
+arrow may be without barbs or may have one or two barbs of iron. It is
+used only rarely and then chiefly for despatching a pig that has
+already been struck by an arrow of the usual kind. The natives say that
+in former times arrows of this kind were used in fighting in preference
+to ordinary pig-arrows, which, however, were also used.
+
+In former times the natives of the Great Andaman, according to their
+own statements, made an arrow consisting of a bamboo shaft at the end
+of which was inserted a head made of Areca wood. An arrow of this kind,
+made for me by a native, is shown in Fig. 22.
+
+None of the arrows made in any part of the Andamans is feathered.
+
+In a comparison of the arrows of the Andamanese with those of the
+Semang and the Philippine Negritos the most interesting point is that
+all three branches of the Negrito race use arrows with detachable
+heads. Arrows of this kind from the Philippines are described by Meyer
+[252].
+
+An important point of difference would seem to be that while the
+Andamanese do not feather their arrows the Semang and the Negritos of
+the Philippines do so. It would seem, however, from the account of
+Semang arrows given by Skeat [253] that the feathering is such that it
+is of no actual service in directing the flight of the weapon, and that
+it is doubtful whether the Semang really understand the principle of
+feathering, or whether they do not employ it as the mutilated survival
+of more intelligent methods or perhaps make use of it for solely
+magical purposes.
+
+Another important point of difference is that the Semang poison their
+arrows, while the Andamanese do not. In this connection it must be
+remembered that the former people have for long been neighbours of
+people who use blow-pipes with poisoned darts.
+
+After the bow and arrow the most important hunting weapon of the Great
+Andaman is the harpoon which is used in capturing dugong, turtle,
+porpoise, and large fish. The harpoon consists of a head, a shaft and a
+line. The line is a length of rope of Hibiscus fibre of as much as
+twenty fathoms or more in length. The shaft is a bamboo of about 18
+feet in length. One end is cut off fairly near a node and is then
+served over with thread, and slightly hollowed. The head consists of a
+long piece of iron, such as a stout nail, brought to a sharp point at
+one end. The other end is served over with thread in such a way as to
+make it fit fairly tightly into the end of the bamboo shaft. Some
+distance from the point of the head two barbs of iron are attached by
+thread, and between this point and the lower end the line is attached.
+(See Fig. 23.)
+
+A man using the harpoon stands on the forward platform of the canoe,
+holding the bamboo shaft in his hand. The head is inserted in the upper
+end of this, and the line passes over his shoulder and is coiled in the
+bottom of the canoe, the other end being attached to the forward
+out-rigger boom or to the thwart that takes its place in a large canoe.
+He poles the canoe along the reef with the harpoon shaft. When about to
+make a throw he raises the shaft till he can hold the butt end in his
+right hand, with the point directed towards the fish or turtle, and he
+then leaps forward so that if he succeeds in his aim the weapon strikes
+with all the force of his weight behind it. When the turtle or fish is
+struck the bamboo shaft floats loose and this is secured by the man in
+the water, who returns to the canoe. It may be necessary to strike the
+prey with a second harpoon, but if the first was well thrown the animal
+is firmly held by the line.
+
+Harpoons are not used in the Little Andaman. The natives of the Great
+Andaman say that they themselves have only used them since they were
+able to obtain iron and that before that time they could only capture
+turtle and dugong in nets. It would seem therefore that the harpoon has
+been invented or adopted by the tribes of the Great Andaman Division in
+comparatively recent times, and was not an element of the primitive
+Andamanese culture.
+
+The turtle net is no longer used, as the natives prefer the harpoon and
+have all the iron they need. Such nets were formerly made of rope of
+Hibiscus fibre. A net was about 150 cm. in width and of variable
+length. One specimen that was made for me had an open mesh of about 25
+cm. square, while another had a smaller mesh. The knot used in a net
+from the South Andaman is the ordinary fisherman’s knot shown in Fig.
+24 b. In a net from the North Andaman the knot used is a slip-knot, one
+strand being tied with an overhand knot over another which it crosses
+at right angles as shown in Fig. 25.
+
+Each end of the turtle net is attached to a stake pointed at the lower
+end. The lower edge of the net is weighted with stones attached as
+shown in Fig. 24, while to the upper edge are attached a number of
+floats, each consisting of a long thin stick of Hibiscus wood to the
+upper end of which is attached a tassel of fibre.
+
+The net was placed in shallow water so that the stones rested on the
+bottom while the tassels at the upper ends of the floats appeared above
+the surface. As soon as a turtle was entangled in the net the agitation
+could be observed by those watching who would proceed to the spot to
+secure their capture.
+
+So far as is known it would seem that nets of this description are not
+used in the Little Andaman.
+
+The Andamanese make practically no use of spears. At the present time
+the natives of the Great Andaman Division sometimes make pig-spears of
+a length of stout cane or rattan with a head of iron attached. The
+natives themselves say that such spears have only been made since the
+occupation of the islands, and it is probable that they were first made
+in imitation of spears used by Burmese convicts for pig-hunting. They
+are hardly ever used, the pig-arrow being preferred.
+
+The true fish-spear is unknown in the Andamans though use is sometimes
+made of a harpoon similar to the turtle harpoon, but of smaller
+dimensions and with a finer line, for harpooning fish.
+
+In the North Andaman a sort of fish-gig was formerly in use made of
+about twelve pieces of Areca wood of about 105 to 110 cm. long and 1
+cm. or less broad and with tapered and sharp-pointed ends. These were
+fastened side by side by means of a strip of wood near one end, as
+shown in Fig. 26. This weapon was used for spearing small fish in pools
+on the reef.
+
+
+
+CUTTING IMPLEMENTS.
+
+At the present time the Andamanese make use of iron for their cutting
+implements. It is uncertain when they first learnt the use of iron, but
+it was certainly before the end of the eighteenth century. What iron
+they had was obtained from wrecks, of which there have always been a
+number on the Andamans. The metal has only become plentiful since the
+European settlement of 1858.
+
+It is highly probable that the Andamanese, though they may have learnt
+the use of iron from implements used by visitors to their shores, have
+not learnt from any other people the method of working the metal. Even
+at the present day they do not make any use of heat in the manufacture
+of their iron implements, the metal being worked cold. It seems highly
+probable that they have simply adopted in connection with iron the
+methods they formerly used in dealing with other materials,
+particularly shells.
+
+The materials used by the Andamanese, apart from iron, are wood, bone,
+shell and stone. We may begin by considering their use of stone.
+
+In former times quartz flakes were used by the Andamanese for the two
+purposes of shaving and scarifying the skin, and for hardly any other
+purpose. (Among minor uses of stone flakes may be mentioned those of
+cutting the finger-nails, and sharpening boars’ tusks.) A quartz pebble
+is held in the left hand and is struck with a hard rounded pebble of
+any suitable kind. A flake is thus knocked off and falls into the palm
+of the left hand. The flake is examined, and if it be suitable it is at
+once used. If it be unsuitable it is thrown away and another made. For
+shaving, flakes with a sharp blade-like edge are required; for
+scarifying, flakes with a fine point are preferred. A flake is used
+till its fine edge is lost and is then thrown away and another made.
+Thus a woman who is shaving some one’s head may use as many as twenty
+flakes one after another, and to obtain twenty suitable flakes she
+probably makes as many as forty or even more. The kitchen-middens or
+heaps of refuse that are found on the sites of old encampments contain
+thousands of quartz pebbles that have been used as cores, and thousands
+of flakes.
+
+Besides quartz there is a flinty kind of stone that is used in much the
+same way for making flakes. Suitable pieces of the stone are obtained
+and are placed in the fire for a few hours. They are taken out, and
+when they are cold are used in exactly the same way as a quartz pebble.
+
+At the present time quartz is hardly ever used in this way, for the
+natives greatly prefer glass, and they obtain sufficient old bottles
+from Port Blair to satisfy their requirements. The bottom of a bottle
+is treated in every way as though it was a quartz pebble, a flake being
+knocked off and used, and then another and so on till the operation in
+hand (whether shaving or scarifying) is completed. The flake is held
+between the thumb and first finger when it is being used. In no case is
+a flake of quartz or glass ever kept. It is only made when required and
+after having been used is thrown away.
+
+The natives themselves say that they formerly never made any use of
+stone for cutting purposes save in the case of stone flakes as
+described above. As against this there are three statements that must
+be considered. Colebrooke, who visited the islands in 1789, says of the
+Andamanese that “their canoes are hollowed out of the trunks of trees
+by means of fire and instruments of stone, having no iron in use
+amongst them, except such utensils as they have procured from the
+Europeans and sailors who have lately visited these islands; or from
+the wrecks of vessels formerly stranded on their coasts.” The accuracy
+of Colebrooke’s statement is made doubtful by the fact that at the
+present time (since 1858) the natives do not use fire in making their
+canoes, and it seems improbable that if they had this custom in 1789
+they should have discontinued it and have entirely forgotten that it
+ever existed. Further if they used implements of stone in 1789 it is
+certainly strange that by 1858 they should have entirely forgotten that
+they ever did so. When Mr Man was making his enquiries the oldest men
+all agreed in stating that they never used stone for their adzes. We
+may conclude that Colebrooke’s statement is untrustworthy.
+
+Stoliczka records the finding in the South Andaman of a stone celt and
+a stone arrow-head in the kitchen-middens of the South Andaman. The
+chief reason for doubting the value of this find is that Stoliczka
+states that these implements were made of tertiary sandstone, which it
+is very hard to believe would be of any use whatever. We may therefore
+adopt the opinion of M. Lapicque [254] that Stoliczka had found
+fragments of a whet-stone of sandstone and had been mislead into
+thinking that he had found an axe and an arrow-head.
+
+A third statement that needs to be considered is one by Mr Portman, who
+presented to the British Museum an arrow with a head of stone made
+specially for him by a native of the North Andaman who stated that in
+former times such arrow-heads were used by the Andamanese. At the
+present time the arrow-head is broken and it would seem to be so
+fragile as to be entirely worthless for the purpose to which it was
+supposed to be put. The natives of the North Andaman whom I questioned
+stated that they did not use stone for their arrow-heads, but shell. We
+may therefore hold that the evidence given by Mr Portman is not at all
+satisfactory.
+
+In the Akar-Bale tribe I heard a legend that at a certain spot there is
+a kind of stone which was used by the ancestors for making adzes. I
+visited the spot and the stone was pointed out to me. Unfortunately the
+specimen that I took was lost and I am therefore unable to state what
+the stone was, but it was such that it would have been utterly
+impossible to make any sort of adze out of it. It was of a crystalline
+nature and was easily fractured by a blow against even a soft substance
+such as wood. It was clear that the native statements about it were
+merely a legend having no historical value.
+
+We may justifiably conclude that it is probable that the statement of
+the natives to the effect that before they possessed iron in any
+quantity they made their adzes and arrow-heads out of shell and not out
+of stone, is correct. Their use of stone for cutting was therefore
+confined to the flakes which have been described.
+
+The most important material to the Andamanese seems to have been shell.
+Mollusc shells were used in the natural form or after having been
+manufactured. The chief shell used in its natural form is the Cyrena
+which serves at the present time as a knife, a scraper and a spoon.
+Even when they have knives of iron and steel they still use the Cyrena
+shell in preference for some purposes. It is used as a scraper in
+preparing fibres for rope and thread, in making arrows, as a knife for
+cutting thatching leaves and cane and even thread and rope, and for
+making incised patterns on bows and arrows. The shells are always to be
+found lying about their encampments, and a few are always carried with
+them when they migrate to a fresh camp. Those living inland obtain
+their supply of shells from their friends on the coast.
+
+When in use the shell is clasped between the thumb and first finger,
+the thumb passing over the convex side and the finger round the hinged
+edge. The remaining fingers are used to clasp the object that is being
+scraped or cut. In cutting, the motion is away from the body, being
+produced by a twist of the wrist. In scraping the motion is away from
+the body, or from left to right. A knife of iron or steel is held in
+this way by the natives whenever it is used for any purpose for which
+they formerly would have used a shell. The blade is clasped near the
+handle between the thumb and first finger, the back of the blade
+pressing against the root of the thumb, and the handle away from the
+body.
+
+Another shell that is used in its natural form is a small whelk shell
+that is used as a scraper for scraping off the outer skin of mangrove
+seeds in preparing them for food.
+
+A shell that is used in very nearly its natural form is a kind of pearl
+shell that grows along creeks through the mangrove swamps. The shell is
+only very slightly curved and it is for this reason that it is selected
+as suitable. The weak edge or lip of the valve is broken away, and the
+edge is then slightly ground on a stone. This implement is used by
+women for slicing yams and certain other vegetables such as some kinds
+of seeds when they are being prepared for food.
+
+The natives say that before iron was plentiful they used shells for the
+heads of their pig-arrows. Several different species of shell seem to
+have been used, the chief concern being to obtain a piece of sufficient
+size that was as nearly flat as possible. Such shells are those
+belonging to the larger bivalves. The natives state that their method
+of working the shell was to break it roughly into shape with stones and
+then grind it down on a whet-stone until it was given a sufficiently
+sharp point and edge. Some arrow-heads of shell were made for me by
+this method at my request by one of the old men of the North Andaman.
+
+The natives state that before they had iron they made their adzes of
+shell. Two different men of the North Andaman made two shell adzes for
+me, one of Pinna shell, and the other of a shell that I omitted to
+identify. The Pinna shell adze seemed to me only suitable for light
+work such as finishing off a bow or a canoe, as it seemed likely to
+break under a strong blow. The other adze was much stronger and
+therefore capable of heavy work, and although the edge seemed to me to
+make it a poor implement with which to cut down a tree yet it certainly
+did not seem less suitable than the stone adzes used by many primitive
+peoples. If I were given a choice of implements with which to fell a
+tree, between the shell adze of the Andamanese and a stone axe of
+South-western Australia I should certainly choose the former.
+
+According to the natives they formerly used bone for the points of
+their fish-arrows and for the barbs of their pig-arrows. For both of
+these purposes they now use iron. The bone was broken into a piece of
+suitable length and then ground down with a whet-stone. Apparently the
+bone most frequently used was the tibia of the pig. For their
+fish-arrows they also made use of the bone of the tail of the
+sting-ray,—its “sting.” When the fish was caught the bone was knocked
+off and reserved for use. It required no treatment whatever, being
+simply bound on to the point of the fore-shaft in the same way that an
+iron point is now attached.
+
+Colebrooke, in 1789, described their arrows as “headed with fish-bones
+or the tusks of wild hogs, sometimes merely with a sharp bit of wood
+hardened in the fire.” By fish-bone he probably means the bone of the
+sting-ray. Where he writes the tusks of wild hogs we should probably
+read “the bones.” A boar’s tusk is curved, and it seems impossible to
+imagine how it could possibly be used as an arrow-head or arrow-point.
+
+The boar’s tusk is used by the Andamanese as an implement, however,
+making a very efficient sort of spokeshave. The edge which is used is
+kept sharp by scraping with a quartz or glass flake or with a Cyrena
+shell. The edge is near the point (at a in Fig. 27) and the tusk is
+clasped at the other end between the forefinger and the root of the
+thumb (at b in Fig. 27), the movement being away from the body. It is
+used for planing bows and paddles, and in the hands of an Andaman
+Islander is a very efficient implement, producing a beautifully smooth
+and even surface.
+
+Of wood the Andamanese formerly made knives and arrow-points. The
+knives were made of a slip of bamboo or cane shaped and sharpened with
+a Cyrena shell. Such knives were used for cutting meat and apparently
+for no other purpose. A knife was always attached by a short length of
+cord to a skewer of pointed Areca wood. The double implement was used
+in cooking and eating, the skewer serving to lift pieces of meat in and
+out of a pot, while the knife served to cut them. At the present time
+the cane or bamboo knife is replaced by a knife made from hoop-iron,
+but the shape of the original implement is retained as nearly as
+possible and a skewer of Areca wood is generally attached to it.
+
+As has been already stated the Andamanese formerly used hard wood such
+as that of the Areca palm for the points and heads of their arrows.
+They do not seem to have made use of bamboo in this way.
+
+At the present time iron is used for the blades of adzes, for the heads
+and barbs of pig-arrows, the points of fish-arrows, the heads of
+harpoons, and for knives. The method of working the metal is apparently
+exactly the same as the method they formerly used for working shell and
+bone. For the head of a pig-arrow a suitable piece of iron is taken and
+a fragment of about the right size is broken off by means of a stone
+hammer. This is then roughly broken into the required shape, no heat
+being used, and no advantage being taken of the malleability of the
+metal. The next process is to grind it on a whet-stone. The natives are
+always eager to obtain files which enable them to do this part of the
+work much more rapidly. When the arrow-head has been ground into shape
+the edges are sharpened. Blades for adzes are made in exactly the same
+way from any suitable piece of iron or steel, such as a cutlass or an
+old file or a piece of thick hoop-iron. The adze-blade is attached to a
+handle of mangrove wood by the method shown in Fig. 28.
+
+The barbs of pig-arrows and the points of fish-arrows are made in the
+same way by breaking the metal into a suitable shape and then grinding
+it on a whet-stone. It is probable that this was the method that was
+formerly used for dealing with bone for these purposes.
+
+In the case of the knife, iron or steel is now substituted for cane or
+bamboo, but the knife has retained its shape in spite of the change of
+material. The shape of a knife, whether of cane or of iron, with its
+attached skewer of Areca wood is shown in Fig. 28.
+
+In the case of the harpoon the native tradition is that this implement
+was only made after they had discovered the use of iron.
+
+At the present time both the Semang and the Negritos of the Philippines
+make use of iron. The Semang heat the iron until it is red-hot and then
+batter it into shape between two stones [255]. The shapes of the iron
+weapons and implements which they make follow fairly closely those made
+by the Malays.
+
+In an attempt to reconstruct the primitive Negrito culture it would
+seem that the most reasonable hypothesis is that the primitive Negritos
+had no knowledge of iron and had not learnt to fashion implements out
+of stone, but relied entirely on such materials as wood, bone and
+shell. The Andamanese, becoming possessed of iron through wrecks upon
+their islands, applied to it the technique that they had developed for
+dealing with shell, and thereby invented their present method of
+working iron without heating it. The Semang and the Negritos of the
+Philippines probably first learnt the use of iron from their neighbours
+of other races. There is not at present any evidence to show that the
+Negritos ever had any method of working stone except the very simple
+one at present in use in the Andamans for making flakes.
+
+
+
+STRING, ROPE, MATS, BASKETS, AND NETTING.
+
+For string, rope and thread the Andaman Islanders make use of a number
+of different vegetable substances, but they make no use whatever of any
+animal substances. Some of the more important fibres, with their uses
+and the methods of preparing them, are mentioned below.
+
+The bark of the Hibiscus tiliaceus, which occurs in the beach
+vegetation in all parts of the islands, provides the Andamanese with
+one of their most important fibres. By the coast-dwellers of the Great
+and Little Andaman Divisions it is used for making rope. In the Great
+Andaman Division the rope made from it was formerly used for making
+turtle nets, and is now used for the lines of turtle harpoons, and for
+hawsers to attach a canoe either to a stone used as an anchor or to a
+tree. No other fibre is used for these purposes. The Hibiscus rope does
+not seem to be much affected by salt water. The forest-dwellers of the
+Great Andaman have less use for rope, and at the same time are not able
+to obtain so readily the Hibiscus fibre. What rope they do have is
+therefore obtained from the coast-dwellers or is made of some other
+fibre. In the Little Andaman the Hibiscus is regularly used for rope.
+It is also used for the short cord by which the detachable head of the
+pig-arrow is attached to the shaft. In the Great Andaman a strip of the
+bark of the Hibiscus is used for the sling in which children are
+carried. Strips of the bark are worn by the women of the Little Andaman
+across their shoulders and breasts, as a sort of ornament.
+
+To obtain the fibre young straight shoots of about 120 cm. in length
+are cut from the tree, those free from gnarls, and having a smooth
+bark, being chosen. The bark (inner and outer layers) is peeled off in
+strips of from 1·5 to 3 cm. in width. The inner or liber layer is then
+separated from the outer layer of the bark, is well scraped with a
+Cyrena shell and dried in the sun or over a fire. When dry it is worked
+in the hands until the various layers of fibre separate one from
+another. It is then ready to be made into rope. The fibre is
+interlacing, and when freshly made is a lustrous greyish brown. After
+exposure to salt water it turns a dark brown.
+
+Mr E. H. Man, in his work on the Andamans, speaks of the Melochia
+velutina as providing fibre for rope. This is an error. The tree to
+which Mr Man refers is the Hibiscus tiliaceus. It is extremely common
+on the shores of the islands, as it is in many other parts of the
+tropics. It is very easily identified, as it bears its characteristic
+yellow flowers for a long time every year. There is no doubt whatever
+that this is the tree from which the natives regularly obtain the fibre
+for the rope they use in turtle-hunting and fishing and in their
+canoes. Other writers, following Mr Man, have repeated his error in
+calling it the Melochia velutina, for example Sir Richard Temple and Mr
+Portman. In Mr Portman’s collection of photographs in the British
+Museum there is a good photograph of a Hibiscus tiliaceus tree labelled
+“Melochia velutina.” I looked carefully in the Andaman jungles for the
+Melochia velutina but was unable to find it, and I am quite certain
+that in any case, even if it be found there, it is not commonly used by
+the natives for rope.
+
+The bark of a number of other trees provides fibre of which the natives
+occasionally make use. Amongst these are one or more species of
+Sterculia (S. villosa?), and a tree that I identified somewhat
+doubtfully as Grewia laevigata. The coarse fibre of the liber layer of
+these trees may be made into rope by the same method as that employed
+in dealing with Hibiscus tiliaceus. Very little actual use is made of
+them however. A fibre which looks very like that obtained from one
+species of Sterculia is frequently used by the natives of the Little
+Andaman (and also by the Jarawa) for their personal ornaments. Mr
+Portman says that this fibre is obtained from the Celtis cinnamonea.
+
+A species of Hibiscus, which I believe is Hibiscus scandens, growing in
+the jungles and not along the shore, provides a fibre that is prized by
+the natives of the Great Andaman tribes for making string or fine rope.
+The fibre is less easily obtained than that of the Hibiscus tiliaceus,
+but owing to its quality (it is not so interlacing) is capable of being
+made into finer rope and string. It is often made into string and then
+used for making netted bags. I did not find this fibre in use in the
+Little Andaman, but as it is not very often met with even in the Great
+Andaman, it may possibly be used in the Little Andaman.
+
+There are several species of Ficus in the Andaman forests, and the
+natives know that they can obtain fibre from the bark of these trees.
+The only one that is regularly made use of is the Ficus laccifera. The
+natives of the Great Andaman Division use the bark of this tree for
+making their personal ornaments. In the Little Andaman it is used for
+bow-strings. A fibre called in the Little Andaman ulu, and said by Mr
+Portman to be obtained from the Ficus hispida, is used in that island,
+and by the Jarawa, for making personal ornaments.
+
+The Gnetum edule, a climbing plant that is fairly common, is used in
+all parts of the Andamans for thread and string. The creeper is cut
+into short lengths at the nodes and is dried for a few days. The outer
+layer of bark is then scraped off with a Cyrena shell, and the liber
+layer beneath it is peeled off in fine strips and these are made into
+thread or string. This string is used in the Great Andaman Division for
+making netted bags and fishing nets. In the Little Andaman it is used
+for binding their arrows, as well as for netting.
+
+The most valuable fibre of the Great Andaman tribes is that of the
+Anadendron paniculatum, which is used for string and thread and for
+bow-strings. Until recent times the method of preparing the fibre was
+not known to the natives of the Little Andaman, but they have now
+learnt it from the natives of the Great Andaman with whom they have
+been brought in contact, and the use of the fibre for string and thread
+is coming in amongst them.
+
+The fibre is not easy to prepare. Long thin branches of the creeper are
+cut, which must be neither too young nor too old. To obtain these it is
+often necessary to climb up into high trees, for the Anadendron is a
+climbing plant. The creeper is cut into lengths of from 20 to 40 cm.
+The bark (inner and outer layers) is peeled off these in strips of from
+7 to 10 mm. in width. A strip of the bark is taken and placed on the
+thigh, inner surface downwards, and is scraped with a Cyrena shell
+until the outer bark is entirely removed and the fibres remain clean
+and separate. These are dried in the sun or over a fire and, if not
+needed for immediate use, are stored for future occasion. The fibre is
+fine and of a light greyish brown colour. In its qualities it somewhat
+resembles ramie fibre. It is extremely strong.
+
+There are a number of other trees and plants that are known by the
+natives to afford fibre, but they are not used, or if they are, it is
+extremely rarely.
+
+The Andaman jungles have a number of different species of Calamus, and
+the canes or rattans of these are put to all sorts of uses, such as the
+making of baskets, the lashings and furnishings of canoes, and in
+building huts. In the Little Andaman one species of cane is used to
+provide the fibre for women’s belts. The outer skin is removed and the
+remainder of the cane is divided into fine strips or threads. A bundle
+of these tied together constitutes the belt worn by the women of the
+Little Andaman. The outer sheath of the leaf-stem of the Calamus
+tigrinus is used by the natives of the Great Andaman Division for
+making mats. Lengths of the leaf-stem are cut and the outer skin is
+removed in strips of about 3 to 5 mm. in width. The still adhering pith
+is removed with a Cyrena shell, and the strips are dried in the sun and
+then made into mats.
+
+The leaf-stem of a species of palm is cut while green and is then
+shredded into long strips. The fibre thus obtained really consists of
+the leaflets of the young unopened leaves of the palm. It is used in
+the Little Andaman to make the tassel that women wear over the pudenda.
+The women of the North Andaman formerly wore a tassel of this fibre,
+but have now discontinued the custom, since their contact with the
+South Andaman. In the Great Andaman tribes this material has important
+ceremonial uses. It is called ko̱ro in Aka-Jeru and ara in Aka-Bea, and
+has been frequently mentioned in this volume. A tassel of the fibre is
+suspended near the grave of a dead person and at the entrance of the
+village at which the death took place. In the North Andaman a suspended
+cane hung with a fringe of the fibre is erected for the peace-making
+ceremony. (See Plate XIX.)
+
+Two plants that were not identified are used in the North Andaman for
+making baskets. The methods of preparing these will be described later.
+
+The natives of the Great Andaman Division make use of the leaves of the
+Pandanus Andamanensium for making belts for women and ornaments that
+are worn on ceremonial occasions. These leaves do not seem to be used
+in the Little Andaman.
+
+The pods of one or more species of Dendrobium are collected by the
+natives of both Great Andaman and Little Andaman. They are roasted in
+the fire, until the outer skin turns a bright yellow, and this is torn
+off in strips and used for ornamenting nets, baskets, rope, etc.
+
+The above description includes all the more important vegetable
+substances used by the Andamanese for their rope, string, netting, and
+basket-work. There are many other substances that they might use if
+they wished, of the properties of which they are fully aware. Their
+knowledge of the trees and plants of the forests and of the peculiar
+properties of each is very extensive. They themselves say that they use
+only those that best serve their purposes.
+
+The Andamanese make rope and string or thread, but in all cases it is
+only two-ply. Rope is made by men only, and is used for the lines of
+turtle harpoons, and was formerly used for turtle nets. The ropes made
+from Hibiscus fibre are very strong and durable, being quite as good as
+the best hempen ropes of the same diameter. In rope-making the Hibiscus
+or other fibre (Sterculia or Grewia) is taken and twisted into a long
+strand, either with the fingers, or on the thigh by rolling beneath the
+palm of the hand, short lengths of fibre being added until a single
+twisted strand of sufficient length and uniform thickness is produced.
+The middle of this strand is passed over a piece of wood held by the
+toes, one half of it being wound on to a reel (kutobi in Aka-Jeru) made
+by tying together crossways two pieces of cane or wood each about 20
+cm. long and 6 mm. in diameter. The other half of the strand is loose,
+and is held (near the point where it is tied to the wood held in the
+toes) between the finger and thumb of the left hand, the rest of it
+passing across the palm, over the left forearm, under the armpit,
+across the back and over the right shoulder, hanging down loosely to
+the worker’s right side. This arrangement is in order that the loose
+strand shall not become entangled or get in the man’s way as he works.
+The reel is held in the right hand and is passed first under the left
+hand, then back again over it, the two strands being thus twisted into
+a firm two-ply cord.
+
+The natives of the Little Andaman make rope in much the same way, but
+they pass the reel from right to left over the other strand and back
+under it, the twist being thus in the opposite direction from that used
+in the Great Andaman.
+
+String or thread is made by both men and women. It is put to many uses,
+the chief being for binding the heads of arrows, harpoons and spears
+and the ends of bows, and in making nets, baskets, mats and personal
+ornaments. In making string the man or woman sits down with legs
+outstretched. Thin strands of fibre, varying in thickness according to
+the thickness of the string required, are taken and each twisted singly
+by being rolled between the palm of the right hand and the right thigh,
+the motion being away from the body. When a sufficient number of short
+single strands has been thus made, two of them are taken and placed
+together on the thigh, being held at one end in the left hand. The two
+strands are rolled together beneath the palm of the right hand, the
+motion being inwards towards the body. A well twisted thread is thus
+produced. When some 10 cm. or so have been thus twisted, the thread is
+rolled once beneath the palm of the hand in the opposite direction,
+i.e. away from the body, this action rendering it more compact. As soon
+as the end of the two strands that are being twisted is neared, two
+more are taken and joined on, first one and then the other, by being
+rolled in with the first two. Fresh strands are thus continually added
+as the string grows in length. String of any desired length is made in
+this way, of considerable strength and of surprisingly uniform
+thickness.
+
+String is made in this way from the fibre of Anadendron, Gnetum and
+Hibiscus scandens in the Great Andaman Division, and from Gnetum and
+ulu fibre in the Little Andaman. In the Great Andaman string made from
+Anadendron fibre is rendered more durable by being waxed with black
+bee’s-wax, but this treatment is not considered necessary for string
+made from Gnetum fibre or from Hibiscus scandens.
+
+Ornamental rope is made for men’s belts in the Great Andaman. Hibiscus
+fibre is twisted into a single strand. Around this strand strips of
+Dendrobium skin are wound spirally so that it is entirely covered, and
+the strand itself is twisted into a two-ply cord.
+
+Two other forms of cord have been already mentioned, namely the
+bow-string, of twisted fibre of the Ficus laccifera in the Little
+Andaman, and of wrapped fibre of the Anadendron in the Great Andaman
+Division, and the special cord used in the Great Andaman for attaching
+the head of a pig-arrow to the shaft. The Andamanese make very little
+use of plaited cord. I have only met with it in personal ornaments made
+of Pandanus leaf in the Great Andaman.
+
+The mat-work of the Andamanese is very simple. The natives of the
+Little Andaman make bamboo mats on which they sleep. Strips of bamboo
+of about 120 cm. in length and ·75 cm. in width are attached by means
+of thin strips of cane to other strips of bamboo at right angles to the
+first series. The technique is illustrated in Fig. 29 which shows the
+back and the front of a portion of such a mat. It is that usually known
+as wrapped-twined work.
+
+A similar technique is used in both the Little Andaman and the Great
+Andaman in making thatching of cane-leaves. There is a difference,
+however, the wrapping used in making thatch being that shown
+diagrammatically in Fig. 30.
+
+The natives of the Great Andaman make sleeping mats from the outer
+sheath of the leaf-stem of the Calamus tigrinus. Lengths of the
+material are prepared and cleaned and are cut to a uniform length,
+generally about 60 to 80 cm., having a breadth of 3 to 5 mm. A length
+of thread, generally of the less valuable Gnetum fibre, but
+occasionally of Anadendron fibre, is made and is wound on to two
+netting needles, one half on each. With this thread the strips of
+cane-leaf are fastened together. The technique is different in the
+North Andaman and in the South Andaman.
+
+In the North the technique, which is represented diagrammatically in
+Fig. 31, A is that known as wrapped-twined work. One of the two threads
+of which the work is composed is held taut, the needle on which it is
+wound being held in the toes, and the other thread is wrapped spirally
+round it, one of the strips of cane-leaf sheath being enclosed at every
+turn. Thus the method is exactly the same as that adopted in making
+mats of thatch.
+
+In the South the technique is that known as twined work or fitching.
+The two wefts (i.e. the threads) are twisted together in the same
+direction one under the other, enclosing at each half turn one of the
+strips of leaf-sheath. This is shown diagrammatically in Fig. 31, B.
+
+The mat is made by parallel lines of such twining or wrapped-twining.
+At each side of the mat the line of threading is quite close to the
+ends of the strips of which the mat is made. In the South Andaman the
+work on each side of the mat is different from that in the middle. Each
+of the two threads is alternately given a complete turn round one of
+the strips of material.
+
+Mats may be of any length, and examples vary from 1 metre to 10 metres.
+When in use about a metre and a half is unrolled and the remainder
+serves as a pillow. If the mat be short a split log does service as a
+pillow instead, but the full-length mat is certainly a more comfortable
+bed. When a mat begins to wear or fall to pieces in some part it is not
+thrown away, but this part is kept rolled up, and an unbroken part of
+the mat is unrolled to sleep on, the remainder being kept rolled up
+either at the head, where it forms a pillow, or at the foot. An old mat
+may be continually increased in length by additions made to it. The
+work of making these mats is performed by women only.
+
+The Jarawa and the natives of the Little Andaman make mats of a
+somewhat similar pattern, but I have not been able to secure one so as
+to see how it is made.
+
+To explain the different forms of the Andamanese baskets, it is most
+convenient to begin by considering the way in which the natives of the
+North Andaman tie up their pots. The small cooking-pots of the North
+Andaman are fragile things and are not easily made, and it is therefore
+necessary to take care of them. A leaf of the Licuala palm is taken.
+The leaflets are plaited over one another, close to the point of their
+insertion in the petiole, so as to form a sort of rosette with leaflets
+radiating from it in every direction (Fig. 32 a). This is laid on the
+ground, the pot is placed on it upside down, and the leaflets are
+brought up all round the pot so as to meet at the point, and are there
+roughly fastened. Three strips of cane are then taken and are tied
+together crossways in the middle so as to form a sort of six-rayed star
+with six approximately equal angles. This is laid on the ground with
+the outer surface of the canes downwards, the pot is placed on it
+upside down, and the strips of cane are bent upwards over the pot so as
+to meet at the point. The ends of two opposite strips of cane are left
+projecting for a few centimetres above the point, and the ends of the
+other four are fastened firmly down. Another strip of cane is now
+fastened round the middle of the pot, being applied to the six canes
+previously mentioned by wrapping, i.e. a turn is taken with it round
+each of the six strips in turn. The pot is now safely tied up and can
+be hung in the hut or carried on a journey without much fear of its
+coming to grief. To use the pot it is of course necessary to untie it.
+A pot wrapped up in this way is shown in Fig. 32 a and b.
+
+In the South Andaman the pots have rounded bottoms. They are not tied
+up in the same way as in the North Andaman, but for purposes of safety
+and carriage each pot is provided with a rude basket. The basket is
+made so as to fit the pot. Six strips of cane are taken and tied
+together in the middle, as previously described. A stout strip of cane
+is then taken and is bent round into a circle so as to be just a little
+larger than the outside rim of the pot. This, which is to form the rim
+of the basket, is placed in position and the six strips of cane before
+mentioned are bent round and attached to it. The manner of attaching
+the uprights of the basket to the rim is shown in Fig. 33. The strip of
+cane forming the upright is thinned down beyond the point where it
+reaches the rim. It is given one turn round the rim, ascending on the
+outside and descending inside, then a half turn round the standing part
+of itself, immediately below the rim from left to right, then another
+complete turn round the rim ascending inside and descending outside, a
+half turn behind its own standing part below the rim, a third complete
+turn round the rim, and the end is fastened with an overhand knot.
+
+A thinner strip of cane is now taken and wound round the six uprights
+(the warp of the basket) being given a turn round one after another.
+The technique is that known as wrapped work. If the strip be not long
+enough another is joined to it with a reef or sailor’s knot. The weft
+(as this thinner strip may be called) is given five or six spiral
+turns, and thus leaves a very open and rather weak basket. The basket
+is then further strengthened by other strips of cane attached by one
+end to the rim and carried downwards, with one turn round each of the
+horizontal canes (weft) and the other end attached to the centre of the
+bottom of the basket. A strip of cane or bark is attached to the rim by
+its two ends to provide a strap by which the basket with its pot may be
+carried on the back. Before the pot is placed in it the basket is lined
+with the leaflets of the Licuala palm.
+
+We may now turn to the baskets of the Little Andaman, of which there
+are two varieties, one made with more care than the other. As regards
+shape both varieties are the same, and the shape is exactly that of the
+Little Andaman pots.
+
+The following is a description of a small but typical specimen of the
+better variety of Little Andaman basket. The foundation consists of
+twelve whole canes. A little under 80 cm. of the cane is left whole,
+and at each end it is thinned down to a strip. The twelve canes are
+taken in four bundles of three each and placed so as to cross each
+other in the middle. They are bent into a somewhat conical shape, and
+the ends (where the cane is thinned) are attached to a rim composed of
+a whole cane bent into a circle and tied. The method by which each of
+the uprights or stakes is attached to the rim is shown in Fig. 34. It
+is almost identical with that used in the South Andaman pot basket. The
+weaving is then begun near the bottom of the basket. A thin strip of
+the outside of a cane is taken, and is applied to the uprights (warp or
+stakes) by wrapped work, i.e. it is given a complete turn round each of
+them in turn. This wrapped weaving is continued spirally from near the
+bottom of the basket to near the rim. Near the top of the basket,
+between 4 and 5 cm. from the rim, the weaving is so arranged that for
+about three-quarters of the way round the basket there is a gap of
+about 1·5 cm. between two rows of weft (see Fig. 34). The purpose of
+this will be mentioned later. The basket now consists of a rim to which
+are attached twelve uprights forming the warp of the basket, around
+which a fine strip of cane has been spirally wrapped from the bottom to
+the top. Twelve fine strips of the outside of a cane are now taken. One
+end of each is fastened to the rim in between two of the stakes, the
+mode of fastening being shown in Fig. 34. The strip is then carried
+down the basket, on the outside, as far as the bottom row of weaving,
+round which it is doubled, and is then wound spirally, from the bottom
+to the top of the basket, around its own standing part, including at
+each spiral turn one of the wefts. Thus each of these twelve strips of
+cane is attached to the outside of the basket by the process known as
+wrapped-twined work. The basket is furnished with a handle of bark
+fibre which is attached by its two ends to the rim on that side where
+there is no gap between the rows of weft near the top.
+
+In the less carefully made baskets of the Little Andaman there are a
+few important differences. The stakes of the basket are not thin whole
+canes, but are strips of larger canes. The weft is applied in wrapped
+work, as in the basket already described, but the rows of weft are not
+so close together and are therefore not so numerous. After the first
+process, when the basket consists of stakes and horizontal (spiral)
+weft only, vertical strengthening strips are added, but these are
+applied, not in wrapped-twined work as in the basket described, but in
+wrapped work, in exactly the same way as in the South Andaman
+pot-basket. Thus, apart from its shape, which is that of the Little
+Andaman pot, the Little Andaman basket of this kind is very similar to
+the South Andaman pot-basket.
+
+The natives of the Little Andaman make pots that are much larger and
+deeper than those of the South Andaman, and have a more rounded bottom
+than those of the North Andaman. For every pot a basket is made that
+exactly fits it, and in this basket it is stored and carried. Every
+basket that is made in the Little Andaman, whether it be used for
+carrying a pot or for any other purpose, is made of exactly the same
+shape.
+
+The purpose of the gap that is left near the top of the basket as
+described above is in order that strips of string or fibre may be tied
+across the mouth of the basket, from side to side, in order to keep its
+contents safe.
+
+We may now return to the Great Andaman and consider the baskets of the
+South Andaman Group of tribes. These are made from the best canes. From
+80 to 120 fine strips of cane are taken which are to form the stakes or
+uprights. A slight hollow is made in the ground, and the strips of cane
+are placed crossways across one another in this hollow, the inner
+surfaces of the canes being downwards. As the strips are being
+arranged, and when the weaving is begun, the centre, i.e., the point
+where the strips cross one another in the middle of the hollow, is
+pressed firmly beneath the heel so as to maintain them in position. The
+first few strips are sometimes tied together in the middle, but this is
+not always done. When all the strips are arranged evenly the weaving of
+the basket is begun with a length of thread, which is slewed in and out
+between the strips of cane, beginning as near the centre as possible,
+the stroke being that of ordinary wicker-work. After four or five
+spiral turns have been taken with the thread it is fastened. The bottom
+of the basket is then reversed, the stakes being bent over, and the
+weaving proper is begun with a fine strip of cane. This is applied by
+wicker-work nearly as far as the top of the basket. At the top, the
+weaving is finished off with three or four spiral turns of
+wrapped-twined work in cane (see Fig. 35). The rim of the basket is
+formed of a thin piece of wood (circular in section) bent round into a
+circle of the right size and the two ends tied together. The stakes or
+uprights are attached to this rim (after the weaving is finished) but a
+space of about 5 cm. is left between the top of the weaving and the
+rim. The mode of attaching the uprights to the rim is shown in Fig. 35.
+
+The South Andaman basket is really a conical basket with the bottom
+reversed or dented inwards to form a “kick” like the kick of a bottle.
+If it were not for the kick it would be the same shape as the Little
+Andaman basket. The kick enables it to stand upright, although it is
+inclined to be top-heavy, but renders it unfit for carrying pots.
+
+The space between the top of the weaving and the rim is to admit of
+strings being tied across the mouth of the basket to keep its contents
+safe.
+
+A handle of Hibiscus fibre is attached to the rim and rests across the
+front of the chest when the basket is carried on the back.
+
+South Andaman baskets are sometimes ornamented, in the process of
+making, with strips of Dendrobium skin, applied horizontally by
+overlaid interlacing. The strip of Dendrobium skin is laid over the
+weft and woven in with it for one turn round the basket. I have never
+seen ornamentation with Dendrobium skin applied to the South Andaman
+baskets by any method save this one.
+
+Patterns of red paint and white clay are occasionally painted on
+baskets when they are newly made. Shells are sometimes attached to
+different parts of the basket by thread, for the purpose of ornament.
+
+In the North Andaman, baskets are made that differ in several important
+features from those of the South Andaman. They are not made of cane but
+of two different materials. One of these is the stem of a creeper
+called čup-to̱i. Lengths of the creeper are cut and dried and then split
+lengthways into two or three pieces according to their size. The outer
+bark or skin is then scraped off with a Cyrena shell. These strips are
+to form the stakes or warp of the basket. The other material is another
+creeper called bobi. The long tough tendrils of this plant are taken
+and the soft outer sheath removed by drawing the tendril through a
+piece of split cane or bamboo bent double so that the tendril is
+scraped between the two inner surfaces. The fibre that remains is split
+longitudinally into two pieces and dried.
+
+A bundle of strips of the čup-to̱i is taken, sufficient in length and
+number for the required size of basket. The bundle is divided into two
+equal bundles and these are tied together in the middle crossways with
+thread. This cross forms the beginning of the basket. The weaving is
+begun with thread, which is slewed in and out between the warp, from 4
+to 7 spiral turns being made. During this process the centre of the
+basket, i.e., the cross, is pressed beneath the heel into a slight
+hollow made in the ground, to give it a curve which, in the finished
+basket, will form the “kick.” The thread is tied, the bottom is turned
+upside down, the stakes are bent back and the weaving is continued, not
+with thread but with strips of bobi, till a short distance from the top
+of the basket, and then three or four rows of wrapped-twined work are
+made, the strip of bobi being coiled round the basket and attached to
+the uprights with thread. A rim is made of a strip of cane bent into a
+circle. This is placed inside the uprights and tied to them in two or
+three places. The remaining portion of each of the uprights, projecting
+above the rim, is bent down outside and slightly obliquely, and tied
+down by a thread passing over each in turn and round the rim. A very
+rough and untidy rim is thus produced, and this is again served or
+bound over with thread. A handle of Hibiscus fibre is added.
+
+In the North Andaman baskets, as in those of the South Andaman, a space
+of a few centimetres is left between the top of the weaving and the
+rim, there being for that space only warp or uprights and no weft. This
+allows string to be tied in any direction across the mouth of the
+basket, so as to keep its contents safe.
+
+The shape of the North Andaman baskets is different from that of the
+southern baskets, the former having a sort of belly at the bottom and
+narrowing somewhat above. The result is that the northern baskets will
+stand more firmly, being less top-heavy when either full or empty than
+those of the south.
+
+In the North Andaman baskets are ornamented as they are made with
+worked-in strips of Dendrobium fibre. There are several different
+methods of working this ornamentation, resulting in different patterns.
+Baskets are also ornamented, when new, with painted patterns in white
+and red, though this is not general, and occasionally shells are
+attached to them by thread.
+
+One more form of basket-work remains to be briefly mentioned. The
+natives of all parts of the islands were formerly in the habit of
+preserving as trophies the skulls of pigs and turtle that were killed
+in the chase. The natives of the Great Andaman Division do not now
+trouble to preserve all the skulls of the pigs they kill, and they give
+as their reason for this that now that they have dogs the hunting of
+pigs is not a sport that requires any great skill. The Jarawa however
+still keep up the old custom, and they go so far as carefully to encase
+every skull in basket-work. As may be seen from Fig. 36 the basket-work
+in question is of simple wrapped work, the material being strips of
+cane.
+
+It is of some interest to consider the different forms of technique
+used by the Andamanese in dealing with flexible materials. Rope and
+string are only made two-ply. It would seem that the Andamanese have
+not discovered that three-ply cord is stronger for a given diameter
+than two-ply. They have, in the bow-string of the Great Andaman, an
+interesting form of cord that may perhaps best be described as wrapped
+cord. The making of a rope involves the twisting of two strands of
+material around one another. The making of a wrapped cord involves the
+spiral wrapping of one strand of material round another. This is
+exactly the same process as “serving,” and it is one that is used by
+the Andamanese in all sorts of ways. In serving their arrows with
+thread and in serving the ends of bows and the heads of harpoons the
+Andamanese have several different methods of making fast the ends, and
+I regret that I did not take more detailed notes on this subject. Their
+skill in handling this technique is shown in the strength of the
+binding on their arrows.
+
+This spiral wrapping of one strand round a flexible or rigid object
+lies at the base of much else in their technique. We have seen that
+they make considerable use of wrapped-twined work. In this work a strip
+of material crosses at right angles a number of strips of the same or
+other material, and a weft is wound round the former, taking in one of
+the latter at each turn. There are two methods of doing this, either by
+simple spiral wrapping, as in the mats of thatch, or by what may be
+called “right and left” or “zig-zag” wrapping, as in the bamboo mat of
+the Little Andaman. A difference is also made according as the strip of
+material around which the weft is wrapped is rigid, as in the Little
+Andaman bamboo mat or in thatching, or flexible, as in the North
+Andaman mat, where it is one thread while the weft is another thread.
+
+Wrapped work, in which a strip of weft is wound successively round one
+after another of a number of rigid stakes, is another very simple
+process that is employed in a number of different ways by the
+Andamanese. The most important development of wrapped work amongst them
+is seen in the pot-basket of the South Andaman, in the baskets of the
+Jarawa and Little Andaman and in the pig’s-skull basket-work of the
+Jarawa.
+
+Simple twined work is rare in the Andamans. There is hardly any example
+of it except in the mats of the South Andaman. It would seem probable
+that the North Andaman mat technique of wrapped-twined work is the
+earlier, being more in agreement with what we may call the technical
+habits of the Andamanese, and that the South Andaman mat technique is a
+later elaboration. In this connection it may be remembered that
+plaiting, in which also several wefts are twisted one over another, is
+rarely used in the Andamans.
+
+The process of nippering, by which the natives of the Great Andaman
+make the cord of their pig-arrows, and the somewhat similar process
+used in the Little Andaman in making personal ornaments, are quite in
+accordance with the general trend of the technique, but when such a
+process is applied to a number of parallel strips of material instead
+of to two only it constitutes a step towards wicker-work. It is
+notable, however, that it is only in the Great Andaman that wicker-work
+is used, and this suggests that it has only been invented or adopted
+since the separation of the two divisions of the Andamanese.
+
+It is very tempting to regard the different forms of basket, in the
+order in which they are described above, as so many stages of a process
+of evolution. It is, at any rate, worth while to state the argument,
+and to show what the differences between them exactly are. In the North
+Andaman pot-covering we have (1) the technique simple wrapped work, and
+(2) the basis six strips of cane tied together in the middle. In the
+South Andaman pot-basket we have both these features, but the
+difference in the shape of the pots allows them to be carried in a true
+basket and we have therefore (3) a rim, with (4) a peculiar method of
+attaching the uprights to the rim, (5) a number of horizontal (wrapped)
+wefts instead of one or two, and (6) strengthening strips applied to
+the horizontal wefts in wrapped work. In the rougher kind of basket
+made in the Little Andaman we have nearly all the features of the South
+Andaman pot-basket. The only differences, apart from the shape of the
+basket, which in each case follows the shape of the pot, are (2) more
+than six uprights may be used, and (5) the number of horizontal wefts,
+i.e. the number of spiral turns taken round the basket, is as a rule
+greater. In the more carefully made Little Andaman basket there are
+several differences. The uprights are fine whole canes instead of
+strips of split cane. It is undoubtedly more difficult to procure whole
+canes of the proper size than simply to split up larger canes, but
+where the technique is wrapped work the circular section of the
+uprights improves the quality of the resulting basket, as a strip of
+cane is more easily wound round a whole cane than round a split cane,
+and there is less chance of it breaking when a strain is put upon it.
+Another difference is that in the better Little Andaman baskets the
+rows of weft are as close together as the peculiar technique will
+allow. This makes a finer and stronger basket, and is an obvious
+improvement. The third difference is that in these baskets the
+strengthening strips are applied not in wrapped work, but in
+wrapped-twined work, which, however, we have seen is a common technique
+in the Andamans. In the better baskets of the Little Andaman we find a
+special feature of some interest in the gap that is left in the weaving
+near the rim, to allow of strings being tied across the mouth.
+
+When we look at the South Andaman basket the first thing that strikes
+us is that it is really a conical basket of much the same shape as the
+Little Andaman basket, but with the bottom dented in to make a kick, so
+allowing the basket to stand on its bottom. This denting is only
+rendered possible, however, by the fact that the uprights of the South
+Andaman basket are thin strips of cane that can be easily bent, and
+this again depends on the use of wicker-work in the basket instead of
+wrapped work. It must be remembered that the top of the weaving is
+finished off with three rows of wrapped-twined work, and this suggests
+that there may possibly have been a stage of development between the
+Little Andaman basket and the South Andaman form, in which the uprights
+were thin strips of cane, and the weft was applied in wrapped-twined
+work from top to bottom. This, however, is only a surmise. It does
+certainly seem probable that the South Andaman basket is derived
+immediately from a form of basket similar to that of the Little
+Andaman, the great difference being the change to wicker-work
+technique. The method of attaching the uprights to the rim was
+doubtless introduced owing to the fact that the original method is
+unsatisfactory when the uprights are thin and easily broken strips,
+instead of stout ones.
+
+The North Andaman basket seems to have been derived from one similar to
+that of the South Andaman by the introduction of two changes, (1) the
+use of different materials, and (2) the change of shape. The materials
+used in the north are such as to give a basket on the whole stronger
+and more durable than that of the south. If a heavy weight be carried
+in a southern basket the pressure of the basket on the back tends to
+crack the canes of which it is composed. In the case of a northern
+basket it may lose its shape, but the materials of which it is composed
+will give or bend without cracking so readily. The shape of the
+northern basket is certainly an improvement, as it avoids the
+top-heaviness of the southern shape. Both the northern and the southern
+baskets have a gap between the top of the weaving and the rim, like the
+basket of the Little Andaman.
+
+Thus every step, or nearly every step, in a hypothetical process of
+evolution is exhibited in the different forms of basket-work. First we
+have the pot-covering of the North Andaman, then the pot-basket of the
+South Andaman, then the rougher kind of Little Andaman basket, of the
+same shape as the pot, then the South Andaman basket of cane with a
+kick and finally the basket of the North Andaman. The better kind of
+Little Andaman basket is simply an independent improvement of the
+other, involving no new technique.
+
+However much or little probability we may attach to this hypothetical
+reconstruction of the history of basket-work in the Andamans, one thing
+does seem fairly certain, and that is that the original ancestors of
+the Andamanese were not acquainted with wicker-work, or had no use for
+it. In the Little Andaman Division only wrapped work and wrapped-twined
+work are used, and the wicker-work of the Great Andaman Division has
+almost certainly been adopted since the two divisions were separated.
+The consideration of the general technical bias of the Andamanese in
+their dealings with flexible materials supports the view that in their
+case wicker-work is later than wrapped work and wrapped-twined work. It
+seems more than likely that the Andamanese of the larger island have
+invented wicker-work in its simplest form on the basis of a previous
+technique of wrapped and wrapped-twined work. To us wicker-work seems
+such a simple process as almost to need no inventing. It must be
+recognized however that the general bias of the Andamanese is against
+using materials in this way. The Andaman Islander shows a decided
+preference for those processes in which he uses a single flexible
+material which he winds or wraps round other rigid or flexible
+material, as in nippering, or wrapped work or wrapped-twined work.
+
+It is impossible to obtain confirmation of this view, however, from a
+comparison of the Andamanese with the Semang and the Philippine
+Negritos. The Semang make mat-work bags and wallets of check, and they
+make (or use) baskets of hexagonal work. Both check and hexagonal work
+are used by other races in the Malay Peninsula and in Malaysia
+generally. The present mats and baskets of the Semang cannot therefore
+be regarded as original Negrito productions. They have almost certainly
+been adopted through contact with other cultures.
+
+The same thing would seem to apply to the present basket-work of the
+Philippine Negritos, of which however we know very little.
+
+Netted bags of string are made by the women of both the Great Andaman
+and the Little Andaman Divisions, and are used for carrying or storing
+small objects such as shells, fruit, roots, etc. The string used for
+these is made from the fibre of the Gnetum edule in the Little Andaman,
+and is generally made from the same fibre in the Great Andaman, but in
+the latter division the fibre of Hibiscus scandens is prized for this
+purpose and is used instead of that of the Gnetum when it is available.
+Small hand fishing nets are made by the women in both divisions from
+thread of Gnetum fibre. In the Great Andaman Division netting is also
+used for personal ornaments, the thread used for this purpose being
+generally made from Anadendron fibre.
+
+The mode of netting is always the same. Netting needles are used, made
+from slips of bamboo or cane, and varying in size according to the work
+for which they are intended. The netting string or thread is wound on
+to this needle. For the foundation of the net a short length of string
+is taken and the two ends tied together, the loop thus formed being
+placed over the big toe as the woman sits on the ground.
+
+The knot used in netting is that known as the fisherman’s knot, in use
+all over the world. The needle is held in the right hand, is passed
+from above downwards through the loop marked a in the figure, and is
+drawn through far enough to leave a new loop b of the required size.
+This loop is held between the thumb and forefinger of the left hand,
+the uniformity in mesh being apparently obtained largely by the sense
+of touch. The needle is then passed through the new loop b again from
+above and is drawn out leaving a loop c, through which the needle is
+passed once more, forming the finished knot, which is then drawn taut.
+
+When netting is made for personal apparel it is generally ornamented
+with strips of Dendrobium skin worked in with the thread in the course
+of the netting. Netting for personal ornaments consists of a sort of
+bag open at both ends. Each end is tied with a string passed through
+the ultimate loops, and this string serves to tie the band of net round
+the waist or neck or wrist or knee.
+
+Fishing nets are attached to a handle. The handles of the Little
+Andaman Division and those of the Great Andaman Division are different
+in shape. The Great Andaman net with its hoop can be folded up
+compactly for carriage, while that of the Little Andaman cannot.
+
+The nets of rope formerly used in the Great Andaman for catching turtle
+have been already described.
+
+
+
+DOMESTIC IMPLEMENTS AND UTENSILS.
+
+The Andamanese are perhaps the only people in the world who have no
+method of their own of making fire. At the present time they obtain
+matches from the Settlement of Port Blair, and a few of them have
+learnt, either from Burmese or from Nicobarese, a method of making fire
+by the friction of pieces of split bamboo. Formerly, however, they had
+no knowledge of any method by which fire could be produced. Fires were
+and still are carefully kept alive in the village, and are carefully
+carried when travelling. Every hunting party carries its fire with it.
+The natives are very skilful in selecting wood that will smoulder for a
+long time without going out and without breaking into flame.
+
+The most interesting of the Andamanese domestic utensils is undoubtedly
+the cooking-pot. Pots are made in all parts of the Andamans where
+suitable clay is to be found. The clay is obtained and is freed as far
+as possible from stones and gritty matter with the hands. It is then
+moistened with water and kneaded on a board consisting of a portion of
+a broken canoe. It is worked very stiff and after kneading is rolled
+beneath the palm of the hand into long thin rolls. These are built up
+into a pot by coiling, the requisite degree of thickness being obtained
+by pressure of the thumb and first finger. When the pot has been built
+up to the required size and shape, the surface, inside and out, is
+moistened and is scraped over in all directions with an Arca shell. The
+pot is dried in the sun for a few hours and is then baked by placing
+inside and around it pieces of burning wood. The pot often cracks in
+the baking, and another has to be made.
+
+In the North Andaman the pots are made with pointed bottoms, and are
+generally small, the largest having a capacity of only six or seven
+pints. They are made by women only. In the South Andaman the pots have
+rounded bottoms and, on the average, are larger and thicker than those
+of the North Andaman. They are made by both men and women, the best
+being made by men. In the Little Andaman the pots are larger, and,
+particularly, deeper than those of the South Andaman, and have somewhat
+pointed bottoms. The pots of the Jarawa are similar to those of the
+Little Andaman.
+
+In the North Andaman pots are not ornamented, but in the South Andaman
+they are decorated with usually simple patterns of dots and lines made
+with a small pointed stick. The Little Andaman pots that I have seen
+were not decorated.
+
+The pots are used for cooking, i.e. for boiling meat and vegetables. In
+the North Andaman small pots are specially made for melting the
+composition used for covering the binding on the heads of arrows.
+
+Neither the Semang nor the Philippine Negritos make any kind of
+pottery. The origin of Andamanese pottery therefore is a problem of
+some interest. It is almost certain that the early Andamanese were
+acquainted with pottery before they were divided into the Great Andaman
+and Little Andaman Divisions. One of the very few words which is the
+same in all Andamanese languages is the word for pot, buču in the
+Little Andaman, buǰ in Aka-Bea and peč in Aka-Jeru. The most reasonable
+hypothesis would therefore seem to be that the Andamanese learnt the
+method of making pottery by coiling before they reached the Andaman
+Islands but after they had become separated from that part of the
+Negrito race from which the Semang and the Philippine Negritos are
+descended. Of course it is possible that the art of pottery may have
+been an original possession of the Negritos and that the Semang and
+Philippine Negritos may have lost it. A people could easily lose the
+art if they were compelled in the course of their migrations to spend
+three or four generations in a region that lacked clay suitable for the
+purpose.
+
+The Andamanese make buckets of wood, which they use for carrying and
+holding a supply of water. A solid piece is cut from the trunk of a
+soft-wooded tree and is hollowed out with a chisel made by attaching
+the blade of an adze to a stick. The natural form of the wood is
+retained, only the bark being removed from the outside while the inside
+is chiselled out to leave sides of about a centimetre thick and a
+bottom of somewhat greater thickness. In order to render the bottom of
+the bucket water-tight the natives of the Little Andaman pour over it
+on the inside melted bees’-wax. The natives of the Great Andaman use
+for this purpose the same composition with which they cover the
+bindings of their arrows, which certainly is superior to bees’-wax.
+
+A bucket of the shape used in the Great Andaman is shown in Plate VII,
+on the left. A strip of cane is attached round the middle of the
+bucket, and to this in turn is attached another strip of cane which,
+being passed across the front of the chest, enables the bucket to be
+carried on the back.
+
+The buckets of the Little Andaman are cut with thinner sides than those
+of the Great Andaman. A strip of cane is fastened round the bucket near
+the top. From this two other strips of cane are attached by both ends,
+passing under the bottom, and a third strip is attached which passes
+over the head and supports the bucket when it is carried on the back.
+In the Little Andaman the outside of the bucket is charred with fire.
+
+Occasionally pieces of the giant bamboo, which does not grow in the
+Andamans, are found on the shore, having drifted from the Burma coast.
+When a sound piece is found it is made into buckets each formed of a
+single joint.
+
+Water vessels are made from bamboos that do grow in the islands. A
+length of bamboo of good diameter is cut, containing three joints. The
+partition of the lowest node is preserved to serve as a bottom, and the
+other partitions are broken through with an arrow. This is the usual
+vessel used for carrying water on a journey by land or in a canoe, and
+for keeping a supply of drinking water in the hut.
+
+A single joint of the same kind of bamboo is used as a cooking vessel.
+It is cleaned, washed, and dried, and is then filled with meat tightly
+packed. The top is closed with leaves and the bamboo is placed on the
+fire until the meat is cooked. Meat is not cooked in this way for
+immediate consumption. It will keep for twenty-four hours or even
+longer if not opened. To obtain the contents the bamboo is split open
+with an adze.
+
+Trays used for food are cut from soft wood of a species of Sterculia
+with an adze. They are shallow and somewhat long and narrow, with
+pointed ends.
+
+A large Pinna shell is occasionally used as a tray or dish for holding
+food, or for mixing clay with water for painting. A Nautilus shell
+forms a fairly convenient cup or drinking vessel and is frequently used
+for that purpose, as well as for baling out water from a canoe.
+
+Bamboo tongs are made by bending double a piece split from a bamboo,
+and cutting the ends to the required shape. They are used for lifting
+from the fire anything too hot to be taken in the hand and are chiefly
+of service in cooking.
+
+Digging sticks are made from various kinds of wood, being simply
+pointed at one or both ends. These sticks are not as a rule preserved,
+but made as required with an adze and thrown away after use. They are
+used for digging up edible roots.
+
+Hooks for picking fruit, such as the Artocarpus, are made by attaching
+a small piece of wood to the end of a bamboo. Hooks for catching crabs
+are made from the wood of the Rhizophora by taking advantage of the
+natural form where a small branch joins a larger one.
+
+The fan-shaped leaf of a Licuala palm is made use of in many ways. The
+edges of the leaflets are sewn together with fine strips of cane, and
+the sewn leaf is then used either as a sunshade or umbrella for
+protection from sunshine or rain, as a sleeping mat if the proper
+article be lacking, as a screen to make the roof or sides of a hut more
+wind or rain proof, as a wrapper for making objects of all sorts into
+bundles, and as a winding sheet for a corpse.
+
+Torches are made from resin, which is broken into small pieces and
+wrapped up in leaves of a species of Crinum (? lorifolium), a few
+pieces of smouldering charcoal being added before it is tied up. The
+torch is then parcelled by marling with a strip of cane or a length of
+some tough creeper. These resin torches are used in turtle-hunting and
+fishing expeditions on dark nights.
+
+Other torches are made of fragments of rotten Dipterocarpus wood. They
+are used only in the village.
+
+
+
+PERSONAL ORNAMENT; GREAT ANDAMAN.
+
+At the present time the natives of the Great Andaman Division obtain
+from the Settlement of Port Blair cloth which both men and women wear
+round the loins. They also obtain beads from which they make necklaces.
+
+The following is a list of the various personal ornaments made by the
+natives of the Great Andaman Division, and worn by them.
+
+Rope girdle. Every man wears some sort of girdle round his waist, and
+this was formerly the only object that was constantly worn by men. The
+girdle may consist of a length of rope of Hibiscus fibre or a length of
+ornamental cord made by wrapping the yellow skin of the Dendrobium over
+two strands of Hibiscus fibre and then twisting these into a two-ply
+cord.
+
+Necklaces and garters of string. Both men and women are often to be
+seen with a simple piece of string, usually of Anadendron fibre, tied
+round the neck or around the leg just below the knee.
+
+Ornaments of Pandanus leaf. Every married woman always wears a belt of
+Pandanus leaf which she is never without for even a moment. When the
+belt she is wearing needs renewing she puts the new one on before
+taking the other off. To make such a belt two leaves of the Pandanus
+Andamanensium are taken and cut to a sufficient length (about 20 cm.).
+The thorns at the edge of the leaf are removed by cutting off a strip
+of about 3 mm. wide from the edge, leaving a strip of leaf about 4 cm.
+broad. The two leaves are placed one on the other and are wound
+spirally round in three turns so as to give a belt of six thicknesses
+of leaf, the upper surface of the leaf being on the outside of the
+belt. The leaves are secured together by tying with thread at the back
+where the two ends just overlap. At the point where the leaves are tied
+one or two bundles of strips of Pandanus leaf are attached with thread.
+The bundle is made of a number of strips of leaf about 90 cm. long and
+2·5 cm. broad which are chewed in the mouth to make them soft and then
+placed together and served over with thread for about 12 cm. in the
+middle. Belts of this kind are generally worn by married women, but
+precisely similar belts are worn by men on certain ceremonial
+occasions. They are called toto t’er-bua in Aka-Jeru.
+
+A very similar belt is made in exactly the same way save that the
+tassel of leaves at the back consists of narrow strips of Pandanus leaf
+instead of broad strips. This kind of belt is worn by women only.
+Examples may be seen in Plate IV (the lower belt of the two) and in
+Plate XVIII. It is called toto t’er-nyarab in Aka-Jeru.
+
+A belt is made in much the same way out of Pandanus leaves split in
+half down the midrib, giving strips of about 2·5 cm. broad. Such belts
+have only a scanty tassel of thin strips of leaf at the back. They are
+worn by girls and women only. They are called kudu in Aka-Jeru.
+
+Yet another variety of belt is made of whole leaves in exactly the same
+way as the toto t’er-bua but has no tassel at the back. An example may
+be seen in Plate IV (the upper belt). It is worn by women.
+
+Girdles are made of strips of Pandanus leaf of about 1·25 cm. broad
+without any tassel, but with strings of Dentalium shell attached at
+various points. A girdle of this kind is shown in Plate XV.
+
+Girdles are also made by cutting a number of strips of leaf and
+softening them by chewing them in the mouth. These strips are laid
+together and either served over or marled with thread so as to make a
+girdle of round section. A tassel of leaves similar to that of the toto
+t’er-bua is attached to the back, and very frequently strings of
+Dentalium shell are attached at various points. Such a girdle may be
+worn by either men or women. It is called toto t’er-ŋau in Aka-Jeru.
+
+Yet another kind of girdle is made by splitting Pandanus leaves into
+thin strips and making them into a kind of wrapped cord, one strip
+being wrapped spirally round one or more others by the same technique
+as that used in making bow-strings. A number of coils of strands made
+in this way are tied together with thread at various points and a
+tassel similar to that of the toto t’er-bua is added at the back. Such
+girdles are usually improved by the addition of a few pendent strings
+of Dentalium shell. They may be worn by either men or women. Their name
+in Aka-Jeru is toto t’er-mo̱i.
+
+Ornaments of Pandanus leaf to be worn either round the leg just below
+the knee or round the wrist are made in exactly the same way as the
+belt called toto t’er-bua, each having a tassel of Pandanus leaf strips
+attached. Such garters and bracelets are worn at a dance by men.
+
+Other ornaments for wearing round the wrist or knee when dancing are
+made by the same method as the girdle called toto t’er-ŋau, each having
+a tassel of strips of leaf.
+
+Similar dancing ornaments are made by plaiting strips of leaf into a
+three-plait cord of the right length, a tassel of loose leaf strips
+being left at each end. These are tied round the wrist or knee.
+
+Ornaments for the knee or wrist, such as those shown on the legs of the
+man in Plate XII, are made by winding spirally a narrow strip of leaf
+and sewing it. A number of pendent strings of Dentalium shell are
+attached round it, and often strings are attached at the end of which
+small shells hang suspended which rattle against one another as the
+wearer walks or dances.
+
+Chaplets or headdresses worn by men when dancing, and occasionally by
+women, are made of fairly broad strips of leaf in the same way as the
+toto t’er-bua. Such a chaplet may have a tassel of narrow strips of
+Pandanus leaf at the back to which are attached shells that rattle as
+the wearer moves, or it may have pendent strings of Dentalium shells
+round the hinder half of its circumference.
+
+In making ornaments of Pandanus leaf such as the toto t’er-bua the
+upper surface of the strip of leaf is usually ornamented with a design
+scratched on it with a pointed piece of wood. The design usually covers
+not only the portion of leaf that is visible when the belt or other
+object is finished, but also that portion which is not visible, being
+underneath. Many ornaments of this kind are further decorated when
+finished with the composition used for covering the bindings of arrows,
+which is applied with a pointed stick in simple geometrical patterns.
+The woman shown in Plate X is wearing two belts that have been
+ornamented with composition in this way.
+
+Woman’s leaf apron. In the South Andaman the women wear a sort of small
+apron consisting of a number of leaves of the Mimusops littoralis laid
+one over the other, the stalk ends of the leaves being tucked in
+between the layers of a belt of Pandanus leaf. The leaves thus hang
+suspended so as to cover, somewhat inadequately, the pudenda. The
+natives say that the leaves of the Mimusops are chosen because they
+remain green longer than those of any other species. As soon as the
+leaves fade and turn yellow they are renewed. The appearance of the
+leaf apron may be seen in Plates IV and XV.
+
+The women of the North Andaman have within recent years adopted the
+fashion of those of the South Andaman in this matter, but formerly they
+made a similar use of a different kind of leaf from a plant called
+čainyo in Aka-Jeru, and over the top of the leaves they wore a tassel
+of the fibre called ko̱ro.
+
+Ornaments of netting and Dentalium shells. Bands of netting (in shape
+of a cylinder or bag open at both ends) are made of suitable size to
+tie round the waist, the neck, the leg below the knee or the wrist.
+Such netting is generally ornamented as it is being made with strips of
+Dendrobium skin worked in the net. Along the lower edge of the band of
+netting are attached a number of threads each having Dentalium shells
+strung on to it like beads. Ornaments of this kind are shown in Plates
+V and IX. They are worn by both men and women, but usually only on the
+occasion of a dance or some other ceremony.
+
+Ornaments of bone, etc. These are made with human bones, with the bones
+of such animals as pig, turtle, dugong, Paradoxurus, monitor lizard, or
+with pieces of wood or cane, or of coral, of suitable shape. A length
+of cord, of the fibre of the Hibiscus tiliaceus or of the Ficus
+laccifera, is taken, and the bones are attached to it by thread. As a
+rule, strips of Dendrobium skin are worked in, being laid on the bone
+and bound over with the thread.
+
+Ornaments of shell. Various kinds of shells are perforated and attached
+to string and are worn round the neck, the head, the knee, or the
+wrist. A necklace of fresh-water shells (ino ko̱lo to̱i in Aka-Jeru) is
+shown in Plate IX. A necklace of small sea-shells is shown in Plate
+XIII. The favourite shell of the Great Andaman tribes is the Dentalium
+octogonum. The shells are collected from the shore by the women. The
+closed end of each is bitten off with the teeth and the shells, which
+thus form cylindrical beads, are strung on to a piece of thread. These
+strings of shell are worn as necklaces, as shown in Plates IV and XII,
+and are tied round the wrist and knee and ankle as shown in Plate IV.
+
+Ornaments of seed. The seed-tops of two or three species of mangrove
+are collected and strung on to thread and worn round the neck. Fig. 40
+shows the two kinds of mangrove seed commonly used in this way.
+
+Bamboo necklaces. A necklace is sometimes made of a number of short
+pieces of bamboo arrow-shaft threaded on to a string. The pieces of
+bamboo are ornamented with simple designs scratched or cut on them with
+a shell.
+
+Sling of bark. Another object that may perhaps be mentioned amongst
+objects of personal ornament is the sling used in carrying children. It
+is made of a broad strip of the bark of the Hibiscus tiliaceus. Some
+slings are covered entirely with netting, while others are ornamented
+with shells in various ways. Plate XIV shows one with strings of
+Dentalium shell sewn on to it.
+
+Dancing ornaments of Tetranthera wood. A piece of Tetranthera wood,
+usually part of the shaft of an old pig-arrow, about 30 to 35 cm. long,
+is taken and made into shavings with a Cyrena shell. The wood is shaved
+carefully round and round, so as to make a continuous sheet of fibre,
+as though unwinding a roll of material. A bundle of these shavings is
+tied at one end and covered with red paint, and forms an object that is
+carried in the hand or worn in the belt at dances.
+
+
+
+PERSONAL ORNAMENT; LITTLE ANDAMAN.
+
+The personal ornaments of the Little Andaman and of the Jarawa are
+different from those of the Great Andaman Division, and therefore need
+to be described separately.
+
+Ornaments of bark. Strips of bark (? Celtis cinnamonea) are worn by the
+men round the waist and round the arm.
+
+Ornamental cord. These are the ornaments most frequently met with both
+in the Little Andaman and amongst the Jarawa. The basis is a strip of
+cane, varying in breadth in different examples. On one side of this are
+laid strips of the yellow skin of the Dendrobium, varying in number
+according to the breadth of the cane, and the whole is served over or
+bound with thread. The technique in shown in Fig. 41, which represents
+diagrammatically the method adopted when there are two strips of
+Dendrobium skin. Such ornamental cord is made in pieces of considerable
+length. Often tassels of thread (of Ficus hispida fibre) are attached
+to it at intervals. The cord is worn wound round the waist, the neck,
+or the arm. Both men and women wear it.
+
+Woman’s girdle. In the Little Andaman this is made of a number of fine
+strips of cane tied together with thread. At the front is attached a
+tassel of fibre made from young unopened palm-leaves (the fibre called
+ko̱ro in Aka-Jeru).
+
+Woman’s shoulder strap. The women of the Little Andaman wear a strip of
+bark over the shoulders, crossing over the chest and passing beneath
+the breasts.
+
+The above brief description of the ornaments of the Andamanese is
+perhaps sufficient for the purpose of this appendix, which is to
+determine as far as possible the elements of a primitive Negrito
+culture. Any complete account of the subject would need a large number
+of figures and a discussion of many comparatively unimportant details.
+The first point of importance to be noted is that the personal
+ornaments of the Little Andaman Division differ markedly from those of
+the Great Andaman Division. One difference is that the Pandanus leaf,
+which is used so much and in so many ways in the Great Andaman, seems
+not to be used at all in the Little Andaman. Another is that shells,
+which are much used in the Great Andaman, are used to a far less extent
+in the Little Andaman. The natives of the Little Andaman told me that
+they sometimes make ornaments of Dentalium shell, but I did not see any
+such ornament, nor any other ornament of shell, in use. The ornaments
+of netting worn in the Great Andaman, and forming the usual dancing
+costume, seem not to be used in the Little Andaman. Finally, perhaps
+most important of all, there is at present no evidence that the natives
+of the Little Andaman make ornaments of either human or animal bones.
+In the Little Andaman the lower jaw of a child is preserved by the
+parents and is worn by them, but I never saw a human skull (whether of
+child or adult) so worn, and I was not able to obtain any evidence of
+the use of strings of human bones such as are constantly seen in a camp
+of the Great Andaman.
+
+The points of similarity between the ornaments of the Little Andaman
+and those of the Great Andaman are very few. One of the most striking
+is the great use that is made in both divisions of the yellow skin of
+the Dendrobium. It seems probable that here we have evidence of one
+element of a primitive Negrito culture, for the Negritos of the
+Philippines also are fond of using a yellow vegetable fibre for their
+personal ornaments. So far as it is possible to judge from the figure
+and description, the armlet given by Meyer in Plate iii, No. 11, seems
+to be very similar to the ornamental cord of the Little Andaman. It is
+described as a “mit schwarz und gelben Grasstreifchen umflocktener
+Bambus-reif.”
+
+Another point of resemblance between the Great Andaman and the Little
+Andaman is that in both very little use is made of feathers or flowers.
+The natives of the Great Andaman never make use of the feathers of
+birds. The Jarawa occasionally wear in a chaplet a feather of the
+king-crow (Dicrurus macrocercus) if we may judge from a specimen in the
+British Museum. The natives of the Little Andaman certainly do not as a
+rule make any use of feathers. It would seem, from all accounts, that
+the Semang and the Philippine Negritos do not make any considerable use
+of feathers for personal ornament. We may perhaps hazard the conclusion
+that this is a mark of the Negrito culture distinguishing them from
+such people as the Papuans or Australians in whose personal ornaments
+the feathers of birds occupy an important place.
+
+In the Great Andaman flowers are not used as personal ornaments. In the
+British Museum there is an ornament from the Little Andaman consisting
+of a strip of bark-fibre with a few flowers attached.
+
+As regards personal ornament, therefore, the only elements of a
+primitive Negrito culture that we seem to be able to trace in the
+Andamans at the present day are (1) the use of yellow vegetable fibre,
+and (2) the absence of any considerable use of feathers.
+
+One element of a primitive Andamanese culture, though not necessarily
+of a primitive Negrito culture, would seem to be the use of a tassel of
+the fibre obtained from an unopened palm-leaf which is used by women to
+cover their genitals in the Little Andaman, and was similarly used
+until recently in the North Andaman.
+
+
+
+HAIR-DRESSING, SCARIFICATION, AND BODY-PAINTING.
+
+At the present time the usual method of hair-dressing in the Great
+Andaman is to shave a portion of the scalp all round so as to leave a
+sort of skull-cap of hair, as may be seen in many of the plates of this
+volume. In some cases a “parting” is made by shaving a narrow strip
+over the crown. (See Plate XV, for example.) When the hair grows so
+long as to be uncomfortable the whole head is shaved, and it is then
+permitted to grow again. In these days the natives cut their hair
+whenever they have an opportunity of obtaining a pair of scissors. In
+the Little Andaman women and old men are frequently to be seen with the
+head entirely shaved. The younger men shave away the lower edge of the
+hair all round in the same way as the natives of the Great Andaman, but
+this may be a recent practice.
+
+The fashion of hair-dressing, at any rate for women, has changed within
+recent times, for Mr Man wrote in 1882 that “the majority of the women
+every week or ten days shave their heads almost entirely, leaving only
+two narrow parallel lines of hair, termed gor, from the crown to the
+nape of the neck [256].” At the present time this style of
+hair-dressing has fallen entirely into disuse, and the women do their
+hair in the same way as the men.
+
+The operation of shaving, which is done with a flake of glass or
+quartz, is performed by women, and never, or very rarely, by men.
+
+Mention has been made in an earlier part of the work of the way in
+which the natives of the Great Andaman scarify the skin of the body and
+limbs with a flake of glass or quartz. The Semang do not scarify
+themselves in this way, but some, at any rate, of the Negritos of the
+Philippines do.
+
+The natives of the Great Andaman, as described earlier in this work,
+paint their bodies with a grey clay called odu or og, with a fine white
+clay, and with red paint made by mixing burnt oxide of iron with fat or
+oil. The natives of the Little Andaman use the same kind of clay as
+that called odu or og in the Great Andaman, but instead of applying it
+in patterns they smear it roughly on the back and front of the trunk.
+They also use red paint, with which they smear their hair, a practice
+never met with in the Great Andaman.
+
+
+
+ORNAMENTATION.
+
+The Andamanese have simple designs which they paint or incise on their
+bodies and on a great number of the objects that they make and use. A
+few typical designs such as are incised or painted on belts of Pandanus
+leaf are shown in Fig. 42. A very large number of designs are based on
+the zig-zag line. Examples are shown in Fig. 42 c, e, and g. In all
+parts of the Great Andaman and also in the Little Andaman the zig-zag
+line is associated with snakes. Thus in the Little Andaman the simple
+zig-zag line is called dobo kwolage (dobo = snake). In the North
+Andaman the design of zig-zag lines painted on the body with white clay
+is called or-čubi t’era-bat, or-čubi being the name of a species of
+large snake.
+
+A number of other common designs consist of parallel lines of dots or
+of short strokes, an example of which is shown in Fig. 42 f.
+
+By far the greater number of the Andamanese designs are based on the
+following elements, (1) parallel lines crossing a surface from side to
+side at right angles to the edge or else in a sloping direction (about
+45°), (2) parallel lines of dots or of short lines, i.e. parallel
+broken lines, as in Fig. 42 f, (3) zig-zag lines, which may be single,
+or parallel or opposed so as to make lines of lozenges. As an example
+of the way in which these elements may be combined two designs copied
+from bamboo necklaces are shown in Fig. 43.
+
+It would perhaps be possible to show that there is a real connection
+between the ornamentation of the Andamanese and that of the Semang, as
+there is certainly a considerable degree of superficial resemblance,
+but at present we understand so little the psychological processes
+underlying the use of ornament amongst primitive peoples that the
+subject is one of considerable difficulty.
+
+
+
+CANOES.
+
+Canoes are in regular use on the coast in all parts of the islands.
+There are three types of canoe. (1) The Little Andaman canoe, with one
+outrigger, propelled with paddles or with a pole. (2) The Great Andaman
+small canoe, with one outrigger, propelled with paddles or with a pole.
+(3) The Great Andaman large canoe, without outrigger, propelled with
+oars.
+
+The third kind of canoe mentioned above is a recent innovation. The
+natives themselves say that such canoes have only been made in recent
+times, since they have been able to obtain a plentiful supply of iron
+tools, and so have been able to cut down and hollow out large trunks
+[257]. They seem to have been invented by the natives of the South
+Andaman, and copied by those of the Middle and North Andaman.
+
+Canoes of this type are propelled by rowing with short oars, except in
+shallow water where they are poled. This method of propulsion (rowing
+as opposed to paddling) was adopted in imitation of the boats with
+which they have become familiar since the European occupation.
+
+For the small canoe of the Great Andaman five or six species of
+soft-wooded trees are used, of which three are species of Sterculia. A
+suitable tree is selected near the shore or a creek, and is felled.
+Care is taken to make it fall in a particular direction. Thus, if the
+trunk is curved, the convex side of the curve will have to be the
+bottom of the canoe, and the tree should fall so that this side lies on
+the ground. Trees are very rarely regular and before beginning the work
+of cutting the natives have to decide how it should be cut so as to
+give the best result, i.e., the greatest stability.
+
+After the tree is felled the trunk is cut to the requisite length. The
+inside of the canoe is first roughly hollowed out with the adze, no use
+being made of fire. The bark is then removed from the outside of the
+trunk and the two ends are shaped. Finally, the inside is carefully
+finished with the adze so as to reduce the sides and bottom to the
+requisite thickness.
+
+Except at the stem and stern, the canoe retains the shape of the tree,
+only the bark being removed, and the sides and bottom being formed of
+the alburnum or sap-wood. At the stern a small platform is cut
+projecting over the water, which serves as a seat for the steersman. At
+the prow a larger platform is cut, on which the harpooner stands when
+he is harpooning turtle or fish. Below these two platforms the ends are
+not cut away squarely but are rounded from side to side. The prow of
+the canoe is in every case the lower and therefore broader end of the
+trunk. It is only in this way that a sufficiently large platform can be
+provided for the harpooner.
+
+The trees used for canoes have a pithy core and there is therefore a
+small patch in both the prow and the stern which would admit the water.
+In former times these two places were caulked with bees’-wax. At the
+present time the natives often nail a piece of tin (part of an old
+kerosene tin, for example), with some rags beneath it, on the outside
+of the canoe at these two places.
+
+When the hull of the canoe is finished it is moved to the shore or to
+the bank of a creek and the outrigger is attached. The float is a
+straight spar of light wood. In the North Andaman the wood of the
+Hibiscus tiliaceus is often used, but Mr Man says that in the South
+Andaman the float is always made from a species of Sterculia (mai in
+Aka-Bea) [258]. The ends of the float are only roughly shaped. The
+broader end of the float is forward.
+
+The float is attached to a number of booms, of which there are never
+less than three in the smallest canoes, while there may be as many as
+eight or nine in a large canoe. A medium-sized canoe has five or six
+booms. The boom is a thin straight piece of tough wood, of which one
+end is sharpened and thrust right through two holes cut in the gunwales
+of the canoe opposite to one another, the sharpened end projecting for
+a few inches on the port side of the canoe. The boom thus projects
+about three feet on the starboard side on the level of the gunwale.
+
+Where the boom passes through the gunwales of the canoe it is bound
+with cane, and the cane is bound round the whole of that part of the
+boom that is within the canoe between the two gunwales. (See Fig. 44.)
+This portion of the boom forms a seat for the man paddling the canoe,
+so that he sits on a level with the gunwale with his feet on the floor
+of the canoe.
+
+The boom is attached to the float by means of sticks of tough wood.
+These sticks, having pointed ends, are driven into the float, one
+perpendicular, and the other two at an angle on each side. The tops of
+the three sticks are fastened to the boom a few inches from its end by
+means of a strip of cane. The arrangement of the three sticks is shown
+in Fig. 45.
+
+The strip of cane with which the sticks are bound to the boom is wound
+spirally round the boom itself for a few inches and is then carried
+down round the float and back to the boom again on the other side. The
+three sticks provide an efficient resistance against a longitudinal
+thrust (i.e., a thrust in the same direction as the line of the canoe).
+The strip of cane passing from the boom round the float and back to the
+boom again provides a resistance against any lateral thrust on the
+float. The three sticks, being driven in when the wood of the float is
+dry, do not readily work loose, as the water in which it is constantly
+immersed keeps the wood swollen. The cane binding, including the stays
+on each side, may work loose, but can readily be tightened or renewed.
+Each of the booms is attached to the float in exactly the same way, and
+the whole arrangement is very efficient in keeping the float rigidly
+attached to the hull in such a position that it rests on the surface of
+the water when the hull itself rides freely balanced.
+
+Canoes of this type vary in dimensions within wide limits. A small
+canoe with only three booms, which would carry three persons, measured
+4·85 metres in length over all with a beam of about 35 centimetres. A
+large canoe may measure as much as 9 metres with a proportionate beam.
+
+A well-made canoe will often balance well enough as it stands, but it
+is sometimes necessary to balance it with ballast of stones or pieces
+of coral. In any case the canoe is easily overturned in a rough sea
+unless the occupants can maintain the balance with their bodies. As the
+canoe is made of light wood it cannot sink even when full of water, and
+the natives easily right an overturned canoe, bale it out, and get in
+again, even in a rough sea.
+
+The furniture of a canoe consists of the ballast (of stone), a piece of
+stone (or sometimes a piece of tin) on which to keep a small fire
+smouldering, an anchor consisting of a lump of coral or stone attached
+to a length of rope, a Nautilus shell or two for baling out the canoe,
+a bamboo pole of about 18 feet in length for poling the canoe in
+shallow water, and paddles.
+
+In the platform overhanging the prow a few holes are cut. These holes
+are sometimes used to attach the rope by which the canoe is fastened to
+an anchor. One or more turtle skulls are often attached so as to hang
+down beneath the platform. In turtle-hunting expeditions on dark nights
+a torch is slung beneath the forward platform so as to shed its light
+on the water while the harpooner remains in shadow.
+
+When a canoe is finished it is decorated with designs painted on it
+with red paint and white clay, particularly on the forward platform and
+along the gunwale. These designs soon wear off when the canoe is in use
+and are not renewed.
+
+The paddles used by the Andamanese vary considerably in size and to
+some extent in shape, but the following description with its
+accompanying figure gives a fair idea of a typical specimen. The whole
+paddle has a length of 123·5 centimetres, the shaft being 85
+centimetres and the blade 38·5 centimetres. The diameter of the shaft
+from the blade to the middle is 2·6 centimetres, and from the middle
+towards the handle end it tapers to a point. The shaft is circular in
+section throughout its length. The blade is leaf-shaped, pointed
+bluntly at the apex. In section it is plano-convex, with a maximum
+thickness of 1·3 centimetres and a width of 8·7 centimetres. Paddles
+are cut with an adze from the wood of the Myristica longifolia and
+planed with a boar’s tusk. They are often ornamented, when new, with
+painted designs in red and white.
+
+In deep water the canoe is paddled. Each of the occupants sits facing
+forward. The steersman sits on the stern platform. The others sit on
+the seats provided by the outrigger booms. Each man paddles on which
+side he chooses. It rests with the steersman to maintain the canoe in
+its proper course. In shallow water the canoe is propelled with a pole.
+A man stands on the forward platform and poles the canoe, steering as
+he does so. In a fairly large canoe a man at the stern may also take a
+pole and, standing up, help to propel the canoe.
+
+All the work connected with the making of canoes and paddles is done by
+men alone, except the painting, which is usually done by women. It is
+the men also who make most use of canoes.
+
+The large canoe, that is now made by all the tribes of the Great
+Andaman Division, is simply a canoe of the same general shape as the
+Great Andaman outrigger canoe, cut from a larger tree and without the
+outrigger. The shape of the hull, with its platforms fore and aft, is
+exactly the same. It seems that when the natives obtained a plentiful
+supply of iron tools (after 1858) they began to cut down and hollow out
+larger trees than formerly. Having made these larger canoes they found
+that they would, when well cut and ballasted with stone, float quite
+well without an outrigger. (It may be mentioned that the hull of a
+small canoe is always tested on the water before the outrigger is
+attached.) Indeed a well cut canoe of large size floats and balances
+better in a rough sea than a smaller one with an outrigger. It is
+possible that at first these large canoes were propelled with paddles
+just as the outrigger canoes are, the paddlers facing forward. Having
+learnt to understand the principle of the oar, through their contact
+with the Penal Settlement, the natives applied this principle to their
+own canoes. It could not, of course, be applied to the small canoes, as
+the shape of the canoe and the position of the paddler make the use of
+an oar impossible. It could be applied very easily, however, to the new
+large canoes. In these the oarsman does not sit on a level with the
+gunwale, but sits down in the hull itself on a piece of wood resting on
+the two sides of the hull a few inches above the floor. The gunwale of
+the canoe is thus about on a level with the bottom of his sternum. A
+number of holes are made in the gunwale on each side, and by means of
+these, loops of cane are attached to the gunwale. The oar, which is
+shaped in imitation of European oars, but with a short shaft, is thrust
+through the loop of cane, which serves as a fulcrum or rowlock. The
+rowers face aft. A man at the stern steers with a paddle. In shallow
+water the large canoes are propelled with poles in exactly the same way
+as the smaller canoes.
+
+In the bow, at about the position that would be occupied by the
+foremost boom in an outrigger canoe, holes are made in the gunwale on
+each side and a piece of wood is thrust through them as a sort of
+thwart. This is to provide a means of making fast the end of the
+harpoon line or the anchor line, and thus serves a purpose that is
+served by the foremost boom in the outrigger canoe.
+
+The large canoes are not quite so useful in turtle-hunting as the
+smaller outrigger variety, as they cannot be so quickly turned when the
+pursued turtle doubles. Very often a large canoe and a small canoe are
+taken together on an expedition, the harpooning being mostly done from
+the smaller one while the captured turtles are placed in the larger
+one. A small canoe with three or four men cannot hold more than one or
+at most two big turtles, whereas as many as ten or a dozen can be
+stowed in one of the large canoes.
+
+The chief use of the large canoes is to make journeys from place to
+place. One of the largest will hold as many as thirty men and women
+with their baggage, whereas an outrigger canoe would never carry more
+than nine or ten. Further, there is less chance of an even heavily
+laden big canoe capsizing in a rough sea than of an outrigger canoe
+doing so. One result of the introduction of the large canoe has
+therefore been to enable the natives to move much more freely about the
+islands than formerly. The passage from the South Andaman to Ritchie’s
+Archipelago, for instance, would only be attempted in an outrigger
+canoe on a very calm day, whereas in a large canoe it can be
+successfully accomplished even when there is something of a sea
+running.
+
+The small canoe of the Little Andaman is fairly similar to that of the
+Great Andaman. There are three differences. (1) The stem and stern are
+squarely cut in the Little Andaman, instead of being rounded off. (2)
+The outrigger booms are attached to the top of the gunwale by cane
+binding which passes through holes made in the gunwales, instead of
+being themselves passed through holes in the gunwale. (3) The float is
+attached to the booms in a different and less efficient manner. Three
+pointed hard-wood sticks are driven into the float, but they are all
+three approximately perpendicular. They are bound at the top to the
+boom, but there are no stays of cane to maintain the float rigid
+against a lateral thrust. In other respects the Little Andaman canoe is
+the same as the Great Andaman canoe.
+
+The Jarawa of the South Andaman do not at the present time make use of
+canoes. This is apparently because, through their hostility with the
+Aka-Bea, they have been confined to the interior of the island. They
+make rafts of bamboos lashed together for crossing creeks and inlets.
+The forest-dwellers of the Great Andaman Division seem also to have
+made occasional use of similar rafts for the same purpose.
+
+A canoe of the North Sentinel was seen by Mr Gilbert Rogers during a
+visit to that island in 1903 [259]. It had been hollowed out of a tree
+and was about 15 feet long. The ends of the canoe were cut off
+perpendicularly to its length leaving a piece of the tree about one
+inch thick projecting for about three inches beyond either end to form
+a small but rickety seat. The log from which the canoe was cut was
+curved so that the ends were slightly higher than the middle. It had a
+float supported by six booms passing through holes cut in the sides of
+the canoe. These booms were fastened to smaller pieces of stick fixed
+into the sides of the canoe beneath them. The outrigger was attached to
+each boom by two small pointed sticks driven into the float and tied to
+the boom above with cane. There was one small paddle, a Nautilus shell
+for a baler, and five poles resting on the outrigger booms. These point
+to the canoe being poled along in the lagoon, which is quite shallow,
+rather than to its being used for long journeys or outside the reefs
+which surround the island. The canoe was 18 inches in diameter at the
+smaller end and perhaps 30 inches wide at the larger end.
+
+This description shows that the canoe of the North Sentinel is on the
+whole more like that of the Little Andaman than like that of the Great
+Andaman.
+
+It seems probable that the Andaman Islands were peopled by sea from the
+coast of Burma. If this were so, then the original ancestors of the
+Andamanese must have been in possession of canoes. A consideration of
+the present Andaman canoes suggests that their ancestors had canoes
+with a single outrigger on the starboard side, with a number of booms.
+Of the different methods of attaching the booms to the float, it is
+possible that the method now in use in the Little Andaman (and
+apparently also in the North Sentinel) is primitive, and that the Great
+Andaman attachment is an improvement that has been invented since the
+separation of the two divisions. On the other hand it is not impossible
+that the Great Andaman attachment is primitive, and that in the Little
+Andaman we have a degeneration that might be due to the fact that the
+Little Andaman (and equally the North Sentinel) provides much less
+scope for maritime pursuits than the Great Andaman.
+
+The recent invention of the large canoe in the Great Andaman and the
+adoption of the principle of the oar shows that the Andamanese readily
+adopt new inventions when these are clearly of service to them.
+
+Turning now to the Semang, as these people live inland they have no use
+for canoes. They make rafts of bamboos lashed together with which they
+float down the rivers, returning overland.
+
+Some of the Philippine Negritos seem to live on the coast and possibly
+have canoes, but nothing is known about these.
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+The examination of the technical culture of the Andamanese given above
+has been sufficient to enable us to make a few statements as to what
+was probably the culture of the Negritos before they were split up into
+isolated groups. It is highly probable that they obtained their
+subsistence solely by hunting and collecting vegetable products. They
+had bows and arrows, the form of bow being probably fairly similar to
+that used at the present day in the Little Andaman, while for hunting
+the larger animals they had arrows with detachable heads. They possibly
+had no knowledge of any way of making implements of stone, but made use
+only of such materials as wood, bone, and shell. It is not probable
+that they possessed the art of making pottery, and their basketry and
+mat-work were probably confined to very simple forms. In their personal
+ornaments there is reason to think that they showed a fondness for
+bright yellow vegetable fibre, and made little or no use of the
+feathers of birds. The ornamentation of their utensils was probably
+confined to the use of the simplest forms of geometric design with a
+preponderance of the zig-zag and the lozenge. Finally their huts
+consisted of a single sloping roof sufficient to afford shelter for a
+single family or larger huts consisting of such small huts joined
+together.
+
+We have seen that since the Andamanese have occupied their present
+home, or at any rate since the Great Andaman Division and the Little
+Andaman Division have been separated from one another, many changes,
+some of considerable importance, have taken place in the Andaman
+technology. In general it would seem that the technical culture of the
+Great Andaman has changed more than that of the Little Andaman. Putting
+aside the effect on the technology of the introduction of iron, there
+is no evidence that any of the changes that have taken place in the
+Great Andaman have been due to outside influence. Important
+modifications have taken place in the form of the bow, in the forms and
+technique of baskets, and in personal ornaments, and in all these
+instances there is no reason to think that these changes have not been
+brought about by the natives themselves without the influence of
+contact with other people. Their method of working iron, based as it
+is, to all appearance, on their former method of working shell, shows
+that even here, though the iron itself came to them from outside, and
+even though they may have learnt its use from seeing it used by aliens,
+still they have not learnt from others how to fashion the metal into
+shape by heating it. Thus, so far as their technical culture is
+concerned, there is no evidence whatever that the Andamanese have ever
+been influenced by contact with any other race since the time, now many
+centuries ago, when they first reached the islands.
+
+On the other hand there is some probability that the ancestors of the
+Andamanese, before they first reached the islands, or at any rate
+before the isolation of the Little Andaman from the Great Andaman, had
+learnt from some other race how to make pottery, and it is possible
+that at the same time they may have acquired other elements of their
+culture, such as the outrigger canoe. We may even give a guess as to
+the particular culture from which the ancestors of the Andamanese may
+have adopted these elements, which may well have been that of a branch
+of that people of whom an offshoot peopled the Nicobars.
+
+Confirmation of these hypotheses, if confirmation be ever forthcoming,
+can only be obtained in the study of the history of races and of
+culture in south-eastern Asia. Until we have much fuller knowledge of
+the culture of the Semang and the Negritos of the Philippines, any
+conclusions that may be drawn from the study of the Andamanese alone
+must be regarded as provisional working hypotheses only, and it is as
+such that they are here put forward.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B
+
+THE SPELLING OF ANDAMANESE WORDS
+
+
+In writing words of the Andaman languages I have used a slightly
+modified form of the “Anthropos” Alphabet of Father Schmidt [260],
+which I consider to be by far the most scientific alphabet for writing
+down the languages of primitive peoples. The consonants are
+
+
+ k g y ŋ
+ č ǰ
+ ń
+ t d n l r
+ p b w m
+
+
+The letter ŋ is used for the nasalised guttural stop (ng in English)
+which should always be written with one letter, since it is a single
+consonant, quite distinct from the double consonant ng of “ungodly.”
+The letter ń stands for a palatalised n, something like the sound in
+French “agneau.” The č and ǰ, which, in the “Anthropos” Alphabet
+represent the sounds in English “church” and “judge” respectively,
+should, I think, really be written t′ and d′. The t′ is a palatalised
+t, as heard in “Tuesday,” whereas the č is a fricative, often regarded
+as a compound of t and sh. It is not always easy to distinguish t′ from
+č and d′ from ǰ, but I believe the Andamanese sounds are really t′ and
+d′, and this is to some extent confirmed by the fact that they have no
+s, z, sh or zh in their languages. I have used the č and ǰ because
+former writers had written these sounds ch and j and it seemed worth
+while to make some sacrifice of scientific exactness in order to avoid
+too great a divergence in spelling from previous workers in the same
+field.
+
+The remaining consonants may be pronounced as in English. I have not
+distinguished between different varieties of the consonants l, r, t, d,
+k and g. Further I have not distinguished between p and p̌ (the labial
+fricative). Many of the words of the Northern languages that I have
+written with a p are often pronounced with a p̌ sound.
+
+The vowels are
+
+
+ i u
+ e o ö
+ e̱ o̱
+ a̤ a̱̱
+ a
+
+
+These may be pronounced as follows:
+
+
+ i, intermediate between the vowels of “it” and “eat.”
+ e, as the vowel in “say.”
+ e̱, as the e in “error” or the a in “Mary.”
+ a̤, as the a in “man.”
+ a, as the a in French “pas.”
+ a̱̱, as the a in “path.”
+ o̱, as the vowel in “not” or in “nought.”
+ o, as in “go.”
+ u, as the vowel in “fool.”
+ ö, nearly as the German ö.
+
+
+I have not attempted to distinguish all the different varieties of
+vowel sounds that are found in the different dialects. Slightly
+different but closely related sounds are represented by the same letter
+[261].
+
+In writing Andamanese words I have followed the practice of separating
+by hyphens the affixes from the stems in each word. In the Andamanese
+languages there are two main classes of words. The first class consists
+of words each of which is a simple stem (without affixes). Such words
+are the names of what the Andaman Islander regards as simple
+independent objects or things, such as roa, canoe, baraba, a mat, ra, a
+pig. The second class consists of words each of which is formed of a
+stem and a prefix. In the language of the Little Andaman (and in that
+of the Jarawa as far as known) these prefixes are simple vowels, i-,
+e-, a-, o-, and u-. In the languages of the Great Andaman Division they
+are such as ot-, aka-, era-, e-, u-, ab-, etc. Such words are used to
+denote dependent objects such as the parts, qualities or actions of a
+thing. Thus while a pig (ra) or a canoe (roa) is an independent object
+and is therefore denoted by a simple stem, the head or prow of a pig or
+canoe, being a part of a “thing,” is denoted by a word (ot-čo)
+consisting of a stem (-čo) and a prefix (ot-). So also the quality of
+bigness which may belong to a pig or a canoe is denoted by a word
+(er-kuro) consisting of a stem (-kuro) and a prefix (er-).
+
+Thus the second class includes many words that we should call nouns,
+all the words we should call adjectives and practically all those we
+should regard as verbs. In the Andamanese languages the distinction
+between nouns and adjectives is not very clear and even less so is the
+distinction between adjectives and verbs. Whereas the distinction
+between things (independent objects) on the one hand, and the parts,
+qualities, actions, etc. of things on the other, is of the utmost
+importance. For this reason I have thought it advisable always to
+separate by a hyphen the prefix and the stem in words of the second
+class.
+
+In compound words or phrases in which the second word consists of
+prefix and stem it is common to insert before the prefix a t or an l.
+Thus ra t’er-kuro is “a big pig” and ra t’ot-čo is “a pig’s head.” In
+writing such words I have placed an inverted comma between the t or l
+and the prefix. This infix t must not be confused with the first
+personal pronoun in the North Andaman, Tio, contracted to T’ before a
+prefix.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+[1] “Notes on the Languages of the Andaman Islands,” by A. R. Brown,
+Anthropos, Vol. IX, 1914, pp. 36–52 with map. This paper contains notes
+on I, The Relations of the Andamanese Languages, and II, The Formation
+of Words in the Language of the Little Andaman.
+
+[2] I hope to be able to publish shortly the first volume of a work in
+which the same method is applied to the interpretation of the social
+institutions of the natives of Australia.
+
+[3] The formation of the Arakan Fold (including the Andaman and Nicobar
+Islands), dates from the middle of the Tertiary Period, and was
+apparently connected with the great movements that produced the
+Himalaya-Alpine mountain system and the Circum-Pacific Fold. The
+Andaman Sea, in the later Tertiary period, was prolonged much further
+to the north, over the region now occupied by the Pegu Yomah.
+
+[4] This line of volcanic activity is a minor continuation of the Sunda
+Range of volcanoes of Java and Sumatra. It is continued northward,
+parallel to the Arakan Fold, as far as the extinct volcano of
+Puppadoung, east of Pagan, not far from Lat. 21°.
+
+[5] The flora of the Andamans and Cocos contains a number of species,
+the presence of which can only be explained by the supposition of a
+past land connection with the Arakan region. (See Prain, “The
+Vegetation of the Coco Group,” Journ. Asiatic Soc. of Bengal, Vol. LX,
+Part II, pp. 283–406.) On the other hand, the paucity of mammalian
+fauna is such as to lead to the conclusion that the islands were
+isolated at a period when the mammals now typical of the mainland did
+not exist there. (See Miller, “Mammals of the Andaman and Nicobar
+Islands,” Proc. National Museum, U.S.A. Vol. XXIV).
+
+[6] There is no evidence of the former existence of Negritos in the
+Nicobars, but on the other hand, there is equally no direct evidence of
+their former presence in Lower Burma.
+
+[7] On the accompanying map of south-eastern Asia the regions now
+occupied by the Negritos are shown by the shading.
+
+[8] Anciennes Relations des Indes et de la Chine; De Deux Voyageurs
+Mahometans, qui y allerent dans le neuvième siècle; Traduites d’Arabe
+(par M. l’Abbé Renaudot). Paris, MDCCXVIII, pp. 5 and 6.
+
+[9] Takakasu’s Edition of I-tsing, pp. xxviii seq.
+
+[10] The Travels of Marco Polo, Edited by John Masefield, Everyman’s
+Library, 1908, p. 347.
+
+[11] Extracts of Master Caesar Frederike: his Eighteene Yeeres’ Indian
+Observations, Purchas: his Pilgrimes, London, 1625; Vol. II, p. 1710.
+In spite of the repeated descriptions of the Andamanese by early
+writers as ferocious cannibals, there is good reason to think that they
+have not deserved quite so evil a reputation. If they had ever been
+cannibals they had certainly abandoned the custom by the time the
+islands were occupied in 1858. It is improbable that such inveterate
+man-eaters, as they are supposed to have been, would have entirely
+altered their ways in the course of a century or two. The legend
+probably had its origin in the fact that the Andamanese attacked all
+strangers who landed on their coasts, and (in the North Andaman, at any
+rate) often disposed of the bodies of slain enemies by cutting them in
+pieces and burning them on a fire.
+
+[12] The account is that of a visit to the Andamans in 1771 by John
+Ritchie, published in the Indian Antiquary, Vol. XXX, 1901, pp. 232
+seq. Two natives came off to the ship in a canoe, and Ritchie writes:
+“I gave them some nails and bits of old iron which pleased them much;
+and about three in the afternoon, they went into the canoe, and tried
+hard to pull the chain plates from the vessel’s side. They went astern
+when this would not do, and dragged strongly and long at the rudder
+chains; but these were too well fixed; and at last, they went towards
+the shore at an easy rate, looking at their nails, and singing all the
+way.”
+
+[13] In 1906 some Little Andaman visitors to Rutland Island captured a
+Jarawa of that part. They told me that though he spoke differently from
+them, they could understand him fairly well.
+
+[14] Portman, M. V., A History of Our Relations with the Andamanese,
+Calcutta, 1899.
+
+[15] This estimate is based on what the Andamanese were able to tell me
+of the conditions under which they formerly lived. Of course such an
+estimate can only be of small value. I think it is more probable that I
+have underestimated the former population than that I have
+overestimated it.
+
+[16] Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of Tribes, p.
+27.
+
+[17] Page 18 above.
+
+[18] A few small areas were not occupied at all, for example the
+greater part of Saddle Peak in the North Andaman, which is covered with
+dense jungle and is supposed by the natives to be the haunt of large
+and deadly snakes and of evil spirits.
+
+[19] Mouat, F. J., Adventures and Researches among the Andaman
+Islanders, London, 1863, p. 313.
+
+[20] Loc. cit. p. 300.
+
+[21] Journ. Anthrop. Inst. Vol. XII, pp. 107 and 108.
+
+[22] Portman, Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of
+Tribes, p. 23.
+
+[23] The photograph is reproduced in Le Tour du Monde, 1895, p. 447.
+
+[24] See Journ. Anthrop. Inst. Vol. XII, p. 71.
+
+[25] Man, op. cit. p. 108.
+
+[26] In the North Andaman the times before the Settlement are spoken of
+as the time when there were no dogs, Bibi poiye = “Dog not.”
+
+[27] They are only eaten in the rainy season.
+
+[28] There are two kinds of wild bee in the Andamans. A small species
+makes black honeycombs in hollow trees, and these may be found at any
+time of the year. A larger species of bee builds white combs suspended
+from the underside of branches in tall trees. Such combs are found in
+abundance only in the hot season, and not at all in the middle of the
+rainy season.
+
+[29] Man, in Journ. Anthrop. Inst. Vol. XII, p. 108.
+
+[30] The natives of the North Andaman were able to tell me of a few
+cases of murder which had occurred within the memory of those still
+living.
+
+Mr Portman in his History of Our Relations with the Andamanese records
+a certain number of murders which occurred while he was in charge of
+the Andamanese. One man, who had been imprisoned at Port Blair for
+murder, committed another soon after his release and was hanged. Since
+that date there has been no case of murder among the Great Andaman
+tribes. This is perhaps in part due to the punishment with which they
+are now threatened by the Government, but another cause is probably the
+breakdown of the old social organisation which has in this respect
+rather improved their morals than the opposite.
+
+[31] The nickname is applied, however, not only to those who deserve it
+by their character, but also to others; for instance, one man was
+called Tarenǰek because his maternal uncle was a man of violent temper.
+
+[32] See below, Chap. IV.
+
+[33] The classificatory system of relationship was first studied and
+named by Lewis H. Morgan, in Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of
+the Human Family, Washington, Smithsonian Institution, 1871. The
+subject is also discussed in the same author’s Ancient Society.
+Although there has been a good deal of attention paid to the systems of
+relationship of savage tribes since the time of Morgan, there is no
+general work on the subject that supersedes these two books.
+
+[34] The terms used in any society to denote relationships are of
+interest to the ethnologist as an important means to the discovery of
+the relationship system (i.e. the system of juridical and moral
+institutions) existing in the same society. Without a thorough
+knowledge of the terms in use and their exact meanings it is impossible
+to discover the rights and duties of relatives one to another. It is,
+however, sometimes forgotten that the study of terms of relationship is
+not an end in itself but a means to a more important study.
+
+[35] In the Andamanese languages a large number of words are formed
+from a stem and a prefix. E-, ot-, aka-, ara-, ab- etc. are prefixes of
+this kind. The function of the prefixes is (1) to show that the object
+denoted by the word is in a dependent relation to some other object
+understood, as for instance that it is part of that other object, and
+(2) to modify the reference of the stem, as for instance while e-tire
+means the offspring of an animal or an human being, era-tire means the
+offspring of a tree or plant (the young shoots). For a description of
+these prefixes the reader may be referred to the work of Mr Portman,
+Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of Tribes.
+
+[36] Dege bula and dege pal mean “my husband” and “my wife”
+respectively.
+
+[37] Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of Tribes.
+
+[38] Man, op. cit. p. 421. The dia, or the d’ before a prefix, in the
+words of this list is the pronoun “my.”
+
+[39] Portman, Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of
+Tribes, p. 255.
+
+[40] Op. cit. p. 100.
+
+[41] The natives commonly applied the term to me, in the form Mam-jula.
+
+[42] The systems of relationship of savage peoples are often very
+difficult to study, even with a thorough mastery of the native
+language. My account of the Andamanese system is not perhaps complete
+and is therefore open to error. Since the above account was written I
+have had the opportunity of studying in Australia several examples of
+“classificatory” systems of relationship, and can now say very
+definitely that such a system presents an extreme contrast to the
+system of the Andamans. My failure fully to comprehend the Andamanese
+system was partly due to the difficulties of the language, in which I
+did not have time to become expert, and partly to the nature of the
+Andamanese terms, of which it is by no means easy to discover the
+meaning, even with careful observation.
+
+[43] Man, op. cit. p. 135. He speaks of the wives as “models of
+constancy.”
+
+[44] I collected a number of genealogies from the natives, but
+unfortunately my own inexperience in the use of the genealogical
+method, and my consequent inability to surmount the difficulties with
+which I met, made this branch of my investigations a failure.
+
+[45] When a husband and wife greet one another the man sits on the lap
+of the wife.
+
+[46] Man, op. cit. p. 139.
+
+[47] Ibid.
+
+[48] Man, op. cit. p. 139.
+
+[49] Man, op. cit. p. 125.
+
+[50] It would not be safe, however, to base any arguments of importance
+to sociology on the above description of the Andamanese system of
+relationship alone. Although I tried to learn all that I could on the
+subject, it is quite certain that I did not learn all that was to be
+learnt, and it is possible that further enquiry might have shown that I
+was mistaken in some of my observations. The difficulty of being really
+sure on these matters is due (1) to the fact that the breaking-up of
+the old local organisation has produced many changes in their customs,
+and (2) to the difficulty of questioning the natives on matters
+connected with relationships when they have no words in their language
+to denote any but the simplest relationships.
+
+[51] The dance is described in the next chapter.
+
+[52] In the years 1872 to 1902 inclusive the Jarawa made eight attacks
+on camps of the friendly Andamanese in different places, in which two
+of the friendly Andamanese men and one girl were killed and three men
+and one boy were wounded. There were also one or two casual meetings
+between Jarawa and friendly Andamanese. One of the friendlies was
+surprised and killed while turtle hunting in 1894. During the same
+years the Jarawa made on different occasions about twenty attacks on
+parties of convicts or on separate individuals, killing altogether 27
+convicts and two police constables, and wounding six other convicts. In
+these skirmishes and in the expeditions to which they gave rise three
+Jarawa were killed and seven wounded on various occasions, and several
+times Jarawa men, women or children were captured and afterwards
+released. A number of convicts have at different times run away from
+the Settlement and as some of those were never after heard of they may
+be supposed to have been killed by the Jarawa. For an official record
+of dealings with the Jarawa see the “Census Report” 1901, pp. 68–90.
+
+[53] I could not obtain any definite legend about these stones, but one
+informant said that when Biliku got angry and destroyed the world (see
+later, Chap. IV) the children all became stones at this place.
+
+[54] This is the plant (not identified) of which the leaves were, till
+recent times, worn by the women of the North Andaman to cover the
+pudenda. In the South Andaman the leaves of the Mimusops littoralis are
+in use for this purpose, and the Northern tribes have recently given up
+their own custom and adopted that of the South.
+
+[55] Unfortunately I was not able to see this ceremony performed, and
+my information is therefore derived from the statements of the natives.
+
+[56] There is no secrecy about any of the proceedings; the whole
+ceremony is performed in the village and may be witnessed by anybody.
+
+[57] In the Southern tribes large stones are placed on the youth’s
+thighs.
+
+[58] In these days the natives are very fond of tea, which they obtain
+from the Andamanese Homes; during the ceremony described above the
+youth or girl is not permitted to drink tea.
+
+[59] I believe that the dance is intended to imitate the movement of a
+turtle as it swims through the water.
+
+[60] The meaning of the word kimil (or gumul) will be discussed in a
+later chapter.
+
+[61] This plant is selected because it is associated with
+honey-gathering; its bitter sap, being extremely obnoxious to bees, is
+smeared over their persons when taking a comb, and enables them to
+escape scot free with their prize. (Note by Mr Man.)
+
+[62] This is believed to be the Ophiophagus elaps. (Note by Mr Man.)
+
+[63] Man, op. cit. p. 133.
+
+[64] Man, loc. cit. p. 143.
+
+[65] Man, op. cit. p. 354. Mr Man adds in a note that “it is believed
+that Puluga would punish severely any person who might be guilty of
+eating his yat-tub, either by causing his skin to peel off (wainyake)
+or by turning his hair white and flaying him alive.” On Puluga see
+later, Chaps. III and IV.
+
+[66] Turtle are captured alive by means of harpoons, and may be kept
+alive several days before they are killed and eaten.
+
+[67] Mr M. V. Portman gives a list of personal names in use in the
+South Andaman in his Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group
+of Tribes, p. 70. The derivations of many of the names as there given,
+are, however, of doubtful accuracy.
+
+[68] Portman, Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman Group of
+Tribes, pp. 166–188.
+
+[69] A similar custom is found in many savage tribes. Thus in many
+parts of Australia the aborigines call white men by the same name that
+they apply to the spirits of the dead.
+
+[70] Man, op. cit. pp. 158, 159.
+
+[71] Portman, Notes on the Languages, etc. p. 183.
+
+[72] Man, op. cit. p. 152.
+
+[73] Ibid. p. 160.
+
+[74] Man, op. cit. p. 160.
+
+[75] Ibid. p. 161.
+
+[76] Portman, Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman, p. 328.
+
+[77] Portman, Notes on the Languages of the South Andaman, p. 314.
+
+[78] Man, op. cit. pp. 153, 154.
+
+[79] Man, op. cit. p. 165.
+
+[80] Ibid. p. 153.
+
+[81] Man, op. cit. p. 157.
+
+[82] Man, op. cit. p. 112.
+
+[83] Man, op. cit. p. 159.
+
+[84] Ibid. p. 158.
+
+[85] Man, op. cit. p. 153.
+
+[86] Man, op. cit. p. 159.
+
+[87] Man, op. cit. p. 161.
+
+[88] I could not obtain any information about the word that Mr Man
+gives as chaitan. Some men of the South Andaman whom I questioned did
+not seem to recognize the word, except as their way of pronouncing the
+Urdu word shaitan = devil.
+
+[89] In the “Census Report” 1901, p. 62, Sir Richard Temple writes,
+“The Andamanese have an idea that the ‘soul’ will go under the earth by
+an aerial bridge after death, but there is no heaven nor hell nor any
+idea of a corporeal resurrection in a religious sense.”
+
+[90] It may be noted that in the Andamanese languages there is no
+future tense of the verb, and it is often very difficult to know
+whether a speaker is referring to the present or to the future.
+Further, although there is a past tense, a native often uses the
+present tense in a narrative relating to the past, so that a statement
+relating to the past and one relating to the future may have exactly
+the same grammatical form. Mr Ellis, writing in the Journal of the
+Philological Society (1882) from information supplied by Mr Man, gives
+a verbal suffix -ngabo denoting the future in the Aka-Bea language. Mr
+Portman points out that this is an error. (Notes on the Languages of
+the South Andaman, p. 88.)
+
+[91] Man, op. cit. p. 96.
+
+[92] Man, op. cit. p. 83.
+
+[93] In preparing the fibre, the skin or bark of the young shoots of
+the plant is torn off in strips and these are placed on the thigh and
+scraped with a Cyrena shell.
+
+[94] Man, op. cit. pp. 153 and 172.
+
+[95] Portman, Notes on the Languages, etc. p. 97.
+
+[96] The legend will be given later.
+
+[97] Man, op. cit. p. 169.
+
+[98] The suffix -la is added to personal names and to terms of address
+in order to express respect.
+
+[99] The name seems to mean “alone.”
+
+[100] The giant bamboo does not grow in the Andamans, but pieces of it
+are often drifted ashore, having come from the coast of Burma. The
+natives pick up these drift-wood bamboos and make buckets of them. It
+is possible that the bamboo from which the first man was born was just
+such a piece drifted up from the sea. Unfortunately I neglected to
+enquire on this point when taking down the legend.
+
+[101] The meaning of the name is “the cave of Tarai”; I believe that
+this is the name of a spot in the Aka-J̌eru country.
+
+[102] The meaning of the name was not discovered.
+
+[103] The lizard was caught in some way by his genital organs, but I
+was unable to understand the story completely.
+
+[104] This is the small platform of sticks placed near or above the
+fire, on which the natives keep their food, and on which they often
+place objects that they desire to dry.
+
+[105] Notes on the Languages, etc. p. 227.
+
+[106] When an old man of the A-Pučikwar tribe was giving me the
+information repeated above, an Andamanese man was with us who had been
+brought up as a Christian and had some knowledge of the doctrines of
+that faith. He explained to me that Tomo is the equivalent of the
+Christian God. This man belonged to the Akar-Bale tribe.
+
+[107] These names are common personal names among the aborigines of the
+present day. Mr Portman derives Nyali from nam-da, the name of a tree,
+and Irap from pira-da meaning “scattered,” but these derivations are
+far from being authenticated. (Portman, Notes on the Languages of the
+South Andaman Group of Tribes, p. 70.)
+
+[108] The place called Irap is at the north end of Havelock Island.
+
+[109] Man, op. cit. p. 164.
+
+[110] Until the settlement of Europeans on the islands the Andamanese
+had no knowledge of any means of producing fire. It is necessary to
+remember this to understand some of their legends which relate how in
+the time of the ancestors the fire was very nearly lost in a heavy
+storm.
+
+[111] I understood that Lirtit, by the loss of his wings and tail,
+became a man.
+
+[112] Portman, loc. cit.
+
+[113] Mo̱m is a title indicating respect, and Mirit is the imperial
+pigeon.
+
+[114] Portman, loc. cit.
+
+[115] Ibid.
+
+[116] Portman, loc. cit.
+
+[117] Man, op. cit. p. 164.
+
+[118] Ibid.
+
+[119] Man, op. cit. p. 167.
+
+[120] Dik was one of the ancestors. He was a giant and was so big that
+he could go into the deepest water and never needed a canoe. He used to
+shoot dugong and porpoise with his bow and arrow. (The natives shoot
+small fish with a bow and arrows, but large fish and dugong and
+porpoise they take with harpoons.)
+
+[121] Karami is the name of a bird that was not identified.
+
+[122] Kočurag-boa is the Akar-Bale name for a huge legendary animal.
+
+[123] When a man has killed another, either in a personal or a tribal
+quarrel, he has to observe several customs of which one is to keep
+himself painted with red paint for several weeks.
+
+[124] Man, op. cit. p. 171.
+
+[125] Man, op. cit. pp. 167–169.
+
+[126] Notes on the Languages, etc. p. 27.
+
+[127] Man, op. cit. p. 166.
+
+[128] Ibid.
+
+[129] Man, op. cit. p. 169.
+
+[130] This is the name of some creature that I did not identify,
+perhaps a kind of spider.
+
+[131] An Andaman Islander will often, when walking along the shore,
+shoot his arrows before him, either aiming at some object, or trying to
+send each one as far as possible. I have never seen them do this in the
+jungle, for they might easily lose the arrows.
+
+[132] The Andamanese classify resin as a “stone” although they know its
+vegetable origin.
+
+[133] Man, op. cit. p. 172.
+
+[134] Kalwadi is a small crab, yaramurud is the crow pheasant
+(Centropus andamanensis), and toau is the hawksbill turtle.
+
+[135] Knives are generally carried slipped into a string that is tied
+round the neck, the knife, with a skewer of sharpened wood that is
+attached to it, hanging at the back of the neck, where it is easily
+accessible and not likely to get lost.
+
+[136] I could obtain no explanation of the phrase, or word, to̱ kit. My
+informant only said “That is the way the spirits talk.”
+
+[137] Man, op. cit. p. 165.
+
+[138] The sneezing (the word is translated literally) is a sort of
+whistling noise that the wild pigs make when they suspect danger.
+
+[139] The Andamanese always disembowel a pig and sever the joints of
+its legs before they place it on a fire.
+
+[140] Man, op. cit. p. 170.
+
+[141] Page 214.
+
+[142] Man, op. cit. p. 170.
+
+[143] In taking a honeycomb the natives often drive away the bees with
+fire or smoke.
+
+[144] In climbing a tall tree the Andamanese choose a stout cane or
+other creeper depending from one of the branches of the tree, and climb
+up it.
+
+[145] The natives express their joy at a success in hunting by
+shouting.
+
+[146] Man, op. cit. p. 173.
+
+[147] The narrator said “resin.” The Dipterocarpus tree does not
+produce resin, but a sort of oil. The marks on the two fishes owe their
+origin to this incident.
+
+[148] Man, op. cit. p. 173.
+
+[149] Man, op. cit. p. 169.
+
+[150] Vide supra, p. 142.
+
+[151] The making of such hypothetical reconstructions of the past has
+been regarded by a number of writers as the principal if not the sole
+task of ethnology. My own view is that such studies can never be of any
+great scientific value. Although, within narrow limits, particularly
+when the method is applied to the facts of language and material
+culture, it is possible to reach conclusions of some degree of
+probability, yet by their very nature all such hypotheses are incapable
+of verification. Moreover, the purpose of scientific studies is to
+discover general laws, and hypotheses as to events in the past of which
+we have and can have no certain knowledge will not provide suitable
+material from which to draw generalisations.
+
+[152] It may be worth while to mention that the interpretation of
+Andamanese customs given in this chapter was not worked out until after
+I had left the islands. Had it been otherwise I should have made
+careful enquiries into subjects which, as it was, escaped my notice.
+
+[153] Tylor, Primitive Culture, I, 387.
+
+[154] Frazer, Totemism and Exogamy, IV.
+
+[155] Max Müller, Physical Religion, p. 119.
+
+[156] Marett, Threshold of Religion.
+
+[157] McDougall, Introduction to Social Psychology, Chap. XIII, seems
+to combine the two hypotheses.
+
+[158] For a criticism of the hypotheses of animism and naturism as
+explanations of primitive religion see Durkheim, Les Formes
+Élémentaires de la Vie Religieuse, Book I, chapters 2 and 3.
+
+[159] Sentiment,—an organised system of emotional tendencies centred
+about some object.
+
+[160] See p. 73 above.
+
+[161] Page 134.
+
+[162] In a few words the psycho-physical theory here assumed is that
+weeping is a substitute for motor activity when the kinetic system of
+the body (motor centres, thyroid, suprarenals, etc.) is stimulated but
+no effective action in direct response to the stimulus is possible at
+the moment. When a sentiment is stimulated and action to which it might
+lead is frustrated, the resultant emotional state is usually painful,
+and hence weeping is commonly associated with painful states.
+
+[163] McDougall, Social Psychology.
+
+[164] Active sympathy, the habitual sharing of joyful and painful
+emotions, is of the utmost importance in the formation of sentiments of
+personal attachment.
+
+[165] It is a commonplace of psychology that a collective emotion, i.e.
+one felt and expressed at the same moment by a number of persons, is
+felt much more intensely than an unshared emotion of the same kind.
+
+[166] It will be shown later in the chapter that when individuals are
+excluded from participation in the dance it is because they are in a
+condition of partial exclusion from the common life.
+
+[167] The psychology of dancing offers a wide field for study that has
+as yet, so far as I know, been barely touched. The following brief
+notes are therefore necessarily incomplete and somewhat unsatisfactory.
+
+[168] I have known a dance to be continued for seven or eight hours,
+each dancer taking only short periods of rest; and it must be
+remembered that the Andamanese dance is more strenuous than our
+ball-room dances.
+
+[169] Man, op. cit. p. 76.
+
+[170] Man, op. cit. p. 333.
+
+[171] In a number of tribes of Western Australia I found an exactly
+similar custom. It was formerly the rule that after the death of a near
+relative the mourner must abstain from eating kangaroo, that being the
+largest game animal. Since the establishment of sheep stations in their
+country, with the consequent great decrease in numbers of the kangaroo,
+it has come about that the animal which now provides their most
+important supply of meat is the sheep, and the modern rule is that a
+mourner must not eat mutton.
+
+[172] Page 171.
+
+[173] The brakes formed by the cane (bido) from the leaves of which the
+ko̱ro fibre is obtained seem to be regarded as lurking places of the
+spirits. The natives often speak of the Bido-teč-lau (Calamus leaf
+spirits).
+
+[174] Page 216.
+
+[175] The psychological function of individual anger is to restore to
+their normal condition the wounded self-regarding sentiments. The
+function of collective anger is similarly to restore the collective
+sentiments on which the solidarity of the society depends.
+
+[176] I once drew a few grotesque figures for the amusement of some
+Andamanese children, and they at once pronounced them to be “spirits.”
+
+[177] The Andamanese beliefs about storms and the weather generally
+will be dealt with in the next chapter.
+
+[178] See above, p. 119.
+
+[179] See p. 227.
+
+[180] I am unfortunately obliged to leave a big gap in this chapter and
+in the book, owing to my inability to discuss the Andamanese notions
+about sex. The natives of the Great Andaman at the present time show an
+unusual prudery in their conversation and dealings with white men, but
+there is good reason to suspect that this is due to the influence of
+officers who have been in charge of the Andaman Home in former years.
+At the present time all the men except a few of the oldest in remote
+parts are very careful never to appear before a white man without some
+covering although formerly they wore nothing. In their conversation in
+the presence of a white man they are careful to avoid reference to
+sexual matters. The men of the Little Andaman who have not come under
+the influence of the Andamanese Homes, still go naked and unashamed,
+and indulge in obscene gestures and jokes. At the time I was in the
+Andamans I failed to realise the very great importance of a thorough
+knowledge of the notions of a primitive people on matters of sex in any
+attempt to understand their customs, and therefore failed to make the
+necessary enquiries.
+
+[181] In order to carry the analysis further it would be necessary to
+consider in detail the whole question of the relation of art and
+ceremonial, and that of the social function of art which is involved in
+it, and also to deal with the notion of “value” as it appears in
+primitive societies. The material from the Andaman Islands is not
+suitable for the discussion of these problems.
+
+[182] The exposition of this important thesis can only be given here in
+the most abbreviated form. The thesis itself, as applied to primitive
+ritual in general, owes its origin to Professor Émile Durkheim, and has
+been expounded by him (more particularly in his work Les Formes
+élémentaires de la Vie religieuse) and by Messieurs H. Hubert and M.
+Mauss.
+
+[183] Primus in orbe deos fecit timor.
+
+[184] Page 214.
+
+[185] We have seen, in the last chapter, that any condition of the
+individual in which he is withdrawn from active participation in the
+common life is regarded as one of danger from magico-religious forces
+antagonistic to the society.
+
+[186] It will be shown later in the chapter that some part of the
+respect paid to the cicada is due to its connection not with the day
+and night but with the seasons of the year.
+
+[187] Page 215.
+
+[188] Page 221.
+
+[189] Page 294.
+
+[190] Page 215.
+
+[191] Page 213.
+
+[192] Pages 207 and 204.
+
+[193] Page 207.
+
+[194] Ibid.
+
+[195] Page 204.
+
+[196] Page 203.
+
+[197] Page 207.
+
+[198] Page 202.
+
+[199] Page 206.
+
+[200] Ibid.
+
+[201] Page 207.
+
+[202] Page 208.
+
+[203] The same threefold division of the world is seen in the beliefs
+about the three kinds of spirits, those of the forest, those of the
+sea, and the Morua who, while spoken of as spirits of the sky, are
+often thought of as living in the tops of the tall trees.
+
+[204] Page 218.
+
+[205] It is worth while to recall here the belief that if a man goes
+into the water after eating civet-cat he will not be able to swim.
+
+[206] Page 208.
+
+[207] Ibid.
+
+[208] Page 209.
+
+[209] Page 206.
+
+[210] Page 207.
+
+[211] It appears also in geographical names. Puluga-l’ar-mugu, meaning
+‘the Puluga front’ is the name of a part of the Archipelago facing the
+N.E. and means ‘the side facing Puluga.’
+
+[212] Although it is generally believed that storms (or more exactly,
+violent storms or cyclones) are the results of the anger of Biliku, yet
+there is a conflicting belief that storms are made by the spirits,
+particularly the spirits of the sea.
+
+[213] Page 154.
+
+[214] The application of the name biliku to the spider is clearly a
+minor motive, and probably a late accretion. The name of the N.E.
+monsoon is the same in all the divisions of the Andamans about which we
+have information, with dialectic differences only. In the Little
+Andaman the form of the name is Öluga, and the same name is given to
+the monitor lizard. Presumably, therefore, there was originally one
+name throughout the Andamans for the N.E. monsoon (Öluga, Puluga,
+Bilik, Bilika, Biliku) and later this name was applied to the spider in
+the North Andaman and to the monitor lizard in the Little Andaman. It
+may be noted that the name of the monitor lizard varies from one
+language to another in the Great Andaman.
+
+[215] It is to be noted that these tabus connected with Biliku are not
+absolute prohibitions; they are beliefs that if certain things are done
+Biliku will be angry (i.e., there may be storms); if you do these
+things you must risk the danger. It is exactly the same with the
+roasting of pork.
+
+[216] See, for instance, the Aka-J̌eru legend on pages 197–198, the
+Aka-Kede on page 200 and that from the Akar-Bale tribe on pages
+200–201, and also the legends on pages 207, 208.
+
+[217] In a paper in Folk-lore, vol. xx, 1909, I put forward the
+hypothesis that probably at one time all the tribes of the Andamans
+regarded Biliku (Puluga) as female, and Tarai (Daria) as male. I am
+still inclined to think that there is some evidence for this, but a
+discussion of what the Andamanese beliefs may have been in the past is
+entirely outside the scope of this chapter and is therefore omitted.
+
+[218] The stem be seems to be connected with the idea of cutting.
+
+[219] In dealing with the account given by Mr Man of the Andaman
+mythology it is necessary to remember that he was undoubtedly
+influenced by a very strong desire to show that the beliefs of the
+Andamanese about Puluga were really fundamentally the same as the
+beliefs of the Christian about his God. It may be taken as certain that
+he did not consciously allow this wish to affect his record of the
+Andaman beliefs, but it is very improbable that it did not
+unconsciously have a great deal of influence both on Mr Man and on his
+informants.
+
+[220] To complete the discussion of this part of the subject it would
+be necessary to deal with many points in the legends of the real
+meaning of which I do not feel satisfied. I have, for instance, given
+no explanation of the position of Pe̱rǰido in the Biliku-Tarai myth,
+although this is probably an important matter. Nor have I traced to its
+source the connection of Biliku (with her net, and her hole, or cave,
+in which she shuts herself up to sleep and from which she comes out to
+bring rain and storm) with the spider. Besides Tomo, Biliku has yet
+another competitor for the position of control over the fine weather of
+the hot season, namely the snake, or-čubi (wara-ǰobo), which is
+regarded as being in some way the guardian of honey and of fine
+weather. There are legends that show the connection of this snake with
+honey (page 227) and the same connection is shown in the honey-eating
+ceremony (page 105). According to Mr Man, when the natives of the South
+Andaman see a dark cloud approaching and they do not wish it to rain
+they threaten Puluga that they will call up the wara-ǰobo to bite him.
+The snake, like other snakes, is only to be seen during the hot weather
+of the honey season. It may be remembered that it is from this snake
+that the pattern used in decorating the body with white clay is named.
+
+[221] In the last chapter it was shown that the attribution of magical
+force to such things as foods and human bones is simply the means by
+which the social values of these things are represented and recognized.
+Similarly here the magical powers of the ancestors are simply the
+representation of their social value, i.e. of the social value of
+tradition.
+
+[222] In Central Australia it is believed that if a boy who has not
+been initiated eats large lizards he will develop an abnormal and
+diseased craving for sexual intercourse. (Spencer and Gillen, Native
+Tribes of Central Australia, p. 471.) A friend who has observed the
+monitor lizard in Australia tells me that the animal fully deserves its
+reputation.
+
+[223] Page 217.
+
+[224] Page 218.
+
+[225] Page 218.
+
+[226] See Introduction, p. 12.
+
+[227] The information here given as to the Semang is derived from two
+works, Skeat and Blagden, Pagan Races of the Malay Peninsula, vol. 1,
+quoted as Skeat, and Rudolf Martin, Die Inlandstämme der Malayischen
+Halbinsel, 1905, quoted as Martin.
+
+[228] The information about the Philippine Negritos is derived from
+Reed, Negritos of Zambales, Manila, 1904, quoted as Reed, and A. B.
+Meyer, Die Philippinen, II, Die Negritos, Dresden, 1893, quoted as
+Meyer.
+
+[229] See p. 34.
+
+[230] See Census Report, 1901.
+
+[231] Supplement to the Andaman and Nicobar Gazette, January 2, 1904.
+
+[232] Skeat, p. 172.
+
+[233] Skeat, p. 174.
+
+[234] Skeat, p. 176, and plate. See also Annandale, Fasciculi
+Malayensis, Anthropology, Part I, Plate IV.
+
+[235] Skeat, p. 174.
+
+[236] Skeat, p. 177.
+
+[237] Reed, Plate xxxviii.
+
+[238] Meyer, Plate x.
+
+[239] Skeat, p. 341.
+
+[240] Skeat, p. 270.
+
+[241] Skeat, p. 280.
+
+[242] Skeat, p. 205.
+
+[243] Skeat, p. 205.
+
+[244] Reed, p. 44.
+
+[245] Reed, p. 44.
+
+[246] Reed, p. 47.
+
+[247] Reed, p. 47.
+
+[248] Reed, p. 48.
+
+[249] For information about the two specimens at Cambridge I am
+indebted to the kindness of Mr J. W. Layard.
+
+[250] According to Skeat the end with the longer point is the lower end
+of the bow (Skeat, p. 273), but Martin (p. 785) describes a bow of this
+type and states that the longer point is the upper end.
+
+[251] Meyer, pp. 13–17 and Plates VI–VIII.
+
+[252] Meyer, Plates VI and VIII.
+
+[253] Skeat, p. 274.
+
+[254] Lapicque, “Ethnographie des Iles Andaman,” Bulletin de la Société
+d’Anthropologie de Paris, 1894, p. 370.
+
+[255] Skeat, p. 383.
+
+[256] Man, op. cit. p. 77.
+
+[257] Man, Journ. Anthr. Inst. XII, p. 367, note 4.
+
+[258] Man, op. cit. p. 397.
+
+[259] Supplement to the Andaman and Nicobar Gazette, January 2, 1904.
+
+[260] Published in Vol. ii of the journal Anthropos, 1907.
+
+[261] Although I had acquired some knowledge of phonetics before I went
+to the Andamans, as a necessary part of the preliminary training of an
+ethnologist, yet it was not really sufficient to enable me to deal in a
+thoroughly scientific manner with the problems of Andamanese phonetics,
+and my further studies of the subject give me reason to believe that my
+phonetic analysis of the Andaman languages was not as thorough as it
+might have been.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78356 ***