[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
NEVINBUR, NELENG, AND NIMBEEI 477 that it is indeed the heart which is meant here, for it is described as beating in the chest.) A small coco-nut is then thrust up through the wide-open anus, and set in the place of the heart. This being done another variety of leaf is rubbed on the opening, so that it gradually closes up. Long wooden nails, made of tree- fern (naai im),1 are now taken and thrust up the long veins of the arms, a slit having been made in the arm through which they are passed. The blood is wiped away and a leat applied to the wound which causes it to draw together and heal. Up to this stage in the proceedings all the men of N1'mbe’u' have been present ; now all save one depart. The member who has remained behind, waits beside the victim, from whose eyes the bandage has been taken, until he regains consciousness. Though it seems impossible but that he should be dcad after the operations which have been performed on him, three independent informants were positive in their statements that he would be alive, though breathing very heavily and with great difficulty. As soon as he shows signs of becoming conscious, the man watching beside him fetches water and forces it down his throat. The victim awakes in a kind of stupor, and the other asks him : " In which direction is the sea? " If the men of Nimbiei have done their work well, the victim is dazed and in reply to the question he points weakly inland, towards the bush. This is satisfactory and the unfortunate man is left alone. He cannot move from where he lies, but continues to linger there, getting weaker and weaker and breathing with ever-increasing difficulty. At the end of a day he is usually dead, though he may survive for as lung as two days. The members of the N1‘mb;’ei then return, cut up the corpse and cat it. These strange practices, fabulous though they sound, were related with scarcely any variation in the telling by two iridependent informants. One of these was Aipeno, a "Christian"; the other was Tota's father, Aimbong, an old heathen who had the evil reputation among the natives of having himself actually participated in a Nimbe'ei performance. A spot, densely overgrown, at the head of the lagoon, was pointed out as a place where several men had mct their death as victims of this secret society. 1 Deacon has Shown some 01 these nails in the amol at Hur Mbflr Village.