438 A NATUEALIST'S WANDEBINGS 



died, it lias become by then a roass of putrefaction emitting a 

 pestilential odour, wliicli to the Timorese gives no apparent 

 discomfort. As during this period whoever arrives must be 

 feasted, every buffalo, horse and pig that the family possess 

 have often to be slaughtered, reducing them to absolute 



poverty. On the conclusion of these death ceremonies the 

 family leave the house, but the body remains there either on a 

 bier or de25osited in a large coffin and guarded by the officials 

 of the kingdom, till the relatives can aiford to provide the 

 burial feast. Till such time the king is supposed to be asleep 

 and no successor with reigning powers can be appointed. 



Like the Australians, the Timorese cannot understand why 

 any one should ever die unless he be killed ; so they attribute 

 both sickness and natural death to the influence of some 

 malevolent existence, which they believe eats up the spirit of 

 the blighted person after death. As soon, therefore, as the sick 

 man has died, the Sicangi (or person in whom the evil spirit 

 had taken up its residence and who is considered to be in 

 collusion with it), whom their fanaticism easily discovers, usee! 

 with his whole family to be seized (till it was made a capital 

 crime by the Portuguese so to do), bound hand and foot, and 

 either impaled or buried alive, and their goods confiscated 

 for the benefit of the accusers and the lord of the soil. 



Their food seems to consist chiefly of indian-corn roasted 

 ever the fire by each individual when he feels hungry, and 

 eaten grain by grain as it becomes ready. On high occasions, 

 when a pig or a goat is killed, the indian-corn mixed with 

 rice and Katjang {Phaseohs) beans, is stewed along with the 

 flesh, and the whole mess flavoured with the most pungent 

 capsicums. Sweet potatoes (and in some elevated districts 

 European potatoes), Cucurbitaceous fruits and various herbs 

 form also a large part of their diet. In times of scarcity a species 

 of legume, called by them Jcutu (DulkJws Labial), common 

 over the whole island, is also used as food, but unless it is 

 well^ cooked it is, if not poisonous, very deleterious. They 

 cultivate few fruits except the banana ; but the jack-fruit 

 seems in some places abundant and is highly prized, espe- 

 cially its seeds, which when boiled, taste not unlike potatoes 

 and much resemble those of the seeding variety of the bread- 

 fruit tree (Artocavjius incisa). The true bread-fruit I did not 



