56 PIGTAILS AND TATOOING. 



not OUT pale faces be reg-arded by these savages 

 in a similar lig-ht? Some had perfect Malayan 

 features, but none seen on this occasion appeared to 

 practise betel-chewing-, — a remarkable circumstance, 

 since the men who on our former visit came off to 

 the ship, then only about fifteen mUes to the north- 

 west, had their teeth discoloured. 



None of the natives had any hair upon the face ; 

 various ways of dressing- that of the head were prac- 

 tised, the most singTilar of which has akeady been 

 described at p. 297 of Vol. I. The hair was usually 

 of its natural dark colour at the base, with the re- 

 mainder dyed reddish brown and frizzled out into a 

 mop with long-toothed combs of wood or tortoise- 

 sheU. One child had the head so shaved as to leave 

 a long" tuft on the forehead, and another on the back 

 of the head — precisely in the same manner as is 

 sometimes practised in Java. Nor must I omit 

 noticing a singular appendage formerly alluded to — 

 analogous to the pigtaU once in vogue — worn by 

 many of these people ; it is formed of human hair 

 wrapped round with twine, and ends in one or more 

 bunches of shells, dog's teeth, and tails of pigs, — the 

 longest one which I saw measured twenty-one inches 

 in length. Among numerous ornaments the most 

 common is a large round concave portion of melon 

 shell, sometimes beautifully inlaid with filagree work 

 of tortoise-shell, worn on the breast. FiUets of 

 cassowary feathers, fur of the spotted bare-tailed 

 opossum, or woven stuff studded with shells, were 

 often seen. 



