IN TiMon. 435 



into the hollow of his hand, " Maman ? " (may I eat ? ), said 

 my guide, with an obeisance, following the proper etiquette, 

 to which the Dato replied, " Maman " (eat). This little 

 ceremony had an instant effect in loosening the tongues of our 

 hosts, who kept up an unbroken dialogue till long after dark. 



Just at sunset we were surprised by the intrusion of a man, 

 who beat a long and vigorous tatoo on a drum suspended in the 

 centre of the building, to give, as was explained to us, informa- 

 tion to the neighbourhood that the remains of the father and 

 of some other relatives of the Dato — an old white-haired man 

 — which had been dangling some thirty years in the tree-top 

 which we had just passed, were at last to be buried, and that 

 every night till the feast was ready the drum would be beat at 

 sunset. I had observed an unwonted activity of rice and 

 Indian-corn stamping, and remarked the wealth of pigs and 

 goats that we had to make our way through as we entered, all 

 now explained as preparations against the day of burial. 



AVhen a member of a family dies, at least three duties are 

 imperative on the surviving relatives before the body can be 

 buried. First, every blood relative without exception is bound 

 to give, either in person or by proxy, a gift of greater or less 

 magnitude to the deceased. On arriving where the dead body 

 is, each donor places his gifts on or near the corpse, and 

 within its hearing fires off as many shots of his gun as he can 

 afford, the greater the number the greater is his respect, it is 

 supposed, for the departed. The other essentials are a death 

 and-burial feast. If the defunct have been a lowly person 

 with few relatives, a small feast will suffice to satisfy the 

 demands of custom. If, however, he have been of some rank, 

 with many relatives and a wide acquaintance, these must be on 

 a scale commensurate with his position ; and so serious are the 

 demands that custom requires, that the death feast alone often 

 reduces the family to abject poverty, necessitating the delay 

 of the funeral for months, years, or even a whole century, till 

 such time, in fact, as the relatives and descendants are able to 

 provide the necessary costly feast. The corpse, which has 

 been lying where it died during these first tedious cere- 

 monies, is then folded at the hips, bundled up in a mat and 

 suspended by a cord below the floor of the curious dovecot- 

 like huts in the trees which I have spoken of, to wait inter- 



