[573] The Development of the Clan System, in Amer. Anthrop., N.S. VI, 1904, pp. 477-486.
[574] J.A.I., XXXV, p. 142.
[575] Ibid., p. 150. Cf. Vth Rep. on the ... N.W. Tribes of Canada, B.A.A.S., p. 24. A myth of this sort has been quoted above.
[576] J.A.I., XXXV, p. 147.
[577] Proc. and Transact., etc., VII, § 2, p. 12.
[578] See The Golden Bough,2 III, pp. 351 ff. Wilken had already pointed out similar facts in De Simsonsage, in De Gids, 1890; De Betrekking tusschen Menschen-Dieren en Plantenleven, in Indische Gids, 1884, 1888; Ueber das Haaropfer, in Revue Coloniale Internationale, 1886-1887.
[579] For example, Eylmann in Die Eingeborenen der Kolonie Südaustralien, p. 199.
[580] Mrs. Parker says in connection with the Euahlayi, that if the Yunbeai does "confer exceptional force, it also exposes one to exceptional dangers, for all that hurts the animal wounds the man" (Euahlayi, p. 29).
[581] In a later work (The Origin of Totemism, in The Fortnightly Review, May, 1899, pp. 844-845), Frazer raises this objection himself. "If," he says, "I deposit my soul in a hare, and my brother John (a member of another clan) shoots that hare, roasts and swallows it, what becomes of my soul? To meet this obvious danger it is necessary that John should know the state of my soul, and that, knowing it, he should, whenever he shoots a hare, take steps to extract and restore to me my soul before he cooks and dines upon the animal." Now Frazer believes that he has found this practice in use in Central Australia. Every year, in the course of a ceremony which we shall describe presently, when the animals of the new generation arrive at maturity, the first game to be killed is presented to men of that totem, who eat a little of it; and it is only after this that the men of the other clans may eat it freely. This, says Frazer, is a way of returning to the former the souls they may have confided to these animals. But, aside from the fact that this interpretation of the fact is wholly arbitrary, it is hard not to find this way of escaping the danger rather peculiar. This ceremony is annual; long days may have elapsed since the animal was killed. During all this time, what has become of the soul which it sheltered and the individual whose life depended on this soul? But it is superfluous to insist upon all the inconceivable things in this explanation.
[582] Parker, op. cit., p. 20; Howitt, Australian Medicine Men, in J.A.I., XVI, pp. 34, 49 f.; Hill Tout, J.A.I., XXXV, p. 146.