their ceremonies at eating the new eleusine grain, viii. 64;

warriors eat hearts of foes to become brave among the, viii. 149;

man-slayers drink the blood of their enemies among the, viii. 155;

their custom of driving sick cattle round a fire, xi. 13;

use of bull-roarers among the, xi. 229 n.

Nanga, sacred enclosure in Fiji, viii. 125, xi. 243, 244

Nanja spots, local totem centres in Central Australia, i. 96, 97;

trees, haunted by disembodied spirits, i. 96

Nanjundayya, H. V., on serpent worship in Mysore, v. 81 sq.

Nanna, the wife of Balder, x. 102, 103