rules observed by them on entering an enemy's country, iii. 111;
their custom as to cutting a child's hair, iii. 263;
names of relations tabooed among the, iii. 340;
disinter the bones of the dead at a festival, iii. 373 n.;
their field-speech, iii. 411 sqq.;
their theory of rain, vi. 33;
their conception of the rice-soul as a blue bird, vii. 182 n. 1, 295 sq.;
attribute souls to men, animals, and rice, vii. 183;
their customs as to the Mother of the Rice, vii. 194 sq.;
their offerings to the souls of the dead at planting a new field, vii. 228;