[1022] II, 20, 22; III, 18.
[1023] Very similar practices are recounted by A. W. Howitt, Native Tribes of South-East Australia, pp. 355-96; “the medicine-men of hostile tribes sneak into the camp in the night, and with a net of a peculiar construction garotte one of the tribe, drag him a hundred yards or so from the camp, cut up his abdomen obliquely, take out the kidney and caul-fat, and then stuff a handful of grass and sand into the wound.”
[1024] VI, 26.
[1025] II, 22.
[1026] I, 10; VII, 14; IX, 23, 29.
[1027] II, 28.
[1028] II, 6; III, 19.
[1029] III, 29.
[1030] III, 17.
[1031] III, 21.