State Library of NSW
38 in all cases, it is looked upon in the light of an ornament, especially when some red colour is woven into it. This ring is put on from below up, and the woman will often ex- perience great difficulty in getting it over her hips: it is quite a labour sometimes. 54.55. Deformations etc. Nothing beyond what has been mentioned concerning the tooth-avulsion (sect. 22), and the nose-piercing (ibid) & the body-scars (sect. 51). No practice of circumcision or castration. 56. Music. At the corrobboree, the tintinnabulation may be effected by the boys (1) clapping with the hands and varying the note according to the concavity of the palms (2) striking two sticks, or a wommera and a stick, together. (3) stamping with the feet: by the women, banging the "fork" with the open hand clutched on the back of the wrist with the other. The only musical wind instrument they have is the yē-kē yē-kē (the second y being scarcely sounded), a name common to all the dialects met with in the district included by Cooktown, The Laura, Palmerville, Maytown, Byenstown, and the Daintree. It is said to have been introduced onto the Bloomfield from the gulf country through the Kokowana-speaking blacks via the Laura, a very long time ago - long before the oldest living one at Wyalla was born - and that from here the Daintree aboriginals got their first instrument. The "yeke yeke"s in use here are simply hollow hardwood saplings about from 7 to 9 feet long, which taken from 31/2 or even 4 inches at the larger distal extremity, to about 2 or 21/2 inches at the smaller proximal, or mouth, end. The sap wood is generally cut off, leaving a shell about 1/4 inch thick, but the only polish it gets is the constant handling. The blacks here never go to the trouble of charring out a sapling as they can get plenty of hollow ones: neither are they particular as to straightness as the ones that are naturally hollow are rarely straight. Before steel tomahawks were
This page has its status set to Ready for review and is no longer transcribable.