66
In  calling the soul,   a   clucking    sound,  represented in  Malay   by  the word    kur or  kĕrr,   by  which
fowls   are called, is  almost  always  used;   in  fact,   “kur    sĕmangat”   (“cluck!    cluck!  soul!”) is  such
a   common  expression  of  astonishment    among   the Malays  that    its force   is  little  more    than    “good
gracious    me!”    (vide   infra,  p.  534,    note).  ↑
67
Vide    App.    vi. ↑
68
In  another charm   we  find    the sick    man’s   body    compared    to  a   weather-beaten  barque  at  sea.    ↑
69
Vide    App.    cclxxi. ↑
70
The entire  conception  of  the soul    among   the Malays  agrees  word    for word    with    Professor
Tylor’s classical   definition  in  Primitive   Culture,    vol.    i.  p.  387,    and hence   I   have    not hesitated   to
use his exact   words   in  so  far as  they    were    applicable. ↑
71
Cp. Tylor,  Prim.   Cult.   vol.    i.  p.  422.    ↑
72
What    these   seven   souls   were    it  is  impossible  without more    evidence    to  determine.  All that    can
be  said    is  that    they    were    most    probably    seven   different   manifestations  of  the same    soul.   Such
might   be  the Shadow-soul,    the Reflection-soul,    the Puppet-soul,    the Bird-soul   (?),    the Life-
soul,   etc,    but as  yet no  evidence    is  forthcoming.—Cp.    Tylor,  op. cit.    vol.    i.  pp. 391,    392.    ↑
73
Professor   Tylor   calls   this    “a  combination of  several kinds   of  spirit, soul,   or  image,  to  which
different   functions   belong” (op.    cit.    vol.    i.  pp. 391,    392).   ↑
74
Infra,  Chap.   VI. p.  569.    ↑
75
Infra,  Chap.   V.  p.  241.    ↑
76
Infra,  Chap.   VI. p.  575.    ↑
77
Infra,  Chap.   VI. p.  568.    ↑
