[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
E PREFACE xv his life was gleaned from here and there and then put together. Another characteristic was his tolerance of people. Whether he felt tolerant towards people of different traditions and opinions from himself I don't know, but if he did not do so he kept it to himself as far as I knew, for personally I never heard him say anything cruel of or to anyone. He also seemed to me utterly lacking in conceit, as though it did not matter to him at all that he had an inï¬Ånitely better intellect than anyone else in the room. Another remarkable thing about him was the wideness of his interests. I remember so well one evening at An-nstrong's when we got him talking of Russian literature—he seemed to have read a very great deal and he compared it with French and English literature and explained in what ways he thought it lost by being translated. He always kept up his interest in Russia, and one used to see Russian newspaper cuttings in his room. But he never seemed to realize that others would care to know about his time in Russia. At least I never heard him speak of it. About his ethnology you, of course, know more than I do. I can only say that his power of hard work and his grasp of salient facts and their RELATION to each other always astounded me. It seemed ridiculous that he should be younger than I was, for intellectually and emotionally he was in many ways so amazingly mature. He was one of the most courteous people I ever knew." Deacon was a frequent and welcome visitor to our Sunday afternoon gatherings and my wife and Ibecame very fond of him. ' -It‘ was during his last term that Bernard wrote a suggestive paper (" The Kakihan Society of Ceram and New Guinea Initia- tion Cults,â€ù Fulk—Ltmi, vol. xxxvi, I925, pp. 332-61) in which heicorrelated the ghost societies with initiation cults of the Nielanesiamspeaking peoples in the Mandated Territory of New Guinea on the one hand and with the Kakihan of Ceram, in Indonesia, on the other ; the latter is essentially a ghost society and most completely represents the original cult. On 4th February, I927, he wrote from Malekula, “ I still feel that what I Wrote was sound: on the whole my work here accords with what I said in the article. , . . My great point is that the Kakihan cult reappears in areas hundreds, or thousands, of miles apart, and that it is therefore of great importance for tracing