[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
57" PREFACE xxiii to me perfectly lucidly, I could not explain it to anyone better myself. It is perfectly clear that the natives (the intelligent ones) do conceive of the system as a connected mechanism which they can represent by diagrams [which they drew for Deacon on the sand] . . . It is extraordinary that a native should be able to represent completely by a diagram a complex system of matrimonial classes. The way they could reason about relation- ships from their diagrams was absolutely on a par with a good scientiï¬Åc exposition in a lecture room. I have collected in Malekula, too, some cases of a remarkable mathematical ability. I hope, when I get my material together, to be able to prove that the native is capable of pretty advanced abstract thought.â€ù The joy and satisfaction which this discovery gave him was well founded. Fortunately he had written up this information and this ï¬Årstfniit of Deacon's work was published as he left it (“ The Regulation of MARRIAGE in_ Ambrym,â€ù joum. Roy. Anth. Inst, vol. lvii, 1927, pp. 325-42). This paper was immediately followed by one bearing the same title by A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and by another “ Bilateral descent and the formation of MARRIAGE classes â€ù by Brenda Z. Selig-man, which emphasize the theoretical importance of Deacon’s work. Professor Radcliffe-Brown begins by saying, " Nothing reveals more clearly the loss that anthro- pology has suffered by the death of Bernard Deacon than his discovery of a system of ‘ classes ’ regulating MARRIAGE and kin5hip'in Ambrym, not only by reason of the importance of that discovery but also and particularly by reason of the way imiwhich it was made as the conï¬Årmation of an acute reasoning that something of the sort should be there " (1.0. p. 343). In a. letter to me eacon -wrote : " Actually the thing [this particular investigation] was to me a kind of crucial experiment at the end of a long train of ideas—beginning really in my ï¬Årst reading of Rivers and talks with Armstrong. I owe a great deal to him in social anthropology. Before I left England I had determined to have a go at Ambrym, as a test-case." Doubtless Deacon did other work on the island, but, except the article on MARRIAGE-classes, only very few notes have been found. He wrote on 28th January, I927, from Balap, South- West Arnbrym: " The culture is very like the S. Malekulan~ S.W. Bay to Port Sandwich. I have found Nalawan again, with §i