[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
xxiv PREFACE the cylindrical wooden resonators, also M ansip (of the N21/inbur). . . . Ambrym culture can be analysed into : (I) a strongly matri- lineal, indigenous, (2) a.n immigrant culture from Malekula, with no matrilineal elements and essentially patrilineal in tradition and custom." He also found pottery sherds but no whole pots, and discovered that geometrical drawings are made there as in Malekula. In a letter to his MOTHER he says: " I like Amhrym very much, chiefly because of its freedom from malaria mosquitoes. . . . Life here is very pleasant . . . the natives of Ambrym and their life are very interesting. . . . It is rather amusing here, there are three missionaries sidc by side, within about a mile of each other-—Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Seventh Day Adventist, all ï¬Åghting each other and trying to convert natives from the other missions. All the R.C.s wear crosses round their necks and have names like Augustine, Benedict, etc, though the Presbyterians have names like Moses, Jacob, Isaac, etc., both Presbyterians and R.C.s keep Sunday, of course, the Seventh Day Adventist natives keep Saturday instead of Sunday, and consider both Presbyterians and R.C.s heathen, and they do not eat meat, smoke, or drink tea. They are on the look out for Christ's return any day. Presbyterians and Adventists both regard the R.C.s as heathen worshippers of graven images. Imagine what confusion! Poor natives! There are also, in other districts, Church of Christ Missions, beside the Melanesian Mission in the north." From Ambryrn, Deacon returned to Bushman’s Bay. During his three visits to this spot, while staying with a planter, Mr. E. Corlette, he also collected some relationship systems from natives of Epi, Oba, and Raga (Pentecost), but these have not been found. In a letter to his MOTHER during his ï¬Årst visit, dated rst November, I926, he draws a pleasant picture of his visit here. His host was a highly cultivated and well-travelled University man, and possessed a. good library of modern books—Bernard Shaw, Galsworthy, Wells, Dean Inge, and the like, as well as scientiï¬Åc books. One can well imagine what an oasis this must have proved to Deacon, where for the only time during his stay in Malekula he could indulge in literary conversation and discuss matters of world-wide