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J! Xxvi PREFACE . in the native life during that time, with the exception of setting up a new gong at Epmumbag (which I have described fully) and repeated death ceremonies. Not a single Nalaze/an has been made, nor is it probable that one will, as for making things like the efï¬Ågies, no one dreams of it now. Last week I secured the only fairly decent and complete eï¬Åigy left [this now adorns the ethnological Museum at Cambridge]. . . . Collecting is very difï¬Åcult, since the only specimens are to he found in inaccessible abandoned villages up in the bush, where you have streams, rain, and almost impassable tracks to contend with. Often you have to hack a road through a tangle of creepers. I am afraid my collection will be rather small. .' . . I imagine that most of the material I have got will have disappeared for ever in, say, ï¬Åve years time. Indeed with the deaths that have occurred during my stay, some of my work would be impossible to repeat now. . . . Well, I must stop. It is appallingly hot here, and mosquitoes are bad—in fact, about the worst time of the year. I shall be glad to get away. I need a change. By the way, this group is a great place for blackwater fever, a great many deaths take place from it. On one plantation in S. Malckula ï¬Åve planters in succession have dicd of it. Apparently nothing is known about the disease. There are also peculiar diseases introduced by the Tonkinese, among others a kind of liver inflammation, very painful. . . . I eXpect I shall be Writing up my material in Sydney.â€ù This reference to Sydney is explained as follows: In November, I925, Professor A. R. Radcliffe-Brown, of the University of Capetown, was offered the new Professorship of Anthropology at the University of Sydney, but he could not take up his duties till the end of June, I926. I knew that a Lecturer in Anthropology was about to be appointed, so I strongly advised Professor Brown to offer it to Deacon. Previously I had recommended Deacon to get in touch with Professor Brown, which he did and sent some MS. to him, the value of which was at once recognized, and in due course Deacon was elected to the Lecturership, though Professor Brown had never met him. In his last letter to his MOTHER, Deacon said he was “ very well and feeling very ï¬Åt " and wc can picture him as busily » i
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