[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
wrr r s PREFACE xxvii packing up his specimens and effects and happy in the prospect of his Lecturership in the University of Sydney and of the oongenial and inspiring society to be found there. He knew that he had accomplished good ï¬Åeld-work, the results of which he was looking forward to working up into a comprehensive survey of Malekulan culture, and that he had laid the foundations for a more extensive study of various ethnological problems. He was just entering into the life for which he was so well prepared and for which his FRIENDs conï¬Ådently anticipated a brilliant successwwhen on Saturday, 5th March, according to a letter from Mrs. Boyd to Mrs. Deacon, he began to feel unwell, two days later blackwater fever declared itself. On the evening of Wednesday the» crisis came; the blackwater fever entirely lett him, but he had great weakness. On Thursday, he suffered from palpitation, on Saturday Izth March, I927, he took a good deal of nourishment, had no pain, and at times his mind wandered, but he had rational moments in between. Then the end came. The present book will give but a faint idea of the book that he himself would have written. Recently I asked Miss L. E. Cheesman, who has done such excellent ï¬Åeld-work in entomology in Oceania, to let me know something about what impression Deacon had left behind him in Malekula. She writes :— “ I heard of Mr. Deacon from all quarters while working in Malekula in I929 and I930. All the British residents spoke of him warmly as did also his French neighbours at South-West Bay, the Dillensegers, who were on very FRIENDly tenns with him. All were shocked by the news of his death and grieved as for a personal FRIEND. “ The natives who worked for him alluded to him with a nearer approach to affection than I have remarked in any Malekulan. I had at different times three of his boys as guides. At South-West Bay I employed Amanrantus who is mentioned very often in Mr. Deacon‘s notes. He described very graphically the surprise of bushmen when a white man visited them who learnt their language so that he was able to talk to them in it. Amanrantus accompanied him on most of his bush journeys, encamped with him, acted as interpreter, and waited on him during his last illness. He told me more than once how the