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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine] > xxxii INTRODUCTION which he spent here he became, apparently, proï¬Åcient in the local dialect, and obtained most of his information through its medium. He then went northwards to the districts of Lamburnbu and Lagalag and here too he acquired a. working knowledge of the language. From here he entered the territory of the Big Narnbas, but his stay in this district was brief, for these natives were still deï¬Ånitely opposed to European interference, and the authorities were afraid lest a white man living alone in this part of the country might not be safer Their decision was undoubtedly a great disappointment to Deacon, but even during his short visit he acquired very valuable information about certain aspects of Big Nambas culture. In order to appreciate how much Deacon achieved during his year in Malekula, something must be said of the conditions under which he worked. The climate of the island is, of course, tropical, and has the usual attendant ills of malaria-infected mosquitoes. For such handicaps he was, however, prepared; what he had not expected was the sorry plight of the natives. More will be written later of the depopulation which has been going forward in this island apparently since the advent of the white man, but it must be stressed here that, far from ï¬Ånding a living society, Deacon found at South—West Bay only relatively few survivors of several districts. He was therefore unable here to study the social, economic, and religious life of a living com- munity, but had to acquire his knowledge of what that life had once been by means of the tedious and not wholly reliable method of questioning the older men. In the north-west the culture of the people had suffered less severely, but even in this part of the island they were diminished in numbers and their social life was almost certainly but a shadow of what it bad been in days gone by. How keenly Deacon felt this can be seen from his letters, in one of which he wrote: “ I may say fliat work here [South-West Bay] is really archaeology. The place is on the verge of complete depopu1ation—chieï¬Åy dysentry, consump- tion, fever, Spanish influenza, measles, and whooping cough,â€ù and again in another, “ The death-rate everywhere is terriï¬Åc. Work is largely a race between speed of note-taking and speed of diffusion of epidemics, etc. Spanish influenza has appeared again, and whole villages are lying prostrate with it. The whole T » 1 4 ’ ll >
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