[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
28 MALEKULA , region to the south of Lambumbu, such as Metenesal, Vanetaghol, Vuliembet, Vaniar, and Tarnborav. These are set on Sp1IS and ridges, so that they necessitate a sharp climb before they can be reached. Access is easy, as a rule, only from the mountain behind, and it is generally on this side, behind and above the settlement, that the secret place, the loghor, is situated. Here it is inacessible save through the village that owns it. On the sides of the ridges are the yam gardens; below, in shady valleys, watered by mountain streams, the bananas are planted. There is reason to suppose that, in these north-western districts there is a conception about the properties of things male and female which is similar to the conception ot igah and ileo in Seniang, but whether or in what way it influences the arrangement of the dwelling-houses or dancing ground, We do not know. Only one description of a dancing ground belonging to this region has been recorded. This is the dancing ground of Sarembal village in Lambumbu (Plate VIB), but interesting as it is, we do not know if it is typical. It is approached along a path running down the middle of an avenue of upright stones (newt nan rasugh) some 840 yards long. There are altogether 218 of these stones which are arranged in successive pairs on either side. This avenue opens out into a roughly circular space measuring approximately 60 feet in diameter, and enclosed by thirty-four monoliths of from 4ft. 6in. to 6ft. Sin. high (see Fig. 2) called nevat um rmdel. These, too, are arranged approximately in a circle except for those between the numbers 9 and 25, which are set up almost in a straight line. Between these seventeen monoliths horizontal slabs oi stone are placed, piled four deep, so that they form a kind of stone wall or partition. This is called the nanggumnggur naval, and serves to separate the most sacred part of the village from the rest. At either end of it stand tree-fern images (temah bares), or images carved in other woods (temuh naar or temah nembet), about 7 feet high, and behind it, outside the dancing ground, is a raised plot of ground on which the club—house is built. In this respect the mmggumnggur nevat does not wholly correspond to the mm‘ save of Seniang for women might and often did pass beyond the latter into the dancing ground, but beyond the former no woman may tread. The Mai save indeed indicated