[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
34 MALEKULA as the dwelling-houses, but in addition to the ordinary bamboo ribs, itseems that after the thatching is completed, four straight poles called Mai huhu are ï¬Åxed on either side of the house, in such a way that each crosses the one opposite it over the ridge pole. Resting on the crutches thus made, and parallel to the ridge pole, a post known as mzvan temes (“ iruit ghost â€ù) is laid. This post has no structural utility at all ; it is purely of ceremonial importance, though what the exact signiï¬Åcance oi it is was not made clear. The amel as a whole appears to be thought of as a head. Its front is spoken of as no on amel (“ The face of the amel“) ;» its door is the mouth (nimbongon aml) ; the lower part oi the roof on each side, together with the :* Fret 4. Diagram of a. house in North—West Ma.1ekula_ ground immediately beneath, is "the ears " (nindilghin nu amel). The two principal upright posts, that at the front and that at the back (often there are only these two), are called respectively the “ man—post â€ù and the “ Woman-post " (numbou morot and numbou milamp). At the top of the "rnan-post â€ù a lace is carved ; this is the “ face of the post " (ne on numbou). The inner meaning of this conception of the amel and the naming of its different parts were not explained. (See Fig. 3.) Of the houses of Mewun and the north-west we know very little, though it seems that in general they resemble those of Seniang but are not so high as these. Two rough sketches of what is almost certainly a dwelling-house show a structure in which the roof reaches to the ground ‘and there are