[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
200 MALEKULA his gift by a present of equal value. If he makes you any consider- able gift with the assurance that it is for nothing, a pure gift from his heart, and you accept it as such, making no return service or gilt, it is not long before you will begin to overhear, on all con- venient occasions, uncornplimentary references to the fact that you were given something and broad hints that you owe at least an equal return gift." To make no return gift for a present or act of service is to fail sig-nally in one’s social obligations ; to make a return equal in value to the initial gift is sufficient to avoid disgrace; but if a man desires to be well spoken of he must give as repayment something of greater value than that which he received in the ï¬Årst place. This has already been illustrated by the rules regulating the borrowing and repaying of pigs ; further examples will appear in the accounts of the numerous ceremonies which involve gift exchange. Yet for all that the Malekulan is, as has been said, grasping and bourgeois in his attitude towards wealth, generosity and consideration for 0ne‘s debtors are held up as virtues. It is true that the generosity which is preached and practised bring a reward greater and more tangible than mere self-approbation. To be stingy is to sink in public esteem ; to be open-handed is to acquire fame, honour, and influence. Men of high rank are able to get many men to work for them if they are Willing to be lavish with their possessions, and in this way they will acquire yet more wealth, but if they are niggardly in their rewards the work will be scamped. For the sake of the honour of the village, too, guests are always worthily entertained. A stranger is taken to the men’s club-house where he is always given of the best, asked to eat ï¬Årst, and in every way treated as though he were a man of importance, so that on leaving and passing through other villages he may speak well of his hosts and their fame be thereby upheld. The following tale, recorded from Seniang, is interesting as preaching the reward of honesty and the punishment of envy and malice. A LEGEND or THE SUN A man of Benaur village once borrowed a curved pig’s tusk from a friend in order that he might go to Tomman Island to