[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
378 MALEKULA districts of South Malekula; these are T aresing with its image Nahau ; Balrmrum with its image Savanral; and Bwiliau with its image Ambang. _ , It is not only in the names, however, that the Mangks of the Maskelynes resembles the Ninumgki of Seniang; the images set up at ENTRANCE to the grades have certain characters in common. Thus the temes erected for Lovwis is of tree fern carved with several faces through the noses of which a short stick is thrust; the temes of Neliu/is is also of tree fern, and though it has only one facevit too has a stick (ngimgunu) through the nasal septum. Again in the grade Meleim the temes is said to be placed under a thatched roof with a small circle of ï¬Åat upright stones behind it‘ These are certainly similar to the shelter which, in Seniang, is put up for the ï¬Årst time at ENTRANCE to Nimze/eil and to the nonggob. It is interesting that there should have been a division of opinion as to whether the temes of the highest grade Amat were a carved pole or a stone image, for it it were indeed the latter then in this south-easterly part of Malekula, as in the south-westerly, the highest Nimangki status is oonnected with the erection of a monolith, and this suggests that in the latter district the use of stone images is not wholly due to contact with Lambumbu. Further, the existence of the names Meleun and Balias in the Maskelynes shows that, though the grades of which these are the titles may have been introduced into Seniang from the north, they are not to be regarded as the unique property of Larnbumbu, and, if we are correct i.n equating Naamel ndarlamp with Amul Lumqï¬Å, and the Amat of the Maskelynes with the Amat of Worvulu, it seems very possible that this grade is indigenous to the south and was perhaps formerly the highest in the series there. Lists of Nimzmgki grade names or titles have also been collected from Vanbaut near Port Sandwich and from Senbarei. These are given on p. 379, together with those recorded by Rivers from Sulol and Lonwolwol in Ambrym. It will be noticed that these lists 1 are not as long as the list from Seniang, nor even as that from Worvulu, and that the names of the majority of grades 1 Whence Deacon obtained these lists is not clear. No further notes on the grades which they record have been iound, and it is doubtful whether any were taken. In the lists them lv th to b ' se es ere seems e some contusion as to whether the name is that of the grade or or the title which is borne by its membexs.—- C. H. W, .H e 1 1 1 1 r '.i ,. , F i3‘ . ~'l rr 1 3 Lt 1. A7 at 9 11, 1‘ § ii- it '1 kg t i. 1 > ye» V»