[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
45o MALEKULA do not all arrive together; some come one day, some another; some early, some late ; each bringing with him his mat, cooking implements, and other gear. By the end of the next ï¬Åve days they have all assembled, and life in the loghar begins to hum. From now onwards, until the end oi the Nimangki Tlel celebra- tions, each member will not see his wiic or any other woman, but he will have arranged with the former to bring food and other necessities to a certain spot in the bush, whence he can fetch them unobserved. The initiated members who come together thus are generally a rather irresponsible crowd, chiefly young men who come i.nto residence in the loghor principally in order to have :r "good time â€ù; a kind of “man's holiday ". Certain of them have speciï¬Åc duties, for each novice has one or two who act as his guardians, these men being paid for their trouble by the novice’s father. The general term for such men is tï¬Åmbal, which appears to mean " guardian ", but is also used to include any initiated member, whether he has the position of a guardian or no. The bond between men who have been in residence together in the loghor is a very strong one, comparable to that between boys who have been in the same " house '1‘ at school. In fact, it was said that when they dispersed at the conclusion of the Nimangki Tlel, they would often weep at parting with each other, so unforgettable and irrevocable had the three or four months irresponsible “good time " in the loghor been to them ; it is felt that they will never come together again, the same company in the same way; later there will be other men, new initiates, " never like this time " again. Deacon writes :- “I am very sure of the correctness of this interpretation, as my informant talked about it at length, and much emphasized the bond uniting those in residence in a lodge. It is perhaps worth while mentioning a parallel that the Nimangki Tie! has continually suggested to me: that of Oxford or Cambridge. Members, in fact, ‘ go into residence ' i.n a laghor in much the same way as we go into residence in a college of a University. In many respects the atmosphere oi rr lodge during initiation is reminiscent of an English Public School—rags, fogging, tests of endurance, etc. Trying to convey the atmosphere of a loghcv, one man said that the tï¬Åmbal were ' all same boat's crew belong loghor ', while the nesnm was ‘like master belong cutter belong loghor '. It is quite clear that, apart lroru the special secrets of the society revealed at initiation, seclusion in the laghor constitutes a very real kind of ‘education’ oi the boys. In a sense here (as in England) what