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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
THE AMBAT, KABAT, AND HAMBAT 623 the Owl had killed the clam, Ambat commanded Vin-bumba~au- to cover up the stones of the island, into which the clam had turned, with good soil, and this she did. The name Vin-bumba-an is doubtless identical with the Nevinburnbnau of Deacon's notes. In none of the stories concerning the emergence of Tomman Island which Deacon recorded does Nevinbumbaau play any part; she is connected with the Ambat brothers only as an egress who tries to capture them, and it is Ambat himself who labours to make Tomman habitable 1 " The owl thrust the stake into the mouth of the giant clam, and the giant clam died, and Ambat he dug the ground about the base of the stake ; he made an island ; its name is Our.“ 1 The stories oi the doings of the Ambat brothers as recounted by both Layard and Deacon recall vividly some of the legends of the Banks Islands which have Qat as their hero. For instance, Codrington (1891, pp. 158 I62) reports a n1yth_fron1 Meta which tells of Qat's>wite Iro Lei and the jealousy oflhis brothers who desire to steal her and a. magic canoe from'Qat, a theme which, though the details are not identical, recalls the story of Ambat, Lindanda, and the perï¬Ådy of Ambat’s brothers. Another Mota story (Codrington, p. 163). which tells of Qasavara, the ogre who kidnaps Qatis eleven brothers, but who is eventually lured forth and killed by Qat, is strongly reminiscent of the tale of how Nevinbunibaau, the egress, captures the ï¬Åve Ambat brothers one after the other, and how eventually they escape home through thc"skill and cunning of Ambzltv himself. The only important ;liflereiice'between the Qat and the Ambat mythology is that whereas according 'tci,tl"le former Qat always triumphs over his enemies and in the end leaves the island in his magic canoe (Codrington, pp. I(>6—']),ii0C0rding‘i10 thelatter Ambat is atlast killed by his brothers, or, following another tale, all ï¬Åve, fA'n1bat destroy each other in fratricidal‘ strife. These similarities impressed Deacon so greatly that he wrote : “ What seems to me very important is the almost certain identity of the‘Ambal. with Qat. The transformation is so entirely in accord with the rules governing phonetic changes, and the general character of ,' I Concerning the long ens of Vin-buniba-ail, it is interesting to notice that according to one of Deacon's informants, Nevinbumbaau had in the day-time ears like Ordinary people, but that at night she would pull chain out until grail long, and then wrap them Mound her throat to keep hexsell wan:n.— Al l : =4 ll;
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