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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="content-type"
+ content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
+
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of By Rock &amp; Pool On An
+ Austral Shore, by Louis Becke.</title>
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore, and
+Other Stories, by Louis Becke
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore, and Other Stories
+
+Author: Louis Becke
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2004 [EBook #12798]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCK AND POOL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David McLachlan and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h1>Note to Readers</h1>
+
+ <p>This file is encoded using the UTF-8 character set.</p>
+
+ <p>The text in this file contains a number of characters not
+ contained in the standard ASCII character set. To enable the
+ display of these characters the UTF-8 character set must be
+ used by the reader.</p>
+
+ <p>A number of character sets supporting UTF-8 are available
+ from the Unicode web site at
+ <a href="http://www.unicode.org/" target="_new">
+ www.unicode.org</a>
+
+ .</p>
+
+ <p>If you do not have access to
+ <a href="http://www.unicode.org/" target="_new">
+ www.unicode.org</a>
+
+ you should obtain the ASCII encoded version of this file from
+ Project Gutenberg which uses an alternate representation system
+ to present the UTF-8 characters.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 1 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page_ii" name="page_ii">[pg ii]</a>
+ </span>
+
+<!-- Page 2 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page_iii" name="page_iii">[pg iii]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <h1>
+ <i>By</i>
+
+ ROCK &amp; POOL</h1>
+
+ <h1>On An Austral Shore</h1>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>By</i>
+
+ LOUIS BECKE</h2>
+
+ <h3>AUTHOR OF "PACIFIC TALES," "BY REEF AND PALM," ETC.,
+ ETC.</h3>
+
+ <center>New Amsterdam Book Company
+ <br />
+
+ 156 FIFTH AVENUE: NEW YORK CITY: MCMI</center>
+
+<!-- Page 3 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page_iv" name="page_iv">[pg iv]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <a name='CONTENTS'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<!-- Page 4 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page__v" name="page__v">[pg v]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page001">BY ROCK AND POOL</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page020">SOLEPA</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page045">THE FISHER FOLK OF NUKUFETAU</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page066">MRS. MACLAGGAN'S BILLY</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page078">AN ISLAND MEMORY</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page107">A HUNDRED FATHOMS DEEP</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page118">ON A TIDAL RIVER</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page132">DENISON GETS ANOTHER SHIP</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page141">JACK SHARK'S PILOT</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page148">THE "PALU" OF THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page159">THE WILY "GOANNER"</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page165">THE T&#258;NIFA OF SAMOA</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page174">ON BOARD THE
+ <i>TUCOPIA</i>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page218">THE MAN IN THE BUFFALO HIDE</a>
+ </p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>
+ <a href="#page231">A CRUISE IN THE SOUTH SEAS&#8212;HINTS TO
+ INTENDING TRAVELLERS</a>
+ </p>
+
+<!-- Page 5 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page_vi" name="page_vi">[pg vi]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 6 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page001" name="page001">[pg 1]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='By_Rock_and_Pool_on_an_Austral_Shore'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>The quaint, old-fashioned little town faces eastward to the
+ blue Pacific, whose billows, when the wind blows from any point
+ between north and east, come tumbling in across the shallow bar
+ in ceaseless lines of foaming white, to meet, when the tide is
+ on the ebb, the swift current of a tidal river as broad as the
+ Thames at Westminster Bridge. On the south side of the bar,
+ from the sleepy town itself to the pilot station on the Signal
+ Hill, there rises a series of smooth grassy bluffs, whose
+ seaward bases touch the fringe of many small beaches, or start
+ sheer upward from the water when the tide is high, and the
+ noisy swish and swirl of the eager river current has
+ ceased.</p>
+
+ <p>As you stand on the Signal Hill, and look along the coast,
+ you see a long, long monotonous line of beach, trending
+ northward ten miles from end to end, forming a great curve from
+ the sandspit on the north side of the treacherous bar to the
+ blue loom of a headland in shape like the figure of a couchant
+ lion. Back from the shore-line, a narrow littoral of dense
+ scrub, impervious to the rays of the sun, and unbroken in its
+<!-- Page 7 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page002" name="page002">[pg 2]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ solitude except by the cries of birds, or the heavy footfall of
+ wild cattle upon the thick carpet of fallen leaves; and then,
+ far to the west, the dimmed, shadowy outline of the main
+ coastal range.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>It is a keen, frosty morning in June&#8212;the midwinter of
+ Australia&#8212;and as the red sun bursts through the sea-rim,
+ a gentle land breeze creeps softly down from the mountain
+ forest of gums and iron-barks, and blows away the mists that,
+ all through a night of cloudless calm, have laid heavily upon
+ the surface of the sleeping ocean. One by one the doors of the
+ five little white-painted, weather-boarded houses which form
+ the quarters of the pilot-boat's crew open, and five brown,
+ hairy-faced men, each smoking a pipe, issue forth, and, hands
+ in pockets, scan the surface of the sea from north to south,
+ for perchance a schooner, trying to make the port, may have
+ been carried along by the current from the southward, and is
+ within signalling distance to tell her whether the bar is
+ passable or not. For the bar of the Port is as changeable in
+ its moods as the heart of a giddy maid to her
+ lovers&#8212;to-day it may invite you to come in and take
+ possession of its placid waters in the harbour beyond;
+ to-morrow it may roar and snarl with boiling surf and savage,
+ eddying currents, and whirlpools slapping fiercely against the
+ grim, black rocks of the southern shore.</p>
+
+ <p>Look at the five men as they stand or saunter about on the
+ smooth, frosty grass. They are sailormen&#8212;
+<!-- Page 8 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page003" name="page003">[pg 3]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ one and all&#8212;as you can see by their walk and hear by
+ their talk; rough, ready, and sturdy, though not so sturdy nor
+ so square-built as your solid men of brave old Deal; but a long
+ way better in appearance and character than the sponging,
+ tip-seeking, loafing fraternity of slouching, lazy robbers who
+ on the parades of Brighton, Hastings, and Eastbourne, and other
+ fashionable seaside resorts in this country, lean against
+ lamp-posts with "Licensed Boatman" writ on their hat-bands, and
+ call themselves fishermen, though they seldom handle a herring
+ or cod that does not come from a fishmonger's shop. These
+ Australians of British blood are leaner in face, leaner in limb
+ than the Kentish men, and drink whiskey instead of coffee or
+ tea at early morn. But see them at work in the face of danger
+ and death on that bar, when the surf is leaping high and a
+ schooner lies broadside on and helpless to the sweeping
+ rollers, and you will say that a more undaunted crew never
+ gripped an oar to rescue a fellow-sailorman from the hungry
+ sea.</p>
+
+ <p>One of them, a grey-haired, deeply-bronzed man of sixty,
+ with his neck and hands tatooed in strange markings, imprinted
+ thereon by the hands of the wild natives of Tucopia, in the
+ South Seas, with whom he has lived forty years before as one of
+ themselves, is mine own particular friend and crony, for his
+ two sons have been playmates with my brothers and myself, who
+ were all born in this quaint old-time seaport of the first
+ colony in Australia; this forgotten remnant of the dread days
+ of the awful convict
+<!-- Page 9 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page004" name="page004">[pg 4]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ system, when the clank of horrible gyves sounded on the now
+ deserted and grass-grown streets, and the swish of the hateful
+ and ever active "cat" was heard within the walls of the huge
+ red-brick prison on the bluff facing the sea. Oh, the old, old
+ memories of those hideous times! How little they wounded or
+ troubled our boyish minds, as we, bent on some fishing or
+ hunting venture along the coast, walked along a road which had
+ been first soddened by tears and then dried by the panting,
+ anguished breathings of beings fashioned in the image of their
+ Creator, as they toiled and died under the brutal hands of
+ their savage task-masters&#8212;the civilian officials of that
+ cruel "System" which, by the irony of fate, the far-seeing,
+ gentle, and tender-hearted Arthur Phillip, the founder of
+ Australia, was first appointed to administer.</p>
+
+ <p>But away with such memories for the moment. Over the lee
+ side with them into the Sea of the Past, together with the
+ clank of the fetters and the hum of the cat and the merciless
+ laws of the time; sink them all together with the names of the
+ military rum-selling traducers of the good Phillip, and of
+ ill-tempered, passionate sailor Bligh of the
+ <i>Bounty</i>
+
+ &#8212;honest, brave, irascible, vindictive; destroyer of his
+ ship's company on that fateful adventure to Tahiti, hero of the
+ most famous boat-voyage the world has ever known; sea-bully and
+ petty "hazer" of hapless Fletcher Christian and his comrades,
+ gallant officer in battle and thanked by Nelson at Copenhagen;
+ conscientious governor of a starveling colony gasping under the
+ hands of unscrupulous military money-makers,
+<!-- Page 10 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page005" name="page005">[pg 5]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ William Bligh deserves to be remembered by all men of English
+ blood who are proud of the annals of the most glorious navy in
+ the world.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>But ere we descend to the beach to wander by rock and pool
+ in this glowing Australian sun, the warm, loving rays of which
+ are fast drying the frost-coated grass, let us look at these
+ square, old-time monuments to the dead, placed on the Barrack
+ Hill, and overlooking the sea. There are four in all, but
+ around them are many low, sunken headstones of lichen-covered
+ slabs, the inscriptions on which, like many of those on the
+ stones in the cemetery by the reedy creek, have long since
+ vanished.</p>
+
+ <p>There, indeed, if you care to brave the snake-haunted place
+ you will discover a word, or the part of a
+ word&#8212;"Talav&#8212;&#8212;," "Torre&#8212;&#8212;Vedras,"
+ "Vimiera," or "Badaj&#8212;&#8212;," or "Fuentes de
+ On&#8212;&#8212;," and you know that underneath lies the dust
+ of men who served their country well when the Iron Duke was
+ rescuing Europe from the grip of the bloodstained Corsican. On
+ one, which for seventy years has faced the rising sun and the
+ salty breath of the ocean breeze, there remains but the one
+ glorious word, "Aboukir!" every indented letter thickly filled
+ with grey moss and lichen, though the name of he who fought
+ there has disappeared, and being but that of some humble
+ seaman, is unrecorded and unknown in the annals of his country.
+ How strange it seems! but yet how fitting that this one word
+ alone should be
+<!-- Page 11 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page006" name="page006">[pg 6]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ preserved by loving Nature from the decaying touch of Time.
+ Perhaps the very hand of the convict mason who held the chisel
+ to the stone struck deeper as he carved the letters of the name
+ of the glorious victory.</p>
+
+ <p>But let us away from here; for in the hot summer months amid
+ these neglected and decaying memorials of the dead, creeping
+ and crawling in and out of the crumbling masonry of the tombs,
+ gliding among the long, reedy grass, or lying basking in the
+ sun upon the fallen headstones, are deadly black and brown
+ snakes. They have made this old, time-forgotten cemetery their
+ own favourite haunting place; for the waters of the creek are
+ near, and on its margin they find their prey. Once, so the
+ shaky old wharfinger will tell you, a naval lieutenant, who had
+ been badly wounded in the first Maori war, died in the
+ commandant's house. He was buried here on the bank of the
+ creek, and one day his young wife who had come from England to
+ nurse him and found him dead, sat down on his grave and went to
+ sleep. When she awoke, a great black snake was lying on her
+ knees. She died that day from the shock.</p>
+
+ <p>The largest of these four monuments on the bluff stands
+ nearest to the sea, and the inscription on the heavy flat slab
+ of sandstone which covers it is fairly legible:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <center>Sacred to the Memory of
+ <br />
+
+<!-- Page 12 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page007" name="page007">[pg 7]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ JAMES VAUGHAN,
+ <br />
+
+ Who was a Private in Captain
+ <br />
+
+ Fraser Allan's Company
+ <br />
+
+ of the 40th Regiment,
+ <br />
+
+ Who died on the 24th November, 1823,
+ <br />
+
+ of a Gunshot Wound Received
+ <br />
+
+ on the 20th Day of the Month,
+ <br />
+
+ when in Pursuit of a
+ <br />
+
+ Runaway Convict.
+ <br />
+
+ Aged 25 years.</center>
+
+ <p>The others record the names of the "infant son and daughters
+ of Mr. G. Smith, Commissariat Storekeeper," and of "Edward
+ Marvin, who died 4th July, 1821, aged 21 years."</p>
+
+ <p>Many other sunken headstones denote the last resting-places
+ of soldiers and sailors, and civilian officials, who died
+ between 1821 and 1830, when the little port was a thriving
+ place, and when, as the old gossips will tell you, it made a
+ "rare show, when the Governor came here, and Major
+ Innes&#8212;him as brought that cussed lantana plant from the
+ Peninsula&#8212;sent ninety mounted men to escort him to Lake
+ Innes."</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>The tide is low, and the flat
+ <i>congewoi</i>
+
+ -covered ledges of reef on the southern side of the bar lie
+ bare and exposed to the sun. Here and there in the crystal
+ pools among the rocks, fish have been left by the tide,
+<!-- Page 13 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page008" name="page008">[pg 8]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and as you step over the
+ <i>congewoi</i>
+
+ , whose teats spurt out jets of water to the pressure of your
+ foot, large silvery bream and gaily-hued parrot-fish rush off
+ and hide themselves from view. But tear off a piece of
+ <i>congewoi,</i>
+
+ open it, and throw the sanguinary-coloured delicacy into the
+ water, and presently you will see the parrot-fish dart out
+ eagerly, and begin to tear it asunder with their long,
+ irregular, and needle-like teeth, whilst the more cautious and
+ lordly bream, with wary eye and gentle, undulating tail, watch
+ from underneath a ledge for a favourable moment to dash out and
+ secure a morsel.</p>
+
+ <p>In some of the wider and shallower ponds are countless
+ thousands of small mullet, each about three or four inches in
+ length, and swimming closely together in separated but compact
+ battalions. Some, as the sound of a human footstep warns them
+ of danger, rush for safety among the submerged clefts and
+ crevices of their temporary retreat, only to be mercilessly and
+ fatally enveloped by the snaky, viscous tentacles of the
+ ever-lurking octopus, for every hole and pool among the rocks
+ contains one or more of these hideously repulsive
+ creatures.</p>
+
+ <p>Sometimes you will see one crawling over the
+ <i>congewoi</i>
+
+ , changing from one pool to another in search of prey; its
+ greeny-grey eyes regard you with defiant malevolence. Strike it
+ heavily with a stick, or thrust it through with a spear, and in
+ an instant its colour, which a moment before was either a dark
+ mottled brown or a mingled reddish-black, changes to a ghastly,
+ horrible, marbled grey; the horrid tentacles
+<!-- Page 14 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page009" name="page009">[pg 9]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ writhe and cling to the weapon, or spread out and adhere to the
+ surrounding points of rock, a black, inky fluid is ejected from
+ the soft, pulpy, and slimy body; and then, after raining blow
+ after blow upon it, it lies unable to crawl away, but still
+ twisting and turning, and showing its red and white
+ suckers&#8212;a thing of horror indeed, the embodiment of all
+ that is hateful, wicked, and malignant in nature.</p>
+
+ <p>Some idea of the numbers of these crafty and savage denizens
+ of the limpid pools may be obtained by dropping a baited
+ fishing line in one of the deeper spots. First you will see
+ one, and then another, thin end of a tentacle come waveringly
+ out from underneath a ledge of rock, and point towards the
+ bait, then the rest of the ugly creature follows, and gathering
+ itself together, darts upon the hook, for the possession of
+ which half a dozen more of its fellows are already advancing,
+ either swimming or by drawing themselves over the sandy bottom
+ of the pool. Deep buried in the sand itself is another, a brute
+ which may weigh ten or fifteen pounds, and which would take all
+ the strength of a strong man to overcome were its loathsome
+ tentacles clasped round his limbs in their horrid embrace. Only
+ part of the head and the half-closed, tigerish eyes are
+ visible, and even these portions are coated over with fine sand
+ so as to render them almost undistinguishable from the bed in
+ which it lies awaiting for some careless crab or fish to come
+ within striking distance. How us boys delighted to destroy
+ these big fellows when we came across one thus hidden in the
+ sand or
+ <i>d&#233;bris</i>
+
+ on the bottom! A
+<!-- Page 15 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page010" name="page010">[pg 10]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ quick thrust of the spear through the tough, elongated head, a
+ vision of whirling, outspread, red and black snaky tentacles,
+ and then the thing is dragged out by main strength and dashed
+ down upon the rocks, to be struck with waddies or stones until
+ the spear can be withdrawn. Everything, it is said, has its use
+ in this world, and the octopus is eminently useful to the
+ Australian line fisherman, for the bream, trevally, flathead,
+ jew-fish, and the noble schnapper dearly love its tough, white
+ flesh, especially after the creature has been held over a flame
+ for a few minutes, so that the mottled skin may be peeled
+ off.</p>
+
+ <p>But treacherous and murderous Thug of the Sea as he is, the
+ octopus has one dreaded foe before whom he flees in terror, and
+ compresses his body into the narrowest and most inaccessible
+ cleft or endeavours to bury himself in the loose, soft
+ sand&#8212;and that foe is the orange-coloured or sage-green
+ rock eel. Never do you see one of these eels in the open water;
+ they lie deep under the stones or twine their lithe, slippery
+ bodies among the waving kelp or seaweed. Always hungry,
+ savage-eyed, and vicious, they know no fear of any living
+ thing, and seizing an octopus and biting off tentacle after
+ tentacle with their closely-set, needle-like teeth and
+ swallowing it whole is a matter of no more moment to them than
+ the bolting of a tender young mullet or bream. In vain does the
+ Sea Thug endeavour to enwrap himself round and round the body
+ of one of these sinuous, scaleless sea-snakes and fasten on to
+ it with his terrible cupping apparatus of suckers&#8212;the eel
+ slips in and out and "wolfs" and worries his enemy
+<!-- Page 16 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page011" name="page011">[pg 11]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ without the slightest harm to itself. Some of them are
+ large&#8212;especially the orange-coloured variety&#8212;three
+ or four feet in length, and often one will raise his snaky head
+ apparently out of solid rock and regard you steadily for a
+ moment. Then he disappears. You advance cautiously to the spot
+ and find a hole no larger than the circumference of an
+ afternoon tea cup, communicating with the water beneath. Lower
+ a baited hook with a strong wire snooding, and "Yellowskin"
+ will open wide his jaws and swallow it without your feeling the
+ slightest movement of the line. But you must be quick and
+ strong of hand then, or you will never drag him forth, for
+ slippery as he is he can coil his length around a projecting
+ bit of rock and defy you for perhaps five or ten minutes; and
+ then when you do succeed in tearing him away and pull him out
+ with the hook buried deep in his loose, pendulous, wrinkled and
+ corduroyed throat, he instantly resolves himself into a
+ quivering Gordian knot, winding the line in and about his coils
+ and knotting it into such knots that can never be
+ unravelled.</p>
+
+ <p>Here and there you will see lying buried deep in the growing
+ coral, or covered with black masses of
+ <i>congewoi</i>
+
+ such things as iron and copper bolts, or heavy pieces of
+ squared timber, the relics of the many wrecks that have
+ occurred on the bar&#8212;some recent, some in years long gone
+ by. Out there, lying wedged in between the weed and
+ kelp-covered boulders, only visible at low water, are two of
+ the guns of the ill-fated
+ <i>Wanderer</i>
+
+ , a ship, like her owner, famous in the history
+<!-- Page 17 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page012" name="page012">[pg 12]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of the colony. She was the property of a Mr. Benjamin Boyd, a
+ man of flocks and herds and wealth, who founded a town and a
+ great whaling station on the shores of Twofold Bay, where he
+ employed some hundreds of men, bond and free. He was of an
+ adventurous and restless disposition, and after making several
+ voyages to the South Seas, was cruelly cut off and murdered by
+ the cannibal natives of Guadalcanar in the Solomon Islands, in
+ the "fifties." The captain, after beating off the savages, who,
+ having killed poor Boyd on shore, made a determined attempt to
+ capture the ship, set sail for Australia, and in endeavouring
+ to cross in over the bar went ashore and became a total wreck.
+ Here is a description written by Judge McFarland of the
+ <i>Wanderer</i>
+
+ as she was in those days when Boyd dreamed a dream of founding
+ a Republic in the South Sea Islands with his wild crew of
+ Polynesians and a few white fellow adventurers:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"She was of 240 tons burthen; very fleet, and had a flush
+ deck; and her cabins were fitted up with every possible
+ attention to convenience, and with great elegance; and had she
+ been intended as a war craft, she could scarcely have been more
+ powerfully armed, for she carried four brass
+ deck-guns&#8212;two six-pounders and two
+ four-pounders&#8212;mounted on carriages resembling dolphins,
+ four two-pounder rail guns&#8212;two on each side&#8212;and one
+ brass twelve-pounder traversing gun (which had seen service at
+ Waterloo)&#8212;in all thirteen serviceable guns. Besides
+ these, there were two small, highly-ornamented guns used for
+ firing signals, which were said to have been obtained from the
+<!-- Page 18 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page013" name="page013">[pg 13]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ wreck of the
+ <i>Royal George</i>
+
+ at Spithead. There were also provided ample stores of round
+ shot and grape for the guns, and a due proportion of small
+ arms, boarding pikes, tomahawks, &amp;c."</p>
+
+ <p>Half a mile further on, and we are under the Signal Hill,
+ and standing on one side of a wide, flat rock, through which a
+ boat passage has been cut by convict hands, when first the
+ white tents of the soldiers were seen on the Barrack Hill. And
+ here, at this same spot, more than a hundred years ago, and
+ thirty before the sound of the axe was first heard amid the
+ forest or tallow-woods and red gum, there once landed a strange
+ party of sea-worn, haggard-faced beings&#8212;six men, one
+ woman, and two infant children. They were the unfortunate
+ Bryant party&#8212;whose wonderful and daring voyage from
+ Sydney to Timor in a wretched, ill-equipped boat, ranks second
+ only to that of Bligh himself. For Will Bryant, an ex-smuggler
+ who was leader, had heard of Bligh's voyage in the boat
+ belonging to the
+ <i>Bounty</i>
+
+ ; and fired with the desire to escape with his wife and
+ children from the famine-stricken community on the shores of
+ Port Jackson, he and his companions in servitude stole a small
+ fishing-boat and boldly put to sea to face a journey of more
+ that three thousand miles over an unknown and dangerous ocean.
+ A few weeks after leaving Sydney they had sighted this little
+ nook when seeking refuge from a fierce north-easterly gale, and
+ here they remained for many days, so that the woman and
+ children might gain strength and the seams of the leaking boat
+ be payed with tallow&#8212;their only
+<!-- Page 19 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page014" name="page014">[pg 14]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ substitute for oakum. Then onward they sailed or rowed, for
+ long, long weary weeks, landing here and there on the coast to
+ seek for water and shell-fish, harried and chased by cannibal
+ savages, suffering all the agonies that could be suffered on
+ such a wild venture, until they reached Timor, only by a
+ strange and unhappy fate to fall into the hands of the brutal
+ and infamous Edwards of the
+ <i>Pandora</i>
+
+ frigate, who with his wrecked ship's company, and the surviving
+ and manacled mutineers of the
+ <i>Bounty</i>
+
+ , who had surrendered to him, soon afterwards appeared at the
+ Dutch port. Bryant, the daring leader, was so fortunate as to
+ die of fever, and so escaped the fate in store for his
+ comrades. 'Tis a strange story indeed.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>At the end of the point of brown, rugged rocks which form a
+ natural breakwater to this tiny boat harbour, the water is
+ deep, showing a pale transparent green at their base, and deep
+ inpenetrable blue ten fathoms beyond. To-day, because it is
+ mid-winter, and the wind blows from the west, the sea is
+ clearer than ever, and far down below will be discerned lazily
+ swimming to and fro great reddish-brown or bright blue groper,
+ watching the dripping sides of the rock in hope that some of
+ the active, gaily-hued crabs which scurry downwards as you
+ approach may fall in&#8212;for the blue groper is a
+ <i>gourmet</i>
+
+ , disdaining to eat of his own tribe, and caring only for crabs
+ or the larger and more luscious crayfish. Stand here when the
+ tide is high and the surf is sweeping in creamy sheets over
+<!-- Page 20 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page015" name="page015">[pg 15]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the lower ledges of rocks; and as the water pours off
+ torrent-like from the surface and leaves them bare, you may oft
+ behold a huge fish&#8212;aye, or two or three&#8212;lying
+ kicking on its side with a young crayfish in its thick, fleshy
+ jaws, calmly waiting for the next sea to set him afloat again.
+ Brave fellows are these gropers&#8212;forty, fifty, up to
+ seventy pounds sometimes, and dangerous fish to hook in such a
+ place as this, where a false step may send a man headlong into
+ the surf below with his line tangled round his feet or arms.
+ But on such a morning as this one might fall overboard and come
+ to no harm, for the sea is smooth, and the kelp sways but
+ gently to the soft rise and fall of the water, and seldom in
+ these cold days of June does Jack Shark cruise in under the lee
+ of the rocks. It is in November, hot, sweltering November, when
+ the clinking sand of the shining beach is burning to the booted
+ foot, and the countless myriads of terrified sea salmon come
+ swarming in over the bar on their way to spawn in the river
+ beyond, that he and his fellows and the bony-snouted saw-fish
+ rush to and fro in the shallow waters, driving their prey
+ before them, and gorging as they drive, till the clear waters
+ of the bar are turned into a bloodied froth. At such a time as
+ this it might be bad to fall overboard, though some of the
+ local youths give but little more heed to the tigers of the sea
+ than they do to the accompanying drove of harmless porpoises,
+ which join in the onslaught on the hapless salmon.</p>
+
+ <p>A mile eastward from the shore there rises stark and clear a
+ great dome-shaped rock, the haunt and resting-
+<!-- Page 21 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page016" name="page016">[pg 16]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ place of thousands of snow-white gulls and brown-plumaged
+ boobies. The breeding-place of the former is within
+ rifle-shot&#8212;over there on that long stretch of banked-up
+ sand on the north side of the bar, where, amid the shelter of
+ the coarse, tufted grass the delicate, graceful creatures will
+ sit three months hence on their fragile white and
+ purple-splashed eggs. The boobies are but visitors, for their
+ breeding-places are on the bleak, savage islands far to the
+ south, amid the snows and storms of black Antarctic seas. But
+ here they dwell together, in unison with the gulls, and were
+ the wind not westerly you could hear their shrill cries and
+ hoarse croaking as they wheel and eddy and circle above the
+ lonely rock, on the highest pinnacle of which a great
+ fish-eagle, with neck thrown back upon his shoulders and eyes
+ fixed eastward to the sun, stands oblivious of their clamour,
+ as creatures beneath his notice.</p>
+
+ <p>Once round the southern side of the Signal Hill the noise of
+ the bar is lost. Between the hill and the next point&#8212;a
+ wild, stern-looking precipice of black-trap rock&#8212;there
+ lies a half a mile or more of shingly strand, just such as you
+ would see at Pevensey Bay or Deal, but backed up at high-water
+ mark with piles of drift timber&#8212;great dead trees that
+ have floated from the far northern rivers, their mighty
+ branches and netted roots bleached white by the sun and wind of
+ many years, and smelling sweet of the salty sea air. Mingled
+ with the lighter bits of driftwood and heaps of seaweed are the
+ shells of hundreds of crayfish&#8212;some of the largest are
+ newly cast up by the sea, and
+<!-- Page 22 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page017" name="page017">[pg 17]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the carapace is yellow and blue; others are burnt red by
+ exposure to the sun; while almost at every step you crush into
+ the thin backs and armoured tails of young ones about a foot in
+ length, the flesh of which, by some mysterious process of
+ nature, has vanished, leaving the skin, muscles, and beautiful
+ fan-like tail just as fresh as if the crustaceans were alive.
+ Just here, out among those kelp-covered rocks, you may, on a
+ moonlight night, catch as many crayfish as you wish&#8212;three
+ of them will be as much as any one would care to carry a mile,
+ for a large, full-grown "lobster," as they are called locally,
+ will weigh a good ten pounds.</p>
+
+ <p>Once round the precipice we come to a new phase of coastal
+ scenery. From the high land above us green scrub-covered spur
+ after spur shoots downward to the shore, enclosing numerous
+ little beaches of coarse sand and many coloured spiral
+ shells&#8212;"Reddies" we boys called them&#8212;with here and
+ there a rare and beautiful cowrie of banded jet black and
+ pearly white. The sea-wall of rock has here but few pools,
+ being split up into long, deep, and narrow chasms, into which
+ the gentle ocean swell comes with strange gurglings and
+ hissings, and groan-like sounds, and tiny jets of spray spout
+ up from hundreds of air-holes through the hollow crust of rock.
+ Here for the first time since the town was left, are heard the
+ cries of land birds; for in the wild apple and rugged
+ honeysuckle trees which grow on the rich, red soil of the spurs
+ they are there in plenty&#8212;crocketts, king parrots,
+ leatherheads, "butcher" and "bell" birds, and the beautiful
+ bronze-wing pigeon&#8212;while deep within the
+<!-- Page 23 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page018" name="page018">[pg 18]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ silent gullies you constantly hear the little black scrub
+ wallabies leaping through the undergrowth and fallen leaves, to
+ hide in still darker forest recesses above.</p>
+
+ <p>There are snakes here, too. Everywhere their sinuous tracks
+ are visible on the sand, criss-crossing with the more defined
+ scratchy markings of those of iguanas. The latter we know come
+ down to carry off any dead fish cast ashore by the waves, or to
+ seize any live ones which may be imprisoned in a shallow pool;
+ but what brings the deadly brown and black snakes down to the
+ edge of
+ <i>salt</i>
+
+ water at night time?</p>
+
+ <p>Point after point, tiny bay after bay, and then we come to a
+ wider expanse of clear, stoneless beach, at the farther end of
+ which a huge boulder of jagged, yellow rock, covered on the
+ summit with a thick mantle of a pale green, fleshly-leaved
+ creeper, bearing a pink flower. It stands in a deep pool about
+ a hundred yards in circumference, and as like as not we shall
+ find the surface of the water covered by thousands of
+ green-backed, red-billed garfish and silvery mullet, whose very
+ numbers prevent them from escaping. Scores of them leap out
+ upon the sand, and lie there with panting gill and flapping
+ tail. It is a great place for us boys, for here at low tides in
+ the winter we strip off, and with naked hands catch the mullet
+ and gars and silvery-sided trumpeters, and throw them out on
+ the beach, to be grilled later on over a fire of glowing
+ honeysuckle cobs, and eaten without salt. What boy does care
+ about such a thing as salt at such times, when his eye is
+ bright and his skin glows with the flush of health, and the
+ soft murmuring of the sea
+<!-- Page 24 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page019" name="page019">[pg 19]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ is mingling in his ears with the thrilling call of the birds,
+ and the rustling hum of the bush; and the yellow sun shines
+ down from a glorious sky of cloudless blue, and dries the sand
+ upon his naked feet; and the very joy of being alive, and away
+ from school, is happiness enough in itself!</p>
+
+ <p>For here, by rock and pool on this lonely Austral beach, it
+ is good and sweet for man or boy to be, and, if but in utter
+ idleness, to watch and listen&#8212;and think.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 25 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page020" name="page020">[pg 20]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='Solepa'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>Solepa</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>The last strokes of the bell for evening service had scarce
+ died away when I heard a footstep on the pebbly path, and old
+ P&#226;k&#237;a, staff in hand and pipe dangling from his
+ pendulous ear-lobe, walked quietly up the steps and sat down
+ cross-legged on the verandah. All my own people had gone to
+ church and the house was very quiet.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good evening, P&#226;k&#237;a," I said in English, "how are
+ you, old man?"</p>
+
+ <p>A smile lit up the brown, old, wrinkled face as he heard my
+ voice&#8212;for I was lying down in the sitting-room, smoking
+ my after-supper pipe&#8212;as he answered in the island dialect
+ that he was well, but that his house was in darkness and he,
+ being lonely, had come over to sit with me awhile.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is well, P&#226;k&#237;a, for I too am lonely, and who
+ so good as thee to talk with when the mind is heavy and the
+ days are long, and no sail cometh up from the sea-rim? Come,
+ sit here within the doorway, for the night wind is chill; and
+ fill thy pipe."</p>
+
+ <p>He came inside as I rose and turned up the lamp so that its
+ light shone full on his bald, bronzed head
+<!-- Page 26 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page021" name="page021">[pg 21]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and deeply tatooed arms and shoulders. Laying down his polished
+ staff of
+ <i>temana</i>
+
+ wood, he came over to me, placed his hand on my arm, patted it
+ gently, and then his kindly old eyes sought mine.</p>
+
+ <p>"Be not dull of heart,
+ <i>taka taina</i>
+
+ .
+ <a href="#footnote_1" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[1]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ A ship will soon come&#8212;it may be to-morrow; it must be
+ soon; for twice have I heard the cocks crow at midnight since I
+ was last here, three days ago. And when the cocks crow at
+ night-time a ship is near."</p>
+
+ <p>"May it be so, P&#226;k&#237;a, for I am weary of waiting.
+ Ten months have come and gone since I first put foot on this
+ land of Nukufetau, and a ship was to have come here in
+ four."</p>
+
+ <p>He filled his pipe, then drawing a small mat near my lounge,
+ he squatted on the floor, and we smoked in silence, listening
+ to the gentle lapping of the lagoon waters upon the inner beach
+ and the beating, never-ceasing hum of the surf on the reef
+ beyond. Overhead the branches of the palms swayed and rustled
+ to the night-breeze.</p>
+
+ <p>Presently, as I turned to look seaward, I caught the old
+ man's dark eyes fixed upon my face, and in them I read a
+ sympathy that at that time and place was grateful to me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Six months is long for one who waits, P&#226;k&#237;a," I
+ said. "I came here but to stay four months and trade for copra;
+ then the ship was to call and take me to Ponap&#233;, in the
+ far north-west. And Ponap&#233; is a great land to such a man
+ as me."</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 27 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page022" name="page022">[pg 22]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <i>Etonu! Etonu!</i>
+
+ I know it. Thrice have I been there when I sailed in the
+ whaleships. A great land truly, like the island called Juan
+ Fernandez, of which I have told thee, with high mountains green
+ to the summits with trees, and deep, dark valleys wherein the
+ sound of the sea is never heard but when the surf beats hard
+ upon the reef. Ah! a fine land&#8212;better than this poor
+ <i>motu</i>
+
+ , which is as but a ring of sand set in the midst of the deep
+ sea. Would that I were young to go there with thee! Tell me,
+ dost know the two small, high islands in the
+ <i>ava</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_2" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[2]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ which is called Jakoits? Hast seen the graves of two white men
+ there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know the islands well; but I have never seen the graves
+ of any white men there. Who were they, and when did they
+ die?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, I am a foolish old man. I forget how old I am. Perhaps,
+ when thou wert a child in thy mother's arms, the graves stood
+ up out of the greensward at the foot of the high cliff which
+ faces to the south. Tell me, is there not a high wall of rock a
+ little way back from the landing beach?... Aye!... that is the
+ place ... and the bones of the men are there, though now great
+ trees may grow over the place. They were both good
+ men&#8212;good to look at, tall and strong; and they fought and
+ died there just under the cliff. I saw them die, for I was
+ there with the captain of my ship. We, and others with us, saw
+ it all."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who were they, P&#226;k&#237;a, and how came they to
+ fight?"</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 28 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page023" name="page023">[pg 23]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ One was a trader, whose name was Preston; he lived on the
+ mainland of Ponap&#233;, where he had a great house and oil
+ store and many servants. The name of the other man was Frank.
+ They fought because of a woman."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell me the story, P&#226;k&#237;a. Thou hast seen many
+ lands and many strange things. And when ye come and sit and
+ talk to me the dulness goeth away from me and I no longer think
+ of the ship; for of all the people on this
+ <i>motu</i>
+
+ , to thee and Temana my servant alone do I talk freely. And
+ Temana is now at church."</p>
+
+ <p>The old man chuckled. "Aye, he is at church because Malepa,
+ his wife, is so jealous of him that she fears to leave him
+ alone. Better would it please him to be sitting here with
+ us."</p>
+
+ <p>I drew the mat curtain across the sitting-room window so
+ that we could not be seen by prying eyes, and put two cups, a
+ gourd of water, and some brandy on the table. Except my own
+ man, Temana, the rest of the natives were intensely jealous of
+ the poor old ex-sailor and wanderer in many lands, and they
+ very much resented his frequent visits to me&#8212;partly on
+ account of the occasional glass of grog which I gave him, and
+ partly because he was suspected of still being a
+ <i>tagata po-uriuri, i.e.</i>
+
+ , a heathen. This, however, he vigorously denied, and though
+ Mar&#233;ko, the Samoan teacher, was a kind-hearted and
+ tolerant man for a native minister, the deacons delighted in
+ persecuting and harassing the ancient upon every possible
+ opportunity, and upon one pretext or another had
+<!-- Page 29 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page024" name="page024">[pg 24]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ succeeded in robbing him of his land and dividing it among his
+ relatives; so that now in his extreme old age he was dependent
+ upon one of his daughters, a woman who herself must have been
+ past sixty.</p>
+
+ <p>I poured some brandy into the cups; we clicked them together
+ and said, "May you be lucky" to each other. Then he told me of
+ Solepa.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"There were many whaleships came to anchor in the three
+ harbours of Ponap&#233; in those days. They came there for wood
+ and water and fresh provisions, before they sailed to the cold,
+ icy seas of the south. I was then a boat-steerer in an English
+ ship&#8212;a good and lucky ship with a good captain. When we
+ came to Ponap&#233; we found there six other whaleships, all
+ anchored close together under the shelter of the two islets.
+ All the captains were friends, and the few white men who lived
+ on shore were friends with them, and every night there was much
+ singing and dancing on board the ships, for, as was the custom,
+ every one on board had been given a Ponap&#233; girl for wife
+ as long as his ship stayed there; and sometimes a ship would be
+ there a long time&#8212;a month perhaps.</p>
+
+ <p>"The trader who lived in the big house was one of the first
+ to come on board our ship; for the captain and he were good
+ friends. They talked together on the poop deck, and I heard the
+ trader say that he had been away to Honolulu for nearly a year
+ and had brought back with him a young wife.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 30 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page025" name="page025">[pg 25]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ 'Good,' said my captain, 'to-night I shall come ashore and
+ drink
+ <i>manuia!</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_3" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[3]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ to ye both.'</p>
+
+ <p>"The trader was pleased, and said that some of the other
+ captains could come also, and that he had sent a letter to the
+ other trader, Frank, who lived on the other side of the island,
+ bidding him to come and greet the new wife. At these words the
+ face of Stacey&#8212;that was my captain's name, became dark,
+ and he said&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"'You are foolish. Such a man as he is, is better away from
+ thy house&#8212;and thy wife. He is a
+ <i>manaia</i>
+
+ , an
+ <i>ulavale</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_4" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[4]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ . Take heed of my words and have no dealings with him.'</p>
+
+ <p>"But the man Preston only laughed. He was a fool in this
+ though he was so clever in many other things. He was a big man,
+ broad in the shoulders with the bright eye and the merry laugh
+ of a boy. He had been a sailor, but had wearied of the life,
+ and so he bought land in Ponap&#233; and became a trader. He
+ was a fair-dealing man with the people there, and so in three
+ or four years he became rich, and bought more land and built a
+ schooner which he sent away to far distant islands to trade for
+ pearl-shell and
+ <i>loli</i>
+
+ (beche-de-mer). Then it was that he went to Honolulu and came
+ back with a wife.</p>
+
+ <p>"That day ere it became dark I went on shore with my
+ captain; some of the other captains went with us. The white man
+ met them on the beach, surrounded by many of his servants, male
+ and female. Some were of Ponap&#233;, some from Tahiti, some
+ from Oahu, and some from the place which you call Savage Island
+ and we call Niu&#233;. As soon as the captains had stepped out
+ upon the beach and I had bidden the four sailors who were with
+ me to push off to return to the ship, the trader, seeing the
+ tatooing on my arms, gave a shout.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 31 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page026" name="page026">[pg 26]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ 'Ho,' he cried, turning to my captain, 'whence comes that
+ boat-steerer of thine? By the markings on his arms and chest he
+ should be from the isles of the Tokelau.'</p>
+
+ <p>"My captain laughed. 'He comes from near there. He is of
+ Nukufetau.'</p>
+
+ <p>"Then let him stay on shore to-night, for there are here
+ with me a man and a woman from Nanomaga; they can talk
+ together. And my wife Solepa, too, will be well pleased to see
+ him, for her mother was a Samoan, and this man can talk to her
+ in her mother's tongue.'</p>
+
+ <p>"'So I too went up to the house with the white men, but
+ would not enter with them, for I was stripped to the waist and
+ could not go into the presence of the lady. Presently the man
+ and woman from Nanomaga sought me out and embraced me and made
+ much of me and took me into another part of the house, where I
+ waited till one of my shipmates returned from the ship bringing
+ my jumper and trousers of white duck and a new Panama hat.
+ T&#257;p&#257;! I was a fine-looking man in those days, and
+ women looked at me from the corner of the eye. And now&#8212;
+<!-- Page 32 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page027" name="page027">[pg 27]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ look at me now! I am like a blind fish which is swept hither
+ and thither by the current against the rocks and sandbanks.
+ Give me some more grog, dear friend; when I talk of the days of
+ my youth my belly yearns for it, and I am not ashamed to
+ beg.</p>
+
+ <p>"Presently, after I had dressed myself, I was taken by the
+ Nanomea man into the big room where Solepa, the white man's
+ wife, was sitting with the white men. She came to me and took
+ my hand, and said to me in Samoan
+ <i>'Talofa, P&#226;k&#237;a, e m&#257;lol&#333; ea oe?'</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_5" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[5]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ and my heart was glad; for it was long since I heard any one
+ speak in a tongue which is akin to mine own.... Was she
+ beautiful? you ask. T&#257;p&#257;! All women are beautiful
+ when they are young, and their eyes are full and clear and
+ their voices are soft and their bosoms are round and smooth!
+ All I can remember of her is that she was very young, with a
+ white, fair skin, and dressed like the
+ <i>papalagi</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_6" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[6]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ women I have seen in Peretania and It&#257;lia and in Chili and
+ in Sydney.</p>
+
+ <p>"As I stood before her, hat in hand and with my eyes looking
+ downward, which is proper and correct for a modest man to do
+ when a high lady speaks to him before many people, a white man
+ who had been sitting at the far end of the room came over to me
+ and said some words of greeting to me. This was Franka
+ <a href="#footnote_7" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[7]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ &#8212;he whom my captain said was a
+ <i>manaia</i>
+
+ . He was better clothed than any other of the white men, and
+ was proud and overbearing in his manner. He
+<!-- Page 33 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page028" name="page028">[pg 28]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ had brought with him more than a score of young Ponap&#233;
+ men, all of whom carried rifles and had cutlasses strapped to
+ their waists. This was done to show the people of Jakoits that
+ he was as great a man as Preston, whom he hated, as you will
+ see. But Preston had naught for him but good words, and when he
+ saw the armed men he bade them welcome and set aside a house
+ for them to sleep in, and his servants brought them many
+ baskets of cooked food&#8212;taro and yams, and fish, turtle,
+ and pork. All this I saw whilst I was in the big room.</p>
+
+ <p>"After I had spoken with the lady Solepa I returned to where
+ the man from Nanomaga and his wife were awaiting me. They
+ pressed me to eat and drink, and by and by sent for a young
+ girl to make kava. T&#257;p&#257;! that kava of Ponap&#233;! It
+ is not made there as it is in Samoa&#8212;where the young men
+ and women chew the dried root and mix it in a wooden
+ <i>tanoa</i>
+
+ (bowl); there the green root is crushed up in a hollowed stone
+ and but little water is added, so that it is strong, very
+ strong, and one is soon made drunk.</p>
+
+ <p>"The girl who made the kava for us was named Sipi. She had
+ eyes like the stars when they are shining upon a deep mountain
+ pool, and round her smooth forehead was bound a circlet of
+ yellow pandanus leaf worked with beads of many colours and
+ fringed with red parrakeet feathers; about her waist were two
+ fine mats, and her bosom and hands were stained with turmeric.
+ I sat and watched her beating the kava, and as her right arm
+ rose and fell her short, black wavy hair danced about her
+ cheeks and hid the
+<!-- Page 34 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page029" name="page029">[pg 29]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ red mouth and white teeth when she smiled at me. And she smiled
+ at me very often, and the man and woman beside me laughed when
+ they saw me regard her so intently, and asked me was it in my
+ mind to have her for my wife.</p>
+
+ <p>"I did not answer at once, for I knew that if I ran away
+ from the ship for the sake of this girl I would be doing a
+ foolish thing, for I had money coming to me when the ship was
+ <i>oti folau</i>
+
+ (paid off). But, as I pondered, the girl bent forward and again
+ her eyes smiled at me through her hair; and then it was I saw
+ that on her head there was a narrow shaven strip from the crown
+ backward. Now, in Tokelau, this fashion is called
+ <i>tu tagita</i>
+
+ , and showeth that a girl is in her virginity. When I saw this
+ I was pleased, but to make sure I said to my friends, 'Her hair
+ is
+ <i>tu tagita</i>
+
+ . Is she a virgin?'</p>
+
+ <p>"The woman of Nanomaga laughed loudly at this and pinched my
+ hand, then she translated my words to the girl who looked into
+ my face and laughed too, shaking her head as she put one hand
+ over her eyes&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"'Nay, nay, O stranger,' she said, 'I am no virgin; neither
+ am I a harlot. I am respectable, and my father and mother have
+ land. I do not go to the ships.' Then she tossed her hair back
+ from her face and began to beat the kava again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, this girl pleased me greatly, for there were no twists
+ in her tongue; so, when the kava-drinking was finished I made
+ her sit beside me, and the Nanomaga woman told her I would run
+ away from the ship if she would be my wife. She put her face
+<!-- Page 35 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page030" name="page030">[pg 30]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ to my shoulder, and then took the circlet from her forehead and
+ bound it round my bared arm, and I gave her a silver ring which
+ I wore on my little finger. Then, together with the Nanomaga
+ man and his wife, we made our plans.... Ah! she was a fine
+ girl. For nearly a year was she wife to me until she sickened
+ and died of the
+ <i>meisake elo</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_8" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[8]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ which was brought to Ponap&#233; by the missionary ship from
+ Honolulu.</p>
+
+ <p>"So the girl and I made our plans, and my friends promised
+ to hide me when the time came for me to run away. We sat long
+ into the night, and I heard much of the man called Franka and
+ of the jealousy he bore to Preston. He was jealous of him
+ because of two reasons; one was that he possessed such a fine
+ house and so much land and a schooner, and the other was that
+ the people of Jakoits paid him the same respect as they paid
+ one of their high chiefs. So that was why Franka hated him. His
+ heart was full of hatred, and sometimes when he was drunk in
+ his own house at R&#333;an Kiti he would boast to the natives
+ that he would one day show them that he was a better man than
+ Preston. Sometimes his drunken boastings were brought to the
+ ears of Preston, who only laughed and took no heed, and always
+ gave him the good word when they met, which was but seldom, for
+ Jakoits and Kiti are far apart, and there was bad blood between
+ the people of the two places. And then&#8212;so the girl Sipi
+ afterwards told me&#8212;Franka was a lover
+<!-- Page 36 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page031" name="page031">[pg 31]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of grog and a stealer of women, and kept a noisy house and made
+ much trouble, and so Preston went not near him, for he was a
+ quiet man and no drinker, and hated dissension. And, besides
+ this, Franka took part in the wars of the Kiti people, and went
+ about with a following of armed men, and such money as he made
+ in trading he spent in muskets and powder and ball; for all
+ this Preston had no liking, and one day he said to Franka, 'Be
+ warned, this fighting and slaying is wrong; it is not correct
+ for a white man to enter into these wars; you are doing wrong,
+ and some day you will be killed.' Now these were good words,
+ but of what use are good words to an evil heart?</p>
+
+ <p>"So we pair sat talking and smoking, and the girl Sipi made
+ us more kava, and then again sat by my side and leant her face
+ against my shoulder, and presently we heard the sounds of music
+ and singing from the big house. We went outside to see and
+ listen, and saw that Preston was playing on a
+ <i>pese laakau</i>
+
+ <a href="#footnote_9" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[9]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ and Solepa and the captain of my ship were dancing
+ together&#8212;like as white people dance&#8212;and two of the
+ other captains were also dancing in the same fashion. All round
+ the room were seated many of the high chiefs of Ponap&#233;
+ with their wives, dressed very finely, and at one end of the
+ room stood a long table covered with a white cloth, on which
+ was laid food of all kinds and wine and grog to
+ drink&#8212;just as you would see in your own country when a
+ rich man gives a feast. Presently as we looked, we saw Franka
+<!-- Page 37 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page032" name="page032">[pg 32]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ walk into the room from a side door and look about. His face
+ was flushed, and he staggered slightly in his steps. He went
+ over to the table and poured out some grog, and then beckoned
+ to Preston to come and drink with him, but Preston smiled and
+ shook his head. How could he go when he was making the music?
+ Then Franka struck his clenched fist on the table in anger, and
+ went over to Preston, just as the dancers had stopped.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Why will ye not drink with me?' he said in a loud voice so
+ that all heard him. 'Art thou too great a man to drink with me
+ again?'</p>
+
+ <p>"'Nay,' answered the other jestingly and taking no heed of
+ Franka's rude voice and angry eyes, 'not so great that I cannot
+ drink with all my friends tonight, be they white or brown,' and
+ so saying he bade every one in the room come to the great table
+ with him and drink
+ <i>manuia</i>
+
+ to him and his young wife.</p>
+
+ <p>"So the nine white men&#8212;Preston, and Franka, and the
+ seven whaleship captains, and Nanakin, the head chief of
+ Ponap&#233;, and many other lesser chiefs, all gathered
+ together around the table and filled their glasses and drank
+ <i>manuia</i>
+
+ to the bride, who sat on a chair in the centre of the room
+ surrounded by the chiefs' wives, and smiled and bowed when my
+ captain called her name and raised his glass towards her. Then
+ after this he again took up the
+ <i>pese laakau</i>
+
+ and began to play, and my captain and Solepa danced again.
+ Suddenly Franka pushed his way through the others and rudely
+ placed his hand on her arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 38 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page033" name="page033">[pg 33]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ 'Come,' he said, 'leave this fellow and dance with me.'</p>
+
+ <p>"She cried out in terror, and then silence fell upon all as
+ my captain withdrew his right arm from her waist and struck
+ Franka on the mouth; it was a strong blow, and Franka staggered
+ backwards and then fell near to the open door. As he rose to
+ his feet again my captain came up to him and bade him leave
+ quickly. 'We want no drunken bullies here,' he said, and at
+ that moment Franka drew a pistol and pointed it at his chest. I
+ leapt upon him and as we struggled together the pistol went
+ off, but the bullet hurt no one.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then there was a great commotion, and my captain and
+ Preston ran to my aid and seized Franka. They dragged him out
+ of the room, and with words of scorn and contempt threw him out
+ amongst his own people who were gathered together outside the
+ house, with their muskets in their hands. But already Nanakin
+ and his chiefs had summoned their fighting men; they came
+ running towards us from all directions, and surrounding Franka
+ and his men, drove them away and bade them beware of ever
+ returning to Jakoits.</p>
+
+ <p>"When they had gone, my captain called me to him, and,
+ turning to the other white men, said, 'This man hath saved my
+ life. He hath a brave heart. I shall do much for him in the
+ time to come.' Then he and the others all shook my hand and
+ praised me, and I was silent and said nothing, for I was
+ ashamed to think I was about to run away from such a good
+ captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 39 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page034" name="page034">[pg 34]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ In the morning we went back to the ship, and the boats were
+ then sent away to fill and bring off casks of water. Every time
+ my boat went I took something with me; tobacco and clothing and
+ other things which I had in my sea chest. Sipi and some other
+ girls met us at the watering place, and they took these from me
+ and put them in a place of safety. That afternoon as the boats
+ were about to leave the shore for the last time, towing the
+ casks, I slipped into the forest which grew very densely on
+ both sides of the little river, and ran till I came to the spot
+ where Sipi was awaiting me. Then together we went inland
+ towards the mountains and kept on walking till nightfall. That
+ night we slept in the forest; we were afraid to make a fire
+ lest it should be seen by some of Nanakin's people and betray
+ us, for I knew that my captain would cause a great search to be
+ made for me. When dawn came we again set out and went on
+ steadily till we came to the summit of the range of mountains
+ which divides the island. There was a clear space on the side
+ of the mountain; a great village had once stood there, so Sipi
+ told me, but all those who had dwelt there had long since died,
+ and their ghosts could be heard flitting to and fro at night
+ time. Far below us we could see the blue sea, and the long
+ waving line of reef with the surf beating upon it, and within,
+ anchored in the green water, were the seven ships and Preston's
+ schooner.</p>
+
+ <p>"All that day and the next the girl and I worked at building
+ a little house for us to live in until the ships had gone. We
+ had no fear of any one seeking
+<!-- Page 40 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page035" name="page035">[pg 35]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ us out in that place, for it had a bad name and none but
+ travelling parties from R&#333;an Kiti ever passed there. Sipi
+ had brought with her a basket of cooked food; in the deserted
+ plantations we found plenty of bananas and yams, and in the
+ stream at the foot of the valley we caught many small fish.
+ Four days went by, and then one morning we saw the ships set
+ their sails and go to sea. We watched them till they touched
+ the sky rim and disappeared; then we went back to Jakoits.</p>
+
+ <p>"The white man and Solepa were sitting under the shade of a
+ tree in front of their house. I went boldly up to him and asked
+ him to give me work to do. At first he was angry, for he and my
+ captain were great friends, and said he would have naught to do
+ with me. Why did I run away from such a good man and such a
+ good ship? There were too many men like me, he said, in
+ Ponap&#233;, who had run away so that they might do naught but
+ wander from village to village and eat and drink and sleep.
+ Then again he asked why I had run away.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Because of her,' I said, pointing to the girl Sipi, who
+ was sitting at the gate with her face covered with the corner
+ of her mat. 'But I am no
+ <i>tafao vale</i>
+
+ .
+ <a href="#footnote_10" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[10]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ I am a true man. Give me work on thy ship.'</p>
+
+ <p>"He thought a little while, then he and Solepa talked
+ together, and Solepa bade Sipi come near so that she might talk
+ to her. Presently he said to me that I had done a foolish thing
+ to run away for the
+<!-- Page 41 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page036" name="page036">[pg 36]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ sake of the girl when I had money coming to me and when the
+ captain's heart was filled with friendship towards me for
+ turning aside Franka's pistol.</p>
+
+ <p>"I bent my head, for I was ashamed. Then I said, 'I care not
+ for the money I have lost, but I am eaten up with shame for
+ running away, for my captain was a good captain to me.'</p>
+
+ <p>"This pleased him, for he smiled and said, 'I will try thee.
+ I will make thee boatswain of the schooner, and this girl here
+ shall be servant to my wife.'</p>
+
+ <p>"So Sipi became servant to Solepa, and I was sent on board
+ the schooner to help prepare her for sea. My new captain gave
+ us a house to live in, and every night I came on shore. Ah,
+ those were brave times, and Preston made much of me when he
+ found that I was a true man and did my work well, and would
+ stand no saucy words nor black looks from those of the
+ schooner's crew who thought that the boatswain should be a
+ white man.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ten days after the whaleships had sailed, the schooner was
+ ready for sea. We were to sail to the westward isles to trade
+ for oil and tortoiseshell, and then go to China, where Preston
+ thought to sell his cargo. On the eve of the day on which we
+ were to leave, the mate, who was an old and stupid Siamani,
+ <a href="#footnote_11" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[11]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ went ashore to my master's house, and I was left in charge of
+ the schooner. Sipi, my wife, was with me, and we sat together
+ in the stern of the ship, smoking our
+ <i>sului</i>
+
+ (cigarettes) and talking of the time when I
+<!-- Page 42 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page037" name="page037">[pg 37]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ should return and buy a piece of land from her father's people,
+ on which I should build a new house. There were six native
+ sailors on board, and these, as the night drew on, spread their
+ mats on the fore deck and went to sleep. Then Sipi and I went
+ into the cabin, which was on deck, and we too slept.</p>
+
+ <p>"How long we had slumbered I cannot tell, but suddenly we
+ were aroused by the sound of a great clamour on deck and the
+ groans and cries of dying men, and then ere we were well
+ awakened the cabin door was opened and Solepa was thrust
+ inside. Then the door was quickly closed and fastened on the
+ outside, and I heard Franka's voice calling out orders to hoist
+ sails and slip the cable.</p>
+
+ <p>"There was a lamp burning dimly in the cabin, and Sipi and I
+ ran to the aid of Solepa, who lay prone upon the floor as if
+ dead. Her dress was torn, and her hands and arms were scratched
+ and bleeding, so that Sipi wept as she leant over her and put
+ water to her lips. In a little while she opened her eyes, and
+ when she saw us a great sob broke from her bosom and she caught
+ my hand in hers and tried to speak.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, grog is a good thing. It is good for a weak, panting
+ woman when her strength is gone and her soul is terrified, and
+ it is good for an old man who is despised by his relations
+ because he is bitten with poverty. There was grog in a wicker
+ jar in the cabin. I gave her some in a glass, and then as the
+ dog Franka, whose soul and body are now in hell, was getting
+ the schooner under way, she told me that while she and Preston
+ were asleep the house was
+<!-- Page 43 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page038" name="page038">[pg 38]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ surrounded by a hundred or more of men from R&#333;an Kiti, led
+ by Franka. They burst in suddenly, and Franka and some others
+ rushed into their sleeping-room and she was torn away from her
+ husband and carried down to the beach.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Is thy husband dead?' I asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"'I cannot tell,' she said in a weak voice. 'I heard some
+ shots fired and saw him struggling with Franka's men. That is
+ all I know. If he is dead then shall I die too. Give me a
+ knife, so that I may die.'</p>
+
+ <p>"As she spoke the schooner began to move, and again we heard
+ Franka's voice calling out in English to some one to go forward
+ and con the ship whilst he steered, for the night was dark and
+ he, clever stealer of women as he was, did not know the passage
+ out through the reef, and trusted to those with him who knew
+ but little more. Then something came into my mind, and I took
+ Solepa's hand in mine.</p>
+
+ <p>"'I will save thee from this pig Franka,' I said quickly,
+ 'he shall never take thee away. Sit ye here with Sipi, and when
+ ye hear the schooner strike, spring ye both into the sea and
+ swim towards the two islands which are near.'</p>
+
+ <p>"In the centre of the deck cabin was a hatch which led into
+ the hold. There was no deck between, for the vessel was but
+ small. I took my knife from the sheath and then lifted the
+ hatch, descended, and crawled forward in the darkness to the
+ fore hatch, up which I crept very carefully, for I had much in
+ my mind. I saw a man standing up, holding on to the fore stay.
+ He was calling out to Franka every now
+<!-- Page 44 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page039" name="page039">[pg 39]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and then, telling him how to steer. I sprang up behind him, and
+ as I drove my knife into his back with my left hand, I struck
+ him with my right on his neck and he fell overboard. He was a
+ white man, I think for when my knife went into his back he
+ called out 'Oh Christ!' But then many native men who have mixed
+ with white people call out 'Oh, Christ,' just like white men
+ when they are drunk. Anyway, it does not matter now.</p>
+
+ <p>"But as I struck my knife into him, I called out in English
+ to put the helm hard down, for I saw that the schooner was very
+ near the reef on the starboard hand. Franka, who was at the
+ wheel, at once obeyed and was fooled, for the schooner, which
+ was now leaping and singing to the strong night wind from the
+ mountains smote suddenly upon the coral reef with a noise like
+ the felling of a great forest tree, and began to grind and tear
+ her timbers.</p>
+
+ <p>"Almost as she struck Solepa and Sipi stood by me, and
+ together we sprang overboard into the white surf ... Give me
+ some more grog, dear friend of my heart. I am no boaster, nor
+ am I a liar; but when I think of that swim to the shore through
+ the rolling seas with those two women, my belly cleaves to my
+ backbone and I become faint.... For the current was against us,
+ and neither Sipi nor Solepa were good swimmers, and many times
+ had we to clutch hold of the jagged coral, which tore our skins
+ so that our blood ran out freely, and had the sharks come to us
+ then I would not be here with thee to-night drinking this, thy
+ good sweet grog which thou givest me out of thy
+<!-- Page 45 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page040" name="page040">[pg 40]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ kind heart. T&#257;p&#257;! When I look into thy face and see
+ thy kind eyes, I am young again. I love thee, not alone because
+ thou hast been kind to me in my poverty and paid the fines of
+ my granddaughter when she hath committed adultery with the
+ young men of the village, but because thou hast seen many lands
+ and have upheld me before the teacher, who is a circumcised but
+ yet untatooed dog of a Samoan. A man who is not tatooed is no
+ better than a woman. He is a male harlot and should be
+ despised. He is only fit to associate with women, and has no
+ right to beget children....</p>
+
+ <p>"We three swam to the shore, and when the dawn came we saw
+ that the schooner stood high and dry on the reef and that
+ Franka and his men were trying to float her by throwing
+ overboard the iron ballast and putting a kedge anchor out upon
+ the lee side of the reef. And at the same time we saw three
+ boats put off from the mainland. These boats were all painted
+ white, and when I saw them I said to Solepa, 'Be of good heart.
+ Thy husband is not dead, for here are three of his boats
+ coming. He is not dead. He is coming to seek thee.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"The three boats came quickly towards the schooner, but ere
+ they reached her Franka and those with him got into the boats
+ in which they had boarded the vessel, and then we saw smoke
+ arise from the bow and stern.... They had set fire to the ship.
+ They were cowards. Fire is a great help to cowards, because in
+ the glare and dazzling light of burning houses or ships, when
+ the thunder of cannons and the
+<!-- Page 46 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page041" name="page041">[pg 41]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ rattle of rifles is heard, they can run about and kill
+ people.... I have seen these things done in Chili.... I have
+ seen men who would not stand and fight on board ship run away
+ on shore and slay women and children in their fury and
+ cowardice. No, they were not Englishmen; they were Spaniolas.
+ But the officers were Englishmen and Germans.
+ <i>They</i>
+
+ did not run away, they were killed. Brave men get killed and
+ cowards live. I am no coward though I am still alive. It is
+ quite proper that I should live, for I never ran away when
+ there was fighting to be done. I have only been a fool because
+ of my love for women. No one could say I was a coward, and no
+ one can say I am a fool, because I am too old now to be a
+ fool.</p>
+
+ <p>"As Franka and those with him left the burning schooner and
+ rowed towards the islands, the three boats from the shore
+ changed their course and followed him. Franka and his men were
+ the first to reach the land, and they quickly ran up the beach
+ and crouched behind the bushes which grew at high-water mark.
+ They all had guns, and Sipi and Solepa and I saw them waiting
+ to shoot. We were hiding amid the roots of a great banyan tree,
+ and could see well. As the boats drew near Solepa watched them
+ eagerly, and then began to weep and laugh at the same time when
+ she saw her husband Preston was steering the one which led. She
+ was a good woman. She loved her husband. I was pleased with
+ her, and told her to be of good cheer, for I was sure that
+ Preston and his people would kill Franka and those with him,
+ for as they rowed they made no noise. No one shouted nor
+<!-- Page 47 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page042" name="page042">[pg 42]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ challenged; they came on and on, and the white man Preston
+ stood up with the steer oar in his hand, and his face was as a
+ stone in which was set eyes of fire. When his boat was within
+ twenty fathoms of the beach the rowers ceased, and he held up
+ his hand to those who awaited his coming.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Listen to me, men of R&#333;an Kiti. We are as three to
+ one of ye, and ye are caught in a trap. Death is in my mouth if
+ I speak the word. Tell me, is my wife Solepa alive?'</p>
+
+ <p>"No one answered, but suddenly Franka stepped out from
+ behind the bushes and pointed his rifle at him, and was about
+ to pull the trigger when a young man of his party who was of
+ good heart seized him by the arm, and cried out 'twas a
+ coward's act; then two or three followed him, and together they
+ bore Franka down upon the sand; and one of them cried out to
+ Preston&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"'This is a wrong business. We were led astray by this man.
+ We are no cowards, and have no ill-will to thee. Thy wife is
+ alive. She swam ashore with two others when the ship struck.
+ Are we dead men?'</p>
+
+ <p>"Then, ere Preston could answer, Solepa leapt out from
+ beneath the banyan tree and ran through the men of R&#333;an
+ Kiti towards the beach, and cried&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"'Oh, my husband, for the love of God let no blood be shed!
+ I am well and unharmed. Spare these people and spare even this
+ man Franka, for he is mad!'</p>
+
+ <p>"Then Preston leapt out of the boat and put his
+<!-- Page 48 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page043" name="page043">[pg 43]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ arms around her waist and kissed her, and then put her aside,
+ and called to every one around him&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"'These are my words,' he said. 'I am a man of peace, but
+ this man Franka is a robber and a dog, and hath stolen upon me
+ in the night and slain my people, and his hands are reddened
+ with blood. And he hath put foul dishonour on me by stealing
+ Solepa my wife, and carrying her away from my house as if she
+ were a slave or a harlot. And there is no room here for such a
+ man to live unless he be a better man than I. But I am no
+ murderer. So stand aside all! Let him rise and rest awhile, and
+ then shall we two fight, man to man. Either he or I must
+ die.'</p>
+
+ <p>"Then many men of both sides came to him and said, 'Let this
+ thing be finished. You are a strong man. Take this robber and
+ slay him as you would slay a pig.' But he put them aside, and
+ said he would fight him man to man, as Englishmen fought.</p>
+
+ <p>"So when Franka was rested two cutlasses were brought, and
+ the two men stood face to face on the sand. I kept close to
+ Franka, for I meant to stab him if I could, but Preston angrily
+ bade me stand back. Then the two crossed their swords together
+ and began to fight. It was a great fight, but it did not last
+ long, for Preston soon ran his sword through Franka's chest. I
+ saw it come out through his back. But as he fell and Preston
+ bent over him he thrust his cutlass into Preston's stomach and
+ worked it to and fro. Then Preston fell on him, and they died
+ together.</p>
+
+ <p>"There was no more bloodshed. Solepa and Sipi and I dressed
+ the dead man in his best clothes, and the
+<!-- Page 49 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page044" name="page044">[pg 44]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ R&#333;an Kiti men dressed Franka in his best clothes, and a
+ great funeral feast was made, and we buried them together on
+ the little island. And Solepa went back again to Honolulu in a
+ whaleship. She was young and fair, and should have soon found
+ another husband. I do not know. But Sipi was a fine wife to
+ me."</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 50 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page045" name="page045">[pg 45]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='The_Fisher_Folk_of_Nukufetau'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>The Fisher Folk of Nukufetau</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>Early one morning, about a week after I had settled down on
+ Nukufetau as a trader, I opened my chest of fishing-gear and
+ began to overhaul it. In a few minutes I was surrounded by an
+ eager and interested group of natives, who examined everything
+ with the greatest curiosity.</p>
+
+ <p>Now for the preceding twelve months I had been living on the
+ little island of Nanomaga, a day's sail from Nukufetau; and
+ between Nanomaga and Nukufetau there was a great bitterness of
+ long standing&#8212;the Nanomagans claimed to be the most
+ daring canoe-men and expert fishermen in all the eight isles of
+ the Ellice Group, and the people of Nukufetau resented the
+ claim strongly. The feeling had been accentuated by my good
+ friend the Samoan teacher on Nanomaga, himself an ardent
+ fisherman, writing to his brother minister on Nukufetau and
+ informing him that although I was not a high-class Christian I
+ was all right in all other respects, and a good
+ fisherman&#8212;"all that he did not know we have taught him,
+ therefore," he added slyly, "let your young men watch him so
+ that they may learn how to fish in deep and rough
+<!-- Page 51 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page046" name="page046">[pg 46]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ water, such as ours." These remarks were of course duly made
+ public, and caused much indignation, neither the minister nor
+ his flock liking the gibe about the deep, rough water; also the
+ insinuation that anything about fishing was to be learnt from
+ the new white man was annoying and uncalled for.</p>
+
+ <p>I must here mention that the natives of De Peyster's Island
+ (Nukufetau) caught all the fish they wanted in the smooth and
+ spacious waters of the lagoon, and were not fond of venturing
+ outside the barrier reef, except during the bonito season, or
+ when the sea was very calm at night, to catch flying-fish.
+ Then, too, the currents outside the reef were swift and
+ dangerous, and the canoes had either to be carried a long
+ distance over the coral or paddled a couple of miles across the
+ lagoon to the ship passage before the open sea was gained.
+ Hudson's Island (Nanomaga)&#8212;a tiny spot less than four
+ miles in circumference&#8212;had no lagoon, and all fishing was
+ done in the deep water of the ocean. The natives were used to
+ launching their canoes, year in and year out, to face the
+ wildest surf, and were, in consequence, wonderfully expert, and
+ in the history of the island there is only one instance of a
+ man having been drowned. The De Peyster people, by reason of
+ the advantage of their placid lagoon, had no reason to risk
+ their lives in the surf in this manner, and so, naturally
+ enough, they were not nearly as skilful in the management of
+ their frail canoes when they had to face a sweeping sea on the
+ outer or ocean reef.</p>
+
+ <p>Just as I was placing some coils of heavy, deep-sea
+<!-- Page 52 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page047" name="page047">[pg 47]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ lines upon the matted floor, Mar&#232;ko the native teacher,
+ fat, jovial, and bubbling-voiced, entered in a great hurry, and
+ hardly giving himself time to shake hands with me, announced in
+ a tone of triumph, that a body of
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ (baby bonito) had just entered the passage and were making
+ their way up the lagoon.</p>
+
+ <p>In less than ten seconds every man, woman, and child on the
+ island, except the teacher and myself, were agog with
+ excitement and bawling and shouting as they rushed to the beach
+ to launch and man the canoes, the advent of the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ having been expected for some days. In nearly all the
+ equatorial islands of the Pacific these beautiful little fish
+ make their appearance every year almost to a day, with
+ unvarying regularity. They remain in the smooth waters of
+ lagoons for about two weeks, swimming about in incredible
+ numbers, and apparently so terrified of their many enemies in
+ their own element, and the savage, keen-eyed frigate birds
+ which constantly assail them from above, that they sometimes
+ crowd into small pools on the inner reef, and when the tide is
+ low, seek to hide themselves by lying in thick masses under the
+ overhanging ledges of coral rock. Simultaneously&#8212;or at
+ least within a day or two at most&#8212;the swarming millions
+ of
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ are followed into the lagoons by the
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ &#8212;a large black and grey rock-cod (much esteemed by the
+ natives for the delicacy of its flavour) and great numbers of
+ enormous eels. At other times of the year both the
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ and the eels are never or but rarely seen inside the lagoons,
+ but are occasionally caught outside the reef at a good
+ depth&#8212;forty to sixty
+<!-- Page 53 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page048" name="page048">[pg 48]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ fathoms. As soon, however, as the young bonito appear, both
+ eels and rock-cod change their normal habits, and entering the
+ lagoons through the passages thereto, they take up their
+ quarters in the deeper parts&#8212;places which are fringed by
+ a labyrinthine border of coral forest, and are at most ten
+ fathoms deep. Here, when the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ are covering the surface above, the eels and rock-cod actually
+ rise to the surface and play havoc among them, especially
+ during moonlight nights, and in the daytime both rock-cod and
+ eels may be seen pursuing their hapless prey in the very
+ shallowest water, amidst the little pools and runnels of the
+ coral reef. It is at this time that the natives of Nukufetau
+ and some other islands have some glorious sport, for in
+ addition to the huge eels and rock-cod many other deep-sea fish
+ flock into the shallower lagoon waters&#8212;all in pursuit of
+ the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ &#8212;and all eager to take the hook.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>As soon as the natives had left the house, Mar&#232;ko
+ turned to me with a beaming smile. "Let them go on first and
+ net some
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ for us for bait," he said, "you and I shall follow in my own
+ canoe and fish for
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ . It will be a great thing for one of us to catch the first
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ of the season. Yesterday, when I was over there," pointing to
+ two tiny islets within the lagoon, "I saw some
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ . The natives laugh at me and say I am mistaken&#8212;that
+ because the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ had not come there could be no
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ . Now,
+ <i>I</i>
+
+ think that the big fish came in some days ago, but the strong
+<!-- Page 54 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page049" name="page049">[pg 49]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ wind and current kept the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ outside till now. Come."</p>
+
+ <p>I needed no pressing. In five minutes I had my basket of
+ lines (of white American cotton) ready, and joined Mar&#232;ko.
+ His canoe (the best on the island, of course) was already in
+ the water and manned by his two sons, boys of eight and twelve
+ respectively. I sat for'ard, the two youngsters amidships, the
+ father took the post of honour as
+ <i>tautai</i>
+
+ or steersman, and with a chuckle of satisfaction from the boys,
+ off we went in the wake of about thirty other canoes.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, the delight of urging a light canoe over the glassy
+ water of an island lagoon, and watching the changing colours
+ and strange, grotesque shapes of the coral trees and plants of
+ the garden beneath as they vanish swiftly astern, and the quick
+
+ <i>chip, chip</i>
+
+ of the flashing paddles sends the whirling, noisy eddies to
+ right and left, and frights the lazy, many-hued rock-fish into
+ the darker depths beneath! On, on, till the half mile or more
+ of shallow water which covers the inner reef is passed, and
+ then suddenly you shoot over the top of the submarine wall,
+ into deepest, loveliest blue, full thirty fathoms deep, and as
+ calm and quiet as an infant sleeping on its mother's bosom,
+ though perhaps not a quarter of a mile away on either hand the
+ long rollers of the Pacific are bellowing and thundering on the
+ grim black shelves of the weather coast.</p>
+
+ <p>So it was on this morning, but with added delights and
+ beauties; as instead of striking straight across the lagoon to
+ our rendezvous we had to skirt the beaches
+<!-- Page 55 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page050" name="page050">[pg 50]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of a chain of thickly wooded islets, which gave forth a sweet
+ smell, mingled with the odours of
+ <i>nono</i>
+
+ blossoms; for during the night rain had fallen after a long
+ month of dry weather, and Nature was breathing with joy. High
+ overhead there floated some snow-white tropic birds&#8212;those
+ gentle, ethereal creatures which, to the toil-spent seaman who
+ watches their mysterious poise in illimitable space, seem to
+ denote the greater Mystery and Rest that lieth beyond all
+ things; and lower down, and sweeping swiftly to and fro with
+ steady, outspread wing and long, forked tail, the fierce-eyed,
+ savage frigate birds scanned the surface of the water in search
+ of prey, and then finding it not, rose without apparent motion
+ to the cloudless canopy of blue and became as but tiny black
+ specks&#8212;and then,
+ <i>swish</i>
+
+ ! and the tiny black specks which but a minute ago were high in
+ heaven are flashing by your cheeks with a weird, whistling
+ sound like winged spectres. You look for them. They are gone.
+ Already they are a thousand feet overhead. Five of them. And
+ all five are as motionless as if they, with their wide,
+ outspread wings, had never moved from their present position
+ for a thousand years.</p>
+
+ <p>"Chip, chip," and "chunk, chunk," go our paddles as we now
+ head eastward towards the rising sun in whose resplendent rays
+ the tufted palms of the two islets stand clearly out,
+ silhouetted against the sea rim beyond. Now and again we hear,
+ as from a long, long distance, the echoes of the voices of the
+ people in the canoes ahead; a soft white mist began to gather
+ over and then ascend from the water, and as we drew near
+<!-- Page 56 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page051" name="page051">[pg 51]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the islets the occasional thunder of the serf on Motuluga Reef
+ we heard awhile ago changed into a monotonous droning hum.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>Aue</i>
+
+ !" said Mar&#232;ko the
+ <i>tautai</i>
+
+ , with a laugh, as he ceased paddling and laid his paddle
+ athwartships, "'tis like to be a hot day and calm. So much the
+ better for our fishing, for the water will be very clear. Boy,
+ give me a coconut to drink."</p>
+
+ <p>"Take some whisky with it, Mar&#232;ko," I said, taking a
+ flask out of my basket.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>Isa</i>
+
+ ! Shame upon you! How can you say such a thing to me, a
+ minister!" And then he added, with a reproachful look, "and my
+ children here, too." He would have winked, but he dared not do
+ so, for one of his boys had turned his face aft and was facing
+ him. I, however, made him a hurried gesture which he quite
+ understood. Good old Mar&#232;ko! He was an honest,
+ generous-hearted, broad-minded fellow, but terribly afraid of
+ his tyrannical deacons, who objected to him smoking even in the
+ seclusion of his own curatage, and otherwise bullied and
+ worried him into behaving exactly as they thought he
+ should.</p>
+
+ <p>By the time we reached the islets the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ catching had begun, and more than a hundred natives were
+ encircling a considerable area of water with finely-meshed nets
+ and driving the fish shoreward upon a small sandy beach, where
+ they were scooped up in gleaming masses of shining blue and
+ silver by a number of women and children, who tumbled over and
+ pushed each other aside amidst much laughter and merriment.</p>
+
+ <p>On the larger of the two islets were a few thatched
+<!-- Page 57 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page052" name="page052">[pg 52]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ huts with open sides. One of these was reserved for the
+ missionary and the white man, and hauling our canoe up on the
+ beach at the invitation of the people, we sat down under a shed
+ whilst the women grilled us some of the freshly-caught fish.
+ This took barely over ten minutes, as fires had already been
+ lighted by the children. The absence of bread was made up for
+ by the flesh of half-grown coconuts and cooked
+ <i>puraka</i>
+
+ &#8212;gigantic species of taro which thrives well in the sandy
+ soil of the Equatorial islands of the Pacific. Just as we had
+ finished eating and were preparing our lines we heard loud
+ cries from the natives who were still engaged among the
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ , and three or four of them seizing spears began chasing what
+ were evidently some large fish. Presently one of them darted
+ his weapon, and then gave a loud cry of triumph, as he leapt
+ into the water and dragged out a large salmon-like fish called
+ "utu", which was at once brought ashore for my inspection. The
+ man who had struck it&#8212;an active, wiry old fellow named
+ Viliamu (William) was panting with excitement. Some large
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ , he said, had just made their appearance with the
+ <i>utu</i>
+
+ and were pursuing the small fish; therefore would we please
+ hurry forward with our preparations. Then the leader of the
+ entire party stood up and bellowed out in bull-like tones his
+ instructions. The canoes were all to start together, and when
+ the ground was reached all lines were to be lowered
+ simultaneously; there was to be no crowding. The white man and
+ missionary, however, if they wished, could start first and make
+ a choice of position.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no," I said, "let us all start fair."</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 58 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page053" name="page053">[pg 53]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ This was greeted with a chorus of approval, and then leaving
+ the women and children to attend to the camp, we hurried back
+ to the canoes. Just as we were leaving the hut I had a look at
+ the
+ <i>utu</i>
+
+ &#8212;a fish I had never before seen. It was about three feet
+ in length, and only for its head (which was coarse and clumsy)
+ much like a heavy salmon. The back was covered with light green
+ scales, the sides and belly a pure silver, and the fins and
+ tail tipped with yellow. It weighed about 20 lbs., and
+ presented a very handsome appearance.</p>
+
+ <p>The fishing-ground to which we were now paddling was not
+ half a mile from the islets, and lay between them and the outer
+ reef which formed its northern boundary. It consisted of a
+ series of deep channels or connected pools running or situated
+ amidst a network of minor reefs, the surfaces of which were,
+ for the most part, bare at low water. Generally the depth was
+ from eight to ten fathoms; in places, however, it was much
+ deeper, and I subsequently found that there were spots whereon
+ I could stand (on the coral ledge) and drop my line into chasms
+ of thirty-two or thirty-three fathoms. Here the water was
+ almost as blue to the eye as the ocean, and here the very
+ largest fish resorted&#8212;such as the
+ <i>pura</i>
+
+ , a species of rock-cod, and a blue-scaled groper, the native
+ name of which I cannot now recall.</p>
+
+ <p>It must have been nearly ten o'clock when the canoes were
+ all in position, and the word was given to let go lines. The
+ particular spot in which we were congregated was about three
+ acres in extent and about
+<!-- Page 59 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page054" name="page054">[pg 54]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ seven fathoms in depth, with water as clear as crystal; and
+ even the dullest eye could discern the smallest pebble or piece
+ of broken coral lying upon the bottom, which was generally
+ composed of patches of coarse sand surrounded by an interlacing
+ fringe of growing coral, or white, blue, or yellow boulders. A
+ glance over the side showed us that the
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ had arrived; we could see numbers of them swimming lazily to
+ and fro beneath, awaiting the flowing tide which would soon
+ cover the lagoon from one shore to the other with swarms of
+ young bonito, as they swam about in search of such places as
+ that in which we were now about to begin fishing.</p>
+
+ <p>Each man had baited his hook with the third of an
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ &#8212;at this stage of their life about four inches long and
+ exactly the colour and shape of a young mackerel&#8212;and
+ within five minutes after ""
+ <i>Tu'u tau kafa</i>
+
+ !" ("Let go lines!") had been called out several of the canoes
+ around our own began to pull up fish&#8212;four to six
+ pounders. I was fishing with a white cotton line, with two
+ hooks, and Mar&#232;ko with the usual native gear&#8212;a
+ hand-made line of hibiscus bark with a barbless hook made from
+ a long wire nail, with its point ground fine and well-curved
+ inwards. We both struck fish at the same moment, and I knew by
+ the zigzag pull that I had two. Up they came
+ together&#8212;three spotted beauties about eighteen inches in
+ length and weighing over 5 lbs. each. Then I found the
+ advantage of the native style of hook; Mar&#232;ko simply put
+ his left thumb and forefinger into the fish's eye, had his hook
+ free in a moment, had baited,
+<!-- Page 60 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page055" name="page055">[pg 55]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ lowered again and was pulling up another before I had succeeded
+ in freeing even my first hook which was firmly fixed in the
+ fish's gullet, out of sight. I soon put myself on a more even
+ footing by cutting off the small one and a half inch hooks I
+ had been using and bending on two thick and long-shanked four
+ inchers. These answered beautifully, as although the barbs
+ caused me some trouble, their stout shanks afforded a good grip
+ and leverage when extracting them from the hard and
+ keen-toothed jaws of the struggling fish. Then, too, I had
+ another advantage over my companions; I was wearing a pair of
+ seaboots which effectually protected my feet from either the
+ terrible fins or the teeth of the fish in the bottom of the
+ canoe.</p>
+
+ <p>I had caught my eighth fish, when an outcry came from a
+ canoe near us, as a young man who was seated on the for'ard
+ thwart rose to his feet and began hauling in his line, which
+ was standing straight up and down, taut as an iron bar, the
+ canoe meanwhile spinning round and round although the steersman
+ used all his efforts to keep her steady.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is it, Tuluia?" called out fifty voices at once. "A
+ shark?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My mother's bones!" said old Viliamu with a laugh of
+ contempt. "'Tis an eel, and Tuluia, who was asleep, has let it
+ twist its tail around a piece of coral. May he lose it for his
+ stupidity."</p>
+
+ <p>We all ceased fishing to watch, and half a dozen men began
+ jeering at the lad, who was too excited to heed them. Old
+ Viliamu, who was in the next canoe, looked down, and then cried
+ out that he could see the
+<!-- Page 61 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page056" name="page056">[pg 56]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ eel, which had taken several turns of its body around a thick
+ branch of growing coral.</p>
+
+ <p>"His head is up," he called out to the youth, "but you
+ cannot move him, he has too many turns in and out among the
+ coral." Then paddling up alongside he again looked at the
+ struggling creature, then felt the line which was vibrating
+ with the tension. Stepping out of his own craft into that of
+ the young man, the line was placed in his hands without an inch
+ of it being payed out, for once one of these giant eels can get
+ his head down he will so quickly twine the line in and out
+ among the rugged coral that it is soon chafed through, if of
+ ordinary thickness. But the ancient knew his work well, as we
+ were soon to see. Taking a turn of the line well up on his
+ forearm and grasping it with his right a yard lower down, he
+ waited for a second or two, then suddenly bent his body till
+ his face nearly touched the water, then he sprang erect and
+ with lightning-like rapidity began to haul in hand
+ <i>under</i>
+
+ hand
+ <a href="#footnote_12" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[12]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ amid loud cries of approval as the wriggling body of the eel
+ was seen ascending clear of the coral. The moment it reached
+ the surface, a second native, with unerring aim sent a spear
+ through it and then a blow or two upon the head with a club
+ carried for the purpose took all further fight out of the
+ creature, which was then lifted out of the water and dropped
+ into the canoe. Here the end of its tail was quickly split open
+ and we saw no more of him for the time being.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 62 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page057" name="page057">[pg 57]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ To capture an eel so soon was looked upon as a lucky omen, to
+ have lost it would have been a presage of ill-fortune for the
+ rest of the day, and the incident put every one in high good
+ humour. By this time the tide was flowing over the flatter
+ parts of the reef and young bonito could be seen jumping out of
+ the water in all directions. Immense bodies were, so I was
+ assured by the natives, now coming into the lagoon from the
+ sea, and would continue to do so till the tide turned, when
+ those in the passage, unable to face a six-knot current, would
+ be carried out again, to make another attempt later on.</p>
+
+ <p>By this time every canoe was hauling in large rock-cod
+ almost as quick as the lines could be baited, and the bottom of
+ our own craft presented a gruesome sight&#8212;a lather of
+ blood and froth and kicking fish, some of which were over 20
+ lbs. weight. Telling the two boys to cease fishing awhile and
+ stun some of the liveliest, I unthinkingly began to bale out
+ some of the ensanguined water, when a score of indignant voices
+ bade me cease. Did I want to bring all the sharks in the world
+ around us? I was asked; and old Viliamu, who was a sarcastic
+ old gentleman, made a mock apology for me&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"How should he know any better? The sharks of Tokelau have
+ no teeth, like the people there, for they too are eaters of
+ <i>fala</i>
+
+ ."</p>
+
+ <p>This evoked a sally of laughter, in which of course I
+ joined. I must explain that the natives of the Tokelau
+<!-- Page 63 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page058" name="page058">[pg 58]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Group, among whom I had lived, through constantly chewing the
+ tough drupes of the fruit of the
+ <i>fala</i>
+
+ (pandanus palm) wear out their teeth prematurely, and are
+ sometimes termed "toothless" by other natives of the South
+ Pacific. However, I was to have my own little joke at Viliamu's
+ expense later on.</p>
+
+ <p>Just at this time a sudden squall, accompanied by torrents
+ of rain, came down upon us from the eastward, and whilst
+ Mar&#232;ko and his boys kept us head to wind&#8212;none of the
+ canoes were anchored&#8212;I took the opportunity of getting
+ ready two of my own lines, each treble-hooked, for the boys.
+ Their own were old and rotten, and had parted so often that
+ they were now too short to be of use, and, besides that, the
+ few remaining hooks of soft wire were too small. As soon as the
+ squall was over I showed Mar&#232;ko what I had done. He nodded
+ and smiled, but said I should try and break off the
+ barbs&#8212;his boys did not understand them as well as
+ native-made hooks. This was quickly accomplished with a heavy
+ knife, and the youngsters began to haul up fish two and three
+ at a time at such a rate that the canoe soon became deep in the
+ water outside and very full inside.</p>
+
+ <p>"A few more, Mar&#232;ko," I said, "and then we'll go
+ ashore, unload, and come back again. I want to tease that old
+ man."</p>
+
+ <p>We caught all we could possibly carry in another quarter of
+ an hour, and I was confident that our take exceeded that of any
+ other canoe. This was because the natives would carefully watch
+ their stone sinkers descend, and use every care to keep them
+ from being
+<!-- Page 64 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page059" name="page059">[pg 59]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ entangled in the coral, whilst my line, which had a 12 oz.
+ leaden sinker, would plump quickly to the bottom in the midst
+ of the hungry fish; consequently, although I lost some hooks by
+ fouling and now and then dragged up a bunch of coral, I was
+ catching more fish than any one else. And I was not going to
+ let my reputation suffer for the sake of a few hooks. So we
+ coiled up our lines on the outrigger platform, and taking up
+ our paddles headed shoreward, taking care to pass near
+ Viliamu's canoe. He hailed me and asked me for a pipe of
+ tobacco.</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall give it to you when we return," I said.</p>
+
+ <p>"When you return! Why, where are you going?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"On shore, you silly old woman! I have been showing these
+ boys how to fish for
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ , and we go because the canoe is sinking. When we return these
+ two
+ <i>tamariki</i>
+
+ (infants) shall show
+ <i>you</i>
+
+ how to fish now that they have learnt from me."</p>
+
+ <p>There was a loud laugh at this, and as the old man took the
+ jest very good-naturedly I brought up alongside, showed him our
+ take, and gave him a stick of tobacco. The astonishment of
+ himself and his crew of three at the quantity of fish we had
+ afforded me much satisfaction, though I could not help feeling
+ that our luck was not due to my own skill alone.</p>
+
+ <p>Returning to the islets we were just in time to escape two
+ fierce squalls, which lasted half an hour and raised such a sea
+ that the remaining canoes began to follow us, as they were
+ unable to keep on the ground. During our absence the women and
+ children
+<!-- Page 65 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page060" name="page060">[pg 60]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ had been most industrious; the weather-worn, dilapidated huts
+ had been made habitable with freshly-plaited
+ <i>kapaus</i>
+
+ &#8212;coarse mats of green coconut leaves, the floors covered
+ with clean white pebbles, sleeping mats in readiness, and heaps
+ of young drinking nuts piled up in every corner, whilst outside
+ smoke was arising from a score of ground ovens in which taro
+ and puraka were being cooked, together with bundles of
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ wrapped in leaves.</p>
+
+ <p>Etiquette forbade Mar&#232;ko and myself counting our fish
+ until the rest of the party returned, although the women had
+ taken them out of the canoe and laid them on the beach, where
+ the pouring rain soon washed them clean and showed them in all
+ their shining beauty. Among them were two or three
+ parrot-fish&#8212;rich carmine, striped with bands of bright
+ yellow, boneless fins, and long protruding teeth in the upper
+ jaw showing out from the thick, fleshy lips; and one
+ <i>afulu</i>
+
+ &#8212;a species of deep-water sand mullet with purple scales
+ and yellow fins.</p>
+
+ <p>Whilst awaiting the rest of the canoes I drew the teacher
+ into our hut and pressed him to take some whisky. He was wet,
+ cold, and shivering, but resolutely declined to take any. "I
+ should like to drink a little," he said frankly, "but I must
+ not. I cannot drink it in secret, and yet I must not set a bad
+ example. Do not ask me, please. But if you like to give some to
+ the old men do so, but only a very little." I did do so. As
+ soon as the rest of the party landed I called up four of the
+ oldest men and gave each of them a stiff nip. They were all
+ nude to the waist, and like all
+<!-- Page 66 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page061" name="page061">[pg 61]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Polynesians who have been exposed to a cold rain squall, were
+ shivering and miserable. After each man had taken his nip and
+ emitted a deep sigh of satisfaction I observed that hundreds of
+ old white men saved their lives by taking a glass of spirits
+ when they were wet through&#8212;they had to do so by the
+ doctor's orders.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is true," said one old fellow; "when men grow old, and
+ the rain falls upon them it does not run off their skins as it
+ would from the smooth skins of young men. It gets into the
+ wrinkles and stays there. But when the belly is warmed with
+ grog a man does not feel the cold."</p>
+
+ <p>"True," I said gravely, as I poured some whisky out for
+ myself; "true, quite true, my dear friends. And in these
+ islands it is very bad for an old man to be exposed to much
+ rain. That is why I am disturbed in my mind. See, there is
+ Mar&#232;ko, your minister. He, like you, is old; he is wet and
+ cold. And he shivers. And he will not take a mouthful of this
+ <i>rom</i>
+
+ because he fears scandal. Now if he should become ill and die I
+ should be a disgraced man. This
+ <i>rom</i>
+
+ is now not
+ <i>rom</i>
+
+ ; it is medicine. And Mar&#232;ko should take some even as you
+ have taken it&#8212;to keep away danger."</p>
+
+ <p>The four old fellows arose to the occasion. They talked
+ earnestly together for a minute, and then formed themselves
+ into a committee, requested me to head them as a deputation
+ with the whisky, and then waited upon their pastor, who was
+ putting on a dry shirt in another hut. I am glad to say that
+ under our united
+<!-- Page 67 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page062" name="page062">[pg 62]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ protests he at last consented to save his life, and felt much
+ better.</p>
+
+ <p>Presently the women announced that the ovens were ready to
+ be opened. As soon as the fish were counted, and the rain
+ having ceased, we all gathered round the canoes and watched
+ each one emptied of its load. As I imagined, our party had
+ taken the most fish, and not only the most, but the heaviest as
+ well. Mar&#232;ko added to my blushing honours by informing the
+ company that as a fisherman and a knowledgable man generally I
+ justified his brother minister's opinion and would prove an
+ acquisition to the community. We then inspected the first eel
+ caught, and a truly huge creature it was, quite nine feet in
+ length, and in girth at its thickest part, as near as I could
+ guess with a piece of line, thirty inches. The line with which
+ it was caught was made of new four-stranded coir-cinnet, as
+ thick as a stout lead pencil, and the hook a piece of 3/6 or
+ 1/2 inch iron with a 6-inch shank, once used as a fish spear,
+ without a barb! The natives seemed much pleased at the interest
+ displayed, and told me that sometimes these eels grew to
+ <i>elua gafa</i>
+
+ (
+ <i>i.e.</i>
+
+ , two fathoms), but were seldom caught, and asked me if I had
+ tackle strong enough for such. Later on I showed them a
+ 27-stranded American cotton line 100 fathoms long, with a
+ 4-inch hook, curved in the shank, as thick as a pencil, and
+ "eyed" for a twisted wire snooding. They had never seen such
+ beautiful tackle before, and were loud in their expressions of
+ admiration, but thought the line too thin for a very heavy
+ fish. I told them that at Nanomaga I had caught
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ (a nocturnal feeding
+<!-- Page 68 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page063" name="page063">[pg 63]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ fish of great size) in over sixty fathoms with that same
+ line.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is true," said one of them politely, "we were told
+ that you and Tiaki (one Jack O'Brien, an old trader) of
+ Funafuti have caught many
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ with your long lines; but the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ is a weak fish even when he is a fathom long. And as he comes
+ up he grows weaker and weaker, and sometimes he bursts open
+ when he comes to the surface. Now if a big eel&#8212;an eel two
+ fathoms long&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>"If he was three fathoms long he could not break this line,"
+ I replied positively.</p>
+
+ <p>They laughed and told me that when I hooked even a small
+ eel, one half a fathom in length, I would change my
+ opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after our midday meal was over, and we were preparing
+ to return to our fishing-ground with an ample supply of fresh
+ bait, the sky to windward became black and threatening, and
+ through the breaks in the long line of palms on the weather
+ side of the island, which permitted the horizon to be viewed,
+ we could see that a squall of unusual violence was coming. All
+ the canoes were at once hauled up on the lee-side of the
+ islets, the huts were secured by ropes as quickly as possible,
+ and every one hurried under shelter. In a few minutes the wind
+ was blowing with astonishing fury, and the air was full of
+ leaves, sticks, and other
+ <i>d&#233;bris</i>
+
+ , whilst the coco-palms and other trees on the islets seemed
+ likely to be torn up by the roots. This lasted about ten
+ minutes. Then came a sudden lull, followed by a terrific and
+ deafening downpour of rain;
+<!-- Page 69 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page064" name="page064">[pg 64]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ then more wind, another downpour, and the sun was out
+ again!</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as the squall was over, I walked round to the
+ weather side of the islet with some children. We found the
+ beach covered with some thousands of
+ <i>atuli</i>
+
+ and beautiful little garfish which had been driven on shore by
+ the force of the wind. We were soon joined by women carrying
+ baskets, which they filled with fish and carried back to the
+ camp. On returning, we again launched the canoes and started
+ off again&#8212;to meet with some disappointment, for although
+ the
+ <i>gatala</i>
+
+ still bit freely and several eels were also taken, some scores
+ of the small, pestilent, lagoon sharks were swimming about and
+ played havoc with our lines. These torments are from two to
+ four feet in length, and their mouths, which are quite out of
+ proportion to their insignificant size, are set with rows of
+ teeth of razor-like keenness. The moment a baited hook was seen
+ one of these little wretches would dart at it like lightning,
+ and generally bit the line through just above the hook. So
+ quick were they, that one could seldom even feel a tug unless
+ the hook got fast in their jaws. Taking off my sinker, and
+ bending on a big hook with a wire snood, I abandoned myself to
+ their destruction, and as fast as I hauled one alongside it was
+ stunned, cut into three or four pieces, and thrown overboard to
+ be devoured by its fellows. Many of the Ellice and Tokelau
+ islanders regard these young sharks as a delicacy, as their
+ flesh is very tender, and has not the usual unpleasant smell.
+ In one of these young sea lawyers we found no less than
+<!-- Page 70 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page065" name="page065">[pg 65]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ five hooks, with pieces of line attached; these were duly
+ restored to their owners.</p>
+
+ <p>Another two hours passed, during which we had fairly good
+ sport, then the rain began to fall so heavily that we gave up
+ for the day. We spent the first part of the evening in the
+ huts, eating, smoking, and talking, and overhauling our tackle
+ for the next day. It had been intended that about midnight we
+ should all go crayfishing in the shallow waters along the shore
+ of the islets, but this idea had to be abandoned in consequence
+ of the rain having soaked the coco palms&#8212;the dead
+ branches of which are rolled and plaited into a cylindrical
+ form and used as torches. The method of catching crayfish is
+ very simple: a number of men, each carrying a
+ <i>kaulama</i>
+
+ torch about 6 feet in length in the left hand, and a small
+ scoop net in the right, walk waist-high through the water; the
+ crayfish, dazed by the brilliant light, are whipped up into the
+ nets and dropped into baskets carried by the women and children
+ who follow. They can only be caught on dark, moonless
+ nights.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>When we returned to the village our spoils included besides
+ a great number of fish, a few turtle and some young frigate
+ birds. The latter were captured for the purpose of being tamed.
+ I made many subsequent visits to the two islets, sometimes
+ alone and sometimes with my native friends, and on each
+ occasion I left these lovely little spots with a keen feeling
+ of regret, for they are ideal resting-places to him who
+ possesses a love of nature and the soul of a fisherman.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 71 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page066" name="page066">[pg 66]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='Mrs_MacLaggans_quotBillyquot'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>Mrs. MacLaggan's "Billy"</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>When Tom Denison was quite a young man he was earning a not
+ too dishonest sort of a living as supercargo of a leaky old
+ ketch owned by Mrs. Molly MacLaggan of Samoa, which in those
+ days was the Land of Primeval Wickedness and Original and
+ Imported Sin, Strong Drink, and Loose Fish generally. Captain
+ "Bully" Hayes also lived in Samoa; his house and garden
+ adjoined that of Mrs. MacLaggan, and at the back there was a
+ galvanised iron cottage, inhabited by a drunken French
+ carpenter named Leger, whose wife was a full-blooded negress,
+ and made kava for Denison and "Bully" every evening, and used
+ to beat Billy MacLaggan on the head with a pole about six times
+ a day, and curse him vigorously in mongrel Martinique French.
+ Billy MacLaggan was Mrs. Molly's male goat, and as notorious in
+ Samoa as Bully Hayes himself.</p>
+
+ <p>I want to try and tell this story as clearly as possible,
+ but there are so many people concerned, and so many things
+ which really happened together, though each one seemed to come
+ before the other a little and try and get into the general
+ jumble, and
+<!-- Page 72 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page067" name="page067">[pg 67]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ every one was so confused, some fatuous people blaming the
+ goat, and some Denison, who was generally disliked by the
+ Germans, while Mrs. Molly said it was caused by the man with
+ the bucket of milk, and Captain Hayes who had bribed him to do
+ it, and nearly caused bloodshed, as the German officer who was
+ insulted by Hayes had shot a lot of people in duels, or if he
+ had not shot them he had stuck his sword into them in fifteen
+ places, more or less.</p>
+
+ <p>Now let me explain: First of all there was Mrs. Molly, who
+ was the hostess; then there was Hamilton, the Apia pilot and
+ his wife; the manager of the big German firm at Matafale (he
+ wore gold spectacles, and was very fond of Mrs. Molly, who was
+ a widow); then there was Bully Hayes, and old Coe the American
+ consul, and young Denison; all these were some of the local
+ guests, and lived in Samoa, the rest were officers from a
+ German man-of-war lying in port, and the usual respectable town
+ loafers. Then there were Leger, the bibulous carpenter; '
+ <i>Liza,</i>
+
+ his black wife; a white policeman named Thady O'Brien, and a
+ loafing scoundrel of a Samoan named Mataiasi, called "Matty"
+ for brevity, who was the public flogger, and milked Mrs.
+ MacLaggan's herd of seven imported Australian cows; and lastly
+ the goat, and about thirty or forty of Bully Hayes's crew, and
+ as many Samoans, who came to look at the dancing and see what
+ they could steal, Leger and his wife and the policeman and the
+ town flogger had charge of the refreshment tables, which for
+ the sake of coolness had been laid out upon the wide, back
+ verandah,
+<!-- Page 73 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page068" name="page068">[pg 68]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and handsomely decorated with pot plants and flags from the
+ man-of-war, and blanc-manges and jellies, and tipsy cake, and
+ cold roast pigeons and chickens were lying around as if they
+ weren't worth two cents.</p>
+
+ <p>The big wholesale store, which formed part of Mrs. Molly's
+ house and establishment, made a fine ballroom. All the barrels
+ of whisky and Queensland rum, and the cases of lager beer and
+ Holland's gin, had been stowed neatly on each side, and covered
+ over with flags and orange blossoms by Denison and Bully Hayes
+ and his men, and the orange blossoms killed the smell of the
+ rum so much that strangers would have thought it was
+ sherry.</p>
+
+ <p>Everything went on beautifully for the first two hours, and
+ then Mrs. Molly asked Denison to take out a very pretty young
+ half-caste lady and get her a drink of milk. When they reached
+ the side table where the milk should have been, they found it
+ all gone; but O'Brien the policeman said that Mataiasi had just
+ started off to milk another cow.</p>
+
+ <p>Just then Hayes came out to the refreshment tables with a
+ lady on his arm. She was thirsty, and so "Bully" opened a large
+ bottle of champagne, and she and he and Denison and the young
+ half-caste lady drank it; then they drank another, and all went
+ oft together to see Mataiasi milking the cow, which was tied up
+ to a coconut tree just outside the fence. The cow was a yellow
+ cow, and was standing very quietly, and just beside her Billy
+ MacLaggan (who caused all this trouble) was lying down, working
+ his jaws to and
+<!-- Page 74 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page069" name="page069">[pg 69]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ fro and making curious, snorting sounds in the bright and
+ gorgeous moonlight. I forgot to say that Wm. MacLaggan was the
+ largest and ugliest goat ever known to the memory of man, and
+ had been taught every vice and wickedness any goat could be
+ taught, and it is as natural for a goat to imbibe sin as it is
+ for him to eat a cactus, or a hedgehog, or a tract.</p>
+
+ <p>Hayes addressed the goat by his Christian name, and asked
+ him how he did, and Billy looked at Hayes for a second or two
+ out of his green, sharky eyes, then he rose in a dignified
+ manner, and came over to him to be scratched under the chin.
+ Then he blew himself out, snorted, and rubbed his horns against
+ the captain's knee: and Hayes remarked to Denison that the poor
+ beggar wanted a drink, and proposed to give him a "proper
+ one."</p>
+
+ <p>The goat knew perfectly well what "drink" meant, and made
+ his vicious tail quiver; then he followed them back to the
+ house, and stood at the foot of the steps waiting for Hayes and
+ Tom to come out again.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other side of the courtyard was Mrs. MacLaggan's
+ laundry. The door was wide open and the place was in darkness,
+ and no one took any notice when presently Tom sauntered out of
+ the ballroom, picked up a large plateful of tipsy-cake, and,
+ being kind to animals, gave a piece to William, who followed
+ him into the laundry for the rest; then Hayes came in with a
+ quart bottle of champagne, shut the door and struck a light.
+ Then he opened the bottle of fizz and poured it out into a
+ deep, enamelled starching-dish, and Billy MacLaggan drank
+ thereof, and then raised his head,
+<!-- Page 75 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page070" name="page070">[pg 70]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ with his immoral-looking beard hanging in a sodden point like a
+ wet deck-swab, and asked for more. That is, he asked as well as
+ any Christian and civilised goat could ask, by standing up on
+ his hind legs like a circus-horse and making strange, unearthly
+ noises. Then he rammed his wicked old nose into the dish again,
+ and pushed it all round the room, trying to sop up more liquor,
+ which wasn't there, and trod on Denison's canvas-slippered
+ foot, and knocked over the little tin kerosene oil lamp which
+ was standing on the floor, and when Hayes, with loud and
+ blasphemous remarks grabbed at the ironing-blanket of the
+ laundry-table to extinguish the flames, he pulled the table
+ down on the top of Denison and himself and the goat and
+ everything, for the blanket was nailed on at the four corners,
+ and when he was down on his hands and knees, the goat being
+ exceedingly alarmed and half-drunk, and smelling his own hair
+ burning, put his head down and charged at the universe in
+ general, or anything else he could hit, and he hit Hayes fair
+ on the temple with a noise like a ship's mainmast going by the
+ board; then the people outside burst in the door, and the
+ creature, with a bull-like bellow, charged out among them, and
+ landed his bony head into the stomach of Mataiasi, who was
+ carrying the bucket of milk, and was afraid to put it down when
+ he saw him coming; then in some way the handle of the iron
+ bucket got on Billy MacLaggan's horns, which simply made him
+ thirst for gore, for he thought he was being made fun of
+ because he was in liquor. With the bucket swinging and
+ clattering and banging around,
+<!-- Page 76 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page071" name="page071">[pg 71]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ he made a dash up on the verandah, among the pretty muslin-clad
+ ladies and white-duck suited men, creating havoc and
+ destruction, and smelling of kerosene and burnt hair and
+ ancient goat, and uttering horrible, blood-curdling
+ <i>bah-h-h-s</i>
+
+ , till he got into the card-table corner, and mistaking the
+ wide glass window for an open door, he promptly jumped through
+ it, and fell with a shower of glass outside on to the verandah
+ again, where Thady O'Brien and the fat German with the
+ spectacles fell on him, and tried to hold him down, and the
+ spectacles were ground into dust and otherwise damaged, and
+ some of the ladies endeavouring to escape out of the hideous
+ <i>m&#233;l&#233;e</i>
+
+ fell with him, and then the goat struggled to his feet with the
+ bucket squashed flat against his forehead, and his horns
+ covered with lace, and tulle, and bits of kid gloves, and
+ planted one of his cloven forefeet into the shirt-front of a
+ German officer, and smashed his watch. Then with another roar
+ of defiance he burst through and disappeared into the
+ wilderness at the back of Mrs. MacLaggan's garden, where he was
+ followed by Leger, the drunken carpenter, and his wife, and
+ nineteen Samoans, all armed with rifles. The army fired at him
+ for two hours, and about midnight returned and reported him
+ riddled with bullets, whereupon Mrs. Molly, who was a little
+ hysterical at the awful mess and wreckage caused by the brute,
+ thanked them and gave them ten dollars.</p>
+
+ <p>Now it so happened that Billy MacLaggan was not killed at
+ all, for about two o'clock in the morning, as Bully Hayes and
+ Tom Denison were sitting on the
+<!-- Page 77 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page072" name="page072">[pg 72]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ verandah of the former's house at Matautu Point, drinking
+ brandy and soda, and dabbing arnica bandages on their various
+ contusions, Pilot Hamilton hailed them from the front gate. He
+ had just left the dance with his wife, and was quite
+ sober&#8212;for Samoa. He asked them to come on with him to his
+ place, as Billy MacLaggan, he said, was lying down in Mrs.
+ Hamilton's kitchen, and seemed poorly, and that he hoped Hayes
+ would forgive the poor thing, which was only a dumb animal. So
+ Hayes and Denison went and saw William, who was now sober and
+ looked sorry. They dressed his wounds, and Tom Denison took him
+ on board early in the morning, intending to take him to sea
+ till the memory of his misdeeds had toned down a bit, for Billy
+ was a great institution in Samoa, and had many friends. Hardly
+ a white man in the place, no matter how hard up he was, but
+ would stand Billy a bottle of lager or a chew of tobacco. (I
+ forgot to mention that Billy would drink anything and chew
+ anything, except cigarettes, at which he snorted with
+ contempt.) Now Denison's little vessel was lying quite near the
+ German man-of-war, and was to sail next day for the Solomons if
+ the captain was sober, and he (Denison) had a lot of work to do
+ to get the ship ready, and whilst he was poring over accounts
+ in the cabin about noon, a boat ran alongside and Bully Hayes
+ came into the cabin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's Billy?" he said. "Quick, get him into my boat at
+ once. There's a search-party coming on board, and the widow is
+ going to give you the dirty kick-out, Tom Denison. There's been
+ the devil to
+<!-- Page 78 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page073" name="page073">[pg 73]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ pay over that cursed goat, but I'm going to save his life all
+ the same. But if she does sack you, you can come to me for a
+ berth."</p>
+
+ <p>Billy, who was placidly eating bananas on the main deck, was
+ at once seized and hoisted over the side into Hayes's boat,
+ which shoved off, leaving Hayes on board to explain things to
+ Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed that when the fat German manager&#8212;the man
+ with spectacles&#8212;I mean the man who had the spectacles
+ until Billy MacLaggan came in&#8212;the man who was courting
+ Mrs. Molly&#8212;fell on the top of the goat, some other man
+ trod on his face, and Leger (who was not sober enough to tell
+ one person from another) said that he saw Tom Denison do it.
+ Seven natives, male and female, swore that at the time alleged
+ Tom was out on the beach bathing his crushed toe in the salt
+ water, and using solemn British oaths; but Leger, who disliked
+ Denison, who had once kicked him overboard violently for being
+ drunk, not only stuck to the story, but said that Hayes and Tom
+ had set the goat on fire on purpose to break up the dance and
+ cause annoyance to the Germans present; also he vaguely hinted
+ that they, Denison and Hayes, would have driven the seven cows
+ into the ballroom but couldn't find them. Then Mrs. MacLaggan
+ promised the fat man to sack Denison on the following morning,
+ and at midnight, as I have said, word was brought in that Billy
+ had been shot. But about ten in the morning Leger heard from
+ some native that the goat was as well as ever, and on board
+ Denison's vessel, and being a mean, spiteful little hound, off
+ he trotted to the
+<!-- Page 79 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page074" name="page074">[pg 74]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ German manager, and said that Captain Hayes and Mr. Denison had
+ rescued the creature. At that very moment the manager was
+ talking to some German officers, one of whom was the man whose
+ watch had been smashed, and as every German in Samoa hated
+ Hayes most fervently, it was at once concluded that Hayes had
+ trained, or suborned, or bribed, or corrupted the goat to do
+ it. So a young lieutenant went and called upon Hayes, and
+ demanded satisfaction for his friend, and Hayes was exceedingly
+ rude to him, but said that if the man with the broken watch
+ liked to meet Billy MacLaggan with his own weapons, and fight
+ him in a goatsmanlike manner, for fifty dollars a side, he
+ (Hayes) would put up Billy's fifty. Then the lieutenant asked
+ for a written apology for his friend, and Hayes said that Billy
+ couldn't write, and, anyway, he was Mrs. Molly's goat. If the
+ man with the smashed nickel wanted an apology, why the blazes
+ didn't he approach Mrs. MacLaggan? he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>Whilst Hayes was telling all this to Tom, pulling his thick
+ beard and laughing loudly, as they paced the little vessel's
+ deck, the search-party came on board to recover the goat. The
+ leader bore a letter from Mrs. MacLaggan to Tom, informing him
+ that his services as supercargo were no longer required, also
+ that he could come ashore at once and be paid off, as his
+ conduct was heartless, and the consuls said it might lead to
+ serious complications, as it had been done with intent to
+ insult the citizens of a friendly nation, one of whom, as he
+ was aware, had made the natives cut
+<!-- Page 80 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page075" name="page075">[pg 75]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ down the price of copra half a cent. Under these circumstances,
+ &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom grinned and showed the letter to Hayes. Then he turned
+ to the mate.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've got the sack, Waters. You're in charge of this rotten,
+ filthy old hooker now until the old man is sober."</p>
+
+ <p>He packed up his traps, went ashore, drew his money from
+ Mrs. MacLaggan's cashier, and bade him goodbye.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where's the goat, Tom?"</p>
+
+ <p>"On board Bully Hayes' ship. His crool, crool mistress shall
+ see him no more! Never more shall his plaintive call to his
+ nannies resound o' nights among the sleeping palm-groves of the
+ Vaisigago Valley; never&#8212;&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>The cashier jumped up out of his chair and seized the
+ dismissed supercargo by the collar.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop that bosh, you rattlebrained young ass, and come and
+ take a farewell drink."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never more will he butt alike the just and the unjust, the
+ fat and bloated German merchant nor the herring-gutted Yankee
+ skipper, nor the bare&#8212;ah&#8212;um&#8212;legged Samoan,
+ nor the gorgeous consul in the solar topee. Gone is the glory
+ of Samoa with Billy MacLaggan. Goodbye for the present, Wade,
+ old man&#8212;I am not so proud of my new dignity&#8212;I am to
+ be supercargo of the brig
+ <i>Rona</i>
+
+ &#8212;as to refuse to drink with you, though you are but a
+ cashier. And give my farewell to the widow, and tell her that I
+ bear her no ill-will, for I leave a dirty little tub of a
+ cockroach-
+<!-- Page 81 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page076" name="page076">[pg 76]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ infested ketch for a swagger brig, where I shall wear white
+ suits every day and feel that peace of mind which&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, do dry up, you young beggar," said the good-natured
+ cashier, whose laughter proved so infectious that Tom joined
+ in.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come then, Wade, just another ere we part."</p>
+
+ <p>Now as these two were drinking in the cashier's office it
+ happened that Thady O'Brien, the policeman (he was chief of the
+ municipal police, and fond of drink) saw them, and invited
+ himself to join them and also to express his sorrow at
+ Denison's "misfortune," as he called it, for Denison was a
+ lovable sort of youth, and often gave him drink on board. So
+ they all sat down, Wade in the one chair, and Tom and the
+ policeman on the table, and had several more drinks, and just
+ then Mrs. MacLaggan came to the door, holding a note in her
+ hand. She bowed coldly to Tom, whose three stiff drinks of
+ brandy enabled him to give her a reproachful glance.</p>
+
+ <p>"Captain Hayes wants to buy one or two of the nanny-goats,
+ to take away with him to Ponap&#233;, Mr. Wade," she said. "I
+ shall be glad to let him have them. Please tell Leger and
+ Mataiasi to catch them at once."</p>
+
+ <p>Then Mrs. MacLaggan went away, and Tom and O'Brien went down
+ to the jetty to wait for a boat to take them on board&#8212;Tom
+ to his duty, and O'Brien because he was thirsty again.
+ Presently Leger and Mataiasi and a large concourse of native
+ children came down, carrying two female goats, who, imagining
+ they
+<!-- Page 82 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page077" name="page077">[pg 77]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ were to be cast into the sea, began to cry with great violence,
+ and were immediately answered in a deep voice by Billy
+ MacLaggan from over the water, whereupon Leger started to run
+ off and tell Mrs. MacLaggan that Billy was alive, and on board
+ the
+ <i>Rona</i>
+
+ , and Denison put out his foot and tripped him, and was at once
+ assailed by Leger's black wife, who hit him on the head with a
+ stick, and then herself was pushed backwards off the jetty into
+ the water by Mr. O'Brien, taking several children and one of
+ the goats with her, and in less than two minutes there was as
+ pretty a fight as ever was seen. Several native police ran to
+ help their superior officer, and a lot of dogs came with them;
+ the dogs bit anybody and everybody indiscriminately, but most
+ of them went for Leger and Denison, who were lying gasping
+ together on the jetty, striving to murder each other; then a
+ number of sailors belonging to a whaleship joined in, and tried
+ to massacre or otherwise injure and generally maltreat the
+ policemen, and by the time the boat from the
+ <i>Rona</i>
+
+ came to the rescue the jetty looked like a battlefield, and one
+ goat was drowned, and the new supercargo was taken on board to
+ have his excoriations attended to, for he was in a very bad
+ state.</p>
+
+ <p>That is the end of the story, which I have told in a
+ confused sort of away, I admit, because there are so many
+ things in it, though I could tell a lot more about the
+ adventures of Billy MacLaggan, after he went to sea with
+ Captain Bully Hayes.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 83 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page078" name="page078">[pg 78]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='An_Island_Memory'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>An Island Memory</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+
+ <p>From early dawn wild excitement had prevailed in the great
+ native village on the shores of Port Lele, and on board two
+ ships which were anchored on the placid waters of the
+ land-locked harbour. As the fleecy, cloud-like mist which,
+ during the night, had enveloped the forest-clad spurs and
+ summit of Mont Buache, was dispelled by the first airs of the
+ awakened trade wind and the yellow shafts of sunrise, a fleet
+ or canoes crowded with natives put off from the sandy beach in
+ front of the king's house, and paddled swiftly over towards the
+ ships, the captains of which only awaited their arrival to
+ weigh and tow out through the passage.</p>
+
+ <p>As the mist lifted, Cayse, the master of the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ of Sagharbour, stepped briskly up on the poop, and hailed the
+ skipper of the other vessel, a small, yellow-painted barque of
+ less than two hundred tons.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are you ready, Captain Ross?"</p>
+
+ <p>"All ready," was the answer; "only waiting for the
+ military," and then followed a hoarse laugh.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 84 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page079" name="page079">[pg 79]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Cayse, a little, grizzled, and leathern-faced man of fifty,
+ replied by an angry snarl, then turned to his mate, who stood
+ beside him awaiting his orders.</p>
+
+ <p>"Get these natives settled down as quickly as possible, Mr.
+ North, then start to heave-up and loose sails. I reckon we'll
+ tow out in an hour. The king will be here presently in his own
+ boat. Hoist it aboard."</p>
+
+ <p>North nodded in silence, and was just moving on to the main
+ deck, when Cayse stopped him.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't seem too ragin' pleased this mornin', Mr. North,
+ over this business. Naow, as I told you yesterday, I admire
+ your feelin's on the subject, but I can't afford&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>The mate's eyes blazed with anger.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I tell you again that I won't have anything to do with
+ it. I know my duty, and mean to stick to it. I shipped for a
+ whaling voyage, and not to help savages to fight. Take my
+ advice and give it up. Money got in this way will do you no
+ good."</p>
+
+ <p>Cayse shifted his feet uneasily.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can't afford to sling away the chance of earnin' two or
+ three thousan' dollars so easy. An' you'll hev to do your duty
+ to me. Naow, look here&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>North raised his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"That will do. I have said I will do my duty as mate, but
+ not a hand's turn will I take in such bloody work as you and
+ the skipper of that crowd of Sydney cut-throats and convicts
+ are going into for the sake of six thousand dollars."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I reckon we can do without you. Any
+<!-- Page 85 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page080" name="page080">[pg 80]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ one would think we was going piratin', instead of helping the
+ king of this island to his rights. Naow, just tell
+ me&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>Again the mate interrupted him.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am going for'ard to get the anchor up, and will obey all
+ your orders as far as the working of the ship is
+ concerned&#8212;nothing more."</p>
+
+ <p>An hour later the two vessels, their decks crowded with
+ three hundred savages, armed with muskets, spears, and clubs,
+ were towed out through the narrow, reef-bound passage, and with
+ the now freshening trade wind filling their sails, set a course
+ along the coast which before sunset would bring them to
+ Leass&#233;, on the lee side of the island. But presently, in
+ response to a signal from the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ , the whaler lay to; a boat put off from the smaller ship, and
+ Captain Ross came alongside, clambered over the bulwarks and
+ joined Cayse and the young king of Port Lele, who were awaiting
+ him on the poop, to discuss with him the plan of surprise and
+ slaughter of the offending people of Leass&#233;.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Nearly a week before the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ had run into Port Lele to refresh before proceeding westward
+ and northward to the Bonin Islands in pursuance of her cruise.
+ Charlik, the king, was delighted to see Cayse, for in the days
+ when his father was king the American captain had conveyed a
+ party of one hundred Strong's Islanders from Port Lele to
+ MacAskill's Island, landed them in his boats during the night,
+ and stood off and
+<!-- Page 86 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page081" name="page081">[pg 81]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ on till daylight, when they returned reeking from their work of
+ slaughter upon the sleeping people, and bringing with them some
+ scores of women and children as captives. For this service the
+ king had given Cayse half a ton of turtle-shell, and the
+ services of ten young men as seamen for as long a time as the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ cruised in the Pacific on that voyage. When Charlik's father
+ was dying, he called his head chiefs around him, and gave the
+ boy into their care with these words&#8212;"Here die I upon my
+ mat like a woman, long before my time, and to-morrow my spirit
+ will hear the mocking laughs of the men of M&#244;ut and
+ Leass&#233;, when they say, 'Sikra is dead; Sikra was but an
+ empty boaster.'"</p>
+
+ <p>Then his son spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not many days shall they laugh. They shall be destroyed
+ all, all, all of them."</p>
+
+ <p>The king touched his son's hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Those are good words. But be not too hasty. Wait till the
+ American comes again. He will help with his men and guns. But
+ he is a greedy man. Yet spare nothing; give him all the silver
+ and gold money I have stored by for his return, and all the
+ turtle-shell that can be gathered together. And let there be
+ not even one little child left in M&#244;ut or
+ Leass&#233;."</p>
+
+ <p>Charlik was a lad or seventeen when his savage old father
+ died, and for a year after his death he harried and distressed
+ his people by his exactions. All day long the men toiled at
+ making coconut oil, and at night time they watched along the
+ beaches for the
+<!-- Page 87 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page082" name="page082">[pg 82]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ hawk-bill turtle; the oil they put into huge butts, which stood
+ in the king's boat-sheds, and the costly turtle-shell was taken
+ by the young ruler and locked up in the seamen's chests which
+ lined the inside wall of the great council-house. And no man
+ durst now fire a musket at a wild pig, for powder and ball had
+ been made
+ <i>tapu</i>
+
+ &#8212;such things were given up to the chiefs, lest they might
+ be wasted, and every morning three young men climbed up the
+ rugged side of Mont Buache, to keep a look-out for the ship
+ whose captain would help their master to wreak a bloody
+ vengeance upon the rebellious people of Leass&#233;.</p>
+
+ <p>At the end of the sixteenth month of watching, a sail
+ appeared coming from the southward, and the watchers on the
+ mountain-top sped down to the king's house, and sinking upon
+ their knees in the courtyard of coral slabs, whispered their
+ news to one of the king's serving-men, who, with a musket in
+ his hand and a cutlass girt around his naked waist, stood
+ sentry before the youthful despot's sleeping-room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good," said the king to Kanka, his head chief; "'tis surely
+ the American K&#233;sa,
+ <a href="#footnote_13" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[13]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ for this is the month in which he said he would return. Let the
+ women make ready a great feast, and launch my three boats, so
+ that if the wind fail, when the sun is high, they may help to
+ drag the ship into Lele."</p>
+
+ <p>Then came the sound of beating drums, and the long, mournful
+ note of the conch-shells calling the wild people together to
+ prepare for the ship. Turtle
+<!-- Page 88 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page083" name="page083">[pg 83]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ were lifted from their walled-in prison holes on the reef, hogs
+ were strangled, and the king's wives went hither and thither
+ among his slave women, bidding them hasten to kindle the ovens,
+ whilst children went out into the great canework cage, wherein
+ were hundreds of the king's wild pigeons, and seizing the
+ birds, began to pluck them alive.</p>
+
+ <p>An hour passed. Charlik, sitting in a European chair, was
+ watching the wild bustle and excitement around him in the
+ courtyard, when his eye fell on the three messengers, who, with
+ bent head and bended knees, were awaiting his further
+ commands.</p>
+
+ <p>Beckoning to a young, light-skinned woman, who stood near
+ him, he bade her bring him three of his best pearl-shell bonito
+ hooks. They were brought, and taking them from her, he threw
+ them to the men.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye have watched well," he said. "There is thy reward. Now
+ go and eat and sleep."</p>
+
+ <p>With eyes sparkling with pleasure, the young men each took
+ up his precious gift, and with crouching forms crept slowly
+ over to the further side of the courtyard, where they were
+ waited upon by women with food.</p>
+
+ <p>Presently the fair young woman&#8212;his sister
+ S&#232;&#8212;returned to her brother's side.</p>
+
+ <p>"The ship is near," she said, and then her voice faltered;
+ "but it is not the ship of K&#233;sa. It is but a small ship,
+ and she hath but two boats. K&#233;sa's had five."</p>
+
+ <p>"What lies are these?" said the young savage fiercely. "Go
+ look again."</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 89 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page084" name="page084">[pg 84]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ The girl left him, to return a few minutes later with
+ grey-headed old Kanka, who in response to an inquiring look
+ from his master, bent his head and said slowly&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"'Tis a strange ship&#8212;one that never before have we
+ seen in Lele."</p>
+
+ <p>The youth made him no answer. He merely raised his arm and
+ pointed his finger at the three messengers.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then they have lied to me. Bring them here to me."</p>
+
+ <p>Kanka stepped over to where the fated men were sitting. They
+ rose at his behest, and crept over to the king; behind them, at
+ some invisible sign given by him, followed a man with a heavy
+ club of
+ <i>toa</i>
+
+ wood. The clamour which had filled the courtyard ceased, and
+ terrified silence fell. One by one the messengers knelt upon
+ the coral flags&#8212;no need for them to ask for mercy from
+ Charlik, the savage son of a bloodstained father. The bearer of
+ the club held the weapon knob downward, and watched the king's
+ face for the signal of death. He nodded, and then, one after
+ another of the men were struck and fell prone upon the stones.
+ With scowling eyes Charlik regarded them for a moment or two in
+ silence, then he turned unconcernedly away, as some of his
+ slaves came forward and carried the bodies out of sight.</p>
+
+ <p>Suddenly he sprang to his feet, as a loud, long cry, first
+ from a single throat, and then echoed and reechoed by a hundred
+ more, came upward from the beach.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 90 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page085" name="page085">[pg 85]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ A ship! A ship! Another ship! The ship of K&#233;sa!"</p>
+
+ <p>Bidding his sister and the old chief Kanka to come with him,
+ Charlik quickly left the house, and walking through a grove of
+ breadfruit trees, reached a spot from where he had a full view
+ of the open sea. There right in the passage was a small barque;
+ and, almost within hail, and just rounding the northern horn of
+ the reef was a larger vessel, one glance at which told Charlik
+ that it was the American whaler for which he had so long
+ waited. In less than an hour they were at anchor abreast of the
+ king's house, and the two captains were being rowed ashore.
+ They met on the beach. The master of the smaller vessel was a
+ tall, broad-shouldered man, armed with a pair of pistols and a
+ cutlass. Striding over the sand he held out his hand to the
+ American.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good day. My name's Ross, barque
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ , of Sydney, from the New Hebrides to Hong Kong with
+ sandalwood."</p>
+
+ <p>"Glad to meet ye. My name is Cayse, ship
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ , bound on a sperm whalin' cruise."</p>
+
+ <p>Further speech was denied them, for suddenly the thronging
+ and excited natives around them drew aside right and left as
+ Charlik, with a face beaming with smiles, came up to Cayse with
+ outstretched hand, and greeted him warmly in English. Then he
+ turned quickly to the Englishman and shook hands with him also,
+ and asked him from whence he came.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Sydney. I came here to get wood, water, and
+ provisions."</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 91 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page086" name="page086">[pg 86]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Good. You can get all you want. Have you muskets and bullets to
+ sell?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I can spare you some."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, that is good. I want plenty, plenty. Now come to my
+ house and eat and drink; then we can talk."</p>
+
+ <p>It was well on towards sunset before Charlik and Cayse had
+ finished their talk. Ross meanwhile had gone on board the
+ barque for some firearms which he was giving the king in
+ exchange for several boatloads of provisions. When he returned,
+ with two of his crew carrying six muskets, a keg of powder, and
+ a bag of bullets, Cayse met him on the threshold of the king's
+ house.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come inside, mister. The king wants to talk to you on a
+ matter of business. I reckon you an' me together can do what he
+ wants done. But jest come along with me first. I want to show
+ you the kind of fellow he is when he gets upset."</p>
+
+ <p>The master of the sandalwooder followed the American across
+ the wide courtyard to some native houses. Stopping in front of
+ one, from which the low murmur of women's voices, broken now
+ and then by a wailing cry, proceeded, he desired Ross to look
+ in through the doorway. A small fire of coconut shells was
+ burning in the centre of the room, and
+ <i>by</i>
+
+ its light Ross saw several women crouched round the bodies of
+ three men, performing the last offices for the dead. They
+ looked at the white strangers with apathetic indifference, but
+ ceased their labours whilst Ross bent down and
+<!-- Page 92 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page087" name="page087">[pg 87]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ examined the still faces. His scrutiny was brief, but it was
+ enough.</p>
+
+ <p>Cayse gave a sniggering laugh. "I reckon you'll feel sorter
+ startled, mister, when I tell you that you were the cause of
+ those men getting clubbed, hey?"</p>
+
+ <p>Ross frowned angrily. "What are you driving at? What the
+ devil had I to do with it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"On'y this. You see I'm the white-headed boy with this young
+ island cock, an' he's been expectin' to see the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ for quite a time. Your barque happened to heave in sight first,
+ an' these three fellows who were standin' mast-head watch up
+ thar on the mountain, came tearin' down an' reported that it
+ was my old hooker. Charlik bein' a most impatient young fellow,
+ had 'em clubbed on the spot; he should hev waited another five
+ minutes. Come on, he's ready to talk business with us now."</p>
+
+ <p>In the centre of the big council room Charlik, attended by
+ his sister, was seated upon a mat. A couple of brightly burning
+ ship's lanterns suspended from the beams overhead, revealed the
+ figures of a score of armed natives, seated with their backs to
+ the canework walls of the room; midway between them and the
+ young king were two seamen's chests, beside which crouched the
+ half-naked, tatooed form or old Kanka.</p>
+
+ <p>Followed by the sailors carrying the muskets, the two
+ captains walked over the soft, springy floor of mats, and
+ seated themselves facing the young man. His eye lit up at the
+ sight of the arms, and then he
+<!-- Page 93 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page088" name="page088">[pg 88]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ desired Ross to tell his men to withdraw. Then as the sound of
+ their footsteps died away, he looked at Cayse and said
+ briefly&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Go on, cap&#232;n. You talk."</p>
+
+ <p>Cayse went into the subject at once.</p>
+
+ <p>"Captain Ross, do you want to earn three thousand
+ dollars?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't mind."</p>
+
+ <p>"Neither do I. Well, just listen. The king here has three
+ thousand dollars in cash and three thousand dollars' worth of
+ coconut ile and turtle-shell. Now, if you and I will help him
+ to do a bit of fightin' it's ours. The money and shell is here
+ in this room, the ile is in the sheds near by. If you agree,
+ the king will hand us over the money now, and we can ship the
+ ile in the morning."</p>
+
+ <p>Ross thought a moment, then he said suspiciously&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Why are you giving me a chance?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not from any feelin' of affection for you, mister,"
+ answered Cayse with his peculiar snarl, "but because I ain't
+ able to do the whole business myself&#8212;if I could I
+ wouldn't ask
+ <i>you</i>
+
+ to come in. Now, I noticed this mornin' that you carry a big
+ crew, and have six guns, and I reckon thet you hev to use 'em
+ sometimes in your business?"</p>
+
+ <p>Ross laughed grimly. "All of us sandalwooding ships carry a
+ few nine-pounders as well as plenty of small arms. We are
+ allowed to do so by the Governor of New South Wales."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just so. Well, now, listen. This island is
+<!-- Page 94 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page089" name="page089">[pg 89]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ governed by two chiefs; this one here, Charlik, has most
+ people, but the other lot, who live on the lee side of the
+ island, rebelled against his father more'n ten years ago.
+ They've had a good many fights, an' in the last one these Lele
+ people got badly whipped. Charlik is the proper king, but ever
+ since a white man named Ledyard went to live with the
+ Leass&#233; people, they've refused to pay tribute. This
+ Ledyard is the cause of all the trouble, and he has taught his
+ natives how to fight European fashion. There's only about six
+ hundred of 'em altogether&#8212;men, women, and
+ children&#8212;eh, Charlik?"</p>
+
+ <p>The young chief nodded in assent.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, by a bit of luck, news came up the other day by one of
+ Charlik's spies that Ledyard has gone away to Ponap&#233; in a
+ cutter he has built. It will take him two or three weeks to go
+ there and back, and now is the time for Charlik to wipe out old
+ scores&#8212;the Leass&#233; people won't stand much of a
+ chance agin' a night attack by three hundred of Charlik's
+ people. If Ledyard was there it would be different."</p>
+
+ <p>Ross soon made his decision. He was a man utterly without
+ pity, and Cayse who, while inciting others to slaughter for the
+ sake of his own gain, yet had some grains of compunction in his
+ nature, almost shuddered when the master of the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ laughed hoarsely and said&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a bargain&#8212;just the thing that my crowd could
+ tackle and carry through themselves. Two
+<!-- Page 95 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page090" name="page090">[pg 90]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ voyages ago me and my beauties wiped out every living soul on
+ one of the Cartaret's Islands. I'll tell you the yarn some day.
+ But look here, king, can't we make another deal about the women
+ and children. Let me keep as many of them as I have room for
+ aboard, and I'll pay for them in muskets and powder and
+ bullets."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you want with them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sell them to old Abba Dul, the king of the Pelews. I've
+ done business with him before."</p>
+
+ <p>Charlik called Kanka over to him, and the two spoke in low
+ tones. Then the young ruler of Lele shook his head.</p>
+
+ <p>"No. There must be but one left to live&#8212;the white
+ man's wife. Now we shall count this money."</p>
+
+ <p>The boxes were carried over directly under the rays of the
+ lamps and opened, the bags containing the money lifted out, the
+ coins counted, and then evenly divided between the two
+ wolves.</p>
+
+ <p>On the following morning the casks of oil were rolled down
+ to the beach and rafted off to the two ships, and before dawn,
+ on the fourth day, Ross and his fellow-ruffian sent word ashore
+ to the king that all was ready, and that he and his fighting
+ men could come on board at once and proceed on their dreadful
+ mission.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<!-- Page 96 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page091" name="page091">[pg 91]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='CHAPTER_II'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+
+ <p>As the two captains and their ferocious young employer sat
+ on the snow-white poop of the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ and discussed the plan of attack, the ship and barque kept
+ closely together, so closely that North, who had not yet placed
+ foot on board the sandalwooder, had now an opportunity of
+ looking down upon her decks, and watching the actions of those
+ who manned her. A more ragged and desperate looking lot of
+ ruffians he had never seen in his life; and their wild, unkempt
+ appearance was in perfect accord with the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ herself, whose dirty, yellow sides were stained from stem to
+ stern with long streaks and broad patches of iron-rust. Aloft
+ she was in as equally a bad condition, and North and his
+ fellow-officers, used to the trimness and unceasing care of a
+ whaleship's sails and running gear, looked with contempt at the
+ disorder and neglect everywhere visible. On deck, however, some
+ attempt at setting things ship-shape were being made by the two
+ mates and boatswain, the six guns were being overhauled, and a
+ pile of muskets lying on the main hatch were being examined and
+ passed up to the poop one by one, to old Kanka, who was in
+ command of the contingent of Lele natives on board the barque.
+ Similar preparations with small arms were being made on board
+ the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ by her crew which, largely composed of Chilenos, Portuguese,
+ and Polynesians, had eagerly accepted the offer of twenty
+ dollars for
+<!-- Page 97 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page092" name="page092">[pg 92]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ each man for a few hours' fighting. North alone had spoken
+ against and tried to dissuade his fellow-officers from taking
+ any active part in the expedition, but his remonstrances fell
+ upon unheeding ears. The details of the scheme to surprise the
+ unsuspecting inhabitants of the two villages had filled him
+ with unutterable horror and indignation, and all sorts of wild
+ plans formed in his brain to prevent the accomplishment of the
+ cruel deed. For the consequences of such interference to
+ himself he cared nothing. He was alone in the world, and had no
+ thought beyond that of making enough money to enable him to one
+ day buy a ship of his own. Once, as he passed the trio on the
+ poop, and glanced at the smooth, olive-coloured features of the
+ young king, who, with anticipative zest, was fondling a rifle
+ which Ross had brought on board for him, he felt inclined to
+ whip a belaying-pin out of the rail and bring it crashing down
+ upon his skull. Had there been any other ship but the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ near, he would have left the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ that moment. But help was coming to his troubled mind.</p>
+
+ <p>An hour before sunset the two vessels ran into a little
+ harbour, then called Port Lottin, but now known as South
+ Harbour by the few wandering whalers which sometimes touch at
+ the island. Here, ere it became dark, the natives, with
+ fourteen of the
+ <i>Lucy May's</i>
+
+ crew under Ross, were landed. They were to march at early
+ morning, cross the mountain range which intervened between
+ South Harbour and Leass&#233;, and then, hidden by the dense
+ forest, await the appearance of the ships off the
+<!-- Page 98 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page093" name="page093">[pg 93]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ doomed villages on the following afternoon. The six
+ boats&#8212;two from the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ and four from the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ &#8212;were to pull ashore as soon as the ships were off
+ Leass&#233; and take up positions, three to the north and three
+ to the south, so as to cut off all who attempted to escape
+ along the beaches from the attack which would be made by Ross.
+ Charlik was to command one of the boat parties, Cayse the
+ other, and should any canoes with fugitives attempt to gain the
+ open sea, they were to be sunk by the
+ <i>Lucy May's</i>
+
+ guns, for she was to anchor in such a position that an escaping
+ canoe would have to pass within fifty yards of her.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Eight bells had struck, and North, who had declined to join
+ the captain and his fellow-officers at supper, was sitting in
+ his cabin smoking and listening to the soft hum of the surf on
+ the barrier reef a mile away. On deck all was quiet, only the
+ fourth mate and three of the hands were keeping watch, the rest
+ of the crew who were not turned in had gone ashore to witness a
+ dance given by King Charlik's warriors.</p>
+
+ <p>Suddenly he heard a footfall on the cabin deck, and then
+ some one said in a low voice&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"May I come in, sir?"</p>
+
+ <p>North, recognising the voice as that of a young man named
+ Macy, his own harpooner, at once bade him enter.</p>
+
+ <p>Macy, a sunburnt, blue-eyed youth, closed the cabin door
+ behind him, and held up his finger to enjoin silence.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 99 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page094" name="page094">[pg 94]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ I've only just now heard, sir, that you will not take a hand in
+ this work which is going on. Neither will I, sir; for those
+ damned savages are going to kill all the poor women and
+ children. I've come to ask you what I'm to do if I'm ordered
+ away in the boat? My God! Mr. North, must we all be turned into
+ a gang of murderers like those fellows on the
+ <i>Lucy May!</i>
+
+ "</p>
+
+ <p>The officer shook the young seaman's hand. "I for one will
+ have no hand in it, my lad; and I wish there were more of us on
+ board of our way of thinking. I wish we could leave the ship. I
+ would rather die of thirst on the open ocean ... Macy, my lad,
+ will you stand to me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stand to you, sir! Aye, Mr. North. If you mean to take to
+ our boat, sir, I am with you."</p>
+
+ <p>"No," answered North in a whisper. "That, after all, would
+ only save us two from being mixed up in this murderous
+ business&#8212;I want to prevent it altogether. Have you heard
+ how far it is across the island to this place Leass&#233;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Seven miles, sir, over the mountains."</p>
+
+ <p>"And twenty by the boats! Macy, I am determined to leave the
+ ship to-night, cut across the island, and save the poor people
+ from massacre. Will you come? We may pay for it with our
+ lives."</p>
+
+ <p>The harpooner raised his rough hand. "We must all die some
+ day, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>For some minutes they conversed in whispered tones; then
+ Macy slipped on deck, and North took his pistols from their
+ racks, filled his coat pockets
+<!-- Page 100 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page095" name="page095">[pg 95]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ with ammunition, and then followed him. His own boat was lying
+ astern.</p>
+
+ <p>Telling the cooper, who was the only one of the afterguard
+ on deck, that he was going ashore to look at the dance, and
+ that only Macy and another hand need come with him, North
+ ordered the boat to be hauled alongside. A quarter of an hour
+ later he and Macy stepped out upon the shore under the shadow
+ of a high bluff, and quite out of view from Ross and his party,
+ although the many camp-fires cast long lines of light across
+ the sleeping waters of the little harbour.</p>
+
+ <p>Informing the boat-keeper that they should return in a
+ couple of hours, the two men first walked along the beach in
+ the direction of the encampment. Then once out of sight from
+ the boat, they struck inland into a deep valley through which,
+ Macy said, a narrow track led up to the range, and then
+ downwards to the two villages. After a careful search the track
+ was found, and the bright stars shining through the canopy of
+ leaves overhead gave them sufficient light to pursue their way.
+ For two hours they toiled along through the silent forest,
+ hearing no sound except now and then the affrighted rush of
+ some startled wild boar, and, far distant, the dull cry of the
+ ever-restless breakers upon the coral reef. At last the summit
+ of the range was reached, and they sat down to rest upon the
+ thick carpet of fallen leaves which covered the ground. Here
+ North took a spirit-flask from his jacket, and Macy and he
+ drank in turns.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know, sir," said Macy, as he returned
+<!-- Page 101 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page096" name="page096">[pg 96]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the flask to the officer, "that there's a white man living at
+ this village?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He's not there now, Macy. He's gone away to another island
+ in his cutter."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know that, sir. I've heard all about it from one of the
+ chaps on the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ . The man's name is Ledyard, and this young devil's-limb of a
+ king hates him like poison&#8212;for two reasons. One is, that
+ Ledyard, who settled in Leass&#233; a few years ago, taught the
+ people there how to use their muskets in a fight, when
+ Charlik's father tried to destroy them time and again; the
+ other is that his wife is a white woman&#8212;or almost a white
+ woman, a Bonin Island Portuguese&#8212;and Charlik means to get
+ her. When Ledyard comes back in his cutter he will walk into a
+ trap, and be killed as soon as he steps ashore."</p>
+
+ <p>North struck his hand upon the ground. "And to think that I
+ have sailed with such a villain as Cayse, who&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's not all. Ledyard has two children. Charlik has given
+ orders for them to be killed, as he says he only wants the
+ woman! Ross, I believe, wanted him to spare 'em, but the young
+ cut-throat said 'No.' I heard all this from two men&#8212;the
+ chap from the
+ <i>Lucy May</i>
+
+ and one of Charlik's fighting men, who speaks English and seems
+ to have a soft place in his heart for Ledyard."</p>
+
+ <p>The mate of the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ sprang to his feet. "The cold-blooded wretches! Come on, Macy.
+ We
+ <i>must</i>
+
+ get there in time."</p>
+
+ <p>For another two hours they made steady progress
+<!-- Page 102 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page097" name="page097">[pg 97]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ through the darkened forest aisles, and then as they emerged
+ out upon a piece of open country, they saw far beneath them the
+ gleaming sea. And here, amidst a dense patch of pandanus palms,
+ the path they had followed came to an end. Pushing their way
+ through the thorny leaves, which tore the skin from their hands
+ and faces, Macy exclaimed excitedly&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"We're all right, sir. I can see a light down there. It must
+ be a fire on the beach."</p>
+
+ <p>Heedless of the unknown dangers of the deep descent, and
+ every now and then tripping and falling over the roots of trees
+ and fallen timber, they again came out into the open, and
+ there, two hundred feet below them, they saw the high-peaked,
+ saddle-backed houses of Leass&#233; village standing clearly
+ out in the starlight. But at this point their further progress
+ was barred by a cliff, which seemed to extend for half a mile
+ on both sides of them. Cautiously feeling their way along its
+ ledge they sought in vain for a path.</p>
+
+ <p>"We must hail them, Macy. There will be sure to be plenty of
+ them who can speak a little English and show us the way to get
+ down."</p>
+
+ <p>Returning as quickly as possible to the spot immediately
+ over the village, the officer gave a long, loud hail.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>Below there, you sleepers!</i>
+
+ "</p>
+
+ <p>The hoarse, shrieking notes of countless thousands of
+ roosting sea-birds, as they rose in alarm from their perches in
+ the forest trees, mingled with the barking of dogs from the
+ village, and then came a wild cry of alarm from a human
+ throat.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 103 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page098" name="page098">[pg 98]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Waiting for a few moments till the clamour had somewhat
+ subsided, the two men again hailed in unison.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>Below there! Awake, you sleepers!</i>
+
+ "</p>
+
+ <p>Another furious outburst of yelping and
+ barking&#8212;through which ran the quavering of voices of the
+ affrighted natives&#8212;smote the stillness of the night. Then
+ the bright light of torches of coconut leaves flashed below,
+ nude figures ran swiftly to and fro among the houses, and then
+ came a deep-voiced answering hail in English&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>Hallo there! Who hails</i>
+
+ ?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Two white men," was the officer's quick reply. "We cannot
+ get down. Bear a hand with a torch; we have lost the track."
+ Then as something flashed across his mind, he added, "Who are
+ you? Are you a white man?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. I am Tom Ledyard."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank God for that! Send a light quickly. You and your
+ people are in deadly danger."</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes the waiting men saw the gleam of torches
+ amid the trees to their right, and presently a tall, bearded,
+ white man appeared, followed by half a dozen natives. All were
+ armed with muskets, whose barrels glinted and shone in the
+ firelight.</p>
+
+ <p>Springing forward to meet him, North told his story in as
+ few words as possible.</p>
+
+ <p>Ledyard's dark face paled with passion. "By heaven, they
+ shall get a bloody welcome! Now, come, sir; follow me. You must
+ need rest badly."</p>
+
+ <p>As they passed through the village square, now lit
+<!-- Page 104 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page099" name="page099">[pg 99]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ up by many fires and filled with alarmed natives, Ledyard
+ called out in his deep tones&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Gather ye together, my friends. The son of the Slaughterer
+ is near. Send a man fleet of foot to M&#244;ut and bid him tell
+ Nena, the chief, and his head men to come to my house quickly,
+ else in a little while our bones will be gnawed by Charlik's
+ dogs."</p>
+
+ <p>Then with North and Macy besides him, he entered his house,
+ the largest in the village. A woman, young, slender, and
+ fair-skinned, met them at the door. Behind her were some
+ terrified native women, one of whom carried Ledyard's youngest
+ child in her arms.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Rita, my girl," said Ledyard, placing his hand on his
+ wife's shoulder and speaking in English, "these are friends.
+ They have come to warn us. That young hell-pup, Charlik, is
+ attacking us tomorrow. But quick, girl, get something for these
+ gentlemen to eat and drink."</p>
+
+ <p>But North and the harpooner were too excited to eat, and,
+ seated opposite their host, they listened eagerly to him as he
+ told them of his plans to repel the attack; of the bitter
+ hatred that for ten years had existed between the people of
+ Leass&#233; and the old king; and then&#8212;he set his
+ teeth&#8212;how that S&#233;, the friendly sister of the young
+ king, had once sent a secret messenger to him telling him to
+ guard his wife well, for her brother had made a boast that when
+ Leass&#233; and M&#244;ut were given to the flames only Cerita
+ should be spared.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then, ten days ago, Mr. North, thinking that this
+<!-- Page 105 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page100" name="page100">[pg 100]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ young tiger-cub Charlik knew that these people here were well
+ prepared to resist an attack, I left in my cutter on a trading
+ voyage to Ponap&#233;. Three days out the vessel began to make
+ water so badly that I had to beat back. I only came ashore
+ yesterday."</p>
+
+ <p>He rose and walked to and fro, muttering to himself. Then he
+ spoke again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. North, and you, my friend"&#8212;turning to
+ Macy&#8212;"have saved me and those I love from a sudden and
+ cruel death. What can I do to show my gratitude? You cannot now
+ return to your ship; will you join your fortunes with mine? I
+ have long thought of leaving this island and settling in
+ Ponap&#233;. There is money to be made there. Join me and be my
+ partners. My cutter is now hauled up on the beach&#8212;if she
+ were fit to go to sea we could leave the island to-night. But
+ that cannot be done. It will take me a week to put her in
+ proper repair&#8212;and to-morrow we must fight for our
+ lives."</p>
+
+ <p>North stretched out his hand. "Macy and I will stand by you,
+ Ledyard. We do not want to ever put foot again on the deck of
+ the
+ <i>Iroquois</i>
+
+ ."</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <a name='CHAPTER_III'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+
+ <p>The story of that day of bloodshed and horror, when Charlik
+ and his white allies sought to exterminate the whole community,
+ cannot here be told in
+ <i>all</i>
+
+ its dreadful details. Seventy years have come and gone since
+ then, and there are but two or three men
+<!-- Page 106 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page101" name="page101">[pg 101]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ now living on the island who can speak of it with knowledge as
+ a tale of "the olden days when we were heathens." Let the rest
+ of the tale be told in the words of one of those natives of
+ Leass&#233;, who, then a boy, fought side by side with Ledyard,
+ North, and Macy.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"The sun was going westward in the sky when the two ships
+ rounded the point and anchored in what you white men now call
+ Coquille Harbour. We of Leass&#233;, who watched from the
+ shore, saw six boats put off, filled with men. There pulled
+ inside the reef, and went to the right towards M&#244;ut; three
+ went to the left. Letya (Ledyard), with the two white strangers
+ who had come to him in the night, and two hundred of our men,
+ had long before gone into the mountains to await Charlik and
+ his fighting men, and their white friends. They&#8212;Letya and
+ the Leass&#233; people&#8212;made a trap for Charlik's men in
+ the forest. Charlik himself was in the boats with the other
+ white men. He wanted to see the people of Leass&#233; and
+ M&#244;ut driven into the water, so that he might shoot at them
+ with a new rifle which K&#233;sa or the other ship
+ captain&#8212;I forget which&#8212;had given to him. But he
+ wanted most of all to get Cerita, the wife of Letya, the white
+ man. Only Cerita was to live. These were Charlik's words. He
+ did not know that her husband had returned from the sea. Had he
+ known that, he would not have given all his money and all his
+ oil to the two white captains to
+<!-- Page 107 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page102" name="page102">[pg 102]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ help him to make Leass&#233; and M&#244;ut desolate and give
+ our bones to his dogs to eat.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was a great trap&#8212;the trap prepared by Letya; and
+ Charlik's men and the white men with them fell in it. They fell
+ as a stone falls in a deep well, and sinks and is no more seen
+ of men.</p>
+
+ <p>"This was the manner of the trap: The path down the cliff
+ was between two high walls of rock; at the foot of the cliff
+ was a thick clump of high pandanus trees growing closely
+ together. In between these trees Letya built a high barrier of
+ logs, encompassing the outlet of the path to Leass&#233;. This
+ barrier was a half circle; the two ends touched the edge of the
+ cliff, and the centre was hidden among the pandanus trees. On
+ the top of this barrier the men of Leass&#233; waited with
+ loaded muskets; lower down on the ground were others, they too
+ had loaded muskets. On the top of the cliff where the path led
+ down, fifty men were hidden. They were hidden in the thick
+ scrub which we call
+ <i>oap. Oap</i>
+
+ is a good thing in which to hide from an enemy, and then spring
+ from and slay him suddenly.</p>
+
+ <p>"I, who was then a boy, saw all this. I heard Letya, our
+ white man, tell the head of our village that Charlik's men
+ would enter into the trap and perish. Then kava was made, and
+ Letya and the head men drank. Kava is good, but rum is better
+ to make men fight. We had no rum, but we had great love for
+ Letya and his wife, and his two children, and great hate for
+ Charlik. So we said, 'If this is death, it is death,' and every
+ man went to his post&#8212;some to the barrier at the foot of
+ the cliff, and some to the thicket
+<!-- Page 108 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page103" name="page103">[pg 103]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of
+ <i>oap</i>
+
+ on the summit. Cerita, the wife of Letya the Englishman, was
+ weeping. She was weeping because Nen&#225;, the chief of
+ M&#244;ut, was waiting in the house to kill her if her husband
+ should be slain. But she did not weep because of the fear of
+ death; it was for her children she wept. That is the way of
+ women. What is the life of a child to the life of a man?</p>
+
+ <p>"Nen&#225; was my father's brother. He was a brave man, but
+ was too old to fight, for his eyes were dimmed by many years.
+ So he sat beside Cerita and her two children, with a long knife
+ in his hand and waited. He covered his face with a mat and
+ waited. It was right for him to do this, for Letya was a great
+ man; and his wife, although she was a foreigner, was an
+ honoured woman. Therefore though Nen&#225; might not look upon
+ her face at other times, he could kill her if Letya said she
+ must die. This was quite right and correct. A wife must be
+ guided by her husband and do what is right and correct, and
+ avoid scandal.</p>
+
+ <p>"For many hours the women in the houses waited in silence.
+ Then suddenly they heard the thunder of two hundred guns, and
+ the roaring of voices, then more muskets. They ran out of the
+ houses and looked up to the cliff, and lo! the sky was bright
+ as day, for when Charlik's people and the white men walked into
+ the trap in the darkness, Letya and our people set alight great
+ heaps of dry leaves and scrub, which were placed all along the
+ barrier of logs. This was done so that they could see better to
+ shoot. There were thirty or forty of Charlik's men killed by
+ that volley.
+<!-- Page 109 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page104" name="page104">[pg 104]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ The white man who was leading them was very brave; he tried to
+ climb over the barrier, but fell back dead, for a man named Sru
+ thrust a whale-lance into his heart. All this time the other
+ white men and the rest of Charlik's people were firing their
+ muskets, but their bullets only hit the heavy logs of the
+ barrier, and Letya and our people killed them very easily by
+ putting their muskets through the spaces. When the sailors saw
+ their captain fall, they tried to run away, and the Lele
+ warriors ran with them. But when they reached the path which
+ led up between the cliff, it too was blocked, and many of them
+ became jammed together between the walls, and these were all
+ killed very easily&#8212;some with bullets, and some with big
+ stones. Then those that were left ran round and found inside
+ the trap, trying to get out. They were like rats in a cask, and
+ our people kept killing them as they ran. Some of
+ them&#8212;about thirty&#8212;did climb over, but all were
+ killed, for when they jumped down on the other side our people
+ were there waiting. At last four of the sailors made a big hole
+ by tearing out two posts, and rushed out, followed by the Lele
+ men. Letya was the first man to meet the sailors, and he told
+ them to surrender. Two of them threw down their arms, but the
+ other two ran at Letya, and one of them ran his cutlass into
+ him. It went in at the stomach, and Letya fell. We killed all
+ these white sailors, but some of the Lele men escaped. That was
+ a great pity, but then how can these things be helped?" The two
+ strange white men who were fighting beside L&#275;tya, picked
+ him up, and they carried him
+<!-- Page 110 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page105" name="page105">[pg 105]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ into his house. He was not dead, but he said, 'I shall soon
+ die, take me to my wife.' I did not go with them to the house.
+ I went into the barrier with the other youths to kill the
+ wounded. It is a foolish thing not to kill wounded men; they
+ may get better and kill you. So we killed them. There were
+ fourteen white men slain in that fight beside their
+ captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"Before it was daylight some of our men set out along the
+ beach to look for the boats. They did not want to kill any more
+ white men, but they did want to kill Charlik. They were very
+ fortunate, for before they had gone far on their way they saw
+ three of the boats coming along close in to the beach. So they
+ hid behind some rocks. Charlik was in the first boat; he was
+ standing in the bow pointing out the way. When he came very
+ close they all fired together, and Charlik's life was gone. He
+ fell dead into the sea. Then the boats all turned seaward, and
+ pulled hard for the ships. Then before long, we saw the other
+ three boats going back to the ships; in these last were four of
+ Charlik's men who had escaped. The boats were quickly pulled
+ up, and the ships sailed away, for those on board were
+ terrified when they heard that all the white men they had sent
+ to fight were dead.</p>
+
+ <p>"Letya did not die at once&#8212;not for two days. Cerita
+ his wife and two white men watched beside him all this time.
+ Before he died he called the head men to him, and said that he
+ gave his small ship to the two white men, together with many
+ other things. All his money he gave to his wife, and told her
+ she must go away with the white men, who would take
+<!-- Page 111 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page106" name="page106">[pg 106]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ her back to her own people. To the head men he gave many
+ valuable things, such as tierces of tobacco and barrels of
+ powder. This was quite right and proper, and showed he knew
+ what was correct to do before he died. We buried him on the
+ little islet over there called B&#232;si.</p>
+
+ <p>"The two white men and Cerita and her two children went away
+ in the little ship. But they did not go to Cerita's country:
+ they remained at Ponap&#233;, and there the tall man of the
+ two&#8212;the officer&#8212;married Cerita. All this we learnt
+ a year afterwards from the captain of a whaling ship. It was
+ quite right and proper for Letya's widow to marry so quickly,
+ and to marry the man who had been a friend to her husband."</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 112 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page107" name="page107">[pg 107]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='A_Hundred_Fathoms_Deep'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>A Hundred Fathoms Deep</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>There is still a world or discovery open to the
+ ichthyologist who, in addition to scientific knowledge, is a
+ lover of deep-sea fishing, has some nerve, and is content to
+ undergo some occasional rough experiences, if he elects to
+ begin his researches among the many island groups of the North
+ and South Pacific. I possessed, to some extent, the two latter
+ qualifications; the former, much to my present and lasting
+ regret, I did not. Nearly twenty-six years ago the vessel in
+ which I sailed as supercargo was wrecked on Strong's Island,
+ the eastern outlier of the fertile Caroline Archipelago, and
+ for more than twelve months I devoted the greater part of my
+ time to traversing the mountainous island from end to end, or,
+ accompanied by a hardy and intelligent native, in fishing,
+ either in the peculiarly-formed lagoon at the south end, or two
+ miles or so outside the barrier reef.</p>
+
+ <p>The master of the vessel, I may mention, was the notorious,
+ over maligned, and genial Captain Bully Hayes, and from him I
+ had learnt a little about some of the generally unknown
+ deep-sea fish of Polynesia and Melanesia. He had told me that
+ when once
+<!-- Page 113 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page108" name="page108">[pg 108]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ sailing between Aneityum and Tanna, in the New Hebrides,
+ shortly after a severe volcanic eruption on the former island
+ had been followed by a submarine convulsion, his brig passed
+ through many hundreds of dead and dying fish of great size,
+ some of which were of a character utterly unknown to any of his
+ native crew&#8212;men who came from all parts of the North and
+ South Pacific. More remarkable still, some of these fish had
+ never before been seen by the inhabitants of the islands near
+ which they were found. There were, he said, some five or six
+ kinds, but they were all of the groper family. One of three
+ which was brought on board was discovered floating on the
+ surface when the ship was five miles off Tanna. A boat was
+ lowered, but on getting up to it, the crew found they were
+ unable to lift it from the water; it was, however, towed to the
+ ship, hoisted on board, and cut into three parts, the whole of
+ which were weighed, and reached over 300 lbs. In colour it was
+ a dull grey, with large, closely-adhering scales about the size
+ of a florin; the fins, tail, and lips were blue. Another one,
+ weighing less, had a differently-shaped head, with a curious,
+ pipe-like mouth; this was a uniform dull blue. A similar
+ upturning from the ocean's dark depths of strange fish occurred
+ during a submarine earthquake near Rose Island, a barren spot
+ to the south-west of Samoa. The disturbance threw up vast
+ numbers of fish upon the reefs of Manua, the nearest island of
+ the group, and the natives looked upon their great size and
+ peculiar appearance with unbounded astonishment.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 114 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page109" name="page109">[pg 109]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Without desiring to bore the reader with unnecessary details of
+ my own experiences in the South Seas, but because the statement
+ bears on the subject of this article&#8212;a subject which has
+ been my delight since I was a boy of ten years of age&#8212;I
+ may say that, nine years after the loss of Captain Hayes's
+ vessel on Strong's Island, I was again shipwrecked on Peru, one
+ of the Gilbert, or, as we traders call them, the "Line"
+ Islands. Here I was so fortunate as to take up my residence
+ with one of the local traders, a Swiss named Frank Voliero, who
+ was an ardent deep-sea fisherman, and whose catches were the
+ envy and wonder of the wild and intractable natives among whom
+ he lived; for he had excellent tackle, which enabled him to
+ fish at depths seldom tried by the natives, who have no reason
+ to go beyond sixty or eighty fathoms. In the long interval that
+ had elapsed since my fishing days in the Carolines and my
+ arrival at Peru Island, I had gained such experience in my
+ hobby in many other parts of the Pacific as falls to few men,
+ and the desire to fish in deep water, and get something that
+ astonished the natives of the various islands, had become a
+ passion with me. Voliero and myself went out together
+ frequently, and, did space permit, I should like to describe
+ the fortune that attended us at Peru, as well as my fishing
+ adventures at Strong's Island.</p>
+
+ <p>In a former work I have endeavoured to describe that
+ extraordinary nocturnal-feeding fish, the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ , and the manner of its capture by the Malayo-Polynesian
+ islanders of the Equatorial Pacific, and in the present
+<!-- Page 115 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page110" name="page110">[pg 110]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ article I shall try to convey to my readers an idea of deep-sea
+ fishing in the South Seas generally. When I was living on the
+ little island of Nanomaga (one of the Ellice Group, situated
+ about 600 miles to the north-west of Samoa), as the one
+ resident trader, I found myself in&#8212;if I may use the
+ term&#8212;a marine paradise, as far as fishing went. The
+ natives were one and all expert fishermen, extremely jealous of
+ their reputation of being not only the best and most skilful
+ men in Polynesia in the handling of their frail canoes in a
+ heavy surf, but also of being deep-learned in the lore of
+ deep-sea fishing.</p>
+
+ <p>My arrival at the island caused no little commotion among
+ the young bloods, each of whose chances of gaining the girl of
+ his heart, and being united to her by the local Samoan
+ missionary teacher, depended in a great measure upon his
+ ability to provide sustenance for her from the sea; for
+ Nanomaga, like the rest of the Ellice Group, is but little more
+ than a richly-verdured sandbank, based upon a foundation of
+ coral, and yielding nothing to its people but coconuts and a
+ coarse species of taro, called puraka. The inhabitants, in
+ their low-lying atolls, possess no running streams, no fertile
+ soil, in which, as in the mountainous isles of Polynesia, the
+ breadfruit, the yam, and the sweet potato grow and flourish
+ side by side with such rich and luscious fruits as the orange
+ and banana, and pineapple&#8212;they have but the beneficent
+ coconut and the evergiving sea to supply their needs. And the
+ sea is kind to them, as Nature meant it to be to her own
+ children.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 116 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page111" name="page111">[pg 111]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ The native missionary at Nanomaga was a Samoan. He was intended
+ by nature to be a warrior, a leader of men; or&#8212;and no
+ higher praise can I give to his dauntless courage&#8212;a
+ boat-header on a sperm whaler. Strong of arm and quick of eye,
+ he was the very man to either throw the harpoon or deal the
+ death-giving thrust or the lance to the monarch of the ocean
+ world; but fate or circumstance had made him a missionary
+ instead. He was a fairly good missionary, but a better
+ fisherman.</p>
+
+ <p>Three miles from Nanomaga is a submerged reef, marked on the
+ chart as the Grand Coral Reef, but known to the natives as Tia
+ Kau, "the reef." It is in reality a vast mountain of coral,
+ whose bases lie two hundred fathoms deep, with a flattened
+ summit of about fifty acres in extent, rising to within five
+ fathoms of the surface of the sea. This spot is the resort of
+ incredible numbers of fish, both deep-sea haunting and surface
+ swimming. Some of the latter, such as the
+ <i>pala</i>
+
+ (not the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ )&#8212;a long, scaleless, beautifully-formed fish, with a head
+ of bony plates and teeth like a rip-saw&#8212;are of great
+ size, and afford splendid sport, as they are game fighters and
+ almost as powerful as a porpoise. They run to over 100 lbs.,
+ and yet are by no means a coarse fish. In the shallow water on
+ the top of this mountain reef there are some eight or nine
+ varieties of rock cod, none of which were of any great size;
+ but far below, at a depth of from fifty to seventy fathoms,
+ there were some truly monstrous fish of this species, and I and
+ my missionary friend had the luck to catch the four largest
+ ever taken&#8212;221 lbs., 208 lbs., 118 lbs., and 111 lbs. I
+ had caught when fishing for
+<!-- Page 117 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page112" name="page112">[pg 112]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ schnapper, in thirty fathoms off Camden Haven, on the coast of
+ New South Wales, a mottled black and grey rock cod, which
+ weighed 83 lbs., and was assured by the Sydney Museum
+ authorities that such a weight for a rock cod was rare in that
+ part of the Pacific, but that
+ <i>b&#234;che-de-mer</i>
+
+ fishermen on the Great Barrier Reef had occasionally captured
+ fish of the same variety of double that size and weight.</p>
+
+ <p>Not possessing a boat, we fished from a canoe&#8212;a light,
+ but strong and beautifully constructed craft, with "whalebacks"
+ fore and aft to keep it from being swamped by seas when facing
+ or running from a surf. The outrigger was formed of a very
+ light wood, called
+ <i>pua</i>
+
+ , about fourteen inches in circumference. With the teacher and
+ myself there usually went with us a third man, whose duty it
+ was to keep the canoe head to wind, for anchoring in deep water
+ in such a tiny craft was out of the question, as well as
+ dangerous, should a heavy fish or a shark get foul of the
+ outrigger. Capsizes in the daytime we did not mind, but at
+ night numbers of grey sharks were always cruising around, and
+ they were then especially savage and daring.</p>
+
+ <p>Leaving the pretty little village, which was embowered in a
+ palm grove on the lee side of the island, we would, if
+ intending to fish on the Tia Kau, make a start before dawn,
+ remain there till the canoe was loaded to her raised gunwale
+ pieces with the weight of fish, and then return. Night fishing
+ on the Tia Kau by a single canoe was forbidden by the
+ <i>kaupule</i>
+
+ (head men) as being too dangerous on account of the sharks, and
+ so usually from ten to twenty canoes set out
+<!-- Page 118 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page113" name="page113">[pg 113]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ together. If one did come to grief through being swamped, or
+ capsized by having the outrigger fouled by a shark, there was
+ always assistance near at hand, and it rarely happened that any
+ of the crew were bitten. In 1872, however, a fearful tragedy
+ occurred on the Tia Kau, when a party of seventy
+ natives&#8212;men, women, and children&#8212;who were crossing
+ to the neighbouring Island of Nanomea, were attacked by sharks
+ when overtaken on the reef by a squall at night. Only two
+ escaped to tell the tale.
+ <a href="#footnote_14" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[14]</span>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>If, however, we meant to try for
+ <i>takuo</i>
+
+ , a huge variety of the mackerel-tribe, or
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ , a magnificent bream-shaped fish, we had no need to go so far
+ as the dangerous Tia Kau; three or four cable-lengths from the
+ beach, and right in front of the village, we could lie in water
+ as smooth as glass, and seventy fathoms in depth. Our bait was
+ invariably flying-fish, freshly caught, or the tentacles of an
+ octopus. My lines were of white American cotton, and I
+ generally used two hooks, one below and one above the sinker,
+ both baited with a whole flying-fish, while my companions
+ preferred wooden or iron hooks, of their own manufacture, and
+ lines made from hibiscus bark or coconut fibre.</p>
+
+ <p>I shall always remember with pleasure my first
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ . I was accompanied by the native teacher alone, and we paddled
+ off from the village just after evening service, and brought to
+ about a quarter of a mile outside the reef. The rest of the
+ islanders had gone
+<!-- Page 119 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page114" name="page114">[pg 114]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ round in their canoes to the weather side of the little island
+ to fish for
+ <i>takuo</i>
+
+ , for we were expecting a
+ <i>malaga</i>
+
+ , or party of visitors from the Island of Nukufetau in a day or
+ two, and unusual supplies of fish had to be obtained, to
+ sustain, not only the island's record as the fishing centre of
+ the universe, but the people's reputation for hospitality. It
+ had been my suggestion to the teacher that he and I, who were
+ unable to accompany the others, should try what we could do
+ nearer home. The night was brilliantly starlight, and the sea
+ as smooth as glass&#8212;so smooth that there was not even the
+ faintest swell upon the reef. The trade wind was at rest, and
+ not the faintest breath of air moved the foliage of the coco
+ palms lining the white strip of beach. Now and then a splash or
+ a sudden commotion in the water around us would denote that
+ some hapless flying-fish had taken an aerial flight from a
+ pursuing
+ <i>pala</i>
+
+ , or that a shark had seized a turtle in his cruel jaws.
+ Lighting our pipes, we lowered our lines together according to
+ island etiquette, and touched bottom at thirty fathoms; then
+ hauled in a fathom or two of line to avoid fouling the coral.
+ In a few minutes my companion hooked an
+ <i>utu</i>
+
+ , a sluggish fish, somewhat like a salmon in appearance, with
+ shining silvery scales and a broad flat head. As he was hauling
+ in, and I was looking over the side of the canoe to watch it
+ coming up, I felt a sharp, heavy tug at my own line, and,
+ before I could check it, thirty or forty yards of line whizzed
+ through my fingers with lightning speed.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>Lahe'u!</i>
+
+ " shouted the teacher, hurriedly making
+<!-- Page 120 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page115" name="page115">[pg 115]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ his own line fast, and whipping up his paddle. "Don't give out
+ any more line or he will run under the reef, and we shall lose
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>I knew by the vibration and hum of the line as soon as I had
+ it well in hand that there was a heavy and powerful fish at the
+ end. Ioane, disregarding the
+ <i>utu</i>
+
+ as being of no importance in comparison to a
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ , was plunging his paddle rapidly into the water, and
+ endeavouring to back the canoe seaward into deeper water, but,
+ in spite of his efforts and my own, we were being taken quickly
+ inshore. For some two or three minutes the canoe was dragged
+ steadily landward, and I knew that once the
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ succeeded in getting underneath the overhanging ledge of reef,
+ there would be but little chance of our taking him except by
+ diving, and diving on a moonless night under a reef, and
+ freeing a fish from jagged branches of coral, is not a pleasant
+ task, although an Ellice Islander does not much mind it.
+ Finding that I could not possibly turn the fish, I asked Ioane
+ what I should do. He told me to let go a few fathoms of line,
+ brace my knee against the thwart, and then trust to the sudden
+ jerk to cant the fish's head one way or the other. I did as I
+ was told. Out flew the line, and then came a shock that made
+ the canoe fairly jump, lifted the outrigger clear out of the
+ water, and all but capsized her. But the ruse was successful,
+ for, with a furious shake,
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ changed his course, and started off at a tremendous rate,
+ parallel with the reef, and then gradually headed seaward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let him go," said Ioane, who was carefully
+<!-- Page 121 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page116" name="page116">[pg 116]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ watching the tautened-out line, and steering at the same time.
+ "'Tis a strong fish, but he is
+ <i>man tonu</i>
+
+ (truly hooked), and will now tire. But give him no more line,
+ and haul up to him."</p>
+
+ <p>For fully five minutes the canoe went flying over the water,
+ and I continued to haul in line fathom by fathom, until I
+ caught sight of, deep down in the water right ahead, a great
+ phosphorescent boil and bubble. Then the pace began to slacken,
+ as the gallant fighter began to turn from side to side, shaking
+ his head and making futile breaks from port to starboard.
+ Bidding me come amidships with the line, Ioane took in his
+ paddle, and picked up the harpoon which we always carried on
+ the outrigger platform in case of meeting a turtle. Nearer and
+ nearer came the great fish, till, with a splash of
+ phosphorescent light and spray, he came to the surface, beating
+ the water with his forked and bony tail, and still trying to
+ get a chance for another downward run. Then Ioane, waiting his
+ opportunity, sent the iron clean through him from side to side,
+ and I sat down and watched, with a thrill of satisfaction and a
+ sigh of relief, his final flurry. In a few minutes we hauled
+ him alongside, drew the harpoon, and with some difficulty
+ managed to get him over the side and lower him into the bottom
+ of the canoe amidships, where he lay fore and aft, his curved
+ back standing up nearly a foot and a half above the raised
+ gunwale. Although not above four feet in length, he was nearly
+ three in depth, and about sixteen inches thick at the
+ shoulder&#8212;a truly noble fish.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 122 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page117" name="page117">[pg 117]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ We have done well," said the teacher, with a pleased laugh, as
+ he hauled in his own line and dropped a 6-lb.
+ <i>utu</i>
+
+ into the canoe. "There will be much talk over this to-morrow,
+ for these people here are very conceited, and think that no one
+ but themselves can catch
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ and
+ <i>pala</i>
+
+ . They will know better now, when they see this one."</p>
+
+ <p>We returned to the shore within two hours from the time we
+ left, with my
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ , an
+ <i>utu</i>
+
+ , and five or six salmon-like fish called
+ <i>tau-tau</i>
+
+ , all nocturnal feeders, and all highly thought of by the
+ natives, especially the latter. The
+ <i>lahe'u</i>
+
+ we hung up under the missionary's verandah, and at daylight I
+ had the intense satisfaction of seeing a crowd of natives
+ surrounding it, and of hearing their flattering allusions to
+ myself as a
+ <i>papalagi masani tonu futi &#237;ka</i>
+
+ &#8212;a white man who really could fish like a native.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 123 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page118" name="page118">[pg 118]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='On_a_Tidal_River'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>On a Tidal River</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>The English visitor to the Eastern Colonies of Australia who
+ is in search of sport with either rod or hand line can always
+ obtain excellent fishing in the summer months even in such
+ traffic-disturbed harbours as Sydney, Newcastle, and other
+ ports; but on the tidal rivers of the eastern and southern
+ seaboard he can, every day, catch more fish than he can carry
+ during seven months of the year. In the true winter months deep
+ sea fishing is not much favoured, except during the prevalence
+ of westerly winds, when, for days at a time, the Pacific is as
+ smooth as a lake; but in the rivers, from Mallacoota Inlet,
+ which is a few miles over the Victorian boundary, to the Tweed
+ River on the north of New South Wales, the stranger may fairly
+ revel not only in the delights of splendid fishing but in the
+ charms of beautiful scenery. He needs no guide, will be put to
+ but little expense, for the country hotel accommodation is good
+ and cheap; and, should he visit some of the northern rivers
+ where the towns, or rather small settlements, are few and far
+ between, he will find the settlers the embodiment of British
+ hospitality.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 124 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page119" name="page119">[pg 119]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Some three years ago the writer formed one of the crew of a
+ little steamer of fifty tons named the
+ <i>Jenny Lind</i>
+
+ , which was sent out along the coast in the endeavour to revive
+ the coast whaling industry. Through stress of weather we had
+ frequently to make a dash for shelter, towing our sole
+ whaleboat, to one of the many tidal rivers on the coast between
+ Sydney and Gabo Island. Here we would remain until the weather
+ broke, and our crew would literally cover the deck with an
+ extraordinary variety of fish in the course of a few hours.
+ Then, at low tide, we could always fill a couple of cornsacks
+ with excellent oysters, and get bucketfuls of large prawns by
+ means of a scoop net improvised from a piece of mosquito
+ netting; game, too, was very plentiful on the lagoons. The
+ settlers were generally glad to see us, and gave us so freely
+ of milk, butter, pumpkins, &amp;c., that, despite the rough
+ handling we always got at sea from the weather, we grew quite
+ fat. But as the greater part of my fishing experience was
+ gained on the northern rivers of the colony of N.S. Wales it is
+ of them I shall write.</p>
+
+ <p>Eighteen hours' run by steamer from Sydney is the Hastings
+ River, on the southern bank of which, a mile from the bar, is
+ the old-time town of Port Macquarie, a quaint, sleepy little
+ place of six hundred inhabitants, who spend their days in
+ fishing and sleeping and waiting for better times. There are
+ two or three fairly good hotels, very pretty scenery along the
+ coast and up the river, and a stranger can pass a month without
+ suffering from ennui&#8212;
+<!-- Page 125 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page120" name="page120">[pg 120]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ that is, of course, if he be fond of fishing and shooting; if
+ he is not he should avoid going there, for it is the dullest
+ coast town in New South Wales. The southern shore, from the
+ steamer wharf to opposite the bar, is lined with a hard beach,
+ on which at high tide, or slack water at low tide, one may sit
+ down in comfort and have great sport with bream, whiting, and
+ flathead. As soon as the tide turns, however, and is well on
+ the ebb or flow, further fishing is impossible, for the river
+ rushes out to sea with great velocity, and the incoming tide is
+ almost as swift. On the other side of the harbour is a long,
+ sandy point, called the North Shore, about a mile in length.
+ This, at the north end, is met by a somewhat dense scrub, which
+ lines the right bank of the river for a couple of miles, and
+ affords a splendid shade to any one fishing on the river bank.
+ The outer or ocean beach is but a few minutes' walk from the
+ river, and a magnificent beach it is, trending in one great
+ unbroken curve to Point Plomer, seven miles from the
+ township.</p>
+
+ <p>Before ascending the river on a fishing trip one has to
+ provide one's self with a plentiful supply of cockles, or
+ "pippies," as they are called locally. These can only be
+ obtained on the northern ocean beach, and not the least
+ enjoyable part of a day's sport consists in getting them. They
+ are triangular in shape, with smooth shells of every imaginable
+ colour, though a rich purple is commonest. As the back wash
+ leaves the sands bare these bivalves may be seen in thick but
+ irregular patches protruding from the sand. Some
+<!-- Page 126 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page121" name="page121">[pg 121]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ times, if the tide is not low enough, one may get rolled over
+ by the surf if he happen to have his back turned seaward.
+ Generally I was accompanied by two boys, known as "Condon's
+ Twins." They were my landlord's sons, and certainly two of the
+ smartest young sportsmen&#8212;although only twelve years
+ old&#8212;ever met with. Both were very small for their age,
+ and I was always in doubt as to which was which. They were
+ always delighted to come with me, and did not mind being soused
+ by a roller now and then when filling my "pippy" bag. Pippies
+ are the best bait one can have for whiting (except prawns) in
+ Australia, for, unlike the English whiting, it will not touch
+ fish bait of any sort, although, when very hungry, it will
+ sometimes take to octopus flesh. Bream (whether black or
+ silvery), flathead, trevally, jew-fish, and, indeed, all other
+ fish obtained in Australia, are not so dainty, for, although
+ they like "pippies" and prawns best, they will take raw meat,
+ fish, or octopus bait with readiness. Certain species of sea
+ and river mullet are like them in this respect, and good sport
+ may be had from them with a rod in the hot months, as Dick and
+ Fred, the twins aforesaid, well knew, for often would their
+ irate father wrathfully ask them why they wasted their time
+ catching "them worthless mullet."</p>
+
+ <p>But let me give an idea of one of many days' fishing on the
+ Hastings, spent with the "Twins." Having filled a sugar bag
+ with "pippies" on the ocean beach, we put on our boots and make
+ our way through the belt of scrub to where our boat is lying,
+<!-- Page 127 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page122" name="page122">[pg 122]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ tied to the protruding roots of a tree. Each of us is armed
+ with a green stick, and we pick our way pretty carefully, for
+ black snakes are plentiful, and to tread on one may mean death.
+ The density of the foliage overhead is such that but little
+ sunlight can pierce through it, and the ground is soft to our
+ feet with the thick carpet of fallen leaves beneath. No sound
+ but the murmuring of the sea and the hoarse notes of countless
+ gulls breaks the silence, for this side of the river is
+ uninhabited, and its solitude disturbed only by some settler
+ who has ridden down the coast to look for straying cattle, or
+ by a fishing party from the town. Our boat, which we had hauled
+ up and then tied to the tree, is now afloat, for the tide has
+ risen, and the long stretches of yellow sandbanks which line
+ the channel on the farther side are covered now with a foot of
+ water. As we drift up the river, eating our lunch, and letting
+ the boat take care of herself, a huge, misshapen thing comes
+ round a low point, emitting horrid groanings and wheezings. It
+ is a steam stern-wheel punt, loaded with mighty logs of
+ black-butt and tallow wood, from fifty feet to seventy feet in
+ length, cut far up the Hastings and the Maria and Wilson
+ Rivers, and destined for the sawmill at Port Macquarie.</p>
+
+ <p>In another hour we are at our landing-place, a selector's
+ abandoned homestead, built of rough slabs, and standing about
+ fifty yards back from the river and the narrow line of brown,
+ winding beach. The roof had long since fallen in, and the
+ fences and outbuildings lay low, covered with vines and
+ creepers. The intense solitude of the place, the motionless
+ forest
+<!-- Page 128 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page123" name="page123">[pg 123]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of lofty grey-boled swamp gums that encompassed it on all sides
+ but one, and the wide stretch of river before it were
+ calculated to inspire melancholy in any one but an ardent
+ fisherman. Scarcely have we hauled our boat up on the sand, and
+ deposited our provisions and water in the roofless house, when
+ we hear a commotion in the river&#8212;a swarm of fish called
+ "tailer" are making havoc among a "school" of small mullet,
+ many of which fling themselves out upon the sand. Presently all
+ is quiet again, and we get our lines ready.</p>
+
+ <p>For whiting and silvery bream rather fine lines are used,
+ but we each have a heavy line for flathead, for these fish are
+ caught in the tidal rivers on a sandy bottom up to three feet
+ and four feet in length. They are in colour, both on back and
+ belly, much like a sole, of great width across the shoulders,
+ and then taper away to a very fine tail. The head is perfectly
+ flat, very thin, and armed on each side with very sharp bones
+ pointing tailward; a wound from one of these causes intense
+ inflammation. The fins are small&#8212;so small as to appear
+ almost rudimentary&#8212;yet the fish swims, or rather darts,
+ along the bottom with amazing rapidity. They love to lie along
+ the banks a few feet from the shore, where, concealed in the
+ sand, they can dart out upon and seize their prey in their
+ enormous "gripsack" mouths. The approach of a boat or a person
+ walking along the sand will cause them to at once speed like
+ lightning into deep water, leaving behind them a wake of sand
+ and mud which is washed off their backs in their flight. Still,
+ although not a
+<!-- Page 129 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page124" name="page124">[pg 124]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ pleasing fish to look at, the flathead is of a delicious and
+ delicate flavour. There are some variations in their shades of
+ colour, from a pale, delicate grey to a very dark brown,
+ according to their habitat, and, although most frequent in very
+ shallow water, they are often caught in great quantities off
+ the coast in from ten to fifteen fathoms of water. Gut or wire
+ snoodings are indispensable when fishing for flathead, else the
+ fish invariably severs the line with his fine needle-pointed
+ teeth, which are set very closely together. Nothing comes amiss
+ to them as food, but they have a great love for small mullet or
+ whiting, or a piece of octopus tentacle.</p>
+
+ <p>Baiting our heavy lines with mullet&#8212;two hooks with
+ brass-wire snoods to each line&#8212;we throw out about thirty
+ yards, then, leaving two or three fathoms loose upon the shore,
+ we each thrust a stick firmly into the sand, and take a turn of
+ the line round it. As the largest flathead invariably dart upon
+ the bait, and then make a bolt with it, this plan is a good one
+ to follow, unless, of course, they are biting freely; in that
+ case the smaller lines for bream and whiting, &amp;c., are
+ hauled in, for there is more real sport in landing an 8-lb.
+ flathead than there is in catching smaller fish, for he is very
+ game, and fights fiercely for his life.</p>
+
+ <p>Having disposed our big lines, we bait the smaller ones with
+ "pippies," and not two minutes at the outside elapse after the
+ sinkers have touched bottom when we know we are to have a good
+ time, for each of us has hooked a fish, and three whiting are
+ kicking on the sand before five minutes have expired. Then
+<!-- Page 130 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page125" name="page125">[pg 125]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ for another hour we throw out and haul in again as quickly as
+ possible, landing whiting from 6 oz. to nearly 2 lbs. in
+ weight. One of the "Twins" has three hooks on his line, and
+ occasionally lands three fish together, and now and again we
+ get small bream and an occasional "tailer" of 2 lbs. or 3 lbs.
+ As the sun mounts higher the breeze dies away, the heat becomes
+ very great, and we have frequent recourse to our water
+ jar&#8212;in one case mixing it with whisky. Then the whiting
+ cease to bite as suddenly as they have begun, and move off into
+ deeper water. Just as we are debating as to whether we shall
+ take the boat out into mid-stream, Twin Dick gives a yell as
+ his stick is suddenly whipped out of the sand, and the loose
+ line lying beside it rushes away into the water. But Dick is an
+ old hand, and lets his fish have his first bolt, and then turns
+ him. "By Jingo! sir, he's a big fellow," he cries, as he hauls
+ in, the line now as taut as a telegraph wire, and then the
+ other twin comes to his aid, and in a few minutes the outline
+ of the fish is seen, coming in straight ahead as quick as they
+ can pull him. When he is within ten feet of the beach the boys
+ run up the bank and land him safely, as he turns his body into
+ a circle in his attempts to shake out the hook. Being called
+ upon to estimate his weight, I give it as 11 lbs., much to the
+ twins' sorrow&#8212;they think it 15 lbs.</p>
+
+ <p>Half an hour passes, and we catch but half a dozen silvery
+ bream and some small baby whiting, for now the sun is beating
+ down upon our heads, and our naked feet begin to burn and
+ sting, so we adjourn to
+<!-- Page 131 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page126" name="page126">[pg 126]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the old house and rest awhile, leaving our big lines securely
+ tied. But, though the breeze for which we wait comes along by
+ two o'clock, the fish do not, and so, after disinterring our
+ takes from the wet sand wherein we had buried them as caught to
+ prevent them being spoilt by the sun, we get aboard again and
+ pull across to the opposite bank of the river. Here, in much
+ deeper water, about fifteen feet right under the clayey bank,
+ we can see hundreds of fine bream, and now and then some small
+ jew-fish. Taking off our sinkers, we have as good and more
+ exciting sport among the bream than we had with the whiting,
+ catching between four and five dozen by six o'clock. Then,
+ after boiling the billy and eating some fearfully tough corned
+ meat, we get into the boat again, hoist our sail, and land at
+ the little township just after dark.</p>
+
+ <p>Such was one of many similar day's sport on the Hastings,
+ which, with the Bellinger, the Nambucca, the Macleay, and the
+ Clarence, affords good fishing practically all the year round.
+ Then, besides these tidal rivers, there are at frequent
+ intervals along the coast tidal lagoons and "blind" creeks
+ where fish congregate in really incredible quantities. Such
+ places as Lake Illawarra and Lake Macquarie are fishing resorts
+ well known to the tourist; but along the northern coast, where
+ the population is scantier, and access by rail or steamer more
+ difficult, there is an absolutely new field open to the
+ sportsman&#8212;in fact, these places are seldom visited for
+ either fishing or shooting by people from Sydney. During
+<!-- Page 132 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page127" name="page127">[pg 127]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ November and December the bars of these rivers are literally
+ black with incredible numbers of coarse sea-salmon&#8212;a fish
+ much like the English sea-bass&#8212;which, making their way
+ over the bars, swim up the rivers and remain there for about a
+ week. Although these fish, which weigh from 6 lbs. to 10 lbs.,
+ do not take a bait and are rather too coarse to eat, their roes
+ are very good, especially when smoked. They are captured with
+ the greatest of ease, either by spearing or by the hand; for
+ sometimes they are in such dense masses that they are unable to
+ manoeuvre in small bays; and the urchins of coastal towns hail
+ their yearly advent with delight. They usually make their first
+ appearance about the second week in November, and are always
+ followed by a great number of very large sharks and saw-fish,
+ which commit dreadful havoc in their serried and helpless
+ ranks. Following the sea-salmon, the rivers are next visited in
+ January by shoals of very large sea-mullet&#8212;blue-black
+ backs, silvery bellies and sides, and yellow fins and tails.
+ These, too, will not take a bait, but are caught in nets, and,
+ if a steamer happens to be on the eve of leaving for Sydney,
+ many hundreds of baskets are sent away; but they barely pay the
+ cost of freight and commission, I believe. There are several
+ varieties of sea-mullet, one or two of which will take the hook
+ freely, and I have often caught them off the rocky coast of New
+ South Wales with a rod when the sea has been smooth. The
+ arrival of the big sea-mullet denotes that the season for
+ jew-fish is at its height; and if the stranger to Australian
+<!-- Page 133 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page128" name="page128">[pg 128]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ waters wants exciting sport let him try jew-fishing at night.
+ In deep water off the coast these great fish are occasionally
+ caught during daylight, but a dull, cloudy night is best, when
+ they may be caught from the beach or river bank in shallow
+ water. Very stout lines and heavy hooks are used, for a 90-lb.
+ or l00-lb. jew-fish is very common. Baiting with a whole mullet
+ or whiting, or one of the tentacles of an octopus, the most
+ amateurish fisherman cannot fail to hook two or three jew-fish
+ in a night. (Even in Sydney harbour I have seen some very large
+ ones caught by people fishing from ferry wharves.) They are
+ very powerful, and also very game, and when they rise to the
+ surface make a terrific splashing. At one place on the Hastings
+ River, called Blackman's Point, a party of four of us took
+ thirteen fish, the heaviest of which was 42 lbs. and the
+ lightest 9 lbs. Next morning, however, the Blackman's Point
+ ferryman, who always set a line from his punt when he turned
+ in, showed us one of over 70 lbs. When they grow to such a size
+ as this they are not eaten locally, as the flesh is very often
+ full of thin, thread-like worms. The young fish, however, are
+ very palatable.</p>
+
+ <p>The saw-fish, to which I have before alluded as harrying the
+ swarms of sea-salmon, also make havoc with the jew-fish, and
+ very often are caught on jew-fish lines. They are terrible
+ customers to get foul of (I do not confound them with the
+ sword-fish) when fishing from a small boat. Their huge bone
+ bill, set on both sides with its terrible sharp spikes, their
+ great length, and enormous strength, render it impossible
+<!-- Page 134 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page129" name="page129">[pg 129]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ to even get them alongside, and there is no help for it but
+ either to cut the line or pull up anchor and land the creature
+ on the shore. Even then the task of despatching one of these
+ fish is no child's play on a dark night, for they lash their
+ long tails about with such fury that a broken leg might be the
+ result of coming too close. In the rivers of Northern
+ Queensland the saw-fish attain an enormous size, and the
+ Chinese fishermen about Cooktown and Townsville often have
+ their nets destroyed by a saw-fish enfolding himself in them.
+ Alligators, by the way, do the same thing there, and are
+ sometimes captured, perfectly helpless, in the folds of the
+ nets, in which they have rolled themselves over and over again,
+ tearing it beyond repair with their feet, but eventually
+ yielding to their fate.</p>
+
+ <p>The schnapper, the best of all Australian fish, is too well
+ known to English visitors to describe in detail. Most town-bred
+ Australians generally regard it as a purely ocean-loving fish,
+ or at least only frequenting very deep waters in deep harbours,
+ such as Sydney, Jervis Bay, and Twofold Bay. This is quite a
+ mistake, for in many of the rivers, twenty or more miles up
+ from the sea, the writer and many other people have not only
+ caught these beautiful fish, but seen fishermen haul in their
+ nets filled with them. But they seldom remain long, preferring
+ the blue depths of ocean to the muddy bottoms of tidal rivers,
+ for they are rock-haunting and surf-loving.</p>
+
+ <p>Of late years the northern bar harbours and rivers of New
+ South Wales have been visited by a fish that
+<!-- Page 135 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page130" name="page130">[pg 130]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ in my boyhood's days was unknown even to the oldest
+ fisherman&#8212;the bonito. Although in shape and size they
+ exactly resemble the ocean bonito of tropic seas, these new
+ arrivals are lighter in colour, with bands of marbled grey
+ along the sides and belly. They bite freely at a running
+ bait&#8212;
+ <i>i.e.,</i>
+
+ when a line is towed astern, and are very good when eaten quite
+ fresh, but, like all of the mackerel tribe, rapidly deteriorate
+ in a few hours after being caught. The majority of the coast
+ settlers will not eat them, being under the idea that, as they
+ are all but scaleless, they are "poisonous." This silly
+ impression also prevails with regard to many other scaleless
+ fish on the Australian coast, some of which, such as the
+ trevally, are among the best and most delicate in flavour. The
+ black and white rock cod is also regarded with aversion by the
+ untutored settlers of the small coast settlements, yet these
+ fish are sold in Sydney, like the schnapper, at prohibitive
+ prices.</p>
+
+ <p>In conclusion, let me advise any one who is contemplating a
+ visit to Australia, and means to devote any of his time to
+ either river or sea fishing, to take his rods with him; all the
+ rest of his tackle he can buy as cheap in the colonies as he
+ can in England. Rods are but little used in salt-water fishing
+ in Australia, and are rather expensive. Those who do use a rod
+ are usually satisfied with a bamboo&#8212;a very good rod it
+ makes, too, although inconvenient to carry when
+ travelling&#8212;but the generality of people use hand lines.
+ And the visitor must not be persuaded that he can always get
+ good fishing without
+<!-- Page 136 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page131" name="page131">[pg 131]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ going some distance from Sydney or Melbourne. That there is
+ some excellent sport to be obtained in Port Jackson in summer
+ is true, but it is lacking in a very essential thing&#8212;the
+ quietude that is dear to the heart of every true fisherman.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 137 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page132" name="page132">[pg 132]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='Denison_Gets_Another_Ship'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>Denison Gets Another Ship</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>Owing to reduced circumstances, and a growing hatred of the
+ hardships of the sea, young Tom Denison (ex-supercargo of the
+ South Sea Island trading schooner
+ <i>Palestine</i>
+
+ ) had sailed from Sydney to undertake the management of an
+ alleged duck-farm in North Queensland. The ducks, and the vast
+ area of desolation in which they suffered a brief existence,
+ were the property of a Cooktown bank, the manager of which was
+ Denison's brother. He was a kind-hearted man, who wanted to
+ help Tom along in the world, and, therefore, was grieved when
+ at the end of three weeks the latter came into Cooktown humping
+ his swag, smoking a clay pipe, and looking exceedingly tired,
+ dirty, and disreputable generally. However, all might have gone
+ well even then had not Mrs. Aubrey Denison, the brother's wife,
+ unduly interfered and lectured Tom on his "idle and dissolute
+ life," as she called it, and made withering remarks about the
+ low tastes of sailors other than captains of mail steamers or
+ officers in the Navy. Tom, who intended to borrow &#163;10 from
+ his brother to pay his passage back to Sydney to look for a
+ ship, bore it all in silence, and
+<!-- Page 138 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page133" name="page133">[pg 133]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ then said that he should like to give up the sea and become a
+ missionary in the South Seas, where he was "well acquainted
+ with the natives."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Aubrey (who was a very refined young lady) smiled
+ contemptuously, and turned down the corners of her pretty
+ little mouth in a manner that made the unsuccessful duck-farmer
+ boil with suppressed fury, as she remarked that
+ <i>she</i>
+
+ had heard of some of the shocking stories he had been telling
+ the accountant and cashier of the
+ <i>characters</i>
+
+ of the people in the South Seas, and
+ <i>she</i>
+
+ quite understood
+ <i>why</i>
+
+ he wished to return there and re-associate with his vulgar and
+ wicked companions. Now, she added, had he stuck bravely to work
+ with the ducks, the Bank (she uttered the word "Bank" in the
+ tone of reverence as one would say "The Almighty") would have
+ watched his career with interest, and in time his brother would
+ have used his influence with the General Manager to obtain a
+ position for him, Tom Denison, in the Bank itself! But, judging
+ from
+ <i>her</i>
+
+ knowledge of his (Tom's) habits and disposition, she would be
+ doing wrong to hold out the slightest hope for him now,
+ and&#8212;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Look here, Maud, you're only twenty-two&#8212;two years
+ older than me, and you talk like an old grandmother;" and then
+ his wrath overpowered his judgment&#8212;"and you'll look like
+ one before you're twenty-five. Don't you lecture
+ <i>me</i>
+
+ . I'm not your husband,
+ <i>thank Heaven above</i>
+
+ ! And damn the bank and its carmine ducks." (He did not say
+ "carmine," but I study the proprieties, and this is not a
+ sanguinary story.)</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 139 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page134" name="page134">[pg 134]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ From the weatherboard portals of the bank Tom strode out in
+ undisguised anger, and obtained employment on a collier,
+ discharging coals. Then, by an extraordinary piece of good
+ luck, he got a billet as proof-reader on the North Queensland
+ <i>Trumpet Call</i>
+
+ , from which, after an exciting three weeks, he was dismissed
+ for "general incompetency and wilful neglect of his duties." So
+ with sorrow in his heart he had turned to the ever-resourceful
+ sea again for a living. He worked his passage down to Sydney in
+ an old, heart-broken, wheezing steamer named the
+ <i>You Yangs</i>
+
+ , and stepped jauntily ashore with sixteen shillings in his
+ pocket, some little personal luggage rolled up in his blanket,
+ and an unlimited confidence in his own luck.</p>
+
+ <p>Two vessels were due from the South Sea Islands in about a
+ month, and as the skippers were both well known to and were on
+ friendly terms with him, he felt pretty certain of getting a
+ berth as second mate or supercargo on one of them. Then he went
+ to look for a quiet lodging.</p>
+
+ <p>This was soon found, and then realising the fact that
+ sixteen shillings would not permit him viewing the sights of
+ Sydney and calling upon the Governor, as is the usual procedure
+ with intellectual and dead-broke Englishmen who come to
+ Australia with letters of introduction from people who are
+ anxious to get rid of them, he tried to get temporary
+ employment by applying personally at the leading warehouses and
+ merchants' offices. The first day he failed; also the second.
+ On the third day the secretary of a milk company desired him to
+ call again in three days. He did, and was then
+<!-- Page 140 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page135" name="page135">[pg 135]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ told by the manager that he "might have something" for him in a
+ month or two. This annoyed Tom, as he had put on his sole clean
+ collar that morning to produce a good impression. He asked the
+ official if six months would not suit him better, as he wanted
+ to go away on a lengthy fishing trip with the Attorney-General.
+ The manager looked at him in a dignified manner, and then bade
+ him an abrupt good-day.</p>
+
+ <p>A week passed. Funds were getting low. Eight shillings had
+ been paid in advance for his room, and he had spent five in
+ meals. But he was not despondent; the
+ <i>Susannah Booth</i>
+
+ , dear, comfortable old wave-puncher, beloved of hard-up
+ supercargoes, was due in a week, and, provided he could inspire
+ his landlady with confidence until then, all would be well.</p>
+
+ <p>But the day came when he had to spend his last shilling, and
+ after a fruitless endeavour to get a job on the wharves to
+ drive one of the many steam winches at work discharging cargo
+ from the various ships, he returned home in disgust.</p>
+
+ <p>That night, as he sat cogitating in his bedroom over his
+ lucklessness, his eye fell on a vegetable monstrosity from
+ Queensland, presented to him by one of the hands on board the
+ <i>You Yangs</i>
+
+ . It was a huge, dried bean-pod, about four feet long, and
+ contained about a dozen large black beans, each about the size
+ of a watch. He had seen these beans, after the kernels were
+ scooped out, mounted with silver, and used as match-boxes by
+ bushmen and other Australian gentry. It at once occurred to him
+ that he might sell it. Surely the thing ought to be worth at
+ least five shillings.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 141 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page136" name="page136">[pg 136]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ In two minutes he was out in the street, but to his disgust
+ found most of the shops closed, except the very small retail
+ establishments.</p>
+
+ <p>Entering a little grocery store, he approached the
+ proprietor, a man with a pale, gargoyle-like face, and
+ unpleasant-looking, raggedy teeth, and showing him the bean,
+ asked him to buy it.</p>
+
+ <p>The merchant looked at it with some interest and asked Tom
+ what it was called.</p>
+
+ <p>Tom said it was a
+ <i>Locomotor Ataxy</i>
+
+ . (He didn't know what a
+ <i>locomotor ataxy</i>
+
+ was; but it sounded well, and was all the Latin he knew, having
+ heard from his mother that a dissolute brother of hers had been
+ afflicted with that complaint, superinduced by spirituous
+ liquors.)</p>
+
+ <p>The grocer-man turned the vegetable over and over again in
+ his hand, and then asked the would-be vendor if he had any
+ more. Tom said he hadn't. The
+ <i>locomotor ataxy</i>
+
+ , he remarked, was a very rare bean, and very valuable. But he
+ would sell it cheap&#8212;for five shillings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't want it," said the man rudely, pushing it away
+ contemptuously. "It's only a faked-up thing anyway, made of
+ paper-mashy."</p>
+
+ <p>Tom tried to convince him that the thing was perfectly
+ genuine, and actually grew on a vine in North Queensland; but
+ the Notre Dame gargoyle-featured person only heard him with a
+ snort of contempt. It was obvious he wouldn't buy it. So,
+ sneeringly observing to the grocer that no doubt five shillings
+ was a large sum for a man in such a small way of
+<!-- Page 142 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page137" name="page137">[pg 137]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ business as he was, Tom went out again into the cold world.</p>
+
+ <p>He tried several other places, but no one would even look at
+ the thing. After vainly tramping about for over two hours, he
+ turned away towards his lodging, feeling very dispirited, and
+ thinking about breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>Turning up a side street called Queen's Place, so as to make
+ a short cut home, he espied in a dimly-lighted little shop an
+ old man and a boy working at the cobbler trade. They had
+ honest, intelligent faces, and looked as if they wanted to buy
+ a
+ <i>locomotor ataxy</i>
+
+ very badly. He tapped at the door and then entered.</p>
+
+ <p>"Would you like to buy this?" he said to the old man. He did
+ not like to repeat his foolish Latin nonsense, for the old
+ fellow had such a worn, kindly face, and his honest, searching
+ eyes met his in such a way that he felt ashamed to ask him to
+ buy what could only be worthless rubbish to him.</p>
+
+ <p>The cobbler looked at the monstrosity wonderingly. "'Tis a
+ rare big bean," he said, in the trembling quaver of old age,
+ and with a mumbling laugh like that of a pleased child. "I'll
+ give you two shillin's for it. I suppose you want money badly,
+ or else you wouldn't be wanderin' about at ten o'clock at night
+ tryin' to sell it. I hope you come by it honest, young
+ man?"</p>
+
+ <p>Tom satisfied him on this score, and then the ancient gave
+ him the two shillings. Bidding him good-night, Tom returned
+ home and went to bed.</p>
+
+ <p>(Quite two years after, when Denison returned to
+<!-- Page 143 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page138" name="page138">[pg 138]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Sydney from the South Seas with more money "than was good for
+ his moral welfare," as his sister-in-law remarked, he sought
+ out the old cobbler gentleman and bought back his
+ <i>locomotor ataxy</i>
+
+ bean for as many sovereigns as he had been given shillings for
+ it.)</p>
+
+ <p>Next morning he was down at the wharves before six o'clock,
+ smoking his pipe contentedly, after breakfasting sumptuously at
+ a coffee-stall for sixpence. There was a little American barque
+ lying alongside the Circular Quay, and some of the hands were
+ bending on her head-sails. Tom sat down on the wharf stringer
+ dangling his feet and watching them intently. Presently the
+ mate appeared on the poop, smoking a cigar. He looked at Tom
+ critically for a moment or so, and then said&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Looking for a ship, young feller?"</p>
+
+ <p>The moment Tom heard him speak, he jumped to his feet, for
+ he knew the voice, last heard when the possessor of it was mate
+ of the island trading schooner
+ <i>Sadie Caller</i>
+
+ , a year before in Samoa.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is that you, Bannister?" he cried.</p>
+
+ <p>"Reckon 'taint no one else, young feller. Why, Tom Denison,
+ is it you? Step right aboard."</p>
+
+ <p>Tom was on the poop in an instant, the mate coming to him
+ with outstretched hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the matter, Tom? Broke?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stony!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sit down here and tell me all about it. I heard you had
+ left the
+ <i>Palestine</i>
+
+ . Say, sling that dirty old pipe overboard, and take one of
+ these cigars. The skipper will be on deck presently, and the
+ sight of it
+<!-- Page 144 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page139" name="page139">[pg 139]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ would rile him terrible. He hez his new wife aboard, and she
+ considers pipes ez low-down."</p>
+
+ <p>Tom laughed as he thought of Mrs. Aubrey, and flung his clay
+ over the side. "What ship is this, Bannister?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The
+ <i>J.W. Seaver</i>
+
+ , of 'Frisco. We're from the Gilbert Islands with a cargo of
+ copra."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who is your supercargo?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Haven't got one. Can't get one here, either. Say, Tom,
+ you're the man. The captain will jump at getting you! Since he
+ married he considers his life too valuable to be trusted among
+ natives, and funks at going ashore and doing supercargo's work.
+ Now you come below, and I'll rake out enough money to get you a
+ high-class suit of store clothes and shiny boots. Then you come
+ back to dinner. I'll talk to him between then and now. He knows
+ a lot about you. I'll tell him that since you left the
+ <i>Palestine</i>
+
+ you've been touring your native country to 'expand your mind.'
+ <i>She's</i>
+
+ Boston, as ugly as a brown stone jug, and highly intellectual.
+ <i>He's</i>
+
+ all right, and as good a sailor-man as ever trod a deck, but
+ <i>she's</i>
+
+ boss, runs the ship, and looks after the crew's morals. Thet's
+ why we're short-handed. But she'll take to you like
+ lightning&#8212;when she hears that you've been 'expanding your
+ mind.' Buy a second-hand copy of Longfellow's, poems, and tell
+ her that it has been your constant companion in all your
+ wanderings among vicious cannibals, and she'll just decorate
+ your cabin like a prima-donna's boudoir, darn your socks, and
+ make you read some of her own poetry."</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 145 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page140" name="page140">[pg 140]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ That afternoon, Mr. Thomas Denison, clean-shirted and looking
+ eminently respectable and prosperous, and feeling once more a
+ man after the degrading duck episode in North Queensland, was
+ strolling about George Street with Bannister, and at peace with
+ the world and himself. For the skipper's wife had been
+ impressed with his intellectuality and modest demeanour, and
+ was already at work decorating his cabin&#8212;as Bannister had
+ prophesied.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 146 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page141" name="page141">[pg 141]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='Jack_Sharks_Pilot'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>Jack Shark's Pilot</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>Early one morning as we in the
+ <i>Palestine</i>
+
+ , South Sea trading schooner, were sailing slowly between
+ Fotuna and Alofa&#8212;two islands lying to the northward of
+ Fiji&#8212;one of the native hands came aft and reported two
+ large sharks alongside. The mate at once dived below for his
+ shark hook, while I tried to find a suitable bit of beef in the
+ harness cask. Just as the mate appeared carrying the heavy hook
+ and chain, our skipper, who was lying on the skylight smoking
+ his pipe, although half asleep, inquired if there were "any
+ pilot fish with the brutes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir," said a sailor who was standing in the waist,
+ looking over the side, "there's quite a lot of 'em. I've never
+ seen so many at one time before. There's nigh on a dozen."</p>
+
+ <p>The captain was on his feet in an instant. "Don't lower that
+ hook of yours just yet, Porter," he said to the mate. "I'm
+ going to get those pilot fish first. Tom, bring me up my small
+ fishing line."</p>
+
+ <p>"They won't take a hook, will they?" I inquired.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just you wait and see, sonny. Ever taste pilot fish?"</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 147 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page142" name="page142">[pg 142]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ No. Are they good to eat?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Best fish in the ocean, barring flying-fish," replied the
+ skipper, as, after examining his line, he cut off both hook and
+ leaden sinker and bent on a small-sized
+ <i>pa</i>
+
+ &#8212;a native-made bonito hook cut out from a solid piece of
+ pearl-shell.</p>
+
+ <p>Then jumping up into the whaleboat which hung in davits on
+ the starboard quarter he waited for the sharks to appear, and
+ the mate and I leant over the side and watched. We had not long
+ to wait, for in a few minutes one came swimming quickly up from
+ astern, and was almost immediately joined by the other, which
+ had been hanging about amidships. They were both, however,
+ pretty deep down, and at first I could not discern any pilot
+ fish. The captain, however, made a cast and the hook dropped in
+ the water, about fifty feet in the rear of the sharks; he let
+ it sink for less than half a minute, and then began hauling in
+ the line as quickly as possible, and at the same moment I saw
+ some of the pilot fish quite distinctly&#8212;some swimming
+ alongside and some just ahead of their detestable companions,
+ which were now right under the counter. Then something gleamed
+ brightly, and the shining hook appeared, for a second or two
+ only, for two of the "pilots" darted after it with
+ lightning-like rapidity, and presently one came to the surface
+ with a splash, beautifully hooked, and was swung up into the
+ boat.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now for some fun," cried the captain, as tossing the fish
+ to us on deck he again lowered the hook. This time it had
+ barely touched the surface of the
+<!-- Page 148 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page143" name="page143">[pg 143]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ water when away went the line with a rush right under our
+ keel.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is a big fellow," said the skipper, and up came
+ another dark blue and silver beauty about a foot in length,
+ dropping off the hook just in time as he was hoisted clear of
+ the gunwale. Then, in less than ten minutes&#8212;so eager were
+ they to rush the hook the moment it struck the water&#8212;five
+ more were jumping about upon the deck or in the boat. Then came
+ a calamity, the eighth fish dropped off when half way up and
+ took the hook with him, having swallowed it and bitten through
+ the line.</p>
+
+ <p>The captain jumped on deck again and began rooting out his
+ bag for another small-sized
+ <i>pa</i>
+
+ , but to his disgust could not find one ready for
+ use&#8212;none of them having the actual "hook" portion lashed
+ to the shank, and the operation of lashing one of these
+ cleverly-made native hooks takes some little time and patience,
+ for the holes which are bored through the base of the "hook"
+ part in order to lash it to the shank are very small, and only
+ very fine and strong cord, such as banana-fibre, can be used.
+ However, while the irate captain was fussing over his task, the
+ mate and I were watching the movements of the sharks and their
+ little friends with the greatest interest, having promised the
+ captain not to lower the shark hook till he had caught the rest
+ of the pilot fish, for he assured us that they would most
+ likely disappear after the sharks were captured. (I learned
+ from my own experience afterward that he was mistaken, for when
+ a shark is caught at sea his attendants will frequently
+<!-- Page 149 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page144" name="page144">[pg 144]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ remain with the ship for weeks, or until another shark appears,
+ in which case they at once attach themselves to him.)</p>
+
+ <p>Both sharks were now swimming almost on the surface, so
+ close to the ship that they could have been caught in a running
+ bowline or harpooned with the greatest ease; and in fact our
+ native crew, who were very partial to shark's flesh, had both
+ harpoon and bowline in readiness in case the cunning brutes
+ would not take a bait. They were both of great size&#8212;the
+ largest being over twelve or thirteen feet in length. With the
+ smaller one were three pilot fish, one swimming directly under
+ the end of its nose, the others just over its eyes; the larger
+ had but one attendant, which kept continually changing its
+ position, sometimes being on one side, then on another, then
+ disappearing for a few moments underneath the monster's belly,
+ or pressing itself so closely against the creature's side that
+ it appeared as if it was adhering to it. I had never before
+ seen these fish at such close quarters, and their extraordinary
+ activity and seeming attachment to their savage companions was
+ most astonishing to witness; occasionally when either of the
+ sharks would cease moving, they would take up a position within
+ a few inches of its jaws, remain there a few seconds, and then
+ swim under its belly and reappear at the tail, then slowly make
+ their way along its back or sides to the hideous head again.
+ Sometimes, either singly or all together, they would dart away
+ on either side, but quickly returned, never being absent more
+ than a minute. These brief excursions showed them to be
+<!-- Page 150 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page145" name="page145">[pg 145]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ extremely swift, yet when they returned to their huge
+ companions they instantly became&#8212;at least to all
+ appearance&#8212;intensely sluggish and languid in their
+ movements, and swam in an undecided, indefinite sort of manner
+ as if thoroughly exhausted. But this was but in appearance, for
+ suddenly they would again shoot away along the surface of the
+ water with lightning-like rapidity, disappear from view of the
+ keenest eye, and, ere you could count five, again be beside the
+ vessel swimming as leisurely, if not as lazily, as if they were
+ incapable of quickening their speed.</p>
+
+ <p>Having his line ready again, the captain now began fishing
+ from the stern, and succeeded in catching three of the
+ remaining four, the last one (which our natives said was the
+ fish which had swallowed the first hook) refusing even to look
+ at the tempting bit of iridescent pearl-shell. Then the
+ impatient mate lowered his bait over the stern, having first
+ passed the line outboard and given the end to three or four of
+ the crew, who stood in the waist ready to haul in. The smaller
+ of the two sharks was at once hooked, and when dragged up
+ alongside amidships struggled and lashed about so furiously
+ that the big fellow came lumbering up to see what was the
+ matter, and Billy Rotumah, our native boatswain, who was
+ watching for him, promptly drove a harpoon socket deeply into
+ him between the shoulders; then, after some difficulty, a
+ couple of running bowlines settled them both in a comfortable
+ position to be stunned with an axe.</p>
+
+ <p>The schooner was at this time within a few miles of a small
+ village on Alofa, named Mua, and presently
+<!-- Page 151 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page146" name="page146">[pg 146]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ a boat manned by natives boarded us to sell yams, taro,
+ pineapples, and bananas, all of which we bought from them in
+ exchange for the sharks' livers and some huge pieces of flesh
+ weighing two or three hundred pounds. These people (who
+ resemble the Samoans in appearance and language) were much
+ impressed and terrified when they saw the pilot fish which had
+ been caught, and told our crew that ours would be an unlucky
+ ship&#8212;that we had done a dangerous and foolish thing.
+ Their feeling on the subject was strong; for when I asked them
+ if they would take two or three of the fish on shore to Father
+ Herv&#233;, one of the French priests living on Fotuna, who was
+ an old friend, they started back in mingled terror and
+ indignation, and absolutely declined to even touch them. Taking
+ one of the pilot fish up I held it by the head between my
+ forefinger and thumb and asked the natives if they did not
+ consider it good to look at.</p>
+
+ <p>"True," replied a fine, stalwart young fellow, speaking in
+ Samoan, "it is good to look at," and then he added gravely, "<i>Talofa
+ lava ia te outou i le vaa nei, ua lata mai ne aso
+ malaia ma le tig&#257;</i>"
+
+ ("Alas for all you people on this ship, there is a day of
+ disaster and sorrow near you").</p>
+
+ <p>I tried to ascertain the cause of their terror, but could
+ only elicit the statement that to kill a pilot fish meant
+ direful misfortune. No sensible man, they asserted, would do
+ such a senseless and
+ <i>saua</i>
+
+ (cruel) thing, and to eat one was an abomination
+ unutterable.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as our visitors had left I hurried to make a closer
+ examination of our prizes before the cook took
+<!-- Page 152 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page147" name="page147">[pg 147]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ possession of them. Of the eleven, only one was over a foot in
+ length, the rest ranged from five to ten inches. The beautiful
+ dark blue of the head and along the back, so noticeable when
+ first caught, had now lost its brilliancy, and the four wide
+ vertical black stripes on the sides had also become dulled,
+ although the silvery belly was still as bright as a new dollar.
+ The eyes were rather large for such a small fish, and all the
+ fins were blue-black, with a narrow white line running along
+ the edges. Their appearance even an hour after death was very
+ handsome, and in shape they were much like a very plump trout.
+ In the stomachs of some we found small flying squid, little
+ shrimps, and other Crustacea.</p>
+
+ <p>Our Manila-man cook, although not a genius, certainly knew
+ how to fry fish, and that morning we had for breakfast some of
+ Jack Shark's pilots&#8212;the most delicately-flavoured
+ deep-sea fish I have ever tasted&#8212;except, perhaps, that
+ wonderful and beautiful creature, the flying-fish.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 153 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page148" name="page148">[pg 148]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='The_quotPaluquot_of_the_Equatorial_Pacific'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>The "Palu" of the Equatorial Pacific</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>During a residence of half a lifetime among the various
+ island-groups of the North-western and South Pacific, I devoted
+ much of my spare time&#8212;and I had plenty of it
+ occasionally&#8212;to deep-sea fishing, my tutors being the
+ natives of the Caroline, Marshall, Gilbert, and Ellice
+ Groups.</p>
+
+ <p>The inhabitants of the last-named cluster of islands are, as
+ I have said, the most skilled fishermen of all the
+ Malayo-Polynesian peoples with whom it has been my fortune to
+ have come in contact. The very poverty of their island
+ homes&#8212;mere sandbanks covered with coconut and pandanus
+ palms only&#8212;drives them to the sea for their food; for the
+ Ellice Islanders, unlike their more fortunate prototypes who
+ dwell in the forest-clad, mountainous, and fertile islands of
+ Samoa, Tahiti, Raratonga, &amp;c., live almost exclusively upon
+ coconuts, the drupes of the pandanus palm, and fish. From their
+ very infancy they look to the sea as the main source of their
+ food-supply, either in the clear waters of the lagoon, among
+ the breaking surf on the
+<!-- Page 154 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page149" name="page149">[pg 149]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ reef, or out in the blue depths of the ocean beyond. From morn
+ till night the frail canoes of these semi-nude, brown-skinned,
+ and fearless toilers of the sea may be seen by the voyager
+ paddling swiftly over the rolling swell of the wide Pacific in
+ chase of the
+ <i>bonito</i>
+
+ , or lying motionless upon the water, miles and miles away from
+ the land, ground-fishing with lines a hundred fathoms long.
+ Then, as the sun dips, the flare of torches will be seen along
+ the sandy beaches as the night-seekers of flying-fish launch
+ their canoes and urge them through the rolling surf beyond the
+ reef, where, for perhaps three or four hours, they will paddle
+ slowly to and fro, just outside the white line of roaring
+ breakers, and return to the shore with their tiny craft
+ half-filled with the most beautiful and wonderful fish in the
+ world. The Ellice Island method of catching flying-fish would
+ take too long to explain here, much as I should like to do so;
+ my purpose is to describe a very remarkable fish called the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ , in the capture of which these people are the most skilful.
+ The catching of flying-fish, however, bears somewhat on the
+ subject of this article, as the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ will not take any other bait but a flying-fish, and therefore a
+ supply of the former is a necessary preliminary to
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ fishing.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us imagine, then, that the bait has been secured, and
+ that a party of
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ -fishers are ready to set out from the little island of
+ Nanomaga, the smallest but most thickly populated of the Ellice
+ Group. The night must be windless and moonless, the latter
+ condition being absolutely indispensable, although,
+<!-- Page 155 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page150" name="page150">[pg 150]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ curiously enough, the fish will take the hook on an ordinary
+ starlight night. Time after time have I tried my luck with
+ either a growing or a waning moon, much to the amusement of the
+ natives, and never once did I get a
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ , although other nocturnal-feeding fish bit freely enough.</p>
+
+ <p>The tackle used by the natives is made of coconut cinnet,
+ four or eight-stranded, of great strength, and capable of
+ holding a fifteen-foot shark should one of these prowlers seize
+ the bait. The hook is made of wood&#8212;in fact, the same as
+ is used for shark-fishing&#8212;about one inch and a half in
+ diameter, fourteen inches in the shank, with a natural curve;
+ the barb, or rather that which answers the purpose of a barb,
+ being supplied by a small piece lashed horizontally across the
+ top of the end of the curve. These peculiar wooden hooks are
+ <i>grown</i>
+
+ ; the roots of a tree called
+ <i>ngiia</i>
+
+ , whose wood is of great toughness, are watched when they
+ protrude from a bank, and trained into the desired shape;
+ specimens of these hooks may be seen in almost any
+ ethnographical museum. To sink the line, coral stones of three
+ or four pounds weight are used, attached by a very thin piece
+ of cinnet or bark, which, when the fish is struck, is always
+ broken by its struggles, and falls off, thus releasing the line
+ from an unnecessary weight. It is no light task hauling in a
+ thick, heavy line, hanging straight up and down for a length of
+ from seventy-five to a hundred fathoms or more!</p>
+
+ <p>Each canoe is manned by four men, only two of whom usually
+ fish, the other two, one at the bow and
+<!-- Page 156 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page151" name="page151">[pg 151]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the other at the stern, being employed in keeping the little
+ craft in a stationary position with their paddles. If, however,
+ there is not much current all four lower their lines, one man
+ working his paddle with one hand so as to keep from drifting.
+ My usual companions were the resident native teacher and two
+ stalwart young natives of the island&#8212;Tulu'ao and Muli'ao;
+ and I may here indulge in a little vanity when I say that my
+ success as a
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ -fisher was regarded as something phenomenal, only one other
+ white man in the group, a trader on the atoll of Funafuti,
+ having ever caught a
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ , or, in fact, tried to catch one. But then I had such
+ beautiful tackle that even the most skilled native fisherman
+ had no chance when competing with me. My lines were of
+ twenty-seven-strand white American cotton, as thick as a small
+ goose-quill, and easily handled, never tangling or twisting
+ like the native cinnet; and my hooks were the admiration and
+ envy of all who saw them. They were of the "flatted" Kirby
+ type, eyed, but with a curve in the shank, which was five
+ inches in length, and as thick as a lead-pencil. I had bought
+ these in Sydney, and during the voyage down had rigged them
+ with snoodings of the very best seizing wire, intending to use
+ them for shark-fishing. I had smaller ones down to three
+ inches, but always preferred using the largest size, as the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ has a large mouth, and it is a difficult matter in a small
+ canoe on a dark night to free a hook embedded in the gullet of
+ a fish which is awkward to handle even when exhausted, and
+ weighing as much as sixty or seventy
+<!-- Page 157 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page152" name="page152">[pg 152]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ pounds; while I also knew that any unusual noise or commotion
+ would be almost sure to attract some of those most dangerous of
+ all night-prowlers of the Pacific, the deep-water blue
+ shark.</p>
+
+ <p>Paddling out due westward from the lee side of the island,
+ where the one village is situated, we would bring-to in about
+ seventy or eighty fathoms. As I always used leaden sinkers, my
+ companions invariably let me lower first to test the depth, as
+ with a two or three-pound lead my comparatively thin line took
+ but little time in running out and touching bottom. A whole
+ flying-fish was used for one bait by the natives, it being tied
+ on to the inner curve of the great wooden hook, whilst I cut
+ one in half, fore-and-aft, and ran my hook through it
+ lengthwise.</p>
+
+ <p>The utmost silence was always observed; and even when
+ lighting our pipes we were always careful not to let the
+ reflection of the flame of the match fall upon the water, on
+ account of the sharks, which would at once be attracted to the
+ canoe, and hover about until they were rewarded for their
+ vigilance by seizing the first
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ brought to the surface. Sometimes a hungry shark will seize the
+ outrigger in his jaws, or get foul of it, and upset the canoe,
+ and a capsize under such circumstances is a serious matter
+ indeed. For this reason the canoes are never far apart from
+ each other; if one should be attacked or disabled by a shark
+ the others at once render assistance, and the shark is usually
+ thrust through with a lance if he is too big to be captured and
+ killed. All haste is then made to get away from the spot,
+ leaving the disturber of the pro
+<!-- Page 158 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page153" name="page153">[pg 153]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ ceedings to be devoured by his companions, whom the scent of
+ blood soon brings upon the scene.</p>
+
+ <p>With ordinary luck we would get our first
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ within an hour of lowering our lines. At such a great depth as
+ eighty or ninety fathoms a bite would scarcely be felt by one
+ of my companions on his thick, heavy, and clumsy line; but on
+ mine it was very different, and there was hardly an occasion on
+ which I did not secure the first fish. Like most
+ bottom-haunting fish in very deep water the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ makes but a brief fight. If he can succeed in "getting his
+ head," he will at once rush into the coral forest amid which he
+ lives, and endeavour to save himself by jamming his body into a
+ cleft or chasm of rock, and let the hook be torn from his jaws,
+ which are soft, boneless, and glutinous. Once, however, he is
+ dragged clear of the coral he seems to lose all heart; and,
+ although he makes an occasional spurt, he grows weaker and
+ weaker as he is dragged toward the surface, and when lifted
+ into the canoe is apparently lifeless, his large eyes literally
+ standing out of his head, and his stomach distended like a
+ balloon. So enormous is the distention of the bladder that
+ sometimes it will protrude from the mouth, and then burst with
+ a noise like a pistol-shot! Perhaps some of my readers will
+ smile at this, but they could see the same thing occur with
+ other deep-sea fish besides the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ . In the Caroline and Marshall Islands there is a species of
+ grey groper which is caught in a depth ranging from one hundred
+ to one hundred and fifty fathoms; these fish, which range up to
+ two hundred pounds, actually burst their
+<!-- Page 159 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page154" name="page154">[pg 154]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ stomachs when brought to the surface; for the air in the
+ cavities of the body expands on the removal of the great
+ pressure which at such depths keeps it compressed.</p>
+
+ <p>Now as to the appearance of the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ . When first caught, and seen by the light of a lantern or
+ torch, it is a dark, silvery grey in colour, with prickly,
+ inverted scales&#8212;like the feathers of a French fowl of a
+ certain breed. The head is somewhat cod-shaped, with eyes quite
+ as large as a crown-piece; the teeth are many, small, and soft,
+ and bend to a firm pressure; and the bones in the fin and tail
+ are so soft and flexible that they may be bent into any shape,
+ but when dried are of the appearance and consistency of
+ gelatine. The length of the largest
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ I have seen was five feet six inches, with a girth of about
+ forty inches. This one was caught in about ninety fathoms of
+ water; and when I opened the stomach I found it to contain five
+ or six undigested fish, about seven inches in length, of the
+ groper species, and for which the natives of the island had no
+ name or knowledge of beyond the appellation
+ <i>ika kehe</i>
+
+ &#8212;"unknown fish"&#8212;that is, fish which are only seen
+ when taken from the stomach of a deep-sea fish, or are brought
+ to the surface or washed ashore after some submarine
+ disturbance.</p>
+
+ <p>The flesh of the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ is greatly valued by the natives of the equatorial islands of
+ the Pacific for its medicinal qualities as a laxative, whilst
+ the oil with which it is permeated is much used as a remedy for
+ rheumatism and similar complaints. Within half an hour of its
+ being taken from the water the skin
+<!-- Page 160 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page155" name="page155">[pg 155]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ changes to a dead black, and the flesh assumes the appearance
+ of whale blubber. Generally, the fish is cooked in the usual
+ native ground-oven as quickly as possible, care being taken to
+ wrap it closely up in the broad leaves of the
+ <i>puraka</i>
+
+ plant&#8212;a species of gigantic taro&#8212;in order that none
+ of the oil may be lost. Thinking that the oil, which is
+ perfectly colourless and with scarcely any odour, might prove
+ of value, I once "tried out" two of the largest fish taken, and
+ obtained a gallon. This I sent to a firm of drug-merchants in
+ Sydney; but unfortunately the vessel was lost on the
+ passage.</p>
+
+ <p>The
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ does not seem to have a wide habitat. In the Tonga Islands it
+ is, I believe, very rare; and in Fiji, Samoa, and other
+ mountainous groups throughout Polynesia the natives appear to
+ have no knowledge of it, although they have a fish possessing
+ the same peculiar characteristics, but of a somewhat different
+ shape. I have fished for it without success at half a dozen
+ places in Samoa, in New Britain, and New Ireland. But it is
+ generally to be found about the coasts of any of the low-lying
+ coral islands of the Union (or Tokelau) Group, the Ellice,
+ Gilbert, Marshall, and part of the Caroline archipelagoes. The
+ Gilbert Islanders call it
+ <i>te ika ne peka</i>
+
+ &#8212;a name that cannot well be translated into bald English,
+ though there is a very lucid Latin equivalent.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1882 I took passage from the Island of Nukufetau in the
+ Ellice Group for the Caroline Islands. The vessel was a fine
+ brigantine of 160 tons, and was named the
+ <i>Orwell</i>
+
+ . She was, unfortunately, com
+<!-- Page 161 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page156" name="page156">[pg 156]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ manded by an incompetent, obstinate, self-willed man, who,
+ though a good seaman, had no meteorological knowledge and
+ succeeded in losing the ship, when lying at anchor, on Peru
+ Island, in the Gilbert Group, ten days after leaving Nukufetau,
+ simply through disregarding the local trader's advice to put to
+ sea. Disastrous as was the incident to me, for I lost trade
+ goods and personal effects to the value of over a thousand
+ pounds, and came ashore with what I stood in&#8212;to wit, a
+ pyjama suit&#8212;and a bag of Chili dollars, I had reason to
+ afterwards congratulate myself from a fisherman's point of
+ view.</p>
+
+ <p>Living on the island was a Swiss, Frank Voliero, whom I have
+ before mentioned. He was an ardent deep-sea fisherman, and was
+ on that account highly respected by the natives, who otherwise
+ did not care for him, as he was of an exceedingly quarrelsome
+ disposition. He was an expert
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ man, and he and I therefore quickly made Island
+ <i>bruderschaft</i>
+
+ . During the three months I remained on Peru we had many
+ fishing trips, and caught not less than fifty
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ . The largest of these was evidently a patriarch, for although
+ he was in rather poor condition he weighed 136 lbs. and was 6
+ feet 10 inches in length. Another, hooked at a depth of
+ eighty-five fathoms, was only 5 feet 2 inches, and weighed 129
+ lbs. Its stomach contained a small octopus with curiously
+ stunted tentacles, almost as thick at the tips as they were at
+ the base, but in all other respects similar to those found in
+ shallow water upon the reefs and in the lagoon.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 162 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page157" name="page157">[pg 157]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Both Voliero and myself tried many kinds of bait for
+ <i>palu,</i>
+
+ believing that the native theory that the fish would only take
+ flying-fish was wrong. We found that on Peru, any elongated
+ fish, such as gars, silvery mullet, or young bonito, were
+ acceptable, and that the tentacle of an octopus, after the
+ outer skin was removed, answered just as well. Yet further
+ southward among the Pacific Isles, flying-fish is the only bait
+ they will take! Evidently, therefore, the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ , at the great depths in which it lives, is attracted by a
+ brightly-hued fish whose habitat is on the surface of the
+ ocean. Why this is so must be decided by ichthyologists, for
+ there are no bright, silvery-scaled fish inhabiting the ocean
+ at such depths as eighty or a hundred fathoms. And why is it
+ that the
+ <i>palu,</i>
+
+ quiescent by day, and feeding only at night, so eagerly seizes
+ a hook baited with a flying-fish&#8212;a fish which never
+ descends more than a few fathoms below the surface, and which
+ the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ can never possibly see except when it is lowered by human hands
+ to, or sinks to the bottom?</p>
+
+ <p>Of the marvellous efficacy of the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ -oil in a case of acute rheumatism I can speak with knowledge.
+ The second mate of an island-trading schooner of which I was
+ the supercargo, was landed at Arorai, in the Line Islands,
+ unable to move, and suffering great agony. After two days'
+ massaging with
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ -oil he recovered and returned to his duties.</p>
+
+ <p>[Since this was written I have learned that Mr. E.R. Waite,
+ of the Sydney Museum, has described the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ as the
+ <i>Ruvettus pretiosus</i>
+
+ , "which hitherto
+<!-- Page 163 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page158" name="page158">[pg 158]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ was known only from the North Atlantic, and whose recorded
+ range is now enormously increased. The Escolar&#8212;to give it
+ its Atlantic name&#8212;has been taken at depths as great as
+ three and four hundred fathoms, but can only be taken at night
+ in September and the early part of October." I should very much
+ like to learn how the
+ <i>palu</i>
+
+ is taken at a depth of four hundred fathoms&#8212;eight hundred
+ yards!]</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 164 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page159" name="page159">[pg 159]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='The_Wily_quotGoannerquot'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>The Wily "Goanner"</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>In the early part of the year 1899 a settler named Hardy,
+ residing at Glenowlan, in the Rylstone district of New South
+ Wales, about 150 miles from Sydney, lost numbers of his lambs
+ during the lambing season. Naturally enough, dingoes were
+ suspected, but none were seen. Then other sheep&#8212;men began
+ to lose lambs, and a close watch was set, with the result that
+ iguanas, which are very numerous in this part of the country,
+ were discovered to be the murderers of the little "baa-baa's."
+ The cause of this new departure in the predatory habits of the
+ "goanner"&#8212;which hitherto had confined his evil deeds to
+ nocturnal visits to the fowl-yards&#8212;is stated to be the
+ extermination of the opossum, which has driven the cunning
+ reptile to seek for another source of food. And, as before the
+ shooting of kangaroos, wallabies, and opossums was resorted to
+ as a means of livelihood by hundreds of bushmen who had no
+ other employment open to them, the young of these marsupials
+ furnished the iguana with an ample supply of food, the theory
+ is very probably correct. Poison will be the only method of
+ destroying or reducing the numbers of the iguana,
+<!-- Page 165 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page160" name="page160">[pg 160]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ who, robber as he is, yet has his good points, as has even the
+ sneaking, blood-loving native cat&#8212;for both are merciless
+ foes to snakes of all kinds; and 'tis better to have an
+ energetic and hungry native cat and a score of wily iguanas
+ working havoc among the tenants of your fowl-house than one
+ brown or an equally deadly "bandy-bandy" snake within half a
+ mile.</p>
+
+ <p>In that part of New South Wales in which the writer was
+ born&#8212;one of the tidal rivers on the northern
+ coast&#8212;both snakes and iguanas were plentiful, and a
+ source of continual worry to the settlers.</p>
+
+ <p>On one occasion some boyish companions and myself set to
+ work to build a raft for fishing purposes out of some old and
+ discarded blue gum rails which were lying along the bank of the
+ river. Boy-like, we utterly disregarded our parents' admonition
+ to put on our boots, and, aided by a couple of blackfellows, we
+ moved about the long grass on our bare feet, picking up the
+ heavy rails and carrying them on our shoulders, one by one,
+ down to the sandy beach, where we were to lash them together.
+ Presently we came across a very heavy rail, about eight feet
+ long, twelve inches in width, and two inches thick. It was no
+ sooner up-ended than we saw half a dozen
+ "bandy-bandies"&#8212;the smallest but most deadly of
+ Australian snakes, not even excepting the
+ death-adder&#8212;lying beneath! We gave a united yell of
+ terror and fled as the black and yellow banded
+ reptiles&#8212;none of which were over eighteen inches in
+ length nor thicker than a man's little finger&#8212;wriggled
+ between our feet into the long grass around
+<!-- Page 166 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page161" name="page161">[pg 161]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ us. For some minutes we were too frightened at our escape to
+ speak; but soon set to work to complete the raft. Presently one
+ of the blackfellows pointed to a tall honeysuckle-tree about
+ fifty feet away, and said with a gleeful chuckle, "Hallo, you
+ see him that 'pfeller goanner been catch him bandy-bandy?"</p>
+
+ <p>Sure enough, an iguana, about three feet in length, was
+ scurrying up the rough, ridgy bark of the honeysuckle with a
+ "bandy-bandy" in his jaws. He had seized the snake by its head,
+ I imagine, for we could see the rest of its form twisting and
+ turning about and enveloping the body of its capturer. In a few
+ seconds we saw the iguana ascend still higher, then he
+ disappeared with his hateful prey among the loftier branches.
+ No doubt he enjoyed his meal.</p>
+
+ <p>About a year or so later I was given another instance of the
+ "cuteness" of the wicked "goanner." My sister (aged twelve) and
+ myself (two years younger) were fishing with bamboo rods for
+ mullet. We were standing, one on each side, of the rocky edges
+ of a tiny little bay on the coast near Port Macquarie (New
+ South Wales). The background was a short, steep beach of soft,
+ snow-white sand, fringed at the high-water margin with a dense
+ jungle of wild apple and pandanus-trees.</p>
+
+ <p>The mullet bit freely, and as we swung the gleaming,
+ bright-silvered fish out of the water on to the rocks on which
+ we stood, we threw them up on to the beach, and left them to
+ kick about and coat themselves with the clean, white
+ sand&#8212;which they did in such an artistic manner that one
+ would imagine
+<!-- Page 167 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page162" name="page162">[pg 162]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ they considered it egg and breadcrumb, and were preparing
+ themselves to fulfil their ultimate and proper use to the
+ <i>genus homo</i>
+
+ .</p>
+
+ <p>My sister had caught seven and I five, when, the sun being
+ amidships, we decided to boil the billy of tea and get
+ something to eat; young mullet, roasted on a glowing fire of
+ honeysuckle cobs were, we knew, very nice. So, laying down our
+ rods on the rocks, we walked up to the beach&#8212;just in time
+ to see two "goanners"&#8212;one of them with a wriggling mullet
+ in his mouth&#8212;scamper off into the bush.</p>
+
+ <p>A careful search revealed the harrowing fact that nine of
+ the twelve fish were missing, and the multitudinous criss-cross
+ tracks on the sand showed the cause of their disappearance. My
+ sister sat down on a hollow log and wept, out of sheer vexation
+ of spirit, while I lit a fire to boil the billy and grill the
+ three remaining mullet. Then after we had eaten the fish and
+ drank some tea, we concocted a plan of deadly revenge. We took
+ four large bream-hooks, bent them on to a piece of
+ fishing-line, baited each hook with a good-sized piece of
+ octopus (our mullet bait), and suspended the line between two
+ saplings, about three inches above the leaf-strewn ground.
+ Then, feeling confident of the success of our murderous device,
+ we finished the billy of tea and went back to our fishing. We
+ caught a couple of dozen or more of fine mullet, each one
+ weighing not less than 1-1/2 lbs.; and then the incoming tide
+ with its sweeping seas drove us from the ledge of rocks to the
+ beach, where we changed our bamboo rods for hand-lines with
+ sinkers,
+<!-- Page 168 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page163" name="page163">[pg 163]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and flung them, baited with chunks of mullet, out into the
+ breaking surf for sea-bream. By four in the afternoon we had
+ caught more fish than we could well carry home, five miles
+ away; and after stringing the mullet and bream through the
+ gills with a strip of supple-jack cane, we went up the beach to
+ our camp for the billy can and basket.</p>
+
+ <p>And then we saw a sight that struck terror into our guilty
+ souls&#8212;a
+ <i>Danse Macabre</i>
+
+ of three writhing black and yellow, long-tailed "goanners,"
+ twisting, turning and lashing their sinuous and scaly tails in
+ agony as they sought to free their widely-opened jaws from the
+ cruel hooks. One had two hooks in his mouth. He was the
+ quietest of the lot, as he had less purchase than the other two
+ upon the ground, and with one hook in his lower and one in his
+ upper jaw, glared upwards at us in his torture and smote his
+ sides with his long, thin tail.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, you wicked, wicked boy!" said my partner in
+ guilt&#8212;at once shifting the responsibility of the whole
+ affair upon me&#8212;"you ought to be ashamed of yourself for
+ doing such a thing! You know well enough that we should never
+ hurt a poor, harmless iguana. Oh,
+ <i>do</i>
+
+ take those horrible hooks out of the poor things' mouths and
+ let them go, you wicked, cruel boy!"</p>
+
+ <p>With my heart in my mouth I crept round through the scrub,
+ knife in hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go on, you horrible, horrible, coward!" screamed my sister;
+ "one would think that the poor things were alligators or
+ sharks. Oh, my goodness, if you're so frightened, I'll come and
+ do it myself." With that
+<!-- Page 169 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page164" name="page164">[pg 164]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ she clambered up into the branches of a pandanus-tree and
+ looked at me excitedly, mingled with considerable contempt and
+ much fear.</p>
+
+ <p>Being quite wise enough not to attempt to take the hooks out
+ of the "goanners'" mouths, I cut the two ends of the line to
+ which they hung. They instantly sought refuge on the tree
+ trunks around them; but as each "goanner" selected his
+ individual tree, and as they were still connected to each other
+ by the line and the hooks in their jaws, their attempts to
+ reach a higher plane was a failure. So they fell to upon one
+ another savagely.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come away, you wicked, thoughtless boy," said my sister,
+ weepingly. "I shall never come out with you again; you cruel
+ thing."</p>
+
+ <p>Then, overcoming my fear, I valiantly advanced, and gingerly
+ extending my arm, cut the tangled-up fishing line in a dozen
+ places; and with my bamboo fishing-rod disintegrated the
+ combatants. They stood for a few seconds, panting and
+ open-mouthed, and then, with the hooks still fast in their
+ jaws, scurried away into the scrub.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 170 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page165" name="page165">[pg 165]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='The_Tanifa_of_Samoa'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>The T&#259;nifa of Samoa</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>Many years ago, at the close of an intensely hot day, I set
+ out from Apia, the principal port of Samoa, to walk to a
+ village named Laulii, a few miles along the coast. Passing
+ through the semi-Europeanised town of Matautu, I emerged out
+ upon the open beach. I was bound on a pigeon-shooting trip to
+ the mountains, but intended sleeping that night at Laulii with
+ some native friends who were to accompany me. With me was a
+ young Manhiki half-caste named Allan Strickland; he was about
+ twenty-two years of age and one of the most perfect specimens
+ of athletic manhood in the South Pacific.
+ <a href="#footnote_15" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[15]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ For six months we had been business partners and comrades in a
+ small cutter in which we traded between Apia and
+ Sava'ii&#8212;the largest island of the Samoan group; and now
+ after some months of toil we were taking a week's holiday
+ together, and enjoying ourselves greatly, although at the time
+ (1873) the country was in the throes of an internecine war.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 171 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page166" name="page166">[pg 166]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ A walk of a mile brought us to the mouth of the Vaivasa River,
+ a small stream flowing into the sea from the littoral on our
+ right. The tide was high and we therefore hailed a picket who
+ were stationed in the trenches on the opposite bank and asked
+ them in a jocular manner not to fire at us while we were wading
+ across. To our surprise, for we were both well known to and on
+ very friendly terms with the contending parties, half a dozen
+ of them sprang up and excitedly bade us not to attempt to
+ cross.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go further up the bank and cross to our
+ <i>olo</i>
+
+ (lines) in a canoe," added a young Manono chief whose family I
+ knew well, "there is a
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ about. We saw it last night."</p>
+
+ <p>That was quite enough for us&#8212;for the name
+ <i>T&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ sent a cold chill down our backs. We turned to the right, and
+ after walking a quarter of a mile came to a hut on the bank at
+ a spot regarded as neutral ground. Here we found some women and
+ children and a canoe, and in less than five minutes we were
+ landed on the other side, the women chorusing the dreadful fate
+ that would have befallen us had we attempted to cross at the
+ mouth of the river.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>E lima gafa le umi!</i>
+
+ " ("'Tis five fathoms long!") cried one old dame.</p>
+
+ <p>"And a fathom wide at the shoulders," said another
+ bare-bosomed lady, with a shudder. "It hath come to the mouth
+ of the Vaivasa because it hath smelt the blood of the three men
+ who were killed in the river here two days ago."</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll hear the true yarn presently," said my
+<!-- Page 172 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page167" name="page167">[pg 167]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ companion as we walked down the left-hand bank of the river.
+ "There must be a
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ cruising about, or else those Manono fellows wouldn't have been
+ so scared at us wanting to cross."</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as we reached the young chief's quarters, we were
+ made very welcome, and were obliged to accept his invitation to
+ remain and share supper with himself and his men&#8212;all
+ stalwart young natives from the little island of Manono&#8212;a
+ lovely spot situated in the straits separating Upolo from
+ Savaii. Placing our guns and bags in the care of one of the
+ warriors, we took our seats on the matted floor, filled our
+ pipes anew, and, whilst a bowl of kava was being prepared,
+ Li'o, the young chief told us about the advent of the
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ .</p>
+
+ <p>Let me first of all, however, explain that the
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ is a somewhat rare and greatly-dreaded member of the
+ old-established shark family. By many white residents in Samoa
+ it was believed to occasionally reach a length of from twenty
+ to twenty-five feet; as a matter of fact it seldom exceeds ten
+ feet, but its great girth, and its solitary, nocturnal habit of
+ haunting the mouths of shallow streams has invested it even to
+ the native mind with fictional powers of voracity and
+ destruction. Yet, despite the exaggerated accounts of the
+ creature, it is really a dreadful monster, rendered the more
+ dangerous to human life by the persistency with which it
+ frequents muddied and shallow water, particularly after a
+ freshet caused by heavy rain, when its presence cannot be
+ discerned.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 173 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page168" name="page168">[pg 168]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Into the port of Apia there fall two small streams&#8212;called
+ "rivers" by the local people&#8212;the Mulivai and the
+ Vaisigago, and I was fortunate to see specimens of the
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ on three occasions, twice at the Vaisigago, and once at the
+ mouth of the Mulivai, but I had never seen one caught, or even
+ sufficiently exposed to give me an idea of its proportions.
+ Many natives, however&#8212;particularly an old Rarotongan
+ named Hapai, who lived in Apia, and was the proud capturer of
+ several
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ &#8212;gave me a reliable description, which I afterwards
+ verified.</p>
+
+ <p>A
+ <i>t&#259;ifa</i>
+
+ ten feet long, they assured me, was an enormously bulky and
+ powerful creature with jaws and teeth much larger than an
+ ocean-haunting shark of double that length; the width across
+ the shoulders was very great, and although it generally swam
+ slowly, it would, when it had once sighted its prey, dart along
+ under the water with great rapidity without causing a ripple.
+ At a village in Savaii, a powerfully built woman who was
+ incautiously bathing at the mouth of a stream was seized by one
+ of these sharks almost before she could utter a cry, so swiftly
+ and suddenly was she attacked. Several attempts were made to
+ capture the brute, which continued to haunt the scene of the
+ tragedy for several days, but it was too cunning to take a hook
+ and was never caught.</p>
+
+ <p>This particular
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ , which had been seen by the young Manono chief and his men on
+ the preceding evening had made its appearance soon after
+ darkness had fallen and had cruised to and fro across the mouth
+ of the Vaivasa till the tide began to fall, when it made
+<!-- Page 174 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page169" name="page169">[pg 169]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ its way seaward through a passage in the reef. It was, so Li'o
+ assured me, quite eight feet in length and very wide across the
+ head and shoulders. The water was clear and by the bright
+ starlight they had discerned its movements very easily; once it
+ came well into the river and remained stationary for some
+ minutes, lying under about two feet of water. Some of the
+ Manono men, hailing a picket of the enemy on the opposite bank
+ of the river, asked for a ten minutes' truce to try and shoot
+ it; this was granted, and standing on top of the sandy trench,
+ half a dozen young fellows fired a volley at the shark from
+ their Sniders. None of the bullets took effect and the
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ sailed slowly off again to cruise to and fro for another hour,
+ watching for any hapless person who might cross the river.</p>
+
+ <p>Just as the kava was being handed round, some children who
+ were on watch cried out that the
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ had come. Springing to his feet, Li'o again hailed the enemy's
+ picket on the other side, and a truce was agreed to, so that
+ "the white men could have a look at the
+ <i>m&#257;lie</i>
+
+ "&#8212;shark.</p>
+
+ <p>Thirty or forty yards away was what seemed to be a huge,
+ irregular and waving mass of phosphorus which, as it drew
+ nearer, revealed the outlines of the dreaded fish. It came in
+ straight for the mouth of the creek, passed over the pebbly
+ bar, and then swam leisurely about in the brackish water,
+ moving from bank to bank at less than a dozen feet from the
+ shore. The stream of bright phosphorescent light which had
+ surrounded its body when it first appeared had now, owing to
+ there being but a minor degree of phos
+<!-- Page 175 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page170" name="page170">[pg 170]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ phorus in the brackish water, given place to a dulled, sickly,
+ greenish reflection, accentuated however by thin, vivid
+ streaks, caused by the exudation from the gills of a streaming,
+ viscid matter, common to some species of sharks, and giving it
+ a truly terrifying and horrible appearance. Presently a couple
+ of natives, taking careful aim, fired at the creature's head;
+ in an instant it darted off with extraordinary velocity,
+ rushing through the water like a submerged comet&#8212;if I may
+ use the illustration. Both of the men who had fired were
+ confident their bullets had struck and badly wounded the shark,
+ but were greatly disgusted when, ten minutes later, it again
+ appeared, swimming leisurely about, at ten fathoms from the
+ beach.</p>
+
+ <p>Three days later, as we were returning to Apia, we were told
+ by our native friends that the shark still haunted the mouth of
+ the Vaivasa; and I determined to capture it. I sent Allan on
+ board the cutter for our one shark hook&#8212;a hook which had
+ done much execution among the sea prowlers. Although not of the
+ largest size, being only ten inches in the shank, it was made
+ of splendid steel, and we had frequently caught fifteen-feet
+ sharks with it at sea. It was a cherished possession with us
+ and we always kept it&#8212;and the four feet of chain to which
+ it was attached&#8212;bright and clean.</p>
+
+ <p>In the evening Allan returned, accompanied by the local
+ pilot (a Captain Hamilton) and the fat, puffing, master of a
+ German barque. They wanted "to see the fun." We soon had
+ everything in readiness; the hook, baited with the
+ belly-portion of a freshly-killed pig
+<!-- Page 176 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page171" name="page171">[pg 171]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ (which the Manono people had commandeered from a bush village)
+ was buoyed to piece of light
+ <i>pua</i>
+
+ wood to keep it from sinking, and then with twenty fathoms of
+ brand-new whale line attached, we let it drift out into the
+ centre of the passage. Then making our end of the line fast to
+ the trunk of a coconut tree, we set some children to watch, and
+ went into the trenches to drink some kava, smoke, and
+ gossip.</p>
+
+ <p>We had not long to wait&#8212;barely half an hour&#8212;when
+ we heard a warning yell from the watchers. The
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ was in sight.</p>
+
+ <p>Jumping up and tumbling over each other in our eagerness we
+ rushed out; but alas! too late for the shark; for instead of
+ approaching in its usual leisurely manner, it made a straight
+ dart at the bait, and before we could free our end of the line
+ it was as taut as an iron bar, and the creature, with the hook
+ firmly fastened in his jaw, was ploughing the water into foam,
+ amid yells of excitement from the natives. Then suddenly the
+ line fell slack, and the half-a-dozen men who were holding it
+ went over on their backs, heels up.</p>
+
+ <p>In mournful silence we hauled it in, and then, oh woe! the
+ hook, our prized, our beautiful hook, was gone! and with it two
+ feet of the chain, which had parted at the centre swivel. That
+ particular
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ was seen no more.</p>
+
+ <p>Nearly two months later, two
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ of a much larger size, appeared at the mouth of the Vaivasa.
+ Several of the white residents tried, night after night, to
+ hook them, but the monsters refused to look at
+<!-- Page 177 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page172" name="page172">[pg 172]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the baits. Then appeared on the scene an old one-eyed Malay
+ named 'Reo, who asserted he could kill them easily. The way in
+ which he set to work was described to me by the natives who
+ witnessed the operations. Taking a piece of green bamboo, about
+ four feet in length, he split from it two strips each an inch
+ wide. The ends of these he then, after charring the points,
+ sharpened carefully; then by great pressure he coiled them up
+ into as small a compass as possible, keeping the whole in
+ position by sewing the coil up in the fresh skin of a fish
+ known as the
+ <i>isuumu moana</i>
+
+ &#8212;a species of the "leather-jacket." Then he asked to be
+ provided with two dogs. A couple of curs were soon provided,
+ killed, and the viscera removed. The coils of bamboo were then
+ placed in the vacancy and the skin of the bellies stitched up
+ with small wooden skewers. That completed the preparation of
+ the baits.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as the two sharks made their appearance, one of the
+ dead dogs was thrown into the water. It was quickly swallowed.
+ Then the second followed, and was also seized by the other
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ . The creatures cruised about for some hours, then went off, as
+ the tide began to fall.</p>
+
+ <p>On the following evening they did not turn up, nor on the
+ next; but the Malay insisted that within four or five days both
+ would be dead. As soon as the dogs were digested, he said, the
+ thin fish-skin would follow, the bamboo coil would fly apart,
+ and the sharpened ends penetrate not only the sharks'
+ intestines, but protrude through the outer skin as well.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 178 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page173" name="page173">[pg 173]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Quite a week afterwards, during which time neither of the
+ <i>t&#259;nifa</i>
+
+ had been seen alive, the smaller of the two was found dead on
+ the beach at Vailele Plantation, about four miles from the
+ Vaivasa. It was examined by numbers of people, and presented an
+ extremely interesting sight; one end of the bamboo spring was
+ protruding over a foot from the belly, which was so cut and
+ lacerated by the agonised efforts of the monster to free itself
+ from the instrument of torture, that much of the intestines was
+ gone.</p>
+
+ <p>That the larger of these dreaded fish had died in the same
+ manner there was no reason to doubt; but probably it had sunk
+ in the deep water outside the barrier reef.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 179 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page174" name="page174">[pg 174]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='On_Board_the_quotTucopiaquot'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>On Board the "Tucopia."</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>The little island trading barque
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ , Henry Robertson, master, lay just below Garden Island in
+ Sydney Harbour, ready to sail for the Friendly Islands and
+ Samoa as soon as the captain came on board. At nine o'clock, as
+ Bruce, the old, white-haired, Scotch mate, was pointing out to
+ Mrs. Lacy and the Reverend Wilfrid Lacy the many ships around,
+ and telling them from whence they came or where they were
+ bound, the second mate called out&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Here's the captain's boat coming, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>Bruce touched his cap to the pale-faced, violet-eyed
+ clergyman's wife, and turning to the break of the poop, at once
+ gave orders to "heave short," leaving the field clear to Mr.
+ Charles Otway, the supercargo of the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ , who was twenty-two years of age, had had seven years'
+ experience of general wickedness in the South Seas, thought he
+ was in love with Mrs. Lacy, and that, before the barque reached
+ Samoa, he would make the lady feel that the Reverend Wilfrid
+ was a serious mistake, and that he, Charles Otway, was the one
+ man in the world whom she could love and be happy with for
+ ever. So, being a hot-blooded
+<!-- Page 180 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page175" name="page175">[pg 175]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and irresponsible young villain, though careful and decorous to
+ all outward seeming, he set himself to work, took exceeding
+ care over his yellow, curly hair, and moustache, and abstained
+ from swearing in Mrs. Lacy's hearing.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>A week before, Mr. and Mrs. Lacy had called at the owner's
+ office and inquired about a passage to Samoa in the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ , and Otway was sent for.</p>
+
+ <p>"Otway," said the junior partner, "can you make room on the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ for two more passengers&#8212;nice people, a clergyman and his
+ wife."</p>
+
+ <p>"D&#8212;&#8212;all nice people, especially clergymen and
+ their wives," he answered promptly&#8212;for although the
+ youngest supercargo in the firm, he was considered, the
+ smartest&#8212;and took every advantage of the fact. "I'm sick
+ of carting these confounded missionaries about, Mr. Harry. Last
+ trip we took two down to Tonga&#8212;beastly hymn-grinding
+ pair, who wanted the hands to come aft every night to prayers,
+ and played-up generally with the discipline of the ship.
+ Robertson never interfered, and old Bruce, who is one of the
+ psalm-singing kidney himself, encouraged the beasts to turn the
+ ship into a floating Bethel."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Harry" laughed good-naturedly. "Otway, my boy, you
+ mustn't put on so much side&#8212;the firm can't afford it. If
+ you hadn't drunk so much whisky last night you would be in a
+ better temper this morning."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, if you've got some one else to take my billet
+<!-- Page 181 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page176" name="page176">[pg 176]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ on the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ , why don't you say so, instead of backing and filling about,
+ like a billy-goat in stays?
+ <i>I</i>
+
+ don't care a damn if you load the schooner up to her maintop
+ with sky-pilots and their dowdy women-kind. I've had enough of
+ 'em, and I hereby tender you my resignation. I can get another
+ and a better ship to-morrow, if&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sit down, you cock-a-hoopy young ass," and "Mr. Harry" hit
+ the supercargo a good-humoured but stiff blow in the chest.
+ "These people aren't missionaries; they're a cut above the
+ usual breed. Man's a gentleman; woman's as sweet as a rosebud.
+ Now look here, Otway; we give you a pretty free hand generally,
+ but in this instance we want you to stretch a point&#8212;you
+ can give these people berths in the trade-room, can't you?"</p>
+
+ <p>The supercargo considered a moment. "There's a lot returning
+ this trip. First, there's the French priest for Wallis
+ Island&#8212;nice old buffer, but never washes, and grinds his
+ teeth in his sleep&#8212;he's in the cabin next to mine; old
+ Miss Wiedermann for Tonga&#8212;cabin on starboard
+ side&#8212;fussy old cat, who is always telling me that she can
+ distinctly hear Robertson's bad language on deck. But her
+ brother is a good sort, and so I put up with her. Then there's
+ Captain Burr, in the skipper's cabin, two Samoan half-caste
+ girls in the deck-house&#8212;there's going to be trouble over
+ those women, old Bruce says, and I don't doubt it&#8212;and the
+ whole lot will have their meals in the beastly dog-kennel you
+ call a saloon, and I call a sweat-box."</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 182 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page177" name="page177">[pg 177]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Thank you, Mr. Otway. Your elegant manner of speaking shows
+ clearly the refining influence of the charming people with whom
+ you associate. Just let me tell you this&#8212;you looked like
+ a gentleman a year or two ago, but become less like one every
+ day."</p>
+
+ <p>"No wonder," replied Otway sullenly, "the Island trade is
+ not calculated to turn out Chesterfields. I'm sick enough of
+ it, now we are carrying passengers as well as cargo. I suppose
+ the firm will be asking us supercargoes to wear uniform and
+ brass buttons soon, like the ticket collector on a penny
+ ferry."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite likely, my sulky young friend&#8212;quite likely, if
+ it will pay us to do so."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then I'll clear out, and go nigger-catching again in the
+ Solomons. That's a lot better than having to be civil to people
+ who worry the soul out of you, are always in the way at sea,
+ and a beastly nuisance in port. Why, do you know what old Miss
+ Weidermann did at Manono, in Samoa, when we were there buying
+ yams three months ago?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No; what did she do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Got the skipper and myself into a howling mess through her
+ infernal interference; and if the chiefs and old Mataafa
+ himself had not come to our help there would have been some
+ shooting, and this firm could never have sent another ship to
+ Manono again. It makes me mad when I think of it&#8212;the
+ silly old bundle of propriety and feminine spite."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell me all about it, Otway. 'Twill do you good, I can see,
+ to unburden yourself of some of your
+<!-- Page 183 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page178" name="page178">[pg 178]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ bad temper. Shut that door, and we'll have a brandy-and-soda
+ together."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," said Otway, "this is what occurred. I was ashore in
+ the village, buying and weighing the yams, the skipper was
+ lending me a hand, and everything was going on bully, when
+ Mataafa and his chiefs sent an invitation to us to come up to
+ his house and drink kava. Of course such an invitation from the
+ native point of view was a great honour; and then, besides
+ that, it was good business to keep in with old Mataafa, who had
+ just given the Germans a thrashing at Vailele, and was as proud
+ as a dog with two tails. So, although I hate kava, I accepted
+ the invitation with 'many expressions of pleasure,' and felt
+ sure that as the old fellow knew me of old, and I knew he
+ wanted to buy some rifles, that I should get the bulk of a bag
+ of sovereigns his mongrel, low-down American secretary was
+ carrying around. So oft went the skipper and I, letting the
+ yams stand over till we returned; the barque was lying about a
+ mile off the beach. Mataafa was very polite to us, and during
+ the kava drinking I found out that he had about three hundred
+ sovereigns, and wanted to see the Martini-Henrys we had on
+ board. Of course I told him that it would be a serious business
+ for the ship if he gave us away&#8212;imprisonment in a
+ dreadful dungeon in Fiji, if not hanging at the yard-arm or a
+ man-of-war&#8212;and the old cock winked his eye and laughed.
+ Then, as time was valuable, we at once concocted a plan to get
+ the rifles&#8212;fifty&#8212;ashore without making too much of
+ a show. Well,
+<!-- Page 184 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page179" name="page179">[pg 179]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ among some of the women present there were two great swells,
+ one was the
+ <i>taupo</i>
+
+ , or town maid, of Palaulae in Savaii, and the other was a
+ niece of Mataafa himself. These two, accompanied by a lot of
+ young women of Manono, were to go off on board the barque in
+ our boats, ostensibly to pay their respects to the white lady
+ on board, and invite her on shore, so as to get her out of the
+ way; then I was to pass the arms out of the stern ports into
+ some canoes which would be waiting just as it became dark.
+ About five o'clock they started off in one boat, leaving me and
+ the skipper to follow in another. I had sent a note off to the
+ mate telling him all about the little game, and to be mighty
+ polite to the two chief women, who were to be introduced to
+ Miss Weidermann, give the old devil some presents of mats,
+ fruits, and such things, and ask her to come ashore as
+ Mataafa's guest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, something had gone wrong with the Weidermann's
+ temper; for when the women came on board she was sulking in her
+ cabin, and refused to show her vinegary face outside her
+ state-room door. Thinking she would get over her tantrum in a
+ few minutes, the mate invited the two Samoan ladies and their
+ attendants down into the cabin, where they awaited her
+ appearance, behaving themselves, of course, very decorously, it
+ being a visit of ceremony.</p>
+
+ <p>"Presently Old Cat-face opened her door, and then, without
+ giving the native ladies time to utter a word, she launched out
+ at them in her bastard-mongrel Samoan-Tongan. The first thing
+ she said was that she knew the kind of women they were, and
+ what
+<!-- Page 185 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page180" name="page180">[pg 180]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ had brought them on board! How dared such brazen, shameless
+ cattle come into the cabin! Into the same cabin as a white
+ lady! The bold, half-naked, disgraceful hussies, etc., etc. And
+ then she capped the thing by calling to the steward to come and
+ drive them out!</p>
+
+ <p>"Not one of the native women could answer her. They were all
+ simply dumbfounded at such a gross insult, and left the cabin
+ in silence. The mate tried to smooth things over, but one of
+ the women&#8212;Mataafa's niece&#8212;gave him a look that told
+ him to say no more. In half an hour the whole lot of them were
+ back on the beach, and came up to the chiefs house, where the
+ skipper and myself were having a final drink of kava with old
+ Mataafa and his
+ <i>faipule</i>
+
+ .
+ <a href="#footnote_16" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[16]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ The face of the elder of the two women was blazing with anger,
+ and then, pointing to the captain and myself, she gave us such
+ a tongue-lashing for sending her off to the ship to be shamed
+ and insulted, that made us blush. Old Mataafa waited until she
+ had finished, and then, with an ugly gleam in his eye but
+ speaking very quietly, asked us what it meant.</p>
+
+ <p>"What
+ <i>could</i>
+
+ we say but that it was no fault of ours; and then, by a happy
+ inspiration, I added that although Miss Weidermann was
+ generally well-conducted enough, she sometimes got blazing
+ drunk, and made a beast of herself. This explanation satisfied
+ the chiefs, if not the women, and everything went on
+<!-- Page 186 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page181" name="page181">[pg 181]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ smoothly. And as it was then nearly dark, and I was determined
+ that Mataafa should get his rifles, half a dozen of his men
+ took us off in their canoes, and we went on board. The skipper
+ and I had fixed up as to what we should do with the Weidermann
+ creature. She was seated at the cabin table waiting to open out
+ on us, but the skipper didn't give her a chance.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Go to your cabin at once, madam,' he said solemnly, 'and I
+ trust you will not again leave it in your present condition.
+ Your conduct is simply astounding.
+ <i>Steward, see that you give Miss Weidermann no more grog</i>
+
+ .'</p>
+
+ <p>"The poor old girl thought that either he or she herself was
+ going mad, but he gave her no time to talk. The captain opened
+ her state-room door, gently pushed her in, and put a man
+ outside to see that she didn't come out again. Then we handed
+ out the rifles through the stern-ports to the natives in the
+ canoes, and sent them away rejoicing. And that's the end of the
+ yarn, and Miss Weidermann nearly went into a fit next morning
+ when we told her that no less than thirty respectable native
+ women had taken their oaths that she was mad drunk, and abused
+ them vilely."</p>
+
+ <p>The junior partner laughed loudly at the story, and Otway,
+ with a more amiable look on his face, rose.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I'll do what I can for these people. I'll make room
+ for them somehow. Where are they going?"</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 187 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page182" name="page182">[pg 182]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Samoa. They have an idea of settling down there, I think, for a
+ few months, and then going on to China. They have plenty of
+ money, apparently."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well, tell them to come on board to-morrow, and I'll
+ show them what can be done for them."</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>So the Rev. and Mrs. Lacy did come on board, and Mr. Charles
+ Otway was vanquished by just one single glance from the lady's
+ violet eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"It would have been such a dreadful disappointment to us if
+ we could not have obtained passages in the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ ," she said, in her soft, sweet voice, as she sank back in the
+ deck-chair he placed before her. "My husband is so bent on
+ making a tour through Samoa. Now, do tell me, Mr. Otway, are
+ these islands so very lovely?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Very, very lovely, Mrs. Lacy," replied Otway, leaning with
+ his back against the rail and regarding her with half-closed
+ eyes; "as sweet and fair to look upon as a lovely woman&#8212;a
+ woman with violet eyes and lips like a budding rose."</p>
+
+ <p>She gave him one swift glance, seemingly in anger, yet her
+ eyes smiled into his; then she bent her head and regarded the
+ deck with intense interest. Otway thought he had scored. She
+ was sure
+ <i>she</i>
+
+ had.</p>
+
+ <p>Otway had just shown her and her husband his own cabin, and
+ had told them that they could occupy it&#8212;he would make
+ himself comfortable in the trade-room, he said. This was after
+ the first look from the violet eyes.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 188 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page183" name="page183">[pg 183]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Robertson, the skipper, came aboard, shook hands with Mrs. Lacy
+ and her husband, nodded to the other passengers, dived below
+ for a moment or two, and then reappeared on deck, full of
+ energy, blasphemy, and anxiety to get under way. In less than
+ an hour the smart barque was outside the Heads, and heeling
+ over to a brisk south-westerly breeze. Two days later she was
+ four hundred miles on her course.</p>
+
+ <p>The Rev. Wilfrid Lacy soon made himself very agreeable to
+ the rest of the passengers, who all agreed that he was a
+ splendid type of parson, and even Otway, who had as much
+ principle as a rat and began making love to his wife from the
+ outset, liked him. First of all, he was not the usual style of
+ travelling clergyman. He didn't say grace at meals, he smoked a
+ pipe, drank whisky and brandy with Otway and Robertson, told
+ rattling good stories, and displayed an immediate interest when
+ the skipper mentioned that the second mate was a "bit of a
+ bruiser," and that there were gloves on board; and the second
+ mate, a nuggety little Tynesider, at once consented to a
+ friendly mill as soon as he was off duty.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wilfrid," said Mrs. Lacy, "you'll shock every one. I can
+ see that Captain Robertson wonders what sort of a clergyman you
+ are."</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson saw the merry light in her dark eyes, and then
+ laughed aloud as he saw Miss Weidermann's face. It expressed
+ the very strongest disapproval, and during the rest of the meal
+ the virgin lady preserved a dismal silence. The rest of the
+ passengers, however, "took" to the clerical gentleman at once.
+ With
+<!-- Page 189 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page184" name="page184">[pg 184]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ old Father Roget&#8212;the Marist missionary who sat opposite
+ him&#8212;he soon entered into an animated conversation, while
+ the two De Boos girls, vivacious Samoan half-castes, attached
+ themselves to his wife. Seated beside Otway was another
+ passenger, an American skipper named Burr, who was going to
+ Apia to take command of a vessel belonging to the same firm as
+ the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ . He was a silent, good-looking man of about sixty, and
+ possessed of much caustic humour and a remarkable fund of
+ smoking-room stories, which, on rare occasions, he would relate
+ in an inimitable, drawling manner, as if he was tired. The
+ chief mate was a deeply but not obtrusively religious Scotsman;
+ the second officer, Allen, was a young man of thirty, an
+ excellent seaman, but rough to the verge of brutality with the
+ crew. Bruce, on the other hand, was too easy-going and
+ patient.</p>
+
+ <p>"I never want to raise my hand against a man," he said one
+ day, as a protest, when Allen gave one of the crew an
+ unmerciful cuff which sent him down as if he had been shot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Neither do I," replied Allen, "I prefer raising my foot.
+ But it's habit, Mr. Bruce, only habit."</p>
+
+ <p>For five days the barque ran steadily on an E.N.E. course,
+ then on the sixth day the wind hauled, and by sunset it was
+ blowing hard from the eastward with a fast-gathering sea. By
+ two in the morning Robertson and his officers knew that they
+ were in for a three-days' easterly gale; a few hours later it
+ was decided to heave-to, as the sea had become dangerous, and
+ the
+<!-- Page 190 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page185" name="page185">[pg 185]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ little vessel was straining badly. Just after this had been
+ done, the gale set in with redoubled fury, and when Mrs. Lacy
+ came on deck shortly before breakfast, she shuddered at the
+ wild spectacle. Coming to the break of the poop, she clasped
+ the iron rail with both hands, and gazed fearfully about
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>"You had better go below, ma'am," said the second mate, who
+ was standing near, talking to Otway, "there's some nasty, lumpy
+ seas."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he gave a yell.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look out there!"</p>
+
+ <p>Springing to Mrs. Lacy's side, he clasped his left arm
+ around her waist, and held on tightly to the iron rail with his
+ right, just as a vast mountain of water took the barque
+ amidships, fell on her deck with terrific force, and fairly
+ buried her from the topgallant foc'scle to the level of the
+ poop. In less than half a minute the galley, for'ard
+ deck-house, long-boat, which was lying on the main hatch, and
+ the port bulwarks had vanished, together with three poor seamen
+ who were asleep in the deck-house. The fearful crash brought
+ the captain flying on deck. One glance showed him that there
+ was no chance of saving the men&#8212;to attempt to lower a
+ boat in such a sea was utterly impossible, and would be madness
+ itself. He sighed, and then took off his cap. Allen and Otway
+ followed his example.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is there no hope for them?" Mrs. Lacy whispered to
+ Otway.</p>
+
+ <p>"None," replied the supercargo in a low voice. "None." Then
+ he urged her to go below, as it was not safe for her to remain
+ on deck. She went at once,
+<!-- Page 191 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page186" name="page186">[pg 186]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and met her husband just as he was leaving their cabin.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is the matter, Nell?" he asked, as he saw that tears
+ were in her eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Three poor men have been carried overboard, Wilfrid. They
+ were in the deck-house asleep ten minutes ago&#8212;now they
+ are gone! Oh, isn't it dreadful, dreadful!" And then she sat
+ down beside him and wept silently.</p>
+
+ <p>Breakfast was a forlorn meal&#8212;Robertson and his
+ officers were not present, and Otway took the captain's seat.
+ He, too, only remained to drink a cup of coffee, then hurriedly
+ went on deck. Lacy rose at the same time, but at the foot of
+ the companion, Otway motioned him to stop.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't come on deck awhile, if you please," he said, "and
+ tell the ladies to keep to the cabin."</p>
+
+ <p>"Anything fresh gone wrong?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," replied the supercargo, looking steadily at the
+ clergyman&#8212;"the ship is making water badly. Don't you hear
+ the pumps going? Tell the ladies not to come on deck&#8212;say
+ it is not safe. And if the old Weidermann girl hears the pumps,
+ and gets inquisitive, tell her that a lot of water got into the
+ hold when that big sea tumbled aboard. She's an inquisitive old
+ ass, and would be bound to tell the other ladies that the ship
+ is in danger."</p>
+
+ <p>Lacy nodded. "All right, I'll see to her. How long has the
+ ship been leaking?"</p>
+
+ <p>"For quite a long time. And there is fourteen inches in her,
+ and it's as much as we can do to keep it under."</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 192 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page187" name="page187">[pg 187]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ That is serious."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway nodded. "Yes, it is serious in weather like this. Now
+ I must go. Daresay we may give you a call in the course of the
+ morning. Ever try a spell at old-fashioned brake pumps? Fine
+ exercise."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm ready now if you want me," was the quiet answer.</p>
+
+ <p>The
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ was indeed in a pretty bad case. Immediately after the fatal
+ sea had swept her decks the carpenter had sounded the well and
+ found fifteen inches of water, some little of which had got
+ below through the fore-scuttle, but the greater portion, it was
+ soon evident, was the result of a leak. The barque was a
+ comparatively new vessel, and Robertson and his officers, after
+ two hours' pumping, came to the conclusion that she had either
+ strained herself badly or a butt-end had started somewhere.</p>
+
+ <p>For two hours the crew worked at the pumps, taking a spell
+ of ten minutes every half-hour, Otway, the American captain
+ Burr, and Mr. Lacy all lending a hand. Then the well was
+ sounded, and showed two inches less.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson ordered the men to come aft and get a glass of
+ grog. They trooped down into the cabin wet and exhausted, and
+ the steward served them each out half a tumblerful of good
+ French brandy. They drank it off, and then went on deck again
+ to have a smoke before resuming pumping. A quarter of an hour
+ later the pumps choked. There were a hundred tons of coal in
+ the lower hold, and some of the small of it had been drawn up.
+ By the time the carpenter had
+<!-- Page 193 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page188" name="page188">[pg 188]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ them cleared the water had gained seven inches, and the little
+ barque was labouring heavily. Again, however, the willing crew
+ turned to and pumped steadily for another hour, but only
+ succeeded in reducing the water by an inch or two. Then
+ Robertson called his officers together and consulted.</p>
+
+ <p>"We can't keep on like this much longer," he said, "the
+ water is gaining on us too fast. And we can't run before such a
+ sea as this, in our condition; we should be pooped in less than
+ five minutes. We shall have to take to the boats in another
+ couple of hours, unless a change takes place. Mr. Allen, and
+ you, Mr. Otway, see to the two boats, and get them in
+ readiness."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he went below to the passengers. They were all seated
+ in the main cabin, and looked anxiously at him as he
+ entered.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am sorry to tell you, ladies," he said quietly, "that the
+ ship is leaking so badly that I fear we shall have to abandon
+ her. The men cannot keep on pumping much longer, now that we
+ are three hands short. Fortunately we have two good boats, and,
+ if we must take to them, shall have no trouble in reaching
+ land."</p>
+
+ <p>They heard him in silence, then the old priest opened his
+ state-room door, and came out.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is bad news indeed, captain," he said gently. "Still
+ we must bow to God's will, and trust to His guidance and
+ protection. And you and your officers and crew are good and
+ brave seamen."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, father. We'll do all right if we
+<!-- Page 194 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page189" name="page189">[pg 189]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ have to take to the boats. And you must try and cheer up the
+ ladies. Now I must leave you all for awhile. We will stick to
+ the pumps for another hour or two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Captain," said Sarah de Boos, a tall, finely built young
+ woman of twenty, "let my sister and myself and our servant help
+ the men at the pump.
+ <i>Do</i>
+
+ , please. We are all three very strong, and our help is surely
+ worth having."</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson patted her soft cheek with his big, sunburnt hand.
+ "You are your father's daughter, Sarah, and I thank you. Of
+ course your help would be something; three fine lusty young
+ women"&#8212;he tried to smile&#8212;"but it's too dangerous
+ for you to be on deck. All the bulwarks are gone, and nasty
+ lumping seas come aboard every now and then."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not afraid of a life-line hurting my waist," was the
+ prompt answer, "and neither is Sukie&#8212;are you Sukie? Go on
+ deck, captain, and Sukie and I and Mina" (the servant) "will
+ just kick off our boots and follow you."</p>
+
+ <p>"And I too," broke in old Father Roget. "Surely I am not too
+ old to help."</p>
+
+ <p>In less than five minutes the two half-caste girls, the
+ native woman Mina, and the old priest, were working the
+ starboard brake, three seamen being on the lee side. Every now
+ and then, as the barque took a heavy roll to windward, the
+ water would flood her deck up to the workers' knees; but they
+ stuck steadily to their task for half an hour, when they gave
+ place
+<!-- Page 195 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page190" name="page190">[pg 190]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ to Burr, the carpenter, the Rev. Wilfrid, and three native
+ seamen.</p>
+
+ <p>In the cabin Mrs. Lacy sat with ashen-hued face beside Miss
+ Weidermann, their hands clasped together, and listening to the
+ wild clamour of the wind and sea. Presently the two De Boos
+ girls, Lacy, Father Roget, and Mina, came below to rest awhile,
+ the water streaming from their sodden garments. The old priest,
+ thoroughly exhausted, threw himself down upon the transom
+ locker cushions.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wilfrid," said Mrs. Lacy coming over to him and placing her
+ shaking hand on his shoulder, "cannot I do something? Oh, Miss
+ De Boos, I wish I were brave, like you. But I am not&#8212;I am
+ a coward, and I hate myself for it."</p>
+
+ <p>The Rev. Wilfrid smiled tenderly at her as he drew her to
+ him for a moment. "Don't worry, little woman. You can't do
+ anything&#8212;yes, you can, though! Get me my pipe and fill it
+ for me. My hands are wet and cramped."</p>
+
+ <p>Sukie De Boos, whose firm, rounded bosom and strong square
+ shoulders made a startling contrast, as they revealed their
+ shape under her soddened blouse, to Mrs. Lacy's fragile figure,
+ impulsively put her hands out, and taking Mrs. Lacy's face
+ between them, kissed her twice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear Mrs. Lacy," she said, "don't be frightened, please.
+ Now get Mr. Lacy's pipe, and I'll rummage the steward's pantry
+ and get some food for us all to eat. Mr. Otway told me to tell
+ you and Miss Weidermann to eat something, as maybe we may not
+ get anything
+<!-- Page 196 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page191" name="page191">[pg 191]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ for some hours. So I'm just going to stay here and see that
+ every one
+ <i>does</i>
+
+ eat. I'll set you a good example."</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes she laid upon the table an assortment of
+ tinned meats, bread, and some bottled beer, and some brandy for
+ Father Roget and Lacy. Otway came down, followed by the
+ steward, and nodded approval.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's right, Sukie. Eat as much as you can. I'll take a
+ drink myself. Here's luck to you, Sukie. Perhaps we won't have
+ to make up a boating party after all. But there's nothing like
+ being ready. So will you, Mr. Lacy, lend a hand here with the
+ steward, and pass up our provisions to the second mate? The
+ captain will be down in a minute, and will tell you ladies what
+ clothing to get ready. For my part I'll be jolly glad if we do
+ have to take to the boats, where we shall be nice and comfy,
+ instead of rolling about in this beastly way&#8212;I'll be
+ sea-sick in another ten minutes. Old Bruce says he felt sick an
+ hour ago. Come on, steward."</p>
+
+ <p>The assumed cheerfulness of his manner produced a good
+ effect, and even old Miss Weidermann plucked up heart a little
+ as she saw him nonchalantly light a cigar as he disappeared
+ with the steward below into the lazzarette.</p>
+
+ <p>On deck Robertson and the mate were talking in low tones, as
+ they assisted the second mate with the boats. There was now
+ nearly three feet of water in the hold, and every one knew that
+ the barque could not keep afloat much longer. Fortunately the
+<!-- Page 197 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page192" name="page192">[pg 192]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ violence of the wind had decreased somewhat, though there was
+ still a mountainous sea.</p>
+
+ <p>Both the old mate and the captain knew that the two small
+ quarter boats would be dangerously overladen, and their
+ unspoken fears were shared by the rest of the officers and
+ crew. But another hour would perhaps make a great difference;
+ and then as the two men were speaking a savage sea smote the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ on the starboard bow, with such violence that she trembled in
+ every timber, and as she staggered under the shock and then
+ rolled heavily to windward, she dipped the starboard quarter
+ boat under the water; it filled, and as she rose again, boat
+ and davits went away together.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson groaned and looked at the mate.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is God's will, sir," said the old Scotsman quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson nodded. "Tell Allen and the others to come here,"
+ he said.</p>
+
+ <p>The Tynesider, followed by Captain Burr, Otway, and the
+ carpenter, came.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Allen," said the captain, "you are the best man in such
+ an emergency as this. You handle a boat better than any man I
+ know. There is now only one boat left, and you must take charge
+ of her. You will have to take a big lot of people&#8212;the
+ four women, the parson, the old French priest, Mr. Otway,
+ Captain Burr, the carpenter, and the five men."</p>
+
+ <p>"I guess I'll stand out, and stick to the ship," said Burr
+ in a lazy, drawling manner, "I don't like bein' crowded up with
+ a lot of wimmen."</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 198 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page193" name="page193">[pg 193]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Neither do I, said Otway.</p>
+
+ <p>"Same here, captain," said the carpenter, a little grizzled
+ man of sixty.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson shook hands with each of them in turn. "I knew you
+ were
+ <i>men</i>
+
+ ," he said simply. "Come below and let's have a drink together,
+ and then see to the boat."</p>
+
+ <p>"What's all this, skipper?" said Allen, with an oath, "d'ye
+ think I'm going to save my carcase and let you men drown? I'll
+ see you all damned first!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll obey orders," growled the captain, "and my orders
+ are that you take charge of that boat. And don't give me any
+ lip. You are a married man and have children. None of us who
+ are standing by the ship are married men. By God, my joker, if
+ you don't know your duty, I'll teach you. Are you going to let
+ these four women go adrift in a boat to perish when you can
+ save them?"</p>
+
+ <p>Allen looked the captain squarely in the face and then put
+ out his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"I understand you, sir. But I don't like doing it. The ship
+ won't keep afloat another hour. But, as you say, I've a wife
+ and kids to consider."</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Followed by the others, Robertson went below, and told his
+ passengers to get ready for the boat. The old French priest,
+ exhausted by his labour at the pumps, was still lying on the
+ transom cushions, sleeping; the Rev. Lacy was seated at the
+ table smoking his pipe (all the ladies were in their
+ state-rooms). He rose as the men entered, and looked at them
+ inquiringly.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 199 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page194" name="page194">[pg 194]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ We're in a bit of a tight place," said the captain, as he
+ coolly poured out half a tumblerful of brandy, "but I'm sending
+ you, Mr. Lacy, and Father Roget, and the ladies away with Mr.
+ Allen in one of the boats. Allen is a man whom I rely upon.
+ He'll bring you ashore safely. He's a bit rough in his talk,
+ but he's one of God's own chosen in a boat, and a fine sailor
+ man&#8212;better than the mate, Captain Burr, or myself; isn't
+ that so, Mr. Bruce?"</p>
+
+ <p>The white-haired old mate bent his head in acknowledgment.
+ Then he stood up stiff and stark, his rough bony hands clasped
+ upon his chest.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll no' deny but that Mr. Allen is far and awa' the best
+ man to have charge o' the boat. But as there is a meenister
+ here, surely he will now offer up a prayer to the Almighty for
+ those in peril on the sea, and especially implore Him to
+ consider a sma' boat, deep to the gunwales."</p>
+
+ <p>He looked at the clergyman, who at first made no reply, but
+ stood with downcast eyes. The men looked at him expectantly; he
+ put one hand on the table, and then slowly raised his face.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think, gentlemen, that ... that Father Roget is the older
+ man." He spoke haltingly, and a flush dyed his smooth,
+ clean-shaven face from brow to chin. "Will you not ask him?"
+ Then his eyes dropped again.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson, who was in a hurry, and yet had a sincere but
+ secret respect for old Bruce's unobtrusive religious feelings,
+ now backed up his mate's request.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think, sir, that as the mate says, a bit of a short
+<!-- Page 200 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page195" name="page195">[pg 195]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ prayer would not be out of place just now, seeing the mess we
+ are in. And that poor old gentleman over there is too done up
+ to stand on his feet. So will you please begin, sir. Steward,
+ call the ladies. We can no longer disguise from them, Mr. Lacy,
+ that we are in a bad way&#8212;as bad a way as I have ever been
+ in during my thirty years at sea."</p>
+
+ <p>In a couple of minutes the two De Boos girls, Miss
+ Weidermann, and the native girl Mina, came out of their cabins;
+ and when the steward said that Mrs. Lacy felt too ill to leave
+ her berth, her husband could not help giving an audible sigh of
+ relief. Then he braced up and spoke with firmness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Please shut Mrs. Lacy's door, steward. Mr. Bruce, will you
+ lend me your church service&#8212;I do not want to go into my
+ cabin for my own. My wife, I fear, has given way."</p>
+
+ <p>The mate brought the church service, and then whilst the men
+ stood with bowed heads, and the women knelt, the clergyman,
+ with strong, unfaltering voice read the second of the prayers
+ "To be used in Storms at Sea." He finished, and then sitting
+ down again, placed one hand over his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+ <i>The living, the living shall praise Thee</i>
+
+ ."</p>
+
+ <p>It was the old mate who spoke. He alone of the men had knelt
+ beside the women, and when he rose his face bore such an
+ expression of calmness and content, that Otway, who five
+ minutes before had been silently cursing him for his "damned
+ idiotcy," looked at him with a sudden mingled respect and
+ wonder.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 201 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page196" name="page196">[pg 196]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Stepping across to the clergyman, Bruce respectfully placed his
+ hand on his shoulder, and as he spoke his clear blue eyes
+ smiled at the still kneeling women.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cheer up, sir. God will protect ye and your gude wife, and
+ us all. You, his meenister, have made supplication to Him, and
+ He has heard. Dinna weep, ladies. We are in the care of One who
+ holds the sea in the hollow of His hand."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he followed the captain and the others on deck, Otway
+ alone remaining to assist the steward.</p>
+
+ <p>"For God's sake give me some brandy," said Lacy to him, in a
+ low voice.</p>
+
+ <p>Otway looked at him in astonishment. Was the man a coward
+ after all?</p>
+
+ <p>He brought the brandy, and with ill-disguised contempt
+ placed it before him without a word. Lacy looked up at him, and
+ his face flushed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'm not funking&#8212;not a d&#8212;&#8212;d bit, I can
+ assure you."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway at once poured out a nip of brandy for himself, and
+ clinked his glass against that of the clergyman.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pon my soul, I couldn't make it out, and I apologise. But a
+ man's nerves go all at once sometimes&#8212;can't help himself,
+ you know. Mine did once when I was in the nigger-catching
+ business in the Solomon Islands. Natives opened fire on us when
+ our boats were aground in a creek, and some of our men got hit.
+ I wasn't a bit scared of a smack from a bullet, but when I got
+ a scratch on my hand from an arrow, I dropped in a blue funk,
+ and acted like a cur.
+<!-- Page 202 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page197" name="page197">[pg 197]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Knew it was poisoned, felt sure I'd die of lockjaw, and began
+ to weep internally. Then the mate called me a rotten young cur,
+ shook me up, and put my Snider into my hand. But I shall always
+ feel funky at the sight even of a child's twopenny bow and
+ arrow. Now I must go."</p>
+
+ <p>The clergyman nodded and smiled, and then rising from his
+ seat, he tapped at the door of his wife's state-room. She
+ opened it, and then Otway, who was helping the steward, heard
+ her sob hysterically.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Will, Will, why did you? How could you? I love you,
+ Will dear, I love you, and if death comes to us in another
+ hour, another minute, I shall die happily with your arms round
+ me. But, Will dear, there is a God, I'm sure there
+ <i>is</i>
+
+ a God.... I feel it in my heart, I feel it. And now that death
+ is so near to us&#8212;&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>Lacy put his arms around her, and lifted her trembling
+ figure upon his knees.</p>
+
+ <p>"There, rest yourself, my pet."</p>
+
+ <p>"Rest! Rest?" she said brokenly, as Lacy drew her to him.
+ "How can I rest when I think of how I have sinned, and how I
+ shall die! Will dear, when I heard you reading that
+ prayer&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I
+ <i>had</i>
+
+ to do it, Nell."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will, dear Will.... Perhaps God may forgive us both.... But
+ as I sat here in my dark cabin, and listened to you reading
+ that prayer, my husband's face came before me&#8212;the face
+ that I thought was so dull and stupid. And his eyes seemed so
+ soft and kind&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 203 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page198" name="page198">[pg 198]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ For God's sake, my dear little woman, don't think of what is
+ past. We have made the plunge together&#8212;&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>The woman uttered one last sobbing sigh. "I am not afraid to
+ die, Will. I am not afraid, but when I heard you begin to read
+ that prayer, my courage forsook me. I wanted to scream&#8212;to
+ rush out and stop you, for it seemed to me as if you were doing
+ it in sheer mockery."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can only say again, Nell, that I could not help myself;
+ made me feel pretty sick, I assure you."</p>
+
+ <p>Their voices ceased, and presently Lacy stepped out into the
+ main cabin, and then went on deck again.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson met him with a cheerful face. "Come on, Mr. Lacy.
+ I've some good news for you&#8212;we are making less water! The
+ leak must be taking up in some way." Then holding on to the
+ rail with one hand, he shouted to the men at the pumps.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shake her up, boys! shake her up. Here's Mr. Lacy come to
+ lend a hand, and the supercargo and steward will be with you in
+ a minute. Now I'm going below for a minute to tell the ladies,
+ and mix you a bucket of grog. Shake her up, you, Tom Tarbucket,
+ my bully boy with a glass eye! Shake her up, and when she sucks
+ dry, I'll stand a sovereign all round."</p>
+
+ <p>The willing crew answered him with a cheer, and Tom
+ Tarbucket, a square-built, merry faced native of Savage Island,
+ who was stripped to the waist, shouted out, amid the laughter
+ of his shipmates&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 204 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page199" name="page199">[pg 199]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Ay, ay, capt'in, we soon make pump suck dry if two Miss de Boos
+ girl come."</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson laughed in response, and then picking up a wooden
+ bucket from under the fife rail, clattered down the companion
+ way.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where are you, Otway? Up you get on deck, and you too,
+ steward. The leak is taken up and 'everything is lovely and the
+ goose hangs high.' Up you go to the pumps, and make 'em suck.
+ I'll bring up some grog presently."</p>
+
+ <p>Then as Otway and the steward sprang up on deck, the captain
+ stamped along the cabin in his sodden sea boots, banging at
+ each door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come out, Sarah, come out Sukie, my little
+ chickabiddies&#8212;there's to be no boat trip for you after
+ all. Miss Weidermann, I've good news, good news! Mrs. Lacy,
+ cheer up, dear lady. The leak has taken up, and you can go on
+ deck and see your husband working at the pumps like a number
+ one chop Trojan. Ha! Father Roget, give me your hand. You're a
+ white man, sir, and ought to be a bishop."</p>
+
+ <p>As he spoke to the now awakened old priest, the two De Boos
+ girls, Mrs. Lacy and Miss Weidermann, all came out of their
+ cabins, and Robertson shook hands with them, and lifting Sukie
+ de Boos up between his two rough hands as if she were a little
+ girl, he kissed her, and then made a grab at Sarah, who dodged
+ behind Mrs. Lacy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, father, don't you attempt to come on deck. Mrs. Lacy,
+ just you keep him here. Sukie, my chick, you and Sarah get a
+ couple of bottles of brandy,
+<!-- Page 205 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page200" name="page200">[pg 200]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ make this bucket full of half-and-half, and bring it on deck to
+ the men."</p>
+
+ <p>As he noisily stamped out of the cabin again, the old priest
+ turned to the ladies, and raised his hand&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"A brave, brave man&#8212;a very good English sailor. And
+ now let us thank God for His mercies to us."</p>
+
+ <p>The four ladies, with Mina, knelt, and then the good old man
+ prayed fervently for a few minutes. Then Sukie de Boos and her
+ sister flung their arms around Mrs. Lacy, and kissed her, and
+ even Miss Weidermann, now thoroughly unstrung, began to cry
+ hysterically. She had at first detested Mrs. Lacy as being
+ altogether too scandalously young and pretty for a clergyman's
+ wife. Now she was ready to take her to her bosom (that is, to
+ her metaphorical bosom, as she had no other), for she believed
+ that Mr. Lacy's prayer had saved them all, he being a
+ Protestant clergyman, and therefore better qualified to avert
+ imminent death than a priest of Rome.</p>
+
+ <p>Sukie and Sally de Boos mixed the grog, took it on deck, and
+ served it out to the men at the pumps.</p>
+
+ <p>The carpenter sounded the well, and as he drew up the iron
+ rod, the second mate gave a shout.</p>
+
+ <p>"Only seven inches, captain."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right, my boy. Take a good spell now, Mr. Allen. Mr. Bruce,
+ we can give her a bit more lower canvas now. She'll stand it.
+ Mr. Lacy, and you Captain Burr, come aft and get into some dry
+ togs. The glass is rising steadily, and in a few hours we'll
+ feel a bit more comfy."</p>
+
+ <p>He prophesied truly, for the violence of the gale
+<!-- Page 206 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page201" name="page201">[pg 201]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ decreased rapidly, and when at the end of an hour the pumps
+ sucked, the crew gave a cheer, and tired out as they were,
+ eagerly sprang aloft to repair damages and then spread more
+ sail, Sarah and Susan de Boos hauling and pulling at the
+ running gear from the deck below. They were both girls of
+ splendid physique, and, in a way, sailors, and had Robertson
+ allowed them to do so, would have gone aloft and handled the
+ canvas with the men.</p>
+
+ <p>By four o'clock in the afternoon the little barque, with her
+ wave-swept, bulwarkless decks, now drying under a bright sun,
+ was running before a warm, good-hearted breeze, and the pumps
+ were only attended to twice in every watch.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Lacy, Miss Weidermann, the De Boos girls, and the
+ French priest were seated on the poop deck, on rugs and
+ blankets spread out for them by Otway and the steward. Lacy,
+ with Captain Burr, was pacing to and fro smoking his pipe, and
+ laughing heartily at Sukie de Boos's attempts to make his wife
+ smoke a cigarette. Presently old Bruce came along with the
+ second mate and some men to set a new gaff-topsail, and the
+ ladies rose to go below, so as to be out of the way.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nae, nae, leddies, dinna go below," said the old mate
+ cheerfully, "ye'll no' hinder us. And the sight o' sae many
+ sweet, bonny faces will mak' us work a' the better. And how are
+ ye now, Mrs. Lacy? Ah, the pink roses are in your cheeks once
+ mair." And then he stepped quickly up to the young clergyman
+ and took his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 207 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page202" name="page202">[pg 202]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Mr. Lacy, ye must pardon me, but I'm an auld man, and must hae
+ my way. Ye're a gude, brave man;" then he added in a low voice,
+ "and ye called upon Him, and He heard us."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, Mr. Bruce," Lacy answered nervously, as he saw
+ his wife's eyes droop, and a vivid blush dye her fair cheeks.
+ Then he plucked the American captain by the sleeve and went
+ below, and Sukie de Boos laughed loudly when in another minute
+ they heard the pop of a bottle of soda water. She ran to the
+ skylight and bent down.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're a pair of exceedingly rude men. You might think of
+ Father Roget&#8212;even if you don't think of us poor women.
+ Mr. Otway, come here, you horrid, dirty-faced, ragged creature!
+ Go below and get a glass of port wine for Father Roget, a
+ bottle of champagne for Mrs. Lacy and my sister and myself, and
+ a cup of tea for Mrs. Weidermann, and bring some biscuits,
+ too."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come and help me, then," said the supercargo, who was
+ indeed dirty-faced and ragged.</p>
+
+ <p>Sukie danced towards the companion way with him. Half-way
+ down he put his arms round her and kissed her vigorously. She
+ returned his kisses with interest, and laughingly smacked his
+ cheek.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me go, Charlie Otway, you horrid, bold fellow. Now,
+ one, two, three, or I'll call out and invoke the protection of
+ the clergy, above and below&#8212;those on board this ship I
+ mean, not those who are in heaven or elsewhere."</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 208 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page203" name="page203">[pg 203]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Ten days later the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ sailed into Apia Harbour and dropped anchor inside Matautu
+ Point just as the evening mists were closing their fleecy
+ mantle around the verdant slopes of Vailima Mountain.</p>
+
+ <p>The two half-caste girls, with their maid and Mr. and Mrs.
+ Lacy, came to bid Otway and the captain a brief farewell,
+ before they went ashore in the pilot boat to D'Acosta's hotel
+ in Matafele.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now remember, Otway, and you, Captain Robertson, and you,
+ Captain Burr, you are all to dine with us at the hotel the day
+ after to-morrow. And perhaps you, too, Father Roget will
+ reconsider your decision and come too." It was Lacy who
+ spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>The gentle-voiced old Frenchman shook his head and
+ smiled&#8212;"Ah no, it was impossible," he said. The bishop
+ would not like him to so soon leave the Mission. But the bishop
+ and his brothers at the Mission would look forward to have the
+ good captain, and Mr. Burr, and Mr. Otway, and the ladies to
+ accept his hospitality.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Lacy's soft little gloved hand was in Otway's.</p>
+
+ <p>"I thank you, Mr. Otway, very, very sincerely for your many
+ kindnesses to me. You have indeed been most generous to us
+ both. It was cruel of us to take your cabin and compel you to
+ sleep in the trade-room. But I shall never forget how kind you
+ have been."</p>
+
+ <p>All that was good in Otway came into his vicious heart and
+ voiced softly through his lips.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 209 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page204" name="page204">[pg 204]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ I am only too glad, Mrs. Lacy.... I am indeed. I didn't like
+ giving up my cabin to strangers at first, and was a bit of a
+ beast when Mr. Harry told me we were taking two extra
+ passengers. But I am glad now."</p>
+
+ <p>He turned away, and went below with burning cheeks. Before
+ the storm he had tried his best, late on several nights, to
+ make Lacy drunk, and to keep him drunk; but Lacy could stand as
+ much or more grog than he could himself; and when he heard that
+ passionate, sobbing appeal, "Oh, Will, Will, how could you?"
+ his better nature was stirred, and his fierce sensual desire
+ for her changed into a sentimental affection and respect. He
+ knew her secret, and now, instead of wishing to take advantage
+ of it, felt he was too much of a man to abuse his
+ knowledge.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Supper was over, and as the skipper, Burr, and Otway paced
+ the quarter-deck before going ashore to play a game or two of
+ billiards and meet some friends, a boat came alongside, and a
+ man stepped on deck and inquired for the captain. As he
+ followed Robertson down the companion, Otway saw that he was a
+ well-dressed, rather gentlemanly-looking young man of about
+ five and twenty.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's that joker, I wonder?" he said to Burr; "not any one
+ living in Samoa, unless he's a new-comer. Hope he won't stay
+ long&#8212;it's eight o'clock now."</p>
+
+ <p>Ten minutes later the steward came to him.</p>
+
+ <p>"The captain wishes to see you, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway entered the cabin. Robertson, with frowning
+<!-- Page 210 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page205" name="page205">[pg 205]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ face, motioned him to a seat. The strange gentleman sat near
+ the captain smoking a cigar, and with some papers in his
+ hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Otway, I have sent for you. This gentleman has a
+ warrant for the arrest of Mr. Lacy, issued by the New Zealand
+ Government and initialled by the British Consul here."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway rose to the occasion. He nodded to the stranger and
+ sat down quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir?" he asked inquiringly of Robertson.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will please tell my supercargo your business, mister,"
+ said the captain gruffly to the stranger; "he can tell you all
+ you wish to know&#8212;that is, if he cares to do so. I don't
+ see that your warrant holds any force here in Samoa. You can't
+ execute it. There's no government here, no police, no anything,
+ and the British Consul can't act on a warrant issued from New
+ Zealand. It is of no more use in Samoa than it would be at Cape
+ Horn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, sir, make haste," said Otway with a mingled and
+ studied insolence and politeness. He already began to detest
+ the stranger.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am a detective of the police force of New Zealand, and I
+ have come from Auckland to arrest William Barton, alias the
+ Rev. Wilfrid Lacy, on a charge of stealing twenty thousand,
+ five hundred pounds from the National Bank of Christchurch, of
+ which he was manager. I believe that twenty thousand pounds of
+ the money he has stolen is on board this vessel at this moment,
+ and I now demand access to his cabin."</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 211 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page206" name="page206">[pg 206]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Do you? How are you going to enforce your demand, my cocksure
+ friend?"</p>
+
+ <p>Otway rose, and placing his two hands on the table, looked
+ insultingly at the detective. "What rot you are talking,
+ man!"</p>
+
+ <p>The detective drew back, alarmed and startled.</p>
+
+ <p>"The British Consul has endorsed my warrant to arrest this
+ man," he said, "and it will go hard with any one who attempts
+ to interfere with me in the performance of my duty."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway shot a quick, triumphant glance at the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Consul is, and always was, a silly old ass. You have
+ come on a fool's errand; and are going on the wrong tack by
+ making threats. That idiotic warrant of yours is of no more use
+ to you than a sheet of fly paper&#8212;Samoa is outside British
+ jurisdiction. The High Commissioner for the Western Pacific
+ would not have endorsed such a fool of a document, and I'll
+ report the matter to him.... Now, sit down and tell me what you
+
+ <i>do</i>
+
+ want, and I'll try and help you all I can. But don't try to
+ bluff us&#8212;it's only wasting your time. Steward, bring us
+ something to drink."</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as the steward brought them "something to drink"
+ Otway became deeply sympathetic with the detective, and
+ Robertson, who knew his supercargo well, smiled inwardly at the
+ manner he adopted.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, just tell us, Mr.&#8212;O'Donovan, I think you said is
+ your name&#8212;what is all the trouble? I need
+<!-- Page 212 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page207" name="page207">[pg 207]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ hardly tell you that whilst both the captain and myself felt
+ annoyed at your dictatorial manner, we are both sensible men,
+ and will do all in our power to assist you. Our firm's
+ reputation has to be studied&#8212;has it not, captain? We
+ don't want it to be insinuated that we helped an embezzler to
+ escape, do we?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly not," replied Robertson, puffing slowly at his
+ cigar, watching Otway keenly through his half-closed eyelids,
+ and wondering what that astute young gentleman was driving at.
+ "I guess that you, Mr. Otway, will do all that is right and
+ cor-rect."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, sir," replied Otway humbly, and with great
+ seriousness, "I know my duty to my employers, and I know that
+ this gentleman may be led into very serious trouble through the
+ dense stupidity of the British Consul here."</p>
+
+ <p>He turned to Mr. O'Donovan&#8212;"Are you aware, Mr.
+ O'Donikin&#8212;I beg your pardon, O'Donovan&#8212;that the
+ British Consul here is not, officially, the British Consul. He
+ is merely a commercial agent, like the United States Consul.
+ Neither are accredited by their Governments to act officially
+ on behalf of their respective countries, and even if they were,
+ there is no extradition treaty with the Samoan Islands, which
+ is a country without a recognised government. Of course, Mr.
+ O'Donovan, you are acting in good faith; but you have no more
+ legal right nor the power to arrest a man in Samoa, than you
+ have to arrest one in Manchuria or Patagonia. Of course, old
+ Johns (the British Consul) doesn't know this, or
+<!-- Page 213 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page208" name="page208">[pg 208]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ he would not have made such a fool of himself by endorsing a
+ warrant from an irresponsible judge of a New Zealand court. But
+ as I told you, I shall aid you in every possible way."</p>
+
+ <p>O'Donovan was no fool. He knew that all that Otway had said
+ was absolutely correct, but he braced himself up.</p>
+
+ <p>"I daresay what you say may be right, Mr. Supercargo. But
+ I've come from New Zealand to get this joker, and by blazes I
+ mean to get him, and take him back with me to New Zealand. And
+ I mean to have those twenty thousand sovereigns to take back as
+ well."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, then, why the devil don't you go and get your man?
+ He's at Joe D'Acosta's hotel with his wife."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't want to be bothered with him just yet. I have no
+ place to put him into. The Californian mail boat from San
+ Francisco is not due here for another ten days. But I know that
+ he hasn't taken his stolen money ashore yet, and you had better
+ hand it over to me at once. I can get
+ <i>him</i>
+
+ at any time."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway leant back in his chair and laughed.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't doubt that, Mr. O'Donovan. If you have enough money
+ to do it, you can do as you say&#8212;get this man at any time.
+ But you want to have some guns behind you to enforce it; and
+ then his capture won't affect our custody of the money. If the
+ Consul instigates you to make an attack on the ship, you will
+ do so at your peril, for we shall resist any piratical
+ attempt."</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 214 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page209" name="page209">[pg 209]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ O'Donovan's face fell. "You said you would assist me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"So I will," replied Otway, lying genially, "But you must
+ point out a way. The High Commissioner for the Western Pacific,
+ in Fiji, is the only man who could give you power to arrest the
+ man and convey him to New Zealand, and the moment you show me
+ the High or the Deputy High Commissioner's order to hand over
+ the money, and Lacy's other effects, I'll do so."</p>
+
+ <p>The detective made his last stroke.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can take the law into my own hands and chance the
+ consequences. The Consul will supply me with a
+ force&#8212;"</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson smiled grimly, and pointed to the rack of Snider
+ rifles around the mizen-mast at the head of the table.</p>
+
+ <p>"You and your force will have a bad time of it then, and be
+ shot down before you can put foot on my deck. I've never seen a
+ shark eat a policeman, but there seems a chance of it now."</p>
+
+ <p>O'Donovan laughed uneasily, then he changed his tactics.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now look here, gentlemen," he said confidentially, leaning
+ across the table, "I can see I'm in a bit of a hole, but I'm a
+ business man, and you are business men, and I think we
+ understand one another, eh? As you say, my warrant doesn't hold
+ good here in Samoa. But the Consul will back me up, and if I
+ can take this chap back to New Zealand it means a big thing for
+ me. Now, what's your figure?"</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 215 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page210" name="page210">[pg 210]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Two hundred each for the skipper and myself," answered Otway
+ promptly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Done. You shall have it."</p>
+
+ <p>"When?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Give me till to-morrow afternoon. I've only a hundred and
+ fifty pounds with me, and I'll have to raise the rest."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, it's a deal. But mind, you'll have to take care
+ to be here before the parson. He's coming off at eleven
+ o'clock."</p>
+
+ <p>"Trust me for that, gentlemen."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry for his wife," said Otway meditatively.</p>
+
+ <p>O'Donovan grinned. "Ah, I haven't told you the
+ yarn&#8212;she's not his wife! She bolted from her husband, who
+ is a big swell in Auckland, a Mr.&#8212;&#8212;."</p>
+
+ <p>"How did you get on their tracks?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sydney police found out that two people answering their
+ description had sailed for the Islands in the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ , and cabled over to us. We thought they had lit out for
+ America. I only got here the day before yesterday in the
+ <i>Ryno</i>
+
+ , from Auckland."</p>
+
+ <p>Otway paid him some very florid compliments on his
+ smartness, and then after another drink or two, the detective
+ went on shore, highly pleased.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as he was gone, Otway turned to Robertson.</p>
+
+ <p>"You won't stand in my way, Robertson, will you?" he
+ asked&#8212;"I want to see the poor devils get away."</p>
+
+ <p>"You take all the responsibility, then."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will," and then he rapidly told the skipper his
+<!-- Page 216 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page211" name="page211">[pg 211]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ plan, and set to work by at once asking the second mate to get
+ ready the boat and then come back to the cabin.</p>
+
+ <p>"All ready," said Allen, five minutes later.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then come with the steward and help me with this gear."</p>
+
+ <p>He unlocked the door of Lacy's state-room, lit the swinging
+ candle, and quickly passed out Mr. and Mrs. Lacy's remaining
+ luggage to the second mate and steward. Three small leather
+ trunks, marked "Books with Care," were especially heavy, and he
+ guessed their contents.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stow them safely in the boat, Allen. Don't make more noise
+ than you can help. I'll be with you in a minute."</p>
+
+ <p>Going into his own cabin, he took a large handbag, threw
+ into it his revolver and two boxes of cartridges, then carried
+ it into the trade-room, and added half a dozen tins of the
+ brand of tobacco which he knew Lacy liked, and then filled the
+ remaining space with pint bottles of champagne. Then he whipped
+ up a sheet or two of letter paper and an envelope from the
+ cabin-table, thrust them into his coat pocket, and, bag in
+ hand, stepped quickly on deck. The old mate was in his cabin,
+ and had not heard anything.</p>
+
+ <p>"Give it to her, boys," he said to the crew, taking the
+ steer-oar in his hand, and heading the boat towards a small
+ fore-and-aft schooner lying half a mile away in the Matafele
+ horn of the reef encircling Apia Harbour.</p>
+
+ <p>The four native seamen bent to their oars in silence, and
+ sped swiftly through the darkness over the calm
+<!-- Page 217 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page212" name="page212">[pg 212]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ waters of the harbour. The schooner showed no riding light on
+ her forestay, but, on the after deck under the awning, a lamp
+ was burning, and three men&#8212;the captain, mate, and
+ boatswain&#8212;were playing cards on the skylight.</p>
+
+ <p>Otway jumped on deck, just as the men rose to meet him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Great Ascensial Jehosophat! Why, it's you, Mr. Otway?"
+ cried the captain, a little clean-shaven man, as he shook hands
+ with the supercargo. "Well, now, I was just wondering whether
+ I'd go ashore and try and drop across you. Say, tell me now,
+ hev you any good tinned beef and a case of Winchesters you can
+ sell me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, both," replied Otway, shaking hands with the three in
+ turn&#8212;they were all old acquaintances, especially Le Brun,
+ the mate. "But come below with me, Revels; I've important
+ business, and it has to be done right away&#8212;this very
+ night."</p>
+
+ <p>Revels led the way below into the schooner's cabin, and at
+ once produced a bottle of Bourbon and a couple of glasses.</p>
+
+ <p>"No time to drink, Revels.... All right, just a little,
+ then. Now, tell me, do you want to make&#8212;and make it
+ easy&#8212;five hundred pounds?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Guess I do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Are you ready for sea?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was thinking of sailing on a cruise among the Tokelau
+ Islands in a day or two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then don't think of it. If you put to sea to-night for a
+ longer voyage, I can guarantee you that you will
+<!-- Page 218 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page213" name="page213">[pg 213]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ get five hundred pounds&#8212;if you will take two passengers
+ on board, and put to sea as soon as they come alongside."</p>
+
+ <p>"Where do they want to go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That I can't say. Manila or Hongkong, most likely. It'll
+ pay you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is the money safe?"</p>
+
+ <p>Otway struck his hand on the table. "Safe as rain, Revels.
+ They have plenty. I have it here alongside, and if you don't
+ get five hundred sovereigns paid you when you have dropped
+ Samoa astern, you can come back with your passengers, and I'll
+ give you fifty pounds myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Friends of yours?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's enough fur me, Otway. Now, just tell me what to
+ do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell your mate to get your boat ready to go ashore, while I
+ write a note."</p>
+
+ <p>He took a sheet of paper, and hurriedly wrote in pencil:</p>
+
+ <p class="blkquot">"DEAR LACY,&#8212;Don't hesitate to follow
+ my instructions. There's a man here from New Zealand. Tried to
+ get access to your cabin; bluffed him. You and your wife must
+ follow bearer of this note to his boat, which will bring you to
+ a schooner. The captain's name is Revels. He expects you, and
+ you can trust him. Have pledged him my word that you will give
+ him &#163;500 to land you at Manila or thereabouts; also that
+ you will hand it to him as soon as the schooner is clear of the
+ land.
+ <i>All</i>
+
+ your luggage is on board the schooner, awaiting you. Allen
+ helped me. You might send him a present by Revels. Goodbye, and
+ all good luck. One last word&#8212;
+ <i>be quick, be quick</i>
+
+ !"</p>
+
+ <p>"Boat is ready," said Revels.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 219 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page214" name="page214">[pg 214]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Right," and Otway closed the letter and handed it to the mate.
+ "Here you are, Le Brun. Now, listen. Pull in to the mouth of
+ the creek at the French Mission, just beside the bridge. Leave
+ your boat there and then take this letter to D'Acosta's Hotel
+ and ask to see Mr. Lacy. If he and his wife have gone out for a
+ walk, you must follow them and give him the letter; but I feel
+ pretty sure you'll find them on the verandah. Bring them off on
+ board as quickly and as quietly as possible. No one will take
+ any notice of the boat in the creek. Oh! and tell Mr. Lacy to
+ be dead sure not to bring anything in the way of even a small
+ bag with him&#8212;Joe D'Acosta might wonder. I'll settle the
+ hotel bill later on. Are you clear?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Clear as mud," replied Le Brun, a big, black-whiskered
+ Guernsey man.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then goodbye."</p>
+
+ <p>The schooner's boat, manned by two hands only, pushed off,
+ and then Revels turned to Otway.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall I heave short so as to be ready?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Heave short, be d&#8212;&#8212;d!" replied Otway testily.
+ "No, just lie nice and quiet, and as soon as you have your
+ passengers on board slip your cable. I'll see that your anchor
+ is fished up for you. And even if you lost your anchor and a
+ few fathoms of chain it doesn't matter against five hundred
+ sovereigns. The people on shore would be sure to hear the sound
+ of the windlass pawls, and there's a man here from
+ Auckland&#8212;a detective&#8212;who might make a bold stroke,
+ get a dozen native bullies and collar
+<!-- Page 220 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page215" name="page215">[pg 215]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ you. So slip, my boy, slip. There's a fine healthy breeze which
+ will take you clear of the reef in ten minutes."</p>
+
+ <p>The two men shook hands, and Otway stepped into his boat,
+ which he steered in towards the principal jetty.</p>
+
+ <p>Jumping out he walked along the roadway which led from
+ Matafele to Apia. As he passed the British Consul's house he
+ saw Mr. O'Donovan standing on the verandah talking to the
+ Consul. He waved his hand to them, and cheerfully invited the
+ detective to come along to "Johnnie Hall's" and play a game of
+ billiards.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. O'Donovan, little thinking that Otway had a purpose in
+ view, took the bait. The Consul knew Otway, and, in a measure,
+ dreaded him, for the supercargo's knowledge of certain
+ transactions in connection with the sale of arms to natives, in
+ which he (the Consul) had taken a leading and lucrative part.
+ So when he saw the supercargo of the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ beckoning to O'Donovan he smiled genially at him, and hurriedly
+ told the detective to go.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's a most astute and clever young scoundrel, Mr.
+ O'Donovan, and in a way we are at his mercy. But you shall have
+ the four hundred pounds in the morning&#8212;not later than
+ noon. This man Barton must be brought to justice at any
+ cost."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just so, sir; and you will get a hundred out of the
+ business, any way," replied O'Donovan, who had gauged the
+ Consul's morality pretty fairly.</p>
+
+ <p>As Otway and the detective walked towards the
+<!-- Page 221 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page216" name="page216">[pg 216]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ hotel known as "Johnny Hall's" the former said
+ lazily&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>"Look here, Mr. O'Donovan. Are the skipper and myself to get
+ those four hundred sovs to-morrow or not? To tell you the exact
+ truth, I have a fair amount of doubt about your promise. Where
+ are you going to get the money?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right, Mr. Otway. You're a business man. And you
+ and the skipper will have your two hundred each before one
+ o'clock to-morrow. The Consul is doing the necessary."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right, my boy," said Otway effusively. "Now we'll play a
+ game or two at Johnny's and have some fun with the girls."</p>
+
+ <p>By eleven o'clock Mr. O'Donovan was comfortably half drunk,
+ and Otway led him out on to the verandah to look at the
+ harbour, shimmering under the starlight. They sat down on two
+ cane lounges, and the supercargo's keen eye saw that Revel's
+ schooner had gone. He breathed freely, and then brought Mr.
+ O'Donovan a large whisky and soda.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>In the morning Mr. O'Donovan and Mr. William Johns, the
+ British Consul, were in a state of frenzy on discovering that
+ Mr. and Mrs. Lacy had escaped during the night in the schooner
+ <i>Solafanua</i>
+
+ . The Consul knew that Otway was at the bottom of the matter,
+ but dared not say so, but O'Donovan, who had more pluck and
+ nothing to lose, lost his temper and came on board the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ just as she was being hauled up on the beach to get at the
+ leak.</p>
+
+ <p>"
+<!-- Page 222 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page217" name="page217">[pg 217]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ You're a dirty sweep," he said to Otway.</p>
+
+ <p>The supercargo hit him between the eyes, and sent him down.
+ Allen picked him up, dumped him into the boat alongside, and
+ sent him ashore.</p>
+
+ <p>When the
+ <i>Tucopia</i>
+
+ lay high and dry on Apia beach Otway and old Bruce walked round
+ under her counter and looked for the leak. As the skipper had
+ surmised, a butt-end had started, but the gaping orifice was
+ now choked and filled with a large piece of seaweed.</p>
+
+ <p>"The prayer of one of God's ain ministers has saved us,"
+ said the Scotch mate, pointing upward.</p>
+
+ <p>"No doubt," replied Otway, who knew that the good old man
+ had heard nothing of what had happened.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 223 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page218" name="page218">[pg 218]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='The_Man_in_the_Buffalo_Hide'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>The Man in the Buffalo Hide</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>Twelve years ago in a North Queensland town I was told the
+ story of "The Man in the Buffalo Hide" by Ned D&#8212;&#8212;.
+ He (D&#8212;&#8212;) was then a prosperous citizen, having made
+ a small fortune by "striking it rich" on the Gilbert and
+ Etheridge Rivers goldfields. Returning from the arid wastes of
+ the Queensland back country to Sydney, he tired of leading an
+ inactive life, and hearing that gold had been discovered on one
+ of the Solomon Islands, he took passage thither in the Sydney
+ whaling barque
+ <i>Costa Rica</i>
+
+ packet, and though he returned to Australia without discovering
+ gold in the islands, he had kept one of the most interesting
+ logs of a whaling cruise it has ever been my fortune to read.
+ The master of the whaleship was Captain J.Y. Carpenter, a man
+ who is well known and highly respected, not only in Sydney
+ (where he now resides), but throughout the East Indies and
+ China, where he had lived for over thirty years. And it was
+ from Captain Carpenter who was one of the actors in this
+ twice-told tragedy, that D&#8212;&#8212;heard this story of
+ Chinese vengeance. He (D&#8212;&#8212;) related it to me in
+ '88, and I wish I
+<!-- Page 224 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page219" name="page219">[pg 219]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ could write the tale as well and vividly as he told it.
+ However, I wrote it out for him then and there. Much to our
+ disgust the editor of the little journal to whom we sent the
+ MS., considered it a fairy tale, and cut it down to some two or
+ three hundred words. I mention these apparently unnecessary
+ details merely that the reader may not think that the tale is
+ fiction, for two years or so after, Captain Carpenter
+ corroborated my friend's story.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>It was after the Taeping rebellion had been stamped out in
+ blood and fire by Gordon and his "Ever Victorious Army," and
+ the Viceroy (Li Hung Chang) had taken up his quarters in
+ Canton, and was secretly torturing and beheading those
+ prisoners whom he had sworn to the English Government to
+ spare.</p>
+
+ <p>Carpenter was in command of a Chinese Government despatch
+ vessel&#8212;a side-wheeler&#8212;which was immediately under
+ the Viceroy's orders. She was but lightly armed, but was very
+ fast, as fast went in those days. His ship had been lying in
+ the filthy river for about a week, when, one afternoon, a
+ mandarin came off with a written order for him to get ready to
+ proceed to sea at daylight on the following morning. Previous
+ experience of his estimable and astute Chinese employers warned
+ him not to ask the fat-faced, almond-eyed mandarin any
+ questions as to the steamer's destination, or the duration of
+ the voyage. He simply said that he would be ready at the
+ appointed time.</p>
+
+ <p>At daylight another mandarin, named Kwang&#8212;
+<!-- Page 225 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page220" name="page220">[pg 220]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ one of much higher rank than his visitor of the previous
+ day&#8212;came on board. He was attended by thirty of the most
+ ruffianly-looking scoundrels&#8212;even for Chinamen&#8212;that
+ the captain had ever seen. They were all well armed, and came
+ off in a large, well-appointed boat, which, the mandarin
+ intimated with a polite smile, was to be towed, if she was too
+ heavy to be hoisted aboard. A couple of hands were put in her,
+ and she was veered astern. Then the anchor was lifted, and the
+ steamer started on her eighty miles trip down the river to the
+ sea, the mandarin informing the captain that he would name the
+ ship's destination as soon as they were clear of the land.</p>
+
+ <p>Most of Carpenter's officers were Europeans&#8212;Englishmen
+ or Americans&#8212;and one or two of them who spoke Chinese,
+ attempted to enter into conversation with the thirty braves,
+ and endeavour to learn the object of the steamer's mission.
+ Their inquiries were met either with a mocking jest or
+ downright insult, and presently the mandarin, who hitherto had
+ preserved a smiling and affable demeanour as he sat on the
+ quarter-deck, turned to the captain with a sullen and ferocious
+ aspect, and bade him remind his officers that they had no
+ business to question the servants of the "high and excellent
+ Viceroy."</p>
+
+ <p>But though neither Carpenter nor any of his officers could
+ learn aught about this sudden mission, one of their servants, a
+ Chinese who was deeply attached to his master, whispered
+ tremblingly to him that the mandarin and the thirty braves were
+ in quest of one of the Viceroy's most hated enemies&#8212;a
+ noted leader
+<!-- Page 226 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page221" name="page221">[pg 221]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of the Taepings who had escaped the bloodied hands of Li Hung
+ Chang, and whose retreat had been betrayed to the cruel,
+ merciless Li the previous day.</p>
+
+ <p>Once clear of the land, the mandarin, with a polite smile
+ and many compliments to Carpenter on the skilful and
+ expeditious manner in which he had navigated the steamer down
+ the river, requested him to proceed to a certain point on the
+ western side of the island of Formosa.</p>
+
+ <p>"When you are within twenty miles of the land, captain," he
+ said suavely, "you will make the steamer stop, and my men and I
+ will leave you in the boat. You must await our return, which
+ may be on the following day, or the day after, or perhaps
+ longer still. But whether I am absent one, or two, or six days,
+ you must keep your ship in the position I indicate as nearly as
+ possible. You must avoid observation from the shore, you must
+ be watchful, diligent, and patient, and, when you see my boat
+ returning, you must make your engines work quickly, and come
+ towards us with all speed. High commendation and a great reward
+ from the serene nobleness of our great Viceroy&#8212;who has
+ already condescended to notice your honourable ability and
+ great integrity in your profession&#8212;awaits you." Then with
+ another smile and bow he went to his cabin.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as the steamer reached the place indicated by the
+ mandarin the engines were stopped. The boat, which was towing
+ astern, was hauled alongside, and the thirty truculent
+ "braves," with a Chinese
+<!-- Page 227 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page222" name="page222">[pg 222]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ pilot and the ever-smiling mandarin, got into her and pushed
+ off for the shore. That they were all picked men, who could
+ handle an oar as well as a rifle, was very evident from the
+ manner in which they sent the big boat along towards the blue
+ outline of the distant shore.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>For two days Carpenter and his officers waited and watched,
+ the steamer lying and rolling about upon a long swell, and
+ under a hot and brazen sun. Then, about seven o'clock in the
+ morning, as the sea haze lifted, a look-out on the foreyard
+ hailed the deck and said the boat was in sight. The steamer's
+ head was at once put towards her under a full head of steam,
+ and in another hour the mandarin and his braves were
+ alongside.</p>
+
+ <p>The mandarin clambered up on deck, his always-smiling face
+ (which Carpenter and his officers had come to detest) now
+ darkly exultant.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have done well, sir," he said to the captain; "the
+ Viceroy himself, when my own miserable worthlessness abases
+ itself before him, shall know how truly and cleverly you and
+ your officers (who shall be honoured for countless ages in the
+ future) have obeyed the behests which I have had the
+ never-to-be-extinguished honour to convey from him to you.
+ There is a prisoner in the boat&#8212;a prisoner who is to be
+ tried before those high and merciful judges whose Heaven-sent
+ authority your valorous commander of the Ever Victorious Army
+ has upheld."</p>
+
+ <p>Carpenter, being a sailor man before all else,
+<!-- Page 228 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page223" name="page223">[pg 223]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ swallowed the mandarin's compliments for all they were worth,
+ and I can imagine him giving a grumpy nod to the smiling minion
+ of the Viceroy as he ordered "the prisoner" to be brought on
+ deck, and the boat to be veered astern for towing.</p>
+
+ <p>The official interposed oilily. There was no need, he said,
+ to tow the boat to Canton if she could not be hoisted on board,
+ and was likely to impede the steamer's progress. Some of his
+ braves could remain in her, and the insignia of the Viceroy
+ which they wore would ensure both their and the boat's
+ safety&#8212;no pirates would touch them.</p>
+
+ <p>The captain said that to tow such a heavy boat for such a
+ long distance would certainly delay the steamer's arrival in
+ Canton by at least six or eight hours. The mandarin smiled
+ sweetly, and said that as speed was everything the most
+ honourable navigator, whom he now had the privilege to address,
+ and who was so soon to be distinguished by his mightiness the
+ Viceroy, could at once let the boat which had conveyed his
+ worthless self into the sunshine of his (the captain's)
+ presence, go adrift.</p>
+
+ <p>At a sign from Kwang, six of his cutthroats clambered down
+ the side into the boat, which was at once cast oft; the steamer
+ was sent along under a full head of steam, and the captain was
+ about to ascend the bridge when the mandarin stayed him, and
+ requested that a meal should be at once prepared in the cabin
+ for the prisoner, who, he said, was somewhat exhausted, for his
+ capture was only effected after he had killed three and wounded
+ half a dozen of "the
+<!-- Page 229 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page224" name="page224">[pg 224]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ braves." So courageous a man, he added softly, whatever his
+ offence might be, must not be allowed to suffer the pangs of
+ hunger and thirst.</p>
+
+ <p>Carpenter gave the necessary order to the steward with a
+ sensation of pleasure, feeling that he had done the suave and
+ gentle-voiced Kwang an injustice in imagining him to be like
+ most Chinese officials&#8212;utterly indifferent and callous to
+ human suffering. Then he stepped along the deck towards the
+ bridge just as two of the braves lifted the prisoner to his
+ feet, which a third had freed from a thong of hide, bound so
+ tightly around them that it had literally cut into the flesh.
+ His hands were tied in the same manner, and round his neck was
+ an iron collar, with a chain about six feet in length which was
+ secured at the end to another band around the waist of one of
+ the "braves."</p>
+
+ <p>As the prisoner stood erect, Carpenter saw that he was a man
+ of herculean proportions and over six feet three or four inches
+ in height. His arms and naked chest were cut, bleeding and
+ bruised, and a bamboo gag was in his mouth; but what at once
+ attracted the captain's attention and sympathy was the man's
+ face.</p>
+
+ <p>So calm, steadfast, and serene were his clear, undaunted
+ eyes; so proud, lofty, and contemptuous and yet so dignified
+ his bearing, as he glanced at his guards when they bade him
+ walk, that Carpenter, drawing back a little, raised his hand in
+ salute.</p>
+
+ <p>In an instant the deep, dark eyes lit up, and the tortured,
+ distorted mouth would have smiled had it not been for the cruel
+ gag. But twice he bent his
+<!-- Page 230 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page225" name="page225">[pg 225]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ head, and his eyes did that which was denied to his lips.</p>
+
+ <p>Captain Carpenter was deeply moved. The man's heroic
+ fortitude, his noble bearing under such physical suffering, the
+ tender, woman-like resignation in the eyes which could yet
+ smile into his, affected him so strongly that he could not help
+ asking one of the "braves" the prisoner's name.</p>
+
+ <p>An insolent, threatening gesture was the only answer. But
+ the prisoner had heard, and bent his head in acknowledgment.
+ When he raised it again and saw that Carpenter had now taken
+ off his cap, tears trickled down his cheeks. In another moment
+ he was hurried along the deck into the cabin, and half a dozen
+ "braves" stood guard at the door to prevent intrusion, whilst
+ the gag was removed, and the victim of the Viceroy's vengeance
+ was urged to eat. Whether he did so or not was never known, for
+ half an hour afterwards he was removed to one of the
+ state-rooms, where he was closely guarded by Kwang's
+ cutthroats. When he was next seen by Carpenter and the officers
+ of the steamer the gag was again in his mouth, but the calm,
+ resolute eyes met theirs as it trying to tell them that the
+ heroic soul within the tortured body knew no fear, and felt and
+ appreciated their sympathy.</p>
+
+ <p>On the afternoon of the third day after leaving Formosa the
+ steamer ploughed her way up the muddy waters of the river, and
+ came to an anchor off the city at a place which was within half
+ a mile of the Viceroy's residence. The mandarin requested the
+<!-- Page 231 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page226" name="page226">[pg 226]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ captain to fire three guns, and hoist the Chinese flag at both
+ the fore and main peaks.</p>
+
+ <p>This signal was, so Kwang condescended to say, to inform His
+ Illustriousness the Ever-Merciful Viceroy that he, Kwang, his
+ crawling dependent, guided by Carpenter's high intelligence,
+ and supreme and honoured skill as a navigator, had achieved the
+ object which His Illustriousness desired.</p>
+
+ <p>The captain listened to all this "flam," bowed his
+ acknowledgments, and then suddenly asked the mandarin the
+ prisoner's name.</p>
+
+ <p>Again the fat, complacent face darkened, and almost scowled.
+ "No," he replied sullenly, he himself "was not permitted" to
+ know the prisoner's name. His crime? He did not know. When was
+ he to be tried? To-morrow. Then he rose and abruptly requested
+ the captain to ask no more questions. But, he added, with a
+ smile, he could promise him that he should at least see the
+ captive again.</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes a boat came off, and the prisoner, closely
+ guarded, and with his face covered with a piece of cloth, was
+ hurried ashore.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Four days had passed&#8212;days of heat so intense that even
+ the Chinese crew of the steamer lay about the decks under the
+ awning, stripped to their waists, and fanning themselves
+ languidly. During this time the captain and his officers, by
+ careful inquiries, ascertained that the unfortunate prisoner
+ was a brother of one of the Wangs, or seven "Heavenly Kings,"
+ who had led the Taeping forces, and that for a long time past
+<!-- Page 232 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page227" name="page227">[pg 227]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ the Viceroy had made most strenuous efforts to effect his
+ capture, being particularly exasperated with him, not only for
+ his courage in the field, and the influence he had wielded over
+ the unfortunate Taepings, who were wiped out by Gordon and the
+ Ever-Victorious Army, but also because he refused to accept Li
+ Hung Chang's sworn word to spare his life if he surrendered;
+ for well he knew that a death by torture awaited him. Gordon
+ himself, it was said, revolver in hand, and with tears of rage
+ streaming down his face, had sought to find and shoot the
+ Viceroy for the cruel murder of other leaders who had
+ surrendered to him under the solemn promise of their lives
+ being spared.</p>
+
+ <p>Late in the afternoon, a messenger came on board with a note
+ to the captain. It was from the mandarin Kwang, and contained
+ but a line. "Follow the bearer, who will guide you to the
+ prisoner."</p>
+
+ <p>An hour later Carpenter was conducted through a narrow door
+ which was set in a very high wall of great thickness. He found
+ himself in a garden of the greatest beauty, and magnificent
+ proportions. Temples and other buildings of the most elaborate
+ and artistic design and construction showed here and there amid
+ a profusion of gloriously-foliaged trees and flowering shrubs.
+ No sound broke the silence except the twittering of birds; and
+ not a single person was visible.</p>
+
+ <p>The guide, who had not yet uttered a single word, now turned
+ and motioned Carpenter to follow him along a winding path,
+ paved with white marble slabs,
+<!-- Page 233 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page228" name="page228">[pg 228]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ and bordered with gaily-hued flowers. Suddenly they emerged
+ upon a lovely sward of the brightest green, in the centre of
+ which a fountain played, sending its fine feathery spray high
+ in air.</p>
+
+ <p>On one side of the fountain were a number of "braves" who
+ stood in a close circle, and, as Carpenter approached, two of
+ them silently stepped out of the cordon, brought their rifles
+ to the salute, and the guide whispered to him to enter.</p>
+
+ <p>Within the circle was Kwang, who was seated in his chair of
+ office. He rose and greeted the captain politely.</p>
+
+ <p>"I promised you that you should again see the criminal in
+ whom you and your officers took such a deep and benevolent
+ interest. I now fulfil that promise&#8212;and leave you." And,
+ with a malevolent smile, he bowed and disappeared.</p>
+
+ <p>The guide touched Carpenter's arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look," he said in a whisper.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Within a few inches of a wavering line of spray from the
+ fountain, purposely diverted so as to fall upon the grass, lay
+ what appeared at first sight to be a round bundle tied up in a
+ buffalo hide. A black swarm of flies buzzed and buzzed over and
+ around it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Draw near and look," said the harsh voice of the officer
+ who commanded the grim, silent guard, as he stepped up to the
+ strange-looking bundle, and waved his fan quickly to and fro
+ over a protuberance in the centre.</p>
+
+ <p>A black cloud of flies arose, and revealed a sight
+<!-- Page 234 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page229" name="page229">[pg 229]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ that will haunt Carpenter to his dying day&#8212;the purpled,
+ distorted face of a living man. The eyelids had been cut off,
+ and only two dreadful, bloodied, glaring things of horror
+ appealed mutely to God. The victim's knees had been drawn up to
+ his chin, and only his head was visible; for the fresh buffalo
+ hide in which his body had been sewn, fitted tightly around his
+ neck.</p>
+
+ <p>Shuddering with horror, and yet fascinated with the dreadful
+ spectacle, Carpenter asked the officer how long the prisoner
+ had been tortured.</p>
+
+ <p>"Four days," was the reply.</p>
+
+ <p>For the buffalo, the hide of which was to be the prisoner's
+ death-wrap, was in readiness the moment the steamer arrived,
+ and ten minutes after the signal was hoisted, the creature was
+ killed, the hide stripped off, and the prisoner sewn up in it,
+ only his head being left free.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he was carried to a heated room, so that the hide
+ should contract quickly. From there he was taken to the
+ fountain, where his eyelids were cut off, and then he was laid
+ upon the ground, his mouth just within a few inches of a spray
+ from the fountain.</p>
+
+ <p>And the Viceroy came, saw, approved, and smiled, and
+ assigned to Kwang the honoured post of watching his hated enemy
+ die under slow and agonising torture. To attract the flies,
+ honeyed water was applied to the prisoner's shaven head and
+ face. And the guards, now and then as his thirst increased,
+ offered him brine to drink.</p>
+
+ <p>"He is still alive," the brutal-faced Tartar officer
+<!-- Page 235 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page230" name="page230">[pg 230]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ said genially, as he touched one of the dreadful eyeballs, and
+ the poor, tortured creature's lips moved slightly.</p>
+
+ <p>Sick at heart and almost overcome with horror, Captain
+ Carpenter, with quickened footsteps, passed through the cordon
+ of guards, and followed his guide from the dreadful spot.</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes he was without the wall, and a sigh of
+ relief broke from him as he set out towards the river.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<!-- Page 236 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page231" name="page231">[pg 231]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='A_CRUISE_IN_THE_SOUTH_SEAS'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>A CRUISE IN THE SOUTH SEAS</h2>
+
+ <h3>(HINTS TO INTENDING TRAVELLERS)</h3>
+
+<!-- Page 237 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page232" name="page232">[pg 232]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<!-- Page 238 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page233" name="page233">[pg 233]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ <a name='A_Cruise_in_the_South_Seas'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>
+ <i>A Cruise in the South Seas</i>
+ </h2>
+
+ <h3>(HINTS TO INTENDING TRAVELLERS)</h3>
+
+ <p>The traveller who makes a hurried trip in an excursion
+ steamer through the Cook, Society, Samoan, or Tongan Islands
+ has but little opportunity of seeing anything of the social
+ life of the natives, or getting either fishing or shooting; for
+ it is but rarely that the vessel remains for more than
+ forty-eight hours at any of the ports visited. Personally, if I
+ wanted to have an enjoyable cruise among the various island
+ groups in the South Pacific I should avoid the "excursion"
+ steamer as I would the plague. In the first place, one sees
+ next to nothing for his passage money if he fatuously takes a
+ ticket in either Sydney or New Zealand for "a round trip to
+ Tonga, Samoa, Tahiti, and back." Certainly, he will enjoy the
+ sea voyage, for in the Australasian winter months the weather
+ in the South Seas is never very hot, and cloudless skies and a
+ smooth sea may almost be relied upon from April until the end
+ of July. At such places as Nukualofa, the little capital of the
+ Tonga Islands, an excursion steamer will remain for perhaps
+ forty hours; at Apia, in Samoa, forty-eight hours; and at
+ Papeite, the
+<!-- Page 239 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page234" name="page234">[pg 234]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ capital of the French island of Tahiti, forty-eight hours. At
+ the two latter places the traveller will be charmed by the
+ lovely scenery, and disgusted by the squalid appearance of the
+ natives; for within the last ten years great changes have
+ occurred, and the native communities inhabiting the island
+ ports, such as Apia and Papeite, have degenerated into the
+ veriest loafers, spongers, and thieves. The appearance of a
+ strange European in any of the environs of Apia is the signal
+ for an onslaught of beggars of all ages and both sexes, who
+ will pester his life out for tobacco; if he says he does not
+ smoke, they say a sixpence will do as well. If he refuses he is
+ pretty sure to be insulted by some half-naked ruffian, and will
+ be glad to get back to the ship or to the refuge of an hotel.
+ And yet, away from the contaminating influences of the town the
+ white stranger will meet with politeness and respect wherever
+ he goes&#8212;particularly if he is an Englishman&#8212;and
+ will at once note the pleasing difference in the manners of the
+ natives. Yet it must now be remembered that Samoa&#8212;with
+ the exception of the beautiful island of Tutuila&#8212;is
+ German territory, and German officials are none too effusive to
+ Englishmen or Americans&#8212;in Samoa.</p>
+
+ <p>But if any one wants to spend an enjoyable time in the South
+ Seas let him avoid the "excursion ship" and go there in a
+ trading steamer. There are several of these now sailing out of
+ Australasian ports, and there is a choice of groups to visit.
+ If a four months' voyage is not too long, a passage may be
+ obtained in a small, but fairly fast and com
+<!-- Page 240 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page235" name="page235">[pg 235]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ fortable boat of 600 tons sailing from Sydney, which visits
+ over forty islands in her cruise from Niu&#233; or Savage
+ Island, ten days' steam from Sydney, to Jaluit in the Marshall
+ Islands. But this particular cruise I would not recommend to
+ any one in search of a variety of beautiful scenery, for nearly
+ all of the islands visited are of the one type&#8212;low-lying
+ sandy atolls, densely verdured with coco-palms, and very
+ monotonous from their sameness of appearance. Their
+ inhabitants, however, are widely different in manners, customs,
+ and general mode of life. To the ethnologist such a cruise
+ among the Ellice, Gilbert, and Marshall Islands would no doubt
+ be full of interest; but to the traveller in search of either
+ beautiful scenery or sport (except fishing) they would be
+ disappointing.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us suppose that the intending traveller desires to make
+ a stay of some two or three months in the Samoan Group. He can
+ reach there easily enough from Sydney or Auckland by steamer
+ once a month, either by one of the Union Steamship Company's
+ regular traders or by one of the San Francisco mail boats. From
+ Sydney the voyage occupies eight days, from Auckland five. The
+ outfit required for a three or four months' stay is not a large
+ one&#8212;light clothing can be bought almost as cheaply in
+ Samoa as in Sydney, a couple of guns with plenty of ammunition
+ (for cartridges are shockingly dear in the Islands), a large
+ and varied assortment of deep-sea tackle, a rod for fresh-water
+ or reef fishing, and a good waterproof and rugs for camping
+ out, as the early mornings are sometimes very chilly. And there
+ is one other thing
+<!-- Page 241 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page236" name="page236">[pg 236]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ that is worth while taking, even though it may cost from
+ &#163;30 to &#163;50 or so in Sydney&#8212;a good secondhand
+ boat, with two suits of sails. Thus provided the sportsman can
+ sail all along the coasts of Savaii and Upolu, and be
+ practically independent of the local storekeepers. To hire a
+ boat is very expensive, and to travel in native craft is
+ horribly uncomfortable, and risky as well. And such a boat can
+ always be sold again for at least its cost.</p>
+
+ <p>A stay of two or three days, or at most a week, in Apia is
+ quite long enough, and the stranger will get all the
+ information he requires about the outlying districts from the
+ Consuls or any of the old white residents. Such provisions as
+ are needed&#8212;tea, sugar, flour, biscuits, tinned or other
+ meats, &amp;c.&#8212;can be had at fairly cheap rates; but a
+ large stock should be taken, for, besides the keep of the
+ native crew of, say, four men, it must always be borne in mind
+ that a white visitor is expected to return the hospitality he
+ receives from the native chiefs by making a present, and the
+ Samoans are particularly susceptible to the charms of tinned
+ meats, sardines, salmon, and
+ <i>falaoa</i>
+
+ (bread or biscuit). That such a return should be made is only
+ just and natural, though I am sorry to say that very often it
+ is not. Then, again, it is very easy to stow away in the trade
+ box in the boat eight or ten pieces of good print, cut off in
+ pieces of six fathoms (which is enough to make a woman's gown),
+ about 30 lbs. of twist negrohead tobacco (twenty to thirty
+ sticks to the pound), half a gross of lucifer matches, and such
+ things as cotton, scissors, combs, &amp;c., and powder, caps,
+ and a
+<!-- Page 242 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page237" name="page237">[pg 237]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ bag of No. 3 shot for pigeon shooting. Now, this seems a lot of
+ articles for a man to take on a short Samoan
+ <i>malaga</i>
+
+ (journey), but it is not, and for the &#163;50 which it may
+ cost for such an outfit (exclusive of the boat and crew's
+ wages) the traveller will see more of the people and their mode
+ of life, be more hospitably received, and spend a pleasanter
+ time than if he were cruising about in a 1,000-ton yacht. The
+ wages or boatmen and native sailors in Samoa are usually $15.00
+ per month, but many will gladly go on a
+ <i>malaga</i>
+
+ (the general acceptance of the word is a pleasure trip) for
+ much less, for there is but little work, and much eating and
+ drinking. But, as sailors, the Samoans are a wretched lot, and
+ the local living Savage Islanders, as the natives of Niu&#233;
+ Island are called, are far better, especially if there is any
+ wind or a beat to windward in a heavy sea. These Savage Island
+ "boys" can always be obtained in Apia. They are good seamen and
+ very willing to work; but they have to be fed entirely by their
+ white employer, for the Samoans seldom make a present of food
+ to a crew of Niu&#233; boys, for whom they profess a contempt
+ and designate
+ <i>au pu&#225;a</i>
+
+ &#8212;
+ <i>i.e.</i>
+
+ , pigs.</p>
+
+ <p>The Samoan Group consists of five islands, trending from
+ west by north to east by south. The two largest are Upolu and
+ Savaii. Tutuila, and the Manua Group of three islands are too
+ far to the windward to attempt in a small boat against the
+ south-east trades. And it would take quite three months to
+ visit the principal villages on the two large islands, staying
+ a few days at each place.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 243 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page238" name="page238">[pg 238]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ The best plan is to make to windward along the coast of Upolu
+ after leaving Apia. A large boat cannot be taken all the way
+ inside the reef, owing to the many coral patches which, at low
+ tide, render this course impracticable. The first place of any
+ importance is Saluafata, fifteen miles from Apia (I must
+ mention that Apia is in the centre of Upolu, and on the north
+ side), then Falif&#257;, an exquisitely pretty place, and then
+ F&#257;goloa Bay and village, eight miles further on. This is
+ the deepest indentation in Samoa, except the famous P&#257;go
+ P&#257;go Harbour on Tutuila, and the scenery is very
+ beautiful. After leaving F&#257;goloa, the open sea has to be
+ taken, for there is now no barrier reef for ten miles, where it
+ begins at Samusu village, to the towns of Aleipata and
+ Lep&#257;, two of the best in the group, and inhabited by
+ cleanly and hospitable people. This is the weather point of
+ Upolu, and after leaving Lep&#257; the boat has a clear run of
+ over sixty miles before the glorious trades to the lee end of
+ the island&#8212;that is, unless a stay is made at the populous
+ towns of Falealilli, S&#257;fata, Laf&#257;ga, and Falelatai,
+ on the southern coast. The scenery along this part of the
+ island is enchanting, but sudden squalls at night-time are
+ sometimes frequent, from December to March, and 'tis always
+ advisable to run into a port at sunset.</p>
+
+ <p>Two miles off the lee end of Upolu is the low-lying island
+ of Manono, which is, however, enclosed in the Upolu barrier
+ reef. It is only about three miles in circumference,
+ exceedingly fertile, and is the most important place in the
+ group, owing to the political influence wielded by the chiefly
+ families who have
+<!-- Page 244 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page239" name="page239">[pg 239]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ always made it their home. A mile from Manono, and in the
+ centre of the deep strait separating Upolu from Savaii, is a
+ curiously picturesque spot, an island named Apolima.
+ <a href="#footnote_17" target="_new">
+ <span class="footnote">[17]</span>
+ </a>
+
+ It is an extinct crater, but has a narrow passage on the north
+ side, and is inhabited by about fifty people, who are delighted
+ to see any
+ <i>papalagi</i>
+
+ (foreigner) who is venturesome enough to make a landing
+ there.</p>
+
+ <p>Savaii is distant about ten miles from Upolu. Its coast is
+ for the most part
+ <i>itu papa</i>
+
+ &#8212;i.e., iron bound&#8212;but there are five populous towns
+ there&#8212;Palaulae, Salealua, Asaua, Matautu, and Safune.
+ After making the round of Savaii, the boat has to make back to
+ Manono, and then can proceed inside the reef all the way to
+ Apia, making stoppages at the many minor villages which stud
+ the shore at intervals of every few miles.</p>
+
+ <p>These
+ <i>malaga</i>
+
+ by boat along the coast or from one island to another are much
+ in favour with many of the white residents of Samoa, who find
+ their life in Apia very monotonous. European ladies frequently
+ accompany their husbands, and sometimes quite a large party is
+ made up. More than five-and-twenty years ago, when the writer
+ was gaining his first experiences of Samoan life, it was his
+ good fortune to be one of such a party, and a right merry time
+ he had of it among the natives; for in those days, although
+<!-- Page 245 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page240" name="page240">[pg 240]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ there was party warfare occasionally, the group was free from
+ the savage hatreds and dissensions&#8212;largely fomented by
+ the interference and intrigues of unscrupulous traders and
+ incapable officials&#8212;which for the past ten or twelve
+ years have made it notorious.</p>
+
+ <p>In travelling in Samoa one need not always rely upon native
+ hospitality. Though most of the white traders at the outlying
+ villages nowadays make nothing beyond a scanty living, they are
+ as a rule very hospitable and pleased to see and entertain
+ white visitors as well as their poor means will allow, and in
+ nine cases out of ten would feel hurt if they were ignored and
+ the native teacher's house visited first; for between the
+ average trader and the native teacher there is always a natural
+ and yet reasonable jealousy. And here let me say a word in
+ praise of the Samoan teacher&#8212;in Samoa. Away from his
+ native land, in charge of a mission station in another part of
+ Polynesia or Melanesia, he is too often pompous and overbearing
+ alike to his flock and to the white trader. Here he is far from
+ the control and supervision of the white missionaries, who only
+ visit him twice in the year, and consequently he thinks himself
+ a man of vast importance. But in Samoa his superiors are prompt
+ to curb any inclination he may evince to ride the high horse
+ over his flock or interfere with any matter not strictly
+ connected with his charge. So, in Samoa, the native teacher is
+ generally a good fellow, the soul of hospitality, and anxious
+ to entertain any chance white visitor; and although the Samoans
+ are not bigoted ranters like the Tongans or
+<!-- Page 246 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page241" name="page241">[pg 241]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ Fijians, and the teachers have not anything like the undue and
+ improper influence over the people possessed by the native
+ ministers in Tonga or Fiji, to needlessly offend one would be
+ resented by the villagers and make the visitor's stay anything
+ but pleasant. As for the white missionaries in Samoa, all I
+ need say of them is that they are gentlemen, and that the words
+ "Mission House" are synonymous in most cases with warm welcome
+ to the traveller.</p>
+
+ <p>Travelling inland in Savaii or crossing Upolu from north to
+ south, or
+ <i>vice-vers&#226;,</i>
+
+ is very delightful, though one misses much of the lovely
+ scenery that unfolds itself in a panorama-like manner when
+ sailing along the coast. One journey that can easily be
+ accomplished in a day is that from Apia to Safata. Carriers are
+ easily obtainable, and some splendid pigeon shooting can be had
+ an hour or two after leaving Apia till within a few miles of
+ Safata. Pigeons are about the only game to be had in Samoa,
+ though the
+ <i>manutagi</i>
+
+ , or ring-dove, is very plentiful, but one hardly likes to
+ shoot such dear little creatures. Occasionally one may get a
+ wild duck or two and some fearful-looking wild fowls&#8212;the
+ progeny of the domestic fowl. Wild pigs are not now plentiful
+ in Upolu though they are in Savaii, but they are exceedingly
+ difficult to shoot and the country they frequent is fearfully
+ rough. In some of the streams there are some very good fish,
+ running up to 2 lbs. or 3 lbs. They bite eagerly at the
+ <i>ula</i>
+
+ or freshwater prawn, and are excellent eating; and yet, strange
+ to say, very few of the white residents in the group even know
+ of their existence. This applies also to
+<!-- Page 247 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page242" name="page242">[pg 242]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ deep-sea fishing; for although the deep water outside the reefs
+ and the passages leading into the harbours teem with splendid
+ fish, the residents of Apia are content to buy the wretched
+ things brought to them by women who capture them in nets in the
+ shallow water inside the reef. Once, during my stay on Manono,
+ a young Manhiki half-caste and myself went out in our boat
+ about a mile from the land, and in thirty fathoms of water
+ caught in an hour three large-scaled fish of the groper
+ species. These fish, though once familiar enough to the people
+ of the island, are now never fished for, and our appearance
+ with our prizes caused quite an excitement in the village,
+ everyone thronging around us to look. And yet there are two or
+ three varieties of groper&#8212;many of them weighing 50 lbs.
+ or 60 lbs.&#8212;which can be caught anywhere on the Samoan
+ coast; but the Samoan of the present day has sadly degenerated,
+ and, except bonito catching, deep-sea fishing is one of the
+ lost arts. But at almost any place in the group, except Apia,
+ great quantities of fish are caught inside the reefs by nets,
+ and one may always be sure of getting a splendid mullet of some
+ sort for either breakfast or supper.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us suppose that a party of Europeans have arrived at a
+ village, and are the guests of the chief and people generally.
+ Food is at once brought to them, even before any visits of
+ ceremony are paid, for the news of the coming of a party of
+ travellers has doubtless been brought to the village the
+ previous day by a messenger from the last stopping-place. The
+ repast provided may be simple, but will be ample,
+<!-- Page 248 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page243" name="page243">[pg 243]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ baked pork most likely being the
+ <i>pi&#232;ce de r&#233;sistance,</i>
+
+ with roast fowl, baked pigeons, breadfruit (if in season), and
+ yams or taro, with a plentiful supply of young
+ drinking-coconuts. (Should the host be the local teacher, some
+ deplorable tea and a loaf of terrible bread are sure to be
+ produced.) This preliminary meal finished, the formalities
+ begin by a visit from the chief and his
+ <i>tulafale,</i>
+
+ or "talking-man," accompanied by the leading citizens. The
+ talking-man then makes a speech, welcoming the guests, and is
+ by no means sparing of "buttery" phrases which indicate the
+ intense delight, &amp;c., of the inhabitants of the village at
+ having the honoured privilege of entertaining such noble and
+ distinguished visitors, &amp;c. A suitable reply is made by the
+ guests (through an interpreter, if no one among them can speak
+ Samoan), and then follows a ceremonious brewing and drinking of
+ kava. This is a most important function in Samoa, and to the
+ stranger unaccustomed to the manner of making the beverage, the
+ ordeal of drinking it is an exceedingly trying one. It is
+ prepared as follows: The dried kava root is cut up in thin
+ slices and handed to a number of young women, who masticate it
+ and then deposit it in a large wooden
+ <i>tanoa</i>
+
+ , or bowl. Water is then added in sufficient quantity till the
+ <i>tanoa</i>
+
+ is half-filled with a thin yellowish-green liquid, which is
+ carefully strained by a thick "swab" of the beaten bark of the
+ <i>fau</i>
+
+ -tree. This straining operation is performed only by a very
+ experienced lady, and is watched in respectful silence. Then
+ the drink is handed round in a polished bowl of coconut-shell.
+ But for a full
+<!-- Page 249 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page244" name="page244">[pg 244]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ description of all the details of a kava-drinking, let me
+ commend my readers to the best and most charming book ever
+ written on South Sea life, "South Sea Bubbles," by the late
+ Earl of Pembroke and Dr. Kingsley. Nowadays, however, many
+ Samoan households, out of deference to European tastes, have
+ the kava root grated instead of being chewed.</p>
+
+ <p>The kava-drinking over, all stiffness and formality
+ disappears for the time, and the visitors are surrounded by the
+ villagers, eager to learn the latest news from Apia, and from
+ the world abroad. The discussion of political matters always
+ has a strong attraction for Samoans, who are anxious to learn
+ the state of affairs in Europe, and their knowledge and
+ shrewdness is surprising. Should there be any white ladies
+ present, the brown ones make much of them. The Samoans are a
+ fine, handsome race, and the faces and figures of many of the
+ young women are very attractive; but the practice of cutting
+ off their long, flowing black hair, and allowing it to grow in
+ a short, stiff "frizz" is all too common, and detracts very
+ much from an otherwise handsome and graceful appearance,
+ especially when the hair is coated with lime in order to change
+ its colour to red. Many of the men, particularly those of
+ chiefly rank, are of magnificent stature and proportions, and
+ their walk and carriage are in consonance.</p>
+
+ <p>An announcement that the visitors intend to go pigeon
+ shooting is warmly applauded, and each white man is at once
+ provided with a guide, for, unless he has had experience of the
+ Samoan forest, he will return
+<!-- Page 250 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page245" name="page245">[pg 245]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ with an empty bag, as, however plentiful the birds may be,
+ their habit of hiding in the branches of the lofty
+ <i>tamanu</i>
+
+ and
+ <i>masa'oi</i>
+
+ -trees render them difficult of detection. The natives
+ themselves are very good shots, and very rarely fail to bring
+ down a bird, even when nothing more than a scarlet leg or a
+ blue-grey feather is visible. The guns they use are very
+ common, cheap German affairs, but are specially made for Samoa,
+ being very small bored and long in the barrel. The best time is
+ in the early morning and towards the cool of the evening, when
+ the birds are feeding on
+ <i>masa'oi</i>
+
+ and other berries; during the heat of the day they seldom leave
+ their perches, though their deep crooning note may be heard
+ everywhere. In the mountainous interiors of Upolu and Savaii
+ there is but little undergrowth; the ground is carpeted with a
+ thick layer of leaves, dry on the top, but rain and dew-soaked
+ beneath, and simply to breathe the sweet, cool mountain air is
+ delightful. At certain times of the year the birds are very
+ fat, and I have very often seen them literally burst when
+ striking the ground after being shot in high trees. Their
+ flavour is delicious, especially if they are hung for a day. I
+ may here remark that, in New Britain, precisely the same
+ species of pigeon is very often quite uneatable through feeding
+ upon Chili berries, which in that island grow in profusion. In
+ shooting in a Samoan forest one has nothing to fear from
+ venomous reptiles, for, although there are two or three kinds
+ of snakes, they are rarely ever seen and quite harmless.
+ Scorpions and centipedes&#8212;the latter often six inches in
+ length&#8212;there are in plenty, but these
+<!-- Page 251 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page246" name="page246">[pg 246]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ detestable vermin are more common in European habitations than
+ in the bush. At the same time, mosquitoes are a terrible
+ annoyance anywhere in the vicinity of water, and delight in
+ attacking the tender skin of the stranger. Then, again, beware
+ of scratching any exposed part of the skin, for, unless it is
+ quickly covered by plaister or otherwise attended to, an
+ irritating sore, which may take months to heal, will often
+ result.</p>
+
+ <p>There are, during the visit of a travelling party to a
+ Samoan town, no fixed times for meals. You are expected to eat
+ much and often. During the day there will be continuous
+ arrivals of people bringing baskets of provisions as presents,
+ which are formally presented&#8212;with a speech. The speech
+ has to be responded to, and the bringers of the presents
+ treated politely, as long as they remain, and they remain until
+ their curiosity&#8212;and avarice&#8212;is satisfied. A return
+ present must be sent on the following day; for although Samoans
+ designate every present of food or anything else made to a
+ party of visitors as an "alofa"&#8212;
+ <i>i.e.,</i>
+
+ a gift of love&#8212;this is but a hollow conventionalism, it
+ being the time-honoured custom of the country to always give a
+ <i>quid pro quo</i>
+
+ for whatever has been received. Yet it must not be imagined
+ that they are a selfish people; if the recipients of an "alofa"
+ of food are too poor to respond otherwise than by a profusion
+ of thanks, the donors of the "alofa" are satisfied&#8212;it
+ would be a disgrace for their village to be spoken of as having
+ treated guests meanly.</p>
+
+ <p>
+<!-- Page 252 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page247" name="page247">[pg 247]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ After evening service&#8212;conducted on week-days in each
+ house by the head of the family&#8212;another meal is served.
+ Then either lamps or a fire of coconut-shells is lit, and there
+ is a great making of
+ <i>sului</i>
+
+ , or cigarettes of strong tobacco rolled in dry banana leaf,
+ and there is much merry jostling and shoving among the young
+ lads and girls for a seat on the matted floor, to hear the
+ white people talk. A dance is sure to be suggested, and
+ presently the
+ <i>fale po-ula,</i>
+
+ or dance-house, is lit up in preparation, as the dancers, male
+ and female, hurry away to adorn themselves. Much has been said
+ about the impropriety of Samoa dancing by travellers who have
+ only witnessed the degrading and indecent exhibitions, given on
+ a large scale by the loafing class of natives who inhabit Apia
+ and its immediate vicinity. The natives are an adaptive race,
+ and suit their manners to their company, and there are always
+ numbers of sponging men and
+ <i>paumotu</i>
+
+ (beach-women) ready to pander to the tastes of low whites who
+ are willing to witness a lewd dance. But in most villages,
+ situated away from the contaminating influences of the
+ principal port, a native
+ <i>siva</i>
+
+ , or dance, is well worth witnessing, and the accompanying
+ singing is very melodious. It is, however, true, that on
+ important occasions, such as the marriage of a great chief,
+ &amp;c., that the dancing, decorous enough in the earlier
+ stages of the evening, degenerates under the influence of
+ excitement into an exhibition that provokes sorrow and disgust.
+ And yet, curiously enough, the dancers at these times are not
+ low class, common people, but young men and women
+<!-- Page 253 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page248" name="page248">[pg 248]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ of high lineage, who, led by the
+ <i>taupo</i>
+
+ , or maid of the village, cast aside all restraint and modesty.
+ In many of the dances the costumes are exceedingly pretty, the
+ men wearing aprons made of the yellow and scarlet leaves of the
+
+ <i>ti</i>
+
+ or dracoena plant, with head-dresses formed of pieces of
+ iridescent pearl-shell, intermixed with silver coins and
+ scarlet and amber beads, and the hair of both sexes is
+ profusely adorned with the scarlet flowers of the hibiscus,
+ while from their necks depend large strings of
+ <i>sea-sea, masa'oi,</i>
+
+ and other brightly-coloured and sweet-smelling berries. Of late
+ years the Tahitian fashion of wearing thick wreaths of orange
+ or lemon blossoms has come into vogue.</p>
+
+ <p>Before concluding these remarks upon Samoa, I must mention
+ that the climate is very healthy for the greater part of the
+ year; but in the rainy season, December to March, the heat is
+ intense, and sickness is often prevalent, especially in Apia.
+ Still fever, such as is met with in the New Hebrides and the
+ Solomon Group, "the grave of the white man in the South Seas,"
+ is unknown, and one may sleep in the open air with impunity.
+ Before setting out from Apia the services of a competent
+ interpreter should be secured&#8212;a man who thoroughly
+ understands the Samoan
+ <i>customs</i>
+
+ as well as the language. Plenty of reliable half-castes can
+ always be found, any one of whom would be glad to engage for a
+ very moderate payment. Too often the pleasures of such a trip
+ as I have described have been marred by the interpreter's lack
+ of tact and knowledge of the idiosyncrasies of the in
+<!-- Page 254 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page249" name="page249">[pg 249]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ habitants of the various districts and villages. The mere fact
+ of a man being able to speak the language fairly well is not
+ the all in all; for the Samoans are a highly sensitive people,
+ and the omission by the interpreter of a chief's titles,
+ &amp;c., when the guests are responding through him to an
+ address of welcome, would be considered "shockingly bad
+ form."</p>
+
+ <p>But the reader must not imagine that the Samoan Group is the
+ only one in the South Pacific where an enjoyable holiday may be
+ spent. The French possession of the Society Islands, of which
+ the pretty town Papeite, in the noble island of Tahiti, is the
+ capital, rivals, if not exceeds, Samoa in the magnificence of
+ its scenery, and the natives are a highly intelligent race of
+ Malayo-Polynesians who, despite their being citizens of the
+ French Republic, never forget that they were redeemed from
+ savagery by Englishmen, and a
+ <i>taata Peretane</i>
+
+ (Englishman) is an ever-welcome guest to them. The facilities
+ for visiting the different islands of the Society Group are
+ very good, for there is quite a fleet of native and
+ European-owned vessels constantly cruising throughout the
+ archipelago. To cross the island of Tahiti from its south-east
+ to its north-west point is one of the most delightful trips
+ imaginable. Then again, the Hervey or Cook's Group, which
+ consist of the fertile islands of Mangaia, Rarotonga, Atui,
+ Aitutaki, and Mauki, are well worth visiting. The people speak
+ a language similar to that of Tahiti, and they are a fine,
+ hospitable race, albeit a little over-civilised. Both of these
+ groups can be reached from Auckland by sailing vessels,
+<!-- Page 255 -->
+ <span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page250" name="page250">[pg 250]</a>
+ </span>
+
+ but not direct from Sydney. As for the lonely islands of the
+ North Pacific, they are too far afield for any one to visit but
+ the trader or the traveller to whom time is nothing.</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <a name='FOOTNOTES'>
+ </a>
+
+ <h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_1">1</a>
+
+ : Literally, "clear crony."</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_2">2</a>
+
+ : Port.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_3">3</a>
+
+ : Happiness.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_4">4</a>
+
+ : A libertine, profligate.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_5">5</a>
+
+ : My love to you, P&#226;k&#237;a; are you well?</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_6">6</a>
+
+ : White foreigners.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_7">7</a>
+
+ : Frank.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_8">8</a>
+
+ : Small-pox.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_9">9</a>
+
+ : An accordion.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_10">10</a>
+
+ : Idler, gad about&#8212;a Samoan expression.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_11">11</a>
+
+ : German.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_12">12</a>
+
+ : The Tokelau and Ellice Islanders are much amused at the white
+ man's method of hauling in a heavy fish hand
+ <i>over</i>
+
+ hand. This to them is "
+ <i>faka fafine</i>
+
+ "&#8212;i.e., like a woman.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_13">13</a>
+
+ : Cayse.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_14">14</a>
+
+ : NOTE BY THE PUBLISHER.&#8212;This incident is related by the
+ author in "By Reef and Palm" under the title of "The Rangers of
+ the Tia Kau."</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_15">15</a>
+
+ : PUBLISHER'S NOTE.&#8212;This Alan Strickland is the "Allan"
+ who has so frequently figured in the author's other tales of
+ South Sea life, notably in the works entitled "By Reef and
+ Palm" and "The Ebbing of the Tide."</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_16">16</a>
+
+ : Councillors.</p>
+
+ <p class="footnote">
+ <a name="footnote_17">17</a>
+
+ :
+ <i>Apo! lima</i>
+
+ ! "Be quick with your hand!" The passage is narrow and
+ dangerous, even for canoes, and the steersman, as he watches
+ the rolling surf, calls out
+ <i>Apo, lau lima</i>
+
+ ! to his crew&#8212;an expression synonymous to our nautical,
+ "Pull like the devil!"</p>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore,
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
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