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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, In the South Seas, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+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: In the South Seas
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2012 [eBook #464]
+[This file was first posted on January 23, 1996]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SOUTH SEAS***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1908 Chatto & Windus edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ IN THE SOUTH SEAS
+
+
+ BEING AN ACCOUNT OF EXPERIENCES AND
+ OBSERVATIONS IN THE MARQUESAS, PAUMOTUS
+ AND GILBERT ISLANDS IN THE COURSE OF
+ TWO CRUSES, ON THE YACHT ‘CASCO’ (1888)
+ AND THE SCHOONER ‘EQUATOR’ (1889)
+
+ BY
+ ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
+
+ [Picture: Decorative graphic]
+
+ FINE-PAPER EDITION
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON
+ CHATTO & WINDUS
+ 1908
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _All rights resverved_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PART 1: THE MARQUESAS
+CHAPTER
+ I. AN ISLAND LANDFALL
+ II. MAKING FRIENDS
+ III. THE MAROON
+ IV. DEATH
+ V. DEPOPULATION
+ VI. CHIEFS AND TAPUS
+ VII. HATIHEU
+ VIII. THE PORT OF ENTRY
+ IX. THE HOUSE OF TEMOANA
+ X. A PORTRAIT AND A STORY
+ XI. LONG-PIG—A CANNIBAL HIGH PLACE
+ XII. THE STORY OF A PLANTATION
+ XIII. CHARACTERS
+ XIV. IN A CANNIBAL VALLEY
+ XV. THE TWO CHIEFS OF ATUONA
+ PART II: THE PAUMOTUS
+ I. THE DANGEROUS ARCHIPELAGO—ATOLLS AT A DISTANCE
+ II. FAKARAVA: AN ATOLL AT HAND
+ III. A HOUSE TO LET IN A LOW ISLAND
+ IV. TRAITS AND SECTS IN THE PAUMOTUS
+ V. A PAUMOTUAN FUNERAL
+ VI. GRAVEYARD STORIES
+ PART III: THE GILBERTS
+ I. BUTARITARI
+ II. THE FOUR BROTHERS
+ III. AROUND OUR HOUSE
+ IV. A TALE OF A TAPU
+ V. A TALE OF A TAPU—_continued_
+ VI. THE FIVE DAYS’ FESTIVAL
+ VII. HUSBAND AND WIFE
+ PART IV: THE GILBERTS—APEMAMA
+ I. THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE ROYAL TRADER
+ II. THE KING OF APEMAMA: FOUNDATION OF EQUATOR TOWN
+ III. THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE PALACE OF MANY WOMEN
+ IV. THE KING OF APEMAMA: EQUATOR TOWN AND THE PALACE
+ V. KING AND COMMONS
+ VI. THE KING OF APEMAMA: DEVIL-WORK
+ VII. THE KING OF APEMAMA
+
+PART 1: THE MARQUESAS
+
+
+CHAPTER I—AN ISLAND LANDFALL
+
+
+For nearly ten years my health had been declining; and for some while
+before I set forth upon my voyage, I believed I was come to the
+afterpiece of life, and had only the nurse and undertaker to expect. It
+was suggested that I should try the South Seas; and I was not unwilling
+to visit like a ghost, and be carried like a bale, among scenes that had
+attracted me in youth and health. I chartered accordingly Dr. Merrit’s
+schooner yacht, the _Casco_, seventy-four tons register; sailed from San
+Francisco towards the end of June 1888, visited the eastern islands, and
+was left early the next year at Honolulu. Hence, lacking courage to
+return to my old life of the house and sick-room, I set forth to leeward
+in a trading schooner, the _Equator_, of a little over seventy tons,
+spent four months among the atolls (low coral islands) of the Gilbert
+group, and reached Samoa towards the close of ’89. By that time
+gratitude and habit were beginning to attach me to the islands; I had
+gained a competency of strength; I had made friends; I had learned new
+interests; the time of my voyages had passed like days in fairyland; and
+I decided to remain. I began to prepare these pages at sea, on a third
+cruise, in the trading steamer _Janet Nicoll_. If more days are granted
+me, they shall be passed where I have found life most pleasant and man
+most interesting; the axes of my black boys are already clearing the
+foundations of my future house; and I must learn to address readers from
+the uttermost parts of the sea.
+
+That I should thus have reversed the verdict of Lord Tennyson’s hero is
+less eccentric than appears. Few men who come to the islands leave them;
+they grow grey where they alighted; the palm shades and the trade-wind
+fans them till they die, perhaps cherishing to the last the fancy of a
+visit home, which is rarely made, more rarely enjoyed, and yet more
+rarely repeated. No part of the world exerts the same attractive power
+upon the visitor, and the task before me is to communicate to fireside
+travellers some sense of its seduction, and to describe the life, at sea
+and ashore, of many hundred thousand persons, some of our own blood and
+language, all our contemporaries, and yet as remote in thought and habit
+as Rob Roy or Barbarossa, the Apostles or the Cæsars.
+
+The first experience can never be repeated. The first love, the first
+sunrise, the first South Sea island, are memories apart and touched a
+virginity of sense. On the 28th of July 1888 the moon was an hour down
+by four in the morning. In the east a radiating centre of brightness
+told of the day; and beneath, on the skyline, the morning bank was
+already building, black as ink. We have all read of the swiftness of the
+day’s coming and departure in low latitudes; it is a point on which the
+scientific and sentimental tourist are at one, and has inspired some
+tasteful poetry. The period certainly varies with the season; but here
+is one case exactly noted. Although the dawn was thus preparing by four,
+the sun was not up till six; and it was half-past five before we could
+distinguish our expected islands from the clouds on the horizon. Eight
+degrees south, and the day two hours a-coming. The interval was passed
+on deck in the silence of expectation, the customary thrill of landfall
+heightened by the strangeness of the shores that we were then
+approaching. Slowly they took shape in the attenuating darkness.
+Ua-huna, piling up to a truncated summit, appeared the first upon the
+starboard bow; almost abeam arose our destination, Nuka-hiva, whelmed in
+cloud; and betwixt and to the southward, the first rays of the sun
+displayed the needles of Ua-pu. These pricked about the line of the
+horizon; like the pinnacles of some ornate and monstrous church, they
+stood there, in the sparkling brightness of the morning, the fit
+signboard of a world of wonders.
+
+Not one soul aboard the _Casco_ had set foot upon the islands, or knew,
+except by accident, one word of any of the island tongues; and it was
+with something perhaps of the same anxious pleasure as thrilled the bosom
+of discoverers that we drew near these problematic shores. The land
+heaved up in peaks and rising vales; it fell in cliffs and buttresses;
+its colour ran through fifty modulations in a scale of pearl and rose and
+olive; and it was crowned above by opalescent clouds. The suffusion of
+vague hues deceived the eye; the shadows of clouds were confounded with
+the articulations of the mountains; and the isle and its unsubstantial
+canopy rose and shimmered before us like a single mass. There was no
+beacon, no smoke of towns to be expected, no plying pilot. Somewhere, in
+that pale phantasmagoria of cliff and cloud, our haven lay concealed; and
+somewhere to the east of it—the only sea-mark given—a certain headland,
+known indifferently as Cape Adam and Eve, or Cape Jack and Jane, and
+distinguished by two colossal figures, the gross statuary of nature.
+These we were to find; for these we craned and stared, focused glasses,
+and wrangled over charts; and the sun was overhead and the land close
+ahead before we found them. To a ship approaching, like the _Casco_,
+from the north, they proved indeed the least conspicuous features of a
+striking coast; the surf flying high above its base; strange, austere,
+and feathered mountains rising behind; and Jack and Jane, or Adam and
+Eve, impending like a pair of warts above the breakers.
+
+Thence we bore away along shore. On our port beam we might hear the
+explosions of the surf; a few birds flew fishing under the prow; there
+was no other sound or mark of life, whether of man or beast, in all that
+quarter of the island. Winged by her own impetus and the dying breeze,
+the _Casco_ skimmed under cliffs, opened out a cove, showed us a beach
+and some green trees, and flitted by again, bowing to the swell. The
+trees, from our distance, might have been hazel; the beach might have
+been in Europe; the mountain forms behind modelled in little from the
+Alps, and the forest which clustered on their ramparts a growth no more
+considerable than our Scottish heath. Again the cliff yawned, but now
+with a deeper entry; and the _Casco_, hauling her wind, began to slide
+into the bay of Anaho. The cocoa-palm, that giraffe of vegetables, so
+graceful, so ungainly, to the European eye so foreign, was to be seen
+crowding on the beach, and climbing and fringing the steep sides of
+mountains. Rude and bare hills embraced the inlet upon either hand; it
+was enclosed to the landward by a bulk of shattered mountains. In every
+crevice of that barrier the forest harboured, roosting and nestling there
+like birds about a ruin; and far above, it greened and roughened the
+razor edges of the summit.
+
+Under the eastern shore, our schooner, now bereft of any breeze,
+continued to creep in: the smart creature, when once under way, appearing
+motive in herself. From close aboard arose the bleating of young lambs;
+a bird sang in the hillside; the scent of the land and of a hundred
+fruits or flowers flowed forth to meet us; and, presently, a house or two
+appeared, standing high upon the ankles of the hills, and one of these
+surrounded with what seemed a garden. These conspicuous habitations,
+that patch of culture, had we but known it, were a mark of the passage of
+whites; and we might have approached a hundred islands and not found
+their parallel. It was longer ere we spied the native village, standing
+(in the universal fashion) close upon a curve of beach, close under a
+grove of palms; the sea in front growling and whitening on a concave arc
+of reef. For the cocoa-tree and the island man are both lovers and
+neighbours of the surf. ‘The coral waxes, the palm grows, but man
+departs,’ says the sad Tahitian proverb; but they are all three, so long
+as they endure, co-haunters of the beach. The mark of anchorage was a
+blow-hole in the rocks, near the south-easterly corner of the bay.
+Punctually to our use, the blow-hole spouted; the schooner turned upon
+her heel; the anchor plunged. It was a small sound, a great event; my
+soul went down with these moorings whence no windlass may extract nor any
+diver fish it up; and I, and some part of my ship’s company, were from
+that hour the bondslaves of the isles of Vivien.
+
+Before yet the anchor plunged a canoe was already paddling from the
+hamlet. It contained two men: one white, one brown and tattooed across
+the face with bands of blue, both in immaculate white European clothes:
+the resident trader, Mr. Regler, and the native chief, Taipi-Kikino.
+‘Captain, is it permitted to come on board?’ were the first words we
+heard among the islands. Canoe followed canoe till the ship swarmed with
+stalwart, six-foot men in every stage of undress; some in a shirt, some
+in a loin-cloth, one in a handkerchief imperfectly adjusted; some, and
+these the more considerable, tattooed from head to foot in awful
+patterns; some barbarous and knived; one, who sticks in my memory as
+something bestial, squatting on his hams in a canoe, sucking an orange
+and spitting it out again to alternate sides with ape-like vivacity—all
+talking, and we could not understand one word; all trying to trade with
+us who had no thought of trading, or offering us island curios at prices
+palpably absurd. There was no word of welcome; no show of civility; no
+hand extended save that of the chief and Mr. Regler. As we still
+continued to refuse the proffered articles, complaint ran high and rude;
+and one, the jester of the party, railed upon our meanness amid jeering
+laughter. Amongst other angry pleasantries—‘Here is a mighty fine ship,’
+said he, ‘to have no money on board!’ I own I was inspired with sensible
+repugnance; even with alarm. The ship was manifestly in their power; we
+had women on board; I knew nothing of my guests beyond the fact that they
+were cannibals; the Directory (my only guide) was full of timid cautions;
+and as for the trader, whose presence might else have reassured me, were
+not whites in the Pacific the usual instigators and accomplices of native
+outrage? When he reads this confession, our kind friend, Mr. Regler, can
+afford to smile.
+
+Later in the day, as I sat writing up my journal, the cabin was filled
+from end to end with Marquesans: three brown-skinned generations,
+squatted cross-legged upon the floor, and regarding me in silence with
+embarrassing eyes. The eyes of all Polynesians are large, luminous, and
+melting; they are like the eyes of animals and some Italians. A kind of
+despair came over me, to sit there helpless under all these staring orbs,
+and be thus blocked in a corner of my cabin by this speechless crowd: and
+a kind of rage to think they were beyond the reach of articulate
+communication, like furred animals, or folk born deaf, or the dwellers of
+some alien planet.
+
+To cross the Channel is, for a boy of twelve, to change heavens; to cross
+the Atlantic, for a man of twenty-four, is hardly to modify his diet.
+But I was now escaped out of the shadow of the Roman empire, under whose
+toppling monuments we were all cradled, whose laws and letters are on
+every hand of us, constraining and preventing. I was now to see what men
+might be whose fathers had never studied Virgil, had never been conquered
+by Cæsar, and never been ruled by the wisdom of Gaius or Papinian. By
+the same step I had journeyed forth out of that comfortable zone of
+kindred languages, where the curse of Babel is so easy to be remedied;
+and my new fellow-creatures sat before me dumb like images. Methought,
+in my travels, all human relation was to be excluded; and when I returned
+home (for in those days I still projected my return) I should have but
+dipped into a picture-book without a text. Nay, and I even questioned if
+my travels should be much prolonged; perhaps they were destined to a
+speedy end; perhaps my subsequent friend, Kauanui, whom I remarked there,
+sitting silent with the rest, for a man of some authority, might leap
+from his hams with an ear-splitting signal, the ship be carried at a
+rush, and the ship’s company butchered for the table.
+
+There could be nothing more natural than these apprehensions, nor
+anything more groundless. In my experience of the islands, I had never
+again so menacing a reception; were I to meet with such to-day, I should
+be more alarmed and tenfold more surprised. The majority of Polynesians
+are easy folk to get in touch with, frank, fond of notice, greedy of the
+least affection, like amiable, fawning dogs; and even with the
+Marquesans, so recently and so imperfectly redeemed from a blood-boltered
+barbarism, all were to become our intimates, and one, at least, was to
+mourn sincerely our departure.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II—MAKING FRIENDS
+
+
+The impediment of tongues was one that I particularly over-estimated.
+The languages of Polynesia are easy to smatter, though hard to speak with
+elegance. And they are extremely similar, so that a person who has a
+tincture of one or two may risk, not without hope, an attempt upon the
+others.
+
+And again, not only is Polynesian easy to smatter, but interpreters
+abound. Missionaries, traders, and broken white folk living on the
+bounty of the natives, are to be found in almost every isle and hamlet;
+and even where these are unserviceable, the natives themselves have often
+scraped up a little English, and in the French zone (though far less
+commonly) a little French-English, or an efficient pidgin, what is called
+to the westward ‘Beach-la-Mar,’ comes easy to the Polynesian; it is now
+taught, besides, in the schools of Hawaii; and from the multiplicity of
+British ships, and the nearness of the States on the one hand and the
+colonies on the other, it may be called, and will almost certainly
+become, the tongue of the Pacific. I will instance a few examples. I
+met in Majuro a Marshall Island boy who spoke excellent English; this he
+had learned in the German firm in Jaluit, yet did not speak one word of
+German. I heard from a gendarme who had taught school in Rapa-iti that
+while the children had the utmost difficulty or reluctance to learn
+French, they picked up English on the wayside, and as if by accident. On
+one of the most out-of-the-way atolls in the Carolines, my friend Mr.
+Benjamin Hird was amazed to find the lads playing cricket on the beach
+and talking English; and it was in English that the crew of the _Janet
+Nicoll_, a set of black boys from different Melanesian islands,
+communicated with other natives throughout the cruise, transmitted
+orders, and sometimes jested together on the fore-hatch. But what struck
+me perhaps most of all was a word I heard on the verandah of the Tribunal
+at Noumea. A case had just been heard—a trial for infanticide against an
+ape-like native woman; and the audience were smoking cigarettes as they
+awaited the verdict. An anxious, amiable French lady, not far from
+tears, was eager for acquittal, and declared she would engage the
+prisoner to be her children’s nurse. The bystanders exclaimed at the
+proposal; the woman was a savage, said they, and spoke no language.
+‘_Mais_, _vous savez_,’ objected the fair sentimentalist; ‘_ils
+apprennent si vite l’anglais_!’
+
+But to be able to speak to people is not all. And in the first stage of
+my relations with natives I was helped by two things. To begin with, I
+was the show-man of the _Casco_. She, her fine lines, tall spars, and
+snowy decks, the crimson fittings of the saloon, and the white, the gilt,
+and the repeating mirrors of the tiny cabin, brought us a hundred
+visitors. The men fathomed out her dimensions with their arms, as their
+fathers fathomed out the ships of Cook; the women declared the cabins
+more lovely than a church; bouncing Junos were never weary of sitting in
+the chairs and contemplating in the glass their own bland images; and I
+have seen one lady strip up her dress, and, with cries of wonder and
+delight, rub herself bare-breeched upon the velvet cushions. Biscuit,
+jam, and syrup was the entertainment; and, as in European parlours, the
+photograph album went the round. This sober gallery, their everyday
+costumes and physiognomies, had become transformed, in three weeks’
+sailing, into things wonderful and rich and foreign; alien faces,
+barbaric dresses, they were now beheld and fingered, in the swerving
+cabin, with innocent excitement and surprise. Her Majesty was often
+recognised, and I have seen French subjects kiss her photograph; Captain
+Speedy—in an Abyssinian war-dress, supposed to be the uniform of the
+British army—met with much acceptance; and the effigies of Mr. Andrew
+Lang were admired in the Marquesas. There is the place for him to go
+when he shall be weary of Middlesex and Homer.
+
+It was perhaps yet more important that I had enjoyed in my youth some
+knowledge of our Scots folk of the Highlands and the Islands. Not much
+beyond a century has passed since these were in the same convulsive and
+transitionary state as the Marquesans of to-day. In both cases an alien
+authority enforced, the clans disarmed, the chiefs deposed, new customs
+introduced, and chiefly that fashion of regarding money as the means and
+object of existence. The commercial age, in each, succeeding at a bound
+to an age of war abroad and patriarchal communism at home. In one the
+cherished practice of tattooing, in the other a cherished costume,
+proscribed. In each a main luxury cut off: beef, driven under cloud of
+night from Lowland pastures, denied to the meat-loving Highlander;
+long-pig, pirated from the next village, to the man-eating Kanaka. The
+grumbling, the secret ferment, the fears and resentments, the alarms and
+sudden councils of Marquesan chiefs, reminded me continually of the days
+of Lovat and Struan. Hospitality, tact, natural fine manners, and a
+touchy punctilio, are common to both races: common to both tongues the
+trick of dropping medial consonants. Here is a table of two widespread
+Polynesian words:—
+
+ _House_. _Love_.
+ {12}
+Tahitian FARE AROHA
+New Zealand WHARE
+Samoan FALE TALOFA
+Manihiki FALE ALOHA
+Hawaiian HALE ALOHA
+Marquesan HA’E KAOHA
+
+The elision of medial consonants, so marked in these Marquesan instances,
+is no less common both in Gaelic and the Lowland Scots. Stranger still,
+that prevalent Polynesian sound, the so-called catch, written with an
+apostrophe, and often or always the gravestone of a perished consonant,
+is to be heard in Scotland to this day. When a Scot pronounces water,
+better, or bottle—_wa’er_, _be’er_, or _bo’le_—the sound is precisely
+that of the catch; and I think we may go beyond, and say, that if such a
+population could be isolated, and this mispronunciation should become the
+rule, it might prove the first stage of transition from _t_ to _k_, which
+is the disease of Polynesian languages. The tendency of the Marquesans,
+however, is to urge against consonants, or at least on the very common
+letter _l_, a war of mere extermination. A hiatus is agreeable to any
+Polynesian ear; the ear even of the stranger soon grows used to these
+barbaric voids; but only in the Marquesan will you find such names as
+_Haaii_ and _Paaaeua_, when each individual vowel must be separately
+uttered.
+
+These points of similarity between a South Sea people and some of my own
+folk at home ran much in my head in the islands; and not only inclined me
+to view my fresh acquaintances with favour, but continually modified my
+judgment. A polite Englishman comes to-day to the Marquesans and is
+amazed to find the men tattooed; polite Italians came not long ago to
+England and found our fathers stained with woad; and when I paid the
+return visit as a little boy, I was highly diverted with the backwardness
+of Italy: so insecure, so much a matter of the day and hour, is the
+pre-eminence of race. It was so that I hit upon a means of communication
+which I recommend to travellers. When I desired any detail of savage
+custom, or of superstitious belief, I cast back in the story of my
+fathers, and fished for what I wanted with some trait of equal barbarism:
+Michael Scott, Lord Derwentwater’s head, the second-sight, the Water
+Kelpie,—each of these I have found to be a killing bait; the black bull’s
+head of Stirling procured me the legend of _Rahero_; and what I knew of
+the Cluny Macphersons, or the Appin Stewarts, enabled me to learn, and
+helped me to understand, about the _Tevas_ of Tahiti. The native was no
+longer ashamed, his sense of kinship grew warmer, and his lips were
+opened. It is this sense of kinship that the traveller must rouse and
+share; or he had better content himself with travels from the blue bed to
+the brown. And the presence of one Cockney titterer will cause a whole
+party to walk in clouds of darkness.
+
+The hamlet of Anaho stands on a margin of flat land between the west of
+the beach and the spring of the impending mountains. A grove of palms,
+perpetually ruffling its green fans, carpets it (as for a triumph) with
+fallen branches, and shades it like an arbour. A road runs from end to
+end of the covert among beds of flowers, the milliner’s shop of the
+community; and here and there, in the grateful twilight, in an air filled
+with a diversity of scents, and still within hearing of the surf upon the
+reef, the native houses stand in scattered neighbourhood. The same word,
+as we have seen, represents in many tongues of Polynesia, with scarce a
+shade of difference, the abode of man. But although the word be the
+same, the structure itself continually varies; and the Marquesan, among
+the most backward and barbarous of islanders, is yet the most
+commodiously lodged. The grass huts of Hawaii, the birdcage houses of
+Tahiti, or the open shed, with the crazy Venetian blinds, of the polite
+Samoan—none of these can be compared with the Marquesan _paepae-hae_, or
+dwelling platform. The paepae is an oblong terrace built without cement
+or black volcanic stone, from twenty to fifty feet in length, raised from
+four to eight feet from the earth, and accessible by a broad stair.
+Along the back of this, and coming to about half its width, runs the open
+front of the house, like a covered gallery: the interior sometimes neat
+and almost elegant in its bareness, the sleeping space divided off by an
+endlong coaming, some bright raiment perhaps hanging from a nail, and a
+lamp and one of White’s sewing-machines the only marks of civilization.
+On the outside, at one end of the terrace, burns the cooking-fire under a
+shed; at the other there is perhaps a pen for pigs; the remainder is the
+evening lounge and _al fresco_ banquet-hall of the inhabitants. To some
+houses water is brought down the mountains in bamboo pipes, perforated
+for the sake of sweetness. With the Highland comparison in my mind, I
+was struck to remember the sluttish mounds of turf and stone in which I
+have sat and been entertained in the Hebrides and the North Islands. Two
+things, I suppose, explain the contrast. In Scotland wood is rare, and
+with materials so rude as turf and stone the very hope of neatness is
+excluded. And in Scotland it is cold. Shelter and a hearth are needs so
+pressing that a man looks not beyond; he is out all day after a bare
+bellyful, and at night when he saith, ‘Aha, it is warm!’ he has not
+appetite for more. Or if for something else, then something higher; a
+fine school of poetry and song arose in these rough shelters, and an air
+like ‘_Lochaber no more_’ is an evidence of refinement more convincing,
+as well as more imperishable, than a palace.
+
+To one such dwelling platform a considerable troop of relatives and
+dependants resort. In the hour of the dusk, when the fire blazes, and
+the scent of the cooked breadfruit fills the air, and perhaps the lamp
+glints already between the pillars and the house, you shall behold them
+silently assemble to this meal, men, women, and children; and the dogs
+and pigs frisk together up the terrace stairway, switching rival tails.
+The strangers from the ship were soon equally welcome: welcome to dip
+their fingers in the wooden dish, to drink cocoanuts, to share the
+circulating pipe, and to hear and hold high debate about the misdeeds of
+the French, the Panama Canal, or the geographical position of San
+Francisco and New Yo’ko. In a Highland hamlet, quite out of reach of any
+tourist, I have met the same plain and dignified hospitality.
+
+I have mentioned two facts—the distasteful behaviour of our earliest
+visitors, and the case of the lady who rubbed herself upon the
+cushions—which would give a very false opinion of Marquesan manners. The
+great majority of Polynesians are excellently mannered; but the Marquesan
+stands apart, annoying and attractive, wild, shy, and refined. If you
+make him a present he affects to forget it, and it must be offered him
+again at his going: a pretty formality I have found nowhere else. A hint
+will get rid of any one or any number; they are so fiercely proud and
+modest; while many of the more lovable but blunter islanders crowd upon a
+stranger, and can be no more driven off than flies. A slight or an
+insult the Marquesan seems never to forget. I was one day talking by the
+wayside with my friend Hoka, when I perceived his eyes suddenly to flash
+and his stature to swell. A white horseman was coming down the mountain,
+and as he passed, and while he paused to exchange salutations with
+myself, Hoka was still staring and ruffling like a gamecock. It was a
+Corsican who had years before called him _cochon sauvage—coçon chauvage_,
+as Hoka mispronounced it. With people so nice and so touchy, it was
+scarce to be supposed that our company of greenhorns should not blunder
+into offences. Hoka, on one of his visits, fell suddenly in a brooding
+silence, and presently after left the ship with cold formality. When he
+took me back into favour, he adroitly and pointedly explained the nature
+of my offence: I had asked him to sell cocoa-nuts; and in Hoka’s view
+articles of food were things that a gentleman should give, not sell; or
+at least that he should not sell to any friend. On another occasion I
+gave my boat’s crew a luncheon of chocolate and biscuits. I had sinned,
+I could never learn how, against some point of observance; and though I
+was drily thanked, my offerings were left upon the beach. But our worst
+mistake was a slight we put on Toma, Hoka’s adoptive father, and in his
+own eyes the rightful chief of Anaho. In the first place, we did not
+call upon him, as perhaps we should, in his fine new European house, the
+only one in the hamlet. In the second, when we came ashore upon a visit
+to his rival, Taipi-Kikino, it was Toma whom we saw standing at the head
+of the beach, a magnificent figure of a man, magnificently tattooed; and
+it was of Toma that we asked our question: ‘Where is the chief?’ ‘What
+chief?’ cried Toma, and turned his back on the blasphemers. Nor did he
+forgive us. Hoka came and went with us daily; but, alone I believe of
+all the countryside, neither Toma nor his wife set foot on board the
+_Casco_. The temptation resisted it is hard for a European to compute.
+The flying city of Laputa moored for a fortnight in St. James’s Park
+affords but a pale figure of the _Casco_ anchored before Anaho; for the
+Londoner has still his change of pleasures, but the Marquesan passes to
+his grave through an unbroken uniformity of days.
+
+On the afternoon before it was intended we should sail, a valedictory
+party came on board: nine of our particular friends equipped with gifts
+and dressed as for a festival. Hoka, the chief dancer and singer, the
+greatest dandy of Anaho, and one of the handsomest young fellows in the
+world-sullen, showy, dramatic, light as a feather and strong as an ox—it
+would have been hard, on that occasion, to recognise, as he sat there
+stooped and silent, his face heavy and grey. It was strange to see the
+lad so much affected; stranger still to recognise in his last gift one of
+the curios we had refused on the first day, and to know our friend, so
+gaily dressed, so plainly moved at our departure, for one of the
+half-naked crew that had besieged and insulted us on our arrival:
+strangest of all, perhaps, to find, in that carved handle of a fan, the
+last of those curiosities of the first day which had now all been given
+to us by their possessors—their chief merchandise, for which they had
+sought to ransom us as long as we were strangers, which they pressed on
+us for nothing as soon as we were friends. The last visit was not long
+protracted. One after another they shook hands and got down into their
+canoe; when Hoka turned his back immediately upon the ship, so that we
+saw his face no more. Taipi, on the other hand, remained standing and
+facing us with gracious valedictory gestures; and when Captain Otis
+dipped the ensign, the whole party saluted with their hats. This was the
+farewell; the episode of our visit to Anaho was held concluded; and
+though the _Casco_ remained nearly forty hours at her moorings, not one
+returned on board, and I am inclined to think they avoided appearing on
+the beach. This reserve and dignity is the finest trait of the
+Marquesan.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III—THE MAROON
+
+
+Of the beauties of Anaho books might be written. I remember waking about
+three, to find the air temperate and scented. The long swell brimmed
+into the bay, and seemed to fill it full and then subside. Gently,
+deeply, and silently the _Casco_ rolled; only at times a block piped like
+a bird. Oceanward, the heaven was bright with stars and the sea with
+their reflections. If I looked to that side, I might have sung with the
+Hawaiian poet:
+
+ _Ua maomao ka lani_, _ua kahaea luna_,
+ _Ua pipi ka maka o ka hoku_.
+ (The heavens were fair, they stretched above,
+ Many were the eyes of the stars.)
+
+And then I turned shoreward, and high squalls were overhead; the
+mountains loomed up black; and I could have fancied I had slipped ten
+thousand miles away and was anchored in a Highland loch; that when the
+day came, it would show pine, and heather, and green fern, and roofs of
+turf sending up the smoke of peats; and the alien speech that should next
+greet my ears must be Gaelic, not Kanaka.
+
+And day, when it came, brought other sights and thoughts. I have watched
+the morning break in many quarters of the world; it has been certainly
+one of the chief joys of my existence, and the dawn that I saw with most
+emotion shone upon the bay of Anaho. The mountains abruptly overhang the
+port with every variety of surface and of inclination, lawn, and cliff,
+and forest. Not one of these but wore its proper tint of saffron, of
+sulphur, of the clove, and of the rose. The lustre was like that of
+satin; on the lighter hues there seemed to float an efflorescence; a
+solemn bloom appeared on the more dark. The light itself was the
+ordinary light of morning, colourless and clean; and on this ground of
+jewels, pencilled out the least detail of drawing. Meanwhile, around the
+hamlet, under the palms, where the blue shadow lingered, the red coals of
+cocoa husk and the light trails of smoke betrayed the awakening business
+of the day; along the beach men and women, lads and lasses, were
+returning from the bath in bright raiment, red and blue and green, such
+as we delighted to see in the coloured little pictures of our childhood;
+and presently the sun had cleared the eastern hill, and the glow of the
+day was over all.
+
+The glow continued and increased, the business, from the main part,
+ceased before it had begun. Twice in the day there was a certain stir of
+shepherding along the seaward hills. At times a canoe went out to fish.
+At times a woman or two languidly filled a basket in the cotton patch.
+At times a pipe would sound out of the shadow of a house, ringing the
+changes on its three notes, with an effect like _Que le jour me dure_,
+repeated endlessly. Or at times, across a corner of the bay, two natives
+might communicate in the Marquesan manner with conventional whistlings.
+All else was sleep and silence. The surf broke and shone around the
+shores; a species of black crane fished in the broken water; the black
+pigs were continually galloping by on some affair; but the people might
+never have awaked, or they might all be dead.
+
+My favourite haunt was opposite the hamlet, where was a landing in a cove
+under a lianaed cliff. The beach was lined with palms and a tree called
+the purao, something between the fig and mulberry in growth, and bearing
+a flower like a great yellow poppy with a maroon heart. In places rocks
+encroached upon the sand; the beach would be all submerged; and the surf
+would bubble warmly as high as to my knees, and play with cocoa-nut husks
+as our more homely ocean plays with wreck and wrack and bottles. As the
+reflux drew down, marvels of colour and design streamed between my feet;
+which I would grasp at, miss, or seize: now to find them what they
+promised, shells to grace a cabinet or be set in gold upon a lady’s
+finger; now to catch only _maya_ of coloured sand, pounded fragments and
+pebbles, that, as soon as they were dry, became as dull and homely as the
+flints upon a garden path. I have toiled at this childish pleasure for
+hours in the strong sun, conscious of my incurable ignorance; but too
+keenly pleased to be ashamed. Meanwhile, the blackbird (or his tropical
+understudy) would be fluting in the thickets overhead.
+
+A little further, in the turn of the bay, a streamlet trickled in the
+bottom of a den, thence spilling down a stair of rock into the sea. The
+draught of air drew down under the foliage in the very bottom of the den,
+which was a perfect arbour for coolness. In front it stood open on the
+blue bay and the _Casco_ lying there under her awning and her cheerful
+colours. Overhead was a thatch of puraos, and over these again palms
+brandished their bright fans, as I have seen a conjurer make himself a
+halo out of naked swords. For in this spot, over a neck of low land at
+the foot of the mountains, the trade-wind streams into Anaho Bay in a
+flood of almost constant volume and velocity, and of a heavenly coolness.
+
+It chanced one day that I was ashore in the cove, with Mrs. Stevenson and
+the ship’s cook. Except for the _Casco_ lying outside, and a crane or
+two, and the ever-busy wind and sea, the face of the world was of a
+prehistoric emptiness; life appeared to stand stock-still, and the sense
+of isolation was profound and refreshing. On a sudden, the trade-wind,
+coming in a gust over the isthmus, struck and scattered the fans of the
+palms above the den; and, behold! in two of the tops there sat a native,
+motionless as an idol and watching us, you would have said, without a
+wink. The next moment the tree closed, and the glimpse was gone. This
+discovery of human presences latent overhead in a place where we had
+supposed ourselves alone, the immobility of our tree-top spies, and the
+thought that perhaps at all hours we were similarly supervised, struck us
+with a chill. Talk languished on the beach. As for the cook (whose
+conscience was not clear), he never afterwards set foot on shore, and
+twice, when the _Casco_ appeared to be driving on the rocks, it was
+amusing to observe that man’s alacrity; death, he was persuaded, awaiting
+him upon the beach. It was more than a year later, in the Gilberts, that
+the explanation dawned upon myself. The natives were drawing palm-tree
+wine, a thing forbidden by law; and when the wind thus suddenly revealed
+them, they were doubtless more troubled than ourselves.
+
+At the top of the den there dwelt an old, melancholy, grizzled man of the
+name of Tari (Charlie) Coffin. He was a native of Oahu, in the Sandwich
+Islands; and had gone to sea in his youth in the American whalers; a
+circumstance to which he owed his name, his English, his down-east twang,
+and the misfortune of his innocent life. For one captain, sailing out of
+New Bedford, carried him to Nuka-hiva and marooned him there among the
+cannibals. The motive for this act was inconceivably small; poor Tari’s
+wages, which were thus economised, would scarce have shook the credit of
+the New Bedford owners. And the act itself was simply murder. Tari’s
+life must have hung in the beginning by a hair. In the grief and terror
+of that time, it is not unlikely he went mad, an infirmity to which he
+was still liable; or perhaps a child may have taken a fancy to him and
+ordained him to be spared. He escaped at least alive, married in the
+island, and when I knew him was a widower with a married son and a
+granddaughter. But the thought of Oahu haunted him; its praise was for
+ever on his lips; he beheld it, looking back, as a place of ceaseless
+feasting, song, and dance; and in his dreams I daresay he revisits it
+with joy. I wonder what he would think if he could be carried there
+indeed, and see the modern town of Honolulu brisk with traffic, and the
+palace with its guards, and the great hotel, and Mr. Berger’s band with
+their uniforms and outlandish instruments; or what he would think to see
+the brown faces grown so few and the white so many; and his father’s land
+sold, for planting sugar, and his father’s house quite perished, or
+perhaps the last of them struck leprous and immured between the surf and
+the cliffs on Molokai? So simply, even in South Sea Islands, and so
+sadly, the changes come.
+
+Tari was poor, and poorly lodged. His house was a wooden frame, run up
+by Europeans; it was indeed his official residence, for Tari was the
+shepherd of the promontory sheep. I can give a perfect inventory of its
+contents: three kegs, a tin biscuit-box, an iron saucepan, several
+cocoa-shell cups, a lantern, and three bottles, probably containing oil;
+while the clothes of the family and a few mats were thrown across the
+open rafters. Upon my first meeting with this exile he had conceived for
+me one of the baseless island friendships, had given me nuts to drink,
+and carried me up the den ‘to see my house’—the only entertainment that
+he had to offer. He liked the ‘Amelican,’ he said, and the ‘Inglisman,’
+but the ‘Flessman’ was his abhorrence; and he was careful to explain that
+if he had thought us ‘Fless,’ we should have had none of his nuts, and
+never a sight of his house. His distaste for the French I can partly
+understand, but not at all his toleration of the Anglo-Saxon. The next
+day he brought me a pig, and some days later one of our party going
+ashore found him in act to bring a second. We were still strange to the
+islands; we were pained by the poor man’s generosity, which he could ill
+afford, and, by a natural enough but quite unpardonable blunder, we
+refused the pig. Had Tari been a Marquesan we should have seen him no
+more; being what he was, the most mild, long-suffering, melancholy man,
+he took a revenge a hundred times more painful. Scarce had the canoe
+with the nine villagers put off from their farewell before the _Casco_
+was boarded from the other side. It was Tari; coming thus late because
+he had no canoe of his own, and had found it hard to borrow one; coming
+thus solitary (as indeed we always saw him), because he was a stranger in
+the land, and the dreariest of company. The rest of my family basely
+fled from the encounter. I must receive our injured friend alone; and
+the interview must have lasted hard upon an hour, for he was loath to
+tear himself away. ‘You go ’way. I see you no more—no, sir!’ he
+lamented; and then looking about him with rueful admiration, ‘This goodee
+ship—no, sir!—goodee ship!’ he would exclaim: the ‘no, sir,’ thrown out
+sharply through the nose upon a rising inflection, an echo from New
+Bedford and the fallacious whaler. From these expressions of grief and
+praise, he would return continually to the case of the rejected pig. ‘I
+like give present all ’e same you,’ he complained; ‘only got pig: you no
+take him!’ He was a poor man; he had no choice of gifts; he had only a
+pig, he repeated; and I had refused it. I have rarely been more wretched
+than to see him sitting there, so old, so grey, so poor, so hardly
+fortuned, of so rueful a countenance, and to appreciate, with growing
+keenness, the affront which I had so innocently dealt him; but it was one
+of those cases in which speech is vain.
+
+Tari’s son was smiling and inert; his daughter-in-law, a girl of sixteen,
+pretty, gentle, and grave, more intelligent than most Anaho women, and
+with a fair share of French; his grandchild, a mite of a creature at the
+breast. I went up the den one day when Tari was from home, and found the
+son making a cotton sack, and madame suckling mademoiselle. When I had
+sat down with them on the floor, the girl began to question me about
+England; which I tried to describe, piling the pan and the cocoa shells
+one upon another to represent the houses, and explaining, as best I was
+able, and by word and gesture, the over-population, the hunger, and the
+perpetual toil. ‘_Pas de cocotiers_? _pas do popoi_?’ she asked. I told
+her it was too cold, and went through an elaborate performance, shutting
+out draughts, and crouching over an imaginary fire, to make sure she
+understood. But she understood right well; remarked it must be bad for
+the health, and sat a while gravely reflecting on that picture of
+unwonted sorrows. I am sure it roused her pity, for it struck in her
+another thought always uppermost in the Marquesan bosom; and she began
+with a smiling sadness, and looking on me out of melancholy eyes, to
+lament the decease of her own people. ‘_Ici pas de Kanaques_,’ said she;
+and taking the baby from her breast, she held it out to me with both her
+hands. ‘_Tenez_—a little baby like this; then dead. All the Kanaques
+die. Then no more.’ The smile, and this instancing by the girl-mother
+of her own tiny flesh and blood, affected me strangely; they spoke of so
+tranquil a despair. Meanwhile the husband smilingly made his sack; and
+the unconscious babe struggled to reach a pot of raspberry jam,
+friendship’s offering, which I had just brought up the den; and in a
+perspective of centuries I saw their case as ours, death coming in like a
+tide, and the day already numbered when there should be no more Beretani,
+and no more of any race whatever, and (what oddly touched me) no more
+literary works and no more readers.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV—DEATH
+
+
+The thought of death, I have said, is uppermost in the mind of the
+Marquesan. It would be strange if it were otherwise. The race is
+perhaps the handsomest extant. Six feet is about the middle height of
+males; they are strongly muscled, free from fat, swift in action,
+graceful in repose; and the women, though fatter and duller, are still
+comely animals. To judge by the eye, there is no race more viable; and
+yet death reaps them with both hands. When Bishop Dordillon first came
+to Tai-o-hae, he reckoned the inhabitants at many thousands; he was but
+newly dead, and in the same bay Stanislao Moanatini counted on his
+fingers eight residual natives. Or take the valley of Hapaa, known to
+readers of Herman Melville under the grotesque misspelling of Hapar.
+There are but two writers who have touched the South Seas with any
+genius, both Americans: Melville and Charles Warren Stoddard; and at the
+christening of the first and greatest, some influential fairy must have
+been neglected: ‘He shall be able to see,’ ‘He shall be able to tell,’
+‘He shall be able to charm,’ said the friendly godmothers; ‘But he shall
+not be able to hear,’ exclaimed the last. The tribe of Hapaa is said to
+have numbered some four hundred, when the small-pox came and reduced them
+by one-fourth. Six months later a woman developed tubercular
+consumption; the disease spread like a fire about the valley, and in less
+than a year two survivors, a man and a woman, fled from that new-created
+solitude. A similar Adam and Eve may some day wither among new races,
+the tragic residue of Britain. When I first heard this story the date
+staggered me; but I am now inclined to think it possible. Early in the
+year of my visit, for example, or late the year before, a first case of
+phthisis appeared in a household of seventeen persons, and by the month
+of August, when the tale was told me, one soul survived, and that was a
+boy who had been absent at his schooling. And depopulation works both
+ways, the doors of death being set wide open, and the door of birth
+almost closed. Thus, in the half-year ending July 1888 there were twelve
+deaths and but one birth in the district of the Hatiheu. Seven or eight
+more deaths were to be looked for in the ordinary course; and M. Aussel,
+the observant gendarme, knew of but one likely birth. At this rate it is
+no matter of surprise if the population in that part should have declined
+in forty years from six thousand to less than four hundred; which are,
+once more on the authority of M. Aussel, the estimated figures. And the
+rate of decline must have even accelerated towards the end.
+
+A good way to appreciate the depopulation is to go by land from Anaho to
+Hatiheu on the adjacent bay. The road is good travelling, but cruelly
+steep. We seemed scarce to have passed the deserted house which stands
+highest in Anaho before we were looking dizzily down upon its roof; the
+_Casco_ well out in the bay, and rolling for a wager, shrank visibly; and
+presently through the gap of Tari’s isthmus, Ua-huna was seen to hang
+cloudlike on the horizon. Over the summit, where the wind blew really
+chill, and whistled in the reed-like grass, and tossed the grassy fell of
+the pandanus, we stepped suddenly, as through a door, into the next vale
+and bay of Hatiheu. A bowl of mountains encloses it upon three sides.
+On the fourth this rampart has been bombarded into ruins, runs down to
+seaward in imminent and shattered crags, and presents the one practicable
+breach of the blue bay. The interior of this vessel is crowded with
+lovely and valuable trees,—orange, breadfruit, mummy-apple, cocoa, the
+island chestnut, and for weeds, the pine and the banana. Four perennial
+streams water and keep it green; and along the dell, first of one, then
+of another, of these, the road, for a considerable distance, descends
+into this fortunate valley. The song of the waters and the familiar
+disarray of boulders gave us a strong sense of home, which the exotic
+foliage, the daft-like growth of the pandanus, the buttressed trunk of
+the banyan, the black pigs galloping in the bush, and the architecture of
+the native houses dissipated ere it could be enjoyed.
+
+The houses on the Hatiheu side begin high up; higher yet, the more
+melancholy spectacle of empty paepaes. When a native habitation is
+deserted, the superstructure—pandanus thatch, wattle, unstable tropical
+timber—speedily rots, and is speedily scattered by the wind. Only the
+stones of the terrace endure; nor can any ruin, cairn, or standing stone,
+or vitrified fort present a more stern appearance of antiquity. We must
+have passed from six to eight of these now houseless platforms. On the
+main road of the island, where it crosses the valley of Taipi, Mr.
+Osbourne tells me they are to be reckoned by the dozen; and as the roads
+have been made long posterior to their erection, perhaps to their
+desertion, and must simply be regarded as lines drawn at random through
+the bush, the forest on either hand must be equally filled with these
+survivals: the gravestones of whole families. Such ruins are tapu {29}
+in the strictest sense; no native must approach them; they have become
+outposts of the kingdom of the grave. It might appear a natural and
+pious custom in the hundreds who are left, the rearguard of perished
+thousands, that their feet should leave untrod these hearthstones of
+their fathers. I believe, in fact, the custom rests on different and
+more grim conceptions. But the house, the grave, and even the body of
+the dead, have been always particularly honoured by Marquesans. Until
+recently the corpse was sometimes kept in the family and daily oiled and
+sunned, until, by gradual and revolting stages, it dried into a kind of
+mummy. Offerings are still laid upon the grave. In Traitor’s Bay, Mr.
+Osbourne saw a man buy a looking-glass to lay upon his son’s. And the
+sentiment against the desecration of tombs, thoughtlessly ruffled in the
+laying down of the new roads, is a chief ingredient in the native hatred
+for the French.
+
+The Marquesan beholds with dismay the approaching extinction of his race.
+The thought of death sits down with him to meat, and rises with him from
+his bed; he lives and breathes under a shadow of mortality awful to
+support; and he is so inured to the apprehension that he greets the
+reality with relief. He does not even seek to support a disappointment;
+at an affront, at a breach of one of his fleeting and communistic
+love-affairs, he seeks an instant refuge in the grave. Hanging is now
+the fashion. I heard of three who had hanged themselves in the west end
+of Hiva-oa during the first half of 1888; but though this be a common
+form of suicide in other parts of the South Seas, I cannot think it will
+continue popular in the Marquesas. Far more suitable to Marquesan
+sentiment is the old form of poisoning with the fruit of the eva, which
+offers to the native suicide a cruel but deliberate death, and gives time
+for those decencies of the last hour, to which he attaches such
+remarkable importance. The coffin can thus be at hand, the pigs killed,
+the cry of the mourners sounding already through the house; and then it
+is, and not before, that the Marquesan is conscious of achievement, his
+life all rounded in, his robes (like Cæsar’s) adjusted for the final act.
+Praise not any man till he is dead, said the ancients; envy not any man
+till you hear the mourners, might be the Marquesan parody. The coffin,
+though of late introduction, strangely engages their attention. It is to
+the mature Marquesan what a watch is to the European schoolboy. For ten
+years Queen Vaekehu had dunned the fathers; at last, but the other day,
+they let her have her will, gave her her coffin, and the woman’s soul is
+at rest. I was told a droll instance of the force of this preoccupation.
+The Polynesians are subject to a disease seemingly rather of the will
+than of the body. I was told the Tahitians have a word for it,
+_erimatua_, but cannot find it in my dictionary. A gendarme, M. Nouveau,
+has seen men beginning to succumb to this insubstantial malady, has
+routed them from their houses, turned them on to do their trick upon the
+roads, and in two days has seen them cured. But this other remedy is
+more original: a Marquesan, dying of this discouragement—perhaps I should
+rather say this acquiescence—has been known, at the fulfilment of his
+crowning wish, on the mere sight of that desired hermitage, his coffin—to
+revive, recover, shake off the hand of death, and be restored for years
+to his occupations—carving tikis (idols), let us say, or braiding old
+men’s beards. From all this it may be conceived how easily they meet
+death when it approaches naturally. I heard one example, grim and
+picturesque. In the time of the small-pox in Hapaa, an old man was
+seized with the disease; he had no thought of recovery; had his grave dug
+by a wayside, and lived in it for near a fortnight, eating, drinking, and
+smoking with the passers-by, talking mostly of his end, and equally
+unconcerned for himself and careless of the friends whom he infected.
+
+This proneness to suicide, and loose seat in life, is not peculiar to the
+Marquesan. What is peculiar is the widespread depression and acceptance
+of the national end. Pleasures are neglected, the dance languishes, the
+songs are forgotten. It is true that some, and perhaps too many, of them
+are proscribed; but many remain, if there were spirit to support or to
+revive them. At the last feast of the Bastille, Stanislao Moanatini shed
+tears when he beheld the inanimate performance of the dancers. When the
+people sang for us in Anaho, they must apologise for the smallness of
+their repertory. They were only young folk present, they said, and it
+was only the old that knew the songs. The whole body of Marquesan poetry
+and music was being suffered to die out with a single dispirited
+generation. The full import is apparent only to one acquainted with
+other Polynesian races; who knows how the Samoan coins a fresh song for
+every trifling incident, or who has heard (on Penrhyn, for instance) a
+band of little stripling maids from eight to twelve keep up their
+minstrelsy for hours upon a stretch, one song following another without
+pause. In like manner, the Marquesan, never industrious, begins now to
+cease altogether from production. The exports of the group decline out
+of all proportion even with the death-rate of the islanders. ‘The coral
+waxes, the palm grows, and man departs,’ says the Marquesan; and he folds
+his hands. And surely this is nature. Fond as it may appear, we labour
+and refrain, not for the rewards of any single life, but with a timid eye
+upon the lives and memories of our successors; and where no one is to
+succeed, of his own family, or his own tongue, I doubt whether
+Rothschilds would make money or Cato practise virtue. It is natural,
+also, that a temporary stimulus should sometimes rouse the Marquesan from
+his lethargy. Over all the landward shore of Anaho cotton runs like a
+wild weed; man or woman, whoever comes to pick it, may earn a dollar in
+the day; yet when we arrived, the trader’s store-house was entirely
+empty; and before we left it was near full. So long as the circus was
+there, so long as the _Casco_ was yet anchored in the bay, it behoved
+every one to make his visit; and to this end every woman must have a new
+dress, and every man a shirt and trousers. Never before, in Mr. Regler’s
+experience, had they displayed so much activity.
+
+In their despondency there is an element of dread. The fear of ghosts
+and of the dark is very deeply written in the mind of the Polynesian; not
+least of the Marquesan. Poor Taipi, the chief of Anaho, was condemned to
+ride to Hatiheu on a moonless night. He borrowed a lantern, sat a long
+while nerving himself for the adventure, and when he at last departed,
+wrung the _Cascos_ by the hand as for a final separation. Certain
+presences, called Vehinehae, frequent and make terrible the nocturnal
+roadside; I was told by one they were like so much mist, and as the
+traveller walked into them dispersed and dissipated; another described
+them as being shaped like men and having eyes like cats; from none could
+I obtain the smallest clearness as to what they did, or wherefore they
+were dreaded. We may be sure at least they represent the dead; for the
+dead, in the minds of the islanders, are all-pervasive. ‘When a native
+says that he is a man,’ writes Dr. Codrington, ‘he means that he is a man
+and not a ghost; not that he is a man and not a beast. The intelligent
+agents of this world are to his mind the men who are alive, and the
+ghosts the men who are dead.’ Dr. Codrington speaks of Melanesia; from
+what I have learned his words are equally true of the Polynesian. And
+yet more. Among cannibal Polynesians a dreadful suspicion rests
+generally on the dead; and the Marquesans, the greatest cannibals of all,
+are scarce likely to be free from similar beliefs. I hazard the guess
+that the Vehinehae are the hungry spirits of the dead, continuing their
+life’s business of the cannibal ambuscade, and lying everywhere unseen,
+and eager to devour the living. Another superstition I picked up through
+the troubled medium of Tari Coffin’s English. The dead, he told me, came
+and danced by night around the paepae of their former family; the family
+were thereupon overcome by some emotion (but whether of pious sorrow or
+of fear I could not gather), and must ‘make a feast,’ of which fish, pig,
+and popoi were indispensable ingredients. So far this is clear enough.
+But here Tari went on to instance the new house of Toma and the
+house-warming feast which was just then in preparation as instances in
+point. Dare we indeed string them together, and add the case of the
+deserted ruin, as though the dead continually besieged the paepaes of the
+living: were kept at arm’s-length, even from the first foundation, only
+by propitiatory feasts, and, so soon as the fire of life went out upon
+the hearth, swarmed back into possession of their ancient seat?
+
+I speak by guess of these Marquesan superstitions. On the cannibal ghost
+I shall return elsewhere with certainty. And it is enough, for the
+present purpose, to remark that the men of the Marquesas, from whatever
+reason, fear and shrink from the presence of ghosts. Conceive how this
+must tell upon the nerves in islands where the number of the dead already
+so far exceeds that of the living, and the dead multiply and the living
+dwindle at so swift a rate. Conceive how the remnant huddles about the
+embers of the fire of life; even as old Red Indians, deserted on the
+march and in the snow, the kindly tribe all gone, the last flame
+expiring, and the night around populous with wolves.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V—DEPOPULATION
+
+
+Over the whole extent of the South Seas, from one tropic to another, we
+find traces of a bygone state of over-population, when the resources of
+even a tropical soil were taxed, and even the improvident Polynesian
+trembled for the future. We may accept some of the ideas of Mr. Darwin’s
+theory of coral islands, and suppose a rise of the sea, or the subsidence
+of some former continental area, to have driven into the tops of the
+mountains multitudes of refugees. Or we may suppose, more soberly, a
+people of sea-rovers, emigrants from a crowded country, to strike upon
+and settle island after island, and as time went on to multiply
+exceedingly in their new seats. In either case the end must be the same;
+soon or late it must grow apparent that the crew are too numerous, and
+that famine is at hand. The Polynesians met this emergent danger with
+various expedients of activity and prevention. A way was found to
+preserve breadfruit by packing it in artificial pits; pits forty feet in
+depth and of proportionate bore are still to be seen, I am told, in the
+Marquesas; and yet even these were insufficient for the teeming people,
+and the annals of the past are gloomy with famine and cannibalism. Among
+the Hawaiians—a hardier people, in a more exacting climate—agriculture
+was carried far; the land was irrigated with canals; and the fish-ponds
+of Molokai prove the number and diligence of the old inhabitants.
+Meanwhile, over all the island world, abortion and infanticide prevailed.
+On coral atolls, where the danger was most plainly obvious, these were
+enforced by law and sanctioned by punishment. On Vaitupu, in the
+Ellices, only two children were allowed to a couple; on Nukufetau, but
+one. On the latter the punishment was by fine; and it is related that
+the fine was sometimes paid, and the child spared.
+
+This is characteristic. For no people in the world are so fond or so
+long-suffering with children—children make the mirth and the adornment of
+their homes, serving them for playthings and for picture-galleries.
+‘Happy is the man that has his quiver full of them.’ The stray bastard
+is contended for by rival families; and the natural and the adopted
+children play and grow up together undistinguished. The spoiling, and I
+may almost say the deification, of the child, is nowhere carried so far
+as in the eastern islands; and furthest, according to my opportunities of
+observation, in the Paumotu group, the so-called Low or Dangerous
+Archipelago. I have seen a Paumotuan native turn from me with
+embarrassment and disaffection because I suggested that a brat would be
+the better for a beating. It is a daily matter in some eastern islands
+to see a child strike or even stone its mother, and the mother, so far
+from punishing, scarce ventures to resist. In some, when his child was
+born, a chief was superseded and resigned his name; as though, like a
+drone, he had then fulfilled the occasion of his being. And in some the
+lightest words of children had the weight of oracles. Only the other
+day, in the Marquesas, if a child conceived a distaste to any stranger, I
+am assured the stranger would be slain. And I shall have to tell in
+another place an instance of the opposite: how a child in Manihiki having
+taken a fancy to myself, her adoptive parents at once accepted the
+situation and loaded me with gifts.
+
+With such sentiments the necessity for child-destruction would not fail
+to clash, and I believe we find the trace of divided feeling in the
+Tahitian brotherhood of Oro. At a certain date a new god was added to
+the Society-Island Olympus, or an old one refurbished and made popular.
+Oro was his name, and he may be compared with the Bacchus of the
+ancients. His zealots sailed from bay to bay, and from island to island;
+they were everywhere received with feasting; wore fine clothes; sang,
+danced, acted; gave exhibitions of dexterity and strength; and were the
+artists, the acrobats, the bards, and the harlots of the group. Their
+life was public and epicurean; their initiation a mystery; and the
+highest in the land aspired to join the brotherhood. If a couple stood
+next in line to a high-chieftaincy, they were suffered, on grounds of
+policy, to spare one child; all other children, who had a father or a
+mother in the company of Oro, stood condemned from the moment of
+conception. A freemasonry, an agnostic sect, a company of artists, its
+members all under oath to spread unchastity, and all forbidden to leave
+offspring—I do not know how it may appear to others, but to me the design
+seems obvious. Famine menacing the islands, and the needful remedy
+repulsive, it was recommended to the native mind by these trappings of
+mystery, pleasure, and parade. This is the more probable, and the
+secret, serious purpose of the institution appears the more plainly, if
+it be true that, after a certain period of life, the obligation of the
+votary was changed; at first, bound to be profligate: afterwards,
+expected to be chaste.
+
+Here, then, we have one side of the case. Man-eating among kindly men,
+child-murder among child-lovers, industry in a race the most idle,
+invention in a race the least progressive, this grim, pagan
+salvation-army of the brotherhood of Oro, the report of early voyagers,
+the widespread vestiges of former habitation, and the universal tradition
+of the islands, all point to the same fact of former crowding and alarm.
+And to-day we are face to face with the reverse. To-day in the
+Marquesas, in the Eight Islands of Hawaii, in Mangareva, in Easter
+Island, we find the same race perishing like flies. Why this change?
+Or, grant that the coming of the whites, the change of habits, and the
+introduction of new maladies and vices, fully explain the depopulation,
+why is that depopulation not universal? The population of Tahiti, after
+a period of alarming decrease, has again become stationary. I hear of a
+similar result among some Maori tribes; in many of the Paumotus a slight
+increase is to be observed; and the Samoans are to-day as healthy and at
+least as fruitful as before the change. Grant that the Tahitians, the
+Maoris, and the Paumotuans have become inured to the new conditions; and
+what are we to make of the Samoans, who have never suffered?
+
+Those who are acquainted only with a single group are apt to be ready
+with solutions. Thus I have heard the mortality of the Maoris attributed
+to their change of residence—from fortified hill-tops to the low, marshy
+vicinity of their plantations. How plausible! And yet the Marquesans
+are dying out in the same houses where their fathers multiplied. Or take
+opium. The Marquesas and Hawaii are the two groups the most infected
+with this vice; the population of the one is the most civilised, that of
+the other by far the most barbarous, of Polynesians; and they are two of
+those that perish the most rapidly. Here is a strong case against opium.
+But let us take unchastity, and we shall find the Marquesas and Hawaii
+figuring again upon another count. Thus, Samoans are the most chaste of
+Polynesians, and they are to this day entirely fertile; Marquesans are
+the most debauched: we have seen how they are perishing; Hawaiians are
+notoriously lax, and they begin to be dotted among deserts. So here is a
+case stronger still against unchastity; and here also we have a
+correction to apply. Whatever the virtues of the Tahitian, neither
+friend nor enemy dares call him chaste; and yet he seems to have outlived
+the time of danger. One last example: syphilis has been plausibly
+credited with much of the sterility. But the Samoans are, by all
+accounts, as fruitful as at first; by some accounts more so; and it is
+not seriously to be argued that the Samoans have escaped syphilis.
+
+These examples show how dangerous it is to reason from any particular
+cause, or even from many in a single group. I have in my eye an able and
+amiable pamphlet by the Rev. S. E. Bishop: ‘Why are the Hawaiians Dying
+Out?’ Any one interested in the subject ought to read this tract, which
+contains real information; and yet Mr. Bishop’s views would have been
+changed by an acquaintance with other groups. Samoa is, for the moment,
+the main and the most instructive exception to the rule. The people are
+the most chaste and one of the most temperate of island peoples. They
+have never been tried and depressed with any grave pestilence. Their
+clothing has scarce been tampered with; at the simple and becoming tabard
+of the girls, Tartuffe, in many another island, would have cried out; for
+the cool, healthy, and modest lava-lava or kilt, Tartuffe has managed in
+many another island to substitute stifling and inconvenient trousers.
+Lastly, and perhaps chiefly, so far from their amusements having been
+curtailed, I think they have been, upon the whole, extended. The
+Polynesian falls easily into despondency: bereavement, disappointment,
+the fear of novel visitations, the decay or proscription of ancient
+pleasures, easily incline him to be sad; and sadness detaches him from
+life. The melancholy of the Hawaiian and the emptiness of his new life
+are striking; and the remark is yet more apposite to the Marquesas. In
+Samoa, on the other hand, perpetual song and dance, perpetual games,
+journeys, and pleasures, make an animated and a smiling picture of the
+island life. And the Samoans are to-day the gayest and the best
+entertained inhabitants of our planet. The importance of this can
+scarcely be exaggerated. In a climate and upon a soil where a livelihood
+can be had for the stooping, entertainment is a prime necessity. It is
+otherwise with us, where life presents us with a daily problem, and there
+is a serious interest, and some of the heat of conflict, in the mere
+continuing to be. So, in certain atolls, where there is no great gaiety,
+but man must bestir himself with some vigour for his daily bread, public
+health and the population are maintained; but in the lotos islands, with
+the decay of pleasures, life itself decays. It is from this point of
+view that we may instance, among other causes of depression, the decay of
+war. We have been so long used in Europe to that dreary business of war
+on the great scale, trailing epidemics and leaving pestilential corpses
+in its train, that we have almost forgotten its original, the most
+healthful, if not the most humane, of all field sports—hedge-warfare.
+From this, as well as from the rest of his amusements and interests, the
+islander, upon a hundred islands, has been recently cut off. And to
+this, as well as to so many others, the Samoan still makes good a special
+title.
+
+Upon the whole, the problem seems to me to stand thus:—Where there have
+been fewest changes, important or unimportant, salutary or hurtful, there
+the race survives. Where there have been most, important or unimportant,
+salutary or hurtful, there it perishes. Each change, however small,
+augments the sum of new conditions to which the race has to become
+inured. There may seem, _a priori_, no comparison between the change
+from ‘sour toddy’ to bad gin, and that from the island kilt to a pair of
+European trousers. Yet I am far from persuaded that the one is any more
+hurtful than the other; and the unaccustomed race will sometimes die of
+pin-pricks. We are here face to face with one of the difficulties of the
+missionary. In Polynesian islands he easily obtains pre-eminent
+authority; the king becomes his _mairedupalais_; he can proscribe, he can
+command; and the temptation is ever towards too much. Thus (by all
+accounts) the Catholics in Mangareva, and thus (to my own knowledge) the
+Protestants in Hawaii, have rendered life in a more or less degree
+unliveable to their converts. And the mild, uncomplaining creatures
+(like children in a prison) yawn and await death. It is easy to blame
+the missionary. But it is his business to make changes. It is surely
+his business, for example, to prevent war; and yet I have instanced war
+itself as one of the elements of health. On the other hand, it were,
+perhaps, easy for the missionary to proceed more gently, and to regard
+every change as an affair of weight. I take the average missionary; I am
+sure I do him no more than justice when I suppose that he would hesitate
+to bombard a village, even in order to convert an archipelago.
+Experience begins to show us (at least in Polynesian islands) that change
+of habit is bloodier than a bombardment.
+
+There is one point, ere I have done, where I may go to meet criticism. I
+have said nothing of faulty hygiene, bathing during fevers, mistaken
+treatment of children, native doctoring, or abortion—all causes
+frequently adduced. And I have said nothing of them because they are
+conditions common to both epochs, and even more efficient in the past
+than in the present. Was it not the same with unchastity, it may be
+asked? Was not the Polynesian always unchaste? Doubtless he was so
+always: doubtless he is more so since the coming of his remarkably chaste
+visitors from Europe. Take the Hawaiian account of Cook: I have no doubt
+it is entirely fair. Take Krusenstern’s candid, almost innocent,
+description of a Russian man-of-war at the Marquesas; consider the
+disgraceful history of missions in Hawaii itself, where (in the war of
+lust) the American missionaries were once shelled by an English
+adventurer, and once raided and mishandled by the crew of an American
+warship; add the practice of whaling fleets to call at the Marquesas, and
+carry off a complement of women for the cruise; consider, besides, how
+the whites were at first regarded in the light of demi-gods, as appears
+plainly in the reception of Cook upon Hawaii; and again, in the story of
+the discovery of Tutuila, when the really decent women of Samoa
+prostituted themselves in public to the French; and bear in mind how it
+was the custom of the adventurers, and we may almost say the business of
+the missionaries, to deride and infract even the most salutary tapus.
+Here we see every engine of dissolution directed at once against a virtue
+never and nowhere very strong or popular; and the result, even in the
+most degraded islands, has been further degradation. Mr. Lawes, the
+missionary of Savage Island, told me the standard of female chastity had
+declined there since the coming of the whites. In heathen time, if a
+girl gave birth to a bastard, her father or brother would dash the infant
+down the cliffs; and to-day the scandal would be small. Or take the
+Marquesas. Stanislao Moanatini told me that in his own recollection, the
+young were strictly guarded; they were not suffered so much as to look
+upon one another in the street, but passed (so my informant put it) like
+dogs; and the other day the whole school-children of Nuka-hiva and Ua-pu
+escaped in a body to the woods, and lived there for a fortnight in
+promiscuous liberty. Readers of travels may perhaps exclaim at my
+authority, and declare themselves better informed. I should prefer the
+statement of an intelligent native like Stanislao (even if it stood
+alone, which it is far from doing) to the report of the most honest
+traveller. A ship of war comes to a haven, anchors, lands a party,
+receives and returns a visit, and the captain writes a chapter on the
+manners of the island. It is not considered what class is mostly seen.
+Yet we should not be pleased if a Lascar foremast hand were to judge
+England by the ladies who parade Ratcliffe Highway, and the gentlemen who
+share with them their hire. Stanislao’s opinion of a decay of virtue
+even in these unvirtuous islands has been supported to me by others; his
+very example, the progress of dissolution amongst the young, is adduced
+by Mr. Bishop in Hawaii. And so far as Marquesans are concerned, we
+might have hazarded a guess of some decline in manners. I do not think
+that any race could ever have prospered or multiplied with such as now
+obtain; I am sure they would have been never at the pains to count
+paternal kinship. It is not possible to give details; suffice it that
+their manners appear to be imitated from the dreams of ignorant and
+vicious children, and their debauches persevered in until energy, reason,
+and almost life itself are in abeyance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI—CHIEFS AND TAPUS
+
+
+We used to admire exceedingly the bland and gallant manners of the chief
+called Taipi-Kikino. An elegant guest at table, skilled in the use of
+knife and fork, a brave figure when he shouldered a gun and started for
+the woods after wild chickens, always serviceable, always ingratiating
+and gay, I would sometimes wonder where he found his cheerfulness. He
+had enough to sober him, I thought, in his official budget. His
+expenses—for he was always seen attired in virgin white—must have by far
+exceeded his income of six dollars in the year, or say two shillings a
+month. And he was himself a man of no substance; his house the poorest
+in the village. It was currently supposed that his elder brother,
+Kauanui, must have helped him out. But how comes it that the elder
+brother should succeed to the family estate, and be a wealthy commoner,
+and the younger be a poor man, and yet rule as chief in Anaho? That the
+one should be wealthy, and the other almost indigent is probably to be
+explained by some adoption; for comparatively few children are brought up
+in the house or succeed to the estates of their natural begetters. That
+the one should be chief instead of the other must be explained (in a very
+Irish fashion) on the ground that neither of them is a chief at all.
+
+Since the return and the wars of the French, many chiefs have been
+deposed, and many so-called chiefs appointed. We have seen, in the same
+house, one such upstart drinking in the company of two such extruded
+island Bourbons, men, whose word a few years ago was life and death, now
+sunk to be peasants like their neighbours. So when the French overthrew
+hereditary tyrants, dubbed the commons of the Marquesas freeborn citizens
+of the republic, and endowed them with a vote for a _conseiller-général_
+at Tahiti, they probably conceived themselves upon the path to
+popularity; and so far from that, they were revolting public sentiment.
+The deposition of the chiefs was perhaps sometimes needful; the
+appointment of others may have been needful also; it was at least a
+delicate business. The Government of George II. exiled many Highland
+magnates. It never occurred to them to manufacture substitutes; and if
+the French have been more bold, we have yet to see with what success.
+
+Our chief at Anaho was always called, he always called himself,
+Taipi-Kikino; and yet that was not his name, but only the wand of his
+false position. As soon as he was appointed chief, his name—which
+signified, if I remember exactly, _Prince born among flowers_—fell in
+abeyance, and he was dubbed instead by the expressive byword,
+Taipi-Kikino—_Highwater man-of-no-account_—or, Englishing more boldly,
+_Beggar on horseback_—a witty and a wicked cut. A nickname in Polynesia
+destroys almost the memory of the original name. To-day, if we were
+Polynesians, Gladstone would be no more heard of. We should speak of and
+address our Nestor as the Grand Old Man, and it is so that himself would
+sign his correspondence. Not the prevalence, then, but the significancy
+of the nickname is to be noted here. The new authority began with small
+prestige. Taipi has now been some time in office; from all I saw he
+seemed a person very fit. He is not the least unpopular, and yet his
+power is nothing. He is a chief to the French, and goes to breakfast
+with the Resident; but for any practical end of chieftaincy a rag doll
+were equally efficient.
+
+We had been but three days in Anaho when we received the visit of the
+chief of Hatiheu, a man of weight and fame, late leader of a war upon the
+French, late prisoner in Tahiti, and the last eater of long-pig in
+Nuka-hiva. Not many years have elapsed since he was seen striding on the
+beach of Anaho, a dead man’s arm across his shoulder. ‘So does Kooamua
+to his enemies!’ he roared to the passers-by, and took a bite from the
+raw flesh. And now behold this gentleman, very wisely replaced in office
+by the French, paying us a morning visit in European clothes. He was the
+man of the most character we had yet seen: his manners genial and
+decisive, his person tall, his face rugged, astute, formidable, and with
+a certain similarity to Mr. Gladstone’s—only for the brownness of the
+skin, and the high-chief’s tattooing, all one side and much of the other
+being of an even blue. Further acquaintance increased our opinion of his
+sense. He viewed the _Casco_ in a manner then quite new to us, examining
+her lines and the running of the gear; to a piece of knitting on which
+one of the party was engaged, he must have devoted ten minutes’ patient
+study; nor did he desist before he had divined the principles; and he was
+interested even to excitement by a type-writer, which he learned to work.
+When he departed he carried away with him a list of his family, with his
+own name printed by his own hand at the bottom. I should add that he was
+plainly much of a humorist, and not a little of a humbug. He told us,
+for instance, that he was a person of exact sobriety; such being the
+obligation of his high estate: the commons might be sots, but the chief
+could not stoop so low. And not many days after he was to be observed in
+a state of smiling and lop-sided imbecility, the _Casco_ ribbon upside
+down on his dishonoured hat.
+
+But his business that morning in Anaho is what concerns us here. The
+devil-fish, it seems, were growing scarce upon the reef; it was judged
+fit to interpose what we should call a close season; for that end, in
+Polynesia, a tapu (vulgarly spelt ‘taboo’) has to be declared, and who
+was to declare it? Taipi might; he ought; it was a chief part of his
+duty; but would any one regard the inhibition of a Beggar on Horse-back?
+He might plant palm branches: it did not in the least follow that the
+spot was sacred. He might recite the spell: it was shrewdly supposed the
+spirits would not hearken. And so the old, legitimate cannibal must ride
+over the mountains to do it for him; and the respectable official in
+white clothes could but look on and envy. At about the same time, though
+in a different manner, Kooamua established a forest law. It was observed
+the cocoa-palms were suffering, for the plucking of green nuts
+impoverishes and at last endangers the tree. Now Kooamua could tapu the
+reef, which was public property, but he could not tapu other people’s
+palms; and the expedient adopted was interesting. He tapu’d his own
+trees, and his example was imitated over all Hatiheu and Anaho. I fear
+Taipi might have tapu’d all that he possessed and found none to follow
+him. So much for the esteem in which the dignity of an appointed chief
+is held by others; a single circumstance will show what he thinks of it
+himself. I never met one, but he took an early opportunity to explain
+his situation. True, he was only an appointed chief when I beheld him;
+but somewhere else, perhaps upon some other isle, he was a chieftain by
+descent: upon which ground, he asked me (so to say it) to excuse his
+mushroom honours.
+
+It will be observed with surprise that both these tapus are for
+thoroughly sensible ends. With surprise, I say, because the nature of
+that institution is much misunderstood in Europe. It is taken usually in
+the sense of a meaningless or wanton prohibition, such as that which
+to-day prevents women in some countries from smoking, or yesterday
+prevented any one in Scotland from taking a walk on Sunday. The error is
+no less natural than it is unjust. The Polynesians have not been trained
+in the bracing, practical thought of ancient Rome; with them the idea of
+law has not been disengaged from that of morals or propriety; so that
+tapu has to cover the whole field, and implies indifferently that an act
+is criminal, immoral, against sound public policy, unbecoming or (as we
+say) ‘not in good form.’ Many tapus were in consequence absurd enough,
+such as those which deleted words out of the language, and particularly
+those which related to women. Tapu encircled women upon all hands. Many
+things were forbidden to men; to women we may say that few were
+permitted. They must not sit on the paepae; they must not go up to it by
+the stair; they must not eat pork; they must not approach a boat; they
+must not cook at a fire which any male had kindled. The other day, after
+the roads were made, it was observed the women plunged along margin
+through the bush, and when they came to a bridge waded through the water:
+roads and bridges were the work of men’s hands, and tapu for the foot of
+women. Even a man’s saddle, if the man be native, is a thing no
+self-respecting lady dares to use. Thus on the Anaho side of the island,
+only two white men, Mr. Regler and the gendarme, M. Aussel, possess
+saddles; and when a woman has a journey to make she must borrow from one
+or other. It will be noticed that these prohibitions tend, most of them,
+to an increased reserve between the sexes. Regard for female chastity is
+the usual excuse for these disabilities that men delight to lay upon
+their wives and mothers. Here the regard is absent; and behold the women
+still bound hand and foot with meaningless proprieties! The women
+themselves, who are survivors of the old regimen, admit that in those
+days life was not worth living. And yet even then there were exceptions.
+There were female chiefs and (I am assured) priestesses besides; nice
+customs curtseyed to great dames, and in the most sacred enclosure of a
+High Place, Father Siméon Delmar was shown a stone, and told it was the
+throne of some well-descended lady. How exactly parallel is this with
+European practice, when princesses were suffered to penetrate the
+strictest cloister, and women could rule over a land in which they were
+denied the control of their own children.
+
+But the tapu is more often the instrument of wise and needful
+restrictions. We have seen it as the organ of paternal government. It
+serves besides to enforce, in the rare case of some one wishing to
+enforce them, rights of private property. Thus a man, weary of the
+coming and going of Marquesan visitors, tapus his door; and to this day
+you may see the palm-branch signal, even as our great-grandfathers saw
+the peeled wand before a Highland inn. Or take another case. Anaho is
+known as ‘the country without popoi.’ The word popoi serves in different
+islands to indicate the main food of the people: thus, in Hawaii, it
+implies a preparation of taro; in the Marquesas, of breadfruit. And a
+Marquesan does not readily conceive life possible without his favourite
+diet. A few years ago a drought killed the breadfruit trees and the
+bananas in the district of Anaho; and from this calamity, and the
+open-handed customs of the island, a singular state of things arose.
+Well-watered Hatiheu had escaped the drought; every householder of Anaho
+accordingly crossed the pass, chose some one in Hatiheu, ‘gave him his
+name’—an onerous gift, but one not to be rejected—and from this
+improvised relative proceeded to draw his supplies, for all the world as
+though he had paid for them. Hence a continued traffic on the road.
+Some stalwart fellow, in a loin-cloth, and glistening with sweat, may be
+seen at all hours of the day, a stick across his bare shoulders, tripping
+nervously under a double burthen of green fruits. And on the far side of
+the gap a dozen stone posts on the wayside in the shadow of a grove mark
+the breathing-space of the popoi-carriers. A little back from the beach,
+and not half a mile from Anaho, I was the more amazed to find a cluster
+of well-doing breadfruits heavy with their harvest. ‘Why do you not take
+these?’ I asked. ‘Tapu,’ said Hoka; and I thought to myself (after the
+manner of dull travellers) what children and fools these people were to
+toil over the mountain and despoil innocent neighbours when the staff of
+life was thus growing at their door. I was the more in error. In the
+general destruction these surviving trees were enough only for the family
+of the proprietor, and by the simple expedient of declaring a tapu he
+enforced his right.
+
+The sanction of the tapu is superstitious; and the punishment of
+infraction either a wasting or a deadly sickness. A slow disease follows
+on the eating of tapu fish, and can only be cured with the bones of the
+same fish burned with the due mysteries. The cocoa-nut and breadfruit
+tapu works more swiftly. Suppose you have eaten tapu fruit at the
+evening meal, at night your sleep will be uneasy; in the morning,
+swelling and a dark discoloration will have attacked your neck, whence
+they spread upward to the face; and in two days, unless the cure be
+interjected, you must die. This cure is prepared from the rubbed leaves
+of the tree from which the patient stole; so that he cannot be saved
+without confessing to the Tahuku the person whom he wronged. In the
+experience of my informant, almost no tapu had been put in use, except
+the two described: he had thus no opportunity to learn the nature and
+operation of the others; and, as the art of making them was jealously
+guarded amongst the old men, he believed the mystery would soon die out.
+I should add that he was no Marquesan, but a Chinaman, a resident in the
+group from boyhood, and a reverent believer in the spells which he
+described. White men, amongst whom Ah Fu included himself, were exempt;
+but he had a tale of a Tahitian woman, who had come to the Marquesas,
+eaten tapu fish, and, although uninformed of her offence and danger, had
+been afflicted and cured exactly like a native.
+
+Doubtless the belief is strong; doubtless, with this weakly and fanciful
+race, it is in many cases strong enough to kill; it should be strong
+indeed in those who tapu their trees secretly, so that they may detect a
+depredator by his sickness. Or, perhaps, we should understand the idea
+of the hidden tapu otherwise, as a politic device to spread uneasiness
+and extort confessions: so that, when a man is ailing, he shall ransack
+his brain for any possible offence, and send at once for any proprietor
+whose rights he has invaded. ‘Had you hidden a tapu?’ we may conceive
+him asking; and I cannot imagine the proprietor gainsaying it; and this
+is perhaps the strangest feature of the system—that it should be regarded
+from without with such a mental and implicit awe, and, when examined from
+within, should present so many apparent evidences of design.
+
+We read in Dr. Campbell’s _Poenamo_ of a New Zealand girl, who was
+foolishly told that she had eaten a tapu yam, and who instantly sickened,
+and died in the two days of simple terror. The period is the same as in
+the Marquesas; doubtless the symptoms were so too. How singular to
+consider that a superstition of such sway is possibly a manufactured
+article; and that, even if it were not originally invented, its details
+have plainly been arranged by the authorities of some Polynesian Scotland
+Yard. Fitly enough, the belief is to-day—and was probably always—far
+from universal. Hell at home is a strong deterrent with some; a passing
+thought with others; with others, again, a theme of public mockery, not
+always well assured; and so in the Marquesas with the tapu. Mr. Regler
+has seen the two extremes of scepticism and implicit fear. In the tapu
+grove he found one fellow stealing breadfruit, cheerful and impudent as a
+street arab; and it was only on a menace of exposure that he showed
+himself the least discountenanced. The other case was opposed in every
+point. Mr. Regler asked a native to accompany him upon a voyage; the man
+went gladly enough, but suddenly perceiving a dead tapu fish in the
+bottom of the boat, leaped back with a scream; nor could the promise of a
+dollar prevail upon him to advance.
+
+The Marquesan, it will be observed, adheres to the old idea of the local
+circumscription of beliefs and duties. Not only are the whites exempt
+from consequences; but their transgressions seem to be viewed without
+horror. It was Mr. Regler who had killed the fish; yet the devout native
+was not shocked at Mr. Regler—only refused to join him in his boat. A
+white is a white: the servant (so to speak) of other and more liberal
+gods; and not to be blamed if he profit by his liberty. The Jews were
+perhaps the first to interrupt this ancient comity of faiths; and the
+Jewish virus is still strong in Christianity. All the world must respect
+our tapus, or we gnash our teeth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII—HATIHEU
+
+
+The bays of Anaho and Hatiheu are divided at their roots by the
+knife-edge of a single hill—the pass so often mentioned; but this isthmus
+expands to the seaward in a considerable peninsula: very bare and grassy;
+haunted by sheep and, at night and morning, by the piercing cries of the
+shepherds; wandered over by a few wild goats; and on its sea-front
+indented with long, clamorous caves, and faced with cliffs of the colour
+and ruinous outline of an old peat-stack. In one of these echoing and
+sunless gullies we saw, clustered like sea-birds on a splashing ledge,
+shrill as sea-birds in their salutation to the passing boat, a group of
+fisherwomen, stripped to their gaudy under-clothes. (The clash of the
+surf and the thin female voices echo in my memory.) We had that day a
+native crew and steersman, Kauanui; it was our first experience of
+Polynesian seamanship, which consists in hugging every point of land.
+There is no thought in this of saving time, for they will pull a long way
+in to skirt a point that is embayed. It seems that, as they can never
+get their houses near enough the surf upon the one side, so they can
+never get their boats near enough upon the other. The practice in bold
+water is not so dangerous as it looks—the reflex from the rocks sending
+the boat off. Near beaches with a heavy run of sea, I continue to think
+it very hazardous, and find the composure of the natives annoying to
+behold. We took unmingled pleasure, on the way out, to see so near at
+hand the beach and the wonderful colours of the surf. On the way back,
+when the sea had risen and was running strong against us, the fineness of
+the steersman’s aim grew more embarrassing. As we came abreast of the
+sea-front, where the surf broke highest, Kauanui embraced the occasion to
+light his pipe, which then made the circuit of the boat—each man taking a
+whiff or two, and, ere he passed it on, filling his lungs and cheeks with
+smoke. Their faces were all puffed out like apples as we came abreast of
+the cliff foot, and the bursting surge fell back into the boat in
+showers. At the next point ‘cocanetti’ was the word, and the stroke
+borrowed my knife, and desisted from his labours to open nuts. These
+untimely indulgences may be compared to the tot of grog served out before
+a ship goes into action.
+
+My purpose in this visit led me first to the boys’ school, for Hatiheu is
+the university of the north islands. The hum of the lesson came out to
+meet us. Close by the door, where the draught blew coolest, sat the lay
+brother; around him, in a packed half-circle, some sixty high-coloured
+faces set with staring eyes; and in the background of the barn-like room
+benches were to be seen, and blackboards with sums on them in chalk. The
+brother rose to greet us, sensibly humble. Thirty years he had been
+there, he said, and fingered his white locks as a bashful child pulls out
+his pinafore. ‘_Et point de résultats_, _monsieur_, _presque pas de
+résultats_.’ He pointed to the scholars: ‘You see, sir, all the youth of
+Nuka-hiva and Ua-pu. Between the ages of six and fifteen this is all
+that remains; and it is but a few years since we had a hundred and twenty
+from Nuka-hiva alone. _Oui_, _monsieur_, _cela se dépérit_.’ Prayers,
+and reading and writing, prayers again and arithmetic, and more prayers
+to conclude: such appeared to be the dreary nature of the course. For
+arithmetic all island people have a natural taste. In Hawaii they make
+good progress in mathematics. In one of the villages on Majuro, and
+generally in the Marshall group, the whole population sit about the
+trader when he is weighing copra, and each on his own slate takes down
+the figures and computes the total. The trader, finding them so apt,
+introduced fractions, for which they had been taught no rule. At first
+they were quite gravelled but ultimately, by sheer hard thinking,
+reasoned out the result, and came one after another to assure the trader
+he was right. Not many people in Europe could have done the like. The
+course at Hatiheu is therefore less dispiriting to Polynesians than a
+stranger might have guessed; and yet how bald it is at best! I asked the
+brother if he did not tell them stories, and he stared at me; if he did
+not teach them history, and he said, ‘O yes, they had a little Scripture
+history—from the New Testament’; and repeated his lamentations over the
+lack of results. I had not the heart to put more questions; I could but
+say it must be very discouraging, and resist the impulse to add that it
+seemed also very natural. He looked up—‘My days are far spent,’ he said;
+‘heaven awaits me.’ May that heaven forgive me, but I was angry with the
+old man and his simple consolation. For think of his opportunity! The
+youth, from six to fifteen, are taken from their homes by Government,
+centralised at Hatiheu, where they are supported by a weekly tax of food;
+and, with the exception of one month in every year, surrendered wholly to
+the direction of the priests. Since the escapade already mentioned the
+holiday occurs at a different period for the girls and for the boys; so
+that a Marquesan brother and sister meet again, after their education is
+complete, a pair of strangers. It is a harsh law, and highly unpopular;
+but what a power it places in the hands of the instructors, and how
+languidly and dully is that power employed by the mission! Too much
+concern to make the natives pious, a design in which they all confess
+defeat, is, I suppose, the explanation of their miserable system. But
+they might see in the girls’ school at Tai-o-hae, under the brisk,
+housewifely sisters, a different picture of efficiency, and a scene of
+neatness, airiness, and spirited and mirthful occupation that should
+shame them into cheerier methods. The sisters themselves lament their
+failure. They complain the annual holiday undoes the whole year’s work;
+they complain particularly of the heartless indifference of the girls.
+Out of so many pretty and apparently affectionate pupils whom they have
+taught and reared, only two have ever returned to pay a visit of
+remembrance to their teachers. These, indeed, come regularly, but the
+rest, so soon as their school-days are over, disappear into the woods
+like captive insects. It is hard to imagine anything more discouraging;
+and yet I do not believe these ladies need despair. For a certain
+interval they keep the girls alive and innocently busy; and if it be at
+all possible to save the race, this would be the means. No such praise
+can be given to the boys’ school at Hatiheu. The day is numbered already
+for them all; alike for the teacher and the scholars death is girt; he is
+afoot upon the march; and in the frequent interval they sit and yawn.
+But in life there seems a thread of purpose through the least
+significant; the drowsiest endeavour is not lost, and even the school at
+Hatiheu may be more useful than it seems.
+
+Hatiheu is a place of some pretensions. The end of the bay towards Anaho
+may be called the civil compound, for it boasts the house of Kooamua, and
+close on the beach, under a great tree, that of the gendarme, M. Armand
+Aussel, with his garden, his pictures, his books, and his excellent
+table, to which strangers are made welcome. No more singular contrast is
+possible than between the gendarmerie and the priesthood, who are besides
+in smouldering opposition and full of mutual complaints. A priest’s
+kitchen in the eastern islands is a depressing spot to see; and many, or
+most of them, make no attempt to keep a garden, sparsely subsisting on
+their rations. But you will never dine with a gendarme without smacking
+your lips; and M. Aussel’s home-made sausage and the salad from his
+garden are unforgotten delicacies. Pierre Loti may like to know that he
+is M. Aussel’s favourite author, and that his books are read in the fit
+scenery of Hatiheu bay.
+
+The other end is all religious. It is here that an overhanging and
+tip-tilted horn, a good sea-mark for Hatiheu, bursts naked from the
+verdure of the climbing forest, and breaks down shoreward in steep
+taluses and cliffs. From the edge of one of the highest, perhaps seven
+hundred or a thousand feet above the beach, a Virgin looks
+insignificantly down, like a poor lost doll, forgotten there by a giant
+child. This laborious symbol of the Catholics is always strange to
+Protestants; we conceive with wonder that men should think it worth while
+to toil so many days, and clamber so much about the face of precipices,
+for an end that makes us smile; and yet I believe it was the wise Bishop
+Dordillon who chose the place, and I know that those who had a hand in
+the enterprise look back with pride upon its vanquished dangers. The
+boys’ school is a recent importation; it was at first in Tai-o-hae,
+beside the girls’; and it was only of late, after their joint escapade,
+that the width of the island was interposed between the sexes. But
+Hatiheu must have been a place of missionary importance from before.
+About midway of the beach no less than three churches stand grouped in a
+patch of bananas, intermingled with some pine-apples. Two are of wood:
+the original church, now in disuse; and a second that, for some
+mysterious reason, has never been used. The new church is of stone, with
+twin towers, walls flangeing into buttresses, and sculptured front. The
+design itself is good, simple, and shapely; but the character is all in
+the detail, where the architect has bloomed into the sculptor. It is
+impossible to tell in words of the angels (although they are more like
+winged archbishops) that stand guard upon the door, of the cherubs in the
+corners, of the scapegoat gargoyles, or the quaint and spirited relief,
+where St. Michael (the artist’s patron) makes short work of a protesting
+Lucifer. We were never weary of viewing the imagery, so innocent,
+sometimes so funny, and yet in the best sense—in the sense of inventive
+gusto and expression—so artistic. I know not whether it was more strange
+to find a building of such merit in a corner of a barbarous isle, or to
+see a building so antique still bright with novelty. The architect, a
+French lay brother, still alive and well, and meditating fresh
+foundations, must have surely drawn his descent from a master-builder in
+the age of the cathedrals; and it was in looking on the church of Hatiheu
+that I seemed to perceive the secret charm of mediæval sculpture; that
+combination of the childish courage of the amateur, attempting all
+things, like the schoolboy on his slate, with the manly perseverance of
+the artist who does not know when he is conquered.
+
+I had always afterwards a strong wish to meet the architect, Brother
+Michel; and one day, when I was talking with the Resident in Tai-o-hae
+(the chief port of the island), there were shown in to us an old, worn,
+purblind, ascetic-looking priest, and a lay brother, a type of all that
+is most sound in France, with a broad, clever, honest, humorous
+countenance, an eye very large and bright, and a strong and healthy body
+inclining to obesity. But that his blouse was black and his face shaven
+clean, you might pick such a man to-day, toiling cheerfully in his own
+patch of vines, from half a dozen provinces of France; and yet he had
+always for me a haunting resemblance to an old kind friend of my boyhood,
+whom I name in case any of my readers should share with me that
+memory—Dr. Paul, of the West Kirk. Almost at the first word I was sure
+it was my architect, and in a moment we were deep in a discussion of
+Hatiheu church. Brother Michel spoke always of his labours with a
+twinkle of humour, underlying which it was possible to spy a serious
+pride, and the change from one to another was often very human and
+diverting. ‘_Et vos gargouilles moyen-âge_,’ cried I; ‘_comme elles sont
+originates_!’ ‘_N’est-ce pas_? _Elles sont bien drôles_!’ he said,
+smiling broadly; and the next moment, with a sudden gravity: ‘_Cependant
+il y en a une qui a une patte de cassé_; _il faut que je voie cela_.’ I
+asked if he had any model—a point we much discussed. ‘_Non_,’ said he
+simply; ‘_c’est une église idéale_.’ The relievo was his favourite
+performance, and very justly so. The angels at the door, he owned, he
+would like to destroy and replace. ‘_Ils n’ont pas de vie_, _ils
+manquent de vie_. _Vous devriez voir mon église à la Dominique_; _j’ai
+là une Vierge qui est vraiment gentille_.’ ‘Ah,’ I cried, ‘they told me
+you had said you would never build another church, and I wrote in my
+journal I could not believe it.’ ‘_Oui_, _j’aimerais bien en fairs une
+autre_,’ he confessed, and smiled at the confession. An artist will
+understand how much I was attracted by this conversation. There is no
+bond so near as a community in that unaffected interest and slightly
+shame-faced pride which mark the intelligent man enamoured of an art. He
+sees the limitations of his aim, the defects of his practice; he smiles
+to be so employed upon the shores of death, yet sees in his own devotion
+something worthy. Artists, if they had the same sense of humour with the
+Augurs, would smile like them on meeting, but the smile would not be
+scornful.
+
+I had occasion to see much of this excellent man. He sailed with us from
+Tai-o-hae to Hiva-oa, a dead beat of ninety miles against a heavy sea.
+It was what is called a good passage, and a feather in the _Casco’s_ cap;
+but among the most miserable forty hours that any one of us had ever
+passed. We were swung and tossed together all that time like shot in a
+stage thunder-box. The mate was thrown down and had his head cut open;
+the captain was sick on deck; the cook sick in the galley. Of all our
+party only two sat down to dinner. I was one. I own that I felt
+wretchedly; and I can only say of the other, who professed to feel quite
+well, that she fled at an early moment from the table. It was in these
+circumstances that we skirted the windward shore of that indescribable
+island of Ua-pu; viewing with dizzy eyes the coves, the capes, the
+breakers, the climbing forests, and the inaccessible stone needles that
+surmount the mountains. The place persists, in a dark corner of our
+memories, like a piece of the scenery of nightmares. The end of this
+distressful passage, where we were to land our passengers, was in a
+similar vein of roughness. The surf ran high on the beach at Taahauku;
+the boat broached-to and capsized; and all hands were submerged. Only
+the brother himself, who was well used to the experience, skipped ashore,
+by some miracle of agility, with scarce a sprinkling. Thenceforward,
+during our stay at Hiva-oa, he was our cicerone and patron; introducing
+us, taking us excursions, serving us in every way, and making himself
+daily more beloved.
+
+Michel Blanc had been a carpenter by trade; had made money and retired,
+supposing his active days quite over; and it was only when he found
+idleness dangerous that he placed his capital and acquirements at the
+service of the mission. He became their carpenter, mason, architect, and
+engineer; added sculpture to his accomplishments, and was famous for his
+skill in gardening. He wore an enviable air of having found a port from
+life’s contentions and lying there strongly anchored; went about his
+business with a jolly simplicity; complained of no lack of
+results—perhaps shyly thinking his own statuary result enough; and was
+altogether a pattern of the missionary layman.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII—THE PORT OF ENTRY
+
+
+The port—the mart, the civil and religious capital of these rude
+islands—is called Tai-o-hae, and lies strung along the beach of a
+precipitous green bay in Nuka-hiva. It was midwinter when we came
+thither, and the weather was sultry, boisterous, and inconstant. Now the
+wind blew squally from the land down gaps of splintered precipice; now,
+between the sentinel islets of the entry, it came in gusts from seaward.
+Heavy and dark clouds impended on the summits; the rain roared and
+ceased; the scuppers of the mountain gushed; and the next day we would
+see the sides of the amphitheatre bearded with white falls. Along the
+beach the town shows a thin file of houses, mostly white, and all
+ensconced in the foliage of an avenue of green puraos; a pier gives
+access from the sea across the belt of breakers; to the eastward there
+stands, on a projecting bushy hill, the old fort which is now the
+calaboose, or prison; eastward still, alone in a garden, the Residency
+flies the colours of France. Just off Calaboose Hill, the tiny
+Government schooner rides almost permanently at anchor, marks eight bells
+in the morning (there or thereabout) with the unfurling of her flag, and
+salutes the setting sun with the report of a musket.
+
+Here dwell together, and share the comforts of a club (which may be
+enumerated as a billiard-board, absinthe, a map of the world on
+Mercator’s projection, and one of the most agreeable verandahs in the
+tropics), a handful of whites of varying nationality, mostly French
+officials, German and Scottish merchant clerks, and the agents of the
+opium monopoly. There are besides three tavern-keepers, the shrewd Scot
+who runs the cotton gin-mill, two white ladies, and a sprinkling of
+people ‘on the beach’—a South Sea expression for which there is no exact
+equivalent. It is a pleasant society, and a hospitable. But one man,
+who was often to be seen seated on the logs at the pier-head, merits a
+word for the singularity of his history and appearance. Long ago, it
+seems, he fell in love with a native lady, a High Chiefess in Ua-pu.
+She, on being approached, declared she could never marry a man who was
+untattooed; it looked so naked; whereupon, with some greatness of soul,
+our hero put himself in the hands of the Tahukus, and, with still
+greater, persevered until the process was complete. He had certainly to
+bear a great expense, for the Tahuku will not work without reward; and
+certainly exquisite pain. Kooamua, high chief as he was, and one of the
+old school, was only part tattooed; he could not, he told us with lively
+pantomime, endure the torture to an end. Our enamoured countryman was
+more resolved; he was tattooed from head to foot in the most approved
+methods of the art; and at last presented himself before his mistress a
+new man. The fickle fair one could never behold him from that day except
+with laughter. For my part, I could never see the man without a kind of
+admiration; of him it might be said, if ever of any, that he had loved
+not wisely, but too well.
+
+The Residency stands by itself, Calaboose Hill screening it from the
+fringe of town along the further bay. The house is commodious, with wide
+verandahs; all day it stands open, back and front, and the trade blows
+copiously over its bare floors. On a week-day the garden offers a scene
+of most untropical animation, half a dozen convicts toiling there
+cheerfully with spade and barrow, and touching hats and smiling to the
+visitor like old attached family servants. On Sunday these are gone, and
+nothing to be seen but dogs of all ranks and sizes peacefully slumbering
+in the shady grounds; for the dogs of Tai-o-hae are very courtly-minded,
+and make the seat of Government their promenade and place of siesta. In
+front and beyond, a strip of green down loses itself in a low wood of
+many species of acacia; and deep in the wood a ruinous wall encloses the
+cemetery of the Europeans. English and Scottish sleep there, and
+Scandinavians, and French _maîtres de manœuvres_ and _maîtres ouvriers_:
+mingling alien dust. Back in the woods, perhaps, the blackbird, or (as
+they call him there) the island nightingale, will be singing home
+strains; and the ceaseless requiem of the surf hangs on the ear. I have
+never seen a resting-place more quiet; but it was a long thought how far
+these sleepers had all travelled, and from what diverse homes they had
+set forth, to lie here in the end together.
+
+On the summit of its promontory hill, the calaboose stands all day with
+doors and window-shutters open to the trade. On my first visit a dog was
+the only guardian visible. He, indeed, rose with an attitude so menacing
+that I was glad to lay hands on an old barrel-hoop; and I think the
+weapon must have been familiar, for the champion instantly retreated, and
+as I wandered round the court and through the building, I could see him,
+with a couple of companions, humbly dodging me about the corners. The
+prisoners’ dormitory was a spacious, airy room, devoid of any furniture;
+its whitewashed walls covered with inscriptions in Marquesan and rude
+drawings: one of the pier, not badly done; one of a murder; several of
+French soldiers in uniform. There was one legend in French: ‘_Je n’est_’
+(sic) ‘_pas le sou_.’ From this noontide quietude it must not be
+supposed the prison was untenanted; the calaboose at Tai-o-hae does a
+good business. But some of its occupants were gardening at the
+Residency, and the rest were probably at work upon the streets, as free
+as our scavengers at home, although not so industrious. On the approach
+of evening they would be called in like children from play; and the
+harbour-master (who is also the jailer) would go through the form of
+locking them up until six the next morning. Should a prisoner have any
+call in town, whether of pleasure or affairs, he has but to unhook the
+window-shutters; and if he is back again, and the shutter decently
+replaced, by the hour of call on the morrow, he may have met the
+harbour-master in the avenue, and there will be no complaint, far less
+any punishment. But this is not all. The charming French Resident, M.
+Delaruelle, carried me one day to the calaboose on an official visit. In
+the green court, a very ragged gentleman, his legs deformed with the
+island elephantiasis, saluted us smiling. ‘One of our political
+prisoners—an insurgent from Raiatea,’ said the Resident; and then to the
+jailer: ‘I thought I had ordered him a new pair of trousers.’ Meanwhile
+no other convict was to be seen—‘_Eh bien_,’ said the Resident, ‘_où sont
+vos prisonniers_?’ ‘_Monsieur le Résident_,’ replied the jailer,
+saluting with soldierly formality, ‘_comme c’est jour de fête_, _je les
+ai laissé aller à la chasse_.’ They were all upon the mountains hunting
+goats! Presently we came to the quarters of the women, likewise
+deserted—‘_Où sont vos bonnes femmes_?’ asked the Resident; and the
+jailer cheerfully responded: ‘_Je crois_, _Monsieur le Résident_,
+_qu’elles sont allées quelquepart faire une visite_.’ It had been the
+design of M. Delaruelle, who was much in love with the whimsicalities of
+his small realm, to elicit something comical; but not even he expected
+anything so perfect as the last. To complete the picture of convict life
+in Tai-o-hae, it remains to be added that these criminals draw a salary
+as regularly as the President of the Republic. Ten sous a day is their
+hire. Thus they have money, food, shelter, clothing, and, I was about to
+write, their liberty. The French are certainly a good-natured people,
+and make easy masters. They are besides inclined to view the Marquesans
+with an eye of humorous indulgence. ‘They are dying, poor devils!’ said
+M. Delaruelle: ‘the main thing is to let them die in peace.’ And it was
+not only well said, but I believe expressed the general thought. Yet
+there is another element to be considered; for these convicts are not
+merely useful, they are almost essential to the French existence. With a
+people incurably idle, dispirited by what can only be called endemic
+pestilence, and inflamed with ill-feeling against their new masters,
+crime and convict labour are a godsend to the Government.
+
+Theft is practically the sole crime. Originally petty pilferers, the men
+of Tai-o-hae now begin to force locks and attack strong-boxes. Hundreds
+of dollars have been taken at a time; though, with that redeeming
+moderation so common in Polynesian theft, the Marquesan burglar will
+always take a part and leave a part, sharing (so to speak) with the
+proprietor. If it be Chilian coin—the island currency—he will escape; if
+the sum is in gold, French silver, or bank-notes, the police wait until
+the money begins to come in circulation, and then easily pick out their
+man. And now comes the shameful part. In plain English, the prisoner is
+tortured until he confesses and (if that be possible) restores the money.
+To keep him alone, day and night, in the black hole, is to inflict on the
+Marquesan torture inexpressible. Even his robberies are carried on in
+the plain daylight, under the open sky, with the stimulus of enterprise,
+and the countenance of an accomplice; his terror of the dark is still
+insurmountable; conceive, then, what he endures in his solitary dungeon;
+conceive how he longs to confess, become a full-fledged convict, and be
+allowed to sleep beside his comrades. While we were in Tai-o-hae a thief
+was under prevention. He had entered a house about eight in the morning,
+forced a trunk, and stolen eleven hundred francs; and now, under the
+horrors of darkness, solitude, and a bedevilled cannibal imagination, he
+was reluctantly confessing and giving up his spoil. From one cache,
+which he had already pointed out, three hundred francs had been
+recovered, and it was expected that he would presently disgorge the rest.
+This would be ugly enough if it were all; but I am bound to say, because
+it is a matter the French should set at rest, that worse is continually
+hinted. I heard that one man was kept six days with his arms bound
+backward round a barrel; and it is the universal report that every
+gendarme in the South Seas is equipped with something in the nature of a
+thumbscrew. I do not know this. I never had the face to ask any of the
+gendarmes—pleasant, intelligent, and kindly fellows—with whom I have been
+intimate, and whose hospitality I have enjoyed; and perhaps the tale
+reposes (as I hope it does) on a misconstruction of that ingenious
+cat’s-cradle with which the French agent of police so readily secures a
+prisoner. But whether physical or moral, torture is certainly employed;
+and by a barbarous injustice, the state of accusation (in which a man may
+very well be innocently placed) is positively painful; the state of
+conviction (in which all are supposed guilty) is comparatively free, and
+positively pleasant. Perhaps worse still,—not only the accused, but
+sometimes his wife, his mistress, or his friend, is subjected to the same
+hardships. I was admiring, in the tapu system, the ingenuity of native
+methods of detection; there is not much to admire in those of the French,
+and to lock up a timid child in a dark room, and, if he proved obstinate,
+lock up his sister in the next, is neither novel nor humane.
+
+The main occasion of these thefts is the new vice of opium-eating. ‘Here
+nobody ever works, and all eat opium,’ said a gendarme; and Ah Fu knew a
+woman who ate a dollar’s worth in a day. The successful thief will give
+a handful of money to each of his friends, a dress to a woman, pass an
+evening in one of the taverns of Tai-o-hae, during which he treats all
+comers, produce a big lump of opium, and retire to the bush to eat and
+sleep it off. A trader, who did not sell opium, confessed to me that he
+was at his wit’s end. ‘I do not sell it, but others do,’ said he. ‘The
+natives only work to buy it; if they walk over to me to sell their
+cotton, they have just to walk over to some one else to buy their opium
+with my money. And why should they be at the bother of two walks? There
+is no use talking,’ he added—‘opium is the currency of this country.’
+
+The man under prevention during my stay at Tai-o-hae lost patience while
+the Chinese opium-seller was being examined in his presence. ‘Of course
+he sold me opium!’ he broke out; ‘all the Chinese here sell opium. It
+was only to buy opium that I stole; it is only to buy opium that anybody
+steals. And what you ought to do is to let no opium come here, and no
+Chinamen.’ This is precisely what is done in Samoa by a native
+Government; but the French have bound their own hands, and for forty
+thousand francs sold native subjects to crime and death. This horrid
+traffic may be said to have sprung up by accident. It was Captain Hart
+who had the misfortune to be the means of beginning it, at a time when
+his plantations flourished in the Marquesas, and he found a difficulty in
+keeping Chinese coolies. To-day the plantations are practically deserted
+and the Chinese gone; but in the meanwhile the natives have learned the
+vice, the patent brings in a round sum, and the needy Government at
+Papeete shut their eyes and open their pockets. Of course, the patentee
+is supposed to sell to Chinamen alone; equally of course, no one could
+afford to pay forty thousand francs for the privilege of supplying a
+scattered handful of Chinese; and every one knows the truth, and all are
+ashamed of it. French officials shake their heads when opium is
+mentioned; and the agents of the farmer blush for their employment.
+Those that live in glass houses should not throw stones; as a subject of
+the British crown, I am an unwilling shareholder in the largest opium
+business under heaven. But the British case is highly complicated; it
+implies the livelihood of millions; and must be reformed, when it can be
+reformed at all, with prudence. This French business, on the other hand,
+is a nostrum and a mere excrescence. No native industry was to be
+encouraged: the poison is solemnly imported. No native habit was to be
+considered: the vice has been gratuitously introduced. And no creature
+profits, save the Government at Papeete—the not very enviable gentlemen
+who pay them, and the Chinese underlings who do the dirty work.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX—THE HOUSE OF TEMOANA
+
+
+The history of the Marquesas is, of late years, much confused by the
+coming and going of the French. At least twice they have seized the
+archipelago, at least once deserted it; and in the meanwhile the natives
+pursued almost without interruption their desultory cannibal wars.
+Through these events and changing dynasties, a single considerable figure
+may be seen to move: that of the high chief, a king, Temoana. Odds and
+ends of his history came to my ears: how he was at first a convert to the
+Protestant mission; how he was kidnapped or exiled from his native land,
+served as cook aboard a whaler, and was shown, for small charge, in
+English seaports; how he returned at last to the Marquesas, fell under
+the strong and benign influence of the late bishop, extended his
+influence in the group, was for a while joint ruler with the prelate, and
+died at last the chief supporter of Catholicism and the French. His
+widow remains in receipt of two pounds a month from the French
+Government. Queen she is usually called, but in the official almanac she
+figures as ‘_Madame Vaekehu_, _Grande Chefesse_.’ His son (natural or
+adoptive, I know not which), Stanislao Moanatini, chief of Akaui, serves
+in Tai-o-hae as a kind of Minister of Public Works; and the daughter of
+Stanislao is High Chiefess of the southern island of Tauata. These,
+then, are the greatest folk of the archipelago; we thought them also the
+most estimable. This is the rule in Polynesia, with few exceptions; the
+higher the family, the better the man—better in sense, better in manners,
+and usually taller and stronger in body. A stranger advances blindfold.
+He scrapes acquaintance as he can. Save the tattoo in the Marquesas,
+nothing indicates the difference of rank; and yet almost invariably we
+found, after we had made them, that our friends were persons of station.
+I have said ‘usually taller and stronger.’ I might have been more
+absolute,—over all Polynesia, and a part of Micronesia, the rule holds
+good; the great ones of the isle, and even of the village, are greater of
+bone and muscle, and often heavier of flesh, than any commoner. The
+usual explanation—that the high-born child is more industriously
+shampooed, is probably the true one. In New Caledonia, at least, where
+the difference does not exist, has never been remarked, the practice of
+shampooing seems to be itself unknown. Doctors would be well employed in
+a study of the point.
+
+Vaekehu lives at the other end of the town from the Residency, beyond the
+buildings of the mission. Her house is on the European plan: a table in
+the midst of the chief room; photographs and religious pictures on the
+wall. It commands to either hand a charming vista: through the front
+door, a peep of green lawn, scurrying pigs, the pendent fans of the
+coco-palm and splendour of the bursting surf: through the back, mounting
+forest glades and coronals of precipice. Here, in the strong
+thorough-draught, Her Majesty received us in a simple gown of print, and
+with no mark of royalty but the exquisite finish of her tattooed mittens,
+the elaboration of her manners, and the gentle falsetto in which all the
+highly refined among Marquesan ladies (and Vaekehu above all others)
+delight to sing their language. An adopted daughter interpreted, while
+we gave the news, and rehearsed by name our friends of Anaho. As we
+talked, we could see, through the landward door, another lady of the
+household at her toilet under the green trees; who presently, when her
+hair was arranged, and her hat wreathed with flowers, appeared upon the
+back verandah with gracious salutations.
+
+Vaekehu is very deaf; ‘_merci_’ is her only word of French; and I do not
+know that she seemed clever. An exquisite, kind refinement, with a shade
+of quietism, gathered perhaps from the nuns, was what chiefly struck us.
+Or rather, upon that first occasion, we were conscious of a sense as of
+district-visiting on our part, and reduced evangelical gentility on the
+part of our hostess. The other impression followed after she was more at
+ease, and came with Stanislao and his little girl to dine on board the
+_Casco_. She had dressed for the occasion: wore white, which very well
+became her strong brown face; and sat among us, eating or smoking her
+cigarette, quite cut off from all society, or only now and then included
+through the intermediary of her son. It was a position that might have
+been ridiculous, and she made it ornamental; making believe to hear and
+to be entertained; her face, whenever she met our eyes, lighting with the
+smile of good society; her contributions to the talk, when she made any,
+and that was seldom, always complimentary and pleasing. No attention was
+paid to the child, for instance, but what she remarked and thanked us
+for. Her parting with each, when she came to leave, was gracious and
+pretty, as had been every step of her behaviour. When Mrs. Stevenson
+held out her hand to say good-bye, Vaekehu took it, held it, and a moment
+smiled upon her; dropped it, and then, as upon a kindly after-thought,
+and with a sort of warmth of condescension, held out both hands and
+kissed my wife upon both cheeks. Given the same relation of years and of
+rank, the thing would have been so done on the boards of the _Comédie
+Française_; just so might Madame Brohan have warmed and condescended to
+Madame Broisat in the _Marquis de Villemer_. It was my part to accompany
+our guests ashore: when I kissed the little girl good-bye at the pier
+steps, Vaekehu gave a cry of gratification, reached down her hand into
+the boat, took mine, and pressed it with that flattering softness which
+seems the coquetry of the old lady in every quarter of the earth. The
+next moment she had taken Stanislao’s arm, and they moved off along the
+pier in the moonlight, leaving me bewildered. This was a queen of
+cannibals; she was tattooed from hand to foot, and perhaps the greatest
+masterpiece of that art now extant, so that a while ago, before she was
+grown prim, her leg was one of the sights of Tai-o-hae; she had been
+passed from chief to chief; she had been fought for and taken in war;
+perhaps, being so great a lady, she had sat on the high place, and
+throned it there, alone of her sex, while the drums were going twenty
+strong and the priests carried up the blood-stained baskets of long-pig.
+And now behold her, out of that past of violence and sickening feasts,
+step forth, in her age, a quiet, smooth, elaborate old lady, such as you
+might find at home (mittened also, but not often so well-mannered) in a
+score of country houses. Only Vaekehu’s mittens were of dye, not of
+silk; and they had been paid for, not in money, but the cooked flesh of
+men. It came in my mind with a clap, what she could think of it herself,
+and whether at heart, perhaps, she might not regret and aspire after the
+barbarous and stirring past. But when I asked Stanislao—‘Ah!’ said he,
+‘she is content; she is religious, she passes all her days with the
+sisters.’
+
+Stanislao (Stanislaos, with the final consonant evaded after the
+Polynesian habit) was sent by Bishop Dordillon to South America, and
+there educated by the fathers. His French is fluent, his talk sensible
+and spirited, and in his capacity of ganger-in-chief, he is of excellent
+service to the French. With the prestige of his name and family, and
+with the stick when needful, he keeps the natives working and the roads
+passable. Without Stanislao and the convicts, I am in doubt what would
+become of the present regimen in Nuka-hiva; whether the highways might
+not be suffered to close up, the pier to wash away, and the Residency to
+fall piecemeal about the ears of impotent officials. And yet though the
+hereditary favourer, and one of the chief props of French authority, he
+has always an eye upon the past. He showed me where the old public place
+had stood, still to be traced by random piles of stone; told me how great
+and fine it was, and surrounded on all sides by populous houses, whence,
+at the beating of the drums, the folk crowded to make holiday. The
+drum-beat of the Polynesian has a strange and gloomy stimulation for the
+nerves of all. White persons feel it—at these precipitate sounds their
+hearts beat faster; and, according to old residents, its effect on the
+natives was extreme. Bishop Dordillon might entreat; Temoana himself
+command and threaten; at the note of the drum wild instincts triumphed.
+And now it might beat upon these ruins, and who should assemble? The
+houses are down, the people dead, their lineage extinct; and the
+sweepings and fugitives of distant bays and islands encamp upon their
+graves. The decline of the dance Stanislao especially laments. ‘_Chaque
+pays a ses coutumes_,’ said he; but in the report of any gendarme,
+perhaps corruptly eager to increase the number of _délits_ and the
+instruments of his own power, custom after custom is placed on the
+expurgatorial index. ‘_Tenez_, _une danse qui n’est pas permise_,’ said
+Stanislao: ‘_je ne sais pas pourquoi_, _elle est très jolie_, _elle va
+comme ça_,’ and sticking his umbrella upright in the road, he sketched
+the steps and gestures. All his criticisms of the present, all his
+regrets for the past, struck me as temperate and sensible. The short
+term of office of the Resident he thought the chief defect of the
+administration; that officer having scarce begun to be efficient ere he
+was recalled. I thought I gathered, too, that he regarded with some fear
+the coming change from a naval to a civil governor. I am sure at least
+that I regard it so myself; for the civil servants of France have never
+appeared to any foreigner as at all the flower of their country, while
+her naval officers may challenge competition with the world. In all his
+talk, Stanislao was particular to speak of his own country as a land of
+savages; and when he stated an opinion of his own, it was with some
+apologetic preface, alleging that he was ‘a savage who had travelled.’
+There was a deal, in this elaborate modesty, of honest pride. Yet there
+was something in the precaution that saddened me; and I could not but
+fear he was only forestalling a taunt that he had heard too often.
+
+I recall with interest two interviews with Stanislao. The first was a
+certain afternoon of tropic rain, which we passed together in the
+verandah of the club; talking at times with heightened voices as the
+showers redoubled overhead, passing at times into the billiard-room, to
+consult, in the dim, cloudy daylight, that map of the world which forms
+its chief adornment. He was naturally ignorant of English history, so
+that I had much of news to communicate. The story of Gordon I told him
+in full, and many episodes of the Indian Mutiny, Lucknow, the second
+battle of Cawn-pore, the relief of Arrah, the death of poor
+Spottis-woode, and Sir Hugh Rose’s hotspur, midland campaign. He was
+intent to hear; his brown face, strongly marked with small-pox, kindled
+and changed with each vicissitude. His eyes glowed with the reflected
+light of battle; his questions were many and intelligent, and it was
+chiefly these that sent us so often to the map. But it is of our parting
+that I keep the strongest sense. We were to sail on the morrow, and the
+night had fallen, dark, gusty, and rainy, when we stumbled up the hill to
+bid farewell to Stanislao. He had already loaded us with gifts; but more
+were waiting. We sat about the table over cigars and green cocoa-nuts;
+claps of wind blew through the house and extinguished the lamp, which was
+always instantly relighted with a single match; and these recurrent
+intervals of darkness were felt as a relief. For there was something
+painful and embarrassing in the kindness of that separation. ‘_Ah_,
+_vous devriez rester ici_, _mon cher ami_!’ cried Stanislao. ‘_Vous êtes
+les gens qu’il faut pour les Kanaques_; _vous êtes doux_, _vous et votre
+famille_; _vous seriez obéis dans toutes les îles_.’ We had been civil;
+not always that, my conscience told me, and never anything beyond; and
+all this to-do is a measure, not of our considerateness, but of the want
+of it in others. The rest of the evening, on to Vaekehu’s and back as
+far as to the pier, Stanislao walked with my arm and sheltered me with
+his umbrella; and after the boat had put off, we could still distinguish,
+in the murky darkness, his gestures of farewell. His words, if there
+were any, were drowned by the rain and the loud surf.
+
+I have mentioned presents, a vexed question in the South Seas; and one
+which well illustrates the common, ignorant habit of regarding races in a
+lump. In many quarters the Polynesian gives only to receive. I have
+visited islands where the population mobbed me for all the world like
+dogs after the waggon of cat’s-meat; and where the frequent proposition,
+‘You my pleni (friend),’ or (with more of pathos) ‘You all ’e same my
+father,’ must be received with hearty laughter and a shout. And perhaps
+everywhere, among the greedy and rapacious, a gift is regarded as a sprat
+to catch a whale. It is the habit to give gifts and to receive returns,
+and such characters, complying with the custom, will look to it nearly
+that they do not lose. But for persons of a different stamp the
+statement must be reversed. The shabby Polynesian is anxious till he has
+received the return gift; the generous is uneasy until he has made it.
+The first is disappointed if you have not given more than he; the second
+is miserable if he thinks he has given less than you. This is my
+experience; if it clash with that of others, I pity their fortune, and
+praise mine: the circumstances cannot change what I have seen, nor lessen
+what I have received. And indeed I find that those who oppose me often
+argue from a ground of singular presumptions; comparing Polynesians with
+an ideal person, compact of generosity and gratitude, whom I never had
+the pleasure of encountering; and forgetting that what is almost poverty
+to us is wealth almost unthinkable to them. I will give one instance: I
+chanced to speak with consideration of these gifts of Stanislao’s with a
+certain clever man, a great hater and contemner of Kanakas. ‘Well! what
+were they?’ he cried. ‘A pack of old men’s beards. Trash!’ And the
+same gentleman, some half an hour later, being upon a different train of
+thought, dwelt at length on the esteem in which the Marquesans held that
+sort of property, how they preferred it to all others except land, and
+what fancy prices it would fetch. Using his own figures, I computed
+that, in this commodity alone, the gifts of Vaekehu and Stanislao
+represented between two and three hundred dollars; and the queen’s
+official salary is of two hundred and forty in the year.
+
+But generosity on the one hand, and conspicuous meanness on the other,
+are in the South Seas, as at home, the exception. It is neither with any
+hope of gain, nor with any lively wish to please, that the ordinary
+Polynesian chooses and presents his gifts. A plain social duty lies
+before him, which he performs correctly, but without the least
+enthusiasm. And we shall best understand his attitude of mind, if we
+examine our own to the cognate absurdity of marriage presents. There we
+give without any special thought of a return; yet if the circumstance
+arise, and the return be withheld, we shall judge ourselves insulted. We
+give them usually without affection, and almost never with a genuine
+desire to please; and our gift is rather a mark of our own status than a
+measure of our love to the recipients. So in a great measure and with
+the common run of the Polynesians; their gifts are formal; they imply no
+more than social recognition; and they are made and reciprocated, as we
+pay and return our morning visits. And the practice of marking and
+measuring events and sentiments by presents is universal in the island
+world. A gift plays with them the part of stamp and seal; and has
+entered profoundly into the mind of islanders. Peace and war, marriage,
+adoption and naturalisation, are celebrated or declared by the acceptance
+or the refusal of gifts; and it is as natural for the islander to bring a
+gift as for us to carry a card-case.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X—A PORTRAIT AND A STORY
+
+
+I have had occasion several times to name the late bishop, Father
+Dordillon, ‘Monseigneur,’ as he is still almost universally called,
+Vicar-Apostolic of the Marquesas and Bishop of Cambysopolis _in
+partibus_. Everywhere in the islands, among all classes and races, this
+fine, old, kindly, cheerful fellow is remembered with affection and
+respect. His influence with the natives was paramount. They reckoned
+him the highest of men—higher than an admiral; brought him their money to
+keep; took his advice upon their purchases; nor would they plant trees
+upon their own land till they had the approval of the father of the
+islands. During the time of the French exodus he singly represented
+Europe, living in the Residency, and ruling by the hand of Temoana. The
+first roads were made under his auspices and by his persuasion. The old
+road between Hatiheu and Anaho was got under way from either side on the
+ground that it would be pleasant for an evening promenade, and brought to
+completion by working on the rivalry of the two villages. The priest
+would boast in Hatiheu of the progress made in Anaho, and he would tell
+the folk of Anaho, ‘If you don’t take care, your neighbours will be over
+the hill before you are at the top.’ It could not be so done to-day; it
+could then; death, opium, and depopulation had not gone so far; and the
+people of Hatiheu, I was told, still vied with each other in fine attire,
+and used to go out by families, in the cool of the evening, boat-sailing
+and racing in the bay. There seems some truth at least in the common
+view, that this joint reign of Temoana and the bishop was the last and
+brief golden age of the Marquesas. But the civil power returned, the
+mission was packed out of the Residency at twenty-four hours’ notice, new
+methods supervened, and the golden age (whatever it quite was) came to an
+end. It is the strongest proof of Father Dordillon’s prestige that it
+survived, seemingly without loss, this hasty deposition.
+
+His method with the natives was extremely mild. Among these barbarous
+children he still played the part of the smiling father; and he was
+careful to observe, in all indifferent matters, the Marquesan etiquette.
+Thus, in the singular system of artificial kinship, the bishop had been
+adopted by Vaekehu as a grandson; Miss Fisher, of Hatiheu, as a daughter.
+From that day, Monseigneur never addressed the young lady except as his
+mother, and closed his letters with the formalities of a dutiful son.
+With Europeans he could be strict, even to the extent of harshness. He
+made no distinction against heretics, with whom he was on friendly terms;
+but the rules of his own Church he would see observed; and once at least
+he had a white man clapped in jail for the desecration of a saint’s day.
+But even this rigour, so intolerable to laymen, so irritating to
+Protestants, could not shake his popularity. We shall best conceive him
+by examples nearer home; we may all have known some divine of the old
+school in Scotland, a literal Sabbatarian, a stickler for the letter of
+the law, who was yet in private modest, innocent, genial and mirthful.
+Much such a man, it seems, was Father Dordillon. And his popularity bore
+a test yet stronger. He had the name, and probably deserved it, of a
+shrewd man in business and one that made the mission pay. Nothing so
+much stirs up resentment as the inmixture in commerce of religious
+bodies; but even rival traders spoke well of Monseigneur.
+
+His character is best portrayed in the story of the days of his decline.
+A time came when, from the failure of sight, he must desist from his
+literary labours: his Marquesan hymns, grammars, and dictionaries; his
+scientific papers, lives of saints, and devotional poetry. He cast about
+for a new interest: pitched on gardening, and was to be seen all day,
+with spade and water-pot, in his childlike eagerness, actually running
+between the borders. Another step of decay, and he must leave his garden
+also. Instantly a new occupation was devised, and he sat in the mission
+cutting paper flowers and wreaths. His diocese was not great enough for
+his activity; the churches of the Marquesas were papered with his
+handiwork, and still he must be making more. ‘Ah,’ said he, smiling,
+‘when I am dead what a fine time you will have clearing out my trash!’
+He had been dead about six months; but I was pleased to see some of his
+trophies still exposed, and looked upon them with a smile: the tribute
+(if I have read his cheerful character aright) which he would have
+preferred to any useless tears. Disease continued progressively to
+disable him; he who had clambered so stalwartly over the rude rocks of
+the Marquesas, bringing peace to warfaring clans, was for some time
+carried in a chair between the mission and the church, and at last
+confined to bed, impotent with dropsy, and tormented with bed-sores and
+sciatica. Here he lay two months without complaint; and on the 11th
+January 1888, in the seventy-ninth year of his life, and the
+thirty-fourth of his labours in the Marquesas, passed away.
+
+Those who have a taste for hearing missions, Protestant or Catholic,
+decried, must seek their pleasure elsewhere than in my pages. Whether
+Catholic or Protestant, with all their gross blots, with all their
+deficiency of candour, of humour, and of common sense, the missionaries
+are the best and the most useful whites in the Pacific. This is a
+subject which will follow us throughout; but there is one part of it that
+may conveniently be treated here. The married and the celibate
+missionary, each has his particular advantage and defect. The married
+missionary, taking him at the best, may offer to the native what he is
+much in want of—a higher picture of domestic life; but the woman at his
+elbow tends to keep him in touch with Europe and out of touch with
+Polynesia, and to perpetuate, and even to ingrain, parochial decencies
+far best forgotten. The mind of the female missionary tends, for
+instance, to be continually busied about dress. She can be taught with
+extreme difficulty to think any costume decent but that to which she grew
+accustomed on Clapham Common; and to gratify this prejudice, the native
+is put to useless expense, his mind is tainted with the morbidities of
+Europe, and his health is set in danger. The celibate missionary, on the
+other hand, and whether at best or worst, falls readily into native ways
+of life; to which he adds too commonly what is either a mark of celibate
+man at large, or an inheritance from mediæval saints—I mean slovenly
+habits and an unclean person. There are, of course, degrees in this; and
+the sister (of course, and all honour to her) is as fresh as a lady at a
+ball. For the diet there is nothing to be said—it must amaze and shock
+the Polynesian—but for the adoption of native habits there is much.
+‘_Chaque pays a ses coutumes_,’ said Stanislao; these it is the
+missionary’s delicate task to modify; and the more he can do so from
+within, and from a native standpoint, the better he will do his work; and
+here I think the Catholics have sometimes the advantage; in the Vicariate
+of Dordillon, I am sure they had it. I have heard the bishop blamed for
+his indulgence to the natives, and above all because he did not rage with
+sufficient energy against cannibalism. It was a part of his policy to
+live among the natives like an elder brother; to follow where he could;
+to lead where it was necessary; never to drive; and to encourage the
+growth of new habits, instead of violently rooting up the old. And it
+might be better, in the long-run, if this policy were always followed.
+
+It might be supposed that native missionaries would prove more indulgent,
+but the reverse is found to be the case. The new broom sweeps clean; and
+the white missionary of to-day is often embarrassed by the bigotry of his
+native coadjutor. What else should we expect? On some islands, sorcery,
+polygamy, human sacrifice, and tobacco-smoking have been prohibited, the
+dress of the native has been modified, and himself warned in strong terms
+against rival sects of Christianity; all by the same man, at the same
+period of time, and with the like authority. By what criterion is the
+convert to distinguish the essential from the unessential? He swallows
+the nostrum whole; there has been no play of mind, no instruction, and,
+except for some brute utility in the prohibitions, no advance. To call
+things by their proper names, this is teaching superstition. It is
+unfortunate to use the word; so few people have read history, and so many
+have dipped into little atheistic manuals, that the majority will rush to
+a conclusion, and suppose the labour lost. And far from that: These
+semi-spontaneous superstitions, varying with the sect of the original
+evangelist and the customs of the island, are found in practice to be
+highly fructifying; and in particular those who have learned and who go
+forth again to teach them offer an example to the world. The best
+specimen of the Christian hero that I ever met was one of these native
+missionaries. He had saved two lives at the risk of his own; like
+Nathan, he had bearded a tyrant in his hour of blood; when a whole white
+population fled, he alone stood to his duty; and his behaviour under
+domestic sorrow with which the public has no concern filled the beholder
+with sympathy and admiration. A poor little smiling laborious man he
+looked; and you would have thought he had nothing in him but that of
+which indeed he had too much—facile good-nature. {86}
+
+It chances that the only rivals of Monseigneur and his mission in the
+Marquesas were certain of these brown-skinned evangelists, natives from
+Hawaii. I know not what they thought of Father Dordillon: they are the
+only class I did not question; but I suspect the prelate to have regarded
+them askance, for he was eminently human. During my stay at Tai-o-hae,
+the time of the yearly holiday came round at the girls’ school; and a
+whole fleet of whale-boats came from Ua-pu to take the daughters of that
+island home. On board of these was Kauwealoha, one of the pastors, a
+fine, rugged old gentleman, of that leonine type so common in Hawaii. He
+paid me a visit in the _Casco_, and there entertained me with a tale of
+one of his colleagues, Kekela, a missionary in the great cannibal isle of
+Hiva-oa. It appears that shortly after a kidnapping visit from a
+Peruvian slaver, the boats of an American whaler put into a bay upon that
+island, were attacked, and made their escape with difficulty, leaving
+their mate, a Mr. Whalon, in the hands of the natives. The captive, with
+his arms bound behind his back, was cast into a house; and the chief
+announced the capture to Kekela. And here I begin to follow the version
+of Kauwealoha; it is a good specimen of Kanaka English; and the reader is
+to conceive it delivered with violent emphasis and speaking pantomime.
+
+‘“I got ’Melican mate,” the chief he say. “What you go do ’Melican
+mate?” Kekela he say. “I go make fire, I go kill, I go eat him,” he say;
+“you come to-mollow eat piece.” “I no _want_ eat ’Melican mate!” Kekela
+he say; “why you want?” “This bad shippee, this slave shippee,” the
+chief he say. “One time a shippee he come from Pelu, he take away plenty
+Kanaka, he take away my son. ’Melican mate he bad man. I go eat him;
+you eat piece.” “I no _want_ eat ’Melican mate!” Kekela he say; and he
+_cly_—all night he cly! To-mollow Kekela he get up, he put on blackee
+coat, he go see chief; he see Missa Whela, him hand tie’ like this.
+(_Pantomime_.) Kekela he cly. He say chief:—“Chief, you like things of
+mine? you like whale-boat?” “Yes,” he say. “You like file-a’m?”
+(fire-arms). “Yes,” he say. “You like blackee coat?” “Yes,” he say.
+Kekela he take Missa Whela by he shoul’a’ (shoulder), he take him light
+out house; he give chief he whale-boat, he file-a’m, he blackee coat. He
+take Missa Whela he house, make him sit down with he wife and chil’en.
+Missa Whela all-the-same pelison (prison); he wife, he chil’en in
+Amelica; he cly—O, he cly. Kekela he solly. One day Kekela he see ship.
+(_Pantomime_.) He say Missa Whela, “Ma’ Whala?” Missa Whela he say,
+“Yes.” Kanaka they begin go down beach. Kekela he get eleven Kanaka,
+get oa’ (oars), get evely thing. He say Missa Whela, “Now you go quick.”
+They jump in whale-boat. “Now you low!” Kekela he say: “you low quick,
+quick!” (_Violent pantomime_, _and a change indicating that the narrator
+has left the boat and returned to the beach_.) All the Kanaka they say,
+“How! ’Melican mate he go away?”—jump in boat; low afta. (_Violent
+pantomime_, _and change again to boat_.) Kekela he say, “Low quick!”’
+
+Here I think Kauwealoha’s pantomime had confused me; I have no more of
+his _ipsissima verba_; and can but add, in my own less spirited manner,
+that the ship was reached, Mr. Whalon taken aboard, and Kekela returned
+to his charge among the cannibals. But how unjust it is to repeat the
+stumblings of a foreigner in a language only partly acquired! A
+thoughtless reader might conceive Kauwealoha and his colleague to be a
+species of amicable baboon; but I have here the anti-dote. In return for
+his act of gallant charity, Kekela was presented by the American
+Government with a sum of money, and by President Lincoln personally with
+a gold watch. From his letter of thanks, written in his own tongue, I
+give the following extract. I do not envy the man who can read it
+without emotion.
+
+ ‘When I saw one of your countrymen, a citizen of your great nation,
+ ill-treated, and about to be baked and eaten, as a pig is eaten, I
+ ran to save him, full of pity and grief at the evil deed of these
+ benighted people. I gave my boat for the stranger’s life. This boat
+ came from James Hunnewell, a gift of friendship. It became the
+ ransom of this countryman of yours, that he might not be eaten by the
+ savages who knew not Jehovah. This was Mr. Whalon, and the date,
+ Jan. 14, 1864.
+
+ ‘As to this friendly deed of mine in saving Mr. Whalon, its seed came
+ from your great land, and was brought by certain of your countrymen,
+ who had received the love of God. It was planted in Hawaii, and I
+ brought it to plant in this land and in these dark regions, that they
+ might receive the root of all that is good and true, which is _love_.
+
+ ‘1. Love to Jehovah.
+
+ ‘2. Love to self.
+
+ ‘3. Love to our neighbour.
+
+ ‘If a man have a sufficiency of these three, he is good and holy,
+ like his God, Jehovah, in his triune character (Father, Son, and Holy
+ Ghost), one-three, three-one. If he have two and wants one, it is
+ not well; and if he have one and wants two, indeed, is not well; but
+ if he cherishes all three, then is he holy, indeed, after the manner
+ of the Bible.
+
+ ‘This is a great thing for your great nation to boast of, before all
+ the nations of the earth. From your great land a most precious seed
+ was brought to the land of darkness. It was planted here, not by
+ means of guns and men-of-war and threatening. It was planted by
+ means of the ignorant, the neglected, the despised. Such was the
+ introduction of the word of the Almighty God into this group of
+ Nuuhiwa. Great is my debt to Americans, who have taught me all
+ things pertaining to this life and to that which is to come.
+
+ ‘How shall I repay your great kindness to me? Thus David asked of
+ Jehovah, and thus I ask of you, the President of the United States.
+ This is my only payment—that which I have received of the Lord,
+ love—(aloha).’
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI—LONG-PIG—A CANNIBAL HIGH PLACE
+
+
+Nothing more strongly arouses our disgust than cannibalism, nothing so
+surely unmortars a society; nothing, we might plausibly argue, will so
+harden and degrade the minds of those that practise it. And yet we
+ourselves make much the same appearance in the eyes of the Buddhist and
+the vegetarian. We consume the carcasses of creatures of like appetites,
+passions, and organs with ourselves; we feed on babes, though not our
+own; and the slaughter-house resounds daily with screams of pain and
+fear. We distinguish, indeed; but the unwillingness of many nations to
+eat the dog, an animal with whom we live on terms of the next intimacy,
+shows how precariously the distinction is grounded. The pig is the main
+element of animal food among the islands; and I had many occasions, my
+mind being quickened by my cannibal surroundings, to observe his
+character and the manner of his death. Many islanders live with their
+pigs as we do with our dogs; both crowd around the hearth with equal
+freedom; and the island pig is a fellow of activity, enterprise, and
+sense. He husks his own cocoa-nuts, and (I am told) rolls them into the
+sun to burst; he is the terror of the shepherd. Mrs. Stevenson, senior,
+has seen one fleeing to the woods with a lamb in his mouth; and I saw
+another come rapidly (and erroneously) to the conclusion that the _Casco_
+was going down, and swim through the flush water to the rail in search of
+an escape. It was told us in childhood that pigs cannot swim; I have
+known one to leap overboard, swim five hundred yards to shore, and return
+to the house of his original owner. I was once, at Tautira, a pig-master
+on a considerable scale; at first, in my pen, the utmost good feeling
+prevailed; a little sow with a belly-ache came and appealed to us for
+help in the manner of a child; and there was one shapely black boar, whom
+we called Catholicus, for he was a particular present from the Catholics
+of the village, and who early displayed the marks of courage and
+friendliness; no other animal, whether dog or pig, was suffered to
+approach him at his food, and for human beings he showed a full measure
+of that toadying fondness so common in the lower animals, and possibly
+their chief title to the name. One day, on visiting my piggery, I was
+amazed to see Catholicus draw back from my approach with cries of terror;
+and if I was amazed at the change, I was truly embarrassed when I learnt
+its reason. One of the pigs had been that morning killed; Catholicus had
+seen the murder, he had discovered he was dwelling in the shambles, and
+from that time his confidence and his delight in life were ended. We
+still reserved him a long while, but he could not endure the sight of any
+two-legged creature, nor could we, under the circumstances, encounter his
+eye without confusion. I have assisted besides, by the ear, at the act
+of butchery itself; the victim’s cries of pain I think I could have
+borne, but the execution was mismanaged, and his expression of terror was
+contagious: that small heart moved to the same tune with ours. Upon such
+‘dread foundations’ the life of the European reposes, and yet the
+European is among the less cruel of races. The paraphernalia of murder,
+the preparatory brutalities of his existence, are all hid away; an
+extreme sensibility reigns upon the surface; and ladies will faint at the
+recital of one tithe of what they daily expect of their butchers. Some
+will be even crying out upon me in their hearts for the coarseness of
+this paragraph. And so with the island cannibals. They were not cruel;
+apart from this custom, they are a race of the most kindly; rightly
+speaking, to cut a man’s flesh after he is dead is far less hateful than
+to oppress him whilst he lives; and even the victims of their appetite
+were gently used in life and suddenly and painlessly despatched at last.
+In island circles of refinement it was doubtless thought bad taste to
+expatiate on what was ugly in the practice.
+
+Cannibalism is traced from end to end of the Pacific, from the Marquesas
+to New Guinea, from New Zealand to Hawaii, here in the lively haunt of
+its exercise, there by scanty but significant survivals. Hawaii is the
+most doubtful. We find cannibalism chronicled in Hawaii, only in the
+history of a single war, where it seems to have been thought exception,
+as in the case of mountain outlaws, such as fell by the hand of Theseus.
+In Tahiti, a single circumstance survived, but that appears conclusive.
+In historic times, when human oblation was made in the marae, the eyes of
+the victim were formally offered to the chief: a delicacy to the leading
+guest. All Melanesia appears tainted. In Micronesia, in the Marshalls,
+with which my acquaintance is no more than that of a tourist, I could
+find no trace at all; and even in the Gilbert zone I long looked and
+asked in vain. I was told tales indeed of men who had been eaten in a
+famine; but these were nothing to my purpose, for the same thing is done
+under the same stress by all kindreds and generations of men. At last,
+in some manuscript notes of Dr. Turner’s, which I was allowed to consult
+at Malua, I came on one damning evidence: on the island of Onoatoa the
+punishment for theft was to be killed and eaten. How shall we account
+for the universality of the practice over so vast an area, among people
+of such varying civilisation, and, with whatever intermixture, of such
+different blood? What circumstance is common to them all, but that they
+lived on islands destitute, or very nearly so, of animal food? I can
+never find it in my appetite that man was meant to live on vegetables
+only. When our stores ran low among the islands, I grew to weary for the
+recurrent day when economy allowed us to open another tin of miserable
+mutton. And in at least one ocean language, a particular word denotes
+that a man is ‘hungry for fish,’ having reached that stage when
+vegetables can no longer satisfy, and his soul, like those of the Hebrews
+in the desert, begins to lust after flesh-pots. Add to this the
+evidences of over-population and imminent famine already adduced, and I
+think we see some ground of indulgence for the island cannibal.
+
+It is right to look at both sides of any question; but I am far from
+making the apology of this worse than bestial vice. The higher
+Polynesian races, such as the Tahitians, Hawaiians, and Samoans, had one
+and all outgrown, and some of them had in part forgot, the practice,
+before Cook or Bougainville had shown a top-sail in their waters. It
+lingered only in some low islands where life was difficult to maintain,
+and among inveterate savages like the New-Zealanders or the Marquesans.
+The Marquesans intertwined man-eating with the whole texture of their
+lives; long-pig was in a sense their currency and sacrament; it formed
+the hire of the artist, illustrated public events, and was the occasion
+and attraction of a feast. To-day they are paying the penalty of this
+bloody commixture. The civil power, in its crusade against man-eating,
+has had to examine one after another all Marquesan arts and pleasures,
+has found them one after another tainted with a cannibal element, and one
+after another has placed them on the proscript list. Their art of
+tattooing stood by itself, the execution exquisite, the designs most
+beautiful and intricate; nothing more handsomely sets off a handsome man;
+it may cost some pain in the beginning, but I doubt if it be near so
+painful in the long-run, and I am sure it is far more becoming than the
+ignoble European practice of tight-lacing among women. And now it has
+been found needful to forbid the art. Their songs and dances were
+numerous (and the law has had to abolish them by the dozen). They now
+face empty-handed the tedium of their uneventful days; and who shall pity
+them? The least rigorous will say that they were justly served.
+
+Death alone could not satisfy Marquesan vengeance: the flesh must be
+eaten. The chief who seized Mr. Whalon preferred to eat him; and he
+thought he had justified the wish when he explained it was a vengeance.
+Two or three years ago, the people of a valley seized and slew a wretch
+who had offended them. His offence, it is to be supposed, was dire; they
+could not bear to leave their vengeance incomplete, and, under the eyes
+of the French, they did not dare to hold a public festival. The body was
+accordingly divided; and every man retired to his own house to consummate
+the rite in secret, carrying his proportion of the dreadful meat in a
+Swedish match-box. The barbarous substance of the drama and the European
+properties employed offer a seizing contrast to the imagination. Yet
+more striking is another incident of the very year when I was there
+myself, 1888. In the spring, a man and woman skulked about the
+school-house in Hiva-oa till they found a particular child alone. Him
+they approached with honeyed words and carneying manners—‘You are
+So-and-so, son of So-and-so?’ they asked; and caressed and beguiled him
+deeper in the woods. Some instinct woke in the child’s bosom, or some
+look betrayed the horrid purpose of his deceivers. He sought to break
+from them; he screamed; and they, casting off the mask, seized him the
+more strongly and began to run. His cries were heard; his schoolmates,
+playing not far off, came running to the rescue; and the sinister couple
+fled and vanished in the woods. They were never identified; no
+prosecution followed; but it was currently supposed they had some grudge
+against the boy’s father, and designed to eat him in revenge. All over
+the islands, as at home among our own ancestors, it will be observed that
+the avenger takes no particular heed to strike an individual. A family,
+a class, a village, a whole valley or island, a whole race of mankind,
+share equally the guilt of any member. So, in the above story, the son
+was to pay the penalty for his father; so Mr. Whalon, the mate of an
+American whaler, was to bleed and be eaten for the misdeeds of a Peruvian
+slaver. I am reminded of an incident in Jaluit in the Marshall group,
+which was told me by an eye-witness, and which I tell here again for the
+strangeness of the scene. Two men had awakened the animosity of the
+Jaluit chiefs; and it was their wives who were selected to be punished.
+A single native served as executioner. Early in the morning, in the face
+of a large concourse of spectators, he waded out upon the reef between
+his victims. These neither complained nor resisted; accompanied their
+destroyer patiently; stooped down, when they had waded deep enough, at
+his command; and he (laying one hand upon the shoulders of each) held
+them under water till they drowned. Doubtless, although my informant did
+not tell me so, their families would be lamenting aloud upon the beach.
+
+It was from Hatiheu that I paid my first visit to a cannibal high place.
+
+The day was sultry and clouded. Drenching tropical showers succeeded
+bursts of sweltering sunshine. The green pathway of the road wound
+steeply upward. As we went, our little schoolboy guide a little ahead of
+us, Father Simeon had his portfolio in his hand, and named the trees for
+me, and read aloud from his notes the abstract of their virtues.
+Presently the road, mounting, showed us the vale of Hatiheu, on a larger
+scale; and the priest, with occasional reference to our guide, pointed
+out the boundaries and told me the names of the larger tribes that lived
+at perpetual war in the old days: one on the north-east, one along the
+beach, one behind upon the mountain. With a survivor of this latter clan
+Father Simeon had spoken; until the pacification he had never been to the
+sea’s edge, nor, if I remember exactly, eaten of sea-fish. Each in its
+own district, the septs lived cantoned and beleaguered. One step without
+the boundaries was to affront death. If famine came, the men must out to
+the woods to gather chestnuts and small fruits; even as to this day, if
+the parents are backward in their weekly doles, school must be broken up
+and the scholars sent foraging. But in the old days, when there was
+trouble in one clan, there would be activity in all its neighbours; the
+woods would be laid full of ambushes; and he who went after vegetables
+for himself might remain to be a joint for his hereditary foes. Nor was
+the pointed occasion needful. A dozen different natural signs and social
+junctures called this people to the war-path and the cannibal hunt. Let
+one of chiefly rank have finished his tattooing, the wife of one be near
+upon her time, two of the debauching streams have deviated nearer on the
+beach of Hatiheu, a certain bird have been heard to sing, a certain
+ominous formation of cloud observed above the northern sea; and instantly
+the arms were oiled, and the man-hunters swarmed into the wood to lay
+their fratricidal ambuscades. It appears besides that occasionally,
+perhaps in famine, the priest would shut himself in his house, where he
+lay for a stated period like a person dead. When he came forth it was to
+run for three days through the territory of the clan, naked and starving,
+and to sleep at night alone in the high place. It was now the turn of
+the others to keep the house, for to encounter the priest upon his rounds
+was death. On the eve of the fourth day the time of the running was
+over; the priest returned to his roof, the laymen came forth, and in the
+morning the number of the victims was announced. I have this tale of the
+priest on one authority—I think a good one,—but I set it down with
+diffidence. The particulars are so striking that, had they been true, I
+almost think I must have heard them oftener referred to. Upon one point
+there seems to be no question: that the feast was sometimes furnished
+from within the clan. In times of scarcity, all who were not protected
+by their family connections—in the Highland expression, all the commons
+of the clan—had cause to tremble. It was vain to resist, it was useless
+to flee. They were begirt upon all hands by cannibals; and the oven was
+ready to smoke for them abroad in the country of their foes, or at home
+in the valley of their fathers.
+
+At a certain corner of the road our scholar-guide struck off to his left
+into the twilight of the forest. We were now on one of the ancient
+native roads, plunged in a high vault of wood, and clambering, it seemed,
+at random over boulders and dead trees; but the lad wound in and out and
+up and down without a check, for these paths are to the natives as marked
+as the king’s highway is to us; insomuch that, in the days of the
+man-hunt, it was their labour rather to block and deface than to improve
+them. In the crypt of the wood the air was clammy and hot and cold;
+overhead, upon the leaves, the tropical rain uproariously poured, but
+only here and there, as through holes in a leaky roof, a single drop
+would fall, and make a spot upon my mackintosh. Presently the huge trunk
+of a banyan hove in sight, standing upon what seemed the ruins of an
+ancient fort; and our guide, halting and holding forth his arm, announced
+that we had reached the _paepae tapu_.
+
+_Paepae_ signifies a floor or platform such as a native house is built
+on; and even such a paepae—a paepae hae—may be called a paepae tapu in a
+lesser sense when it is deserted and becomes the haunt of spirits; but
+the public high place, such as I was now treading, was a thing on a great
+scale. As far as my eyes could pierce through the dark undergrowth, the
+floor of the forest was all paved. Three tiers of terrace ran on the
+slope of the hill; in front, a crumbling parapet contained the main
+arena; and the pavement of that was pierced and parcelled out with
+several wells and small enclosures. No trace remained of any
+superstructure, and the scheme of the amphitheatre was difficult to
+seize. I visited another in Hiva-oa, smaller but more perfect, where it
+was easy to follow rows of benches, and to distinguish isolated seats of
+honour for eminent persons; and where, on the upper platform, a single
+joist of the temple or dead-house still remained, its uprights richly
+carved. In the old days the high place was sedulously tended. No tree
+except the sacred banyan was suffered to encroach upon its grades, no
+dead leaf to rot upon the pavement. The stones were smoothly set, and I
+am told they were kept bright with oil. On all sides the guardians lay
+encamped in their subsidiary huts to watch and cleanse it. No other foot
+of man was suffered to draw near; only the priest, in the days of his
+running, came there to sleep—perhaps to dream of his ungodly errand; but,
+in the time of the feast, the clan trooped to the high place in a body,
+and each had his appointed seat. There were places for the chiefs, the
+drummers, the dancers, the women, and the priests. The drums—perhaps
+twenty strong, and some of them twelve feet high—continuously throbbed in
+time. In time the singers kept up their long-drawn, lugubrious,
+ululating song; in time, too, the dancers, tricked out in singular
+finery, stepped, leaped, swayed, and gesticulated—their plumed fingers
+fluttering in the air like butterflies. The sense of time, in all these
+ocean races, is extremely perfect; and I conceive in such a festival that
+almost every sound and movement fell in one. So much the more
+unanimously must have grown the agitation of the feasters; so much the
+more wild must have been the scene to any European who could have beheld
+them there, in the strong sun and the strong shadow of the banyan, rubbed
+with saffron to throw in a more high relief the arabesque of the tattoo;
+the women bleached by days of confinement to a complexion almost
+European; the chiefs crowned with silver plumes of old men’s beards and
+girt with kirtles of the hair of dead women. All manner of island food
+was meanwhile spread for the women and the commons; and, for those who
+were privileged to eat of it, there were carried up to the dead-house the
+baskets of long-pig. It is told that the feasts were long kept up; the
+people came from them brutishly exhausted with debauchery, and the chiefs
+heavy with their beastly food. There are certain sentiments which we
+call emphatically human—denying the honour of that name to those who lack
+them. In such feasts—particularly where the victim has been slain at
+home, and men banqueted on the poor clay of a comrade with whom they had
+played in infancy, or a woman whose favours they had shared—the whole
+body of these sentiments is outraged. To consider it too closely is to
+understand, if not to excuse, the fervours of self-righteous old
+ship-captains, who would man their guns, and open fire in passing, on a
+cannibal island.
+
+And yet it was strange. There, upon the spot, as I stood under the high,
+dripping vault of the forest, with the young priest on the one hand, in
+his kilted gown, and the bright-eyed Marquesan schoolboy on the other,
+the whole business appeared infinitely distant, and fallen in the cold
+perspective and dry light of history. The bearing of the priest,
+perhaps, affected me. He smiled; he jested with the boy, the heir both of
+these feasters and their meat; he clapped his hands, and gave me a stave
+of one of the old, ill-omened choruses. Centuries might have come and
+gone since this slimy theatre was last in operation; and I beheld the
+place with no more emotion than I might have felt in visiting Stonehenge.
+In Hiva-oa, as I began to appreciate that the thing was still living and
+latent about my footsteps, and that it was still within the bounds of
+possibility that I might hear the cry of the trapped victim, my historic
+attitude entirely failed, and I was sensible of some repugnance for the
+natives. But here, too, the priests maintained their jocular attitude:
+rallying the cannibals as upon an eccentricity rather absurd than
+horrible; seeking, I should say, to shame them from the practice by
+good-natured ridicule, as we shame a child from stealing sugar. We may
+here recognise the temperate and sagacious mind of Bishop Dordillon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII—THE STORY OF A PLANTATION
+
+
+Taahauku, on the south-westerly coast of the island of Hiva-oa—Tahuku,
+say the slovenly whites—may be called the port of Atuona. It is a narrow
+and small anchorage, set between low cliffy points, and opening above
+upon a woody valley: a little French fort, now disused and deserted,
+overhangs the valley and the inlet. Atuona itself, at the head of the
+next bay, is framed in a theatre of mountains, which dominate the more
+immediate settling of Taahauku and give the salient character of the
+scene. They are reckoned at no higher than four thousand feet; but
+Tahiti with eight thousand, and Hawaii with fifteen, can offer no such
+picture of abrupt, melancholy alps. In the morning, when the sun falls
+directly on their front, they stand like a vast wall: green to the
+summit, if by any chance the summit should be clear—water-courses here
+and there delineated on their face, as narrow as cracks. Towards
+afternoon, the light falls more obliquely, and the sculpture of the range
+comes in relief, huge gorges sinking into shadow, huge, tortuous
+buttresses standing edged with sun. At all hours of the day they strike
+the eye with some new beauty, and the mind with the same menacing gloom.
+
+The mountains, dividing and deflecting the endless airy deluge of the
+Trade, are doubtless answerable for the climate. A strong draught of
+wind blew day and night over the anchorage. Day and night the same
+fantastic and attenuated clouds fled across the heavens, the same dusky
+cap of rain and vapour fell and rose on the mountain. The land-breezes
+came very strong and chill, and the sea, like the air, was in perpetual
+bustle. The swell crowded into the narrow anchorage like sheep into a
+fold; broke all along both sides, high on the one, low on the other; kept
+a certain blowhole sounding and smoking like a cannon; and spent itself
+at last upon the beach.
+
+On the side away from Atuona, the sheltering promontory was a nursery of
+coco-trees. Some were mere infants, none had attained to any size, none
+had yet begun to shoot skyward with that whip-like shaft of the mature
+palm. In the young trees the colour alters with the age and growth. Now
+all is of a grass-like hue, infinitely dainty; next the rib grows golden,
+the fronds remaining green as ferns; and then, as the trunk continues to
+mount and to assume its final hue of grey, the fans put on manlier and
+more decided depths of verdure, stand out dark upon the distance, glisten
+against the sun, and flash like silver fountains in the assault of the
+wind. In this young wood of Taahauku, all these hues and combinations
+were exampled and repeated by the score. The trees grew pleasantly
+spaced upon a hilly sward, here and there interspersed with a rack for
+drying copra, or a tumble-down hut for storing it. Every here and there
+the stroller had a glimpse of the _Casco_ tossing in the narrow anchorage
+below; and beyond he had ever before him the dark amphitheatre of the
+Atuona mountains and the cliffy bluff that closes it to seaward. The
+trade-wind moving in the fans made a ceaseless noise of summer rain; and
+from time to time, with the sound of a sudden and distant drum-beat, the
+surf would burst in a sea-cave.
+
+At the upper end of the inlet, its low, cliffy lining sinks, at both
+sides, into a beach. A copra warehouse stands in the shadow of the
+shoreside trees, flitted about for ever by a clan of dwarfish swallows;
+and a line of rails on a high wooden staging bends back into the mouth of
+the valley. Walking on this, the new-landed traveller becomes aware of a
+broad fresh-water lagoon (one arm of which he crosses), and beyond, of a
+grove of noble palms, sheltering the house of the trader, Mr. Keane.
+Overhead, the cocos join in a continuous and lofty roof; blackbirds are
+heard lustily singing; the island cock springs his jubilant rattle and
+airs his golden plumage; cow-bells sound far and near in the grove; and
+when you sit in the broad verandah, lulled by this symphony, you may say
+to yourself, if you are able: ‘Better fifty years of Europe . . .’
+Farther on, the floor of the valley is flat and green, and dotted here
+and there with stripling coco-palms. Through the midst, with many
+changes of music, the river trots and brawls; and along its course, where
+we should look for willows, puraos grow in clusters, and make shadowy
+pools after an angler’s heart. A vale more rich and peaceful, sweeter
+air, a sweeter voice of rural sounds, I have found nowhere. One
+circumstance alone might strike the experienced: here is a convenient
+beach, deep soil, good water, and yet nowhere any paepaes, nowhere any
+trace of island habitation.
+
+It is but a few years since this valley was a place choked with jungle,
+the debatable land and battle-ground of cannibals. Two clans laid claim
+to it—neither could substantiate the claim, and the roads lay desert, or
+were only visited by men in arms. It is for this very reason that it
+wears now so smiling an appearance: cleared, planted, built upon,
+supplied with railways, boat-houses, and bath-houses. For, being no
+man’s land, it was the more readily ceded to a stranger. The stranger
+was Captain John Hart: Ima Hati, ‘Broken-arm,’ the natives call him,
+because when he first visited the islands his arm was in a sling.
+Captain Hart, a man of English birth, but an American subject, had
+conceived the idea of cotton culture in the Marquesas during the American
+War, and was at first rewarded with success. His plantation at Anaho was
+highly productive; island cotton fetched a high price, and the natives
+used to debate which was the stronger power, Ima Hati or the French:
+deciding in favour of the captain, because, though the French had the
+most ships, he had the more money.
+
+He marked Taahauku for a suitable site, acquired it, and offered the
+superintendence to Mr. Robert Stewart, a Fifeshire man, already some time
+in the islands, who had just been ruined by a war on Tauata. Mr. Stewart
+was somewhat averse to the adventure, having some acquaintance with
+Atuona and its notorious chieftain, Moipu. He had once landed there, he
+told me, about dusk, and found the remains of a man and woman partly
+eaten. On his starting and sickening at the sight, one of Moipu’s young
+men picked up a human foot, and provocatively staring at the stranger,
+grinned and nibbled at the heel. None need be surprised if Mr. Stewart
+fled incontinently to the bush, lay there all night in a great horror of
+mind, and got off to sea again by daylight on the morrow. ‘It was always
+a bad place, Atuona,’ commented Mr. Stewart, in his homely Fifeshire
+voice. In spite of this dire introduction, he accepted the captain’s
+offer, was landed at Taahauku with three Chinamen, and proceeded to clear
+the jungle.
+
+War was pursued at that time, almost without interval, between the men of
+Atuona and the men of Haamau; and one day, from the opposite sides of the
+valley, battle—or I should rather say the noise of battle—raged all the
+afternoon: the shots and insults of the opposing clans passing from hill
+to hill over the heads of Mr. Stewart and his Chinamen. There was no
+genuine fighting; it was like a bicker of schoolboys, only some fool had
+given the children guns. One man died of his exertions in running, the
+only casualty. With night the shots and insults ceased; the men of
+Haamau withdrew; and victory, on some occult principle, was scored to
+Moipu. Perhaps, in consequence, there came a day when Moipu made a
+feast, and a party from Haamau came under safe-conduct to eat of it.
+These passed early by Taahauku, and some of Moipu’s young men were there
+to be a guard of honour. They were not long gone before there came down
+from Haamau, a man, his wife, and a girl of twelve, their daughter,
+bringing fungus. Several Atuona lads were hanging round the store; but
+the day being one of truce none apprehended danger. The fungus was
+weighed and paid for; the man of Haamau proposed he should have his axe
+ground in the bargain; and Mr. Stewart demurring at the trouble, some of
+the Atuona lads offered to grind it for him, and set it on the wheel.
+While the axe was grinding, a friendly native whispered Mr. Stewart to
+have a care of himself, for there was trouble in hand; and, all at once,
+the man of Haamau was seized, and his head and arm stricken from his
+body, the head at one sweep of his own newly sharpened axe. In the first
+alert, the girl escaped among the cotton; and Mr. Stewart, having thrust
+the wife into the house and locked her in from the outside, supposed the
+affair was over. But the business had not passed without noise, and it
+reached the ears of an older girl who had loitered by the way, and who
+now came hastily down the valley, crying as she came for her father.
+Her, too, they seized and beheaded; I know not what they had done with
+the axe, it was a blunt knife that served their butcherly turn upon the
+girl; and the blood spurted in fountains and painted them from head to
+foot. Thus horrible from crime, the party returned to Atuona, carrying
+the heads to Moipu. It may be fancied how the feast broke up; but it is
+notable that the guests were honourably suffered to retire. These passed
+back through Taahauku in extreme disorder; a little after the valley
+began to be overrun with shouting and triumphing braves; and a letter of
+warning coming at the same time to Mr. Stewart, he and his Chinamen took
+refuge with the Protestant missionary in Atuona. That night the store
+was gutted, and the bodies cast in a pit and covered with leaves. Three
+days later the schooner had come in; and things appearing quieter, Mr.
+Stewart and the captain landed in Taahauku to compute the damage and to
+view the grave, which was already indicated by the stench. While they
+were so employed, a party of Moipu’s young men, decked with red flannel
+to indicate martial sentiments, came over the hills from Atuona, dug up
+the bodies, washed them in the river, and carried them away on sticks.
+That night the feast began.
+
+Those who knew Mr. Stewart before this experience declare the man to be
+quite altered. He stuck, however, to his post; and somewhat later, when
+the plantation was already well established, and gave employment to sixty
+Chinamen and seventy natives, he found himself once more in dangerous
+times. The men of Haamau, it was reported, had sworn to plunder and
+erase the settlement; letters came continually from the Hawaiian
+missionary, who acted as intelligence department; and for six weeks Mr.
+Stewart and three other whites slept in the cotton-house at night in a
+rampart of bales, and (what was their best defence) ostentatiously
+practised rifle-shooting by day upon the beach. Natives were often there
+to watch them; the practice was excellent; and the assault was never
+delivered—if it ever was intended, which I doubt, for the natives are
+more famous for false rumours than for deeds of energy. I was told the
+late French war was a case in point; the tribes on the beach accusing
+those in the mountains of designs which they had never the hardihood to
+entertain. And the same testimony to their backwardness in open battle
+reached me from all sides. Captain Hart once landed after an engagement
+in a certain bay; one man had his hand hurt, an old woman and two
+children had been slain; and the captain improved the occasion by
+poulticing the hand, and taunting both sides upon so wretched an affair.
+It is true these wars were often merely formal—comparable with duels to
+the first blood. Captain Hart visited a bay where such a war was being
+carried on between two brothers, one of whom had been thought wanting in
+civility to the guests of the other. About one-half of the population
+served day about on alternate sides, so as to be well with each when the
+inevitable peace should follow. The forts of the belligerents were over
+against each other, and close by. Pigs were cooking. Well-oiled braves,
+with well-oiled muskets, strutted on the paepae or sat down to feast. No
+business, however needful, could be done, and all thoughts were supposed
+to be centred in this mockery of war. A few days later, by a regrettable
+accident, a man was killed; it was felt at once the thing had gone too
+far, and the quarrel was instantly patched up. But the more serious wars
+were prosecuted in a similar spirit; a gift of pigs and a feast made
+their inevitable end; the killing of a single man was a great victory,
+and the murder of defenceless solitaries counted a heroic deed.
+
+The foot of the cliffs, about all these islands, is the place of fishing.
+Between Taahauku and Atuona we saw men, but chiefly women, some nearly
+naked, some in thin white or crimson dresses, perched in little surf-beat
+promontories—the brown precipice overhanging them, and the convolvulus
+overhanging that, as if to cut them off the more completely from
+assistance. There they would angle much of the morning; and as fast as
+they caught any fish, eat them, raw and living, where they stood. It was
+such helpless ones that the warriors from the opposite island of Tauata
+slew, and carried home and ate, and were thereupon accounted mighty men
+of valour. Of one such exploit I can give the account of an eye-witness.
+‘Portuguese Joe,’ Mr. Keane’s cook, was once pulling an oar in an Atuona
+boat, when they spied a stranger in a canoe with some fish and a piece of
+tapu. The Atuona men cried upon him to draw near and have a smoke. He
+complied, because, I suppose, he had no choice; but he knew, poor devil,
+what he was coming to, and (as Joe said) ‘he didn’t seem to care about
+the smoke.’ A few questions followed, as to where he came from, and what
+was his business. These he must needs answer, as he must needs draw at
+the unwelcome pipe, his heart the while drying in his bosom. And then,
+of a sudden, a big fellow in Joe’s boat leaned over, plucked the stranger
+from his canoe, struck him with a knife in the neck—inward and downward,
+as Joe showed in pantomime more expressive than his words—and held him
+under water, like a fowl, until his struggles ceased. Whereupon the
+long-pig was hauled on board, the boat’s head turned about for Atuona,
+and these Marquesan braves pulled home rejoicing. Moipu was on the beach
+and rejoiced with them on their arrival. Poor Joe toiled at his oar that
+day with a white face, yet he had no fear for himself. ‘They were very
+good to me—gave me plenty grub: never wished to eat white man,’ said he.
+
+If the most horrible experience was Mr. Stewart’s, it was Captain Hart
+himself who ran the nearest danger. He had bought a piece of land from
+Timau, chief of a neighbouring bay, and put some Chinese there to work.
+Visiting the station with one of the Godeffroys, he found his Chinamen
+trooping to the beach in terror: Timau had driven them out, seized their
+effects, and was in war attire with his young men. A boat was despatched
+to Taahauku for reinforcement; as they awaited her return, they could
+see, from the deck of the schooner, Timau and his young men dancing the
+war-dance on the hill-top till past twelve at night; and so soon as the
+boat came (bringing three gendarmes, armed with chassepots, two white men
+from Taahauku station, and some native warriors) the party set out to
+seize the chief before he should awake. Day was not come, and it was a
+very bright moonlight morning, when they reached the hill-top where (in a
+house of palm-leaves) Timau was sleeping off his debauch. The assailants
+were fully exposed, the interior of the hut quite dark; the position far
+from sound. The gendarmes knelt with their pieces ready, and Captain
+Hart advanced alone. As he drew near the door he heard the snap of a gun
+cocking from within, and in sheer self-defence—there being no other
+escape—sprang into the house and grappled Timau. ‘Timau, come with me!’
+he cried. But Timau—a great fellow, his eyes blood-red with the abuse of
+kava, six foot three in stature—cast him on one side; and the captain,
+instantly expecting to be either shot or brained, discharged his pistol
+in the dark. When they carried Timau out at the door into the moonlight,
+he was already dead, and, upon this unlooked-for termination of their
+sally, the whites appeared to have lost all conduct, and retreated to the
+boats, fired upon by the natives as they went. Captain Hart, who almost
+rivals Bishop Dordillon in popularity, shared with him the policy of
+extreme indulgence to the natives, regarding them as children, making
+light of their defects, and constantly in favour of mild measures. The
+death of Timau has thus somewhat weighed upon his mind; the more so, as
+the chieftain’s musket was found in the house unloaded. To a less
+delicate conscience the matter will seem light. If a drunken savage
+elects to cock a fire-arm, a gentleman advancing towards him in the open
+cannot wait to make sure if it be charged.
+
+I have touched on the captain’s popularity. It is one of the things that
+most strikes a stranger in the Marquesas. He comes instantly on two
+names, both new to him, both locally famous, both mentioned by all with
+affection and respect—the bishop’s and the captain’s. It gave me a
+strong desire to meet with the survivor, which was subsequently
+gratified—to the enrichment of these pages. Long after that again, in
+the Place Dolorous—Molokai—I came once more on the traces of that
+affectionate popularity. There was a blind white leper there, an old
+sailor—‘an old tough,’ he called himself—who had long sailed among the
+eastern islands. Him I used to visit, and, being fresh from the scenes
+of his activity, gave him the news. This (in the true island style) was
+largely a chronicle of wrecks; and it chanced I mentioned the case of one
+not very successful captain, and how he had lost a vessel for Mr. Hart;
+thereupon the blind leper broke forth in lamentation. ‘Did he lose a
+ship of John Hart’s?’ he cried; ‘poor John Hart! Well, I’m sorry it was
+Hart’s,’ with needless force of epithet, which I neglect to reproduce.
+
+Perhaps, if Captain Hart’s affairs had continued to prosper, his
+popularity might have been different. Success wins glory, but it kills
+affection, which misfortune fosters. And the misfortune which overtook
+the captain’s enterprise was truly singular. He was at the top of his
+career. Ile Masse belonged to him, given by the French as an indemnity
+for the robberies at Taahauku. But the Ile Masse was only suitable for
+cattle; and his two chief stations were Anaho, in Nuka-hiva, facing the
+north-east, and Taahauku in Hiva-oa, some hundred miles to the southward,
+and facing the south-west. Both these were on the same day swept by a
+tidal wave, which was not felt in any other bay or island of the group.
+The south coast of Hiva-oa was bestrewn with building timber and
+camphor-wood chests, containing goods; which, on the promise of a
+reasonable salvage, the natives very honestly brought back, the chests
+apparently not opened, and some of the wood after it had been built into
+their houses. But the recovery of such jetsam could not affect the
+result. It was impossible the captain should withstand this partiality
+of fortune; and with his fall the prosperity of the Marquesas ended.
+Anaho is truly extinct, Taahauku but a shadow of itself; nor has any new
+plantation arisen in their stead.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII—CHARACTERS
+
+
+There was a certain traffic in our anchorage at Atuona; different indeed
+from the dead inertia and quiescence of the sister island, Nuka-hiva.
+Sails were seen steering from its mouth; now it would be a whale-boat
+manned with native rowdies, and heavy with copra for sale; now perhaps a
+single canoe come after commodities to buy. The anchorage was besides
+frequented by fishers; not only the lone females perched in niches of the
+cliff, but whole parties, who would sometimes camp and build a fire upon
+the beach, and sometimes lie in their canoes in the midst of the haven
+and jump by turns in the water; which they would cast eight or nine feet
+high, to drive, as we supposed, the fish into their nets. The goods the
+purchasers came to buy were sometimes quaint. I remarked one outrigger
+returning with a single ham swung from a pole in the stern. And one day
+there came into Mr. Keane’s store a charming lad, excellently mannered,
+speaking French correctly though with a babyish accent; very handsome
+too, and much of a dandy, as was shown not only in his shining raiment,
+but by the nature of his purchases. These were five ship-biscuits, a
+bottle of scent, and two balls of washing blue. He was from Tauata,
+whither he returned the same night in an outrigger, daring the deep with
+these young-ladyish treasures. The gross of the native passengers were
+more ill-favoured: tall, powerful fellows, well tattooed, and with
+disquieting manners. Something coarse and jeering distinguished them,
+and I was often reminded of the slums of some great city. One night, as
+dusk was falling, a whale-boat put in on that part of the beach where I
+chanced to be alone. Six or seven ruffianly fellows scrambled out; all
+had enough English to give me ‘good-bye,’ which was the ordinary
+salutation; or ‘good-morning,’ which they seemed to regard as an
+intensitive; jests followed, they surrounded me with harsh laughter and
+rude looks, and I was glad to move away. I had not yet encountered Mr.
+Stewart, or I should have been reminded of his first landing at Atuona
+and the humorist who nibbled at the heel. But their neighbourhood
+depressed me; and I felt, if I had been there a castaway and out of reach
+of help, my heart would have been sick.
+
+Nor was the traffic altogether native. While we lay in the anchorage
+there befell a strange coincidence. A schooner was observed at sea and
+aiming to enter. We knew all the schooners in the group, but this
+appeared larger than any; she was rigged, besides, after the English
+manner; and, coming to an anchor some way outside the _Casco_, showed at
+last the blue ensign. There were at that time, according to rumour, no
+fewer than four yachts in the Pacific; but it was strange that any two of
+them should thus lie side by side in that outlandish inlet: stranger
+still that in the owner of the _Nyanza_, Captain Dewar, I should find a
+man of the same country and the same county with myself, and one whom I
+had seen walking as a boy on the shores of the Alpes Maritimes.
+
+We had besides a white visitor from shore, who came and departed in a
+crowded whale-boat manned by natives; having read of yachts in the Sunday
+papers, and being fired with the desire to see one. Captain Chase, they
+called him, an old whaler-man, thickset and white-bearded, with a strong
+Indiana drawl; years old in the country, a good backer in battle, and one
+of those dead shots whose practice at the target struck terror in the
+braves of Haamau. Captain Chase dwelt farther east in a bay called
+Hanamate, with a Mr. M’Callum; or rather they had dwelt together once,
+and were now amicably separated. The captain is to be found near one end
+of the bay, in a wreck of a house, and waited on by a Chinese. At the
+point of the opposing corner another habitation stands on a tall paepae.
+The surf runs there exceeding heavy, seas of seven and eight feet high
+bursting under the walls of the house, which is thus continually filled
+with their clamour, and rendered fit only for solitary, or at least for
+silent, inmates. Here it is that Mr. M’Callum, with a Shakespeare and a
+Burns, enjoys the society of the breakers. His name and his Burns
+testify to Scottish blood; but he is an American born, somewhere far
+east; followed the trade of a ship-carpenter; and was long employed, the
+captain of a hundred Indians, breaking up wrecks about Cape Flattery.
+Many of the whites who are to be found scattered in the South Seas
+represent the more artistic portion of their class; and not only enjoy
+the poetry of that new life, but came there on purpose to enjoy it. I
+have been shipmates with a man, no longer young, who sailed upon that
+voyage, his first time to sea, for the mere love of Samoa; and it was a
+few letters in a newspaper that sent him on that pilgrimage. Mr.
+M’Callum was another instance of the same. He had read of the South
+Seas; loved to read of them; and let their image fasten in his heart:
+till at length he could refrain no longer—must set forth, a new Rudel,
+for that unseen homeland—and has now dwelt for years in Hiva-oa, and will
+lay his bones there in the end with full content; having no desire to
+behold again the places of his boyhood, only, perhaps—once, before he
+dies—the rude and wintry landscape of Cape Flattery. Yet he is an active
+man, full of schemes; has bought land of the natives; has planted five
+thousand coco-palms; has a desert island in his eye, which he desires to
+lease, and a schooner in the stocks, which he has laid and built himself,
+and even hopes to finish. Mr. M’Callum and I did not meet, but, like
+gallant troubadours, corresponded in verse. I hope he will not consider
+it a breach of copyright if I give here a specimen of his muse. He and
+Bishop Dordillon are the two European bards of the Marquesas.
+
+ ‘Sail, ho! Ahoy! _Casco_,
+ First among the pleasure fleet
+ That came around to greet
+ These isles from San Francisco,
+
+ And first, too; only one
+ Among the literary men
+ That this way has ever been—
+ Welcome, then, to Stevenson.
+
+ Please not offended be
+ At this little notice
+ Of the _Casco_, Captain Otis,
+ With the novelist’s family.
+
+ _Avoir une voyage magnifical_
+ Is our wish sincere,
+ That you’ll have from here
+ _Allant sur la Grande Pacifical_.’
+
+But our chief visitor was one Mapiao, a great Tahuku—which seems to mean
+priest, wizard, tattooer, practiser of any art, or, in a word, esoteric
+person—and a man famed for his eloquence on public occasions and witty
+talk in private. His first appearance was typical of the man. He came
+down clamorous to the eastern landing, where the surf was running very
+high; scorned all our signals to go round the bay; carried his point, was
+brought aboard at some hazard to our skiff, and set down in one corner of
+the cockpit to his appointed task. He had been hired, as one cunning in
+the art, to make my old men’s beards into a wreath: what a wreath for
+Celia’s arbour! His own beard (which he carried, for greater safety, in
+a sailor’s knot) was not merely the adornment of his age, but a
+substantial piece of property. One hundred dollars was the estimated
+value; and as Brother Michel never knew a native to deposit a greater sum
+with Bishop Dordillon, our friend was a rich man in virtue of his chin.
+He had something of an East Indian cast, but taller and stronger: his
+nose hooked, his face narrow, his forehead very high, the whole
+elaborately tattooed. I may say I have never entertained a guest so
+trying. In the least particular he must be waited on; he would not go to
+the scuttle-butt for water; he would not even reach to get the glass, it
+must be given him in his hand; if aid were denied him, he would fold his
+arms, bow his head, and go without: only the work would suffer. Early
+the first forenoon he called aloud for biscuit and salmon; biscuit and
+ham were brought; he looked on them inscrutably, and signed they should
+be set aside. A number of considerations crowded on my mind; how the
+sort of work on which he was engaged was probably tapu in a high degree;
+should by rights, perhaps, be transacted on a tapu platform which no
+female might approach; and it was possible that fish might be the
+essential diet. Some salted fish I therefore brought him, and along with
+that a glass of rum: at sight of which Mapiao displayed extraordinary
+animation, pointed to the zenith, made a long speech in which I picked up
+_umati_—the word for the sun—and signed to me once more to place these
+dainties out of reach. At last I had understood, and every day the
+programme was the same. At an early period of the morning his dinner
+must be set forth on the roof of the house and at a proper distance, full
+in view but just out of reach; and not until the fit hour, which was the
+point of noon, would the artificer partake. This solemnity was the cause
+of an absurd misadventure. He was seated plaiting, as usual, at the
+beards, his dinner arrayed on the roof, and not far off a glass of water
+standing. It appears he desired to drink; was of course far too great a
+gentleman to rise and get the water for himself; and spying Mrs.
+Stevenson, imperiously signed to her to hand it. The signal was
+misunderstood; Mrs. Stevenson was, by this time, prepared for any
+eccentricity on the part of our guest; and instead of passing him the
+water, flung his dinner overboard. I must do Mapiao justice: all
+laughed, but his laughter rang the loudest.
+
+These troubles of service were at worst occasional; the embarrassment of
+the man’s talk incessant. He was plainly a practised conversationalist;
+the nicety of his inflections, the elegance of his gestures, and the fine
+play of his expression, told us that. We, meanwhile, sat like aliens in
+a playhouse; we could see the actors were upon some material business and
+performing well, but the plot of the drama remained undiscoverable.
+Names of places, the name of Captain Hart, occasional disconnected words,
+tantalised without enlightening us; and the less we understood, the more
+gallantly, the more copiously, and with still the more explanatory
+gestures, Mapiao returned to the assault. We could see his vanity was on
+the rack; being come to a place where that fine jewel of his
+conversational talent could earn him no respect; and he had times of
+despair when he desisted from the endeavour, and instants of irritation
+when he regarded us with unconcealed contempt. Yet for me, as the
+practitioner of some kindred mystery to his own, he manifested to the
+last a measure of respect. As we sat under the awning in opposite
+corners of the cockpit, he braiding hairs from dead men’s chins, I
+forming runes upon a sheet of folio paper, he would nod across to me as
+one Tahuku to another, or, crossing the cockpit, study for a while my
+shapeless scrawl and encourage me with a heartfelt ‘_mitai_!—good!’ So
+might a deaf painter sympathise far off with a musician, as the slave and
+master of some uncomprehended and yet kindred art. A silly trade, he
+doubtless considered it; but a man must make allowance for
+barbarians—_chaque pays a ses coutumes_—and he felt the principle was
+there.
+
+The time came at last when his labours, which resembled those rather of
+Penelope than Hercules, could be no more spun out, and nothing remained
+but to pay him and say farewell. After a long, learned argument in
+Marquesan, I gathered that his mind was set on fish-hooks; with three of
+which, and a brace of dollars, I thought he was not ill rewarded for
+passing his forenoons in our cockpit, eating, drinking, delivering his
+opinions, and pressing the ship’s company into his menial service. For
+all that, he was a man of so high a bearing, and so like an uncle of my
+own who should have gone mad and got tattooed, that I applied to him,
+when we were both on shore, to know if he were satisfied. ‘_Mitai
+ehipe_?’ I asked. And he, with rich unction, offering at the same time
+his hand—‘_Mitai ehipe_, _mitai kaehae_; _kaoha nui_!’—or, to translate
+freely: ‘The ship is good, the victuals are up to the mark, and we part
+in friendship.’ Which testimonial uttered, he set off along the beach
+with his head bowed and the air of one deeply injured.
+
+I saw him go, on my side, with relief. It would be more interesting to
+learn how our relation seemed to Mapiao. His exigence, we may suppose,
+was merely loyal. He had been hired by the ignorant to do a piece of
+work; and he was bound that he would do it the right way. Countless
+obstacles, continual ignorant ridicule, availed not to dissuade him. He
+had his dinner laid out; watched it, as was fit, the while he worked; ate
+it at the fit hour; was in all things served and waited on; and could
+take his hire in the end with a clear conscience, telling himself the
+mystery was performed duly, the beards rightfully braided, and we (in
+spite of ourselves) correctly served. His view of our stupidity, even
+he, the mighty talker, must have lacked language to express. He never
+interfered with my Tahuku work; civilly praised it, idle as it seemed;
+civilly supposed that I was competent in my own mystery: such being the
+attitude of the intelligent and the polite. And we, on the other
+hand—who had yet the most to gain or lose, since the product was to be
+ours—who had professed our disability by the very act of hiring him to do
+it—were never weary of impeding his own more important labours, and
+sometimes lacked the sense and the civility to refrain from laughter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV—IN A CANNIBAL VALLEY
+
+
+The road from Taahauku to Atuona skirted the north-westerly side of the
+anchorage, somewhat high up, edged, and sometimes shaded, by the splendid
+flowers of the _flamboyant_—its English name I do not know. At the turn
+of the hand, Atuona came in view: a long beach, a heavy and loud breach
+of surf, a shore-side village scattered among trees, and the guttered
+mountains drawing near on both sides above a narrow and rich ravine. Its
+infamous repute perhaps affected me; but I thought it the loveliest, and
+by far the most ominous and gloomy, spot on earth. Beautiful it surely
+was; and even more salubrious. The healthfulness of the whole group is
+amazing; that of Atuona almost in the nature of a miracle. In Atuona, a
+village planted in a shore-side marsh, the houses standing everywhere
+intermingled with the pools of a taro-garden, we find every condition of
+tropical danger and discomfort; and yet there are not even mosquitoes—not
+even the hateful day-fly of Nuka-hiva—and fever, and its concomitant, the
+island fe’efe’e, {122} are unknown.
+
+This is the chief station of the French on the man-eating isle of
+Hiva-oa. The sergeant of gendarmerie enjoys the style of the
+vice-resident, and hoists the French colours over a quite extensive
+compound. A Chinaman, a waif from the plantation, keeps a restaurant in
+the rear quarters of the village; and the mission is well represented by
+the sister’s school and Brother Michel’s church. Father Orens, a
+wonderful octogenarian, his frame scarce bowed, the fire of his eye
+undimmed, has lived, and trembled, and suffered in this place since 1843.
+Again and again, when Moipu had made coco-brandy, he has been driven from
+his house into the woods. ‘A mouse that dwelt in a cat’s ear’ had a more
+easy resting-place; and yet I have never seen a man that bore less mark
+of years. He must show us the church, still decorated with the bishop’s
+artless ornaments of paper—the last work of industrious old hands, and
+the last earthly amusement of a man that was much of a hero. In the
+sacristy we must see his sacred vessels, and, in particular, a vestment
+which was a ‘_vraie curiosité_,’ because it had been given by a gendarme.
+To the Protestant there is always something embarrassing in the eagerness
+with which grown and holy men regard these trifles; but it was touching
+and pretty to see Orens, his aged eyes shining in his head, display his
+sacred treasures.
+
+_August_ 26.—The vale behind the village, narrowing swiftly to a mere
+ravine, was choked with profitable trees. A river gushed in the midst.
+Overhead, the tall coco-palms made a primary covering; above that, from
+one wall of the mountain to another, the ravine was roofed with cloud; so
+that we moved below, amid teeming vegetation, in a covered house of heat.
+On either hand, at every hundred yards, instead of the houseless,
+disembowelling paepaes of Nuka-hiva, populous houses turned out their
+inhabitants to cry ‘Kaoha!’ to the passers-by. The road, too, was busy:
+strings of girls, fair and foul, as in less favoured countries; men
+bearing breadfruit; the sisters, with a little guard of pupils; a fellow
+bestriding a horse—passed and greeted us continually; and now it was a
+Chinaman who came to the gate of his flower-yard, and gave us ‘Good-day’
+in excellent English; and a little farther on it would be some natives
+who set us down by the wayside, made us a feast of mummy-apple, and
+entertained us as we ate with drumming on a tin case. With all this fine
+plenty of men and fruit, death is at work here also. The population,
+according to the highest estimate, does not exceed six hundred in the
+whole vale of Atuona; and yet, when I once chanced to put the question,
+Brother Michel counted up ten whom he knew to be sick beyond recovery.
+It was here, too, that I could at last gratify my curiosity with the
+sight of a native house in the very article of dissolution. It had
+fallen flat along the paepae, its poles sprawling ungainly; the rains and
+the mites contended against it; what remained seemed sound enough, but
+much was gone already; and it was easy to see how the insects consumed
+the walls as if they had been bread, and the air and the rain ate into
+them like vitriol.
+
+A little ahead of us, a young gentleman, very well tattooed, and dressed
+in a pair of white trousers and a flannel shirt, had been marching
+unconcernedly. Of a sudden, without apparent cause, he turned back, took
+us in possession, and led us undissuadably along a by-path to the river’s
+edge. There, in a nook of the most attractive amenity, he bade us to sit
+down: the stream splashing at our elbow, a shock of nondescript greenery
+enshrining us from above; and thither, after a brief absence, he brought
+us a cocoa-nut, a lump of sandal-wood, and a stick he had begun to carve:
+the nut for present refreshment, the sandal-wood for a precious gift, and
+the stick—in the simplicity of his vanity—to harvest premature praise.
+Only one section was yet carved, although the whole was pencil-marked in
+lengths; and when I proposed to buy it, Poni (for that was the artist’s
+name) recoiled in horror. But I was not to be moved, and simply refused
+restitution, for I had long wondered why a people who displayed, in their
+tattooing, so great a gift of arabesque invention, should display it
+nowhere else. Here, at last, I had found something of the same talent in
+another medium; and I held the incompleteness, in these days of
+world-wide brummagem, for a happy mark of authenticity. Neither my
+reasons nor my purpose had I the means of making clear to Poni; I could
+only hold on to the stick, and bid the artist follow me to the
+gendarmerie, where I should find interpreters and money; but we gave him,
+in the meanwhile, a boat-call in return for his sandal-wood. As he came
+behind us down the vale he sounded upon this continually. And
+continually, from the wayside houses, there poured forth little groups of
+girls in crimson, or of men in white. And to these must Poni pass the
+news of who the strangers were, of what they had been doing, of why it
+was that Poni had a boat-whistle; and of why he was now being haled to
+the vice-residency, uncertain whether to be punished or rewarded,
+uncertain whether he had lost a stick or made a bargain, but hopeful on
+the whole, and in the meanwhile highly consoled by the boat-whistle.
+Whereupon he would tear himself away from this particular group of
+inquirers, and once more we would hear the shrill call in our wake.
+
+_August_ 27.—I made a more extended circuit in the vale with Brother
+Michel. We were mounted on a pair of sober nags, suitable to these rude
+paths; the weather was exquisite, and the company in which I found myself
+no less agreeable than the scenes through which I passed. We mounted at
+first by a steep grade along the summit of one of those twisted spurs
+that, from a distance, mark out provinces of sun and shade upon the
+mountain-side. The ground fell away on either hand with an extreme
+declivity. From either hand, out of profound ravines, mounted the song
+of falling water and the smoke of household fires. Here and there the
+hills of foliage would divide, and our eye would plunge down upon one of
+these deep-nested habitations. And still, high in front, arose the
+precipitous barrier of the mountain, greened over where it seemed that
+scarce a harebell could find root, barred with the zigzags of a human
+road where it seemed that not a goat could scramble. And in truth, for
+all the labour that it cost, the road is regarded even by the Marquesans
+as impassable; they will not risk a horse on that ascent; and those who
+lie to the westward come and go in their canoes. I never knew a hill to
+lose so little on a near approach: a consequence, I must suppose, of its
+surprising steepness. When we turned about, I was amazed to behold so
+deep a view behind, and so high a shoulder of blue sea, crowned by the
+whale-like island of Motane. And yet the wall of mountain had not
+visibly dwindled, and I could even have fancied, as I raised my eyes to
+measure it, that it loomed higher than before.
+
+We struck now into covert paths, crossed and heard more near at hand the
+bickering of the streams, and tasted the coolness of those recesses where
+the houses stood. The birds sang about us as we descended. All along
+our path my guide was being hailed by voices: ‘Mikaël—Kaoha, Mikaël!’
+From the doorstep, from the cotton-patch, or out of the deep grove of
+island-chestnuts, these friendly cries arose, and were cheerily answered
+as we passed. In a sharp angle of a glen, on a rushing brook and under
+fathoms of cool foliage, we struck a house upon a well-built paepae, the
+fire brightly burning under the popoi-shed against the evening meal; and
+here the cries became a chorus, and the house folk, running out, obliged
+us to dismount and breathe. It seemed a numerous family: we saw eight at
+least; and one of these honoured me with a particular attention. This
+was the mother, a woman naked to the waist, of an aged countenance, but
+with hair still copious and black, and breasts still erect and youthful.
+On our arrival I could see she remarked me, but instead of offering any
+greeting, disappeared at once into the bush. Thence she returned with
+two crimson flowers. ‘Good-bye!’ was her salutation, uttered not without
+coquetry; and as she said it she pressed the flowers into my
+hand—‘Good-bye! I speak Inglis.’ It was from a whaler-man, who (she
+informed me) was ‘a plenty good chap,’ that she had learned my language;
+and I could not but think how handsome she must have been in these times
+of her youth, and could not but guess that some memories of the dandy
+whaler-man prompted her attentions to myself. Nor could I refrain from
+wondering what had befallen her lover; in the rain and mire of what
+sea-ports he had tramped since then; in what close and garish
+drinking-dens had found his pleasure; and in the ward of what infirmary
+dreamed his last of the Marquesas. But she, the more fortunate, lived on
+in her green island. The talk, in this lost house upon the mountains,
+ran chiefly upon Mapiao and his visits to the _Casco_: the news of which
+had probably gone abroad by then to all the island, so that there was no
+paepae in Hiva-oa where they did not make the subject of excited comment.
+
+Not much beyond we came upon a high place in the foot of the ravine. Two
+roads divided it, and met in the midst. Save for this intersection the
+amphitheatre was strangely perfect, and had a certain ruder air of things
+Roman. Depths of foliage and the bulk of the mountain kept it in a
+grateful shadow. On the benches several young folk sat clustered or
+apart. One of these, a girl perhaps fourteen years of age, buxom and
+comely, caught the eye of Brother Michel. Why was she not at school?—she
+was done with school now. What was she doing here?—she lived here now.
+Why so?—no answer but a deepening blush. There was no severity in
+Brother Michel’s manner; the girl’s own confusion told her story. ‘_Elle
+a honte_,’ was the missionary’s comment, as we rode away. Near by in the
+stream, a grown girl was bathing naked in a goyle between two
+stepping-stones; and it amused me to see with what alacrity and real
+alarm she bounded on her many-coloured under-clothes. Even in these
+daughters of cannibals shame was eloquent.
+
+It is in Hiva-oa, owing to the inveterate cannibalism of the natives,
+that local beliefs have been most rudely trodden underfoot. It was here
+that three religious chiefs were set under a bridge, and the women of the
+valley made to defile over their heads upon the road-way: the poor,
+dishonoured fellows sitting there (all observers agree) with streaming
+tears. Not only was one road driven across the high place, but two roads
+intersected in its midst. There is no reason to suppose that the last
+was done of purpose, and perhaps it was impossible entirely to avoid the
+numerous sacred places of the islands. But these things are not done
+without result. I have spoken already of the regard of Marquesans for
+the dead, making (as it does) so strange a contrast with their unconcern
+for death. Early on this day’s ride, for instance, we encountered a
+petty chief, who inquired (of course) where we were going, and suggested
+by way of amendment. ‘Why do you not rather show him the cemetery?’ I
+saw it; it was but newly opened, the third within eight years. They are
+great builders here in Hiva-oa; I saw in my ride paepaes that no European
+dry-stone mason could have equalled, the black volcanic stones were laid
+so justly, the corners were so precise, the levels so true; but the
+retaining-wall of the new graveyard stood apart, and seemed to be a work
+of love. The sentiment of honour for the dead is therefore not extinct.
+And yet observe the consequence of violently countering men’s opinions.
+Of the four prisoners in Atuona gaol, three were of course thieves; the
+fourth was there for sacrilege. He had levelled up a piece of the
+graveyard—to give a feast upon, as he informed the court—and declared he
+had no thought of doing wrong. Why should he? He had been forced at the
+point of the bayonet to destroy the sacred places of his own piety; when
+he had recoiled from the task, he had been jeered at for a superstitious
+fool. And now it is supposed he will respect our European superstitions
+as by second nature.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV—THE TWO CHIEFS OF ATUONA
+
+
+It had chanced (as the _Casco_ beat through the Bordelais Straits for
+Taahauku) she approached on one board very near the land in the opposite
+isle of Tauata, where houses were to be seen in a grove of tall
+coco-palms. Brother Michel pointed out the spot. ‘I am at home now,’
+said he. ‘I believe I have a large share in these cocoa-nuts; and in
+that house madame my mother lives with her two husbands!’ ‘With two
+husbands?’ somebody inquired. ‘_C’est ma honte_,’ replied the brother
+drily.
+
+A word in passing on the two husbands. I conceive the brother to have
+expressed himself loosely. It seems common enough to find a native lady
+with two consorts; but these are not two husbands. The first is still
+the husband; the wife continues to be referred to by his name; and the
+position of the coadjutor, or _pikio_, although quite regular, appears
+undoubtedly subordinate. We had opportunities to observe one household
+of the sort. The _pikio_ was recognised; appeared openly along with the
+husband when the lady was thought to be insulted, and the pair made
+common cause like brothers. At home the inequality was more apparent.
+The husband sat to receive and entertain visitors; the _pikio_ was
+running the while to fetch cocoa-nuts like a hired servant, and I
+remarked he was sent on these errands in preference even to the son.
+Plainly we have here no second husband; plainly we have the tolerated
+lover. Only, in the Marquesas, instead of carrying his lady’s fan and
+mantle, he must turn his hand to do the husband’s housework.
+
+The sight of Brother Michel’s family estate led the conversation for some
+while upon the method and consequence of artificial kinship. Our
+curiosity became extremely whetted; the brother offered to have the whole
+of us adopted, and some two days later we became accordingly the children
+of Paaaeua, appointed chief of Atuona. I was unable to be present at the
+ceremony, which was primitively simple. The two Mrs. Stevensons and Mr.
+Osbourne, along with Paaaeua, his wife, and an adopted child of theirs,
+son of a shipwrecked Austrian, sat down to an excellent island meal, of
+which the principal and the only necessary dish was pig. A concourse
+watched them through the apertures of the house; but none, not even
+Brother Michel, might partake; for the meal was sacramental, and either
+creative or declaratory of the new relationship. In Tahiti things are
+not so strictly ordered; when Ori and I ‘made brothers,’ both our
+families sat with us at table, yet only he and I, who had eaten with
+intention were supposed to be affected by the ceremony. For the adoption
+of an infant I believe no formality to be required; the child is handed
+over by the natural parents, and grows up to inherit the estates of the
+adoptive. Presents are doubtless exchanged, as at all junctures of
+island life, social or international; but I never heard of any
+banquet—the child’s presence at the daily board perhaps sufficing. We
+may find the rationale in the ancient Arabian idea that a common diet
+makes a common blood, with its derivative axiom that ‘he is the father
+who gives the child its morning draught.’ In the Marquesan practice, the
+sense would thus be evanescent; from the Tahitian, a mere survival, it
+will have entirely fled. An interesting parallel will probably occur to
+many of my readers.
+
+What is the nature of the obligation assumed at such a festival? It will
+vary with the characters of those engaged, and with the circumstances of
+the case. Thus it would be absurd to take too seriously our adoption at
+Atuona. On the part of Paaaeua it was an affair of social ambition; when
+he agreed to receive us in his family the man had not so much as seen us,
+and knew only that we were inestimably rich and travelled in a floating
+palace. We, upon our side, ate of his baked meats with no true _animus
+affiliandi_, but moved by the single sentiment of curiosity. The affair
+was formal, and a matter of parade, as when in Europe sovereigns call
+each other cousin. Yet, had we stayed at Atuona, Paaaeua would have held
+himself bound to establish us upon his land, and to set apart young men
+for our service, and trees for our support. I have mentioned the
+Austrian. He sailed in one of two sister ships, which left the Clyde in
+coal; both rounded the Horn, and both, at several hundred miles of
+distance, though close on the same point of time, took fire at sea on the
+Pacific. One was destroyed; the derelict iron frame of the second, after
+long, aimless cruising, was at length recovered, refitted, and hails
+to-day from San Francisco. A boat’s crew from one of these disasters
+reached, after great hardships, the isle of Hiva-oa. Some of these men
+vowed they would never again confront the chances of the sea; but alone
+of them all the Austrian has been exactly true to his engagement, remains
+where he landed, and designs to die where he has lived. Now, with such a
+man, falling and taking root among islanders, the processes described may
+be compared to a gardener’s graft. He passes bodily into the native
+stock; ceases wholly to be alien; has entered the commune of the blood,
+shares the prosperity and consideration of his new family, and is
+expected to impart with the same generosity the fruits of his European
+skill and knowledge. It is this implied engagement that so frequently
+offends the ingrafted white. To snatch an immediate advantage—to get
+(let us say) a station for his store—he will play upon the native custom
+and become a son or a brother for the day, promising himself to cast down
+the ladder by which he shall have ascended, and repudiate the kinship so
+soon as it shall grow burdensome. And he finds there are two parties to
+the bargain. Perhaps his Polynesian relative is simple, and conceived
+the blood-bond literally; perhaps he is shrewd, and himself entered the
+covenant with a view to gain. And either way the store is ravaged, the
+house littered with lazy natives; and the richer the man grows, the more
+numerous, the more idle, and the more affectionate he finds his native
+relatives. Most men thus circumstanced contrive to buy or brutally
+manage to enforce their independence; but many vegetate without hope,
+strangled by parasites.
+
+We had no cause to blush with Brother Michel. Our new parents were kind,
+gentle, well-mannered, and generous in gifts; the wife was a most
+motherly woman, the husband a man who stood justly high with his
+employers. Enough has been said to show why Moipu should be deposed; and
+in Paaaeua the French had found a reputable substitute. He went always
+scrupulously dressed, and looked the picture of propriety, like a dark,
+handsome, stupid, and probably religious young man hot from a European
+funeral. In character he seemed the ideal of what is known as the good
+citizen. He wore gravity like an ornament. None could more nicely
+represent the desired character as an appointed chief, the outpost of
+civilisation and reform. And yet, were the French to go and native
+manners to revive, fancy beholds him crowned with old men’s beards and
+crowding with the first to a man-eating festival. But I must not seem to
+be unjust to Paaaeua. His respectability went deeper than the skin; his
+sense of the becoming sometimes nerved him for unexpected rigours.
+
+One evening Captain Otis and Mr. Osbourne were on shore in the village.
+All was agog; dancing had begun; it was plain it was to be a night of
+festival, and our adventurers were overjoyed at their good fortune. A
+strong fall of rain drove them for shelter to the house of Paaaeua, where
+they were made welcome, wiled into a chamber, and shut in. Presently the
+rain took off, the fun was to begin in earnest, and the young bloods of
+Atuona came round the house and called to my fellow-travellers through
+the interstices of the wall. Late into the night the calls were
+continued and resumed, and sometimes mingled with taunts; late into the
+night the prisoners, tantalised by the noises of the festival, renewed
+their efforts to escape. But all was vain; right across the door lay
+that god-fearing householder, Paaaeua, feigning sleep; and my friends had
+to forego their junketing. In this incident, so delightfully European,
+we thought we could detect three strands of sentiment. In the first
+place, Paaaeua had a charge of souls: these were young men, and he judged
+it right to withhold them from the primrose path. Secondly, he was a
+public character, and it was not fitting that his guests should
+countenance a festival of which he disapproved. So might some strict
+clergyman at home address a worldly visitor: ‘Go to the theatre if you
+like, but, by your leave, not from my house!’ Thirdly, Paaaeua was a man
+jealous, and with some cause (as shall be shown) for jealousy; and the
+feasters were the satellites of his immediate rival, Moipu.
+
+For the adoption had caused much excitement in the village; it made the
+strangers popular. Paaaeua, in his difficult posture of appointed chief,
+drew strength and dignity from their alliance, and only Moipu and his
+followers were malcontent. For some reason nobody (except myself)
+appears to dislike Moipu. Captain Hart, who has been robbed and
+threatened by him; Father Orens, whom he has fired at, and repeatedly
+driven to the woods; my own family, and even the French officials—all
+seemed smitten with an irrepressible affection for the man. His fall had
+been made soft; his son, upon his death, was to succeed Paaaeua in the
+chieftaincy; and he lived, at the time of our visit, in the shoreward
+part of the village in a good house, and with a strong following of young
+men, his late braves and pot-hunters. In this society, the coming of the
+_Casco_, the adoption, the return feast on board, and the presents
+exchanged between the whites and their new parents, were doubtless
+eagerly and bitterly canvassed. It was felt that a few years ago the
+honours would have gone elsewhere. In this unwonted business, in this
+reception of some hitherto undreamed-of and outlandish potentate—some
+Prester John or old Assaracus—a few years back it would have been the
+part of Moipu to play the hero and the host, and his young men would have
+accompanied and adorned the various celebrations as the acknowledged
+leaders of society. And now, by a malign vicissitude of fortune, Moipu
+must sit in his house quite unobserved; and his young men could but look
+in at the door while their rivals feasted. Perhaps M. Grévy felt a touch
+of bitterness towards his successor when he beheld him figure on the
+broad stage of the centenary of eighty-nine; the visit of the _Casco_
+which Moipu had missed by so few years was a more unusual occasion in
+Atuona than a centenary in France; and the dethroned chief determined to
+reassert himself in the public eye.
+
+Mr. Osbourne had gone into Atuona photographing; the population of the
+village had gathered together for the occasion on the place before the
+church, and Paaaeua, highly delighted with this new appearance of his
+family, played the master of ceremonies. The church had been taken, with
+its jolly architect before the door; the nuns with their pupils; sundry
+damsels in the ancient and singularly unbecoming robes of tapa; and
+Father Orens in the midst of a group of his parishioners. I know not
+what else was in hand, when the photographer became aware of a sensation
+in the crowd, and, looking around, beheld a very noble figure of a man
+appear upon the margin of a thicket and stroll nonchalantly near. The
+nonchalance was visibly affected; it was plain he came there to arouse
+attention, and his success was instant. He was introduced; he was civil,
+he was obliging, he was always ineffably superior and certain of himself;
+a well-graced actor. It was presently suggested that he should appear in
+his war costume; he gracefully consented; and returned in that strange,
+inappropriate and ill-omened array (which very well became his handsome
+person) to strut in a circle of admirers, and be thenceforth the centre
+of photography. Thus had Moipu effected his introduction, as by
+accident, to the white strangers, made it a favour to display his finery,
+and reduced his rival to a secondary _rôle_ on the theatre of the
+disputed village. Paaaeua felt the blow; and, with a spirit which we
+never dreamed he could possess, asserted his priority. It was found
+impossible that day to get a photograph of Moipu alone; for whenever he
+stood up before the camera his successor placed himself unbidden by his
+side, and gently but firmly held to his position. The portraits of the
+pair, Jacob and Esau, standing shoulder to shoulder, one in his careful
+European dress, one in his barbaric trappings, figure the past and
+present of their island. A graveyard with its humble crosses would be
+the aptest symbol of the future.
+
+We are all impressed with the belief that Moipu had planned his campaign
+from the beginning to the end. It is certain that he lost no time in
+pushing his advantage. Mr. Osbourne was inveigled to his house; various
+gifts were fished out of an old sea-chest; Father Orens was called into
+service as interpreter, and Moipu formally proposed to ‘make brothers’
+with Mata-Galahi—Glass-Eyes,—the not very euphonious name under which Mr.
+Osbourne passed in the Marquesas. The feast of brotherhood took place on
+board the _Casco_. Paaaeua had arrived with his family, like a plain
+man; and his presents, which had been numerous, had followed one another,
+at intervals through several days. Moipu, as if to mark at every point
+the opposition, came with a certain feudal pomp, attended by retainers
+bearing gifts of all descriptions, from plumes of old men’s beard to
+little, pious, Catholic engravings.
+
+I had met the man before this in the village, and detested him on sight;
+there was something indescribably raffish in his looks and ways that
+raised my gorge; and when man-eating was referred to, and he laughed a
+low, cruel laugh, part boastful, part bashful, like one reminded of some
+dashing peccadillo, my repugnance was mingled with nausea. This is no
+very human attitude, nor one at all becoming in a traveller. And, seen
+more privately, the man improved. Something negroid in character and
+face was still displeasing; but his ugly mouth became attractive when he
+smiled, his figure and bearing were certainly noble, and his eyes superb.
+In his appreciation of jams and pickles, in is delight in the
+reverberating mirrors of the dining cabin, and consequent endless
+repetition of Moipus and Mata-Galahis, he showed himself engagingly a
+child. And yet I am not sure; and what seemed childishness may have been
+rather courtly art. His manners struck me as beyond the mark; they were
+refined and caressing to the point of grossness, and when I think of the
+serene absent-mindedness with which he first strolled in upon our party,
+and then recall him running on hands and knees along the cabin sofas,
+pawing the velvet, dipping into the beds, and bleating commendatory
+‘_mitais_’ with exaggerated emphasis, like some enormous over-mannered
+ape, I feel the more sure that both must have been calculated. And I
+sometimes wonder next, if Moipu were quite alone in this polite
+duplicity, and ask myself whether the _Casco_ were quite so much admired
+in the Marquesas as our visitors desired us to suppose.
+
+I will complete this sketch of an incurable cannibal grandee with two
+incongruous traits. His favourite morsel was the human hand, of which he
+speaks to-day with an ill-favoured lustfulness. And when he said
+good-bye to Mrs. Stevenson, holding her hand, viewing her with tearful
+eyes, and chanting his farewell improvisation in the falsetto of
+Marquesan high society, he wrote upon her mind a sentimental impression
+which I try in vain to share.
+
+
+
+
+PART II: THE PAUMOTUS
+
+
+CHAPTER I—THE DANGEROUS ARCHIPELAGO—ATOLLS AT A DISTANCE
+
+
+In the early morning of 4th September a whale-boat manned by natives
+dragged us down the green lane of the anchorage and round the spouting
+promontory. On the shore level it was a hot, breathless, and yet crystal
+morning; but high overhead the hills of Atuona were all cowled in cloud,
+and the ocean-river of the trades streamed without pause. As we crawled
+from under the immediate shelter of the land, we reached at last the
+limit of their influence. The wind fell upon our sails in puffs, which
+strengthened and grew more continuous; presently the _Casco_ heeled down
+to her day’s work; the whale-boat, quite outstripped, clung for a noisy
+moment to her quarter; the stipulated bread, rum, and tobacco were passed
+in; a moment more and the boat was in our wake, and our late pilots were
+cheering our departure.
+
+This was the more inspiriting as we were bound for scenes so different,
+and though on a brief voyage, yet for a new province of creation. That
+wide field of ocean, called loosely the South Seas, extends from tropic
+to tropic, and from perhaps 123 degrees W. to 150 degrees E., a
+parallelogram of one hundred degrees by forty-seven, where degrees are
+the most spacious. Much of it lies vacant, much is closely sown with
+isles, and the isles are of two sorts. No distinction is so continually
+dwelt upon in South Sea talk as that between the ‘low’ and the ‘high’
+island, and there is none more broadly marked in nature. The Himalayas
+are not more different from the Sahara. On the one hand, and chiefly in
+groups of from eight to a dozen, volcanic islands rise above the sea; few
+reach an altitude of less than 4000 feet; one exceeds 13,000; their tops
+are often obscured in cloud, they are all clothed with various forests,
+all abound in food, and are all remarkable for picturesque and solemn
+scenery. On the other hand, we have the atoll; a thing of problematic
+origin and history, the reputed creature of an insect apparently
+unidentified; rudely annular in shape; enclosing a lagoon; rarely
+extending beyond a quarter of a mile at its chief width; often rising at
+its highest point to less than the stature of a man—man himself, the rat
+and the land crab, its chief inhabitants; not more variously supplied
+with plants; and offering to the eye, even when perfect, only a ring of
+glittering beach and verdant foliage, enclosing and enclosed by the blue
+sea.
+
+In no quarter are the atolls so thickly congregated, in none are they so
+varied in size from the greatest to the least, and in none is navigation
+so beset with perils, as in that archipelago that we were now to thread.
+The huge system of the trades is, for some reason, quite confounded by
+this multiplicity of reefs, the wind intermits, squalls are frequent from
+the west and south-west, hurricanes are known. The currents are,
+besides, inextricably intermixed; dead reckoning becomes a farce; the
+charts are not to be trusted; and such is the number and similarity of
+these islands that, even when you have picked one up, you may be none the
+wiser. The reputation of the place is consequently infamous; insurance
+offices exclude it from their field, and it was not without misgiving
+that my captain risked the _Casco_ in such waters. I believe, indeed, it
+is almost understood that yachts are to avoid this baffling archipelago;
+and it required all my instances—and all Mr. Otis’s private taste for
+adventure—to deflect our course across its midst.
+
+For a few days we sailed with a steady trade, and a steady westerly
+current setting us to leeward; and toward sundown of the seventh it was
+supposed we should have sighted Takaroa, one of Cook’s so-called King
+George Islands. The sun set; yet a while longer the old
+moon—semi-brilliant herself, and with a silver belly, which was her
+successor—sailed among gathering clouds; she, too, deserted us; stars of
+every degree of sheen, and clouds of every variety of form disputed the
+sub-lustrous night; and still we gazed in vain for Takaroa. The mate
+stood on the bowsprit, his tall grey figure slashing up and down against
+the stars, and still
+
+ ‘nihil astra praeter
+ Vidit et undas.
+
+The rest of us were grouped at the port anchor davit, staring with no
+less assiduity, but with far less hope on the obscure horizon. Islands
+we beheld in plenty, but they were of ‘such stuff as dreams are made on,’
+and vanished at a wink, only to appear in other places; and by and by not
+only islands, but refulgent and revolving lights began to stud the
+darkness; lighthouses of the mind or of the wearied optic nerve, solemnly
+shining and winking as we passed. At length the mate himself despaired,
+scrambled on board again from his unrestful perch, and announced that we
+had missed our destination. He was the only man of practice in these
+waters, our sole pilot, shipped for that end at Tai-o-hae. If he
+declared we had missed Takaroa, it was not for us to quarrel with the
+fact, but, if we could, to explain it. We had certainly run down our
+southing. Our canted wake upon the sea and our somewhat drunken-looking
+course upon the chart both testified with no less certainty to an
+impetuous westward current. We had no choice but to conclude we were
+again set down to leeward; and the best we could do was to bring the
+_Casco_ to the wind, keep a good watch, and expect morning.
+
+I slept that night, as was then my somewhat dangerous practice, on deck
+upon the cockpit bench. A stir at last awoke me, to see all the eastern
+heaven dyed with faint orange, the binnacle lamp already dulled against
+the brightness of the day, and the steersman leaning eagerly across the
+wheel. ‘There it is, sir!’ he cried, and pointed in the very eyeball of
+the dawn. For awhile I could see nothing but the bluish ruins of the
+morning bank, which lay far along the horizon, like melting icebergs.
+Then the sun rose, pierced a gap in these _débris_ of vapours, and
+displayed an inconsiderable islet, flat as a plate upon the sea, and
+spiked with palms of disproportioned altitude.
+
+So far, so good. Here was certainly an atoll; and we were certainly got
+among the archipelago. But which? And where? The isle was too small
+for either Takaroa: in all our neighbourhood, indeed, there was none so
+inconsiderable, save only Tikei; and Tikei, one of Roggewein’s so-called
+Pernicious Islands, seemed beside the question. At that rate, instead of
+drifting to the west, we must have fetched up thirty miles to windward.
+And how about the current? It had been setting us down, by observation,
+all these days: by the deflection of our wake, it should be setting us
+down that moment. When had it stopped? When had it begun again? and
+what kind of torrent was that which had swept us eastward in the
+interval? To these questions, so typical of navigation in that range of
+isles, I have no answer. Such were at least the facts; Tikei our island
+turned out to be; and it was our first experience of the dangerous
+archipelago, to make our landfall thirty miles out.
+
+The sight of Tikei, thrown direct against the splendour of the morning,
+robbed of all its colour, and deformed with disproportioned trees like
+bristles on a broom, had scarce prepared us to be much in love with
+atolls. Later the same day we saw under more fit conditions the island
+of Taiaro. _Lost in the Sea_ is possibly the meaning of the name. And
+it was so we saw it; lost in blue sea and sky: a ring of white beach,
+green underwood, and tossing palms, gem-like in colour; of a fairy, of a
+heavenly prettiness. The surf ran all around it, white as snow, and
+broke at one point, far to seaward, on what seems an uncharted reef.
+There was no smoke, no sign of man; indeed, the isle is not inhabited,
+only visited at intervals. And yet a trader (Mr. Narii Salmon) was
+watching from the shore and wondering at the unexpected ship. I have
+spent since then long months upon low islands; I know the tedium of their
+undistinguished days; I know the burden of their diet. With whatever
+envy we may have looked from the deck on these green coverts, it was with
+a tenfold greater that Mr. Salmon and his comrades saw us steer, in our
+trim ship, to seaward.
+
+The night fell lovely in the extreme. After the moon went down, the
+heaven was a thing to wonder at for stars. And as I lay in the cockpit
+and looked upon the steersman I was haunted by Emerson’s verses:
+
+ ‘And the lone seaman all the night
+ Sails astonished among stars.’
+
+By this glittering and imperfect brightness, about four bells in the
+first watch we made our third atoll, Raraka. The low line of the isle
+lay straight along the sky; so that I was at first reminded of a towpath,
+and we seemed to be mounting some engineered and navigable stream.
+Presently a red star appeared, about the height and brightness of a
+danger signal, and with that my simile was changed; we seemed rather to
+skirt the embankment of a railway, and the eye began to look
+instinctively for the telegraph-posts, and the ear to expect the coming
+of a train. Here and there, but rarely, faint tree-tops broke the level.
+And the sound of the surf accompanied us, now in a drowsy monotone, now
+with a menacing swing.
+
+The isle lay nearly east and west, barring our advance on Fakarava. We
+must, therefore, hug the coast until we gained the western end, where,
+through a passage eight miles wide, we might sail southward between
+Raraka and the next isle, Kauehi. We had the wind free, a lightish air;
+but clouds of an inky blackness were beginning to arise, and at times it
+lightened—without thunder. Something, I know not what, continually set
+us up upon the island. We lay more and more to the nor’ard; and you
+would have thought the shore copied our manœuvre and outsailed us. Once
+and twice Raraka headed us again—again, in the sea fashion, the quite
+innocent steersman was abused—and again the _Casco_ kept away. Had I
+been called on, with no more light than that of our experience, to draw
+the configuration of that island, I should have shown a series of
+bow-window promontories, each overlapping the other to the nor’ard, and
+the trend of the land from the south-east to the north-west, and behold,
+on the chart it lay near east and west in a straight line.
+
+We had but just repeated our manœuvre and kept away—for not more than
+five minutes the railway embankment had been lost to view and the surf to
+hearing—when I was aware of land again, not only on the weather bow, but
+dead ahead. I played the part of the judicious landsman, holding my
+peace till the last moment; and presently my mariners perceived it for
+themselves.
+
+‘Land ahead!’ said the steersman.
+
+‘By God, it’s Kauehi!’ cried the mate.
+
+And so it was. And with that I began to be sorry for cartographers. We
+were scarce doing three and a half; and they asked me to believe that (in
+five minutes) we had dropped an island, passed eight miles of open water,
+and run almost high and dry upon the next. But my captain was more sorry
+for himself to be afloat in such a labyrinth; laid the _Casco_ to, with
+the log line up and down, and sat on the stern rail and watched it till
+the morning. He had enough of night in the Paumotus.
+
+By daylight on the 9th we began to skirt Kauehi, and had now an
+opportunity to see near at hand the geography of atolls. Here and there,
+where it was high, the farther side loomed up; here and there the near
+side dipped entirely and showed a broad path of water into the lagoon;
+here and there both sides were equally abased, and we could look right
+through the discontinuous ring to the sea horizon on the south.
+Conceive, on a vast scale, the submerged hoop of the duck-hunter, trimmed
+with green rushes to conceal his head—water within, water without—you
+have the image of the perfect atoll. Conceive one that has been partly
+plucked of its rush fringe; you have the atoll of Kauehi. And for either
+shore of it at closer quarters, conceive the line of some old Roman
+highway traversing a wet morass, and here sunk out of view and there
+re-arising, crowned with a green tuft of thicket; only instead of the
+stagnant waters of a marsh, the live ocean now boiled against, now buried
+the frail barrier. Last night’s impression in the dark was thus
+confirmed by day, and not corrected. We sailed indeed by a mere causeway
+in the sea, of nature’s handiwork, yet of no greater magnitude than many
+of the works of man.
+
+The isle was uninhabited; it was all green brush and white sand, set in
+transcendently blue water; even the coco-palms were rare, though some of
+these completed the bright harmony of colour by hanging out a fan of
+golden yellow. For long there was no sign of life beyond the vegetable,
+and no sound but the continuous grumble of the surf. In silence and
+desertion these fair shores slipped past, and were submerged and rose
+again with clumps of thicket from the sea. And then a bird or two
+appeared, hovering and crying; swiftly these became more numerous, and
+presently, looking ahead, we were aware of a vast effervescence of winged
+life. In this place the annular isle was mostly under water, carrying
+here and there on its submerged line a wooded islet. Over one of these
+the birds hung and flew with an incredible density like that of gnats or
+hiving bees; the mass flashed white and black, and heaved and quivered,
+and the screaming of the creatures rose over the voice of the surf in a
+shrill clattering whirr. As you descend some inland valley a not
+dissimilar sound announces the nearness of a mill and pouring river.
+Some stragglers, as I said, came to meet our approach; a few still hung
+about the ship as we departed. The crying died away, the last pair of
+wings was left behind, and once more the low shores of Kauehi streamed
+past our eyes in silence like a picture. I supposed at the time that the
+birds lived, like ants or citizens, concentred where we saw them. I have
+been told since (I know not if correctly) that the whole isle, or much of
+it, is similarly peopled; and that the effervescence at a single spot
+would be the mark of a boat’s crew of egg-hunters from one of the
+neighbouring inhabited atolls. So that here at Kauehi, as the day before
+at Taiaro, the _Casco_ sailed by under the fire of unsuspected eyes. And
+one thing is surely true, that even on these ribbons of land an army
+might lie hid and no passing mariner divine its presence.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II—FAKARAVA: AN ATOLL AT HAND
+
+
+By a little before noon we were running down the coast of our
+destination, Fakarava: the air very light, the sea near smooth; though
+still we were accompanied by a continuous murmur from the beach, like the
+sound of a distant train. The isle is of a huge longitude, the enclosed
+lagoon thirty miles by ten or twelve, and the coral tow-path, which they
+call the land, some eighty or ninety miles by (possibly) one furlong.
+That part by which we sailed was all raised; the underwood excellently
+green, the topping wood of coco-palms continuous—a mark, if I had known
+it, of man’s intervention. For once more, and once more unconsciously,
+we were within hail of fellow-creatures, and that vacant beach was but a
+pistol-shot from the capital city of the archipelago. But the life of an
+atoll, unless it be enclosed, passes wholly on the shores of the lagoon;
+it is there the villages are seated, there the canoes ply and are drawn
+up; and the beach of the ocean is a place accursed and deserted, the fit
+scene only for wizardry and shipwreck, and in the native belief a
+haunting ground of murderous spectres.
+
+By and by we might perceive a breach in the low barrier; the woods
+ceased; a glittering point ran into the sea, tipped with an emerald shoal
+the mark of entrance. As we drew near we met a little run of sea—the
+private sea of the lagoon having there its origin and end, and here, in
+the jaws of the gateway, trying vain conclusions with the more majestic
+heave of the Pacific. The _Casco_ scarce avowed a shock; but there are
+times and circumstances when these harbour mouths of inland basins vomit
+floods, deflecting, burying, and dismasting ships. For, conceive a
+lagoon perfectly sealed but in the one point, and that of merely
+navigable width; conceive the tide and wind to have heaped for hours
+together in that coral fold a superfluity of waters, and the tide to
+change and the wind fall—the open sluice of some great reservoirs at home
+will give an image of the unstemmable effluxion.
+
+We were scarce well headed for the pass before all heads were craned over
+the rail. For the water, shoaling under our board, became changed in a
+moment to surprising hues of blue and grey; and in its transparency the
+coral branched and blossomed, and the fish of the inland sea cruised
+visibly below us, stained and striped, and even beaked like parrots. I
+have paid in my time to view many curiosities; never one so curious as
+that first sight over the ship’s rail in the lagoon of Fakarava. But let
+not the reader be deceived with hope. I have since entered, I suppose,
+some dozen atolls in different parts of the Pacific, and the experience
+has never been repeated. That exquisite hue and transparency of
+submarine day, and these shoals of rainbow fish, have not enraptured me
+again.
+
+Before we could raise our eyes from that engaging spectacle the schooner
+had slipped betwixt the pierheads of the reef, and was already quite
+committed to the sea within. The containing shores are so little
+erected, and the lagoon itself is so great, that, for the more part, it
+seemed to extend without a check to the horizon. Here and there, indeed,
+where the reef carried an inlet, like a signet-ring upon a finger, there
+would be a pencilling of palms; here and there, the green wall of wood
+ran solid for a length of miles; and on the port hand, under the highest
+grove of trees, a few houses sparkled white—Rotoava, the metropolitan
+settlement of the Paumotus. Hither we beat in three tacks, and came to
+an anchor close in shore, in the first smooth water since we had left San
+Francisco, five fathoms deep, where a man might look overboard all day at
+the vanishing cable, the coral patches, and the many-coloured fish.
+
+Fakarava was chosen to be the seat of Government from nautical
+considerations only. It is eccentrically situate; the productions, even
+for a low island, poor; the population neither many nor—for Low
+Islanders—industrious. But the lagoon has two good passages, one to
+leeward, one to windward, so that in all states of the wind it can be
+left and entered, and this advantage, for a government of scattered
+islands, was decisive. A pier of coral, landing-stairs, a harbour light
+upon a staff and pillar, and two spacious Government bungalows in a
+handsome fence, give to the northern end of Rotoava a great air of
+consequence. This is confirmed on the one hand by an empty prison, on
+the other by a gendarmerie pasted over with hand-bills in Tahitian,
+land-law notices from Papeete, and republican sentiments from Paris,
+signed (a little after date) ‘Jules Grévy, _Perihidente_.’ Quite at the
+far end a belfried Catholic chapel concludes the town; and between, on a
+smooth floor of white coral sand and under the breezy canopy of
+coco-palms, the houses of the natives stand irregularly scattered, now
+close on the lagoon for the sake of the breeze, now back under the palms
+for love of shadow.
+
+Not a soul was to be seen. But for the thunder of the surf on the far
+side, it seemed you might have heard a pin drop anywhere about that
+capital city. There was something thrilling in the unexpected silence,
+something yet more so in the unexpected sound. Here before us a sea
+reached to the horizon, rippling like an inland mere; and behold! close
+at our back another sea assaulted with assiduous fury the reverse of the
+position. At night the lantern was run up and lit a vacant pier. In one
+house lights were seen and voices heard, where the population (I was
+told) sat playing cards. A little beyond, from deep in the darkness of
+the palm-grove, we saw the glow and smelt the aromatic odour of a coal of
+cocoa-nut husk, a relic of the evening kitchen. Crickets sang; some
+shrill thing whistled in a tuft of weeds; and the mosquito hummed and
+stung. There was no other trace that night of man, bird, or insect in
+the isle. The moon, now three days old, and as yet but a silver crescent
+on a still visible sphere, shone through the palm canopy with vigorous
+and scattered lights. The alleys where we walked were smoothed and
+weeded like a boulevard; here and there were plants set out; here and
+there dusky cottages clustered in the shadow, some with verandahs. A
+public garden by night, a rich and fashionable watering-place in a
+by-season, offer sights and vistas not dissimilar. And still, on the one
+side, stretched the lapping mere, and from the other the deep sea still
+growled in the night. But it was most of all on board, in the dead
+hours, when I had been better sleeping, that the spell of Fakarava seized
+and held me. The moon was down. The harbour lantern and two of the
+greater planets drew vari-coloured wakes on the lagoon. From shore the
+cheerful watch-cry of cocks rang out at intervals above the organ-point
+of surf. And the thought of this depopulated capital, this protracted
+thread of annular island with its crest of coco-palms and fringe of
+breakers, and that tranquil inland sea that stretched before me till it
+touched the stars, ran in my head for hours with delight.
+
+So long as I stayed upon that isle these thoughts were constant. I lay
+down to sleep, and woke again with an unblunted sense of my surroundings.
+I was never weary of calling up the image of that narrow causeway, on
+which I had my dwelling, lying coiled like a serpent, tail to mouth, in
+the outrageous ocean, and I was never weary of passing—a mere
+quarter-deck parade—from the one side to the other, from the shady,
+habitable shores of the lagoon to the blinding desert and uproarious
+breakers of the opposite beach. The sense of insecurity in such a thread
+of residence is more than fanciful. Hurricanes and tidal waves over-leap
+these humble obstacles; Oceanus remembers his strength, and, where houses
+stood and palms flourished, shakes his white beard again over the barren
+coral. Fakarava itself has suffered; the trees immediately beyond my
+house were all of recent replantation; and Anaa is only now recovered
+from a heavier stroke. I knew one who was then dwelling in the isle. He
+told me that he and two ship captains walked to the sea beach. There for
+a while they viewed the oncoming breakers, till one of the captains
+clapped suddenly his hand before his eyes and cried aloud that he could
+endure no longer to behold them. This was in the afternoon; in the dark
+hours of the night the sea burst upon the island like a flood; the
+settlement was razed all but the church and presbytery; and, when day
+returned, the survivors saw themselves clinging in an abattis of uprooted
+coco-palms and ruined houses.
+
+Danger is but a small consideration. But men are more nicely sensible of
+a discomfort; and the atoll is a discomfortable home. There are some,
+and these probably ancient, where a deep soil has formed and the most
+valuable fruit-trees prosper. I have walked in one, with equal
+admiration and surprise, through a forest of huge breadfruits, eating
+bananas and stumbling among taro as I went. This was in the atoll of
+Namorik in the Marshall group, and stands alone in my experience. To
+give the opposite extreme, which is yet far more near the average, I will
+describe the soil and productions of Fakarava. The surface of that
+narrow strip is for the more part of broken coral lime-stone, like
+volcanic clinkers, and excruciating to the naked foot; in some atolls, I
+believe, not in Fakarava, it gives a fine metallic ring when struck.
+Here and there you come upon a bank of sand, exceeding fine and white,
+and these parts are the least productive. The plants (such as they are)
+spring from and love the broken coral, whence they grow with that
+wonderful verdancy that makes the beauty of the atoll from the sea. The
+coco-palm in particular luxuriates in that stern _solum_, striking down
+his roots to the brackish, percolated water, and bearing his green head
+in the wind with every evidence of health and pleasure. And yet even the
+coco-palm must be helped in infancy with some extraneous nutriment, and
+through much of the low archipelago there is planted with each nut a
+piece of ship’s biscuit and a rusty nail. The pandanus comes next in
+importance, being also a food tree; and he, too, does bravely. A green
+bush called _miki_ runs everywhere; occasionally a purao is seen; and
+there are several useless weeds. According to M. Cuzent, the whole
+number of plants on an atoll such as Fakarava will scarce exceed, even if
+it reaches to, one score. Not a blade of grass appears; not a grain of
+humus, save when a sack or two has been imported to make the semblance of
+a garden; such gardens as bloom in cities on the window-sill. Insect
+life is sometimes dense; a cloud o’ mosquitoes, and, what is far worse, a
+plague of flies blackening our food, has sometimes driven us from a meal
+on Apemama; and even in Fakarava the mosquitoes were a pest. The land
+crab may be seen scuttling to his hole, and at night the rats besiege the
+houses and the artificial gardens. The crab is good eating; possibly so
+is the rat; I have not tried. Pandanus fruit is made, in the Gilberts,
+into an agreeable sweetmeat, such as a man may trifle with at the end of
+a long dinner; for a substantial meal I have no use for it. The rest of
+the food-supply, in a destitute atoll such as Fakarava, can be summed up
+in the favourite jest of the archipelago—cocoa-nut beefsteak. Cocoa-nut
+green, cocoa-nut ripe, cocoa-nut germinated; cocoa-nut to eat and
+cocoa-nut to drink; cocoa-nut raw and cooked, cocoa-nut hot and cold—such
+is the bill of fare. And some of the entrées are no doubt delicious.
+The germinated nut, cooked in the shell and eaten with a spoon, forms a
+good pudding; cocoa-nut milk—the expressed juice of a ripe nut, not the
+water of a green one—goes well in coffee, and is a valuable adjunct in
+cookery through the South Seas; and cocoa-nut salad, if you be a
+millionaire, and can afford to eat the value of a field of corn for your
+dessert, is a dish to be remembered with affection. But when all is done
+there is a sameness, and the Israelites of the low islands murmur at
+their manna.
+
+The reader may think I have forgot the sea. The two beaches do certainly
+abound in life, and they are strangely different. In the lagoon the
+water shallows slowly on a bottom of the fine slimy sand, dotted with
+clumps of growing coral. Then comes a strip of tidal beach on which the
+ripples lap. In the coral clumps the great holy-water clam (_Tridacna_)
+grows plentifully; a little deeper lie the beds of the pearl-oyster and
+sail the resplendent fish that charmed us at our entrance; and these are
+all more or less vigorously coloured. But the other shells are white
+like lime, or faintly tinted with a little pink, the palest possible
+display; many of them dead besides, and badly rolled. On the ocean side,
+on the mounds of the steep beach, over all the width of the reef right
+out to where the surf is bursting, in every cranny, under every scattered
+fragment of the coral, an incredible plenty of marine life displays the
+most wonderful variety and brilliancy of hues. The reef itself has no
+passage of colour but is imitated by some shell. Purple and red and
+white, and green and yellow, pied and striped and clouded, the living
+shells wear in every combination the livery of the dead reef—if the reef
+be dead—so that the eye is continually baffled and the collector
+continually deceived. I have taken shells for stones and stones for
+shells, the one as often as the other. A prevailing character of the
+coral is to be dotted with small spots of red, and it is wonderful how
+many varieties of shell have adopted the same fashion and donned the
+disguise of the red spot. A shell I had found in plenty in the Marquesas
+I found here also unchanged in all things else, but there were the red
+spots. A lively little crab wore the same markings. The case of the
+hermit or soldier crab was more conclusive, being the result of conscious
+choice. This nasty little wrecker, scavenger, and squatter has learned
+the value of a spotted house; so it be of the right colour he will choose
+the smallest shard, tuck himself in a mere corner of a broken whorl, and
+go about the world half naked; but I never found him in this imperfect
+armour unless it was marked with the red spot.
+
+Some two hundred yards distant is the beach of the lagoon. Collect the
+shells from each, set them side by side, and you would suppose they came
+from different hemispheres; the one so pale, the other so brilliant; the
+one prevalently white, the other of a score of hues, and infected with
+the scarlet spot like a disease. This seems the more strange, since the
+hermit crabs pass and repass the island, and I have met them by the
+Residency well, which is about central, journeying either way. Without
+doubt many of the shells in the lagoon are dead. But why are they dead?
+Without doubt the living shells have a very different background set for
+imitation. But why are these so different? We are only on the threshold
+of the mysteries.
+
+Either beach, I have said, abounds with life. On the sea-side and in
+certain atolls this profusion of vitality is even shocking: the rock
+under foot is mined with it. I have broken off—notably in Funafuti and
+Arorai {156}—great lumps of ancient weathered rock that rang under my
+blows like iron, and the fracture has been full of pendent worms as long
+as my hand, as thick as a child’s finger, of a slightly pinkish white,
+and set as close as three or even four to the square inch. Even in the
+lagoon, where certain shell-fish seem to sicken, others (it is notorious)
+prosper exceedingly and make the riches of these islands. Fish, too,
+abound; the lagoon is a closed fish-pond, such as might rejoice the fancy
+of an abbot; sharks swarm there, and chiefly round the passages, to feast
+upon this plenty, and you would suppose that man had only to prepare his
+angle. Alas! it is not so. Of these painted fish that came in hordes
+about the entering _Casco_, some bore poisonous spines, and others were
+poisonous if eaten. The stranger must refrain, or take his chance of
+painful and dangerous sickness. The native, on his own isle, is a safe
+guide; transplant him to the next, and he is helpless as yourself. For
+it is a question both of time and place. A fish caught in a lagoon may
+be deadly; the same fish caught the same day at sea, and only a few
+hundred yards without the passage, will be wholesome eating: in a
+neighbouring isle perhaps the case will be reversed; and perhaps a
+fortnight later you shall be able to eat of them indifferently from
+within and from without. According to the natives, these bewildering
+vicissitudes are ruled by the movement of the heavenly bodies. The
+beautiful planet Venus plays a great part in all island tales and
+customs; and among other functions, some of them more awful, she
+regulates the season of good fish. With Venus in one phase, as we had
+her, certain fish were poisonous in the lagoon: with Venus in another,
+the same fish was harmless and a valued article of diet. White men
+explain these changes by the phases of the coral.
+
+It adds a last touch of horror to the thought of this precarious annular
+gangway in the sea, that even what there is of it is not of honest rock,
+but organic, part alive, part putrescent; even the clean sea and the
+bright fish about it poisoned, the most stubborn boulder burrowed in by
+worms, the lightest dust venomous as an apothecary’s drugs.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III—A HOUSE TO LET IN A LOW ISLAND
+
+
+Never populous, it was yet by a chapter of accidents that I found the
+island so deserted that no sound of human life diversified the hours;
+that we walked in that trim public garden of a town, among closed houses,
+without even a lodging-bill in a window to prove some tenancy in the back
+quarters; and, when we visited the Government bungalow, that Mr. Donat,
+acting Vice-Resident, greeted us alone, and entertained us with cocoa-nut
+punches in the Sessions Hall and seat of judgment of that widespread
+archipelago, our glasses standing arrayed with summonses and census
+returns. The unpopularity of a late Vice-Resident had begun the movement
+of exodus, his native employés resigning court appointments and retiring
+each to his own coco-patch in the remoter districts of the isle. Upon
+the back of that, the Governor in Papeete issued a decree: All land in
+the Paumotus must be defined and registered by a certain date. Now, the
+folk of the archipelago are half nomadic; a man can scarce be said to
+belong to a particular atoll; he belongs to several, perhaps holds a
+stake and counts cousinship in half a score; and the inhabitants of
+Rotoava in particular, man, woman, and child, and from the gendarme to
+the Mormon prophet and the schoolmaster, owned—I was going to say
+land—owned at least coral blocks and growing coco-palms in some adjacent
+isle. Thither—from the gendarme to the babe in arms, the pastor followed
+by his flock, the schoolmaster carrying along with him his scholars, and
+the scholars with their books and slates—they had taken ship some two
+days previous to our arrival, and were all now engaged disputing
+boundaries. Fancy overhears the shrillness of their disputation mingle
+with the surf and scatter sea-fowl. It was admirable to observe the
+completeness of their flight, like that of hibernating birds; nothing
+left but empty houses, like old nests to be reoccupied in spring; and
+even the harmless necessary dominie borne with them in their
+transmigration. Fifty odd set out, and only seven, I was informed,
+remained. But when I made a feast on board the _Casco_, more than seven,
+and nearer seven times seven, appeared to be my guests. Whence they
+appeared, how they were summoned, whither they vanished when the feast
+was eaten, I have no guess. In view of Low Island tales, and that awful
+frequentation which makes men avoid the seaward beaches of an atoll, some
+two score of those that ate with us may have returned, for the occasion,
+from the kingdom of the dead.
+
+It was this solitude that put it in our minds to hire a house, and
+become, for the time being, indwellers of the isle—a practice I have ever
+since, when it was possible, adhered to. Mr. Donat placed us, with that
+intent, under the convoy of one Taniera Mahinui, who combined the
+incongruous characters of catechist and convict. The reader may smile,
+but I affirm he was well qualified for either part. For that of convict,
+first of all, by a good substantial felony, such as in all lands casts
+the perpetrator in chains and dungeons. Taniera was a man of birth—the
+chief a while ago, as he loved to tell, of a district in Anaa of 800
+souls. In an evil hour it occurred to the authorities in Papeete to
+charge the chiefs with the collection of the taxes. It is a question if
+much were collected; it is certain that nothing was handed on; and
+Taniera, who had distinguished himself by a visit to Papeete and some
+high living in restaurants, was chosen for the scapegoat. The reader
+must understand that not Taniera but the authorities in Papeete were
+first in fault. The charge imposed was disproportioned. I have not yet
+heard of any Polynesian capable of such a burden; honest and upright
+Hawaiians—one in particular, who was admired even by the whites as an
+inflexible magistrate—have stumbled in the narrow path of the trustee.
+And Taniera, when the pinch came, scorned to denounce accomplices; others
+had shared the spoil, he bore the penalty alone. He was condemned in
+five years. The period, when I had the pleasure of his friendship, was
+not yet expired; he still drew prison rations, the sole and not unwelcome
+reminder of his chains, and, I believe, looked forward to the date of his
+enfranchisement with mere alarm. For he had no sense of shame in the
+position; complained of nothing but the defective table of his place of
+exile; regretted nothing but the fowls and eggs and fish of his own more
+favoured island. And as for his parishioners, they did not think one
+hair the less of him. A schoolboy, mulcted in ten thousand lines of
+Greek and dwelling sequestered in the dormitories, enjoys unabated
+consideration from his fellows. So with Taniera: a marked man, not a
+dishonoured; having fallen under the lash of the unthinkable gods; a Job,
+perhaps, or say a Taniera in the den of lions. Songs are likely made and
+sung about this saintly Robin Hood. On the other hand, he was even
+highly qualified for his office in the Church; being by nature a grave,
+considerate, and kindly man; his face rugged and serious, his smile
+bright; the master of several trades, a builder both of boats and houses;
+endowed with a fine pulpit voice; endowed besides with such a gift of
+eloquence that at the grave of the late chief of Fakarava he set all the
+assistants weeping. I never met a man of a mind more ecclesiastical; he
+loved to dispute and to inform himself of doctrine and the history of
+sects; and when I showed him the cuts in a volume of Chambers’s
+_Encyclopædia_—except for one of an ape—reserved his whole enthusiasm for
+cardinals’ hats, censers, candlesticks, and cathedrals. Methought when
+he looked upon the cardinal’s hat a voice said low in his ear: ‘Your foot
+is on the ladder.’
+
+Under the guidance of Taniera we were soon installed in what I believe to
+have been the best-appointed private house in Fakarava. It stood just
+beyond the church in an oblong patch of cultivation. More than three
+hundred sacks of soil were imported from Tahiti for the Residency garden;
+and this must shortly be renewed, for the earth blows away, sinks in
+crevices of the coral, and is sought for at last in vain. I know not how
+much earth had gone to the garden of my villa; some at least, for an
+alley of prosperous bananas ran to the gate, and over the rest of the
+enclosure, which was covered with the usual clinker-like fragments of
+smashed coral, not only coco-palms and mikis but also fig-trees
+flourished, all of a delicious greenness. Of course there was no blade
+of grass. In front a picket fence divided us from the white road, the
+palm-fringed margin of the lagoon, and the lagoon itself, reflecting
+clouds by day and stars by night. At the back, a bulwark of uncemented
+coral enclosed us from the narrow belt of bush and the nigh ocean beach
+where the seas thundered, the roar and wash of them still humming in the
+chambers of the house.
+
+This itself was of one story, verandahed front and back. It contained
+three rooms, three sewing-machines, three sea-chests, chairs, tables, a
+pair of beds, a cradle, a double-barrelled gun, a pair of enlarged
+coloured photographs, a pair of coloured prints after Wilkie and
+Mulready, and a French lithograph with the legend: ‘_Le brigade du
+Général Lepasset brûlant son drapeau devant Metz_.’ Under the stilts of
+the house a stove was rusting, till we drew it forth and put it in
+commission. Not far off was the burrow in the coral whence we supplied
+ourselves with brackish water. There was live stock, besides, on the
+estate—cocks and hens and a brace of ill-regulated cats, whom Taniera
+came every morning with the sun to feed on grated cocoa-nut. His voice
+was our regular réveille, ringing pleasantly about the garden:
+‘Pooty—pooty—poo—poo—poo!’
+
+Far as we were from the public offices, the nearness of the chapel made
+our situation what is called eligible in advertisements, and gave us a
+side look on some native life. Every morning, as soon as he had fed the
+fowls, Taniera set the bell agoing in the small belfry; and the faithful,
+who were not very numerous, gathered to prayers. I was once present: it
+was the Lord’s day, and seven females and eight males composed the
+congregation. A woman played precentor, starting with a longish note;
+the catechist joined in upon the second bar; and then the faithful in a
+body. Some had printed hymn-books which they followed; some of the rest
+filled up with ‘eh—eh—eh,’ the Paumotuan tol-de-rol. After the hymn, we
+had an antiphonal prayer or two; and then Taniera rose from the front
+bench, where he had been sitting in his catechist’s robes, passed within
+the altar-rails, opened his Tahitian Bible, and began to preach from
+notes. I understood one word—the name of God; but the preacher managed
+his voice with taste, used rare and expressive gestures, and made a
+strong impression of sincerity. The plain service, the vernacular Bible,
+the hymn-tunes mostly on an English pattern—‘God save the Queen,’ I was
+informed, a special favourite,—all, save some paper flowers upon the
+altar, seemed not merely but austerely Protestant. It is thus the
+Catholics have met their low island proselytes half-way.
+
+Taniera had the keys of our house; it was with him I made my bargain, if
+that could be called a bargain in which all was remitted to my
+generosity; it was he who fed the cats and poultry, he who came to call
+and pick a meal with us like an acknowledged friend; and we long fondly
+supposed he was our landlord. This belief was not to bear the test of
+experience; and, as my chapter has to relate, no certainty succeeded it.
+
+We passed some days of airless quiet and great heat; shell-gatherers were
+warned from the ocean beach, where sunstroke waited them from ten till
+four; the highest palm hung motionless, there was no voice audible but
+that of the sea on the far side. At last, about four of a certain
+afternoon, long cat’s-paws flawed the face of the lagoon; and presently
+in the tree-tops there awoke the grateful bustle of the trades, and all
+the houses and alleys of the island were fanned out. To more than one
+enchanted ship, that had lain long becalmed in view of the green shore,
+the wind brought deliverance; and by daylight on the morrow a schooner
+and two cutters lay moored in the port of Rotoava. Not only in the outer
+sea, but in the lagoon itself, a certain traffic woke with the reviving
+breeze; and among the rest one François, a half-blood, set sail with the
+first light in his own half-decked cutter. He had held before a court
+appointment; being, I believe, the Residency sweeper-out. Trouble
+arising with the unpopular Vice-Resident, he had thrown his honours down,
+and fled to the far parts of the atoll to plant cabbages—or at least
+coco-palms. Thence he was now driven by such need as even a Cincinnatus
+must acknowledge, and fared for the capital city, the seat of his late
+functions, to exchange half a ton of copra for necessary flour. And
+here, for a while, the story leaves to tell of his voyaging.
+
+It must tell, instead, of our house, where, toward seven at night, the
+catechist came suddenly in with his pleased air of being welcome; armed
+besides with a considerable bunch of keys. These he proceeded to try on
+the sea-chests, drawing each in turn from its place against the wall.
+Heads of strangers appeared in the doorway and volunteered suggestions.
+All in vain. Either they were the wrong keys or the wrong boxes, or the
+wrong man was trying them. For a little Taniera fumed and fretted; then
+had recourse to the more summary method of the hatchet; one of the chests
+was broken open, and an armful of clothing, male and female, baled out
+and handed to the strangers on the verandah.
+
+These were François, his wife, and their child. About eight a.m., in the
+midst of the lagoon, their cutter had capsized in jibbing. They got her
+righted, and though she was still full of water put the child on board.
+The mainsail had been carried away, but the jib still drew her sluggishly
+along, and François and the woman swam astern and worked the rudder with
+their hands. The cold was cruel; the fatigue, as time went on, became
+excessive; and in that preserve of sharks, fear hunted them. Again and
+again, François, the half-breed, would have desisted and gone down; but
+the woman, whole blood of an amphibious race, still supported him with
+cheerful words. I am reminded of a woman of Hawaii who swam with her
+husband, I dare not say how many miles, in a high sea, and came ashore at
+last with his dead body in her arms. It was about five in the evening,
+after nine hours’ swimming, that François and his wife reached land at
+Rotoava. The gallant fight was won, and instantly the more childish side
+of native character appears. They had supped, and told and retold their
+story, dripping as they came; the flesh of the woman, whom Mrs. Stevenson
+helped to shift, was cold as stone; and François, having changed to a dry
+cotton shirt and trousers, passed the remainder of the evening on my
+floor and between open doorways, in a thorough draught. Yet François,
+the son of a French father, speaks excellent French himself and seems
+intelligent.
+
+It was our first idea that the catechist, true to his evangelical
+vocation, was clothing the naked from his superfluity. Then it came out
+that François was but dealing with his own. The clothes were his, so was
+the chest, so was the house. François was in fact the landlord. Yet you
+observe he had hung back on the verandah while Taniera tried his
+’prentice hand upon the locks: and even now, when his true character
+appeared, the only use he made of the estate was to leave the clothes of
+his family drying on the fence. Taniera was still the friend of the
+house, still fed the poultry, still came about us on his daily visits,
+François, during the remainder of his stay, holding bashfully aloof. And
+there was stranger matter. Since François had lost the whole load of his
+cutter, the half ton of copra, an axe, bowls, knives, and clothes—since
+he had in a manner to begin the world again, and his necessary flour was
+not yet bought or paid for—I proposed to advance him what he needed on
+the rent. To my enduring amazement he refused, and the reason he gave—if
+that can be called a reason which but darkens counsel—was that Taniera
+was his friend. His friend, you observe; not his creditor. I inquired
+into that, and was assured that Taniera, an exile in a strange isle,
+might possibly be in debt himself, but certainly was no man’s creditor.
+
+Very early one morning we were awakened by a bustling presence in the
+yard, and found our camp had been surprised by a tall, lean old native
+lady, dressed in what were obviously widow’s weeds. You could see at a
+glance she was a notable woman, a housewife, sternly practical, alive
+with energy, and with fine possibilities of temper. Indeed, there was
+nothing native about her but the skin; and the type abounds, and is
+everywhere respected, nearer home. It did us good to see her scour the
+grounds, examining the plants and chickens; watering, feeding, trimming
+them; taking angry, purpose-like possession. When she neared the house
+our sympathy abated; when she came to the broken chest I wished I were
+elsewhere. We had scarce a word in common; but her whole lean body spoke
+for her with indignant eloquence. ‘My chest!’ it cried, with a stress on
+the possessive. ‘My chest—broken open! This is a fine state of things!’
+I hastened to lay the blame where it belonged—on François and his
+wife—and found I had made things worse instead of better. She repeated
+the names at first with incredulity, then with despair. A while she
+seemed stunned, next fell to disembowelling the box, piling the goods on
+the floor, and visibly computing the extent of François’s ravages; and
+presently after she was observed in high speech with Taniera, who seemed
+to hang an ear like one reproved.
+
+Here, then, by all known marks, should be my land-lady at last; here was
+every character of the proprietor fully developed. Should I not approach
+her on the still depending question of my rent? I carried the point to
+an adviser. ‘Nonsense!’ he cried. ‘That’s the old woman, the mother.
+It doesn’t belong to her. I believe that’s the man the house belongs
+to,’ and he pointed to one of the coloured photographs on the wall. On
+this I gave up all desire of understanding; and when the time came for me
+to leave, in the judgment-hall of the archipelago, and with the awful
+countenance of the acting Governor, I duly paid my rent to Taniera. He
+was satisfied, and so was I. But what had he to do with it? Mr. Donat,
+acting magistrate and a man of kindred blood, could throw no light upon
+the mystery; a plain private person, with a taste for letters, cannot be
+expected to do more.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV—TRAITS AND SECTS IN THE PAUMOTUS
+
+
+The most careless reader must have remarked a change of air since the
+Marquesas. The house, crowded with effects, the bustling housewife
+counting her possessions, the serious, indoctrinated island pastor, the
+long fight for life in the lagoon: here are traits of a new world. I
+read in a pamphlet (I will not give the author’s name) that the Marquesan
+especially resembles the Paumotuan. I should take the two races, though
+so near in neighbourhood, to be extremes of Polynesian diversity. The
+Marquesan is certainly the most beautiful of human races, and one of the
+tallest—the Paumotuan averaging a good inch shorter, and not even
+handsome; the Marquesan open-handed, inert, insensible to religion,
+childishly self-indulgent—the Paumotuan greedy, hardy, enterprising, a
+religious disputant, and with a trace of the ascetic character.
+
+Yet a few years ago, and the people of the archipelago were crafty
+savages. Their isles might be called sirens’ isles, not merely from the
+attraction they exerted on the passing mariner, but from the perils that
+awaited him on shore. Even to this day, in certain outlying islands,
+danger lingers; and the civilized Paumotuan dreads to land and hesitates
+to accost his backward brother. But, except in these, to-day the peril
+is a memory. When our generation were yet in the cradle and playroom it
+was still a living fact. Between 1830 and 1840, Hao, for instance, was a
+place of the most dangerous approach, where ships were seized and crews
+kidnapped. As late as 1856, the schooner _Sarah Ann_ sailed from Papeete
+and was seen no more. She had women on board, and children, the
+captain’s wife, a nursemaid, a baby, and the two young sons of a Captain
+Steven on their way to the mainland for schooling. All were supposed to
+have perished in a squall. A year later, the captain of the _Julia_,
+coasting along the island variously called Bligh, Lagoon, and Tematangi
+saw armed natives follow the course of his schooner, clad in
+many-coloured stuffs. Suspicion was at once aroused; the mother of the
+lost children was profuse of money; and one expedition having found the
+place deserted, and returned content with firing a few shots, she raised
+and herself accompanied another. None appeared to greet or to oppose
+them; they roamed a while among abandoned huts and empty thickets; then
+formed two parties and set forth to beat, from end to end, the pandanus
+jungle of the island. One man remained alone by the landing-place—Teina,
+a chief of Anaa, leader of the armed natives who made the strength of the
+expedition. Now that his comrades were departed this way and that, on
+their laborious exploration, the silence fell profound; and this silence
+was the ruin of the islanders. A sound of stones rattling caught the ear
+of Teina. He looked, thinking to perceive a crab, and saw instead the
+brown hand of a human being issue from a fissure in the ground. A shout
+recalled the search parties and announced their doom to the buried
+caitiffs. In the cave below, sixteen were found crouching among human
+bones and singular and horrid curiosities. One was a head of golden
+hair, supposed to be a relic of the captain’s wife; another was half of
+the body of a European child, sun-dried and stuck upon a stick, doubtless
+with some design of wizardry.
+
+The Paumotuan is eager to be rich. He saves, grudges, buries money,
+fears not work. For a dollar each, two natives passed the hours of
+daylight cleaning our ship’s copper. It was strange to see them so
+indefatigable and so much at ease in the water—working at times with
+their pipes lighted, the smoker at times submerged and only the glowing
+bowl above the surface; it was stranger still to think they were next
+congeners to the incapable Marquesan. But the Paumotuan not only saves,
+grudges, and works, he steals besides; or, to be more precise, he
+swindles. He will never deny a debt, he only flees his creditor. He is
+always keen for an advance; so soon as he has fingered it he disappears.
+He knows your ship; so soon as it nears one island, he is off to another.
+You may think you know his name; he has already changed it. Pursuit in
+that infinity of isles were fruitless. The result can be given in a
+nutshell. It has been actually proposed in a Government report to secure
+debts by taking a photograph of the debtor; and the other day in Papeete
+credits on the Paumotus to the amount of sixteen thousand pounds were
+sold for less than forty—_quatre cent mille francs pour moins de mille
+francs_. Even so, the purchase was thought hazardous; and only the man
+who made it and who had special opportunities could have dared to give so
+much.
+
+The Paumotuan is sincerely attached to those of his own blood and
+household. A touching affection sometimes unites wife and husband.
+Their children, while they are alive, completely rule them; after they
+are dead, their bones or their mummies are often jealously preserved and
+carried from atoll to atoll in the wanderings of the family. I was told
+there were many houses in Fakarava with the mummy of a child locked in a
+sea-chest; after I heard it, I would glance a little jealously at those
+by my own bed; in that cupboard, also, it was possible there was a tiny
+skeleton.
+
+The race seems in a fair way to survive. From fifteen islands, whose
+rolls I had occasion to consult, I found a proportion of 59 births to 47
+deaths for 1887. Dropping three out of the fifteen, there remained for
+the other twelve the comfortable ratio of 50 births to 32 deaths. Long
+habits of hardship and activity doubtless explain the contrast with
+Marquesan figures. But the Paumotuan displays, besides, a certain
+concern for health and the rudiments of a sanitary discipline. Public
+talk with these free-spoken people plays the part of the Contagious
+Diseases Act; in-comers to fresh islands anxiously inquire if all be
+well; and syphilis, when contracted, is successfully treated with
+indigenous herbs. Like their neighbours of Tahiti, from whom they have
+perhaps imbibed the error, they regard leprosy with comparative
+indifference, elephantiasis with disproportionate fear. But, unlike
+indeed to the Tahitian, their alarm puts on the guise of self-defence.
+Any one stricken with this painful and ugly malady is confined to the
+ends of villages, denied the use of paths and highways, and condemned to
+transport himself between his house and coco-patch by water only, his
+very footprint being held infectious. Fe’efe’e, being a creature of
+marshes and the sequel of malarial fever, is not original in atolls. On
+the single isle of Makatea, where the lagoon is now a marsh, the disease
+has made a home. Many suffer; they are excluded (if Mr. Wilmot be right)
+from much of the comfort of society; and it is believed they take a
+secret vengeance. The defections of the sick are considered highly
+poisonous. Early in the morning, it is narrated, aged and malicious
+persons creep into the sleeping village, and stealthily make water at the
+doors of the houses of young men. Thus they propagate disease; thus they
+breathe on and obliterate comeliness and health, the objects of their
+envy. Whether horrid fact or more abominable legend, it equally depicts
+that something bitter and energetic which distinguishes Paumotuan man.
+
+The archipelago is divided between two main religions, Catholic and
+Mormon. They front each other proudly with a false air of permanence;
+yet are but shapes, their membership in a perpetual flux. The Mormon
+attends mass with devotion: the Catholic sits attentive at a Mormon
+sermon, and to-morrow each may have transferred allegiance. One man had
+been a pillar of the Church of Rome for fifteen years; his wife dying, he
+decided that must be a poor religion that could not save a man his wife,
+and turned Mormon. According to one informant, Catholicism was the more
+fashionable in health, but on the approach of sickness it was judged
+prudent to secede. As a Mormon, there were five chances out of six you
+might recover; as a Catholic, your hopes were small; and this opinion is
+perhaps founded on the comfortable rite of unction.
+
+We all know what Catholics are, whether in the Paumotus or at home. But
+the Paumotuan Mormon seemed a phenomenon apart. He marries but the one
+wife, uses the Protestant Bible, observes Protestant forms of worship,
+forbids the use of liquor and tobacco, practises adult baptism by
+immersion, and after every public sin, rechristens the backslider. I
+advised with Mahinui, whom I found well informed in the history of the
+American Mormons, and he declared against the least connection. ‘_Pour
+moi_,’ said he, with a fine charity, ‘_les Mormons ici un petit
+Catholiques_.’ Some months later I had an opportunity to consult an
+orthodox fellow-countryman, an old dissenting Highlander, long settled in
+Tahiti, but still breathing of the heather of Tiree. ‘Why do they call
+themselves Mormons?’ I asked. ‘My dear, and that is my question!’ he
+exclaimed. ‘For by all that I can hear of their doctrine, I have nothing
+to say against it, and their life, it is above reproach.’ And for all
+that, Mormons they are, but of the earlier sowing: the so-called
+Josephites, the followers of Joseph Smith, the opponents of Brigham
+Young.
+
+Grant, then, the Mormons to be Mormons. Fresh points at once arise: What
+are the Israelites? and what the Kanitus? For a long while back the sect
+had been divided into Mormons proper and so-called Israelites, I never
+could hear why. A few years since there came a visiting missionary of
+the name of Williams, who made an excellent collection, and retired,
+leaving fresh disruption imminent. Something irregular (as I was told)
+in his way of ‘opening the service’ had raised partisans and enemies; the
+church was once more rent asunder; and a new sect, the Kanitu, issued
+from the division. Since then Kanitus and Israelites, like the
+Cameronians and the United Presbyterians, have made common cause; and the
+ecclesiastical history of the Paumotus is, for the moment, uneventful.
+There will be more doing before long, and these isles bid fair to be the
+Scotland of the South. Two things I could never learn. The nature of
+the innovations of the Rev. Mr. Williams none would tell me, and of the
+meaning of the name Kanitu none had a guess. It was not Tahitian, it was
+not Marquesan; it formed no part of that ancient speech of the Paumotus,
+now passing swiftly into obsolescence. One man, a priest, God bless him!
+said it was the Latin for a little dog. I have found it since as the
+name of a god in New Guinea; it must be a bolder man than I who should
+hint at a connection. Here, then, is a singular thing: a brand-new sect,
+arising by popular acclamation, and a nonsense word invented for its
+name.
+
+The design of mystery seems obvious, and according to a very intelligent
+observer, Mr. Magee of Mangareva, this element of the mysterious is a
+chief attraction of the Mormon Church. It enjoys some of the status of
+Freemasonry at home, and there is for the convert some of the
+exhilaration of adventure. Other attractions are certainly conjoined.
+Perpetual rebaptism, leading to a succession of baptismal feasts, is
+found, both from the social and the spiritual side, a pleasing feature.
+More important is the fact that all the faithful enjoy office; perhaps
+more important still, the strictness of the discipline. ‘The veto on
+liquor,’ said Mr. Magee, ‘brings them plenty members.’ There is no doubt
+these islanders are fond of drink, and no doubt they refrain from the
+indulgence; a bout on a feast-day, for instance, may be followed by a
+week or a month of rigorous sobriety. Mr. Wilmot attributes this to
+Paumotuan frugality and the love of hoarding; it goes far deeper. I have
+mentioned that I made a feast on board the _Casco_. To wash down ship’s
+bread and jam, each guest was given the choice of rum or syrup, and out
+of the whole number only one man voted—in a defiant tone, and amid shouts
+of mirth—for ‘Trum’! This was in public. I had the meanness to repeat
+the experiment, whenever I had a chance, within the four walls of my
+house; and three at least, who had refused at the festival, greedily
+drank rum behind a door. But there were others thoroughly consistent. I
+said the virtues of the race were bourgeois and puritan; and how
+bourgeois is this! how puritanic! how Scottish! and how Yankee!—the
+temptation, the resistance, the public hypocritical conformity, the
+Pharisees, the Holy Willies, and the true disciples. With such a people
+the popularity of an ascetic Church appears legitimate; in these strict
+rules, in this perpetual supervision, the weak find their advantage, the
+strong a certain pleasure; and the doctrine of rebaptism, a clean bill
+and a fresh start, will comfort many staggering professors.
+
+There is yet another sect, or what is called a sect—no doubt
+improperly—that of the Whistlers. Duncan Cameron, so clear in favour of
+the Mormons, was no less loud in condemnation of the Whistlers. Yet I do
+not know; I still fancy there is some connection, perhaps fortuitous,
+probably disavowed. Here at least are some doings in the house of an
+Israelite clergyman (or prophet) in the island of Anaa, of which I am
+equally sure that Duncan would disclaim and the Whistlers hail them for
+an imitation of their own. My informant, a Tahitian and a Catholic,
+occupied one part of the house; the prophet and his family lived in the
+other. Night after night the Mormons, in the one end, held their evening
+sacrifice of song; night after night, in the other, the wife of the
+Tahitian lay awake and listened to their singing with amazement. At
+length she could contain herself no longer, woke her husband, and asked
+him what he heard. ‘I hear several persons singing hymns,’ said he.
+‘Yes,’ she returned, ‘but listen again! Do you not hear something
+supernatural?’ His attention thus directed, he was aware of a strange
+buzzing voice—and yet he declared it was beautiful—which justly
+accompanied the singers. The next day he made inquiries. ‘It is a
+spirit,’ said the prophet, with entire simplicity, ‘which has lately made
+a practice of joining us at family worship.’ It did not appear the thing
+was visible, and like other spirits raised nearer home in these
+degenerate days, it was rudely ignorant, at first could only buzz, and
+had only learned of late to bear a part correctly in the music.
+
+The performances of the Whistlers are more business-like. Their meetings
+are held publicly with open doors, all being ‘cordially invited to
+attend.’ The faithful sit about the room—according to one informant,
+singing hymns; according to another, now singing and now whistling; the
+leader, the wizard—let me rather say, the medium—sits in the midst,
+enveloped in a sheet and silent; and presently, from just above his head,
+or sometimes from the midst of the roof, an aerial whistling proceeds,
+appalling to the inexperienced. This, it appears, is the language of the
+dead; its purport is taken down progressively by one of the experts,
+writing, I was told, ‘as fast as a telegraph operator’; and the
+communications are at last made public. They are of the baldest
+triviality; a schooner is, perhaps, announced, some idle gossip reported
+of a neighbour, or if the spirit shall have been called to consultation
+on a case of sickness, a remedy may be suggested. One of these,
+immersion in scalding water, not long ago proved fatal to the patient.
+The whole business is very dreary, very silly, and very European; it has
+none of the picturesque qualities of similar conjurations in New Zealand;
+it seems to possess no kernel of possible sense, like some that I shall
+describe among the Gilbert islanders. Yet I was told that many hardy,
+intelligent natives were inveterate Whistlers. ‘Like Mahinui?’ I asked,
+willing to have a standard; and I was told ‘Yes.’ Why should I wonder?
+Men more enlightened than my convict-catechist sit down at home to
+follies equally sterile and dull.
+
+The medium is sometimes female. It was a woman, for instance, who
+introduced these practices on the north coast of Taiarapu, to the scandal
+of her own connections, her brother-in-law in particular declaring she
+was drunk. But what shocked Tahiti might seem fit enough in the
+Paumotus, the more so as certain women there possess, by the gift of
+nature, singular and useful powers. They say they are honest,
+well-intentioned ladies, some of them embarrassed by their weird
+inheritance. And indeed the trouble caused by this endowment is so
+great, and the protection afforded so infinitesimally small, that I
+hesitate whether to call it a gift or a hereditary curse. You may rob
+this lady’s coco-patch, steal her canoes, burn down her house, and slay
+her family scatheless; but one thing you must not do: you must not lay a
+hand upon her sleeping-mat, or your belly will swell, and you can only be
+cured by the lady or her husband. Here is the report of an eye-witness,
+Tasmanian born, educated, a man who has made money—certainly no fool. In
+1886 he was present in a house on Makatea, where two lads began to
+skylark on the mats, and were (I think) ejected. Instantly after, their
+bellies began to swell; pains took hold on them; all manner of island
+remedies were exhibited in vain, and rubbing only magnified their
+sufferings. The man of the house was called, explained the nature of the
+visitation, and prepared the cure. A cocoa-nut was husked, filled with
+herbs, and with all the ceremonies of a launch, and the utterance of
+spells in the Paumotuan language, committed to the sea. From that moment
+the pains began to grow more easy and the swelling to subside. The
+reader may stare. I can assure him, if he moved much among old residents
+of the archipelago, he would be driven to admit one thing of two—either
+that there is something in the swollen bellies or nothing in the evidence
+of man.
+
+I have not met these gifted ladies; but I had an experience of my own,
+for I have played, for one night only, the part of the whistling spirit.
+It had been blowing wearily all day, but with the fall of night the wind
+abated, and the moon, which was then full, rolled in a clear sky. We
+went southward down the island on the side of the lagoon, walking through
+long-drawn forest aisles of palm, and on a floor of snowy sand. No life
+was abroad, nor sound of life; till in a clear part of the isle we spied
+the embers of a fire, and not far off, in a dark house, heard natives
+talking softly. To sit without a light, even in company, and under
+cover, is for a Paumotuan a somewhat hazardous extreme. The whole
+scene—the strong moonlight and crude shadows on the sand, the scattered
+coals, the sound of the low voices from the house, and the lap of the
+lagoon along the beach—put me (I know not how) on thoughts of
+superstition. I was barefoot, I observed my steps were noiseless, and
+drawing near to the dark house, but keeping well in shadow, began to
+whistle. ‘The Heaving of the Lead’ was my air—no very tragic piece.
+With the first note the conversation and all movement ceased; silence
+accompanied me while I continued; and when I passed that way on my return
+I found the lamp was lighted in the house, but the tongues were still
+mute. All night, as I now think, the wretches shivered and were silent.
+For indeed, I had no guess at the time at the nature and magnitude of the
+terrors I inflicted, or with what grisly images the notes of that old
+song had peopled the dark house.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V—A PAUMOTUAN FUNERAL
+
+
+No, I had no guess of these men’s terrors. Yet I had received ere that a
+hint, if I had understood; and the occasion was a funeral.
+
+A little apart in the main avenue of Rotoava, in a low hut of leaves that
+opened on a small enclosure, like a pigsty on a pen, an old man dwelt
+solitary with his aged wife. Perhaps they were too old to migrate with
+the others; perhaps they were too poor, and had no possessions to
+dispute. At least they had remained behind; and it thus befell that they
+were invited to my feast. I dare say it was quite a piece of politics in
+the pigsty whether to come or not to come, and the husband long swithered
+between curiosity and age, till curiosity conquered, and they came, and
+in the midst of that last merrymaking death tapped him on the shoulder.
+For some days, when the sky was bright and the wind cool, his mat would
+be spread in the main highway of the village, and he was to be seen lying
+there inert, a mere handful of a man, his wife inertly seated by his
+head. They seemed to have outgrown alike our needs and faculties; they
+neither spoke nor listened; they suffered us to pass without a glance;
+the wife did not fan, she seemed not to attend upon her husband, and the
+two poor antiques sat juxtaposed under the high canopy of palms, the
+human tragedy reduced to its bare elements, a sight beyond pathos,
+stirring a thrill of curiosity. And yet there was one touch of the
+pathetic haunted me: that so much youth and expectation should have run
+in these starved veins, and the man should have squandered all his lees
+of life on a pleasure party.
+
+On the morning of 17th September the sufferer died, and, time pressing,
+he was buried the same day at four. The cemetery lies to seaward behind
+Government House; broken coral, like so much road-metal, forms the
+surface; a few wooden crosses, a few inconsiderable upright stones,
+designate graves; a mortared wall, high enough to lean on, rings it
+about; a clustering shrub surrounds it with pale leaves. Here was the
+grave dug that morning, doubtless by uneasy diggers, to the sound of the
+nigh sea and the cries of sea-birds; meanwhile the dead man waited in his
+house, and the widow and another aged woman leaned on the fence before
+the door, no speech upon their lips, no speculation in their eyes.
+
+Sharp at the hour the procession was in march, the coffin wrapped in
+white and carried by four bearers; mourners behind—not many, for not many
+remained in Rotoava, and not many in black, for these were poor; the men
+in straw hats, white coats, and blue trousers or the gorgeous
+parti-coloured pariu, the Tahitian kilt; the women, with a few
+exceptions, brightly habited. Far in the rear came the widow, painfully
+carrying the dead man’s mat; a creature aged beyond humanity, to the
+likeness of some missing link.
+
+The dead man had been a Mormon; but the Mormon clergyman was gone with
+the rest to wrangle over boundaries in the adjacent isle, and a layman
+took his office. Standing at the head of the open grave, in a white coat
+and blue pariu, his Tahitian Bible in his hand and one eye bound with a
+red handkerchief, he read solemnly that chapter in Job which has been
+read and heard over the bones of so many of our fathers, and with a good
+voice offered up two prayers. The wind and the surf bore a burthen. By
+the cemetery gate a mother in crimson suckled an infant rolled in blue.
+In the midst the widow sat upon the ground and polished one of the
+coffin-stretchers with a piece of coral; a little later she had turned
+her back to the grave and was playing with a leaf. Did she understand?
+God knows. The officiant paused a moment, stooped, and gathered and
+threw reverently on the coffin a handful of rattling coral. Dust to
+dust: but the grains of this dust were gross like cherries, and the true
+dust that was to follow sat near by, still cohering (as by a miracle) in
+the tragic semblance of a female ape.
+
+So far, Mormon or not, it was a Christian funeral. The well-known
+passage had been read from Job, the prayers had been rehearsed, the grave
+was filled, the mourners straggled homeward. With a little coarser grain
+of covering earth, a little nearer outcry of the sea, a stronger glare of
+sunlight on the rude enclosure, and some incongruous colours of attire,
+the well-remembered form had been observed.
+
+By rights it should have been otherwise. The mat should have been buried
+with its owner; but, the family being poor, it was thriftily reserved for
+a fresh service. The widow should have flung herself upon the grave and
+raised the voice of official grief, the neighbours have chimed in, and
+the narrow isle rung for a space with lamentation. But the widow was
+old; perhaps she had forgotten, perhaps never understood, and she played
+like a child with leaves and coffin-stretchers. In all ways my guest was
+buried with maimed rites. Strange to think that his last conscious
+pleasure was the _Casco_ and my feast; strange to think that he had
+limped there, an old child, looking for some new good. And the good
+thing, rest, had been allotted him.
+
+But though the widow had neglected much, there was one part she must not
+utterly neglect. She came away with the dispersing funeral; but the dead
+man’s mat was left behind upon the grave, and I learned that by set of
+sun she must return to sleep there. This vigil is imperative. From
+sundown till the rising of the morning star the Paumotuan must hold his
+watch above the ashes of his kindred. Many friends, if the dead have
+been a man of mark, will keep the watchers company; they will be well
+supplied with coverings against the weather; I believe they bring food,
+and the rite is persevered in for two weeks. Our poor survivor, if,
+indeed, she properly survived, had little to cover, and few to sit with
+her; on the night of the funeral a strong squall chased her from her
+place of watch; for days the weather held uncertain and outrageous; and
+ere seven nights were up she had desisted, and returned to sleep in her
+low roof. That she should be at the pains of returning for so short a
+visit to a solitary house, that this borderer of the grave should fear a
+little wind and a wet blanket, filled me at the time with musings. I
+could not say she was indifferent; she was so far beyond me in experience
+that the court of my criticism waived jurisdiction; but I forged excuses,
+telling myself she had perhaps little to lament, perhaps suffered much,
+perhaps understood nothing. And lo! in the whole affair there was no
+question whether of tenderness or piety, and the sturdy return of this
+old remnant was a mark either of uncommon sense or of uncommon fortitude.
+
+Yet one thing had occurred that partly set me on the trail. I have said
+the funeral passed much as at home. But when all was over, when we were
+trooping in decent silence from the graveyard gate and down the path to
+the settlement, a sudden inbreak of a different spirit startled and
+perhaps dismayed us. Two people walked not far apart in our procession:
+my friend Mr. Donat—Donat-Rimarau: ‘Donat the much-handed’—acting
+Vice-Resident, present ruler of the archipelago, by far the man of chief
+importance on the scene, but known besides for one of an unshakable good
+temper; and a certain comely, strapping young Paumotuan woman, the
+comeliest on the isle, not (let us hope) the bravest or the most polite.
+Of a sudden, ere yet the grave silence of the funeral was broken, she
+made a leap at the Resident, with pointed finger, shrieked a few words,
+and fell back again with a laughter, not a natural mirth. ‘What did she
+say to you?’ I asked. ‘She did not speak to _me_,’ said Donat, a shade
+perturbed; ‘she spoke to the ghost of the dead man.’ And the purport of
+her speech was this: ‘See there! Donat will be a fine feast for you
+to-night.’
+
+‘M. Donat called it a jest,’ I wrote at the time in my diary. ‘It seemed
+to me more in the nature of a terrified conjuration, as though she would
+divert the ghost’s attention from herself. A cannibal race may well have
+cannibal phantoms.’ The guesses of the traveller appear foredoomed to be
+erroneous; yet in these I was precisely right. The woman had stood by in
+terror at the funeral, being then in a dread spot, the graveyard. She
+looked on in terror to the coming night, with that ogre, a new spirit,
+loosed upon the isle. And the words she had cried in Donat’s face were
+indeed a terrified conjuration, basely to shield herself, basely to
+dedicate another in her stead. One thing is to be said in her excuse.
+Doubtless she partly chose Donat because he was a man of great
+good-nature, but partly, too, because he was a man of the half-caste.
+For I believe all natives regard white blood as a kind of talisman
+against the powers of hell. In no other way can they explain the
+unpunished recklessness of Europeans.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI—GRAVEYARD STORIES
+
+
+With my superstitious friend, the islander, I fear I am not wholly frank,
+often leading the way with stories of my own, and being always a grave
+and sometimes an excited hearer. But the deceit is scarce mortal, since
+I am as pleased to hear as he to tell, as pleased with the story as he
+with the belief; and, besides, it is entirely needful. For it is scarce
+possible to exaggerate the extent and empire of his superstitions; they
+mould his life, they colour his thinking; and when he does not speak to
+me of ghosts, and gods, and devils, he is playing the dissembler and
+talking only with his lips. With thoughts so different, one must indulge
+the other; and I would rather that I should indulge his superstition than
+he my incredulity. Of one thing, besides, I may be sure: Let me indulge
+it as I please, I shall not hear the whole; for he is already on his
+guard with me, and the amount of the lore is boundless.
+
+I will give but a few instances at random, chiefly from my own doorstep
+in Upolu, during the past month (October 1890). One of my workmen was
+sent the other day to the banana patch, there to dig; this is a hollow of
+the mountain, buried in woods, out of all sight and cry of mankind; and
+long before dusk Lafaele was back again beside the cook-house with
+embarrassed looks; he dared not longer stay alone, he was afraid of
+‘spirits in the bush.’ It seems these are the souls of the unburied
+dead, haunting where they fell, and wearing woodland shapes of pig, or
+bird, or insect; the bush is full of them, they seem to eat nothing, slay
+solitary wanderers apparently in spite, and at times, in human form, go
+down to villages and consort with the inhabitants undetected. So much I
+learned a day or so after, walking in the bush with a very intelligent
+youth, a native. It was a little before noon; a grey day and squally;
+and perhaps I had spoken lightly. A dark squall burst on the side of the
+mountain; the woods shook and cried; the dead leaves rose from the ground
+in clouds, like butterflies; and my companion came suddenly to a full
+stop. He was afraid, he said, of the trees falling; but as soon as I had
+changed the subject of our talk he proceeded with alacrity. A day or two
+before a messenger came up the mountain from Apia with a letter; I was in
+the bush, he must await my return, then wait till I had answered: and
+before I was done his voice sounded shrill with terror of the coming
+night and the long forest road. These are the commons. Take the chiefs.
+There has been a great coming and going of signs and omens in our group.
+One river ran down blood; red eels were captured in another; an unknown
+fish was thrown upon the coast, an ominous word found written on its
+scales. So far we might be reading in a monkish chronicle; now we come
+on a fresh note, at once modern and Polynesian. The gods of Upolu and
+Savaii, our two chief islands, contended recently at cricket. Since then
+they are at war. Sounds of battle are heard to roll along the coast. A
+woman saw a man swim from the high seas and plunge direct into the bush;
+he was no man of that neighbourhood; and it was known he was one of the
+gods, speeding to a council. Most perspicuous of all, a missionary on
+Savaii, who is also a medical man, was disturbed late in the night by
+knocking; it was no hour for the dispensary, but at length he woke his
+servant and sent him to inquire; the servant, looking from a window,
+beheld crowds of persons, all with grievous wounds, lopped limbs, broken
+heads, and bleeding bullet-holes; but when the door was opened all had
+disappeared. They were gods from the field of battle. Now these reports
+have certainly significance; it is not hard to trace them to political
+grumblers or to read in them a threat of coming trouble; from that merely
+human side I found them ominous myself. But it was the spiritual side of
+their significance that was discussed in secret council by my rulers. I
+shall best depict this mingled habit of the Polynesian mind by two
+connected instances. I once lived in a village, the name of which I do
+not mean to tell. The chief and his sister were persons perfectly
+intelligent: gentlefolk, apt of speech. The sister was very religious, a
+great church-goer, one that used to reprove me if I stayed away; I found
+afterwards that she privately worshipped a shark. The chief himself was
+somewhat of a freethinker; at the least, a latitudinarian: he was a man,
+besides, filled with European knowledge and accomplishments; of an
+impassive, ironical habit; and I should as soon have expected
+superstition in Mr. Herbert Spencer. Hear the sequel. I had discovered
+by unmistakable signs that they buried too shallow in the village
+graveyard, and I took my friend, as the responsible authority, to task.
+‘There is something wrong about your graveyard,’ said I, ‘which you must
+attend to, or it may have very bad results.’ ‘Something wrong? What is
+it?’ he asked, with an emotion that surprised me. ‘If you care to go
+along there any evening about nine o’clock you can see for yourself,’
+said I. He stepped backward. ‘A ghost!’ he cried.
+
+In short, in the whole field of the South Seas, there is not one to blame
+another. Half blood and whole, pious and debauched, intelligent and
+dull, all men believe in ghosts, all men combine with their recent
+Christianity fear of and a lingering faith in the old island deities.
+So, in Europe, the gods of Olympus slowly dwindled into village bogies;
+so to-day, the theological Highlander sneaks from under the eye of the
+Free Church divine to lay an offering by a sacred well.
+
+I try to deal with the whole matter here because of a particular quality
+in Paumotuan superstitions. It is true I heard them told by a man with a
+genius for such narrations. Close about our evening lamp, within sound
+of the island surf, we hung on his words, thrilling. The reader, in far
+other scenes, must listen close for the faint echo.
+
+This bundle of weird stories sprang from the burial and the woman’s
+selfish conjuration. I was dissatisfied with what I heard, harped upon
+questions, and struck at last this vein of metal. It is from sundown to
+about four in the morning that the kinsfolk camp upon the grave; and
+these are the hours of the spirits’ wanderings. At any time of the
+night—it may be earlier, it may be later—a sound is to be heard below,
+which is the noise of his liberation; at four sharp, another and a louder
+marks the instant of the re-imprisonment; between-whiles, he goes his
+malignant rounds. ‘Did you ever see an evil spirit?’ was once asked of a
+Paumotuan. ‘Once.’ ‘Under what form?’ ‘It was in the form of a crane.’
+‘And how did you know that crane to be a spirit?’ was asked. ‘I will
+tell you,’ he answered; and this was the purport of his inconclusive
+narrative. His father had been dead nearly a fortnight; others had
+wearied of the watch; and as the sun was setting, he found himself by the
+grave alone. It was not yet dark, rather the hour of the afterglow, when
+he was aware of a snow-white crane upon the coral mound; presently more
+cranes came, some white, some black; then the cranes vanished, and he saw
+in their place a white cat, to which there was silently joined a great
+company of cats of every hue conceivable; then these also disappeared,
+and he was left astonished.
+
+This was an anodyne appearance. Take instead the experience of
+Rua-a-mariterangi on the isle of Katiu. He had a need for some pandanus,
+and crossed the isle to the sea-beach, where it chiefly flourishes. The
+day was still, and Rua was surprised to hear a crashing sound among the
+thickets, and then the fall of a considerable tree. Here must be some
+one building a canoe; and he entered the margin of the wood to find and
+pass the time of day with this chance neighbour. The crashing sounded
+more at hand; and then he was aware of something drawing swiftly near
+among the tree-tops. It swung by its heels downward, like an ape, so
+that its hands were free for murder; it depended safely by the slightest
+twigs; the speed of its coming was incredible; and soon Rua recognised it
+for a corpse, horrible with age, its bowels hanging as it came. Prayer
+was the weapon of Christian in the Valley of the Shadow, and it is to
+prayer that Rua-a-mariterangi attributes his escape. No merely human
+expedition had availed.
+
+This demon was plainly from the grave; yet you will observe he was abroad
+by day. And inconsistent as it may seem with the hours of the night
+watch and the many references to the rising of the morning star, it is no
+singular exception. I could never find a case of another who had seen
+this ghost, diurnal and arboreal in its habits; but others have heard the
+fall of the tree, which seems the signal of its coming. Mr. Donat was
+once pearling on the uninhabited isle of Haraiki. It was a day without a
+breath of wind, such as alternate in the archipelago with days of
+contumelious breezes. The divers were in the midst of the lagoon upon
+their employment; the cook, a boy of ten, was over his pots in the camp.
+Thus were all souls accounted for except a single native who accompanied
+Donat into the wood in quest of sea-fowls’ eggs. In a moment, out of the
+stillness, came the sound of the fall of a great tree. Donat would have
+passed on to find the cause. ‘No,’ cried his companion, ‘that was no
+tree. It was something _not right_. Let us go back to camp.’ Next
+Sunday the divers were turned on, all that part of the isle was
+thoroughly examined, and sure enough no tree had fallen. A little later
+Mr. Donat saw one of his divers flee from a similar sound, in similar
+unaffected panic, on the same isle. But neither would explain, and it
+was not till afterwards, when he met with Rua, that he learned the
+occasion of their terrors.
+
+But whether by day or night, the purpose of the dead in these abhorred
+activities is still the same. In Samoa, my informant had no idea of the
+food of the bush spirits; no such ambiguity would exist in the mind of a
+Paumotuan. In that hungry archipelago, living and dead must alike toil
+for nutriment; and the race having been cannibal in the past, the spirits
+are so still. When the living ate the dead, horrified nocturnal
+imagination drew the shocking inference that the dead might eat the
+living. Doubtless they slay men, doubtless even mutilate them, in mere
+malice. Marquesan spirits sometimes tear out the eyes of travellers; but
+even that may be more practical than appears, for the eye is a cannibal
+dainty. And certainly the root-idea of the dead, at least in the far
+eastern islands, is to prowl for food. It was as a dainty morsel for a
+meal that the woman denounced Donat at the funeral. There are spirits
+besides who prey in particular not on the bodies but on the souls of the
+dead. The point is clearly made in a Tahitian story. A child fell sick,
+grew swiftly worse, and at last showed signs of death. The mother
+hastened to the house of a sorcerer, who lived hard by. ‘You are yet in
+time,’ said he; ‘a spirit has just run past my door carrying the soul of
+your child wrapped in the leaf of a purao; but I have a spirit stronger
+and swifter who will run him down ere he has time to eat it.’ Wrapped in
+a leaf: like other things edible and corruptible.
+
+Or take an experience of Mr. Donat’s on the island of Anaa. It was a
+night of a high wind, with violent squalls; his child was very sick, and
+the father, though he had gone to bed, lay wakeful, hearkening to the
+gale. All at once a fowl was violently dashed on the house wall.
+Supposing he had forgot to put it in shelter with the rest, Donat arose,
+found the bird (a cock) lying on the verandah, and put it in the
+hen-house, the door of which he securely fastened. Fifteen minutes later
+the business was repeated, only this time, as it was being dashed against
+the wall, the bird crew. Again Donat replaced it, examining the
+hen-house thoroughly and finding it quite perfect; as he was so engaged
+the wind puffed out his light, and he must grope back to the door a good
+deal shaken. Yet a third time the bird was dashed upon the wall; a third
+time Donat set it, now near dead, beside its mates; and he was scarce
+returned before there came a rush, like that of a furious strong man,
+against the door, and a whistle as loud as that of a railway engine rang
+about the house. The sceptical reader may here detect the finger of the
+tempest; but the women gave up all for lost and clustered on the beds
+lamenting. Nothing followed, and I must suppose the gale somewhat
+abated, for presently after a chief came visiting. He was a bold man to
+be abroad so late, but doubtless carried a bright lantern. And he was
+certainly a man of counsel, for as soon as he heard the details of these
+disturbances he was in a position to explain their nature. ‘Your child,’
+said he, ‘must certainly die. This is the evil spirit of our island who
+lies in wait to eat the spirits of the newly dead.’ And then he went on
+to expatiate on the strangeness of the spirit’s conduct. He was not
+usually, he explained, so open of assault, but sat silent on the
+house-top waiting, in the guise of a bird, while within the people tended
+the dying and bewailed the dead, and had no thought of peril. But when
+the day came and the doors were opened, and men began to go abroad,
+blood-stains on the wall betrayed the tragedy.
+
+This is the quality I admire in Paumotuan legend. In Tahiti the
+spirit-eater is said to assume a vesture which has much more of pomp, but
+how much less of horror. It has been seen by all sorts and conditions,
+native and foreign; only the last insist it is a meteor. My authority
+was not so sure. He was riding with his wife about two in the morning;
+both were near asleep, and the horses not much better. It was a
+brilliant and still night, and the road wound over a mountain, near by a
+deserted marae (old Tahitian temple). All at once the appearance passed
+above them: a form of light; the head round and greenish; the body long,
+red, and with a focus of yet redder brilliancy about the midst. A
+buzzing hoot accompanied its passage; it flew direct out of one marae,
+and direct for another down the mountain side. And this, as my informant
+argued, is suggestive. For why should a mere meteor frequent the altars
+of abominable gods? The horses, I should say, were equally dismayed with
+their riders. Now I am not dismayed at all—not even agreeably. Give me
+rather the bird upon the house-top and the morning blood-gouts on the
+wall.
+
+But the dead are not exclusive in their diet. They carry with them to
+the grave, in particular, the Polynesian taste for fish, and enter at
+times with the living into a partnership in fishery. Rua-a-mariterangi
+is again my authority; I feel it diminishes the credit of the fact, but
+how it builds up the image of this inveterate ghost-seer! He belongs to
+the miserably poor island of Taenga, yet his father’s house was always
+well supplied. As Rua grew up he was called at last to go a-fishing with
+this fortunate parent. They rowed the lagoon at dusk, to an unlikely
+place, and the lay down in the stern, and the father began vainly to cast
+his line over the bows. It is to be supposed that Rua slept; and when he
+awoke there was the figure of another beside his father, and his father
+was pulling in the fish hand over hand. ‘Who is that man, father?’ Rua
+asked. ‘It is none of your business,’ said the father; and Rua supposed
+the stranger had swum off to them from shore. Night after night they
+fared into the lagoon, often to the most unlikely places; night after
+night the stranger would suddenly be seen on board, and as suddenly be
+missed; and morning after morning the canoe returned laden with fish.
+‘My father is a very lucky man,’ thought Rua. At last, one fine day,
+there came first one boat party and then another, who must be
+entertained; father and son put off later than usual into the lagoon; and
+before the canoe was landed it was four o’clock, and the morning star was
+close on the horizon. Then the stranger appeared seized with some
+distress; turned about, showing for the first time his face, which was
+that of one long dead, with shining eyes; stared into the east, set the
+tips of his fingers to his mouth like one a-cold, uttered a strange,
+shuddering sound between a whistle and a moan—a thing to freeze the
+blood; and, the day-star just rising from the sea, he suddenly was not.
+Then Rua understood why his father prospered, why his fishes rotted early
+in the day, and why some were always carried to the cemetery and laid
+upon the graves. My informant is a man not certainly averse to
+superstition, but he keeps his head, and takes a certain superior
+interest, which I may be allowed to call scientific. The last point
+reminding him of some parallel practice in Tahiti, he asked Rua if the
+fish were left, or carried home again after a formal dedication. It
+appears old Mariterangi practised both methods; sometimes treating his
+shadowy partner to a mere oblation, sometimes honestly leaving his fish
+to rot upon the grave.
+
+It is plain we have in Europe stories of a similar complexion; and the
+Polynesian _varua ino_ or _aitu o le vao_ is clearly the near kinsman of
+the Transylvanian vampire. Here is a tale in which the kinship appears
+broadly marked. On the atoll of Penrhyn, then still partly savage, a
+certain chief was long the salutary terror of the natives. He died, he
+was buried; and his late neighbours had scarce tasted the delights of
+licence ere his ghost appeared about the village. Fear seized upon all;
+a council was held of the chief men and sorcerers; and with the approval
+of the Rarotongan missionary, who was as frightened as the rest, and in
+the presence of several whites—my friend Mr. Ben Hird being one—the grave
+was opened, deepened until water came, and the body re-interred face
+down. The still recent staking of suicides in England and the
+decapitation of vampires in the east of Europe form close parallels.
+
+So in Samoa only the spirits of the unburied awake fear. During the late
+war many fell in the bush; their bodies, sometimes headless, were brought
+back by native pastors and interred; but this (I know not why) was
+insufficient, and the spirit still lingered on the theatre of death.
+When peace returned a singular scene was enacted in many places, and
+chiefly round the high gorges of Lotoanuu, where the struggle was long
+centred and the loss had been severe. Kinswomen of the dead came
+carrying a mat or sheet and guided by survivors of the fight. The place
+of death was earnestly sought out; the sheet was spread upon the ground;
+and the women, moved with pious anxiety, sat about and watched it. If
+any living thing alighted it was twice brushed away; upon the third
+coming it was known to be the spirit of the dead, was folded in, carried
+home and buried beside the body; and the aitu rested. The rite was
+practised beyond doubt in simple piety; the repose of the soul was its
+object: its motive, reverent affection. The present king disowns indeed
+all knowledge of a dangerous aitu; he declares the souls of the unburied
+were only wanderers in limbo, lacking an entrance to the proper country
+of the dead, unhappy, nowise hurtful. And this severely classic opinion
+doubtless represents the views of the enlightened. But the flight of my
+Lafaele marks the grosser terrors of the ignorant.
+
+This belief in the exorcising efficacy of funeral rites perhaps explains
+a fact, otherwise amazing, that no Polynesian seems at all to share our
+European horror of human bones and mummies. Of the first they made their
+cherished ornaments; they preserved them in houses or in mortuary caves;
+and the watchers of royal sepulchres dwelt with their children among the
+bones of generations. The mummy, even in the making, was as little
+feared. In the Marquesas, on the extreme coast, it was made by the
+household with continual unction and exposure to the sun; in the
+Carolines, upon the farthest west, it is still cured in the smoke of the
+family hearth. Head-hunting, besides, still lives around my doorstep in
+Samoa. And not ten years ago, in the Gilberts, the widow must disinter,
+cleanse, polish, and thenceforth carry about her, by day and night, the
+head of her dead husband. In all these cases we may suppose the process,
+whether of cleansing or drying, to have fully exorcised the aitu.
+
+But the Paumotuan belief is more obscure. Here the man is duly buried,
+and he has to be watched. He is duly watched, and the spirit goes abroad
+in spite of watches. Indeed, it is not the purpose of the vigils to
+prevent these wanderings; only to mollify by polite attention the
+inveterate malignity of the dead. Neglect (it is supposed) may irritate
+and thus invite his visits, and the aged and weakly sometimes balance
+risks and stay at home. Observe, it is the dead man’s kindred and next
+friends who thus deprecate his fury with nocturnal watchings. Even the
+placatory vigil is held perilous, except in company, and a boy was
+pointed out to me in Rotoava, because he had watched alone by his own
+father. Not the ties of the dead, nor yet their proved character, affect
+the issue. A late Resident, who died in Fakarava of sunstroke, was
+beloved in life and is still remembered with affection; none the less his
+spirit went about the island clothed with terrors, and the neighbourhood
+of Government House was still avoided after dark. We may sum up the
+cheerful doctrine thus: All men become vampires, and the vampire spares
+none. And here we come face to face with a tempting inconsistency. For
+the whistling spirits are notoriously clannish; I understood them to wait
+upon and to enlighten kinsfolk only, and that the medium was always of
+the race of the communicating spirit. Here, then, we have the bonds of
+the family, on the one hand, severed at the hour of death; on the other,
+helpfully persisting.
+
+The child’s soul in the Tahitian tale was wrapped in leaves. It is the
+spirits of the newly dead that are the dainty. When they are slain, the
+house is stained with blood. Rua’s dead fisherman was decomposed; so—and
+horribly—was his arboreal demon. The spirit, then, is a thing material;
+and it is by the material ensigns of corruption that he is distinguished
+from the living man. This opinion is widespread, adds a gross terror to
+the more ugly Polynesian tales, and sometimes defaces the more engaging
+with a painful and incongruous touch. I will give two examples
+sufficiently wide apart, one from Tahiti, one from Samoa.
+
+And first from Tahiti. A man went to visit the husband of his sister,
+then some time dead. In her life the sister had been dainty in the
+island fashion, and went always adorned with a coronet of flowers. In
+the midst of the night the brother awoke and was aware of a heavenly
+fragrance going to and fro in the dark house. The lamp I must suppose to
+have burned out; no Tahitian would have lain down without one lighted. A
+while he lay wondering and delighted; then called upon the rest. ‘Do
+none of you smell flowers?’ he asked. ‘O,’ said his brother-in-law, ‘we
+are used to that here.’ The next morning these two men went walking, and
+the widower confessed that his dead wife came about the house
+continually, and that he had even seen her. She was shaped and dressed
+and crowned with flowers as in her lifetime; only she moved a few inches
+above the earth with a very easy progress, and flitted dryshod above the
+surface of the river. And now comes my point: It was always in a back
+view that she appeared; and these brothers-in-law, debating the affair,
+agreed that this was to conceal the inroads of corruption.
+
+Now for the Samoan story. I owe it to the kindness of Dr. F. Otto
+Sierich, whose collection of folk-tales I expect with a high degree of
+interest. A man in Manu’a was married to two wives and had no issue. He
+went to Savaii, married there a third, and was more fortunate. When his
+wife was near her time he remembered he was in a strange island, like a
+poor man; and when his child was born he must be shamed for lack of
+gifts. It was in vain his wife dissuaded him. He returned to his father
+in Manu’a seeking help; and with what he could get he set off in the
+night to re-embark. Now his wives heard of his coming; they were
+incensed that he did not stay to visit them; and on the beach, by his
+canoe, intercepted and slew him. Now the third wife lay asleep in
+Savaii;—her babe was born and slept by her side; and she was awakened by
+the spirit of her husband. ‘Get up,’ he said, ‘my father is sick in
+Manu’a and we must go to visit him.’ ‘It is well,’ said she; ‘take you
+the child, while I carry its mats.’ ‘I cannot carry the child,’ said the
+spirit; ‘I am too cold from the sea.’ When they were got on board the
+canoe the wife smelt carrion. ‘How is this?’ she said. ‘What have you
+in the canoe that I should smell carrion?’ ‘It is nothing in the canoe,’
+said the spirit. ‘It is the land-wind blowing down the mountains, where
+some beast lies dead.’ It appears it was still night when they reached
+Manu’a—the swiftest passage on record—and as they entered the reef the
+bale-fires burned in the village. Again she asked him to carry the
+child; but now he need no more dissemble. ‘I cannot carry your child,’
+said he, ‘for I am dead, and the fires you see are burning for my
+funeral.’
+
+The curious may learn in Dr. Sierich’s book the unexpected sequel of the
+tale. Here is enough for my purpose. Though the man was but new dead,
+the ghost was already putrefied, as though putrefaction were the mark and
+of the essence of a spirit. The vigil on the Paumotuan grave does not
+extend beyond two weeks, and they told me this period was thought to
+coincide with that of the resolution of the body. The ghost always
+marked with decay—the danger seemingly ending with the process of
+dissolution—here is tempting matter for the theorist. But it will not
+do. The lady of the flowers had been long dead, and her spirit was still
+supposed to bear the brand of perishability. The Resident had been more
+than a fortnight buried, and his vampire was still supposed to go the
+rounds.
+
+Of the lost state of the dead, from the lurid Mangaian legend, in which
+infernal deities hocus and destroy the souls of all, to the various
+submarine and aerial limbos where the dead feast, float idle, or resume
+the occupations of their life on earth, it would be wearisome to tell.
+One story I give, for it is singular in itself, is well-known in Tahiti,
+and has this of interest, that it is post-Christian, dating indeed from
+but a few years back. A princess of the reigning house died; was
+transported to the neighbouring isle of Raiatea; fell there under the
+empire of a spirit who condemned her to climb coco-palms all day and
+bring him the nuts; was found after some time in this miserable servitude
+by a second spirit, one of her own house; and by him, upon her
+lamentations, reconveyed to Tahiti, where she found her body still waked,
+but already swollen with the approaches of corruption. It is a lively
+point in the tale that, on the sight of this dishonoured tabernacle, the
+princess prayed she might continue to be numbered with the dead. But it
+seems it was too late, her spirit was replaced by the least dignified of
+entrances, and her startled family beheld the body move. The seemingly
+purgatorial labours, the helpful kindred spirit, and the horror of the
+princess at the sight of her tainted body, are all points to be remarked.
+
+The truth is, the tales are not necessarily consistent in themselves; and
+they are further darkened for the stranger by an ambiguity of language.
+Ghosts, vampires, spirits, and gods are all confounded. And yet I seem
+to perceive that (with exceptions) those whom we would count gods were
+less maleficent. Permanent spirits haunt and do murder in corners of
+Samoa; but those legitimate gods of Upolu and Savaii, whose wars and
+cricketings of late convulsed society, I did not gather to be dreaded, or
+not with a like fear. The spirit of Aana that ate souls is certainly a
+fearsome inmate; but the high gods, even of the archipelago, seem
+helpful. Mahinui—from whom our convict-catechist had been named—the
+spirit of the sea, like a Proteus endowed with endless avatars, came to
+the assistance of the shipwrecked and carried them ashore in the guise of
+a ray fish. The same divinity bore priests from isle to isle about the
+archipelago, and by his aid, within the century, persons have been seen
+to fly. The tutelar deity of each isle is likewise helpful, and by a
+particular form of wedge-shaped cloud on the horizon announces the coming
+of a ship.
+
+To one who conceives of these atolls, so narrow, so barren, so beset with
+sea, here would seem a superfluity of ghostly denizens. And yet there
+are more. In the various brackish pools and ponds, beautiful women with
+long red hair are seen to rise and bathe; only (timid as mice) on the
+first sound of feet upon the coral they dive again for ever. They are
+known to be healthy and harmless living people, dwellers of an
+underworld; and the same fancy is current in Tahiti, where also they have
+the hair red. _Tetea_ is the Tahitian name; the Paumotuan, _Mokurea_.
+
+
+
+
+PART III: THE GILBERTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I—BUTARITARI
+
+
+At Honolulu we had said farewell to the _Casco_ and to Captain Otis, and
+our next adventure was made in changed conditions. Passage was taken for
+myself, my wife, Mr. Osbourne, and my China boy, Ah Fu, on a pigmy
+trading schooner, the _Equator_, Captain Dennis Reid; and on a certain
+bright June day in 1889, adorned in the Hawaiian fashion with the
+garlands of departure, we drew out of port and bore with a fair wind for
+Micronesia.
+
+The whole extent of the South Seas is a desert of ships; more especially
+that part where we were now to sail. No post runs in these islands;
+communication is by accident; where you may have designed to go is one
+thing, where you shall be able to arrive another. It was my hope, for
+instance, to have reached the Carolines, and returned to the light of day
+by way of Manila and the China ports; and it was in Samoa that we were
+destined to re-appear and be once more refreshed with the sight of
+mountains. Since the sunset faded from the peaks of Oahu six months had
+intervened, and we had seen no spot of earth so high as an ordinary
+cottage. Our path had been still on the flat sea, our dwellings upon
+unerected coral, our diet from the pickle-tub or out of tins; I had
+learned to welcome shark’s flesh for a variety; and a mountain, an onion,
+an Irish potato or a beef-steak, had been long lost to sense and dear to
+aspiration.
+
+The two chief places of our stay, Butaritari and Apemama, lie near the
+line; the latter within thirty miles. Both enjoy a superb ocean climate,
+days of blinding sun and bracing wind, nights of a heavenly brightness.
+Both are somewhat wider than Fakarava, measuring perhaps (at the widest)
+a quarter of a mile from beach to beach. In both, a coarse kind of
+_taro_ thrives; its culture is a chief business of the natives, and the
+consequent mounds and ditches make miniature scenery and amuse the eye.
+In all else they show the customary features of an atoll: the low
+horizon, the expanse of the lagoon, the sedge-like rim of palm-tops, the
+sameness and smallness of the land, the hugely superior size and interest
+of sea and sky. Life on such islands is in many points like life on
+shipboard. The atoll, like the ship, is soon taken for granted; and the
+islanders, like the ship’s crew, become soon the centre of attention.
+The isles are populous, independent, seats of kinglets, recently
+civilised, little visited. In the last decade many changes have crept
+in; women no longer go unclothed till marriage; the widow no longer
+sleeps at night and goes abroad by day with the skull of her dead
+husband; and, fire-arms being introduced, the spear and the shark-tooth
+sword are sold for curiosities. Ten years ago all these things and
+practices were to be seen in use; yet ten years more, and the old society
+will have entirely vanished. We came in a happy moment to see its
+institutions still erect and (in Apemama) scarce decayed.
+
+Populous and independent—warrens of men, ruled over with some rustic
+pomp—such was the first and still the recurring impression of these tiny
+lands. As we stood across the lagoon for the town of Butaritari, a
+stretch of the low shore was seen to be crowded with the brown roofs of
+houses; those of the palace and king’s summer parlour (which are of
+corrugated iron) glittered near one end conspicuously bright; the royal
+colours flew hard by on a tall flagstaff; in front, on an artificial
+islet, the gaol played the part of a martello. Even upon this first and
+distant view, the place had scarce the air of what it truly was, a
+village; rather of that which it was also, a petty metropolis, a city
+rustic and yet royal.
+
+The lagoon is shoal. The tide being out, we waded for some quarter of a
+mile in tepid shallows, and stepped ashore at last into a flagrant
+stagnancy of sun and heat. The lee side of a line island after noon is
+indeed a breathless place; on the ocean beach the trade will be still
+blowing, boisterous and cool; out in the lagoon it will be blowing also,
+speeding the canoes; but the screen of bush completely intercepts it from
+the shore, and sleep and silence and companies of mosquitoes brood upon
+the towns.
+
+We may thus be said to have taken Butaritari by surprise. A few
+inhabitants were still abroad in the north end, at which we landed. As
+we advanced, we were soon done with encounter, and seemed to explore a
+city of the dead. Only, between the posts of open houses, we could see
+the townsfolk stretched in the siesta, sometimes a family together veiled
+in a mosquito-net, sometimes a single sleeper on a platform like a corpse
+on a bier.
+
+The houses were of all dimensions, from those of toys to those of
+churches. Some might hold a battalion, some were so minute they could
+scarce receive a pair of lovers; only in the playroom, when the toys are
+mingled, do we meet such incongruities of scale. Many were open sheds;
+some took the form of roofed stages; others were walled and the walls
+pierced with little windows. A few were perched on piles in the lagoon;
+the rest stood at random on a green, through which the roadway made a
+ribbon of sand, or along the embankments of a sheet of water like a
+shallow dock. One and all were the creatures of a single tree; palm-tree
+wood and palm-tree leaf their materials; no nail had been driven, no
+hammer sounded, in their building, and they were held together by
+lashings of palm-tree sinnet.
+
+In the midst of the thoroughfare, the church stands like an island, a
+lofty and dim house with rows of windows; a rich tracery of framing
+sustains the roof; and through the door at either end the street shows in
+a vista. The proportions of the place, in such surroundings, and built
+of such materials, appeared august; and we threaded the nave with a
+sentiment befitting visitors in a cathedral. Benches run along either
+side. In the midst, on a crazy dais, two chairs stand ready for the king
+and queen when they shall choose to worship; over their heads a hoop,
+apparently from a hogshead, depends by a strip of red cotton; and the
+hoop (which hangs askew) is dressed with streamers of the same material,
+red and white.
+
+This was our first advertisement of the royal dignity, and presently we
+stood before its seat and centre. The palace is built of imported wood
+upon a European plan; the roof of corrugated iron, the yard enclosed with
+walls, the gate surmounted by a sort of lych-house. It cannot be called
+spacious; a labourer in the States is sometimes more commodiously lodged;
+but when we had the chance to see it within, we found it was enriched
+(beyond all island expectation) with coloured advertisements and cuts
+from the illustrated papers. Even before the gate some of the treasures
+of the crown stand public: a bell of a good magnitude, two pieces of
+cannon, and a single shell. The bell cannot be rung nor the guns fired;
+they are curiosities, proofs of wealth, a part of the parade of the
+royalty, and stand to be admired like statues in a square. A straight
+gut of water like a canal runs almost to the palace door; the containing
+quay-walls excellently built of coral; over against the mouth, by what
+seems an effect of landscape art, the martello-like islet of the gaol
+breaks the lagoon. Vassal chiefs with tribute, neighbour monarchs come
+a-roving, might here sail in, view with surprise these extensive public
+works, and be awed by these mouths of silent cannon. It was impossible
+to see the place and not to fancy it designed for pageantry. But the
+elaborate theatre then stood empty; the royal house deserted, its doors
+and windows gaping; the whole quarter of the town immersed in silence.
+On the opposite bank of the canal, on a roofed stage, an ancient
+gentleman slept publicly, sole visible inhabitant; and beyond on the
+lagoon a canoe spread a striped lateen, the sole thing moving.
+
+The canal is formed on the south by a pier or causeway with a parapet.
+At the far end the parapet stops, and the quay expands into an oblong
+peninsula in the lagoon, the breathing-place and summer parlour of the
+king. The midst is occupied by an open house or permanent marquee—called
+here a maniapa, or, as the word is now pronounced, a maniap’—at the
+lowest estimation forty feet by sixty. The iron roof, lofty but
+exceedingly low-browed, so that a woman must stoop to enter, is supported
+externally on pillars of coral, within by a frame of wood. The floor is
+of broken coral, divided in aisles by the uprights of the frame; the
+house far enough from shore to catch the breeze, which enters freely and
+disperses the mosquitoes; and under the low eaves the sun is seen to
+glitter and the waves to dance on the lagoon.
+
+It was now some while since we had met any but slumberers; and when we
+had wandered down the pier and stumbled at last into this bright shed, we
+were surprised to find it occupied by a society of wakeful people, some
+twenty souls in all, the court and guardsmen of Butaritari. The court
+ladies were busy making mats; the guardsmen yawned and sprawled. Half a
+dozen rifles lay on a rock and a cutlass was leaned against a pillar: the
+armoury of these drowsy musketeers. At the far end, a little closed
+house of wood displayed some tinsel curtains, and proved, upon
+examination, to be a privy on the European model. In front of this, upon
+some mats, lolled Tebureimoa, the king; behind him, on the panels of the
+house, two crossed rifles represented fasces. He wore pyjamas which
+sorrowfully misbecame his bulk; his nose was hooked and cruel, his body
+overcome with sodden corpulence, his eye timorous and dull: he seemed at
+once oppressed with drowsiness and held awake by apprehension: a pepper
+rajah muddled with opium, and listening for the march of a Dutch army,
+looks perhaps not otherwise. We were to grow better acquainted, and
+first and last I had the same impression; he seemed always drowsy, yet
+always to hearken and start; and, whether from remorse or fear, there is
+no doubt he seeks a refuge in the abuse of drugs.
+
+The rajah displayed no sign of interest in our coming. But the queen,
+who sat beside him in a purple sacque, was more accessible; and there was
+present an interpreter so willing that his volubility became at last the
+cause of our departure. He had greeted us upon our entrance:—‘That is
+the honourable King, and I am his interpreter,’ he had said, with more
+stateliness than truth. For he held no appointment in the court, seemed
+extremely ill-acquainted with the island language, and was present, like
+ourselves, upon a visit of civility. Mr. Williams was his name: an
+American darkey, runaway ship’s cook, and bar-keeper at _The Land we Live
+in_ tavern, Butaritari. I never knew a man who had more words in his
+command or less truth to communicate; neither the gloom of the monarch,
+nor my own efforts to be distant, could in the least abash him; and when
+the scene closed, the darkey was left talking.
+
+The town still slumbered, or had but just begun to turn and stretch
+itself; it was still plunged in heat and silence. So much the more vivid
+was the impression that we carried away of the house upon the islet, the
+Micronesian Saul wakeful amid his guards, and his unmelodious David, Mr.
+Williams, chattering through the drowsy hours.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II—THE FOUR BROTHERS
+
+
+The kingdom of Tebureimoa includes two islands, Great and Little Makin;
+some two thousand subjects pay him tribute, and two semi-independent
+chieftains do him qualified homage. The importance of the office is
+measured by the man; he may be a nobody, he may be absolute; and both
+extremes have been exemplified within the memory of residents.
+
+On the death of king Tetimararoa, Tebureimoa’s father, Nakaeia, the
+eldest son, succeeded. He was a fellow of huge physical strength,
+masterful, violent, with a certain barbaric thrift and some intelligence
+of men and business. Alone in his islands, it was he who dealt and
+profited; he was the planter and the merchant; and his subjects toiled
+for his behoof in servitude. When they wrought long and well their
+taskmaster declared a holiday, and supplied and shared a general debauch.
+The scale of his providing was at times magnificent; six hundred dollars’
+worth of gin and brandy was set forth at once; the narrow land resounded
+with the noise of revelry: and it was a common thing to see the subjects
+(staggering themselves) parade their drunken sovereign on the fore-hatch
+of a wrecked vessel, king and commons howling and singing as they went.
+At a word from Nakaeia’s mouth the revel ended; Makin became once more an
+isle of slaves and of teetotalers; and on the morrow all the population
+must be on the roads or in the taro-patches toiling under his bloodshot
+eye.
+
+The fear of Nakaeia filled the land. No regularity of justice was
+affected; there was no trial, there were no officers of the law; it seems
+there was but one penalty, the capital; and daylight assault and midnight
+murder were the forms of process. The king himself would play the
+executioner: and his blows were dealt by stealth, and with the help and
+countenance of none but his own wives. These were his oarswomen; one
+that caught a crab, he slew incontinently with the tiller; thus
+disciplined, they pulled him by night to the scene of his vengeance,
+which he would then execute alone and return well-pleased with his
+connubial crew. The inmates of the harem held a station hard for us to
+conceive. Beasts of draught, and driven by the fear of death, they were
+yet implicitly trusted with their sovereign’s life; they were still wives
+and queens, and it was supposed that no man should behold their faces.
+They killed by the sight like basilisks; a chance view of one of those
+boatwomen was a crime to be wiped out with blood. In the days of Nakaeia
+the palace was beset with some tall coco-palms which commanded the
+enclosure. It chanced one evening, while Nakaeia sat below at supper
+with his wives, that the owner of the grove was in a tree-top drawing
+palm-tree wine; it chanced that he looked down, and the king at the same
+moment looking up, their eyes encountered. Instant flight preserved the
+involuntary criminal. But during the remainder of that reign he must
+lurk and be hid by friends in remote parts of the isle; Nakaeia hunted
+him without remission, although still in vain; and the palms, accessories
+to the fact, were ruthlessly cut down. Such was the ideal of wifely
+purity in an isle where nubile virgins went naked as in paradise. And
+yet scandal found its way into Nakaeia’s well-guarded harem. He was at
+that time the owner of a schooner, which he used for a pleasure-house,
+lodging on board as she lay anchored; and thither one day he summoned a
+new wife. She was one that had been sealed to him; that is to say (I
+presume), that he was married to her sister, for the husband of an elder
+sister has the call of the cadets. She would be arrayed for the
+occasion; she would come scented, garlanded, decked with fine mats and
+family jewels, for marriage, as her friends supposed; for death, as she
+well knew. ‘Tell me the man’s name, and I will spare you,’ said Nakaeia.
+But the girl was staunch; she held her peace, saved her lover and the
+queens strangled her between the mats.
+
+Nakaeia was feared; it does not appear that he was hated. Deeds that
+smell to us of murder wore to his subjects the reverend face of justice;
+his orgies made him popular; natives to this day recall with respect the
+firmness of his government; and even the whites, whom he long opposed and
+kept at arm’s-length, give him the name (in the canonical South Sea
+phrase) of ‘a perfect gentleman when sober.’
+
+When he came to lie, without issue, on the bed of death, he summoned his
+next brother, Nanteitei, made him a discourse on royal policy, and warned
+him he was too weak to reign. The warning was taken to heart, and for
+some while the government moved on the model of Nakaeia’s. Nanteitei
+dispensed with guards, and walked abroad alone with a revolver in a
+leather mail-bag. To conceal his weakness he affected a rude silence;
+you might talk to him all day; advice, reproof, appeal, and menace alike
+remained unanswered.
+
+The number of his wives was seventeen, many of them heiresses; for the
+royal house is poor, and marriage was in these days a chief means of
+buttressing the throne. Nakaeia kept his harem busy for himself;
+Nanteitei hired it out to others. In his days, for instance, Messrs.
+Wightman built a pier with a verandah at the north end of the town. The
+masonry was the work of the seventeen queens, who toiled and waded there
+like fisher lasses; but the man who was to do the roofing durst not begin
+till they had finished, lest by chance he should look down and see them.
+
+It was perhaps the last appearance of the harem gang. For some time
+already Hawaiian missionaries had been seated at Butaritari—Maka and
+Kanoa, two brave childlike men. Nakaeia would none of their doctrine; he
+was perhaps jealous of their presence; being human, he had some affection
+for their persons. In the house, before the eyes of Kanoa, he slew with
+his own hand three sailors of Oahu, crouching on their backs to knife
+them, and menacing the missionary if he interfered; yet he not only
+spared him at the moment, but recalled him afterwards (when he had fled)
+with some expressions of respect. Nanteitei, the weaker man, fell more
+completely under the spell. Maka, a light-hearted, lovable, yet in his
+own trade very rigorous man, gained and improved an influence on the king
+which soon grew paramount. Nanteitei, with the royal house, was publicly
+converted; and, with a severity which liberal missionaries disavow, the
+harem was at once reduced. It was a compendious act. The throne was
+thus impoverished, its influence shaken, the queen’s relatives mortified,
+and sixteen chief women (some of great possessions) cast in a body on the
+market. I have been shipmates with a Hawaiian sailor who was
+successively married to two of these _impromptu_ widows, and successively
+divorced by both for misconduct. That two great and rich ladies (for
+both of these were rich) should have married ‘a man from another island’
+marks the dissolution of society. The laws besides were wholly
+remodelled, not always for the better. I love Maka as a man; as a
+legislator he has two defects: weak in the punishment of crime, stern to
+repress innocent pleasures.
+
+War and revolution are the common successors of reform; yet Nanteitei
+died (of an overdose of chloroform), in quiet possession of the throne,
+and it was in the reign of the third brother, Nabakatokia, a man brave in
+body and feeble of character, that the storm burst. The rule of the high
+chiefs and notables seems to have always underlain and perhaps alternated
+with monarchy. The Old Men (as they were called) have a right to sit
+with the king in the Speak House and debate: and the king’s chief
+superiority is a form of closure—‘The Speaking is over.’ After the long
+monocracy of Nakaeia and the changes of Nanteitei, the Old Men were
+doubtless grown impatient of obscurity, and they were beyond question
+jealous of the influence of Maka. Calumny, or rather caricature, was
+called in use; a spoken cartoon ran round society; Maka was reported to
+have said in church that the king was the first man in the island and
+himself the second; and, stung by the supposed affront, the chiefs broke
+into rebellion and armed gatherings. In the space of one forenoon the
+throne of Nakaeia was humbled in the dust. The king sat in the maniap’
+before the palace gate expecting his recruits; Maka by his side, both
+anxious men; and meanwhile, in the door of a house at the north entry of
+the town, a chief had taken post and diverted the succours as they came.
+They came singly or in groups, each with his gun or pistol slung about
+his neck. ‘Where are you going?’ asked the chief. ‘The king called us,’
+they would reply. ‘Here is your place. Sit down,’ returned the chief.
+With incredible disloyalty, all obeyed; and sufficient force being thus
+got together from both sides, Nabakatokia was summoned and surrendered.
+About this period, in almost every part of the group, the kings were
+murdered; and on Tapituea, the skeleton of the last hangs to this day in
+the chief Speak House of the isle, a menace to ambition. Nabakatokia was
+more fortunate; his life and the royal style were spared to him, but he
+was stripped of power. The Old Men enjoyed a festival of public
+speaking; the laws were continually changed, never enforced; the commons
+had an opportunity to regret the merits of Nakaeia; and the king, denied
+the resource of rich marriages and the service of a troop of wives, fell
+not only in disconsideration but in debt.
+
+He died some months before my arrival on the islands, and no one
+regretted him; rather all looked hopefully to his successor. This was by
+repute the hero of the family. Alone of the four brothers, he had issue,
+a grown son, Natiata, and a daughter three years old; it was to him, in
+the hour of the revolution, that Nabakatokia turned too late for help;
+and in earlier days he had been the right hand of the vigorous Nakaeia.
+Nontemat’, _Mr. Corpse_, was his appalling nickname, and he had earned it
+well. Again and again, at the command of Nakaeia, he had surrounded
+houses in the dead of night, cut down the mosquito bars and butchered
+families. Here was the hand of iron; here was Nakaeia _redux_. He came,
+summoned from the tributary rule of Little Makin: he was installed, he
+proved a puppet and a trembler, the unwieldy shuttlecock of orators; and
+the reader has seen the remains of him in his summer parlour under the
+name of Tebureimoa.
+
+The change in the man’s character was much commented on in the island,
+and variously explained by opium and Christianity. To my eyes, there
+seemed no change at all, rather an extreme consistency. Mr. Corpse was
+afraid of his brother: King Tebureimoa is afraid of the Old Men. Terror
+of the first nerved him for deeds of desperation; fear of the second
+disables him for the least act of government. He played his part of
+bravo in the past, following the line of least resistance, butchering
+others in his own defence: to-day, grown elderly and heavy, a convert, a
+reader of the Bible, perhaps a penitent, conscious at least of
+accumulated hatreds, and his memory charged with images of violence and
+blood, he capitulates to the Old Men, fuddles himself with opium, and
+sits among his guards in dreadful expectation. The same cowardice that
+put into his hand the knife of the assassin deprives him of the sceptre
+of a king.
+
+A tale that I was told, a trifling incident that fell in my observation,
+depicts him in his two capacities. A chief in Little Makin asked, in an
+hour of lightness, ‘Who is Kaeia?’ A bird carried the saying; and
+Nakaeia placed the matter in the hands of a committee of three. Mr.
+Corpse was chairman; the second commissioner died before my arrival; the
+third was yet alive and green, and presented so venerable an appearance
+that we gave him the name of Abou ben Adhem. Mr. Corpse was troubled
+with a scruple; the man from Little Makin was his adopted brother; in
+such a case it was not very delicate to appear at all, to strike the blow
+(which it seems was otherwise expected of him) would be worse than
+awkward. ‘I will strike the blow,’ said the venerable Abou; and Mr.
+Corpse (surely with a sigh) accepted the compromise. The quarry was
+decoyed into the bush; he was set to carrying a log; and while his arms
+were raised Abou ripped up his belly at a blow. Justice being thus done,
+the commission, in a childish horror, turned to flee. But their victim
+recalled them to his side. ‘You need not run away now,’ he said. ‘You
+have done this thing to me. Stay.’ He was some twenty minutes dying,
+and his murderers sat with him the while: a scene for Shakespeare. All
+the stages of a violent death, the blood, the failing voice, the
+decomposing features, the changed hue, are thus present in the memory of
+Mr. Corpse; and since he studied them in the brother he betrayed, he has
+some reason to reflect on the possibilities of treachery. I was never
+more sure of anything than the tragic quality of the king’s thoughts; and
+yet I had but the one sight of him at unawares. I had once an errand for
+his ear. It was once more the hour of the siesta; but there were
+loiterers abroad, and these directed us to a closed house on the bank of
+the canal where Tebureimoa lay unguarded. We entered without ceremony,
+being in some haste. He lay on the floor upon a bed of mats, reading in
+his Gilbert Island Bible with compunction. On our sudden entrance the
+unwieldy man reared himself half-sitting so that the Bible rolled on the
+floor, stared on us a moment with blank eyes, and, having recognised his
+visitors, sank again upon the mats. So Eglon looked on Ehud.
+
+The justice of facts is strange, and strangely just; Nakaeia, the author
+of these deeds, died at peace discoursing on the craft of kings; his tool
+suffers daily death for his enforced complicity. Not the nature, but the
+congruity of men’s deeds and circumstances damn and save them; and
+Tebureimoa from the first has been incongruously placed. At home, in a
+quiet bystreet of a village, the man had been a worthy carpenter, and,
+even bedevilled as he is, he shows some private virtues. He has no
+lands, only the use of such as are impignorate for fines; he cannot
+enrich himself in the old way by marriages; thrift is the chief pillar of
+his future, and he knows and uses it. Eleven foreign traders pay him a
+patent of a hundred dollars, some two thousand subjects pay capitation at
+the rate of a dollar for a man, half a dollar for a woman, and a shilling
+for a child: allowing for the exchange, perhaps a total of three hundred
+pounds a year. He had been some nine months on the throne: had bought
+his wife a silk dress and hat, figure unknown, and himself a uniform at
+three hundred dollars; had sent his brother’s photograph to be enlarged
+in San Francisco at two hundred and fifty dollars; had greatly reduced
+that brother’s legacy of debt and had still sovereigns in his pocket. An
+affectionate brother, a good economist; he was besides a handy carpenter,
+and cobbled occasionally on the woodwork of the palace. It is not
+wonderful that Mr. Corpse has virtues; that Tebureimoa should have a
+diversion filled me with surprise.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III—AROUND OUR HOUSE
+
+
+When we left the palace we were still but seafarers ashore; and within
+the hour we had installed our goods in one of the six foreign houses of
+Butaritari, namely, that usually occupied by Maka, the Hawaiian
+missionary. Two San Francisco firms are here established, Messrs.
+Crawford and Messrs. Wightman Brothers; the first hard by the palace of
+the mid town, the second at the north entry; each with a store and
+bar-room. Our house was in the Wightman compound, betwixt the store and
+bar, within a fenced enclosure. Across the road a few native houses
+nestled in the margin of the bush, and the green wall of palms rose
+solid, shutting out the breeze. A little sandy cove of the lagoon ran in
+behind, sheltered by a verandah pier, the labour of queens’ hands. Here,
+when the tide was high, sailed boats lay to be loaded; when the tide was
+low, the boats took ground some half a mile away, and an endless series
+of natives descended the pier stair, tailed across the sand in strings
+and clusters, waded to the waist with the bags of copra, and loitered
+backward to renew their charge. The mystery of the copra trade tormented
+me, as I sat and watched the profits drip on the stair and the sands.
+
+In front, from shortly after four in the morning until nine at night, the
+folk of the town streamed by us intermittingly along the road: families
+going up the island to make copra on their lands; women bound for the
+bush to gather flowers against the evening toilet; and, twice a day, the
+toddy-cutters, each with his knife and shell. In the first grey of the
+morning, and again late in the afternoon, these would straggle past about
+their tree-top business, strike off here and there into the bush, and
+vanish from the face of the earth. At about the same hour, if the tide
+be low in the lagoon, you are likely to be bound yourself across the
+island for a bath, and may enter close at their heels alleys of the palm
+wood. Right in front, although the sun is not yet risen, the east is
+already lighted with preparatory fires, and the huge accumulations of the
+trade-wind cloud glow with and heliograph the coming day. The breeze is
+in your face; overhead in the tops of the palms, its playthings, it
+maintains a lively bustle; look where you will, above or below, there is
+no human presence, only the earth and shaken forest. And right overhead
+the song of an invisible singer breaks from the thick leaves; from
+farther on a second tree-top answers; and beyond again, in the bosom of
+the woods, a still more distant minstrel perches and sways and sings.
+So, all round the isle, the toddy-cutters sit on high, and are rocked by
+the trade, and have a view far to seaward, where they keep watch for
+sails, and like huge birds utter their songs in the morning. They sing
+with a certain lustiness and Bacchic glee; the volume of sound and the
+articulate melody fall unexpected from the tree-top, whence we anticipate
+the chattering of fowls. And yet in a sense these songs also are but
+chatter; the words are ancient, obsolete, and sacred; few comprehend
+them, perhaps no one perfectly; but it was understood the cutters ‘prayed
+to have good toddy, and sang of their old wars.’ The prayer is at least
+answered; and when the foaming shell is brought to your door, you have a
+beverage well ‘worthy of a grace.’ All forenoon you may return and
+taste; it only sparkles, and sharpens, and grows to be a new drink, not
+less delicious; but with the progress of the day the fermentation
+quickens and grows acid; in twelve hours it will be yeast for bread, in
+two days more a devilish intoxicant, the counsellor of crime.
+
+The men are of a marked Arabian cast of features, often bearded and
+mustached, often gaily dressed, some with bracelets and anklets, all
+stalking hidalgo-like, and accepting salutations with a haughty lip. The
+hair (with the dandies of either sex) is worn turban-wise in a frizzled
+bush; and like the daggers of the Japanese a pointed stick (used for a
+comb) is thrust gallantly among the curls. The women from this bush of
+hair look forth enticingly: the race cannot be compared with the Tahitian
+for female beauty; I doubt even if the average be high; but some of the
+prettiest girls, and one of the handsomest women I ever saw, were
+Gilbertines. Butaritari, being the commercial centre of the group, is
+Europeanised; the coloured sacque or the white shift are common wear, the
+latter for the evening; the trade hat, loaded with flowers, fruit, and
+ribbons, is unfortunately not unknown; and the characteristic female
+dress of the Gilberts no longer universal. The _ridi_ is its name: a
+cutty petticoat or fringe of the smoked fibre of cocoa-nut leaf, not
+unlike tarry string: the lower edge not reaching the mid-thigh, the upper
+adjusted so low upon the haunches that it seems to cling by accident. A
+sneeze, you think, and the lady must surely be left destitute. ‘The
+perilous, hairbreadth ridi’ was our word for it; and in the conflict that
+rages over women’s dress it has the misfortune to please neither side,
+the prudish condemning it as insufficient, the more frivolous finding it
+unlovely in itself. Yet if a pretty Gilbertine would look her best, that
+must be her costume. In that and naked otherwise, she moves with an
+incomparable liberty and grace and life, that marks the poetry of
+Micronesia. Bundle her in a gown, the charm is fled, and she wriggles
+like an Englishwoman.
+
+Towards dusk the passers-by became more gorgeous. The men broke out in
+all the colours of the rainbow—or at least of the trade-room,—and both
+men and women began to be adorned and scented with new flowers. A small
+white blossom is the favourite, sometimes sown singly in a woman’s hair
+like little stars, now composed in a thick wreath. With the night, the
+crowd sometimes thickened in the road, and the padding and brushing of
+bare feet became continuous; the promenades mostly grave, the silence
+only interrupted by some giggling and scampering of girls; even the
+children quiet. At nine, bed-time struck on a bell from the cathedral,
+and the life of the town ceased. At four the next morning the signal is
+repeated in the darkness, and the innocent prisoners set free; but for
+seven hours all must lie—I was about to say within doors, of a place
+where doors, and even walls, are an exception—housed, at least, under
+their airy roofs and clustered in the tents of the mosquito-nets.
+Suppose a necessary errand to occur, suppose it imperative to send
+abroad, the messenger must then go openly, advertising himself to the
+police with a huge brand of cocoa-nut, which flares from house to house
+like a moving bonfire. Only the police themselves go darkling, and grope
+in the night for misdemeanants. I used to hate their treacherous
+presence; their captain in particular, a crafty old man in white, lurked
+nightly about my premises till I could have found it in my heart to beat
+him. But the rogue was privileged.
+
+Not one of the eleven resident traders came to town, no captain cast
+anchor in the lagoon, but we saw him ere the hour was out. This was
+owing to our position between the store and the bar—the _Sans Souci_, as
+the last was called. Mr. Rick was not only Messrs. Wightman’s manager,
+but consular agent for the States; Mrs. Rick was the only white woman on
+the island, and one of the only two in the archipelago; their house
+besides, with its cool verandahs, its bookshelves, its comfortable
+furniture, could not be rivalled nearer than Jaluit or Honolulu. Every
+one called in consequence, save such as might be prosecuting a South Sea
+quarrel, hingeing on the price of copra and the odd cent, or perhaps a
+difference about poultry. Even these, if they did not appear upon the
+north, would be presently visible to the southward, the _Sans Souci_
+drawing them as with cords. In an island with a total population of
+twelve white persons, one of the two drinking-shops might seem
+superfluous: but every bullet has its billet, and the double
+accommodation of Butaritari is found in practice highly convenient by the
+captains and the crews of ships: _The Land we Live in_ being tacitly
+resigned to the forecastle, the _Sans Souci_ tacitly reserved for the
+afterguard. So aristocratic were my habits, so commanding was my fear of
+Mr. Williams, that I have never visited the first; but in the other,
+which was the club or rather the casino of the island, I regularly passed
+my evenings. It was small, but neatly fitted, and at night (when the
+lamp was lit) sparkled with glass and glowed with coloured pictures like
+a theatre at Christmas. The pictures were advertisements, the glass
+coarse enough, the carpentry amateur; but the effect, in that incongruous
+isle, was of unbridled luxury and inestimable expense. Here songs were
+sung, tales told, tricks performed, games played. The Ricks, ourselves,
+Norwegian Tom the bar-keeper, a captain or two from the ships, and
+perhaps three or four traders come down the island in their boats or by
+the road on foot, made up the usual company. The traders, all bred to
+the sea, take a humorous pride in their new business; ‘South Sea
+Merchants’ is the title they prefer. ‘We are all sailors
+here’—‘Merchants, if you please’—‘_South Sea_ Merchants,’—was a piece of
+conversation endlessly repeated, that never seemed to lose in savour. We
+found them at all times simple, genial, gay, gallant, and obliging; and,
+across some interval of time, recall with pleasure the traders of
+Butaritari. There was one black sheep indeed. I tell of him here where
+he lived, against my rule; for in this case I have no measure to
+preserve, and the man is typical of a class of ruffians that once
+disgraced the whole field of the South Seas, and still linger in the
+rarely visited isles of Micronesia. He had the name on the beach of ‘a
+perfect gentleman when sober,’ but I never saw him otherwise than drunk.
+The few shocking and savage traits of the Micronesian he has singled out
+with the skill of a collector, and planted in the soil of his original
+baseness. He has been accused and acquitted of a treacherous murder; and
+has since boastfully owned it, which inclines me to suppose him innocent.
+His daughter is defaced by his erroneous cruelty, for it was his wife he
+had intended to disfigure, and in the darkness of the night and the
+frenzy of coco-brandy, fastened on the wrong victim. The wife has since
+fled and harbours in the bush with natives; and the husband still demands
+from deaf ears her forcible restoration. The best of his business is to
+make natives drink, and then advance the money for the fine upon a
+lucrative mortgage. ‘Respect for whites’ is the man’s word: ‘What is the
+matter with this island is the want of respect for whites.’ On his way
+to Butaritari, while I was there, he spied his wife in the bush with
+certain natives and made a dash to capture her; whereupon one of her
+companions drew a knife and the husband retreated: ‘Do you call that
+proper respect for whites?’ he cried. At an early stage of the
+acquaintance we proved our respect for his kind of white by forbidding
+him our enclosure under pain of death. Thenceforth he lingered often in
+the neighbourhood with I knew not what sense of envy or design of
+mischief; his white, handsome face (which I beheld with loathing) looked
+in upon us at all hours across the fence; and once, from a safe distance,
+he avenged himself by shouting a recondite island insult, to us quite
+inoffensive, on his English lips incredibly incongruous.
+
+Our enclosure, round which this composite of degradations wandered, was
+of some extent. In one corner was a trellis with a long table of rough
+boards. Here the Fourth of July feast had been held not long before with
+memorable consequences, yet to be set forth; here we took our meals; here
+entertained to a dinner the king and notables of Makin. In the midst was
+the house, with a verandah front and back, and three is rooms within. In
+the verandah we slung our man-of-war hammocks, worked there by day, and
+slept at night. Within were beds, chairs, a round table, a fine hanging
+lamp, and portraits of the royal family of Hawaii. Queen Victoria proves
+nothing; Kalakaua and Mrs. Bishop are diagnostic; and the truth is we
+were the stealthy tenants of the parsonage. On the day of our arrival
+Maka was away; faithless trustees unlocked his doors; and the dear
+rigorous man, the sworn foe of liquor and tobacco, returned to find his
+verandah littered with cigarettes and his parlour horrible with bottles.
+He made but one condition—on the round table, which he used in the
+celebration of the sacraments, he begged us to refrain from setting
+liquor; in all else he bowed to the accomplished fact, refused rent,
+retired across the way into a native house, and, plying in his boat, beat
+the remotest quarters of the isle for provender. He found us pigs—I
+could not fancy where—no other pigs were visible; he brought us fowls and
+taro; when we gave our feast to the monarch and gentry, it was he who
+supplied the wherewithal, he who superintended the cooking, he who asked
+grace at table, and when the king’s health was proposed, he also started
+the cheering with an English hip-hip-hip. There was never a more
+fortunate conception; the heart of the fatted king exulted in his bosom
+at the sound.
+
+Take him for all in all, I have never known a more engaging creature than
+this parson of Butaritari: his mirth, his kindness, his noble, friendly
+feelings, brimmed from the man in speech and gesture. He loved to
+exaggerate, to act and overact the momentary part, to exercise his lungs
+and muscles, and to speak and laugh with his whole body. He had the
+morning cheerfulness of birds and healthy children; and his humour was
+infectious. We were next neighbours and met daily, yet our salutations
+lasted minutes at a stretch—shaking hands, slapping shoulders, capering
+like a pair of Merry-Andrews, laughing to split our sides upon some
+pleasantry that would scarce raise a titter in an infant-school. It
+might be five in the morning, the toddy-cutters just gone by, the road
+empty, the shade of the island lying far on the lagoon: and the
+ebullition cheered me for the day.
+
+Yet I always suspected Maka of a secret melancholy—these jubilant
+extremes could scarce be constantly maintained. He was besides long, and
+lean, and lined, and corded, and a trifle grizzled; and his Sabbath
+countenance was even saturnine. On that day we made a procession to the
+church, or (as I must always call it) the cathedral: Maka (a blot on the
+hot landscape) in tall hat, black frock-coat, black trousers; under his
+arm the hymn-book and the Bible; in his face, a reverent gravity:—beside
+him Mary his wife, a quiet, wise, and handsome elderly lady, seriously
+attired:—myself following with singular and moving thoughts. Long
+before, to the sound of bells and streams and birds, through a green
+Lothian glen, I had accompanied Sunday by Sunday a minister in whose
+house I lodged; and the likeness, and the difference, and the series of
+years and deaths, profoundly touched me. In the great, dusky, palm-tree
+cathedral the congregation rarely numbered thirty: the men on one side,
+the women on the other, myself posted (for a privilege) amongst the
+women, and the small missionary contingent gathered close around the
+platform, we were lost in that round vault. The lessons were read
+antiphonally, the flock was catechised, a blind youth repeated weekly a
+long string of psalms, hymns were sung—I never heard worse singing,—and
+the sermon followed. To say I understood nothing were untrue; there were
+points that I learned to expect with certainty; the name of Honolulu,
+that of Kalakaua, the word Cap’n-man-o’-wa’, the word ship, and a
+description of a storm at sea, infallibly occurred; and I was not seldom
+rewarded with the name of my own Sovereign in the bargain. The rest was
+but sound to the ears, silence for the mind: a plain expanse of tedium,
+rendered unbearable by heat, a hard chair, and the sight through the wide
+doors of the more happy heathen on the green. Sleep breathed on my
+joints and eyelids, sleep hummed in my ears; it reigned in the dim
+cathedral. The congregation stirred and stretched; they moaned, they
+groaned aloud; they yawned upon a singing note, as you may sometimes hear
+a dog when he has reached the tragic bitterest of boredom. In vain the
+preacher thumped the table; in vain he singled and addressed by name
+particular hearers. I was myself perhaps a more effective excitant; and
+at least to one old gentleman the spectacle of my successful struggles
+against sleep—and I hope they were successful—cheered the flight of time.
+He, when he was not catching flies or playing tricks upon his neighbours,
+gloated with a fixed, truculent eye upon the stages of my agony; and
+once, when the service was drawing towards a close, he winked at me
+across the church.
+
+I write of the service with a smile; yet I was always there—always with
+respect for Maka, always with admiration for his deep seriousness, his
+burning energy, the fire of his roused eye, the sincere and various
+accents of his voice. To see him weekly flogging a dead horse and
+blowing a cold fire was a lesson in fortitude and constancy. It may be a
+question whether if the mission were fully supported, and he was set free
+from business avocations, more might not result; I think otherwise
+myself; I think not neglect but rigour has reduced his flock, that rigour
+which has once provoked a revolution, and which to-day, in a man so
+lively and engaging, amazes the beholder. No song, no dance, no tobacco,
+no liquor, no alleviative of life—only toil and church-going; so says a
+voice from his face; and the face is the face of the Polynesian Esau, but
+the voice is the voice of a Jacob from a different world. And a
+Polynesian at the best makes a singular missionary in the Gilberts,
+coming from a country recklessly unchaste to one conspicuously strict;
+from a race hag-ridden with bogies to one comparatively bold against the
+terrors of the dark. The thought was stamped one morning in my mind,
+when I chanced to be abroad by moonlight, and saw all the town lightless,
+but the lamp faithfully burning by the missionary’s bed. It requires no
+law, no fire, and no scouting police, to withhold Maka and his countrymen
+from wandering in the night unlighted.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV—A TALE OF A TAPU
+
+
+On the morrow of our arrival (Sunday, 14th July 1889) our photographers
+were early stirring. Once more we traversed a silent town; many were yet
+abed and asleep; some sat drowsily in their open houses; there was no
+sound of intercourse or business. In that hour before the shadows, the
+quarter of the palace and canal seemed like a landing-place in the
+_Arabian Nights_ or from the classic poets; here were the fit destination
+of some ‘faery frigot,’ here some adventurous prince might step ashore
+among new characters and incidents; and the island prison, where it
+floated on the luminous face of the lagoon, might have passed for the
+repository of the Grail. In such a scene, and at such an hour, the
+impression received was not so much of foreign travel—rather of past
+ages; it seemed not so much degrees of latitude that we had crossed, as
+centuries of time that we had re-ascended; leaving, by the same steps,
+home and to-day. A few children followed us, mostly nude, all silent; in
+the clear, weedy waters of the canal some silent damsels waded, baring
+their brown thighs; and to one of the maniap’s before the palace gate we
+were attracted by a low but stirring hum of speech.
+
+The oval shed was full of men sitting cross-legged. The king was there
+in striped pyjamas, his rear protected by four guards with Winchesters,
+his air and bearing marked by unwonted spirit and decision; tumblers and
+black bottles went the round; and the talk, throughout loud, was general
+and animated. I was inclined at first to view this scene with suspicion.
+But the hour appeared unsuitable for a carouse; drink was besides
+forbidden equally by the law of the land and the canons of the church;
+and while I was yet hesitating, the king’s rigorous attitude disposed of
+my last doubt. We had come, thinking to photograph him surrounded by his
+guards, and at the first word of the design his piety revolted. We were
+reminded of the day—the Sabbath, in which thou shalt take no
+photographs—and returned with a flea in our ear, bearing the rejected
+camera.
+
+At church, a little later, I was struck to find the throne unoccupied.
+So nice a Sabbatarian might have found the means to be present; perhaps
+my doubts revived; and before I got home they were transformed to
+certainties. Tom, the bar-keeper of the _Sans Souci_, was in
+conversation with two emissaries from the court. The ‘keen,’ they said,
+wanted ‘din,’ failing which ‘perandi.’ {231} No din, was Tom’s reply,
+and no perandi; but ‘pira’ if they pleased. It seems they had no use for
+beer, and departed sorrowing.
+
+‘Why, what is the meaning of all this?’ I asked. ‘Is the island on the
+spree?’
+
+Such was the fact. On the 4th of July a feast had been made, and the
+king, at the suggestion of the whites, had raised the tapu against
+liquor. There is a proverb about horses; it scarce applies to the
+superior animal, of whom it may be rather said, that any one can start
+him drinking, not any twenty can prevail on him to stop. The tapu,
+raised ten days before, was not yet re-imposed; for ten days the town had
+been passing the bottle or lying (as we had seen it the afternoon before)
+in hoggish sleep; and the king, moved by the Old Men and his own
+appetites, continued to maintain the liberty, to squander his savings on
+liquor, and to join in and lead the debauch. The whites were the authors
+of this crisis; it was upon their own proposal that the freedom had been
+granted at the first; and for a while, in the interests of trade, they
+were doubtless pleased it should continue. That pleasure had now
+sometime ceased; the bout had been prolonged (it was conceded) unduly;
+and it now began to be a question how it might conclude. Hence Tom’s
+refusal. Yet that refusal was avowedly only for the moment, and it was
+avowedly unavailing; the king’s foragers, denied by Tom at the _Sans
+Souci_, would be supplied at _The Land we Live in_ by the gobbling Mr.
+Williams.
+
+The degree of the peril was not easy to measure at the time, and I am
+inclined to think now it was easy to exaggerate. Yet the conduct of
+drunkards even at home is always matter for anxiety; and at home our
+populations are not armed from the highest to the lowest with revolvers
+and repeating rifles, neither do we go on a debauch by the whole
+townful—and I might rather say, by the whole polity—king, magistrates,
+police, and army joining in one common scene of drunkenness. It must be
+thought besides that we were here in barbarous islands, rarely visited,
+lately and partly civilised. First and last, a really considerable
+number of whites have perished in the Gilberts, chiefly through their own
+misconduct; and the natives have displayed in at least one instance a
+disposition to conceal an accident under a butchery, and leave nothing
+but dumb bones. This last was the chief consideration against a sudden
+closing of the bars; the bar-keepers stood in the immediate breach and
+dealt direct with madmen; too surly a refusal might at any moment
+precipitate a blow, and the blow might prove the signal for a massacre.
+
+_Monday_, 15th.—At the same hour we returned to the same muniap’. Kümmel
+(of all drinks) was served in tumblers; in the midst sat the crown
+prince, a fatted youth, surrounded by fresh bottles and busily plying the
+corkscrew; and king, chief, and commons showed the loose mouth, the
+uncertain joints, and the blurred and animated eye of the early drinker.
+It was plain we were impatiently expected; the king retired with alacrity
+to dress, the guards were despatched after their uniforms; and we were
+left to await the issue of these preparations with a shedful of tipsy
+natives. The orgie had proceeded further than on Sunday. The day
+promised to be of great heat; it was already sultry, the courtiers were
+already fuddled; and still the kümmel continued to go round, and the
+crown prince to play butler. Flemish freedom followed upon Flemish
+excess; and a funny dog, a handsome fellow, gaily dressed, and with a
+full turban of frizzed hair, delighted the company with a humorous
+courtship of a lady in a manner not to be described. It was our
+diversion, in this time of waiting, to observe the gathering of the
+guards. They have European arms, European uniforms, and (to their
+sorrow) European shoes. We saw one warrior (like Mars) in the article of
+being armed; two men and a stalwart woman were scarce strong enough to
+boot him; and after a single appearance on parade the army is crippled
+for a week.
+
+At last, the gates under the king’s house opened; the army issued, one
+behind another, with guns and epaulettes; the colours stooped under the
+gateway; majesty followed in his uniform bedizened with gold lace;
+majesty’s wife came next in a hat and feathers, and an ample trained silk
+gown; the royal imps succeeded; there stood the pageantry of Makin
+marshalled on its chosen theatre. Dickens might have told how serious
+they were; how tipsy; how the king melted and streamed under his cocked
+hat; how he took station by the larger of his two cannons—austere,
+majestic, but not truly vertical; how the troops huddled, and were
+straightened out, and clubbed again; how they and their firelocks raked
+at various inclinations like the masts of ships; and how an amateur
+photographer reviewed, arrayed, and adjusted them, to see his
+dispositions change before he reached the camera.
+
+The business was funny to see; I do not know that it is graceful to laugh
+at; and our report of these transactions was received on our return with
+the shaking of grave heads.
+
+The day had begun ill; eleven hours divided us from sunset; and at any
+moment, on the most trifling chance, the trouble might begin. The
+Wightman compound was in a military sense untenable, commanded on three
+sides by houses and thick bush; the town was computed to contain over a
+thousand stand of excellent new arms; and retreat to the ships, in the
+case of an alert, was a recourse not to be thought of. Our talk that
+morning must have closely reproduced the talk in English garrisons before
+the Sepoy mutiny; the sturdy doubt that any mischief was in prospect, the
+sure belief that (should any come) there was nothing left but to go down
+fighting, the half-amused, half-anxious attitude of mind in which we were
+awaiting fresh developments.
+
+The kümmel soon ran out; we were scarce returned before the king had
+followed us in quest of more. Mr. Corpse was now divested of his more
+awful attitude, the lawless bulk of him again encased in striped pyjamas;
+a guardsman brought up the rear with his rifle at the trail: and his
+majesty was further accompanied by a Rarotongan whalerman and the playful
+courtier with the turban of frizzed hair. There was never a more lively
+deputation. The whalerman was gapingly, tearfully tipsy: the courtier
+walked on air; the king himself was even sportive. Seated in a chair in
+the Ricks’ sitting-room, he bore the brunt of our prayers and menaces
+unmoved. He was even rated, plied with historic instances, threatened
+with the men-of-war, ordered to restore the tapu on the spot—and nothing
+in the least affected him. It should be done to-morrow, he said; to-day
+it was beyond his power, to-day he durst not. ‘Is that royal?’ cried
+indignant Mr. Rick. No, it was not royal; had the king been of a royal
+character we should ourselves have held a different language; and royal
+or not, he had the best of the dispute. The terms indeed were hardly
+equal; for the king was the only man who could restore the tapu, but the
+Ricks were not the only people who sold drink. He had but to hold his
+ground on the first question, and they were sure to weaken on the second.
+A little struggle they still made for the fashion’s sake; and then one
+exceedingly tipsy deputation departed, greatly rejoicing, a case of
+brandy wheeling beside them in a barrow. The Rarotongan (whom I had
+never seen before) wrung me by the hand like a man bound on a far voyage.
+‘My dear frien’!’ he cried, ‘good-bye, my dear frien’!’—tears of kümmel
+standing in his eyes; the king lurched as he went, the courtier ambled,—a
+strange party of intoxicated children to be entrusted with that barrowful
+of madness.
+
+You could never say the town was quiet; all morning there was a ferment
+in the air, an aimless movement and congregation of natives in the
+street. But it was not before half-past one that a sudden hubbub of
+voices called us from the house, to find the whole white colony already
+gathered on the spot as by concerted signal. The _Sans Souci_ was
+overrun with rabble, the stair and verandah thronged. From all these
+throats an inarticulate babbling cry went up incessantly; it sounded like
+the bleating of young lambs, but angrier. In the road his royal highness
+(whom I had seen so lately in the part of butler) stood crying upon Tom;
+on the top step, tossed in the hurly-burly, Tom was shouting to the
+prince. Yet a while the pack swayed about the bar, vociferous. Then
+came a brutal impulse; the mob reeled, and returned, and was rejected;
+the stair showed a stream of heads; and there shot into view, through the
+disbanding ranks, three men violently dragging in their midst a fourth.
+By his hair and his hands, his head forced as low as his knees, his face
+concealed, he was wrenched from the verandah and whisked along the road
+into the village, howling as he disappeared. Had his face been raised,
+we should have seen it bloodied, and the blood was not his own. The
+courtier with the turban of frizzed hair had paid the costs of this
+disturbance with the lower part of one ear.
+
+So the brawl passed with no other casualty than might seem comic to the
+inhumane. Yet we looked round on serious faces and—a fact that spoke
+volumes—Tom was putting up the shutters on the bar. Custom might go
+elsewhere, Mr. Williams might profit as he pleased, but Tom had had
+enough of bar-keeping for that day. Indeed the event had hung on a hair.
+A man had sought to draw a revolver—on what quarrel I could never learn,
+and perhaps he himself could not have told; one shot, when the room was
+so crowded, could scarce have failed to take effect; where many were
+armed and all tipsy, it could scarce have failed to draw others; and the
+woman who spied the weapon and the man who seized it may very well have
+saved the white community.
+
+The mob insensibly melted from the scene; and for the rest of the day our
+neighbourhood was left in peace and a good deal in solitude. But the
+tranquillity was only local; _din_ and_ perandi_ still flowed in other
+quarters: and we had one more sight of Gilbert Island violence. In the
+church, where we had wandered photographing, we were startled by a sudden
+piercing outcry. The scene, looking forth from the doors of that great
+hall of shadow, was unforgettable. The palms, the quaint and scattered
+houses, the flag of the island streaming from its tall staff, glowed with
+intolerable sunshine. In the midst two women rolled fighting on the
+grass. The combatants were the more easy to be distinguished, because
+the one was stripped to the _ridi_ and the other wore a holoku (sacque)
+of some lively colour. The first was uppermost, her teeth locked in her
+adversary’s face, shaking her like a dog; the other impotently fought and
+scratched. So for a moment we saw them wallow and grapple there like
+vermin; then the mob closed and shut them in.
+
+It was a serious question that night if we should sleep ashore. But we
+were travellers, folk that had come far in quest of the adventurous; on
+the first sign of an adventure it would have been a singular
+inconsistency to have withdrawn; and we sent on board instead for our
+revolvers. Mindful of Taahauku, Mr. Rick, Mr. Osbourne, and Mrs.
+Stevenson held an assault of arms on the public highway, and fired at
+bottles to the admiration of the natives. Captain Reid of the _Equator_
+stayed on shore with us to be at hand in case of trouble, and we retired
+to bed at the accustomed hour, agreeably excited by the day’s events.
+The night was exquisite, the silence enchanting; yet as I lay in my
+hammock looking on the strong moonshine and the quiescent palms, one ugly
+picture haunted me of the two women, the naked and the clad, locked in
+that hostile embrace. The harm done was probably not much, yet I could
+have looked on death and massacre with less revolt. The return to these
+primeval weapons, the vision of man’s beastliness, of his ferality,
+shocked in me a deeper sense than that with which we count the cost of
+battles. There are elements in our state and history which it is a
+pleasure to forget, which it is perhaps the better wisdom not to dwell
+on. Crime, pestilence, and death are in the day’s work; the imagination
+readily accepts them. It instinctively rejects, on the contrary,
+whatever shall call up the image of our race upon its lowest terms, as
+the partner of beasts, beastly itself, dwelling pell-mell and
+hugger-mugger, hairy man with hairy woman, in the caves of old. And yet
+to be just to barbarous islanders we must not forget the slums and dens
+of our cities; I must not forget that I have passed dinnerward through
+Soho, and seen that which cured me of my dinner.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V—A TALE OF A TAPU—_continued_
+
+
+_Tuesday_, _July_ 16.—It rained in the night, sudden and loud, in Gilbert
+Island fashion. Before the day, the crowing of a cock aroused me and I
+wandered in the compound and along the street. The squall was blown by,
+the moon shone with incomparable lustre, the air lay dead as in a room,
+and yet all the isle sounded as under a strong shower, the eaves thickly
+pattering, the lofty palms dripping at larger intervals and with a louder
+note. In this bold nocturnal light the interior of the houses lay
+inscrutable, one lump of blackness, save when the moon glinted under the
+roof, and made a belt of silver, and drew the slanting shadows of the
+pillars on the floor. Nowhere in all the town was any lamp or ember; not
+a creature stirred; I thought I was alone to be awake; but the police
+were faithful to their duty; secretly vigilant, keeping account of time;
+and a little later, the watchman struck slowly and repeatedly on the
+cathedral bell; four o’clock, the warning signal. It seemed strange
+that, in a town resigned to drunkenness and tumult, curfew and réveille
+should still be sounded and still obeyed.
+
+The day came, and brought little change. The place still lay silent; the
+people slept, the town slept. Even the few who were awake, mostly women
+and children, held their peace and kept within under the strong shadow of
+the thatch, where you must stop and peer to see them. Through the
+deserted streets, and past the sleeping houses, a deputation took its way
+at an early hour to the palace; the king was suddenly awakened, and must
+listen (probably with a headache) to unpalatable truths. Mrs. Rick,
+being a sufficient mistress of that difficult tongue, was spokeswoman;
+she explained to the sick monarch that I was an intimate personal friend
+of Queen Victoria’s; that immediately on my return I should make her a
+report upon Butaritari; and that if my house should have been again
+invaded by natives, a man-of-war would be despatched to make reprisals.
+It was scarce the fact—rather a just and necessary parable of the fact,
+corrected for latitude; and it certainly told upon the king. He was much
+affected; he had conceived the notion (he said) that I was a man of some
+importance, but not dreamed it was as bad as this; and the missionary
+house was tapu’d under a fine of fifty dollars.
+
+So much was announced on the return of the deputation; not any more; and
+I gathered subsequently that much more had passed. The protection gained
+was welcome. It had been the most annoying and not the least alarming
+feature of the day before, that our house was periodically filled with
+tipsy natives, twenty or thirty at a time, begging drink, fingering our
+goods, hard to be dislodged, awkward to quarrel with. Queen Victoria’s
+friend (who was soon promoted to be her son) was free from these
+intrusions. Not only my house, but my neighbourhood as well, was left in
+peace; even on our walks abroad we were guarded and prepared for; and,
+like great persons visiting a hospital, saw only the fair side. For the
+matter of a week we were thus suffered to go out and in and live in a
+fool’s paradise, supposing the king to have kept his word, the tapu to be
+revived and the island once more sober.
+
+_Tuesday_, _July_ 23.—We dined under a bare trellis erected for the
+Fourth of July; and here we used to linger by lamplight over coffee and
+tobacco. In that climate evening approaches without sensible chill; the
+wind dies out before sunset; heaven glows a while and fades, and darkens
+into the blueness of the tropical night; swiftly and insensibly the
+shadows thicken, the stars multiply their number; you look around you and
+the day is gone. It was then that we would see our Chinaman draw near
+across the compound in a lurching sphere of light, divided by his
+shadows; and with the coming of the lamp the night closed about the
+table. The faces of the company, the spars of the trellis, stood out
+suddenly bright on a ground of blue and silver, faintly designed with
+palm-tops and the peaked roofs of houses. Here and there the gloss upon
+a leaf, or the fracture of a stone, returned an isolated sparkle. All
+else had vanished. We hung there, illuminated like a galaxy of stars _in
+vacuo_; we sat, manifest and blind, amid the general ambush of the
+darkness; and the islanders, passing with light footfalls and low voices
+in the sand of the road, lingered to observe us, unseen.
+
+On Tuesday the dusk had fallen, the lamp had just been brought, when a
+missile struck the table with a rattling smack and rebounded past my ear.
+Three inches to one side and this page had never been written; for the
+thing travelled like a cannon ball. It was supposed at the time to be a
+nut, though even at the time I thought it seemed a small one and fell
+strangely.
+
+_Wednesday_, _July_ 24.—The dusk had fallen once more, and the lamp been
+just brought out, when the same business was repeated. And again the
+missile whistled past my ear. One nut I had been willing to accept; a
+second, I rejected utterly. A cocoa-nut does not come slinging along on
+a windless evening, making an angle of about fifteen degrees with the
+horizon; cocoa-nuts do not fall on successive nights at the same hour and
+spot; in both cases, besides, a specific moment seemed to have been
+chosen, that when the lamp was just carried out, a specific person
+threatened, and that the head of the family. I may have been right or
+wrong, but I believed I was the mark of some intimidation; believed the
+missile was a stone, aimed not to hit, but to frighten.
+
+No idea makes a man more angry. I ran into the road, where the natives
+were as usual promenading in the dark; Maka joined me with a lantern; and
+I ran from one to another, glared in quite innocent faces, put useless
+questions, and proffered idle threats. Thence I carried my wrath (which
+was worthy the son of any queen in history) to the Ricks. They heard me
+with depression, assured me this trick of throwing a stone into a family
+dinner was not new; that it meant mischief, and was of a piece with the
+alarming disposition of the natives. And then the truth, so long
+concealed from us, came out. The king had broken his promise, he had
+defied the deputation; the tapu was still dormant, _The Land we Live in_
+still selling drink, and that quarter of the town disturbed and menaced
+by perpetual broils. But there was worse ahead: a feast was now
+preparing for the birthday of the little princess; and the tributary
+chiefs of Kuma and Little Makin were expected daily. Strong in a
+following of numerous and somewhat savage clansmen, each of these was
+believed, like a Douglas of old, to be of doubtful loyalty. Kuma (a
+little pot-bellied fellow) never visited the palace, never entered the
+town, but sat on the beach on a mat, his gun across his knees, parading
+his mistrust and scorn; Karaiti of Makin, although he was more bold, was
+not supposed to be more friendly; and not only were these vassals jealous
+of the throne, but the followers on either side shared in the animosity.
+Brawls had already taken place; blows had passed which might at any
+moment be repaid in blood. Some of the strangers were already here and
+already drinking; if the debauch continued after the bulk of them had
+come, a collision, perhaps a revolution, was to be expected.
+
+The sale of drink is in this group a measure of the jealousy of traders;
+one begins, the others are constrained to follow; and to him who has the
+most gin, and sells it the most recklessly, the lion’s share of copra is
+assured. It is felt by all to be an extreme expedient, neither safe,
+decent, nor dignified. A trader on Tarawa, heated by an eager rivalry,
+brought many cases of gin. He told me he sat afterwards day and night in
+his house till it was finished, not daring to arrest the sale, not
+venturing to go forth, the bush all round him filled with howling
+drunkards. At night, above all, when he was afraid to sleep, and heard
+shots and voices about him in the darkness, his remorse was black.
+
+‘My God!’ he reflected, ‘if I was to lose my life on such a wretched
+business!’ Often and often, in the story of the Gilberts, this scene has
+been repeated; and the remorseful trader sat beside his lamp, longing for
+the day, listening with agony for the sound of murder, registering
+resolutions for the future. For the business is easy to begin, but
+hazardous to stop. The natives are in their way a just and law-abiding
+people, mindful of their debts, docile to the voice of their own
+institutions; when the tapu is re-enforced they will cease drinking; but
+the white who seeks to antedate the movement by refusing liquor does so
+at his peril.
+
+Hence, in some degree, the anxiety and helplessness of Mr. Rick. He and
+Tom, alarmed by the rabblement of the _Sans Souci_, had stopped the sale;
+they had done so without danger, because _The Land we Live in_ still
+continued selling; it was claimed, besides, that they had been the first
+to begin. What step could be taken? Could Mr. Rick visit Mr. Muller
+(with whom he was not on terms) and address him thus: ‘I was getting
+ahead of you, now you are getting ahead of me, and I ask you to forego
+your profit. I got my place closed in safety, thanks to your continuing;
+but now I think you have continued long enough. I begin to be alarmed;
+and because I am afraid I ask you to confront a certain danger’? It was
+not to be thought of. Something else had to be found; and there was one
+person at one end of the town who was at least not interested in copra.
+There was little else to be said in favour of myself as an ambassador. I
+had arrived in the Wightman schooner, I was living in the Wightman
+compound, I was the daily associate of the Wightman coterie. It was
+egregious enough that I should now intrude unasked in the private affairs
+of Crawford’s agent, and press upon him the sacrifice of his interests
+and the venture of his life. But bad as I might be, there was none
+better; since the affair of the stone I was, besides, sharp-set to be
+doing, the idea of a delicate interview attracted me, and I thought it
+policy to show myself abroad.
+
+The night was very dark. There was service in the church, and the
+building glimmered through all its crevices like a dim Kirk Allowa’. I
+saw few other lights, but was indistinctly aware of many people stirring
+in the darkness, and a hum and sputter of low talk that sounded stealthy.
+I believe (in the old phrase) my beard was sometimes on my shoulder as I
+went. Muller’s was but partly lighted, and quite silent, and the gate
+was fastened. I could by no means manage to undo the latch. No wonder,
+since I found it afterwards to be four or five feet long—a fortification
+in itself. As I still fumbled, a dog came on the inside and sniffed
+suspiciously at my hands, so that I was reduced to calling ‘House ahoy!’
+Mr. Muller came down and put his chin across the paling in the dark.
+‘Who is that?’ said he, like one who has no mind to welcome strangers.
+
+‘My name is Stevenson,’ said I.
+
+‘O, Mr. Stevens! I didn’t know you. Come inside.’ We stepped into the
+dark store, when I leaned upon the counter and he against the wall. All
+the light came from the sleeping-room, where I saw his family being put
+to bed; it struck full in my face, but Mr. Muller stood in shadow. No
+doubt he expected what was Coming, and sought the advantage of position;
+but for a man who wished to persuade and had nothing to conceal, mine was
+the preferable.
+
+‘Look here,’ I began, ‘I hear you are selling to the natives.’
+
+‘Others have done that before me,’ he returned pointedly.
+
+‘No doubt,’ said I, ‘and I have nothing to do with the past, but the
+future. I want you to promise you will handle these spirits carefully.’
+
+‘Now what is your motive in this?’ he asked, and then, with a sneer, ‘Are
+you afraid of your life?’
+
+‘That is nothing to the purpose,’ I replied. ‘I know, and you know,
+these spirits ought not to be used at all.’
+
+‘Tom and Mr. Rick have sold them before.’
+
+‘I have nothing to do with Tom and Mr. Rick. All I know is I have heard
+them both refuse.’
+
+‘No, I suppose you have nothing to do with them. Then you are just
+afraid of your life.’
+
+‘Come now,’ I cried, being perhaps a little stung, ‘you know in your
+heart I am asking a reasonable thing. I don’t ask you to lose your
+profit—though I would prefer to see no spirits brought here, as you
+would—’
+
+‘I don’t say I wouldn’t. I didn’t begin this,’ he interjected.
+
+‘No, I don’t suppose you did,’ said I. ‘And I don’t ask you to lose; I
+ask you to give me your word, man to man, that you will make no native
+drunk.’
+
+Up to now Mr. Muller had maintained an attitude very trying to my temper;
+but he had maintained it with difficulty, his sentiment being all upon my
+side; and here he changed ground for the worse. ‘It isn’t me that
+sells,’ said he.
+
+‘No, it’s that nigger,’ I agreed. ‘But he’s yours to buy and sell; you
+have your hand on the nape of his neck; and I ask you—I have my wife
+here—to use the authority you have.’
+
+He hastily returned to his old ward. ‘I don’t deny I could if I wanted,’
+said he. ‘But there’s no danger, the natives are all quiet. You’re just
+afraid of your life.’
+
+I do not like to be called a coward, even by implication; and here I lost
+my temper and propounded an untimely ultimatum. ‘You had better put it
+plain,’ I cried. ‘Do you mean to refuse me what I ask?’
+
+‘I don’t want either to refuse it or grant it,’ he replied.
+
+‘You’ll find you have to do the one thing or the other, and right now!’ I
+cried, and then, striking into a happier vein, ‘Come,’ said I, ‘you’re a
+better sort than that. I see what’s wrong with you—you think I came from
+the opposite camp. I see the sort of man you are, and you know that what
+I ask is right.’
+
+Again he changed ground. ‘If the natives get any drink, it isn’t safe to
+stop them,’ he objected.
+
+‘I’ll be answerable for the bar,’ I said. ‘We are three men and four
+revolvers; we’ll come at a word, and hold the place against the village.’
+
+‘You don’t know what you’re talking about; it’s too dangerous!’ he cried.
+
+‘Look here,’ said I, ‘I don’t mind much about losing that life you talk
+so much of; but I mean to lose it the way I want to, and that is, putting
+a stop to all this beastliness.’
+
+He talked a while about his duty to the firm; I minded not at all, I was
+secure of victory. He was but waiting to capitulate, and looked about
+for any potent to relieve the strain. In the gush of light from the
+bedroom door I spied a cigar-holder on the desk. ‘That is well
+coloured,’ said I.
+
+‘Will you take a cigar?’ said he.
+
+I took it and held it up unlighted. ‘Now,’ said I, ‘you promise me.’
+
+‘I promise you you won’t have any trouble from natives that have drunk at
+my place,’ he replied.
+
+‘That is all I ask,’ said I, and showed it was not by immediately
+offering to try his stock.
+
+So far as it was anyway critical our interview here ended. Mr. Muller
+had thenceforth ceased to regard me as an emissary from his rivals,
+dropped his defensive attitude, and spoke as he believed. I could make
+out that he would already, had he dared, have stopped the sale himself.
+Not quite daring, it may be imagined how he resented the idea of
+interference from those who had (by his own statement) first led him on,
+then deserted him in the breach, and now (sitting themselves in safety)
+egged him on to a new peril, which was all gain to them, all loss to him!
+I asked him what he thought of the danger from the feast.
+
+‘I think worse of it than any of you,’ he answered. ‘They were shooting
+around here last night, and I heard the balls too. I said to myself,
+“That’s bad.” What gets me is why you should be making this row up at
+your end. I should be the first to go.’
+
+It was a thoughtless wonder. The consolation of being second is not
+great; the fact, not the order of going—there was our concern.
+
+Scott talks moderately of looking forward to a time of fighting ‘with a
+feeling that resembled pleasure.’ The resemblance seems rather an
+identity. In modern life, contact is ended; man grows impatient of
+endless manœuvres; and to approach the fact, to find ourselves where we
+can push an advantage home, and stand a fair risk, and see at last what
+we are made of, stirs the blood. It was so at least with all my family,
+who bubbled with delight at the approach of trouble; and we sat deep into
+the night like a pack of schoolboys, preparing the revolvers and
+arranging plans against the morrow. It promised certainly to be a busy
+and eventful day. The Old Men were to be summoned to confront me on the
+question of the tapu; Muller might call us at any moment to garrison his
+bar; and suppose Muller to fail, we decided in a family council to take
+that matter into our own hands, _The Land we Live in_ at the pistol’s
+mouth, and with the polysyllabic Williams, dance to a new tune. As I
+recall our humour I think it would have gone hard with the mulatto.
+
+_Wednesday_, _July_ 24.—It was as well, and yet it was disappointing that
+these thunder-clouds rolled off in silence. Whether the Old Men recoiled
+from an interview with Queen Victoria’s son, whether Muller had secretly
+intervened, or whether the step flowed naturally from the fears of the
+king and the nearness of the feast, the tapu was early that morning
+re-enforced; not a day too soon, from the manner the boats began to
+arrive thickly, and the town was filled with the big rowdy vassals of
+Karaiti.
+
+The effect lingered for some time on the minds of the traders; it was
+with the approval of all present that I helped to draw up a petition to
+the United States, praying for a law against the liquor trade in the
+Gilberts; and it was at this request that I added, under my own name, a
+brief testimony of what had passed;—useless pains; since the whole
+reposes, probably unread and possibly unopened, in a pigeon-hole at
+Washington.
+
+_Sunday_, _July_ 28.—This day we had the afterpiece of the debauch. The
+king and queen, in European clothes, and followed by armed guards,
+attended church for the first time, and sat perched aloft in a precarious
+dignity under the barrel-hoops. Before sermon his majesty clambered from
+the dais, stood lopsidedly upon the gravel floor, and in a few words
+abjured drinking. The queen followed suit with a yet briefer allocution.
+All the men in church were next addressed in turn; each held up his right
+hand, and the affair was over—throne and church were reconciled.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI—THE FIVE DAYS’ FESTIVAL
+
+
+_Thursday_, _July_ 25.—The street was this day much enlivened by the
+presence of the men from Little Makin; they average taller than
+Butaritarians, and being on a holiday, went wreathed with yellow leaves
+and gorgeous in vivid colours. They are said to be more savage, and to
+be proud of the distinction. Indeed, it seemed to us they swaggered in
+the town, like plaided Highlanders upon the streets of Inverness,
+conscious of barbaric virtues.
+
+In the afternoon the summer parlour was observed to be packed with
+people; others standing outside and stooping to peer under the eaves,
+like children at home about a circus. It was the Makin company,
+rehearsing for the day of competition. Karaiti sat in the front row
+close to the singers, where we were summoned (I suppose in honour of
+Queen Victoria) to join him. A strong breathless heat reigned under the
+iron roof, and the air was heavy with the scent of wreaths. The singers,
+with fine mats about their loins, cocoa-nut feathers set in rings upon
+their fingers, and their heads crowned with yellow leaves, sat on the
+floor by companies. A varying number of soloists stood up for different
+songs; and these bore the chief part in the music. But the full force of
+the companies, even when not singing, contributed continuously to the
+effect, and marked the ictus of the measure, mimicking, grimacing,
+casting up their heads and eyes, fluttering the feathers on their
+fingers, clapping hands, or beating (loud as a kettledrum) on the left
+breast; the time was exquisite, the music barbarous, but full of
+conscious art. I noted some devices constantly employed. A sudden
+change would be introduced (I think of key) with no break of the measure,
+but emphasised by a sudden dramatic heightening of the voice and a
+swinging, general gesticulation. The voices of the soloists would begin
+far apart in a rude discord, and gradually draw together to a unison;
+which, when, they had reached, they were joined and drowned by the full
+chorus. The ordinary, hurried, barking unmelodious movement of the
+voices would at times be broken and glorified by a psalm-like strain of
+melody, often well constructed, or seeming so by contrast. There was
+much variety of measure, and towards the end of each piece, when the fun
+became fast and furious, a recourse to this figure—
+
+ [Picture: Music. It means two/four time with quaver, quaver, crotchet
+ repeated for three bars]
+
+It is difficult to conceive what fire and devilry they get into these
+hammering finales; all go together, voices, hands, eyes, leaves, and
+fluttering finger-rings; the chorus swings to the eye, the song throbs on
+the ear; the faces are convulsed with enthusiasm and effort.
+
+Presently the troop stood up in a body, the drums forming a half-circle
+for the soloists, who were sometimes five or even more in number. The
+songs that followed were highly dramatic; though I had none to give me
+any explanation, I would at times make out some shadowy but decisive
+outline of a plot; and I was continually reminded of certain quarrelsome
+concerted scenes in grand operas at home; just so the single voices issue
+from and fall again into the general volume; just so do the performers
+separate and crowd together, brandish the raised hand, and roll the eye
+to heaven—or the gallery. Already this is beyond the Thespian model; the
+art of this people is already past the embryo: song, dance, drums,
+quartette and solo—it is the drama full developed although still in
+miniature. Of all so-called dancing in the South Seas, that which I saw
+in Butaritari stands easily the first. The _hula_, as it may be viewed
+by the speedy globe-trotter in Honolulu, is surely the most dull of man’s
+inventions, and the spectator yawns under its length as at a college
+lecture or a parliamentary debate. But the Gilbert Island dance leads on
+the mind; it thrills, rouses, subjugates; it has the essence of all art,
+an unexplored imminent significance. Where so many are engaged, and
+where all must make (at a given moment) the same swift, elaborate, and
+often arbitrary movement, the toil of rehearsal is of course extreme.
+But they begin as children. A child and a man may often be seen together
+in a maniap’: the man sings and gesticulates, the child stands before him
+with streaming tears and tremulously copies him in act and sound; it is
+the Gilbert Island artist learning (as all artists must) his art in
+sorrow.
+
+I may seem to praise too much; here is a passage from my wife’s diary,
+which proves that I was not alone in being moved, and completes the
+picture:—‘The conductor gave the cue, and all the dancers, waving their
+arms, swaying their bodies, and clapping their breasts in perfect time,
+opened with an introductory. The performers remained seated, except two,
+and once three, and twice a single soloist. These stood in the group,
+making a slight movement with the feet and rhythmical quiver of the body
+as they sang. There was a pause after the introductory, and then the
+real business of the opera—for it was no less—began; an opera where every
+singer was an accomplished actor. The leading man, in an impassioned
+ecstasy which possessed him from head to foot, seemed transfigured; once
+it was as though a strong wind had swept over the stage—their arms, their
+feathered fingers thrilling with an emotion that shook my nerves as well:
+heads and bodies followed like a field of grain before a gust. My blood
+came hot and cold, tears pricked my eyes, my head whirled, I felt an
+almost irresistible impulse to join the dancers. One drama, I think, I
+very nearly understood. A fierce and savage old man took the solo part.
+He sang of the birth of a prince, and how he was tenderly rocked in his
+mother’s arms; of his boyhood, when he excelled his fellows in swimming,
+climbing, and all athletic sports; of his youth, when he went out to sea
+with his boat and fished; of his manhood, when he married a wife who
+cradled a son of his own in her arms. Then came the alarm of war, and a
+great battle, of which for a time the issue was doubtful; but the hero
+conquered, as he always does, and with a tremendous burst of the victors
+the piece closed. There were also comic pieces, which caused great
+amusement. During one, an old man behind me clutched me by the arm,
+shook his finger in my face with a roguish smile, and said something with
+a chuckle, which I took to be the equivalent of “O, you women, you women;
+it is true of you all!” I fear it was not complimentary. At no time was
+there the least sign of the ugly indecency of the eastern islands. All
+was poetry pure and simple. The music itself was as complex as our own,
+though constructed on an entirely different basis; once or twice I was
+startled by a bit of something very like the best English sacred music,
+but it was only for an instant. At last there was a longer pause, and
+this time the dancers were all on their feet. As the drama went on, the
+interest grew. The performers appealed to each other, to the audience,
+to the heaven above; they took counsel with each other, the conspirators
+drew together in a knot; it was just an opera, the drums coming in at
+proper intervals, the tenor, baritone, and bass all where they should
+be—except that the voices were all of the same calibre. A woman once
+sang from the back row with a very fine contralto voice spoilt by being
+made artificially nasal; I notice all the women affect that
+unpleasantness. At one time a boy of angelic beauty was the soloist; and
+at another, a child of six or eight, doubtless an infant phenomenon being
+trained, was placed in the centre. The little fellow was desperately
+frightened and embarrassed at first, but towards the close warmed up to
+his work and showed much dramatic talent. The changing expressions on
+the faces of the dancers were so speaking, that it seemed a great
+stupidity not to understand them.’
+
+Our neighbour at this performance, Karaiti, somewhat favours his
+Butaritarian majesty in shape and feature, being, like him, portly,
+bearded, and Oriental. In character he seems the reverse: alert,
+smiling, jovial, jocular, industrious. At home in his own island, he
+labours himself like a slave, and makes his people labour like a
+slave-driver. He takes an interest in ideas. George the trader told him
+about flying-machines. ‘Is that true, George?’ he asked. ‘It is in the
+papers,’ replied George. ‘Well,’ said Karaiti, ‘if that man can do it
+with machinery, I can do it without’; and he designed and made a pair of
+wings, strapped them on his shoulders, went to the end of a pier,
+launched himself into space, and fell bulkily into the sea. His wives
+fished him out, for his wings hindered him in swimming. ‘George,’ said
+he, pausing as he went up to change, ‘George, you lie.’ He had eight
+wives, for his small realm still follows ancient customs; but he showed
+embarrassment when this was mentioned to my wife. ‘Tell her I have only
+brought one here,’ he said anxiously. Altogether the Black Douglas
+pleased us much; and as we heard fresh details of the king’s uneasiness,
+and saw for ourselves that all the weapons in the summer parlour had been
+hid, we watched with the more admiration the cause of all this anxiety
+rolling on his big legs, with his big smiling face, apparently unarmed,
+and certainly unattended, through the hostile town. The Red Douglas,
+pot-bellied Kuma, having perhaps heard word of the debauch, remained upon
+his fief; his vassals thus came uncommanded to the feast, and swelled the
+following of Karaiti.
+
+_Friday_, _July_ 26.—At night in the dark, the singers of Makin paraded
+in the road before our house and sang the song of the princess. ‘This is
+the day; she was born to-day; Nei Kamaunave was born to-day—a beautiful
+princess, Queen of Butaritari.’ So I was told it went in endless
+iteration. The song was of course out of season, and the performance
+only a rehearsal. But it was a serenade besides; a delicate attention to
+ourselves from our new friend, Karaiti.
+
+_Saturday_, _July_ 27.—We had announced a performance of the magic
+lantern to-night in church; and this brought the king to visit us. In
+honour of the Black Douglas (I suppose) his usual two guardsmen were now
+increased to four; and the squad made an outlandish figure as they
+straggled after him, in straw hats, kilts and jackets. Three carried
+their arms reversed, the butts over their shoulders, the muzzles menacing
+the king’s plump back; the fourth had passed his weapon behind his neck,
+and held it there with arms extended like a backboard. The visit was
+extraordinarily long. The king, no longer galvanised with gin, said and
+did nothing. He sat collapsed in a chair and let a cigar go out. It was
+hot, it was sleepy, it was cruel dull; there was no resource but to spy
+in the countenance of Tebureimoa for some remaining trait of _Mr. Corpse_
+the butcher. His hawk nose, crudely depressed and flattened at the
+point, did truly seem to us to smell of midnight murder. When he took
+his leave, Maka bade me observe him going down the stair (or rather
+ladder) from the verandah. ‘Old man,’ said Maka. ‘Yes,’ said I, ‘and
+yet I suppose not old man.’ ‘Young man,’ returned Maka, ‘perhaps fo’ty.’
+And I have heard since he is most likely younger.
+
+While the magic lantern was showing, I skulked without in the dark. The
+voice of Maka, excitedly explaining the Scripture slides, seemed to fill
+not the church only, but the neighbourhood. All else was silent.
+Presently a distant sound of singing arose and approached; and a
+procession drew near along the road, the hot clean smell of the men and
+women striking in my face delightfully. At the corner, arrested by the
+voice of Maka and the lightening and darkening of the church, they
+paused. They had no mind to go nearer, that was plain. They were Makin
+people, I believe, probably staunch heathens, contemners of the
+missionary and his works. Of a sudden, however, a man broke from their
+company, took to his heels, and fled into the church; next moment three
+had followed him; the next it was a covey of near upon a score, all
+pelting for their lives. So the little band of the heathen paused
+irresolute at the corner, and melted before the attractions of a magic
+lantern, like a glacier in spring. The more staunch vainly taunted the
+deserters; three fled in a guilty silence, but still fled; and when at
+length the leader found the wit or the authority to get his troop in
+motion and revive the singing, it was with much diminished forces that
+they passed musically on up the dark road.
+
+Meanwhile inside the luminous pictures brightened and faded. I stood for
+some while unobserved in the rear of the spectators, when I could hear
+just in front of me a pair of lovers following the show with interest,
+the male playing the part of interpreter and (like Adam) mingling
+caresses with his lecture. The wild animals, a tiger in particular, and
+that old school-treat favourite, the sleeper and the mouse, were hailed
+with joy; but the chief marvel and delight was in the gospel series.
+Maka, in the opinion of his aggrieved wife, did not properly rise to the
+occasion. ‘What is the matter with the man? Why can’t he talk?’ she
+cried. The matter with the man, I think, was the greatness of the
+opportunity; he reeled under his good fortune; and whether he did ill or
+well, the exposure of these pious ‘phantoms’ did as a matter of fact
+silence in all that part of the island the voice of the scoffer. ‘Why
+then,’ the word went round, ‘why then, the Bible is true!’ And on our
+return afterwards we were told the impression was yet lively, and those
+who had seen might be heard telling those who had not, ‘O yes, it is all
+true; these things all happened, we have seen the pictures.’ The
+argument is not so childish as it seems; for I doubt if these islanders
+are acquainted with any other mode of representation but photography; so
+that the picture of an event (on the old melodrama principle that ‘the
+camera cannot lie, Joseph,’) would appear strong proof of its occurrence.
+The fact amused us the more because our slides were some of them
+ludicrously silly, and one (Christ before Pilate) was received with
+shouts of merriment, in which even Maka was constrained to join.
+
+_Sunday_, _July_ 28.—Karaiti came to ask for a repetition of the
+‘phantoms’—this was the accepted word—and, having received a promise,
+turned and left my humble roof without the shadow of a salutation. I
+felt it impolite to have the least appearance of pocketing a slight; the
+times had been too difficult, and were still too doubtful; and Queen
+Victoria’s son was bound to maintain the honour of his house. Karaiti
+was accordingly summoned that evening to the Ricks, where Mrs. Rick fell
+foul of him in words, and Queen Victoria’s son assailed him with
+indignant looks. I was the ass with the lion’s skin; I could not roar in
+the language of the Gilbert Islands; but I could stare. Karaiti declared
+he had meant no offence; apologised in a sound, hearty, gentlemanly
+manner; and became at once at his ease. He had in a dagger to examine,
+and announced he would come to price it on the morrow, to-day being
+Sunday; this nicety in a heathen with eight wives surprised me. The
+dagger was ‘good for killing fish,’ he said roguishly; and was supposed
+to have his eye upon fish upon two legs. It is at least odd that in
+Eastern Polynesia fish was the accepted euphemism for the human
+sacrifice. Asked as to the population of his island, Karaiti called out
+to his vassals who sat waiting him outside the door, and they put it at
+four hundred and fifty; but (added Karaiti jovially) there will soon be
+plenty more, for all the women are in the family way. Long before we
+separated I had quite forgotten his offence. He, however, still bore it
+in mind; and with a very courteous inspiration returned early on the next
+day, paid us a long visit, and punctiliously said farewell when he
+departed.
+
+_Monday_, _July_ 29.—The great day came round at last. In the first
+hours the night was startled by the sound of clapping hands and the chant
+of Nei Kamaunava; its melancholy, slow, and somewhat menacing measures
+broken at intervals by a formidable shout. The little morsel of humanity
+thus celebrated in the dark hours was observed at midday playing on the
+green entirely naked, and equally unobserved and unconcerned.
+
+The summer parlour on its artificial islet, relieved against the
+shimmering lagoon, and shimmering itself with sun and tinned iron, was
+all day crowded about by eager men and women. Within, it was boxed full
+of islanders, of any age and size, and in every degree of nudity and
+finery. So close we squatted, that at one time I had a mighty handsome
+woman on my knees, two little naked urchins having their feet against my
+back. There might be a dame in full attire of _holoku_ and hat and
+flowers; and her next neighbour might the next moment strip some little
+rag of a shift from her fat shoulders and come out a monument of flesh,
+painted rather than covered by the hairbreadth _ridi_. Little ladies who
+thought themselves too great to appear undraped upon so high a festival
+were seen to pause outside in the bright sunshine, their miniature ridis
+in their hand; a moment more and they were full-dressed and entered the
+concert-room.
+
+At either end stood up to sing, or sat down to rest, the alternate
+companies of singers; Kuma and Little Makin on the north, Butaritari and
+its conjunct hamlets on the south; both groups conspicuous in barbaric
+bravery. In the midst, between these rival camps of troubadours, a bench
+was placed; and here the king and queen throned it, some two or three
+feet above the crowded audience on the floor—Tebureimoa as usual in his
+striped pyjamas with a satchel strapped across one shoulder, doubtless
+(in the island fashion) to contain his pistols; the queen in a purple
+_holoku_, her abundant hair let down, a fan in her hand. The bench was
+turned facing to the strangers, a piece of well-considered civility; and
+when it was the turn of Butaritari to sing, the pair must twist round on
+the bench, lean their elbows on the rail, and turn to us the spectacle of
+their broad backs. The royal couple occasionally solaced themselves with
+a clay pipe; and the pomp of state was further heightened by the rifles
+of a picket of the guard.
+
+With this kingly countenance, and ourselves squatted on the ground, we
+heard several songs from one side or the other. Then royalty and its
+guards withdrew, and Queen Victoria’s son and daughter-in-law were
+summoned by acclamation to the vacant throne. Our pride was perhaps a
+little modified when we were joined on our high places by a certain
+thriftless loafer of a white; and yet I was glad too, for the man had a
+smattering of native, and could give me some idea of the subject of the
+songs. One was patriotic, and dared Tembinok’ of Apemama, the terror of
+the group, to an invasion. One mixed the planting of taro and the
+harvest-home. Some were historical, and commemorated kings and the
+illustrious chances of their time, such as a bout of drinking or a war.
+One, at least, was a drama of domestic interest, excellently played by
+the troop from Makin. It told the story of a man who has lost his wife,
+at first bewails her loss, then seeks another: the earlier strains (or
+acts) are played exclusively by men; but towards the end a woman appears,
+who has just lost her husband; and I suppose the pair console each other,
+for the finale seemed of happy omen. Of some of the songs my informant
+told me briefly they were ‘like about the _weemen_’; this I could have
+guessed myself. Each side (I should have said) was strengthened by one
+or two women. They were all soloists, did not very often join in the
+performance, but stood disengaged at the back part of the stage, and
+looked (in _ridi_, necklace, and dressed hair) for all the world like
+European ballet-dancers. When the song was anyway broad these ladies
+came particularly to the front; and it was singular to see that, after
+each entry, the _première danseuse_ pretended to be overcome by shame, as
+though led on beyond what she had meant, and her male assistants made a
+feint of driving her away like one who had disgraced herself. Similar
+affectations accompany certain truly obscene dances of Samoa, where they
+are very well in place. Here it was different. The words, perhaps, in
+this free-spoken world, were gross enough to make a carter blush; and the
+most suggestive feature was this feint of shame. For such parts the
+women showed some disposition; they were pert, they were neat, they were
+acrobatic, they were at times really amusing, and some of them were
+pretty. But this is not the artist’s field; there is the whole width of
+heaven between such capering and ogling, and the strange rhythmic
+gestures, and strange, rapturous, frenzied faces with which the best of
+the male dancers held us spellbound through a Gilbert Island ballet.
+
+Almost from the first it was apparent that the people of the city were
+defeated. I might have thought them even good, only I had the other
+troop before my eyes to correct my standard, and remind me continually of
+‘the little more, and how much it is.’ Perceiving themselves worsted,
+the choir of Butaritari grew confused, blundered, and broke down; amid
+this hubbub of unfamiliar intervals I should not myself have recognised
+the slip, but the audience were quick to catch it, and to jeer. To crown
+all, the Makin company began a dance of truly superlative merit. I know
+not what it was about, I was too much absorbed to ask. In one act a part
+of the chorus, squealing in some strange falsetto, produced very much the
+effect of our orchestra; in another, the dancers, leaping like
+jumping-jacks, with arms extended, passed through and through each
+other’s ranks with extraordinary speed, neatness, and humour. A more
+laughable effect I never saw; in any European theatre it would have
+brought the house down, and the island audience roared with laughter and
+applause. This filled up the measure for the rival company, and they
+forgot themselves and decency. After each act or figure of the ballet,
+the performers pause a moment standing, and the next is introduced by the
+clapping of hands in triplets. Not until the end of the whole ballet do
+they sit down, which is the signal for the rivals to stand up. But now
+all rules were to be broken. During the interval following on this great
+applause, the company of Butaritari leaped suddenly to their feet and
+most unhandsomely began a performance of their own. It was strange to
+see the men of Makin staring; I have seen a tenor in Europe stare with
+the same blank dignity into a hissing theatre; but presently, to my
+surprise, they sobered down, gave up the unsung remainder of their
+ballet, resumed their seats, and suffered their ungallant adversaries to
+go on and finish. Nothing would suffice. Again, at the first interval,
+Butaritari unhandsomely cut in; Makin, irritated in turn, followed the
+example; and the two companies of dancers remained permanently standing,
+continuously clapping hands, and regularly cutting across each other at
+each pause. I expected blows to begin with any moment; and our position
+in the midst was highly unstrategical. But the Makin people had a better
+thought; and upon a fresh interruption turned and trooped out of the
+house. We followed them, first because these were the artists, second
+because they were guests and had been scurvily ill-used. A large
+population of our neighbours did the same, so that the causeway was
+filled from end to end by the procession of deserters; and the Butaritari
+choir was left to sing for its own pleasure in an empty house, having
+gained the point and lost the audience. It was surely fortunate that
+there was no one drunk; but, drunk or sober, where else would a scene so
+irritating have concluded without blows?
+
+The last stage and glory of this auspicious day was of our own
+providing—the second and positively the last appearance of the phantoms.
+All round the church, groups sat outside, in the night, where they could
+see nothing; perhaps ashamed to enter, certainly finding some shadowy
+pleasure in the mere proximity. Within, about one-half of the great shed
+was densely packed with people. In the midst, on the royal dais, the
+lantern luminously smoked; chance rays of light struck out the earnest
+countenance of our Chinaman grinding the hand-organ; a fainter glimmer
+showed off the rafters and their shadows in the hollow of the roof; the
+pictures shone and vanished on the screen; and as each appeared, there
+would run a hush, a whisper, a strong shuddering rustle, and a chorus of
+small cries among the crowd. There sat by me the mate of a wrecked
+schooner. ‘They would think this a strange sight in Europe or the
+States,’ said he, ‘going on in a building like this, all tied with bits
+of string.’
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII—HUSBAND AND WIFE
+
+
+The trader accustomed to the manners of Eastern Polynesia has a lesson to
+learn among the Gilberts. The _ridi_ is but a spare attire; as late as
+thirty years back the women went naked until marriage; within ten years
+the custom lingered; and these facts, above all when heard in
+description, conveyed a very false idea of the manners of the group. A
+very intelligent missionary described it (in its former state) as a
+‘Paradise of naked women’ for the resident whites. It was at least a
+platonic Paradise, where Lothario ventured at his peril. Since 1860,
+fourteen whites have perished on a single island, all for the same cause,
+all found where they had no business, and speared by some indignant
+father of a family; the figure was given me by one of their
+contemporaries who had been more prudent and survived. The strange
+persistence of these fourteen martyrs might seem to point to monomania or
+a series of romantic passions; gin is the more likely key. The poor
+buzzards sat alone in their houses by an open case; they drank; their
+brain was fired; they stumbled towards the nearest houses on chance; and
+the dart went through their liver. In place of a Paradise the trader
+found an archipelago of fierce husbands and of virtuous women. ‘Of
+course if you wish to make love to them, it’s the same as anywhere else,’
+observed a trader innocently; but he and his companions rarely so choose.
+
+The trader must be credited with a virtue: he often makes a kind and
+loyal husband. Some of the worst beachcombers in the Pacific, some of
+the last of the old school, have fallen in my path, and some of them were
+admirable to their native wives, and one made a despairing widower. The
+position of a trader’s wife in the Gilberts is, besides, unusually
+enviable. She shares the immunities of her husband. Curfew in
+Butaritari sounds for her in vain. Long after the bell is rung and the
+great island ladies are confined for the night to their own roof, this
+chartered libertine may scamper and giggle through the deserted streets
+or go down to bathe in the dark. The resources of the store are at her
+hand; she goes arrayed like a queen, and feasts delicately everyday upon
+tinned meats. And she who was perhaps of no regard or station among
+natives sits with captains, and is entertained on board of schooners.
+Five of these privileged dames were some time our neighbours. Four were
+handsome skittish lasses, gamesome like children, and like children
+liable to fits of pouting. They wore dresses by day, but there was a
+tendency after dark to strip these lendings and to career and squall
+about the compound in the aboriginal _ridi_. Games of cards were
+continually played, with shells for counters; their course was much
+marred by cheating; and the end of a round (above all if a man was of the
+party) resolved itself into a scrimmage for the counters. The fifth was
+a matron. It was a picture to see her sail to church on a Sunday, a
+parasol in hand, a nursemaid following, and the baby buried in a trade
+hat and armed with a patent feeding-bottle. The service was enlivened by
+her continual supervision and correction of the maid. It was impossible
+not to fancy the baby was a doll, and the church some European playroom.
+All these women were legitimately married. It is true that the
+certificate of one, when she proudly showed it, proved to run thus, that
+she was ‘married for one night,’ and her gracious partner was at liberty
+to ‘send her to hell’ the next morning; but she was none the wiser or the
+worse for the dastardly trick. Another, I heard, was married on a work
+of mine in a pirated edition; it answered the purpose as well as a Hall
+Bible. Notwithstanding all these allurements of social distinction, rare
+food and raiment, a comparative vacation from toil, and legitimate
+marriage contracted on a pirated edition, the trader must sometimes seek
+long before he can be mated. While I was in the group one had been eight
+months on the quest, and he was still a bachelor.
+
+Within strictly native society the old laws and practices were harsh, but
+not without a certain stamp of high-mindedness. Stealthy adultery was
+punished with death; open elopement was properly considered virtue in
+comparison, and compounded for a fine in land. The male adulterer alone
+seems to have been punished. It is correct manners for a jealous man to
+hang himself; a jealous woman has a different remedy—she bites her rival.
+Ten or twenty years ago it was a capital offence to raise a woman’s
+_ridi_; to this day it is still punished with a heavy fine; and the
+garment itself is still symbolically sacred. Suppose a piece of land to
+be disputed in Butaritari, the claimant who shall first hang a _ridi_ on
+the tapu-post has gained his cause, since no one can remove or touch it
+but himself.
+
+The _ridi_ was the badge not of the woman but the wife, the mark not of
+her sex but of her station. It was the collar on the slave’s neck, the
+brand on merchandise. The adulterous woman seems to have been spared;
+were the husband offended, it would be a poor consolation to send his
+draught cattle to the shambles. Karaiti, to this day, calls his eight
+wives ‘his horses,’ some trader having explained to him the employment of
+these animals on farms; and Nanteitei hired out his wives to do
+mason-work. Husbands, at least when of high rank, had the power of life
+and death; even whites seem to have possessed it; and their wives, when
+they had transgressed beyond forgiveness, made haste to pronounce the
+formula of deprecation—_I Kana Kim_. This form of words had so much
+virtue that a condemned criminal repeating it on a particular day to the
+king who had condemned him, must be instantly released. It is an offer
+of abasement, and, strangely enough, the reverse—the imitation—is a
+common vulgar insult in Great Britain to this day. I give a scene
+between a trader and his Gilbert Island wife, as it was told me by the
+husband, now one of the oldest residents, but then a freshman in the
+group.
+
+‘Go and light a fire,’ said the trader, ‘and when I have brought this oil
+I will cook some fish.’ The woman grunted at him, island fashion. ‘I am
+not a pig that you should grunt at me,’ said he.
+
+‘I know you are not a pig,’ said the woman, ‘neither am I your slave.’
+
+‘To be sure you are not my slave, and if you do not care to stop with me,
+you had better go home to your people,’ said he. ‘But in the mean time
+go and light the fire; and when I have brought this oil I will cook some
+fish.’
+
+She went as if to obey; and presently when the trader looked she had
+built a fire so big that the cook-house was catching in flames.
+
+‘_I Kana Kim_!’ she cried, as she saw him coming; but he recked not, and
+hit her with a cooking-pot. The leg pierced her skull, blood spouted, it
+was thought she was a dead woman, and the natives surrounded the house in
+a menacing expectation. Another white was present, a man of older
+experience. ‘You will have us both killed if you go on like this,’ he
+cried. ‘She had said _I Kana Kim_!’ If she had not said _I Kana Kim_ he
+might have struck her with a caldron. It was not the blow that made the
+crime, but the disregard of an accepted formula.
+
+Polygamy, the particular sacredness of wives, their semi-servile state,
+their seclusion in kings’ harems, even their privilege of biting, all
+would seem to indicate a Mohammedan society and the opinion of the
+soullessness of woman. And not so in the least. It is a mere
+appearance. After you have studied these extremes in one house, you may
+go to the next and find all reversed, the woman the mistress, the man
+only the first of her thralls. The authority is not with the husband as
+such, nor the wife as such. It resides in the chief or the chief-woman;
+in him or her who has inherited the lands of the clan, and stands to the
+clansman in the place of parent, exacting their service, answerable for
+their fines. There is but the one source of power and the one ground of
+dignity—rank. The king married a chief-woman; she became his menial, and
+must work with her hands on Messrs. Wightman’s pier. The king divorced
+her; she regained at once her former state and power. She married the
+Hawaiian sailor, and behold the man is her flunkey and can be shown the
+door at pleasure. Nay, and such low-born lords are even corrected
+physically, and, like grown but dutiful children, must endure the
+discipline.
+
+We were intimate in one such household, that of Nei Takauti and Nan Tok’;
+I put the lady first of necessity. During one week of fool’s paradise,
+Mrs. Stevenson had gone alone to the sea-side of the island after shells.
+I am very sure the proceeding was unsafe; and she soon perceived a man
+and woman watching her. Do what she would, her guardians held her
+steadily in view; and when the afternoon began to fall, and they thought
+she had stayed long enough, took her in charge, and by signs and broken
+English ordered her home. On the way the lady drew from her earring-hole
+a clay pipe, the husband lighted it, and it was handed to my unfortunate
+wife, who knew not how to refuse the incommodious favour; and when they
+were all come to our house, the pair sat down beside her on the floor,
+and improved the occasion with prayer. From that day they were our
+family friends; bringing thrice a day the beautiful island garlands of
+white flowers, visiting us any evening, and frequently carrying us down
+to their own maniap’ in return, the woman leading Mrs. Stevenson by the
+hand like one child with another.
+
+Nan Tok’, the husband, was young, extremely handsome, of the most
+approved good humour, and suffering in his precarious station from
+suppressed high spirits. Nei Takauti, the wife, was getting old; her
+grown son by a former marriage had just hanged himself before his
+mother’s eyes in despair at a well-merited rebuke. Perhaps she had never
+been beautiful, but her face was full of character, her eye of sombre
+fire. She was a high chief-woman, but by a strange exception for a
+person of her rank, was small, spare, and sinewy, with lean small hands
+and corded neck. Her full dress of an evening was invariably a white
+chemise—and for adornment, green leaves (or sometimes white blossoms)
+stuck in her hair and thrust through her huge earring-holes. The husband
+on the contrary changed to view like a kaleidoscope. Whatever pretty
+thing my wife might have given to Nei Takauti—a string of beads, a
+ribbon, a piece of bright fabric—appeared the next evening on the person
+of Nan Tok’. It was plain he was a clothes-horse; that he wore livery;
+that, in a word, he was his wife’s wife. They reversed the parts indeed,
+down to the least particular; it was the husband who showed himself the
+ministering angel in the hour of pain, while the wife displayed the
+apathy and heartlessness of the proverbial man.
+
+When Nei Takauti had a headache Nan Tok’ was full of attention and
+concern. When the husband had a cold and a racking toothache the wife
+heeded not, except to jeer. It is always the woman’s part to fill and
+light the pipe; Nei Takauti handed hers in silence to the wedded page;
+but she carried it herself, as though the page were not entirely trusted.
+Thus she kept the money, but it was he who ran the errands, anxiously
+sedulous. A cloud on her face dimmed instantly his beaming looks; on an
+early visit to their maniap’ my wife saw he had cause to be wary. Nan
+Tok’ had a friend with him, a giddy young thing, of his own age and sex;
+and they had worked themselves into that stage of jocularity when
+consequences are too often disregarded. Nei Takauti mentioned her own
+name. Instantly Nan Tok’ held up two fingers, his friend did likewise,
+both in an ecstasy of slyness. It was plain the lady had two names; and
+from the nature of their merriment, and the wrath that gathered on her
+brow, there must be something ticklish in the second. The husband
+pronounced it; a well-directed cocoa-nut from the hand of his wife caught
+him on the side of the head, and the voices and the mirth of these
+indiscreet young gentlemen ceased for the day.
+
+The people of Eastern Polynesia are never at a loss; their etiquette is
+absolute and plenary; in every circumstance it tells them what to do and
+how to do it. The Gilbertines are seemingly more free, and pay for their
+freedom (like ourselves) in frequent perplexity. This was often the case
+with the topsy-turvy couple. We had once supplied them during a visit
+with a pipe and tobacco; and when they had smoked and were about to
+leave, they found themselves confronted with a problem: should they take
+or leave what remained of the tobacco? The piece of plug was taken up,
+it was laid down again, it was handed back and forth, and argued over,
+till the wife began to look haggard and the husband elderly. They ended
+by taking it, and I wager were not yet clear of the compound before they
+were sure they had decided wrong. Another time they had been given each
+a liberal cup of coffee, and Nan Tok’ with difficulty and disaffection
+made an end of his. Nei Takauti had taken some, she had no mind for
+more, plainly conceived it would be a breach of manners to set down the
+cup unfinished, and ordered her wedded retainer to dispose of what was
+left. ‘I have swallowed all I can, I cannot swallow more, it is a
+physical impossibility,’ he seemed to say; and his stern officer
+reiterated her commands with secret imperative signals. Luckless dog!
+but in mere humanity we came to the rescue and removed the cup.
+
+I cannot but smile over this funny household; yet I remember the good
+souls with affection and respect. Their attention to ourselves was
+surprising. The garlands are much esteemed, the blossoms must be sought
+far and wide; and though they had many retainers to call to their aid, we
+often saw themselves passing afield after the blossoms, and the wife
+engaged with her own in putting them together. It was no want of only
+that disregard so incident to husbands, that made Nei Takauti despise the
+sufferings of Nan Tok’. When my wife was unwell she proved a diligent
+and kindly nurse; and the pair, to the extreme embarrassment of the
+sufferer, became fixtures in the sick-room. This rugged, capable,
+imperious old dame, with the wild eyes, had deep and tender qualities:
+her pride in her young husband it seemed that she dissembled, fearing
+possibly to spoil him; and when she spoke of her dead son there came
+something tragic in her face. But I seemed to trace in the Gilbertines a
+virility of sense and sentiment which distinguishes them (like their
+harsh and uncouth language) from their brother islanders in the east.
+
+
+
+
+PART IV: THE GILBERTS—APEMAMA
+
+
+CHAPTER I—THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE ROYAL TRADER
+
+
+There is one great personage in the Gilberts: Tembinok’ of Apemama:
+solely conspicuous, the hero of song, the butt of gossip. Through the
+rest of the group the kings are slain or fallen in tutelage: Tembinok’
+alone remains, the last tyrant, the last erect vestige of a dead society.
+The white man is everywhere else, building his houses, drinking his gin,
+getting in and out of trouble with the weak native governments. There is
+only one white on Apemama, and he on sufferance, living far from court,
+and hearkening and watching his conduct like a mouse in a cat’s ear.
+Through all the other islands a stream of native visitors comes and goes,
+travelling by families, spending years on the grand tour. Apemama alone
+is left upon one side, the tourist dreading to risk himself within the
+clutch of Tembinok’. And fear of the same Gorgon follows and troubles
+them at home. Maiana once paid him tribute; he once fell upon and seized
+Nonuti: first steps to the empire of the archipelago. A British warship
+coming on the scene, the conqueror was driven to disgorge, his career
+checked in the outset, his dear-bought armoury sunk in his own lagoon.
+But the impression had been made; periodical fear of him still shakes the
+islands; rumour depicts him mustering his canoes for a fresh onfall;
+rumour can name his destination; and Tembinok’ figures in the patriotic
+war-songs of the Gilberts like Napoleon in those of our grandfathers.
+
+We were at sea, bound from Mariki to Nonuti and Tapituea, when the wind
+came suddenly fair for Apemama. The course was at once changed; all
+hands were turned-to to clean ship, the decks holy-stoned, all the cabin
+washed, the trade-room overhauled. In all our cruising we never saw the
+_Equator_ so smart as she was made for Tembinok’. Nor was Captain Reid
+alone in these coquetries; for, another schooner chancing to arrive
+during my stay in Apemama, I found that she also was dandified for the
+occasion. And the two cases stand alone in my experience of South Sea
+traders.
+
+We had on board a family of native tourists, from the grandsire to the
+babe in arms, trying (against an extraordinary series of ill-luck) to
+regain their native island of Peru. {275} Five times already they had
+paid their fare and taken ship; five times they had been disappointed,
+dropped penniless upon strange islands, or carried back to Butaritari,
+whence they sailed. This last attempt had been no better-starred; their
+provisions were exhausted. Peru was beyond hope, and they had cheerfully
+made up their minds to a fresh stage of exile in Tapituea or Nonuti.
+With this slant of wind their random destination became once more
+changed; and like the Calendar’s pilot, when the ‘black mountains’ hove
+in view, they changed colour and beat upon their breasts. Their camp,
+which was on deck in the ship’s waist, resounded with complaint. They
+would be set to work, they must become slaves, escape was hopeless, they
+must live and toil and die in Apemama, in the tyrant’s den. With this
+sort of talk they so greatly terrified their children, that one (a big
+hulking boy) must at last be torn screaming from the schooner’s side.
+And their fears were wholly groundless. I have little doubt they were
+not suffered to be idle; but I can vouch for it that they were kindly and
+generously used. For, the matter of a year later, I was once more
+shipmate with these inconsistent wanderers on board the _Janet Nicoll_.
+Their fare was paid by Tembinok’; they who had gone ashore from the
+_Equator_ destitute, reappeared upon the _Janet_ with new clothes, laden
+with mats and presents, and bringing with them a magazine of food, on
+which they lived like fighting-cocks throughout the voyage; I saw them at
+length repatriated, and I must say they showed more concern on quitting
+Apemama than delight at reaching home.
+
+We entered by the north passage (Sunday, September 1st), dodging among
+shoals. It was a day of fierce equatorial sunshine; but the breeze was
+strong and chill; and the mate, who conned the schooner from the
+cross-trees, returned shivering to the deck. The lagoon was thick with
+many-tinted wavelets; a continuous roaring of the outer sea overhung the
+anchorage; and the long, hollow crescent of palm ruffled and sparkled in
+the wind. Opposite our berth the beach was seen to be surmounted for
+some distance by a terrace of white coral seven or eight feet high and
+crowned in turn by the scattered and incongruous buildings of the palace.
+The village adjoins on the south, a cluster of high-roofed maniap’s. And
+village and palace seemed deserted.
+
+We were scarce yet moored, however, before distant and busy figures
+appeared upon the beach, a boat was launched, and a crew pulled out to us
+bringing the king’s ladder. Tembinok’ had once an accident; has feared
+ever since to entrust his person to the rotten chandlery of South Sea
+traders; and devised in consequence a frame of wood, which is brought on
+board a ship as soon as she appears, and remains lashed to her side until
+she leave. The boat’s crew, having applied this engine, returned at once
+to shore. They might not come on board; neither might we land, or not
+without danger of offence; the king giving pratique in person. An
+interval followed, during which dinner was delayed for the great man—the
+prelude of the ladder, giving us some notion of his weighty body and
+sensible, ingenious character, had highly whetted our curiosity; and it
+was with something like excitement that we saw the beach and terrace
+suddenly blacken with attendant vassals, the king and party embark, the
+boat (a man-of-war gig) come flying towards us dead before the wind, and
+the royal coxswain lay us cleverly aboard, mount the ladder with a
+jealous diffidence, and descend heavily on deck.
+
+Not long ago he was overgrown with fat, obscured to view, and a burthen
+to himself. Captains visiting the island advised him to walk; and though
+it broke the habits of a life and the traditions of his rank, he
+practised the remedy with benefit. His corpulence is now portable; you
+would call him lusty rather than fat; but his gait is still dull,
+stumbling, and elephantine. He neither stops nor hastens, but goes about
+his business with an implacable deliberation. We could never see him and
+not be struck with his extraordinary natural means for the theatre: a
+beaked profile like Dante’s in the mask, a mane of long black hair, the
+eye brilliant, imperious, and inquiring: for certain parts, and to one
+who could have used it, the face was a fortune. His voice matched it
+well, being shrill, powerful, and uncanny, with a note like a sea-bird’s.
+Where there are no fashions, none to set them, few to follow them if they
+were set, and none to criticise, he dresses—as Sir Charles Grandison
+lived—‘to his own heart.’ Now he wears a woman’s frock, now a naval
+uniform; now (and more usually) figures in a masquerade costume of his
+own design: trousers and a singular jacket with shirt tails, the cut and
+fit wonderful for island workmanship, the material always handsome,
+sometimes green velvet, sometimes cardinal red silk. This masquerade
+becomes him admirably. In the woman’s frock he looks ominous and weird
+beyond belief. I see him now come pacing towards me in the cruel sun,
+solitary, a figure out of Hoffmann.
+
+A visit on board ship, such as that at which we now assisted, makes a
+chief part and by far the chief diversion of the life of Tembinok’. He
+is not only the sole ruler, he is the sole merchant of his triple
+kingdom, Apemama, Aranuka, and Kuria, well-planted islands. The taro
+goes to the chiefs, who divide as they please among their immediate
+adherents; but certain fish, turtles—which abound in Kuria,—and the whole
+produce of the coco-palm, belong exclusively to Tembinok’. ‘A’ cobra
+{279a} berong me,’ observed his majesty with a wave of his hand; and he
+counts and sells it by the houseful. ‘You got copra, king?’ I have heard
+a trader ask. ‘I got two, three outches,’ {279b} his majesty replied: ‘I
+think three.’ Hence the commercial importance of Apemama, the trade of
+three islands being centred there in a single hand; hence it is that so
+many whites have tried in vain to gain or to preserve a footing; hence
+ships are adorned, cooks have special orders, and captains array
+themselves in smiles, to greet the king. If he be pleased with his
+welcome and the fare he may pass days on board, and, every day, and
+sometimes every hour, will be of profit to the ship. He oscillates
+between the cabin, where he is entertained with strange meats, and the
+trade-room, where he enjoys the pleasures of shopping on a scale to match
+his person. A few obsequious attendants squat by the house door,
+awaiting his least signal. In the boat, which has been suffered to drop
+astern, one or two of his wives lie covered from the sun under mats,
+tossed by the short sea of the lagoon, and enduring agonies of heat and
+tedium. This severity is now and then relaxed and the wives allowed on
+board. Three or four were thus favoured on the day of our arrival:
+substantial ladies airily attired in _ridis_. Each had a share of copra,
+her _peculium_, to dispose of for herself. The display in the
+trade-room—hats, ribbbons, dresses, scents, tins of salmon—the pride of
+the eye and the lust of the flesh—tempted them in vain. They had but the
+one idea—tobacco, the island currency, tantamount to minted gold;
+returned to shore with it, burthened but rejoicing; and late into the
+night, on the royal terrace, were to be seen counting the sticks by
+lamplight in the open air.
+
+The king is no such economist. He is greedy of things new and foreign.
+House after house, chest after chest, in the palace precinct, is already
+crammed with clocks, musical boxes, blue spectacles, umbrellas, knitted
+waistcoats, bolts of stuff, tools, rifles, fowling-pieces, medicines,
+European foods, sewing-machines, and, what is more extraordinary, stoves:
+all that ever caught his eye, tickled his appetite, pleased him for its
+use, or puzzled him with its apparent inutility. And still his lust is
+unabated. He is possessed by the seven devils of the collector. He
+hears a thing spoken of, and a shadow comes on his face. ‘I think I no
+got him,’ he will say; and the treasures he has seem worthless in
+comparison. If a ship be bound for Apemama, the merchant racks his brain
+to hit upon some novelty. This he leaves carelessly in the main cabin or
+partly conceals in his own berth, so that the king shall spy it for
+himself. ‘How much you want?’ inquires Tembinok’, passing and pointing.
+‘No, king; that too dear,’ returns the trader. ‘I think I like him,’
+says the king. This was a bowl of gold-fish. On another occasion it was
+scented soap. ‘No, king; that cost too much,’ said the trader; ‘too good
+for a Kanaka.’ ‘How much you got? I take him all,’ replied his majesty,
+and became the lord of seventeen boxes at two dollars a cake. Or again,
+the merchant feigns the article is not for sale, is private property, an
+heirloom or a gift; and the trick infallibly succeeds. Thwart the king
+and you hold him. His autocratic nature rears at the affront of
+opposition. He accepts it for a challenge; sets his teeth like a hunter
+going at a fence; and with no mark of emotion, scarce even of interest,
+stolidly piles up the price. Thus, for our sins, he took a fancy to my
+wife’s dressing-bag, a thing entirely useless to the man, and sadly
+battered by years of service. Early one forenoon he came to our house,
+sat down, and abruptly offered to purchase it. I told him I sold
+nothing, and the bag at any rate was a present from a friend; but he was
+acquainted with these pretexts from of old, and knew what they were worth
+and how to meet them. Adopting what I believe is called ‘the object
+method,’ he drew out a bag of English gold, sovereigns and
+half-sovereigns, and began to lay them one by one in silence on the
+table; at each fresh piece reading our faces with a look. In vain I
+continued to protest I was no trader; he deigned not to reply. There
+must have been twenty pounds on the table, he was still going on, and
+irritation had begun to mingle with our embarrassment, when a happy idea
+came to our delivery. Since his majesty thought so much of the bag, we
+said, we must beg him to accept it as a present. It was the most
+surprising turn in Tembinok’s experience. He perceived too late that his
+persistence was unmannerly; hung his head a while in silence; then,
+lifting up a sheepish countenance, ‘I ‘shamed,’ said the tyrant. It was
+the first and the last time we heard him own to a flaw in his behaviour.
+Half an hour after he sent us a camphor-wood chest worth only a few
+dollars—but then heaven knows what Tembinok’ had paid for it.
+
+Cunning by nature, and versed for forty years in the government of men,
+it must not be supposed that he is cheated blindly, or has resigned
+himself without resistance to be the milch-cow of the passing trader.
+His efforts have been even heroic. Like Nakaeia of Makin, he has owned
+schooners. More fortunate than Nakaeia, he has found captains. Ships of
+his have sailed as far as to the colonies. He has trafficked direct, in
+his own bottoms, with New Zealand. And even so, even there, the
+world-enveloping dishonesty of the white man prevented him; his profit
+melted, his ship returned in debt, the money for the insurance was
+embezzled, and when the _Coronet_ came to be lost, he was astonished to
+find he had lost all. At this he dropped his weapons; owned he might as
+hopefully wrestle with the winds of heaven; and like an experienced
+sheep, submitted his fleece thenceforward to the shearers. He is the
+last man in the world to waste anger on the incurable; accepts it with
+cynical composure; asks no more in those he deals with than a certain
+decency of moderation; drives as good a bargain as he can; and when he
+considers he is more than usually swindled, writes it in his memory
+against the merchant’s name. He once ran over to me a list of captains
+and supercargoes with whom he had done business, classing them under
+three heads: ‘He cheat a litty’—‘He cheat plenty’—and ‘I think he cheat
+too much.’ For the first two classes he expressed perfect toleration;
+sometimes, but not always, for the third. I was present when a certain
+merchant was turned about his business, and was the means (having a
+considerable influence ever since the bag) of patching up the dispute.
+Even on the day of our arrival there was like to have been a hitch with
+Captain Reid: the ground of which is perhaps worth recital. Among goods
+exported specially for Tembinok’ there is a beverage known (and labelled)
+as Hennessy’s brandy. It is neither Hennessy, nor even brandy; is about
+the colour of sherry, but is not sherry; tastes of kirsch, and yet
+neither is it kirsch. The king, at least, has grown used to this amazing
+brand, and rather prides himself upon the taste; and any substitution is
+a double offence, being at once to cheat him and to cast a doubt upon his
+palate. A similar weakness is to be observed in all connoisseurs. Now
+the last case sold by the _Equator_ was found to contain a different and
+I would fondly fancy a superior distillation; and the conversation opened
+very black for Captain Reid. But Tembinok’ is a moderate man. He was
+reminded and admitted that all men were liable to error, even himself;
+accepted the principle that a fault handsomely acknowledged should be
+condoned; and wound the matter up with this proposal: ‘Tuppoti {283} I
+mi’take, you ’peakee me. Tuppoti you mi’take, I ’peakee you. Mo’
+betta.’
+
+After dinner and supper in the cabin, a glass or two of ‘Hennetti’—the
+genuine article this time, with the kirsch bouquet,—and five hours’
+lounging on the trade-room counter, royalty embarked for home. Three
+tacks grounded the boat before the palace; the wives were carried ashore
+on the backs of vassals; Tembinok’ stepped on a railed platform like a
+steamer’s gangway, and was borne shoulder high through the shallows, up
+the beach, and by an inclined plane, paved with pebbles, to the glaring
+terrace where he dwells.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II—THE KING OF APEMAMA: FOUNDATION OF EQUATOR TOWN
+
+
+Our first sight of Tembinok’ was a matter of concern, almost alarm, to my
+whole party. We had a favour to seek; we must approach in the proper
+courtly attitude of a suitor; and must either please him or fail in the
+main purpose of our voyage. It was our wish to land and live in Apemama,
+and see more near at hand the odd character of the man and the odd (or
+rather ancient) condition of his island. In all other isles of the South
+Seas a white man may land with his chest, and set up house for a
+lifetime, if he choose, and if he have the money or the trade; no
+hindrance is conceivable. But Apemama is a close island, lying there in
+the sea with closed doors; the king himself, like a vigilant officer,
+ready at the wicket to scrutinise and reject intrenching visitors. Hence
+the attraction of our enterprise; not merely because it was a little
+difficult, but because this social quarantine, a curiosity in itself, has
+been the preservative of others.
+
+Tembinok’, like most tyrants, is a conservative; like many conservatives,
+he eagerly welcomes new ideas, and, except in the field of politics,
+leans to practical reform. When the missionaries came, professing a
+knowledge of the truth, he readily received them; attended their worship,
+acquired the accomplishment of public prayer, and made himself a student
+at their feet. It is thus—it is by the cultivation of similar passing
+chances—that he has learned to read, to write, to cipher, and to speak
+his queer, personal English, so different from ordinary ‘Beach de Mar,’
+so much more obscure, expressive, and condensed. His education attended
+to, he found time to become critical of the new inmates. Like Nakaeia of
+Makin, he is an admirer of silence in the island; broods over it like a
+great ear; has spies who report daily; and had rather his subjects sang
+than talked. The service, and in particular the sermon, were thus sure
+to become offences: ‘Here, in my island, _I_ ’peak,’ he once observed to
+me. ‘My chieps no ’peak—do what I talk.’ He looked at the missionary,
+and what did he see? ‘See Kanaka ’peak in a big outch!’ he cried, with a
+strong ring of sarcasm. Yet he endured the subversive spectacle, and
+might even have continued to endure it, had not a fresh point arisen. He
+looked again, to employ his own figure; and the Kanaka was no longer
+speaking, he was doing worse—he was building a copra-house. The king was
+touched in his chief interests; revenue and prerogative were threatened.
+He considered besides (and some think with him) that trade is
+incompatible with the missionary claims. ‘Tuppoti mitonary think “good
+man”: very good. Tuppoti he think “cobra”: no good. I send him away
+ship.’ Such was his abrupt history of the evangelist in Apemama.
+
+Similar deportations are common: ‘I send him away ship’ is the epitaph of
+not a few, his majesty paying the exile’s fare to the next place of call.
+For instance, being passionately fond of European food, he has several
+times added to his household a white cook, and one after another these
+have been deported. They, on their side, swear they were not paid their
+wages; he, on his, that they robbed and swindled him beyond endurance:
+both perhaps justly. A more important case was that of an agent,
+despatched (as I heard the story) by a firm of merchants to worm his way
+into the king’s good graces, become, if possible, premier, and handle the
+copra in the interest of his employers. He obtained authority to land,
+practised his fascinations, was patiently listened to by Tembinok’,
+supposed himself on the highway to success; and behold! when the next
+ship touched at Apemama, the would-be premier was flung into a boat—had
+on board—his fare paid, and so good-bye. But it is needless to multiply
+examples; the proof of the pudding is in the eating. When we came to
+Apemama, of so many white men who have scrambled for a place in that rich
+market, one remained—a silent, sober, solitary, niggardly recluse, of
+whom the king remarks, ‘I think he good; he no ’peak.’
+
+I was warned at the outset we might very well fail in our design: yet
+never dreamed of what proved to be the fact, that we should be left
+four-and-twenty hours in suspense and come within an ace of ultimate
+rejection. Captain Reid had primed himself; no sooner was the king on
+board, and the Hennetti question amicably settled, than he proceeded to
+express my request and give an abstract of my claims and virtues. The
+gammon about Queen Victoria’s son might do for Butaritari; it was out of
+the question here; and I now figured as ‘one of the Old Men of England,’
+a person of deep knowledge, come expressly to visit Tembinok’s dominion,
+and eager to report upon it to the no less eager Queen Victoria. The
+king made no shadow of an answer, and presently began upon a different
+subject. We might have thought that he had not heard, or not understood;
+only that we found ourselves the subject of a constant study. As we sat
+at meals, he took us in series and fixed upon each, for near a minute at
+a time, the same hard and thoughtful stare. As he thus looked he seemed
+to forget himself, the subject and the company, and to become absorbed in
+the process of his thought; the look was wholly impersonal; I have seen
+the same in the eyes of portrait-painters. The counts upon which whites
+have been deported are mainly four: cheating Tembinok’, meddling overmuch
+with copra, which is the source of his wealth, and one of the sinews of
+his power, _’peaking_, and political intrigue. I felt guiltless upon
+all; but how to show it? I would not have taken copra in a gift: how to
+express that quality by my dinner-table bearing? The rest of the party
+shared my innocence and my embarrassment. They shared also in my
+mortification when after two whole meal-times and the odd moments of an
+afternoon devoted to this reconnoitring, Tembinok’ took his leave in
+silence. Next morning, the same undisguised study, the same silence, was
+resumed; and the second day had come to its maturity before I was
+informed abruptly that I had stood the ordeal. ‘I look your eye. You
+good man. You no lie,’ said the king: a doubtful compliment to a writer
+of romance. Later he explained he did not quite judge by the eye only,
+but the mouth as well. ‘Tuppoti I see man,’ he explained. ‘I no tavvy
+good man, bad man. I look eye, look mouth. Then I tavvy. Look _eye_,
+look mouth,’ he repeated. And indeed in our case the mouth had the most
+to do with it, and it was by our talk that we gained admission to the
+island; the king promising himself (and I believe really amassing) a vast
+amount of useful knowledge ere we left.
+
+The terms of our admission were as follows: We were to choose a site, and
+the king should there build us a town. His people should work for us,
+but the king only was to give them orders. One of his cooks should come
+daily to help mine, and to learn of him. In case our stores ran out, he
+would supply us, and be repaid on the return of the _Equator_. On the
+other hand, he was to come to meals with us when so inclined; when he
+stayed at home, a dish was to be sent him from our table; and I solemnly
+engaged to give his subjects no liquor or money (both of which they are
+forbidden to possess) and no tobacco, which they were to receive only
+from the royal hand. I think I remember to have protested against the
+stringency of this last article; at least, it was relaxed, and when a man
+worked for me I was allowed to give him a pipe of tobacco on the
+premises, but none to take away.
+
+The site of Equator City—we named our city for the schooner—was soon
+chosen. The immediate shores of the lagoon are windy and blinding;
+Tembinok’ himself is glad to grope blue-spectacled on his terrace; and we
+fled the neighbourhood of the red _conjunctiva_, the suppurating eyeball,
+and the beggar who pursues and beseeches the passing foreigner for eye
+wash. Behind the town the country is diversified; here open, sandy,
+uneven, and dotted with dwarfish palms; here cut up with taro trenches,
+deep and shallow, and, according to the growth of the plants, presenting
+now the appearance of a sandy tannery, now of an alleyed and green
+garden. A path leads towards the sea, mounting abruptly to the main
+level of the island—twenty or even thirty feet, although Findlay gives
+five; and just hard by the top of the rise, where the coco-palms begin to
+be well grown, we found a grove of pandanus, and a piece of soil
+pleasantly covered with green underbush. A well was not far off under a
+rustic well-house; nearer still, in a sandy cup of the land, a pond where
+we might wash our clothes. The place was out of the wind, out of the
+sun, and out of sight of the village. It was shown to the king, and the
+town promised for the morrow.
+
+The morrow came, Mr. Osbourne landed, found nothing done, and carried his
+complaint to Tembinok’. He heard it, rose, called for a Winchester,
+stepped without the royal palisade, and fired two shots in the air. A
+shot in the air is the first Apemama warning; it has the force of a
+proclamation in more loquacious countries; and his majesty remarked
+agreeably that it would make his labourers ‘mo’ bright.’ In less than
+thirty minutes, accordingly, the men had mustered, the work was begun,
+and we were told that we might bring our baggage when we pleased.
+
+It was two in the afternoon ere the first boat was beached, and the long
+procession of chests and crates and sacks began to straggle through the
+sandy desert towards Equator Town. The grove of pandanus was practically
+a thing of the past. Fire surrounded and smoke rose in the green
+underbush. In a wide circuit the axes were still crashing. Those very
+advantages for which the place was chosen, it had been the king’s first
+idea to abolish; and in the midst of this devastation there stood already
+a good-sized maniap’ and a small closed house. A mat was spread near by
+for Tembinok’; here he sat superintending, in cardinal red, a pith helmet
+on his head, a meerschaum pipe in his mouth, a wife stretched at his back
+with custody of the matches and tobacco. Twenty or thirty feet in front
+of him the bulk of the workers squatted on the ground; some of the bush
+here survived and in this the commons sat nearly to their shoulders, and
+presented only an arc of brown faces, black heads, and attentive eyes
+fixed on his majesty. Long pauses reigned, during which the subjects
+stared and the king smoked. Then Tembinok’ would raise his voice and
+speak shrilly and briefly. There was never a response in words; but if
+the speech were jesting, there came by way of answer discreet, obsequious
+laughter—such laughter as we hear in schoolrooms; and if it were
+practical, the sudden uprising and departure of the squad. Twice they so
+disappeared, and returned with further elements of the city: a second
+house and a second maniap’. It was singular to spy, far off through the
+coco stems, the silent oncoming of the maniap’, at first (it seemed)
+swimming spontaneously in the air—but on a nearer view betraying under
+the eaves many score of moving naked legs. In all the affair servile
+obedience was no less remarkable than servile deliberation. The gang had
+here mustered by the note of a deadly weapon; the man who looked on was
+the unquestioned master of their lives; and except for civility, they
+bestirred themselves like so many American hotel clerks. The spectator
+was aware of an unobtrusive yet invincible inertia, at which the skipper
+of a trading dandy might have torn his hair.
+
+Yet the work was accomplished. By dusk, when his majesty withdrew, the
+town was founded and complete, a new and ruder Amphion having called it
+from nothing with three cracks of a rifle. And the next morning the same
+conjurer obliged us with a further miracle: a mystic rampart fencing us,
+so that the path which ran by our doors became suddenly impassable, the
+inhabitants who had business across the isle must fetch a wide circuit,
+and we sat in the midst in a transparent privacy, seeing, seen, but
+unapproachable, like bees in a glass hive. The outward and visible sign
+of this glamour was no more than a few ragged coco-leaf garlands round
+the stems of the outlying palms; but its significance reposed on the
+tremendous sanction of the tapu and the guns of Tembinok’.
+
+We made our first meal that night in the improvised city, where we were
+to stay two months, and which—so soon as we had done with it—was to
+vanish in a day as it appeared, its elements returning whence they came,
+the tapu raised, the traffic on the path resumed, the sun and the moon
+peering in vain between the palm-trees for the bygone work, the wind
+blowing over an empty site. Yet the place, which is now only an episode
+in some memories, seemed to have been built, and to be destined to
+endure, for years. It was a busy hamlet. One of the maniap’s we made
+our dining-room, one the kitchen. The houses we reserved for sleeping.
+They were on the admirable Apemama plan: out and away the best house in
+the South Seas; standing some three feet above the ground on posts; the
+sides of woven flaps, which can be raised to admit light and air, or
+lowered to shut out the wind and the rain: airy, healthy, clean, and
+watertight. We had a hen of a remarkable kind: almost unique in my
+experience, being a hen that occasionally laid eggs. Not far off, Mrs.
+Stevenson tended a garden of salad and shalots. The salad was devoured
+by the hen—which was her bane. The shalots were served out a leaf at a
+time, and welcomed and relished like peaches. Toddy and green cocoa-nuts
+were brought us daily. We once had a present of fish from the king, and
+once of a turtle. Sometimes we shot so-called plover along on the shore,
+sometimes wild chicken in the bush. The rest of our diet was from tins.
+
+Our occupations were very various. While some of the party would be away
+sketching, Mr. Osbourne and I hammered away at a novel. We read Gibbon
+and Carlyle aloud; we blew on flageolets, we strummed on guitars; we took
+photographs by the light of the sun, the moon, and flash-powder;
+sometimes we played cards. Pot-hunting engaged a part of our leisure. I
+have myself passed afternoons in the exciting but innocuous pursuit of
+winged animals with a revolver; and it was fortunate there were better
+shots of the party, and fortunate the king could lend us a more suitable
+weapon, in the form of an excellent fowling-piece, or our spare diet had
+been sparer still.
+
+Night was the time to see our city, after the moon was up, after the
+lamps were lighted, and so long as the fire sparkled in the cook-house.
+We suffered from a plague of flies and mosquitoes, comparable to that of
+Egypt; our dinner-table (lent, like all our furniture, by the king) must
+be enclosed in a tent of netting, our citadel and refuge; and this became
+all luminous, and bulged and beaconed under the eaves, like the globe of
+some monstrous lamp under the margin of its shade. Our cabins, the sides
+being propped at a variety of inclinations, spelled out strange, angular
+patterns of brightness. In his roofed and open kitchen, Ah Fu was to be
+seen by lamp and firelight, dabbling among pots. Over all, there fell in
+the season an extraordinary splendour of mellow moonshine. The sand
+sparkled as with the dust of diamonds; the stars had vanished. At
+intervals, a dusky night-bird, slow and low flying, passed in the
+colonnade of the tree stems and uttered a hoarse croaking cry.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III—THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE PALACE OF MANY WOMEN
+
+
+The palace, or rather the ground which it includes, is several acres in
+extent. A terrace encloses it toward the lagoon; on the side of the
+land, a palisade with several gates. These are scarce intended for
+defence; a man, if he were strong, might easily pluck down the palisade;
+he need not be specially active to leap from the beach upon the terrace.
+There is no parade of guards, soldiers, or weapons; the armoury is under
+lock and key; and the only sentinels are certain inconspicuous old women
+lurking day and night before the gates. By day, these crones were often
+engaged in boiling syrup or the like household occupation; by night, they
+lay ambushed in the shadow or crouched along the palisade, filling the
+office of eunuchs to this harem, sole guards upon a tyrant life.
+
+Female wardens made a fit outpost for this palace of many women. Of the
+number of the king’s wives I have no guess; and but a loose idea of their
+function. He himself displayed embarrassment when they were referred to
+as his wives, called them himself ‘my pamily,’ and explained they were
+his ‘cutcheons’—cousins. We distinguished four of the crowd: the king’s
+mother; his sister, a grave, trenchant woman, with much of her brother’s
+intelligence; the queen proper, to whom (and to whom alone) my wife was
+formally presented; and the favourite of the hour, a pretty, graceful
+girl, who sat with the king daily, and once (when he shed tears) consoled
+him with caresses. I am assured that even with her his relations are
+platonic. In the background figured a multitude of ladies, the lean, the
+plump, and the elephantine, some in sacque frocks, some in the
+hairbreadth _ridi_; high-born and low, slave and mistress; from the queen
+to the scullion, from the favourite to the scraggy sentries at the
+palisade. Not all of these of course are of ‘my pamily,’—many are mere
+attendants; yet a surprising number shared the responsibility of the
+king’s trust. These were key-bearers, treasurers, wardens of the
+armoury, the napery, and the stores. Each knew and did her part to
+admiration. Should anything be required—a particular gun, perhaps, or a
+particular bolt of stuff,—the right queen was summoned; she came bringing
+the right chest, opened it in the king’s presence, and displayed her
+charge in perfect preservation—the gun cleaned and oiled, the goods duly
+folded. Without delay or haste, and with the minimum of speech, the
+whole great establishment turned on wheels like a machine. Nowhere have
+I seen order more complete and pervasive. And yet I was always reminded
+of Norse tales of trolls and ogres who kept their hearts buried in the
+ground for the mere safety, and must confide the secret to their wives.
+For these weapons are the life of Tembinok’. He does not aim at
+popularity; but drives and braves his subjects, with a simplicity of
+domination which it is impossible not to admire, hard not to sympathise
+with. Should one out of so many prove faithless, should the armoury be
+secretly unlocked, should the crones have dozed by the palisade and the
+weapons find their way unseen into the village, revolution would be
+nearly certain, death the most probable result, and the spirit of the
+tyrant of Apemama flit to rejoin his predecessors of Mariki and Tapituea.
+Yet those whom he so trusts are all women, and all rivals.
+
+There is indeed a ministry and staff of males: cook, steward, carpenter,
+and supercargoes: the hierarchy of a schooner. The spies, ‘his majesty’s
+daily papers,’ as we called them, come every morning to report, and go
+again. The cook and steward are concerned with the table only. The
+supercargoes, whose business it is to keep tally of the copra at three
+pounds a month and a percentage, are rarely in the palace; and two at
+least are in the other islands. The carpenter, indeed, shrewd and jolly
+old Rubam—query, Reuben?—promoted on my last visit to the greater dignity
+of governor, is daily present, altering, extending, embellishing,
+pursuing the endless series of the king’s inventions; and his majesty
+will sometimes pass an afternoon watching and talking with Rubam at his
+work. But the males are still outsiders; none seems to be armed, none is
+entrusted with a key; by dusk they are all usually departed from the
+palace; and the weight of the monarchy and of the monarch’s life reposes
+unshared on the women.
+
+Here is a household unlike, indeed, to one of ours; more unlike still to
+the Oriental harem: that of an elderly childless man, his days menaced,
+dwelling alone amid a bevy of women of all ages, ranks, and
+relationships,—the mother, the sister, the cousin, the legitimate wife,
+the concubine, the favourite, the eldest born, and she of yesterday; he,
+in their midst, the only master, the only male, the sole dispenser of
+honours, clothes, and luxuries, the sole mark of multitudinous ambitions
+and desires. I doubt if you could find a man in Europe so bold as to
+attempt this piece of tact and government. And seemingly Tembinok’
+himself had trouble in the beginning. I hear of him shooting at a wife
+for some levity on board a schooner. Another, on some more serious
+offence, he slew outright; he exposed her body in an open box, and (to
+make the warning more memorable) suffered it to putrefy before the palace
+gate. Doubtless his growing years have come to his assistance; for upon
+so large a scale it is more easy to play the father than the husband.
+And to-day, at least to the eye of a stranger, all seems to go smoothly,
+and the wives to be proud of their trust, proud of their rank, and proud
+of their cunning lord.
+
+I conceived they made rather a hero of the man. A popular master in a
+girls’ school might, perhaps, offer a figure of his preponderating
+station. But then the master does not eat, sleep, live, and wash his
+dirty linen in the midst of his admirers; he escapes, he has a room of
+his own, he leads a private life; if he had nothing else, he has the
+holidays, and the more unhappy Tembinok’ is always on the stage and on
+the stretch.
+
+In all my coming and going, I never heard him speak harshly or express
+the least displeasure. An extreme, rather heavy, benignity—the benignity
+of one sure to be obeyed—marked his demeanour; so that I was at times
+reminded of Samual Richardson in his circle of admiring women. The wives
+spoke up and seemed to volunteer opinions, like our wives at home—or,
+say, like doting but respectable aunts. Altogether, I conclude that he
+rules his seraglio much more by art than terror; and those who give a
+different account (and who have none of them enjoyed my opportunities of
+observation) perhaps failed to distinguish between degrees of rank,
+between ‘my pamily’ and the hangers-on, laundresses, and prostitutes.
+
+A notable feature is the evening game of cards when lamps are set forth
+upon the terrace, and ‘I and my pamily’ play for tobacco by the hour. It
+is highly characteristic of Tembinok’ that he must invent a game for
+himself; highly characteristic of his worshipping household that they
+should swear by the absurd invention. It is founded on poker, played
+with the honours out of many packs, and inconceivably dreary. But I have
+a passion for all games, studied it, and am supposed to be the only white
+who ever fairly grasped its principle: a fact for which the wives (with
+whom I was not otherwise popular) admired me with acclamation. It was
+impossible to be deceived; this was a genuine feeling: they were proud of
+their private game, had been cut to the quick by the want of interest
+shown in it by others, and expanded under the flattery of my attention.
+Tembinok’ puts up a double stake, and receives in return two hands to
+choose from: a shallow artifice which the wives (in all these years) have
+not yet fathomed. He himself, when talking with me privately, made not
+the least secret that he was secure of winning; and it was thus he
+explained his recent liberality on board the _Equator_. He let the wives
+buy their own tobacco, which pleased them at the moment. He won it back
+at cards, which made him once more, and without fresh expense, that which
+he ought to be,—the sole fount of all indulgences. And he summed the
+matter up in that phrase with which he almost always concludes any
+account of his policy: ‘Mo’ betta.’
+
+The palace compound is laid with broken coral, excruciating to the eyes
+and the bare feet, but exquisitely raked and weeded. A score or more of
+buildings lie in a sort of street along the palisade and scattered on the
+margin of the terrace; dwelling-houses for the wives and the attendants,
+storehouses for the king’s curios and treasures, spacious maniap’s for
+feast or council, some on pillars of wood, some on piers of masonry. One
+was still in hand, a new invention, the king’s latest born: a European
+frame-house built for coolness inside a lofty maniap’: its roof planked
+like a ship’s deck to be a raised, shady, and yet private promenade. It
+was here the king spent hours with Rubam; here I would sometimes join
+them; the place had a most singular appearance; and I must say I was
+greatly taken with the fancy, and joined with relish in the counsels of
+the architects.
+
+Suppose we had business with his majesty by day: we strolled over the
+sand and by the dwarfish palms, exchanged a ‘_Kõnamaori_’ with the crone
+on duty, and entered the compound. The wide sheet of coral glared before
+us deserted; all having stowed themselves in dark canvas from the excess
+of room. I have gone to and fro in that labyrinth of a place, seeking
+the king; and the only breathing creature I could find was when I peered
+under the eaves of a maniap’, and saw the brawny body of one of the wives
+stretched on the floor, a naked Amazon plunged in noiseless slumber. If
+it were still the hour of the ‘morning papers’ the quest would be more
+easy, the half-dozen obsequious, sly dogs squatting on the ground outside
+a house, crammed as far as possible in its narrow shadow, and turning to
+the king a row of leering faces. Tembinok’ would be within, the flaps of
+the cabin raised, the trade blowing through, hearing their report. Like
+journalists nearer home, when the day’s news were scanty, these would
+make the more of it in words; and I have known one to fill up a barren
+morning with an imaginary conversation of two dogs. Sometimes the king
+deigns to laugh, sometimes to question or jest with them, his voice
+sounding shrilly from the cabin. By his side he may have the
+heir-apparent, Paul, his nephew and adopted son, six years old, stark
+naked, and a model of young human beauty. And there will always be the
+favourite and perhaps two other wives awake; four more lying supine under
+mats and whelmed in slumber. Or perhaps we came later, fell on a more
+private hour, and found Tembinok’ retired in the house with the
+favourite, an earthenware spittoon, a leaden inkpot, and a commercial
+ledger. In the last, lying on his belly, he writes from day to day the
+uneventful history of his reign; and when thus employed he betrayed a
+touch of fretfulness on interruption with which I was well able to
+sympathise. The royal annalist once read me a page or so, translating as
+he went; but the passage being genealogical, and the author boggling
+extremely in his version, I own I have been sometimes better entertained.
+Nor does he confine himself to prose, but touches the lyre, too, in his
+leisure moments, and passes for the chief bard of his kingdom, as he is
+its sole public character, leading architect, and only merchant.
+
+His competence, however, does not reach to music; and his verses, when
+they are ready, are taught to a professional musician, who sets them and
+instructs the chorus. Asked what his songs were about, Tembinok’
+replied, ‘Sweethearts and trees and the sea. Not all the same true, all
+the same lie.’ For a condensed view of lyrical poetry (except that he
+seems to have forgot the stars and flowers) this would be hard to mend.
+These multifarious occupations bespeak (in a native and an absolute
+prince) unusual activity of mind.
+
+The palace court at noon is a spot to be remembered with awe, the visitor
+scrambling there, on the loose stones, through a splendid nightmare of
+light and heat; but the sweep of the wind delivers it from flies and
+mosquitoes; and with the set of sun it became heavenly. I remember it
+best on moonless nights. The air was like a bath of milk. Countless
+shining stars were overhead, the lagoon paved with them. Herds of wives
+squatted by companies on the gravel, softly chatting. Tembinok’ would
+doff his jacket, and sit bare and silent, perhaps meditating songs; the
+favourite usually by him, silent also. Meanwhile in the midst of the
+court, the palace lanterns were being lit and marshalled in rank upon the
+ground—six or eight square yards of them; a sight that gave one strange
+ideas of the number of ‘my pamily’: such a sight as may be seen about
+dusk in a corner of some great terminus at home. Presently these fared
+off into all corners of the precinct, lighting the last labours of the
+day, lighting one after another to their rest that prodigious company of
+women. A few lingered in the middle of the court for the card-party, and
+saw the honours shuffled and dealt, and Tembinok’ deliberating between
+his two; hands, and the queens losing their tobacco. Then these also
+were scattered and extinguished; and their place was taken by a great
+bonfire, the night-light of the palace. When this was no more, smaller
+fires burned likewise at the gates. These were tended by the crones,
+unseen, unsleeping—not always unheard. Should any approach in the dark
+hours, a guarded alert made the circuit of the palisade; each sentry
+signalled her neighbour with a stone; the rattle of falling pebbles
+passed and died away; and the wardens of Tembinok’ crouched in their
+places silent as before.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV—THE KING OF APEMAMA: EQUATOR TOWN AND THE PALACE
+
+
+Five persons were detailed to wait upon us. Uncle Parker, who brought us
+toddy and green nuts, was an elderly, almost an old man, with the
+spirits, the industry, and the morals of a boy of ten. His face was
+ancient, droll, and diabolical, the skin stretched over taut sinews, like
+a sail on the guide-rope; and he smiled with every muscle of his head.
+His nuts must be counted every day, or he would deceive us in the tale;
+they must be daily examined, or some would prove to be unhusked; nothing
+but the king’s name, and scarcely that, would hold him to his duty.
+After his toils were over he was given a pipe, matches, and tobacco, and
+sat on the floor in the maniap’ to smoke. He would not seem to move from
+his position, and yet every day, when the things fell to be returned the
+plug had disappeared; he had found the means to conceal it in the roof,
+whence he could radiantly produce it on the morrow. Although this piece
+of legerdemain was performed regularly before three or four pairs of
+eyes, we could never catch him in the fact; although we searched after he
+was gone, we could never find the tobacco. Such were the diversions of
+Uncle Parker, a man nearing sixty. But he was punished according unto
+his deeds: Mrs. Stevenson took a fancy to paint him, and the sufferings
+of the sitter were beyond description.
+
+Three lasses came from the palace to do our washing and racket with Ah
+Fu. They were of the lowest class, hangers-on kept for the convenience
+of merchant skippers, probably low-born, perhaps out-islanders, with
+little refinement whether of manner or appearance, but likely and jolly
+enough wenches in their way. We called one _Guttersnipe_, for you may
+find her image in the slums of any city; the same lean, dark-eyed, eager,
+vulgar face, the same sudden, hoarse guffaws, the same forward and yet
+anxious manner, as with a tail of an eye on the policeman: only the
+policeman here was a live king, and his truncheon a rifle. I doubt if
+you could find anywhere out of the islands, or often there, the parallel
+of _Fatty_, a mountain of a girl, who must have weighed near as many
+stones as she counted summers, could have given a good account of a
+life-guardsman, had the face of a baby, and applied her vast mechanical
+forces almost exclusively to play. But they were all three of the same
+merry spirit. Our washing was conducted in a game of romps; and they
+fled and pursued, and splashed, and pelted, and rolled each other in the
+sand, and kept up a continuous noise of cries and laughter like holiday
+children. Indeed, and however strange their own function in that austere
+establishment, were they not escaped for the day from the largest and
+strictest Ladies’ School in the South Seas?
+
+Our fifth attendant was no less a person than the royal cook. He was
+strikingly handsome both in face and body, lazy as a slave, and insolent
+as a butcher’s boy. He slept and smoked on our premises in various
+graceful attitudes; but so far from helping Ah Fu, he was not at the
+pains to watch him. It may be said of him that he came to learn, and
+remained to teach; and his lessons were at times difficult to stomach.
+For example, he was sent to fill a bucket from the well. About half-way
+he found my wife watering her onions, changed buckets with her, and
+leaving her the empty, returned to the kitchen with the full. On another
+occasion he was given a dish of dumplings for the king, was told they
+must be eaten hot, and that he should carry them as fast as possible.
+The wretch set off at the rate of about a mile in the hour, head in air,
+toes turned out. My patience, after a month of trial, failed me at the
+sight. I pursued, caught him by his two big shoulders, and thrusting him
+before me, ran with him down the hill, over the sands, and through the
+applauding village, to the Speak House, where the king was then holding a
+pow-wow. He had the impudence to pretend he was internally injured by my
+violence, and to profess serious apprehensions for his life.
+
+All this we endured; for the ways of Tembinok’ are summary, and I was not
+yet ripe to take a hand in the man’s death. But in the meanwhile, here
+was my unfortunate China boy slaving for the pair, and presently he fell
+sick. I was now in the position of Cimondain Lantenac, and indeed all
+the characters in _Quatre-Vingt-Treize_: to continue to spare the guilty,
+I must sacrifice the innocent. I took the usual course and tried to save
+both, with the usual consequence of failure. Well rehearsed, I went down
+to the palace, found the king alone, and obliged him with a vast amount
+of rigmarole. The cook was too old to learn: I feared he was not making
+progress; how if we had a boy instead?—boys were more teachable. It was
+all in vain; the king pierced through my disguises to the root of the
+fact; saw that the cook had desperately misbehaved; and sat a while
+glooming. ‘I think he tavvy too much,’ he said at last, with grim
+concision; and immediately turned the talk to other subjects. The same
+day another high officer, the steward, appeared in the cook’s place, and,
+I am bound to say, proved civil and industrious.
+
+As soon as I left, it seems the king called for a Winchester and strolled
+outside the palisade, awaiting the defaulter. That day Tembinok’ wore
+the woman’s frock; as like as not, his make-up was completed by a pith
+helmet and blue spectacles. Conceive the glaring stretch of sandhills,
+the dwarf palms with their noon-day shadows, the line of the palisade,
+the crone sentries (each by a small clear fire) cooking syrup on their
+posts—and this chimæra waiting with his deadly engine. To him, enter at
+last the cook, strolling down the sandhill from Equator Town, listless,
+vain and graceful; with no thought of alarm. As soon as he was well
+within range, the travestied monarch fired the six shots over his head,
+at his feet, and on either hand of him: the second Apemama warning,
+startling in itself, fatal in significance, for the next time his majesty
+will aim to hit. I am told the king is a crack shot; that when he aims
+to kill, the grave may be got ready; and when he aims to miss, misses by
+so near a margin that the culprit tastes six times the bitterness of
+death. The effect upon the cook I had an opportunity of seeing for
+myself. My wife and I were returning from the sea-side of the island,
+when we spied one coming to meet us at a very quick, disordered pace,
+between a walk and a run. As we drew nearer we saw it was the cook,
+beside himself with some emotion, his usual warm, mulatto colour declined
+into a bluish pallor. He passed us without word or gesture, staring on
+us with the face of a Satan, and plunged on across the wood for the
+unpeopled quarter of the island and the long, desert beach, where he
+might rage to and fro unseen, and froth out the vials of his wrath, fear,
+and humiliation. Doubtless in the curses that he there uttered to the
+bursting surf and the tropic birds, the name of the Kaupoi—the rich
+man—was frequently repeated. I had made him the laughing-stock of the
+village in the affair of the king’s dumplings; I had brought him by my
+machinations into disgrace and the immediate jeopardy of his days; last,
+and perhaps bitterest, he had found me there by the way to spy upon him
+in the hour of his disorder.
+
+Time passed, and we saw no more of him. The season of the full moon came
+round, when a man thinks shame to lie sleeping; and I continued until
+late—perhaps till twelve or one in the morning—to walk on the bright sand
+and in the tossing shadow of the palms. I played, as I wandered, on a
+flageolet, which occupied much of my attention; the fans overhead rattled
+in the wind with a metallic chatter; and a bare foot falls at any rate
+almost noiseless on that shifting soil. Yet when I got back to Equator
+Town, where all the lights were out, and my wife (who was still awake,
+and had been looking forth) asked me who it was that followed me, I
+thought she spoke in jest. ‘Not at all,’ she said. ‘I saw him twice as
+you passed, walking close at your heels. He only left you at the corner
+of the maniap’; he must be still behind the cook-house.’ Thither I
+ran—like a fool, without any weapon—and came face to face with the cook.
+He was within my tapu-line, which was death in itself; he could have no
+business there at such an hour but either to steal or to kill; guilt made
+him timorous; and he turned and fled before me in the night in silence.
+As he went I kicked him in that place where honour lies, and he gave
+tongue faintly like an injured mouse. At the moment I daresay he
+supposed it was a deadly instrument that touched him.
+
+What had the man been after? I have found my music better qualified to
+scatter than to collect an audience. Amateur as I was, I could not
+suppose him interested in my reading of the _Carnival of Venice_, or that
+he would deny himself his natural rest to follow my variations on _The
+Ploughboy_. And whatever his design, it was impossible I should suffer
+him to prowl by night among the houses. A word to the king, and the man
+were not, his case being far beyond pardon. But it is one thing to kill
+a man yourself; quite another to bear tales behind his back and have him
+shot by a third party; and I determined to deal with the fellow in some
+method of my own. I told Ah Fu the story, and bade him fetch me the cook
+whenever he should find him. I had supposed this would be a matter of
+difficulty; and far from that, he came of his own accord: an act really
+of desperation, since his life hung by my silence, and the best he could
+hope was to be forgotten. Yet he came with an assured countenance,
+volunteered no apology or explanation, complained of injuries received,
+and pretended he was unable to sit down. I suppose I am the weakest man
+God made; I had kicked him in the least vulnerable part of his big
+carcase; my foot was bare, and I had not even hurt my foot. Ah Fu could
+not control his merriment. On my side, knowing what must be the nature
+of his apprehensions, I found in so much impudence a kind of gallantry,
+and secretly admired the man. I told him I should say nothing of his
+night’s adventure to the king; that I should still allow him, when he had
+an errand, to come within my tapu-line by day; but if ever I found him
+there after the set of the sun I would shoot him on the spot; and to the
+proof showed him a revolver. He must have been incredibly relieved; but
+he showed no sign of it, took himself off with his usual dandy
+nonchalance, and was scarce seen by us again.
+
+These five, then, with the substitution of the steward for the cook, came
+and went, and were our only visitors. The circle of the tapu held at
+arm’s-length the inhabitants of the village. As for ‘my pamily,’ they
+dwelt like nuns in their enclosure; only once have I met one of them
+abroad, and she was the king’s sister, and the place in which I found her
+(the island infirmary) was very likely privileged. There remains only
+the king to be accounted for. He would come strolling over, always
+alone, a little before a meal-time, take a chair, and talk and eat with
+us like an old family friend. Gilbertine etiquette appears defective on
+the point of leave-taking. It may be remembered we had trouble in the
+matter with Karaiti; and there was something childish and disconcerting
+in Tembinok’s abrupt ‘I want go home now,’ accompanied by a kind of
+ducking rise, and followed by an unadorned retreat. It was the only blot
+upon his manners, which were otherwise plain, decent, sensible, and
+dignified. He never stayed long nor drank much, and copied our behaviour
+where he perceived it to differ from his own. Very early in the day, for
+instance, he ceased eating with his knife. It was plain he was
+determined in all things to wring profit from our visit, and chiefly upon
+etiquette. The quality of his white visitors puzzled and concerned him;
+he would bring up name after name, and ask if its bearer were a ‘big
+chiep,’ or even a ‘chiep’ at all—which, as some were my excellent good
+friends, and none were actually born in the purple, became at times
+embarrassing. He was struck to learn that our classes were
+distinguishable by their speech, and that certain words (for instance)
+were tapu on the quarter-deck of a man-of-war; and he begged in
+consequence that we should watch and correct him on the point. We were
+able to assure him that he was beyond correction. His vocabulary is apt
+and ample to an extraordinary degree. God knows where he collected it,
+but by some instinct or some accident he has avoided all profane or gross
+expressions. ‘Obliged,’ ‘stabbed,’ ‘gnaw,’ ‘lodge,’ ‘power,’ ‘company,’
+‘slender,’ ‘smooth,’ and ‘wonderful,’ are a few of the unexpected words
+that enrich his dialect. Perhaps what pleased him most was to hear about
+saluting the quarter-deck of a man-of-war. In his gratitude for this
+hint he became fulsome. ‘Schooner cap’n no tell me,’ he cried; ‘I think
+no tavvy! You tavvy too much; tavvy ’teama’, tavvy man-a-wa’. I think
+you tavvy everything.’ Yet he gravelled me often enough with his
+perpetual questions; and the false Mr. Barlow stood frequently exposed
+before the royal Sandford. I remember once in particular. We were
+showing the magic-lantern; a slide of Windsor Castle was put in, and I
+told him there was the ‘outch’ of Victoreea. ‘How many pathom he high?’
+he asked, and I was dumb before him. It was the builder, the
+indefatigable architect of palaces, that spoke; collector though he was,
+he did not collect useless information; and all his questions had a
+purpose. After etiquette, government, law, the police, money, and
+medicine were his chief interests—things vitally important to himself as
+a king and the father of his people. It was my part not only to supply
+new information, but to correct the old. ‘My patha he tell me,’ or
+‘White man he tell me,’ would be his constant beginning; ‘You think he
+lie?’ Sometimes I thought he did. Tembinok’ once brought me a
+difficulty of this kind, which I was long of comprehending. A schooner
+captain had told him of Captain Cook; the king was much interested in the
+story; and turned for more information—not to Mr. Stephen’s Dictionary,
+not to the _Britannica_, but to the Bible in the Gilbert Island version
+(which consists chiefly of the New Testament and the Psalms). Here he
+sought long and earnestly; Paul he found, and Festus and Alexander the
+coppersmith: no word of Cook. The inference was obvious: the explorer
+was a myth. So hard it is, even for a man of great natural parts like
+Tembinok’, to grasp the ideas of a new society and culture.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V—KING AND COMMONS
+
+
+We saw but little of the commons of the isle. At first we met them at
+the well, where they washed their linen and we drew water for the table.
+The combination was distasteful; and, having a tyrant at command, we
+applied to the king and had the place enclosed in our tapu. It was one
+of the few favours which Tembinok’ visibly boggled about granting, and it
+may be conceived how little popular it made the strangers. Many
+villagers passed us daily going afield; but they fetched a wide circuit
+round our tapu, and seemed to avert their looks. At times we went
+ourselves into the village—a strange place. Dutch by its canals,
+Oriental by the height and steepness of the roofs, which looked at dusk
+like temples; but we were rarely called into a house: no welcome, no
+friendship, was offered us; and of home life we had but the one view: the
+waking of a corpse, a frigid, painful scene: the widow holding on her lap
+the cold, bluish body of her husband, and now partaking of the
+refreshments which made the round of the company, now weeping and kissing
+the pale mouth. (‘I fear you feel this affliction deeply,’ said the
+Scottish minister. ‘Eh, sir, and that I do!’ replied the widow. ‘I’ve
+been greetin’ a’ nicht; an’ noo I’m just gaun to sup this bit parritch,
+and then I’ll begin an’ greet again.’) In our walks abroad I have always
+supposed the islanders avoided us, perhaps from distaste, perhaps by
+order; and those whom we met we took generally by surprise. The surface
+of the isle is diversified with palm groves, thickets, and romantic
+dingles four feet deep, relics of old taro plantation; and it is thus
+possible to stumble unawares on folk resting or hiding from their work.
+About pistol-shot from our township there lay a pond in the bottom of a
+jungle; here the maids of the isle came to bathe, and were several times
+alarmed by our intrusion. Not for them are the bright cold rivers of
+Tahiti or Upolu, not for them to splash and laugh in the hour of the dusk
+with a villageful of gay companions; but to steal here solitary, to
+crouch in a place like a cow-wallow, and wash (if that can be called
+washing) in lukewarm mud, brown as their own skins. Other, but still
+rare, encounters occur to my memory. I was several times arrested by a
+tender sound in the bush of voices talking, soft as flutes and with quiet
+intonations. Hope told a flattering tale; I put aside the leaves; and
+behold! in place of the expected dryads, a pair of all too solid ladies
+squatting over a clay pipe in the ungraceful _ridi_. The beauty of the
+voice and the eye was all that remained to those vast dames; but that of
+the voice was indeed exquisite. It is strange I should have never heard
+a more winning sound of speech, yet the dialect should be one remarkable
+for violent, ugly, and outlandish vocables; so that Tembinok’ himself
+declared it made him weary, and professed to find repose in talking
+English.
+
+The state of this folk, of whom I saw so little, I can merely guess at.
+The king himself explains the situation with some art. ‘No; I no pay
+them,’ he once said. ‘I give them tobacco. They work for me _all the
+same brothers_.’ It is true there was a brother once in Arden! But we
+prefer the shorter word. They bear every servile mark,—levity like a
+child’s, incurable idleness, incurious content. The insolence of the
+cook was a trait of his own; not so his levity, which he shared with the
+innocent Uncle Parker. With equal unconcern both gambolled under the
+shadow of the gallows, and took liberties with death that might have
+surprised a careless student of man’s nature. I wrote of Parker that he
+behaved like a boy of ten: what was he else, being a slave of sixty? He
+had passed all his years in school, fed, clad, thought for, commanded;
+and had grown familiar and coquetted with the fear of punishment. By
+terror you may drive men long, but not far. Here, in Apemama, they work
+at the constant and the instant peril of their lives; and are plunged in
+a kind of lethargy of laziness. It is common to see one go afield in his
+stiff mat ungirt, so that he walks elbows-in like a trussed fowl; and
+whatsoever his right hand findeth to do, the other must be off duty
+holding on his clothes. It is common to see two men carrying between
+them on a pole a single bucket of water. To make two bites of a cherry
+is good enough: to make two burthens of a soldier’s kit, for a distance
+of perhaps half a furlong, passes measure. Woman, being the less
+childish animal, is less relaxed by servile conditions. Even in the
+king’s absence, even when they were alone, I have seen Apemama women work
+with constancy. But the outside to be hoped for in a man is that he may
+attack his task in little languid fits, and lounge between-whiles. So I
+have seen a painter, with his pipe going, and a friend by the studio
+fireside. You might suppose the race to lack civility, even vitality,
+until you saw them in the dance. Night after night, and sometimes day
+after day, they rolled out their choruses in the great Speak House—solemn
+andantes and adagios, led by the clapped hand, and delivered with an
+energy that shook the roof. The time was not so slow, though it was slow
+for the islands; but I have chosen rather to indicate the effect upon the
+hearer. Their music had a church-like character from near at hand, and
+seemed to European ears more regular than the run of island music. Twice
+I have heard a discord regularly solved. From farther off, heard at
+Equator Town for instance, the measures rose and fell and crepitated like
+the barking of hounds in a distant kennel.
+
+The slaves are certainly not overworked—children of ten do more without
+fatigue—and the Apemama labourers have holidays, when the singing begins
+early in the afternoon. The diet is hard; copra and a sweetmeat of
+pounded pandanus are the only dishes I observed outside the palace; but
+there seems no defect in quantity, and the king shares with them his
+turtles. Three came in a boat from Kuria during our stay; one was kept
+for the palace, one sent to us, one presented to the village. It is the
+habit of the islanders to cook the turtle in its carapace; we had been
+promised the shells, and we asked a tapu on this foolish practice. The
+face of Tembinok’ darkened and he answered nothing. Hesitation in the
+question of the well I could understand, for water is scarce on a low
+island; that he should refuse to interfere upon a point of cookery was
+more than I had dreamed of; and I gathered (rightly or wrongly) that he
+was scrupulous of touching in the least degree the private life and
+habits of his slaves. So that even here, in full despotism, public
+opinion has weight; even here, in the midst of slavery, freedom has a
+corner.
+
+Orderly, sober, and innocent, life flows in the isle from day to day as
+in a model plantation under a model planter. It is impossible to doubt
+the beneficence of that stern rule. A curious politeness, a soft and
+gracious manner, something effeminate and courtly, distinguishes the
+islanders of Apemama; it is talked of by all the traders, it was felt
+even by residents so little beloved as ourselves, and noticeable even in
+the cook, and even in that scoundrel’s hours of insolence. The king,
+with his manly and plain bearing, stood out alone; you might say he was
+the only Gilbert Islander in Apemama. Violence, so common in Butaritari,
+seems unknown. So are theft and drunkenness. I am assured the
+experiment has been made of leaving sovereigns on the beach before the
+village; they lay there untouched. In all our time on the island I was
+but once asked for drink. This was by a mighty plausible fellow, wearing
+European clothes and speaking excellent English—Tamaiti his name, or, as
+the whites have now corrupted it, ‘Tom White’: one of the king’s
+supercargoes at three pounds a month and a percentage, a medical man
+besides, and in his private hours a wizard. He found me one day in the
+outskirts of the village, in a secluded place, hot and private, where the
+taro-pits are deep and the plants high. Here he buttonholed me, and,
+looking about him like a conspirator, inquired if I had gin.
+
+I told him I had. He remarked that gin was forbidden, lauded the
+prohibition a while, and then went on to explain that he was a doctor, or
+‘dogstar’ as he pronounced the word, that gin was necessary to him for
+his medical infusions, that he was quite out of it, and that he would be
+obliged to me for some in a bottle. I told him I had passed the king my
+word on landing; but since his case was so exceptional, I would go down
+to the palace at once, and had no doubt that Tembinok’ would set me free.
+Tom White was immediately overwhelmed with embarrassment and terror,
+besought me in the most moving terms not to betray him, and fled my
+neighbourhood. He had none of the cook’s valour; it was weeks before he
+dared to meet my eye; and then only by the order of the king and on
+particular business.
+
+The more I viewed and admired this triumph of firm rule, the more I was
+haunted and troubled by a problem, the problem (perhaps) of to-morrow for
+ourselves. Here was a people protected from all serious misfortune,
+relieved of all serious anxieties, and deprived of what we call our
+liberty. Did they like it? and what was their sentiment toward the
+ruler? The first question I could not of course ask, nor perhaps the
+natives answer. Even the second was delicate; yet at last, and under
+charming and strange circumstances, I found my opportunity to put it and
+a man to reply. It was near the full of the moon, with a delicious
+breeze; the isle was bright as day—to sleep would have been sacrilege;
+and I walked in the bush, playing my pipe. It must have been the sound
+of what I am pleased to call my music that attracted in my direction
+another wanderer of the night. This was a young man attired in a fine
+mat, and with a garland on his hair, for he was new come from dancing and
+singing in the public hall; and his body, his face, and his eyes were all
+of an enchanting beauty. Every here and there in the Gilberts youths are
+to be found of this absurd perfection; I have seen five of us pass half
+an hour in admiration of a boy at Mariki; and Te Kop (my friend in the
+fine mat and garland) I had already several times remarked, and long ago
+set down as the loveliest animal in Apemama. The philtre of admiration
+must be very strong, or these natives specially susceptible to its
+effects, for I have scarce ever admired a person in the islands but what
+he has sought my particular acquaintance. So it was with Te Kop. He led
+me to the ocean side; and for an hour or two we sat smoking and talking
+on the resplendent sand and under the ineffable brightness of the moon.
+My friend showed himself very sensible of the beauty and amenity of the
+hour. ‘Good night! Good wind!’ he kept exclaiming, and as he said the
+words he seemed to hug myself. I had long before invented such
+reiterated expressions of delight for a character (Felipe, in the story
+of _Olalla_) intended to be partly bestial. But there was nothing
+bestial in Te Kop; only a childish pleasure in the moment. He was no
+less pleased with his companion, or was good enough to say so; honoured
+me, before he left, by calling me Te Kop; apostrophised me as ‘My name!’
+with an intonation exquisitely tender, laying his hand at the same time
+swiftly on my knee; and after we had risen, and our paths began to
+separate in the bush, twice cried to me with a sort of gentle ecstasy, ‘I
+like you too much!’ From the beginning he had made no secret of his
+terror of the king; would not sit down nor speak above a whisper till he
+had put the whole breadth of the isle between himself and his monarch,
+then harmlessly asleep; and even there, even within a stone-cast of the
+outer sea, our talk covered by the sound of the surf and the rattle of
+the wind among the palms, continued to speak guardedly, softening his
+silver voice (which rang loud enough in the chorus) and looking about him
+like a man in fear of spies. The strange thing is that I should have
+beheld him no more. In any other island in the whole South Seas, if I
+had advanced half as far with any native, he would have been at my door
+next morning, bringing and expecting gifts. But Te Kop vanished in the
+bush for ever. My house, of course, was unapproachable; but he knew
+where to find me on the ocean beach, where I went daily. I was the
+_Kaupoi_, the rich man; my tobacco and trade were known to be endless: he
+was sure of a present. I am at a loss how to explain his behaviour,
+unless it be supposed that he recalled with terror and regret a passage
+in our interview. Here it is:
+
+‘The king, he good man?’ I asked.
+
+‘Suppose he like you, he good man,’ replied Te Kop: ‘no like, no good.’
+
+That is one way of putting it, of course. Te Kop himself was probably no
+favourite, for he scarce appealed to my judgment as a type of industry.
+And there must be many others whom the king (to adhere to the formula)
+does not like. Do these unfortunates like the king? Or is not rather
+the repulsion mutual? and the conscientious Tembinok’, like the
+conscientious Braxfield before him, and many other conscientious rulers
+and judges before either, surrounded by a considerable body of
+‘grumbletonians’? Take the cook, for instance, when he passed us by,
+blue with rage and terror. He was very wroth with me; I think by all the
+old principles of human nature he was not very well pleased with his
+sovereign. It was the rich man he sought to waylay: I think it must have
+been by the turn of a hair that it was not the king he waylaid instead.
+And the king gives, or seems to give, plenty of opportunities; day and
+night he goes abroad alone, whether armed or not I can but guess; and the
+taro-patches, where his business must so often carry him, seem designed
+for assassination. The case of the cook was heavy indeed to my
+conscience. I did not like to kill my enemy at second-hand; but had I a
+right to conceal from the king, who had trusted me, the dangerous secret
+character of his attendant? And suppose the king should fall, what would
+be the fate of the king’s friends? It was our opinion at the time that
+we should pay dear for the closing of the well; that our breath was in
+the king’s nostrils; that if the king should by any chance be bludgeoned
+in a taro-patch, the philosophical and musical inhabitants of Equator
+Town might lay aside their pleasant instruments, and betake themselves to
+what defence they had, with a very dim prospect of success. These
+speculations were forced upon us by an incident which I am ashamed to
+betray. The schooner _H. L. Haseltine_ (since capsized at sea, with the
+loss of eleven lives) put into Apemama in a good hour for us, who had
+near exhausted our supplies. The king, after his habit, spent day after
+day on board; the gin proved unhappily to his taste; he brought a store
+of it ashore with him; and for some time the sole tyrant of the isle was
+half-seas-over. He was not drunk—the man is not a drunkard, he has
+always stores of liquor at hand, which he uses with moderation,—but he
+was muzzy, dull, and confused. He came one day to lunch with us, and
+while the cloth was being laid fell asleep in his chair. His confusion,
+when he awoke and found he had been detected, was equalled by our
+uneasiness. When he was gone we sat and spoke of his peril, which we
+thought to be in some degree our own; of how easily the man might be
+surprised in such a state by _grumbletonians_; of the strange scenes that
+would follow—the royal treasures and stores at the mercy of the rabble,
+the palace overrun, the garrison of women turned adrift. And as we
+talked we were startled by a gun-shot and a sudden, barbaric outcry. I
+believe we all changed colour; but it was only the king firing at a dog
+and the chorus striking up in the Speak House. A day or two later I
+learned the king was very sick; went down, diagnosed the case; and took
+at once the highest medical degree by the exhibition of bicarbonate of
+soda. Within the hour Richard was himself again; and I found him at the
+unfinished house, enjoying the double pleasure of directing Rubam and
+making a dinner of cocoa-nut dumplings, and all eagerness to have the
+formula of this new sort of _pain-killer_—for _pain-killer_ in the
+islands is the generic name of medicine. So ended the king’s modest
+spree and our anxiety.
+
+On the face of things, I ought to say, loyalty appeared unshaken. When
+the schooner at last returned for us, after much experience of baffling
+winds, she brought a rumour that Tebureimoa had declared war on Apemama.
+Tembinok’ became a new man; his face radiant; his attitude, as I saw him
+preside over a council of chiefs in one of the palace maniap’s, eager as
+a boy’s; his voice sounding abroad, shrill and jubilant, over half the
+compound. War is what he wants, and here was his chance. The English
+captain, when he flung his arms in the lagoon, had forbidden him (except
+in one case) all military adventures in the future: here was the case
+arrived. All morning the council sat; men were drilled, arms were
+bought, the sound of firing disturbed the afternoon; the king devised and
+communicated to me his plan of campaign, which was highly elaborate and
+ingenious, but perhaps a trifle fine-spun for the rough and random
+vicissitudes of war. And in all this bustle the temper of the people
+appeared excellent, an unwonted animation in every face, and even Uncle
+Parker burning with military zeal.
+
+Of course it was a false alarm. Tebureimoa had other fish to fry. The
+ambassador who accompanied us on our return to Butaritari found him
+retired to a small island on the reef, in a huff with the Old Men, a tiff
+with the traders, and more fear of insurrection at home than appetite for
+wars abroad. The plenipotentiary had been placed under my protection;
+and we solemnly saluted when we met. He proved an excellent fisherman,
+and caught bonito over the ship’s side. He pulled a good oar, and made
+himself useful for a whole fiery afternoon, towing the becalmed _Equator_
+off Mariki. He went to his post and did no good. He returned home
+again, having done no harm. _O si sic omnes_!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI—THE KING OF APEMAMA: DEVIL-WORK
+
+
+The ocean beach of Apemama was our daily resort. The coast is broken by
+shallow bays. The reef is detached, elevated, and includes a lagoon
+about knee-deep, the unrestful spending-basin of the surf. The beach is
+now of fine sand, now of broken coral. The trend of the coast being
+convex, scarce a quarter of a mile of it is to be seen at once; the land
+being so low, the horizon appears within a stone-cast; and the narrow
+prospect enhances the sense of privacy. Man avoids the place—even his
+footprints are uncommon; but a great number of birds hover and pipe there
+fishing, and leave crooked tracks upon the sand. Apart from these, the
+only sound (and I was going to say the only society), is that of the
+breakers on the reef.
+
+On each projection of the coast, the bank of coral clinkers immediately
+above the beach has been levelled, and a pillar built, perhaps
+breast-high. These are not sepulchral; all the dead being buried on the
+inhabited side of the island, close to men’s houses, and (what is worse)
+to their wells. I was told they were to protect the isle against inroads
+from the sea—divine or diabolical martellos, probably sacred to Taburik,
+God of Thunder.
+
+The bay immediately opposite Equator Town, which we called Fu Bay, in
+honour of our cook, was thus fortified on either horn. It was well
+sheltered by the reef, the enclosed water clear and tranquil, the
+enclosing beach curved like a horseshoe, and both steep and broad. The
+path debouched about the midst of the re-entrant angle, the woods
+stopping some distance inland. In front, between the fringe of the wood
+and the crown of the beach, there had been designed a regular figure,
+like the court for some new variety of tennis, with borders of round
+stones imbedded, and pointed at the angles with low posts, likewise of
+stone. This was the king’s Pray Place. When he prayed, what he prayed
+for, and to whom he addressed his supplications I could never learn. The
+ground was tapu.
+
+In the angle, by the mouth of the path, stood a deserted maniap’. Near
+by there had been a house before our coming, which was now transported
+and figured for the moment in Equator Town. It had been, and it would be
+again when we departed, the residence of the guardian and wizard of the
+spot—Tamaiti. Here, in this lone place, within sound of the sea, he had
+his dwelling and uncanny duties. I cannot call to mind another case of a
+man living on the ocean side of any open atoll; and Tamaiti must have had
+strong nerves, the greater confidence in his own spells, or, what I
+believe to be the truth, an enviable scepticism. Whether Tamaiti had any
+guardianship of the Pray Place I never heard. But his own particular
+chapel stood farther back in the fringe of the wood. It was a tree of
+respectable growth. Around it there was drawn a circle of stones like
+those that enclosed the Pray Place; in front, facing towards the sea, a
+stone of a much greater size, and somewhat hollowed, like a piscina,
+stood close against the trunk; in front of that again a conical pile of
+gravel. In the hollow of what I have called the piscina (though it
+proved to be a magic seat) lay an offering of green cocoa-nuts; and when
+you looked up you found the boughs of the tree to be laden with strange
+fruit: palm-branches elaborately plaited, and beautiful models of canoes,
+finished and rigged to the least detail. The whole had the appearance of
+a mid-summer and sylvan Christmas-tree _al fresco_. Yet we were already
+well enough acquainted in the Gilberts to recognise it, at the first
+sight, for a piece of wizardry, or, as they say in the group, of
+Devil-work.
+
+The plaited palms were what we recognised. We had seen them before on
+Apaiang, the most christianised of all these islands; where excellent Mr.
+Bingham lived and laboured and has left golden memories; whence all the
+education in the northern Gilberts traces its descent; and where we were
+boarded by little native Sunday-school misses in clean frocks, with
+demure faces, and singing hymns as to the manner born.
+
+Our experience of Devil-work at Apaiang had been as follows:—It chanced
+we were benighted at the house of Captain Tierney. My wife and I lodged
+with a Chinaman some half a mile away; and thither Captain Reid and a
+native boy escorted us by torch-light. On the way the torch went out,
+and we took shelter in a small and lonely Christian chapel to rekindle
+it. Stuck in the rafters of the chapel was a branch of knotted palm.
+‘What is that?’ I asked. ‘O, that’s Devil-work,’ said the Captain. ‘And
+what is Devil-work?’ I inquired. ‘If you like, I’ll show you some when
+we get to Johnnie’s,’ he replied. ‘Johnnie’s’ was a quaint little house
+upon the crest of the beach, raised some three feet on posts, approached
+by stairs; part walled, part trellised. Trophies of
+advertisement-photographs were hung up within for decoration. There was
+a table and a recess-bed, in which Mrs. Stevenson slept; while I camped
+on the matted floor with Johnnie, Mrs. Johnnie, her sister, and the
+devil’s own regiment of cockroaches. Hither was summoned an old witch,
+who looked the part to horror. The lamp was set on the floor; the crone
+squatted on the threshold, a green palm-branch in her hand, the light
+striking full on her aged features and picking out behind her, from the
+black night, timorous faces of spectators. Our sorceress began with a
+chanted incantation; it was in the old tongue, for which I had no
+interpreter; but ever and again there ran among the crowd outside that
+laugh which every traveller in the islands learns so soon to
+recognise,—the laugh of terror. Doubtless these half-Christian folk were
+shocked, these half-heathen folk alarmed. Chench or Taburik thus
+invoked, we put our questions; the witch knotted the leaves, here a leaf
+and there a leaf, plainly on some arithmetical system; studied the result
+with great apparent contention of mind; and gave the answers. Sidney
+Colvin was in robust health and gone a journey; and we should have a fair
+wind upon the morrow: that was the result of our consultation, for which
+we paid a dollar. The next day dawned cloudless and breathless; but I
+think Captain Reid placed a secret reliance on the sibyl, for the
+schooner was got ready for sea. By eight the lagoon was flawed with long
+cat’s-paws, and the palms tossed and rustled; before ten we were clear of
+the passage and skimming under all plain sail, with bubbling scuppers.
+So we had the breeze, which was well worth a dollar in itself; but the
+bulletin about my friend in England proved, some six months later, when I
+got my mail, to have been groundless. Perhaps London lies beyond the
+horizon of the island gods.
+
+Tembinok’, in his first dealings, showed himself sternly averse from
+superstition: and had not the _Equator_ delayed, we might have left the
+island and still supposed him an agnostic. It chanced one day, however,
+that he came to our maniap’, and found Mrs. Stevenson in the midst of a
+game of patience. She explained the game as well as she was able, and
+wound up jocularly by telling him this was her devil-work, and if she
+won, the _Equator_ would arrive next day. Tembinok’ must have drawn a
+long breath; we were not so high-and-dry after all; he need no longer
+dissemble, and he plunged at once into confessions. He made devil-work
+every day, he told us, to know if ships were coming in; and thereafter
+brought us regular reports of the results. It was surprising how
+regularly he was wrong; but he always had an explanation ready. There
+had been some schooner in the offing out of view; but either she was not
+bound for Apemama, or had changed her course, or lay becalmed. I used to
+regard the king with veneration as he thus publicly deceived himself. I
+saw behind him all the fathers of the Church, all the philosophers and
+men of science of the past; before him, all those that are to come;
+himself in the midst; the whole visionary series bowed over the same task
+of welding incongruities. To the end Tembinok’ spoke reluctantly of the
+island gods and their worship, and I learned but little. Taburik is the
+god of thunder, and deals in wind and weather. A while since there were
+wizards who could call him down in the form of lightning. ‘My patha he
+tell me he see: you think he lie?’ Tienti—pronounced something like
+‘Chench,’ and identified by his majesty with the devil—sends and removes
+bodily sickness. He is whistled for in the Paumotuan manner, and is said
+to appear; but the king has never seen him. The doctors treat disease by
+the aid of Chench: eclectic Tembinok’ at the same time administering
+‘pain-killer’ from his medicine-chest, so as to give the sufferer both
+chances. ‘I think mo’ betta,’ observed his majesty, with more than his
+usual self-approval. Apparently the gods are not jealous, and placidly
+enjoy both shrine and priest in common. On Tamaiti’s medicine-tree, for
+instance, the model canoes are hung up _ex voto_ for a prosperous voyage,
+and must therefore be dedicated to Taburik, god of the weather; but the
+stone in front is the place of sick folk come to pacify Chench.
+
+It chanced, by great good luck, that even as we spoke of these affairs, I
+found myself threatened with a cold. I do not suppose I was ever glad of
+a cold before, or shall ever be again; but the opportunity to see the
+sorcerers at work was priceless, and I called in the faculty of Apemama.
+They came in a body, all in their Sunday’s best and hung with wreaths and
+shells, the insignia of the devil-worker. Tamaiti I knew already:
+Terutak’ I saw for the first time—a tall, lank, raw-boned, serious
+North-Sea fisherman turned brown; and there was a third in their company
+whose name I never heard, and who played to Tamaiti the part of
+_famulus_. Tamaiti took me in hand first, and led me, conversing
+agreeably, to the shores of Fu Bay. The _famulus_ climbed a tree for
+some green cocoa-nuts. Tamaiti himself disappeared a while in the bush
+and returned with coco tinder, dry leaves, and a spray of waxberry. I
+was placed on the stone, with my back to the tree and my face to
+windward; between me and the gravel-heap one of the green nuts was set;
+and then Tamaiti (having previously bared his feet, for he had come in
+canvas shoes, which tortured him) joined me within the magic circle,
+hollowed out the top of the gravel-heap, built his fire in the bottom,
+and applied a match: it was one of Bryant and May’s. The flame was slow
+to catch, and the irreverent sorcerer filled in the time with talk of
+foreign places—of London, and ‘companies,’ and how much money they had;
+of San Francisco, and the nefarious fogs, ‘all the same smoke,’ which had
+been so nearly the occasion of his death. I tried vainly to lead him to
+the matter in hand. ‘Everybody make medicine,’ he said lightly. And
+when I asked him if he were himself a good practitioner—‘No savvy,’ he
+replied, more lightly still. At length the leaves burst in a flame,
+which he continued to feed; a thick, light smoke blew in my face, and the
+flames streamed against and scorched my clothes. He in the meanwhile
+addressed, or affected to address, the evil spirit, his lips moving fast,
+but without sound; at the same time he waved in the air and twice struck
+me on the breast with his green spray. So soon as the leaves were
+consumed the ashes were buried, the green spray was imbedded in the
+gravel, and the ceremony was at an end.
+
+A reader of the _Arabian Nights_ felt quite at home. Here was the
+suffumigation; here was the muttering wizard; here was the desert place
+to which Aladdin was decoyed by the false uncle. But they manage these
+things better in fiction. The effect was marred by the levity of the
+magician, entertaining his patient with small talk like an affable
+dentist, and by the incongruous presence of Mr. Osbourne with a camera.
+As for my cold, it was neither better nor worse.
+
+I was now handed over to Terutak’, the leading practitioner or medical
+baronet of Apemama. His place is on the lagoon side of the island, hard
+by the palace. A rail of light wood, some two feet high, encloses an
+oblong piece of gravel like the king’s Pray Place; in the midst is a
+green tree; below, a stone table bears a pair of boxes covered with a
+fine mat; and in front of these an offering of food, a cocoa-nut, a piece
+of taro or a fish, is placed daily. On two sides the enclosure is lined
+with maniap’s; and one of our party, who had been there to sketch, had
+remarked a daily concourse of people and an extraordinary number of sick
+children; for this is in fact the infirmary of Apemama. The doctor and
+myself entered the sacred place alone; the boxes and the mat were
+displaced; and I was enthroned in their stead upon the stone, facing once
+more to the east. For a while the sorcerer remained unseen behind me,
+making passes in the air with a branch of palm. Then he struck lightly
+on the brim of my straw hat; and this blow he continued to repeat at
+intervals, sometimes brushing instead my arm and shoulder. I have had
+people try to mesmerise me a dozen times, and never with the least
+result. But at the first tap—on a quarter no more vital than my
+hat-brim, and from nothing more virtuous than a switch of palm wielded by
+a man I could not even see—sleep rushed upon me like an armed man. My
+sinews fainted, my eyes closed, my brain hummed, with drowsiness. I
+resisted, at first instinctively, then with a certain flurry of despair,
+in the end successfully; if that were indeed success which enabled me to
+scramble to my feet, to stumble home somnambulous, to cast myself at once
+upon my bed, and sink at once into a dreamless stupor. When I awoke my
+cold was gone. So I leave a matter that I do not understand.
+
+Meanwhile my appetite for curiosities (not usually very keen) had been
+strangely whetted by the sacred boxes. They were of pandanus wood,
+oblong in shape, with an effect of pillaring along the sides like straw
+work, lightly fringed with hair or fibre and standing on four legs. The
+outside was neat as a toy; the inside a mystery I was resolved to
+penetrate. But there was a lion in the path. I might not approach
+Terutak’, since I had promised to buy nothing in the island; I dared not
+have recourse to the king, for I had already received from him more gifts
+than I knew how to repay. In this dilemma (the schooner being at last
+returned) we hit on a device. Captain Reid came forward in my stead,
+professed an unbridled passion for the boxes, and asked and obtained
+leave to bargain for them with the wizard. That same afternoon the
+captain and I made haste to the infirmary, entered the enclosure, raised
+the mat, and had begun to examine the boxes at our leisure, when
+Terutak’s wife bounced out of one of the nigh houses, fell upon us, swept
+up the treasures, and was gone. There was never a more absolute
+surprise. She came, she took, she vanished, we had not a guess whither;
+and we remained, with foolish looks and laughter on the empty field.
+Such was the fit prologue of our memorable bargaining.
+
+Presently Terutak’ came, bringing Tamaiti along with him, both smiling;
+and we four squatted without the rail. In the three maniap’s of the
+infirmary a certain audience was gathered: the family of a sick child
+under treatment, the king’s sister playing cards, a pretty girl, who
+swore I was the image of her father; in all perhaps a score. Terutak’s
+wife had returned (even as she had vanished) unseen, and now sat,
+breathless and watchful, by her husband’s side. Perhaps some rumour of
+our quest had gone abroad, or perhaps we had given the alert by our
+unseemly freedom: certain, at least, that in the faces of all present,
+expectation and alarm were mingled.
+
+Captain Reid announced, without preface or disguise, that I was come to
+purchase; Terutak’, with sudden gravity, refused to sell. He was
+pressed; he persisted. It was explained we only wanted one: no matter,
+two were necessary for the healing of the sick. He was rallied, he was
+reasoned with: in vain. He sat there, serious and still, and refused.
+All this was only a preliminary skirmish; hitherto no sum of money had
+been mentioned; but now the captain brought his great guns to bear. He
+named a pound, then two, then three. Out of the maniap’s one person
+after another came to join the group, some with mere excitement, others
+with consternation in their faces. The pretty girl crept to my side; it
+was then that—surely with the most artless flattery—she informed me of my
+likeness to her father. Tamaiti the infidel sat with hanging head and
+every mark of dejection. Terutak’ streamed with sweat, his eye was
+glazed, his face wore a painful rictus, his chest heaved like that of one
+spent with running. The man must have been by nature covetous; and I
+doubt if ever I saw moral agony more tragically displayed. His wife by
+his side passionately encouraged his resistance.
+
+And now came the charge of the old guard. The captain, making a skip,
+named the surprising figure of five pounds. At the word the maniap’s
+were emptied. The king’s sister flung down her cards and came to the
+front to listen, a cloud on her brow. The pretty girl beat her breast
+and cried with wearisome iteration that if the box were hers I should
+have it. Terutak’s wife was beside herself with pious fear, her face
+discomposed, her voice (which scarce ceased from warning and
+encouragement) shrill as a whistle. Even Terutak’ lost that image-like
+immobility which he had hitherto maintained. He rocked on his mat, threw
+up his closed knees alternately, and struck himself on the breast after
+the manner of dancers. But he came gold out of the furnace; and with
+what voice was left him continued to reject the bribe.
+
+And now came a timely interjection. ‘Money will not heal the sick,’
+observed the king’s sister sententiously; and as soon as I heard the
+remark translated my eyes were unsealed, and I began to blush for my
+employment. Here was a sick child, and I sought, in the view of its
+parents, to remove the medicine-box. Here was the priest of a religion,
+and I (a heathen millionaire) was corrupting him to sacrilege. Here was
+a greedy man, torn in twain betwixt greed and conscience; and I sat by
+and relished, and lustfully renewed his torments. _Ave_, _Cæsar_!
+Smothered in a corner, dormant but not dead, we have all the one touch of
+nature: an infant passion for the sand and blood of the arena. So I
+brought to an end my first and last experience of the joys of the
+millionaire, and departed amid silent awe. Nowhere else can I expect to
+stir the depths of human nature by an offer of five pounds; nowhere else,
+even at the expense of millions, could I hope to see the evil of riches
+stand so legibly exposed. Of all the bystanders, none but the king’s
+sister retained any memory of the gravity and danger of the thing in
+hand. Their eyes glowed, the girl beat her breast, in senseless animal
+excitement. Nothing was offered them; they stood neither to gain nor to
+lose; at the mere name and wind of these great sums Satan possessed them.
+
+From this singular interview I went straight to the palace; found the
+king; confessed what I had been doing; begged him, in my name, to
+compliment Terutak’ on his virtue, and to have a similar box made for me
+against the return of the schooner. Tembinok’, Rubam, and one of the
+Daily Papers—him we used to call ‘the Facetiæ Column’—laboured for a
+while of some idea, which was at last intelligibly delivered. They
+feared I thought the box would cure me; whereas, without the wizard, it
+was useless; and when I was threatened with another cold I should do
+better to rely on pain-killer. I explained I merely wished to keep it in
+my ‘outch’ as a thing made in Apemama and these honest men were much
+relieved.
+
+Late the same evening, my wife, crossing the isle to windward, was aware
+of singing in the bush. Nothing is more common in that hour and place
+than the jubilant carol of the toddy-cutter, swinging high overhead,
+beholding below him the narrow ribbon of the isle, the surrounding field
+of ocean, and the fires of the sunset. But this was of a graver
+character, and seemed to proceed from the ground-level. Advancing a
+little in the thicket, Mrs. Stevenson saw a clear space, a fine mat
+spread in the midst, and on the mat a wreath of white flowers and one of
+the devil-work boxes. A woman—whom we guess to have been Mrs.
+Terutak’—sat in front, now drooping over the box like a mother over a
+cradle, now lifting her face and directing her song to heaven. A passing
+toddy-cutter told my wife that she was praying. Probably she did not so
+much pray as deprecate; and perhaps even the ceremony was one of
+disenchantment. For the box was already doomed; it was to pass from its
+green medicine-tree, reverend precinct, and devout attendants; to be
+handled by the profane; to cross three seas; to come to land under the
+foolscap of St. Paul’s; to be domesticated within the hail of Lillie
+Bridge; there to be dusted by the British housemaid, and to take perhaps
+the roar of London for the voice of the outer sea along the reef. Before
+even we had finished dinner Chench had begun his journey, and one of the
+newspapers had already placed the box upon my table as the gift of
+Tembinok’.
+
+I made haste to the palace, thanked the king, but offered to restore the
+box, for I could not bear that the sick of the island should be made to
+suffer. I was amazed by his reply. Terutak’, it appeared, had still
+three or four in reserve against an accident; and his reluctance, and the
+dread painted at first on every face, was not in the least occasioned by
+the prospect of medical destitution, but by the immediate divinity of
+Chench. How much more did I respect the king’s command, which had been
+able to extort in a moment and for nothing a sacrilegious favour that I
+had in vain solicited with millions! But now I had a difficult task in
+front of me; it was not in my view that Terutak’ should suffer by his
+virtue; and I must persuade the king to share my opinion, to let me
+enrich one of his subjects, and (what was yet more delicate) to pay for
+my present. Nothing shows the king in a more becoming light than the
+fact that I succeeded. He demurred at the principle; he exclaimed, when
+he heard it, at the sum. ‘Plenty money!’ cried he, with contemptuous
+displeasure. But his resistance was never serious; and when he had blown
+off his ill-humour—‘A’ right,’ said he. ‘You give him. Mo’ betta.’
+
+Armed with this permission, I made straight for the infirmary. The night
+was now come, cool, dark, and starry. On a mat hard by a clear fire of
+wood and coco shell, Terutak’ lay beside his wife. Both were smiling;
+the agony was over, the king’s command had reconciled (I must suppose)
+their agitating scruples; and I was bidden to sit by them and share the
+circulating pipe. I was a little moved myself when I placed five gold
+sovereigns in the wizard’s hand; but there was no sign of emotion in
+Terutak’ as he returned them, pointed to the palace, and named Tembinok’.
+It was a changed scene when I had managed to explain. Terutak’, long,
+dour Scots fisherman as he was, expressed his satisfaction within bounds;
+but the wife beamed; and there was an old gentleman present—her father, I
+suppose—who seemed nigh translated. His eyes stood out of his head;
+‘_Kaupoi_, _Kaupoi_—rich, rich!’ ran on his lips like a refrain; and he
+could not meet my eye but what he gurgled into foolish laughter.
+
+I might now go home, leaving that fire-lit family party gloating over
+their new millions, and consider my strange day. I had tried and
+rewarded the virtue of Terutak’. I had played the millionaire, had
+behaved abominably, and then in some degree repaired my thoughtlessness.
+And now I had my box, and could open it and look within. It contained a
+miniature sleeping-mat and a white shell. Tamaiti, interrogated next day
+as to the shell, explained it was not exactly Chench, but a cell, or
+body, which he would at times inhabit. Asked why there was a
+sleeping-mat, he retorted indignantly, ‘Why have you mats?’ And this was
+the sceptical Tamaiti! But island scepticism is never deeper than the
+lips.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII—THE KING OF APEMAMA
+
+
+Thus all things on the island, even the priests of the gods, obey the
+word of Tembinok’. He can give and take, and slay, and allay the
+scruples of the conscientious, and do all things (apparently) but
+interfere in the cookery of a turtle. ‘I got power’ is his favourite
+word; it interlards his conversation; the thought haunts him and is ever
+fresh; and when be has asked and meditates of foreign countries, he looks
+up with a smile and reminds you, ‘_I_ got _Power_.’ Nor is his delight
+only in the possession, but in the exercise. He rejoices in the crooked
+and violent paths of kingship like a strong man to run a race, or like an
+artist in his art. To feel, to use his power, to embellish his island
+and the picture of the island life after a private ideal, to milk the
+island vigorously, to extend his singular museum—these employ
+delightfully the sum of his abilities. I never saw a man more patently
+in the right trade.
+
+It would be natural to suppose this monarchy inherited intact through
+generations. And so far from that, it is a thing of yesterday. I was
+already a boy at school while Apemama was yet republican, ruled by a
+noisy council of Old Men, and torn with incurable feuds. And Tembinok’
+is no Bourbon; rather the son of a Napoleon. Of course he is well-born.
+No man need aspire high in the isles of the Pacific unless his pedigree
+be long and in the upper regions mythical. And our king counts
+cousinship with most of the high families in the archipelago, and traces
+his descent to a shark and a heroic woman. Directed by an oracle, she
+swam beyond sight of land to meet her revolting paramour, and received at
+sea the seed of a predestined family. ‘I think lie,’ is the king’s
+emphatic commentary; yet he is proud of the legend. From this
+illustrious beginning the fortunes of the race must have declined; and
+Teñkoruti, the grandfather of Tembinok’, was the chief of a village at
+the north end of the island. Kuria and Aranuka were yet independent;
+Apemama itself the arena of devastating feuds. Through this perturbed
+period of history the figure of Teñkoruti stalks memorable. In war he
+was swift and bloody; several towns fell to his spear, and the
+inhabitants were butchered to a man. In civil life this arrogance was
+unheard of. When the council of Old Men was summoned, he went to the
+Speak House, delivered his mind, and left without waiting to be answered.
+Wisdom had spoken: let others opine according to their folly. He was
+feared and hated, and this was his pleasure. He was no poet; he cared
+not for arts or knowledge. ‘My gran’patha one thing savvy, savvy pight,’
+observed the king. In some lull of their own disputes the Old Men of
+Apemama adventured on the conquest of Apemama; and this unlicked Caius
+Marcius was elected general of the united troops. Success attended him;
+the islands were reduced, and Teñkoruti returned to his own government,
+glorious and detested. He died about 1860, in the seventieth year of his
+age and the full odour of unpopularity. He was tall and lean, says his
+grandson, looked extremely old, and ‘walked all the same young man.’ The
+same observer gave me a significant detail. The survivors of that rough
+epoch were all defaced with spearmarks; there was none on the body of
+this skilful fighter. ‘I see old man, no got a spear,’ said the king.
+
+Teñkoruti left two sons, Tembaitake and Tembinatake. Tembaitake, our
+king’s father, was short, middling stout, a poet, a good genealogist, and
+something of a fighter; it seems he took himself seriously, and was
+perhaps scarce conscious that he was in all things the creature and
+nursling of his brother. There was no shadow of dispute between the
+pair: the greater man filled with alacrity and content the second place;
+held the breach in war, and all the portfolios in the time of peace; and,
+when his brother rated him, listened in silence, looking on the ground.
+Like Teñkoruti, he was tall and lean and a swift talker—a rare trait in
+the islands. He possessed every accomplishment. He knew sorcery, he was
+the best genealogist of his day, he was a poet, he could dance and make
+canoes and armour; and the famous mast of Apemama, which ran one joint
+higher than the mainmast of a full-rigged ship, was of his conception and
+design. But these were avocations, and the man’s trade was war. ‘When
+my uncle go make wa’, he laugh,’ said Tembinok’. He forbade the use of
+field fortification, that protractor of native hostilities; his men must
+fight in the open, and win or be beaten out of hand; his own activity
+inspired his followers; and the swiftness of his blows beat down, in one
+lifetime, the resistance of three islands. He made his brother
+sovereign, he left his nephew absolute. ‘My uncle make all smooth,’ said
+Tembinok’. ‘I mo’ king than my patha: I got power,’ he said, with
+formidable relish.
+
+Such is the portrait of the uncle drawn by the nephew. I can set beside
+it another by a different artist, who has often—I may say
+always—delighted me with his romantic taste in narrative, but not
+always—and I may say not often—persuaded me of his exactitude. I have
+already denied myself the use of so much excellent matter from the same
+source, that I begin to think it time to reward good resolution; and his
+account of Tembinatake agrees so well with the king’s, that it may very
+well be (what I hope it is) the record of a fact, and not (what I
+suspect) the pleasing exercise of an imagination more than sailorly. A.,
+for so I had perhaps better call him, was walking up the island after
+dusk, when he came on a lighted village of some size, was directed to the
+chief’s house, and asked leave to rest and smoke a pipe. ‘You will sit
+down, and smoke a pipe, and wash, and eat, and sleep,’ replied the chief,
+‘and to-morrow you will go again.’ Food was brought, prayers were held
+(for this was in the brief day of Christianity), and the chief himself
+prayed with eloquence and seeming sincerity. All evening A. sat and
+admired the man by the firelight. He was six feet high, lean, with the
+appearance of many years, and an extraordinary air of breeding and
+command. ‘He looked like a man who would kill you laughing,’ said A., in
+singular echo of one of the king’s expressions. And again: ‘I had been
+reading the Musketeer books, and he reminded me of Aramis.’ Such is the
+portrait of Tembinatake, drawn by an expert romancer.
+
+We had heard many tales of ‘my patha’; never a word of my uncle till two
+days before we left. As the time approached for our departure Tembinok’
+became greatly changed; a softer, a more melancholy, and, in particular,
+a more confidential man appeared in his stead. To my wife he contrived
+laboriously to explain that though he knew he must lose his father in the
+course of nature, he had not minded nor realised it till the moment came;
+and that now he was to lose us he repeated the experience. We showed
+fireworks one evening on the terrace. It was a heavy business; the sense
+of separation was in all our minds, and the talk languished. The king
+was specially affected, sat disconsolate on his mat, and often sighed.
+Of a sudden one of the wives stepped forth from a cluster, came and
+kissed him in silence, and silently went again. It was just such a
+caress as we might give to a disconsolate child, and the king received it
+with a child’s simplicity. Presently after we said good-night and
+withdrew; but Tembinok’ detained Mr. Osbourne, patting the mat by his
+side and saying: ‘Sit down. I feel bad, I like talk.’ Osbourne sat down
+by him. ‘You like some beer?’ said he; and one of the wives produced a
+bottle. The king did not partake, but sat sighing and smoking a
+meerschaum pipe. ‘I very sorry you go,’ he said at last. ‘Miss Stlevens
+he good man, woman he good man, boy he good man; all good man. Woman he
+smart all the same man. My woman’ (glancing towards his wives) ‘he good
+woman, no very smart. I think Miss Stlevens he is chiep all the same
+cap’n man-o-wa’. I think Miss Stlevens he rich man all the same me. All
+go schoona. I very sorry. My patha he go, my uncle he go, my cutcheons
+he go, Miss Stlevens he go: all go. You no see king cry before. King
+all the same man: feel bad, he cry. I very sorry.’
+
+In the morning it was the common topic in the village that the king had
+wept. To me he said: ‘Last night I no can ’peak: too much here,’ laying
+his hand upon his bosom. ‘Now you go away all the same my pamily. My
+brothers, my uncle go away. All the same.’ This was said with a
+dejection almost passionate. And it was the first time I had heard him
+name his uncle, or indeed employ the word. The same day he sent me a
+present of two corselets, made in the island fashion of plaited fibre,
+heavy and strong. One had been worn by Teñkoruti, one by Tembaitake; and
+the gift being gratefully received, he sent me, on the return of his
+messengers, a third—that of Tembinatake. My curiosity was roused; I
+begged for information as to the three wearers; and the king entered with
+gusto into the details already given. Here was a strange thing, that he
+should have talked so much of his family, and not once mentioned that
+relative of whom he was plainly the most proud. Nay, more: he had
+hitherto boasted of his father; thenceforth he had little to say of him;
+and the qualities for which he had praised him in the past were now
+attributed where they were due,—to the uncle. A confusion might be
+natural enough among islanders, who call all the sons of their
+grandfather by the common name of father. But this was not the case with
+Tembinok’. Now the ice was broken the word uncle was perpetually in his
+mouth; he who had been so ready to confound was now careful to
+distinguish; and the father sank gradually into a self-complacent
+ordinary man, while the uncle rose to his true stature as the hero and
+founder of the race.
+
+The more I heard and the more I considered, the more this mystery of
+Tembinok’s behaviour puzzled and attracted me. And the explanation, when
+it came, was one to strike the imagination of a dramatist. Tembinok’ had
+two brothers. One, detected in private trading, was banished, then
+forgiven, lives to this day in the island, and is the father of the
+heir-apparent, Paul. The other fell beyond forgiveness. I have heard it
+was a love-affair with one of the king’s wives, and the thing is highly
+possible in that romantic archipelago. War was attempted to be levied;
+but Tembinok’ was too swift for the rebels, and the guilty brother
+escaped in a canoe. He did not go alone. Tembinatake had a hand in the
+rebellion, and the man who had gained a kingdom for a weakling brother
+was banished by that brother’s son. The fugitives came to shore in other
+islands, but Tembinok’ remains to this day ignorant of their fate.
+
+So far history. And now a moment for conjecture. Tembinok’ confused
+habitually, not only the attributes and merits of his father and his
+uncle, but their diverse personal appearance. Before he had even spoken,
+or thought to speak, of Tembinatake, he had told me often of a tall, lean
+father, skilled in war, and his own schoolmaster in genealogy and island
+arts. How if both were fathers, one natural, one adoptive? How if the
+heir of Tembaitake, like the heir of Tembinok’ himself, were not a son,
+but an adopted nephew? How if the founder of the monarchy, while he
+worked for his brother, worked at the same time for the child of his
+loins? How if on the death of Tembaitake, the two stronger
+natures, father and son, king and kingmaker, clashed, and Tembinok’, when
+he drove out his uncle, drove out the author of his days? Here is at
+least a tragedy four-square.
+
+The king took us on board in his own gig, dressed for the occasion in the
+naval uniform. He had little to say, he refused refreshments, shook us
+briefly by the hand, and went ashore again. That night the palm-tops of
+Apemama had dipped behind the sea, and the schooner sailed solitary under
+the stars.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+{12} Where that word is used as a salutation I give that form.
+
+{29} In English usually written ‘taboo’: ‘tapu’ is the correct Tahitian
+form.—[ED.]
+
+{86} The reference is to Maka, the Gawaiian missionary, at Butaritari in
+the Gilberts.
+
+{122} Elephantiasis.
+
+{156} Arorai is in the Gilberts, Funafuti in the Ellice Islands.—ED.
+
+{231} Gin and brandy.
+
+{275} In the Gilbert group.
+
+{279a} Copra: the dried kernel of the cocoa-nut, the chief article of
+commerce throughout the Pacific Islands.
+
+{279b} Houses.
+
+{283} Suppose.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SOUTH SEAS***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, In the South Seas, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+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: In the South Seas
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2012 [eBook #464]
+[This file was first posted on January 23, 1996]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SOUTH SEAS***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1908 Chatto &amp; Windus edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>IN THE SOUTH SEAS</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BEING AN
+ACCOUNT OF EXPERIENCES AND</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OBSERVATIONS IN THE MARQUESAS,
+PAUMOTUS</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">AND GILBERT ISLANDS IN THE COURSE
+OF</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">TWO CRUSES, ON THE YACHT
+&lsquo;CASCO&rsquo; (1888)</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">AND THE SCHOONER &lsquo;EQUATOR&rsquo;
+(1889)</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY</span><br
+/>
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p0b.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Decorative graphic"
+title=
+"Decorative graphic"
+src="images/p0s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">FINE-PAPER EDITION</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON<br />
+CHATTO &amp; WINDUS<br />
+1908</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>All rights resverved</i></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">PART 1: THE
+MARQUESAS</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">CHAPTER</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">I.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">AN ISLAND LANDFALL</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">II.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">MAKING FRIENDS</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">III.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE MAROON</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">IV.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">DEATH</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">V.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">DEPOPULATION</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VI.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">CHIEFS AND TAPUS</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VII.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">HATIHEU</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VIII.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE PORT OF ENTRY</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">IX.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE HOUSE OF TEMOANA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">X.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">A PORTRAIT AND A STORY</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">XI.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">LONG-PIG&mdash;A CANNIBAL HIGH
+PLACE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">XII.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE STORY OF A
+PLANTATION</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">XIII.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">CHARACTERS</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">XIV.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">IN A CANNIBAL VALLEY</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">XV.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE TWO CHIEFS OF ATUONA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">PART II: THE
+PAUMOTUS</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">I.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE DANGEROUS
+ARCHIPELAGO&mdash;ATOLLS AT A DISTANCE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">II.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">FAKARAVA: AN ATOLL AT
+HAND</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">III.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">A HOUSE TO LET IN A LOW
+ISLAND</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">IV.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">TRAITS AND SECTS IN THE
+PAUMOTUS</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">V.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">A PAUMOTUAN FUNERAL</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VI.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">GRAVEYARD STORIES</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">PART III: THE
+GILBERTS</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">I.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">BUTARITARI</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">II.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE FOUR BROTHERS</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">III.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">AROUND OUR HOUSE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">IV.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">A TALE OF A TAPU</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">V.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">A TALE OF A TAPU&mdash;</span><span
+class="GutSmall"><i>continued</i></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VI.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE FIVE DAYS&rsquo;
+FESTIVAL</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VII.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">HUSBAND AND WIFE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">PART IV: THE
+GILBERTS&mdash;APEMAMA</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">I.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE ROYAL
+TRADER</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">II.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE KING OF APEMAMA: FOUNDATION OF
+EQUATOR TOWN</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">III.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE PALACE OF
+MANY WOMEN</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">IV.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE KING OF APEMAMA: EQUATOR TOWN
+AND THE PALACE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">V.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">KING AND COMMONS</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VI.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE KING OF APEMAMA:
+DEVIL-WORK</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">VII.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">THE KING OF APEMAMA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2>PART 1: THE MARQUESAS</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I&mdash;AN ISLAND LANDFALL</h3>
+<p>For nearly ten years my health had been declining; and for
+some while before I set forth upon my voyage, I believed I was
+come to the afterpiece of life, and had only the nurse and
+undertaker to expect.&nbsp; It was suggested that I should try
+the South Seas; and I was not unwilling to visit like a ghost,
+and be carried like a bale, among scenes that had attracted me in
+youth and health.&nbsp; I chartered accordingly Dr.
+Merrit&rsquo;s schooner yacht, the <i>Casco</i>, seventy-four
+tons register; sailed from San Francisco towards the end of June
+1888, visited the eastern islands, and was left early the next
+year at Honolulu.&nbsp; Hence, lacking courage to return to my
+old life of the house and sick-room, I set forth to leeward in a
+trading schooner, the <i>Equator</i>, of a little over seventy
+tons, spent four months among the atolls (low coral islands) of
+the Gilbert group, and reached Samoa towards the close of
+&rsquo;89.&nbsp; By that time gratitude and habit were beginning
+to attach me to the islands; I had gained a competency of
+strength; I had made friends; I had learned new interests; the
+time of my voyages had passed like days in fairyland; and I
+decided to remain.&nbsp; I began to prepare these pages at sea,
+on a third cruise, in the trading steamer <i>Janet
+Nicoll</i>.&nbsp; If more days are granted me, they shall be
+passed where I have found life most pleasant and man most
+interesting; the axes of my black boys are already clearing the
+foundations of my future house; and I must learn to address
+readers from the uttermost parts of the sea.</p>
+<p>That I should thus have reversed the verdict of Lord
+Tennyson&rsquo;s hero is less eccentric than appears.&nbsp; Few
+men who come to the islands leave them; they grow grey where they
+alighted; the palm shades and the trade-wind fans them till they
+die, perhaps cherishing to the last the fancy of a visit home,
+which is rarely made, more rarely enjoyed, and yet more rarely
+repeated.&nbsp; No part of the world exerts the same attractive
+power upon the visitor, and the task before me is to communicate
+to fireside travellers some sense of its seduction, and to
+describe the life, at sea and ashore, of many hundred thousand
+persons, some of our own blood and language, all our
+contemporaries, and yet as remote in thought and habit as Rob Roy
+or Barbarossa, the Apostles or the C&aelig;sars.</p>
+<p>The first experience can never be repeated.&nbsp; The first
+love, the first sunrise, the first South Sea island, are memories
+apart and touched a virginity of sense.&nbsp; On the 28th of July
+1888 the moon was an hour down by four in the morning.&nbsp; In
+the east a radiating centre of brightness told of the day; and
+beneath, on the skyline, the morning bank was already building,
+black as ink.&nbsp; We have all read of the swiftness of the
+day&rsquo;s coming and departure in low latitudes; it is a point
+on which the scientific and sentimental tourist are at one, and
+has inspired some tasteful poetry.&nbsp; The period certainly
+varies with the season; but here is one case exactly noted.&nbsp;
+Although the dawn was thus preparing by four, the sun was not up
+till six; and it was half-past five before we could distinguish
+our expected islands from the clouds on the horizon.&nbsp; Eight
+degrees south, and the day two hours a-coming.&nbsp; The interval
+was passed on deck in the silence of expectation, the customary
+thrill of landfall heightened by the strangeness of the shores
+that we were then approaching.&nbsp; Slowly they took shape in
+the attenuating darkness.&nbsp; Ua-huna, piling up to a truncated
+summit, appeared the first upon the starboard bow; almost abeam
+arose our destination, Nuka-hiva, whelmed in cloud; and betwixt
+and to the southward, the first rays of the sun displayed the
+needles of Ua-pu.&nbsp; These pricked about the line of the
+horizon; like the pinnacles of some ornate and monstrous church,
+they stood there, in the sparkling brightness of the morning, the
+fit signboard of a world of wonders.</p>
+<p>Not one soul aboard the <i>Casco</i> had set foot upon the
+islands, or knew, except by accident, one word of any of the
+island tongues; and it was with something perhaps of the same
+anxious pleasure as thrilled the bosom of discoverers that we
+drew near these problematic shores.&nbsp; The land heaved up in
+peaks and rising vales; it fell in cliffs and buttresses; its
+colour ran through fifty modulations in a scale of pearl and rose
+and olive; and it was crowned above by opalescent clouds.&nbsp;
+The suffusion of vague hues deceived the eye; the shadows of
+clouds were confounded with the articulations of the mountains;
+and the isle and its unsubstantial canopy rose and shimmered
+before us like a single mass.&nbsp; There was no beacon, no smoke
+of towns to be expected, no plying pilot.&nbsp; Somewhere, in
+that pale phantasmagoria of cliff and cloud, our haven lay
+concealed; and somewhere to the east of it&mdash;the only
+sea-mark given&mdash;a certain headland, known indifferently as
+Cape Adam and Eve, or Cape Jack and Jane, and distinguished by
+two colossal figures, the gross statuary of nature.&nbsp; These
+we were to find; for these we craned and stared, focused glasses,
+and wrangled over charts; and the sun was overhead and the land
+close ahead before we found them.&nbsp; To a ship approaching,
+like the <i>Casco</i>, from the north, they proved indeed the
+least conspicuous features of a striking coast; the surf flying
+high above its base; strange, austere, and feathered mountains
+rising behind; and Jack and Jane, or Adam and Eve, impending like
+a pair of warts above the breakers.</p>
+<p>Thence we bore away along shore.&nbsp; On our port beam we
+might hear the explosions of the surf; a few birds flew fishing
+under the prow; there was no other sound or mark of life, whether
+of man or beast, in all that quarter of the island.&nbsp; Winged
+by her own impetus and the dying breeze, the <i>Casco</i> skimmed
+under cliffs, opened out a cove, showed us a beach and some green
+trees, and flitted by again, bowing to the swell.&nbsp; The
+trees, from our distance, might have been hazel; the beach might
+have been in Europe; the mountain forms behind modelled in little
+from the Alps, and the forest which clustered on their ramparts a
+growth no more considerable than our Scottish heath.&nbsp; Again
+the cliff yawned, but now with a deeper entry; and the
+<i>Casco</i>, hauling her wind, began to slide into the bay of
+Anaho.&nbsp; The cocoa-palm, that giraffe of vegetables, so
+graceful, so ungainly, to the European eye so foreign, was to be
+seen crowding on the beach, and climbing and fringing the steep
+sides of mountains.&nbsp; Rude and bare hills embraced the inlet
+upon either hand; it was enclosed to the landward by a bulk of
+shattered mountains.&nbsp; In every crevice of that barrier the
+forest harboured, roosting and nestling there like birds about a
+ruin; and far above, it greened and roughened the razor edges of
+the summit.</p>
+<p>Under the eastern shore, our schooner, now bereft of any
+breeze, continued to creep in: the smart creature, when once
+under way, appearing motive in herself.&nbsp; From close aboard
+arose the bleating of young lambs; a bird sang in the hillside;
+the scent of the land and of a hundred fruits or flowers flowed
+forth to meet us; and, presently, a house or two appeared,
+standing high upon the ankles of the hills, and one of these
+surrounded with what seemed a garden.&nbsp; These conspicuous
+habitations, that patch of culture, had we but known it, were a
+mark of the passage of whites; and we might have approached a
+hundred islands and not found their parallel.&nbsp; It was longer
+ere we spied the native village, standing (in the universal
+fashion) close upon a curve of beach, close under a grove of
+palms; the sea in front growling and whitening on a concave arc
+of reef.&nbsp; For the cocoa-tree and the island man are both
+lovers and neighbours of the surf.&nbsp; &lsquo;The coral waxes,
+the palm grows, but man departs,&rsquo; says the sad Tahitian
+proverb; but they are all three, so long as they endure,
+co-haunters of the beach.&nbsp; The mark of anchorage was a
+blow-hole in the rocks, near the south-easterly corner of the
+bay.&nbsp; Punctually to our use, the blow-hole spouted; the
+schooner turned upon her heel; the anchor plunged.&nbsp; It was a
+small sound, a great event; my soul went down with these moorings
+whence no windlass may extract nor any diver fish it up; and I,
+and some part of my ship&rsquo;s company, were from that hour the
+bondslaves of the isles of Vivien.</p>
+<p>Before yet the anchor plunged a canoe was already paddling
+from the hamlet.&nbsp; It contained two men: one white, one brown
+and tattooed across the face with bands of blue, both in
+immaculate white European clothes: the resident trader, Mr.
+Regler, and the native chief, Taipi-Kikino.&nbsp; &lsquo;Captain,
+is it permitted to come on board?&rsquo; were the first words we
+heard among the islands.&nbsp; Canoe followed canoe till the ship
+swarmed with stalwart, six-foot men in every stage of undress;
+some in a shirt, some in a loin-cloth, one in a handkerchief
+imperfectly adjusted; some, and these the more considerable,
+tattooed from head to foot in awful patterns; some barbarous and
+knived; one, who sticks in my memory as something bestial,
+squatting on his hams in a canoe, sucking an orange and spitting
+it out again to alternate sides with ape-like vivacity&mdash;all
+talking, and we could not understand one word; all trying to
+trade with us who had no thought of trading, or offering us
+island curios at prices palpably absurd.&nbsp; There was no word
+of welcome; no show of civility; no hand extended save that of
+the chief and Mr. Regler.&nbsp; As we still continued to refuse
+the proffered articles, complaint ran high and rude; and one, the
+jester of the party, railed upon our meanness amid jeering
+laughter.&nbsp; Amongst other angry
+pleasantries&mdash;&lsquo;Here is a mighty fine ship,&rsquo; said
+he, &lsquo;to have no money on board!&rsquo;&nbsp; I own I was
+inspired with sensible repugnance; even with alarm.&nbsp; The
+ship was manifestly in their power; we had women on board; I knew
+nothing of my guests beyond the fact that they were cannibals;
+the Directory (my only guide) was full of timid cautions; and as
+for the trader, whose presence might else have reassured me, were
+not whites in the Pacific the usual instigators and accomplices
+of native outrage?&nbsp; When he reads this confession, our kind
+friend, Mr. Regler, can afford to smile.</p>
+<p>Later in the day, as I sat writing up my journal, the cabin
+was filled from end to end with Marquesans: three brown-skinned
+generations, squatted cross-legged upon the floor, and regarding
+me in silence with embarrassing eyes.&nbsp; The eyes of all
+Polynesians are large, luminous, and melting; they are like the
+eyes of animals and some Italians.&nbsp; A kind of despair came
+over me, to sit there helpless under all these staring orbs, and
+be thus blocked in a corner of my cabin by this speechless crowd:
+and a kind of rage to think they were beyond the reach of
+articulate communication, like furred animals, or folk born deaf,
+or the dwellers of some alien planet.</p>
+<p>To cross the Channel is, for a boy of twelve, to change
+heavens; to cross the Atlantic, for a man of twenty-four, is
+hardly to modify his diet.&nbsp; But I was now escaped out of the
+shadow of the Roman empire, under whose toppling monuments we
+were all cradled, whose laws and letters are on every hand of us,
+constraining and preventing.&nbsp; I was now to see what men
+might be whose fathers had never studied Virgil, had never been
+conquered by C&aelig;sar, and never been ruled by the wisdom of
+Gaius or Papinian.&nbsp; By the same step I had journeyed forth
+out of that comfortable zone of kindred languages, where the
+curse of Babel is so easy to be remedied; and my new
+fellow-creatures sat before me dumb like images.&nbsp; Methought,
+in my travels, all human relation was to be excluded; and when I
+returned home (for in those days I still projected my return) I
+should have but dipped into a picture-book without a text.&nbsp;
+Nay, and I even questioned if my travels should be much
+prolonged; perhaps they were destined to a speedy end; perhaps my
+subsequent friend, Kauanui, whom I remarked there, sitting silent
+with the rest, for a man of some authority, might leap from his
+hams with an ear-splitting signal, the ship be carried at a rush,
+and the ship&rsquo;s company butchered for the table.</p>
+<p>There could be nothing more natural than these apprehensions,
+nor anything more groundless.&nbsp; In my experience of the
+islands, I had never again so menacing a reception; were I to
+meet with such to-day, I should be more alarmed and tenfold more
+surprised.&nbsp; The majority of Polynesians are easy folk to get
+in touch with, frank, fond of notice, greedy of the least
+affection, like amiable, fawning dogs; and even with the
+Marquesans, so recently and so imperfectly redeemed from a
+blood-boltered barbarism, all were to become our intimates, and
+one, at least, was to mourn sincerely our departure.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER II&mdash;MAKING FRIENDS</h3>
+<p>The impediment of tongues was one that I particularly
+over-estimated.&nbsp; The languages of Polynesia are easy to
+smatter, though hard to speak with elegance.&nbsp; And they are
+extremely similar, so that a person who has a tincture of one or
+two may risk, not without hope, an attempt upon the others.</p>
+<p>And again, not only is Polynesian easy to smatter, but
+interpreters abound.&nbsp; Missionaries, traders, and broken
+white folk living on the bounty of the natives, are to be found
+in almost every isle and hamlet; and even where these are
+unserviceable, the natives themselves have often scraped up a
+little English, and in the French zone (though far less commonly)
+a little French-English, or an efficient pidgin, what is called
+to the westward &lsquo;Beach-la-Mar,&rsquo; comes easy to the
+Polynesian; it is now taught, besides, in the schools of Hawaii;
+and from the multiplicity of British ships, and the nearness of
+the States on the one hand and the colonies on the other, it may
+be called, and will almost certainly become, the tongue of the
+Pacific.&nbsp; I will instance a few examples.&nbsp; I met in
+Majuro a Marshall Island boy who spoke excellent English; this he
+had learned in the German firm in Jaluit, yet did not speak one
+word of German.&nbsp; I heard from a gendarme who had taught
+school in Rapa-iti that while the children had the utmost
+difficulty or reluctance to learn French, they picked up English
+on the wayside, and as if by accident.&nbsp; On one of the most
+out-of-the-way atolls in the Carolines, my friend Mr. Benjamin
+Hird was amazed to find the lads playing cricket on the beach and
+talking English; and it was in English that the crew of the
+<i>Janet Nicoll</i>, a set of black boys from different
+Melanesian islands, communicated with other natives throughout
+the cruise, transmitted orders, and sometimes jested together on
+the fore-hatch.&nbsp; But what struck me perhaps most of all was
+a word I heard on the verandah of the Tribunal at Noumea.&nbsp; A
+case had just been heard&mdash;a trial for infanticide against an
+ape-like native woman; and the audience were smoking cigarettes
+as they awaited the verdict.&nbsp; An anxious, amiable French
+lady, not far from tears, was eager for acquittal, and declared
+she would engage the prisoner to be her children&rsquo;s
+nurse.&nbsp; The bystanders exclaimed at the proposal; the woman
+was a savage, said they, and spoke no language.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Mais</i>, <i>vous savez</i>,&rsquo; objected the fair
+sentimentalist; &lsquo;<i>ils apprennent si vite
+l&rsquo;anglais</i>!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But to be able to speak to people is not all.&nbsp; And in the
+first stage of my relations with natives I was helped by two
+things.&nbsp; To begin with, I was the show-man of the
+<i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; She, her fine lines, tall spars, and snowy
+decks, the crimson fittings of the saloon, and the white, the
+gilt, and the repeating mirrors of the tiny cabin, brought us a
+hundred visitors.&nbsp; The men fathomed out her dimensions with
+their arms, as their fathers fathomed out the ships of Cook; the
+women declared the cabins more lovely than a church; bouncing
+Junos were never weary of sitting in the chairs and contemplating
+in the glass their own bland images; and I have seen one lady
+strip up her dress, and, with cries of wonder and delight, rub
+herself bare-breeched upon the velvet cushions.&nbsp; Biscuit,
+jam, and syrup was the entertainment; and, as in European
+parlours, the photograph album went the round.&nbsp; This sober
+gallery, their everyday costumes and physiognomies, had become
+transformed, in three weeks&rsquo; sailing, into things wonderful
+and rich and foreign; alien faces, barbaric dresses, they were
+now beheld and fingered, in the swerving cabin, with innocent
+excitement and surprise.&nbsp; Her Majesty was often recognised,
+and I have seen French subjects kiss her photograph; Captain
+Speedy&mdash;in an Abyssinian war-dress, supposed to be the
+uniform of the British army&mdash;met with much acceptance; and
+the effigies of Mr. Andrew Lang were admired in the
+Marquesas.&nbsp; There is the place for him to go when he shall
+be weary of Middlesex and Homer.</p>
+<p>It was perhaps yet more important that I had enjoyed in my
+youth some knowledge of our Scots folk of the Highlands and the
+Islands.&nbsp; Not much beyond a century has passed since these
+were in the same convulsive and transitionary state as the
+Marquesans of to-day.&nbsp; In both cases an alien authority
+enforced, the clans disarmed, the chiefs deposed, new customs
+introduced, and chiefly that fashion of regarding money as the
+means and object of existence.&nbsp; The commercial age, in each,
+succeeding at a bound to an age of war abroad and patriarchal
+communism at home.&nbsp; In one the cherished practice of
+tattooing, in the other a cherished costume, proscribed.&nbsp; In
+each a main luxury cut off: beef, driven under cloud of night
+from Lowland pastures, denied to the meat-loving Highlander;
+long-pig, pirated from the next village, to the man-eating
+Kanaka.&nbsp; The grumbling, the secret ferment, the fears and
+resentments, the alarms and sudden councils of Marquesan chiefs,
+reminded me continually of the days of Lovat and Struan.&nbsp;
+Hospitality, tact, natural fine manners, and a touchy punctilio,
+are common to both races: common to both tongues the trick of
+dropping medial consonants.&nbsp; Here is a table of two
+widespread Polynesian words:&mdash;</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center"><i>House</i>.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center"><i>Love</i>. <a
+name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12"
+class="citation">[12]</a></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Tahitian</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">FARE</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">AROHA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>New Zealand</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">WHARE</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Samoan</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">FALE</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">TALOFA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Manihiki</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">FALE</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">ALOHA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Hawaiian</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">HALE</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">ALOHA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Marquesan</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">HA&rsquo;E</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">KAOHA</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>The elision of medial consonants, so marked in these Marquesan
+instances, is no less common both in Gaelic and the Lowland
+Scots.&nbsp; Stranger still, that prevalent Polynesian sound, the
+so-called catch, written with an apostrophe, and often or always
+the gravestone of a perished consonant, is to be heard in
+Scotland to this day.&nbsp; When a Scot pronounces water, better,
+or bottle&mdash;<i>wa&rsquo;er</i>, <i>be&rsquo;er</i>, or
+<i>bo&rsquo;le</i>&mdash;the sound is precisely that of the
+catch; and I think we may go beyond, and say, that if such a
+population could be isolated, and this mispronunciation should
+become the rule, it might prove the first stage of transition
+from <i>t</i> to <i>k</i>, which is the disease of Polynesian
+languages.&nbsp; The tendency of the Marquesans, however, is to
+urge against consonants, or at least on the very common letter
+<i>l</i>, a war of mere extermination.&nbsp; A hiatus is
+agreeable to any Polynesian ear; the ear even of the stranger
+soon grows used to these barbaric voids; but only in the
+Marquesan will you find such names as <i>Haaii</i> and
+<i>Paaaeua</i>, when each individual vowel must be separately
+uttered.</p>
+<p>These points of similarity between a South Sea people and some
+of my own folk at home ran much in my head in the islands; and
+not only inclined me to view my fresh acquaintances with favour,
+but continually modified my judgment.&nbsp; A polite Englishman
+comes to-day to the Marquesans and is amazed to find the men
+tattooed; polite Italians came not long ago to England and found
+our fathers stained with woad; and when I paid the return visit
+as a little boy, I was highly diverted with the backwardness of
+Italy: so insecure, so much a matter of the day and hour, is the
+pre-eminence of race.&nbsp; It was so that I hit upon a means of
+communication which I recommend to travellers.&nbsp; When I
+desired any detail of savage custom, or of superstitious belief,
+I cast back in the story of my fathers, and fished for what I
+wanted with some trait of equal barbarism: Michael Scott, Lord
+Derwentwater&rsquo;s head, the second-sight, the Water
+Kelpie,&mdash;each of these I have found to be a killing bait;
+the black bull&rsquo;s head of Stirling procured me the legend of
+<i>Rahero</i>; and what I knew of the Cluny Macphersons, or the
+Appin Stewarts, enabled me to learn, and helped me to understand,
+about the <i>Tevas</i> of Tahiti.&nbsp; The native was no longer
+ashamed, his sense of kinship grew warmer, and his lips were
+opened.&nbsp; It is this sense of kinship that the traveller must
+rouse and share; or he had better content himself with travels
+from the blue bed to the brown.&nbsp; And the presence of one
+Cockney titterer will cause a whole party to walk in clouds of
+darkness.</p>
+<p>The hamlet of Anaho stands on a margin of flat land between
+the west of the beach and the spring of the impending
+mountains.&nbsp; A grove of palms, perpetually ruffling its green
+fans, carpets it (as for a triumph) with fallen branches, and
+shades it like an arbour.&nbsp; A road runs from end to end of
+the covert among beds of flowers, the milliner&rsquo;s shop of
+the community; and here and there, in the grateful twilight, in
+an air filled with a diversity of scents, and still within
+hearing of the surf upon the reef, the native houses stand in
+scattered neighbourhood.&nbsp; The same word, as we have seen,
+represents in many tongues of Polynesia, with scarce a shade of
+difference, the abode of man.&nbsp; But although the word be the
+same, the structure itself continually varies; and the Marquesan,
+among the most backward and barbarous of islanders, is yet the
+most commodiously lodged.&nbsp; The grass huts of Hawaii, the
+birdcage houses of Tahiti, or the open shed, with the crazy
+Venetian blinds, of the polite Samoan&mdash;none of these can be
+compared with the Marquesan <i>paepae-hae</i>, or dwelling
+platform.&nbsp; The paepae is an oblong terrace built without
+cement or black volcanic stone, from twenty to fifty feet in
+length, raised from four to eight feet from the earth, and
+accessible by a broad stair.&nbsp; Along the back of this, and
+coming to about half its width, runs the open front of the house,
+like a covered gallery: the interior sometimes neat and almost
+elegant in its bareness, the sleeping space divided off by an
+endlong coaming, some bright raiment perhaps hanging from a nail,
+and a lamp and one of White&rsquo;s sewing-machines the only
+marks of civilization.&nbsp; On the outside, at one end of the
+terrace, burns the cooking-fire under a shed; at the other there
+is perhaps a pen for pigs; the remainder is the evening lounge
+and <i>al fresco</i> banquet-hall of the inhabitants.&nbsp; To
+some houses water is brought down the mountains in bamboo pipes,
+perforated for the sake of sweetness.&nbsp; With the Highland
+comparison in my mind, I was struck to remember the sluttish
+mounds of turf and stone in which I have sat and been entertained
+in the Hebrides and the North Islands.&nbsp; Two things, I
+suppose, explain the contrast.&nbsp; In Scotland wood is rare,
+and with materials so rude as turf and stone the very hope of
+neatness is excluded.&nbsp; And in Scotland it is cold.&nbsp;
+Shelter and a hearth are needs so pressing that a man looks not
+beyond; he is out all day after a bare bellyful, and at night
+when he saith, &lsquo;Aha, it is warm!&rsquo; he has not appetite
+for more.&nbsp; Or if for something else, then something higher;
+a fine school of poetry and song arose in these rough shelters,
+and an air like &lsquo;<i>Lochaber no more</i>&rsquo; is an
+evidence of refinement more convincing, as well as more
+imperishable, than a palace.</p>
+<p>To one such dwelling platform a considerable troop of
+relatives and dependants resort.&nbsp; In the hour of the dusk,
+when the fire blazes, and the scent of the cooked breadfruit
+fills the air, and perhaps the lamp glints already between the
+pillars and the house, you shall behold them silently assemble to
+this meal, men, women, and children; and the dogs and pigs frisk
+together up the terrace stairway, switching rival tails.&nbsp;
+The strangers from the ship were soon equally welcome: welcome to
+dip their fingers in the wooden dish, to drink cocoanuts, to
+share the circulating pipe, and to hear and hold high debate
+about the misdeeds of the French, the Panama Canal, or the
+geographical position of San Francisco and New Yo&rsquo;ko.&nbsp;
+In a Highland hamlet, quite out of reach of any tourist, I have
+met the same plain and dignified hospitality.</p>
+<p>I have mentioned two facts&mdash;the distasteful behaviour of
+our earliest visitors, and the case of the lady who rubbed
+herself upon the cushions&mdash;which would give a very false
+opinion of Marquesan manners.&nbsp; The great majority of
+Polynesians are excellently mannered; but the Marquesan stands
+apart, annoying and attractive, wild, shy, and refined.&nbsp; If
+you make him a present he affects to forget it, and it must be
+offered him again at his going: a pretty formality I have found
+nowhere else.&nbsp; A hint will get rid of any one or any number;
+they are so fiercely proud and modest; while many of the more
+lovable but blunter islanders crowd upon a stranger, and can be
+no more driven off than flies.&nbsp; A slight or an insult the
+Marquesan seems never to forget.&nbsp; I was one day talking by
+the wayside with my friend Hoka, when I perceived his eyes
+suddenly to flash and his stature to swell.&nbsp; A white
+horseman was coming down the mountain, and as he passed, and
+while he paused to exchange salutations with myself, Hoka was
+still staring and ruffling like a gamecock.&nbsp; It was a
+Corsican who had years before called him <i>cochon
+sauvage&mdash;co&ccedil;on chauvage</i>, as Hoka mispronounced
+it.&nbsp; With people so nice and so touchy, it was scarce to be
+supposed that our company of greenhorns should not blunder into
+offences.&nbsp; Hoka, on one of his visits, fell suddenly in a
+brooding silence, and presently after left the ship with cold
+formality.&nbsp; When he took me back into favour, he adroitly
+and pointedly explained the nature of my offence: I had asked him
+to sell cocoa-nuts; and in Hoka&rsquo;s view articles of food
+were things that a gentleman should give, not sell; or at least
+that he should not sell to any friend.&nbsp; On another occasion
+I gave my boat&rsquo;s crew a luncheon of chocolate and
+biscuits.&nbsp; I had sinned, I could never learn how, against
+some point of observance; and though I was drily thanked, my
+offerings were left upon the beach.&nbsp; But our worst mistake
+was a slight we put on Toma, Hoka&rsquo;s adoptive father, and in
+his own eyes the rightful chief of Anaho.&nbsp; In the first
+place, we did not call upon him, as perhaps we should, in his
+fine new European house, the only one in the hamlet.&nbsp; In the
+second, when we came ashore upon a visit to his rival,
+Taipi-Kikino, it was Toma whom we saw standing at the head of the
+beach, a magnificent figure of a man, magnificently tattooed; and
+it was of Toma that we asked our question: &lsquo;Where is the
+chief?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;What chief?&rsquo; cried Toma, and
+turned his back on the blasphemers.&nbsp; Nor did he forgive
+us.&nbsp; Hoka came and went with us daily; but, alone I believe
+of all the countryside, neither Toma nor his wife set foot on
+board the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; The temptation resisted it is hard
+for a European to compute.&nbsp; The flying city of Laputa moored
+for a fortnight in St. James&rsquo;s Park affords but a pale
+figure of the <i>Casco</i> anchored before Anaho; for the
+Londoner has still his change of pleasures, but the Marquesan
+passes to his grave through an unbroken uniformity of days.</p>
+<p>On the afternoon before it was intended we should sail, a
+valedictory party came on board: nine of our particular friends
+equipped with gifts and dressed as for a festival.&nbsp; Hoka,
+the chief dancer and singer, the greatest dandy of Anaho, and one
+of the handsomest young fellows in the world-sullen, showy,
+dramatic, light as a feather and strong as an ox&mdash;it would
+have been hard, on that occasion, to recognise, as he sat there
+stooped and silent, his face heavy and grey.&nbsp; It was strange
+to see the lad so much affected; stranger still to recognise in
+his last gift one of the curios we had refused on the first day,
+and to know our friend, so gaily dressed, so plainly moved at our
+departure, for one of the half-naked crew that had besieged and
+insulted us on our arrival: strangest of all, perhaps, to find,
+in that carved handle of a fan, the last of those curiosities of
+the first day which had now all been given to us by their
+possessors&mdash;their chief merchandise, for which they had
+sought to ransom us as long as we were strangers, which they
+pressed on us for nothing as soon as we were friends.&nbsp; The
+last visit was not long protracted.&nbsp; One after another they
+shook hands and got down into their canoe; when Hoka turned his
+back immediately upon the ship, so that we saw his face no
+more.&nbsp; Taipi, on the other hand, remained standing and
+facing us with gracious valedictory gestures; and when Captain
+Otis dipped the ensign, the whole party saluted with their
+hats.&nbsp; This was the farewell; the episode of our visit to
+Anaho was held concluded; and though the <i>Casco</i> remained
+nearly forty hours at her moorings, not one returned on board,
+and I am inclined to think they avoided appearing on the
+beach.&nbsp; This reserve and dignity is the finest trait of the
+Marquesan.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER III&mdash;THE MAROON</h3>
+<p>Of the beauties of Anaho books might be written.&nbsp; I
+remember waking about three, to find the air temperate and
+scented.&nbsp; The long swell brimmed into the bay, and seemed to
+fill it full and then subside.&nbsp; Gently, deeply, and silently
+the <i>Casco</i> rolled; only at times a block piped like a
+bird.&nbsp; Oceanward, the heaven was bright with stars and the
+sea with their reflections.&nbsp; If I looked to that side, I
+might have sung with the Hawaiian poet:</p>
+<blockquote><p><i>Ua maomao ka lani</i>, <i>ua kahaea
+luna</i>,<br />
+<i>Ua pipi ka maka o ka hoku</i>.<br />
+(The heavens were fair, they stretched above,<br />
+Many were the eyes of the stars.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And then I turned shoreward, and high squalls were overhead;
+the mountains loomed up black; and I could have fancied I had
+slipped ten thousand miles away and was anchored in a Highland
+loch; that when the day came, it would show pine, and heather,
+and green fern, and roofs of turf sending up the smoke of peats;
+and the alien speech that should next greet my ears must be
+Gaelic, not Kanaka.</p>
+<p>And day, when it came, brought other sights and
+thoughts.&nbsp; I have watched the morning break in many quarters
+of the world; it has been certainly one of the chief joys of my
+existence, and the dawn that I saw with most emotion shone upon
+the bay of Anaho.&nbsp; The mountains abruptly overhang the port
+with every variety of surface and of inclination, lawn, and
+cliff, and forest.&nbsp; Not one of these but wore its proper
+tint of saffron, of sulphur, of the clove, and of the rose.&nbsp;
+The lustre was like that of satin; on the lighter hues there
+seemed to float an efflorescence; a solemn bloom appeared on the
+more dark.&nbsp; The light itself was the ordinary light of
+morning, colourless and clean; and on this ground of jewels,
+pencilled out the least detail of drawing.&nbsp; Meanwhile,
+around the hamlet, under the palms, where the blue shadow
+lingered, the red coals of cocoa husk and the light trails of
+smoke betrayed the awakening business of the day; along the beach
+men and women, lads and lasses, were returning from the bath in
+bright raiment, red and blue and green, such as we delighted to
+see in the coloured little pictures of our childhood; and
+presently the sun had cleared the eastern hill, and the glow of
+the day was over all.</p>
+<p>The glow continued and increased, the business, from the main
+part, ceased before it had begun.&nbsp; Twice in the day there
+was a certain stir of shepherding along the seaward hills.&nbsp;
+At times a canoe went out to fish.&nbsp; At times a woman or two
+languidly filled a basket in the cotton patch.&nbsp; At times a
+pipe would sound out of the shadow of a house, ringing the
+changes on its three notes, with an effect like <i>Que le jour me
+dure</i>, repeated endlessly.&nbsp; Or at times, across a corner
+of the bay, two natives might communicate in the Marquesan manner
+with conventional whistlings.&nbsp; All else was sleep and
+silence.&nbsp; The surf broke and shone around the shores; a
+species of black crane fished in the broken water; the black pigs
+were continually galloping by on some affair; but the people
+might never have awaked, or they might all be dead.</p>
+<p>My favourite haunt was opposite the hamlet, where was a
+landing in a cove under a lianaed cliff.&nbsp; The beach was
+lined with palms and a tree called the purao, something between
+the fig and mulberry in growth, and bearing a flower like a great
+yellow poppy with a maroon heart.&nbsp; In places rocks
+encroached upon the sand; the beach would be all submerged; and
+the surf would bubble warmly as high as to my knees, and play
+with cocoa-nut husks as our more homely ocean plays with wreck
+and wrack and bottles.&nbsp; As the reflux drew down, marvels of
+colour and design streamed between my feet; which I would grasp
+at, miss, or seize: now to find them what they promised, shells
+to grace a cabinet or be set in gold upon a lady&rsquo;s finger;
+now to catch only <i>maya</i> of coloured sand, pounded fragments
+and pebbles, that, as soon as they were dry, became as dull and
+homely as the flints upon a garden path.&nbsp; I have toiled at
+this childish pleasure for hours in the strong sun, conscious of
+my incurable ignorance; but too keenly pleased to be
+ashamed.&nbsp; Meanwhile, the blackbird (or his tropical
+understudy) would be fluting in the thickets overhead.</p>
+<p>A little further, in the turn of the bay, a streamlet trickled
+in the bottom of a den, thence spilling down a stair of rock into
+the sea.&nbsp; The draught of air drew down under the foliage in
+the very bottom of the den, which was a perfect arbour for
+coolness.&nbsp; In front it stood open on the blue bay and the
+<i>Casco</i> lying there under her awning and her cheerful
+colours.&nbsp; Overhead was a thatch of puraos, and over these
+again palms brandished their bright fans, as I have seen a
+conjurer make himself a halo out of naked swords.&nbsp; For in
+this spot, over a neck of low land at the foot of the mountains,
+the trade-wind streams into Anaho Bay in a flood of almost
+constant volume and velocity, and of a heavenly coolness.</p>
+<p>It chanced one day that I was ashore in the cove, with Mrs.
+Stevenson and the ship&rsquo;s cook.&nbsp; Except for the
+<i>Casco</i> lying outside, and a crane or two, and the ever-busy
+wind and sea, the face of the world was of a prehistoric
+emptiness; life appeared to stand stock-still, and the sense of
+isolation was profound and refreshing.&nbsp; On a sudden, the
+trade-wind, coming in a gust over the isthmus, struck and
+scattered the fans of the palms above the den; and, behold! in
+two of the tops there sat a native, motionless as an idol and
+watching us, you would have said, without a wink.&nbsp; The next
+moment the tree closed, and the glimpse was gone.&nbsp; This
+discovery of human presences latent overhead in a place where we
+had supposed ourselves alone, the immobility of our tree-top
+spies, and the thought that perhaps at all hours we were
+similarly supervised, struck us with a chill.&nbsp; Talk
+languished on the beach.&nbsp; As for the cook (whose conscience
+was not clear), he never afterwards set foot on shore, and twice,
+when the <i>Casco</i> appeared to be driving on the rocks, it was
+amusing to observe that man&rsquo;s alacrity; death, he was
+persuaded, awaiting him upon the beach.&nbsp; It was more than a
+year later, in the Gilberts, that the explanation dawned upon
+myself.&nbsp; The natives were drawing palm-tree wine, a thing
+forbidden by law; and when the wind thus suddenly revealed them,
+they were doubtless more troubled than ourselves.</p>
+<p>At the top of the den there dwelt an old, melancholy, grizzled
+man of the name of Tari (Charlie) Coffin.&nbsp; He was a native
+of Oahu, in the Sandwich Islands; and had gone to sea in his
+youth in the American whalers; a circumstance to which he owed
+his name, his English, his down-east twang, and the misfortune of
+his innocent life.&nbsp; For one captain, sailing out of New
+Bedford, carried him to Nuka-hiva and marooned him there among
+the cannibals.&nbsp; The motive for this act was inconceivably
+small; poor Tari&rsquo;s wages, which were thus economised, would
+scarce have shook the credit of the New Bedford owners.&nbsp; And
+the act itself was simply murder.&nbsp; Tari&rsquo;s life must
+have hung in the beginning by a hair.&nbsp; In the grief and
+terror of that time, it is not unlikely he went mad, an infirmity
+to which he was still liable; or perhaps a child may have taken a
+fancy to him and ordained him to be spared.&nbsp; He escaped at
+least alive, married in the island, and when I knew him was a
+widower with a married son and a granddaughter.&nbsp; But the
+thought of Oahu haunted him; its praise was for ever on his lips;
+he beheld it, looking back, as a place of ceaseless feasting,
+song, and dance; and in his dreams I daresay he revisits it with
+joy.&nbsp; I wonder what he would think if he could be carried
+there indeed, and see the modern town of Honolulu brisk with
+traffic, and the palace with its guards, and the great hotel, and
+Mr. Berger&rsquo;s band with their uniforms and outlandish
+instruments; or what he would think to see the brown faces grown
+so few and the white so many; and his father&rsquo;s land sold,
+for planting sugar, and his father&rsquo;s house quite perished,
+or perhaps the last of them struck leprous and immured between
+the surf and the cliffs on Molokai?&nbsp; So simply, even in
+South Sea Islands, and so sadly, the changes come.</p>
+<p>Tari was poor, and poorly lodged.&nbsp; His house was a wooden
+frame, run up by Europeans; it was indeed his official residence,
+for Tari was the shepherd of the promontory sheep.&nbsp; I can
+give a perfect inventory of its contents: three kegs, a tin
+biscuit-box, an iron saucepan, several cocoa-shell cups, a
+lantern, and three bottles, probably containing oil; while the
+clothes of the family and a few mats were thrown across the open
+rafters.&nbsp; Upon my first meeting with this exile he had
+conceived for me one of the baseless island friendships, had
+given me nuts to drink, and carried me up the den &lsquo;to see
+my house&rsquo;&mdash;the only entertainment that he had to
+offer.&nbsp; He liked the &lsquo;Amelican,&rsquo; he said, and
+the &lsquo;Inglisman,&rsquo; but the &lsquo;Flessman&rsquo; was
+his abhorrence; and he was careful to explain that if he had
+thought us &lsquo;Fless,&rsquo; we should have had none of his
+nuts, and never a sight of his house.&nbsp; His distaste for the
+French I can partly understand, but not at all his toleration of
+the Anglo-Saxon.&nbsp; The next day he brought me a pig, and some
+days later one of our party going ashore found him in act to
+bring a second.&nbsp; We were still strange to the islands; we
+were pained by the poor man&rsquo;s generosity, which he could
+ill afford, and, by a natural enough but quite unpardonable
+blunder, we refused the pig.&nbsp; Had Tari been a Marquesan we
+should have seen him no more; being what he was, the most mild,
+long-suffering, melancholy man, he took a revenge a hundred times
+more painful.&nbsp; Scarce had the canoe with the nine villagers
+put off from their farewell before the <i>Casco</i> was boarded
+from the other side.&nbsp; It was Tari; coming thus late because
+he had no canoe of his own, and had found it hard to borrow one;
+coming thus solitary (as indeed we always saw him), because he
+was a stranger in the land, and the dreariest of company.&nbsp;
+The rest of my family basely fled from the encounter.&nbsp; I
+must receive our injured friend alone; and the interview must
+have lasted hard upon an hour, for he was loath to tear himself
+away.&nbsp; &lsquo;You go &rsquo;way.&nbsp; I see you no
+more&mdash;no, sir!&rsquo; he lamented; and then looking about
+him with rueful admiration, &lsquo;This goodee ship&mdash;no,
+sir!&mdash;goodee ship!&rsquo; he would exclaim: the &lsquo;no,
+sir,&rsquo; thrown out sharply through the nose upon a rising
+inflection, an echo from New Bedford and the fallacious
+whaler.&nbsp; From these expressions of grief and praise, he
+would return continually to the case of the rejected pig.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I like give present all &rsquo;e same you,&rsquo; he
+complained; &lsquo;only got pig: you no take him!&rsquo;&nbsp; He
+was a poor man; he had no choice of gifts; he had only a pig, he
+repeated; and I had refused it.&nbsp; I have rarely been more
+wretched than to see him sitting there, so old, so grey, so poor,
+so hardly fortuned, of so rueful a countenance, and to
+appreciate, with growing keenness, the affront which I had so
+innocently dealt him; but it was one of those cases in which
+speech is vain.</p>
+<p>Tari&rsquo;s son was smiling and inert; his daughter-in-law, a
+girl of sixteen, pretty, gentle, and grave, more intelligent than
+most Anaho women, and with a fair share of French; his
+grandchild, a mite of a creature at the breast.&nbsp; I went up
+the den one day when Tari was from home, and found the son making
+a cotton sack, and madame suckling mademoiselle.&nbsp; When I had
+sat down with them on the floor, the girl began to question me
+about England; which I tried to describe, piling the pan and the
+cocoa shells one upon another to represent the houses, and
+explaining, as best I was able, and by word and gesture, the
+over-population, the hunger, and the perpetual toil.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Pas de cocotiers</i>? <i>pas do popoi</i>?&rsquo; she
+asked.&nbsp; I told her it was too cold, and went through an
+elaborate performance, shutting out draughts, and crouching over
+an imaginary fire, to make sure she understood.&nbsp; But she
+understood right well; remarked it must be bad for the health,
+and sat a while gravely reflecting on that picture of unwonted
+sorrows.&nbsp; I am sure it roused her pity, for it struck in her
+another thought always uppermost in the Marquesan bosom; and she
+began with a smiling sadness, and looking on me out of melancholy
+eyes, to lament the decease of her own people.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Ici pas de Kanaques</i>,&rsquo; said she; and taking
+the baby from her breast, she held it out to me with both her
+hands.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Tenez</i>&mdash;a little baby like this;
+then dead.&nbsp; All the Kanaques die.&nbsp; Then no
+more.&rsquo;&nbsp; The smile, and this instancing by the
+girl-mother of her own tiny flesh and blood, affected me
+strangely; they spoke of so tranquil a despair.&nbsp; Meanwhile
+the husband smilingly made his sack; and the unconscious babe
+struggled to reach a pot of raspberry jam, friendship&rsquo;s
+offering, which I had just brought up the den; and in a
+perspective of centuries I saw their case as ours, death coming
+in like a tide, and the day already numbered when there should be
+no more Beretani, and no more of any race whatever, and (what
+oddly touched me) no more literary works and no more readers.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV&mdash;DEATH</h3>
+<p>The thought of death, I have said, is uppermost in the mind of
+the Marquesan.&nbsp; It would be strange if it were
+otherwise.&nbsp; The race is perhaps the handsomest extant.&nbsp;
+Six feet is about the middle height of males; they are strongly
+muscled, free from fat, swift in action, graceful in repose; and
+the women, though fatter and duller, are still comely
+animals.&nbsp; To judge by the eye, there is no race more viable;
+and yet death reaps them with both hands.&nbsp; When Bishop
+Dordillon first came to Tai-o-hae, he reckoned the inhabitants at
+many thousands; he was but newly dead, and in the same bay
+Stanislao Moanatini counted on his fingers eight residual
+natives.&nbsp; Or take the valley of Hapaa, known to readers of
+Herman Melville under the grotesque misspelling of Hapar.&nbsp;
+There are but two writers who have touched the South Seas with
+any genius, both Americans: Melville and Charles Warren Stoddard;
+and at the christening of the first and greatest, some
+influential fairy must have been neglected: &lsquo;He shall be
+able to see,&rsquo; &lsquo;He shall be able to tell,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;He shall be able to charm,&rsquo; said the friendly
+godmothers; &lsquo;But he shall not be able to hear,&rsquo;
+exclaimed the last.&nbsp; The tribe of Hapaa is said to have
+numbered some four hundred, when the small-pox came and reduced
+them by one-fourth.&nbsp; Six months later a woman developed
+tubercular consumption; the disease spread like a fire about the
+valley, and in less than a year two survivors, a man and a woman,
+fled from that new-created solitude.&nbsp; A similar Adam and Eve
+may some day wither among new races, the tragic residue of
+Britain.&nbsp; When I first heard this story the date staggered
+me; but I am now inclined to think it possible.&nbsp; Early in
+the year of my visit, for example, or late the year before, a
+first case of phthisis appeared in a household of seventeen
+persons, and by the month of August, when the tale was told me,
+one soul survived, and that was a boy who had been absent at his
+schooling.&nbsp; And depopulation works both ways, the doors of
+death being set wide open, and the door of birth almost
+closed.&nbsp; Thus, in the half-year ending July 1888 there were
+twelve deaths and but one birth in the district of the
+Hatiheu.&nbsp; Seven or eight more deaths were to be looked for
+in the ordinary course; and M. Aussel, the observant gendarme,
+knew of but one likely birth.&nbsp; At this rate it is no matter
+of surprise if the population in that part should have declined
+in forty years from six thousand to less than four hundred; which
+are, once more on the authority of M. Aussel, the estimated
+figures.&nbsp; And the rate of decline must have even accelerated
+towards the end.</p>
+<p>A good way to appreciate the depopulation is to go by land
+from Anaho to Hatiheu on the adjacent bay.&nbsp; The road is good
+travelling, but cruelly steep.&nbsp; We seemed scarce to have
+passed the deserted house which stands highest in Anaho before we
+were looking dizzily down upon its roof; the <i>Casco</i> well
+out in the bay, and rolling for a wager, shrank visibly; and
+presently through the gap of Tari&rsquo;s isthmus, Ua-huna was
+seen to hang cloudlike on the horizon.&nbsp; Over the summit,
+where the wind blew really chill, and whistled in the reed-like
+grass, and tossed the grassy fell of the pandanus, we stepped
+suddenly, as through a door, into the next vale and bay of
+Hatiheu.&nbsp; A bowl of mountains encloses it upon three
+sides.&nbsp; On the fourth this rampart has been bombarded into
+ruins, runs down to seaward in imminent and shattered crags, and
+presents the one practicable breach of the blue bay.&nbsp; The
+interior of this vessel is crowded with lovely and valuable
+trees,&mdash;orange, breadfruit, mummy-apple, cocoa, the island
+chestnut, and for weeds, the pine and the banana.&nbsp; Four
+perennial streams water and keep it green; and along the dell,
+first of one, then of another, of these, the road, for a
+considerable distance, descends into this fortunate valley.&nbsp;
+The song of the waters and the familiar disarray of boulders gave
+us a strong sense of home, which the exotic foliage, the
+daft-like growth of the pandanus, the buttressed trunk of the
+banyan, the black pigs galloping in the bush, and the
+architecture of the native houses dissipated ere it could be
+enjoyed.</p>
+<p>The houses on the Hatiheu side begin high up; higher yet, the
+more melancholy spectacle of empty paepaes.&nbsp; When a native
+habitation is deserted, the superstructure&mdash;pandanus thatch,
+wattle, unstable tropical timber&mdash;speedily rots, and is
+speedily scattered by the wind.&nbsp; Only the stones of the
+terrace endure; nor can any ruin, cairn, or standing stone, or
+vitrified fort present a more stern appearance of
+antiquity.&nbsp; We must have passed from six to eight of these
+now houseless platforms.&nbsp; On the main road of the island,
+where it crosses the valley of Taipi, Mr. Osbourne tells me they
+are to be reckoned by the dozen; and as the roads have been made
+long posterior to their erection, perhaps to their desertion, and
+must simply be regarded as lines drawn at random through the
+bush, the forest on either hand must be equally filled with these
+survivals: the gravestones of whole families.&nbsp; Such ruins
+are tapu <a name="citation29"></a><a href="#footnote29"
+class="citation">[29]</a> in the strictest sense; no native must
+approach them; they have become outposts of the kingdom of the
+grave.&nbsp; It might appear a natural and pious custom in the
+hundreds who are left, the rearguard of perished thousands, that
+their feet should leave untrod these hearthstones of their
+fathers.&nbsp; I believe, in fact, the custom rests on different
+and more grim conceptions.&nbsp; But the house, the grave, and
+even the body of the dead, have been always particularly honoured
+by Marquesans.&nbsp; Until recently the corpse was sometimes kept
+in the family and daily oiled and sunned, until, by gradual and
+revolting stages, it dried into a kind of mummy.&nbsp; Offerings
+are still laid upon the grave.&nbsp; In Traitor&rsquo;s Bay, Mr.
+Osbourne saw a man buy a looking-glass to lay upon his
+son&rsquo;s.&nbsp; And the sentiment against the desecration of
+tombs, thoughtlessly ruffled in the laying down of the new roads,
+is a chief ingredient in the native hatred for the French.</p>
+<p>The Marquesan beholds with dismay the approaching extinction
+of his race.&nbsp; The thought of death sits down with him to
+meat, and rises with him from his bed; he lives and breathes
+under a shadow of mortality awful to support; and he is so inured
+to the apprehension that he greets the reality with relief.&nbsp;
+He does not even seek to support a disappointment; at an affront,
+at a breach of one of his fleeting and communistic love-affairs,
+he seeks an instant refuge in the grave.&nbsp; Hanging is now the
+fashion.&nbsp; I heard of three who had hanged themselves in the
+west end of Hiva-oa during the first half of 1888; but though
+this be a common form of suicide in other parts of the South
+Seas, I cannot think it will continue popular in the
+Marquesas.&nbsp; Far more suitable to Marquesan sentiment is the
+old form of poisoning with the fruit of the eva, which offers to
+the native suicide a cruel but deliberate death, and gives time
+for those decencies of the last hour, to which he attaches such
+remarkable importance.&nbsp; The coffin can thus be at hand, the
+pigs killed, the cry of the mourners sounding already through the
+house; and then it is, and not before, that the Marquesan is
+conscious of achievement, his life all rounded in, his robes
+(like C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s) adjusted for the final act.&nbsp;
+Praise not any man till he is dead, said the ancients; envy not
+any man till you hear the mourners, might be the Marquesan
+parody.&nbsp; The coffin, though of late introduction, strangely
+engages their attention.&nbsp; It is to the mature Marquesan what
+a watch is to the European schoolboy.&nbsp; For ten years Queen
+Vaekehu had dunned the fathers; at last, but the other day, they
+let her have her will, gave her her coffin, and the woman&rsquo;s
+soul is at rest.&nbsp; I was told a droll instance of the force
+of this preoccupation.&nbsp; The Polynesians are subject to a
+disease seemingly rather of the will than of the body.&nbsp; I
+was told the Tahitians have a word for it, <i>erimatua</i>, but
+cannot find it in my dictionary.&nbsp; A gendarme, M. Nouveau,
+has seen men beginning to succumb to this insubstantial malady,
+has routed them from their houses, turned them on to do their
+trick upon the roads, and in two days has seen them cured.&nbsp;
+But this other remedy is more original: a Marquesan, dying of
+this discouragement&mdash;perhaps I should rather say this
+acquiescence&mdash;has been known, at the fulfilment of his
+crowning wish, on the mere sight of that desired hermitage, his
+coffin&mdash;to revive, recover, shake off the hand of death, and
+be restored for years to his occupations&mdash;carving tikis
+(idols), let us say, or braiding old men&rsquo;s beards.&nbsp;
+From all this it may be conceived how easily they meet death when
+it approaches naturally.&nbsp; I heard one example, grim and
+picturesque.&nbsp; In the time of the small-pox in Hapaa, an old
+man was seized with the disease; he had no thought of recovery;
+had his grave dug by a wayside, and lived in it for near a
+fortnight, eating, drinking, and smoking with the passers-by,
+talking mostly of his end, and equally unconcerned for himself
+and careless of the friends whom he infected.</p>
+<p>This proneness to suicide, and loose seat in life, is not
+peculiar to the Marquesan.&nbsp; What is peculiar is the
+widespread depression and acceptance of the national end.&nbsp;
+Pleasures are neglected, the dance languishes, the songs are
+forgotten.&nbsp; It is true that some, and perhaps too many, of
+them are proscribed; but many remain, if there were spirit to
+support or to revive them.&nbsp; At the last feast of the
+Bastille, Stanislao Moanatini shed tears when he beheld the
+inanimate performance of the dancers.&nbsp; When the people sang
+for us in Anaho, they must apologise for the smallness of their
+repertory.&nbsp; They were only young folk present, they said,
+and it was only the old that knew the songs.&nbsp; The whole body
+of Marquesan poetry and music was being suffered to die out with
+a single dispirited generation.&nbsp; The full import is apparent
+only to one acquainted with other Polynesian races; who knows how
+the Samoan coins a fresh song for every trifling incident, or who
+has heard (on Penrhyn, for instance) a band of little stripling
+maids from eight to twelve keep up their minstrelsy for hours
+upon a stretch, one song following another without pause.&nbsp;
+In like manner, the Marquesan, never industrious, begins now to
+cease altogether from production.&nbsp; The exports of the group
+decline out of all proportion even with the death-rate of the
+islanders.&nbsp; &lsquo;The coral waxes, the palm grows, and man
+departs,&rsquo; says the Marquesan; and he folds his hands.&nbsp;
+And surely this is nature.&nbsp; Fond as it may appear, we labour
+and refrain, not for the rewards of any single life, but with a
+timid eye upon the lives and memories of our successors; and
+where no one is to succeed, of his own family, or his own tongue,
+I doubt whether Rothschilds would make money or Cato practise
+virtue.&nbsp; It is natural, also, that a temporary stimulus
+should sometimes rouse the Marquesan from his lethargy.&nbsp;
+Over all the landward shore of Anaho cotton runs like a wild
+weed; man or woman, whoever comes to pick it, may earn a dollar
+in the day; yet when we arrived, the trader&rsquo;s store-house
+was entirely empty; and before we left it was near full.&nbsp; So
+long as the circus was there, so long as the <i>Casco</i> was yet
+anchored in the bay, it behoved every one to make his visit; and
+to this end every woman must have a new dress, and every man a
+shirt and trousers.&nbsp; Never before, in Mr. Regler&rsquo;s
+experience, had they displayed so much activity.</p>
+<p>In their despondency there is an element of dread.&nbsp; The
+fear of ghosts and of the dark is very deeply written in the mind
+of the Polynesian; not least of the Marquesan.&nbsp; Poor Taipi,
+the chief of Anaho, was condemned to ride to Hatiheu on a
+moonless night.&nbsp; He borrowed a lantern, sat a long while
+nerving himself for the adventure, and when he at last departed,
+wrung the <i>Cascos</i> by the hand as for a final
+separation.&nbsp; Certain presences, called Vehinehae, frequent
+and make terrible the nocturnal roadside; I was told by one they
+were like so much mist, and as the traveller walked into them
+dispersed and dissipated; another described them as being shaped
+like men and having eyes like cats; from none could I obtain the
+smallest clearness as to what they did, or wherefore they were
+dreaded.&nbsp; We may be sure at least they represent the dead;
+for the dead, in the minds of the islanders, are
+all-pervasive.&nbsp; &lsquo;When a native says that he is a
+man,&rsquo; writes Dr. Codrington, &lsquo;he means that he is a
+man and not a ghost; not that he is a man and not a beast.&nbsp;
+The intelligent agents of this world are to his mind the men who
+are alive, and the ghosts the men who are dead.&rsquo;&nbsp; Dr.
+Codrington speaks of Melanesia; from what I have learned his
+words are equally true of the Polynesian.&nbsp; And yet
+more.&nbsp; Among cannibal Polynesians a dreadful suspicion rests
+generally on the dead; and the Marquesans, the greatest cannibals
+of all, are scarce likely to be free from similar beliefs.&nbsp;
+I hazard the guess that the Vehinehae are the hungry spirits of
+the dead, continuing their life&rsquo;s business of the cannibal
+ambuscade, and lying everywhere unseen, and eager to devour the
+living.&nbsp; Another superstition I picked up through the
+troubled medium of Tari Coffin&rsquo;s English.&nbsp; The dead,
+he told me, came and danced by night around the paepae of their
+former family; the family were thereupon overcome by some emotion
+(but whether of pious sorrow or of fear I could not gather), and
+must &lsquo;make a feast,&rsquo; of which fish, pig, and popoi
+were indispensable ingredients.&nbsp; So far this is clear
+enough.&nbsp; But here Tari went on to instance the new house of
+Toma and the house-warming feast which was just then in
+preparation as instances in point.&nbsp; Dare we indeed string
+them together, and add the case of the deserted ruin, as though
+the dead continually besieged the paepaes of the living: were
+kept at arm&rsquo;s-length, even from the first foundation, only
+by propitiatory feasts, and, so soon as the fire of life went out
+upon the hearth, swarmed back into possession of their ancient
+seat?</p>
+<p>I speak by guess of these Marquesan superstitions.&nbsp; On
+the cannibal ghost I shall return elsewhere with certainty.&nbsp;
+And it is enough, for the present purpose, to remark that the men
+of the Marquesas, from whatever reason, fear and shrink from the
+presence of ghosts.&nbsp; Conceive how this must tell upon the
+nerves in islands where the number of the dead already so far
+exceeds that of the living, and the dead multiply and the living
+dwindle at so swift a rate.&nbsp; Conceive how the remnant
+huddles about the embers of the fire of life; even as old Red
+Indians, deserted on the march and in the snow, the kindly tribe
+all gone, the last flame expiring, and the night around populous
+with wolves.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER V&mdash;DEPOPULATION</h3>
+<p>Over the whole extent of the South Seas, from one tropic to
+another, we find traces of a bygone state of over-population,
+when the resources of even a tropical soil were taxed, and even
+the improvident Polynesian trembled for the future.&nbsp; We may
+accept some of the ideas of Mr. Darwin&rsquo;s theory of coral
+islands, and suppose a rise of the sea, or the subsidence of some
+former continental area, to have driven into the tops of the
+mountains multitudes of refugees.&nbsp; Or we may suppose, more
+soberly, a people of sea-rovers, emigrants from a crowded
+country, to strike upon and settle island after island, and as
+time went on to multiply exceedingly in their new seats.&nbsp; In
+either case the end must be the same; soon or late it must grow
+apparent that the crew are too numerous, and that famine is at
+hand.&nbsp; The Polynesians met this emergent danger with various
+expedients of activity and prevention.&nbsp; A way was found to
+preserve breadfruit by packing it in artificial pits; pits forty
+feet in depth and of proportionate bore are still to be seen, I
+am told, in the Marquesas; and yet even these were insufficient
+for the teeming people, and the annals of the past are gloomy
+with famine and cannibalism.&nbsp; Among the Hawaiians&mdash;a
+hardier people, in a more exacting climate&mdash;agriculture was
+carried far; the land was irrigated with canals; and the
+fish-ponds of Molokai prove the number and diligence of the old
+inhabitants.&nbsp; Meanwhile, over all the island world, abortion
+and infanticide prevailed.&nbsp; On coral atolls, where the
+danger was most plainly obvious, these were enforced by law and
+sanctioned by punishment.&nbsp; On Vaitupu, in the Ellices, only
+two children were allowed to a couple; on Nukufetau, but
+one.&nbsp; On the latter the punishment was by fine; and it is
+related that the fine was sometimes paid, and the child
+spared.</p>
+<p>This is characteristic.&nbsp; For no people in the world are
+so fond or so long-suffering with children&mdash;children make
+the mirth and the adornment of their homes, serving them for
+playthings and for picture-galleries.&nbsp; &lsquo;Happy is the
+man that has his quiver full of them.&rsquo;&nbsp; The stray
+bastard is contended for by rival families; and the natural and
+the adopted children play and grow up together
+undistinguished.&nbsp; The spoiling, and I may almost say the
+deification, of the child, is nowhere carried so far as in the
+eastern islands; and furthest, according to my opportunities of
+observation, in the Paumotu group, the so-called Low or Dangerous
+Archipelago.&nbsp; I have seen a Paumotuan native turn from me
+with embarrassment and disaffection because I suggested that a
+brat would be the better for a beating.&nbsp; It is a daily
+matter in some eastern islands to see a child strike or even
+stone its mother, and the mother, so far from punishing, scarce
+ventures to resist.&nbsp; In some, when his child was born, a
+chief was superseded and resigned his name; as though, like a
+drone, he had then fulfilled the occasion of his being.&nbsp; And
+in some the lightest words of children had the weight of
+oracles.&nbsp; Only the other day, in the Marquesas, if a child
+conceived a distaste to any stranger, I am assured the stranger
+would be slain.&nbsp; And I shall have to tell in another place
+an instance of the opposite: how a child in Manihiki having taken
+a fancy to myself, her adoptive parents at once accepted the
+situation and loaded me with gifts.</p>
+<p>With such sentiments the necessity for child-destruction would
+not fail to clash, and I believe we find the trace of divided
+feeling in the Tahitian brotherhood of Oro.&nbsp; At a certain
+date a new god was added to the Society-Island Olympus, or an old
+one refurbished and made popular.&nbsp; Oro was his name, and he
+may be compared with the Bacchus of the ancients.&nbsp; His
+zealots sailed from bay to bay, and from island to island; they
+were everywhere received with feasting; wore fine clothes; sang,
+danced, acted; gave exhibitions of dexterity and strength; and
+were the artists, the acrobats, the bards, and the harlots of the
+group.&nbsp; Their life was public and epicurean; their
+initiation a mystery; and the highest in the land aspired to join
+the brotherhood.&nbsp; If a couple stood next in line to a
+high-chieftaincy, they were suffered, on grounds of policy, to
+spare one child; all other children, who had a father or a mother
+in the company of Oro, stood condemned from the moment of
+conception.&nbsp; A freemasonry, an agnostic sect, a company of
+artists, its members all under oath to spread unchastity, and all
+forbidden to leave offspring&mdash;I do not know how it may
+appear to others, but to me the design seems obvious.&nbsp;
+Famine menacing the islands, and the needful remedy repulsive, it
+was recommended to the native mind by these trappings of mystery,
+pleasure, and parade.&nbsp; This is the more probable, and the
+secret, serious purpose of the institution appears the more
+plainly, if it be true that, after a certain period of life, the
+obligation of the votary was changed; at first, bound to be
+profligate: afterwards, expected to be chaste.</p>
+<p>Here, then, we have one side of the case.&nbsp; Man-eating
+among kindly men, child-murder among child-lovers, industry in a
+race the most idle, invention in a race the least progressive,
+this grim, pagan salvation-army of the brotherhood of Oro, the
+report of early voyagers, the widespread vestiges of former
+habitation, and the universal tradition of the islands, all point
+to the same fact of former crowding and alarm.&nbsp; And to-day
+we are face to face with the reverse.&nbsp; To-day in the
+Marquesas, in the Eight Islands of Hawaii, in Mangareva, in
+Easter Island, we find the same race perishing like flies.&nbsp;
+Why this change?&nbsp; Or, grant that the coming of the whites,
+the change of habits, and the introduction of new maladies and
+vices, fully explain the depopulation, why is that depopulation
+not universal?&nbsp; The population of Tahiti, after a period of
+alarming decrease, has again become stationary.&nbsp; I hear of a
+similar result among some Maori tribes; in many of the Paumotus a
+slight increase is to be observed; and the Samoans are to-day as
+healthy and at least as fruitful as before the change.&nbsp;
+Grant that the Tahitians, the Maoris, and the Paumotuans have
+become inured to the new conditions; and what are we to make of
+the Samoans, who have never suffered?</p>
+<p>Those who are acquainted only with a single group are apt to
+be ready with solutions.&nbsp; Thus I have heard the mortality of
+the Maoris attributed to their change of residence&mdash;from
+fortified hill-tops to the low, marshy vicinity of their
+plantations.&nbsp; How plausible!&nbsp; And yet the Marquesans
+are dying out in the same houses where their fathers
+multiplied.&nbsp; Or take opium.&nbsp; The Marquesas and Hawaii
+are the two groups the most infected with this vice; the
+population of the one is the most civilised, that of the other by
+far the most barbarous, of Polynesians; and they are two of those
+that perish the most rapidly.&nbsp; Here is a strong case against
+opium.&nbsp; But let us take unchastity, and we shall find the
+Marquesas and Hawaii figuring again upon another count.&nbsp;
+Thus, Samoans are the most chaste of Polynesians, and they are to
+this day entirely fertile; Marquesans are the most debauched: we
+have seen how they are perishing; Hawaiians are notoriously lax,
+and they begin to be dotted among deserts.&nbsp; So here is a
+case stronger still against unchastity; and here also we have a
+correction to apply.&nbsp; Whatever the virtues of the Tahitian,
+neither friend nor enemy dares call him chaste; and yet he seems
+to have outlived the time of danger.&nbsp; One last example:
+syphilis has been plausibly credited with much of the
+sterility.&nbsp; But the Samoans are, by all accounts, as
+fruitful as at first; by some accounts more so; and it is not
+seriously to be argued that the Samoans have escaped
+syphilis.</p>
+<p>These examples show how dangerous it is to reason from any
+particular cause, or even from many in a single group.&nbsp; I
+have in my eye an able and amiable pamphlet by the Rev. S. E.
+Bishop: &lsquo;Why are the Hawaiians Dying Out?&rsquo;&nbsp; Any
+one interested in the subject ought to read this tract, which
+contains real information; and yet Mr. Bishop&rsquo;s views would
+have been changed by an acquaintance with other groups.&nbsp;
+Samoa is, for the moment, the main and the most instructive
+exception to the rule.&nbsp; The people are the most chaste and
+one of the most temperate of island peoples.&nbsp; They have
+never been tried and depressed with any grave pestilence.&nbsp;
+Their clothing has scarce been tampered with; at the simple and
+becoming tabard of the girls, Tartuffe, in many another island,
+would have cried out; for the cool, healthy, and modest lava-lava
+or kilt, Tartuffe has managed in many another island to
+substitute stifling and inconvenient trousers.&nbsp; Lastly, and
+perhaps chiefly, so far from their amusements having been
+curtailed, I think they have been, upon the whole,
+extended.&nbsp; The Polynesian falls easily into despondency:
+bereavement, disappointment, the fear of novel visitations, the
+decay or proscription of ancient pleasures, easily incline him to
+be sad; and sadness detaches him from life.&nbsp; The melancholy
+of the Hawaiian and the emptiness of his new life are striking;
+and the remark is yet more apposite to the Marquesas.&nbsp; In
+Samoa, on the other hand, perpetual song and dance, perpetual
+games, journeys, and pleasures, make an animated and a smiling
+picture of the island life.&nbsp; And the Samoans are to-day the
+gayest and the best entertained inhabitants of our planet.&nbsp;
+The importance of this can scarcely be exaggerated.&nbsp; In a
+climate and upon a soil where a livelihood can be had for the
+stooping, entertainment is a prime necessity.&nbsp; It is
+otherwise with us, where life presents us with a daily problem,
+and there is a serious interest, and some of the heat of
+conflict, in the mere continuing to be.&nbsp; So, in certain
+atolls, where there is no great gaiety, but man must bestir
+himself with some vigour for his daily bread, public health and
+the population are maintained; but in the lotos islands, with the
+decay of pleasures, life itself decays.&nbsp; It is from this
+point of view that we may instance, among other causes of
+depression, the decay of war.&nbsp; We have been so long used in
+Europe to that dreary business of war on the great scale,
+trailing epidemics and leaving pestilential corpses in its train,
+that we have almost forgotten its original, the most healthful,
+if not the most humane, of all field
+sports&mdash;hedge-warfare.&nbsp; From this, as well as from the
+rest of his amusements and interests, the islander, upon a
+hundred islands, has been recently cut off.&nbsp; And to this, as
+well as to so many others, the Samoan still makes good a special
+title.</p>
+<p>Upon the whole, the problem seems to me to stand
+thus:&mdash;Where there have been fewest changes, important or
+unimportant, salutary or hurtful, there the race survives.&nbsp;
+Where there have been most, important or unimportant, salutary or
+hurtful, there it perishes.&nbsp; Each change, however small,
+augments the sum of new conditions to which the race has to
+become inured.&nbsp; There may seem, <i>a priori</i>, no
+comparison between the change from &lsquo;sour toddy&rsquo; to
+bad gin, and that from the island kilt to a pair of European
+trousers.&nbsp; Yet I am far from persuaded that the one is any
+more hurtful than the other; and the unaccustomed race will
+sometimes die of pin-pricks.&nbsp; We are here face to face with
+one of the difficulties of the missionary.&nbsp; In Polynesian
+islands he easily obtains pre-eminent authority; the king becomes
+his <i>mairedupalais</i>; he can proscribe, he can command; and
+the temptation is ever towards too much.&nbsp; Thus (by all
+accounts) the Catholics in Mangareva, and thus (to my own
+knowledge) the Protestants in Hawaii, have rendered life in a
+more or less degree unliveable to their converts.&nbsp; And the
+mild, uncomplaining creatures (like children in a prison) yawn
+and await death.&nbsp; It is easy to blame the missionary.&nbsp;
+But it is his business to make changes.&nbsp; It is surely his
+business, for example, to prevent war; and yet I have instanced
+war itself as one of the elements of health.&nbsp; On the other
+hand, it were, perhaps, easy for the missionary to proceed more
+gently, and to regard every change as an affair of weight.&nbsp;
+I take the average missionary; I am sure I do him no more than
+justice when I suppose that he would hesitate to bombard a
+village, even in order to convert an archipelago.&nbsp;
+Experience begins to show us (at least in Polynesian islands)
+that change of habit is bloodier than a bombardment.</p>
+<p>There is one point, ere I have done, where I may go to meet
+criticism.&nbsp; I have said nothing of faulty hygiene, bathing
+during fevers, mistaken treatment of children, native doctoring,
+or abortion&mdash;all causes frequently adduced.&nbsp; And I have
+said nothing of them because they are conditions common to both
+epochs, and even more efficient in the past than in the
+present.&nbsp; Was it not the same with unchastity, it may be
+asked?&nbsp; Was not the Polynesian always unchaste?&nbsp;
+Doubtless he was so always: doubtless he is more so since the
+coming of his remarkably chaste visitors from Europe.&nbsp; Take
+the Hawaiian account of Cook: I have no doubt it is entirely
+fair.&nbsp; Take Krusenstern&rsquo;s candid, almost innocent,
+description of a Russian man-of-war at the Marquesas; consider
+the disgraceful history of missions in Hawaii itself, where (in
+the war of lust) the American missionaries were once shelled by
+an English adventurer, and once raided and mishandled by the crew
+of an American warship; add the practice of whaling fleets to
+call at the Marquesas, and carry off a complement of women for
+the cruise; consider, besides, how the whites were at first
+regarded in the light of demi-gods, as appears plainly in the
+reception of Cook upon Hawaii; and again, in the story of the
+discovery of Tutuila, when the really decent women of Samoa
+prostituted themselves in public to the French; and bear in mind
+how it was the custom of the adventurers, and we may almost say
+the business of the missionaries, to deride and infract even the
+most salutary tapus.&nbsp; Here we see every engine of
+dissolution directed at once against a virtue never and nowhere
+very strong or popular; and the result, even in the most degraded
+islands, has been further degradation.&nbsp; Mr. Lawes, the
+missionary of Savage Island, told me the standard of female
+chastity had declined there since the coming of the whites.&nbsp;
+In heathen time, if a girl gave birth to a bastard, her father or
+brother would dash the infant down the cliffs; and to-day the
+scandal would be small.&nbsp; Or take the Marquesas.&nbsp;
+Stanislao Moanatini told me that in his own recollection, the
+young were strictly guarded; they were not suffered so much as to
+look upon one another in the street, but passed (so my informant
+put it) like dogs; and the other day the whole school-children of
+Nuka-hiva and Ua-pu escaped in a body to the woods, and lived
+there for a fortnight in promiscuous liberty.&nbsp; Readers of
+travels may perhaps exclaim at my authority, and declare
+themselves better informed.&nbsp; I should prefer the statement
+of an intelligent native like Stanislao (even if it stood alone,
+which it is far from doing) to the report of the most honest
+traveller.&nbsp; A ship of war comes to a haven, anchors, lands a
+party, receives and returns a visit, and the captain writes a
+chapter on the manners of the island.&nbsp; It is not considered
+what class is mostly seen.&nbsp; Yet we should not be pleased if
+a Lascar foremast hand were to judge England by the ladies who
+parade Ratcliffe Highway, and the gentlemen who share with them
+their hire.&nbsp; Stanislao&rsquo;s opinion of a decay of virtue
+even in these unvirtuous islands has been supported to me by
+others; his very example, the progress of dissolution amongst the
+young, is adduced by Mr. Bishop in Hawaii.&nbsp; And so far as
+Marquesans are concerned, we might have hazarded a guess of some
+decline in manners.&nbsp; I do not think that any race could ever
+have prospered or multiplied with such as now obtain; I am sure
+they would have been never at the pains to count paternal
+kinship.&nbsp; It is not possible to give details; suffice it
+that their manners appear to be imitated from the dreams of
+ignorant and vicious children, and their debauches persevered in
+until energy, reason, and almost life itself are in abeyance.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI&mdash;CHIEFS AND TAPUS</h3>
+<p>We used to admire exceedingly the bland and gallant manners of
+the chief called Taipi-Kikino.&nbsp; An elegant guest at table,
+skilled in the use of knife and fork, a brave figure when he
+shouldered a gun and started for the woods after wild chickens,
+always serviceable, always ingratiating and gay, I would
+sometimes wonder where he found his cheerfulness.&nbsp; He had
+enough to sober him, I thought, in his official budget.&nbsp; His
+expenses&mdash;for he was always seen attired in virgin
+white&mdash;must have by far exceeded his income of six dollars
+in the year, or say two shillings a month.&nbsp; And he was
+himself a man of no substance; his house the poorest in the
+village.&nbsp; It was currently supposed that his elder brother,
+Kauanui, must have helped him out.&nbsp; But how comes it that
+the elder brother should succeed to the family estate, and be a
+wealthy commoner, and the younger be a poor man, and yet rule as
+chief in Anaho?&nbsp; That the one should be wealthy, and the
+other almost indigent is probably to be explained by some
+adoption; for comparatively few children are brought up in the
+house or succeed to the estates of their natural begetters.&nbsp;
+That the one should be chief instead of the other must be
+explained (in a very Irish fashion) on the ground that neither of
+them is a chief at all.</p>
+<p>Since the return and the wars of the French, many chiefs have
+been deposed, and many so-called chiefs appointed.&nbsp; We have
+seen, in the same house, one such upstart drinking in the company
+of two such extruded island Bourbons, men, whose word a few years
+ago was life and death, now sunk to be peasants like their
+neighbours.&nbsp; So when the French overthrew hereditary
+tyrants, dubbed the commons of the Marquesas freeborn citizens of
+the republic, and endowed them with a vote for a
+<i>conseiller-g&eacute;n&eacute;ral</i> at Tahiti, they probably
+conceived themselves upon the path to popularity; and so far from
+that, they were revolting public sentiment.&nbsp; The deposition
+of the chiefs was perhaps sometimes needful; the appointment of
+others may have been needful also; it was at least a delicate
+business.&nbsp; The Government of George II. exiled many Highland
+magnates.&nbsp; It never occurred to them to manufacture
+substitutes; and if the French have been more bold, we have yet
+to see with what success.</p>
+<p>Our chief at Anaho was always called, he always called
+himself, Taipi-Kikino; and yet that was not his name, but only
+the wand of his false position.&nbsp; As soon as he was appointed
+chief, his name&mdash;which signified, if I remember exactly,
+<i>Prince born among flowers</i>&mdash;fell in abeyance, and he
+was dubbed instead by the expressive byword,
+Taipi-Kikino&mdash;<i>Highwater man-of-no-account</i>&mdash;or,
+Englishing more boldly, <i>Beggar on horseback</i>&mdash;a witty
+and a wicked cut.&nbsp; A nickname in Polynesia destroys almost
+the memory of the original name.&nbsp; To-day, if we were
+Polynesians, Gladstone would be no more heard of.&nbsp; We should
+speak of and address our Nestor as the Grand Old Man, and it is
+so that himself would sign his correspondence.&nbsp; Not the
+prevalence, then, but the significancy of the nickname is to be
+noted here.&nbsp; The new authority began with small
+prestige.&nbsp; Taipi has now been some time in office; from all
+I saw he seemed a person very fit.&nbsp; He is not the least
+unpopular, and yet his power is nothing.&nbsp; He is a chief to
+the French, and goes to breakfast with the Resident; but for any
+practical end of chieftaincy a rag doll were equally
+efficient.</p>
+<p>We had been but three days in Anaho when we received the visit
+of the chief of Hatiheu, a man of weight and fame, late leader of
+a war upon the French, late prisoner in Tahiti, and the last
+eater of long-pig in Nuka-hiva.&nbsp; Not many years have elapsed
+since he was seen striding on the beach of Anaho, a dead
+man&rsquo;s arm across his shoulder.&nbsp; &lsquo;So does Kooamua
+to his enemies!&rsquo; he roared to the passers-by, and took a
+bite from the raw flesh.&nbsp; And now behold this gentleman,
+very wisely replaced in office by the French, paying us a morning
+visit in European clothes.&nbsp; He was the man of the most
+character we had yet seen: his manners genial and decisive, his
+person tall, his face rugged, astute, formidable, and with a
+certain similarity to Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s&mdash;only for the
+brownness of the skin, and the high-chief&rsquo;s tattooing, all
+one side and much of the other being of an even blue.&nbsp;
+Further acquaintance increased our opinion of his sense.&nbsp; He
+viewed the <i>Casco</i> in a manner then quite new to us,
+examining her lines and the running of the gear; to a piece of
+knitting on which one of the party was engaged, he must have
+devoted ten minutes&rsquo; patient study; nor did he desist
+before he had divined the principles; and he was interested even
+to excitement by a type-writer, which he learned to work.&nbsp;
+When he departed he carried away with him a list of his family,
+with his own name printed by his own hand at the bottom.&nbsp; I
+should add that he was plainly much of a humorist, and not a
+little of a humbug.&nbsp; He told us, for instance, that he was a
+person of exact sobriety; such being the obligation of his high
+estate: the commons might be sots, but the chief could not stoop
+so low.&nbsp; And not many days after he was to be observed in a
+state of smiling and lop-sided imbecility, the <i>Casco</i>
+ribbon upside down on his dishonoured hat.</p>
+<p>But his business that morning in Anaho is what concerns us
+here.&nbsp; The devil-fish, it seems, were growing scarce upon
+the reef; it was judged fit to interpose what we should call a
+close season; for that end, in Polynesia, a tapu (vulgarly spelt
+&lsquo;taboo&rsquo;) has to be declared, and who was to declare
+it?&nbsp; Taipi might; he ought; it was a chief part of his duty;
+but would any one regard the inhibition of a Beggar on
+Horse-back?&nbsp; He might plant palm branches: it did not in the
+least follow that the spot was sacred.&nbsp; He might recite the
+spell: it was shrewdly supposed the spirits would not
+hearken.&nbsp; And so the old, legitimate cannibal must ride over
+the mountains to do it for him; and the respectable official in
+white clothes could but look on and envy.&nbsp; At about the same
+time, though in a different manner, Kooamua established a forest
+law.&nbsp; It was observed the cocoa-palms were suffering, for
+the plucking of green nuts impoverishes and at last endangers the
+tree.&nbsp; Now Kooamua could tapu the reef, which was public
+property, but he could not tapu other people&rsquo;s palms; and
+the expedient adopted was interesting.&nbsp; He tapu&rsquo;d his
+own trees, and his example was imitated over all Hatiheu and
+Anaho.&nbsp; I fear Taipi might have tapu&rsquo;d all that he
+possessed and found none to follow him.&nbsp; So much for the
+esteem in which the dignity of an appointed chief is held by
+others; a single circumstance will show what he thinks of it
+himself.&nbsp; I never met one, but he took an early opportunity
+to explain his situation.&nbsp; True, he was only an appointed
+chief when I beheld him; but somewhere else, perhaps upon some
+other isle, he was a chieftain by descent: upon which ground, he
+asked me (so to say it) to excuse his mushroom honours.</p>
+<p>It will be observed with surprise that both these tapus are
+for thoroughly sensible ends.&nbsp; With surprise, I say, because
+the nature of that institution is much misunderstood in
+Europe.&nbsp; It is taken usually in the sense of a meaningless
+or wanton prohibition, such as that which to-day prevents women
+in some countries from smoking, or yesterday prevented any one in
+Scotland from taking a walk on Sunday.&nbsp; The error is no less
+natural than it is unjust.&nbsp; The Polynesians have not been
+trained in the bracing, practical thought of ancient Rome; with
+them the idea of law has not been disengaged from that of morals
+or propriety; so that tapu has to cover the whole field, and
+implies indifferently that an act is criminal, immoral, against
+sound public policy, unbecoming or (as we say) &lsquo;not in good
+form.&rsquo;&nbsp; Many tapus were in consequence absurd enough,
+such as those which deleted words out of the language, and
+particularly those which related to women.&nbsp; Tapu encircled
+women upon all hands.&nbsp; Many things were forbidden to men; to
+women we may say that few were permitted.&nbsp; They must not sit
+on the paepae; they must not go up to it by the stair; they must
+not eat pork; they must not approach a boat; they must not cook
+at a fire which any male had kindled.&nbsp; The other day, after
+the roads were made, it was observed the women plunged along
+margin through the bush, and when they came to a bridge waded
+through the water: roads and bridges were the work of men&rsquo;s
+hands, and tapu for the foot of women.&nbsp; Even a man&rsquo;s
+saddle, if the man be native, is a thing no self-respecting lady
+dares to use.&nbsp; Thus on the Anaho side of the island, only
+two white men, Mr. Regler and the gendarme, M. Aussel, possess
+saddles; and when a woman has a journey to make she must borrow
+from one or other.&nbsp; It will be noticed that these
+prohibitions tend, most of them, to an increased reserve between
+the sexes.&nbsp; Regard for female chastity is the usual excuse
+for these disabilities that men delight to lay upon their wives
+and mothers.&nbsp; Here the regard is absent; and behold the
+women still bound hand and foot with meaningless
+proprieties!&nbsp; The women themselves, who are survivors of the
+old regimen, admit that in those days life was not worth
+living.&nbsp; And yet even then there were exceptions.&nbsp;
+There were female chiefs and (I am assured) priestesses besides;
+nice customs curtseyed to great dames, and in the most sacred
+enclosure of a High Place, Father Sim&eacute;on Delmar was shown
+a stone, and told it was the throne of some well-descended
+lady.&nbsp; How exactly parallel is this with European practice,
+when princesses were suffered to penetrate the strictest
+cloister, and women could rule over a land in which they were
+denied the control of their own children.</p>
+<p>But the tapu is more often the instrument of wise and needful
+restrictions.&nbsp; We have seen it as the organ of paternal
+government.&nbsp; It serves besides to enforce, in the rare case
+of some one wishing to enforce them, rights of private
+property.&nbsp; Thus a man, weary of the coming and going of
+Marquesan visitors, tapus his door; and to this day you may see
+the palm-branch signal, even as our great-grandfathers saw the
+peeled wand before a Highland inn.&nbsp; Or take another
+case.&nbsp; Anaho is known as &lsquo;the country without
+popoi.&rsquo;&nbsp; The word popoi serves in different islands to
+indicate the main food of the people: thus, in Hawaii, it implies
+a preparation of taro; in the Marquesas, of breadfruit.&nbsp; And
+a Marquesan does not readily conceive life possible without his
+favourite diet.&nbsp; A few years ago a drought killed the
+breadfruit trees and the bananas in the district of Anaho; and
+from this calamity, and the open-handed customs of the island, a
+singular state of things arose.&nbsp; Well-watered Hatiheu had
+escaped the drought; every householder of Anaho accordingly
+crossed the pass, chose some one in Hatiheu, &lsquo;gave him his
+name&rsquo;&mdash;an onerous gift, but one not to be
+rejected&mdash;and from this improvised relative proceeded to
+draw his supplies, for all the world as though he had paid for
+them.&nbsp; Hence a continued traffic on the road.&nbsp; Some
+stalwart fellow, in a loin-cloth, and glistening with sweat, may
+be seen at all hours of the day, a stick across his bare
+shoulders, tripping nervously under a double burthen of green
+fruits.&nbsp; And on the far side of the gap a dozen stone posts
+on the wayside in the shadow of a grove mark the breathing-space
+of the popoi-carriers.&nbsp; A little back from the beach, and
+not half a mile from Anaho, I was the more amazed to find a
+cluster of well-doing breadfruits heavy with their harvest.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Why do you not take these?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Tapu,&rsquo; said Hoka; and I thought to myself (after the
+manner of dull travellers) what children and fools these people
+were to toil over the mountain and despoil innocent neighbours
+when the staff of life was thus growing at their door.&nbsp; I
+was the more in error.&nbsp; In the general destruction these
+surviving trees were enough only for the family of the
+proprietor, and by the simple expedient of declaring a tapu he
+enforced his right.</p>
+<p>The sanction of the tapu is superstitious; and the punishment
+of infraction either a wasting or a deadly sickness.&nbsp; A slow
+disease follows on the eating of tapu fish, and can only be cured
+with the bones of the same fish burned with the due
+mysteries.&nbsp; The cocoa-nut and breadfruit tapu works more
+swiftly.&nbsp; Suppose you have eaten tapu fruit at the evening
+meal, at night your sleep will be uneasy; in the morning,
+swelling and a dark discoloration will have attacked your neck,
+whence they spread upward to the face; and in two days, unless
+the cure be interjected, you must die.&nbsp; This cure is
+prepared from the rubbed leaves of the tree from which the
+patient stole; so that he cannot be saved without confessing to
+the Tahuku the person whom he wronged.&nbsp; In the experience of
+my informant, almost no tapu had been put in use, except the two
+described: he had thus no opportunity to learn the nature and
+operation of the others; and, as the art of making them was
+jealously guarded amongst the old men, he believed the mystery
+would soon die out.&nbsp; I should add that he was no Marquesan,
+but a Chinaman, a resident in the group from boyhood, and a
+reverent believer in the spells which he described.&nbsp; White
+men, amongst whom Ah Fu included himself, were exempt; but he had
+a tale of a Tahitian woman, who had come to the Marquesas, eaten
+tapu fish, and, although uninformed of her offence and danger,
+had been afflicted and cured exactly like a native.</p>
+<p>Doubtless the belief is strong; doubtless, with this weakly
+and fanciful race, it is in many cases strong enough to kill; it
+should be strong indeed in those who tapu their trees secretly,
+so that they may detect a depredator by his sickness.&nbsp; Or,
+perhaps, we should understand the idea of the hidden tapu
+otherwise, as a politic device to spread uneasiness and extort
+confessions: so that, when a man is ailing, he shall ransack his
+brain for any possible offence, and send at once for any
+proprietor whose rights he has invaded.&nbsp; &lsquo;Had you
+hidden a tapu?&rsquo; we may conceive him asking; and I cannot
+imagine the proprietor gainsaying it; and this is perhaps the
+strangest feature of the system&mdash;that it should be regarded
+from without with such a mental and implicit awe, and, when
+examined from within, should present so many apparent evidences
+of design.</p>
+<p>We read in Dr. Campbell&rsquo;s <i>Poenamo</i> of a New
+Zealand girl, who was foolishly told that she had eaten a tapu
+yam, and who instantly sickened, and died in the two days of
+simple terror.&nbsp; The period is the same as in the Marquesas;
+doubtless the symptoms were so too.&nbsp; How singular to
+consider that a superstition of such sway is possibly a
+manufactured article; and that, even if it were not originally
+invented, its details have plainly been arranged by the
+authorities of some Polynesian Scotland Yard.&nbsp; Fitly enough,
+the belief is to-day&mdash;and was probably always&mdash;far from
+universal.&nbsp; Hell at home is a strong deterrent with some; a
+passing thought with others; with others, again, a theme of
+public mockery, not always well assured; and so in the Marquesas
+with the tapu.&nbsp; Mr. Regler has seen the two extremes of
+scepticism and implicit fear.&nbsp; In the tapu grove he found
+one fellow stealing breadfruit, cheerful and impudent as a street
+arab; and it was only on a menace of exposure that he showed
+himself the least discountenanced.&nbsp; The other case was
+opposed in every point.&nbsp; Mr. Regler asked a native to
+accompany him upon a voyage; the man went gladly enough, but
+suddenly perceiving a dead tapu fish in the bottom of the boat,
+leaped back with a scream; nor could the promise of a dollar
+prevail upon him to advance.</p>
+<p>The Marquesan, it will be observed, adheres to the old idea of
+the local circumscription of beliefs and duties.&nbsp; Not only
+are the whites exempt from consequences; but their transgressions
+seem to be viewed without horror.&nbsp; It was Mr. Regler who had
+killed the fish; yet the devout native was not shocked at Mr.
+Regler&mdash;only refused to join him in his boat.&nbsp; A white
+is a white: the servant (so to speak) of other and more liberal
+gods; and not to be blamed if he profit by his liberty.&nbsp; The
+Jews were perhaps the first to interrupt this ancient comity of
+faiths; and the Jewish virus is still strong in
+Christianity.&nbsp; All the world must respect our tapus, or we
+gnash our teeth.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII&mdash;HATIHEU</h3>
+<p>The bays of Anaho and Hatiheu are divided at their roots by
+the knife-edge of a single hill&mdash;the pass so often
+mentioned; but this isthmus expands to the seaward in a
+considerable peninsula: very bare and grassy; haunted by sheep
+and, at night and morning, by the piercing cries of the
+shepherds; wandered over by a few wild goats; and on its
+sea-front indented with long, clamorous caves, and faced with
+cliffs of the colour and ruinous outline of an old
+peat-stack.&nbsp; In one of these echoing and sunless gullies we
+saw, clustered like sea-birds on a splashing ledge, shrill as
+sea-birds in their salutation to the passing boat, a group of
+fisherwomen, stripped to their gaudy under-clothes.&nbsp; (The
+clash of the surf and the thin female voices echo in my
+memory.)&nbsp; We had that day a native crew and steersman,
+Kauanui; it was our first experience of Polynesian seamanship,
+which consists in hugging every point of land.&nbsp; There is no
+thought in this of saving time, for they will pull a long way in
+to skirt a point that is embayed.&nbsp; It seems that, as they
+can never get their houses near enough the surf upon the one
+side, so they can never get their boats near enough upon the
+other.&nbsp; The practice in bold water is not so dangerous as it
+looks&mdash;the reflex from the rocks sending the boat off.&nbsp;
+Near beaches with a heavy run of sea, I continue to think it very
+hazardous, and find the composure of the natives annoying to
+behold.&nbsp; We took unmingled pleasure, on the way out, to see
+so near at hand the beach and the wonderful colours of the
+surf.&nbsp; On the way back, when the sea had risen and was
+running strong against us, the fineness of the steersman&rsquo;s
+aim grew more embarrassing.&nbsp; As we came abreast of the
+sea-front, where the surf broke highest, Kauanui embraced the
+occasion to light his pipe, which then made the circuit of the
+boat&mdash;each man taking a whiff or two, and, ere he passed it
+on, filling his lungs and cheeks with smoke.&nbsp; Their faces
+were all puffed out like apples as we came abreast of the cliff
+foot, and the bursting surge fell back into the boat in
+showers.&nbsp; At the next point &lsquo;cocanetti&rsquo; was the
+word, and the stroke borrowed my knife, and desisted from his
+labours to open nuts.&nbsp; These untimely indulgences may be
+compared to the tot of grog served out before a ship goes into
+action.</p>
+<p>My purpose in this visit led me first to the boys&rsquo;
+school, for Hatiheu is the university of the north islands.&nbsp;
+The hum of the lesson came out to meet us.&nbsp; Close by the
+door, where the draught blew coolest, sat the lay brother; around
+him, in a packed half-circle, some sixty high-coloured faces set
+with staring eyes; and in the background of the barn-like room
+benches were to be seen, and blackboards with sums on them in
+chalk.&nbsp; The brother rose to greet us, sensibly humble.&nbsp;
+Thirty years he had been there, he said, and fingered his white
+locks as a bashful child pulls out his pinafore. &lsquo;<i>Et
+point de r&eacute;sultats</i>, <i>monsieur</i>, <i>presque pas de
+r&eacute;sultats</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; He pointed to the scholars:
+&lsquo;You see, sir, all the youth of Nuka-hiva and Ua-pu.&nbsp;
+Between the ages of six and fifteen this is all that remains; and
+it is but a few years since we had a hundred and twenty from
+Nuka-hiva alone.&nbsp; <i>Oui</i>, <i>monsieur</i>, <i>cela se
+d&eacute;p&eacute;rit</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Prayers, and reading and
+writing, prayers again and arithmetic, and more prayers to
+conclude: such appeared to be the dreary nature of the
+course.&nbsp; For arithmetic all island people have a natural
+taste.&nbsp; In Hawaii they make good progress in
+mathematics.&nbsp; In one of the villages on Majuro, and
+generally in the Marshall group, the whole population sit about
+the trader when he is weighing copra, and each on his own slate
+takes down the figures and computes the total.&nbsp; The trader,
+finding them so apt, introduced fractions, for which they had
+been taught no rule.&nbsp; At first they were quite gravelled but
+ultimately, by sheer hard thinking, reasoned out the result, and
+came one after another to assure the trader he was right.&nbsp;
+Not many people in Europe could have done the like.&nbsp; The
+course at Hatiheu is therefore less dispiriting to Polynesians
+than a stranger might have guessed; and yet how bald it is at
+best!&nbsp; I asked the brother if he did not tell them stories,
+and he stared at me; if he did not teach them history, and he
+said, &lsquo;O yes, they had a little Scripture
+history&mdash;from the New Testament&rsquo;; and repeated his
+lamentations over the lack of results.&nbsp; I had not the heart
+to put more questions; I could but say it must be very
+discouraging, and resist the impulse to add that it seemed also
+very natural.&nbsp; He looked up&mdash;&lsquo;My days are far
+spent,&rsquo; he said; &lsquo;heaven awaits me.&rsquo;&nbsp; May
+that heaven forgive me, but I was angry with the old man and his
+simple consolation.&nbsp; For think of his opportunity!&nbsp; The
+youth, from six to fifteen, are taken from their homes by
+Government, centralised at Hatiheu, where they are supported by a
+weekly tax of food; and, with the exception of one month in every
+year, surrendered wholly to the direction of the priests.&nbsp;
+Since the escapade already mentioned the holiday occurs at a
+different period for the girls and for the boys; so that a
+Marquesan brother and sister meet again, after their education is
+complete, a pair of strangers.&nbsp; It is a harsh law, and
+highly unpopular; but what a power it places in the hands of the
+instructors, and how languidly and dully is that power employed
+by the mission!&nbsp; Too much concern to make the natives pious,
+a design in which they all confess defeat, is, I suppose, the
+explanation of their miserable system.&nbsp; But they might see
+in the girls&rsquo; school at Tai-o-hae, under the brisk,
+housewifely sisters, a different picture of efficiency, and a
+scene of neatness, airiness, and spirited and mirthful occupation
+that should shame them into cheerier methods.&nbsp; The sisters
+themselves lament their failure.&nbsp; They complain the annual
+holiday undoes the whole year&rsquo;s work; they complain
+particularly of the heartless indifference of the girls.&nbsp;
+Out of so many pretty and apparently affectionate pupils whom
+they have taught and reared, only two have ever returned to pay a
+visit of remembrance to their teachers.&nbsp; These, indeed, come
+regularly, but the rest, so soon as their school-days are over,
+disappear into the woods like captive insects.&nbsp; It is hard
+to imagine anything more discouraging; and yet I do not believe
+these ladies need despair.&nbsp; For a certain interval they keep
+the girls alive and innocently busy; and if it be at all possible
+to save the race, this would be the means.&nbsp; No such praise
+can be given to the boys&rsquo; school at Hatiheu.&nbsp; The day
+is numbered already for them all; alike for the teacher and the
+scholars death is girt; he is afoot upon the march; and in the
+frequent interval they sit and yawn.&nbsp; But in life there
+seems a thread of purpose through the least significant; the
+drowsiest endeavour is not lost, and even the school at Hatiheu
+may be more useful than it seems.</p>
+<p>Hatiheu is a place of some pretensions.&nbsp; The end of the
+bay towards Anaho may be called the civil compound, for it boasts
+the house of Kooamua, and close on the beach, under a great tree,
+that of the gendarme, M. Armand Aussel, with his garden, his
+pictures, his books, and his excellent table, to which strangers
+are made welcome.&nbsp; No more singular contrast is possible
+than between the gendarmerie and the priesthood, who are besides
+in smouldering opposition and full of mutual complaints.&nbsp; A
+priest&rsquo;s kitchen in the eastern islands is a depressing
+spot to see; and many, or most of them, make no attempt to keep a
+garden, sparsely subsisting on their rations.&nbsp; But you will
+never dine with a gendarme without smacking your lips; and M.
+Aussel&rsquo;s home-made sausage and the salad from his garden
+are unforgotten delicacies.&nbsp; Pierre Loti may like to know
+that he is M. Aussel&rsquo;s favourite author, and that his books
+are read in the fit scenery of Hatiheu bay.</p>
+<p>The other end is all religious.&nbsp; It is here that an
+overhanging and tip-tilted horn, a good sea-mark for Hatiheu,
+bursts naked from the verdure of the climbing forest, and breaks
+down shoreward in steep taluses and cliffs.&nbsp; From the edge
+of one of the highest, perhaps seven hundred or a thousand feet
+above the beach, a Virgin looks insignificantly down, like a poor
+lost doll, forgotten there by a giant child.&nbsp; This laborious
+symbol of the Catholics is always strange to Protestants; we
+conceive with wonder that men should think it worth while to toil
+so many days, and clamber so much about the face of precipices,
+for an end that makes us smile; and yet I believe it was the wise
+Bishop Dordillon who chose the place, and I know that those who
+had a hand in the enterprise look back with pride upon its
+vanquished dangers.&nbsp; The boys&rsquo; school is a recent
+importation; it was at first in Tai-o-hae, beside the
+girls&rsquo;; and it was only of late, after their joint
+escapade, that the width of the island was interposed between the
+sexes.&nbsp; But Hatiheu must have been a place of missionary
+importance from before.&nbsp; About midway of the beach no less
+than three churches stand grouped in a patch of bananas,
+intermingled with some pine-apples.&nbsp; Two are of wood: the
+original church, now in disuse; and a second that, for some
+mysterious reason, has never been used.&nbsp; The new church is
+of stone, with twin towers, walls flangeing into buttresses, and
+sculptured front.&nbsp; The design itself is good, simple, and
+shapely; but the character is all in the detail, where the
+architect has bloomed into the sculptor.&nbsp; It is impossible
+to tell in words of the angels (although they are more like
+winged archbishops) that stand guard upon the door, of the
+cherubs in the corners, of the scapegoat gargoyles, or the quaint
+and spirited relief, where St. Michael (the artist&rsquo;s
+patron) makes short work of a protesting Lucifer.&nbsp; We were
+never weary of viewing the imagery, so innocent, sometimes so
+funny, and yet in the best sense&mdash;in the sense of inventive
+gusto and expression&mdash;so artistic.&nbsp; I know not whether
+it was more strange to find a building of such merit in a corner
+of a barbarous isle, or to see a building so antique still bright
+with novelty.&nbsp; The architect, a French lay brother, still
+alive and well, and meditating fresh foundations, must have
+surely drawn his descent from a master-builder in the age of the
+cathedrals; and it was in looking on the church of Hatiheu that I
+seemed to perceive the secret charm of medi&aelig;val sculpture;
+that combination of the childish courage of the amateur,
+attempting all things, like the schoolboy on his slate, with the
+manly perseverance of the artist who does not know when he is
+conquered.</p>
+<p>I had always afterwards a strong wish to meet the architect,
+Brother Michel; and one day, when I was talking with the Resident
+in Tai-o-hae (the chief port of the island), there were shown in
+to us an old, worn, purblind, ascetic-looking priest, and a lay
+brother, a type of all that is most sound in France, with a
+broad, clever, honest, humorous countenance, an eye very large
+and bright, and a strong and healthy body inclining to
+obesity.&nbsp; But that his blouse was black and his face shaven
+clean, you might pick such a man to-day, toiling cheerfully in
+his own patch of vines, from half a dozen provinces of France;
+and yet he had always for me a haunting resemblance to an old
+kind friend of my boyhood, whom I name in case any of my readers
+should share with me that memory&mdash;Dr. Paul, of the West
+Kirk.&nbsp; Almost at the first word I was sure it was my
+architect, and in a moment we were deep in a discussion of
+Hatiheu church.&nbsp; Brother Michel spoke always of his labours
+with a twinkle of humour, underlying which it was possible to spy
+a serious pride, and the change from one to another was often
+very human and diverting.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Et vos gargouilles
+moyen-&acirc;ge</i>,&rsquo; cried I; &lsquo;<i>comme elles sont
+originates</i>!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>N&rsquo;est-ce
+pas</i>?&nbsp; <i>Elles sont bien dr&ocirc;les</i>!&rsquo; he
+said, smiling broadly; and the next moment, with a sudden
+gravity: &lsquo;<i>Cependant il y en a une qui a une patte de
+cass&eacute;</i>; <i>il faut que je voie cela</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; I
+asked if he had any model&mdash;a point we much discussed.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Non</i>,&rsquo; said he simply; &lsquo;<i>c&rsquo;est
+une &eacute;glise id&eacute;ale</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; The relievo was
+his favourite performance, and very justly so.&nbsp; The angels
+at the door, he owned, he would like to destroy and
+replace.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Ils n&rsquo;ont pas de vie</i>, <i>ils
+manquent de vie</i>.&nbsp; <i>Vous devriez voir mon &eacute;glise
+&agrave; la Dominique</i>; <i>j&rsquo;ai l&agrave; une Vierge qui
+est vraiment gentille</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Ah,&rsquo; I
+cried, &lsquo;they told me you had said you would never build
+another church, and I wrote in my journal I could not believe
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Oui</i>, <i>j&rsquo;aimerais bien en
+fairs une autre</i>,&rsquo; he confessed, and smiled at the
+confession.&nbsp; An artist will understand how much I was
+attracted by this conversation.&nbsp; There is no bond so near as
+a community in that unaffected interest and slightly shame-faced
+pride which mark the intelligent man enamoured of an art.&nbsp;
+He sees the limitations of his aim, the defects of his practice;
+he smiles to be so employed upon the shores of death, yet sees in
+his own devotion something worthy.&nbsp; Artists, if they had the
+same sense of humour with the Augurs, would smile like them on
+meeting, but the smile would not be scornful.</p>
+<p>I had occasion to see much of this excellent man.&nbsp; He
+sailed with us from Tai-o-hae to Hiva-oa, a dead beat of ninety
+miles against a heavy sea.&nbsp; It was what is called a good
+passage, and a feather in the <i>Casco&rsquo;s</i> cap; but among
+the most miserable forty hours that any one of us had ever
+passed.&nbsp; We were swung and tossed together all that time
+like shot in a stage thunder-box.&nbsp; The mate was thrown down
+and had his head cut open; the captain was sick on deck; the cook
+sick in the galley.&nbsp; Of all our party only two sat down to
+dinner.&nbsp; I was one.&nbsp; I own that I felt wretchedly; and
+I can only say of the other, who professed to feel quite well,
+that she fled at an early moment from the table.&nbsp; It was in
+these circumstances that we skirted the windward shore of that
+indescribable island of Ua-pu; viewing with dizzy eyes the coves,
+the capes, the breakers, the climbing forests, and the
+inaccessible stone needles that surmount the mountains.&nbsp; The
+place persists, in a dark corner of our memories, like a piece of
+the scenery of nightmares.&nbsp; The end of this distressful
+passage, where we were to land our passengers, was in a similar
+vein of roughness.&nbsp; The surf ran high on the beach at
+Taahauku; the boat broached-to and capsized; and all hands were
+submerged.&nbsp; Only the brother himself, who was well used to
+the experience, skipped ashore, by some miracle of agility, with
+scarce a sprinkling.&nbsp; Thenceforward, during our stay at
+Hiva-oa, he was our cicerone and patron; introducing us, taking
+us excursions, serving us in every way, and making himself daily
+more beloved.</p>
+<p>Michel Blanc had been a carpenter by trade; had made money and
+retired, supposing his active days quite over; and it was only
+when he found idleness dangerous that he placed his capital and
+acquirements at the service of the mission.&nbsp; He became their
+carpenter, mason, architect, and engineer; added sculpture to his
+accomplishments, and was famous for his skill in gardening.&nbsp;
+He wore an enviable air of having found a port from life&rsquo;s
+contentions and lying there strongly anchored; went about his
+business with a jolly simplicity; complained of no lack of
+results&mdash;perhaps shyly thinking his own statuary result
+enough; and was altogether a pattern of the missionary
+layman.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII&mdash;THE PORT OF ENTRY</h3>
+<p>The port&mdash;the mart, the civil and religious capital of
+these rude islands&mdash;is called Tai-o-hae, and lies strung
+along the beach of a precipitous green bay in Nuka-hiva.&nbsp; It
+was midwinter when we came thither, and the weather was sultry,
+boisterous, and inconstant.&nbsp; Now the wind blew squally from
+the land down gaps of splintered precipice; now, between the
+sentinel islets of the entry, it came in gusts from
+seaward.&nbsp; Heavy and dark clouds impended on the summits; the
+rain roared and ceased; the scuppers of the mountain gushed; and
+the next day we would see the sides of the amphitheatre bearded
+with white falls.&nbsp; Along the beach the town shows a thin
+file of houses, mostly white, and all ensconced in the foliage of
+an avenue of green puraos; a pier gives access from the sea
+across the belt of breakers; to the eastward there stands, on a
+projecting bushy hill, the old fort which is now the calaboose,
+or prison; eastward still, alone in a garden, the Residency flies
+the colours of France.&nbsp; Just off Calaboose Hill, the tiny
+Government schooner rides almost permanently at anchor, marks
+eight bells in the morning (there or thereabout) with the
+unfurling of her flag, and salutes the setting sun with the
+report of a musket.</p>
+<p>Here dwell together, and share the comforts of a club (which
+may be enumerated as a billiard-board, absinthe, a map of the
+world on Mercator&rsquo;s projection, and one of the most
+agreeable verandahs in the tropics), a handful of whites of
+varying nationality, mostly French officials, German and Scottish
+merchant clerks, and the agents of the opium monopoly.&nbsp;
+There are besides three tavern-keepers, the shrewd Scot who runs
+the cotton gin-mill, two white ladies, and a sprinkling of people
+&lsquo;on the beach&rsquo;&mdash;a South Sea expression for which
+there is no exact equivalent.&nbsp; It is a pleasant society, and
+a hospitable.&nbsp; But one man, who was often to be seen seated
+on the logs at the pier-head, merits a word for the singularity
+of his history and appearance.&nbsp; Long ago, it seems, he fell
+in love with a native lady, a High Chiefess in Ua-pu.&nbsp; She,
+on being approached, declared she could never marry a man who was
+untattooed; it looked so naked; whereupon, with some greatness of
+soul, our hero put himself in the hands of the Tahukus, and, with
+still greater, persevered until the process was complete.&nbsp;
+He had certainly to bear a great expense, for the Tahuku will not
+work without reward; and certainly exquisite pain.&nbsp; Kooamua,
+high chief as he was, and one of the old school, was only part
+tattooed; he could not, he told us with lively pantomime, endure
+the torture to an end.&nbsp; Our enamoured countryman was more
+resolved; he was tattooed from head to foot in the most approved
+methods of the art; and at last presented himself before his
+mistress a new man.&nbsp; The fickle fair one could never behold
+him from that day except with laughter.&nbsp; For my part, I
+could never see the man without a kind of admiration; of him it
+might be said, if ever of any, that he had loved not wisely, but
+too well.</p>
+<p>The Residency stands by itself, Calaboose Hill screening it
+from the fringe of town along the further bay.&nbsp; The house is
+commodious, with wide verandahs; all day it stands open, back and
+front, and the trade blows copiously over its bare floors.&nbsp;
+On a week-day the garden offers a scene of most untropical
+animation, half a dozen convicts toiling there cheerfully with
+spade and barrow, and touching hats and smiling to the visitor
+like old attached family servants.&nbsp; On Sunday these are
+gone, and nothing to be seen but dogs of all ranks and sizes
+peacefully slumbering in the shady grounds; for the dogs of
+Tai-o-hae are very courtly-minded, and make the seat of
+Government their promenade and place of siesta.&nbsp; In front
+and beyond, a strip of green down loses itself in a low wood of
+many species of acacia; and deep in the wood a ruinous wall
+encloses the cemetery of the Europeans.&nbsp; English and
+Scottish sleep there, and Scandinavians, and French
+<i>ma&icirc;tres de man&oelig;uvres</i> and <i>ma&icirc;tres
+ouvriers</i>: mingling alien dust.&nbsp; Back in the woods,
+perhaps, the blackbird, or (as they call him there) the island
+nightingale, will be singing home strains; and the ceaseless
+requiem of the surf hangs on the ear.&nbsp; I have never seen a
+resting-place more quiet; but it was a long thought how far these
+sleepers had all travelled, and from what diverse homes they had
+set forth, to lie here in the end together.</p>
+<p>On the summit of its promontory hill, the calaboose stands all
+day with doors and window-shutters open to the trade.&nbsp; On my
+first visit a dog was the only guardian visible.&nbsp; He,
+indeed, rose with an attitude so menacing that I was glad to lay
+hands on an old barrel-hoop; and I think the weapon must have
+been familiar, for the champion instantly retreated, and as I
+wandered round the court and through the building, I could see
+him, with a couple of companions, humbly dodging me about the
+corners.&nbsp; The prisoners&rsquo; dormitory was a spacious,
+airy room, devoid of any furniture; its whitewashed walls covered
+with inscriptions in Marquesan and rude drawings: one of the
+pier, not badly done; one of a murder; several of French soldiers
+in uniform.&nbsp; There was one legend in French: &lsquo;<i>Je
+n&rsquo;est</i>&rsquo; (sic) &lsquo;<i>pas le
+sou</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; From this noontide quietude it must not be
+supposed the prison was untenanted; the calaboose at Tai-o-hae
+does a good business.&nbsp; But some of its occupants were
+gardening at the Residency, and the rest were probably at work
+upon the streets, as free as our scavengers at home, although not
+so industrious.&nbsp; On the approach of evening they would be
+called in like children from play; and the harbour-master (who is
+also the jailer) would go through the form of locking them up
+until six the next morning.&nbsp; Should a prisoner have any call
+in town, whether of pleasure or affairs, he has but to unhook the
+window-shutters; and if he is back again, and the shutter
+decently replaced, by the hour of call on the morrow, he may have
+met the harbour-master in the avenue, and there will be no
+complaint, far less any punishment.&nbsp; But this is not
+all.&nbsp; The charming French Resident, M. Delaruelle, carried
+me one day to the calaboose on an official visit.&nbsp; In the
+green court, a very ragged gentleman, his legs deformed with the
+island elephantiasis, saluted us smiling.&nbsp; &lsquo;One of our
+political prisoners&mdash;an insurgent from Raiatea,&rsquo; said
+the Resident; and then to the jailer: &lsquo;I thought I had
+ordered him a new pair of trousers.&rsquo;&nbsp; Meanwhile no
+other convict was to be seen&mdash;&lsquo;<i>Eh bien</i>,&rsquo;
+said the Resident, &lsquo;<i>o&ugrave; sont vos
+prisonniers</i>?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Monsieur le
+R&eacute;sident</i>,&rsquo; replied the jailer, saluting with
+soldierly formality, &lsquo;<i>comme c&rsquo;est jour de
+f&ecirc;te</i>, <i>je les ai laiss&eacute; aller &agrave; la
+chasse</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; They were all upon the mountains hunting
+goats!&nbsp; Presently we came to the quarters of the women,
+likewise deserted&mdash;&lsquo;<i>O&ugrave; sont vos bonnes
+femmes</i>?&rsquo; asked the Resident; and the jailer cheerfully
+responded: &lsquo;<i>Je crois</i>, <i>Monsieur le
+R&eacute;sident</i>, <i>qu&rsquo;elles sont all&eacute;es
+quelquepart faire une visite</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; It had been the
+design of M. Delaruelle, who was much in love with the
+whimsicalities of his small realm, to elicit something comical;
+but not even he expected anything so perfect as the last.&nbsp;
+To complete the picture of convict life in Tai-o-hae, it remains
+to be added that these criminals draw a salary as regularly as
+the President of the Republic.&nbsp; Ten sous a day is their
+hire.&nbsp; Thus they have money, food, shelter, clothing, and, I
+was about to write, their liberty.&nbsp; The French are certainly
+a good-natured people, and make easy masters.&nbsp; They are
+besides inclined to view the Marquesans with an eye of humorous
+indulgence.&nbsp; &lsquo;They are dying, poor devils!&rsquo; said
+M. Delaruelle: &lsquo;the main thing is to let them die in
+peace.&rsquo;&nbsp; And it was not only well said, but I believe
+expressed the general thought.&nbsp; Yet there is another element
+to be considered; for these convicts are not merely useful, they
+are almost essential to the French existence.&nbsp; With a people
+incurably idle, dispirited by what can only be called endemic
+pestilence, and inflamed with ill-feeling against their new
+masters, crime and convict labour are a godsend to the
+Government.</p>
+<p>Theft is practically the sole crime.&nbsp; Originally petty
+pilferers, the men of Tai-o-hae now begin to force locks and
+attack strong-boxes.&nbsp; Hundreds of dollars have been taken at
+a time; though, with that redeeming moderation so common in
+Polynesian theft, the Marquesan burglar will always take a part
+and leave a part, sharing (so to speak) with the
+proprietor.&nbsp; If it be Chilian coin&mdash;the island
+currency&mdash;he will escape; if the sum is in gold, French
+silver, or bank-notes, the police wait until the money begins to
+come in circulation, and then easily pick out their man.&nbsp;
+And now comes the shameful part.&nbsp; In plain English, the
+prisoner is tortured until he confesses and (if that be possible)
+restores the money.&nbsp; To keep him alone, day and night, in
+the black hole, is to inflict on the Marquesan torture
+inexpressible.&nbsp; Even his robberies are carried on in the
+plain daylight, under the open sky, with the stimulus of
+enterprise, and the countenance of an accomplice; his terror of
+the dark is still insurmountable; conceive, then, what he endures
+in his solitary dungeon; conceive how he longs to confess, become
+a full-fledged convict, and be allowed to sleep beside his
+comrades.&nbsp; While we were in Tai-o-hae a thief was under
+prevention.&nbsp; He had entered a house about eight in the
+morning, forced a trunk, and stolen eleven hundred francs; and
+now, under the horrors of darkness, solitude, and a bedevilled
+cannibal imagination, he was reluctantly confessing and giving up
+his spoil.&nbsp; From one cache, which he had already pointed
+out, three hundred francs had been recovered, and it was expected
+that he would presently disgorge the rest.&nbsp; This would be
+ugly enough if it were all; but I am bound to say, because it is
+a matter the French should set at rest, that worse is continually
+hinted.&nbsp; I heard that one man was kept six days with his
+arms bound backward round a barrel; and it is the universal
+report that every gendarme in the South Seas is equipped with
+something in the nature of a thumbscrew.&nbsp; I do not know
+this.&nbsp; I never had the face to ask any of the
+gendarmes&mdash;pleasant, intelligent, and kindly
+fellows&mdash;with whom I have been intimate, and whose
+hospitality I have enjoyed; and perhaps the tale reposes (as I
+hope it does) on a misconstruction of that ingenious
+cat&rsquo;s-cradle with which the French agent of police so
+readily secures a prisoner.&nbsp; But whether physical or moral,
+torture is certainly employed; and by a barbarous injustice, the
+state of accusation (in which a man may very well be innocently
+placed) is positively painful; the state of conviction (in which
+all are supposed guilty) is comparatively free, and positively
+pleasant.&nbsp; Perhaps worse still,&mdash;not only the accused,
+but sometimes his wife, his mistress, or his friend, is subjected
+to the same hardships.&nbsp; I was admiring, in the tapu system,
+the ingenuity of native methods of detection; there is not much
+to admire in those of the French, and to lock up a timid child in
+a dark room, and, if he proved obstinate, lock up his sister in
+the next, is neither novel nor humane.</p>
+<p>The main occasion of these thefts is the new vice of
+opium-eating.&nbsp; &lsquo;Here nobody ever works, and all eat
+opium,&rsquo; said a gendarme; and Ah Fu knew a woman who ate a
+dollar&rsquo;s worth in a day.&nbsp; The successful thief will
+give a handful of money to each of his friends, a dress to a
+woman, pass an evening in one of the taverns of Tai-o-hae, during
+which he treats all comers, produce a big lump of opium, and
+retire to the bush to eat and sleep it off.&nbsp; A trader, who
+did not sell opium, confessed to me that he was at his
+wit&rsquo;s end.&nbsp; &lsquo;I do not sell it, but others
+do,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;The natives only work to buy it;
+if they walk over to me to sell their cotton, they have just to
+walk over to some one else to buy their opium with my
+money.&nbsp; And why should they be at the bother of two
+walks?&nbsp; There is no use talking,&rsquo; he
+added&mdash;&lsquo;opium is the currency of this
+country.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The man under prevention during my stay at Tai-o-hae lost
+patience while the Chinese opium-seller was being examined in his
+presence.&nbsp; &lsquo;Of course he sold me opium!&rsquo; he
+broke out; &lsquo;all the Chinese here sell opium.&nbsp; It was
+only to buy opium that I stole; it is only to buy opium that
+anybody steals.&nbsp; And what you ought to do is to let no opium
+come here, and no Chinamen.&rsquo;&nbsp; This is precisely what
+is done in Samoa by a native Government; but the French have
+bound their own hands, and for forty thousand francs sold native
+subjects to crime and death.&nbsp; This horrid traffic may be
+said to have sprung up by accident.&nbsp; It was Captain Hart who
+had the misfortune to be the means of beginning it, at a time
+when his plantations flourished in the Marquesas, and he found a
+difficulty in keeping Chinese coolies.&nbsp; To-day the
+plantations are practically deserted and the Chinese gone; but in
+the meanwhile the natives have learned the vice, the patent
+brings in a round sum, and the needy Government at Papeete shut
+their eyes and open their pockets.&nbsp; Of course, the patentee
+is supposed to sell to Chinamen alone; equally of course, no one
+could afford to pay forty thousand francs for the privilege of
+supplying a scattered handful of Chinese; and every one knows the
+truth, and all are ashamed of it.&nbsp; French officials shake
+their heads when opium is mentioned; and the agents of the farmer
+blush for their employment.&nbsp; Those that live in glass houses
+should not throw stones; as a subject of the British crown, I am
+an unwilling shareholder in the largest opium business under
+heaven.&nbsp; But the British case is highly complicated; it
+implies the livelihood of millions; and must be reformed, when it
+can be reformed at all, with prudence.&nbsp; This French
+business, on the other hand, is a nostrum and a mere
+excrescence.&nbsp; No native industry was to be encouraged: the
+poison is solemnly imported.&nbsp; No native habit was to be
+considered: the vice has been gratuitously introduced.&nbsp; And
+no creature profits, save the Government at Papeete&mdash;the not
+very enviable gentlemen who pay them, and the Chinese underlings
+who do the dirty work.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IX&mdash;THE HOUSE OF TEMOANA</h3>
+<p>The history of the Marquesas is, of late years, much confused
+by the coming and going of the French.&nbsp; At least twice they
+have seized the archipelago, at least once deserted it; and in
+the meanwhile the natives pursued almost without interruption
+their desultory cannibal wars.&nbsp; Through these events and
+changing dynasties, a single considerable figure may be seen to
+move: that of the high chief, a king, Temoana.&nbsp; Odds and
+ends of his history came to my ears: how he was at first a
+convert to the Protestant mission; how he was kidnapped or exiled
+from his native land, served as cook aboard a whaler, and was
+shown, for small charge, in English seaports; how he returned at
+last to the Marquesas, fell under the strong and benign influence
+of the late bishop, extended his influence in the group, was for
+a while joint ruler with the prelate, and died at last the chief
+supporter of Catholicism and the French.&nbsp; His widow remains
+in receipt of two pounds a month from the French
+Government.&nbsp; Queen she is usually called, but in the
+official almanac she figures as &lsquo;<i>Madame Vaekehu</i>,
+<i>Grande Chefesse</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; His son (natural or
+adoptive, I know not which), Stanislao Moanatini, chief of Akaui,
+serves in Tai-o-hae as a kind of Minister of Public Works; and
+the daughter of Stanislao is High Chiefess of the southern island
+of Tauata.&nbsp; These, then, are the greatest folk of the
+archipelago; we thought them also the most estimable.&nbsp; This
+is the rule in Polynesia, with few exceptions; the higher the
+family, the better the man&mdash;better in sense, better in
+manners, and usually taller and stronger in body.&nbsp; A
+stranger advances blindfold.&nbsp; He scrapes acquaintance as he
+can.&nbsp; Save the tattoo in the Marquesas, nothing indicates
+the difference of rank; and yet almost invariably we found, after
+we had made them, that our friends were persons of station.&nbsp;
+I have said &lsquo;usually taller and stronger.&rsquo;&nbsp; I
+might have been more absolute,&mdash;over all Polynesia, and a
+part of Micronesia, the rule holds good; the great ones of the
+isle, and even of the village, are greater of bone and muscle,
+and often heavier of flesh, than any commoner.&nbsp; The usual
+explanation&mdash;that the high-born child is more industriously
+shampooed, is probably the true one.&nbsp; In New Caledonia, at
+least, where the difference does not exist, has never been
+remarked, the practice of shampooing seems to be itself
+unknown.&nbsp; Doctors would be well employed in a study of the
+point.</p>
+<p>Vaekehu lives at the other end of the town from the Residency,
+beyond the buildings of the mission.&nbsp; Her house is on the
+European plan: a table in the midst of the chief room;
+photographs and religious pictures on the wall.&nbsp; It commands
+to either hand a charming vista: through the front door, a peep
+of green lawn, scurrying pigs, the pendent fans of the coco-palm
+and splendour of the bursting surf: through the back, mounting
+forest glades and coronals of precipice.&nbsp; Here, in the
+strong thorough-draught, Her Majesty received us in a simple gown
+of print, and with no mark of royalty but the exquisite finish of
+her tattooed mittens, the elaboration of her manners, and the
+gentle falsetto in which all the highly refined among Marquesan
+ladies (and Vaekehu above all others) delight to sing their
+language.&nbsp; An adopted daughter interpreted, while we gave
+the news, and rehearsed by name our friends of Anaho.&nbsp; As we
+talked, we could see, through the landward door, another lady of
+the household at her toilet under the green trees; who presently,
+when her hair was arranged, and her hat wreathed with flowers,
+appeared upon the back verandah with gracious salutations.</p>
+<p>Vaekehu is very deaf; &lsquo;<i>merci</i>&rsquo; is her only
+word of French; and I do not know that she seemed clever.&nbsp;
+An exquisite, kind refinement, with a shade of quietism, gathered
+perhaps from the nuns, was what chiefly struck us.&nbsp; Or
+rather, upon that first occasion, we were conscious of a sense as
+of district-visiting on our part, and reduced evangelical
+gentility on the part of our hostess.&nbsp; The other impression
+followed after she was more at ease, and came with Stanislao and
+his little girl to dine on board the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; She had
+dressed for the occasion: wore white, which very well became her
+strong brown face; and sat among us, eating or smoking her
+cigarette, quite cut off from all society, or only now and then
+included through the intermediary of her son.&nbsp; It was a
+position that might have been ridiculous, and she made it
+ornamental; making believe to hear and to be entertained; her
+face, whenever she met our eyes, lighting with the smile of good
+society; her contributions to the talk, when she made any, and
+that was seldom, always complimentary and pleasing.&nbsp; No
+attention was paid to the child, for instance, but what she
+remarked and thanked us for.&nbsp; Her parting with each, when
+she came to leave, was gracious and pretty, as had been every
+step of her behaviour.&nbsp; When Mrs. Stevenson held out her
+hand to say good-bye, Vaekehu took it, held it, and a moment
+smiled upon her; dropped it, and then, as upon a kindly
+after-thought, and with a sort of warmth of condescension, held
+out both hands and kissed my wife upon both cheeks.&nbsp; Given
+the same relation of years and of rank, the thing would have been
+so done on the boards of the <i>Com&eacute;die
+Fran&ccedil;aise</i>; just so might Madame Brohan have warmed and
+condescended to Madame Broisat in the <i>Marquis de
+Villemer</i>.&nbsp; It was my part to accompany our guests
+ashore: when I kissed the little girl good-bye at the pier steps,
+Vaekehu gave a cry of gratification, reached down her hand into
+the boat, took mine, and pressed it with that flattering softness
+which seems the coquetry of the old lady in every quarter of the
+earth.&nbsp; The next moment she had taken Stanislao&rsquo;s arm,
+and they moved off along the pier in the moonlight, leaving me
+bewildered.&nbsp; This was a queen of cannibals; she was tattooed
+from hand to foot, and perhaps the greatest masterpiece of that
+art now extant, so that a while ago, before she was grown prim,
+her leg was one of the sights of Tai-o-hae; she had been passed
+from chief to chief; she had been fought for and taken in war;
+perhaps, being so great a lady, she had sat on the high place,
+and throned it there, alone of her sex, while the drums were
+going twenty strong and the priests carried up the blood-stained
+baskets of long-pig.&nbsp; And now behold her, out of that past
+of violence and sickening feasts, step forth, in her age, a
+quiet, smooth, elaborate old lady, such as you might find at home
+(mittened also, but not often so well-mannered) in a score of
+country houses.&nbsp; Only Vaekehu&rsquo;s mittens were of dye,
+not of silk; and they had been paid for, not in money, but the
+cooked flesh of men.&nbsp; It came in my mind with a clap, what
+she could think of it herself, and whether at heart, perhaps, she
+might not regret and aspire after the barbarous and stirring
+past.&nbsp; But when I asked Stanislao&mdash;&lsquo;Ah!&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;she is content; she is religious, she passes all
+her days with the sisters.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Stanislao (Stanislaos, with the final consonant evaded after
+the Polynesian habit) was sent by Bishop Dordillon to South
+America, and there educated by the fathers.&nbsp; His French is
+fluent, his talk sensible and spirited, and in his capacity of
+ganger-in-chief, he is of excellent service to the French.&nbsp;
+With the prestige of his name and family, and with the stick when
+needful, he keeps the natives working and the roads
+passable.&nbsp; Without Stanislao and the convicts, I am in doubt
+what would become of the present regimen in Nuka-hiva; whether
+the highways might not be suffered to close up, the pier to wash
+away, and the Residency to fall piecemeal about the ears of
+impotent officials.&nbsp; And yet though the hereditary favourer,
+and one of the chief props of French authority, he has always an
+eye upon the past.&nbsp; He showed me where the old public place
+had stood, still to be traced by random piles of stone; told me
+how great and fine it was, and surrounded on all sides by
+populous houses, whence, at the beating of the drums, the folk
+crowded to make holiday.&nbsp; The drum-beat of the Polynesian
+has a strange and gloomy stimulation for the nerves of all.&nbsp;
+White persons feel it&mdash;at these precipitate sounds their
+hearts beat faster; and, according to old residents, its effect
+on the natives was extreme.&nbsp; Bishop Dordillon might entreat;
+Temoana himself command and threaten; at the note of the drum
+wild instincts triumphed.&nbsp; And now it might beat upon these
+ruins, and who should assemble?&nbsp; The houses are down, the
+people dead, their lineage extinct; and the sweepings and
+fugitives of distant bays and islands encamp upon their
+graves.&nbsp; The decline of the dance Stanislao especially
+laments.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Chaque pays a ses coutumes</i>,&rsquo;
+said he; but in the report of any gendarme, perhaps corruptly
+eager to increase the number of <i>d&eacute;lits</i> and the
+instruments of his own power, custom after custom is placed on
+the expurgatorial index.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Tenez</i>, <i>une danse
+qui n&rsquo;est pas permise</i>,&rsquo; said Stanislao:
+&lsquo;<i>je ne sais pas pourquoi</i>, <i>elle est tr&egrave;s
+jolie</i>, <i>elle va comme &ccedil;a</i>,&rsquo; and sticking
+his umbrella upright in the road, he sketched the steps and
+gestures.&nbsp; All his criticisms of the present, all his
+regrets for the past, struck me as temperate and sensible.&nbsp;
+The short term of office of the Resident he thought the chief
+defect of the administration; that officer having scarce begun to
+be efficient ere he was recalled.&nbsp; I thought I gathered,
+too, that he regarded with some fear the coming change from a
+naval to a civil governor.&nbsp; I am sure at least that I regard
+it so myself; for the civil servants of France have never
+appeared to any foreigner as at all the flower of their country,
+while her naval officers may challenge competition with the
+world.&nbsp; In all his talk, Stanislao was particular to speak
+of his own country as a land of savages; and when he stated an
+opinion of his own, it was with some apologetic preface, alleging
+that he was &lsquo;a savage who had travelled.&rsquo;&nbsp; There
+was a deal, in this elaborate modesty, of honest pride.&nbsp; Yet
+there was something in the precaution that saddened me; and I
+could not but fear he was only forestalling a taunt that he had
+heard too often.</p>
+<p>I recall with interest two interviews with Stanislao.&nbsp;
+The first was a certain afternoon of tropic rain, which we passed
+together in the verandah of the club; talking at times with
+heightened voices as the showers redoubled overhead, passing at
+times into the billiard-room, to consult, in the dim, cloudy
+daylight, that map of the world which forms its chief
+adornment.&nbsp; He was naturally ignorant of English history, so
+that I had much of news to communicate.&nbsp; The story of Gordon
+I told him in full, and many episodes of the Indian Mutiny,
+Lucknow, the second battle of Cawn-pore, the relief of Arrah, the
+death of poor Spottis-woode, and Sir Hugh Rose&rsquo;s hotspur,
+midland campaign.&nbsp; He was intent to hear; his brown face,
+strongly marked with small-pox, kindled and changed with each
+vicissitude.&nbsp; His eyes glowed with the reflected light of
+battle; his questions were many and intelligent, and it was
+chiefly these that sent us so often to the map.&nbsp; But it is
+of our parting that I keep the strongest sense.&nbsp; We were to
+sail on the morrow, and the night had fallen, dark, gusty, and
+rainy, when we stumbled up the hill to bid farewell to
+Stanislao.&nbsp; He had already loaded us with gifts; but more
+were waiting.&nbsp; We sat about the table over cigars and green
+cocoa-nuts; claps of wind blew through the house and extinguished
+the lamp, which was always instantly relighted with a single
+match; and these recurrent intervals of darkness were felt as a
+relief.&nbsp; For there was something painful and embarrassing in
+the kindness of that separation.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Ah</i>, <i>vous
+devriez rester ici</i>, <i>mon cher ami</i>!&rsquo; cried
+Stanislao.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Vous &ecirc;tes les gens qu&rsquo;il
+faut pour les Kanaques</i>; <i>vous &ecirc;tes doux</i>, <i>vous
+et votre famille</i>; <i>vous seriez ob&eacute;is dans toutes les
+&icirc;les</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; We had been civil; not always that,
+my conscience told me, and never anything beyond; and all this
+to-do is a measure, not of our considerateness, but of the want
+of it in others.&nbsp; The rest of the evening, on to
+Vaekehu&rsquo;s and back as far as to the pier, Stanislao walked
+with my arm and sheltered me with his umbrella; and after the
+boat had put off, we could still distinguish, in the murky
+darkness, his gestures of farewell.&nbsp; His words, if there
+were any, were drowned by the rain and the loud surf.</p>
+<p>I have mentioned presents, a vexed question in the South Seas;
+and one which well illustrates the common, ignorant habit of
+regarding races in a lump.&nbsp; In many quarters the Polynesian
+gives only to receive.&nbsp; I have visited islands where the
+population mobbed me for all the world like dogs after the waggon
+of cat&rsquo;s-meat; and where the frequent proposition,
+&lsquo;You my pleni (friend),&rsquo; or (with more of pathos)
+&lsquo;You all &rsquo;e same my father,&rsquo; must be received
+with hearty laughter and a shout.&nbsp; And perhaps everywhere,
+among the greedy and rapacious, a gift is regarded as a sprat to
+catch a whale.&nbsp; It is the habit to give gifts and to receive
+returns, and such characters, complying with the custom, will
+look to it nearly that they do not lose.&nbsp; But for persons of
+a different stamp the statement must be reversed.&nbsp; The
+shabby Polynesian is anxious till he has received the return
+gift; the generous is uneasy until he has made it.&nbsp; The
+first is disappointed if you have not given more than he; the
+second is miserable if he thinks he has given less than
+you.&nbsp; This is my experience; if it clash with that of
+others, I pity their fortune, and praise mine: the circumstances
+cannot change what I have seen, nor lessen what I have
+received.&nbsp; And indeed I find that those who oppose me often
+argue from a ground of singular presumptions; comparing
+Polynesians with an ideal person, compact of generosity and
+gratitude, whom I never had the pleasure of encountering; and
+forgetting that what is almost poverty to us is wealth almost
+unthinkable to them.&nbsp; I will give one instance: I chanced to
+speak with consideration of these gifts of Stanislao&rsquo;s with
+a certain clever man, a great hater and contemner of
+Kanakas.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well! what were they?&rsquo; he
+cried.&nbsp; &lsquo;A pack of old men&rsquo;s beards.&nbsp;
+Trash!&rsquo;&nbsp; And the same gentleman, some half an hour
+later, being upon a different train of thought, dwelt at length
+on the esteem in which the Marquesans held that sort of property,
+how they preferred it to all others except land, and what fancy
+prices it would fetch.&nbsp; Using his own figures, I computed
+that, in this commodity alone, the gifts of Vaekehu and Stanislao
+represented between two and three hundred dollars; and the
+queen&rsquo;s official salary is of two hundred and forty in the
+year.</p>
+<p>But generosity on the one hand, and conspicuous meanness on
+the other, are in the South Seas, as at home, the
+exception.&nbsp; It is neither with any hope of gain, nor with
+any lively wish to please, that the ordinary Polynesian chooses
+and presents his gifts.&nbsp; A plain social duty lies before
+him, which he performs correctly, but without the least
+enthusiasm.&nbsp; And we shall best understand his attitude of
+mind, if we examine our own to the cognate absurdity of marriage
+presents.&nbsp; There we give without any special thought of a
+return; yet if the circumstance arise, and the return be
+withheld, we shall judge ourselves insulted.&nbsp; We give them
+usually without affection, and almost never with a genuine desire
+to please; and our gift is rather a mark of our own status than a
+measure of our love to the recipients.&nbsp; So in a great
+measure and with the common run of the Polynesians; their gifts
+are formal; they imply no more than social recognition; and they
+are made and reciprocated, as we pay and return our morning
+visits.&nbsp; And the practice of marking and measuring events
+and sentiments by presents is universal in the island
+world.&nbsp; A gift plays with them the part of stamp and seal;
+and has entered profoundly into the mind of islanders.&nbsp;
+Peace and war, marriage, adoption and naturalisation, are
+celebrated or declared by the acceptance or the refusal of gifts;
+and it is as natural for the islander to bring a gift as for us
+to carry a card-case.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER X&mdash;A PORTRAIT AND A STORY</h3>
+<p>I have had occasion several times to name the late bishop,
+Father Dordillon, &lsquo;Monseigneur,&rsquo; as he is still
+almost universally called, Vicar-Apostolic of the Marquesas and
+Bishop of Cambysopolis <i>in partibus</i>.&nbsp; Everywhere in
+the islands, among all classes and races, this fine, old, kindly,
+cheerful fellow is remembered with affection and respect.&nbsp;
+His influence with the natives was paramount.&nbsp; They reckoned
+him the highest of men&mdash;higher than an admiral; brought him
+their money to keep; took his advice upon their purchases; nor
+would they plant trees upon their own land till they had the
+approval of the father of the islands.&nbsp; During the time of
+the French exodus he singly represented Europe, living in the
+Residency, and ruling by the hand of Temoana.&nbsp; The first
+roads were made under his auspices and by his persuasion.&nbsp;
+The old road between Hatiheu and Anaho was got under way from
+either side on the ground that it would be pleasant for an
+evening promenade, and brought to completion by working on the
+rivalry of the two villages.&nbsp; The priest would boast in
+Hatiheu of the progress made in Anaho, and he would tell the folk
+of Anaho, &lsquo;If you don&rsquo;t take care, your neighbours
+will be over the hill before you are at the top.&rsquo;&nbsp; It
+could not be so done to-day; it could then; death, opium, and
+depopulation had not gone so far; and the people of Hatiheu, I
+was told, still vied with each other in fine attire, and used to
+go out by families, in the cool of the evening, boat-sailing and
+racing in the bay.&nbsp; There seems some truth at least in the
+common view, that this joint reign of Temoana and the bishop was
+the last and brief golden age of the Marquesas.&nbsp; But the
+civil power returned, the mission was packed out of the Residency
+at twenty-four hours&rsquo; notice, new methods supervened, and
+the golden age (whatever it quite was) came to an end.&nbsp; It
+is the strongest proof of Father Dordillon&rsquo;s prestige that
+it survived, seemingly without loss, this hasty deposition.</p>
+<p>His method with the natives was extremely mild.&nbsp; Among
+these barbarous children he still played the part of the smiling
+father; and he was careful to observe, in all indifferent
+matters, the Marquesan etiquette.&nbsp; Thus, in the singular
+system of artificial kinship, the bishop had been adopted by
+Vaekehu as a grandson; Miss Fisher, of Hatiheu, as a
+daughter.&nbsp; From that day, Monseigneur never addressed the
+young lady except as his mother, and closed his letters with the
+formalities of a dutiful son.&nbsp; With Europeans he could be
+strict, even to the extent of harshness.&nbsp; He made no
+distinction against heretics, with whom he was on friendly terms;
+but the rules of his own Church he would see observed; and once
+at least he had a white man clapped in jail for the desecration
+of a saint&rsquo;s day.&nbsp; But even this rigour, so
+intolerable to laymen, so irritating to Protestants, could not
+shake his popularity.&nbsp; We shall best conceive him by
+examples nearer home; we may all have known some divine of the
+old school in Scotland, a literal Sabbatarian, a stickler for the
+letter of the law, who was yet in private modest, innocent,
+genial and mirthful.&nbsp; Much such a man, it seems, was Father
+Dordillon.&nbsp; And his popularity bore a test yet
+stronger.&nbsp; He had the name, and probably deserved it, of a
+shrewd man in business and one that made the mission pay.&nbsp;
+Nothing so much stirs up resentment as the inmixture in commerce
+of religious bodies; but even rival traders spoke well of
+Monseigneur.</p>
+<p>His character is best portrayed in the story of the days of
+his decline.&nbsp; A time came when, from the failure of sight,
+he must desist from his literary labours: his Marquesan hymns,
+grammars, and dictionaries; his scientific papers, lives of
+saints, and devotional poetry.&nbsp; He cast about for a new
+interest: pitched on gardening, and was to be seen all day, with
+spade and water-pot, in his childlike eagerness, actually running
+between the borders.&nbsp; Another step of decay, and he must
+leave his garden also.&nbsp; Instantly a new occupation was
+devised, and he sat in the mission cutting paper flowers and
+wreaths.&nbsp; His diocese was not great enough for his activity;
+the churches of the Marquesas were papered with his handiwork,
+and still he must be making more.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ah,&rsquo; said
+he, smiling, &lsquo;when I am dead what a fine time you will have
+clearing out my trash!&rsquo;&nbsp; He had been dead about six
+months; but I was pleased to see some of his trophies still
+exposed, and looked upon them with a smile: the tribute (if I
+have read his cheerful character aright) which he would have
+preferred to any useless tears.&nbsp; Disease continued
+progressively to disable him; he who had clambered so stalwartly
+over the rude rocks of the Marquesas, bringing peace to warfaring
+clans, was for some time carried in a chair between the mission
+and the church, and at last confined to bed, impotent with
+dropsy, and tormented with bed-sores and sciatica.&nbsp; Here he
+lay two months without complaint; and on the 11th January 1888,
+in the seventy-ninth year of his life, and the thirty-fourth of
+his labours in the Marquesas, passed away.</p>
+<p>Those who have a taste for hearing missions, Protestant or
+Catholic, decried, must seek their pleasure elsewhere than in my
+pages.&nbsp; Whether Catholic or Protestant, with all their gross
+blots, with all their deficiency of candour, of humour, and of
+common sense, the missionaries are the best and the most useful
+whites in the Pacific.&nbsp; This is a subject which will follow
+us throughout; but there is one part of it that may conveniently
+be treated here.&nbsp; The married and the celibate missionary,
+each has his particular advantage and defect.&nbsp; The married
+missionary, taking him at the best, may offer to the native what
+he is much in want of&mdash;a higher picture of domestic life;
+but the woman at his elbow tends to keep him in touch with Europe
+and out of touch with Polynesia, and to perpetuate, and even to
+ingrain, parochial decencies far best forgotten.&nbsp; The mind
+of the female missionary tends, for instance, to be continually
+busied about dress.&nbsp; She can be taught with extreme
+difficulty to think any costume decent but that to which she grew
+accustomed on Clapham Common; and to gratify this prejudice, the
+native is put to useless expense, his mind is tainted with the
+morbidities of Europe, and his health is set in danger.&nbsp; The
+celibate missionary, on the other hand, and whether at best or
+worst, falls readily into native ways of life; to which he adds
+too commonly what is either a mark of celibate man at large, or
+an inheritance from medi&aelig;val saints&mdash;I mean slovenly
+habits and an unclean person.&nbsp; There are, of course, degrees
+in this; and the sister (of course, and all honour to her) is as
+fresh as a lady at a ball.&nbsp; For the diet there is nothing to
+be said&mdash;it must amaze and shock the Polynesian&mdash;but
+for the adoption of native habits there is much.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Chaque pays a ses coutumes</i>,&rsquo; said Stanislao;
+these it is the missionary&rsquo;s delicate task to modify; and
+the more he can do so from within, and from a native standpoint,
+the better he will do his work; and here I think the Catholics
+have sometimes the advantage; in the Vicariate of Dordillon, I am
+sure they had it.&nbsp; I have heard the bishop blamed for his
+indulgence to the natives, and above all because he did not rage
+with sufficient energy against cannibalism.&nbsp; It was a part
+of his policy to live among the natives like an elder brother; to
+follow where he could; to lead where it was necessary; never to
+drive; and to encourage the growth of new habits, instead of
+violently rooting up the old.&nbsp; And it might be better, in
+the long-run, if this policy were always followed.</p>
+<p>It might be supposed that native missionaries would prove more
+indulgent, but the reverse is found to be the case.&nbsp; The new
+broom sweeps clean; and the white missionary of to-day is often
+embarrassed by the bigotry of his native coadjutor.&nbsp; What
+else should we expect?&nbsp; On some islands, sorcery, polygamy,
+human sacrifice, and tobacco-smoking have been prohibited, the
+dress of the native has been modified, and himself warned in
+strong terms against rival sects of Christianity; all by the same
+man, at the same period of time, and with the like
+authority.&nbsp; By what criterion is the convert to distinguish
+the essential from the unessential?&nbsp; He swallows the nostrum
+whole; there has been no play of mind, no instruction, and,
+except for some brute utility in the prohibitions, no
+advance.&nbsp; To call things by their proper names, this is
+teaching superstition.&nbsp; It is unfortunate to use the word;
+so few people have read history, and so many have dipped into
+little atheistic manuals, that the majority will rush to a
+conclusion, and suppose the labour lost.&nbsp; And far from that:
+These semi-spontaneous superstitions, varying with the sect of
+the original evangelist and the customs of the island, are found
+in practice to be highly fructifying; and in particular those who
+have learned and who go forth again to teach them offer an
+example to the world.&nbsp; The best specimen of the Christian
+hero that I ever met was one of these native missionaries.&nbsp;
+He had saved two lives at the risk of his own; like Nathan, he
+had bearded a tyrant in his hour of blood; when a whole white
+population fled, he alone stood to his duty; and his behaviour
+under domestic sorrow with which the public has no concern filled
+the beholder with sympathy and admiration.&nbsp; A poor little
+smiling laborious man he looked; and you would have thought he
+had nothing in him but that of which indeed he had too
+much&mdash;facile good-nature. <a name="citation86"></a><a
+href="#footnote86" class="citation">[86]</a></p>
+<p>It chances that the only rivals of Monseigneur and his mission
+in the Marquesas were certain of these brown-skinned evangelists,
+natives from Hawaii.&nbsp; I know not what they thought of Father
+Dordillon: they are the only class I did not question; but I
+suspect the prelate to have regarded them askance, for he was
+eminently human.&nbsp; During my stay at Tai-o-hae, the time of
+the yearly holiday came round at the girls&rsquo; school; and a
+whole fleet of whale-boats came from Ua-pu to take the daughters
+of that island home.&nbsp; On board of these was Kauwealoha, one
+of the pastors, a fine, rugged old gentleman, of that leonine
+type so common in Hawaii.&nbsp; He paid me a visit in the
+<i>Casco</i>, and there entertained me with a tale of one of his
+colleagues, Kekela, a missionary in the great cannibal isle of
+Hiva-oa.&nbsp; It appears that shortly after a kidnapping visit
+from a Peruvian slaver, the boats of an American whaler put into
+a bay upon that island, were attacked, and made their escape with
+difficulty, leaving their mate, a Mr. Whalon, in the hands of the
+natives.&nbsp; The captive, with his arms bound behind his back,
+was cast into a house; and the chief announced the capture to
+Kekela.&nbsp; And here I begin to follow the version of
+Kauwealoha; it is a good specimen of Kanaka English; and the
+reader is to conceive it delivered with violent emphasis and
+speaking pantomime.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;I got &rsquo;Melican mate,&rdquo; the chief he
+say.&nbsp; &ldquo;What you go do &rsquo;Melican mate?&rdquo;
+Kekela he say.&nbsp; &ldquo;I go make fire, I go kill, I go eat
+him,&rdquo; he say; &ldquo;you come to-mollow eat
+piece.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I no <i>want</i> eat &rsquo;Melican
+mate!&rdquo; Kekela he say; &ldquo;why you want?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;This bad shippee, this slave shippee,&rdquo; the chief he
+say.&nbsp; &ldquo;One time a shippee he come from Pelu, he take
+away plenty Kanaka, he take away my son.&nbsp; &rsquo;Melican
+mate he bad man.&nbsp; I go eat him; you eat piece.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I no <i>want</i> eat &rsquo;Melican mate!&rdquo; Kekela he
+say; and he <i>cly</i>&mdash;all night he cly!&nbsp; To-mollow
+Kekela he get up, he put on blackee coat, he go see chief; he see
+Missa Whela, him hand tie&rsquo; like this.&nbsp;
+(<i>Pantomime</i>.)&nbsp; Kekela he cly.&nbsp; He say
+chief:&mdash;&ldquo;Chief, you like things of mine? you like
+whale-boat?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he say.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You like file-a&rsquo;m?&rdquo; (fire-arms).&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he say.&nbsp; &ldquo;You like blackee
+coat?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he say.&nbsp; Kekela he
+take Missa Whela by he shoul&rsquo;a&rsquo; (shoulder), he take
+him light out house; he give chief he whale-boat, he
+file-a&rsquo;m, he blackee coat.&nbsp; He take Missa Whela he
+house, make him sit down with he wife and chil&rsquo;en.&nbsp;
+Missa Whela all-the-same pelison (prison); he wife, he
+chil&rsquo;en in Amelica; he cly&mdash;O, he cly.&nbsp; Kekela he
+solly.&nbsp; One day Kekela he see ship.&nbsp;
+(<i>Pantomime</i>.)&nbsp; He say Missa Whela, &ldquo;Ma&rsquo;
+Whala?&rdquo;&nbsp; Missa Whela he say, &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Kanaka they begin go down beach.&nbsp; Kekela he get eleven
+Kanaka, get oa&rsquo; (oars), get evely thing.&nbsp; He say Missa
+Whela, &ldquo;Now you go quick.&rdquo;&nbsp; They jump in
+whale-boat.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now you low!&rdquo;&nbsp; Kekela he say:
+&ldquo;you low quick, quick!&rdquo;&nbsp; (<i>Violent
+pantomime</i>, <i>and a change indicating that the narrator has
+left the boat and returned to the beach</i>.)&nbsp; All the
+Kanaka they say, &ldquo;How!&nbsp; &rsquo;Melican mate he go
+away?&rdquo;&mdash;jump in boat; low afta.&nbsp; (<i>Violent
+pantomime</i>, <i>and change again to boat</i>.)&nbsp; Kekela he
+say, &ldquo;Low quick!&rdquo;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Here I think Kauwealoha&rsquo;s pantomime had confused me; I
+have no more of his <i>ipsissima verba</i>; and can but add, in
+my own less spirited manner, that the ship was reached, Mr.
+Whalon taken aboard, and Kekela returned to his charge among the
+cannibals.&nbsp; But how unjust it is to repeat the stumblings of
+a foreigner in a language only partly acquired!&nbsp; A
+thoughtless reader might conceive Kauwealoha and his colleague to
+be a species of amicable baboon; but I have here the
+anti-dote.&nbsp; In return for his act of gallant charity, Kekela
+was presented by the American Government with a sum of money, and
+by President Lincoln personally with a gold watch.&nbsp; From his
+letter of thanks, written in his own tongue, I give the following
+extract.&nbsp; I do not envy the man who can read it without
+emotion.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;When I saw one of your countrymen, a
+citizen of your great nation, ill-treated, and about to be baked
+and eaten, as a pig is eaten, I ran to save him, full of pity and
+grief at the evil deed of these benighted people.&nbsp; I gave my
+boat for the stranger&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; This boat came from
+James Hunnewell, a gift of friendship.&nbsp; It became the ransom
+of this countryman of yours, that he might not be eaten by the
+savages who knew not Jehovah.&nbsp; This was Mr. Whalon, and the
+date, Jan. 14, 1864.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;As to this friendly deed of mine in saving Mr. Whalon,
+its seed came from your great land, and was brought by certain of
+your countrymen, who had received the love of God.&nbsp; It was
+planted in Hawaii, and I brought it to plant in this land and in
+these dark regions, that they might receive the root of all that
+is good and true, which is <i>love</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. Love to Jehovah.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. Love to self.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. Love to our neighbour.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;If a man have a sufficiency of these three, he is good
+and holy, like his God, Jehovah, in his triune character (Father,
+Son, and Holy Ghost), one-three, three-one.&nbsp; If he have two
+and wants one, it is not well; and if he have one and wants two,
+indeed, is not well; but if he cherishes all three, then is he
+holy, indeed, after the manner of the Bible.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;This is a great thing for your great nation to boast
+of, before all the nations of the earth.&nbsp; From your great
+land a most precious seed was brought to the land of
+darkness.&nbsp; It was planted here, not by means of guns and
+men-of-war and threatening.&nbsp; It was planted by means of the
+ignorant, the neglected, the despised.&nbsp; Such was the
+introduction of the word of the Almighty God into this group of
+Nuuhiwa.&nbsp; Great is my debt to Americans, who have taught me
+all things pertaining to this life and to that which is to
+come.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;How shall I repay your great kindness to me?&nbsp; Thus
+David asked of Jehovah, and thus I ask of you, the President of
+the United States.&nbsp; This is my only payment&mdash;that which
+I have received of the Lord, love&mdash;(aloha).&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h3>CHAPTER XI&mdash;LONG-PIG&mdash;A CANNIBAL HIGH PLACE</h3>
+<p>Nothing more strongly arouses our disgust than cannibalism,
+nothing so surely unmortars a society; nothing, we might
+plausibly argue, will so harden and degrade the minds of those
+that practise it.&nbsp; And yet we ourselves make much the same
+appearance in the eyes of the Buddhist and the vegetarian.&nbsp;
+We consume the carcasses of creatures of like appetites,
+passions, and organs with ourselves; we feed on babes, though not
+our own; and the slaughter-house resounds daily with screams of
+pain and fear.&nbsp; We distinguish, indeed; but the
+unwillingness of many nations to eat the dog, an animal with whom
+we live on terms of the next intimacy, shows how precariously the
+distinction is grounded.&nbsp; The pig is the main element of
+animal food among the islands; and I had many occasions, my mind
+being quickened by my cannibal surroundings, to observe his
+character and the manner of his death.&nbsp; Many islanders live
+with their pigs as we do with our dogs; both crowd around the
+hearth with equal freedom; and the island pig is a fellow of
+activity, enterprise, and sense.&nbsp; He husks his own
+cocoa-nuts, and (I am told) rolls them into the sun to burst; he
+is the terror of the shepherd.&nbsp; Mrs. Stevenson, senior, has
+seen one fleeing to the woods with a lamb in his mouth; and I saw
+another come rapidly (and erroneously) to the conclusion that the
+<i>Casco</i> was going down, and swim through the flush water to
+the rail in search of an escape.&nbsp; It was told us in
+childhood that pigs cannot swim; I have known one to leap
+overboard, swim five hundred yards to shore, and return to the
+house of his original owner.&nbsp; I was once, at Tautira, a
+pig-master on a considerable scale; at first, in my pen, the
+utmost good feeling prevailed; a little sow with a belly-ache
+came and appealed to us for help in the manner of a child; and
+there was one shapely black boar, whom we called Catholicus, for
+he was a particular present from the Catholics of the village,
+and who early displayed the marks of courage and friendliness; no
+other animal, whether dog or pig, was suffered to approach him at
+his food, and for human beings he showed a full measure of that
+toadying fondness so common in the lower animals, and possibly
+their chief title to the name.&nbsp; One day, on visiting my
+piggery, I was amazed to see Catholicus draw back from my
+approach with cries of terror; and if I was amazed at the change,
+I was truly embarrassed when I learnt its reason.&nbsp; One of
+the pigs had been that morning killed; Catholicus had seen the
+murder, he had discovered he was dwelling in the shambles, and
+from that time his confidence and his delight in life were
+ended.&nbsp; We still reserved him a long while, but he could not
+endure the sight of any two-legged creature, nor could we, under
+the circumstances, encounter his eye without confusion.&nbsp; I
+have assisted besides, by the ear, at the act of butchery itself;
+the victim&rsquo;s cries of pain I think I could have borne, but
+the execution was mismanaged, and his expression of terror was
+contagious: that small heart moved to the same tune with
+ours.&nbsp; Upon such &lsquo;dread foundations&rsquo; the life of
+the European reposes, and yet the European is among the less
+cruel of races.&nbsp; The paraphernalia of murder, the
+preparatory brutalities of his existence, are all hid away; an
+extreme sensibility reigns upon the surface; and ladies will
+faint at the recital of one tithe of what they daily expect of
+their butchers.&nbsp; Some will be even crying out upon me in
+their hearts for the coarseness of this paragraph.&nbsp; And so
+with the island cannibals.&nbsp; They were not cruel; apart from
+this custom, they are a race of the most kindly; rightly
+speaking, to cut a man&rsquo;s flesh after he is dead is far less
+hateful than to oppress him whilst he lives; and even the victims
+of their appetite were gently used in life and suddenly and
+painlessly despatched at last.&nbsp; In island circles of
+refinement it was doubtless thought bad taste to expatiate on
+what was ugly in the practice.</p>
+<p>Cannibalism is traced from end to end of the Pacific, from the
+Marquesas to New Guinea, from New Zealand to Hawaii, here in the
+lively haunt of its exercise, there by scanty but significant
+survivals.&nbsp; Hawaii is the most doubtful.&nbsp; We find
+cannibalism chronicled in Hawaii, only in the history of a single
+war, where it seems to have been thought exception, as in the
+case of mountain outlaws, such as fell by the hand of
+Theseus.&nbsp; In Tahiti, a single circumstance survived, but
+that appears conclusive.&nbsp; In historic times, when human
+oblation was made in the marae, the eyes of the victim were
+formally offered to the chief: a delicacy to the leading
+guest.&nbsp; All Melanesia appears tainted.&nbsp; In Micronesia,
+in the Marshalls, with which my acquaintance is no more than that
+of a tourist, I could find no trace at all; and even in the
+Gilbert zone I long looked and asked in vain.&nbsp; I was told
+tales indeed of men who had been eaten in a famine; but these
+were nothing to my purpose, for the same thing is done under the
+same stress by all kindreds and generations of men.&nbsp; At
+last, in some manuscript notes of Dr. Turner&rsquo;s, which I was
+allowed to consult at Malua, I came on one damning evidence: on
+the island of Onoatoa the punishment for theft was to be killed
+and eaten.&nbsp; How shall we account for the universality of the
+practice over so vast an area, among people of such varying
+civilisation, and, with whatever intermixture, of such different
+blood?&nbsp; What circumstance is common to them all, but that
+they lived on islands destitute, or very nearly so, of animal
+food?&nbsp; I can never find it in my appetite that man was meant
+to live on vegetables only.&nbsp; When our stores ran low among
+the islands, I grew to weary for the recurrent day when economy
+allowed us to open another tin of miserable mutton.&nbsp; And in
+at least one ocean language, a particular word denotes that a man
+is &lsquo;hungry for fish,&rsquo; having reached that stage when
+vegetables can no longer satisfy, and his soul, like those of the
+Hebrews in the desert, begins to lust after flesh-pots.&nbsp; Add
+to this the evidences of over-population and imminent famine
+already adduced, and I think we see some ground of indulgence for
+the island cannibal.</p>
+<p>It is right to look at both sides of any question; but I am
+far from making the apology of this worse than bestial
+vice.&nbsp; The higher Polynesian races, such as the Tahitians,
+Hawaiians, and Samoans, had one and all outgrown, and some of
+them had in part forgot, the practice, before Cook or
+Bougainville had shown a top-sail in their waters.&nbsp; It
+lingered only in some low islands where life was difficult to
+maintain, and among inveterate savages like the New-Zealanders or
+the Marquesans.&nbsp; The Marquesans intertwined man-eating with
+the whole texture of their lives; long-pig was in a sense their
+currency and sacrament; it formed the hire of the artist,
+illustrated public events, and was the occasion and attraction of
+a feast.&nbsp; To-day they are paying the penalty of this bloody
+commixture.&nbsp; The civil power, in its crusade against
+man-eating, has had to examine one after another all Marquesan
+arts and pleasures, has found them one after another tainted with
+a cannibal element, and one after another has placed them on the
+proscript list.&nbsp; Their art of tattooing stood by itself, the
+execution exquisite, the designs most beautiful and intricate;
+nothing more handsomely sets off a handsome man; it may cost some
+pain in the beginning, but I doubt if it be near so painful in
+the long-run, and I am sure it is far more becoming than the
+ignoble European practice of tight-lacing among women.&nbsp; And
+now it has been found needful to forbid the art.&nbsp; Their
+songs and dances were numerous (and the law has had to abolish
+them by the dozen).&nbsp; They now face empty-handed the tedium
+of their uneventful days; and who shall pity them?&nbsp; The
+least rigorous will say that they were justly served.</p>
+<p>Death alone could not satisfy Marquesan vengeance: the flesh
+must be eaten.&nbsp; The chief who seized Mr. Whalon preferred to
+eat him; and he thought he had justified the wish when he
+explained it was a vengeance.&nbsp; Two or three years ago, the
+people of a valley seized and slew a wretch who had offended
+them.&nbsp; His offence, it is to be supposed, was dire; they
+could not bear to leave their vengeance incomplete, and, under
+the eyes of the French, they did not dare to hold a public
+festival.&nbsp; The body was accordingly divided; and every man
+retired to his own house to consummate the rite in secret,
+carrying his proportion of the dreadful meat in a Swedish
+match-box.&nbsp; The barbarous substance of the drama and the
+European properties employed offer a seizing contrast to the
+imagination.&nbsp; Yet more striking is another incident of the
+very year when I was there myself, 1888.&nbsp; In the spring, a
+man and woman skulked about the school-house in Hiva-oa till they
+found a particular child alone.&nbsp; Him they approached with
+honeyed words and carneying manners&mdash;&lsquo;You are
+So-and-so, son of So-and-so?&rsquo; they asked; and caressed and
+beguiled him deeper in the woods.&nbsp; Some instinct woke in the
+child&rsquo;s bosom, or some look betrayed the horrid purpose of
+his deceivers.&nbsp; He sought to break from them; he screamed;
+and they, casting off the mask, seized him the more strongly and
+began to run.&nbsp; His cries were heard; his schoolmates,
+playing not far off, came running to the rescue; and the sinister
+couple fled and vanished in the woods.&nbsp; They were never
+identified; no prosecution followed; but it was currently
+supposed they had some grudge against the boy&rsquo;s father, and
+designed to eat him in revenge.&nbsp; All over the islands, as at
+home among our own ancestors, it will be observed that the
+avenger takes no particular heed to strike an individual.&nbsp; A
+family, a class, a village, a whole valley or island, a whole
+race of mankind, share equally the guilt of any member.&nbsp; So,
+in the above story, the son was to pay the penalty for his
+father; so Mr. Whalon, the mate of an American whaler, was to
+bleed and be eaten for the misdeeds of a Peruvian slaver.&nbsp; I
+am reminded of an incident in Jaluit in the Marshall group, which
+was told me by an eye-witness, and which I tell here again for
+the strangeness of the scene.&nbsp; Two men had awakened the
+animosity of the Jaluit chiefs; and it was their wives who were
+selected to be punished.&nbsp; A single native served as
+executioner.&nbsp; Early in the morning, in the face of a large
+concourse of spectators, he waded out upon the reef between his
+victims.&nbsp; These neither complained nor resisted; accompanied
+their destroyer patiently; stooped down, when they had waded deep
+enough, at his command; and he (laying one hand upon the
+shoulders of each) held them under water till they drowned.&nbsp;
+Doubtless, although my informant did not tell me so, their
+families would be lamenting aloud upon the beach.</p>
+<p>It was from Hatiheu that I paid my first visit to a cannibal
+high place.</p>
+<p>The day was sultry and clouded.&nbsp; Drenching tropical
+showers succeeded bursts of sweltering sunshine.&nbsp; The green
+pathway of the road wound steeply upward.&nbsp; As we went, our
+little schoolboy guide a little ahead of us, Father Simeon had
+his portfolio in his hand, and named the trees for me, and read
+aloud from his notes the abstract of their virtues.&nbsp;
+Presently the road, mounting, showed us the vale of Hatiheu, on a
+larger scale; and the priest, with occasional reference to our
+guide, pointed out the boundaries and told me the names of the
+larger tribes that lived at perpetual war in the old days: one on
+the north-east, one along the beach, one behind upon the
+mountain.&nbsp; With a survivor of this latter clan Father Simeon
+had spoken; until the pacification he had never been to the
+sea&rsquo;s edge, nor, if I remember exactly, eaten of
+sea-fish.&nbsp; Each in its own district, the septs lived
+cantoned and beleaguered.&nbsp; One step without the boundaries
+was to affront death.&nbsp; If famine came, the men must out to
+the woods to gather chestnuts and small fruits; even as to this
+day, if the parents are backward in their weekly doles, school
+must be broken up and the scholars sent foraging.&nbsp; But in
+the old days, when there was trouble in one clan, there would be
+activity in all its neighbours; the woods would be laid full of
+ambushes; and he who went after vegetables for himself might
+remain to be a joint for his hereditary foes.&nbsp; Nor was the
+pointed occasion needful.&nbsp; A dozen different natural signs
+and social junctures called this people to the war-path and the
+cannibal hunt.&nbsp; Let one of chiefly rank have finished his
+tattooing, the wife of one be near upon her time, two of the
+debauching streams have deviated nearer on the beach of Hatiheu,
+a certain bird have been heard to sing, a certain ominous
+formation of cloud observed above the northern sea; and instantly
+the arms were oiled, and the man-hunters swarmed into the wood to
+lay their fratricidal ambuscades.&nbsp; It appears besides that
+occasionally, perhaps in famine, the priest would shut himself in
+his house, where he lay for a stated period like a person
+dead.&nbsp; When he came forth it was to run for three days
+through the territory of the clan, naked and starving, and to
+sleep at night alone in the high place.&nbsp; It was now the turn
+of the others to keep the house, for to encounter the priest upon
+his rounds was death.&nbsp; On the eve of the fourth day the time
+of the running was over; the priest returned to his roof, the
+laymen came forth, and in the morning the number of the victims
+was announced.&nbsp; I have this tale of the priest on one
+authority&mdash;I think a good one,&mdash;but I set it down with
+diffidence.&nbsp; The particulars are so striking that, had they
+been true, I almost think I must have heard them oftener referred
+to.&nbsp; Upon one point there seems to be no question: that the
+feast was sometimes furnished from within the clan.&nbsp; In
+times of scarcity, all who were not protected by their family
+connections&mdash;in the Highland expression, all the commons of
+the clan&mdash;had cause to tremble.&nbsp; It was vain to resist,
+it was useless to flee.&nbsp; They were begirt upon all hands by
+cannibals; and the oven was ready to smoke for them abroad in the
+country of their foes, or at home in the valley of their
+fathers.</p>
+<p>At a certain corner of the road our scholar-guide struck off
+to his left into the twilight of the forest.&nbsp; We were now on
+one of the ancient native roads, plunged in a high vault of wood,
+and clambering, it seemed, at random over boulders and dead
+trees; but the lad wound in and out and up and down without a
+check, for these paths are to the natives as marked as the
+king&rsquo;s highway is to us; insomuch that, in the days of the
+man-hunt, it was their labour rather to block and deface than to
+improve them.&nbsp; In the crypt of the wood the air was clammy
+and hot and cold; overhead, upon the leaves, the tropical rain
+uproariously poured, but only here and there, as through holes in
+a leaky roof, a single drop would fall, and make a spot upon my
+mackintosh.&nbsp; Presently the huge trunk of a banyan hove in
+sight, standing upon what seemed the ruins of an ancient fort;
+and our guide, halting and holding forth his arm, announced that
+we had reached the <i>paepae tapu</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Paepae</i> signifies a floor or platform such as a native
+house is built on; and even such a paepae&mdash;a paepae
+hae&mdash;may be called a paepae tapu in a lesser sense when it
+is deserted and becomes the haunt of spirits; but the public high
+place, such as I was now treading, was a thing on a great
+scale.&nbsp; As far as my eyes could pierce through the dark
+undergrowth, the floor of the forest was all paved.&nbsp; Three
+tiers of terrace ran on the slope of the hill; in front, a
+crumbling parapet contained the main arena; and the pavement of
+that was pierced and parcelled out with several wells and small
+enclosures.&nbsp; No trace remained of any superstructure, and
+the scheme of the amphitheatre was difficult to seize.&nbsp; I
+visited another in Hiva-oa, smaller but more perfect, where it
+was easy to follow rows of benches, and to distinguish isolated
+seats of honour for eminent persons; and where, on the upper
+platform, a single joist of the temple or dead-house still
+remained, its uprights richly carved.&nbsp; In the old days the
+high place was sedulously tended.&nbsp; No tree except the sacred
+banyan was suffered to encroach upon its grades, no dead leaf to
+rot upon the pavement.&nbsp; The stones were smoothly set, and I
+am told they were kept bright with oil.&nbsp; On all sides the
+guardians lay encamped in their subsidiary huts to watch and
+cleanse it.&nbsp; No other foot of man was suffered to draw near;
+only the priest, in the days of his running, came there to
+sleep&mdash;perhaps to dream of his ungodly errand; but, in the
+time of the feast, the clan trooped to the high place in a body,
+and each had his appointed seat.&nbsp; There were places for the
+chiefs, the drummers, the dancers, the women, and the
+priests.&nbsp; The drums&mdash;perhaps twenty strong, and some of
+them twelve feet high&mdash;continuously throbbed in time.&nbsp;
+In time the singers kept up their long-drawn, lugubrious,
+ululating song; in time, too, the dancers, tricked out in
+singular finery, stepped, leaped, swayed, and
+gesticulated&mdash;their plumed fingers fluttering in the air
+like butterflies.&nbsp; The sense of time, in all these ocean
+races, is extremely perfect; and I conceive in such a festival
+that almost every sound and movement fell in one.&nbsp; So much
+the more unanimously must have grown the agitation of the
+feasters; so much the more wild must have been the scene to any
+European who could have beheld them there, in the strong sun and
+the strong shadow of the banyan, rubbed with saffron to throw in
+a more high relief the arabesque of the tattoo; the women
+bleached by days of confinement to a complexion almost European;
+the chiefs crowned with silver plumes of old men&rsquo;s beards
+and girt with kirtles of the hair of dead women.&nbsp; All manner
+of island food was meanwhile spread for the women and the
+commons; and, for those who were privileged to eat of it, there
+were carried up to the dead-house the baskets of long-pig.&nbsp;
+It is told that the feasts were long kept up; the people came
+from them brutishly exhausted with debauchery, and the chiefs
+heavy with their beastly food.&nbsp; There are certain sentiments
+which we call emphatically human&mdash;denying the honour of that
+name to those who lack them.&nbsp; In such
+feasts&mdash;particularly where the victim has been slain at
+home, and men banqueted on the poor clay of a comrade with whom
+they had played in infancy, or a woman whose favours they had
+shared&mdash;the whole body of these sentiments is
+outraged.&nbsp; To consider it too closely is to understand, if
+not to excuse, the fervours of self-righteous old ship-captains,
+who would man their guns, and open fire in passing, on a cannibal
+island.</p>
+<p>And yet it was strange.&nbsp; There, upon the spot, as I stood
+under the high, dripping vault of the forest, with the young
+priest on the one hand, in his kilted gown, and the bright-eyed
+Marquesan schoolboy on the other, the whole business appeared
+infinitely distant, and fallen in the cold perspective and dry
+light of history.&nbsp; The bearing of the priest, perhaps,
+affected me. He smiled; he jested with the boy, the heir both of
+these feasters and their meat; he clapped his hands, and gave me
+a stave of one of the old, ill-omened choruses.&nbsp; Centuries
+might have come and gone since this slimy theatre was last in
+operation; and I beheld the place with no more emotion than I
+might have felt in visiting Stonehenge.&nbsp; In Hiva-oa, as I
+began to appreciate that the thing was still living and latent
+about my footsteps, and that it was still within the bounds of
+possibility that I might hear the cry of the trapped victim, my
+historic attitude entirely failed, and I was sensible of some
+repugnance for the natives.&nbsp; But here, too, the priests
+maintained their jocular attitude: rallying the cannibals as upon
+an eccentricity rather absurd than horrible; seeking, I should
+say, to shame them from the practice by good-natured ridicule, as
+we shame a child from stealing sugar.&nbsp; We may here recognise
+the temperate and sagacious mind of Bishop Dordillon.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XII&mdash;THE STORY OF A PLANTATION</h3>
+<p>Taahauku, on the south-westerly coast of the island of
+Hiva-oa&mdash;Tahuku, say the slovenly whites&mdash;may be called
+the port of Atuona.&nbsp; It is a narrow and small anchorage, set
+between low cliffy points, and opening above upon a woody valley:
+a little French fort, now disused and deserted, overhangs the
+valley and the inlet.&nbsp; Atuona itself, at the head of the
+next bay, is framed in a theatre of mountains, which dominate the
+more immediate settling of Taahauku and give the salient
+character of the scene.&nbsp; They are reckoned at no higher than
+four thousand feet; but Tahiti with eight thousand, and Hawaii
+with fifteen, can offer no such picture of abrupt, melancholy
+alps.&nbsp; In the morning, when the sun falls directly on their
+front, they stand like a vast wall: green to the summit, if by
+any chance the summit should be clear&mdash;water-courses here
+and there delineated on their face, as narrow as cracks.&nbsp;
+Towards afternoon, the light falls more obliquely, and the
+sculpture of the range comes in relief, huge gorges sinking into
+shadow, huge, tortuous buttresses standing edged with sun.&nbsp;
+At all hours of the day they strike the eye with some new beauty,
+and the mind with the same menacing gloom.</p>
+<p>The mountains, dividing and deflecting the endless airy deluge
+of the Trade, are doubtless answerable for the climate.&nbsp; A
+strong draught of wind blew day and night over the
+anchorage.&nbsp; Day and night the same fantastic and attenuated
+clouds fled across the heavens, the same dusky cap of rain and
+vapour fell and rose on the mountain.&nbsp; The land-breezes came
+very strong and chill, and the sea, like the air, was in
+perpetual bustle.&nbsp; The swell crowded into the narrow
+anchorage like sheep into a fold; broke all along both sides,
+high on the one, low on the other; kept a certain blowhole
+sounding and smoking like a cannon; and spent itself at last upon
+the beach.</p>
+<p>On the side away from Atuona, the sheltering promontory was a
+nursery of coco-trees.&nbsp; Some were mere infants, none had
+attained to any size, none had yet begun to shoot skyward with
+that whip-like shaft of the mature palm.&nbsp; In the young trees
+the colour alters with the age and growth.&nbsp; Now all is of a
+grass-like hue, infinitely dainty; next the rib grows golden, the
+fronds remaining green as ferns; and then, as the trunk continues
+to mount and to assume its final hue of grey, the fans put on
+manlier and more decided depths of verdure, stand out dark upon
+the distance, glisten against the sun, and flash like silver
+fountains in the assault of the wind.&nbsp; In this young wood of
+Taahauku, all these hues and combinations were exampled and
+repeated by the score.&nbsp; The trees grew pleasantly spaced
+upon a hilly sward, here and there interspersed with a rack for
+drying copra, or a tumble-down hut for storing it.&nbsp; Every
+here and there the stroller had a glimpse of the <i>Casco</i>
+tossing in the narrow anchorage below; and beyond he had ever
+before him the dark amphitheatre of the Atuona mountains and the
+cliffy bluff that closes it to seaward.&nbsp; The trade-wind
+moving in the fans made a ceaseless noise of summer rain; and
+from time to time, with the sound of a sudden and distant
+drum-beat, the surf would burst in a sea-cave.</p>
+<p>At the upper end of the inlet, its low, cliffy lining sinks,
+at both sides, into a beach.&nbsp; A copra warehouse stands in
+the shadow of the shoreside trees, flitted about for ever by a
+clan of dwarfish swallows; and a line of rails on a high wooden
+staging bends back into the mouth of the valley.&nbsp; Walking on
+this, the new-landed traveller becomes aware of a broad
+fresh-water lagoon (one arm of which he crosses), and beyond, of
+a grove of noble palms, sheltering the house of the trader, Mr.
+Keane.&nbsp; Overhead, the cocos join in a continuous and lofty
+roof; blackbirds are heard lustily singing; the island cock
+springs his jubilant rattle and airs his golden plumage;
+cow-bells sound far and near in the grove; and when you sit in
+the broad verandah, lulled by this symphony, you may say to
+yourself, if you are able: &lsquo;Better fifty years of Europe .
+. .&rsquo;&nbsp; Farther on, the floor of the valley is flat and
+green, and dotted here and there with stripling coco-palms.&nbsp;
+Through the midst, with many changes of music, the river trots
+and brawls; and along its course, where we should look for
+willows, puraos grow in clusters, and make shadowy pools after an
+angler&rsquo;s heart.&nbsp; A vale more rich and peaceful,
+sweeter air, a sweeter voice of rural sounds, I have found
+nowhere.&nbsp; One circumstance alone might strike the
+experienced: here is a convenient beach, deep soil, good water,
+and yet nowhere any paepaes, nowhere any trace of island
+habitation.</p>
+<p>It is but a few years since this valley was a place choked
+with jungle, the debatable land and battle-ground of
+cannibals.&nbsp; Two clans laid claim to it&mdash;neither could
+substantiate the claim, and the roads lay desert, or were only
+visited by men in arms.&nbsp; It is for this very reason that it
+wears now so smiling an appearance: cleared, planted, built upon,
+supplied with railways, boat-houses, and bath-houses.&nbsp; For,
+being no man&rsquo;s land, it was the more readily ceded to a
+stranger.&nbsp; The stranger was Captain John Hart: Ima Hati,
+&lsquo;Broken-arm,&rsquo; the natives call him, because when he
+first visited the islands his arm was in a sling.&nbsp; Captain
+Hart, a man of English birth, but an American subject, had
+conceived the idea of cotton culture in the Marquesas during the
+American War, and was at first rewarded with success.&nbsp; His
+plantation at Anaho was highly productive; island cotton fetched
+a high price, and the natives used to debate which was the
+stronger power, Ima Hati or the French: deciding in favour of the
+captain, because, though the French had the most ships, he had
+the more money.</p>
+<p>He marked Taahauku for a suitable site, acquired it, and
+offered the superintendence to Mr. Robert Stewart, a Fifeshire
+man, already some time in the islands, who had just been ruined
+by a war on Tauata.&nbsp; Mr. Stewart was somewhat averse to the
+adventure, having some acquaintance with Atuona and its notorious
+chieftain, Moipu.&nbsp; He had once landed there, he told me,
+about dusk, and found the remains of a man and woman partly
+eaten.&nbsp; On his starting and sickening at the sight, one of
+Moipu&rsquo;s young men picked up a human foot, and provocatively
+staring at the stranger, grinned and nibbled at the heel.&nbsp;
+None need be surprised if Mr. Stewart fled incontinently to the
+bush, lay there all night in a great horror of mind, and got off
+to sea again by daylight on the morrow.&nbsp; &lsquo;It was
+always a bad place, Atuona,&rsquo; commented Mr. Stewart, in his
+homely Fifeshire voice.&nbsp; In spite of this dire introduction,
+he accepted the captain&rsquo;s offer, was landed at Taahauku
+with three Chinamen, and proceeded to clear the jungle.</p>
+<p>War was pursued at that time, almost without interval, between
+the men of Atuona and the men of Haamau; and one day, from the
+opposite sides of the valley, battle&mdash;or I should rather say
+the noise of battle&mdash;raged all the afternoon: the shots and
+insults of the opposing clans passing from hill to hill over the
+heads of Mr. Stewart and his Chinamen.&nbsp; There was no genuine
+fighting; it was like a bicker of schoolboys, only some fool had
+given the children guns.&nbsp; One man died of his exertions in
+running, the only casualty.&nbsp; With night the shots and
+insults ceased; the men of Haamau withdrew; and victory, on some
+occult principle, was scored to Moipu.&nbsp; Perhaps, in
+consequence, there came a day when Moipu made a feast, and a
+party from Haamau came under safe-conduct to eat of it.&nbsp;
+These passed early by Taahauku, and some of Moipu&rsquo;s young
+men were there to be a guard of honour.&nbsp; They were not long
+gone before there came down from Haamau, a man, his wife, and a
+girl of twelve, their daughter, bringing fungus.&nbsp; Several
+Atuona lads were hanging round the store; but the day being one
+of truce none apprehended danger.&nbsp; The fungus was weighed
+and paid for; the man of Haamau proposed he should have his axe
+ground in the bargain; and Mr. Stewart demurring at the trouble,
+some of the Atuona lads offered to grind it for him, and set it
+on the wheel.&nbsp; While the axe was grinding, a friendly native
+whispered Mr. Stewart to have a care of himself, for there was
+trouble in hand; and, all at once, the man of Haamau was seized,
+and his head and arm stricken from his body, the head at one
+sweep of his own newly sharpened axe.&nbsp; In the first alert,
+the girl escaped among the cotton; and Mr. Stewart, having thrust
+the wife into the house and locked her in from the outside,
+supposed the affair was over.&nbsp; But the business had not
+passed without noise, and it reached the ears of an older girl
+who had loitered by the way, and who now came hastily down the
+valley, crying as she came for her father.&nbsp; Her, too, they
+seized and beheaded; I know not what they had done with the axe,
+it was a blunt knife that served their butcherly turn upon the
+girl; and the blood spurted in fountains and painted them from
+head to foot.&nbsp; Thus horrible from crime, the party returned
+to Atuona, carrying the heads to Moipu.&nbsp; It may be fancied
+how the feast broke up; but it is notable that the guests were
+honourably suffered to retire.&nbsp; These passed back through
+Taahauku in extreme disorder; a little after the valley began to
+be overrun with shouting and triumphing braves; and a letter of
+warning coming at the same time to Mr. Stewart, he and his
+Chinamen took refuge with the Protestant missionary in
+Atuona.&nbsp; That night the store was gutted, and the bodies
+cast in a pit and covered with leaves.&nbsp; Three days later the
+schooner had come in; and things appearing quieter, Mr. Stewart
+and the captain landed in Taahauku to compute the damage and to
+view the grave, which was already indicated by the stench.&nbsp;
+While they were so employed, a party of Moipu&rsquo;s young men,
+decked with red flannel to indicate martial sentiments, came over
+the hills from Atuona, dug up the bodies, washed them in the
+river, and carried them away on sticks.&nbsp; That night the
+feast began.</p>
+<p>Those who knew Mr. Stewart before this experience declare the
+man to be quite altered.&nbsp; He stuck, however, to his post;
+and somewhat later, when the plantation was already well
+established, and gave employment to sixty Chinamen and seventy
+natives, he found himself once more in dangerous times.&nbsp; The
+men of Haamau, it was reported, had sworn to plunder and erase
+the settlement; letters came continually from the Hawaiian
+missionary, who acted as intelligence department; and for six
+weeks Mr. Stewart and three other whites slept in the
+cotton-house at night in a rampart of bales, and (what was their
+best defence) ostentatiously practised rifle-shooting by day upon
+the beach.&nbsp; Natives were often there to watch them; the
+practice was excellent; and the assault was never
+delivered&mdash;if it ever was intended, which I doubt, for the
+natives are more famous for false rumours than for deeds of
+energy.&nbsp; I was told the late French war was a case in point;
+the tribes on the beach accusing those in the mountains of
+designs which they had never the hardihood to entertain.&nbsp;
+And the same testimony to their backwardness in open battle
+reached me from all sides.&nbsp; Captain Hart once landed after
+an engagement in a certain bay; one man had his hand hurt, an old
+woman and two children had been slain; and the captain improved
+the occasion by poulticing the hand, and taunting both sides upon
+so wretched an affair.&nbsp; It is true these wars were often
+merely formal&mdash;comparable with duels to the first
+blood.&nbsp; Captain Hart visited a bay where such a war was
+being carried on between two brothers, one of whom had been
+thought wanting in civility to the guests of the other.&nbsp;
+About one-half of the population served day about on alternate
+sides, so as to be well with each when the inevitable peace
+should follow.&nbsp; The forts of the belligerents were over
+against each other, and close by.&nbsp; Pigs were cooking.&nbsp;
+Well-oiled braves, with well-oiled muskets, strutted on the
+paepae or sat down to feast.&nbsp; No business, however needful,
+could be done, and all thoughts were supposed to be centred in
+this mockery of war.&nbsp; A few days later, by a regrettable
+accident, a man was killed; it was felt at once the thing had
+gone too far, and the quarrel was instantly patched up.&nbsp; But
+the more serious wars were prosecuted in a similar spirit; a gift
+of pigs and a feast made their inevitable end; the killing of a
+single man was a great victory, and the murder of defenceless
+solitaries counted a heroic deed.</p>
+<p>The foot of the cliffs, about all these islands, is the place
+of fishing.&nbsp; Between Taahauku and Atuona we saw men, but
+chiefly women, some nearly naked, some in thin white or crimson
+dresses, perched in little surf-beat promontories&mdash;the brown
+precipice overhanging them, and the convolvulus overhanging that,
+as if to cut them off the more completely from assistance.&nbsp;
+There they would angle much of the morning; and as fast as they
+caught any fish, eat them, raw and living, where they
+stood.&nbsp; It was such helpless ones that the warriors from the
+opposite island of Tauata slew, and carried home and ate, and
+were thereupon accounted mighty men of valour.&nbsp; Of one such
+exploit I can give the account of an eye-witness.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Portuguese Joe,&rsquo; Mr. Keane&rsquo;s cook, was once
+pulling an oar in an Atuona boat, when they spied a stranger in a
+canoe with some fish and a piece of tapu.&nbsp; The Atuona men
+cried upon him to draw near and have a smoke.&nbsp; He complied,
+because, I suppose, he had no choice; but he knew, poor devil,
+what he was coming to, and (as Joe said) &lsquo;he didn&rsquo;t
+seem to care about the smoke.&rsquo;&nbsp; A few questions
+followed, as to where he came from, and what was his
+business.&nbsp; These he must needs answer, as he must needs draw
+at the unwelcome pipe, his heart the while drying in his
+bosom.&nbsp; And then, of a sudden, a big fellow in Joe&rsquo;s
+boat leaned over, plucked the stranger from his canoe, struck him
+with a knife in the neck&mdash;inward and downward, as Joe showed
+in pantomime more expressive than his words&mdash;and held him
+under water, like a fowl, until his struggles ceased.&nbsp;
+Whereupon the long-pig was hauled on board, the boat&rsquo;s head
+turned about for Atuona, and these Marquesan braves pulled home
+rejoicing.&nbsp; Moipu was on the beach and rejoiced with them on
+their arrival.&nbsp; Poor Joe toiled at his oar that day with a
+white face, yet he had no fear for himself.&nbsp; &lsquo;They
+were very good to me&mdash;gave me plenty grub: never wished to
+eat white man,&rsquo; said he.</p>
+<p>If the most horrible experience was Mr. Stewart&rsquo;s, it
+was Captain Hart himself who ran the nearest danger.&nbsp; He had
+bought a piece of land from Timau, chief of a neighbouring bay,
+and put some Chinese there to work.&nbsp; Visiting the station
+with one of the Godeffroys, he found his Chinamen trooping to the
+beach in terror: Timau had driven them out, seized their effects,
+and was in war attire with his young men.&nbsp; A boat was
+despatched to Taahauku for reinforcement; as they awaited her
+return, they could see, from the deck of the schooner, Timau and
+his young men dancing the war-dance on the hill-top till past
+twelve at night; and so soon as the boat came (bringing three
+gendarmes, armed with chassepots, two white men from Taahauku
+station, and some native warriors) the party set out to seize the
+chief before he should awake.&nbsp; Day was not come, and it was
+a very bright moonlight morning, when they reached the hill-top
+where (in a house of palm-leaves) Timau was sleeping off his
+debauch.&nbsp; The assailants were fully exposed, the interior of
+the hut quite dark; the position far from sound.&nbsp; The
+gendarmes knelt with their pieces ready, and Captain Hart
+advanced alone.&nbsp; As he drew near the door he heard the snap
+of a gun cocking from within, and in sheer
+self-defence&mdash;there being no other escape&mdash;sprang into
+the house and grappled Timau.&nbsp; &lsquo;Timau, come with
+me!&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp; But Timau&mdash;a great fellow, his
+eyes blood-red with the abuse of kava, six foot three in
+stature&mdash;cast him on one side; and the captain, instantly
+expecting to be either shot or brained, discharged his pistol in
+the dark.&nbsp; When they carried Timau out at the door into the
+moonlight, he was already dead, and, upon this unlooked-for
+termination of their sally, the whites appeared to have lost all
+conduct, and retreated to the boats, fired upon by the natives as
+they went.&nbsp; Captain Hart, who almost rivals Bishop Dordillon
+in popularity, shared with him the policy of extreme indulgence
+to the natives, regarding them as children, making light of their
+defects, and constantly in favour of mild measures.&nbsp; The
+death of Timau has thus somewhat weighed upon his mind; the more
+so, as the chieftain&rsquo;s musket was found in the house
+unloaded.&nbsp; To a less delicate conscience the matter will
+seem light.&nbsp; If a drunken savage elects to cock a fire-arm,
+a gentleman advancing towards him in the open cannot wait to make
+sure if it be charged.</p>
+<p>I have touched on the captain&rsquo;s popularity.&nbsp; It is
+one of the things that most strikes a stranger in the
+Marquesas.&nbsp; He comes instantly on two names, both new to
+him, both locally famous, both mentioned by all with affection
+and respect&mdash;the bishop&rsquo;s and the
+captain&rsquo;s.&nbsp; It gave me a strong desire to meet with
+the survivor, which was subsequently gratified&mdash;to the
+enrichment of these pages.&nbsp; Long after that again, in the
+Place Dolorous&mdash;Molokai&mdash;I came once more on the traces
+of that affectionate popularity.&nbsp; There was a blind white
+leper there, an old sailor&mdash;&lsquo;an old tough,&rsquo; he
+called himself&mdash;who had long sailed among the eastern
+islands.&nbsp; Him I used to visit, and, being fresh from the
+scenes of his activity, gave him the news.&nbsp; This (in the
+true island style) was largely a chronicle of wrecks; and it
+chanced I mentioned the case of one not very successful captain,
+and how he had lost a vessel for Mr. Hart; thereupon the blind
+leper broke forth in lamentation.&nbsp; &lsquo;Did he lose a ship
+of John Hart&rsquo;s?&rsquo; he cried; &lsquo;poor John
+Hart!&nbsp; Well, I&rsquo;m sorry it was Hart&rsquo;s,&rsquo;
+with needless force of epithet, which I neglect to reproduce.</p>
+<p>Perhaps, if Captain Hart&rsquo;s affairs had continued to
+prosper, his popularity might have been different.&nbsp; Success
+wins glory, but it kills affection, which misfortune
+fosters.&nbsp; And the misfortune which overtook the
+captain&rsquo;s enterprise was truly singular.&nbsp; He was at
+the top of his career.&nbsp; Ile Masse belonged to him, given by
+the French as an indemnity for the robberies at Taahauku.&nbsp;
+But the Ile Masse was only suitable for cattle; and his two chief
+stations were Anaho, in Nuka-hiva, facing the north-east, and
+Taahauku in Hiva-oa, some hundred miles to the southward, and
+facing the south-west.&nbsp; Both these were on the same day
+swept by a tidal wave, which was not felt in any other bay or
+island of the group.&nbsp; The south coast of Hiva-oa was
+bestrewn with building timber and camphor-wood chests, containing
+goods; which, on the promise of a reasonable salvage, the natives
+very honestly brought back, the chests apparently not opened, and
+some of the wood after it had been built into their houses.&nbsp;
+But the recovery of such jetsam could not affect the
+result.&nbsp; It was impossible the captain should withstand this
+partiality of fortune; and with his fall the prosperity of the
+Marquesas ended.&nbsp; Anaho is truly extinct, Taahauku but a
+shadow of itself; nor has any new plantation arisen in their
+stead.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII&mdash;CHARACTERS</h3>
+<p>There was a certain traffic in our anchorage at Atuona;
+different indeed from the dead inertia and quiescence of the
+sister island, Nuka-hiva.&nbsp; Sails were seen steering from its
+mouth; now it would be a whale-boat manned with native rowdies,
+and heavy with copra for sale; now perhaps a single canoe come
+after commodities to buy.&nbsp; The anchorage was besides
+frequented by fishers; not only the lone females perched in
+niches of the cliff, but whole parties, who would sometimes camp
+and build a fire upon the beach, and sometimes lie in their
+canoes in the midst of the haven and jump by turns in the water;
+which they would cast eight or nine feet high, to drive, as we
+supposed, the fish into their nets.&nbsp; The goods the
+purchasers came to buy were sometimes quaint.&nbsp; I remarked
+one outrigger returning with a single ham swung from a pole in
+the stern.&nbsp; And one day there came into Mr. Keane&rsquo;s
+store a charming lad, excellently mannered, speaking French
+correctly though with a babyish accent; very handsome too, and
+much of a dandy, as was shown not only in his shining raiment,
+but by the nature of his purchases.&nbsp; These were five
+ship-biscuits, a bottle of scent, and two balls of washing
+blue.&nbsp; He was from Tauata, whither he returned the same
+night in an outrigger, daring the deep with these young-ladyish
+treasures.&nbsp; The gross of the native passengers were more
+ill-favoured: tall, powerful fellows, well tattooed, and with
+disquieting manners.&nbsp; Something coarse and jeering
+distinguished them, and I was often reminded of the slums of some
+great city.&nbsp; One night, as dusk was falling, a whale-boat
+put in on that part of the beach where I chanced to be
+alone.&nbsp; Six or seven ruffianly fellows scrambled out; all
+had enough English to give me &lsquo;good-bye,&rsquo; which was
+the ordinary salutation; or &lsquo;good-morning,&rsquo; which
+they seemed to regard as an intensitive; jests followed, they
+surrounded me with harsh laughter and rude looks, and I was glad
+to move away.&nbsp; I had not yet encountered Mr. Stewart, or I
+should have been reminded of his first landing at Atuona and the
+humorist who nibbled at the heel.&nbsp; But their neighbourhood
+depressed me; and I felt, if I had been there a castaway and out
+of reach of help, my heart would have been sick.</p>
+<p>Nor was the traffic altogether native.&nbsp; While we lay in
+the anchorage there befell a strange coincidence.&nbsp; A
+schooner was observed at sea and aiming to enter.&nbsp; We knew
+all the schooners in the group, but this appeared larger than
+any; she was rigged, besides, after the English manner; and,
+coming to an anchor some way outside the <i>Casco</i>, showed at
+last the blue ensign.&nbsp; There were at that time, according to
+rumour, no fewer than four yachts in the Pacific; but it was
+strange that any two of them should thus lie side by side in that
+outlandish inlet: stranger still that in the owner of the
+<i>Nyanza</i>, Captain Dewar, I should find a man of the same
+country and the same county with myself, and one whom I had seen
+walking as a boy on the shores of the Alpes Maritimes.</p>
+<p>We had besides a white visitor from shore, who came and
+departed in a crowded whale-boat manned by natives; having read
+of yachts in the Sunday papers, and being fired with the desire
+to see one.&nbsp; Captain Chase, they called him, an old
+whaler-man, thickset and white-bearded, with a strong Indiana
+drawl; years old in the country, a good backer in battle, and one
+of those dead shots whose practice at the target struck terror in
+the braves of Haamau.&nbsp; Captain Chase dwelt farther east in a
+bay called Hanamate, with a Mr. M&rsquo;Callum; or rather they
+had dwelt together once, and were now amicably separated.&nbsp;
+The captain is to be found near one end of the bay, in a wreck of
+a house, and waited on by a Chinese.&nbsp; At the point of the
+opposing corner another habitation stands on a tall paepae.&nbsp;
+The surf runs there exceeding heavy, seas of seven and eight feet
+high bursting under the walls of the house, which is thus
+continually filled with their clamour, and rendered fit only for
+solitary, or at least for silent, inmates.&nbsp; Here it is that
+Mr. M&rsquo;Callum, with a Shakespeare and a Burns, enjoys the
+society of the breakers.&nbsp; His name and his Burns testify to
+Scottish blood; but he is an American born, somewhere far east;
+followed the trade of a ship-carpenter; and was long employed,
+the captain of a hundred Indians, breaking up wrecks about Cape
+Flattery.&nbsp; Many of the whites who are to be found scattered
+in the South Seas represent the more artistic portion of their
+class; and not only enjoy the poetry of that new life, but came
+there on purpose to enjoy it.&nbsp; I have been shipmates with a
+man, no longer young, who sailed upon that voyage, his first time
+to sea, for the mere love of Samoa; and it was a few letters in a
+newspaper that sent him on that pilgrimage.&nbsp; Mr.
+M&rsquo;Callum was another instance of the same.&nbsp; He had
+read of the South Seas; loved to read of them; and let their
+image fasten in his heart: till at length he could refrain no
+longer&mdash;must set forth, a new Rudel, for that unseen
+homeland&mdash;and has now dwelt for years in Hiva-oa, and will
+lay his bones there in the end with full content; having no
+desire to behold again the places of his boyhood, only,
+perhaps&mdash;once, before he dies&mdash;the rude and wintry
+landscape of Cape Flattery.&nbsp; Yet he is an active man, full
+of schemes; has bought land of the natives; has planted five
+thousand coco-palms; has a desert island in his eye, which he
+desires to lease, and a schooner in the stocks, which he has laid
+and built himself, and even hopes to finish.&nbsp; Mr.
+M&rsquo;Callum and I did not meet, but, like gallant troubadours,
+corresponded in verse.&nbsp; I hope he will not consider it a
+breach of copyright if I give here a specimen of his muse.&nbsp;
+He and Bishop Dordillon are the two European bards of the
+Marquesas.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Sail, ho!&nbsp; Ahoy!&nbsp;
+<i>Casco</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; First among the pleasure fleet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That came around to greet<br />
+These isles from San Francisco,</p>
+<p>And first, too; only one<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Among the literary men<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That this way has ever been&mdash;<br />
+Welcome, then, to Stevenson.</p>
+<p>Please not offended be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At this little notice<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the <i>Casco</i>, Captain Otis,<br />
+With the novelist&rsquo;s family.</p>
+<p><i>Avoir une voyage magnifical</i><br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is our wish sincere,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That you&rsquo;ll have from here<br />
+<i>Allant sur la Grande Pacifical</i>.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But our chief visitor was one Mapiao, a great
+Tahuku&mdash;which seems to mean priest, wizard, tattooer,
+practiser of any art, or, in a word, esoteric person&mdash;and a
+man famed for his eloquence on public occasions and witty talk in
+private.&nbsp; His first appearance was typical of the man.&nbsp;
+He came down clamorous to the eastern landing, where the surf was
+running very high; scorned all our signals to go round the bay;
+carried his point, was brought aboard at some hazard to our
+skiff, and set down in one corner of the cockpit to his appointed
+task.&nbsp; He had been hired, as one cunning in the art, to make
+my old men&rsquo;s beards into a wreath: what a wreath for
+Celia&rsquo;s arbour!&nbsp; His own beard (which he carried, for
+greater safety, in a sailor&rsquo;s knot) was not merely the
+adornment of his age, but a substantial piece of property.&nbsp;
+One hundred dollars was the estimated value; and as Brother
+Michel never knew a native to deposit a greater sum with Bishop
+Dordillon, our friend was a rich man in virtue of his chin.&nbsp;
+He had something of an East Indian cast, but taller and stronger:
+his nose hooked, his face narrow, his forehead very high, the
+whole elaborately tattooed.&nbsp; I may say I have never
+entertained a guest so trying.&nbsp; In the least particular he
+must be waited on; he would not go to the scuttle-butt for water;
+he would not even reach to get the glass, it must be given him in
+his hand; if aid were denied him, he would fold his arms, bow his
+head, and go without: only the work would suffer.&nbsp; Early the
+first forenoon he called aloud for biscuit and salmon; biscuit
+and ham were brought; he looked on them inscrutably, and signed
+they should be set aside.&nbsp; A number of considerations
+crowded on my mind; how the sort of work on which he was engaged
+was probably tapu in a high degree; should by rights, perhaps, be
+transacted on a tapu platform which no female might approach; and
+it was possible that fish might be the essential diet.&nbsp; Some
+salted fish I therefore brought him, and along with that a glass
+of rum: at sight of which Mapiao displayed extraordinary
+animation, pointed to the zenith, made a long speech in which I
+picked up <i>umati</i>&mdash;the word for the sun&mdash;and
+signed to me once more to place these dainties out of
+reach.&nbsp; At last I had understood, and every day the
+programme was the same.&nbsp; At an early period of the morning
+his dinner must be set forth on the roof of the house and at a
+proper distance, full in view but just out of reach; and not
+until the fit hour, which was the point of noon, would the
+artificer partake.&nbsp; This solemnity was the cause of an
+absurd misadventure.&nbsp; He was seated plaiting, as usual, at
+the beards, his dinner arrayed on the roof, and not far off a
+glass of water standing.&nbsp; It appears he desired to drink;
+was of course far too great a gentleman to rise and get the water
+for himself; and spying Mrs. Stevenson, imperiously signed to her
+to hand it.&nbsp; The signal was misunderstood; Mrs. Stevenson
+was, by this time, prepared for any eccentricity on the part of
+our guest; and instead of passing him the water, flung his dinner
+overboard.&nbsp; I must do Mapiao justice: all laughed, but his
+laughter rang the loudest.</p>
+<p>These troubles of service were at worst occasional; the
+embarrassment of the man&rsquo;s talk incessant.&nbsp; He was
+plainly a practised conversationalist; the nicety of his
+inflections, the elegance of his gestures, and the fine play of
+his expression, told us that.&nbsp; We, meanwhile, sat like
+aliens in a playhouse; we could see the actors were upon some
+material business and performing well, but the plot of the drama
+remained undiscoverable.&nbsp; Names of places, the name of
+Captain Hart, occasional disconnected words, tantalised without
+enlightening us; and the less we understood, the more gallantly,
+the more copiously, and with still the more explanatory gestures,
+Mapiao returned to the assault.&nbsp; We could see his vanity was
+on the rack; being come to a place where that fine jewel of his
+conversational talent could earn him no respect; and he had times
+of despair when he desisted from the endeavour, and instants of
+irritation when he regarded us with unconcealed contempt.&nbsp;
+Yet for me, as the practitioner of some kindred mystery to his
+own, he manifested to the last a measure of respect.&nbsp; As we
+sat under the awning in opposite corners of the cockpit, he
+braiding hairs from dead men&rsquo;s chins, I forming runes upon
+a sheet of folio paper, he would nod across to me as one Tahuku
+to another, or, crossing the cockpit, study for a while my
+shapeless scrawl and encourage me with a heartfelt
+&lsquo;<i>mitai</i>!&mdash;good!&rsquo;&nbsp; So might a deaf
+painter sympathise far off with a musician, as the slave and
+master of some uncomprehended and yet kindred art.&nbsp; A silly
+trade, he doubtless considered it; but a man must make allowance
+for barbarians&mdash;<i>chaque pays a ses coutumes</i>&mdash;and
+he felt the principle was there.</p>
+<p>The time came at last when his labours, which resembled those
+rather of Penelope than Hercules, could be no more spun out, and
+nothing remained but to pay him and say farewell.&nbsp; After a
+long, learned argument in Marquesan, I gathered that his mind was
+set on fish-hooks; with three of which, and a brace of dollars, I
+thought he was not ill rewarded for passing his forenoons in our
+cockpit, eating, drinking, delivering his opinions, and pressing
+the ship&rsquo;s company into his menial service.&nbsp; For all
+that, he was a man of so high a bearing, and so like an uncle of
+my own who should have gone mad and got tattooed, that I applied
+to him, when we were both on shore, to know if he were
+satisfied.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Mitai ehipe</i>?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp;
+And he, with rich unction, offering at the same time his
+hand&mdash;&lsquo;<i>Mitai ehipe</i>, <i>mitai kaehae</i>;
+<i>kaoha nui</i>!&rsquo;&mdash;or, to translate freely:
+&lsquo;The ship is good, the victuals are up to the mark, and we
+part in friendship.&rsquo;&nbsp; Which testimonial uttered, he
+set off along the beach with his head bowed and the air of one
+deeply injured.</p>
+<p>I saw him go, on my side, with relief.&nbsp; It would be more
+interesting to learn how our relation seemed to Mapiao.&nbsp; His
+exigence, we may suppose, was merely loyal.&nbsp; He had been
+hired by the ignorant to do a piece of work; and he was bound
+that he would do it the right way.&nbsp; Countless obstacles,
+continual ignorant ridicule, availed not to dissuade him.&nbsp;
+He had his dinner laid out; watched it, as was fit, the while he
+worked; ate it at the fit hour; was in all things served and
+waited on; and could take his hire in the end with a clear
+conscience, telling himself the mystery was performed duly, the
+beards rightfully braided, and we (in spite of ourselves)
+correctly served.&nbsp; His view of our stupidity, even he, the
+mighty talker, must have lacked language to express.&nbsp; He
+never interfered with my Tahuku work; civilly praised it, idle as
+it seemed; civilly supposed that I was competent in my own
+mystery: such being the attitude of the intelligent and the
+polite.&nbsp; And we, on the other hand&mdash;who had yet the
+most to gain or lose, since the product was to be ours&mdash;who
+had professed our disability by the very act of hiring him to do
+it&mdash;were never weary of impeding his own more important
+labours, and sometimes lacked the sense and the civility to
+refrain from laughter.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIV&mdash;IN A CANNIBAL VALLEY</h3>
+<p>The road from Taahauku to Atuona skirted the north-westerly
+side of the anchorage, somewhat high up, edged, and sometimes
+shaded, by the splendid flowers of the
+<i>flamboyant</i>&mdash;its English name I do not know.&nbsp; At
+the turn of the hand, Atuona came in view: a long beach, a heavy
+and loud breach of surf, a shore-side village scattered among
+trees, and the guttered mountains drawing near on both sides
+above a narrow and rich ravine.&nbsp; Its infamous repute perhaps
+affected me; but I thought it the loveliest, and by far the most
+ominous and gloomy, spot on earth.&nbsp; Beautiful it surely was;
+and even more salubrious.&nbsp; The healthfulness of the whole
+group is amazing; that of Atuona almost in the nature of a
+miracle.&nbsp; In Atuona, a village planted in a shore-side
+marsh, the houses standing everywhere intermingled with the pools
+of a taro-garden, we find every condition of tropical danger and
+discomfort; and yet there are not even mosquitoes&mdash;not even
+the hateful day-fly of Nuka-hiva&mdash;and fever, and its
+concomitant, the island fe&rsquo;efe&rsquo;e, <a
+name="citation122"></a><a href="#footnote122"
+class="citation">[122]</a> are unknown.</p>
+<p>This is the chief station of the French on the man-eating isle
+of Hiva-oa.&nbsp; The sergeant of gendarmerie enjoys the style of
+the vice-resident, and hoists the French colours over a quite
+extensive compound.&nbsp; A Chinaman, a waif from the plantation,
+keeps a restaurant in the rear quarters of the village; and the
+mission is well represented by the sister&rsquo;s school and
+Brother Michel&rsquo;s church.&nbsp; Father Orens, a wonderful
+octogenarian, his frame scarce bowed, the fire of his eye
+undimmed, has lived, and trembled, and suffered in this place
+since 1843.&nbsp; Again and again, when Moipu had made
+coco-brandy, he has been driven from his house into the
+woods.&nbsp; &lsquo;A mouse that dwelt in a cat&rsquo;s
+ear&rsquo; had a more easy resting-place; and yet I have never
+seen a man that bore less mark of years.&nbsp; He must show us
+the church, still decorated with the bishop&rsquo;s artless
+ornaments of paper&mdash;the last work of industrious old hands,
+and the last earthly amusement of a man that was much of a
+hero.&nbsp; In the sacristy we must see his sacred vessels, and,
+in particular, a vestment which was a &lsquo;<i>vraie
+curiosit&eacute;</i>,&rsquo; because it had been given by a
+gendarme.&nbsp; To the Protestant there is always something
+embarrassing in the eagerness with which grown and holy men
+regard these trifles; but it was touching and pretty to see
+Orens, his aged eyes shining in his head, display his sacred
+treasures.</p>
+<p><i>August</i> 26.&mdash;The vale behind the village, narrowing
+swiftly to a mere ravine, was choked with profitable trees.&nbsp;
+A river gushed in the midst.&nbsp; Overhead, the tall coco-palms
+made a primary covering; above that, from one wall of the
+mountain to another, the ravine was roofed with cloud; so that we
+moved below, amid teeming vegetation, in a covered house of
+heat.&nbsp; On either hand, at every hundred yards, instead of
+the houseless, disembowelling paepaes of Nuka-hiva, populous
+houses turned out their inhabitants to cry &lsquo;Kaoha!&rsquo;
+to the passers-by.&nbsp; The road, too, was busy: strings of
+girls, fair and foul, as in less favoured countries; men bearing
+breadfruit; the sisters, with a little guard of pupils; a fellow
+bestriding a horse&mdash;passed and greeted us continually; and
+now it was a Chinaman who came to the gate of his flower-yard,
+and gave us &lsquo;Good-day&rsquo; in excellent English; and a
+little farther on it would be some natives who set us down by the
+wayside, made us a feast of mummy-apple, and entertained us as we
+ate with drumming on a tin case.&nbsp; With all this fine plenty
+of men and fruit, death is at work here also.&nbsp; The
+population, according to the highest estimate, does not exceed
+six hundred in the whole vale of Atuona; and yet, when I once
+chanced to put the question, Brother Michel counted up ten whom
+he knew to be sick beyond recovery.&nbsp; It was here, too, that
+I could at last gratify my curiosity with the sight of a native
+house in the very article of dissolution.&nbsp; It had fallen
+flat along the paepae, its poles sprawling ungainly; the rains
+and the mites contended against it; what remained seemed sound
+enough, but much was gone already; and it was easy to see how the
+insects consumed the walls as if they had been bread, and the air
+and the rain ate into them like vitriol.</p>
+<p>A little ahead of us, a young gentleman, very well tattooed,
+and dressed in a pair of white trousers and a flannel shirt, had
+been marching unconcernedly.&nbsp; Of a sudden, without apparent
+cause, he turned back, took us in possession, and led us
+undissuadably along a by-path to the river&rsquo;s edge.&nbsp;
+There, in a nook of the most attractive amenity, he bade us to
+sit down: the stream splashing at our elbow, a shock of
+nondescript greenery enshrining us from above; and thither, after
+a brief absence, he brought us a cocoa-nut, a lump of
+sandal-wood, and a stick he had begun to carve: the nut for
+present refreshment, the sandal-wood for a precious gift, and the
+stick&mdash;in the simplicity of his vanity&mdash;to harvest
+premature praise.&nbsp; Only one section was yet carved, although
+the whole was pencil-marked in lengths; and when I proposed to
+buy it, Poni (for that was the artist&rsquo;s name) recoiled in
+horror.&nbsp; But I was not to be moved, and simply refused
+restitution, for I had long wondered why a people who displayed,
+in their tattooing, so great a gift of arabesque invention,
+should display it nowhere else.&nbsp; Here, at last, I had found
+something of the same talent in another medium; and I held the
+incompleteness, in these days of world-wide brummagem, for a
+happy mark of authenticity.&nbsp; Neither my reasons nor my
+purpose had I the means of making clear to Poni; I could only
+hold on to the stick, and bid the artist follow me to the
+gendarmerie, where I should find interpreters and money; but we
+gave him, in the meanwhile, a boat-call in return for his
+sandal-wood.&nbsp; As he came behind us down the vale he sounded
+upon this continually.&nbsp; And continually, from the wayside
+houses, there poured forth little groups of girls in crimson, or
+of men in white.&nbsp; And to these must Poni pass the news of
+who the strangers were, of what they had been doing, of why it
+was that Poni had a boat-whistle; and of why he was now being
+haled to the vice-residency, uncertain whether to be punished or
+rewarded, uncertain whether he had lost a stick or made a
+bargain, but hopeful on the whole, and in the meanwhile highly
+consoled by the boat-whistle.&nbsp; Whereupon he would tear
+himself away from this particular group of inquirers, and once
+more we would hear the shrill call in our wake.</p>
+<p><i>August</i> 27.&mdash;I made a more extended circuit in the
+vale with Brother Michel.&nbsp; We were mounted on a pair of
+sober nags, suitable to these rude paths; the weather was
+exquisite, and the company in which I found myself no less
+agreeable than the scenes through which I passed.&nbsp; We
+mounted at first by a steep grade along the summit of one of
+those twisted spurs that, from a distance, mark out provinces of
+sun and shade upon the mountain-side.&nbsp; The ground fell away
+on either hand with an extreme declivity.&nbsp; From either hand,
+out of profound ravines, mounted the song of falling water and
+the smoke of household fires.&nbsp; Here and there the hills of
+foliage would divide, and our eye would plunge down upon one of
+these deep-nested habitations.&nbsp; And still, high in front,
+arose the precipitous barrier of the mountain, greened over where
+it seemed that scarce a harebell could find root, barred with the
+zigzags of a human road where it seemed that not a goat could
+scramble.&nbsp; And in truth, for all the labour that it cost,
+the road is regarded even by the Marquesans as impassable; they
+will not risk a horse on that ascent; and those who lie to the
+westward come and go in their canoes.&nbsp; I never knew a hill
+to lose so little on a near approach: a consequence, I must
+suppose, of its surprising steepness.&nbsp; When we turned about,
+I was amazed to behold so deep a view behind, and so high a
+shoulder of blue sea, crowned by the whale-like island of
+Motane.&nbsp; And yet the wall of mountain had not visibly
+dwindled, and I could even have fancied, as I raised my eyes to
+measure it, that it loomed higher than before.</p>
+<p>We struck now into covert paths, crossed and heard more near
+at hand the bickering of the streams, and tasted the coolness of
+those recesses where the houses stood.&nbsp; The birds sang about
+us as we descended.&nbsp; All along our path my guide was being
+hailed by voices: &lsquo;Mika&euml;l&mdash;Kaoha,
+Mika&euml;l!&rsquo;&nbsp; From the doorstep, from the
+cotton-patch, or out of the deep grove of island-chestnuts, these
+friendly cries arose, and were cheerily answered as we
+passed.&nbsp; In a sharp angle of a glen, on a rushing brook and
+under fathoms of cool foliage, we struck a house upon a
+well-built paepae, the fire brightly burning under the popoi-shed
+against the evening meal; and here the cries became a chorus, and
+the house folk, running out, obliged us to dismount and
+breathe.&nbsp; It seemed a numerous family: we saw eight at
+least; and one of these honoured me with a particular
+attention.&nbsp; This was the mother, a woman naked to the waist,
+of an aged countenance, but with hair still copious and black,
+and breasts still erect and youthful.&nbsp; On our arrival I
+could see she remarked me, but instead of offering any greeting,
+disappeared at once into the bush.&nbsp; Thence she returned with
+two crimson flowers.&nbsp; &lsquo;Good-bye!&rsquo; was her
+salutation, uttered not without coquetry; and as she said it she
+pressed the flowers into my hand&mdash;&lsquo;Good-bye!&nbsp; I
+speak Inglis.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was from a whaler-man, who (she
+informed me) was &lsquo;a plenty good chap,&rsquo; that she had
+learned my language; and I could not but think how handsome she
+must have been in these times of her youth, and could not but
+guess that some memories of the dandy whaler-man prompted her
+attentions to myself.&nbsp; Nor could I refrain from wondering
+what had befallen her lover; in the rain and mire of what
+sea-ports he had tramped since then; in what close and garish
+drinking-dens had found his pleasure; and in the ward of what
+infirmary dreamed his last of the Marquesas.&nbsp; But she, the
+more fortunate, lived on in her green island.&nbsp; The talk, in
+this lost house upon the mountains, ran chiefly upon Mapiao and
+his visits to the <i>Casco</i>: the news of which had probably
+gone abroad by then to all the island, so that there was no
+paepae in Hiva-oa where they did not make the subject of excited
+comment.</p>
+<p>Not much beyond we came upon a high place in the foot of the
+ravine.&nbsp; Two roads divided it, and met in the midst.&nbsp;
+Save for this intersection the amphitheatre was strangely
+perfect, and had a certain ruder air of things Roman.&nbsp;
+Depths of foliage and the bulk of the mountain kept it in a
+grateful shadow.&nbsp; On the benches several young folk sat
+clustered or apart.&nbsp; One of these, a girl perhaps fourteen
+years of age, buxom and comely, caught the eye of Brother
+Michel.&nbsp; Why was she not at school?&mdash;she was done with
+school now.&nbsp; What was she doing here?&mdash;she lived here
+now.&nbsp; Why so?&mdash;no answer but a deepening blush.&nbsp;
+There was no severity in Brother Michel&rsquo;s manner; the
+girl&rsquo;s own confusion told her story.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Elle a
+honte</i>,&rsquo; was the missionary&rsquo;s comment, as we rode
+away.&nbsp; Near by in the stream, a grown girl was bathing naked
+in a goyle between two stepping-stones; and it amused me to see
+with what alacrity and real alarm she bounded on her
+many-coloured under-clothes.&nbsp; Even in these daughters of
+cannibals shame was eloquent.</p>
+<p>It is in Hiva-oa, owing to the inveterate cannibalism of the
+natives, that local beliefs have been most rudely trodden
+underfoot.&nbsp; It was here that three religious chiefs were set
+under a bridge, and the women of the valley made to defile over
+their heads upon the road-way: the poor, dishonoured fellows
+sitting there (all observers agree) with streaming tears.&nbsp;
+Not only was one road driven across the high place, but two roads
+intersected in its midst.&nbsp; There is no reason to suppose
+that the last was done of purpose, and perhaps it was impossible
+entirely to avoid the numerous sacred places of the
+islands.&nbsp; But these things are not done without
+result.&nbsp; I have spoken already of the regard of Marquesans
+for the dead, making (as it does) so strange a contrast with
+their unconcern for death.&nbsp; Early on this day&rsquo;s ride,
+for instance, we encountered a petty chief, who inquired (of
+course) where we were going, and suggested by way of
+amendment.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why do you not rather show him the
+cemetery?&rsquo;&nbsp; I saw it; it was but newly opened, the
+third within eight years.&nbsp; They are great builders here in
+Hiva-oa; I saw in my ride paepaes that no European dry-stone
+mason could have equalled, the black volcanic stones were laid so
+justly, the corners were so precise, the levels so true; but the
+retaining-wall of the new graveyard stood apart, and seemed to be
+a work of love.&nbsp; The sentiment of honour for the dead is
+therefore not extinct.&nbsp; And yet observe the consequence of
+violently countering men&rsquo;s opinions.&nbsp; Of the four
+prisoners in Atuona gaol, three were of course thieves; the
+fourth was there for sacrilege.&nbsp; He had levelled up a piece
+of the graveyard&mdash;to give a feast upon, as he informed the
+court&mdash;and declared he had no thought of doing wrong.&nbsp;
+Why should he?&nbsp; He had been forced at the point of the
+bayonet to destroy the sacred places of his own piety; when he
+had recoiled from the task, he had been jeered at for a
+superstitious fool.&nbsp; And now it is supposed he will respect
+our European superstitions as by second nature.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XV&mdash;THE TWO CHIEFS OF ATUONA</h3>
+<p>It had chanced (as the <i>Casco</i> beat through the Bordelais
+Straits for Taahauku) she approached on one board very near the
+land in the opposite isle of Tauata, where houses were to be seen
+in a grove of tall coco-palms.&nbsp; Brother Michel pointed out
+the spot.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am at home now,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I believe I have a large share in these cocoa-nuts; and in
+that house madame my mother lives with her two
+husbands!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;With two husbands?&rsquo; somebody
+inquired.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>C&rsquo;est ma honte</i>,&rsquo;
+replied the brother drily.</p>
+<p>A word in passing on the two husbands.&nbsp; I conceive the
+brother to have expressed himself loosely.&nbsp; It seems common
+enough to find a native lady with two consorts; but these are not
+two husbands.&nbsp; The first is still the husband; the wife
+continues to be referred to by his name; and the position of the
+coadjutor, or <i>pikio</i>, although quite regular, appears
+undoubtedly subordinate.&nbsp; We had opportunities to observe
+one household of the sort.&nbsp; The <i>pikio</i> was recognised;
+appeared openly along with the husband when the lady was thought
+to be insulted, and the pair made common cause like
+brothers.&nbsp; At home the inequality was more apparent.&nbsp;
+The husband sat to receive and entertain visitors; the
+<i>pikio</i> was running the while to fetch cocoa-nuts like a
+hired servant, and I remarked he was sent on these errands in
+preference even to the son.&nbsp; Plainly we have here no second
+husband; plainly we have the tolerated lover.&nbsp; Only, in the
+Marquesas, instead of carrying his lady&rsquo;s fan and mantle,
+he must turn his hand to do the husband&rsquo;s housework.</p>
+<p>The sight of Brother Michel&rsquo;s family estate led the
+conversation for some while upon the method and consequence of
+artificial kinship.&nbsp; Our curiosity became extremely whetted;
+the brother offered to have the whole of us adopted, and some two
+days later we became accordingly the children of Paaaeua,
+appointed chief of Atuona.&nbsp; I was unable to be present at
+the ceremony, which was primitively simple.&nbsp; The two Mrs.
+Stevensons and Mr. Osbourne, along with Paaaeua, his wife, and an
+adopted child of theirs, son of a shipwrecked Austrian, sat down
+to an excellent island meal, of which the principal and the only
+necessary dish was pig.&nbsp; A concourse watched them through
+the apertures of the house; but none, not even Brother Michel,
+might partake; for the meal was sacramental, and either creative
+or declaratory of the new relationship.&nbsp; In Tahiti things
+are not so strictly ordered; when Ori and I &lsquo;made
+brothers,&rsquo; both our families sat with us at table, yet only
+he and I, who had eaten with intention were supposed to be
+affected by the ceremony.&nbsp; For the adoption of an infant I
+believe no formality to be required; the child is handed over by
+the natural parents, and grows up to inherit the estates of the
+adoptive.&nbsp; Presents are doubtless exchanged, as at all
+junctures of island life, social or international; but I never
+heard of any banquet&mdash;the child&rsquo;s presence at the
+daily board perhaps sufficing.&nbsp; We may find the rationale in
+the ancient Arabian idea that a common diet makes a common blood,
+with its derivative axiom that &lsquo;he is the father who gives
+the child its morning draught.&rsquo;&nbsp; In the Marquesan
+practice, the sense would thus be evanescent; from the Tahitian,
+a mere survival, it will have entirely fled.&nbsp; An interesting
+parallel will probably occur to many of my readers.</p>
+<p>What is the nature of the obligation assumed at such a
+festival?&nbsp; It will vary with the characters of those
+engaged, and with the circumstances of the case.&nbsp; Thus it
+would be absurd to take too seriously our adoption at
+Atuona.&nbsp; On the part of Paaaeua it was an affair of social
+ambition; when he agreed to receive us in his family the man had
+not so much as seen us, and knew only that we were inestimably
+rich and travelled in a floating palace.&nbsp; We, upon our side,
+ate of his baked meats with no true <i>animus affiliandi</i>, but
+moved by the single sentiment of curiosity.&nbsp; The affair was
+formal, and a matter of parade, as when in Europe sovereigns call
+each other cousin.&nbsp; Yet, had we stayed at Atuona, Paaaeua
+would have held himself bound to establish us upon his land, and
+to set apart young men for our service, and trees for our
+support.&nbsp; I have mentioned the Austrian.&nbsp; He sailed in
+one of two sister ships, which left the Clyde in coal; both
+rounded the Horn, and both, at several hundred miles of distance,
+though close on the same point of time, took fire at sea on the
+Pacific.&nbsp; One was destroyed; the derelict iron frame of the
+second, after long, aimless cruising, was at length recovered,
+refitted, and hails to-day from San Francisco.&nbsp; A
+boat&rsquo;s crew from one of these disasters reached, after
+great hardships, the isle of Hiva-oa.&nbsp; Some of these men
+vowed they would never again confront the chances of the sea; but
+alone of them all the Austrian has been exactly true to his
+engagement, remains where he landed, and designs to die where he
+has lived.&nbsp; Now, with such a man, falling and taking root
+among islanders, the processes described may be compared to a
+gardener&rsquo;s graft.&nbsp; He passes bodily into the native
+stock; ceases wholly to be alien; has entered the commune of the
+blood, shares the prosperity and consideration of his new family,
+and is expected to impart with the same generosity the fruits of
+his European skill and knowledge.&nbsp; It is this implied
+engagement that so frequently offends the ingrafted white.&nbsp;
+To snatch an immediate advantage&mdash;to get (let us say) a
+station for his store&mdash;he will play upon the native custom
+and become a son or a brother for the day, promising himself to
+cast down the ladder by which he shall have ascended, and
+repudiate the kinship so soon as it shall grow burdensome.&nbsp;
+And he finds there are two parties to the bargain.&nbsp; Perhaps
+his Polynesian relative is simple, and conceived the blood-bond
+literally; perhaps he is shrewd, and himself entered the covenant
+with a view to gain.&nbsp; And either way the store is ravaged,
+the house littered with lazy natives; and the richer the man
+grows, the more numerous, the more idle, and the more
+affectionate he finds his native relatives.&nbsp; Most men thus
+circumstanced contrive to buy or brutally manage to enforce their
+independence; but many vegetate without hope, strangled by
+parasites.</p>
+<p>We had no cause to blush with Brother Michel.&nbsp; Our new
+parents were kind, gentle, well-mannered, and generous in gifts;
+the wife was a most motherly woman, the husband a man who stood
+justly high with his employers.&nbsp; Enough has been said to
+show why Moipu should be deposed; and in Paaaeua the French had
+found a reputable substitute.&nbsp; He went always scrupulously
+dressed, and looked the picture of propriety, like a dark,
+handsome, stupid, and probably religious young man hot from a
+European funeral.&nbsp; In character he seemed the ideal of what
+is known as the good citizen.&nbsp; He wore gravity like an
+ornament.&nbsp; None could more nicely represent the desired
+character as an appointed chief, the outpost of civilisation and
+reform.&nbsp; And yet, were the French to go and native manners
+to revive, fancy beholds him crowned with old men&rsquo;s beards
+and crowding with the first to a man-eating festival.&nbsp; But I
+must not seem to be unjust to Paaaeua.&nbsp; His respectability
+went deeper than the skin; his sense of the becoming sometimes
+nerved him for unexpected rigours.</p>
+<p>One evening Captain Otis and Mr. Osbourne were on shore in the
+village.&nbsp; All was agog; dancing had begun; it was plain it
+was to be a night of festival, and our adventurers were overjoyed
+at their good fortune.&nbsp; A strong fall of rain drove them for
+shelter to the house of Paaaeua, where they were made welcome,
+wiled into a chamber, and shut in.&nbsp; Presently the rain took
+off, the fun was to begin in earnest, and the young bloods of
+Atuona came round the house and called to my fellow-travellers
+through the interstices of the wall.&nbsp; Late into the night
+the calls were continued and resumed, and sometimes mingled with
+taunts; late into the night the prisoners, tantalised by the
+noises of the festival, renewed their efforts to escape.&nbsp;
+But all was vain; right across the door lay that god-fearing
+householder, Paaaeua, feigning sleep; and my friends had to
+forego their junketing.&nbsp; In this incident, so delightfully
+European, we thought we could detect three strands of
+sentiment.&nbsp; In the first place, Paaaeua had a charge of
+souls: these were young men, and he judged it right to withhold
+them from the primrose path.&nbsp; Secondly, he was a public
+character, and it was not fitting that his guests should
+countenance a festival of which he disapproved.&nbsp; So might
+some strict clergyman at home address a worldly visitor:
+&lsquo;Go to the theatre if you like, but, by your leave, not
+from my house!&rsquo;&nbsp; Thirdly, Paaaeua was a man jealous,
+and with some cause (as shall be shown) for jealousy; and the
+feasters were the satellites of his immediate rival, Moipu.</p>
+<p>For the adoption had caused much excitement in the village; it
+made the strangers popular.&nbsp; Paaaeua, in his difficult
+posture of appointed chief, drew strength and dignity from their
+alliance, and only Moipu and his followers were malcontent.&nbsp;
+For some reason nobody (except myself) appears to dislike
+Moipu.&nbsp; Captain Hart, who has been robbed and threatened by
+him; Father Orens, whom he has fired at, and repeatedly driven to
+the woods; my own family, and even the French officials&mdash;all
+seemed smitten with an irrepressible affection for the man.&nbsp;
+His fall had been made soft; his son, upon his death, was to
+succeed Paaaeua in the chieftaincy; and he lived, at the time of
+our visit, in the shoreward part of the village in a good house,
+and with a strong following of young men, his late braves and
+pot-hunters.&nbsp; In this society, the coming of the
+<i>Casco</i>, the adoption, the return feast on board, and the
+presents exchanged between the whites and their new parents, were
+doubtless eagerly and bitterly canvassed.&nbsp; It was felt that
+a few years ago the honours would have gone elsewhere.&nbsp; In
+this unwonted business, in this reception of some hitherto
+undreamed-of and outlandish potentate&mdash;some Prester John or
+old Assaracus&mdash;a few years back it would have been the part
+of Moipu to play the hero and the host, and his young men would
+have accompanied and adorned the various celebrations as the
+acknowledged leaders of society.&nbsp; And now, by a malign
+vicissitude of fortune, Moipu must sit in his house quite
+unobserved; and his young men could but look in at the door while
+their rivals feasted.&nbsp; Perhaps M. Gr&eacute;vy felt a touch
+of bitterness towards his successor when he beheld him figure on
+the broad stage of the centenary of eighty-nine; the visit of the
+<i>Casco</i> which Moipu had missed by so few years was a more
+unusual occasion in Atuona than a centenary in France; and the
+dethroned chief determined to reassert himself in the public
+eye.</p>
+<p>Mr. Osbourne had gone into Atuona photographing; the
+population of the village had gathered together for the occasion
+on the place before the church, and Paaaeua, highly delighted
+with this new appearance of his family, played the master of
+ceremonies.&nbsp; The church had been taken, with its jolly
+architect before the door; the nuns with their pupils; sundry
+damsels in the ancient and singularly unbecoming robes of tapa;
+and Father Orens in the midst of a group of his
+parishioners.&nbsp; I know not what else was in hand, when the
+photographer became aware of a sensation in the crowd, and,
+looking around, beheld a very noble figure of a man appear upon
+the margin of a thicket and stroll nonchalantly near.&nbsp; The
+nonchalance was visibly affected; it was plain he came there to
+arouse attention, and his success was instant.&nbsp; He was
+introduced; he was civil, he was obliging, he was always
+ineffably superior and certain of himself; a well-graced
+actor.&nbsp; It was presently suggested that he should appear in
+his war costume; he gracefully consented; and returned in that
+strange, inappropriate and ill-omened array (which very well
+became his handsome person) to strut in a circle of admirers, and
+be thenceforth the centre of photography.&nbsp; Thus had Moipu
+effected his introduction, as by accident, to the white
+strangers, made it a favour to display his finery, and reduced
+his rival to a secondary <i>r&ocirc;le</i> on the theatre of the
+disputed village.&nbsp; Paaaeua felt the blow; and, with a spirit
+which we never dreamed he could possess, asserted his
+priority.&nbsp; It was found impossible that day to get a
+photograph of Moipu alone; for whenever he stood up before the
+camera his successor placed himself unbidden by his side, and
+gently but firmly held to his position.&nbsp; The portraits of
+the pair, Jacob and Esau, standing shoulder to shoulder, one in
+his careful European dress, one in his barbaric trappings, figure
+the past and present of their island.&nbsp; A graveyard with its
+humble crosses would be the aptest symbol of the future.</p>
+<p>We are all impressed with the belief that Moipu had planned
+his campaign from the beginning to the end.&nbsp; It is certain
+that he lost no time in pushing his advantage.&nbsp; Mr. Osbourne
+was inveigled to his house; various gifts were fished out of an
+old sea-chest; Father Orens was called into service as
+interpreter, and Moipu formally proposed to &lsquo;make
+brothers&rsquo; with Mata-Galahi&mdash;Glass-Eyes,&mdash;the not
+very euphonious name under which Mr. Osbourne passed in the
+Marquesas.&nbsp; The feast of brotherhood took place on board the
+<i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; Paaaeua had arrived with his family, like a
+plain man; and his presents, which had been numerous, had
+followed one another, at intervals through several days.&nbsp;
+Moipu, as if to mark at every point the opposition, came with a
+certain feudal pomp, attended by retainers bearing gifts of all
+descriptions, from plumes of old men&rsquo;s beard to little,
+pious, Catholic engravings.</p>
+<p>I had met the man before this in the village, and detested him
+on sight; there was something indescribably raffish in his looks
+and ways that raised my gorge; and when man-eating was referred
+to, and he laughed a low, cruel laugh, part boastful, part
+bashful, like one reminded of some dashing peccadillo, my
+repugnance was mingled with nausea.&nbsp; This is no very human
+attitude, nor one at all becoming in a traveller.&nbsp; And, seen
+more privately, the man improved.&nbsp; Something negroid in
+character and face was still displeasing; but his ugly mouth
+became attractive when he smiled, his figure and bearing were
+certainly noble, and his eyes superb.&nbsp; In his appreciation
+of jams and pickles, in is delight in the reverberating mirrors
+of the dining cabin, and consequent endless repetition of Moipus
+and Mata-Galahis, he showed himself engagingly a child.&nbsp; And
+yet I am not sure; and what seemed childishness may have been
+rather courtly art.&nbsp; His manners struck me as beyond the
+mark; they were refined and caressing to the point of grossness,
+and when I think of the serene absent-mindedness with which he
+first strolled in upon our party, and then recall him running on
+hands and knees along the cabin sofas, pawing the velvet, dipping
+into the beds, and bleating commendatory
+&lsquo;<i>mitais</i>&rsquo; with exaggerated emphasis, like some
+enormous over-mannered ape, I feel the more sure that both must
+have been calculated.&nbsp; And I sometimes wonder next, if Moipu
+were quite alone in this polite duplicity, and ask myself whether
+the <i>Casco</i> were quite so much admired in the Marquesas as
+our visitors desired us to suppose.</p>
+<p>I will complete this sketch of an incurable cannibal grandee
+with two incongruous traits.&nbsp; His favourite morsel was the
+human hand, of which he speaks to-day with an ill-favoured
+lustfulness.&nbsp; And when he said good-bye to Mrs. Stevenson,
+holding her hand, viewing her with tearful eyes, and chanting his
+farewell improvisation in the falsetto of Marquesan high society,
+he wrote upon her mind a sentimental impression which I try in
+vain to share.</p>
+<h2>PART II: THE PAUMOTUS</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I&mdash;THE DANGEROUS ARCHIPELAGO&mdash;ATOLLS AT A
+DISTANCE</h3>
+<p>In the early morning of 4th September a whale-boat manned by
+natives dragged us down the green lane of the anchorage and round
+the spouting promontory.&nbsp; On the shore level it was a hot,
+breathless, and yet crystal morning; but high overhead the hills
+of Atuona were all cowled in cloud, and the ocean-river of the
+trades streamed without pause.&nbsp; As we crawled from under the
+immediate shelter of the land, we reached at last the limit of
+their influence.&nbsp; The wind fell upon our sails in puffs,
+which strengthened and grew more continuous; presently the
+<i>Casco</i> heeled down to her day&rsquo;s work; the whale-boat,
+quite outstripped, clung for a noisy moment to her quarter; the
+stipulated bread, rum, and tobacco were passed in; a moment more
+and the boat was in our wake, and our late pilots were cheering
+our departure.</p>
+<p>This was the more inspiriting as we were bound for scenes so
+different, and though on a brief voyage, yet for a new province
+of creation.&nbsp; That wide field of ocean, called loosely the
+South Seas, extends from tropic to tropic, and from perhaps 123
+degrees W. to 150 degrees E., a parallelogram of one hundred
+degrees by forty-seven, where degrees are the most
+spacious.&nbsp; Much of it lies vacant, much is closely sown with
+isles, and the isles are of two sorts.&nbsp; No distinction is so
+continually dwelt upon in South Sea talk as that between the
+&lsquo;low&rsquo; and the &lsquo;high&rsquo; island, and there is
+none more broadly marked in nature.&nbsp; The Himalayas are not
+more different from the Sahara.&nbsp; On the one hand, and
+chiefly in groups of from eight to a dozen, volcanic islands rise
+above the sea; few reach an altitude of less than 4000 feet; one
+exceeds 13,000; their tops are often obscured in cloud, they are
+all clothed with various forests, all abound in food, and are all
+remarkable for picturesque and solemn scenery.&nbsp; On the other
+hand, we have the atoll; a thing of problematic origin and
+history, the reputed creature of an insect apparently
+unidentified; rudely annular in shape; enclosing a lagoon; rarely
+extending beyond a quarter of a mile at its chief width; often
+rising at its highest point to less than the stature of a
+man&mdash;man himself, the rat and the land crab, its chief
+inhabitants; not more variously supplied with plants; and
+offering to the eye, even when perfect, only a ring of glittering
+beach and verdant foliage, enclosing and enclosed by the blue
+sea.</p>
+<p>In no quarter are the atolls so thickly congregated, in none
+are they so varied in size from the greatest to the least, and in
+none is navigation so beset with perils, as in that archipelago
+that we were now to thread.&nbsp; The huge system of the trades
+is, for some reason, quite confounded by this multiplicity of
+reefs, the wind intermits, squalls are frequent from the west and
+south-west, hurricanes are known.&nbsp; The currents are,
+besides, inextricably intermixed; dead reckoning becomes a farce;
+the charts are not to be trusted; and such is the number and
+similarity of these islands that, even when you have picked one
+up, you may be none the wiser.&nbsp; The reputation of the place
+is consequently infamous; insurance offices exclude it from their
+field, and it was not without misgiving that my captain risked
+the <i>Casco</i> in such waters.&nbsp; I believe, indeed, it is
+almost understood that yachts are to avoid this baffling
+archipelago; and it required all my instances&mdash;and all Mr.
+Otis&rsquo;s private taste for adventure&mdash;to deflect our
+course across its midst.</p>
+<p>For a few days we sailed with a steady trade, and a steady
+westerly current setting us to leeward; and toward sundown of the
+seventh it was supposed we should have sighted Takaroa, one of
+Cook&rsquo;s so-called King George Islands.&nbsp; The sun set;
+yet a while longer the old moon&mdash;semi-brilliant herself, and
+with a silver belly, which was her successor&mdash;sailed among
+gathering clouds; she, too, deserted us; stars of every degree of
+sheen, and clouds of every variety of form disputed the
+sub-lustrous night; and still we gazed in vain for Takaroa.&nbsp;
+The mate stood on the bowsprit, his tall grey figure slashing up
+and down against the stars, and still</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;nihil
+astra praeter<br />
+Vidit et undas.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The rest of us were grouped at the port anchor davit, staring
+with no less assiduity, but with far less hope on the obscure
+horizon.&nbsp; Islands we beheld in plenty, but they were of
+&lsquo;such stuff as dreams are made on,&rsquo; and vanished at a
+wink, only to appear in other places; and by and by not only
+islands, but refulgent and revolving lights began to stud the
+darkness; lighthouses of the mind or of the wearied optic nerve,
+solemnly shining and winking as we passed.&nbsp; At length the
+mate himself despaired, scrambled on board again from his
+unrestful perch, and announced that we had missed our
+destination.&nbsp; He was the only man of practice in these
+waters, our sole pilot, shipped for that end at Tai-o-hae.&nbsp;
+If he declared we had missed Takaroa, it was not for us to
+quarrel with the fact, but, if we could, to explain it.&nbsp; We
+had certainly run down our southing.&nbsp; Our canted wake upon
+the sea and our somewhat drunken-looking course upon the chart
+both testified with no less certainty to an impetuous westward
+current.&nbsp; We had no choice but to conclude we were again set
+down to leeward; and the best we could do was to bring the
+<i>Casco</i> to the wind, keep a good watch, and expect
+morning.</p>
+<p>I slept that night, as was then my somewhat dangerous
+practice, on deck upon the cockpit bench.&nbsp; A stir at last
+awoke me, to see all the eastern heaven dyed with faint orange,
+the binnacle lamp already dulled against the brightness of the
+day, and the steersman leaning eagerly across the wheel.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;There it is, sir!&rsquo; he cried, and pointed in the very
+eyeball of the dawn.&nbsp; For awhile I could see nothing but the
+bluish ruins of the morning bank, which lay far along the
+horizon, like melting icebergs.&nbsp; Then the sun rose, pierced
+a gap in these <i>d&eacute;bris</i> of vapours, and displayed an
+inconsiderable islet, flat as a plate upon the sea, and spiked
+with palms of disproportioned altitude.</p>
+<p>So far, so good.&nbsp; Here was certainly an atoll; and we
+were certainly got among the archipelago.&nbsp; But which?&nbsp;
+And where?&nbsp; The isle was too small for either Takaroa: in
+all our neighbourhood, indeed, there was none so inconsiderable,
+save only Tikei; and Tikei, one of Roggewein&rsquo;s so-called
+Pernicious Islands, seemed beside the question.&nbsp; At that
+rate, instead of drifting to the west, we must have fetched up
+thirty miles to windward.&nbsp; And how about the current?&nbsp;
+It had been setting us down, by observation, all these days: by
+the deflection of our wake, it should be setting us down that
+moment.&nbsp; When had it stopped?&nbsp; When had it begun again?
+and what kind of torrent was that which had swept us eastward in
+the interval?&nbsp; To these questions, so typical of navigation
+in that range of isles, I have no answer.&nbsp; Such were at
+least the facts; Tikei our island turned out to be; and it was
+our first experience of the dangerous archipelago, to make our
+landfall thirty miles out.</p>
+<p>The sight of Tikei, thrown direct against the splendour of the
+morning, robbed of all its colour, and deformed with
+disproportioned trees like bristles on a broom, had scarce
+prepared us to be much in love with atolls.&nbsp; Later the same
+day we saw under more fit conditions the island of Taiaro.&nbsp;
+<i>Lost in the Sea</i> is possibly the meaning of the name.&nbsp;
+And it was so we saw it; lost in blue sea and sky: a ring of
+white beach, green underwood, and tossing palms, gem-like in
+colour; of a fairy, of a heavenly prettiness.&nbsp; The surf ran
+all around it, white as snow, and broke at one point, far to
+seaward, on what seems an uncharted reef.&nbsp; There was no
+smoke, no sign of man; indeed, the isle is not inhabited, only
+visited at intervals.&nbsp; And yet a trader (Mr. Narii Salmon)
+was watching from the shore and wondering at the unexpected
+ship.&nbsp; I have spent since then long months upon low islands;
+I know the tedium of their undistinguished days; I know the
+burden of their diet.&nbsp; With whatever envy we may have looked
+from the deck on these green coverts, it was with a tenfold
+greater that Mr. Salmon and his comrades saw us steer, in our
+trim ship, to seaward.</p>
+<p>The night fell lovely in the extreme.&nbsp; After the moon
+went down, the heaven was a thing to wonder at for stars.&nbsp;
+And as I lay in the cockpit and looked upon the steersman I was
+haunted by Emerson&rsquo;s verses:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;And the lone seaman all the night<br />
+Sails astonished among stars.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>By this glittering and imperfect brightness, about four bells
+in the first watch we made our third atoll, Raraka.&nbsp; The low
+line of the isle lay straight along the sky; so that I was at
+first reminded of a towpath, and we seemed to be mounting some
+engineered and navigable stream.&nbsp; Presently a red star
+appeared, about the height and brightness of a danger signal, and
+with that my simile was changed; we seemed rather to skirt the
+embankment of a railway, and the eye began to look instinctively
+for the telegraph-posts, and the ear to expect the coming of a
+train.&nbsp; Here and there, but rarely, faint tree-tops broke
+the level.&nbsp; And the sound of the surf accompanied us, now in
+a drowsy monotone, now with a menacing swing.</p>
+<p>The isle lay nearly east and west, barring our advance on
+Fakarava.&nbsp; We must, therefore, hug the coast until we gained
+the western end, where, through a passage eight miles wide, we
+might sail southward between Raraka and the next isle,
+Kauehi.&nbsp; We had the wind free, a lightish air; but clouds of
+an inky blackness were beginning to arise, and at times it
+lightened&mdash;without thunder.&nbsp; Something, I know not
+what, continually set us up upon the island.&nbsp; We lay more
+and more to the nor&rsquo;ard; and you would have thought the
+shore copied our man&oelig;uvre and outsailed us. Once and twice
+Raraka headed us again&mdash;again, in the sea fashion, the quite
+innocent steersman was abused&mdash;and again the <i>Casco</i>
+kept away.&nbsp; Had I been called on, with no more light than
+that of our experience, to draw the configuration of that island,
+I should have shown a series of bow-window promontories, each
+overlapping the other to the nor&rsquo;ard, and the trend of the
+land from the south-east to the north-west, and behold, on the
+chart it lay near east and west in a straight line.</p>
+<p>We had but just repeated our man&oelig;uvre and kept
+away&mdash;for not more than five minutes the railway embankment
+had been lost to view and the surf to hearing&mdash;when I was
+aware of land again, not only on the weather bow, but dead
+ahead.&nbsp; I played the part of the judicious landsman, holding
+my peace till the last moment; and presently my mariners
+perceived it for themselves.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Land ahead!&rsquo; said the steersman.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;By God, it&rsquo;s Kauehi!&rsquo; cried the mate.</p>
+<p>And so it was.&nbsp; And with that I began to be sorry for
+cartographers.&nbsp; We were scarce doing three and a half; and
+they asked me to believe that (in five minutes) we had dropped an
+island, passed eight miles of open water, and run almost high and
+dry upon the next.&nbsp; But my captain was more sorry for
+himself to be afloat in such a labyrinth; laid the <i>Casco</i>
+to, with the log line up and down, and sat on the stern rail and
+watched it till the morning.&nbsp; He had enough of night in the
+Paumotus.</p>
+<p>By daylight on the 9th we began to skirt Kauehi, and had now
+an opportunity to see near at hand the geography of atolls.&nbsp;
+Here and there, where it was high, the farther side loomed up;
+here and there the near side dipped entirely and showed a broad
+path of water into the lagoon; here and there both sides were
+equally abased, and we could look right through the discontinuous
+ring to the sea horizon on the south.&nbsp; Conceive, on a vast
+scale, the submerged hoop of the duck-hunter, trimmed with green
+rushes to conceal his head&mdash;water within, water
+without&mdash;you have the image of the perfect atoll.&nbsp;
+Conceive one that has been partly plucked of its rush fringe; you
+have the atoll of Kauehi.&nbsp; And for either shore of it at
+closer quarters, conceive the line of some old Roman highway
+traversing a wet morass, and here sunk out of view and there
+re-arising, crowned with a green tuft of thicket; only instead of
+the stagnant waters of a marsh, the live ocean now boiled
+against, now buried the frail barrier.&nbsp; Last night&rsquo;s
+impression in the dark was thus confirmed by day, and not
+corrected.&nbsp; We sailed indeed by a mere causeway in the sea,
+of nature&rsquo;s handiwork, yet of no greater magnitude than
+many of the works of man.</p>
+<p>The isle was uninhabited; it was all green brush and white
+sand, set in transcendently blue water; even the coco-palms were
+rare, though some of these completed the bright harmony of colour
+by hanging out a fan of golden yellow.&nbsp; For long there was
+no sign of life beyond the vegetable, and no sound but the
+continuous grumble of the surf.&nbsp; In silence and desertion
+these fair shores slipped past, and were submerged and rose again
+with clumps of thicket from the sea.&nbsp; And then a bird or two
+appeared, hovering and crying; swiftly these became more
+numerous, and presently, looking ahead, we were aware of a vast
+effervescence of winged life.&nbsp; In this place the annular
+isle was mostly under water, carrying here and there on its
+submerged line a wooded islet.&nbsp; Over one of these the birds
+hung and flew with an incredible density like that of gnats or
+hiving bees; the mass flashed white and black, and heaved and
+quivered, and the screaming of the creatures rose over the voice
+of the surf in a shrill clattering whirr.&nbsp; As you descend
+some inland valley a not dissimilar sound announces the nearness
+of a mill and pouring river.&nbsp; Some stragglers, as I said,
+came to meet our approach; a few still hung about the ship as we
+departed.&nbsp; The crying died away, the last pair of wings was
+left behind, and once more the low shores of Kauehi streamed past
+our eyes in silence like a picture.&nbsp; I supposed at the time
+that the birds lived, like ants or citizens, concentred where we
+saw them.&nbsp; I have been told since (I know not if correctly)
+that the whole isle, or much of it, is similarly peopled; and
+that the effervescence at a single spot would be the mark of a
+boat&rsquo;s crew of egg-hunters from one of the neighbouring
+inhabited atolls.&nbsp; So that here at Kauehi, as the day before
+at Taiaro, the <i>Casco</i> sailed by under the fire of
+unsuspected eyes.&nbsp; And one thing is surely true, that even
+on these ribbons of land an army might lie hid and no passing
+mariner divine its presence.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER II&mdash;FAKARAVA: AN ATOLL AT HAND</h3>
+<p>By a little before noon we were running down the coast of our
+destination, Fakarava: the air very light, the sea near smooth;
+though still we were accompanied by a continuous murmur from the
+beach, like the sound of a distant train.&nbsp; The isle is of a
+huge longitude, the enclosed lagoon thirty miles by ten or
+twelve, and the coral tow-path, which they call the land, some
+eighty or ninety miles by (possibly) one furlong.&nbsp; That part
+by which we sailed was all raised; the underwood excellently
+green, the topping wood of coco-palms continuous&mdash;a mark, if
+I had known it, of man&rsquo;s intervention.&nbsp; For once more,
+and once more unconsciously, we were within hail of
+fellow-creatures, and that vacant beach was but a pistol-shot
+from the capital city of the archipelago.&nbsp; But the life of
+an atoll, unless it be enclosed, passes wholly on the shores of
+the lagoon; it is there the villages are seated, there the canoes
+ply and are drawn up; and the beach of the ocean is a place
+accursed and deserted, the fit scene only for wizardry and
+shipwreck, and in the native belief a haunting ground of
+murderous spectres.</p>
+<p>By and by we might perceive a breach in the low barrier; the
+woods ceased; a glittering point ran into the sea, tipped with an
+emerald shoal the mark of entrance.&nbsp; As we drew near we met
+a little run of sea&mdash;the private sea of the lagoon having
+there its origin and end, and here, in the jaws of the gateway,
+trying vain conclusions with the more majestic heave of the
+Pacific.&nbsp; The <i>Casco</i> scarce avowed a shock; but there
+are times and circumstances when these harbour mouths of inland
+basins vomit floods, deflecting, burying, and dismasting
+ships.&nbsp; For, conceive a lagoon perfectly sealed but in the
+one point, and that of merely navigable width; conceive the tide
+and wind to have heaped for hours together in that coral fold a
+superfluity of waters, and the tide to change and the wind
+fall&mdash;the open sluice of some great reservoirs at home will
+give an image of the unstemmable effluxion.</p>
+<p>We were scarce well headed for the pass before all heads were
+craned over the rail.&nbsp; For the water, shoaling under our
+board, became changed in a moment to surprising hues of blue and
+grey; and in its transparency the coral branched and blossomed,
+and the fish of the inland sea cruised visibly below us, stained
+and striped, and even beaked like parrots.&nbsp; I have paid in
+my time to view many curiosities; never one so curious as that
+first sight over the ship&rsquo;s rail in the lagoon of
+Fakarava.&nbsp; But let not the reader be deceived with
+hope.&nbsp; I have since entered, I suppose, some dozen atolls in
+different parts of the Pacific, and the experience has never been
+repeated.&nbsp; That exquisite hue and transparency of submarine
+day, and these shoals of rainbow fish, have not enraptured me
+again.</p>
+<p>Before we could raise our eyes from that engaging spectacle
+the schooner had slipped betwixt the pierheads of the reef, and
+was already quite committed to the sea within.&nbsp; The
+containing shores are so little erected, and the lagoon itself is
+so great, that, for the more part, it seemed to extend without a
+check to the horizon.&nbsp; Here and there, indeed, where the
+reef carried an inlet, like a signet-ring upon a finger, there
+would be a pencilling of palms; here and there, the green wall of
+wood ran solid for a length of miles; and on the port hand, under
+the highest grove of trees, a few houses sparkled
+white&mdash;Rotoava, the metropolitan settlement of the
+Paumotus.&nbsp; Hither we beat in three tacks, and came to an
+anchor close in shore, in the first smooth water since we had
+left San Francisco, five fathoms deep, where a man might look
+overboard all day at the vanishing cable, the coral patches, and
+the many-coloured fish.</p>
+<p>Fakarava was chosen to be the seat of Government from nautical
+considerations only.&nbsp; It is eccentrically situate; the
+productions, even for a low island, poor; the population neither
+many nor&mdash;for Low Islanders&mdash;industrious.&nbsp; But the
+lagoon has two good passages, one to leeward, one to windward, so
+that in all states of the wind it can be left and entered, and
+this advantage, for a government of scattered islands, was
+decisive.&nbsp; A pier of coral, landing-stairs, a harbour light
+upon a staff and pillar, and two spacious Government bungalows in
+a handsome fence, give to the northern end of Rotoava a great air
+of consequence.&nbsp; This is confirmed on the one hand by an
+empty prison, on the other by a gendarmerie pasted over with
+hand-bills in Tahitian, land-law notices from Papeete, and
+republican sentiments from Paris, signed (a little after date)
+&lsquo;Jules Gr&eacute;vy, <i>Perihidente</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Quite
+at the far end a belfried Catholic chapel concludes the town; and
+between, on a smooth floor of white coral sand and under the
+breezy canopy of coco-palms, the houses of the natives stand
+irregularly scattered, now close on the lagoon for the sake of
+the breeze, now back under the palms for love of shadow.</p>
+<p>Not a soul was to be seen.&nbsp; But for the thunder of the
+surf on the far side, it seemed you might have heard a pin drop
+anywhere about that capital city.&nbsp; There was something
+thrilling in the unexpected silence, something yet more so in the
+unexpected sound.&nbsp; Here before us a sea reached to the
+horizon, rippling like an inland mere; and behold! close at our
+back another sea assaulted with assiduous fury the reverse of the
+position.&nbsp; At night the lantern was run up and lit a vacant
+pier.&nbsp; In one house lights were seen and voices heard, where
+the population (I was told) sat playing cards.&nbsp; A little
+beyond, from deep in the darkness of the palm-grove, we saw the
+glow and smelt the aromatic odour of a coal of cocoa-nut husk, a
+relic of the evening kitchen.&nbsp; Crickets sang; some shrill
+thing whistled in a tuft of weeds; and the mosquito hummed and
+stung.&nbsp; There was no other trace that night of man, bird, or
+insect in the isle.&nbsp; The moon, now three days old, and as
+yet but a silver crescent on a still visible sphere, shone
+through the palm canopy with vigorous and scattered lights.&nbsp;
+The alleys where we walked were smoothed and weeded like a
+boulevard; here and there were plants set out; here and there
+dusky cottages clustered in the shadow, some with
+verandahs.&nbsp; A public garden by night, a rich and fashionable
+watering-place in a by-season, offer sights and vistas not
+dissimilar.&nbsp; And still, on the one side, stretched the
+lapping mere, and from the other the deep sea still growled in
+the night.&nbsp; But it was most of all on board, in the dead
+hours, when I had been better sleeping, that the spell of
+Fakarava seized and held me.&nbsp; The moon was down.&nbsp; The
+harbour lantern and two of the greater planets drew vari-coloured
+wakes on the lagoon.&nbsp; From shore the cheerful watch-cry of
+cocks rang out at intervals above the organ-point of surf.&nbsp;
+And the thought of this depopulated capital, this protracted
+thread of annular island with its crest of coco-palms and fringe
+of breakers, and that tranquil inland sea that stretched before
+me till it touched the stars, ran in my head for hours with
+delight.</p>
+<p>So long as I stayed upon that isle these thoughts were
+constant.&nbsp; I lay down to sleep, and woke again with an
+unblunted sense of my surroundings.&nbsp; I was never weary of
+calling up the image of that narrow causeway, on which I had my
+dwelling, lying coiled like a serpent, tail to mouth, in the
+outrageous ocean, and I was never weary of passing&mdash;a mere
+quarter-deck parade&mdash;from the one side to the other, from
+the shady, habitable shores of the lagoon to the blinding desert
+and uproarious breakers of the opposite beach.&nbsp; The sense of
+insecurity in such a thread of residence is more than
+fanciful.&nbsp; Hurricanes and tidal waves over-leap these humble
+obstacles; Oceanus remembers his strength, and, where houses
+stood and palms flourished, shakes his white beard again over the
+barren coral.&nbsp; Fakarava itself has suffered; the trees
+immediately beyond my house were all of recent replantation; and
+Anaa is only now recovered from a heavier stroke.&nbsp; I knew
+one who was then dwelling in the isle.&nbsp; He told me that he
+and two ship captains walked to the sea beach.&nbsp; There for a
+while they viewed the oncoming breakers, till one of the captains
+clapped suddenly his hand before his eyes and cried aloud that he
+could endure no longer to behold them.&nbsp; This was in the
+afternoon; in the dark hours of the night the sea burst upon the
+island like a flood; the settlement was razed all but the church
+and presbytery; and, when day returned, the survivors saw
+themselves clinging in an abattis of uprooted coco-palms and
+ruined houses.</p>
+<p>Danger is but a small consideration.&nbsp; But men are more
+nicely sensible of a discomfort; and the atoll is a
+discomfortable home.&nbsp; There are some, and these probably
+ancient, where a deep soil has formed and the most valuable
+fruit-trees prosper.&nbsp; I have walked in one, with equal
+admiration and surprise, through a forest of huge breadfruits,
+eating bananas and stumbling among taro as I went.&nbsp; This was
+in the atoll of Namorik in the Marshall group, and stands alone
+in my experience.&nbsp; To give the opposite extreme, which is
+yet far more near the average, I will describe the soil and
+productions of Fakarava.&nbsp; The surface of that narrow strip
+is for the more part of broken coral lime-stone, like volcanic
+clinkers, and excruciating to the naked foot; in some atolls, I
+believe, not in Fakarava, it gives a fine metallic ring when
+struck.&nbsp; Here and there you come upon a bank of sand,
+exceeding fine and white, and these parts are the least
+productive.&nbsp; The plants (such as they are) spring from and
+love the broken coral, whence they grow with that wonderful
+verdancy that makes the beauty of the atoll from the sea.&nbsp;
+The coco-palm in particular luxuriates in that stern
+<i>solum</i>, striking down his roots to the brackish, percolated
+water, and bearing his green head in the wind with every evidence
+of health and pleasure.&nbsp; And yet even the coco-palm must be
+helped in infancy with some extraneous nutriment, and through
+much of the low archipelago there is planted with each nut a
+piece of ship&rsquo;s biscuit and a rusty nail.&nbsp; The
+pandanus comes next in importance, being also a food tree; and
+he, too, does bravely.&nbsp; A green bush called <i>miki</i> runs
+everywhere; occasionally a purao is seen; and there are several
+useless weeds.&nbsp; According to M. Cuzent, the whole number of
+plants on an atoll such as Fakarava will scarce exceed, even if
+it reaches to, one score.&nbsp; Not a blade of grass appears; not
+a grain of humus, save when a sack or two has been imported to
+make the semblance of a garden; such gardens as bloom in cities
+on the window-sill.&nbsp; Insect life is sometimes dense; a cloud
+o&rsquo; mosquitoes, and, what is far worse, a plague of flies
+blackening our food, has sometimes driven us from a meal on
+Apemama; and even in Fakarava the mosquitoes were a pest.&nbsp;
+The land crab may be seen scuttling to his hole, and at night the
+rats besiege the houses and the artificial gardens.&nbsp; The
+crab is good eating; possibly so is the rat; I have not
+tried.&nbsp; Pandanus fruit is made, in the Gilberts, into an
+agreeable sweetmeat, such as a man may trifle with at the end of
+a long dinner; for a substantial meal I have no use for it.&nbsp;
+The rest of the food-supply, in a destitute atoll such as
+Fakarava, can be summed up in the favourite jest of the
+archipelago&mdash;cocoa-nut beefsteak.&nbsp; Cocoa-nut green,
+cocoa-nut ripe, cocoa-nut germinated; cocoa-nut to eat and
+cocoa-nut to drink; cocoa-nut raw and cooked, cocoa-nut hot and
+cold&mdash;such is the bill of fare.&nbsp; And some of the
+entr&eacute;es are no doubt delicious.&nbsp; The germinated nut,
+cooked in the shell and eaten with a spoon, forms a good pudding;
+cocoa-nut milk&mdash;the expressed juice of a ripe nut, not the
+water of a green one&mdash;goes well in coffee, and is a valuable
+adjunct in cookery through the South Seas; and cocoa-nut salad,
+if you be a millionaire, and can afford to eat the value of a
+field of corn for your dessert, is a dish to be remembered with
+affection.&nbsp; But when all is done there is a sameness, and
+the Israelites of the low islands murmur at their manna.</p>
+<p>The reader may think I have forgot the sea.&nbsp; The two
+beaches do certainly abound in life, and they are strangely
+different.&nbsp; In the lagoon the water shallows slowly on a
+bottom of the fine slimy sand, dotted with clumps of growing
+coral.&nbsp; Then comes a strip of tidal beach on which the
+ripples lap.&nbsp; In the coral clumps the great holy-water clam
+(<i>Tridacna</i>) grows plentifully; a little deeper lie the beds
+of the pearl-oyster and sail the resplendent fish that charmed us
+at our entrance; and these are all more or less vigorously
+coloured.&nbsp; But the other shells are white like lime, or
+faintly tinted with a little pink, the palest possible display;
+many of them dead besides, and badly rolled.&nbsp; On the ocean
+side, on the mounds of the steep beach, over all the width of the
+reef right out to where the surf is bursting, in every cranny,
+under every scattered fragment of the coral, an incredible plenty
+of marine life displays the most wonderful variety and brilliancy
+of hues.&nbsp; The reef itself has no passage of colour but is
+imitated by some shell.&nbsp; Purple and red and white, and green
+and yellow, pied and striped and clouded, the living shells wear
+in every combination the livery of the dead reef&mdash;if the
+reef be dead&mdash;so that the eye is continually baffled and the
+collector continually deceived.&nbsp; I have taken shells for
+stones and stones for shells, the one as often as the
+other.&nbsp; A prevailing character of the coral is to be dotted
+with small spots of red, and it is wonderful how many varieties
+of shell have adopted the same fashion and donned the disguise of
+the red spot.&nbsp; A shell I had found in plenty in the
+Marquesas I found here also unchanged in all things else, but
+there were the red spots.&nbsp; A lively little crab wore the
+same markings.&nbsp; The case of the hermit or soldier crab was
+more conclusive, being the result of conscious choice.&nbsp; This
+nasty little wrecker, scavenger, and squatter has learned the
+value of a spotted house; so it be of the right colour he will
+choose the smallest shard, tuck himself in a mere corner of a
+broken whorl, and go about the world half naked; but I never
+found him in this imperfect armour unless it was marked with the
+red spot.</p>
+<p>Some two hundred yards distant is the beach of the
+lagoon.&nbsp; Collect the shells from each, set them side by
+side, and you would suppose they came from different hemispheres;
+the one so pale, the other so brilliant; the one prevalently
+white, the other of a score of hues, and infected with the
+scarlet spot like a disease.&nbsp; This seems the more strange,
+since the hermit crabs pass and repass the island, and I have met
+them by the Residency well, which is about central, journeying
+either way.&nbsp; Without doubt many of the shells in the lagoon
+are dead.&nbsp; But why are they dead?&nbsp; Without doubt the
+living shells have a very different background set for
+imitation.&nbsp; But why are these so different?&nbsp; We are
+only on the threshold of the mysteries.</p>
+<p>Either beach, I have said, abounds with life.&nbsp; On the
+sea-side and in certain atolls this profusion of vitality is even
+shocking: the rock under foot is mined with it.&nbsp; I have
+broken off&mdash;notably in Funafuti and Arorai <a
+name="citation156"></a><a href="#footnote156"
+class="citation">[156]</a>&mdash;great lumps of ancient weathered
+rock that rang under my blows like iron, and the fracture has
+been full of pendent worms as long as my hand, as thick as a
+child&rsquo;s finger, of a slightly pinkish white, and set as
+close as three or even four to the square inch.&nbsp; Even in the
+lagoon, where certain shell-fish seem to sicken, others (it is
+notorious) prosper exceedingly and make the riches of these
+islands.&nbsp; Fish, too, abound; the lagoon is a closed
+fish-pond, such as might rejoice the fancy of an abbot; sharks
+swarm there, and chiefly round the passages, to feast upon this
+plenty, and you would suppose that man had only to prepare his
+angle.&nbsp; Alas! it is not so.&nbsp; Of these painted fish that
+came in hordes about the entering <i>Casco</i>, some bore
+poisonous spines, and others were poisonous if eaten.&nbsp; The
+stranger must refrain, or take his chance of painful and
+dangerous sickness.&nbsp; The native, on his own isle, is a safe
+guide; transplant him to the next, and he is helpless as
+yourself.&nbsp; For it is a question both of time and
+place.&nbsp; A fish caught in a lagoon may be deadly; the same
+fish caught the same day at sea, and only a few hundred yards
+without the passage, will be wholesome eating: in a neighbouring
+isle perhaps the case will be reversed; and perhaps a fortnight
+later you shall be able to eat of them indifferently from within
+and from without.&nbsp; According to the natives, these
+bewildering vicissitudes are ruled by the movement of the
+heavenly bodies.&nbsp; The beautiful planet Venus plays a great
+part in all island tales and customs; and among other functions,
+some of them more awful, she regulates the season of good
+fish.&nbsp; With Venus in one phase, as we had her, certain fish
+were poisonous in the lagoon: with Venus in another, the same
+fish was harmless and a valued article of diet.&nbsp; White men
+explain these changes by the phases of the coral.</p>
+<p>It adds a last touch of horror to the thought of this
+precarious annular gangway in the sea, that even what there is of
+it is not of honest rock, but organic, part alive, part
+putrescent; even the clean sea and the bright fish about it
+poisoned, the most stubborn boulder burrowed in by worms, the
+lightest dust venomous as an apothecary&rsquo;s drugs.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER III&mdash;A HOUSE TO LET IN A LOW ISLAND</h3>
+<p>Never populous, it was yet by a chapter of accidents that I
+found the island so deserted that no sound of human life
+diversified the hours; that we walked in that trim public garden
+of a town, among closed houses, without even a lodging-bill in a
+window to prove some tenancy in the back quarters; and, when we
+visited the Government bungalow, that Mr. Donat, acting
+Vice-Resident, greeted us alone, and entertained us with
+cocoa-nut punches in the Sessions Hall and seat of judgment of
+that widespread archipelago, our glasses standing arrayed with
+summonses and census returns.&nbsp; The unpopularity of a late
+Vice-Resident had begun the movement of exodus, his native
+employ&eacute;s resigning court appointments and retiring each to
+his own coco-patch in the remoter districts of the isle.&nbsp;
+Upon the back of that, the Governor in Papeete issued a decree:
+All land in the Paumotus must be defined and registered by a
+certain date.&nbsp; Now, the folk of the archipelago are half
+nomadic; a man can scarce be said to belong to a particular
+atoll; he belongs to several, perhaps holds a stake and counts
+cousinship in half a score; and the inhabitants of Rotoava in
+particular, man, woman, and child, and from the gendarme to the
+Mormon prophet and the schoolmaster, owned&mdash;I was going to
+say land&mdash;owned at least coral blocks and growing coco-palms
+in some adjacent isle.&nbsp; Thither&mdash;from the gendarme to
+the babe in arms, the pastor followed by his flock, the
+schoolmaster carrying along with him his scholars, and the
+scholars with their books and slates&mdash;they had taken ship
+some two days previous to our arrival, and were all now engaged
+disputing boundaries.&nbsp; Fancy overhears the shrillness of
+their disputation mingle with the surf and scatter
+sea-fowl.&nbsp; It was admirable to observe the completeness of
+their flight, like that of hibernating birds; nothing left but
+empty houses, like old nests to be reoccupied in spring; and even
+the harmless necessary dominie borne with them in their
+transmigration.&nbsp; Fifty odd set out, and only seven, I was
+informed, remained.&nbsp; But when I made a feast on board the
+<i>Casco</i>, more than seven, and nearer seven times seven,
+appeared to be my guests.&nbsp; Whence they appeared, how they
+were summoned, whither they vanished when the feast was eaten, I
+have no guess.&nbsp; In view of Low Island tales, and that awful
+frequentation which makes men avoid the seaward beaches of an
+atoll, some two score of those that ate with us may have
+returned, for the occasion, from the kingdom of the dead.</p>
+<p>It was this solitude that put it in our minds to hire a house,
+and become, for the time being, indwellers of the isle&mdash;a
+practice I have ever since, when it was possible, adhered
+to.&nbsp; Mr. Donat placed us, with that intent, under the convoy
+of one Taniera Mahinui, who combined the incongruous characters
+of catechist and convict.&nbsp; The reader may smile, but I
+affirm he was well qualified for either part.&nbsp; For that of
+convict, first of all, by a good substantial felony, such as in
+all lands casts the perpetrator in chains and dungeons.&nbsp;
+Taniera was a man of birth&mdash;the chief a while ago, as he
+loved to tell, of a district in Anaa of 800 souls.&nbsp; In an
+evil hour it occurred to the authorities in Papeete to charge the
+chiefs with the collection of the taxes.&nbsp; It is a question
+if much were collected; it is certain that nothing was handed on;
+and Taniera, who had distinguished himself by a visit to Papeete
+and some high living in restaurants, was chosen for the
+scapegoat.&nbsp; The reader must understand that not Taniera but
+the authorities in Papeete were first in fault.&nbsp; The charge
+imposed was disproportioned.&nbsp; I have not yet heard of any
+Polynesian capable of such a burden; honest and upright
+Hawaiians&mdash;one in particular, who was admired even by the
+whites as an inflexible magistrate&mdash;have stumbled in the
+narrow path of the trustee.&nbsp; And Taniera, when the pinch
+came, scorned to denounce accomplices; others had shared the
+spoil, he bore the penalty alone.&nbsp; He was condemned in five
+years.&nbsp; The period, when I had the pleasure of his
+friendship, was not yet expired; he still drew prison rations,
+the sole and not unwelcome reminder of his chains, and, I
+believe, looked forward to the date of his enfranchisement with
+mere alarm.&nbsp; For he had no sense of shame in the position;
+complained of nothing but the defective table of his place of
+exile; regretted nothing but the fowls and eggs and fish of his
+own more favoured island.&nbsp; And as for his parishioners, they
+did not think one hair the less of him.&nbsp; A schoolboy,
+mulcted in ten thousand lines of Greek and dwelling sequestered
+in the dormitories, enjoys unabated consideration from his
+fellows.&nbsp; So with Taniera: a marked man, not a dishonoured;
+having fallen under the lash of the unthinkable gods; a Job,
+perhaps, or say a Taniera in the den of lions.&nbsp; Songs are
+likely made and sung about this saintly Robin Hood.&nbsp; On the
+other hand, he was even highly qualified for his office in the
+Church; being by nature a grave, considerate, and kindly man; his
+face rugged and serious, his smile bright; the master of several
+trades, a builder both of boats and houses; endowed with a fine
+pulpit voice; endowed besides with such a gift of eloquence that
+at the grave of the late chief of Fakarava he set all the
+assistants weeping.&nbsp; I never met a man of a mind more
+ecclesiastical; he loved to dispute and to inform himself of
+doctrine and the history of sects; and when I showed him the cuts
+in a volume of Chambers&rsquo;s
+<i>Encyclop&aelig;dia</i>&mdash;except for one of an
+ape&mdash;reserved his whole enthusiasm for cardinals&rsquo;
+hats, censers, candlesticks, and cathedrals.&nbsp; Methought when
+he looked upon the cardinal&rsquo;s hat a voice said low in his
+ear: &lsquo;Your foot is on the ladder.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Under the guidance of Taniera we were soon installed in what I
+believe to have been the best-appointed private house in
+Fakarava.&nbsp; It stood just beyond the church in an oblong
+patch of cultivation.&nbsp; More than three hundred sacks of soil
+were imported from Tahiti for the Residency garden; and this must
+shortly be renewed, for the earth blows away, sinks in crevices
+of the coral, and is sought for at last in vain.&nbsp; I know not
+how much earth had gone to the garden of my villa; some at least,
+for an alley of prosperous bananas ran to the gate, and over the
+rest of the enclosure, which was covered with the usual
+clinker-like fragments of smashed coral, not only coco-palms and
+mikis but also fig-trees flourished, all of a delicious
+greenness.&nbsp; Of course there was no blade of grass.&nbsp; In
+front a picket fence divided us from the white road, the
+palm-fringed margin of the lagoon, and the lagoon itself,
+reflecting clouds by day and stars by night.&nbsp; At the back, a
+bulwark of uncemented coral enclosed us from the narrow belt of
+bush and the nigh ocean beach where the seas thundered, the roar
+and wash of them still humming in the chambers of the house.</p>
+<p>This itself was of one story, verandahed front and back.&nbsp;
+It contained three rooms, three sewing-machines, three
+sea-chests, chairs, tables, a pair of beds, a cradle, a
+double-barrelled gun, a pair of enlarged coloured photographs, a
+pair of coloured prints after Wilkie and Mulready, and a French
+lithograph with the legend: &lsquo;<i>Le brigade du
+G&eacute;n&eacute;ral Lepasset br&ucirc;lant son drapeau devant
+Metz</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Under the stilts of the house a stove was
+rusting, till we drew it forth and put it in commission.&nbsp;
+Not far off was the burrow in the coral whence we supplied
+ourselves with brackish water.&nbsp; There was live stock,
+besides, on the estate&mdash;cocks and hens and a brace of
+ill-regulated cats, whom Taniera came every morning with the sun
+to feed on grated cocoa-nut.&nbsp; His voice was our regular
+r&eacute;veille, ringing pleasantly about the garden:
+&lsquo;Pooty&mdash;pooty&mdash;poo&mdash;poo&mdash;poo!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Far as we were from the public offices, the nearness of the
+chapel made our situation what is called eligible in
+advertisements, and gave us a side look on some native
+life.&nbsp; Every morning, as soon as he had fed the fowls,
+Taniera set the bell agoing in the small belfry; and the
+faithful, who were not very numerous, gathered to prayers.&nbsp;
+I was once present: it was the Lord&rsquo;s day, and seven
+females and eight males composed the congregation.&nbsp; A woman
+played precentor, starting with a longish note; the catechist
+joined in upon the second bar; and then the faithful in a
+body.&nbsp; Some had printed hymn-books which they followed; some
+of the rest filled up with &lsquo;eh&mdash;eh&mdash;eh,&rsquo;
+the Paumotuan tol-de-rol.&nbsp; After the hymn, we had an
+antiphonal prayer or two; and then Taniera rose from the front
+bench, where he had been sitting in his catechist&rsquo;s robes,
+passed within the altar-rails, opened his Tahitian Bible, and
+began to preach from notes.&nbsp; I understood one word&mdash;the
+name of God; but the preacher managed his voice with taste, used
+rare and expressive gestures, and made a strong impression of
+sincerity.&nbsp; The plain service, the vernacular Bible, the
+hymn-tunes mostly on an English pattern&mdash;&lsquo;God save the
+Queen,&rsquo; I was informed, a special favourite,&mdash;all,
+save some paper flowers upon the altar, seemed not merely but
+austerely Protestant.&nbsp; It is thus the Catholics have met
+their low island proselytes half-way.</p>
+<p>Taniera had the keys of our house; it was with him I made my
+bargain, if that could be called a bargain in which all was
+remitted to my generosity; it was he who fed the cats and
+poultry, he who came to call and pick a meal with us like an
+acknowledged friend; and we long fondly supposed he was our
+landlord.&nbsp; This belief was not to bear the test of
+experience; and, as my chapter has to relate, no certainty
+succeeded it.</p>
+<p>We passed some days of airless quiet and great heat;
+shell-gatherers were warned from the ocean beach, where sunstroke
+waited them from ten till four; the highest palm hung motionless,
+there was no voice audible but that of the sea on the far
+side.&nbsp; At last, about four of a certain afternoon, long
+cat&rsquo;s-paws flawed the face of the lagoon; and presently in
+the tree-tops there awoke the grateful bustle of the trades, and
+all the houses and alleys of the island were fanned out.&nbsp; To
+more than one enchanted ship, that had lain long becalmed in view
+of the green shore, the wind brought deliverance; and by daylight
+on the morrow a schooner and two cutters lay moored in the port
+of Rotoava.&nbsp; Not only in the outer sea, but in the lagoon
+itself, a certain traffic woke with the reviving breeze; and
+among the rest one Fran&ccedil;ois, a half-blood, set sail with
+the first light in his own half-decked cutter.&nbsp; He had held
+before a court appointment; being, I believe, the Residency
+sweeper-out.&nbsp; Trouble arising with the unpopular
+Vice-Resident, he had thrown his honours down, and fled to the
+far parts of the atoll to plant cabbages&mdash;or at least
+coco-palms.&nbsp; Thence he was now driven by such need as even a
+Cincinnatus must acknowledge, and fared for the capital city, the
+seat of his late functions, to exchange half a ton of copra for
+necessary flour.&nbsp; And here, for a while, the story leaves to
+tell of his voyaging.</p>
+<p>It must tell, instead, of our house, where, toward seven at
+night, the catechist came suddenly in with his pleased air of
+being welcome; armed besides with a considerable bunch of
+keys.&nbsp; These he proceeded to try on the sea-chests, drawing
+each in turn from its place against the wall.&nbsp; Heads of
+strangers appeared in the doorway and volunteered
+suggestions.&nbsp; All in vain.&nbsp; Either they were the wrong
+keys or the wrong boxes, or the wrong man was trying them.&nbsp;
+For a little Taniera fumed and fretted; then had recourse to the
+more summary method of the hatchet; one of the chests was broken
+open, and an armful of clothing, male and female, baled out and
+handed to the strangers on the verandah.</p>
+<p>These were Fran&ccedil;ois, his wife, and their child.&nbsp;
+About eight a.m., in the midst of the lagoon, their cutter had
+capsized in jibbing.&nbsp; They got her righted, and though she
+was still full of water put the child on board.&nbsp; The
+mainsail had been carried away, but the jib still drew her
+sluggishly along, and Fran&ccedil;ois and the woman swam astern
+and worked the rudder with their hands.&nbsp; The cold was cruel;
+the fatigue, as time went on, became excessive; and in that
+preserve of sharks, fear hunted them.&nbsp; Again and again,
+Fran&ccedil;ois, the half-breed, would have desisted and gone
+down; but the woman, whole blood of an amphibious race, still
+supported him with cheerful words.&nbsp; I am reminded of a woman
+of Hawaii who swam with her husband, I dare not say how many
+miles, in a high sea, and came ashore at last with his dead body
+in her arms.&nbsp; It was about five in the evening, after nine
+hours&rsquo; swimming, that Fran&ccedil;ois and his wife reached
+land at Rotoava.&nbsp; The gallant fight was won, and instantly
+the more childish side of native character appears.&nbsp; They
+had supped, and told and retold their story, dripping as they
+came; the flesh of the woman, whom Mrs. Stevenson helped to
+shift, was cold as stone; and Fran&ccedil;ois, having changed to
+a dry cotton shirt and trousers, passed the remainder of the
+evening on my floor and between open doorways, in a thorough
+draught.&nbsp; Yet Fran&ccedil;ois, the son of a French father,
+speaks excellent French himself and seems intelligent.</p>
+<p>It was our first idea that the catechist, true to his
+evangelical vocation, was clothing the naked from his
+superfluity.&nbsp; Then it came out that Fran&ccedil;ois was but
+dealing with his own.&nbsp; The clothes were his, so was the
+chest, so was the house.&nbsp; Fran&ccedil;ois was in fact the
+landlord.&nbsp; Yet you observe he had hung back on the verandah
+while Taniera tried his &rsquo;prentice hand upon the locks: and
+even now, when his true character appeared, the only use he made
+of the estate was to leave the clothes of his family drying on
+the fence.&nbsp; Taniera was still the friend of the house, still
+fed the poultry, still came about us on his daily visits,
+Fran&ccedil;ois, during the remainder of his stay, holding
+bashfully aloof.&nbsp; And there was stranger matter.&nbsp; Since
+Fran&ccedil;ois had lost the whole load of his cutter, the half
+ton of copra, an axe, bowls, knives, and clothes&mdash;since he
+had in a manner to begin the world again, and his necessary flour
+was not yet bought or paid for&mdash;I proposed to advance him
+what he needed on the rent.&nbsp; To my enduring amazement he
+refused, and the reason he gave&mdash;if that can be called a
+reason which but darkens counsel&mdash;was that Taniera was his
+friend.&nbsp; His friend, you observe; not his creditor.&nbsp; I
+inquired into that, and was assured that Taniera, an exile in a
+strange isle, might possibly be in debt himself, but certainly
+was no man&rsquo;s creditor.</p>
+<p>Very early one morning we were awakened by a bustling presence
+in the yard, and found our camp had been surprised by a tall,
+lean old native lady, dressed in what were obviously
+widow&rsquo;s weeds.&nbsp; You could see at a glance she was a
+notable woman, a housewife, sternly practical, alive with energy,
+and with fine possibilities of temper.&nbsp; Indeed, there was
+nothing native about her but the skin; and the type abounds, and
+is everywhere respected, nearer home.&nbsp; It did us good to see
+her scour the grounds, examining the plants and chickens;
+watering, feeding, trimming them; taking angry, purpose-like
+possession.&nbsp; When she neared the house our sympathy abated;
+when she came to the broken chest I wished I were
+elsewhere.&nbsp; We had scarce a word in common; but her whole
+lean body spoke for her with indignant eloquence.&nbsp; &lsquo;My
+chest!&rsquo; it cried, with a stress on the possessive.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My chest&mdash;broken open!&nbsp; This is a fine state of
+things!&rsquo;&nbsp; I hastened to lay the blame where it
+belonged&mdash;on Fran&ccedil;ois and his wife&mdash;and found I
+had made things worse instead of better.&nbsp; She repeated the
+names at first with incredulity, then with despair.&nbsp; A while
+she seemed stunned, next fell to disembowelling the box, piling
+the goods on the floor, and visibly computing the extent of
+Fran&ccedil;ois&rsquo;s ravages; and presently after she was
+observed in high speech with Taniera, who seemed to hang an ear
+like one reproved.</p>
+<p>Here, then, by all known marks, should be my land-lady at
+last; here was every character of the proprietor fully
+developed.&nbsp; Should I not approach her on the still depending
+question of my rent?&nbsp; I carried the point to an
+adviser.&nbsp; &lsquo;Nonsense!&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;That&rsquo;s the old woman, the mother.&nbsp; It
+doesn&rsquo;t belong to her.&nbsp; I believe that&rsquo;s the man
+the house belongs to,&rsquo; and he pointed to one of the
+coloured photographs on the wall.&nbsp; On this I gave up all
+desire of understanding; and when the time came for me to leave,
+in the judgment-hall of the archipelago, and with the awful
+countenance of the acting Governor, I duly paid my rent to
+Taniera.&nbsp; He was satisfied, and so was I.&nbsp; But what had
+he to do with it?&nbsp; Mr. Donat, acting magistrate and a man of
+kindred blood, could throw no light upon the mystery; a plain
+private person, with a taste for letters, cannot be expected to
+do more.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV&mdash;TRAITS AND SECTS IN THE PAUMOTUS</h3>
+<p>The most careless reader must have remarked a change of air
+since the Marquesas.&nbsp; The house, crowded with effects, the
+bustling housewife counting her possessions, the serious,
+indoctrinated island pastor, the long fight for life in the
+lagoon: here are traits of a new world.&nbsp; I read in a
+pamphlet (I will not give the author&rsquo;s name) that the
+Marquesan especially resembles the Paumotuan.&nbsp; I should take
+the two races, though so near in neighbourhood, to be extremes of
+Polynesian diversity.&nbsp; The Marquesan is certainly the most
+beautiful of human races, and one of the tallest&mdash;the
+Paumotuan averaging a good inch shorter, and not even handsome;
+the Marquesan open-handed, inert, insensible to religion,
+childishly self-indulgent&mdash;the Paumotuan greedy, hardy,
+enterprising, a religious disputant, and with a trace of the
+ascetic character.</p>
+<p>Yet a few years ago, and the people of the archipelago were
+crafty savages.&nbsp; Their isles might be called sirens&rsquo;
+isles, not merely from the attraction they exerted on the passing
+mariner, but from the perils that awaited him on shore.&nbsp;
+Even to this day, in certain outlying islands, danger lingers;
+and the civilized Paumotuan dreads to land and hesitates to
+accost his backward brother.&nbsp; But, except in these, to-day
+the peril is a memory.&nbsp; When our generation were yet in the
+cradle and playroom it was still a living fact.&nbsp; Between
+1830 and 1840, Hao, for instance, was a place of the most
+dangerous approach, where ships were seized and crews
+kidnapped.&nbsp; As late as 1856, the schooner <i>Sarah Ann</i>
+sailed from Papeete and was seen no more.&nbsp; She had women on
+board, and children, the captain&rsquo;s wife, a nursemaid, a
+baby, and the two young sons of a Captain Steven on their way to
+the mainland for schooling.&nbsp; All were supposed to have
+perished in a squall.&nbsp; A year later, the captain of the
+<i>Julia</i>, coasting along the island variously called Bligh,
+Lagoon, and Tematangi saw armed natives follow the course of his
+schooner, clad in many-coloured stuffs.&nbsp; Suspicion was at
+once aroused; the mother of the lost children was profuse of
+money; and one expedition having found the place deserted, and
+returned content with firing a few shots, she raised and herself
+accompanied another.&nbsp; None appeared to greet or to oppose
+them; they roamed a while among abandoned huts and empty
+thickets; then formed two parties and set forth to beat, from end
+to end, the pandanus jungle of the island.&nbsp; One man remained
+alone by the landing-place&mdash;Teina, a chief of Anaa, leader
+of the armed natives who made the strength of the
+expedition.&nbsp; Now that his comrades were departed this way
+and that, on their laborious exploration, the silence fell
+profound; and this silence was the ruin of the islanders.&nbsp; A
+sound of stones rattling caught the ear of Teina.&nbsp; He
+looked, thinking to perceive a crab, and saw instead the brown
+hand of a human being issue from a fissure in the ground.&nbsp; A
+shout recalled the search parties and announced their doom to the
+buried caitiffs.&nbsp; In the cave below, sixteen were found
+crouching among human bones and singular and horrid
+curiosities.&nbsp; One was a head of golden hair, supposed to be
+a relic of the captain&rsquo;s wife; another was half of the body
+of a European child, sun-dried and stuck upon a stick, doubtless
+with some design of wizardry.</p>
+<p>The Paumotuan is eager to be rich.&nbsp; He saves, grudges,
+buries money, fears not work.&nbsp; For a dollar each, two
+natives passed the hours of daylight cleaning our ship&rsquo;s
+copper.&nbsp; It was strange to see them so indefatigable and so
+much at ease in the water&mdash;working at times with their pipes
+lighted, the smoker at times submerged and only the glowing bowl
+above the surface; it was stranger still to think they were next
+congeners to the incapable Marquesan.&nbsp; But the Paumotuan not
+only saves, grudges, and works, he steals besides; or, to be more
+precise, he swindles.&nbsp; He will never deny a debt, he only
+flees his creditor.&nbsp; He is always keen for an advance; so
+soon as he has fingered it he disappears.&nbsp; He knows your
+ship; so soon as it nears one island, he is off to another.&nbsp;
+You may think you know his name; he has already changed it.&nbsp;
+Pursuit in that infinity of isles were fruitless.&nbsp; The
+result can be given in a nutshell.&nbsp; It has been actually
+proposed in a Government report to secure debts by taking a
+photograph of the debtor; and the other day in Papeete credits on
+the Paumotus to the amount of sixteen thousand pounds were sold
+for less than forty&mdash;<i>quatre cent mille francs pour moins
+de mille francs</i>.&nbsp; Even so, the purchase was thought
+hazardous; and only the man who made it and who had special
+opportunities could have dared to give so much.</p>
+<p>The Paumotuan is sincerely attached to those of his own blood
+and household.&nbsp; A touching affection sometimes unites wife
+and husband.&nbsp; Their children, while they are alive,
+completely rule them; after they are dead, their bones or their
+mummies are often jealously preserved and carried from atoll to
+atoll in the wanderings of the family.&nbsp; I was told there
+were many houses in Fakarava with the mummy of a child locked in
+a sea-chest; after I heard it, I would glance a little jealously
+at those by my own bed; in that cupboard, also, it was possible
+there was a tiny skeleton.</p>
+<p>The race seems in a fair way to survive.&nbsp; From fifteen
+islands, whose rolls I had occasion to consult, I found a
+proportion of 59 births to 47 deaths for 1887.&nbsp; Dropping
+three out of the fifteen, there remained for the other twelve the
+comfortable ratio of 50 births to 32 deaths.&nbsp; Long habits of
+hardship and activity doubtless explain the contrast with
+Marquesan figures.&nbsp; But the Paumotuan displays, besides, a
+certain concern for health and the rudiments of a sanitary
+discipline.&nbsp; Public talk with these free-spoken people plays
+the part of the Contagious Diseases Act; in-comers to fresh
+islands anxiously inquire if all be well; and syphilis, when
+contracted, is successfully treated with indigenous herbs.&nbsp;
+Like their neighbours of Tahiti, from whom they have perhaps
+imbibed the error, they regard leprosy with comparative
+indifference, elephantiasis with disproportionate fear.&nbsp;
+But, unlike indeed to the Tahitian, their alarm puts on the guise
+of self-defence.&nbsp; Any one stricken with this painful and
+ugly malady is confined to the ends of villages, denied the use
+of paths and highways, and condemned to transport himself between
+his house and coco-patch by water only, his very footprint being
+held infectious.&nbsp; Fe&rsquo;efe&rsquo;e, being a creature of
+marshes and the sequel of malarial fever, is not original in
+atolls.&nbsp; On the single isle of Makatea, where the lagoon is
+now a marsh, the disease has made a home.&nbsp; Many suffer; they
+are excluded (if Mr. Wilmot be right) from much of the comfort of
+society; and it is believed they take a secret vengeance.&nbsp;
+The defections of the sick are considered highly poisonous.&nbsp;
+Early in the morning, it is narrated, aged and malicious persons
+creep into the sleeping village, and stealthily make water at the
+doors of the houses of young men.&nbsp; Thus they propagate
+disease; thus they breathe on and obliterate comeliness and
+health, the objects of their envy.&nbsp; Whether horrid fact or
+more abominable legend, it equally depicts that something bitter
+and energetic which distinguishes Paumotuan man.</p>
+<p>The archipelago is divided between two main religions,
+Catholic and Mormon.&nbsp; They front each other proudly with a
+false air of permanence; yet are but shapes, their membership in
+a perpetual flux.&nbsp; The Mormon attends mass with devotion:
+the Catholic sits attentive at a Mormon sermon, and to-morrow
+each may have transferred allegiance.&nbsp; One man had been a
+pillar of the Church of Rome for fifteen years; his wife dying,
+he decided that must be a poor religion that could not save a man
+his wife, and turned Mormon.&nbsp; According to one informant,
+Catholicism was the more fashionable in health, but on the
+approach of sickness it was judged prudent to secede.&nbsp; As a
+Mormon, there were five chances out of six you might recover; as
+a Catholic, your hopes were small; and this opinion is perhaps
+founded on the comfortable rite of unction.</p>
+<p>We all know what Catholics are, whether in the Paumotus or at
+home.&nbsp; But the Paumotuan Mormon seemed a phenomenon
+apart.&nbsp; He marries but the one wife, uses the Protestant
+Bible, observes Protestant forms of worship, forbids the use of
+liquor and tobacco, practises adult baptism by immersion, and
+after every public sin, rechristens the backslider.&nbsp; I
+advised with Mahinui, whom I found well informed in the history
+of the American Mormons, and he declared against the least
+connection.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Pour moi</i>,&rsquo; said he, with a
+fine charity, &lsquo;<i>les Mormons ici un petit
+Catholiques</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Some months later I had an
+opportunity to consult an orthodox fellow-countryman, an old
+dissenting Highlander, long settled in Tahiti, but still
+breathing of the heather of Tiree.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why do they call
+themselves Mormons?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;My dear, and
+that is my question!&rsquo; he exclaimed.&nbsp; &lsquo;For by all
+that I can hear of their doctrine, I have nothing to say against
+it, and their life, it is above reproach.&rsquo;&nbsp; And for
+all that, Mormons they are, but of the earlier sowing: the
+so-called Josephites, the followers of Joseph Smith, the
+opponents of Brigham Young.</p>
+<p>Grant, then, the Mormons to be Mormons.&nbsp; Fresh points at
+once arise: What are the Israelites? and what the Kanitus?&nbsp;
+For a long while back the sect had been divided into Mormons
+proper and so-called Israelites, I never could hear why.&nbsp; A
+few years since there came a visiting missionary of the name of
+Williams, who made an excellent collection, and retired, leaving
+fresh disruption imminent.&nbsp; Something irregular (as I was
+told) in his way of &lsquo;opening the service&rsquo; had raised
+partisans and enemies; the church was once more rent asunder; and
+a new sect, the Kanitu, issued from the division.&nbsp; Since
+then Kanitus and Israelites, like the Cameronians and the United
+Presbyterians, have made common cause; and the ecclesiastical
+history of the Paumotus is, for the moment, uneventful.&nbsp;
+There will be more doing before long, and these isles bid fair to
+be the Scotland of the South.&nbsp; Two things I could never
+learn.&nbsp; The nature of the innovations of the Rev. Mr.
+Williams none would tell me, and of the meaning of the name
+Kanitu none had a guess.&nbsp; It was not Tahitian, it was not
+Marquesan; it formed no part of that ancient speech of the
+Paumotus, now passing swiftly into obsolescence.&nbsp; One man, a
+priest, God bless him! said it was the Latin for a little
+dog.&nbsp; I have found it since as the name of a god in New
+Guinea; it must be a bolder man than I who should hint at a
+connection.&nbsp; Here, then, is a singular thing: a brand-new
+sect, arising by popular acclamation, and a nonsense word
+invented for its name.</p>
+<p>The design of mystery seems obvious, and according to a very
+intelligent observer, Mr. Magee of Mangareva, this element of the
+mysterious is a chief attraction of the Mormon Church.&nbsp; It
+enjoys some of the status of Freemasonry at home, and there is
+for the convert some of the exhilaration of adventure.&nbsp;
+Other attractions are certainly conjoined.&nbsp; Perpetual
+rebaptism, leading to a succession of baptismal feasts, is found,
+both from the social and the spiritual side, a pleasing
+feature.&nbsp; More important is the fact that all the faithful
+enjoy office; perhaps more important still, the strictness of the
+discipline.&nbsp; &lsquo;The veto on liquor,&rsquo; said Mr.
+Magee, &lsquo;brings them plenty members.&rsquo;&nbsp; There is
+no doubt these islanders are fond of drink, and no doubt they
+refrain from the indulgence; a bout on a feast-day, for instance,
+may be followed by a week or a month of rigorous sobriety.&nbsp;
+Mr. Wilmot attributes this to Paumotuan frugality and the love of
+hoarding; it goes far deeper.&nbsp; I have mentioned that I made
+a feast on board the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; To wash down
+ship&rsquo;s bread and jam, each guest was given the choice of
+rum or syrup, and out of the whole number only one man
+voted&mdash;in a defiant tone, and amid shouts of mirth&mdash;for
+&lsquo;Trum&rsquo;!&nbsp; This was in public.&nbsp; I had the
+meanness to repeat the experiment, whenever I had a chance,
+within the four walls of my house; and three at least, who had
+refused at the festival, greedily drank rum behind a door.&nbsp;
+But there were others thoroughly consistent.&nbsp; I said the
+virtues of the race were bourgeois and puritan; and how bourgeois
+is this! how puritanic! how Scottish! and how Yankee!&mdash;the
+temptation, the resistance, the public hypocritical conformity,
+the Pharisees, the Holy Willies, and the true disciples.&nbsp;
+With such a people the popularity of an ascetic Church appears
+legitimate; in these strict rules, in this perpetual supervision,
+the weak find their advantage, the strong a certain pleasure; and
+the doctrine of rebaptism, a clean bill and a fresh start, will
+comfort many staggering professors.</p>
+<p>There is yet another sect, or what is called a sect&mdash;no
+doubt improperly&mdash;that of the Whistlers.&nbsp; Duncan
+Cameron, so clear in favour of the Mormons, was no less loud in
+condemnation of the Whistlers.&nbsp; Yet I do not know; I still
+fancy there is some connection, perhaps fortuitous, probably
+disavowed.&nbsp; Here at least are some doings in the house of an
+Israelite clergyman (or prophet) in the island of Anaa, of which
+I am equally sure that Duncan would disclaim and the Whistlers
+hail them for an imitation of their own.&nbsp; My informant, a
+Tahitian and a Catholic, occupied one part of the house; the
+prophet and his family lived in the other.&nbsp; Night after
+night the Mormons, in the one end, held their evening sacrifice
+of song; night after night, in the other, the wife of the
+Tahitian lay awake and listened to their singing with
+amazement.&nbsp; At length she could contain herself no longer,
+woke her husband, and asked him what he heard.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+hear several persons singing hymns,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; she returned, &lsquo;but listen again!&nbsp;
+Do you not hear something supernatural?&rsquo;&nbsp; His
+attention thus directed, he was aware of a strange buzzing
+voice&mdash;and yet he declared it was beautiful&mdash;which
+justly accompanied the singers.&nbsp; The next day he made
+inquiries.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is a spirit,&rsquo; said the prophet,
+with entire simplicity, &lsquo;which has lately made a practice
+of joining us at family worship.&rsquo;&nbsp; It did not appear
+the thing was visible, and like other spirits raised nearer home
+in these degenerate days, it was rudely ignorant, at first could
+only buzz, and had only learned of late to bear a part correctly
+in the music.</p>
+<p>The performances of the Whistlers are more
+business-like.&nbsp; Their meetings are held publicly with open
+doors, all being &lsquo;cordially invited to attend.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The faithful sit about the room&mdash;according to one informant,
+singing hymns; according to another, now singing and now
+whistling; the leader, the wizard&mdash;let me rather say, the
+medium&mdash;sits in the midst, enveloped in a sheet and silent;
+and presently, from just above his head, or sometimes from the
+midst of the roof, an aerial whistling proceeds, appalling to the
+inexperienced.&nbsp; This, it appears, is the language of the
+dead; its purport is taken down progressively by one of the
+experts, writing, I was told, &lsquo;as fast as a telegraph
+operator&rsquo;; and the communications are at last made
+public.&nbsp; They are of the baldest triviality; a schooner is,
+perhaps, announced, some idle gossip reported of a neighbour, or
+if the spirit shall have been called to consultation on a case of
+sickness, a remedy may be suggested.&nbsp; One of these,
+immersion in scalding water, not long ago proved fatal to the
+patient.&nbsp; The whole business is very dreary, very silly, and
+very European; it has none of the picturesque qualities of
+similar conjurations in New Zealand; it seems to possess no
+kernel of possible sense, like some that I shall describe among
+the Gilbert islanders.&nbsp; Yet I was told that many hardy,
+intelligent natives were inveterate Whistlers.&nbsp; &lsquo;Like
+Mahinui?&rsquo; I asked, willing to have a standard; and I was
+told &lsquo;Yes.&rsquo;&nbsp; Why should I wonder?&nbsp; Men more
+enlightened than my convict-catechist sit down at home to follies
+equally sterile and dull.</p>
+<p>The medium is sometimes female.&nbsp; It was a woman, for
+instance, who introduced these practices on the north coast of
+Taiarapu, to the scandal of her own connections, her
+brother-in-law in particular declaring she was drunk.&nbsp; But
+what shocked Tahiti might seem fit enough in the Paumotus, the
+more so as certain women there possess, by the gift of nature,
+singular and useful powers.&nbsp; They say they are honest,
+well-intentioned ladies, some of them embarrassed by their weird
+inheritance.&nbsp; And indeed the trouble caused by this
+endowment is so great, and the protection afforded so
+infinitesimally small, that I hesitate whether to call it a gift
+or a hereditary curse.&nbsp; You may rob this lady&rsquo;s
+coco-patch, steal her canoes, burn down her house, and slay her
+family scatheless; but one thing you must not do: you must not
+lay a hand upon her sleeping-mat, or your belly will swell, and
+you can only be cured by the lady or her husband.&nbsp; Here is
+the report of an eye-witness, Tasmanian born, educated, a man who
+has made money&mdash;certainly no fool.&nbsp; In 1886 he was
+present in a house on Makatea, where two lads began to skylark on
+the mats, and were (I think) ejected.&nbsp; Instantly after,
+their bellies began to swell; pains took hold on them; all manner
+of island remedies were exhibited in vain, and rubbing only
+magnified their sufferings.&nbsp; The man of the house was
+called, explained the nature of the visitation, and prepared the
+cure.&nbsp; A cocoa-nut was husked, filled with herbs, and with
+all the ceremonies of a launch, and the utterance of spells in
+the Paumotuan language, committed to the sea.&nbsp; From that
+moment the pains began to grow more easy and the swelling to
+subside.&nbsp; The reader may stare.&nbsp; I can assure him, if
+he moved much among old residents of the archipelago, he would be
+driven to admit one thing of two&mdash;either that there is
+something in the swollen bellies or nothing in the evidence of
+man.</p>
+<p>I have not met these gifted ladies; but I had an experience of
+my own, for I have played, for one night only, the part of the
+whistling spirit.&nbsp; It had been blowing wearily all day, but
+with the fall of night the wind abated, and the moon, which was
+then full, rolled in a clear sky.&nbsp; We went southward down
+the island on the side of the lagoon, walking through long-drawn
+forest aisles of palm, and on a floor of snowy sand.&nbsp; No
+life was abroad, nor sound of life; till in a clear part of the
+isle we spied the embers of a fire, and not far off, in a dark
+house, heard natives talking softly.&nbsp; To sit without a
+light, even in company, and under cover, is for a Paumotuan a
+somewhat hazardous extreme.&nbsp; The whole scene&mdash;the
+strong moonlight and crude shadows on the sand, the scattered
+coals, the sound of the low voices from the house, and the lap of
+the lagoon along the beach&mdash;put me (I know not how) on
+thoughts of superstition.&nbsp; I was barefoot, I observed my
+steps were noiseless, and drawing near to the dark house, but
+keeping well in shadow, began to whistle.&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+Heaving of the Lead&rsquo; was my air&mdash;no very tragic
+piece.&nbsp; With the first note the conversation and all
+movement ceased; silence accompanied me while I continued; and
+when I passed that way on my return I found the lamp was lighted
+in the house, but the tongues were still mute.&nbsp; All night,
+as I now think, the wretches shivered and were silent.&nbsp; For
+indeed, I had no guess at the time at the nature and magnitude of
+the terrors I inflicted, or with what grisly images the notes of
+that old song had peopled the dark house.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER V&mdash;A PAUMOTUAN FUNERAL</h3>
+<p>No, I had no guess of these men&rsquo;s terrors.&nbsp; Yet I
+had received ere that a hint, if I had understood; and the
+occasion was a funeral.</p>
+<p>A little apart in the main avenue of Rotoava, in a low hut of
+leaves that opened on a small enclosure, like a pigsty on a pen,
+an old man dwelt solitary with his aged wife.&nbsp; Perhaps they
+were too old to migrate with the others; perhaps they were too
+poor, and had no possessions to dispute.&nbsp; At least they had
+remained behind; and it thus befell that they were invited to my
+feast.&nbsp; I dare say it was quite a piece of politics in the
+pigsty whether to come or not to come, and the husband long
+swithered between curiosity and age, till curiosity conquered,
+and they came, and in the midst of that last merrymaking death
+tapped him on the shoulder.&nbsp; For some days, when the sky was
+bright and the wind cool, his mat would be spread in the main
+highway of the village, and he was to be seen lying there inert,
+a mere handful of a man, his wife inertly seated by his
+head.&nbsp; They seemed to have outgrown alike our needs and
+faculties; they neither spoke nor listened; they suffered us to
+pass without a glance; the wife did not fan, she seemed not to
+attend upon her husband, and the two poor antiques sat juxtaposed
+under the high canopy of palms, the human tragedy reduced to its
+bare elements, a sight beyond pathos, stirring a thrill of
+curiosity.&nbsp; And yet there was one touch of the pathetic
+haunted me: that so much youth and expectation should have run in
+these starved veins, and the man should have squandered all his
+lees of life on a pleasure party.</p>
+<p>On the morning of 17th September the sufferer died, and, time
+pressing, he was buried the same day at four.&nbsp; The cemetery
+lies to seaward behind Government House; broken coral, like so
+much road-metal, forms the surface; a few wooden crosses, a few
+inconsiderable upright stones, designate graves; a mortared wall,
+high enough to lean on, rings it about; a clustering shrub
+surrounds it with pale leaves.&nbsp; Here was the grave dug that
+morning, doubtless by uneasy diggers, to the sound of the nigh
+sea and the cries of sea-birds; meanwhile the dead man waited in
+his house, and the widow and another aged woman leaned on the
+fence before the door, no speech upon their lips, no speculation
+in their eyes.</p>
+<p>Sharp at the hour the procession was in march, the coffin
+wrapped in white and carried by four bearers; mourners
+behind&mdash;not many, for not many remained in Rotoava, and not
+many in black, for these were poor; the men in straw hats, white
+coats, and blue trousers or the gorgeous parti-coloured pariu,
+the Tahitian kilt; the women, with a few exceptions, brightly
+habited.&nbsp; Far in the rear came the widow, painfully carrying
+the dead man&rsquo;s mat; a creature aged beyond humanity, to the
+likeness of some missing link.</p>
+<p>The dead man had been a Mormon; but the Mormon clergyman was
+gone with the rest to wrangle over boundaries in the adjacent
+isle, and a layman took his office.&nbsp; Standing at the head of
+the open grave, in a white coat and blue pariu, his Tahitian
+Bible in his hand and one eye bound with a red handkerchief, he
+read solemnly that chapter in Job which has been read and heard
+over the bones of so many of our fathers, and with a good voice
+offered up two prayers.&nbsp; The wind and the surf bore a
+burthen.&nbsp; By the cemetery gate a mother in crimson suckled
+an infant rolled in blue.&nbsp; In the midst the widow sat upon
+the ground and polished one of the coffin-stretchers with a piece
+of coral; a little later she had turned her back to the grave and
+was playing with a leaf.&nbsp; Did she understand?&nbsp; God
+knows.&nbsp; The officiant paused a moment, stooped, and gathered
+and threw reverently on the coffin a handful of rattling
+coral.&nbsp; Dust to dust: but the grains of this dust were gross
+like cherries, and the true dust that was to follow sat near by,
+still cohering (as by a miracle) in the tragic semblance of a
+female ape.</p>
+<p>So far, Mormon or not, it was a Christian funeral.&nbsp; The
+well-known passage had been read from Job, the prayers had been
+rehearsed, the grave was filled, the mourners straggled
+homeward.&nbsp; With a little coarser grain of covering earth, a
+little nearer outcry of the sea, a stronger glare of sunlight on
+the rude enclosure, and some incongruous colours of attire, the
+well-remembered form had been observed.</p>
+<p>By rights it should have been otherwise.&nbsp; The mat should
+have been buried with its owner; but, the family being poor, it
+was thriftily reserved for a fresh service.&nbsp; The widow
+should have flung herself upon the grave and raised the voice of
+official grief, the neighbours have chimed in, and the narrow
+isle rung for a space with lamentation.&nbsp; But the widow was
+old; perhaps she had forgotten, perhaps never understood, and she
+played like a child with leaves and coffin-stretchers.&nbsp; In
+all ways my guest was buried with maimed rites.&nbsp; Strange to
+think that his last conscious pleasure was the <i>Casco</i> and
+my feast; strange to think that he had limped there, an old
+child, looking for some new good.&nbsp; And the good thing, rest,
+had been allotted him.</p>
+<p>But though the widow had neglected much, there was one part
+she must not utterly neglect.&nbsp; She came away with the
+dispersing funeral; but the dead man&rsquo;s mat was left behind
+upon the grave, and I learned that by set of sun she must return
+to sleep there.&nbsp; This vigil is imperative.&nbsp; From
+sundown till the rising of the morning star the Paumotuan must
+hold his watch above the ashes of his kindred.&nbsp; Many
+friends, if the dead have been a man of mark, will keep the
+watchers company; they will be well supplied with coverings
+against the weather; I believe they bring food, and the rite is
+persevered in for two weeks.&nbsp; Our poor survivor, if, indeed,
+she properly survived, had little to cover, and few to sit with
+her; on the night of the funeral a strong squall chased her from
+her place of watch; for days the weather held uncertain and
+outrageous; and ere seven nights were up she had desisted, and
+returned to sleep in her low roof.&nbsp; That she should be at
+the pains of returning for so short a visit to a solitary house,
+that this borderer of the grave should fear a little wind and a
+wet blanket, filled me at the time with musings.&nbsp; I could
+not say she was indifferent; she was so far beyond me in
+experience that the court of my criticism waived jurisdiction;
+but I forged excuses, telling myself she had perhaps little to
+lament, perhaps suffered much, perhaps understood nothing.&nbsp;
+And lo! in the whole affair there was no question whether of
+tenderness or piety, and the sturdy return of this old remnant
+was a mark either of uncommon sense or of uncommon fortitude.</p>
+<p>Yet one thing had occurred that partly set me on the
+trail.&nbsp; I have said the funeral passed much as at
+home.&nbsp; But when all was over, when we were trooping in
+decent silence from the graveyard gate and down the path to the
+settlement, a sudden inbreak of a different spirit startled and
+perhaps dismayed us.&nbsp; Two people walked not far apart in our
+procession: my friend Mr. Donat&mdash;Donat-Rimarau: &lsquo;Donat
+the much-handed&rsquo;&mdash;acting Vice-Resident, present ruler
+of the archipelago, by far the man of chief importance on the
+scene, but known besides for one of an unshakable good temper;
+and a certain comely, strapping young Paumotuan woman, the
+comeliest on the isle, not (let us hope) the bravest or the most
+polite.&nbsp; Of a sudden, ere yet the grave silence of the
+funeral was broken, she made a leap at the Resident, with pointed
+finger, shrieked a few words, and fell back again with a
+laughter, not a natural mirth.&nbsp; &lsquo;What did she say to
+you?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;She did not speak to
+<i>me</i>,&rsquo; said Donat, a shade perturbed; &lsquo;she spoke
+to the ghost of the dead man.&rsquo;&nbsp; And the purport of her
+speech was this: &lsquo;See there!&nbsp; Donat will be a fine
+feast for you to-night.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;M. Donat called it a jest,&rsquo; I wrote at the time
+in my diary.&nbsp; &lsquo;It seemed to me more in the nature of a
+terrified conjuration, as though she would divert the
+ghost&rsquo;s attention from herself.&nbsp; A cannibal race may
+well have cannibal phantoms.&rsquo;&nbsp; The guesses of the
+traveller appear foredoomed to be erroneous; yet in these I was
+precisely right.&nbsp; The woman had stood by in terror at the
+funeral, being then in a dread spot, the graveyard.&nbsp; She
+looked on in terror to the coming night, with that ogre, a new
+spirit, loosed upon the isle.&nbsp; And the words she had cried
+in Donat&rsquo;s face were indeed a terrified conjuration, basely
+to shield herself, basely to dedicate another in her stead.&nbsp;
+One thing is to be said in her excuse.&nbsp; Doubtless she partly
+chose Donat because he was a man of great good-nature, but
+partly, too, because he was a man of the half-caste.&nbsp; For I
+believe all natives regard white blood as a kind of talisman
+against the powers of hell.&nbsp; In no other way can they
+explain the unpunished recklessness of Europeans.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI&mdash;GRAVEYARD STORIES</h3>
+<p>With my superstitious friend, the islander, I fear I am not
+wholly frank, often leading the way with stories of my own, and
+being always a grave and sometimes an excited hearer.&nbsp; But
+the deceit is scarce mortal, since I am as pleased to hear as he
+to tell, as pleased with the story as he with the belief; and,
+besides, it is entirely needful.&nbsp; For it is scarce possible
+to exaggerate the extent and empire of his superstitions; they
+mould his life, they colour his thinking; and when he does not
+speak to me of ghosts, and gods, and devils, he is playing the
+dissembler and talking only with his lips.&nbsp; With thoughts so
+different, one must indulge the other; and I would rather that I
+should indulge his superstition than he my incredulity.&nbsp; Of
+one thing, besides, I may be sure: Let me indulge it as I please,
+I shall not hear the whole; for he is already on his guard with
+me, and the amount of the lore is boundless.</p>
+<p>I will give but a few instances at random, chiefly from my own
+doorstep in Upolu, during the past month (October 1890).&nbsp;
+One of my workmen was sent the other day to the banana patch,
+there to dig; this is a hollow of the mountain, buried in woods,
+out of all sight and cry of mankind; and long before dusk Lafaele
+was back again beside the cook-house with embarrassed looks; he
+dared not longer stay alone, he was afraid of &lsquo;spirits in
+the bush.&rsquo;&nbsp; It seems these are the souls of the
+unburied dead, haunting where they fell, and wearing woodland
+shapes of pig, or bird, or insect; the bush is full of them, they
+seem to eat nothing, slay solitary wanderers apparently in spite,
+and at times, in human form, go down to villages and consort with
+the inhabitants undetected.&nbsp; So much I learned a day or so
+after, walking in the bush with a very intelligent youth, a
+native.&nbsp; It was a little before noon; a grey day and
+squally; and perhaps I had spoken lightly.&nbsp; A dark squall
+burst on the side of the mountain; the woods shook and cried; the
+dead leaves rose from the ground in clouds, like butterflies; and
+my companion came suddenly to a full stop.&nbsp; He was afraid,
+he said, of the trees falling; but as soon as I had changed the
+subject of our talk he proceeded with alacrity.&nbsp; A day or
+two before a messenger came up the mountain from Apia with a
+letter; I was in the bush, he must await my return, then wait
+till I had answered: and before I was done his voice sounded
+shrill with terror of the coming night and the long forest
+road.&nbsp; These are the commons.&nbsp; Take the chiefs.&nbsp;
+There has been a great coming and going of signs and omens in our
+group.&nbsp; One river ran down blood; red eels were captured in
+another; an unknown fish was thrown upon the coast, an ominous
+word found written on its scales.&nbsp; So far we might be
+reading in a monkish chronicle; now we come on a fresh note, at
+once modern and Polynesian.&nbsp; The gods of Upolu and Savaii,
+our two chief islands, contended recently at cricket.&nbsp; Since
+then they are at war.&nbsp; Sounds of battle are heard to roll
+along the coast.&nbsp; A woman saw a man swim from the high seas
+and plunge direct into the bush; he was no man of that
+neighbourhood; and it was known he was one of the gods, speeding
+to a council.&nbsp; Most perspicuous of all, a missionary on
+Savaii, who is also a medical man, was disturbed late in the
+night by knocking; it was no hour for the dispensary, but at
+length he woke his servant and sent him to inquire; the servant,
+looking from a window, beheld crowds of persons, all with
+grievous wounds, lopped limbs, broken heads, and bleeding
+bullet-holes; but when the door was opened all had
+disappeared.&nbsp; They were gods from the field of battle.&nbsp;
+Now these reports have certainly significance; it is not hard to
+trace them to political grumblers or to read in them a threat of
+coming trouble; from that merely human side I found them ominous
+myself.&nbsp; But it was the spiritual side of their significance
+that was discussed in secret council by my rulers.&nbsp; I shall
+best depict this mingled habit of the Polynesian mind by two
+connected instances.&nbsp; I once lived in a village, the name of
+which I do not mean to tell.&nbsp; The chief and his sister were
+persons perfectly intelligent: gentlefolk, apt of speech.&nbsp;
+The sister was very religious, a great church-goer, one that used
+to reprove me if I stayed away; I found afterwards that she
+privately worshipped a shark.&nbsp; The chief himself was
+somewhat of a freethinker; at the least, a latitudinarian: he was
+a man, besides, filled with European knowledge and
+accomplishments; of an impassive, ironical habit; and I should as
+soon have expected superstition in Mr. Herbert Spencer.&nbsp;
+Hear the sequel.&nbsp; I had discovered by unmistakable signs
+that they buried too shallow in the village graveyard, and I took
+my friend, as the responsible authority, to task.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;There is something wrong about your graveyard,&rsquo; said
+I, &lsquo;which you must attend to, or it may have very bad
+results.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Something wrong?&nbsp; What is
+it?&rsquo; he asked, with an emotion that surprised me.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;If you care to go along there any evening about nine
+o&rsquo;clock you can see for yourself,&rsquo; said I.&nbsp; He
+stepped backward.&nbsp; &lsquo;A ghost!&rsquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>In short, in the whole field of the South Seas, there is not
+one to blame another.&nbsp; Half blood and whole, pious and
+debauched, intelligent and dull, all men believe in ghosts, all
+men combine with their recent Christianity fear of and a
+lingering faith in the old island deities.&nbsp; So, in Europe,
+the gods of Olympus slowly dwindled into village bogies; so
+to-day, the theological Highlander sneaks from under the eye of
+the Free Church divine to lay an offering by a sacred well.</p>
+<p>I try to deal with the whole matter here because of a
+particular quality in Paumotuan superstitions.&nbsp; It is true I
+heard them told by a man with a genius for such narrations.&nbsp;
+Close about our evening lamp, within sound of the island surf, we
+hung on his words, thrilling.&nbsp; The reader, in far other
+scenes, must listen close for the faint echo.</p>
+<p>This bundle of weird stories sprang from the burial and the
+woman&rsquo;s selfish conjuration.&nbsp; I was dissatisfied with
+what I heard, harped upon questions, and struck at last this vein
+of metal.&nbsp; It is from sundown to about four in the morning
+that the kinsfolk camp upon the grave; and these are the hours of
+the spirits&rsquo; wanderings.&nbsp; At any time of the
+night&mdash;it may be earlier, it may be later&mdash;a sound is
+to be heard below, which is the noise of his liberation; at four
+sharp, another and a louder marks the instant of the
+re-imprisonment; between-whiles, he goes his malignant
+rounds.&nbsp; &lsquo;Did you ever see an evil spirit?&rsquo; was
+once asked of a Paumotuan.&nbsp; &lsquo;Once.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Under what form?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;It was in the form of
+a crane.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And how did you know that crane to
+be a spirit?&rsquo; was asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;I will tell
+you,&rsquo; he answered; and this was the purport of his
+inconclusive narrative.&nbsp; His father had been dead nearly a
+fortnight; others had wearied of the watch; and as the sun was
+setting, he found himself by the grave alone.&nbsp; It was not
+yet dark, rather the hour of the afterglow, when he was aware of
+a snow-white crane upon the coral mound; presently more cranes
+came, some white, some black; then the cranes vanished, and he
+saw in their place a white cat, to which there was silently
+joined a great company of cats of every hue conceivable; then
+these also disappeared, and he was left astonished.</p>
+<p>This was an anodyne appearance.&nbsp; Take instead the
+experience of Rua-a-mariterangi on the isle of Katiu.&nbsp; He
+had a need for some pandanus, and crossed the isle to the
+sea-beach, where it chiefly flourishes.&nbsp; The day was still,
+and Rua was surprised to hear a crashing sound among the
+thickets, and then the fall of a considerable tree.&nbsp; Here
+must be some one building a canoe; and he entered the margin of
+the wood to find and pass the time of day with this chance
+neighbour.&nbsp; The crashing sounded more at hand; and then he
+was aware of something drawing swiftly near among the
+tree-tops.&nbsp; It swung by its heels downward, like an ape, so
+that its hands were free for murder; it depended safely by the
+slightest twigs; the speed of its coming was incredible; and soon
+Rua recognised it for a corpse, horrible with age, its bowels
+hanging as it came.&nbsp; Prayer was the weapon of Christian in
+the Valley of the Shadow, and it is to prayer that
+Rua-a-mariterangi attributes his escape.&nbsp; No merely human
+expedition had availed.</p>
+<p>This demon was plainly from the grave; yet you will observe he
+was abroad by day.&nbsp; And inconsistent as it may seem with the
+hours of the night watch and the many references to the rising of
+the morning star, it is no singular exception.&nbsp; I could
+never find a case of another who had seen this ghost, diurnal and
+arboreal in its habits; but others have heard the fall of the
+tree, which seems the signal of its coming.&nbsp; Mr. Donat was
+once pearling on the uninhabited isle of Haraiki.&nbsp; It was a
+day without a breath of wind, such as alternate in the
+archipelago with days of contumelious breezes.&nbsp; The divers
+were in the midst of the lagoon upon their employment; the cook,
+a boy of ten, was over his pots in the camp.&nbsp; Thus were all
+souls accounted for except a single native who accompanied Donat
+into the wood in quest of sea-fowls&rsquo; eggs.&nbsp; In a
+moment, out of the stillness, came the sound of the fall of a
+great tree.&nbsp; Donat would have passed on to find the
+cause.&nbsp; &lsquo;No,&rsquo; cried his companion, &lsquo;that
+was no tree.&nbsp; It was something <i>not right</i>.&nbsp; Let
+us go back to camp.&rsquo;&nbsp; Next Sunday the divers were
+turned on, all that part of the isle was thoroughly examined, and
+sure enough no tree had fallen.&nbsp; A little later Mr. Donat
+saw one of his divers flee from a similar sound, in similar
+unaffected panic, on the same isle.&nbsp; But neither would
+explain, and it was not till afterwards, when he met with Rua,
+that he learned the occasion of their terrors.</p>
+<p>But whether by day or night, the purpose of the dead in these
+abhorred activities is still the same.&nbsp; In Samoa, my
+informant had no idea of the food of the bush spirits; no such
+ambiguity would exist in the mind of a Paumotuan.&nbsp; In that
+hungry archipelago, living and dead must alike toil for
+nutriment; and the race having been cannibal in the past, the
+spirits are so still.&nbsp; When the living ate the dead,
+horrified nocturnal imagination drew the shocking inference that
+the dead might eat the living.&nbsp; Doubtless they slay men,
+doubtless even mutilate them, in mere malice.&nbsp; Marquesan
+spirits sometimes tear out the eyes of travellers; but even that
+may be more practical than appears, for the eye is a cannibal
+dainty.&nbsp; And certainly the root-idea of the dead, at least
+in the far eastern islands, is to prowl for food.&nbsp; It was as
+a dainty morsel for a meal that the woman denounced Donat at the
+funeral.&nbsp; There are spirits besides who prey in particular
+not on the bodies but on the souls of the dead.&nbsp; The point
+is clearly made in a Tahitian story.&nbsp; A child fell sick,
+grew swiftly worse, and at last showed signs of death.&nbsp; The
+mother hastened to the house of a sorcerer, who lived hard
+by.&nbsp; &lsquo;You are yet in time,&rsquo; said he; &lsquo;a
+spirit has just run past my door carrying the soul of your child
+wrapped in the leaf of a purao; but I have a spirit stronger and
+swifter who will run him down ere he has time to eat
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wrapped in a leaf: like other things edible and
+corruptible.</p>
+<p>Or take an experience of Mr. Donat&rsquo;s on the island of
+Anaa.&nbsp; It was a night of a high wind, with violent squalls;
+his child was very sick, and the father, though he had gone to
+bed, lay wakeful, hearkening to the gale.&nbsp; All at once a
+fowl was violently dashed on the house wall.&nbsp; Supposing he
+had forgot to put it in shelter with the rest, Donat arose, found
+the bird (a cock) lying on the verandah, and put it in the
+hen-house, the door of which he securely fastened.&nbsp; Fifteen
+minutes later the business was repeated, only this time, as it
+was being dashed against the wall, the bird crew.&nbsp; Again
+Donat replaced it, examining the hen-house thoroughly and finding
+it quite perfect; as he was so engaged the wind puffed out his
+light, and he must grope back to the door a good deal
+shaken.&nbsp; Yet a third time the bird was dashed upon the wall;
+a third time Donat set it, now near dead, beside its mates; and
+he was scarce returned before there came a rush, like that of a
+furious strong man, against the door, and a whistle as loud as
+that of a railway engine rang about the house.&nbsp; The
+sceptical reader may here detect the finger of the tempest; but
+the women gave up all for lost and clustered on the beds
+lamenting.&nbsp; Nothing followed, and I must suppose the gale
+somewhat abated, for presently after a chief came visiting.&nbsp;
+He was a bold man to be abroad so late, but doubtless carried a
+bright lantern.&nbsp; And he was certainly a man of counsel, for
+as soon as he heard the details of these disturbances he was in a
+position to explain their nature.&nbsp; &lsquo;Your child,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;must certainly die.&nbsp; This is the evil spirit
+of our island who lies in wait to eat the spirits of the newly
+dead.&rsquo;&nbsp; And then he went on to expatiate on the
+strangeness of the spirit&rsquo;s conduct.&nbsp; He was not
+usually, he explained, so open of assault, but sat silent on the
+house-top waiting, in the guise of a bird, while within the
+people tended the dying and bewailed the dead, and had no thought
+of peril.&nbsp; But when the day came and the doors were opened,
+and men began to go abroad, blood-stains on the wall betrayed the
+tragedy.</p>
+<p>This is the quality I admire in Paumotuan legend.&nbsp; In
+Tahiti the spirit-eater is said to assume a vesture which has
+much more of pomp, but how much less of horror.&nbsp; It has been
+seen by all sorts and conditions, native and foreign; only the
+last insist it is a meteor.&nbsp; My authority was not so
+sure.&nbsp; He was riding with his wife about two in the morning;
+both were near asleep, and the horses not much better.&nbsp; It
+was a brilliant and still night, and the road wound over a
+mountain, near by a deserted marae (old Tahitian temple).&nbsp;
+All at once the appearance passed above them: a form of light;
+the head round and greenish; the body long, red, and with a focus
+of yet redder brilliancy about the midst.&nbsp; A buzzing hoot
+accompanied its passage; it flew direct out of one marae, and
+direct for another down the mountain side.&nbsp; And this, as my
+informant argued, is suggestive.&nbsp; For why should a mere
+meteor frequent the altars of abominable gods?&nbsp; The horses,
+I should say, were equally dismayed with their riders.&nbsp; Now
+I am not dismayed at all&mdash;not even agreeably.&nbsp; Give me
+rather the bird upon the house-top and the morning blood-gouts on
+the wall.</p>
+<p>But the dead are not exclusive in their diet.&nbsp; They carry
+with them to the grave, in particular, the Polynesian taste for
+fish, and enter at times with the living into a partnership in
+fishery.&nbsp; Rua-a-mariterangi is again my authority; I feel it
+diminishes the credit of the fact, but how it builds up the image
+of this inveterate ghost-seer!&nbsp; He belongs to the miserably
+poor island of Taenga, yet his father&rsquo;s house was always
+well supplied.&nbsp; As Rua grew up he was called at last to go
+a-fishing with this fortunate parent.&nbsp; They rowed the lagoon
+at dusk, to an unlikely place, and the lay down in the stern, and
+the father began vainly to cast his line over the bows.&nbsp; It
+is to be supposed that Rua slept; and when he awoke there was the
+figure of another beside his father, and his father was pulling
+in the fish hand over hand.&nbsp; &lsquo;Who is that man,
+father?&rsquo; Rua asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is none of your
+business,&rsquo; said the father; and Rua supposed the stranger
+had swum off to them from shore.&nbsp; Night after night they
+fared into the lagoon, often to the most unlikely places; night
+after night the stranger would suddenly be seen on board, and as
+suddenly be missed; and morning after morning the canoe returned
+laden with fish.&nbsp; &lsquo;My father is a very lucky
+man,&rsquo; thought Rua.&nbsp; At last, one fine day, there came
+first one boat party and then another, who must be entertained;
+father and son put off later than usual into the lagoon; and
+before the canoe was landed it was four o&rsquo;clock, and the
+morning star was close on the horizon.&nbsp; Then the stranger
+appeared seized with some distress; turned about, showing for the
+first time his face, which was that of one long dead, with
+shining eyes; stared into the east, set the tips of his fingers
+to his mouth like one a-cold, uttered a strange, shuddering sound
+between a whistle and a moan&mdash;a thing to freeze the blood;
+and, the day-star just rising from the sea, he suddenly was
+not.&nbsp; Then Rua understood why his father prospered, why his
+fishes rotted early in the day, and why some were always carried
+to the cemetery and laid upon the graves.&nbsp; My informant is a
+man not certainly averse to superstition, but he keeps his head,
+and takes a certain superior interest, which I may be allowed to
+call scientific.&nbsp; The last point reminding him of some
+parallel practice in Tahiti, he asked Rua if the fish were left,
+or carried home again after a formal dedication.&nbsp; It appears
+old Mariterangi practised both methods; sometimes treating his
+shadowy partner to a mere oblation, sometimes honestly leaving
+his fish to rot upon the grave.</p>
+<p>It is plain we have in Europe stories of a similar complexion;
+and the Polynesian <i>varua ino</i> or <i>aitu o le vao</i> is
+clearly the near kinsman of the Transylvanian vampire.&nbsp; Here
+is a tale in which the kinship appears broadly marked.&nbsp; On
+the atoll of Penrhyn, then still partly savage, a certain chief
+was long the salutary terror of the natives.&nbsp; He died, he
+was buried; and his late neighbours had scarce tasted the
+delights of licence ere his ghost appeared about the
+village.&nbsp; Fear seized upon all; a council was held of the
+chief men and sorcerers; and with the approval of the Rarotongan
+missionary, who was as frightened as the rest, and in the
+presence of several whites&mdash;my friend Mr. Ben Hird being
+one&mdash;the grave was opened, deepened until water came, and
+the body re-interred face down.&nbsp; The still recent staking of
+suicides in England and the decapitation of vampires in the east
+of Europe form close parallels.</p>
+<p>So in Samoa only the spirits of the unburied awake fear.&nbsp;
+During the late war many fell in the bush; their bodies,
+sometimes headless, were brought back by native pastors and
+interred; but this (I know not why) was insufficient, and the
+spirit still lingered on the theatre of death.&nbsp; When peace
+returned a singular scene was enacted in many places, and chiefly
+round the high gorges of Lotoanuu, where the struggle was long
+centred and the loss had been severe.&nbsp; Kinswomen of the dead
+came carrying a mat or sheet and guided by survivors of the
+fight.&nbsp; The place of death was earnestly sought out; the
+sheet was spread upon the ground; and the women, moved with pious
+anxiety, sat about and watched it.&nbsp; If any living thing
+alighted it was twice brushed away; upon the third coming it was
+known to be the spirit of the dead, was folded in, carried home
+and buried beside the body; and the aitu rested.&nbsp; The rite
+was practised beyond doubt in simple piety; the repose of the
+soul was its object: its motive, reverent affection.&nbsp; The
+present king disowns indeed all knowledge of a dangerous aitu; he
+declares the souls of the unburied were only wanderers in limbo,
+lacking an entrance to the proper country of the dead, unhappy,
+nowise hurtful.&nbsp; And this severely classic opinion doubtless
+represents the views of the enlightened.&nbsp; But the flight of
+my Lafaele marks the grosser terrors of the ignorant.</p>
+<p>This belief in the exorcising efficacy of funeral rites
+perhaps explains a fact, otherwise amazing, that no Polynesian
+seems at all to share our European horror of human bones and
+mummies.&nbsp; Of the first they made their cherished ornaments;
+they preserved them in houses or in mortuary caves; and the
+watchers of royal sepulchres dwelt with their children among the
+bones of generations.&nbsp; The mummy, even in the making, was as
+little feared.&nbsp; In the Marquesas, on the extreme coast, it
+was made by the household with continual unction and exposure to
+the sun; in the Carolines, upon the farthest west, it is still
+cured in the smoke of the family hearth.&nbsp; Head-hunting,
+besides, still lives around my doorstep in Samoa.&nbsp; And not
+ten years ago, in the Gilberts, the widow must disinter, cleanse,
+polish, and thenceforth carry about her, by day and night, the
+head of her dead husband.&nbsp; In all these cases we may suppose
+the process, whether of cleansing or drying, to have fully
+exorcised the aitu.</p>
+<p>But the Paumotuan belief is more obscure.&nbsp; Here the man
+is duly buried, and he has to be watched.&nbsp; He is duly
+watched, and the spirit goes abroad in spite of watches.&nbsp;
+Indeed, it is not the purpose of the vigils to prevent these
+wanderings; only to mollify by polite attention the inveterate
+malignity of the dead.&nbsp; Neglect (it is supposed) may
+irritate and thus invite his visits, and the aged and weakly
+sometimes balance risks and stay at home.&nbsp; Observe, it is
+the dead man&rsquo;s kindred and next friends who thus deprecate
+his fury with nocturnal watchings.&nbsp; Even the placatory vigil
+is held perilous, except in company, and a boy was pointed out to
+me in Rotoava, because he had watched alone by his own
+father.&nbsp; Not the ties of the dead, nor yet their proved
+character, affect the issue.&nbsp; A late Resident, who died in
+Fakarava of sunstroke, was beloved in life and is still
+remembered with affection; none the less his spirit went about
+the island clothed with terrors, and the neighbourhood of
+Government House was still avoided after dark.&nbsp; We may sum
+up the cheerful doctrine thus: All men become vampires, and the
+vampire spares none.&nbsp; And here we come face to face with a
+tempting inconsistency.&nbsp; For the whistling spirits are
+notoriously clannish; I understood them to wait upon and to
+enlighten kinsfolk only, and that the medium was always of the
+race of the communicating spirit.&nbsp; Here, then, we have the
+bonds of the family, on the one hand, severed at the hour of
+death; on the other, helpfully persisting.</p>
+<p>The child&rsquo;s soul in the Tahitian tale was wrapped in
+leaves.&nbsp; It is the spirits of the newly dead that are the
+dainty.&nbsp; When they are slain, the house is stained with
+blood.&nbsp; Rua&rsquo;s dead fisherman was decomposed;
+so&mdash;and horribly&mdash;was his arboreal demon.&nbsp; The
+spirit, then, is a thing material; and it is by the material
+ensigns of corruption that he is distinguished from the living
+man.&nbsp; This opinion is widespread, adds a gross terror to the
+more ugly Polynesian tales, and sometimes defaces the more
+engaging with a painful and incongruous touch.&nbsp; I will give
+two examples sufficiently wide apart, one from Tahiti, one from
+Samoa.</p>
+<p>And first from Tahiti.&nbsp; A man went to visit the husband
+of his sister, then some time dead.&nbsp; In her life the sister
+had been dainty in the island fashion, and went always adorned
+with a coronet of flowers.&nbsp; In the midst of the night the
+brother awoke and was aware of a heavenly fragrance going to and
+fro in the dark house.&nbsp; The lamp I must suppose to have
+burned out; no Tahitian would have lain down without one
+lighted.&nbsp; A while he lay wondering and delighted; then
+called upon the rest.&nbsp; &lsquo;Do none of you smell
+flowers?&rsquo; he asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;O,&rsquo; said his
+brother-in-law, &lsquo;we are used to that here.&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+next morning these two men went walking, and the widower
+confessed that his dead wife came about the house continually,
+and that he had even seen her.&nbsp; She was shaped and dressed
+and crowned with flowers as in her lifetime; only she moved a few
+inches above the earth with a very easy progress, and flitted
+dryshod above the surface of the river.&nbsp; And now comes my
+point: It was always in a back view that she appeared; and these
+brothers-in-law, debating the affair, agreed that this was to
+conceal the inroads of corruption.</p>
+<p>Now for the Samoan story.&nbsp; I owe it to the kindness of
+Dr. F. Otto Sierich, whose collection of folk-tales I expect with
+a high degree of interest.&nbsp; A man in Manu&rsquo;a was
+married to two wives and had no issue.&nbsp; He went to Savaii,
+married there a third, and was more fortunate.&nbsp; When his
+wife was near her time he remembered he was in a strange island,
+like a poor man; and when his child was born he must be shamed
+for lack of gifts.&nbsp; It was in vain his wife dissuaded
+him.&nbsp; He returned to his father in Manu&rsquo;a seeking
+help; and with what he could get he set off in the night to
+re-embark.&nbsp; Now his wives heard of his coming; they were
+incensed that he did not stay to visit them; and on the beach, by
+his canoe, intercepted and slew him.&nbsp; Now the third wife lay
+asleep in Savaii;&mdash;her babe was born and slept by her side;
+and she was awakened by the spirit of her husband.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Get up,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;my father is sick in
+Manu&rsquo;a and we must go to visit him.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;It
+is well,&rsquo; said she; &lsquo;take you the child, while I
+carry its mats.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I cannot carry the
+child,&rsquo; said the spirit; &lsquo;I am too cold from the
+sea.&rsquo;&nbsp; When they were got on board the canoe the wife
+smelt carrion.&nbsp; &lsquo;How is this?&rsquo; she said.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;What have you in the canoe that I should smell
+carrion?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;It is nothing in the canoe,&rsquo;
+said the spirit.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is the land-wind blowing down
+the mountains, where some beast lies dead.&rsquo;&nbsp; It
+appears it was still night when they reached
+Manu&rsquo;a&mdash;the swiftest passage on record&mdash;and as
+they entered the reef the bale-fires burned in the village.&nbsp;
+Again she asked him to carry the child; but now he need no more
+dissemble.&nbsp; &lsquo;I cannot carry your child,&rsquo; said
+he, &lsquo;for I am dead, and the fires you see are burning for
+my funeral.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The curious may learn in Dr. Sierich&rsquo;s book the
+unexpected sequel of the tale.&nbsp; Here is enough for my
+purpose.&nbsp; Though the man was but new dead, the ghost was
+already putrefied, as though putrefaction were the mark and of
+the essence of a spirit.&nbsp; The vigil on the Paumotuan grave
+does not extend beyond two weeks, and they told me this period
+was thought to coincide with that of the resolution of the
+body.&nbsp; The ghost always marked with decay&mdash;the danger
+seemingly ending with the process of dissolution&mdash;here is
+tempting matter for the theorist.&nbsp; But it will not do.&nbsp;
+The lady of the flowers had been long dead, and her spirit was
+still supposed to bear the brand of perishability.&nbsp; The
+Resident had been more than a fortnight buried, and his vampire
+was still supposed to go the rounds.</p>
+<p>Of the lost state of the dead, from the lurid Mangaian legend,
+in which infernal deities hocus and destroy the souls of all, to
+the various submarine and aerial limbos where the dead feast,
+float idle, or resume the occupations of their life on earth, it
+would be wearisome to tell.&nbsp; One story I give, for it is
+singular in itself, is well-known in Tahiti, and has this of
+interest, that it is post-Christian, dating indeed from but a few
+years back.&nbsp; A princess of the reigning house died; was
+transported to the neighbouring isle of Raiatea; fell there under
+the empire of a spirit who condemned her to climb coco-palms all
+day and bring him the nuts; was found after some time in this
+miserable servitude by a second spirit, one of her own house; and
+by him, upon her lamentations, reconveyed to Tahiti, where she
+found her body still waked, but already swollen with the
+approaches of corruption.&nbsp; It is a lively point in the tale
+that, on the sight of this dishonoured tabernacle, the princess
+prayed she might continue to be numbered with the dead.&nbsp; But
+it seems it was too late, her spirit was replaced by the least
+dignified of entrances, and her startled family beheld the body
+move.&nbsp; The seemingly purgatorial labours, the helpful
+kindred spirit, and the horror of the princess at the sight of
+her tainted body, are all points to be remarked.</p>
+<p>The truth is, the tales are not necessarily consistent in
+themselves; and they are further darkened for the stranger by an
+ambiguity of language.&nbsp; Ghosts, vampires, spirits, and gods
+are all confounded.&nbsp; And yet I seem to perceive that (with
+exceptions) those whom we would count gods were less
+maleficent.&nbsp; Permanent spirits haunt and do murder in
+corners of Samoa; but those legitimate gods of Upolu and Savaii,
+whose wars and cricketings of late convulsed society, I did not
+gather to be dreaded, or not with a like fear.&nbsp; The spirit
+of Aana that ate souls is certainly a fearsome inmate; but the
+high gods, even of the archipelago, seem helpful.&nbsp;
+Mahinui&mdash;from whom our convict-catechist had been
+named&mdash;the spirit of the sea, like a Proteus endowed with
+endless avatars, came to the assistance of the shipwrecked and
+carried them ashore in the guise of a ray fish.&nbsp; The same
+divinity bore priests from isle to isle about the archipelago,
+and by his aid, within the century, persons have been seen to
+fly.&nbsp; The tutelar deity of each isle is likewise helpful,
+and by a particular form of wedge-shaped cloud on the horizon
+announces the coming of a ship.</p>
+<p>To one who conceives of these atolls, so narrow, so barren, so
+beset with sea, here would seem a superfluity of ghostly
+denizens.&nbsp; And yet there are more.&nbsp; In the various
+brackish pools and ponds, beautiful women with long red hair are
+seen to rise and bathe; only (timid as mice) on the first sound
+of feet upon the coral they dive again for ever.&nbsp; They are
+known to be healthy and harmless living people, dwellers of an
+underworld; and the same fancy is current in Tahiti, where also
+they have the hair red.&nbsp; <i>Tetea</i> is the Tahitian name;
+the Paumotuan, <i>Mokurea</i>.</p>
+<h2>PART III: THE GILBERTS</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I&mdash;BUTARITARI</h3>
+<p>At Honolulu we had said farewell to the <i>Casco</i> and to
+Captain Otis, and our next adventure was made in changed
+conditions.&nbsp; Passage was taken for myself, my wife, Mr.
+Osbourne, and my China boy, Ah Fu, on a pigmy trading schooner,
+the <i>Equator</i>, Captain Dennis Reid; and on a certain bright
+June day in 1889, adorned in the Hawaiian fashion with the
+garlands of departure, we drew out of port and bore with a fair
+wind for Micronesia.</p>
+<p>The whole extent of the South Seas is a desert of ships; more
+especially that part where we were now to sail.&nbsp; No post
+runs in these islands; communication is by accident; where you
+may have designed to go is one thing, where you shall be able to
+arrive another.&nbsp; It was my hope, for instance, to have
+reached the Carolines, and returned to the light of day by way of
+Manila and the China ports; and it was in Samoa that we were
+destined to re-appear and be once more refreshed with the sight
+of mountains.&nbsp; Since the sunset faded from the peaks of Oahu
+six months had intervened, and we had seen no spot of earth so
+high as an ordinary cottage.&nbsp; Our path had been still on the
+flat sea, our dwellings upon unerected coral, our diet from the
+pickle-tub or out of tins; I had learned to welcome shark&rsquo;s
+flesh for a variety; and a mountain, an onion, an Irish potato or
+a beef-steak, had been long lost to sense and dear to
+aspiration.</p>
+<p>The two chief places of our stay, Butaritari and Apemama, lie
+near the line; the latter within thirty miles.&nbsp; Both enjoy a
+superb ocean climate, days of blinding sun and bracing wind,
+nights of a heavenly brightness.&nbsp; Both are somewhat wider
+than Fakarava, measuring perhaps (at the widest) a quarter of a
+mile from beach to beach.&nbsp; In both, a coarse kind of
+<i>taro</i> thrives; its culture is a chief business of the
+natives, and the consequent mounds and ditches make miniature
+scenery and amuse the eye.&nbsp; In all else they show the
+customary features of an atoll: the low horizon, the expanse of
+the lagoon, the sedge-like rim of palm-tops, the sameness and
+smallness of the land, the hugely superior size and interest of
+sea and sky.&nbsp; Life on such islands is in many points like
+life on shipboard.&nbsp; The atoll, like the ship, is soon taken
+for granted; and the islanders, like the ship&rsquo;s crew,
+become soon the centre of attention.&nbsp; The isles are
+populous, independent, seats of kinglets, recently civilised,
+little visited.&nbsp; In the last decade many changes have crept
+in; women no longer go unclothed till marriage; the widow no
+longer sleeps at night and goes abroad by day with the skull of
+her dead husband; and, fire-arms being introduced, the spear and
+the shark-tooth sword are sold for curiosities.&nbsp; Ten years
+ago all these things and practices were to be seen in use; yet
+ten years more, and the old society will have entirely
+vanished.&nbsp; We came in a happy moment to see its institutions
+still erect and (in Apemama) scarce decayed.</p>
+<p>Populous and independent&mdash;warrens of men, ruled over with
+some rustic pomp&mdash;such was the first and still the recurring
+impression of these tiny lands.&nbsp; As we stood across the
+lagoon for the town of Butaritari, a stretch of the low shore was
+seen to be crowded with the brown roofs of houses; those of the
+palace and king&rsquo;s summer parlour (which are of corrugated
+iron) glittered near one end conspicuously bright; the royal
+colours flew hard by on a tall flagstaff; in front, on an
+artificial islet, the gaol played the part of a martello.&nbsp;
+Even upon this first and distant view, the place had scarce the
+air of what it truly was, a village; rather of that which it was
+also, a petty metropolis, a city rustic and yet royal.</p>
+<p>The lagoon is shoal.&nbsp; The tide being out, we waded for
+some quarter of a mile in tepid shallows, and stepped ashore at
+last into a flagrant stagnancy of sun and heat.&nbsp; The lee
+side of a line island after noon is indeed a breathless place; on
+the ocean beach the trade will be still blowing, boisterous and
+cool; out in the lagoon it will be blowing also, speeding the
+canoes; but the screen of bush completely intercepts it from the
+shore, and sleep and silence and companies of mosquitoes brood
+upon the towns.</p>
+<p>We may thus be said to have taken Butaritari by
+surprise.&nbsp; A few inhabitants were still abroad in the north
+end, at which we landed.&nbsp; As we advanced, we were soon done
+with encounter, and seemed to explore a city of the dead.&nbsp;
+Only, between the posts of open houses, we could see the
+townsfolk stretched in the siesta, sometimes a family together
+veiled in a mosquito-net, sometimes a single sleeper on a
+platform like a corpse on a bier.</p>
+<p>The houses were of all dimensions, from those of toys to those
+of churches.&nbsp; Some might hold a battalion, some were so
+minute they could scarce receive a pair of lovers; only in the
+playroom, when the toys are mingled, do we meet such
+incongruities of scale.&nbsp; Many were open sheds; some took the
+form of roofed stages; others were walled and the walls pierced
+with little windows.&nbsp; A few were perched on piles in the
+lagoon; the rest stood at random on a green, through which the
+roadway made a ribbon of sand, or along the embankments of a
+sheet of water like a shallow dock.&nbsp; One and all were the
+creatures of a single tree; palm-tree wood and palm-tree leaf
+their materials; no nail had been driven, no hammer sounded, in
+their building, and they were held together by lashings of
+palm-tree sinnet.</p>
+<p>In the midst of the thoroughfare, the church stands like an
+island, a lofty and dim house with rows of windows; a rich
+tracery of framing sustains the roof; and through the door at
+either end the street shows in a vista.&nbsp; The proportions of
+the place, in such surroundings, and built of such materials,
+appeared august; and we threaded the nave with a sentiment
+befitting visitors in a cathedral.&nbsp; Benches run along either
+side.&nbsp; In the midst, on a crazy dais, two chairs stand ready
+for the king and queen when they shall choose to worship; over
+their heads a hoop, apparently from a hogshead, depends by a
+strip of red cotton; and the hoop (which hangs askew) is dressed
+with streamers of the same material, red and white.</p>
+<p>This was our first advertisement of the royal dignity, and
+presently we stood before its seat and centre.&nbsp; The palace
+is built of imported wood upon a European plan; the roof of
+corrugated iron, the yard enclosed with walls, the gate
+surmounted by a sort of lych-house.&nbsp; It cannot be called
+spacious; a labourer in the States is sometimes more commodiously
+lodged; but when we had the chance to see it within, we found it
+was enriched (beyond all island expectation) with coloured
+advertisements and cuts from the illustrated papers.&nbsp; Even
+before the gate some of the treasures of the crown stand public:
+a bell of a good magnitude, two pieces of cannon, and a single
+shell.&nbsp; The bell cannot be rung nor the guns fired; they are
+curiosities, proofs of wealth, a part of the parade of the
+royalty, and stand to be admired like statues in a square.&nbsp;
+A straight gut of water like a canal runs almost to the palace
+door; the containing quay-walls excellently built of coral; over
+against the mouth, by what seems an effect of landscape art, the
+martello-like islet of the gaol breaks the lagoon.&nbsp; Vassal
+chiefs with tribute, neighbour monarchs come a-roving, might here
+sail in, view with surprise these extensive public works, and be
+awed by these mouths of silent cannon.&nbsp; It was impossible to
+see the place and not to fancy it designed for pageantry.&nbsp;
+But the elaborate theatre then stood empty; the royal house
+deserted, its doors and windows gaping; the whole quarter of the
+town immersed in silence.&nbsp; On the opposite bank of the
+canal, on a roofed stage, an ancient gentleman slept publicly,
+sole visible inhabitant; and beyond on the lagoon a canoe spread
+a striped lateen, the sole thing moving.</p>
+<p>The canal is formed on the south by a pier or causeway with a
+parapet.&nbsp; At the far end the parapet stops, and the quay
+expands into an oblong peninsula in the lagoon, the
+breathing-place and summer parlour of the king.&nbsp; The midst
+is occupied by an open house or permanent marquee&mdash;called
+here a maniapa, or, as the word is now pronounced, a
+maniap&rsquo;&mdash;at the lowest estimation forty feet by
+sixty.&nbsp; The iron roof, lofty but exceedingly low-browed, so
+that a woman must stoop to enter, is supported externally on
+pillars of coral, within by a frame of wood.&nbsp; The floor is
+of broken coral, divided in aisles by the uprights of the frame;
+the house far enough from shore to catch the breeze, which enters
+freely and disperses the mosquitoes; and under the low eaves the
+sun is seen to glitter and the waves to dance on the lagoon.</p>
+<p>It was now some while since we had met any but slumberers; and
+when we had wandered down the pier and stumbled at last into this
+bright shed, we were surprised to find it occupied by a society
+of wakeful people, some twenty souls in all, the court and
+guardsmen of Butaritari.&nbsp; The court ladies were busy making
+mats; the guardsmen yawned and sprawled.&nbsp; Half a dozen
+rifles lay on a rock and a cutlass was leaned against a pillar:
+the armoury of these drowsy musketeers.&nbsp; At the far end, a
+little closed house of wood displayed some tinsel curtains, and
+proved, upon examination, to be a privy on the European
+model.&nbsp; In front of this, upon some mats, lolled Tebureimoa,
+the king; behind him, on the panels of the house, two crossed
+rifles represented fasces.&nbsp; He wore pyjamas which
+sorrowfully misbecame his bulk; his nose was hooked and cruel,
+his body overcome with sodden corpulence, his eye timorous and
+dull: he seemed at once oppressed with drowsiness and held awake
+by apprehension: a pepper rajah muddled with opium, and listening
+for the march of a Dutch army, looks perhaps not otherwise.&nbsp;
+We were to grow better acquainted, and first and last I had the
+same impression; he seemed always drowsy, yet always to hearken
+and start; and, whether from remorse or fear, there is no doubt
+he seeks a refuge in the abuse of drugs.</p>
+<p>The rajah displayed no sign of interest in our coming.&nbsp;
+But the queen, who sat beside him in a purple sacque, was more
+accessible; and there was present an interpreter so willing that
+his volubility became at last the cause of our departure.&nbsp;
+He had greeted us upon our entrance:&mdash;&lsquo;That is the
+honourable King, and I am his interpreter,&rsquo; he had said,
+with more stateliness than truth.&nbsp; For he held no
+appointment in the court, seemed extremely ill-acquainted with
+the island language, and was present, like ourselves, upon a
+visit of civility.&nbsp; Mr. Williams was his name: an American
+darkey, runaway ship&rsquo;s cook, and bar-keeper at <i>The Land
+we Live in</i> tavern, Butaritari.&nbsp; I never knew a man who
+had more words in his command or less truth to communicate;
+neither the gloom of the monarch, nor my own efforts to be
+distant, could in the least abash him; and when the scene closed,
+the darkey was left talking.</p>
+<p>The town still slumbered, or had but just begun to turn and
+stretch itself; it was still plunged in heat and silence.&nbsp;
+So much the more vivid was the impression that we carried away of
+the house upon the islet, the Micronesian Saul wakeful amid his
+guards, and his unmelodious David, Mr. Williams, chattering
+through the drowsy hours.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER II&mdash;THE FOUR BROTHERS</h3>
+<p>The kingdom of Tebureimoa includes two islands, Great and
+Little Makin; some two thousand subjects pay him tribute, and two
+semi-independent chieftains do him qualified homage.&nbsp; The
+importance of the office is measured by the man; he may be a
+nobody, he may be absolute; and both extremes have been
+exemplified within the memory of residents.</p>
+<p>On the death of king Tetimararoa, Tebureimoa&rsquo;s father,
+Nakaeia, the eldest son, succeeded.&nbsp; He was a fellow of huge
+physical strength, masterful, violent, with a certain barbaric
+thrift and some intelligence of men and business.&nbsp; Alone in
+his islands, it was he who dealt and profited; he was the planter
+and the merchant; and his subjects toiled for his behoof in
+servitude.&nbsp; When they wrought long and well their taskmaster
+declared a holiday, and supplied and shared a general
+debauch.&nbsp; The scale of his providing was at times
+magnificent; six hundred dollars&rsquo; worth of gin and brandy
+was set forth at once; the narrow land resounded with the noise
+of revelry: and it was a common thing to see the subjects
+(staggering themselves) parade their drunken sovereign on the
+fore-hatch of a wrecked vessel, king and commons howling and
+singing as they went.&nbsp; At a word from Nakaeia&rsquo;s mouth
+the revel ended; Makin became once more an isle of slaves and of
+teetotalers; and on the morrow all the population must be on the
+roads or in the taro-patches toiling under his bloodshot eye.</p>
+<p>The fear of Nakaeia filled the land.&nbsp; No regularity of
+justice was affected; there was no trial, there were no officers
+of the law; it seems there was but one penalty, the capital; and
+daylight assault and midnight murder were the forms of
+process.&nbsp; The king himself would play the executioner: and
+his blows were dealt by stealth, and with the help and
+countenance of none but his own wives.&nbsp; These were his
+oarswomen; one that caught a crab, he slew incontinently with the
+tiller; thus disciplined, they pulled him by night to the scene
+of his vengeance, which he would then execute alone and return
+well-pleased with his connubial crew.&nbsp; The inmates of the
+harem held a station hard for us to conceive.&nbsp; Beasts of
+draught, and driven by the fear of death, they were yet
+implicitly trusted with their sovereign&rsquo;s life; they were
+still wives and queens, and it was supposed that no man should
+behold their faces.&nbsp; They killed by the sight like
+basilisks; a chance view of one of those boatwomen was a crime to
+be wiped out with blood.&nbsp; In the days of Nakaeia the palace
+was beset with some tall coco-palms which commanded the
+enclosure.&nbsp; It chanced one evening, while Nakaeia sat below
+at supper with his wives, that the owner of the grove was in a
+tree-top drawing palm-tree wine; it chanced that he looked down,
+and the king at the same moment looking up, their eyes
+encountered.&nbsp; Instant flight preserved the involuntary
+criminal.&nbsp; But during the remainder of that reign he must
+lurk and be hid by friends in remote parts of the isle; Nakaeia
+hunted him without remission, although still in vain; and the
+palms, accessories to the fact, were ruthlessly cut down.&nbsp;
+Such was the ideal of wifely purity in an isle where nubile
+virgins went naked as in paradise.&nbsp; And yet scandal found
+its way into Nakaeia&rsquo;s well-guarded harem.&nbsp; He was at
+that time the owner of a schooner, which he used for a
+pleasure-house, lodging on board as she lay anchored; and thither
+one day he summoned a new wife.&nbsp; She was one that had been
+sealed to him; that is to say (I presume), that he was married to
+her sister, for the husband of an elder sister has the call of
+the cadets.&nbsp; She would be arrayed for the occasion; she
+would come scented, garlanded, decked with fine mats and family
+jewels, for marriage, as her friends supposed; for death, as she
+well knew.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tell me the man&rsquo;s name, and I will
+spare you,&rsquo; said Nakaeia.&nbsp; But the girl was staunch;
+she held her peace, saved her lover and the queens strangled her
+between the mats.</p>
+<p>Nakaeia was feared; it does not appear that he was
+hated.&nbsp; Deeds that smell to us of murder wore to his
+subjects the reverend face of justice; his orgies made him
+popular; natives to this day recall with respect the firmness of
+his government; and even the whites, whom he long opposed and
+kept at arm&rsquo;s-length, give him the name (in the canonical
+South Sea phrase) of &lsquo;a perfect gentleman when
+sober.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When he came to lie, without issue, on the bed of death, he
+summoned his next brother, Nanteitei, made him a discourse on
+royal policy, and warned him he was too weak to reign.&nbsp; The
+warning was taken to heart, and for some while the government
+moved on the model of Nakaeia&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Nanteitei dispensed
+with guards, and walked abroad alone with a revolver in a leather
+mail-bag.&nbsp; To conceal his weakness he affected a rude
+silence; you might talk to him all day; advice, reproof, appeal,
+and menace alike remained unanswered.</p>
+<p>The number of his wives was seventeen, many of them heiresses;
+for the royal house is poor, and marriage was in these days a
+chief means of buttressing the throne.&nbsp; Nakaeia kept his
+harem busy for himself; Nanteitei hired it out to others.&nbsp;
+In his days, for instance, Messrs.&nbsp; Wightman built a pier
+with a verandah at the north end of the town.&nbsp; The masonry
+was the work of the seventeen queens, who toiled and waded there
+like fisher lasses; but the man who was to do the roofing durst
+not begin till they had finished, lest by chance he should look
+down and see them.</p>
+<p>It was perhaps the last appearance of the harem gang.&nbsp;
+For some time already Hawaiian missionaries had been seated at
+Butaritari&mdash;Maka and Kanoa, two brave childlike men.&nbsp;
+Nakaeia would none of their doctrine; he was perhaps jealous of
+their presence; being human, he had some affection for their
+persons.&nbsp; In the house, before the eyes of Kanoa, he slew
+with his own hand three sailors of Oahu, crouching on their backs
+to knife them, and menacing the missionary if he interfered; yet
+he not only spared him at the moment, but recalled him afterwards
+(when he had fled) with some expressions of respect.&nbsp;
+Nanteitei, the weaker man, fell more completely under the
+spell.&nbsp; Maka, a light-hearted, lovable, yet in his own trade
+very rigorous man, gained and improved an influence on the king
+which soon grew paramount.&nbsp; Nanteitei, with the royal house,
+was publicly converted; and, with a severity which liberal
+missionaries disavow, the harem was at once reduced.&nbsp; It was
+a compendious act.&nbsp; The throne was thus impoverished, its
+influence shaken, the queen&rsquo;s relatives mortified, and
+sixteen chief women (some of great possessions) cast in a body on
+the market.&nbsp; I have been shipmates with a Hawaiian sailor
+who was successively married to two of these <i>impromptu</i>
+widows, and successively divorced by both for misconduct.&nbsp;
+That two great and rich ladies (for both of these were rich)
+should have married &lsquo;a man from another island&rsquo; marks
+the dissolution of society.&nbsp; The laws besides were wholly
+remodelled, not always for the better.&nbsp; I love Maka as a
+man; as a legislator he has two defects: weak in the punishment
+of crime, stern to repress innocent pleasures.</p>
+<p>War and revolution are the common successors of reform; yet
+Nanteitei died (of an overdose of chloroform), in quiet
+possession of the throne, and it was in the reign of the third
+brother, Nabakatokia, a man brave in body and feeble of
+character, that the storm burst.&nbsp; The rule of the high
+chiefs and notables seems to have always underlain and perhaps
+alternated with monarchy.&nbsp; The Old Men (as they were called)
+have a right to sit with the king in the Speak House and debate:
+and the king&rsquo;s chief superiority is a form of
+closure&mdash;&lsquo;The Speaking is over.&rsquo;&nbsp; After the
+long monocracy of Nakaeia and the changes of Nanteitei, the Old
+Men were doubtless grown impatient of obscurity, and they were
+beyond question jealous of the influence of Maka.&nbsp; Calumny,
+or rather caricature, was called in use; a spoken cartoon ran
+round society; Maka was reported to have said in church that the
+king was the first man in the island and himself the second; and,
+stung by the supposed affront, the chiefs broke into rebellion
+and armed gatherings.&nbsp; In the space of one forenoon the
+throne of Nakaeia was humbled in the dust.&nbsp; The king sat in
+the maniap&rsquo; before the palace gate expecting his recruits;
+Maka by his side, both anxious men; and meanwhile, in the door of
+a house at the north entry of the town, a chief had taken post
+and diverted the succours as they came.&nbsp; They came singly or
+in groups, each with his gun or pistol slung about his
+neck.&nbsp; &lsquo;Where are you going?&rsquo; asked the
+chief.&nbsp; &lsquo;The king called us,&rsquo; they would
+reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;Here is your place.&nbsp; Sit down,&rsquo;
+returned the chief.&nbsp; With incredible disloyalty, all obeyed;
+and sufficient force being thus got together from both sides,
+Nabakatokia was summoned and surrendered.&nbsp; About this
+period, in almost every part of the group, the kings were
+murdered; and on Tapituea, the skeleton of the last hangs to this
+day in the chief Speak House of the isle, a menace to
+ambition.&nbsp; Nabakatokia was more fortunate; his life and the
+royal style were spared to him, but he was stripped of
+power.&nbsp; The Old Men enjoyed a festival of public speaking;
+the laws were continually changed, never enforced; the commons
+had an opportunity to regret the merits of Nakaeia; and the king,
+denied the resource of rich marriages and the service of a troop
+of wives, fell not only in disconsideration but in debt.</p>
+<p>He died some months before my arrival on the islands, and no
+one regretted him; rather all looked hopefully to his
+successor.&nbsp; This was by repute the hero of the family.&nbsp;
+Alone of the four brothers, he had issue, a grown son, Natiata,
+and a daughter three years old; it was to him, in the hour of the
+revolution, that Nabakatokia turned too late for help; and in
+earlier days he had been the right hand of the vigorous
+Nakaeia.&nbsp; Nontemat&rsquo;, <i>Mr. Corpse</i>, was his
+appalling nickname, and he had earned it well.&nbsp; Again and
+again, at the command of Nakaeia, he had surrounded houses in the
+dead of night, cut down the mosquito bars and butchered
+families.&nbsp; Here was the hand of iron; here was Nakaeia
+<i>redux</i>.&nbsp; He came, summoned from the tributary rule of
+Little Makin: he was installed, he proved a puppet and a
+trembler, the unwieldy shuttlecock of orators; and the reader has
+seen the remains of him in his summer parlour under the name of
+Tebureimoa.</p>
+<p>The change in the man&rsquo;s character was much commented on
+in the island, and variously explained by opium and
+Christianity.&nbsp; To my eyes, there seemed no change at all,
+rather an extreme consistency.&nbsp; Mr. Corpse was afraid of his
+brother: King Tebureimoa is afraid of the Old Men.&nbsp; Terror
+of the first nerved him for deeds of desperation; fear of the
+second disables him for the least act of government.&nbsp; He
+played his part of bravo in the past, following the line of least
+resistance, butchering others in his own defence: to-day, grown
+elderly and heavy, a convert, a reader of the Bible, perhaps a
+penitent, conscious at least of accumulated hatreds, and his
+memory charged with images of violence and blood, he capitulates
+to the Old Men, fuddles himself with opium, and sits among his
+guards in dreadful expectation.&nbsp; The same cowardice that put
+into his hand the knife of the assassin deprives him of the
+sceptre of a king.</p>
+<p>A tale that I was told, a trifling incident that fell in my
+observation, depicts him in his two capacities.&nbsp; A chief in
+Little Makin asked, in an hour of lightness, &lsquo;Who is
+Kaeia?&rsquo;&nbsp; A bird carried the saying; and Nakaeia placed
+the matter in the hands of a committee of three.&nbsp; Mr. Corpse
+was chairman; the second commissioner died before my arrival; the
+third was yet alive and green, and presented so venerable an
+appearance that we gave him the name of Abou ben Adhem.&nbsp; Mr.
+Corpse was troubled with a scruple; the man from Little Makin was
+his adopted brother; in such a case it was not very delicate to
+appear at all, to strike the blow (which it seems was otherwise
+expected of him) would be worse than awkward.&nbsp; &lsquo;I will
+strike the blow,&rsquo; said the venerable Abou; and Mr. Corpse
+(surely with a sigh) accepted the compromise.&nbsp; The quarry
+was decoyed into the bush; he was set to carrying a log; and
+while his arms were raised Abou ripped up his belly at a
+blow.&nbsp; Justice being thus done, the commission, in a
+childish horror, turned to flee.&nbsp; But their victim recalled
+them to his side.&nbsp; &lsquo;You need not run away now,&rsquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &lsquo;You have done this thing to me.&nbsp;
+Stay.&rsquo;&nbsp; He was some twenty minutes dying, and his
+murderers sat with him the while: a scene for Shakespeare.&nbsp;
+All the stages of a violent death, the blood, the failing voice,
+the decomposing features, the changed hue, are thus present in
+the memory of Mr. Corpse; and since he studied them in the
+brother he betrayed, he has some reason to reflect on the
+possibilities of treachery.&nbsp; I was never more sure of
+anything than the tragic quality of the king&rsquo;s thoughts;
+and yet I had but the one sight of him at unawares.&nbsp; I had
+once an errand for his ear.&nbsp; It was once more the hour of
+the siesta; but there were loiterers abroad, and these directed
+us to a closed house on the bank of the canal where Tebureimoa
+lay unguarded.&nbsp; We entered without ceremony, being in some
+haste.&nbsp; He lay on the floor upon a bed of mats, reading in
+his Gilbert Island Bible with compunction.&nbsp; On our sudden
+entrance the unwieldy man reared himself half-sitting so that the
+Bible rolled on the floor, stared on us a moment with blank eyes,
+and, having recognised his visitors, sank again upon the
+mats.&nbsp; So Eglon looked on Ehud.</p>
+<p>The justice of facts is strange, and strangely just; Nakaeia,
+the author of these deeds, died at peace discoursing on the craft
+of kings; his tool suffers daily death for his enforced
+complicity.&nbsp; Not the nature, but the congruity of
+men&rsquo;s deeds and circumstances damn and save them; and
+Tebureimoa from the first has been incongruously placed.&nbsp; At
+home, in a quiet bystreet of a village, the man had been a worthy
+carpenter, and, even bedevilled as he is, he shows some private
+virtues.&nbsp; He has no lands, only the use of such as are
+impignorate for fines; he cannot enrich himself in the old way by
+marriages; thrift is the chief pillar of his future, and he knows
+and uses it.&nbsp; Eleven foreign traders pay him a patent of a
+hundred dollars, some two thousand subjects pay capitation at the
+rate of a dollar for a man, half a dollar for a woman, and a
+shilling for a child: allowing for the exchange, perhaps a total
+of three hundred pounds a year.&nbsp; He had been some nine
+months on the throne: had bought his wife a silk dress and hat,
+figure unknown, and himself a uniform at three hundred dollars;
+had sent his brother&rsquo;s photograph to be enlarged in San
+Francisco at two hundred and fifty dollars; had greatly reduced
+that brother&rsquo;s legacy of debt and had still sovereigns in
+his pocket.&nbsp; An affectionate brother, a good economist; he
+was besides a handy carpenter, and cobbled occasionally on the
+woodwork of the palace.&nbsp; It is not wonderful that Mr. Corpse
+has virtues; that Tebureimoa should have a diversion filled me
+with surprise.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER III&mdash;AROUND OUR HOUSE</h3>
+<p>When we left the palace we were still but seafarers ashore;
+and within the hour we had installed our goods in one of the six
+foreign houses of Butaritari, namely, that usually occupied by
+Maka, the Hawaiian missionary.&nbsp; Two San Francisco firms are
+here established, Messrs. Crawford and Messrs. Wightman Brothers;
+the first hard by the palace of the mid town, the second at the
+north entry; each with a store and bar-room.&nbsp; Our house was
+in the Wightman compound, betwixt the store and bar, within a
+fenced enclosure.&nbsp; Across the road a few native houses
+nestled in the margin of the bush, and the green wall of palms
+rose solid, shutting out the breeze.&nbsp; A little sandy cove of
+the lagoon ran in behind, sheltered by a verandah pier, the
+labour of queens&rsquo; hands.&nbsp; Here, when the tide was
+high, sailed boats lay to be loaded; when the tide was low, the
+boats took ground some half a mile away, and an endless series of
+natives descended the pier stair, tailed across the sand in
+strings and clusters, waded to the waist with the bags of copra,
+and loitered backward to renew their charge.&nbsp; The mystery of
+the copra trade tormented me, as I sat and watched the profits
+drip on the stair and the sands.</p>
+<p>In front, from shortly after four in the morning until nine at
+night, the folk of the town streamed by us intermittingly along
+the road: families going up the island to make copra on their
+lands; women bound for the bush to gather flowers against the
+evening toilet; and, twice a day, the toddy-cutters, each with
+his knife and shell.&nbsp; In the first grey of the morning, and
+again late in the afternoon, these would straggle past about
+their tree-top business, strike off here and there into the bush,
+and vanish from the face of the earth.&nbsp; At about the same
+hour, if the tide be low in the lagoon, you are likely to be
+bound yourself across the island for a bath, and may enter close
+at their heels alleys of the palm wood.&nbsp; Right in front,
+although the sun is not yet risen, the east is already lighted
+with preparatory fires, and the huge accumulations of the
+trade-wind cloud glow with and heliograph the coming day.&nbsp;
+The breeze is in your face; overhead in the tops of the palms,
+its playthings, it maintains a lively bustle; look where you
+will, above or below, there is no human presence, only the earth
+and shaken forest.&nbsp; And right overhead the song of an
+invisible singer breaks from the thick leaves; from farther on a
+second tree-top answers; and beyond again, in the bosom of the
+woods, a still more distant minstrel perches and sways and
+sings.&nbsp; So, all round the isle, the toddy-cutters sit on
+high, and are rocked by the trade, and have a view far to
+seaward, where they keep watch for sails, and like huge birds
+utter their songs in the morning.&nbsp; They sing with a certain
+lustiness and Bacchic glee; the volume of sound and the
+articulate melody fall unexpected from the tree-top, whence we
+anticipate the chattering of fowls.&nbsp; And yet in a sense
+these songs also are but chatter; the words are ancient,
+obsolete, and sacred; few comprehend them, perhaps no one
+perfectly; but it was understood the cutters &lsquo;prayed to
+have good toddy, and sang of their old wars.&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+prayer is at least answered; and when the foaming shell is
+brought to your door, you have a beverage well &lsquo;worthy of a
+grace.&rsquo;&nbsp; All forenoon you may return and taste; it
+only sparkles, and sharpens, and grows to be a new drink, not
+less delicious; but with the progress of the day the fermentation
+quickens and grows acid; in twelve hours it will be yeast for
+bread, in two days more a devilish intoxicant, the counsellor of
+crime.</p>
+<p>The men are of a marked Arabian cast of features, often
+bearded and mustached, often gaily dressed, some with bracelets
+and anklets, all stalking hidalgo-like, and accepting salutations
+with a haughty lip.&nbsp; The hair (with the dandies of either
+sex) is worn turban-wise in a frizzled bush; and like the daggers
+of the Japanese a pointed stick (used for a comb) is thrust
+gallantly among the curls.&nbsp; The women from this bush of hair
+look forth enticingly: the race cannot be compared with the
+Tahitian for female beauty; I doubt even if the average be high;
+but some of the prettiest girls, and one of the handsomest women
+I ever saw, were Gilbertines.&nbsp; Butaritari, being the
+commercial centre of the group, is Europeanised; the coloured
+sacque or the white shift are common wear, the latter for the
+evening; the trade hat, loaded with flowers, fruit, and ribbons,
+is unfortunately not unknown; and the characteristic female dress
+of the Gilberts no longer universal.&nbsp; The <i>ridi</i> is its
+name: a cutty petticoat or fringe of the smoked fibre of
+cocoa-nut leaf, not unlike tarry string: the lower edge not
+reaching the mid-thigh, the upper adjusted so low upon the
+haunches that it seems to cling by accident.&nbsp; A sneeze, you
+think, and the lady must surely be left destitute.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The perilous, hairbreadth ridi&rsquo; was our word for it;
+and in the conflict that rages over women&rsquo;s dress it has
+the misfortune to please neither side, the prudish condemning it
+as insufficient, the more frivolous finding it unlovely in
+itself.&nbsp; Yet if a pretty Gilbertine would look her best,
+that must be her costume.&nbsp; In that and naked otherwise, she
+moves with an incomparable liberty and grace and life, that marks
+the poetry of Micronesia.&nbsp; Bundle her in a gown, the charm
+is fled, and she wriggles like an Englishwoman.</p>
+<p>Towards dusk the passers-by became more gorgeous.&nbsp; The
+men broke out in all the colours of the rainbow&mdash;or at least
+of the trade-room,&mdash;and both men and women began to be
+adorned and scented with new flowers.&nbsp; A small white blossom
+is the favourite, sometimes sown singly in a woman&rsquo;s hair
+like little stars, now composed in a thick wreath.&nbsp; With the
+night, the crowd sometimes thickened in the road, and the padding
+and brushing of bare feet became continuous; the promenades
+mostly grave, the silence only interrupted by some giggling and
+scampering of girls; even the children quiet.&nbsp; At nine,
+bed-time struck on a bell from the cathedral, and the life of the
+town ceased.&nbsp; At four the next morning the signal is
+repeated in the darkness, and the innocent prisoners set free;
+but for seven hours all must lie&mdash;I was about to say within
+doors, of a place where doors, and even walls, are an
+exception&mdash;housed, at least, under their airy roofs and
+clustered in the tents of the mosquito-nets.&nbsp; Suppose a
+necessary errand to occur, suppose it imperative to send abroad,
+the messenger must then go openly, advertising himself to the
+police with a huge brand of cocoa-nut, which flares from house to
+house like a moving bonfire.&nbsp; Only the police themselves go
+darkling, and grope in the night for misdemeanants.&nbsp; I used
+to hate their treacherous presence; their captain in particular,
+a crafty old man in white, lurked nightly about my premises till
+I could have found it in my heart to beat him.&nbsp; But the
+rogue was privileged.</p>
+<p>Not one of the eleven resident traders came to town, no
+captain cast anchor in the lagoon, but we saw him ere the hour
+was out.&nbsp; This was owing to our position between the store
+and the bar&mdash;the <i>Sans Souci</i>, as the last was
+called.&nbsp; Mr. Rick was not only Messrs. Wightman&rsquo;s
+manager, but consular agent for the States; Mrs. Rick was the
+only white woman on the island, and one of the only two in the
+archipelago; their house besides, with its cool verandahs, its
+bookshelves, its comfortable furniture, could not be rivalled
+nearer than Jaluit or Honolulu.&nbsp; Every one called in
+consequence, save such as might be prosecuting a South Sea
+quarrel, hingeing on the price of copra and the odd cent, or
+perhaps a difference about poultry.&nbsp; Even these, if they did
+not appear upon the north, would be presently visible to the
+southward, the <i>Sans Souci</i> drawing them as with
+cords.&nbsp; In an island with a total population of twelve white
+persons, one of the two drinking-shops might seem superfluous:
+but every bullet has its billet, and the double accommodation of
+Butaritari is found in practice highly convenient by the captains
+and the crews of ships: <i>The Land we Live in</i> being tacitly
+resigned to the forecastle, the <i>Sans Souci</i> tacitly
+reserved for the afterguard.&nbsp; So aristocratic were my
+habits, so commanding was my fear of Mr. Williams, that I have
+never visited the first; but in the other, which was the club or
+rather the casino of the island, I regularly passed my
+evenings.&nbsp; It was small, but neatly fitted, and at night
+(when the lamp was lit) sparkled with glass and glowed with
+coloured pictures like a theatre at Christmas.&nbsp; The pictures
+were advertisements, the glass coarse enough, the carpentry
+amateur; but the effect, in that incongruous isle, was of
+unbridled luxury and inestimable expense.&nbsp; Here songs were
+sung, tales told, tricks performed, games played.&nbsp; The
+Ricks, ourselves, Norwegian Tom the bar-keeper, a captain or two
+from the ships, and perhaps three or four traders come down the
+island in their boats or by the road on foot, made up the usual
+company.&nbsp; The traders, all bred to the sea, take a humorous
+pride in their new business; &lsquo;South Sea Merchants&rsquo; is
+the title they prefer.&nbsp; &lsquo;We are all sailors
+here&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Merchants, if you
+please&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;<i>South Sea</i>
+Merchants,&rsquo;&mdash;was a piece of conversation endlessly
+repeated, that never seemed to lose in savour.&nbsp; We found
+them at all times simple, genial, gay, gallant, and obliging;
+and, across some interval of time, recall with pleasure the
+traders of Butaritari.&nbsp; There was one black sheep
+indeed.&nbsp; I tell of him here where he lived, against my rule;
+for in this case I have no measure to preserve, and the man is
+typical of a class of ruffians that once disgraced the whole
+field of the South Seas, and still linger in the rarely visited
+isles of Micronesia.&nbsp; He had the name on the beach of
+&lsquo;a perfect gentleman when sober,&rsquo; but I never saw him
+otherwise than drunk.&nbsp; The few shocking and savage traits of
+the Micronesian he has singled out with the skill of a collector,
+and planted in the soil of his original baseness.&nbsp; He has
+been accused and acquitted of a treacherous murder; and has since
+boastfully owned it, which inclines me to suppose him
+innocent.&nbsp; His daughter is defaced by his erroneous cruelty,
+for it was his wife he had intended to disfigure, and in the
+darkness of the night and the frenzy of coco-brandy, fastened on
+the wrong victim.&nbsp; The wife has since fled and harbours in
+the bush with natives; and the husband still demands from deaf
+ears her forcible restoration.&nbsp; The best of his business is
+to make natives drink, and then advance the money for the fine
+upon a lucrative mortgage.&nbsp; &lsquo;Respect for whites&rsquo;
+is the man&rsquo;s word: &lsquo;What is the matter with this
+island is the want of respect for whites.&rsquo;&nbsp; On his way
+to Butaritari, while I was there, he spied his wife in the bush
+with certain natives and made a dash to capture her; whereupon
+one of her companions drew a knife and the husband retreated:
+&lsquo;Do you call that proper respect for whites?&rsquo; he
+cried.&nbsp; At an early stage of the acquaintance we proved our
+respect for his kind of white by forbidding him our enclosure
+under pain of death.&nbsp; Thenceforth he lingered often in the
+neighbourhood with I knew not what sense of envy or design of
+mischief; his white, handsome face (which I beheld with loathing)
+looked in upon us at all hours across the fence; and once, from a
+safe distance, he avenged himself by shouting a recondite island
+insult, to us quite inoffensive, on his English lips incredibly
+incongruous.</p>
+<p>Our enclosure, round which this composite of degradations
+wandered, was of some extent.&nbsp; In one corner was a trellis
+with a long table of rough boards.&nbsp; Here the Fourth of July
+feast had been held not long before with memorable consequences,
+yet to be set forth; here we took our meals; here entertained to
+a dinner the king and notables of Makin.&nbsp; In the midst was
+the house, with a verandah front and back, and three is rooms
+within.&nbsp; In the verandah we slung our man-of-war hammocks,
+worked there by day, and slept at night.&nbsp; Within were beds,
+chairs, a round table, a fine hanging lamp, and portraits of the
+royal family of Hawaii.&nbsp; Queen Victoria proves nothing;
+Kalakaua and Mrs. Bishop are diagnostic; and the truth is we were
+the stealthy tenants of the parsonage.&nbsp; On the day of our
+arrival Maka was away; faithless trustees unlocked his doors; and
+the dear rigorous man, the sworn foe of liquor and tobacco,
+returned to find his verandah littered with cigarettes and his
+parlour horrible with bottles.&nbsp; He made but one
+condition&mdash;on the round table, which he used in the
+celebration of the sacraments, he begged us to refrain from
+setting liquor; in all else he bowed to the accomplished fact,
+refused rent, retired across the way into a native house, and,
+plying in his boat, beat the remotest quarters of the isle for
+provender.&nbsp; He found us pigs&mdash;I could not fancy
+where&mdash;no other pigs were visible; he brought us fowls and
+taro; when we gave our feast to the monarch and gentry, it was he
+who supplied the wherewithal, he who superintended the cooking,
+he who asked grace at table, and when the king&rsquo;s health was
+proposed, he also started the cheering with an English
+hip-hip-hip.&nbsp; There was never a more fortunate conception;
+the heart of the fatted king exulted in his bosom at the
+sound.</p>
+<p>Take him for all in all, I have never known a more engaging
+creature than this parson of Butaritari: his mirth, his kindness,
+his noble, friendly feelings, brimmed from the man in speech and
+gesture.&nbsp; He loved to exaggerate, to act and overact the
+momentary part, to exercise his lungs and muscles, and to speak
+and laugh with his whole body.&nbsp; He had the morning
+cheerfulness of birds and healthy children; and his humour was
+infectious.&nbsp; We were next neighbours and met daily, yet our
+salutations lasted minutes at a stretch&mdash;shaking hands,
+slapping shoulders, capering like a pair of Merry-Andrews,
+laughing to split our sides upon some pleasantry that would
+scarce raise a titter in an infant-school.&nbsp; It might be five
+in the morning, the toddy-cutters just gone by, the road empty,
+the shade of the island lying far on the lagoon: and the
+ebullition cheered me for the day.</p>
+<p>Yet I always suspected Maka of a secret melancholy&mdash;these
+jubilant extremes could scarce be constantly maintained.&nbsp; He
+was besides long, and lean, and lined, and corded, and a trifle
+grizzled; and his Sabbath countenance was even saturnine.&nbsp;
+On that day we made a procession to the church, or (as I must
+always call it) the cathedral: Maka (a blot on the hot landscape)
+in tall hat, black frock-coat, black trousers; under his arm the
+hymn-book and the Bible; in his face, a reverent
+gravity:&mdash;beside him Mary his wife, a quiet, wise, and
+handsome elderly lady, seriously attired:&mdash;myself following
+with singular and moving thoughts.&nbsp; Long before, to the
+sound of bells and streams and birds, through a green Lothian
+glen, I had accompanied Sunday by Sunday a minister in whose
+house I lodged; and the likeness, and the difference, and the
+series of years and deaths, profoundly touched me.&nbsp; In the
+great, dusky, palm-tree cathedral the congregation rarely
+numbered thirty: the men on one side, the women on the other,
+myself posted (for a privilege) amongst the women, and the small
+missionary contingent gathered close around the platform, we were
+lost in that round vault.&nbsp; The lessons were read
+antiphonally, the flock was catechised, a blind youth repeated
+weekly a long string of psalms, hymns were sung&mdash;I never
+heard worse singing,&mdash;and the sermon followed.&nbsp; To say
+I understood nothing were untrue; there were points that I
+learned to expect with certainty; the name of Honolulu, that of
+Kalakaua, the word Cap&rsquo;n-man-o&rsquo;-wa&rsquo;, the word
+ship, and a description of a storm at sea, infallibly occurred;
+and I was not seldom rewarded with the name of my own Sovereign
+in the bargain.&nbsp; The rest was but sound to the ears, silence
+for the mind: a plain expanse of tedium, rendered unbearable by
+heat, a hard chair, and the sight through the wide doors of the
+more happy heathen on the green.&nbsp; Sleep breathed on my
+joints and eyelids, sleep hummed in my ears; it reigned in the
+dim cathedral.&nbsp; The congregation stirred and stretched; they
+moaned, they groaned aloud; they yawned upon a singing note, as
+you may sometimes hear a dog when he has reached the tragic
+bitterest of boredom.&nbsp; In vain the preacher thumped the
+table; in vain he singled and addressed by name particular
+hearers.&nbsp; I was myself perhaps a more effective excitant;
+and at least to one old gentleman the spectacle of my successful
+struggles against sleep&mdash;and I hope they were
+successful&mdash;cheered the flight of time.&nbsp; He, when he
+was not catching flies or playing tricks upon his neighbours,
+gloated with a fixed, truculent eye upon the stages of my agony;
+and once, when the service was drawing towards a close, he winked
+at me across the church.</p>
+<p>I write of the service with a smile; yet I was always
+there&mdash;always with respect for Maka, always with admiration
+for his deep seriousness, his burning energy, the fire of his
+roused eye, the sincere and various accents of his voice.&nbsp;
+To see him weekly flogging a dead horse and blowing a cold fire
+was a lesson in fortitude and constancy.&nbsp; It may be a
+question whether if the mission were fully supported, and he was
+set free from business avocations, more might not result; I think
+otherwise myself; I think not neglect but rigour has reduced his
+flock, that rigour which has once provoked a revolution, and
+which to-day, in a man so lively and engaging, amazes the
+beholder.&nbsp; No song, no dance, no tobacco, no liquor, no
+alleviative of life&mdash;only toil and church-going; so says a
+voice from his face; and the face is the face of the Polynesian
+Esau, but the voice is the voice of a Jacob from a different
+world.&nbsp; And a Polynesian at the best makes a singular
+missionary in the Gilberts, coming from a country recklessly
+unchaste to one conspicuously strict; from a race hag-ridden with
+bogies to one comparatively bold against the terrors of the
+dark.&nbsp; The thought was stamped one morning in my mind, when
+I chanced to be abroad by moonlight, and saw all the town
+lightless, but the lamp faithfully burning by the
+missionary&rsquo;s bed.&nbsp; It requires no law, no fire, and no
+scouting police, to withhold Maka and his countrymen from
+wandering in the night unlighted.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV&mdash;A TALE OF A TAPU</h3>
+<p>On the morrow of our arrival (Sunday, 14th July 1889) our
+photographers were early stirring.&nbsp; Once more we traversed a
+silent town; many were yet abed and asleep; some sat drowsily in
+their open houses; there was no sound of intercourse or
+business.&nbsp; In that hour before the shadows, the quarter of
+the palace and canal seemed like a landing-place in the
+<i>Arabian Nights</i> or from the classic poets; here were the
+fit destination of some &lsquo;faery frigot,&rsquo; here some
+adventurous prince might step ashore among new characters and
+incidents; and the island prison, where it floated on the
+luminous face of the lagoon, might have passed for the repository
+of the Grail.&nbsp; In such a scene, and at such an hour, the
+impression received was not so much of foreign
+travel&mdash;rather of past ages; it seemed not so much degrees
+of latitude that we had crossed, as centuries of time that we had
+re-ascended; leaving, by the same steps, home and to-day.&nbsp; A
+few children followed us, mostly nude, all silent; in the clear,
+weedy waters of the canal some silent damsels waded, baring their
+brown thighs; and to one of the maniap&rsquo;s before the palace
+gate we were attracted by a low but stirring hum of speech.</p>
+<p>The oval shed was full of men sitting cross-legged.&nbsp; The
+king was there in striped pyjamas, his rear protected by four
+guards with Winchesters, his air and bearing marked by unwonted
+spirit and decision; tumblers and black bottles went the round;
+and the talk, throughout loud, was general and animated.&nbsp; I
+was inclined at first to view this scene with suspicion.&nbsp;
+But the hour appeared unsuitable for a carouse; drink was besides
+forbidden equally by the law of the land and the canons of the
+church; and while I was yet hesitating, the king&rsquo;s rigorous
+attitude disposed of my last doubt.&nbsp; We had come, thinking
+to photograph him surrounded by his guards, and at the first word
+of the design his piety revolted.&nbsp; We were reminded of the
+day&mdash;the Sabbath, in which thou shalt take no
+photographs&mdash;and returned with a flea in our ear, bearing
+the rejected camera.</p>
+<p>At church, a little later, I was struck to find the throne
+unoccupied.&nbsp; So nice a Sabbatarian might have found the
+means to be present; perhaps my doubts revived; and before I got
+home they were transformed to certainties.&nbsp; Tom, the
+bar-keeper of the <i>Sans Souci</i>, was in conversation with two
+emissaries from the court.&nbsp; The &lsquo;keen,&rsquo; they
+said, wanted &lsquo;din,&rsquo; failing which
+&lsquo;perandi.&rsquo; <a name="citation231"></a><a
+href="#footnote231" class="citation">[231]</a>&nbsp; No din, was
+Tom&rsquo;s reply, and no perandi; but &lsquo;pira&rsquo; if they
+pleased.&nbsp; It seems they had no use for beer, and departed
+sorrowing.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Why, what is the meaning of all this?&rsquo; I
+asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;Is the island on the spree?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Such was the fact.&nbsp; On the 4th of July a feast had been
+made, and the king, at the suggestion of the whites, had raised
+the tapu against liquor.&nbsp; There is a proverb about horses;
+it scarce applies to the superior animal, of whom it may be
+rather said, that any one can start him drinking, not any twenty
+can prevail on him to stop.&nbsp; The tapu, raised ten days
+before, was not yet re-imposed; for ten days the town had been
+passing the bottle or lying (as we had seen it the afternoon
+before) in hoggish sleep; and the king, moved by the Old Men and
+his own appetites, continued to maintain the liberty, to squander
+his savings on liquor, and to join in and lead the debauch.&nbsp;
+The whites were the authors of this crisis; it was upon their own
+proposal that the freedom had been granted at the first; and for
+a while, in the interests of trade, they were doubtless pleased
+it should continue.&nbsp; That pleasure had now sometime ceased;
+the bout had been prolonged (it was conceded) unduly; and it now
+began to be a question how it might conclude.&nbsp; Hence
+Tom&rsquo;s refusal.&nbsp; Yet that refusal was avowedly only for
+the moment, and it was avowedly unavailing; the king&rsquo;s
+foragers, denied by Tom at the <i>Sans Souci</i>, would be
+supplied at <i>The Land we Live in</i> by the gobbling Mr.
+Williams.</p>
+<p>The degree of the peril was not easy to measure at the time,
+and I am inclined to think now it was easy to exaggerate.&nbsp;
+Yet the conduct of drunkards even at home is always matter for
+anxiety; and at home our populations are not armed from the
+highest to the lowest with revolvers and repeating rifles,
+neither do we go on a debauch by the whole townful&mdash;and I
+might rather say, by the whole polity&mdash;king, magistrates,
+police, and army joining in one common scene of
+drunkenness.&nbsp; It must be thought besides that we were here
+in barbarous islands, rarely visited, lately and partly
+civilised.&nbsp; First and last, a really considerable number of
+whites have perished in the Gilberts, chiefly through their own
+misconduct; and the natives have displayed in at least one
+instance a disposition to conceal an accident under a butchery,
+and leave nothing but dumb bones.&nbsp; This last was the chief
+consideration against a sudden closing of the bars; the
+bar-keepers stood in the immediate breach and dealt direct with
+madmen; too surly a refusal might at any moment precipitate a
+blow, and the blow might prove the signal for a massacre.</p>
+<p><i>Monday</i>, 15th.&mdash;At the same hour we returned to the
+same muniap&rsquo;.&nbsp; K&uuml;mmel (of all drinks) was served
+in tumblers; in the midst sat the crown prince, a fatted youth,
+surrounded by fresh bottles and busily plying the corkscrew; and
+king, chief, and commons showed the loose mouth, the uncertain
+joints, and the blurred and animated eye of the early
+drinker.&nbsp; It was plain we were impatiently expected; the
+king retired with alacrity to dress, the guards were despatched
+after their uniforms; and we were left to await the issue of
+these preparations with a shedful of tipsy natives.&nbsp; The
+orgie had proceeded further than on Sunday.&nbsp; The day
+promised to be of great heat; it was already sultry, the
+courtiers were already fuddled; and still the k&uuml;mmel
+continued to go round, and the crown prince to play butler.&nbsp;
+Flemish freedom followed upon Flemish excess; and a funny dog, a
+handsome fellow, gaily dressed, and with a full turban of frizzed
+hair, delighted the company with a humorous courtship of a lady
+in a manner not to be described.&nbsp; It was our diversion, in
+this time of waiting, to observe the gathering of the
+guards.&nbsp; They have European arms, European uniforms, and (to
+their sorrow) European shoes.&nbsp; We saw one warrior (like
+Mars) in the article of being armed; two men and a stalwart woman
+were scarce strong enough to boot him; and after a single
+appearance on parade the army is crippled for a week.</p>
+<p>At last, the gates under the king&rsquo;s house opened; the
+army issued, one behind another, with guns and epaulettes; the
+colours stooped under the gateway; majesty followed in his
+uniform bedizened with gold lace; majesty&rsquo;s wife came next
+in a hat and feathers, and an ample trained silk gown; the royal
+imps succeeded; there stood the pageantry of Makin marshalled on
+its chosen theatre.&nbsp; Dickens might have told how serious
+they were; how tipsy; how the king melted and streamed under his
+cocked hat; how he took station by the larger of his two
+cannons&mdash;austere, majestic, but not truly vertical; how the
+troops huddled, and were straightened out, and clubbed again; how
+they and their firelocks raked at various inclinations like the
+masts of ships; and how an amateur photographer reviewed,
+arrayed, and adjusted them, to see his dispositions change before
+he reached the camera.</p>
+<p>The business was funny to see; I do not know that it is
+graceful to laugh at; and our report of these transactions was
+received on our return with the shaking of grave heads.</p>
+<p>The day had begun ill; eleven hours divided us from sunset;
+and at any moment, on the most trifling chance, the trouble might
+begin.&nbsp; The Wightman compound was in a military sense
+untenable, commanded on three sides by houses and thick bush; the
+town was computed to contain over a thousand stand of excellent
+new arms; and retreat to the ships, in the case of an alert, was
+a recourse not to be thought of.&nbsp; Our talk that morning must
+have closely reproduced the talk in English garrisons before the
+Sepoy mutiny; the sturdy doubt that any mischief was in prospect,
+the sure belief that (should any come) there was nothing left but
+to go down fighting, the half-amused, half-anxious attitude of
+mind in which we were awaiting fresh developments.</p>
+<p>The k&uuml;mmel soon ran out; we were scarce returned before
+the king had followed us in quest of more.&nbsp; Mr. Corpse was
+now divested of his more awful attitude, the lawless bulk of him
+again encased in striped pyjamas; a guardsman brought up the rear
+with his rifle at the trail: and his majesty was further
+accompanied by a Rarotongan whalerman and the playful courtier
+with the turban of frizzed hair.&nbsp; There was never a more
+lively deputation.&nbsp; The whalerman was gapingly, tearfully
+tipsy: the courtier walked on air; the king himself was even
+sportive.&nbsp; Seated in a chair in the Ricks&rsquo;
+sitting-room, he bore the brunt of our prayers and menaces
+unmoved.&nbsp; He was even rated, plied with historic instances,
+threatened with the men-of-war, ordered to restore the tapu on
+the spot&mdash;and nothing in the least affected him.&nbsp; It
+should be done to-morrow, he said; to-day it was beyond his
+power, to-day he durst not.&nbsp; &lsquo;Is that royal?&rsquo;
+cried indignant Mr. Rick.&nbsp; No, it was not royal; had the
+king been of a royal character we should ourselves have held a
+different language; and royal or not, he had the best of the
+dispute.&nbsp; The terms indeed were hardly equal; for the king
+was the only man who could restore the tapu, but the Ricks were
+not the only people who sold drink.&nbsp; He had but to hold his
+ground on the first question, and they were sure to weaken on the
+second.&nbsp; A little struggle they still made for the
+fashion&rsquo;s sake; and then one exceedingly tipsy deputation
+departed, greatly rejoicing, a case of brandy wheeling beside
+them in a barrow.&nbsp; The Rarotongan (whom I had never seen
+before) wrung me by the hand like a man bound on a far
+voyage.&nbsp; &lsquo;My dear frien&rsquo;!&rsquo; he cried,
+&lsquo;good-bye, my dear frien&rsquo;!&rsquo;&mdash;tears of
+k&uuml;mmel standing in his eyes; the king lurched as he went,
+the courtier ambled,&mdash;a strange party of intoxicated
+children to be entrusted with that barrowful of madness.</p>
+<p>You could never say the town was quiet; all morning there was
+a ferment in the air, an aimless movement and congregation of
+natives in the street.&nbsp; But it was not before half-past one
+that a sudden hubbub of voices called us from the house, to find
+the whole white colony already gathered on the spot as by
+concerted signal.&nbsp; The <i>Sans Souci</i> was overrun with
+rabble, the stair and verandah thronged.&nbsp; From all these
+throats an inarticulate babbling cry went up incessantly; it
+sounded like the bleating of young lambs, but angrier.&nbsp; In
+the road his royal highness (whom I had seen so lately in the
+part of butler) stood crying upon Tom; on the top step, tossed in
+the hurly-burly, Tom was shouting to the prince.&nbsp; Yet a
+while the pack swayed about the bar, vociferous.&nbsp; Then came
+a brutal impulse; the mob reeled, and returned, and was rejected;
+the stair showed a stream of heads; and there shot into view,
+through the disbanding ranks, three men violently dragging in
+their midst a fourth.&nbsp; By his hair and his hands, his head
+forced as low as his knees, his face concealed, he was wrenched
+from the verandah and whisked along the road into the village,
+howling as he disappeared.&nbsp; Had his face been raised, we
+should have seen it bloodied, and the blood was not his
+own.&nbsp; The courtier with the turban of frizzed hair had paid
+the costs of this disturbance with the lower part of one ear.</p>
+<p>So the brawl passed with no other casualty than might seem
+comic to the inhumane.&nbsp; Yet we looked round on serious faces
+and&mdash;a fact that spoke volumes&mdash;Tom was putting up the
+shutters on the bar.&nbsp; Custom might go elsewhere, Mr.
+Williams might profit as he pleased, but Tom had had enough of
+bar-keeping for that day.&nbsp; Indeed the event had hung on a
+hair.&nbsp; A man had sought to draw a revolver&mdash;on what
+quarrel I could never learn, and perhaps he himself could not
+have told; one shot, when the room was so crowded, could scarce
+have failed to take effect; where many were armed and all tipsy,
+it could scarce have failed to draw others; and the woman who
+spied the weapon and the man who seized it may very well have
+saved the white community.</p>
+<p>The mob insensibly melted from the scene; and for the rest of
+the day our neighbourhood was left in peace and a good deal in
+solitude.&nbsp; But the tranquillity was only local; <i>din</i>
+and<i> perandi</i> still flowed in other quarters: and we had one
+more sight of Gilbert Island violence.&nbsp; In the church, where
+we had wandered photographing, we were startled by a sudden
+piercing outcry.&nbsp; The scene, looking forth from the doors of
+that great hall of shadow, was unforgettable.&nbsp; The palms,
+the quaint and scattered houses, the flag of the island streaming
+from its tall staff, glowed with intolerable sunshine.&nbsp; In
+the midst two women rolled fighting on the grass.&nbsp; The
+combatants were the more easy to be distinguished, because the
+one was stripped to the <i>ridi</i> and the other wore a holoku
+(sacque) of some lively colour.&nbsp; The first was uppermost,
+her teeth locked in her adversary&rsquo;s face, shaking her like
+a dog; the other impotently fought and scratched.&nbsp; So for a
+moment we saw them wallow and grapple there like vermin; then the
+mob closed and shut them in.</p>
+<p>It was a serious question that night if we should sleep
+ashore.&nbsp; But we were travellers, folk that had come far in
+quest of the adventurous; on the first sign of an adventure it
+would have been a singular inconsistency to have withdrawn; and
+we sent on board instead for our revolvers.&nbsp; Mindful of
+Taahauku, Mr. Rick, Mr. Osbourne, and Mrs. Stevenson held an
+assault of arms on the public highway, and fired at bottles to
+the admiration of the natives.&nbsp; Captain Reid of the
+<i>Equator</i> stayed on shore with us to be at hand in case of
+trouble, and we retired to bed at the accustomed hour, agreeably
+excited by the day&rsquo;s events.&nbsp; The night was exquisite,
+the silence enchanting; yet as I lay in my hammock looking on the
+strong moonshine and the quiescent palms, one ugly picture
+haunted me of the two women, the naked and the clad, locked in
+that hostile embrace.&nbsp; The harm done was probably not much,
+yet I could have looked on death and massacre with less
+revolt.&nbsp; The return to these primeval weapons, the vision of
+man&rsquo;s beastliness, of his ferality, shocked in me a deeper
+sense than that with which we count the cost of battles.&nbsp;
+There are elements in our state and history which it is a
+pleasure to forget, which it is perhaps the better wisdom not to
+dwell on.&nbsp; Crime, pestilence, and death are in the
+day&rsquo;s work; the imagination readily accepts them.&nbsp; It
+instinctively rejects, on the contrary, whatever shall call up
+the image of our race upon its lowest terms, as the partner of
+beasts, beastly itself, dwelling pell-mell and hugger-mugger,
+hairy man with hairy woman, in the caves of old.&nbsp; And yet to
+be just to barbarous islanders we must not forget the slums and
+dens of our cities; I must not forget that I have passed
+dinnerward through Soho, and seen that which cured me of my
+dinner.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER V&mdash;A TALE OF A TAPU&mdash;<i>continued</i></h3>
+<p><i>Tuesday</i>, <i>July</i> 16.&mdash;It rained in the night,
+sudden and loud, in Gilbert Island fashion.&nbsp; Before the day,
+the crowing of a cock aroused me and I wandered in the compound
+and along the street.&nbsp; The squall was blown by, the moon
+shone with incomparable lustre, the air lay dead as in a room,
+and yet all the isle sounded as under a strong shower, the eaves
+thickly pattering, the lofty palms dripping at larger intervals
+and with a louder note.&nbsp; In this bold nocturnal light the
+interior of the houses lay inscrutable, one lump of blackness,
+save when the moon glinted under the roof, and made a belt of
+silver, and drew the slanting shadows of the pillars on the
+floor.&nbsp; Nowhere in all the town was any lamp or ember; not a
+creature stirred; I thought I was alone to be awake; but the
+police were faithful to their duty; secretly vigilant, keeping
+account of time; and a little later, the watchman struck slowly
+and repeatedly on the cathedral bell; four o&rsquo;clock, the
+warning signal.&nbsp; It seemed strange that, in a town resigned
+to drunkenness and tumult, curfew and r&eacute;veille should
+still be sounded and still obeyed.</p>
+<p>The day came, and brought little change.&nbsp; The place still
+lay silent; the people slept, the town slept.&nbsp; Even the few
+who were awake, mostly women and children, held their peace and
+kept within under the strong shadow of the thatch, where you must
+stop and peer to see them.&nbsp; Through the deserted streets,
+and past the sleeping houses, a deputation took its way at an
+early hour to the palace; the king was suddenly awakened, and
+must listen (probably with a headache) to unpalatable
+truths.&nbsp; Mrs. Rick, being a sufficient mistress of that
+difficult tongue, was spokeswoman; she explained to the sick
+monarch that I was an intimate personal friend of Queen
+Victoria&rsquo;s; that immediately on my return I should make her
+a report upon Butaritari; and that if my house should have been
+again invaded by natives, a man-of-war would be despatched to
+make reprisals.&nbsp; It was scarce the fact&mdash;rather a just
+and necessary parable of the fact, corrected for latitude; and it
+certainly told upon the king.&nbsp; He was much affected; he had
+conceived the notion (he said) that I was a man of some
+importance, but not dreamed it was as bad as this; and the
+missionary house was tapu&rsquo;d under a fine of fifty
+dollars.</p>
+<p>So much was announced on the return of the deputation; not any
+more; and I gathered subsequently that much more had
+passed.&nbsp; The protection gained was welcome.&nbsp; It had
+been the most annoying and not the least alarming feature of the
+day before, that our house was periodically filled with tipsy
+natives, twenty or thirty at a time, begging drink, fingering our
+goods, hard to be dislodged, awkward to quarrel with.&nbsp; Queen
+Victoria&rsquo;s friend (who was soon promoted to be her son) was
+free from these intrusions.&nbsp; Not only my house, but my
+neighbourhood as well, was left in peace; even on our walks
+abroad we were guarded and prepared for; and, like great persons
+visiting a hospital, saw only the fair side.&nbsp; For the matter
+of a week we were thus suffered to go out and in and live in a
+fool&rsquo;s paradise, supposing the king to have kept his word,
+the tapu to be revived and the island once more sober.</p>
+<p><i>Tuesday</i>, <i>July</i> 23.&mdash;We dined under a bare
+trellis erected for the Fourth of July; and here we used to
+linger by lamplight over coffee and tobacco.&nbsp; In that
+climate evening approaches without sensible chill; the wind dies
+out before sunset; heaven glows a while and fades, and darkens
+into the blueness of the tropical night; swiftly and insensibly
+the shadows thicken, the stars multiply their number; you look
+around you and the day is gone.&nbsp; It was then that we would
+see our Chinaman draw near across the compound in a lurching
+sphere of light, divided by his shadows; and with the coming of
+the lamp the night closed about the table.&nbsp; The faces of the
+company, the spars of the trellis, stood out suddenly bright on a
+ground of blue and silver, faintly designed with palm-tops and
+the peaked roofs of houses.&nbsp; Here and there the gloss upon a
+leaf, or the fracture of a stone, returned an isolated
+sparkle.&nbsp; All else had vanished.&nbsp; We hung there,
+illuminated like a galaxy of stars <i>in vacuo</i>; we sat,
+manifest and blind, amid the general ambush of the darkness; and
+the islanders, passing with light footfalls and low voices in the
+sand of the road, lingered to observe us, unseen.</p>
+<p>On Tuesday the dusk had fallen, the lamp had just been
+brought, when a missile struck the table with a rattling smack
+and rebounded past my ear.&nbsp; Three inches to one side and
+this page had never been written; for the thing travelled like a
+cannon ball.&nbsp; It was supposed at the time to be a nut,
+though even at the time I thought it seemed a small one and fell
+strangely.</p>
+<p><i>Wednesday</i>, <i>July</i> 24.&mdash;The dusk had fallen
+once more, and the lamp been just brought out, when the same
+business was repeated.&nbsp; And again the missile whistled past
+my ear.&nbsp; One nut I had been willing to accept; a second, I
+rejected utterly.&nbsp; A cocoa-nut does not come slinging along
+on a windless evening, making an angle of about fifteen degrees
+with the horizon; cocoa-nuts do not fall on successive nights at
+the same hour and spot; in both cases, besides, a specific moment
+seemed to have been chosen, that when the lamp was just carried
+out, a specific person threatened, and that the head of the
+family.&nbsp; I may have been right or wrong, but I believed I
+was the mark of some intimidation; believed the missile was a
+stone, aimed not to hit, but to frighten.</p>
+<p>No idea makes a man more angry.&nbsp; I ran into the road,
+where the natives were as usual promenading in the dark; Maka
+joined me with a lantern; and I ran from one to another, glared
+in quite innocent faces, put useless questions, and proffered
+idle threats.&nbsp; Thence I carried my wrath (which was worthy
+the son of any queen in history) to the Ricks.&nbsp; They heard
+me with depression, assured me this trick of throwing a stone
+into a family dinner was not new; that it meant mischief, and was
+of a piece with the alarming disposition of the natives.&nbsp;
+And then the truth, so long concealed from us, came out.&nbsp;
+The king had broken his promise, he had defied the deputation;
+the tapu was still dormant, <i>The Land we Live in</i> still
+selling drink, and that quarter of the town disturbed and menaced
+by perpetual broils.&nbsp; But there was worse ahead: a feast was
+now preparing for the birthday of the little princess; and the
+tributary chiefs of Kuma and Little Makin were expected
+daily.&nbsp; Strong in a following of numerous and somewhat
+savage clansmen, each of these was believed, like a Douglas of
+old, to be of doubtful loyalty.&nbsp; Kuma (a little pot-bellied
+fellow) never visited the palace, never entered the town, but sat
+on the beach on a mat, his gun across his knees, parading his
+mistrust and scorn; Karaiti of Makin, although he was more bold,
+was not supposed to be more friendly; and not only were these
+vassals jealous of the throne, but the followers on either side
+shared in the animosity.&nbsp; Brawls had already taken place;
+blows had passed which might at any moment be repaid in
+blood.&nbsp; Some of the strangers were already here and already
+drinking; if the debauch continued after the bulk of them had
+come, a collision, perhaps a revolution, was to be expected.</p>
+<p>The sale of drink is in this group a measure of the jealousy
+of traders; one begins, the others are constrained to follow; and
+to him who has the most gin, and sells it the most recklessly,
+the lion&rsquo;s share of copra is assured.&nbsp; It is felt by
+all to be an extreme expedient, neither safe, decent, nor
+dignified.&nbsp; A trader on Tarawa, heated by an eager rivalry,
+brought many cases of gin.&nbsp; He told me he sat afterwards day
+and night in his house till it was finished, not daring to arrest
+the sale, not venturing to go forth, the bush all round him
+filled with howling drunkards.&nbsp; At night, above all, when he
+was afraid to sleep, and heard shots and voices about him in the
+darkness, his remorse was black.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My God!&rsquo; he reflected, &lsquo;if I was to lose my
+life on such a wretched business!&rsquo;&nbsp; Often and often,
+in the story of the Gilberts, this scene has been repeated; and
+the remorseful trader sat beside his lamp, longing for the day,
+listening with agony for the sound of murder, registering
+resolutions for the future.&nbsp; For the business is easy to
+begin, but hazardous to stop.&nbsp; The natives are in their way
+a just and law-abiding people, mindful of their debts, docile to
+the voice of their own institutions; when the tapu is re-enforced
+they will cease drinking; but the white who seeks to antedate the
+movement by refusing liquor does so at his peril.</p>
+<p>Hence, in some degree, the anxiety and helplessness of Mr.
+Rick.&nbsp; He and Tom, alarmed by the rabblement of the <i>Sans
+Souci</i>, had stopped the sale; they had done so without danger,
+because <i>The Land we Live in</i> still continued selling; it
+was claimed, besides, that they had been the first to
+begin.&nbsp; What step could be taken?&nbsp; Could Mr. Rick visit
+Mr. Muller (with whom he was not on terms) and address him thus:
+&lsquo;I was getting ahead of you, now you are getting ahead of
+me, and I ask you to forego your profit.&nbsp; I got my place
+closed in safety, thanks to your continuing; but now I think you
+have continued long enough.&nbsp; I begin to be alarmed; and
+because I am afraid I ask you to confront a certain
+danger&rsquo;?&nbsp; It was not to be thought of.&nbsp; Something
+else had to be found; and there was one person at one end of the
+town who was at least not interested in copra.&nbsp; There was
+little else to be said in favour of myself as an
+ambassador.&nbsp; I had arrived in the Wightman schooner, I was
+living in the Wightman compound, I was the daily associate of the
+Wightman coterie.&nbsp; It was egregious enough that I should now
+intrude unasked in the private affairs of Crawford&rsquo;s agent,
+and press upon him the sacrifice of his interests and the venture
+of his life.&nbsp; But bad as I might be, there was none better;
+since the affair of the stone I was, besides, sharp-set to be
+doing, the idea of a delicate interview attracted me, and I
+thought it policy to show myself abroad.</p>
+<p>The night was very dark.&nbsp; There was service in the
+church, and the building glimmered through all its crevices like
+a dim Kirk Allowa&rsquo;.&nbsp; I saw few other lights, but was
+indistinctly aware of many people stirring in the darkness, and a
+hum and sputter of low talk that sounded stealthy.&nbsp; I
+believe (in the old phrase) my beard was sometimes on my shoulder
+as I went.&nbsp; Muller&rsquo;s was but partly lighted, and quite
+silent, and the gate was fastened.&nbsp; I could by no means
+manage to undo the latch.&nbsp; No wonder, since I found it
+afterwards to be four or five feet long&mdash;a fortification in
+itself.&nbsp; As I still fumbled, a dog came on the inside and
+sniffed suspiciously at my hands, so that I was reduced to
+calling &lsquo;House ahoy!&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Muller came down and
+put his chin across the paling in the dark.&nbsp; &lsquo;Who is
+that?&rsquo; said he, like one who has no mind to welcome
+strangers.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My name is Stevenson,&rsquo; said I.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O, Mr. Stevens!&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t know you.&nbsp;
+Come inside.&rsquo;&nbsp; We stepped into the dark store, when I
+leaned upon the counter and he against the wall.&nbsp; All the
+light came from the sleeping-room, where I saw his family being
+put to bed; it struck full in my face, but Mr. Muller stood in
+shadow.&nbsp; No doubt he expected what was Coming, and sought
+the advantage of position; but for a man who wished to persuade
+and had nothing to conceal, mine was the preferable.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Look here,&rsquo; I began, &lsquo;I hear you are
+selling to the natives.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Others have done that before me,&rsquo; he returned
+pointedly.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No doubt,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;and I have nothing to
+do with the past, but the future.&nbsp; I want you to promise you
+will handle these spirits carefully.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now what is your motive in this?&rsquo; he asked, and
+then, with a sneer, &lsquo;Are you afraid of your
+life?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That is nothing to the purpose,&rsquo; I replied.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I know, and you know, these spirits ought not to be used
+at all.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Tom and Mr. Rick have sold them before.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I have nothing to do with Tom and Mr. Rick.&nbsp; All I
+know is I have heard them both refuse.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No, I suppose you have nothing to do with them.&nbsp;
+Then you are just afraid of your life.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Come now,&rsquo; I cried, being perhaps a little stung,
+&lsquo;you know in your heart I am asking a reasonable
+thing.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t ask you to lose your
+profit&mdash;though I would prefer to see no spirits brought
+here, as you would&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I don&rsquo;t say I wouldn&rsquo;t.&nbsp; I
+didn&rsquo;t begin this,&rsquo; he interjected.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No, I don&rsquo;t suppose you did,&rsquo; said I.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And I don&rsquo;t ask you to lose; I ask you to give me
+your word, man to man, that you will make no native
+drunk.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Up to now Mr. Muller had maintained an attitude very trying to
+my temper; but he had maintained it with difficulty, his
+sentiment being all upon my side; and here he changed ground for
+the worse.&nbsp; &lsquo;It isn&rsquo;t me that sells,&rsquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No, it&rsquo;s that nigger,&rsquo; I agreed.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;But he&rsquo;s yours to buy and sell; you have your hand
+on the nape of his neck; and I ask you&mdash;I have my wife
+here&mdash;to use the authority you have.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>He hastily returned to his old ward.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+don&rsquo;t deny I could if I wanted,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;But there&rsquo;s no danger, the natives are all
+quiet.&nbsp; You&rsquo;re just afraid of your life.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I do not like to be called a coward, even by implication; and
+here I lost my temper and propounded an untimely ultimatum.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You had better put it plain,&rsquo; I cried.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Do you mean to refuse me what I ask?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I don&rsquo;t want either to refuse it or grant
+it,&rsquo; he replied.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You&rsquo;ll find you have to do the one thing or the
+other, and right now!&rsquo; I cried, and then, striking into a
+happier vein, &lsquo;Come,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re a
+better sort than that.&nbsp; I see what&rsquo;s wrong with
+you&mdash;you think I came from the opposite camp.&nbsp; I see
+the sort of man you are, and you know that what I ask is
+right.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Again he changed ground.&nbsp; &lsquo;If the natives get any
+drink, it isn&rsquo;t safe to stop them,&rsquo; he objected.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I&rsquo;ll be answerable for the bar,&rsquo; I
+said.&nbsp; &lsquo;We are three men and four revolvers;
+we&rsquo;ll come at a word, and hold the place against the
+village.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You don&rsquo;t know what you&rsquo;re talking about;
+it&rsquo;s too dangerous!&rsquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Look here,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t mind
+much about losing that life you talk so much of; but I mean to
+lose it the way I want to, and that is, putting a stop to all
+this beastliness.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>He talked a while about his duty to the firm; I minded not at
+all, I was secure of victory.&nbsp; He was but waiting to
+capitulate, and looked about for any potent to relieve the
+strain.&nbsp; In the gush of light from the bedroom door I spied
+a cigar-holder on the desk.&nbsp; &lsquo;That is well
+coloured,&rsquo; said I.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Will you take a cigar?&rsquo; said he.</p>
+<p>I took it and held it up unlighted.&nbsp; &lsquo;Now,&rsquo;
+said I, &lsquo;you promise me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I promise you you won&rsquo;t have any trouble from
+natives that have drunk at my place,&rsquo; he replied.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That is all I ask,&rsquo; said I, and showed it was not
+by immediately offering to try his stock.</p>
+<p>So far as it was anyway critical our interview here
+ended.&nbsp; Mr. Muller had thenceforth ceased to regard me as an
+emissary from his rivals, dropped his defensive attitude, and
+spoke as he believed.&nbsp; I could make out that he would
+already, had he dared, have stopped the sale himself.&nbsp; Not
+quite daring, it may be imagined how he resented the idea of
+interference from those who had (by his own statement) first led
+him on, then deserted him in the breach, and now (sitting
+themselves in safety) egged him on to a new peril, which was all
+gain to them, all loss to him!&nbsp; I asked him what he thought
+of the danger from the feast.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I think worse of it than any of you,&rsquo; he
+answered.&nbsp; &lsquo;They were shooting around here last night,
+and I heard the balls too.&nbsp; I said to myself,
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s bad.&rdquo;&nbsp; What gets me is why you
+should be making this row up at your end.&nbsp; I should be the
+first to go.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It was a thoughtless wonder.&nbsp; The consolation of being
+second is not great; the fact, not the order of going&mdash;there
+was our concern.</p>
+<p>Scott talks moderately of looking forward to a time of
+fighting &lsquo;with a feeling that resembled
+pleasure.&rsquo;&nbsp; The resemblance seems rather an
+identity.&nbsp; In modern life, contact is ended; man grows
+impatient of endless man&oelig;uvres; and to approach the fact,
+to find ourselves where we can push an advantage home, and stand
+a fair risk, and see at last what we are made of, stirs the
+blood.&nbsp; It was so at least with all my family, who bubbled
+with delight at the approach of trouble; and we sat deep into the
+night like a pack of schoolboys, preparing the revolvers and
+arranging plans against the morrow.&nbsp; It promised certainly
+to be a busy and eventful day.&nbsp; The Old Men were to be
+summoned to confront me on the question of the tapu; Muller might
+call us at any moment to garrison his bar; and suppose Muller to
+fail, we decided in a family council to take that matter into our
+own hands, <i>The Land we Live in</i> at the pistol&rsquo;s
+mouth, and with the polysyllabic Williams, dance to a new
+tune.&nbsp; As I recall our humour I think it would have gone
+hard with the mulatto.</p>
+<p><i>Wednesday</i>, <i>July</i> 24.&mdash;It was as well, and
+yet it was disappointing that these thunder-clouds rolled off in
+silence.&nbsp; Whether the Old Men recoiled from an interview
+with Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son, whether Muller had secretly
+intervened, or whether the step flowed naturally from the fears
+of the king and the nearness of the feast, the tapu was early
+that morning re-enforced; not a day too soon, from the manner the
+boats began to arrive thickly, and the town was filled with the
+big rowdy vassals of Karaiti.</p>
+<p>The effect lingered for some time on the minds of the traders;
+it was with the approval of all present that I helped to draw up
+a petition to the United States, praying for a law against the
+liquor trade in the Gilberts; and it was at this request that I
+added, under my own name, a brief testimony of what had
+passed;&mdash;useless pains; since the whole reposes, probably
+unread and possibly unopened, in a pigeon-hole at Washington.</p>
+<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>July</i> 28.&mdash;This day we had the
+afterpiece of the debauch.&nbsp; The king and queen, in European
+clothes, and followed by armed guards, attended church for the
+first time, and sat perched aloft in a precarious dignity under
+the barrel-hoops.&nbsp; Before sermon his majesty clambered from
+the dais, stood lopsidedly upon the gravel floor, and in a few
+words abjured drinking.&nbsp; The queen followed suit with a yet
+briefer allocution.&nbsp; All the men in church were next
+addressed in turn; each held up his right hand, and the affair
+was over&mdash;throne and church were reconciled.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI&mdash;THE FIVE DAYS&rsquo; FESTIVAL</h3>
+<p><i>Thursday</i>, <i>July</i> 25.&mdash;The street was this day
+much enlivened by the presence of the men from Little Makin; they
+average taller than Butaritarians, and being on a holiday, went
+wreathed with yellow leaves and gorgeous in vivid colours.&nbsp;
+They are said to be more savage, and to be proud of the
+distinction.&nbsp; Indeed, it seemed to us they swaggered in the
+town, like plaided Highlanders upon the streets of Inverness,
+conscious of barbaric virtues.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon the summer parlour was observed to be packed
+with people; others standing outside and stooping to peer under
+the eaves, like children at home about a circus.&nbsp; It was the
+Makin company, rehearsing for the day of competition.&nbsp;
+Karaiti sat in the front row close to the singers, where we were
+summoned (I suppose in honour of Queen Victoria) to join
+him.&nbsp; A strong breathless heat reigned under the iron roof,
+and the air was heavy with the scent of wreaths.&nbsp; The
+singers, with fine mats about their loins, cocoa-nut feathers set
+in rings upon their fingers, and their heads crowned with yellow
+leaves, sat on the floor by companies.&nbsp; A varying number of
+soloists stood up for different songs; and these bore the chief
+part in the music.&nbsp; But the full force of the companies,
+even when not singing, contributed continuously to the effect,
+and marked the ictus of the measure, mimicking, grimacing,
+casting up their heads and eyes, fluttering the feathers on their
+fingers, clapping hands, or beating (loud as a kettledrum) on the
+left breast; the time was exquisite, the music barbarous, but
+full of conscious art.&nbsp; I noted some devices constantly
+employed.&nbsp; A sudden change would be introduced (I think of
+key) with no break of the measure, but emphasised by a sudden
+dramatic heightening of the voice and a swinging, general
+gesticulation.&nbsp; The voices of the soloists would begin far
+apart in a rude discord, and gradually draw together to a unison;
+which, when, they had reached, they were joined and drowned by
+the full chorus.&nbsp; The ordinary, hurried, barking unmelodious
+movement of the voices would at times be broken and glorified by
+a psalm-like strain of melody, often well constructed, or seeming
+so by contrast.&nbsp; There was much variety of measure, and
+towards the end of each piece, when the fun became fast and
+furious, a recourse to this figure&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p252.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Music. It means two/four time with quaver, quaver, crotchet
+repeated for three bars"
+title=
+"Music. It means two/four time with quaver, quaver, crotchet
+repeated for three bars"
+src="images/p252.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>It is difficult to conceive what fire and devilry they get
+into these hammering finales; all go together, voices, hands,
+eyes, leaves, and fluttering finger-rings; the chorus swings to
+the eye, the song throbs on the ear; the faces are convulsed with
+enthusiasm and effort.</p>
+<p>Presently the troop stood up in a body, the drums forming a
+half-circle for the soloists, who were sometimes five or even
+more in number.&nbsp; The songs that followed were highly
+dramatic; though I had none to give me any explanation, I would
+at times make out some shadowy but decisive outline of a plot;
+and I was continually reminded of certain quarrelsome concerted
+scenes in grand operas at home; just so the single voices issue
+from and fall again into the general volume; just so do the
+performers separate and crowd together, brandish the raised hand,
+and roll the eye to heaven&mdash;or the gallery.&nbsp; Already
+this is beyond the Thespian model; the art of this people is
+already past the embryo: song, dance, drums, quartette and
+solo&mdash;it is the drama full developed although still in
+miniature.&nbsp; Of all so-called dancing in the South Seas, that
+which I saw in Butaritari stands easily the first.&nbsp; The
+<i>hula</i>, as it may be viewed by the speedy globe-trotter in
+Honolulu, is surely the most dull of man&rsquo;s inventions, and
+the spectator yawns under its length as at a college lecture or a
+parliamentary debate.&nbsp; But the Gilbert Island dance leads on
+the mind; it thrills, rouses, subjugates; it has the essence of
+all art, an unexplored imminent significance.&nbsp; Where so many
+are engaged, and where all must make (at a given moment) the same
+swift, elaborate, and often arbitrary movement, the toil of
+rehearsal is of course extreme.&nbsp; But they begin as
+children.&nbsp; A child and a man may often be seen together in a
+maniap&rsquo;: the man sings and gesticulates, the child stands
+before him with streaming tears and tremulously copies him in act
+and sound; it is the Gilbert Island artist learning (as all
+artists must) his art in sorrow.</p>
+<p>I may seem to praise too much; here is a passage from my
+wife&rsquo;s diary, which proves that I was not alone in being
+moved, and completes the picture:&mdash;&lsquo;The conductor gave
+the cue, and all the dancers, waving their arms, swaying their
+bodies, and clapping their breasts in perfect time, opened with
+an introductory.&nbsp; The performers remained seated, except
+two, and once three, and twice a single soloist.&nbsp; These
+stood in the group, making a slight movement with the feet and
+rhythmical quiver of the body as they sang.&nbsp; There was a
+pause after the introductory, and then the real business of the
+opera&mdash;for it was no less&mdash;began; an opera where every
+singer was an accomplished actor.&nbsp; The leading man, in an
+impassioned ecstasy which possessed him from head to foot, seemed
+transfigured; once it was as though a strong wind had swept over
+the stage&mdash;their arms, their feathered fingers thrilling
+with an emotion that shook my nerves as well: heads and bodies
+followed like a field of grain before a gust.&nbsp; My blood came
+hot and cold, tears pricked my eyes, my head whirled, I felt an
+almost irresistible impulse to join the dancers.&nbsp; One drama,
+I think, I very nearly understood.&nbsp; A fierce and savage old
+man took the solo part.&nbsp; He sang of the birth of a prince,
+and how he was tenderly rocked in his mother&rsquo;s arms; of his
+boyhood, when he excelled his fellows in swimming, climbing, and
+all athletic sports; of his youth, when he went out to sea with
+his boat and fished; of his manhood, when he married a wife who
+cradled a son of his own in her arms.&nbsp; Then came the alarm
+of war, and a great battle, of which for a time the issue was
+doubtful; but the hero conquered, as he always does, and with a
+tremendous burst of the victors the piece closed.&nbsp; There
+were also comic pieces, which caused great amusement.&nbsp;
+During one, an old man behind me clutched me by the arm, shook
+his finger in my face with a roguish smile, and said something
+with a chuckle, which I took to be the equivalent of &ldquo;O,
+you women, you women; it is true of you all!&rdquo;&nbsp; I fear
+it was not complimentary.&nbsp; At no time was there the least
+sign of the ugly indecency of the eastern islands.&nbsp; All was
+poetry pure and simple.&nbsp; The music itself was as complex as
+our own, though constructed on an entirely different basis; once
+or twice I was startled by a bit of something very like the best
+English sacred music, but it was only for an instant.&nbsp; At
+last there was a longer pause, and this time the dancers were all
+on their feet.&nbsp; As the drama went on, the interest
+grew.&nbsp; The performers appealed to each other, to the
+audience, to the heaven above; they took counsel with each other,
+the conspirators drew together in a knot; it was just an opera,
+the drums coming in at proper intervals, the tenor, baritone, and
+bass all where they should be&mdash;except that the voices were
+all of the same calibre.&nbsp; A woman once sang from the back
+row with a very fine contralto voice spoilt by being made
+artificially nasal; I notice all the women affect that
+unpleasantness.&nbsp; At one time a boy of angelic beauty was the
+soloist; and at another, a child of six or eight, doubtless an
+infant phenomenon being trained, was placed in the centre.&nbsp;
+The little fellow was desperately frightened and embarrassed at
+first, but towards the close warmed up to his work and showed
+much dramatic talent.&nbsp; The changing expressions on the faces
+of the dancers were so speaking, that it seemed a great stupidity
+not to understand them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Our neighbour at this performance, Karaiti, somewhat favours
+his Butaritarian majesty in shape and feature, being, like him,
+portly, bearded, and Oriental.&nbsp; In character he seems the
+reverse: alert, smiling, jovial, jocular, industrious.&nbsp; At
+home in his own island, he labours himself like a slave, and
+makes his people labour like a slave-driver.&nbsp; He takes an
+interest in ideas.&nbsp; George the trader told him about
+flying-machines.&nbsp; &lsquo;Is that true, George?&rsquo; he
+asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is in the papers,&rsquo; replied
+George.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said Karaiti, &lsquo;if that
+man can do it with machinery, I can do it without&rsquo;; and he
+designed and made a pair of wings, strapped them on his
+shoulders, went to the end of a pier, launched himself into
+space, and fell bulkily into the sea.&nbsp; His wives fished him
+out, for his wings hindered him in swimming.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;George,&rsquo; said he, pausing as he went up to change,
+&lsquo;George, you lie.&rsquo;&nbsp; He had eight wives, for his
+small realm still follows ancient customs; but he showed
+embarrassment when this was mentioned to my wife.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Tell her I have only brought one here,&rsquo; he said
+anxiously.&nbsp; Altogether the Black Douglas pleased us much;
+and as we heard fresh details of the king&rsquo;s uneasiness, and
+saw for ourselves that all the weapons in the summer parlour had
+been hid, we watched with the more admiration the cause of all
+this anxiety rolling on his big legs, with his big smiling face,
+apparently unarmed, and certainly unattended, through the hostile
+town.&nbsp; The Red Douglas, pot-bellied Kuma, having perhaps
+heard word of the debauch, remained upon his fief; his vassals
+thus came uncommanded to the feast, and swelled the following of
+Karaiti.</p>
+<p><i>Friday</i>, <i>July</i> 26.&mdash;At night in the dark, the
+singers of Makin paraded in the road before our house and sang
+the song of the princess.&nbsp; &lsquo;This is the day; she was
+born to-day; Nei Kamaunave was born to-day&mdash;a beautiful
+princess, Queen of Butaritari.&rsquo;&nbsp; So I was told it went
+in endless iteration.&nbsp; The song was of course out of season,
+and the performance only a rehearsal.&nbsp; But it was a serenade
+besides; a delicate attention to ourselves from our new friend,
+Karaiti.</p>
+<p><i>Saturday</i>, <i>July</i> 27.&mdash;We had announced a
+performance of the magic lantern to-night in church; and this
+brought the king to visit us.&nbsp; In honour of the Black
+Douglas (I suppose) his usual two guardsmen were now increased to
+four; and the squad made an outlandish figure as they straggled
+after him, in straw hats, kilts and jackets.&nbsp; Three carried
+their arms reversed, the butts over their shoulders, the muzzles
+menacing the king&rsquo;s plump back; the fourth had passed his
+weapon behind his neck, and held it there with arms extended like
+a backboard.&nbsp; The visit was extraordinarily long.&nbsp; The
+king, no longer galvanised with gin, said and did nothing.&nbsp;
+He sat collapsed in a chair and let a cigar go out.&nbsp; It was
+hot, it was sleepy, it was cruel dull; there was no resource but
+to spy in the countenance of Tebureimoa for some remaining trait
+of <i>Mr. Corpse</i> the butcher.&nbsp; His hawk nose, crudely
+depressed and flattened at the point, did truly seem to us to
+smell of midnight murder.&nbsp; When he took his leave, Maka bade
+me observe him going down the stair (or rather ladder) from the
+verandah.&nbsp; &lsquo;Old man,&rsquo; said Maka.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;and yet I suppose not old
+man.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Young man,&rsquo; returned Maka,
+&lsquo;perhaps fo&rsquo;ty.&rsquo;&nbsp; And I have heard since
+he is most likely younger.</p>
+<p>While the magic lantern was showing, I skulked without in the
+dark.&nbsp; The voice of Maka, excitedly explaining the Scripture
+slides, seemed to fill not the church only, but the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; All else was silent.&nbsp; Presently a
+distant sound of singing arose and approached; and a procession
+drew near along the road, the hot clean smell of the men and
+women striking in my face delightfully.&nbsp; At the corner,
+arrested by the voice of Maka and the lightening and darkening of
+the church, they paused.&nbsp; They had no mind to go nearer,
+that was plain.&nbsp; They were Makin people, I believe, probably
+staunch heathens, contemners of the missionary and his
+works.&nbsp; Of a sudden, however, a man broke from their
+company, took to his heels, and fled into the church; next moment
+three had followed him; the next it was a covey of near upon a
+score, all pelting for their lives.&nbsp; So the little band of
+the heathen paused irresolute at the corner, and melted before
+the attractions of a magic lantern, like a glacier in
+spring.&nbsp; The more staunch vainly taunted the deserters;
+three fled in a guilty silence, but still fled; and when at
+length the leader found the wit or the authority to get his troop
+in motion and revive the singing, it was with much diminished
+forces that they passed musically on up the dark road.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile inside the luminous pictures brightened and
+faded.&nbsp; I stood for some while unobserved in the rear of the
+spectators, when I could hear just in front of me a pair of
+lovers following the show with interest, the male playing the
+part of interpreter and (like Adam) mingling caresses with his
+lecture.&nbsp; The wild animals, a tiger in particular, and that
+old school-treat favourite, the sleeper and the mouse, were
+hailed with joy; but the chief marvel and delight was in the
+gospel series.&nbsp; Maka, in the opinion of his aggrieved wife,
+did not properly rise to the occasion.&nbsp; &lsquo;What is the
+matter with the man?&nbsp; Why can&rsquo;t he talk?&rsquo; she
+cried.&nbsp; The matter with the man, I think, was the greatness
+of the opportunity; he reeled under his good fortune; and whether
+he did ill or well, the exposure of these pious
+&lsquo;phantoms&rsquo; did as a matter of fact silence in all
+that part of the island the voice of the scoffer.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Why then,&rsquo; the word went round, &lsquo;why then, the
+Bible is true!&rsquo;&nbsp; And on our return afterwards we were
+told the impression was yet lively, and those who had seen might
+be heard telling those who had not, &lsquo;O yes, it is all true;
+these things all happened, we have seen the
+pictures.&rsquo;&nbsp; The argument is not so childish as it
+seems; for I doubt if these islanders are acquainted with any
+other mode of representation but photography; so that the picture
+of an event (on the old melodrama principle that &lsquo;the
+camera cannot lie, Joseph,&rsquo;) would appear strong proof of
+its occurrence.&nbsp; The fact amused us the more because our
+slides were some of them ludicrously silly, and one (Christ
+before Pilate) was received with shouts of merriment, in which
+even Maka was constrained to join.</p>
+<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>July</i> 28.&mdash;Karaiti came to ask for a
+repetition of the &lsquo;phantoms&rsquo;&mdash;this was the
+accepted word&mdash;and, having received a promise, turned and
+left my humble roof without the shadow of a salutation.&nbsp; I
+felt it impolite to have the least appearance of pocketing a
+slight; the times had been too difficult, and were still too
+doubtful; and Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son was bound to maintain
+the honour of his house.&nbsp; Karaiti was accordingly summoned
+that evening to the Ricks, where Mrs. Rick fell foul of him in
+words, and Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son assailed him with indignant
+looks.&nbsp; I was the ass with the lion&rsquo;s skin; I could
+not roar in the language of the Gilbert Islands; but I could
+stare.&nbsp; Karaiti declared he had meant no offence; apologised
+in a sound, hearty, gentlemanly manner; and became at once at his
+ease.&nbsp; He had in a dagger to examine, and announced he would
+come to price it on the morrow, to-day being Sunday; this nicety
+in a heathen with eight wives surprised me.&nbsp; The dagger was
+&lsquo;good for killing fish,&rsquo; he said roguishly; and was
+supposed to have his eye upon fish upon two legs.&nbsp; It is at
+least odd that in Eastern Polynesia fish was the accepted
+euphemism for the human sacrifice.&nbsp; Asked as to the
+population of his island, Karaiti called out to his vassals who
+sat waiting him outside the door, and they put it at four hundred
+and fifty; but (added Karaiti jovially) there will soon be plenty
+more, for all the women are in the family way.&nbsp; Long before
+we separated I had quite forgotten his offence.&nbsp; He,
+however, still bore it in mind; and with a very courteous
+inspiration returned early on the next day, paid us a long visit,
+and punctiliously said farewell when he departed.</p>
+<p><i>Monday</i>, <i>July</i> 29.&mdash;The great day came round
+at last.&nbsp; In the first hours the night was startled by the
+sound of clapping hands and the chant of Nei Kamaunava; its
+melancholy, slow, and somewhat menacing measures broken at
+intervals by a formidable shout.&nbsp; The little morsel of
+humanity thus celebrated in the dark hours was observed at midday
+playing on the green entirely naked, and equally unobserved and
+unconcerned.</p>
+<p>The summer parlour on its artificial islet, relieved against
+the shimmering lagoon, and shimmering itself with sun and tinned
+iron, was all day crowded about by eager men and women.&nbsp;
+Within, it was boxed full of islanders, of any age and size, and
+in every degree of nudity and finery.&nbsp; So close we squatted,
+that at one time I had a mighty handsome woman on my knees, two
+little naked urchins having their feet against my back.&nbsp;
+There might be a dame in full attire of <i>holoku</i> and hat and
+flowers; and her next neighbour might the next moment strip some
+little rag of a shift from her fat shoulders and come out a
+monument of flesh, painted rather than covered by the hairbreadth
+<i>ridi</i>.&nbsp; Little ladies who thought themselves too great
+to appear undraped upon so high a festival were seen to pause
+outside in the bright sunshine, their miniature ridis in their
+hand; a moment more and they were full-dressed and entered the
+concert-room.</p>
+<p>At either end stood up to sing, or sat down to rest, the
+alternate companies of singers; Kuma and Little Makin on the
+north, Butaritari and its conjunct hamlets on the south; both
+groups conspicuous in barbaric bravery.&nbsp; In the midst,
+between these rival camps of troubadours, a bench was placed; and
+here the king and queen throned it, some two or three feet above
+the crowded audience on the floor&mdash;Tebureimoa as usual in
+his striped pyjamas with a satchel strapped across one shoulder,
+doubtless (in the island fashion) to contain his pistols; the
+queen in a purple <i>holoku</i>, her abundant hair let down, a
+fan in her hand.&nbsp; The bench was turned facing to the
+strangers, a piece of well-considered civility; and when it was
+the turn of Butaritari to sing, the pair must twist round on the
+bench, lean their elbows on the rail, and turn to us the
+spectacle of their broad backs.&nbsp; The royal couple
+occasionally solaced themselves with a clay pipe; and the pomp of
+state was further heightened by the rifles of a picket of the
+guard.</p>
+<p>With this kingly countenance, and ourselves squatted on the
+ground, we heard several songs from one side or the other.&nbsp;
+Then royalty and its guards withdrew, and Queen Victoria&rsquo;s
+son and daughter-in-law were summoned by acclamation to the
+vacant throne.&nbsp; Our pride was perhaps a little modified when
+we were joined on our high places by a certain thriftless loafer
+of a white; and yet I was glad too, for the man had a smattering
+of native, and could give me some idea of the subject of the
+songs.&nbsp; One was patriotic, and dared Tembinok&rsquo; of
+Apemama, the terror of the group, to an invasion.&nbsp; One mixed
+the planting of taro and the harvest-home.&nbsp; Some were
+historical, and commemorated kings and the illustrious chances of
+their time, such as a bout of drinking or a war.&nbsp; One, at
+least, was a drama of domestic interest, excellently played by
+the troop from Makin.&nbsp; It told the story of a man who has
+lost his wife, at first bewails her loss, then seeks another: the
+earlier strains (or acts) are played exclusively by men; but
+towards the end a woman appears, who has just lost her husband;
+and I suppose the pair console each other, for the finale seemed
+of happy omen.&nbsp; Of some of the songs my informant told me
+briefly they were &lsquo;like about the <i>weemen</i>&rsquo;;
+this I could have guessed myself.&nbsp; Each side (I should have
+said) was strengthened by one or two women.&nbsp; They were all
+soloists, did not very often join in the performance, but stood
+disengaged at the back part of the stage, and looked (in
+<i>ridi</i>, necklace, and dressed hair) for all the world like
+European ballet-dancers.&nbsp; When the song was anyway broad
+these ladies came particularly to the front; and it was singular
+to see that, after each entry, the <i>premi&egrave;re
+danseuse</i> pretended to be overcome by shame, as though led on
+beyond what she had meant, and her male assistants made a feint
+of driving her away like one who had disgraced herself.&nbsp;
+Similar affectations accompany certain truly obscene dances of
+Samoa, where they are very well in place.&nbsp; Here it was
+different.&nbsp; The words, perhaps, in this free-spoken world,
+were gross enough to make a carter blush; and the most suggestive
+feature was this feint of shame.&nbsp; For such parts the women
+showed some disposition; they were pert, they were neat, they
+were acrobatic, they were at times really amusing, and some of
+them were pretty.&nbsp; But this is not the artist&rsquo;s field;
+there is the whole width of heaven between such capering and
+ogling, and the strange rhythmic gestures, and strange,
+rapturous, frenzied faces with which the best of the male dancers
+held us spellbound through a Gilbert Island ballet.</p>
+<p>Almost from the first it was apparent that the people of the
+city were defeated.&nbsp; I might have thought them even good,
+only I had the other troop before my eyes to correct my standard,
+and remind me continually of &lsquo;the little more, and how much
+it is.&rsquo;&nbsp; Perceiving themselves worsted, the choir of
+Butaritari grew confused, blundered, and broke down; amid this
+hubbub of unfamiliar intervals I should not myself have
+recognised the slip, but the audience were quick to catch it, and
+to jeer.&nbsp; To crown all, the Makin company began a dance of
+truly superlative merit.&nbsp; I know not what it was about, I
+was too much absorbed to ask.&nbsp; In one act a part of the
+chorus, squealing in some strange falsetto, produced very much
+the effect of our orchestra; in another, the dancers, leaping
+like jumping-jacks, with arms extended, passed through and
+through each other&rsquo;s ranks with extraordinary speed,
+neatness, and humour.&nbsp; A more laughable effect I never saw;
+in any European theatre it would have brought the house down, and
+the island audience roared with laughter and applause.&nbsp; This
+filled up the measure for the rival company, and they forgot
+themselves and decency.&nbsp; After each act or figure of the
+ballet, the performers pause a moment standing, and the next is
+introduced by the clapping of hands in triplets.&nbsp; Not until
+the end of the whole ballet do they sit down, which is the signal
+for the rivals to stand up.&nbsp; But now all rules were to be
+broken.&nbsp; During the interval following on this great
+applause, the company of Butaritari leaped suddenly to their feet
+and most unhandsomely began a performance of their own.&nbsp; It
+was strange to see the men of Makin staring; I have seen a tenor
+in Europe stare with the same blank dignity into a hissing
+theatre; but presently, to my surprise, they sobered down, gave
+up the unsung remainder of their ballet, resumed their seats, and
+suffered their ungallant adversaries to go on and finish.&nbsp;
+Nothing would suffice.&nbsp; Again, at the first interval,
+Butaritari unhandsomely cut in; Makin, irritated in turn,
+followed the example; and the two companies of dancers remained
+permanently standing, continuously clapping hands, and regularly
+cutting across each other at each pause.&nbsp; I expected blows
+to begin with any moment; and our position in the midst was
+highly unstrategical.&nbsp; But the Makin people had a better
+thought; and upon a fresh interruption turned and trooped out of
+the house.&nbsp; We followed them, first because these were the
+artists, second because they were guests and had been scurvily
+ill-used.&nbsp; A large population of our neighbours did the
+same, so that the causeway was filled from end to end by the
+procession of deserters; and the Butaritari choir was left to
+sing for its own pleasure in an empty house, having gained the
+point and lost the audience.&nbsp; It was surely fortunate that
+there was no one drunk; but, drunk or sober, where else would a
+scene so irritating have concluded without blows?</p>
+<p>The last stage and glory of this auspicious day was of our own
+providing&mdash;the second and positively the last appearance of
+the phantoms.&nbsp; All round the church, groups sat outside, in
+the night, where they could see nothing; perhaps ashamed to
+enter, certainly finding some shadowy pleasure in the mere
+proximity.&nbsp; Within, about one-half of the great shed was
+densely packed with people.&nbsp; In the midst, on the royal
+dais, the lantern luminously smoked; chance rays of light struck
+out the earnest countenance of our Chinaman grinding the
+hand-organ; a fainter glimmer showed off the rafters and their
+shadows in the hollow of the roof; the pictures shone and
+vanished on the screen; and as each appeared, there would run a
+hush, a whisper, a strong shuddering rustle, and a chorus of
+small cries among the crowd.&nbsp; There sat by me the mate of a
+wrecked schooner.&nbsp; &lsquo;They would think this a strange
+sight in Europe or the States,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;going on in
+a building like this, all tied with bits of string.&rsquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII&mdash;HUSBAND AND WIFE</h3>
+<p>The trader accustomed to the manners of Eastern Polynesia has
+a lesson to learn among the Gilberts.&nbsp; The <i>ridi</i> is
+but a spare attire; as late as thirty years back the women went
+naked until marriage; within ten years the custom lingered; and
+these facts, above all when heard in description, conveyed a very
+false idea of the manners of the group.&nbsp; A very intelligent
+missionary described it (in its former state) as a
+&lsquo;Paradise of naked women&rsquo; for the resident
+whites.&nbsp; It was at least a platonic Paradise, where Lothario
+ventured at his peril.&nbsp; Since 1860, fourteen whites have
+perished on a single island, all for the same cause, all found
+where they had no business, and speared by some indignant father
+of a family; the figure was given me by one of their
+contemporaries who had been more prudent and survived.&nbsp; The
+strange persistence of these fourteen martyrs might seem to point
+to monomania or a series of romantic passions; gin is the more
+likely key.&nbsp; The poor buzzards sat alone in their houses by
+an open case; they drank; their brain was fired; they stumbled
+towards the nearest houses on chance; and the dart went through
+their liver.&nbsp; In place of a Paradise the trader found an
+archipelago of fierce husbands and of virtuous women.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Of course if you wish to make love to them, it&rsquo;s the
+same as anywhere else,&rsquo; observed a trader innocently; but
+he and his companions rarely so choose.</p>
+<p>The trader must be credited with a virtue: he often makes a
+kind and loyal husband.&nbsp; Some of the worst beachcombers in
+the Pacific, some of the last of the old school, have fallen in
+my path, and some of them were admirable to their native wives,
+and one made a despairing widower.&nbsp; The position of a
+trader&rsquo;s wife in the Gilberts is, besides, unusually
+enviable.&nbsp; She shares the immunities of her husband.&nbsp;
+Curfew in Butaritari sounds for her in vain.&nbsp; Long after the
+bell is rung and the great island ladies are confined for the
+night to their own roof, this chartered libertine may scamper and
+giggle through the deserted streets or go down to bathe in the
+dark.&nbsp; The resources of the store are at her hand; she goes
+arrayed like a queen, and feasts delicately everyday upon tinned
+meats.&nbsp; And she who was perhaps of no regard or station
+among natives sits with captains, and is entertained on board of
+schooners.&nbsp; Five of these privileged dames were some time
+our neighbours.&nbsp; Four were handsome skittish lasses,
+gamesome like children, and like children liable to fits of
+pouting.&nbsp; They wore dresses by day, but there was a tendency
+after dark to strip these lendings and to career and squall about
+the compound in the aboriginal <i>ridi</i>.&nbsp; Games of cards
+were continually played, with shells for counters; their course
+was much marred by cheating; and the end of a round (above all if
+a man was of the party) resolved itself into a scrimmage for the
+counters.&nbsp; The fifth was a matron.&nbsp; It was a picture to
+see her sail to church on a Sunday, a parasol in hand, a
+nursemaid following, and the baby buried in a trade hat and armed
+with a patent feeding-bottle.&nbsp; The service was enlivened by
+her continual supervision and correction of the maid.&nbsp; It
+was impossible not to fancy the baby was a doll, and the church
+some European playroom.&nbsp; All these women were legitimately
+married.&nbsp; It is true that the certificate of one, when she
+proudly showed it, proved to run thus, that she was
+&lsquo;married for one night,&rsquo; and her gracious partner was
+at liberty to &lsquo;send her to hell&rsquo; the next morning;
+but she was none the wiser or the worse for the dastardly
+trick.&nbsp; Another, I heard, was married on a work of mine in a
+pirated edition; it answered the purpose as well as a Hall
+Bible.&nbsp; Notwithstanding all these allurements of social
+distinction, rare food and raiment, a comparative vacation from
+toil, and legitimate marriage contracted on a pirated edition,
+the trader must sometimes seek long before he can be mated.&nbsp;
+While I was in the group one had been eight months on the quest,
+and he was still a bachelor.</p>
+<p>Within strictly native society the old laws and practices were
+harsh, but not without a certain stamp of high-mindedness.&nbsp;
+Stealthy adultery was punished with death; open elopement was
+properly considered virtue in comparison, and compounded for a
+fine in land.&nbsp; The male adulterer alone seems to have been
+punished.&nbsp; It is correct manners for a jealous man to hang
+himself; a jealous woman has a different remedy&mdash;she bites
+her rival.&nbsp; Ten or twenty years ago it was a capital offence
+to raise a woman&rsquo;s <i>ridi</i>; to this day it is still
+punished with a heavy fine; and the garment itself is still
+symbolically sacred.&nbsp; Suppose a piece of land to be disputed
+in Butaritari, the claimant who shall first hang a <i>ridi</i> on
+the tapu-post has gained his cause, since no one can remove or
+touch it but himself.</p>
+<p>The <i>ridi</i> was the badge not of the woman but the wife,
+the mark not of her sex but of her station.&nbsp; It was the
+collar on the slave&rsquo;s neck, the brand on merchandise.&nbsp;
+The adulterous woman seems to have been spared; were the husband
+offended, it would be a poor consolation to send his draught
+cattle to the shambles.&nbsp; Karaiti, to this day, calls his
+eight wives &lsquo;his horses,&rsquo; some trader having
+explained to him the employment of these animals on farms; and
+Nanteitei hired out his wives to do mason-work.&nbsp; Husbands,
+at least when of high rank, had the power of life and death; even
+whites seem to have possessed it; and their wives, when they had
+transgressed beyond forgiveness, made haste to pronounce the
+formula of deprecation&mdash;<i>I Kana Kim</i>.&nbsp; This form
+of words had so much virtue that a condemned criminal repeating
+it on a particular day to the king who had condemned him, must be
+instantly released.&nbsp; It is an offer of abasement, and,
+strangely enough, the reverse&mdash;the imitation&mdash;is a
+common vulgar insult in Great Britain to this day.&nbsp; I give a
+scene between a trader and his Gilbert Island wife, as it was
+told me by the husband, now one of the oldest residents, but then
+a freshman in the group.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Go and light a fire,&rsquo; said the trader, &lsquo;and
+when I have brought this oil I will cook some fish.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The woman grunted at him, island fashion.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am not a
+pig that you should grunt at me,&rsquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I know you are not a pig,&rsquo; said the woman,
+&lsquo;neither am I your slave.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;To be sure you are not my slave, and if you do not care
+to stop with me, you had better go home to your people,&rsquo;
+said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;But in the mean time go and light the fire;
+and when I have brought this oil I will cook some
+fish.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>She went as if to obey; and presently when the trader looked
+she had built a fire so big that the cook-house was catching in
+flames.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;<i>I Kana Kim</i>!&rsquo; she cried, as she saw him
+coming; but he recked not, and hit her with a cooking-pot.&nbsp;
+The leg pierced her skull, blood spouted, it was thought she was
+a dead woman, and the natives surrounded the house in a menacing
+expectation.&nbsp; Another white was present, a man of older
+experience.&nbsp; &lsquo;You will have us both killed if you go
+on like this,&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp; &lsquo;She had said <i>I
+Kana Kim</i>!&rsquo;&nbsp; If she had not said <i>I Kana Kim</i>
+he might have struck her with a caldron.&nbsp; It was not the
+blow that made the crime, but the disregard of an accepted
+formula.</p>
+<p>Polygamy, the particular sacredness of wives, their
+semi-servile state, their seclusion in kings&rsquo; harems, even
+their privilege of biting, all would seem to indicate a
+Mohammedan society and the opinion of the soullessness of
+woman.&nbsp; And not so in the least.&nbsp; It is a mere
+appearance.&nbsp; After you have studied these extremes in one
+house, you may go to the next and find all reversed, the woman
+the mistress, the man only the first of her thralls.&nbsp; The
+authority is not with the husband as such, nor the wife as
+such.&nbsp; It resides in the chief or the chief-woman; in him or
+her who has inherited the lands of the clan, and stands to the
+clansman in the place of parent, exacting their service,
+answerable for their fines.&nbsp; There is but the one source of
+power and the one ground of dignity&mdash;rank.&nbsp; The king
+married a chief-woman; she became his menial, and must work with
+her hands on Messrs. Wightman&rsquo;s pier.&nbsp; The king
+divorced her; she regained at once her former state and
+power.&nbsp; She married the Hawaiian sailor, and behold the man
+is her flunkey and can be shown the door at pleasure.&nbsp; Nay,
+and such low-born lords are even corrected physically, and, like
+grown but dutiful children, must endure the discipline.</p>
+<p>We were intimate in one such household, that of Nei Takauti
+and Nan Tok&rsquo;; I put the lady first of necessity.&nbsp;
+During one week of fool&rsquo;s paradise, Mrs. Stevenson had gone
+alone to the sea-side of the island after shells.&nbsp; I am very
+sure the proceeding was unsafe; and she soon perceived a man and
+woman watching her.&nbsp; Do what she would, her guardians held
+her steadily in view; and when the afternoon began to fall, and
+they thought she had stayed long enough, took her in charge, and
+by signs and broken English ordered her home.&nbsp; On the way
+the lady drew from her earring-hole a clay pipe, the husband
+lighted it, and it was handed to my unfortunate wife, who knew
+not how to refuse the incommodious favour; and when they were all
+come to our house, the pair sat down beside her on the floor, and
+improved the occasion with prayer.&nbsp; From that day they were
+our family friends; bringing thrice a day the beautiful island
+garlands of white flowers, visiting us any evening, and
+frequently carrying us down to their own maniap&rsquo; in return,
+the woman leading Mrs. Stevenson by the hand like one child with
+another.</p>
+<p>Nan Tok&rsquo;, the husband, was young, extremely handsome, of
+the most approved good humour, and suffering in his precarious
+station from suppressed high spirits.&nbsp; Nei Takauti, the
+wife, was getting old; her grown son by a former marriage had
+just hanged himself before his mother&rsquo;s eyes in despair at
+a well-merited rebuke.&nbsp; Perhaps she had never been
+beautiful, but her face was full of character, her eye of sombre
+fire.&nbsp; She was a high chief-woman, but by a strange
+exception for a person of her rank, was small, spare, and sinewy,
+with lean small hands and corded neck.&nbsp; Her full dress of an
+evening was invariably a white chemise&mdash;and for adornment,
+green leaves (or sometimes white blossoms) stuck in her hair and
+thrust through her huge earring-holes.&nbsp; The husband on the
+contrary changed to view like a kaleidoscope.&nbsp; Whatever
+pretty thing my wife might have given to Nei Takauti&mdash;a
+string of beads, a ribbon, a piece of bright
+fabric&mdash;appeared the next evening on the person of Nan
+Tok&rsquo;.&nbsp; It was plain he was a clothes-horse; that he
+wore livery; that, in a word, he was his wife&rsquo;s wife.&nbsp;
+They reversed the parts indeed, down to the least particular; it
+was the husband who showed himself the ministering angel in the
+hour of pain, while the wife displayed the apathy and
+heartlessness of the proverbial man.</p>
+<p>When Nei Takauti had a headache Nan Tok&rsquo; was full of
+attention and concern.&nbsp; When the husband had a cold and a
+racking toothache the wife heeded not, except to jeer.&nbsp; It
+is always the woman&rsquo;s part to fill and light the pipe; Nei
+Takauti handed hers in silence to the wedded page; but she
+carried it herself, as though the page were not entirely
+trusted.&nbsp; Thus she kept the money, but it was he who ran the
+errands, anxiously sedulous.&nbsp; A cloud on her face dimmed
+instantly his beaming looks; on an early visit to their
+maniap&rsquo; my wife saw he had cause to be wary.&nbsp; Nan
+Tok&rsquo; had a friend with him, a giddy young thing, of his own
+age and sex; and they had worked themselves into that stage of
+jocularity when consequences are too often disregarded.&nbsp; Nei
+Takauti mentioned her own name.&nbsp; Instantly Nan Tok&rsquo;
+held up two fingers, his friend did likewise, both in an ecstasy
+of slyness.&nbsp; It was plain the lady had two names; and from
+the nature of their merriment, and the wrath that gathered on her
+brow, there must be something ticklish in the second.&nbsp; The
+husband pronounced it; a well-directed cocoa-nut from the hand of
+his wife caught him on the side of the head, and the voices and
+the mirth of these indiscreet young gentlemen ceased for the
+day.</p>
+<p>The people of Eastern Polynesia are never at a loss; their
+etiquette is absolute and plenary; in every circumstance it tells
+them what to do and how to do it.&nbsp; The Gilbertines are
+seemingly more free, and pay for their freedom (like ourselves)
+in frequent perplexity.&nbsp; This was often the case with the
+topsy-turvy couple.&nbsp; We had once supplied them during a
+visit with a pipe and tobacco; and when they had smoked and were
+about to leave, they found themselves confronted with a problem:
+should they take or leave what remained of the tobacco?&nbsp; The
+piece of plug was taken up, it was laid down again, it was handed
+back and forth, and argued over, till the wife began to look
+haggard and the husband elderly.&nbsp; They ended by taking it,
+and I wager were not yet clear of the compound before they were
+sure they had decided wrong.&nbsp; Another time they had been
+given each a liberal cup of coffee, and Nan Tok&rsquo; with
+difficulty and disaffection made an end of his.&nbsp; Nei Takauti
+had taken some, she had no mind for more, plainly conceived it
+would be a breach of manners to set down the cup unfinished, and
+ordered her wedded retainer to dispose of what was left.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I have swallowed all I can, I cannot swallow more, it is a
+physical impossibility,&rsquo; he seemed to say; and his stern
+officer reiterated her commands with secret imperative
+signals.&nbsp; Luckless dog! but in mere humanity we came to the
+rescue and removed the cup.</p>
+<p>I cannot but smile over this funny household; yet I remember
+the good souls with affection and respect.&nbsp; Their attention
+to ourselves was surprising.&nbsp; The garlands are much
+esteemed, the blossoms must be sought far and wide; and though
+they had many retainers to call to their aid, we often saw
+themselves passing afield after the blossoms, and the wife
+engaged with her own in putting them together.&nbsp; It was no
+want of only that disregard so incident to husbands, that made
+Nei Takauti despise the sufferings of Nan Tok&rsquo;.&nbsp; When
+my wife was unwell she proved a diligent and kindly nurse; and
+the pair, to the extreme embarrassment of the sufferer, became
+fixtures in the sick-room.&nbsp; This rugged, capable, imperious
+old dame, with the wild eyes, had deep and tender qualities: her
+pride in her young husband it seemed that she dissembled, fearing
+possibly to spoil him; and when she spoke of her dead son there
+came something tragic in her face.&nbsp; But I seemed to trace in
+the Gilbertines a virility of sense and sentiment which
+distinguishes them (like their harsh and uncouth language) from
+their brother islanders in the east.</p>
+<h2>PART IV: THE GILBERTS&mdash;APEMAMA</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I&mdash;THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE ROYAL TRADER</h3>
+<p>There is one great personage in the Gilberts: Tembinok&rsquo;
+of Apemama: solely conspicuous, the hero of song, the butt of
+gossip.&nbsp; Through the rest of the group the kings are slain
+or fallen in tutelage: Tembinok&rsquo; alone remains, the last
+tyrant, the last erect vestige of a dead society.&nbsp; The white
+man is everywhere else, building his houses, drinking his gin,
+getting in and out of trouble with the weak native
+governments.&nbsp; There is only one white on Apemama, and he on
+sufferance, living far from court, and hearkening and watching
+his conduct like a mouse in a cat&rsquo;s ear.&nbsp; Through all
+the other islands a stream of native visitors comes and goes,
+travelling by families, spending years on the grand tour.&nbsp;
+Apemama alone is left upon one side, the tourist dreading to risk
+himself within the clutch of Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; And fear of
+the same Gorgon follows and troubles them at home.&nbsp; Maiana
+once paid him tribute; he once fell upon and seized Nonuti: first
+steps to the empire of the archipelago.&nbsp; A British warship
+coming on the scene, the conqueror was driven to disgorge, his
+career checked in the outset, his dear-bought armoury sunk in his
+own lagoon.&nbsp; But the impression had been made; periodical
+fear of him still shakes the islands; rumour depicts him
+mustering his canoes for a fresh onfall; rumour can name his
+destination; and Tembinok&rsquo; figures in the patriotic
+war-songs of the Gilberts like Napoleon in those of our
+grandfathers.</p>
+<p>We were at sea, bound from Mariki to Nonuti and Tapituea, when
+the wind came suddenly fair for Apemama.&nbsp; The course was at
+once changed; all hands were turned-to to clean ship, the decks
+holy-stoned, all the cabin washed, the trade-room
+overhauled.&nbsp; In all our cruising we never saw the
+<i>Equator</i> so smart as she was made for
+Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; Nor was Captain Reid alone in these
+coquetries; for, another schooner chancing to arrive during my
+stay in Apemama, I found that she also was dandified for the
+occasion.&nbsp; And the two cases stand alone in my experience of
+South Sea traders.</p>
+<p>We had on board a family of native tourists, from the
+grandsire to the babe in arms, trying (against an extraordinary
+series of ill-luck) to regain their native island of Peru. <a
+name="citation275"></a><a href="#footnote275"
+class="citation">[275]</a>&nbsp; Five times already they had paid
+their fare and taken ship; five times they had been disappointed,
+dropped penniless upon strange islands, or carried back to
+Butaritari, whence they sailed.&nbsp; This last attempt had been
+no better-starred; their provisions were exhausted.&nbsp; Peru
+was beyond hope, and they had cheerfully made up their minds to a
+fresh stage of exile in Tapituea or Nonuti.&nbsp; With this slant
+of wind their random destination became once more changed; and
+like the Calendar&rsquo;s pilot, when the &lsquo;black
+mountains&rsquo; hove in view, they changed colour and beat upon
+their breasts.&nbsp; Their camp, which was on deck in the
+ship&rsquo;s waist, resounded with complaint.&nbsp; They would be
+set to work, they must become slaves, escape was hopeless, they
+must live and toil and die in Apemama, in the tyrant&rsquo;s
+den.&nbsp; With this sort of talk they so greatly terrified their
+children, that one (a big hulking boy) must at last be torn
+screaming from the schooner&rsquo;s side.&nbsp; And their fears
+were wholly groundless.&nbsp; I have little doubt they were not
+suffered to be idle; but I can vouch for it that they were kindly
+and generously used.&nbsp; For, the matter of a year later, I was
+once more shipmate with these inconsistent wanderers on board the
+<i>Janet Nicoll</i>.&nbsp; Their fare was paid by
+Tembinok&rsquo;; they who had gone ashore from the <i>Equator</i>
+destitute, reappeared upon the <i>Janet</i> with new clothes,
+laden with mats and presents, and bringing with them a magazine
+of food, on which they lived like fighting-cocks throughout the
+voyage; I saw them at length repatriated, and I must say they
+showed more concern on quitting Apemama than delight at reaching
+home.</p>
+<p>We entered by the north passage (Sunday, September 1st),
+dodging among shoals.&nbsp; It was a day of fierce equatorial
+sunshine; but the breeze was strong and chill; and the mate, who
+conned the schooner from the cross-trees, returned shivering to
+the deck.&nbsp; The lagoon was thick with many-tinted wavelets; a
+continuous roaring of the outer sea overhung the anchorage; and
+the long, hollow crescent of palm ruffled and sparkled in the
+wind.&nbsp; Opposite our berth the beach was seen to be
+surmounted for some distance by a terrace of white coral seven or
+eight feet high and crowned in turn by the scattered and
+incongruous buildings of the palace.&nbsp; The village adjoins on
+the south, a cluster of high-roofed maniap&rsquo;s.&nbsp; And
+village and palace seemed deserted.</p>
+<p>We were scarce yet moored, however, before distant and busy
+figures appeared upon the beach, a boat was launched, and a crew
+pulled out to us bringing the king&rsquo;s ladder.&nbsp;
+Tembinok&rsquo; had once an accident; has feared ever since to
+entrust his person to the rotten chandlery of South Sea traders;
+and devised in consequence a frame of wood, which is brought on
+board a ship as soon as she appears, and remains lashed to her
+side until she leave.&nbsp; The boat&rsquo;s crew, having applied
+this engine, returned at once to shore.&nbsp; They might not come
+on board; neither might we land, or not without danger of
+offence; the king giving pratique in person.&nbsp; An interval
+followed, during which dinner was delayed for the great
+man&mdash;the prelude of the ladder, giving us some notion of his
+weighty body and sensible, ingenious character, had highly
+whetted our curiosity; and it was with something like excitement
+that we saw the beach and terrace suddenly blacken with attendant
+vassals, the king and party embark, the boat (a man-of-war gig)
+come flying towards us dead before the wind, and the royal
+coxswain lay us cleverly aboard, mount the ladder with a jealous
+diffidence, and descend heavily on deck.</p>
+<p>Not long ago he was overgrown with fat, obscured to view, and
+a burthen to himself.&nbsp; Captains visiting the island advised
+him to walk; and though it broke the habits of a life and the
+traditions of his rank, he practised the remedy with
+benefit.&nbsp; His corpulence is now portable; you would call him
+lusty rather than fat; but his gait is still dull, stumbling, and
+elephantine.&nbsp; He neither stops nor hastens, but goes about
+his business with an implacable deliberation.&nbsp; We could
+never see him and not be struck with his extraordinary natural
+means for the theatre: a beaked profile like Dante&rsquo;s in the
+mask, a mane of long black hair, the eye brilliant, imperious,
+and inquiring: for certain parts, and to one who could have used
+it, the face was a fortune.&nbsp; His voice matched it well,
+being shrill, powerful, and uncanny, with a note like a
+sea-bird&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Where there are no fashions, none to set
+them, few to follow them if they were set, and none to criticise,
+he dresses&mdash;as Sir Charles Grandison lived&mdash;&lsquo;to
+his own heart.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now he wears a woman&rsquo;s frock,
+now a naval uniform; now (and more usually) figures in a
+masquerade costume of his own design: trousers and a singular
+jacket with shirt tails, the cut and fit wonderful for island
+workmanship, the material always handsome, sometimes green
+velvet, sometimes cardinal red silk.&nbsp; This masquerade
+becomes him admirably.&nbsp; In the woman&rsquo;s frock he looks
+ominous and weird beyond belief.&nbsp; I see him now come pacing
+towards me in the cruel sun, solitary, a figure out of
+Hoffmann.</p>
+<p>A visit on board ship, such as that at which we now assisted,
+makes a chief part and by far the chief diversion of the life of
+Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He is not only the sole ruler, he is the
+sole merchant of his triple kingdom, Apemama, Aranuka, and Kuria,
+well-planted islands.&nbsp; The taro goes to the chiefs, who
+divide as they please among their immediate adherents; but
+certain fish, turtles&mdash;which abound in Kuria,&mdash;and the
+whole produce of the coco-palm, belong exclusively to
+Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; &lsquo;A&rsquo; cobra <a
+name="citation279a"></a><a href="#footnote279a"
+class="citation">[279a]</a> berong me,&rsquo; observed his
+majesty with a wave of his hand; and he counts and sells it by
+the houseful.&nbsp; &lsquo;You got copra, king?&rsquo; I have
+heard a trader ask.&nbsp; &lsquo;I got two, three outches,&rsquo;
+<a name="citation279b"></a><a href="#footnote279b"
+class="citation">[279b]</a> his majesty replied: &lsquo;I think
+three.&rsquo;&nbsp; Hence the commercial importance of Apemama,
+the trade of three islands being centred there in a single hand;
+hence it is that so many whites have tried in vain to gain or to
+preserve a footing; hence ships are adorned, cooks have special
+orders, and captains array themselves in smiles, to greet the
+king.&nbsp; If he be pleased with his welcome and the fare he may
+pass days on board, and, every day, and sometimes every hour,
+will be of profit to the ship.&nbsp; He oscillates between the
+cabin, where he is entertained with strange meats, and the
+trade-room, where he enjoys the pleasures of shopping on a scale
+to match his person.&nbsp; A few obsequious attendants squat by
+the house door, awaiting his least signal.&nbsp; In the boat,
+which has been suffered to drop astern, one or two of his wives
+lie covered from the sun under mats, tossed by the short sea of
+the lagoon, and enduring agonies of heat and tedium.&nbsp; This
+severity is now and then relaxed and the wives allowed on
+board.&nbsp; Three or four were thus favoured on the day of our
+arrival: substantial ladies airily attired in <i>ridis</i>.&nbsp;
+Each had a share of copra, her <i>peculium</i>, to dispose of for
+herself.&nbsp; The display in the trade-room&mdash;hats,
+ribbbons, dresses, scents, tins of salmon&mdash;the pride of the
+eye and the lust of the flesh&mdash;tempted them in vain.&nbsp;
+They had but the one idea&mdash;tobacco, the island currency,
+tantamount to minted gold; returned to shore with it, burthened
+but rejoicing; and late into the night, on the royal terrace,
+were to be seen counting the sticks by lamplight in the open
+air.</p>
+<p>The king is no such economist.&nbsp; He is greedy of things
+new and foreign.&nbsp; House after house, chest after chest, in
+the palace precinct, is already crammed with clocks, musical
+boxes, blue spectacles, umbrellas, knitted waistcoats, bolts of
+stuff, tools, rifles, fowling-pieces, medicines, European foods,
+sewing-machines, and, what is more extraordinary, stoves: all
+that ever caught his eye, tickled his appetite, pleased him for
+its use, or puzzled him with its apparent inutility.&nbsp; And
+still his lust is unabated.&nbsp; He is possessed by the seven
+devils of the collector.&nbsp; He hears a thing spoken of, and a
+shadow comes on his face.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think I no got
+him,&rsquo; he will say; and the treasures he has seem worthless
+in comparison.&nbsp; If a ship be bound for Apemama, the merchant
+racks his brain to hit upon some novelty.&nbsp; This he leaves
+carelessly in the main cabin or partly conceals in his own berth,
+so that the king shall spy it for himself.&nbsp; &lsquo;How much
+you want?&rsquo; inquires Tembinok&rsquo;, passing and
+pointing.&nbsp; &lsquo;No, king; that too dear,&rsquo; returns
+the trader.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think I like him,&rsquo; says the
+king.&nbsp; This was a bowl of gold-fish.&nbsp; On another
+occasion it was scented soap.&nbsp; &lsquo;No, king; that cost
+too much,&rsquo; said the trader; &lsquo;too good for a
+Kanaka.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;How much you got?&nbsp; I take him
+all,&rsquo; replied his majesty, and became the lord of seventeen
+boxes at two dollars a cake.&nbsp; Or again, the merchant feigns
+the article is not for sale, is private property, an heirloom or
+a gift; and the trick infallibly succeeds.&nbsp; Thwart the king
+and you hold him.&nbsp; His autocratic nature rears at the
+affront of opposition.&nbsp; He accepts it for a challenge; sets
+his teeth like a hunter going at a fence; and with no mark of
+emotion, scarce even of interest, stolidly piles up the
+price.&nbsp; Thus, for our sins, he took a fancy to my
+wife&rsquo;s dressing-bag, a thing entirely useless to the man,
+and sadly battered by years of service.&nbsp; Early one forenoon
+he came to our house, sat down, and abruptly offered to purchase
+it.&nbsp; I told him I sold nothing, and the bag at any rate was
+a present from a friend; but he was acquainted with these
+pretexts from of old, and knew what they were worth and how to
+meet them.&nbsp; Adopting what I believe is called &lsquo;the
+object method,&rsquo; he drew out a bag of English gold,
+sovereigns and half-sovereigns, and began to lay them one by one
+in silence on the table; at each fresh piece reading our faces
+with a look.&nbsp; In vain I continued to protest I was no
+trader; he deigned not to reply.&nbsp; There must have been
+twenty pounds on the table, he was still going on, and irritation
+had begun to mingle with our embarrassment, when a happy idea
+came to our delivery.&nbsp; Since his majesty thought so much of
+the bag, we said, we must beg him to accept it as a
+present.&nbsp; It was the most surprising turn in
+Tembinok&rsquo;s experience.&nbsp; He perceived too late that his
+persistence was unmannerly; hung his head a while in silence;
+then, lifting up a sheepish countenance, &lsquo;I
+&lsquo;shamed,&rsquo; said the tyrant.&nbsp; It was the first and
+the last time we heard him own to a flaw in his behaviour.&nbsp;
+Half an hour after he sent us a camphor-wood chest worth only a
+few dollars&mdash;but then heaven knows what Tembinok&rsquo; had
+paid for it.</p>
+<p>Cunning by nature, and versed for forty years in the
+government of men, it must not be supposed that he is cheated
+blindly, or has resigned himself without resistance to be the
+milch-cow of the passing trader.&nbsp; His efforts have been even
+heroic.&nbsp; Like Nakaeia of Makin, he has owned
+schooners.&nbsp; More fortunate than Nakaeia, he has found
+captains.&nbsp; Ships of his have sailed as far as to the
+colonies.&nbsp; He has trafficked direct, in his own bottoms,
+with New Zealand.&nbsp; And even so, even there, the
+world-enveloping dishonesty of the white man prevented him; his
+profit melted, his ship returned in debt, the money for the
+insurance was embezzled, and when the <i>Coronet</i> came to be
+lost, he was astonished to find he had lost all.&nbsp; At this he
+dropped his weapons; owned he might as hopefully wrestle with the
+winds of heaven; and like an experienced sheep, submitted his
+fleece thenceforward to the shearers.&nbsp; He is the last man in
+the world to waste anger on the incurable; accepts it with
+cynical composure; asks no more in those he deals with than a
+certain decency of moderation; drives as good a bargain as he
+can; and when he considers he is more than usually swindled,
+writes it in his memory against the merchant&rsquo;s name.&nbsp;
+He once ran over to me a list of captains and supercargoes with
+whom he had done business, classing them under three heads:
+&lsquo;He cheat a litty&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;He cheat
+plenty&rsquo;&mdash;and &lsquo;I think he cheat too
+much.&rsquo;&nbsp; For the first two classes he expressed perfect
+toleration; sometimes, but not always, for the third.&nbsp; I was
+present when a certain merchant was turned about his business,
+and was the means (having a considerable influence ever since the
+bag) of patching up the dispute.&nbsp; Even on the day of our
+arrival there was like to have been a hitch with Captain Reid:
+the ground of which is perhaps worth recital.&nbsp; Among goods
+exported specially for Tembinok&rsquo; there is a beverage known
+(and labelled) as Hennessy&rsquo;s brandy.&nbsp; It is neither
+Hennessy, nor even brandy; is about the colour of sherry, but is
+not sherry; tastes of kirsch, and yet neither is it kirsch.&nbsp;
+The king, at least, has grown used to this amazing brand, and
+rather prides himself upon the taste; and any substitution is a
+double offence, being at once to cheat him and to cast a doubt
+upon his palate.&nbsp; A similar weakness is to be observed in
+all connoisseurs.&nbsp; Now the last case sold by the
+<i>Equator</i> was found to contain a different and I would
+fondly fancy a superior distillation; and the conversation opened
+very black for Captain Reid.&nbsp; But Tembinok&rsquo; is a
+moderate man.&nbsp; He was reminded and admitted that all men
+were liable to error, even himself; accepted the principle that a
+fault handsomely acknowledged should be condoned; and wound the
+matter up with this proposal: &lsquo;Tuppoti <a
+name="citation283"></a><a href="#footnote283"
+class="citation">[283]</a> I mi&rsquo;take, you &rsquo;peakee
+me.&nbsp; Tuppoti you mi&rsquo;take, I &rsquo;peakee you.&nbsp;
+Mo&rsquo; betta.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>After dinner and supper in the cabin, a glass or two of
+&lsquo;Hennetti&rsquo;&mdash;the genuine article this time, with
+the kirsch bouquet,&mdash;and five hours&rsquo; lounging on the
+trade-room counter, royalty embarked for home.&nbsp; Three tacks
+grounded the boat before the palace; the wives were carried
+ashore on the backs of vassals; Tembinok&rsquo; stepped on a
+railed platform like a steamer&rsquo;s gangway, and was borne
+shoulder high through the shallows, up the beach, and by an
+inclined plane, paved with pebbles, to the glaring terrace where
+he dwells.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER II&mdash;THE KING OF APEMAMA: FOUNDATION OF EQUATOR
+TOWN</h3>
+<p>Our first sight of Tembinok&rsquo; was a matter of concern,
+almost alarm, to my whole party.&nbsp; We had a favour to seek;
+we must approach in the proper courtly attitude of a suitor; and
+must either please him or fail in the main purpose of our
+voyage.&nbsp; It was our wish to land and live in Apemama, and
+see more near at hand the odd character of the man and the odd
+(or rather ancient) condition of his island.&nbsp; In all other
+isles of the South Seas a white man may land with his chest, and
+set up house for a lifetime, if he choose, and if he have the
+money or the trade; no hindrance is conceivable.&nbsp; But
+Apemama is a close island, lying there in the sea with closed
+doors; the king himself, like a vigilant officer, ready at the
+wicket to scrutinise and reject intrenching visitors.&nbsp; Hence
+the attraction of our enterprise; not merely because it was a
+little difficult, but because this social quarantine, a curiosity
+in itself, has been the preservative of others.</p>
+<p>Tembinok&rsquo;, like most tyrants, is a conservative; like
+many conservatives, he eagerly welcomes new ideas, and, except in
+the field of politics, leans to practical reform.&nbsp; When the
+missionaries came, professing a knowledge of the truth, he
+readily received them; attended their worship, acquired the
+accomplishment of public prayer, and made himself a student at
+their feet.&nbsp; It is thus&mdash;it is by the cultivation of
+similar passing chances&mdash;that he has learned to read, to
+write, to cipher, and to speak his queer, personal English, so
+different from ordinary &lsquo;Beach de Mar,&rsquo; so much more
+obscure, expressive, and condensed.&nbsp; His education attended
+to, he found time to become critical of the new inmates.&nbsp;
+Like Nakaeia of Makin, he is an admirer of silence in the island;
+broods over it like a great ear; has spies who report daily; and
+had rather his subjects sang than talked.&nbsp; The service, and
+in particular the sermon, were thus sure to become offences:
+&lsquo;Here, in my island, <i>I</i> &rsquo;peak,&rsquo; he once
+observed to me.&nbsp; &lsquo;My chieps no &rsquo;peak&mdash;do
+what I talk.&rsquo;&nbsp; He looked at the missionary, and what
+did he see?&nbsp; &lsquo;See Kanaka &rsquo;peak in a big
+outch!&rsquo; he cried, with a strong ring of sarcasm.&nbsp; Yet
+he endured the subversive spectacle, and might even have
+continued to endure it, had not a fresh point arisen.&nbsp; He
+looked again, to employ his own figure; and the Kanaka was no
+longer speaking, he was doing worse&mdash;he was building a
+copra-house.&nbsp; The king was touched in his chief interests;
+revenue and prerogative were threatened.&nbsp; He considered
+besides (and some think with him) that trade is incompatible with
+the missionary claims.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tuppoti mitonary think
+&ldquo;good man&rdquo;: very good.&nbsp; Tuppoti he think
+&ldquo;cobra&rdquo;: no good.&nbsp; I send him away
+ship.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such was his abrupt history of the evangelist
+in Apemama.</p>
+<p>Similar deportations are common: &lsquo;I send him away
+ship&rsquo; is the epitaph of not a few, his majesty paying the
+exile&rsquo;s fare to the next place of call.&nbsp; For instance,
+being passionately fond of European food, he has several times
+added to his household a white cook, and one after another these
+have been deported.&nbsp; They, on their side, swear they were
+not paid their wages; he, on his, that they robbed and swindled
+him beyond endurance: both perhaps justly.&nbsp; A more important
+case was that of an agent, despatched (as I heard the story) by a
+firm of merchants to worm his way into the king&rsquo;s good
+graces, become, if possible, premier, and handle the copra in the
+interest of his employers.&nbsp; He obtained authority to land,
+practised his fascinations, was patiently listened to by
+Tembinok&rsquo;, supposed himself on the highway to success; and
+behold! when the next ship touched at Apemama, the would-be
+premier was flung into a boat&mdash;had on board&mdash;his fare
+paid, and so good-bye.&nbsp; But it is needless to multiply
+examples; the proof of the pudding is in the eating.&nbsp; When
+we came to Apemama, of so many white men who have scrambled for a
+place in that rich market, one remained&mdash;a silent, sober,
+solitary, niggardly recluse, of whom the king remarks, &lsquo;I
+think he good; he no &rsquo;peak.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I was warned at the outset we might very well fail in our
+design: yet never dreamed of what proved to be the fact, that we
+should be left four-and-twenty hours in suspense and come within
+an ace of ultimate rejection.&nbsp; Captain Reid had primed
+himself; no sooner was the king on board, and the Hennetti
+question amicably settled, than he proceeded to express my
+request and give an abstract of my claims and virtues.&nbsp; The
+gammon about Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son might do for Butaritari;
+it was out of the question here; and I now figured as &lsquo;one
+of the Old Men of England,&rsquo; a person of deep knowledge,
+come expressly to visit Tembinok&rsquo;s dominion, and eager to
+report upon it to the no less eager Queen Victoria.&nbsp; The
+king made no shadow of an answer, and presently began upon a
+different subject.&nbsp; We might have thought that he had not
+heard, or not understood; only that we found ourselves the
+subject of a constant study.&nbsp; As we sat at meals, he took us
+in series and fixed upon each, for near a minute at a time, the
+same hard and thoughtful stare.&nbsp; As he thus looked he seemed
+to forget himself, the subject and the company, and to become
+absorbed in the process of his thought; the look was wholly
+impersonal; I have seen the same in the eyes of
+portrait-painters.&nbsp; The counts upon which whites have been
+deported are mainly four: cheating Tembinok&rsquo;, meddling
+overmuch with copra, which is the source of his wealth, and one
+of the sinews of his power, <i>&rsquo;peaking</i>, and political
+intrigue.&nbsp; I felt guiltless upon all; but how to show
+it?&nbsp; I would not have taken copra in a gift: how to express
+that quality by my dinner-table bearing?&nbsp; The rest of the
+party shared my innocence and my embarrassment.&nbsp; They shared
+also in my mortification when after two whole meal-times and the
+odd moments of an afternoon devoted to this reconnoitring,
+Tembinok&rsquo; took his leave in silence.&nbsp; Next morning,
+the same undisguised study, the same silence, was resumed; and
+the second day had come to its maturity before I was informed
+abruptly that I had stood the ordeal.&nbsp; &lsquo;I look your
+eye.&nbsp; You good man.&nbsp; You no lie,&rsquo; said the king:
+a doubtful compliment to a writer of romance.&nbsp; Later he
+explained he did not quite judge by the eye only, but the mouth
+as well.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tuppoti I see man,&rsquo; he
+explained.&nbsp; &lsquo;I no tavvy good man, bad man.&nbsp; I
+look eye, look mouth.&nbsp; Then I tavvy.&nbsp; Look <i>eye</i>,
+look mouth,&rsquo; he repeated.&nbsp; And indeed in our case the
+mouth had the most to do with it, and it was by our talk that we
+gained admission to the island; the king promising himself (and I
+believe really amassing) a vast amount of useful knowledge ere we
+left.</p>
+<p>The terms of our admission were as follows: We were to choose
+a site, and the king should there build us a town.&nbsp; His
+people should work for us, but the king only was to give them
+orders.&nbsp; One of his cooks should come daily to help mine,
+and to learn of him.&nbsp; In case our stores ran out, he would
+supply us, and be repaid on the return of the
+<i>Equator</i>.&nbsp; On the other hand, he was to come to meals
+with us when so inclined; when he stayed at home, a dish was to
+be sent him from our table; and I solemnly engaged to give his
+subjects no liquor or money (both of which they are forbidden to
+possess) and no tobacco, which they were to receive only from the
+royal hand.&nbsp; I think I remember to have protested against
+the stringency of this last article; at least, it was relaxed,
+and when a man worked for me I was allowed to give him a pipe of
+tobacco on the premises, but none to take away.</p>
+<p>The site of Equator City&mdash;we named our city for the
+schooner&mdash;was soon chosen.&nbsp; The immediate shores of the
+lagoon are windy and blinding; Tembinok&rsquo; himself is glad to
+grope blue-spectacled on his terrace; and we fled the
+neighbourhood of the red <i>conjunctiva</i>, the suppurating
+eyeball, and the beggar who pursues and beseeches the passing
+foreigner for eye wash.&nbsp; Behind the town the country is
+diversified; here open, sandy, uneven, and dotted with dwarfish
+palms; here cut up with taro trenches, deep and shallow, and,
+according to the growth of the plants, presenting now the
+appearance of a sandy tannery, now of an alleyed and green
+garden.&nbsp; A path leads towards the sea, mounting abruptly to
+the main level of the island&mdash;twenty or even thirty feet,
+although Findlay gives five; and just hard by the top of the
+rise, where the coco-palms begin to be well grown, we found a
+grove of pandanus, and a piece of soil pleasantly covered with
+green underbush.&nbsp; A well was not far off under a rustic
+well-house; nearer still, in a sandy cup of the land, a pond
+where we might wash our clothes.&nbsp; The place was out of the
+wind, out of the sun, and out of sight of the village.&nbsp; It
+was shown to the king, and the town promised for the morrow.</p>
+<p>The morrow came, Mr. Osbourne landed, found nothing done, and
+carried his complaint to Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He heard it,
+rose, called for a Winchester, stepped without the royal
+palisade, and fired two shots in the air.&nbsp; A shot in the air
+is the first Apemama warning; it has the force of a proclamation
+in more loquacious countries; and his majesty remarked agreeably
+that it would make his labourers &lsquo;mo&rsquo;
+bright.&rsquo;&nbsp; In less than thirty minutes, accordingly,
+the men had mustered, the work was begun, and we were told that
+we might bring our baggage when we pleased.</p>
+<p>It was two in the afternoon ere the first boat was beached,
+and the long procession of chests and crates and sacks began to
+straggle through the sandy desert towards Equator Town.&nbsp; The
+grove of pandanus was practically a thing of the past.&nbsp; Fire
+surrounded and smoke rose in the green underbush.&nbsp; In a wide
+circuit the axes were still crashing.&nbsp; Those very advantages
+for which the place was chosen, it had been the king&rsquo;s
+first idea to abolish; and in the midst of this devastation there
+stood already a good-sized maniap&rsquo; and a small closed
+house.&nbsp; A mat was spread near by for Tembinok&rsquo;; here
+he sat superintending, in cardinal red, a pith helmet on his
+head, a meerschaum pipe in his mouth, a wife stretched at his
+back with custody of the matches and tobacco.&nbsp; Twenty or
+thirty feet in front of him the bulk of the workers squatted on
+the ground; some of the bush here survived and in this the
+commons sat nearly to their shoulders, and presented only an arc
+of brown faces, black heads, and attentive eyes fixed on his
+majesty.&nbsp; Long pauses reigned, during which the subjects
+stared and the king smoked.&nbsp; Then Tembinok&rsquo; would
+raise his voice and speak shrilly and briefly.&nbsp; There was
+never a response in words; but if the speech were jesting, there
+came by way of answer discreet, obsequious laughter&mdash;such
+laughter as we hear in schoolrooms; and if it were practical, the
+sudden uprising and departure of the squad.&nbsp; Twice they so
+disappeared, and returned with further elements of the city: a
+second house and a second maniap&rsquo;.&nbsp; It was singular to
+spy, far off through the coco stems, the silent oncoming of the
+maniap&rsquo;, at first (it seemed) swimming spontaneously in the
+air&mdash;but on a nearer view betraying under the eaves many
+score of moving naked legs.&nbsp; In all the affair servile
+obedience was no less remarkable than servile deliberation.&nbsp;
+The gang had here mustered by the note of a deadly weapon; the
+man who looked on was the unquestioned master of their lives; and
+except for civility, they bestirred themselves like so many
+American hotel clerks.&nbsp; The spectator was aware of an
+unobtrusive yet invincible inertia, at which the skipper of a
+trading dandy might have torn his hair.</p>
+<p>Yet the work was accomplished.&nbsp; By dusk, when his majesty
+withdrew, the town was founded and complete, a new and ruder
+Amphion having called it from nothing with three cracks of a
+rifle.&nbsp; And the next morning the same conjurer obliged us
+with a further miracle: a mystic rampart fencing us, so that the
+path which ran by our doors became suddenly impassable, the
+inhabitants who had business across the isle must fetch a wide
+circuit, and we sat in the midst in a transparent privacy,
+seeing, seen, but unapproachable, like bees in a glass
+hive.&nbsp; The outward and visible sign of this glamour was no
+more than a few ragged coco-leaf garlands round the stems of the
+outlying palms; but its significance reposed on the tremendous
+sanction of the tapu and the guns of Tembinok&rsquo;.</p>
+<p>We made our first meal that night in the improvised city,
+where we were to stay two months, and which&mdash;so soon as we
+had done with it&mdash;was to vanish in a day as it appeared, its
+elements returning whence they came, the tapu raised, the traffic
+on the path resumed, the sun and the moon peering in vain between
+the palm-trees for the bygone work, the wind blowing over an
+empty site.&nbsp; Yet the place, which is now only an episode in
+some memories, seemed to have been built, and to be destined to
+endure, for years.&nbsp; It was a busy hamlet.&nbsp; One of the
+maniap&rsquo;s we made our dining-room, one the kitchen.&nbsp;
+The houses we reserved for sleeping.&nbsp; They were on the
+admirable Apemama plan: out and away the best house in the South
+Seas; standing some three feet above the ground on posts; the
+sides of woven flaps, which can be raised to admit light and air,
+or lowered to shut out the wind and the rain: airy, healthy,
+clean, and watertight.&nbsp; We had a hen of a remarkable kind:
+almost unique in my experience, being a hen that occasionally
+laid eggs.&nbsp; Not far off, Mrs. Stevenson tended a garden of
+salad and shalots.&nbsp; The salad was devoured by the
+hen&mdash;which was her bane.&nbsp; The shalots were served out a
+leaf at a time, and welcomed and relished like peaches.&nbsp;
+Toddy and green cocoa-nuts were brought us daily.&nbsp; We once
+had a present of fish from the king, and once of a turtle.&nbsp;
+Sometimes we shot so-called plover along on the shore, sometimes
+wild chicken in the bush.&nbsp; The rest of our diet was from
+tins.</p>
+<p>Our occupations were very various.&nbsp; While some of the
+party would be away sketching, Mr. Osbourne and I hammered away
+at a novel.&nbsp; We read Gibbon and Carlyle aloud; we blew on
+flageolets, we strummed on guitars; we took photographs by the
+light of the sun, the moon, and flash-powder; sometimes we played
+cards.&nbsp; Pot-hunting engaged a part of our leisure.&nbsp; I
+have myself passed afternoons in the exciting but innocuous
+pursuit of winged animals with a revolver; and it was fortunate
+there were better shots of the party, and fortunate the king
+could lend us a more suitable weapon, in the form of an excellent
+fowling-piece, or our spare diet had been sparer still.</p>
+<p>Night was the time to see our city, after the moon was up,
+after the lamps were lighted, and so long as the fire sparkled in
+the cook-house.&nbsp; We suffered from a plague of flies and
+mosquitoes, comparable to that of Egypt; our dinner-table (lent,
+like all our furniture, by the king) must be enclosed in a tent
+of netting, our citadel and refuge; and this became all luminous,
+and bulged and beaconed under the eaves, like the globe of some
+monstrous lamp under the margin of its shade.&nbsp; Our cabins,
+the sides being propped at a variety of inclinations, spelled out
+strange, angular patterns of brightness.&nbsp; In his roofed and
+open kitchen, Ah Fu was to be seen by lamp and firelight,
+dabbling among pots.&nbsp; Over all, there fell in the season an
+extraordinary splendour of mellow moonshine.&nbsp; The sand
+sparkled as with the dust of diamonds; the stars had
+vanished.&nbsp; At intervals, a dusky night-bird, slow and low
+flying, passed in the colonnade of the tree stems and uttered a
+hoarse croaking cry.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER III&mdash;THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE PALACE OF MANY
+WOMEN</h3>
+<p>The palace, or rather the ground which it includes, is several
+acres in extent.&nbsp; A terrace encloses it toward the lagoon;
+on the side of the land, a palisade with several gates.&nbsp;
+These are scarce intended for defence; a man, if he were strong,
+might easily pluck down the palisade; he need not be specially
+active to leap from the beach upon the terrace.&nbsp; There is no
+parade of guards, soldiers, or weapons; the armoury is under lock
+and key; and the only sentinels are certain inconspicuous old
+women lurking day and night before the gates.&nbsp; By day, these
+crones were often engaged in boiling syrup or the like household
+occupation; by night, they lay ambushed in the shadow or crouched
+along the palisade, filling the office of eunuchs to this harem,
+sole guards upon a tyrant life.</p>
+<p>Female wardens made a fit outpost for this palace of many
+women.&nbsp; Of the number of the king&rsquo;s wives I have no
+guess; and but a loose idea of their function.&nbsp; He himself
+displayed embarrassment when they were referred to as his wives,
+called them himself &lsquo;my pamily,&rsquo; and explained they
+were his &lsquo;cutcheons&rsquo;&mdash;cousins.&nbsp; We
+distinguished four of the crowd: the king&rsquo;s mother; his
+sister, a grave, trenchant woman, with much of her
+brother&rsquo;s intelligence; the queen proper, to whom (and to
+whom alone) my wife was formally presented; and the favourite of
+the hour, a pretty, graceful girl, who sat with the king daily,
+and once (when he shed tears) consoled him with caresses.&nbsp; I
+am assured that even with her his relations are platonic.&nbsp;
+In the background figured a multitude of ladies, the lean, the
+plump, and the elephantine, some in sacque frocks, some in the
+hairbreadth <i>ridi</i>; high-born and low, slave and mistress;
+from the queen to the scullion, from the favourite to the scraggy
+sentries at the palisade.&nbsp; Not all of these of course are of
+&lsquo;my pamily,&rsquo;&mdash;many are mere attendants; yet a
+surprising number shared the responsibility of the king&rsquo;s
+trust.&nbsp; These were key-bearers, treasurers, wardens of the
+armoury, the napery, and the stores.&nbsp; Each knew and did her
+part to admiration.&nbsp; Should anything be required&mdash;a
+particular gun, perhaps, or a particular bolt of stuff,&mdash;the
+right queen was summoned; she came bringing the right chest,
+opened it in the king&rsquo;s presence, and displayed her charge
+in perfect preservation&mdash;the gun cleaned and oiled, the
+goods duly folded.&nbsp; Without delay or haste, and with the
+minimum of speech, the whole great establishment turned on wheels
+like a machine.&nbsp; Nowhere have I seen order more complete and
+pervasive.&nbsp; And yet I was always reminded of Norse tales of
+trolls and ogres who kept their hearts buried in the ground for
+the mere safety, and must confide the secret to their
+wives.&nbsp; For these weapons are the life of
+Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He does not aim at popularity; but drives
+and braves his subjects, with a simplicity of domination which it
+is impossible not to admire, hard not to sympathise with.&nbsp;
+Should one out of so many prove faithless, should the armoury be
+secretly unlocked, should the crones have dozed by the palisade
+and the weapons find their way unseen into the village,
+revolution would be nearly certain, death the most probable
+result, and the spirit of the tyrant of Apemama flit to rejoin
+his predecessors of Mariki and Tapituea.&nbsp; Yet those whom he
+so trusts are all women, and all rivals.</p>
+<p>There is indeed a ministry and staff of males: cook, steward,
+carpenter, and supercargoes: the hierarchy of a schooner.&nbsp;
+The spies, &lsquo;his majesty&rsquo;s daily papers,&rsquo; as we
+called them, come every morning to report, and go again.&nbsp;
+The cook and steward are concerned with the table only.&nbsp; The
+supercargoes, whose business it is to keep tally of the copra at
+three pounds a month and a percentage, are rarely in the palace;
+and two at least are in the other islands.&nbsp; The carpenter,
+indeed, shrewd and jolly old Rubam&mdash;query,
+Reuben?&mdash;promoted on my last visit to the greater dignity of
+governor, is daily present, altering, extending, embellishing,
+pursuing the endless series of the king&rsquo;s inventions; and
+his majesty will sometimes pass an afternoon watching and talking
+with Rubam at his work.&nbsp; But the males are still outsiders;
+none seems to be armed, none is entrusted with a key; by dusk
+they are all usually departed from the palace; and the weight of
+the monarchy and of the monarch&rsquo;s life reposes unshared on
+the women.</p>
+<p>Here is a household unlike, indeed, to one of ours; more
+unlike still to the Oriental harem: that of an elderly childless
+man, his days menaced, dwelling alone amid a bevy of women of all
+ages, ranks, and relationships,&mdash;the mother, the sister, the
+cousin, the legitimate wife, the concubine, the favourite, the
+eldest born, and she of yesterday; he, in their midst, the only
+master, the only male, the sole dispenser of honours, clothes,
+and luxuries, the sole mark of multitudinous ambitions and
+desires.&nbsp; I doubt if you could find a man in Europe so bold
+as to attempt this piece of tact and government.&nbsp; And
+seemingly Tembinok&rsquo; himself had trouble in the
+beginning.&nbsp; I hear of him shooting at a wife for some levity
+on board a schooner.&nbsp; Another, on some more serious offence,
+he slew outright; he exposed her body in an open box, and (to
+make the warning more memorable) suffered it to putrefy before
+the palace gate.&nbsp; Doubtless his growing years have come to
+his assistance; for upon so large a scale it is more easy to play
+the father than the husband.&nbsp; And to-day, at least to the
+eye of a stranger, all seems to go smoothly, and the wives to be
+proud of their trust, proud of their rank, and proud of their
+cunning lord.</p>
+<p>I conceived they made rather a hero of the man.&nbsp; A
+popular master in a girls&rsquo; school might, perhaps, offer a
+figure of his preponderating station.&nbsp; But then the master
+does not eat, sleep, live, and wash his dirty linen in the midst
+of his admirers; he escapes, he has a room of his own, he leads a
+private life; if he had nothing else, he has the holidays, and
+the more unhappy Tembinok&rsquo; is always on the stage and on
+the stretch.</p>
+<p>In all my coming and going, I never heard him speak harshly or
+express the least displeasure.&nbsp; An extreme, rather heavy,
+benignity&mdash;the benignity of one sure to be
+obeyed&mdash;marked his demeanour; so that I was at times
+reminded of Samual Richardson in his circle of admiring
+women.&nbsp; The wives spoke up and seemed to volunteer opinions,
+like our wives at home&mdash;or, say, like doting but respectable
+aunts.&nbsp; Altogether, I conclude that he rules his seraglio
+much more by art than terror; and those who give a different
+account (and who have none of them enjoyed my opportunities of
+observation) perhaps failed to distinguish between degrees of
+rank, between &lsquo;my pamily&rsquo; and the hangers-on,
+laundresses, and prostitutes.</p>
+<p>A notable feature is the evening game of cards when lamps are
+set forth upon the terrace, and &lsquo;I and my pamily&rsquo;
+play for tobacco by the hour.&nbsp; It is highly characteristic
+of Tembinok&rsquo; that he must invent a game for himself; highly
+characteristic of his worshipping household that they should
+swear by the absurd invention.&nbsp; It is founded on poker,
+played with the honours out of many packs, and inconceivably
+dreary.&nbsp; But I have a passion for all games, studied it, and
+am supposed to be the only white who ever fairly grasped its
+principle: a fact for which the wives (with whom I was not
+otherwise popular) admired me with acclamation.&nbsp; It was
+impossible to be deceived; this was a genuine feeling: they were
+proud of their private game, had been cut to the quick by the
+want of interest shown in it by others, and expanded under the
+flattery of my attention.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; puts up a double
+stake, and receives in return two hands to choose from: a shallow
+artifice which the wives (in all these years) have not yet
+fathomed.&nbsp; He himself, when talking with me privately, made
+not the least secret that he was secure of winning; and it was
+thus he explained his recent liberality on board the
+<i>Equator</i>.&nbsp; He let the wives buy their own tobacco,
+which pleased them at the moment.&nbsp; He won it back at cards,
+which made him once more, and without fresh expense, that which
+he ought to be,&mdash;the sole fount of all indulgences.&nbsp;
+And he summed the matter up in that phrase with which he almost
+always concludes any account of his policy: &lsquo;Mo&rsquo;
+betta.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The palace compound is laid with broken coral, excruciating to
+the eyes and the bare feet, but exquisitely raked and
+weeded.&nbsp; A score or more of buildings lie in a sort of
+street along the palisade and scattered on the margin of the
+terrace; dwelling-houses for the wives and the attendants,
+storehouses for the king&rsquo;s curios and treasures, spacious
+maniap&rsquo;s for feast or council, some on pillars of wood,
+some on piers of masonry.&nbsp; One was still in hand, a new
+invention, the king&rsquo;s latest born: a European frame-house
+built for coolness inside a lofty maniap&rsquo;: its roof planked
+like a ship&rsquo;s deck to be a raised, shady, and yet private
+promenade.&nbsp; It was here the king spent hours with Rubam;
+here I would sometimes join them; the place had a most singular
+appearance; and I must say I was greatly taken with the fancy,
+and joined with relish in the counsels of the architects.</p>
+<p>Suppose we had business with his majesty by day: we strolled
+over the sand and by the dwarfish palms, exchanged a
+&lsquo;<i>K&otilde;namaori</i>&rsquo; with the crone on duty, and
+entered the compound.&nbsp; The wide sheet of coral glared before
+us deserted; all having stowed themselves in dark canvas from the
+excess of room.&nbsp; I have gone to and fro in that labyrinth of
+a place, seeking the king; and the only breathing creature I
+could find was when I peered under the eaves of a maniap&rsquo;,
+and saw the brawny body of one of the wives stretched on the
+floor, a naked Amazon plunged in noiseless slumber.&nbsp; If it
+were still the hour of the &lsquo;morning papers&rsquo; the quest
+would be more easy, the half-dozen obsequious, sly dogs squatting
+on the ground outside a house, crammed as far as possible in its
+narrow shadow, and turning to the king a row of leering
+faces.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; would be within, the flaps of the
+cabin raised, the trade blowing through, hearing their
+report.&nbsp; Like journalists nearer home, when the day&rsquo;s
+news were scanty, these would make the more of it in words; and I
+have known one to fill up a barren morning with an imaginary
+conversation of two dogs.&nbsp; Sometimes the king deigns to
+laugh, sometimes to question or jest with them, his voice
+sounding shrilly from the cabin.&nbsp; By his side he may have
+the heir-apparent, Paul, his nephew and adopted son, six years
+old, stark naked, and a model of young human beauty.&nbsp; And
+there will always be the favourite and perhaps two other wives
+awake; four more lying supine under mats and whelmed in
+slumber.&nbsp; Or perhaps we came later, fell on a more private
+hour, and found Tembinok&rsquo; retired in the house with the
+favourite, an earthenware spittoon, a leaden inkpot, and a
+commercial ledger.&nbsp; In the last, lying on his belly, he
+writes from day to day the uneventful history of his reign; and
+when thus employed he betrayed a touch of fretfulness on
+interruption with which I was well able to sympathise.&nbsp; The
+royal annalist once read me a page or so, translating as he went;
+but the passage being genealogical, and the author boggling
+extremely in his version, I own I have been sometimes better
+entertained.&nbsp; Nor does he confine himself to prose, but
+touches the lyre, too, in his leisure moments, and passes for the
+chief bard of his kingdom, as he is its sole public character,
+leading architect, and only merchant.</p>
+<p>His competence, however, does not reach to music; and his
+verses, when they are ready, are taught to a professional
+musician, who sets them and instructs the chorus.&nbsp; Asked
+what his songs were about, Tembinok&rsquo; replied,
+&lsquo;Sweethearts and trees and the sea.&nbsp; Not all the same
+true, all the same lie.&rsquo;&nbsp; For a condensed view of
+lyrical poetry (except that he seems to have forgot the stars and
+flowers) this would be hard to mend.&nbsp; These multifarious
+occupations bespeak (in a native and an absolute prince) unusual
+activity of mind.</p>
+<p>The palace court at noon is a spot to be remembered with awe,
+the visitor scrambling there, on the loose stones, through a
+splendid nightmare of light and heat; but the sweep of the wind
+delivers it from flies and mosquitoes; and with the set of sun it
+became heavenly.&nbsp; I remember it best on moonless
+nights.&nbsp; The air was like a bath of milk.&nbsp; Countless
+shining stars were overhead, the lagoon paved with them.&nbsp;
+Herds of wives squatted by companies on the gravel, softly
+chatting.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; would doff his jacket, and sit
+bare and silent, perhaps meditating songs; the favourite usually
+by him, silent also.&nbsp; Meanwhile in the midst of the court,
+the palace lanterns were being lit and marshalled in rank upon
+the ground&mdash;six or eight square yards of them; a sight that
+gave one strange ideas of the number of &lsquo;my pamily&rsquo;:
+such a sight as may be seen about dusk in a corner of some great
+terminus at home.&nbsp; Presently these fared off into all
+corners of the precinct, lighting the last labours of the day,
+lighting one after another to their rest that prodigious company
+of women.&nbsp; A few lingered in the middle of the court for the
+card-party, and saw the honours shuffled and dealt, and
+Tembinok&rsquo; deliberating between his two; hands, and the
+queens losing their tobacco.&nbsp; Then these also were scattered
+and extinguished; and their place was taken by a great bonfire,
+the night-light of the palace.&nbsp; When this was no more,
+smaller fires burned likewise at the gates.&nbsp; These were
+tended by the crones, unseen, unsleeping&mdash;not always
+unheard.&nbsp; Should any approach in the dark hours, a guarded
+alert made the circuit of the palisade; each sentry signalled her
+neighbour with a stone; the rattle of falling pebbles passed and
+died away; and the wardens of Tembinok&rsquo; crouched in their
+places silent as before.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV&mdash;THE KING OF APEMAMA: EQUATOR TOWN AND THE
+PALACE</h3>
+<p>Five persons were detailed to wait upon us.&nbsp; Uncle
+Parker, who brought us toddy and green nuts, was an elderly,
+almost an old man, with the spirits, the industry, and the morals
+of a boy of ten.&nbsp; His face was ancient, droll, and
+diabolical, the skin stretched over taut sinews, like a sail on
+the guide-rope; and he smiled with every muscle of his
+head.&nbsp; His nuts must be counted every day, or he would
+deceive us in the tale; they must be daily examined, or some
+would prove to be unhusked; nothing but the king&rsquo;s name,
+and scarcely that, would hold him to his duty.&nbsp; After his
+toils were over he was given a pipe, matches, and tobacco, and
+sat on the floor in the maniap&rsquo; to smoke.&nbsp; He would
+not seem to move from his position, and yet every day, when the
+things fell to be returned the plug had disappeared; he had found
+the means to conceal it in the roof, whence he could radiantly
+produce it on the morrow.&nbsp; Although this piece of
+legerdemain was performed regularly before three or four pairs of
+eyes, we could never catch him in the fact; although we searched
+after he was gone, we could never find the tobacco.&nbsp; Such
+were the diversions of Uncle Parker, a man nearing sixty.&nbsp;
+But he was punished according unto his deeds: Mrs. Stevenson took
+a fancy to paint him, and the sufferings of the sitter were
+beyond description.</p>
+<p>Three lasses came from the palace to do our washing and racket
+with Ah Fu.&nbsp; They were of the lowest class, hangers-on kept
+for the convenience of merchant skippers, probably low-born,
+perhaps out-islanders, with little refinement whether of manner
+or appearance, but likely and jolly enough wenches in their
+way.&nbsp; We called one <i>Guttersnipe</i>, for you may find her
+image in the slums of any city; the same lean, dark-eyed, eager,
+vulgar face, the same sudden, hoarse guffaws, the same forward
+and yet anxious manner, as with a tail of an eye on the
+policeman: only the policeman here was a live king, and his
+truncheon a rifle.&nbsp; I doubt if you could find anywhere out
+of the islands, or often there, the parallel of <i>Fatty</i>, a
+mountain of a girl, who must have weighed near as many stones as
+she counted summers, could have given a good account of a
+life-guardsman, had the face of a baby, and applied her vast
+mechanical forces almost exclusively to play.&nbsp; But they were
+all three of the same merry spirit.&nbsp; Our washing was
+conducted in a game of romps; and they fled and pursued, and
+splashed, and pelted, and rolled each other in the sand, and kept
+up a continuous noise of cries and laughter like holiday
+children.&nbsp; Indeed, and however strange their own function in
+that austere establishment, were they not escaped for the day
+from the largest and strictest Ladies&rsquo; School in the South
+Seas?</p>
+<p>Our fifth attendant was no less a person than the royal
+cook.&nbsp; He was strikingly handsome both in face and body,
+lazy as a slave, and insolent as a butcher&rsquo;s boy.&nbsp; He
+slept and smoked on our premises in various graceful attitudes;
+but so far from helping Ah Fu, he was not at the pains to watch
+him.&nbsp; It may be said of him that he came to learn, and
+remained to teach; and his lessons were at times difficult to
+stomach.&nbsp; For example, he was sent to fill a bucket from the
+well.&nbsp; About half-way he found my wife watering her onions,
+changed buckets with her, and leaving her the empty, returned to
+the kitchen with the full.&nbsp; On another occasion he was given
+a dish of dumplings for the king, was told they must be eaten
+hot, and that he should carry them as fast as possible.&nbsp; The
+wretch set off at the rate of about a mile in the hour, head in
+air, toes turned out.&nbsp; My patience, after a month of trial,
+failed me at the sight.&nbsp; I pursued, caught him by his two
+big shoulders, and thrusting him before me, ran with him down the
+hill, over the sands, and through the applauding village, to the
+Speak House, where the king was then holding a pow-wow.&nbsp; He
+had the impudence to pretend he was internally injured by my
+violence, and to profess serious apprehensions for his life.</p>
+<p>All this we endured; for the ways of Tembinok&rsquo; are
+summary, and I was not yet ripe to take a hand in the man&rsquo;s
+death.&nbsp; But in the meanwhile, here was my unfortunate China
+boy slaving for the pair, and presently he fell sick.&nbsp; I was
+now in the position of Cimondain Lantenac, and indeed all the
+characters in <i>Quatre-Vingt-Treize</i>: to continue to spare
+the guilty, I must sacrifice the innocent.&nbsp; I took the usual
+course and tried to save both, with the usual consequence of
+failure.&nbsp; Well rehearsed, I went down to the palace, found
+the king alone, and obliged him with a vast amount of
+rigmarole.&nbsp; The cook was too old to learn: I feared he was
+not making progress; how if we had a boy instead?&mdash;boys were
+more teachable.&nbsp; It was all in vain; the king pierced
+through my disguises to the root of the fact; saw that the cook
+had desperately misbehaved; and sat a while glooming.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I think he tavvy too much,&rsquo; he said at last, with
+grim concision; and immediately turned the talk to other
+subjects.&nbsp; The same day another high officer, the steward,
+appeared in the cook&rsquo;s place, and, I am bound to say,
+proved civil and industrious.</p>
+<p>As soon as I left, it seems the king called for a Winchester
+and strolled outside the palisade, awaiting the defaulter.&nbsp;
+That day Tembinok&rsquo; wore the woman&rsquo;s frock; as like as
+not, his make-up was completed by a pith helmet and blue
+spectacles.&nbsp; Conceive the glaring stretch of sandhills, the
+dwarf palms with their noon-day shadows, the line of the
+palisade, the crone sentries (each by a small clear fire) cooking
+syrup on their posts&mdash;and this chim&aelig;ra waiting with
+his deadly engine.&nbsp; To him, enter at last the cook,
+strolling down the sandhill from Equator Town, listless, vain and
+graceful; with no thought of alarm.&nbsp; As soon as he was well
+within range, the travestied monarch fired the six shots over his
+head, at his feet, and on either hand of him: the second Apemama
+warning, startling in itself, fatal in significance, for the next
+time his majesty will aim to hit.&nbsp; I am told the king is a
+crack shot; that when he aims to kill, the grave may be got
+ready; and when he aims to miss, misses by so near a margin that
+the culprit tastes six times the bitterness of death.&nbsp; The
+effect upon the cook I had an opportunity of seeing for
+myself.&nbsp; My wife and I were returning from the sea-side of
+the island, when we spied one coming to meet us at a very quick,
+disordered pace, between a walk and a run.&nbsp; As we drew
+nearer we saw it was the cook, beside himself with some emotion,
+his usual warm, mulatto colour declined into a bluish
+pallor.&nbsp; He passed us without word or gesture, staring on us
+with the face of a Satan, and plunged on across the wood for the
+unpeopled quarter of the island and the long, desert beach, where
+he might rage to and fro unseen, and froth out the vials of his
+wrath, fear, and humiliation.&nbsp; Doubtless in the curses that
+he there uttered to the bursting surf and the tropic birds, the
+name of the Kaupoi&mdash;the rich man&mdash;was frequently
+repeated.&nbsp; I had made him the laughing-stock of the village
+in the affair of the king&rsquo;s dumplings; I had brought him by
+my machinations into disgrace and the immediate jeopardy of his
+days; last, and perhaps bitterest, he had found me there by the
+way to spy upon him in the hour of his disorder.</p>
+<p>Time passed, and we saw no more of him.&nbsp; The season of
+the full moon came round, when a man thinks shame to lie
+sleeping; and I continued until late&mdash;perhaps till twelve or
+one in the morning&mdash;to walk on the bright sand and in the
+tossing shadow of the palms.&nbsp; I played, as I wandered, on a
+flageolet, which occupied much of my attention; the fans overhead
+rattled in the wind with a metallic chatter; and a bare foot
+falls at any rate almost noiseless on that shifting soil.&nbsp;
+Yet when I got back to Equator Town, where all the lights were
+out, and my wife (who was still awake, and had been looking
+forth) asked me who it was that followed me, I thought she spoke
+in jest.&nbsp; &lsquo;Not at all,&rsquo; she said.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+saw him twice as you passed, walking close at your heels.&nbsp;
+He only left you at the corner of the maniap&rsquo;; he must be
+still behind the cook-house.&rsquo;&nbsp; Thither I
+ran&mdash;like a fool, without any weapon&mdash;and came face to
+face with the cook.&nbsp; He was within my tapu-line, which was
+death in itself; he could have no business there at such an hour
+but either to steal or to kill; guilt made him timorous; and he
+turned and fled before me in the night in silence.&nbsp; As he
+went I kicked him in that place where honour lies, and he gave
+tongue faintly like an injured mouse.&nbsp; At the moment I
+daresay he supposed it was a deadly instrument that touched
+him.</p>
+<p>What had the man been after?&nbsp; I have found my music
+better qualified to scatter than to collect an audience.&nbsp;
+Amateur as I was, I could not suppose him interested in my
+reading of the <i>Carnival of Venice</i>, or that he would deny
+himself his natural rest to follow my variations on <i>The
+Ploughboy</i>.&nbsp; And whatever his design, it was impossible I
+should suffer him to prowl by night among the houses.&nbsp; A
+word to the king, and the man were not, his case being far beyond
+pardon.&nbsp; But it is one thing to kill a man yourself; quite
+another to bear tales behind his back and have him shot by a
+third party; and I determined to deal with the fellow in some
+method of my own.&nbsp; I told Ah Fu the story, and bade him
+fetch me the cook whenever he should find him.&nbsp; I had
+supposed this would be a matter of difficulty; and far from that,
+he came of his own accord: an act really of desperation, since
+his life hung by my silence, and the best he could hope was to be
+forgotten.&nbsp; Yet he came with an assured countenance,
+volunteered no apology or explanation, complained of injuries
+received, and pretended he was unable to sit down.&nbsp; I
+suppose I am the weakest man God made; I had kicked him in the
+least vulnerable part of his big carcase; my foot was bare, and I
+had not even hurt my foot.&nbsp; Ah Fu could not control his
+merriment.&nbsp; On my side, knowing what must be the nature of
+his apprehensions, I found in so much impudence a kind of
+gallantry, and secretly admired the man.&nbsp; I told him I
+should say nothing of his night&rsquo;s adventure to the king;
+that I should still allow him, when he had an errand, to come
+within my tapu-line by day; but if ever I found him there after
+the set of the sun I would shoot him on the spot; and to the
+proof showed him a revolver.&nbsp; He must have been incredibly
+relieved; but he showed no sign of it, took himself off with his
+usual dandy nonchalance, and was scarce seen by us again.</p>
+<p>These five, then, with the substitution of the steward for the
+cook, came and went, and were our only visitors.&nbsp; The circle
+of the tapu held at arm&rsquo;s-length the inhabitants of the
+village.&nbsp; As for &lsquo;my pamily,&rsquo; they dwelt like
+nuns in their enclosure; only once have I met one of them abroad,
+and she was the king&rsquo;s sister, and the place in which I
+found her (the island infirmary) was very likely
+privileged.&nbsp; There remains only the king to be accounted
+for.&nbsp; He would come strolling over, always alone, a little
+before a meal-time, take a chair, and talk and eat with us like
+an old family friend.&nbsp; Gilbertine etiquette appears
+defective on the point of leave-taking.&nbsp; It may be
+remembered we had trouble in the matter with Karaiti; and there
+was something childish and disconcerting in Tembinok&rsquo;s
+abrupt &lsquo;I want go home now,&rsquo; accompanied by a kind of
+ducking rise, and followed by an unadorned retreat.&nbsp; It was
+the only blot upon his manners, which were otherwise plain,
+decent, sensible, and dignified.&nbsp; He never stayed long nor
+drank much, and copied our behaviour where he perceived it to
+differ from his own.&nbsp; Very early in the day, for instance,
+he ceased eating with his knife.&nbsp; It was plain he was
+determined in all things to wring profit from our visit, and
+chiefly upon etiquette.&nbsp; The quality of his white visitors
+puzzled and concerned him; he would bring up name after name, and
+ask if its bearer were a &lsquo;big chiep,&rsquo; or even a
+&lsquo;chiep&rsquo; at all&mdash;which, as some were my excellent
+good friends, and none were actually born in the purple, became
+at times embarrassing.&nbsp; He was struck to learn that our
+classes were distinguishable by their speech, and that certain
+words (for instance) were tapu on the quarter-deck of a
+man-of-war; and he begged in consequence that we should watch and
+correct him on the point.&nbsp; We were able to assure him that
+he was beyond correction.&nbsp; His vocabulary is apt and ample
+to an extraordinary degree.&nbsp; God knows where he collected
+it, but by some instinct or some accident he has avoided all
+profane or gross expressions.&nbsp; &lsquo;Obliged,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;stabbed,&rsquo; &lsquo;gnaw,&rsquo; &lsquo;lodge,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;power,&rsquo; &lsquo;company,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;slender,&rsquo; &lsquo;smooth,&rsquo; and
+&lsquo;wonderful,&rsquo; are a few of the unexpected words that
+enrich his dialect.&nbsp; Perhaps what pleased him most was to
+hear about saluting the quarter-deck of a man-of-war.&nbsp; In
+his gratitude for this hint he became fulsome.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Schooner cap&rsquo;n no tell me,&rsquo; he cried; &lsquo;I
+think no tavvy!&nbsp; You tavvy too much; tavvy
+&rsquo;teama&rsquo;, tavvy man-a-wa&rsquo;.&nbsp; I think you
+tavvy everything.&rsquo; Yet he gravelled me often enough with
+his perpetual questions; and the false Mr. Barlow stood
+frequently exposed before the royal Sandford.&nbsp; I remember
+once in particular.&nbsp; We were showing the magic-lantern; a
+slide of Windsor Castle was put in, and I told him there was the
+&lsquo;outch&rsquo; of Victoreea.&nbsp; &lsquo;How many pathom he
+high?&rsquo; he asked, and I was dumb before him.&nbsp; It was
+the builder, the indefatigable architect of palaces, that spoke;
+collector though he was, he did not collect useless information;
+and all his questions had a purpose.&nbsp; After etiquette,
+government, law, the police, money, and medicine were his chief
+interests&mdash;things vitally important to himself as a king and
+the father of his people.&nbsp; It was my part not only to supply
+new information, but to correct the old.&nbsp; &lsquo;My patha he
+tell me,&rsquo; or &lsquo;White man he tell me,&rsquo; would be
+his constant beginning; &lsquo;You think he lie?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Sometimes I thought he did.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; once brought me
+a difficulty of this kind, which I was long of
+comprehending.&nbsp; A schooner captain had told him of Captain
+Cook; the king was much interested in the story; and turned for
+more information&mdash;not to Mr. Stephen&rsquo;s Dictionary, not
+to the <i>Britannica</i>, but to the Bible in the Gilbert Island
+version (which consists chiefly of the New Testament and the
+Psalms).&nbsp; Here he sought long and earnestly; Paul he found,
+and Festus and Alexander the coppersmith: no word of Cook.&nbsp;
+The inference was obvious: the explorer was a myth.&nbsp; So hard
+it is, even for a man of great natural parts like
+Tembinok&rsquo;, to grasp the ideas of a new society and
+culture.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER V&mdash;KING AND COMMONS</h3>
+<p>We saw but little of the commons of the isle.&nbsp; At first
+we met them at the well, where they washed their linen and we
+drew water for the table.&nbsp; The combination was distasteful;
+and, having a tyrant at command, we applied to the king and had
+the place enclosed in our tapu.&nbsp; It was one of the few
+favours which Tembinok&rsquo; visibly boggled about granting, and
+it may be conceived how little popular it made the
+strangers.&nbsp; Many villagers passed us daily going afield; but
+they fetched a wide circuit round our tapu, and seemed to avert
+their looks.&nbsp; At times we went ourselves into the
+village&mdash;a strange place.&nbsp; Dutch by its canals,
+Oriental by the height and steepness of the roofs, which looked
+at dusk like temples; but we were rarely called into a house: no
+welcome, no friendship, was offered us; and of home life we had
+but the one view: the waking of a corpse, a frigid, painful
+scene: the widow holding on her lap the cold, bluish body of her
+husband, and now partaking of the refreshments which made the
+round of the company, now weeping and kissing the pale
+mouth.&nbsp; (&lsquo;I fear you feel this affliction
+deeply,&rsquo; said the Scottish minister.&nbsp; &lsquo;Eh, sir,
+and that I do!&rsquo; replied the widow.&nbsp; &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve
+been greetin&rsquo; a&rsquo; nicht; an&rsquo; noo I&rsquo;m just
+gaun to sup this bit parritch, and then I&rsquo;ll begin
+an&rsquo; greet again.&rsquo;)&nbsp; In our walks abroad I have
+always supposed the islanders avoided us, perhaps from distaste,
+perhaps by order; and those whom we met we took generally by
+surprise.&nbsp; The surface of the isle is diversified with palm
+groves, thickets, and romantic dingles four feet deep, relics of
+old taro plantation; and it is thus possible to stumble unawares
+on folk resting or hiding from their work.&nbsp; About
+pistol-shot from our township there lay a pond in the bottom of a
+jungle; here the maids of the isle came to bathe, and were
+several times alarmed by our intrusion.&nbsp; Not for them are
+the bright cold rivers of Tahiti or Upolu, not for them to splash
+and laugh in the hour of the dusk with a villageful of gay
+companions; but to steal here solitary, to crouch in a place like
+a cow-wallow, and wash (if that can be called washing) in
+lukewarm mud, brown as their own skins.&nbsp; Other, but still
+rare, encounters occur to my memory.&nbsp; I was several times
+arrested by a tender sound in the bush of voices talking, soft as
+flutes and with quiet intonations.&nbsp; Hope told a flattering
+tale; I put aside the leaves; and behold! in place of the
+expected dryads, a pair of all too solid ladies squatting over a
+clay pipe in the ungraceful <i>ridi</i>.&nbsp; The beauty of the
+voice and the eye was all that remained to those vast dames; but
+that of the voice was indeed exquisite.&nbsp; It is strange I
+should have never heard a more winning sound of speech, yet the
+dialect should be one remarkable for violent, ugly, and
+outlandish vocables; so that Tembinok&rsquo; himself declared it
+made him weary, and professed to find repose in talking
+English.</p>
+<p>The state of this folk, of whom I saw so little, I can merely
+guess at.&nbsp; The king himself explains the situation with some
+art.&nbsp; &lsquo;No; I no pay them,&rsquo; he once said.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I give them tobacco.&nbsp; They work for me <i>all the
+same brothers</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is true there was a brother
+once in Arden!&nbsp; But we prefer the shorter word.&nbsp; They
+bear every servile mark,&mdash;levity like a child&rsquo;s,
+incurable idleness, incurious content.&nbsp; The insolence of the
+cook was a trait of his own; not so his levity, which he shared
+with the innocent Uncle Parker.&nbsp; With equal unconcern both
+gambolled under the shadow of the gallows, and took liberties
+with death that might have surprised a careless student of
+man&rsquo;s nature.&nbsp; I wrote of Parker that he behaved like
+a boy of ten: what was he else, being a slave of sixty?&nbsp; He
+had passed all his years in school, fed, clad, thought for,
+commanded; and had grown familiar and coquetted with the fear of
+punishment.&nbsp; By terror you may drive men long, but not
+far.&nbsp; Here, in Apemama, they work at the constant and the
+instant peril of their lives; and are plunged in a kind of
+lethargy of laziness.&nbsp; It is common to see one go afield in
+his stiff mat ungirt, so that he walks elbows-in like a trussed
+fowl; and whatsoever his right hand findeth to do, the other must
+be off duty holding on his clothes.&nbsp; It is common to see two
+men carrying between them on a pole a single bucket of
+water.&nbsp; To make two bites of a cherry is good enough: to
+make two burthens of a soldier&rsquo;s kit, for a distance of
+perhaps half a furlong, passes measure.&nbsp; Woman, being the
+less childish animal, is less relaxed by servile
+conditions.&nbsp; Even in the king&rsquo;s absence, even when
+they were alone, I have seen Apemama women work with
+constancy.&nbsp; But the outside to be hoped for in a man is that
+he may attack his task in little languid fits, and lounge
+between-whiles.&nbsp; So I have seen a painter, with his pipe
+going, and a friend by the studio fireside.&nbsp; You might
+suppose the race to lack civility, even vitality, until you saw
+them in the dance.&nbsp; Night after night, and sometimes day
+after day, they rolled out their choruses in the great Speak
+House&mdash;solemn andantes and adagios, led by the clapped hand,
+and delivered with an energy that shook the roof.&nbsp; The time
+was not so slow, though it was slow for the islands; but I have
+chosen rather to indicate the effect upon the hearer.&nbsp; Their
+music had a church-like character from near at hand, and seemed
+to European ears more regular than the run of island music.&nbsp;
+Twice I have heard a discord regularly solved.&nbsp; From farther
+off, heard at Equator Town for instance, the measures rose and
+fell and crepitated like the barking of hounds in a distant
+kennel.</p>
+<p>The slaves are certainly not overworked&mdash;children of ten
+do more without fatigue&mdash;and the Apemama labourers have
+holidays, when the singing begins early in the afternoon.&nbsp;
+The diet is hard; copra and a sweetmeat of pounded pandanus are
+the only dishes I observed outside the palace; but there seems no
+defect in quantity, and the king shares with them his
+turtles.&nbsp; Three came in a boat from Kuria during our stay;
+one was kept for the palace, one sent to us, one presented to the
+village.&nbsp; It is the habit of the islanders to cook the
+turtle in its carapace; we had been promised the shells, and we
+asked a tapu on this foolish practice.&nbsp; The face of
+Tembinok&rsquo; darkened and he answered nothing.&nbsp;
+Hesitation in the question of the well I could understand, for
+water is scarce on a low island; that he should refuse to
+interfere upon a point of cookery was more than I had dreamed of;
+and I gathered (rightly or wrongly) that he was scrupulous of
+touching in the least degree the private life and habits of his
+slaves.&nbsp; So that even here, in full despotism, public
+opinion has weight; even here, in the midst of slavery, freedom
+has a corner.</p>
+<p>Orderly, sober, and innocent, life flows in the isle from day
+to day as in a model plantation under a model planter.&nbsp; It
+is impossible to doubt the beneficence of that stern rule.&nbsp;
+A curious politeness, a soft and gracious manner, something
+effeminate and courtly, distinguishes the islanders of Apemama;
+it is talked of by all the traders, it was felt even by residents
+so little beloved as ourselves, and noticeable even in the cook,
+and even in that scoundrel&rsquo;s hours of insolence.&nbsp; The
+king, with his manly and plain bearing, stood out alone; you
+might say he was the only Gilbert Islander in Apemama.&nbsp;
+Violence, so common in Butaritari, seems unknown.&nbsp; So are
+theft and drunkenness.&nbsp; I am assured the experiment has been
+made of leaving sovereigns on the beach before the village; they
+lay there untouched.&nbsp; In all our time on the island I was
+but once asked for drink.&nbsp; This was by a mighty plausible
+fellow, wearing European clothes and speaking excellent
+English&mdash;Tamaiti his name, or, as the whites have now
+corrupted it, &lsquo;Tom White&rsquo;: one of the king&rsquo;s
+supercargoes at three pounds a month and a percentage, a medical
+man besides, and in his private hours a wizard.&nbsp; He found me
+one day in the outskirts of the village, in a secluded place, hot
+and private, where the taro-pits are deep and the plants
+high.&nbsp; Here he buttonholed me, and, looking about him like a
+conspirator, inquired if I had gin.</p>
+<p>I told him I had.&nbsp; He remarked that gin was forbidden,
+lauded the prohibition a while, and then went on to explain that
+he was a doctor, or &lsquo;dogstar&rsquo; as he pronounced the
+word, that gin was necessary to him for his medical infusions,
+that he was quite out of it, and that he would be obliged to me
+for some in a bottle.&nbsp; I told him I had passed the king my
+word on landing; but since his case was so exceptional, I would
+go down to the palace at once, and had no doubt that
+Tembinok&rsquo; would set me free.&nbsp; Tom White was
+immediately overwhelmed with embarrassment and terror, besought
+me in the most moving terms not to betray him, and fled my
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; He had none of the cook&rsquo;s valour; it
+was weeks before he dared to meet my eye; and then only by the
+order of the king and on particular business.</p>
+<p>The more I viewed and admired this triumph of firm rule, the
+more I was haunted and troubled by a problem, the problem
+(perhaps) of to-morrow for ourselves.&nbsp; Here was a people
+protected from all serious misfortune, relieved of all serious
+anxieties, and deprived of what we call our liberty.&nbsp; Did
+they like it? and what was their sentiment toward the
+ruler?&nbsp; The first question I could not of course ask, nor
+perhaps the natives answer.&nbsp; Even the second was delicate;
+yet at last, and under charming and strange circumstances, I
+found my opportunity to put it and a man to reply.&nbsp; It was
+near the full of the moon, with a delicious breeze; the isle was
+bright as day&mdash;to sleep would have been sacrilege; and I
+walked in the bush, playing my pipe.&nbsp; It must have been the
+sound of what I am pleased to call my music that attracted in my
+direction another wanderer of the night.&nbsp; This was a young
+man attired in a fine mat, and with a garland on his hair, for he
+was new come from dancing and singing in the public hall; and his
+body, his face, and his eyes were all of an enchanting
+beauty.&nbsp; Every here and there in the Gilberts youths are to
+be found of this absurd perfection; I have seen five of us pass
+half an hour in admiration of a boy at Mariki; and Te Kop (my
+friend in the fine mat and garland) I had already several times
+remarked, and long ago set down as the loveliest animal in
+Apemama.&nbsp; The philtre of admiration must be very strong, or
+these natives specially susceptible to its effects, for I have
+scarce ever admired a person in the islands but what he has
+sought my particular acquaintance.&nbsp; So it was with Te
+Kop.&nbsp; He led me to the ocean side; and for an hour or two we
+sat smoking and talking on the resplendent sand and under the
+ineffable brightness of the moon.&nbsp; My friend showed himself
+very sensible of the beauty and amenity of the hour.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Good night! Good wind!&rsquo; he kept exclaiming, and as
+he said the words he seemed to hug myself.&nbsp; I had long
+before invented such reiterated expressions of delight for a
+character (Felipe, in the story of <i>Olalla</i>) intended to be
+partly bestial.&nbsp; But there was nothing bestial in Te Kop;
+only a childish pleasure in the moment.&nbsp; He was no less
+pleased with his companion, or was good enough to say so;
+honoured me, before he left, by calling me Te Kop; apostrophised
+me as &lsquo;My name!&rsquo; with an intonation exquisitely
+tender, laying his hand at the same time swiftly on my knee; and
+after we had risen, and our paths began to separate in the bush,
+twice cried to me with a sort of gentle ecstasy, &lsquo;I like
+you too much!&rsquo;&nbsp; From the beginning he had made no
+secret of his terror of the king; would not sit down nor speak
+above a whisper till he had put the whole breadth of the isle
+between himself and his monarch, then harmlessly asleep; and even
+there, even within a stone-cast of the outer sea, our talk
+covered by the sound of the surf and the rattle of the wind among
+the palms, continued to speak guardedly, softening his silver
+voice (which rang loud enough in the chorus) and looking about
+him like a man in fear of spies.&nbsp; The strange thing is that
+I should have beheld him no more.&nbsp; In any other island in
+the whole South Seas, if I had advanced half as far with any
+native, he would have been at my door next morning, bringing and
+expecting gifts.&nbsp; But Te Kop vanished in the bush for
+ever.&nbsp; My house, of course, was unapproachable; but he knew
+where to find me on the ocean beach, where I went daily.&nbsp; I
+was the <i>Kaupoi</i>, the rich man; my tobacco and trade were
+known to be endless: he was sure of a present.&nbsp; I am at a
+loss how to explain his behaviour, unless it be supposed that he
+recalled with terror and regret a passage in our interview.&nbsp;
+Here it is:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The king, he good man?&rsquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Suppose he like you, he good man,&rsquo; replied Te
+Kop: &lsquo;no like, no good.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>That is one way of putting it, of course.&nbsp; Te Kop himself
+was probably no favourite, for he scarce appealed to my judgment
+as a type of industry.&nbsp; And there must be many others whom
+the king (to adhere to the formula) does not like.&nbsp; Do these
+unfortunates like the king?&nbsp; Or is not rather the repulsion
+mutual? and the conscientious Tembinok&rsquo;, like the
+conscientious Braxfield before him, and many other conscientious
+rulers and judges before either, surrounded by a considerable
+body of &lsquo;grumbletonians&rsquo;?&nbsp; Take the cook, for
+instance, when he passed us by, blue with rage and terror.&nbsp;
+He was very wroth with me; I think by all the old principles of
+human nature he was not very well pleased with his
+sovereign.&nbsp; It was the rich man he sought to waylay: I think
+it must have been by the turn of a hair that it was not the king
+he waylaid instead.&nbsp; And the king gives, or seems to give,
+plenty of opportunities; day and night he goes abroad alone,
+whether armed or not I can but guess; and the taro-patches, where
+his business must so often carry him, seem designed for
+assassination.&nbsp; The case of the cook was heavy indeed to my
+conscience.&nbsp; I did not like to kill my enemy at second-hand;
+but had I a right to conceal from the king, who had trusted me,
+the dangerous secret character of his attendant?&nbsp; And
+suppose the king should fall, what would be the fate of the
+king&rsquo;s friends?&nbsp; It was our opinion at the time that
+we should pay dear for the closing of the well; that our breath
+was in the king&rsquo;s nostrils; that if the king should by any
+chance be bludgeoned in a taro-patch, the philosophical and
+musical inhabitants of Equator Town might lay aside their
+pleasant instruments, and betake themselves to what defence they
+had, with a very dim prospect of success.&nbsp; These
+speculations were forced upon us by an incident which I am
+ashamed to betray.&nbsp; The schooner <i>H. L. Haseltine</i>
+(since capsized at sea, with the loss of eleven lives) put into
+Apemama in a good hour for us, who had near exhausted our
+supplies.&nbsp; The king, after his habit, spent day after day on
+board; the gin proved unhappily to his taste; he brought a store
+of it ashore with him; and for some time the sole tyrant of the
+isle was half-seas-over.&nbsp; He was not drunk&mdash;the man is
+not a drunkard, he has always stores of liquor at hand, which he
+uses with moderation,&mdash;but he was muzzy, dull, and
+confused.&nbsp; He came one day to lunch with us, and while the
+cloth was being laid fell asleep in his chair.&nbsp; His
+confusion, when he awoke and found he had been detected, was
+equalled by our uneasiness.&nbsp; When he was gone we sat and
+spoke of his peril, which we thought to be in some degree our
+own; of how easily the man might be surprised in such a state by
+<i>grumbletonians</i>; of the strange scenes that would
+follow&mdash;the royal treasures and stores at the mercy of the
+rabble, the palace overrun, the garrison of women turned
+adrift.&nbsp; And as we talked we were startled by a gun-shot and
+a sudden, barbaric outcry.&nbsp; I believe we all changed colour;
+but it was only the king firing at a dog and the chorus striking
+up in the Speak House.&nbsp; A day or two later I learned the
+king was very sick; went down, diagnosed the case; and took at
+once the highest medical degree by the exhibition of bicarbonate
+of soda.&nbsp; Within the hour Richard was himself again; and I
+found him at the unfinished house, enjoying the double pleasure
+of directing Rubam and making a dinner of cocoa-nut dumplings,
+and all eagerness to have the formula of this new sort of
+<i>pain-killer</i>&mdash;for <i>pain-killer</i> in the islands is
+the generic name of medicine.&nbsp; So ended the king&rsquo;s
+modest spree and our anxiety.</p>
+<p>On the face of things, I ought to say, loyalty appeared
+unshaken.&nbsp; When the schooner at last returned for us, after
+much experience of baffling winds, she brought a rumour that
+Tebureimoa had declared war on Apemama.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo;
+became a new man; his face radiant; his attitude, as I saw him
+preside over a council of chiefs in one of the palace
+maniap&rsquo;s, eager as a boy&rsquo;s; his voice sounding
+abroad, shrill and jubilant, over half the compound.&nbsp; War is
+what he wants, and here was his chance.&nbsp; The English
+captain, when he flung his arms in the lagoon, had forbidden him
+(except in one case) all military adventures in the future: here
+was the case arrived.&nbsp; All morning the council sat; men were
+drilled, arms were bought, the sound of firing disturbed the
+afternoon; the king devised and communicated to me his plan of
+campaign, which was highly elaborate and ingenious, but perhaps a
+trifle fine-spun for the rough and random vicissitudes of
+war.&nbsp; And in all this bustle the temper of the people
+appeared excellent, an unwonted animation in every face, and even
+Uncle Parker burning with military zeal.</p>
+<p>Of course it was a false alarm.&nbsp; Tebureimoa had other
+fish to fry.&nbsp; The ambassador who accompanied us on our
+return to Butaritari found him retired to a small island on the
+reef, in a huff with the Old Men, a tiff with the traders, and
+more fear of insurrection at home than appetite for wars
+abroad.&nbsp; The plenipotentiary had been placed under my
+protection; and we solemnly saluted when we met.&nbsp; He proved
+an excellent fisherman, and caught bonito over the ship&rsquo;s
+side.&nbsp; He pulled a good oar, and made himself useful for a
+whole fiery afternoon, towing the becalmed <i>Equator</i> off
+Mariki.&nbsp; He went to his post and did no good.&nbsp; He
+returned home again, having done no harm.&nbsp; <i>O si sic
+omnes</i>!</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI&mdash;THE KING OF APEMAMA: DEVIL-WORK</h3>
+<p>The ocean beach of Apemama was our daily resort.&nbsp; The
+coast is broken by shallow bays.&nbsp; The reef is detached,
+elevated, and includes a lagoon about knee-deep, the unrestful
+spending-basin of the surf.&nbsp; The beach is now of fine sand,
+now of broken coral.&nbsp; The trend of the coast being convex,
+scarce a quarter of a mile of it is to be seen at once; the land
+being so low, the horizon appears within a stone-cast; and the
+narrow prospect enhances the sense of privacy.&nbsp; Man avoids
+the place&mdash;even his footprints are uncommon; but a great
+number of birds hover and pipe there fishing, and leave crooked
+tracks upon the sand.&nbsp; Apart from these, the only sound (and
+I was going to say the only society), is that of the breakers on
+the reef.</p>
+<p>On each projection of the coast, the bank of coral clinkers
+immediately above the beach has been levelled, and a pillar
+built, perhaps breast-high.&nbsp; These are not sepulchral; all
+the dead being buried on the inhabited side of the island, close
+to men&rsquo;s houses, and (what is worse) to their wells.&nbsp;
+I was told they were to protect the isle against inroads from the
+sea&mdash;divine or diabolical martellos, probably sacred to
+Taburik, God of Thunder.</p>
+<p>The bay immediately opposite Equator Town, which we called Fu
+Bay, in honour of our cook, was thus fortified on either
+horn.&nbsp; It was well sheltered by the reef, the enclosed water
+clear and tranquil, the enclosing beach curved like a horseshoe,
+and both steep and broad.&nbsp; The path debouched about the
+midst of the re-entrant angle, the woods stopping some distance
+inland.&nbsp; In front, between the fringe of the wood and the
+crown of the beach, there had been designed a regular figure,
+like the court for some new variety of tennis, with borders of
+round stones imbedded, and pointed at the angles with low posts,
+likewise of stone.&nbsp; This was the king&rsquo;s Pray
+Place.&nbsp; When he prayed, what he prayed for, and to whom he
+addressed his supplications I could never learn.&nbsp; The ground
+was tapu.</p>
+<p>In the angle, by the mouth of the path, stood a deserted
+maniap&rsquo;.&nbsp; Near by there had been a house before our
+coming, which was now transported and figured for the moment in
+Equator Town.&nbsp; It had been, and it would be again when we
+departed, the residence of the guardian and wizard of the
+spot&mdash;Tamaiti.&nbsp; Here, in this lone place, within sound
+of the sea, he had his dwelling and uncanny duties.&nbsp; I
+cannot call to mind another case of a man living on the ocean
+side of any open atoll; and Tamaiti must have had strong nerves,
+the greater confidence in his own spells, or, what I believe to
+be the truth, an enviable scepticism.&nbsp; Whether Tamaiti had
+any guardianship of the Pray Place I never heard.&nbsp; But his
+own particular chapel stood farther back in the fringe of the
+wood.&nbsp; It was a tree of respectable growth.&nbsp; Around it
+there was drawn a circle of stones like those that enclosed the
+Pray Place; in front, facing towards the sea, a stone of a much
+greater size, and somewhat hollowed, like a piscina, stood close
+against the trunk; in front of that again a conical pile of
+gravel.&nbsp; In the hollow of what I have called the piscina
+(though it proved to be a magic seat) lay an offering of green
+cocoa-nuts; and when you looked up you found the boughs of the
+tree to be laden with strange fruit: palm-branches elaborately
+plaited, and beautiful models of canoes, finished and rigged to
+the least detail.&nbsp; The whole had the appearance of a
+mid-summer and sylvan Christmas-tree <i>al fresco</i>.&nbsp; Yet
+we were already well enough acquainted in the Gilberts to
+recognise it, at the first sight, for a piece of wizardry, or, as
+they say in the group, of Devil-work.</p>
+<p>The plaited palms were what we recognised.&nbsp; We had seen
+them before on Apaiang, the most christianised of all these
+islands; where excellent Mr. Bingham lived and laboured and has
+left golden memories; whence all the education in the northern
+Gilberts traces its descent; and where we were boarded by little
+native Sunday-school misses in clean frocks, with demure faces,
+and singing hymns as to the manner born.</p>
+<p>Our experience of Devil-work at Apaiang had been as
+follows:&mdash;It chanced we were benighted at the house of
+Captain Tierney.&nbsp; My wife and I lodged with a Chinaman some
+half a mile away; and thither Captain Reid and a native boy
+escorted us by torch-light.&nbsp; On the way the torch went out,
+and we took shelter in a small and lonely Christian chapel to
+rekindle it.&nbsp; Stuck in the rafters of the chapel was a
+branch of knotted palm.&nbsp; &lsquo;What is that?&rsquo; I
+asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;O, that&rsquo;s Devil-work,&rsquo; said the
+Captain.&nbsp; &lsquo;And what is Devil-work?&rsquo; I
+inquired.&nbsp; &lsquo;If you like, I&rsquo;ll show you some when
+we get to Johnnie&rsquo;s,&rsquo; he replied.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Johnnie&rsquo;s&rsquo; was a quaint little house upon the
+crest of the beach, raised some three feet on posts, approached
+by stairs; part walled, part trellised.&nbsp; Trophies of
+advertisement-photographs were hung up within for
+decoration.&nbsp; There was a table and a recess-bed, in which
+Mrs. Stevenson slept; while I camped on the matted floor with
+Johnnie, Mrs. Johnnie, her sister, and the devil&rsquo;s own
+regiment of cockroaches.&nbsp; Hither was summoned an old witch,
+who looked the part to horror.&nbsp; The lamp was set on the
+floor; the crone squatted on the threshold, a green palm-branch
+in her hand, the light striking full on her aged features and
+picking out behind her, from the black night, timorous faces of
+spectators.&nbsp; Our sorceress began with a chanted incantation;
+it was in the old tongue, for which I had no interpreter; but
+ever and again there ran among the crowd outside that laugh which
+every traveller in the islands learns so soon to
+recognise,&mdash;the laugh of terror.&nbsp; Doubtless these
+half-Christian folk were shocked, these half-heathen folk
+alarmed.&nbsp; Chench or Taburik thus invoked, we put our
+questions; the witch knotted the leaves, here a leaf and there a
+leaf, plainly on some arithmetical system; studied the result
+with great apparent contention of mind; and gave the
+answers.&nbsp; Sidney Colvin was in robust health and gone a
+journey; and we should have a fair wind upon the morrow: that was
+the result of our consultation, for which we paid a dollar.&nbsp;
+The next day dawned cloudless and breathless; but I think Captain
+Reid placed a secret reliance on the sibyl, for the schooner was
+got ready for sea.&nbsp; By eight the lagoon was flawed with long
+cat&rsquo;s-paws, and the palms tossed and rustled; before ten we
+were clear of the passage and skimming under all plain sail, with
+bubbling scuppers.&nbsp; So we had the breeze, which was well
+worth a dollar in itself; but the bulletin about my friend in
+England proved, some six months later, when I got my mail, to
+have been groundless.&nbsp; Perhaps London lies beyond the
+horizon of the island gods.</p>
+<p>Tembinok&rsquo;, in his first dealings, showed himself sternly
+averse from superstition: and had not the <i>Equator</i> delayed,
+we might have left the island and still supposed him an
+agnostic.&nbsp; It chanced one day, however, that he came to our
+maniap&rsquo;, and found Mrs. Stevenson in the midst of a game of
+patience.&nbsp; She explained the game as well as she was able,
+and wound up jocularly by telling him this was her devil-work,
+and if she won, the <i>Equator</i> would arrive next day.&nbsp;
+Tembinok&rsquo; must have drawn a long breath; we were not so
+high-and-dry after all; he need no longer dissemble, and he
+plunged at once into confessions.&nbsp; He made devil-work every
+day, he told us, to know if ships were coming in; and thereafter
+brought us regular reports of the results.&nbsp; It was
+surprising how regularly he was wrong; but he always had an
+explanation ready.&nbsp; There had been some schooner in the
+offing out of view; but either she was not bound for Apemama, or
+had changed her course, or lay becalmed.&nbsp; I used to regard
+the king with veneration as he thus publicly deceived
+himself.&nbsp; I saw behind him all the fathers of the Church,
+all the philosophers and men of science of the past; before him,
+all those that are to come; himself in the midst; the whole
+visionary series bowed over the same task of welding
+incongruities.&nbsp; To the end Tembinok&rsquo; spoke reluctantly
+of the island gods and their worship, and I learned but
+little.&nbsp; Taburik is the god of thunder, and deals in wind
+and weather.&nbsp; A while since there were wizards who could
+call him down in the form of lightning.&nbsp; &lsquo;My patha he
+tell me he see: you think he lie?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Tienti&mdash;pronounced something like &lsquo;Chench,&rsquo; and
+identified by his majesty with the devil&mdash;sends and removes
+bodily sickness.&nbsp; He is whistled for in the Paumotuan
+manner, and is said to appear; but the king has never seen
+him.&nbsp; The doctors treat disease by the aid of Chench:
+eclectic Tembinok&rsquo; at the same time administering
+&lsquo;pain-killer&rsquo; from his medicine-chest, so as to give
+the sufferer both chances.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think mo&rsquo;
+betta,&rsquo; observed his majesty, with more than his usual
+self-approval.&nbsp; Apparently the gods are not jealous, and
+placidly enjoy both shrine and priest in common.&nbsp; On
+Tamaiti&rsquo;s medicine-tree, for instance, the model canoes are
+hung up <i>ex voto</i> for a prosperous voyage, and must
+therefore be dedicated to Taburik, god of the weather; but the
+stone in front is the place of sick folk come to pacify
+Chench.</p>
+<p>It chanced, by great good luck, that even as we spoke of these
+affairs, I found myself threatened with a cold.&nbsp; I do not
+suppose I was ever glad of a cold before, or shall ever be again;
+but the opportunity to see the sorcerers at work was priceless,
+and I called in the faculty of Apemama.&nbsp; They came in a
+body, all in their Sunday&rsquo;s best and hung with wreaths and
+shells, the insignia of the devil-worker.&nbsp; Tamaiti I knew
+already: Terutak&rsquo; I saw for the first time&mdash;a tall,
+lank, raw-boned, serious North-Sea fisherman turned brown; and
+there was a third in their company whose name I never heard, and
+who played to Tamaiti the part of <i>famulus</i>.&nbsp; Tamaiti
+took me in hand first, and led me, conversing agreeably, to the
+shores of Fu Bay.&nbsp; The <i>famulus</i> climbed a tree for
+some green cocoa-nuts.&nbsp; Tamaiti himself disappeared a while
+in the bush and returned with coco tinder, dry leaves, and a
+spray of waxberry.&nbsp; I was placed on the stone, with my back
+to the tree and my face to windward; between me and the
+gravel-heap one of the green nuts was set; and then Tamaiti
+(having previously bared his feet, for he had come in canvas
+shoes, which tortured him) joined me within the magic circle,
+hollowed out the top of the gravel-heap, built his fire in the
+bottom, and applied a match: it was one of Bryant and
+May&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The flame was slow to catch, and the
+irreverent sorcerer filled in the time with talk of foreign
+places&mdash;of London, and &lsquo;companies,&rsquo; and how much
+money they had; of San Francisco, and the nefarious fogs,
+&lsquo;all the same smoke,&rsquo; which had been so nearly the
+occasion of his death.&nbsp; I tried vainly to lead him to the
+matter in hand.&nbsp; &lsquo;Everybody make medicine,&rsquo; he
+said lightly.&nbsp; And when I asked him if he were himself a
+good practitioner&mdash;&lsquo;No savvy,&rsquo; he replied, more
+lightly still.&nbsp; At length the leaves burst in a flame, which
+he continued to feed; a thick, light smoke blew in my face, and
+the flames streamed against and scorched my clothes.&nbsp; He in
+the meanwhile addressed, or affected to address, the evil spirit,
+his lips moving fast, but without sound; at the same time he
+waved in the air and twice struck me on the breast with his green
+spray.&nbsp; So soon as the leaves were consumed the ashes were
+buried, the green spray was imbedded in the gravel, and the
+ceremony was at an end.</p>
+<p>A reader of the <i>Arabian Nights</i> felt quite at
+home.&nbsp; Here was the suffumigation; here was the muttering
+wizard; here was the desert place to which Aladdin was decoyed by
+the false uncle.&nbsp; But they manage these things better in
+fiction.&nbsp; The effect was marred by the levity of the
+magician, entertaining his patient with small talk like an
+affable dentist, and by the incongruous presence of Mr. Osbourne
+with a camera.&nbsp; As for my cold, it was neither better nor
+worse.</p>
+<p>I was now handed over to Terutak&rsquo;, the leading
+practitioner or medical baronet of Apemama.&nbsp; His place is on
+the lagoon side of the island, hard by the palace.&nbsp; A rail
+of light wood, some two feet high, encloses an oblong piece of
+gravel like the king&rsquo;s Pray Place; in the midst is a green
+tree; below, a stone table bears a pair of boxes covered with a
+fine mat; and in front of these an offering of food, a cocoa-nut,
+a piece of taro or a fish, is placed daily.&nbsp; On two sides
+the enclosure is lined with maniap&rsquo;s; and one of our party,
+who had been there to sketch, had remarked a daily concourse of
+people and an extraordinary number of sick children; for this is
+in fact the infirmary of Apemama.&nbsp; The doctor and myself
+entered the sacred place alone; the boxes and the mat were
+displaced; and I was enthroned in their stead upon the stone,
+facing once more to the east.&nbsp; For a while the sorcerer
+remained unseen behind me, making passes in the air with a branch
+of palm.&nbsp; Then he struck lightly on the brim of my straw
+hat; and this blow he continued to repeat at intervals, sometimes
+brushing instead my arm and shoulder.&nbsp; I have had people try
+to mesmerise me a dozen times, and never with the least
+result.&nbsp; But at the first tap&mdash;on a quarter no more
+vital than my hat-brim, and from nothing more virtuous than a
+switch of palm wielded by a man I could not even see&mdash;sleep
+rushed upon me like an armed man.&nbsp; My sinews fainted, my
+eyes closed, my brain hummed, with drowsiness.&nbsp; I resisted,
+at first instinctively, then with a certain flurry of despair, in
+the end successfully; if that were indeed success which enabled
+me to scramble to my feet, to stumble home somnambulous, to cast
+myself at once upon my bed, and sink at once into a dreamless
+stupor.&nbsp; When I awoke my cold was gone.&nbsp; So I leave a
+matter that I do not understand.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile my appetite for curiosities (not usually very keen)
+had been strangely whetted by the sacred boxes.&nbsp; They were
+of pandanus wood, oblong in shape, with an effect of pillaring
+along the sides like straw work, lightly fringed with hair or
+fibre and standing on four legs.&nbsp; The outside was neat as a
+toy; the inside a mystery I was resolved to penetrate.&nbsp; But
+there was a lion in the path.&nbsp; I might not approach
+Terutak&rsquo;, since I had promised to buy nothing in the
+island; I dared not have recourse to the king, for I had already
+received from him more gifts than I knew how to repay.&nbsp; In
+this dilemma (the schooner being at last returned) we hit on a
+device.&nbsp; Captain Reid came forward in my stead, professed an
+unbridled passion for the boxes, and asked and obtained leave to
+bargain for them with the wizard.&nbsp; That same afternoon the
+captain and I made haste to the infirmary, entered the enclosure,
+raised the mat, and had begun to examine the boxes at our
+leisure, when Terutak&rsquo;s wife bounced out of one of the nigh
+houses, fell upon us, swept up the treasures, and was gone.&nbsp;
+There was never a more absolute surprise.&nbsp; She came, she
+took, she vanished, we had not a guess whither; and we remained,
+with foolish looks and laughter on the empty field.&nbsp; Such
+was the fit prologue of our memorable bargaining.</p>
+<p>Presently Terutak&rsquo; came, bringing Tamaiti along with
+him, both smiling; and we four squatted without the rail.&nbsp;
+In the three maniap&rsquo;s of the infirmary a certain audience
+was gathered: the family of a sick child under treatment, the
+king&rsquo;s sister playing cards, a pretty girl, who swore I was
+the image of her father; in all perhaps a score.&nbsp;
+Terutak&rsquo;s wife had returned (even as she had vanished)
+unseen, and now sat, breathless and watchful, by her
+husband&rsquo;s side.&nbsp; Perhaps some rumour of our quest had
+gone abroad, or perhaps we had given the alert by our unseemly
+freedom: certain, at least, that in the faces of all present,
+expectation and alarm were mingled.</p>
+<p>Captain Reid announced, without preface or disguise, that I
+was come to purchase; Terutak&rsquo;, with sudden gravity,
+refused to sell.&nbsp; He was pressed; he persisted.&nbsp; It was
+explained we only wanted one: no matter, two were necessary for
+the healing of the sick.&nbsp; He was rallied, he was reasoned
+with: in vain.&nbsp; He sat there, serious and still, and
+refused.&nbsp; All this was only a preliminary skirmish; hitherto
+no sum of money had been mentioned; but now the captain brought
+his great guns to bear.&nbsp; He named a pound, then two, then
+three.&nbsp; Out of the maniap&rsquo;s one person after another
+came to join the group, some with mere excitement, others with
+consternation in their faces.&nbsp; The pretty girl crept to my
+side; it was then that&mdash;surely with the most artless
+flattery&mdash;she informed me of my likeness to her
+father.&nbsp; Tamaiti the infidel sat with hanging head and every
+mark of dejection.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo; streamed with sweat, his
+eye was glazed, his face wore a painful rictus, his chest heaved
+like that of one spent with running.&nbsp; The man must have been
+by nature covetous; and I doubt if ever I saw moral agony more
+tragically displayed.&nbsp; His wife by his side passionately
+encouraged his resistance.</p>
+<p>And now came the charge of the old guard.&nbsp; The captain,
+making a skip, named the surprising figure of five pounds.&nbsp;
+At the word the maniap&rsquo;s were emptied.&nbsp; The
+king&rsquo;s sister flung down her cards and came to the front to
+listen, a cloud on her brow.&nbsp; The pretty girl beat her
+breast and cried with wearisome iteration that if the box were
+hers I should have it.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo;s wife was beside
+herself with pious fear, her face discomposed, her voice (which
+scarce ceased from warning and encouragement) shrill as a
+whistle.&nbsp; Even Terutak&rsquo; lost that image-like
+immobility which he had hitherto maintained.&nbsp; He rocked on
+his mat, threw up his closed knees alternately, and struck
+himself on the breast after the manner of dancers.&nbsp; But he
+came gold out of the furnace; and with what voice was left him
+continued to reject the bribe.</p>
+<p>And now came a timely interjection.&nbsp; &lsquo;Money will
+not heal the sick,&rsquo; observed the king&rsquo;s sister
+sententiously; and as soon as I heard the remark translated my
+eyes were unsealed, and I began to blush for my employment.&nbsp;
+Here was a sick child, and I sought, in the view of its parents,
+to remove the medicine-box.&nbsp; Here was the priest of a
+religion, and I (a heathen millionaire) was corrupting him to
+sacrilege.&nbsp; Here was a greedy man, torn in twain betwixt
+greed and conscience; and I sat by and relished, and lustfully
+renewed his torments.&nbsp; <i>Ave</i>, <i>C&aelig;sar</i>!&nbsp;
+Smothered in a corner, dormant but not dead, we have all the one
+touch of nature: an infant passion for the sand and blood of the
+arena.&nbsp; So I brought to an end my first and last experience
+of the joys of the millionaire, and departed amid silent
+awe.&nbsp; Nowhere else can I expect to stir the depths of human
+nature by an offer of five pounds; nowhere else, even at the
+expense of millions, could I hope to see the evil of riches stand
+so legibly exposed.&nbsp; Of all the bystanders, none but the
+king&rsquo;s sister retained any memory of the gravity and danger
+of the thing in hand.&nbsp; Their eyes glowed, the girl beat her
+breast, in senseless animal excitement.&nbsp; Nothing was offered
+them; they stood neither to gain nor to lose; at the mere name
+and wind of these great sums Satan possessed them.</p>
+<p>From this singular interview I went straight to the palace;
+found the king; confessed what I had been doing; begged him, in
+my name, to compliment Terutak&rsquo; on his virtue, and to have
+a similar box made for me against the return of the
+schooner.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo;, Rubam, and one of the Daily
+Papers&mdash;him we used to call &lsquo;the Faceti&aelig;
+Column&rsquo;&mdash;laboured for a while of some idea, which was
+at last intelligibly delivered.&nbsp; They feared I thought the
+box would cure me; whereas, without the wizard, it was useless;
+and when I was threatened with another cold I should do better to
+rely on pain-killer.&nbsp; I explained I merely wished to keep it
+in my &lsquo;outch&rsquo; as a thing made in Apemama and these
+honest men were much relieved.</p>
+<p>Late the same evening, my wife, crossing the isle to windward,
+was aware of singing in the bush.&nbsp; Nothing is more common in
+that hour and place than the jubilant carol of the toddy-cutter,
+swinging high overhead, beholding below him the narrow ribbon of
+the isle, the surrounding field of ocean, and the fires of the
+sunset.&nbsp; But this was of a graver character, and seemed to
+proceed from the ground-level.&nbsp; Advancing a little in the
+thicket, Mrs. Stevenson saw a clear space, a fine mat spread in
+the midst, and on the mat a wreath of white flowers and one of
+the devil-work boxes.&nbsp; A woman&mdash;whom we guess to have
+been Mrs. Terutak&rsquo;&mdash;sat in front, now drooping over
+the box like a mother over a cradle, now lifting her face and
+directing her song to heaven.&nbsp; A passing toddy-cutter told
+my wife that she was praying.&nbsp; Probably she did not so much
+pray as deprecate; and perhaps even the ceremony was one of
+disenchantment.&nbsp; For the box was already doomed; it was to
+pass from its green medicine-tree, reverend precinct, and devout
+attendants; to be handled by the profane; to cross three seas; to
+come to land under the foolscap of St. Paul&rsquo;s; to be
+domesticated within the hail of Lillie Bridge; there to be dusted
+by the British housemaid, and to take perhaps the roar of London
+for the voice of the outer sea along the reef.&nbsp; Before even
+we had finished dinner Chench had begun his journey, and one of
+the newspapers had already placed the box upon my table as the
+gift of Tembinok&rsquo;.</p>
+<p>I made haste to the palace, thanked the king, but offered to
+restore the box, for I could not bear that the sick of the island
+should be made to suffer.&nbsp; I was amazed by his reply.&nbsp;
+Terutak&rsquo;, it appeared, had still three or four in reserve
+against an accident; and his reluctance, and the dread painted at
+first on every face, was not in the least occasioned by the
+prospect of medical destitution, but by the immediate divinity of
+Chench.&nbsp; How much more did I respect the king&rsquo;s
+command, which had been able to extort in a moment and for
+nothing a sacrilegious favour that I had in vain solicited with
+millions!&nbsp; But now I had a difficult task in front of me; it
+was not in my view that Terutak&rsquo; should suffer by his
+virtue; and I must persuade the king to share my opinion, to let
+me enrich one of his subjects, and (what was yet more delicate)
+to pay for my present.&nbsp; Nothing shows the king in a more
+becoming light than the fact that I succeeded.&nbsp; He demurred
+at the principle; he exclaimed, when he heard it, at the
+sum.&nbsp; &lsquo;Plenty money!&rsquo; cried he, with
+contemptuous displeasure.&nbsp; But his resistance was never
+serious; and when he had blown off his
+ill-humour&mdash;&lsquo;A&rsquo; right,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You give him.&nbsp; Mo&rsquo; betta.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Armed with this permission, I made straight for the
+infirmary.&nbsp; The night was now come, cool, dark, and
+starry.&nbsp; On a mat hard by a clear fire of wood and coco
+shell, Terutak&rsquo; lay beside his wife.&nbsp; Both were
+smiling; the agony was over, the king&rsquo;s command had
+reconciled (I must suppose) their agitating scruples; and I was
+bidden to sit by them and share the circulating pipe.&nbsp; I was
+a little moved myself when I placed five gold sovereigns in the
+wizard&rsquo;s hand; but there was no sign of emotion in
+Terutak&rsquo; as he returned them, pointed to the palace, and
+named Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; It was a changed scene when I had
+managed to explain.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo;, long, dour Scots
+fisherman as he was, expressed his satisfaction within bounds;
+but the wife beamed; and there was an old gentleman
+present&mdash;her father, I suppose&mdash;who seemed nigh
+translated.&nbsp; His eyes stood out of his head;
+&lsquo;<i>Kaupoi</i>, <i>Kaupoi</i>&mdash;rich, rich!&rsquo; ran
+on his lips like a refrain; and he could not meet my eye but what
+he gurgled into foolish laughter.</p>
+<p>I might now go home, leaving that fire-lit family party
+gloating over their new millions, and consider my strange
+day.&nbsp; I had tried and rewarded the virtue of
+Terutak&rsquo;.&nbsp; I had played the millionaire, had behaved
+abominably, and then in some degree repaired my
+thoughtlessness.&nbsp; And now I had my box, and could open it
+and look within.&nbsp; It contained a miniature sleeping-mat and
+a white shell.&nbsp; Tamaiti, interrogated next day as to the
+shell, explained it was not exactly Chench, but a cell, or body,
+which he would at times inhabit.&nbsp; Asked why there was a
+sleeping-mat, he retorted indignantly, &lsquo;Why have you
+mats?&rsquo;&nbsp; And this was the sceptical Tamaiti!&nbsp; But
+island scepticism is never deeper than the lips.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII&mdash;THE KING OF APEMAMA</h3>
+<p>Thus all things on the island, even the priests of the gods,
+obey the word of Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He can give and take, and
+slay, and allay the scruples of the conscientious, and do all
+things (apparently) but interfere in the cookery of a
+turtle.&nbsp; &lsquo;I got power&rsquo; is his favourite word; it
+interlards his conversation; the thought haunts him and is ever
+fresh; and when be has asked and meditates of foreign countries,
+he looks up with a smile and reminds you, &lsquo;<i>I</i> got
+<i>Power</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nor is his delight only in the
+possession, but in the exercise.&nbsp; He rejoices in the crooked
+and violent paths of kingship like a strong man to run a race, or
+like an artist in his art.&nbsp; To feel, to use his power, to
+embellish his island and the picture of the island life after a
+private ideal, to milk the island vigorously, to extend his
+singular museum&mdash;these employ delightfully the sum of his
+abilities.&nbsp; I never saw a man more patently in the right
+trade.</p>
+<p>It would be natural to suppose this monarchy inherited intact
+through generations.&nbsp; And so far from that, it is a thing of
+yesterday.&nbsp; I was already a boy at school while Apemama was
+yet republican, ruled by a noisy council of Old Men, and torn
+with incurable feuds.&nbsp; And Tembinok&rsquo; is no Bourbon;
+rather the son of a Napoleon.&nbsp; Of course he is
+well-born.&nbsp; No man need aspire high in the isles of the
+Pacific unless his pedigree be long and in the upper regions
+mythical.&nbsp; And our king counts cousinship with most of the
+high families in the archipelago, and traces his descent to a
+shark and a heroic woman.&nbsp; Directed by an oracle, she swam
+beyond sight of land to meet her revolting paramour, and received
+at sea the seed of a predestined family.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think
+lie,&rsquo; is the king&rsquo;s emphatic commentary; yet he is
+proud of the legend.&nbsp; From this illustrious beginning the
+fortunes of the race must have declined; and Te&ntilde;koruti,
+the grandfather of Tembinok&rsquo;, was the chief of a village at
+the north end of the island.&nbsp; Kuria and Aranuka were yet
+independent; Apemama itself the arena of devastating feuds.&nbsp;
+Through this perturbed period of history the figure of
+Te&ntilde;koruti stalks memorable.&nbsp; In war he was swift and
+bloody; several towns fell to his spear, and the inhabitants were
+butchered to a man.&nbsp; In civil life this arrogance was
+unheard of.&nbsp; When the council of Old Men was summoned, he
+went to the Speak House, delivered his mind, and left without
+waiting to be answered.&nbsp; Wisdom had spoken: let others opine
+according to their folly.&nbsp; He was feared and hated, and this
+was his pleasure.&nbsp; He was no poet; he cared not for arts or
+knowledge.&nbsp; &lsquo;My gran&rsquo;patha one thing savvy,
+savvy pight,&rsquo; observed the king.&nbsp; In some lull of
+their own disputes the Old Men of Apemama adventured on the
+conquest of Apemama; and this unlicked Caius Marcius was elected
+general of the united troops.&nbsp; Success attended him; the
+islands were reduced, and Te&ntilde;koruti returned to his own
+government, glorious and detested.&nbsp; He died about 1860, in
+the seventieth year of his age and the full odour of
+unpopularity.&nbsp; He was tall and lean, says his grandson,
+looked extremely old, and &lsquo;walked all the same young
+man.&rsquo;&nbsp; The same observer gave me a significant
+detail.&nbsp; The survivors of that rough epoch were all defaced
+with spearmarks; there was none on the body of this skilful
+fighter.&nbsp; &lsquo;I see old man, no got a spear,&rsquo; said
+the king.</p>
+<p>Te&ntilde;koruti left two sons, Tembaitake and
+Tembinatake.&nbsp; Tembaitake, our king&rsquo;s father, was
+short, middling stout, a poet, a good genealogist, and something
+of a fighter; it seems he took himself seriously, and was perhaps
+scarce conscious that he was in all things the creature and
+nursling of his brother.&nbsp; There was no shadow of dispute
+between the pair: the greater man filled with alacrity and
+content the second place; held the breach in war, and all the
+portfolios in the time of peace; and, when his brother rated him,
+listened in silence, looking on the ground.&nbsp; Like
+Te&ntilde;koruti, he was tall and lean and a swift talker&mdash;a
+rare trait in the islands.&nbsp; He possessed every
+accomplishment.&nbsp; He knew sorcery, he was the best
+genealogist of his day, he was a poet, he could dance and make
+canoes and armour; and the famous mast of Apemama, which ran one
+joint higher than the mainmast of a full-rigged ship, was of his
+conception and design.&nbsp; But these were avocations, and the
+man&rsquo;s trade was war.&nbsp; &lsquo;When my uncle go make
+wa&rsquo;, he laugh,&rsquo; said Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He
+forbade the use of field fortification, that protractor of native
+hostilities; his men must fight in the open, and win or be beaten
+out of hand; his own activity inspired his followers; and the
+swiftness of his blows beat down, in one lifetime, the resistance
+of three islands.&nbsp; He made his brother sovereign, he left
+his nephew absolute.&nbsp; &lsquo;My uncle make all
+smooth,&rsquo; said Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; &lsquo;I mo&rsquo;
+king than my patha: I got power,&rsquo; he said, with formidable
+relish.</p>
+<p>Such is the portrait of the uncle drawn by the nephew.&nbsp; I
+can set beside it another by a different artist, who has
+often&mdash;I may say always&mdash;delighted me with his romantic
+taste in narrative, but not always&mdash;and I may say not
+often&mdash;persuaded me of his exactitude.&nbsp; I have already
+denied myself the use of so much excellent matter from the same
+source, that I begin to think it time to reward good resolution;
+and his account of Tembinatake agrees so well with the
+king&rsquo;s, that it may very well be (what I hope it is) the
+record of a fact, and not (what I suspect) the pleasing exercise
+of an imagination more than sailorly.&nbsp; A., for so I had
+perhaps better call him, was walking up the island after dusk,
+when he came on a lighted village of some size, was directed to
+the chief&rsquo;s house, and asked leave to rest and smoke a
+pipe.&nbsp; &lsquo;You will sit down, and smoke a pipe, and wash,
+and eat, and sleep,&rsquo; replied the chief, &lsquo;and
+to-morrow you will go again.&rsquo;&nbsp; Food was brought,
+prayers were held (for this was in the brief day of
+Christianity), and the chief himself prayed with eloquence and
+seeming sincerity.&nbsp; All evening A. sat and admired the man
+by the firelight.&nbsp; He was six feet high, lean, with the
+appearance of many years, and an extraordinary air of breeding
+and command.&nbsp; &lsquo;He looked like a man who would kill you
+laughing,&rsquo; said A., in singular echo of one of the
+king&rsquo;s expressions.&nbsp; And again: &lsquo;I had been
+reading the Musketeer books, and he reminded me of
+Aramis.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such is the portrait of Tembinatake, drawn
+by an expert romancer.</p>
+<p>We had heard many tales of &lsquo;my patha&rsquo;; never a
+word of my uncle till two days before we left.&nbsp; As the time
+approached for our departure Tembinok&rsquo; became greatly
+changed; a softer, a more melancholy, and, in particular, a more
+confidential man appeared in his stead.&nbsp; To my wife he
+contrived laboriously to explain that though he knew he must lose
+his father in the course of nature, he had not minded nor
+realised it till the moment came; and that now he was to lose us
+he repeated the experience.&nbsp; We showed fireworks one evening
+on the terrace.&nbsp; It was a heavy business; the sense of
+separation was in all our minds, and the talk languished.&nbsp;
+The king was specially affected, sat disconsolate on his mat, and
+often sighed.&nbsp; Of a sudden one of the wives stepped forth
+from a cluster, came and kissed him in silence, and silently went
+again.&nbsp; It was just such a caress as we might give to a
+disconsolate child, and the king received it with a child&rsquo;s
+simplicity.&nbsp; Presently after we said good-night and
+withdrew; but Tembinok&rsquo; detained Mr. Osbourne, patting the
+mat by his side and saying: &lsquo;Sit down.&nbsp; I feel bad, I
+like talk.&rsquo;&nbsp; Osbourne sat down by him.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You like some beer?&rsquo; said he; and one of the wives
+produced a bottle.&nbsp; The king did not partake, but sat
+sighing and smoking a meerschaum pipe.&nbsp; &lsquo;I very sorry
+you go,&rsquo; he said at last.&nbsp; &lsquo;Miss Stlevens he
+good man, woman he good man, boy he good man; all good man.&nbsp;
+Woman he smart all the same man.&nbsp; My woman&rsquo; (glancing
+towards his wives) &lsquo;he good woman, no very smart.&nbsp; I
+think Miss Stlevens he is chiep all the same cap&rsquo;n
+man-o-wa&rsquo;.&nbsp; I think Miss Stlevens he rich man all the
+same me.&nbsp; All go schoona.&nbsp; I very sorry.&nbsp; My patha
+he go, my uncle he go, my cutcheons he go, Miss Stlevens he go:
+all go.&nbsp; You no see king cry before.&nbsp; King all the same
+man: feel bad, he cry.&nbsp; I very sorry.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the morning it was the common topic in the village that the
+king had wept.&nbsp; To me he said: &lsquo;Last night I no can
+&rsquo;peak: too much here,&rsquo; laying his hand upon his
+bosom.&nbsp; &lsquo;Now you go away all the same my pamily.&nbsp;
+My brothers, my uncle go away.&nbsp; All the same.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This was said with a dejection almost passionate.&nbsp; And it
+was the first time I had heard him name his uncle, or indeed
+employ the word.&nbsp; The same day he sent me a present of two
+corselets, made in the island fashion of plaited fibre, heavy and
+strong.&nbsp; One had been worn by Te&ntilde;koruti, one by
+Tembaitake; and the gift being gratefully received, he sent me,
+on the return of his messengers, a third&mdash;that of
+Tembinatake.&nbsp; My curiosity was roused; I begged for
+information as to the three wearers; and the king entered with
+gusto into the details already given.&nbsp; Here was a strange
+thing, that he should have talked so much of his family, and not
+once mentioned that relative of whom he was plainly the most
+proud.&nbsp; Nay, more: he had hitherto boasted of his father;
+thenceforth he had little to say of him; and the qualities for
+which he had praised him in the past were now attributed where
+they were due,&mdash;to the uncle.&nbsp; A confusion might be
+natural enough among islanders, who call all the sons of their
+grandfather by the common name of father.&nbsp; But this was not
+the case with Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; Now the ice was broken the
+word uncle was perpetually in his mouth; he who had been so ready
+to confound was now careful to distinguish; and the father sank
+gradually into a self-complacent ordinary man, while the uncle
+rose to his true stature as the hero and founder of the race.</p>
+<p>The more I heard and the more I considered, the more this
+mystery of Tembinok&rsquo;s behaviour puzzled and attracted
+me.&nbsp; And the explanation, when it came, was one to strike
+the imagination of a dramatist.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; had two
+brothers.&nbsp; One, detected in private trading, was banished,
+then forgiven, lives to this day in the island, and is the father
+of the heir-apparent, Paul.&nbsp; The other fell beyond
+forgiveness.&nbsp; I have heard it was a love-affair with one of
+the king&rsquo;s wives, and the thing is highly possible in that
+romantic archipelago.&nbsp; War was attempted to be levied; but
+Tembinok&rsquo; was too swift for the rebels, and the guilty
+brother escaped in a canoe.&nbsp; He did not go alone.&nbsp;
+Tembinatake had a hand in the rebellion, and the man who had
+gained a kingdom for a weakling brother was banished by that
+brother&rsquo;s son.&nbsp; The fugitives came to shore in other
+islands, but Tembinok&rsquo; remains to this day ignorant of
+their fate.</p>
+<p>So far history.&nbsp; And now a moment for conjecture.&nbsp;
+Tembinok&rsquo; confused habitually, not only the attributes and
+merits of his father and his uncle, but their diverse personal
+appearance.&nbsp; Before he had even spoken, or thought to speak,
+of Tembinatake, he had told me often of a tall, lean father,
+skilled in war, and his own schoolmaster in genealogy and island
+arts.&nbsp; How if both were fathers, one natural, one
+adoptive?&nbsp; How if the heir of Tembaitake, like the heir of
+Tembinok&rsquo; himself, were not a son, but an adopted
+nephew?&nbsp; How if the founder of the monarchy, while he worked
+for his brother, worked at the same time for the child of his
+loins?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How if on the
+death of Tembaitake, the two stronger natures, father and son,
+king and kingmaker, clashed, and Tembinok&rsquo;, when he drove
+out his uncle, drove out the author of his days?&nbsp; Here is at
+least a tragedy four-square.</p>
+<p>The king took us on board in his own gig, dressed for the
+occasion in the naval uniform.&nbsp; He had little to say, he
+refused refreshments, shook us briefly by the hand, and went
+ashore again.&nbsp; That night the palm-tops of Apemama had
+dipped behind the sea, and the schooner sailed solitary under the
+stars.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">THE END.</p>
+<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BILLING AND
+SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD</span></p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12"
+class="footnote">[12]</a>&nbsp; Where that word is used as a
+salutation I give that form.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote29"></a><a href="#citation29"
+class="footnote">[29]</a>&nbsp; In English usually written
+&lsquo;taboo&rsquo;: &lsquo;tapu&rsquo; is the correct Tahitian
+form.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote86"></a><a href="#citation86"
+class="footnote">[86]</a>&nbsp; The reference is to Maka, the
+Gawaiian missionary, at Butaritari in the Gilberts.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote122"></a><a href="#citation122"
+class="footnote">[122]</a>&nbsp; Elephantiasis.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote156"></a><a href="#citation156"
+class="footnote">[156]</a>&nbsp; Arorai is in the Gilberts,
+Funafuti in the Ellice Islands.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote231"></a><a href="#citation231"
+class="footnote">[231]</a>&nbsp; Gin and brandy.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote275"></a><a href="#citation275"
+class="footnote">[275]</a>&nbsp; In the Gilbert group.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote279a"></a><a href="#citation279a"
+class="footnote">[279a]</a>&nbsp; Copra: the dried kernel of the
+cocoa-nut, the chief article of commerce throughout the Pacific
+Islands.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote279b"></a><a href="#citation279b"
+class="footnote">[279b]</a>&nbsp; Houses.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote283"></a><a href="#citation283"
+class="footnote">[283]</a>&nbsp; Suppose.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SOUTH SEAS***</p>
+<pre>
+
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+
+
+Title: In the South Seas
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+Release Date: March, 1996 [EBook #464]
+[This file was first posted on January 23, 1996]
+[Most recently updated: August 18, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, IN THE SOUTH SEAS ***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1908 Chatto & Windus edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SOUTH SEAS
+
+
+
+
+PART 1: THE MARQUESAS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--AN ISLAND LANDFALL
+
+
+
+For nearly ten years my health had been declining; and for some
+while before I set forth upon my voyage, I believed I was come to
+the afterpiece of life, and had only the nurse and undertaker to
+expect. It was suggested that I should try the South Seas; and I
+was not unwilling to visit like a ghost, and be carried like a
+bale, among scenes that had attracted me in youth and health. I
+chartered accordingly Dr. Merrit's schooner yacht, the Casco,
+seventy-four tons register; sailed from San Francisco towards the
+end of June 1888, visited the eastern islands, and was left early
+the next year at Honolulu. Hence, lacking courage to return to my
+old life of the house and sick-room, I set forth to leeward in a
+trading schooner, the Equator, of a little over seventy tons, spent
+four months among the atolls (low coral islands) of the Gilbert
+group, and reached Samoa towards the close of '89. By that time
+gratitude and habit were beginning to attach me to the islands; I
+had gained a competency of strength; I had made friends; I had
+learned new interests; the time of my voyages had passed like days
+in fairyland; and I decided to remain. I began to prepare these
+pages at sea, on a third cruise, in the trading steamer Janet
+Nicoll. If more days are granted me, they shall be passed where I
+have found life most pleasant and man most interesting; the axes of
+my black boys are already clearing the foundations of my future
+house; and I must learn to address readers from the uttermost parts
+of the sea.
+
+That I should thus have reversed the verdict of Lord Tennyson's
+hero is less eccentric than appears. Few men who come to the
+islands leave them; they grow grey where they alighted; the palm
+shades and the trade-wind fans them till they die, perhaps
+cherishing to the last the fancy of a visit home, which is rarely
+made, more rarely enjoyed, and yet more rarely repeated. No part
+of the world exerts the same attractive power upon the visitor, and
+the task before me is to communicate to fireside travellers some
+sense of its seduction, and to describe the life, at sea and
+ashore, of many hundred thousand persons, some of our own blood and
+language, all our contemporaries, and yet as remote in thought and
+habit as Rob Roy or Barbarossa, the Apostles or the Caesars.
+
+The first experience can never be repeated. The first love, the
+first sunrise, the first South Sea island, are memories apart and
+touched a virginity of sense. On the 28th of July 1888 the moon
+was an hour down by four in the morning. In the east a radiating
+centre of brightness told of the day; and beneath, on the skyline,
+the morning bank was already building, black as ink. We have all
+read of the swiftness of the day's coming and departure in low
+latitudes; it is a point on which the scientific and sentimental
+tourist are at one, and has inspired some tasteful poetry. The
+period certainly varies with the season; but here is one case
+exactly noted. Although the dawn was thus preparing by four, the
+sun was not up till six; and it was half-past five before we could
+distinguish our expected islands from the clouds on the horizon.
+Eight degrees south, and the day two hours a-coming. The interval
+was passed on deck in the silence of expectation, the customary
+thrill of landfall heightened by the strangeness of the shores that
+we were then approaching. Slowly they took shape in the
+attenuating darkness. Ua-huna, piling up to a truncated summit,
+appeared the first upon the starboard bow; almost abeam arose our
+destination, Nuka-hiva, whelmed in cloud; and betwixt and to the
+southward, the first rays of the sun displayed the needles of Ua-
+pu. These pricked about the line of the horizon; like the
+pinnacles of some ornate and monstrous church, they stood there, in
+the sparkling brightness of the morning, the fit signboard of a
+world of wonders.
+
+Not one soul aboard the Casco had set foot upon the islands, or
+knew, except by accident, one word of any of the island tongues;
+and it was with something perhaps of the same anxious pleasure as
+thrilled the bosom of discoverers that we drew near these
+problematic shores. The land heaved up in peaks and rising vales;
+it fell in cliffs and buttresses; its colour ran through fifty
+modulations in a scale of pearl and rose and olive; and it was
+crowned above by opalescent clouds. The suffusion of vague hues
+deceived the eye; the shadows of clouds were confounded with the
+articulations of the mountains; and the isle and its unsubstantial
+canopy rose and shimmered before us like a single mass. There was
+no beacon, no smoke of towns to be expected, no plying pilot.
+Somewhere, in that pale phantasmagoria of cliff and cloud, our
+haven lay concealed; and somewhere to the east of it--the only sea-
+mark given--a certain headland, known indifferently as Cape Adam
+and Eve, or Cape Jack and Jane, and distinguished by two colossal
+figures, the gross statuary of nature. These we were to find; for
+these we craned and stared, focused glasses, and wrangled over
+charts; and the sun was overhead and the land close ahead before we
+found them. To a ship approaching, like the Casco, from the north,
+they proved indeed the least conspicuous features of a striking
+coast; the surf flying high above its base; strange, austere, and
+feathered mountains rising behind; and Jack and Jane, or Adam and
+Eve, impending like a pair of warts above the breakers.
+
+Thence we bore away along shore. On our port beam we might hear
+the explosions of the surf; a few birds flew fishing under the
+prow; there was no other sound or mark of life, whether of man or
+beast, in all that quarter of the island. Winged by her own
+impetus and the dying breeze, the Casco skimmed under cliffs,
+opened out a cove, showed us a beach and some green trees, and
+flitted by again, bowing to the swell. The trees, from our
+distance, might have been hazel; the beach might have been in
+Europe; the mountain forms behind modelled in little from the Alps,
+and the forest which clustered on their ramparts a growth no more
+considerable than our Scottish heath. Again the cliff yawned, but
+now with a deeper entry; and the Casco, hauling her wind, began to
+slide into the bay of Anaho. The cocoa-palm, that giraffe of
+vegetables, so graceful, so ungainly, to the European eye so
+foreign, was to be seen crowding on the beach, and climbing and
+fringing the steep sides of mountains. Rude and bare hills
+embraced the inlet upon either hand; it was enclosed to the
+landward by a bulk of shattered mountains. In every crevice of
+that barrier the forest harboured, roosting and nestling there like
+birds about a ruin; and far above, it greened and roughened the
+razor edges of the summit.
+
+Under the eastern shore, our schooner, now bereft of any breeze,
+continued to creep in: the smart creature, when once under way,
+appearing motive in herself. From close aboard arose the bleating
+of young lambs; a bird sang in the hillside; the scent of the land
+and of a hundred fruits or flowers flowed forth to meet us; and,
+presently, a house or two appeared, standing high upon the ankles
+of the hills, and one of these surrounded with what seemed a
+garden. These conspicuous habitations, that patch of culture, had
+we but known it, were a mark of the passage of whites; and we might
+have approached a hundred islands and not found their parallel. It
+was longer ere we spied the native village, standing (in the
+universal fashion) close upon a curve of beach, close under a grove
+of palms; the sea in front growling and whitening on a concave arc
+of reef. For the cocoa-tree and the island man are both lovers and
+neighbours of the surf. 'The coral waxes, the palm grows, but man
+departs,' says the sad Tahitian proverb; but they are all three, so
+long as they endure, co-haunters of the beach. The mark of
+anchorage was a blow-hole in the rocks, near the south-easterly
+corner of the bay. Punctually to our use, the blow-hole spouted;
+the schooner turned upon her heel; the anchor plunged. It was a
+small sound, a great event; my soul went down with these moorings
+whence no windlass may extract nor any diver fish it up; and I, and
+some part of my ship's company, were from that hour the bondslaves
+of the isles of Vivien.
+
+Before yet the anchor plunged a canoe was already paddling from the
+hamlet. It contained two men: one white, one brown and tattooed
+across the face with bands of blue, both in immaculate white
+European clothes: the resident trader, Mr. Regler, and the native
+chief, Taipi-Kikino. 'Captain, is it permitted to come on board?'
+were the first words we heard among the islands. Canoe followed
+canoe till the ship swarmed with stalwart, six-foot men in every
+stage of undress; some in a shirt, some in a loin-cloth, one in a
+handkerchief imperfectly adjusted; some, and these the more
+considerable, tattooed from head to foot in awful patterns; some
+barbarous and knived; one, who sticks in my memory as something
+bestial, squatting on his hams in a canoe, sucking an orange and
+spitting it out again to alternate sides with ape-like vivacity--
+all talking, and we could not understand one word; all trying to
+trade with us who had no thought of trading, or offering us island
+curios at prices palpably absurd. There was no word of welcome; no
+show of civility; no hand extended save that of the chief and Mr.
+Regler. As we still continued to refuse the proffered articles,
+complaint ran high and rude; and one, the jester of the party,
+railed upon our meanness amid jeering laughter. Amongst other
+angry pleasantries--'Here is a mighty fine ship,' said he, 'to have
+no money on board!' I own I was inspired with sensible repugnance;
+even with alarm. The ship was manifestly in their power; we had
+women on board; I knew nothing of my guests beyond the fact that
+they were cannibals; the Directory (my only guide) was full of
+timid cautions; and as for the trader, whose presence might else
+have reassured me, were not whites in the Pacific the usual
+instigators and accomplices of native outrage? When he reads this
+confession, our kind friend, Mr. Regler, can afford to smile.
+
+Later in the day, as I sat writing up my journal, the cabin was
+filled from end to end with Marquesans: three brown-skinned
+generations, squatted cross-legged upon the floor, and regarding me
+in silence with embarrassing eyes. The eyes of all Polynesians are
+large, luminous, and melting; they are like the eyes of animals and
+some Italians. A kind of despair came over me, to sit there
+helpless under all these staring orbs, and be thus blocked in a
+corner of my cabin by this speechless crowd: and a kind of rage to
+think they were beyond the reach of articulate communication, like
+furred animals, or folk born deaf, or the dwellers of some alien
+planet.
+
+To cross the Channel is, for a boy of twelve, to change heavens; to
+cross the Atlantic, for a man of twenty-four, is hardly to modify
+his diet. But I was now escaped out of the shadow of the Roman
+empire, under whose toppling monuments we were all cradled, whose
+laws and letters are on every hand of us, constraining and
+preventing. I was now to see what men might be whose fathers had
+never studied Virgil, had never been conquered by Caesar, and never
+been ruled by the wisdom of Gaius or Papinian. By the same step I
+had journeyed forth out of that comfortable zone of kindred
+languages, where the curse of Babel is so easy to be remedied; and
+my new fellow-creatures sat before me dumb like images. Methought,
+in my travels, all human relation was to be excluded; and when I
+returned home (for in those days I still projected my return) I
+should have but dipped into a picture-book without a text. Nay,
+and I even questioned if my travels should be much prolonged;
+perhaps they were destined to a speedy end; perhaps my subsequent
+friend, Kauanui, whom I remarked there, sitting silent with the
+rest, for a man of some authority, might leap from his hams with an
+ear-splitting signal, the ship be carried at a rush, and the ship's
+company butchered for the table.
+
+There could be nothing more natural than these apprehensions, nor
+anything more groundless. In my experience of the islands, I had
+never again so menacing a reception; were I to meet with such to-
+day, I should be more alarmed and tenfold more surprised. The
+majority of Polynesians are easy folk to get in touch with, frank,
+fond of notice, greedy of the least affection, like amiable,
+fawning dogs; and even with the Marquesans, so recently and so
+imperfectly redeemed from a blood-boltered barbarism, all were to
+become our intimates, and one, at least, was to mourn sincerely our
+departure.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--MAKING FRIENDS
+
+
+
+The impediment of tongues was one that I particularly over-
+estimated. The languages of Polynesia are easy to smatter, though
+hard to speak with elegance. And they are extremely similar, so
+that a person who has a tincture of one or two may risk, not
+without hope, an attempt upon the others.
+
+And again, not only is Polynesian easy to smatter, but interpreters
+abound. Missionaries, traders, and broken white folk living on the
+bounty of the natives, are to be found in almost every isle and
+hamlet; and even where these are unserviceable, the natives
+themselves have often scraped up a little English, and in the
+French zone (though far less commonly) a little French-English, or
+an efficient pidgin, what is called to the westward 'Beach-la-Mar,'
+comes easy to the Polynesian; it is now taught, besides, in the
+schools of Hawaii; and from the multiplicity of British ships, and
+the nearness of the States on the one hand and the colonies on the
+other, it may be called, and will almost certainly become, the
+tongue of the Pacific. I will instance a few examples. I met in
+Majuro a Marshall Island boy who spoke excellent English; this he
+had learned in the German firm in Jaluit, yet did not speak one
+word of German. I heard from a gendarme who had taught school in
+Rapa-iti that while the children had the utmost difficulty or
+reluctance to learn French, they picked up English on the wayside,
+and as if by accident. On one of the most out-of-the-way atolls in
+the Carolines, my friend Mr. Benjamin Hird was amazed to find the
+lads playing cricket on the beach and talking English; and it was
+in English that the crew of the Janet Nicoll, a set of black boys
+from different Melanesian islands, communicated with other natives
+throughout the cruise, transmitted orders, and sometimes jested
+together on the fore-hatch. But what struck me perhaps most of all
+was a word I heard on the verandah of the Tribunal at Noumea. A
+case had just been heard--a trial for infanticide against an ape-
+like native woman; and the audience were smoking cigarettes as they
+awaited the verdict. An anxious, amiable French lady, not far from
+tears, was eager for acquittal, and declared she would engage the
+prisoner to be her children's nurse. The bystanders exclaimed at
+the proposal; the woman was a savage, said they, and spoke no
+language. 'Mais, vous savez,' objected the fair sentimentalist;
+'ils apprennent si vite l'anglais!'
+
+But to be able to speak to people is not all. And in the first
+stage of my relations with natives I was helped by two things. To
+begin with, I was the show-man of the Casco. She, her fine lines,
+tall spars, and snowy decks, the crimson fittings of the saloon,
+and the white, the gilt, and the repeating mirrors of the tiny
+cabin, brought us a hundred visitors. The men fathomed out her
+dimensions with their arms, as their fathers fathomed out the ships
+of Cook; the women declared the cabins more lovely than a church;
+bouncing Junos were never weary of sitting in the chairs and
+contemplating in the glass their own bland images; and I have seen
+one lady strip up her dress, and, with cries of wonder and delight,
+rub herself bare-breeched upon the velvet cushions. Biscuit, jam,
+and syrup was the entertainment; and, as in European parlours, the
+photograph album went the round. This sober gallery, their
+everyday costumes and physiognomies, had become transformed, in
+three weeks' sailing, into things wonderful and rich and foreign;
+alien faces, barbaric dresses, they were now beheld and fingered,
+in the swerving cabin, with innocent excitement and surprise. Her
+Majesty was often recognised, and I have seen French subjects kiss
+her photograph; Captain Speedy--in an Abyssinian war-dress,
+supposed to be the uniform of the British army--met with much
+acceptance; and the effigies of Mr. Andrew Lang were admired in the
+Marquesas. There is the place for him to go when he shall be weary
+of Middlesex and Homer.
+
+It was perhaps yet more important that I had enjoyed in my youth
+some knowledge of our Scots folk of the Highlands and the Islands.
+Not much beyond a century has passed since these were in the same
+convulsive and transitionary state as the Marquesans of to-day. In
+both cases an alien authority enforced, the clans disarmed, the
+chiefs deposed, new customs introduced, and chiefly that fashion of
+regarding money as the means and object of existence. The
+commercial age, in each, succeeding at a bound to an age of war
+abroad and patriarchal communism at home. In one the cherished
+practice of tattooing, in the other a cherished costume,
+proscribed. In each a main luxury cut off: beef, driven under
+cloud of night from Lowland pastures, denied to the meat-loving
+Highlander; long-pig, pirated from the next village, to the man-
+eating Kanaka. The grumbling, the secret ferment, the fears and
+resentments, the alarms and sudden councils of Marquesan chiefs,
+reminded me continually of the days of Lovat and Struan.
+Hospitality, tact, natural fine manners, and a touchy punctilio,
+are common to both races: common to both tongues the trick of
+dropping medial consonants. Here is a table of two widespread
+Polynesian words:-
+
+
+ House. Love.
+
+Tahitian FARE AROHA
+
+New Zealand WHARE
+
+Samoan FALE TALOFA
+
+Manihiki FALE ALOHA
+
+Hawaiian HALE ALOHA
+
+Marquesan HA'E KAOHA
+
+
+The elision of medial consonants, so marked in these Marquesan
+instances, is no less common both in Gaelic and the Lowland Scots.
+Stranger still, that prevalent Polynesian sound, the so-called
+catch, written with an apostrophe, and often or always the
+gravestone of a perished consonant, is to be heard in Scotland to
+this day. When a Scot pronounces water, better, or bottle--wa'er,
+be'er, or bo'le--the sound is precisely that of the catch; and I
+think we may go beyond, and say, that if such a population could be
+isolated, and this mispronunciation should become the rule, it
+might prove the first stage of transition from t to k, which is the
+disease of Polynesian languages. The tendency of the Marquesans,
+however, is to urge against consonants, or at least on the very
+common letter l, a war of mere extermination. A hiatus is
+agreeable to any Polynesian ear; the ear even of the stranger soon
+grows used to these barbaric voids; but only in the Marquesan will
+you find such names as Haaii and Paaaeua, when each individual
+vowel must be separately uttered.
+
+These points of similarity between a South Sea people and some of
+my own folk at home ran much in my head in the islands; and not
+only inclined me to view my fresh acquaintances with favour, but
+continually modified my judgment. A polite Englishman comes to-day
+to the Marquesans and is amazed to find the men tattooed; polite
+Italians came not long ago to England and found our fathers stained
+with woad; and when I paid the return visit as a little boy, I was
+highly diverted with the backwardness of Italy: so insecure, so
+much a matter of the day and hour, is the pre-eminence of race. It
+was so that I hit upon a means of communication which I recommend
+to travellers. When I desired any detail of savage custom, or of
+superstitious belief, I cast back in the story of my fathers, and
+fished for what I wanted with some trait of equal barbarism:
+Michael Scott, Lord Derwentwater's head, the second-sight, the
+Water Kelpie,--each of these I have found to be a killing bait; the
+black bull's head of Stirling procured me the legend of Rahero; and
+what I knew of the Cluny Macphersons, or the Appin Stewarts,
+enabled me to learn, and helped me to understand, about the Tevas
+of Tahiti. The native was no longer ashamed, his sense of kinship
+grew warmer, and his lips were opened. It is this sense of kinship
+that the traveller must rouse and share; or he had better content
+himself with travels from the blue bed to the brown. And the
+presence of one Cockney titterer will cause a whole party to walk
+in clouds of darkness.
+
+The hamlet of Anaho stands on a margin of flat land between the
+west of the beach and the spring of the impending mountains. A
+grove of palms, perpetually ruffling its green fans, carpets it (as
+for a triumph) with fallen branches, and shades it like an arbour.
+A road runs from end to end of the covert among beds of flowers,
+the milliner's shop of the community; and here and there, in the
+grateful twilight, in an air filled with a diversity of scents, and
+still within hearing of the surf upon the reef, the native houses
+stand in scattered neighbourhood. The same word, as we have seen,
+represents in many tongues of Polynesia, with scarce a shade of
+difference, the abode of man. But although the word be the same,
+the structure itself continually varies; and the Marquesan, among
+the most backward and barbarous of islanders, is yet the most
+commodiously lodged. The grass huts of Hawaii, the birdcage houses
+of Tahiti, or the open shed, with the crazy Venetian blinds, of the
+polite Samoan--none of these can be compared with the Marquesan
+paepae-hae, or dwelling platform. The paepae is an oblong terrace
+built without cement or black volcanic stone, from twenty to fifty
+feet in length, raised from four to eight feet from the earth, and
+accessible by a broad stair. Along the back of this, and coming to
+about half its width, runs the open front of the house, like a
+covered gallery: the interior sometimes neat and almost elegant in
+its bareness, the sleeping space divided off by an endlong coaming,
+some bright raiment perhaps hanging from a nail, and a lamp and one
+of White's sewing-machines the only marks of civilization. On the
+outside, at one end of the terrace, burns the cooking-fire under a
+shed; at the other there is perhaps a pen for pigs; the remainder
+is the evening lounge and al fresco banquet-hall of the
+inhabitants. To some houses water is brought down the mountains in
+bamboo pipes, perforated for the sake of sweetness. With the
+Highland comparison in my mind, I was struck to remember the
+sluttish mounds of turf and stone in which I have sat and been
+entertained in the Hebrides and the North Islands. Two things, I
+suppose, explain the contrast. In Scotland wood is rare, and with
+materials so rude as turf and stone the very hope of neatness is
+excluded. And in Scotland it is cold. Shelter and a hearth are
+needs so pressing that a man looks not beyond; he is out all day
+after a bare bellyful, and at night when he saith, 'Aha, it is
+warm!' he has not appetite for more. Or if for something else,
+then something higher; a fine school of poetry and song arose in
+these rough shelters, and an air like 'Lochaber no more' is an
+evidence of refinement more convincing, as well as more
+imperishable, than a palace.
+
+To one such dwelling platform a considerable troop of relatives and
+dependants resort. In the hour of the dusk, when the fire blazes,
+and the scent of the cooked breadfruit fills the air, and perhaps
+the lamp glints already between the pillars and the house, you
+shall behold them silently assemble to this meal, men, women, and
+children; and the dogs and pigs frisk together up the terrace
+stairway, switching rival tails. The strangers from the ship were
+soon equally welcome: welcome to dip their fingers in the wooden
+dish, to drink cocoanuts, to share the circulating pipe, and to
+hear and hold high debate about the misdeeds of the French, the
+Panama Canal, or the geographical position of San Francisco and New
+Yo'ko. In a Highland hamlet, quite out of reach of any tourist, I
+have met the same plain and dignified hospitality.
+
+I have mentioned two facts--the distasteful behaviour of our
+earliest visitors, and the case of the lady who rubbed herself upon
+the cushions--which would give a very false opinion of Marquesan
+manners. The great majority of Polynesians are excellently
+mannered; but the Marquesan stands apart, annoying and attractive,
+wild, shy, and refined. If you make him a present he affects to
+forget it, and it must be offered him again at his going: a pretty
+formality I have found nowhere else. A hint will get rid of any
+one or any number; they are so fiercely proud and modest; while
+many of the more lovable but blunter islanders crowd upon a
+stranger, and can be no more driven off than flies. A slight or an
+insult the Marquesan seems never to forget. I was one day talking
+by the wayside with my friend Hoka, when I perceived his eyes
+suddenly to flash and his stature to swell. A white horseman was
+coming down the mountain, and as he passed, and while he paused to
+exchange salutations with myself, Hoka was still staring and
+ruffling like a gamecock. It was a Corsican who had years before
+called him cochon sauvage--cocon chauvage, as Hoka mispronounced
+it. With people so nice and so touchy, it was scarce to be
+supposed that our company of greenhorns should not blunder into
+offences. Hoka, on one of his visits, fell suddenly in a brooding
+silence, and presently after left the ship with cold formality.
+When he took me back into favour, he adroitly and pointedly
+explained the nature of my offence: I had asked him to sell cocoa-
+nuts; and in Hoka's view articles of food were things that a
+gentleman should give, not sell; or at least that he should not
+sell to any friend. On another occasion I gave my boat's crew a
+luncheon of chocolate and biscuits. I had sinned, I could never
+learn how, against some point of observance; and though I was drily
+thanked, my offerings were left upon the beach. But our worst
+mistake was a slight we put on Toma, Hoka's adoptive father, and in
+his own eyes the rightful chief of Anaho. In the first place, we
+did not call upon him, as perhaps we should, in his fine new
+European house, the only one in the hamlet. In the second, when we
+came ashore upon a visit to his rival, Taipi-Kikino, it was Toma
+whom we saw standing at the head of the beach, a magnificent figure
+of a man, magnificently tattooed; and it was of Toma that we asked
+our question: 'Where is the chief?' 'What chief?' cried Toma, and
+turned his back on the blasphemers. Nor did he forgive us. Hoka
+came and went with us daily; but, alone I believe of all the
+countryside, neither Toma nor his wife set foot on board the Casco.
+The temptation resisted it is hard for a European to compute. The
+flying city of Laputa moored for a fortnight in St. James's Park
+affords but a pale figure of the Casco anchored before Anaho; for
+the Londoner has still his change of pleasures, but the Marquesan
+passes to his grave through an unbroken uniformity of days.
+
+On the afternoon before it was intended we should sail, a
+valedictory party came on board: nine of our particular friends
+equipped with gifts and dressed as for a festival. Hoka, the chief
+dancer and singer, the greatest dandy of Anaho, and one of the
+handsomest young fellows in the world-sullen, showy, dramatic,
+light as a feather and strong as an ox--it would have been hard, on
+that occasion, to recognise, as he sat there stooped and silent,
+his face heavy and grey. It was strange to see the lad so much
+affected; stranger still to recognise in his last gift one of the
+curios we had refused on the first day, and to know our friend, so
+gaily dressed, so plainly moved at our departure, for one of the
+half-naked crew that had besieged and insulted us on our arrival:
+strangest of all, perhaps, to find, in that carved handle of a fan,
+the last of those curiosities of the first day which had now all
+been given to us by their possessors--their chief merchandise, for
+which they had sought to ransom us as long as we were strangers,
+which they pressed on us for nothing as soon as we were friends.
+The last visit was not long protracted. One after another they
+shook hands and got down into their canoe; when Hoka turned his
+back immediately upon the ship, so that we saw his face no more.
+Taipi, on the other hand, remained standing and facing us with
+gracious valedictory gestures; and when Captain Otis dipped the
+ensign, the whole party saluted with their hats. This was the
+farewell; the episode of our visit to Anaho was held concluded; and
+though the Casco remained nearly forty hours at her moorings, not
+one returned on board, and I am inclined to think they avoided
+appearing on the beach. This reserve and dignity is the finest
+trait of the Marquesan.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--THE MAROON
+
+
+
+Of the beauties of Anaho books might be written. I remember waking
+about three, to find the air temperate and scented. The long swell
+brimmed into the bay, and seemed to fill it full and then subside.
+Gently, deeply, and silently the Casco rolled; only at times a
+block piped like a bird. Oceanward, the heaven was bright with
+stars and the sea with their reflections. If I looked to that
+side, I might have sung with the Hawaiian poet:
+
+
+Ua maomao ka lani, ua kahaea luna,
+Ua pipi ka maka o ka hoku.
+(The heavens were fair, they stretched above,
+Many were the eyes of the stars.)
+
+
+And then I turned shoreward, and high squalls were overhead; the
+mountains loomed up black; and I could have fancied I had slipped
+ten thousand miles away and was anchored in a Highland loch; that
+when the day came, it would show pine, and heather, and green fern,
+and roofs of turf sending up the smoke of peats; and the alien
+speech that should next greet my ears must be Gaelic, not Kanaka.
+
+And day, when it came, brought other sights and thoughts. I have
+watched the morning break in many quarters of the world; it has
+been certainly one of the chief joys of my existence, and the dawn
+that I saw with most emotion shone upon the bay of Anaho. The
+mountains abruptly overhang the port with every variety of surface
+and of inclination, lawn, and cliff, and forest. Not one of these
+but wore its proper tint of saffron, of sulphur, of the clove, and
+of the rose. The lustre was like that of satin; on the lighter
+hues there seemed to float an efflorescence; a solemn bloom
+appeared on the more dark. The light itself was the ordinary light
+of morning, colourless and clean; and on this ground of jewels,
+pencilled out the least detail of drawing. Meanwhile, around the
+hamlet, under the palms, where the blue shadow lingered, the red
+coals of cocoa husk and the light trails of smoke betrayed the
+awakening business of the day; along the beach men and women, lads
+and lasses, were returning from the bath in bright raiment, red and
+blue and green, such as we delighted to see in the coloured little
+pictures of our childhood; and presently the sun had cleared the
+eastern hill, and the glow of the day was over all.
+
+The glow continued and increased, the business, from the main part,
+ceased before it had begun. Twice in the day there was a certain
+stir of shepherding along the seaward hills. At times a canoe went
+out to fish. At times a woman or two languidly filled a basket in
+the cotton patch. At times a pipe would sound out of the shadow of
+a house, ringing the changes on its three notes, with an effect
+like Que le jour me dure, repeated endlessly. Or at times, across
+a corner of the bay, two natives might communicate in the Marquesan
+manner with conventional whistlings. All else was sleep and
+silence. The surf broke and shone around the shores; a species of
+black crane fished in the broken water; the black pigs were
+continually galloping by on some affair; but the people might never
+have awaked, or they might all be dead.
+
+My favourite haunt was opposite the hamlet, where was a landing in
+a cove under a lianaed cliff. The beach was lined with palms and a
+tree called the purao, something between the fig and mulberry in
+growth, and bearing a flower like a great yellow poppy with a
+maroon heart. In places rocks encroached upon the sand; the beach
+would be all submerged; and the surf would bubble warmly as high as
+to my knees, and play with cocoa-nut husks as our more homely ocean
+plays with wreck and wrack and bottles. As the reflux drew down,
+marvels of colour and design streamed between my feet; which I
+would grasp at, miss, or seize: now to find them what they
+promised, shells to grace a cabinet or be set in gold upon a lady's
+finger; now to catch only maya of coloured sand, pounded fragments
+and pebbles, that, as soon as they were dry, became as dull and
+homely as the flints upon a garden path. I have toiled at this
+childish pleasure for hours in the strong sun, conscious of my
+incurable ignorance; but too keenly pleased to be ashamed.
+Meanwhile, the blackbird (or his tropical understudy) would be
+fluting in the thickets overhead.
+
+A little further, in the turn of the bay, a streamlet trickled in
+the bottom of a den, thence spilling down a stair of rock into the
+sea. The draught of air drew down under the foliage in the very
+bottom of the den, which was a perfect arbour for coolness. In
+front it stood open on the blue bay and the Casco lying there under
+her awning and her cheerful colours. Overhead was a thatch of
+puraos, and over these again palms brandished their bright fans, as
+I have seen a conjurer make himself a halo out of naked swords.
+For in this spot, over a neck of low land at the foot of the
+mountains, the trade-wind streams into Anaho Bay in a flood of
+almost constant volume and velocity, and of a heavenly coolness.
+
+It chanced one day that I was ashore in the cove, with Mrs.
+Stevenson and the ship's cook. Except for the Casco lying outside,
+and a crane or two, and the ever-busy wind and sea, the face of the
+world was of a prehistoric emptiness; life appeared to stand stock-
+still, and the sense of isolation was profound and refreshing. On
+a sudden, the trade-wind, coming in a gust over the isthmus, struck
+and scattered the fans of the palms above the den; and, behold! in
+two of the tops there sat a native, motionless as an idol and
+watching us, you would have said, without a wink. The next moment
+the tree closed, and the glimpse was gone. This discovery of human
+presences latent overhead in a place where we had supposed
+ourselves alone, the immobility of our tree-top spies, and the
+thought that perhaps at all hours we were similarly supervised,
+struck us with a chill. Talk languished on the beach. As for the
+cook (whose conscience was not clear), he never afterwards set foot
+on shore, and twice, when the Casco appeared to be driving on the
+rocks, it was amusing to observe that man's alacrity; death, he was
+persuaded, awaiting him upon the beach. It was more than a year
+later, in the Gilberts, that the explanation dawned upon myself.
+The natives were drawing palm-tree wine, a thing forbidden by law;
+and when the wind thus suddenly revealed them, they were doubtless
+more troubled than ourselves.
+
+At the top of the den there dwelt an old, melancholy, grizzled man
+of the name of Tari (Charlie) Coffin. He was a native of Oahu, in
+the Sandwich Islands; and had gone to sea in his youth in the
+American whalers; a circumstance to which he owed his name, his
+English, his down-east twang, and the misfortune of his innocent
+life. For one captain, sailing out of New Bedford, carried him to
+Nuka-hiva and marooned him there among the cannibals. The motive
+for this act was inconceivably small; poor Tari's wages, which were
+thus economised, would scarce have shook the credit of the New
+Bedford owners. And the act itself was simply murder. Tari's life
+must have hung in the beginning by a hair. In the grief and terror
+of that time, it is not unlikely he went mad, an infirmity to which
+he was still liable; or perhaps a child may have taken a fancy to
+him and ordained him to be spared. He escaped at least alive,
+married in the island, and when I knew him was a widower with a
+married son and a granddaughter. But the thought of Oahu haunted
+him; its praise was for ever on his lips; he beheld it, looking
+back, as a place of ceaseless feasting, song, and dance; and in his
+dreams I daresay he revisits it with joy. I wonder what he would
+think if he could be carried there indeed, and see the modern town
+of Honolulu brisk with traffic, and the palace with its guards, and
+the great hotel, and Mr. Berger's band with their uniforms and
+outlandish instruments; or what he would think to see the brown
+faces grown so few and the white so many; and his father's land
+sold, for planting sugar, and his father's house quite perished, or
+perhaps the last of them struck leprous and immured between the
+surf and the cliffs on Molokai? So simply, even in South Sea
+Islands, and so sadly, the changes come.
+
+Tari was poor, and poorly lodged. His house was a wooden frame,
+run up by Europeans; it was indeed his official residence, for Tari
+was the shepherd of the promontory sheep. I can give a perfect
+inventory of its contents: three kegs, a tin biscuit-box, an iron
+saucepan, several cocoa-shell cups, a lantern, and three bottles,
+probably containing oil; while the clothes of the family and a few
+mats were thrown across the open rafters. Upon my first meeting
+with this exile he had conceived for me one of the baseless island
+friendships, had given me nuts to drink, and carried me up the den
+'to see my house'--the only entertainment that he had to offer. He
+liked the 'Amelican,' he said, and the 'Inglisman,' but the
+'Flessman' was his abhorrence; and he was careful to explain that
+if he had thought us 'Fless,' we should have had none of his nuts,
+and never a sight of his house. His distaste for the French I can
+partly understand, but not at all his toleration of the Anglo-
+Saxon. The next day he brought me a pig, and some days later one
+of our party going ashore found him in act to bring a second. We
+were still strange to the islands; we were pained by the poor man's
+generosity, which he could ill afford, and, by a natural enough but
+quite unpardonable blunder, we refused the pig. Had Tari been a
+Marquesan we should have seen him no more; being what he was, the
+most mild, long-suffering, melancholy man, he took a revenge a
+hundred times more painful. Scarce had the canoe with the nine
+villagers put off from their farewell before the Casco was boarded
+from the other side. It was Tari; coming thus late because he had
+no canoe of his own, and had found it hard to borrow one; coming
+thus solitary (as indeed we always saw him), because he was a
+stranger in the land, and the dreariest of company. The rest of my
+family basely fled from the encounter. I must receive our injured
+friend alone; and the interview must have lasted hard upon an hour,
+for he was loath to tear himself away. 'You go 'way. I see you no
+more--no, sir!' he lamented; and then looking about him with rueful
+admiration, 'This goodee ship--no, sir!--goodee ship!' he would
+exclaim: the 'no, sir,' thrown out sharply through the nose upon a
+rising inflection, an echo from New Bedford and the fallacious
+whaler. From these expressions of grief and praise, he would
+return continually to the case of the rejected pig. 'I like give
+present all 'e same you,' he complained; 'only got pig: you no
+take him!' He was a poor man; he had no choice of gifts; he had
+only a pig, he repeated; and I had refused it. I have rarely been
+more wretched than to see him sitting there, so old, so grey, so
+poor, so hardly fortuned, of so rueful a countenance, and to
+appreciate, with growing keenness, the affront which I had so
+innocently dealt him; but it was one of those cases in which speech
+is vain.
+
+Tari's son was smiling and inert; his daughter-in-law, a girl of
+sixteen, pretty, gentle, and grave, more intelligent than most
+Anaho women, and with a fair share of French; his grandchild, a
+mite of a creature at the breast. I went up the den one day when
+Tari was from home, and found the son making a cotton sack, and
+madame suckling mademoiselle. When I had sat down with them on the
+floor, the girl began to question me about England; which I tried
+to describe, piling the pan and the cocoa shells one upon another
+to represent the houses, and explaining, as best I was able, and by
+word and gesture, the over-population, the hunger, and the
+perpetual toil. 'Pas de cocotiers? pas do popoi?' she asked. I
+told her it was too cold, and went through an elaborate
+performance, shutting out draughts, and crouching over an imaginary
+fire, to make sure she understood. But she understood right well;
+remarked it must be bad for the health, and sat a while gravely
+reflecting on that picture of unwonted sorrows. I am sure it
+roused her pity, for it struck in her another thought always
+uppermost in the Marquesan bosom; and she began with a smiling
+sadness, and looking on me out of melancholy eyes, to lament the
+decease of her own people. 'Ici pas de Kanaques,' said she; and
+taking the baby from her breast, she held it out to me with both
+her hands. 'Tenez--a little baby like this; then dead. All the
+Kanaques die. Then no more.' The smile, and this instancing by
+the girl-mother of her own tiny flesh and blood, affected me
+strangely; they spoke of so tranquil a despair. Meanwhile the
+husband smilingly made his sack; and the unconscious babe struggled
+to reach a pot of raspberry jam, friendship's offering, which I had
+just brought up the den; and in a perspective of centuries I saw
+their case as ours, death coming in like a tide, and the day
+already numbered when there should be no more Beretani, and no more
+of any race whatever, and (what oddly touched me) no more literary
+works and no more readers.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--DEATH
+
+
+
+The thought of death, I have said, is uppermost in the mind of the
+Marquesan. It would be strange if it were otherwise. The race is
+perhaps the handsomest extant. Six feet is about the middle height
+of males; they are strongly muscled, free from fat, swift in
+action, graceful in repose; and the women, though fatter and
+duller, are still comely animals. To judge by the eye, there is no
+race more viable; and yet death reaps them with both hands. When
+Bishop Dordillon first came to Tai-o-hae, he reckoned the
+inhabitants at many thousands; he was but newly dead, and in the
+same bay Stanislao Moanatini counted on his fingers eight residual
+natives. Or take the valley of Hapaa, known to readers of Herman
+Melville under the grotesque misspelling of Hapar. There are but
+two writers who have touched the South Seas with any genius, both
+Americans: Melville and Charles Warren Stoddard; and at the
+christening of the first and greatest, some influential fairy must
+have been neglected: 'He shall be able to see,' 'He shall be able
+to tell,' 'He shall be able to charm,' said the friendly
+godmothers; 'But he shall not be able to hear,' exclaimed the last.
+The tribe of Hapaa is said to have numbered some four hundred, when
+the small-pox came and reduced them by one-fourth. Six months
+later a woman developed tubercular consumption; the disease spread
+like a fire about the valley, and in less than a year two
+survivors, a man and a woman, fled from that new-created solitude.
+A similar Adam and Eve may some day wither among new races, the
+tragic residue of Britain. When I first heard this story the date
+staggered me; but I am now inclined to think it possible. Early in
+the year of my visit, for example, or late the year before, a first
+case of phthisis appeared in a household of seventeen persons, and
+by the month of August, when the tale was told me, one soul
+survived, and that was a boy who had been absent at his schooling.
+And depopulation works both ways, the doors of death being set wide
+open, and the door of birth almost closed. Thus, in the half-year
+ending July 1888 there were twelve deaths and but one birth in the
+district of the Hatiheu. Seven or eight more deaths were to be
+looked for in the ordinary course; and M. Aussel, the observant
+gendarme, knew of but one likely birth. At this rate it is no
+matter of surprise if the population in that part should have
+declined in forty years from six thousand to less than four
+hundred; which are, once more on the authority of M. Aussel, the
+estimated figures. And the rate of decline must have even
+accelerated towards the end.
+
+A good way to appreciate the depopulation is to go by land from
+Anaho to Hatiheu on the adjacent bay. The road is good travelling,
+but cruelly steep. We seemed scarce to have passed the deserted
+house which stands highest in Anaho before we were looking dizzily
+down upon its roof; the Casco well out in the bay, and rolling for
+a wager, shrank visibly; and presently through the gap of Tari's
+isthmus, Ua-huna was seen to hang cloudlike on the horizon. Over
+the summit, where the wind blew really chill, and whistled in the
+reed-like grass, and tossed the grassy fell of the pandanus, we
+stepped suddenly, as through a door, into the next vale and bay of
+Hatiheu. A bowl of mountains encloses it upon three sides. On the
+fourth this rampart has been bombarded into ruins, runs down to
+seaward in imminent and shattered crags, and presents the one
+practicable breach of the blue bay. The interior of this vessel is
+crowded with lovely and valuable trees,--orange, breadfruit, mummy-
+apple, cocoa, the island chestnut, and for weeds, the pine and the
+banana. Four perennial streams water and keep it green; and along
+the dell, first of one, then of another, of these, the road, for a
+considerable distance, descends into this fortunate valley. The
+song of the waters and the familiar disarray of boulders gave us a
+strong sense of home, which the exotic foliage, the daft-like
+growth of the pandanus, the buttressed trunk of the banyan, the
+black pigs galloping in the bush, and the architecture of the
+native houses dissipated ere it could be enjoyed.
+
+The houses on the Hatiheu side begin high up; higher yet, the more
+melancholy spectacle of empty paepaes. When a native habitation is
+deserted, the superstructure--pandanus thatch, wattle, unstable
+tropical timber--speedily rots, and is speedily scattered by the
+wind. Only the stones of the terrace endure; nor can any ruin,
+cairn, or standing stone, or vitrified fort present a more stern
+appearance of antiquity. We must have passed from six to eight of
+these now houseless platforms. On the main road of the island,
+where it crosses the valley of Taipi, Mr. Osbourne tells me they
+are to be reckoned by the dozen; and as the roads have been made
+long posterior to their erection, perhaps to their desertion, and
+must simply be regarded as lines drawn at random through the bush,
+the forest on either hand must be equally filled with these
+survivals: the gravestones of whole families. Such ruins are tapu
+in the strictest sense; no native must approach them; they have
+become outposts of the kingdom of the grave. It might appear a
+natural and pious custom in the hundreds who are left, the
+rearguard of perished thousands, that their feet should leave
+untrod these hearthstones of their fathers. I believe, in fact,
+the custom rests on different and more grim conceptions. But the
+house, the grave, and even the body of the dead, have been always
+particularly honoured by Marquesans. Until recently the corpse was
+sometimes kept in the family and daily oiled and sunned, until, by
+gradual and revolting stages, it dried into a kind of mummy.
+Offerings are still laid upon the grave. In Traitor's Bay, Mr.
+Osbourne saw a man buy a looking-glass to lay upon his son's. And
+the sentiment against the desecration of tombs, thoughtlessly
+ruffled in the laying down of the new roads, is a chief ingredient
+in the native hatred for the French.
+
+The Marquesan beholds with dismay the approaching extinction of his
+race. The thought of death sits down with him to meat, and rises
+with him from his bed; he lives and breathes under a shadow of
+mortality awful to support; and he is so inured to the apprehension
+that he greets the reality with relief. He does not even seek to
+support a disappointment; at an affront, at a breach of one of his
+fleeting and communistic love-affairs, he seeks an instant refuge
+in the grave. Hanging is now the fashion. I heard of three who
+had hanged themselves in the west end of Hiva-oa during the first
+half of 1888; but though this be a common form of suicide in other
+parts of the South Seas, I cannot think it will continue popular in
+the Marquesas. Far more suitable to Marquesan sentiment is the old
+form of poisoning with the fruit of the eva, which offers to the
+native suicide a cruel but deliberate death, and gives time for
+those decencies of the last hour, to which he attaches such
+remarkable importance. The coffin can thus be at hand, the pigs
+killed, the cry of the mourners sounding already through the house;
+and then it is, and not before, that the Marquesan is conscious of
+achievement, his life all rounded in, his robes (like Caesar's)
+adjusted for the final act. Praise not any man till he is dead,
+said the ancients; envy not any man till you hear the mourners,
+might be the Marquesan parody. The coffin, though of late
+introduction, strangely engages their attention. It is to the
+mature Marquesan what a watch is to the European schoolboy. For
+ten years Queen Vaekehu had dunned the fathers; at last, but the
+other day, they let her have her will, gave her her coffin, and the
+woman's soul is at rest. I was told a droll instance of the force
+of this preoccupation. The Polynesians are subject to a disease
+seemingly rather of the will than of the body. I was told the
+Tahitians have a word for it, erimatua, but cannot find it in my
+dictionary. A gendarme, M. Nouveau, has seen men beginning to
+succumb to this insubstantial malady, has routed them from their
+houses, turned them on to do their trick upon the roads, and in two
+days has seen them cured. But this other remedy is more original:
+a Marquesan, dying of this discouragement--perhaps I should rather
+say this acquiescence--has been known, at the fulfilment of his
+crowning wish, on the mere sight of that desired hermitage, his
+coffin--to revive, recover, shake off the hand of death, and be
+restored for years to his occupations--carving tikis (idols), let
+us say, or braiding old men's beards. From all this it may be
+conceived how easily they meet death when it approaches naturally.
+I heard one example, grim and picturesque. In the time of the
+small-pox in Hapaa, an old man was seized with the disease; he had
+no thought of recovery; had his grave dug by a wayside, and lived
+in it for near a fortnight, eating, drinking, and smoking with the
+passers-by, talking mostly of his end, and equally unconcerned for
+himself and careless of the friends whom he infected.
+
+This proneness to suicide, and loose seat in life, is not peculiar
+to the Marquesan. What is peculiar is the widespread depression
+and acceptance of the national end. Pleasures are neglected, the
+dance languishes, the songs are forgotten. It is true that some,
+and perhaps too many, of them are proscribed; but many remain, if
+there were spirit to support or to revive them. At the last feast
+of the Bastille, Stanislao Moanatini shed tears when he beheld the
+inanimate performance of the dancers. When the people sang for us
+in Anaho, they must apologise for the smallness of their repertory.
+They were only young folk present, they said, and it was only the
+old that knew the songs. The whole body of Marquesan poetry and
+music was being suffered to die out with a single dispirited
+generation. The full import is apparent only to one acquainted
+with other Polynesian races; who knows how the Samoan coins a fresh
+song for every trifling incident, or who has heard (on Penrhyn, for
+instance) a band of little stripling maids from eight to twelve
+keep up their minstrelsy for hours upon a stretch, one song
+following another without pause. In like manner, the Marquesan,
+never industrious, begins now to cease altogether from production.
+The exports of the group decline out of all proportion even with
+the death-rate of the islanders. 'The coral waxes, the palm grows,
+and man departs,' says the Marquesan; and he folds his hands. And
+surely this is nature. Fond as it may appear, we labour and
+refrain, not for the rewards of any single life, but with a timid
+eye upon the lives and memories of our successors; and where no one
+is to succeed, of his own family, or his own tongue, I doubt
+whether Rothschilds would make money or Cato practise virtue. It
+is natural, also, that a temporary stimulus should sometimes rouse
+the Marquesan from his lethargy. Over all the landward shore of
+Anaho cotton runs like a wild weed; man or woman, whoever comes to
+pick it, may earn a dollar in the day; yet when we arrived, the
+trader's store-house was entirely empty; and before we left it was
+near full. So long as the circus was there, so long as the Casco
+was yet anchored in the bay, it behoved every one to make his
+visit; and to this end every woman must have a new dress, and every
+man a shirt and trousers. Never before, in Mr. Regler's
+experience, had they displayed so much activity.
+
+In their despondency there is an element of dread. The fear of
+ghosts and of the dark is very deeply written in the mind of the
+Polynesian; not least of the Marquesan. Poor Taipi, the chief of
+Anaho, was condemned to ride to Hatiheu on a moonless night. He
+borrowed a lantern, sat a long while nerving himself for the
+adventure, and when he at last departed, wrung the Cascos by the
+hand as for a final separation. Certain presences, called
+Vehinehae, frequent and make terrible the nocturnal roadside; I was
+told by one they were like so much mist, and as the traveller
+walked into them dispersed and dissipated; another described them
+as being shaped like men and having eyes like cats; from none could
+I obtain the smallest clearness as to what they did, or wherefore
+they were dreaded. We may be sure at least they represent the
+dead; for the dead, in the minds of the islanders, are all-
+pervasive. 'When a native says that he is a man,' writes Dr.
+Codrington, 'he means that he is a man and not a ghost; not that he
+is a man and not a beast. The intelligent agents of this world are
+to his mind the men who are alive, and the ghosts the men who are
+dead.' Dr. Codrington speaks of Melanesia; from what I have
+learned his words are equally true of the Polynesian. And yet
+more. Among cannibal Polynesians a dreadful suspicion rests
+generally on the dead; and the Marquesans, the greatest cannibals
+of all, are scarce likely to be free from similar beliefs. I
+hazard the guess that the Vehinehae are the hungry spirits of the
+dead, continuing their life's business of the cannibal ambuscade,
+and lying everywhere unseen, and eager to devour the living.
+Another superstition I picked up through the troubled medium of
+Tari Coffin's English. The dead, he told me, came and danced by
+night around the paepae of their former family; the family were
+thereupon overcome by some emotion (but whether of pious sorrow or
+of fear I could not gather), and must 'make a feast,' of which
+fish, pig, and popoi were indispensable ingredients. So far this
+is clear enough. But here Tari went on to instance the new house
+of Toma and the house-warming feast which was just then in
+preparation as instances in point. Dare we indeed string them
+together, and add the case of the deserted ruin, as though the dead
+continually besieged the paepaes of the living: were kept at
+arm's-length, even from the first foundation, only by propitiatory
+feasts, and, so soon as the fire of life went out upon the hearth,
+swarmed back into possession of their ancient seat?
+
+I speak by guess of these Marquesan superstitions. On the cannibal
+ghost I shall return elsewhere with certainty. And it is enough,
+for the present purpose, to remark that the men of the Marquesas,
+from whatever reason, fear and shrink from the presence of ghosts.
+Conceive how this must tell upon the nerves in islands where the
+number of the dead already so far exceeds that of the living, and
+the dead multiply and the living dwindle at so swift a rate.
+Conceive how the remnant huddles about the embers of the fire of
+life; even as old Red Indians, deserted on the march and in the
+snow, the kindly tribe all gone, the last flame expiring, and the
+night around populous with wolves.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--DEPOPULATION
+
+
+
+Over the whole extent of the South Seas, from one tropic to
+another, we find traces of a bygone state of over-population, when
+the resources of even a tropical soil were taxed, and even the
+improvident Polynesian trembled for the future. We may accept some
+of the ideas of Mr. Darwin's theory of coral islands, and suppose a
+rise of the sea, or the subsidence of some former continental area,
+to have driven into the tops of the mountains multitudes of
+refugees. Or we may suppose, more soberly, a people of sea-rovers,
+emigrants from a crowded country, to strike upon and settle island
+after island, and as time went on to multiply exceedingly in their
+new seats. In either case the end must be the same; soon or late
+it must grow apparent that the crew are too numerous, and that
+famine is at hand. The Polynesians met this emergent danger with
+various expedients of activity and prevention. A way was found to
+preserve breadfruit by packing it in artificial pits; pits forty
+feet in depth and of proportionate bore are still to be seen, I am
+told, in the Marquesas; and yet even these were insufficient for
+the teeming people, and the annals of the past are gloomy with
+famine and cannibalism. Among the Hawaiians--a hardier people, in
+a more exacting climate--agriculture was carried far; the land was
+irrigated with canals; and the fish-ponds of Molokai prove the
+number and diligence of the old inhabitants. Meanwhile, over all
+the island world, abortion and infanticide prevailed. On coral
+atolls, where the danger was most plainly obvious, these were
+enforced by law and sanctioned by punishment. On Vaitupu, in the
+Ellices, only two children were allowed to a couple; on Nukufetau,
+but one. On the latter the punishment was by fine; and it is
+related that the fine was sometimes paid, and the child spared.
+
+This is characteristic. For no people in the world are so fond or
+so long-suffering with children--children make the mirth and the
+adornment of their homes, serving them for playthings and for
+picture-galleries. 'Happy is the man that has his quiver full of
+them.' The stray bastard is contended for by rival families; and
+the natural and the adopted children play and grow up together
+undistinguished. The spoiling, and I may almost say the
+deification, of the child, is nowhere carried so far as in the
+eastern islands; and furthest, according to my opportunities of
+observation, in the Paumotu group, the so-called Low or Dangerous
+Archipelago. I have seen a Paumotuan native turn from me with
+embarrassment and disaffection because I suggested that a brat
+would be the better for a beating. It is a daily matter in some
+eastern islands to see a child strike or even stone its mother, and
+the mother, so far from punishing, scarce ventures to resist. In
+some, when his child was born, a chief was superseded and resigned
+his name; as though, like a drone, he had then fulfilled the
+occasion of his being. And in some the lightest words of children
+had the weight of oracles. Only the other day, in the Marquesas,
+if a child conceived a distaste to any stranger, I am assured the
+stranger would be slain. And I shall have to tell in another place
+an instance of the opposite: how a child in Manihiki having taken
+a fancy to myself, her adoptive parents at once accepted the
+situation and loaded me with gifts.
+
+With such sentiments the necessity for child-destruction would not
+fail to clash, and I believe we find the trace of divided feeling
+in the Tahitian brotherhood of Oro. At a certain date a new god
+was added to the Society-Island Olympus, or an old one refurbished
+and made popular. Oro was his name, and he may be compared with
+the Bacchus of the ancients. His zealots sailed from bay to bay,
+and from island to island; they were everywhere received with
+feasting; wore fine clothes; sang, danced, acted; gave exhibitions
+of dexterity and strength; and were the artists, the acrobats, the
+bards, and the harlots of the group. Their life was public and
+epicurean; their initiation a mystery; and the highest in the land
+aspired to join the brotherhood. If a couple stood next in line to
+a high-chieftaincy, they were suffered, on grounds of policy, to
+spare one child; all other children, who had a father or a mother
+in the company of Oro, stood condemned from the moment of
+conception. A freemasonry, an agnostic sect, a company of artists,
+its members all under oath to spread unchastity, and all forbidden
+to leave offspring--I do not know how it may appear to others, but
+to me the design seems obvious. Famine menacing the islands, and
+the needful remedy repulsive, it was recommended to the native mind
+by these trappings of mystery, pleasure, and parade. This is the
+more probable, and the secret, serious purpose of the institution
+appears the more plainly, if it be true that, after a certain
+period of life, the obligation of the votary was changed; at first,
+bound to be profligate: afterwards, expected to be chaste.
+
+Here, then, we have one side of the case. Man-eating among kindly
+men, child-murder among child-lovers, industry in a race the most
+idle, invention in a race the least progressive, this grim, pagan
+salvation-army of the brotherhood of Oro, the report of early
+voyagers, the widespread vestiges of former habitation, and the
+universal tradition of the islands, all point to the same fact of
+former crowding and alarm. And to-day we are face to face with the
+reverse. To-day in the Marquesas, in the Eight Islands of Hawaii,
+in Mangareva, in Easter Island, we find the same race perishing
+like flies. Why this change? Or, grant that the coming of the
+whites, the change of habits, and the introduction of new maladies
+and vices, fully explain the depopulation, why is that depopulation
+not universal? The population of Tahiti, after a period of
+alarming decrease, has again become stationary. I hear of a
+similar result among some Maori tribes; in many of the Paumotus a
+slight increase is to be observed; and the Samoans are to-day as
+healthy and at least as fruitful as before the change. Grant that
+the Tahitians, the Maoris, and the Paumotuans have become inured to
+the new conditions; and what are we to make of the Samoans, who
+have never suffered?
+
+Those who are acquainted only with a single group are apt to be
+ready with solutions. Thus I have heard the mortality of the
+Maoris attributed to their change of residence--from fortified
+hill-tops to the low, marshy vicinity of their plantations. How
+plausible! And yet the Marquesans are dying out in the same houses
+where their fathers multiplied. Or take opium. The Marquesas and
+Hawaii are the two groups the most infected with this vice; the
+population of the one is the most civilised, that of the other by
+far the most barbarous, of Polynesians; and they are two of those
+that perish the most rapidly. Here is a strong case against opium.
+But let us take unchastity, and we shall find the Marquesas and
+Hawaii figuring again upon another count. Thus, Samoans are the
+most chaste of Polynesians, and they are to this day entirely
+fertile; Marquesans are the most debauched: we have seen how they
+are perishing; Hawaiians are notoriously lax, and they begin to be
+dotted among deserts. So here is a case stronger still against
+unchastity; and here also we have a correction to apply. Whatever
+the virtues of the Tahitian, neither friend nor enemy dares call
+him chaste; and yet he seems to have outlived the time of danger.
+One last example: syphilis has been plausibly credited with much
+of the sterility. But the Samoans are, by all accounts, as
+fruitful as at first; by some accounts more so; and it is not
+seriously to be argued that the Samoans have escaped syphilis.
+
+These examples show how dangerous it is to reason from any
+particular cause, or even from many in a single group. I have in
+my eye an able and amiable pamphlet by the Rev. S. E. Bishop: 'Why
+are the Hawaiians Dying Out?' Any one interested in the subject
+ought to read this tract, which contains real information; and yet
+Mr. Bishop's views would have been changed by an acquaintance with
+other groups. Samoa is, for the moment, the main and the most
+instructive exception to the rule. The people are the most chaste
+and one of the most temperate of island peoples. They have never
+been tried and depressed with any grave pestilence. Their clothing
+has scarce been tampered with; at the simple and becoming tabard of
+the girls, Tartuffe, in many another island, would have cried out;
+for the cool, healthy, and modest lava-lava or kilt, Tartuffe has
+managed in many another island to substitute stifling and
+inconvenient trousers. Lastly, and perhaps chiefly, so far from
+their amusements having been curtailed, I think they have been,
+upon the whole, extended. The Polynesian falls easily into
+despondency: bereavement, disappointment, the fear of novel
+visitations, the decay or proscription of ancient pleasures, easily
+incline him to be sad; and sadness detaches him from life. The
+melancholy of the Hawaiian and the emptiness of his new life are
+striking; and the remark is yet more apposite to the Marquesas. In
+Samoa, on the other hand, perpetual song and dance, perpetual
+games, journeys, and pleasures, make an animated and a smiling
+picture of the island life. And the Samoans are to-day the gayest
+and the best entertained inhabitants of our planet. The importance
+of this can scarcely be exaggerated. In a climate and upon a soil
+where a livelihood can be had for the stooping, entertainment is a
+prime necessity. It is otherwise with us, where life presents us
+with a daily problem, and there is a serious interest, and some of
+the heat of conflict, in the mere continuing to be. So, in certain
+atolls, where there is no great gaiety, but man must bestir himself
+with some vigour for his daily bread, public health and the
+population are maintained; but in the lotos islands, with the decay
+of pleasures, life itself decays. It is from this point of view
+that we may instance, among other causes of depression, the decay
+of war. We have been so long used in Europe to that dreary
+business of war on the great scale, trailing epidemics and leaving
+pestilential corpses in its train, that we have almost forgotten
+its original, the most healthful, if not the most humane, of all
+field sports--hedge-warfare. From this, as well as from the rest
+of his amusements and interests, the islander, upon a hundred
+islands, has been recently cut off. And to this, as well as to so
+many others, the Samoan still makes good a special title.
+
+Upon the whole, the problem seems to me to stand thus:- Where there
+have been fewest changes, important or unimportant, salutary or
+hurtful, there the race survives. Where there have been most,
+important or unimportant, salutary or hurtful, there it perishes.
+Each change, however small, augments the sum of new conditions to
+which the race has to become inured. There may seem, a priori, no
+comparison between the change from 'sour toddy' to bad gin, and
+that from the island kilt to a pair of European trousers. Yet I am
+far from persuaded that the one is any more hurtful than the other;
+and the unaccustomed race will sometimes die of pin-pricks. We are
+here face to face with one of the difficulties of the missionary.
+In Polynesian islands he easily obtains pre-eminent authority; the
+king becomes his mairedupalais; he can proscribe, he can command;
+and the temptation is ever towards too much. Thus (by all
+accounts) the Catholics in Mangareva, and thus (to my own
+knowledge) the Protestants in Hawaii, have rendered life in a more
+or less degree unliveable to their converts. And the mild,
+uncomplaining creatures (like children in a prison) yawn and await
+death. It is easy to blame the missionary. But it is his business
+to make changes. It is surely his business, for example, to
+prevent war; and yet I have instanced war itself as one of the
+elements of health. On the other hand, it were, perhaps, easy for
+the missionary to proceed more gently, and to regard every change
+as an affair of weight. I take the average missionary; I am sure I
+do him no more than justice when I suppose that he would hesitate
+to bombard a village, even in order to convert an archipelago.
+Experience begins to show us (at least in Polynesian islands) that
+change of habit is bloodier than a bombardment.
+
+There is one point, ere I have done, where I may go to meet
+criticism. I have said nothing of faulty hygiene, bathing during
+fevers, mistaken treatment of children, native doctoring, or
+abortion--all causes frequently adduced. And I have said nothing
+of them because they are conditions common to both epochs, and even
+more efficient in the past than in the present. Was it not the
+same with unchastity, it may be asked? Was not the Polynesian
+always unchaste? Doubtless he was so always: doubtless he is more
+so since the coming of his remarkably chaste visitors from Europe.
+Take the Hawaiian account of Cook: I have no doubt it is entirely
+fair. Take Krusenstern's candid, almost innocent, description of a
+Russian man-of-war at the Marquesas; consider the disgraceful
+history of missions in Hawaii itself, where (in the war of lust)
+the American missionaries were once shelled by an English
+adventurer, and once raided and mishandled by the crew of an
+American warship; add the practice of whaling fleets to call at the
+Marquesas, and carry off a complement of women for the cruise;
+consider, besides, how the whites were at first regarded in the
+light of demi-gods, as appears plainly in the reception of Cook
+upon Hawaii; and again, in the story of the discovery of Tutuila,
+when the really decent women of Samoa prostituted themselves in
+public to the French; and bear in mind how it was the custom of the
+adventurers, and we may almost say the business of the
+missionaries, to deride and infract even the most salutary tapus.
+Here we see every engine of dissolution directed at once against a
+virtue never and nowhere very strong or popular; and the result,
+even in the most degraded islands, has been further degradation.
+Mr. Lawes, the missionary of Savage Island, told me the standard of
+female chastity had declined there since the coming of the whites.
+In heathen time, if a girl gave birth to a bastard, her father or
+brother would dash the infant down the cliffs; and to-day the
+scandal would be small. Or take the Marquesas. Stanislao
+Moanatini told me that in his own recollection, the young were
+strictly guarded; they were not suffered so much as to look upon
+one another in the street, but passed (so my informant put it) like
+dogs; and the other day the whole school-children of Nuka-hiva and
+Ua-pu escaped in a body to the woods, and lived there for a
+fortnight in promiscuous liberty. Readers of travels may perhaps
+exclaim at my authority, and declare themselves better informed. I
+should prefer the statement of an intelligent native like Stanislao
+(even if it stood alone, which it is far from doing) to the report
+of the most honest traveller. A ship of war comes to a haven,
+anchors, lands a party, receives and returns a visit, and the
+captain writes a chapter on the manners of the island. It is not
+considered what class is mostly seen. Yet we should not be pleased
+if a Lascar foremast hand were to judge England by the ladies who
+parade Ratcliffe Highway, and the gentlemen who share with them
+their hire. Stanislao's opinion of a decay of virtue even in these
+unvirtuous islands has been supported to me by others; his very
+example, the progress of dissolution amongst the young, is adduced
+by Mr. Bishop in Hawaii. And so far as Marquesans are concerned,
+we might have hazarded a guess of some decline in manners. I do
+not think that any race could ever have prospered or multiplied
+with such as now obtain; I am sure they would have been never at
+the pains to count paternal kinship. It is not possible to give
+details; suffice it that their manners appear to be imitated from
+the dreams of ignorant and vicious children, and their debauches
+persevered in until energy, reason, and almost life itself are in
+abeyance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--CHIEFS AND TAPUS
+
+
+
+We used to admire exceedingly the bland and gallant manners of the
+chief called Taipi-Kikino. An elegant guest at table, skilled in
+the use of knife and fork, a brave figure when he shouldered a gun
+and started for the woods after wild chickens, always serviceable,
+always ingratiating and gay, I would sometimes wonder where he
+found his cheerfulness. He had enough to sober him, I thought, in
+his official budget. His expenses--for he was always seen attired
+in virgin white--must have by far exceeded his income of six
+dollars in the year, or say two shillings a month. And he was
+himself a man of no substance; his house the poorest in the
+village. It was currently supposed that his elder brother,
+Kauanui, must have helped him out. But how comes it that the elder
+brother should succeed to the family estate, and be a wealthy
+commoner, and the younger be a poor man, and yet rule as chief in
+Anaho? That the one should be wealthy, and the other almost
+indigent is probably to be explained by some adoption; for
+comparatively few children are brought up in the house or succeed
+to the estates of their natural begetters. That the one should be
+chief instead of the other must be explained (in a very Irish
+fashion) on the ground that neither of them is a chief at all.
+
+Since the return and the wars of the French, many chiefs have been
+deposed, and many so-called chiefs appointed. We have seen, in the
+same house, one such upstart drinking in the company of two such
+extruded island Bourbons, men, whose word a few years ago was life
+and death, now sunk to be peasants like their neighbours. So when
+the French overthrew hereditary tyrants, dubbed the commons of the
+Marquesas freeborn citizens of the republic, and endowed them with
+a vote for a conseiller-general at Tahiti, they probably conceived
+themselves upon the path to popularity; and so far from that, they
+were revolting public sentiment. The deposition of the chiefs was
+perhaps sometimes needful; the appointment of others may have been
+needful also; it was at least a delicate business. The Government
+of George II. exiled many Highland magnates. It never occurred to
+them to manufacture substitutes; and if the French have been more
+bold, we have yet to see with what success.
+
+Our chief at Anaho was always called, he always called himself,
+Taipi-Kikino; and yet that was not his name, but only the wand of
+his false position. As soon as he was appointed chief, his name--
+which signified, if I remember exactly, PRINCE BORN AMONG FLOWERS--
+fell in abeyance, and he was dubbed instead by the expressive
+byword, Taipi-Kikino--HIGHWATER MAN-OF-NO-ACCOUNT--or, Englishing
+more boldly, BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK--a witty and a wicked cut. A
+nickname in Polynesia destroys almost the memory of the original
+name. To-day, if we were Polynesians, Gladstone would be no more
+heard of. We should speak of and address our Nestor as the Grand
+Old Man, and it is so that himself would sign his correspondence.
+Not the prevalence, then, but the significancy of the nickname is
+to be noted here. The new authority began with small prestige.
+Taipi has now been some time in office; from all I saw he seemed a
+person very fit. He is not the least unpopular, and yet his power
+is nothing. He is a chief to the French, and goes to breakfast
+with the Resident; but for any practical end of chieftaincy a rag
+doll were equally efficient.
+
+We had been but three days in Anaho when we received the visit of
+the chief of Hatiheu, a man of weight and fame, late leader of a
+war upon the French, late prisoner in Tahiti, and the last eater of
+long-pig in Nuka-hiva. Not many years have elapsed since he was
+seen striding on the beach of Anaho, a dead man's arm across his
+shoulder. 'So does Kooamua to his enemies!' he roared to the
+passers-by, and took a bite from the raw flesh. And now behold
+this gentleman, very wisely replaced in office by the French,
+paying us a morning visit in European clothes. He was the man of
+the most character we had yet seen: his manners genial and
+decisive, his person tall, his face rugged, astute, formidable, and
+with a certain similarity to Mr. Gladstone's--only for the
+brownness of the skin, and the high-chief's tattooing, all one side
+and much of the other being of an even blue. Further acquaintance
+increased our opinion of his sense. He viewed the Casco in a
+manner then quite new to us, examining her lines and the running of
+the gear; to a piece of knitting on which one of the party was
+engaged, he must have devoted ten minutes' patient study; nor did
+he desist before he had divined the principles; and he was
+interested even to excitement by a type-writer, which he learned to
+work. When he departed he carried away with him a list of his
+family, with his own name printed by his own hand at the bottom. I
+should add that he was plainly much of a humorist, and not a little
+of a humbug. He told us, for instance, that he was a person of
+exact sobriety; such being the obligation of his high estate: the
+commons might be sots, but the chief could not stoop so low. And
+not many days after he was to be observed in a state of smiling and
+lop-sided imbecility, the Casco ribbon upside down on his
+dishonoured hat.
+
+But his business that morning in Anaho is what concerns us here.
+The devil-fish, it seems, were growing scarce upon the reef; it was
+judged fit to interpose what we should call a close season; for
+that end, in Polynesia, a tapu (vulgarly spelt 'taboo') has to be
+declared, and who was to declare it? Taipi might; he ought; it was
+a chief part of his duty; but would any one regard the inhibition
+of a Beggar on Horse-back? He might plant palm branches: it did
+not in the least follow that the spot was sacred. He might recite
+the spell: it was shrewdly supposed the spirits would not hearken.
+And so the old, legitimate cannibal must ride over the mountains to
+do it for him; and the respectable official in white clothes could
+but look on and envy. At about the same time, though in a
+different manner, Kooamua established a forest law. It was
+observed the cocoa-palms were suffering, for the plucking of green
+nuts impoverishes and at last endangers the tree. Now Kooamua
+could tapu the reef, which was public property, but he could not
+tapu other people's palms; and the expedient adopted was
+interesting. He tapu'd his own trees, and his example was imitated
+over all Hatiheu and Anaho. I fear Taipi might have tapu'd all
+that he possessed and found none to follow him. So much for the
+esteem in which the dignity of an appointed chief is held by
+others; a single circumstance will show what he thinks of it
+himself. I never met one, but he took an early opportunity to
+explain his situation. True, he was only an appointed chief when I
+beheld him; but somewhere else, perhaps upon some other isle, he
+was a chieftain by descent: upon which ground, he asked me (so to
+say it) to excuse his mushroom honours.
+
+It will be observed with surprise that both these tapus are for
+thoroughly sensible ends. With surprise, I say, because the nature
+of that institution is much misunderstood in Europe. It is taken
+usually in the sense of a meaningless or wanton prohibition, such
+as that which to-day prevents women in some countries from smoking,
+or yesterday prevented any one in Scotland from taking a walk on
+Sunday. The error is no less natural than it is unjust. The
+Polynesians have not been trained in the bracing, practical thought
+of ancient Rome; with them the idea of law has not been disengaged
+from that of morals or propriety; so that tapu has to cover the
+whole field, and implies indifferently that an act is criminal,
+immoral, against sound public policy, unbecoming or (as we say)
+'not in good form.' Many tapus were in consequence absurd enough,
+such as those which deleted words out of the language, and
+particularly those which related to women. Tapu encircled women
+upon all hands. Many things were forbidden to men; to women we may
+say that few were permitted. They must not sit on the paepae; they
+must not go up to it by the stair; they must not eat pork; they
+must not approach a boat; they must not cook at a fire which any
+male had kindled. The other day, after the roads were made, it was
+observed the women plunged along margin through the bush, and when
+they came to a bridge waded through the water: roads and bridges
+were the work of men's hands, and tapu for the foot of women. Even
+a man's saddle, if the man be native, is a thing no self-respecting
+lady dares to use. Thus on the Anaho side of the island, only two
+white men, Mr. Regler and the gendarme, M. Aussel, possess saddles;
+and when a woman has a journey to make she must borrow from one or
+other. It will be noticed that these prohibitions tend, most of
+them, to an increased reserve between the sexes. Regard for female
+chastity is the usual excuse for these disabilities that men
+delight to lay upon their wives and mothers. Here the regard is
+absent; and behold the women still bound hand and foot with
+meaningless proprieties! The women themselves, who are survivors
+of the old regimen, admit that in those days life was not worth
+living. And yet even then there were exceptions. There were
+female chiefs and (I am assured) priestesses besides; nice customs
+curtseyed to great dames, and in the most sacred enclosure of a
+High Place, Father Simeon Delmar was shown a stone, and told it was
+the throne of some well-descended lady. How exactly parallel is
+this with European practice, when princesses were suffered to
+penetrate the strictest cloister, and women could rule over a land
+in which they were denied the control of their own children.
+
+But the tapu is more often the instrument of wise and needful
+restrictions. We have seen it as the organ of paternal government.
+It serves besides to enforce, in the rare case of some one wishing
+to enforce them, rights of private property. Thus a man, weary of
+the coming and going of Marquesan visitors, tapus his door; and to
+this day you may see the palm-branch signal, even as our great-
+grandfathers saw the peeled wand before a Highland inn. Or take
+another case. Anaho is known as 'the country without popoi.' The
+word popoi serves in different islands to indicate the main food of
+the people: thus, in Hawaii, it implies a preparation of taro; in
+the Marquesas, of breadfruit. And a Marquesan does not readily
+conceive life possible without his favourite diet. A few years ago
+a drought killed the breadfruit trees and the bananas in the
+district of Anaho; and from this calamity, and the open-handed
+customs of the island, a singular state of things arose. Well-
+watered Hatiheu had escaped the drought; every householder of Anaho
+accordingly crossed the pass, chose some one in Hatiheu, 'gave him
+his name'--an onerous gift, but one not to be rejected--and from
+this improvised relative proceeded to draw his supplies, for all
+the world as though he had paid for them. Hence a continued
+traffic on the road. Some stalwart fellow, in a loin-cloth, and
+glistening with sweat, may be seen at all hours of the day, a stick
+across his bare shoulders, tripping nervously under a double
+burthen of green fruits. And on the far side of the gap a dozen
+stone posts on the wayside in the shadow of a grove mark the
+breathing-space of the popoi-carriers. A little back from the
+beach, and not half a mile from Anaho, I was the more amazed to
+find a cluster of well-doing breadfruits heavy with their harvest.
+'Why do you not take these?' I asked. 'Tapu,' said Hoka; and I
+thought to myself (after the manner of dull travellers) what
+children and fools these people were to toil over the mountain and
+despoil innocent neighbours when the staff of life was thus growing
+at their door. I was the more in error. In the general
+destruction these surviving trees were enough only for the family
+of the proprietor, and by the simple expedient of declaring a tapu
+he enforced his right.
+
+The sanction of the tapu is superstitious; and the punishment of
+infraction either a wasting or a deadly sickness. A slow disease
+follows on the eating of tapu fish, and can only be cured with the
+bones of the same fish burned with the due mysteries. The cocoa-
+nut and breadfruit tapu works more swiftly. Suppose you have eaten
+tapu fruit at the evening meal, at night your sleep will be uneasy;
+in the morning, swelling and a dark discoloration will have
+attacked your neck, whence they spread upward to the face; and in
+two days, unless the cure be interjected, you must die. This cure
+is prepared from the rubbed leaves of the tree from which the
+patient stole; so that he cannot be saved without confessing to the
+Tahuku the person whom he wronged. In the experience of my
+informant, almost no tapu had been put in use, except the two
+described: he had thus no opportunity to learn the nature and
+operation of the others; and, as the art of making them was
+jealously guarded amongst the old men, he believed the mystery
+would soon die out. I should add that he was no Marquesan, but a
+Chinaman, a resident in the group from boyhood, and a reverent
+believer in the spells which he described. White men, amongst whom
+Ah Fu included himself, were exempt; but he had a tale of a
+Tahitian woman, who had come to the Marquesas, eaten tapu fish,
+and, although uninformed of her offence and danger, had been
+afflicted and cured exactly like a native.
+
+Doubtless the belief is strong; doubtless, with this weakly and
+fanciful race, it is in many cases strong enough to kill; it should
+be strong indeed in those who tapu their trees secretly, so that
+they may detect a depredator by his sickness. Or, perhaps, we
+should understand the idea of the hidden tapu otherwise, as a
+politic device to spread uneasiness and extort confessions: so
+that, when a man is ailing, he shall ransack his brain for any
+possible offence, and send at once for any proprietor whose rights
+he has invaded. 'Had you hidden a tapu?' we may conceive him
+asking; and I cannot imagine the proprietor gainsaying it; and this
+is perhaps the strangest feature of the system--that it should be
+regarded from without with such a mental and implicit awe, and,
+when examined from within, should present so many apparent
+evidences of design.
+
+We read in Dr. Campbell's Poenamo of a New Zealand girl, who was
+foolishly told that she had eaten a tapu yam, and who instantly
+sickened, and died in the two days of simple terror. The period is
+the same as in the Marquesas; doubtless the symptoms were so too.
+How singular to consider that a superstition of such sway is
+possibly a manufactured article; and that, even if it were not
+originally invented, its details have plainly been arranged by the
+authorities of some Polynesian Scotland Yard. Fitly enough, the
+belief is to-day--and was probably always--far from universal.
+Hell at home is a strong deterrent with some; a passing thought
+with others; with others, again, a theme of public mockery, not
+always well assured; and so in the Marquesas with the tapu. Mr.
+Regler has seen the two extremes of scepticism and implicit fear.
+In the tapu grove he found one fellow stealing breadfruit, cheerful
+and impudent as a street arab; and it was only on a menace of
+exposure that he showed himself the least discountenanced. The
+other case was opposed in every point. Mr. Regler asked a native
+to accompany him upon a voyage; the man went gladly enough, but
+suddenly perceiving a dead tapu fish in the bottom of the boat,
+leaped back with a scream; nor could the promise of a dollar
+prevail upon him to advance.
+
+The Marquesan, it will be observed, adheres to the old idea of the
+local circumscription of beliefs and duties. Not only are the
+whites exempt from consequences; but their transgressions seem to
+be viewed without horror. It was Mr. Regler who had killed the
+fish; yet the devout native was not shocked at Mr. Regler--only
+refused to join him in his boat. A white is a white: the servant
+(so to speak) of other and more liberal gods; and not to be blamed
+if he profit by his liberty. The Jews were perhaps the first to
+interrupt this ancient comity of faiths; and the Jewish virus is
+still strong in Christianity. All the world must respect our
+tapus, or we gnash our teeth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII--HATIHEU
+
+
+
+The bays of Anaho and Hatiheu are divided at their roots by the
+knife-edge of a single hill--the pass so often mentioned; but this
+isthmus expands to the seaward in a considerable peninsula: very
+bare and grassy; haunted by sheep and, at night and morning, by the
+piercing cries of the shepherds; wandered over by a few wild goats;
+and on its sea-front indented with long, clamorous caves, and faced
+with cliffs of the colour and ruinous outline of an old peat-stack.
+In one of these echoing and sunless gullies we saw, clustered like
+sea-birds on a splashing ledge, shrill as sea-birds in their
+salutation to the passing boat, a group of fisherwomen, stripped to
+their gaudy under-clothes. (The clash of the surf and the thin
+female voices echo in my memory.) We had that day a native crew
+and steersman, Kauanui; it was our first experience of Polynesian
+seamanship, which consists in hugging every point of land. There
+is no thought in this of saving time, for they will pull a long way
+in to skirt a point that is embayed. It seems that, as they can
+never get their houses near enough the surf upon the one side, so
+they can never get their boats near enough upon the other. The
+practice in bold water is not so dangerous as it looks--the reflex
+from the rocks sending the boat off. Near beaches with a heavy run
+of sea, I continue to think it very hazardous, and find the
+composure of the natives annoying to behold. We took unmingled
+pleasure, on the way out, to see so near at hand the beach and the
+wonderful colours of the surf. On the way back, when the sea had
+risen and was running strong against us, the fineness of the
+steersman's aim grew more embarrassing. As we came abreast of the
+sea-front, where the surf broke highest, Kauanui embraced the
+occasion to light his pipe, which then made the circuit of the
+boat--each man taking a whiff or two, and, ere he passed it on,
+filling his lungs and cheeks with smoke. Their faces were all
+puffed out like apples as we came abreast of the cliff foot, and
+the bursting surge fell back into the boat in showers. At the next
+point 'cocanetti' was the word, and the stroke borrowed my knife,
+and desisted from his labours to open nuts. These untimely
+indulgences may be compared to the tot of grog served out before a
+ship goes into action.
+
+My purpose in this visit led me first to the boys' school, for
+Hatiheu is the university of the north islands. The hum of the
+lesson came out to meet us. Close by the door, where the draught
+blew coolest, sat the lay brother; around him, in a packed half-
+circle, some sixty high-coloured faces set with staring eyes; and
+in the background of the barn-like room benches were to be seen,
+and blackboards with sums on them in chalk. The brother rose to
+greet us, sensibly humble. Thirty years he had been there, he
+said, and fingered his white locks as a bashful child pulls out his
+pinafore. 'Et point de resultats, monsieur, presque pas de
+resultats.' He pointed to the scholars: 'You see, sir, all the
+youth of Nuka-hiva and Ua-pu. Between the ages of six and fifteen
+this is all that remains; and it is but a few years since we had a
+hundred and twenty from Nuka-hiva alone. Oui, monsieur, cela se
+deperit.' Prayers, and reading and writing, prayers again and
+arithmetic, and more prayers to conclude: such appeared to be the
+dreary nature of the course. For arithmetic all island people have
+a natural taste. In Hawaii they make good progress in mathematics.
+In one of the villages on Majuro, and generally in the Marshall
+group, the whole population sit about the trader when he is
+weighing copra, and each on his own slate takes down the figures
+and computes the total. The trader, finding them so apt,
+introduced fractions, for which they had been taught no rule. At
+first they were quite gravelled but ultimately, by sheer hard
+thinking, reasoned out the result, and came one after another to
+assure the trader he was right. Not many people in Europe could
+have done the like. The course at Hatiheu is therefore less
+dispiriting to Polynesians than a stranger might have guessed; and
+yet how bald it is at best! I asked the brother if he did not tell
+them stories, and he stared at me; if he did not teach them
+history, and he said, 'O yes, they had a little Scripture history--
+from the New Testament'; and repeated his lamentations over the
+lack of results. I had not the heart to put more questions; I
+could but say it must be very discouraging, and resist the impulse
+to add that it seemed also very natural. He looked up--'My days
+are far spent,' he said; 'heaven awaits me.' May that heaven
+forgive me, but I was angry with the old man and his simple
+consolation. For think of his opportunity! The youth, from six to
+fifteen, are taken from their homes by Government, centralised at
+Hatiheu, where they are supported by a weekly tax of food; and,
+with the exception of one month in every year, surrendered wholly
+to the direction of the priests. Since the escapade already
+mentioned the holiday occurs at a different period for the girls
+and for the boys; so that a Marquesan brother and sister meet
+again, after their education is complete, a pair of strangers. It
+is a harsh law, and highly unpopular; but what a power it places in
+the hands of the instructors, and how languidly and dully is that
+power employed by the mission! Too much concern to make the
+natives pious, a design in which they all confess defeat, is, I
+suppose, the explanation of their miserable system. But they might
+see in the girls' school at Tai-o-hae, under the brisk, housewifely
+sisters, a different picture of efficiency, and a scene of
+neatness, airiness, and spirited and mirthful occupation that
+should shame them into cheerier methods. The sisters themselves
+lament their failure. They complain the annual holiday undoes the
+whole year's work; they complain particularly of the heartless
+indifference of the girls. Out of so many pretty and apparently
+affectionate pupils whom they have taught and reared, only two have
+ever returned to pay a visit of remembrance to their teachers.
+These, indeed, come regularly, but the rest, so soon as their
+school-days are over, disappear into the woods like captive
+insects. It is hard to imagine anything more discouraging; and yet
+I do not believe these ladies need despair. For a certain interval
+they keep the girls alive and innocently busy; and if it be at all
+possible to save the race, this would be the means. No such praise
+can be given to the boys' school at Hatiheu. The day is numbered
+already for them all; alike for the teacher and the scholars death
+is girt; he is afoot upon the march; and in the frequent interval
+they sit and yawn. But in life there seems a thread of purpose
+through the least significant; the drowsiest endeavour is not lost,
+and even the school at Hatiheu may be more useful than it seems.
+
+Hatiheu is a place of some pretensions. The end of the bay towards
+Anaho may be called the civil compound, for it boasts the house of
+Kooamua, and close on the beach, under a great tree, that of the
+gendarme, M. Armand Aussel, with his garden, his pictures, his
+books, and his excellent table, to which strangers are made
+welcome. No more singular contrast is possible than between the
+gendarmerie and the priesthood, who are besides in smouldering
+opposition and full of mutual complaints. A priest's kitchen in
+the eastern islands is a depressing spot to see; and many, or most
+of them, make no attempt to keep a garden, sparsely subsisting on
+their rations. But you will never dine with a gendarme without
+smacking your lips; and M. Aussel's home-made sausage and the salad
+from his garden are unforgotten delicacies. Pierre Loti may like
+to know that he is M. Aussel's favourite author, and that his books
+are read in the fit scenery of Hatiheu bay.
+
+The other end is all religious. It is here that an overhanging and
+tip-tilted horn, a good sea-mark for Hatiheu, bursts naked from the
+verdure of the climbing forest, and breaks down shoreward in steep
+taluses and cliffs. From the edge of one of the highest, perhaps
+seven hundred or a thousand feet above the beach, a Virgin looks
+insignificantly down, like a poor lost doll, forgotten there by a
+giant child. This laborious symbol of the Catholics is always
+strange to Protestants; we conceive with wonder that men should
+think it worth while to toil so many days, and clamber so much
+about the face of precipices, for an end that makes us smile; and
+yet I believe it was the wise Bishop Dordillon who chose the place,
+and I know that those who had a hand in the enterprise look back
+with pride upon its vanquished dangers. The boys' school is a
+recent importation; it was at first in Tai-o-hae, beside the
+girls'; and it was only of late, after their joint escapade, that
+the width of the island was interposed between the sexes. But
+Hatiheu must have been a place of missionary importance from
+before. About midway of the beach no less than three churches
+stand grouped in a patch of bananas, intermingled with some pine-
+apples. Two are of wood: the original church, now in disuse; and
+a second that, for some mysterious reason, has never been used.
+The new church is of stone, with twin towers, walls flangeing into
+buttresses, and sculptured front. The design itself is good,
+simple, and shapely; but the character is all in the detail, where
+the architect has bloomed into the sculptor. It is impossible to
+tell in words of the angels (although they are more like winged
+archbishops) that stand guard upon the door, of the cherubs in the
+corners, of the scapegoat gargoyles, or the quaint and spirited
+relief, where St. Michael (the artist's patron) makes short work of
+a protesting Lucifer. We were never weary of viewing the imagery,
+so innocent, sometimes so funny, and yet in the best sense--in the
+sense of inventive gusto and expression--so artistic. I know not
+whether it was more strange to find a building of such merit in a
+corner of a barbarous isle, or to see a building so antique still
+bright with novelty. The architect, a French lay brother, still
+alive and well, and meditating fresh foundations, must have surely
+drawn his descent from a master-builder in the age of the
+cathedrals; and it was in looking on the church of Hatiheu that I
+seemed to perceive the secret charm of mediaeval sculpture; that
+combination of the childish courage of the amateur, attempting all
+things, like the schoolboy on his slate, with the manly
+perseverance of the artist who does not know when he is conquered.
+
+I had always afterwards a strong wish to meet the architect,
+Brother Michel; and one day, when I was talking with the Resident
+in Tai-o-hae (the chief port of the island), there were shown in to
+us an old, worn, purblind, ascetic-looking priest, and a lay
+brother, a type of all that is most sound in France, with a broad,
+clever, honest, humorous countenance, an eye very large and bright,
+and a strong and healthy body inclining to obesity. But that his
+blouse was black and his face shaven clean, you might pick such a
+man to-day, toiling cheerfully in his own patch of vines, from half
+a dozen provinces of France; and yet he had always for me a
+haunting resemblance to an old kind friend of my boyhood, whom I
+name in case any of my readers should share with me that memory--
+Dr. Paul, of the West Kirk. Almost at the first word I was sure it
+was my architect, and in a moment we were deep in a discussion of
+Hatiheu church. Brother Michel spoke always of his labours with a
+twinkle of humour, underlying which it was possible to spy a
+serious pride, and the change from one to another was often very
+human and diverting. 'Et vos gargouilles moyen-age,' cried I;
+'comme elles sont originates!' 'N'est-ce pas? Elles sont bien
+droles!' he said, smiling broadly; and the next moment, with a
+sudden gravity: 'Cependant il y en a une qui a une patte de casse;
+il faut que je voie cela.' I asked if he had any model--a point we
+much discussed. 'Non,' said he simply; 'c'est une eglise ideale.'
+The relievo was his favourite performance, and very justly so. The
+angels at the door, he owned, he would like to destroy and replace.
+'Ils n'ont pas de vie, ils manquent de vie. Vous devriez voir mon
+eglise a la Dominique; j'ai la une Vierge qui est vraiment
+gentille.' 'Ah,' I cried, 'they told me you had said you would
+never build another church, and I wrote in my journal I could not
+believe it.' 'Oui, j'aimerais bien en fairs une autre,' he
+confessed, and smiled at the confession. An artist will understand
+how much I was attracted by this conversation. There is no bond so
+near as a community in that unaffected interest and slightly shame-
+faced pride which mark the intelligent man enamoured of an art. He
+sees the limitations of his aim, the defects of his practice; he
+smiles to be so employed upon the shores of death, yet sees in his
+own devotion something worthy. Artists, if they had the same sense
+of humour with the Augurs, would smile like them on meeting, but
+the smile would not be scornful.
+
+I had occasion to see much of this excellent man. He sailed with
+us from Tai-o-hae to Hiva-oa, a dead beat of ninety miles against a
+heavy sea. It was what is called a good passage, and a feather in
+the Casco's cap; but among the most miserable forty hours that any
+one of us had ever passed. We were swung and tossed together all
+that time like shot in a stage thunder-box. The mate was thrown
+down and had his head cut open; the captain was sick on deck; the
+cook sick in the galley. Of all our party only two sat down to
+dinner. I was one. I own that I felt wretchedly; and I can only
+say of the other, who professed to feel quite well, that she fled
+at an early moment from the table. It was in these circumstances
+that we skirted the windward shore of that indescribable island of
+Ua-pu; viewing with dizzy eyes the coves, the capes, the breakers,
+the climbing forests, and the inaccessible stone needles that
+surmount the mountains. The place persists, in a dark corner of
+our memories, like a piece of the scenery of nightmares. The end
+of this distressful passage, where we were to land our passengers,
+was in a similar vein of roughness. The surf ran high on the beach
+at Taahauku; the boat broached-to and capsized; and all hands were
+submerged. Only the brother himself, who was well used to the
+experience, skipped ashore, by some miracle of agility, with scarce
+a sprinkling. Thenceforward, during our stay at Hiva-oa, he was
+our cicerone and patron; introducing us, taking us excursions,
+serving us in every way, and making himself daily more beloved.
+
+Michel Blanc had been a carpenter by trade; had made money and
+retired, supposing his active days quite over; and it was only when
+he found idleness dangerous that he placed his capital and
+acquirements at the service of the mission. He became their
+carpenter, mason, architect, and engineer; added sculpture to his
+accomplishments, and was famous for his skill in gardening. He
+wore an enviable air of having found a port from life's contentions
+and lying there strongly anchored; went about his business with a
+jolly simplicity; complained of no lack of results--perhaps shyly
+thinking his own statuary result enough; and was altogether a
+pattern of the missionary layman.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII--THE PORT OF ENTRY
+
+
+
+The port--the mart, the civil and religious capital of these rude
+islands--is called Tai-o-hae, and lies strung along the beach of a
+precipitous green bay in Nuka-hiva. It was midwinter when we came
+thither, and the weather was sultry, boisterous, and inconstant.
+Now the wind blew squally from the land down gaps of splintered
+precipice; now, between the sentinel islets of the entry, it came
+in gusts from seaward. Heavy and dark clouds impended on the
+summits; the rain roared and ceased; the scuppers of the mountain
+gushed; and the next day we would see the sides of the amphitheatre
+bearded with white falls. Along the beach the town shows a thin
+file of houses, mostly white, and all ensconced in the foliage of
+an avenue of green puraos; a pier gives access from the sea across
+the belt of breakers; to the eastward there stands, on a projecting
+bushy hill, the old fort which is now the calaboose, or prison;
+eastward still, alone in a garden, the Residency flies the colours
+of France. Just off Calaboose Hill, the tiny Government schooner
+rides almost permanently at anchor, marks eight bells in the
+morning (there or thereabout) with the unfurling of her flag, and
+salutes the setting sun with the report of a musket.
+
+Here dwell together, and share the comforts of a club (which may be
+enumerated as a billiard-board, absinthe, a map of the world on
+Mercator's projection, and one of the most agreeable verandahs in
+the tropics), a handful of whites of varying nationality, mostly
+French officials, German and Scottish merchant clerks, and the
+agents of the opium monopoly. There are besides three tavern-
+keepers, the shrewd Scot who runs the cotton gin-mill, two white
+ladies, and a sprinkling of people 'on the beach'--a South Sea
+expression for which there is no exact equivalent. It is a
+pleasant society, and a hospitable. But one man, who was often to
+be seen seated on the logs at the pier-head, merits a word for the
+singularity of his history and appearance. Long ago, it seems, he
+fell in love with a native lady, a High Chiefess in Ua-pu. She, on
+being approached, declared she could never marry a man who was
+untattooed; it looked so naked; whereupon, with some greatness of
+soul, our hero put himself in the hands of the Tahukus, and, with
+still greater, persevered until the process was complete. He had
+certainly to bear a great expense, for the Tahuku will not work
+without reward; and certainly exquisite pain. Kooamua, high chief
+as he was, and one of the old school, was only part tattooed; he
+could not, he told us with lively pantomime, endure the torture to
+an end. Our enamoured countryman was more resolved; he was
+tattooed from head to foot in the most approved methods of the art;
+and at last presented himself before his mistress a new man. The
+fickle fair one could never behold him from that day except with
+laughter. For my part, I could never see the man without a kind of
+admiration; of him it might be said, if ever of any, that he had
+loved not wisely, but too well.
+
+The Residency stands by itself, Calaboose Hill screening it from
+the fringe of town along the further bay. The house is commodious,
+with wide verandahs; all day it stands open, back and front, and
+the trade blows copiously over its bare floors. On a week-day the
+garden offers a scene of most untropical animation, half a dozen
+convicts toiling there cheerfully with spade and barrow, and
+touching hats and smiling to the visitor like old attached family
+servants. On Sunday these are gone, and nothing to be seen but
+dogs of all ranks and sizes peacefully slumbering in the shady
+grounds; for the dogs of Tai-o-hae are very courtly-minded, and
+make the seat of Government their promenade and place of siesta.
+In front and beyond, a strip of green down loses itself in a low
+wood of many species of acacia; and deep in the wood a ruinous wall
+encloses the cemetery of the Europeans. English and Scottish sleep
+there, and Scandinavians, and French maitres de manoeuvres and
+maitres ouvriers: mingling alien dust. Back in the woods,
+perhaps, the blackbird, or (as they call him there) the island
+nightingale, will be singing home strains; and the ceaseless
+requiem of the surf hangs on the ear. I have never seen a resting-
+place more quiet; but it was a long thought how far these sleepers
+had all travelled, and from what diverse homes they had set forth,
+to lie here in the end together.
+
+On the summit of its promontory hill, the calaboose stands all day
+with doors and window-shutters open to the trade. On my first
+visit a dog was the only guardian visible. He, indeed, rose with
+an attitude so menacing that I was glad to lay hands on an old
+barrel-hoop; and I think the weapon must have been familiar, for
+the champion instantly retreated, and as I wandered round the court
+and through the building, I could see him, with a couple of
+companions, humbly dodging me about the corners. The prisoners'
+dormitory was a spacious, airy room, devoid of any furniture; its
+whitewashed walls covered with inscriptions in Marquesan and rude
+drawings: one of the pier, not badly done; one of a murder;
+several of French soldiers in uniform. There was one legend in
+French: 'Je n'est' (sic) 'pas le sou.' From this noontide
+quietude it must not be supposed the prison was untenanted; the
+calaboose at Tai-o-hae does a good business. But some of its
+occupants were gardening at the Residency, and the rest were
+probably at work upon the streets, as free as our scavengers at
+home, although not so industrious. On the approach of evening they
+would be called in like children from play; and the harbour-master
+(who is also the jailer) would go through the form of locking them
+up until six the next morning. Should a prisoner have any call in
+town, whether of pleasure or affairs, he has but to unhook the
+window-shutters; and if he is back again, and the shutter decently
+replaced, by the hour of call on the morrow, he may have met the
+harbour-master in the avenue, and there will be no complaint, far
+less any punishment. But this is not all. The charming French
+Resident, M. Delaruelle, carried me one day to the calaboose on an
+official visit. In the green court, a very ragged gentleman, his
+legs deformed with the island elephantiasis, saluted us smiling.
+'One of our political prisoners--an insurgent from Raiatea,' said
+the Resident; and then to the jailer: 'I thought I had ordered him
+a new pair of trousers.' Meanwhile no other convict was to be
+seen--'Eh bien,' said the Resident, 'ou sont vos prisonniers?'
+'Monsieur le Resident,' replied the jailer, saluting with soldierly
+formality, 'comme c'est jour de fete, je les ai laisse aller a la
+chasse.' They were all upon the mountains hunting goats!
+Presently we came to the quarters of the women, likewise deserted--
+'Ou sont vos bonnes femmes?' asked the Resident; and the jailer
+cheerfully responded: 'Je crois, Monsieur le Resident, qu'elles
+sont allees quelquepart faire une visite.' It had been the design
+of M. Delaruelle, who was much in love with the whimsicalities of
+his small realm, to elicit something comical; but not even he
+expected anything so perfect as the last. To complete the picture
+of convict life in Tai-o-hae, it remains to be added that these
+criminals draw a salary as regularly as the President of the
+Republic. Ten sous a day is their hire. Thus they have money,
+food, shelter, clothing, and, I was about to write, their liberty.
+The French are certainly a good-natured people, and make easy
+masters. They are besides inclined to view the Marquesans with an
+eye of humorous indulgence. 'They are dying, poor devils!' said M.
+Delaruelle: 'the main thing is to let them die in peace.' And it
+was not only well said, but I believe expressed the general
+thought. Yet there is another element to be considered; for these
+convicts are not merely useful, they are almost essential to the
+French existence. With a people incurably idle, dispirited by what
+can only be called endemic pestilence, and inflamed with ill-
+feeling against their new masters, crime and convict labour are a
+godsend to the Government.
+
+Theft is practically the sole crime. Originally petty pilferers,
+the men of Tai-o-hae now begin to force locks and attack strong-
+boxes. Hundreds of dollars have been taken at a time; though, with
+that redeeming moderation so common in Polynesian theft, the
+Marquesan burglar will always take a part and leave a part, sharing
+(so to speak) with the proprietor. If it be Chilian coin--the
+island currency--he will escape; if the sum is in gold, French
+silver, or bank-notes, the police wait until the money begins to
+come in circulation, and then easily pick out their man. And now
+comes the shameful part. In plain English, the prisoner is
+tortured until he confesses and (if that be possible) restores the
+money. To keep him alone, day and night, in the black hole, is to
+inflict on the Marquesan torture inexpressible. Even his robberies
+are carried on in the plain daylight, under the open sky, with the
+stimulus of enterprise, and the countenance of an accomplice; his
+terror of the dark is still insurmountable; conceive, then, what he
+endures in his solitary dungeon; conceive how he longs to confess,
+become a full-fledged convict, and be allowed to sleep beside his
+comrades. While we were in Tai-o-hae a thief was under prevention.
+He had entered a house about eight in the morning, forced a trunk,
+and stolen eleven hundred francs; and now, under the horrors of
+darkness, solitude, and a bedevilled cannibal imagination, he was
+reluctantly confessing and giving up his spoil. From one cache,
+which he had already pointed out, three hundred francs had been
+recovered, and it was expected that he would presently disgorge the
+rest. This would be ugly enough if it were all; but I am bound to
+say, because it is a matter the French should set at rest, that
+worse is continually hinted. I heard that one man was kept six
+days with his arms bound backward round a barrel; and it is the
+universal report that every gendarme in the South Seas is equipped
+with something in the nature of a thumbscrew. I do not know this.
+I never had the face to ask any of the gendarmes--pleasant,
+intelligent, and kindly fellows--with whom I have been intimate,
+and whose hospitality I have enjoyed; and perhaps the tale reposes
+(as I hope it does) on a misconstruction of that ingenious cat's-
+cradle with which the French agent of police so readily secures a
+prisoner. But whether physical or moral, torture is certainly
+employed; and by a barbarous injustice, the state of accusation (in
+which a man may very well be innocently placed) is positively
+painful; the state of conviction (in which all are supposed guilty)
+is comparatively free, and positively pleasant. Perhaps worse
+still,--not only the accused, but sometimes his wife, his mistress,
+or his friend, is subjected to the same hardships. I was admiring,
+in the tapu system, the ingenuity of native methods of detection;
+there is not much to admire in those of the French, and to lock up
+a timid child in a dark room, and, if he proved obstinate, lock up
+his sister in the next, is neither novel nor humane.
+
+The main occasion of these thefts is the new vice of opium-eating.
+'Here nobody ever works, and all eat opium,' said a gendarme; and
+Ah Fu knew a woman who ate a dollar's worth in a day. The
+successful thief will give a handful of money to each of his
+friends, a dress to a woman, pass an evening in one of the taverns
+of Tai-o-hae, during which he treats all comers, produce a big lump
+of opium, and retire to the bush to eat and sleep it off. A
+trader, who did not sell opium, confessed to me that he was at his
+wit's end. 'I do not sell it, but others do,' said he. 'The
+natives only work to buy it; if they walk over to me to sell their
+cotton, they have just to walk over to some one else to buy their
+opium with my money. And why should they be at the bother of two
+walks? There is no use talking,' he added--'opium is the currency
+of this country.'
+
+The man under prevention during my stay at Tai-o-hae lost patience
+while the Chinese opium-seller was being examined in his presence.
+'Of course he sold me opium!' he broke out; 'all the Chinese here
+sell opium. It was only to buy opium that I stole; it is only to
+buy opium that anybody steals. And what you ought to do is to let
+no opium come here, and no Chinamen.' This is precisely what is
+done in Samoa by a native Government; but the French have bound
+their own hands, and for forty thousand francs sold native subjects
+to crime and death. This horrid traffic may be said to have sprung
+up by accident. It was Captain Hart who had the misfortune to be
+the means of beginning it, at a time when his plantations
+flourished in the Marquesas, and he found a difficulty in keeping
+Chinese coolies. To-day the plantations are practically deserted
+and the Chinese gone; but in the meanwhile the natives have learned
+the vice, the patent brings in a round sum, and the needy
+Government at Papeete shut their eyes and open their pockets. Of
+course, the patentee is supposed to sell to Chinamen alone; equally
+of course, no one could afford to pay forty thousand francs for the
+privilege of supplying a scattered handful of Chinese; and every
+one knows the truth, and all are ashamed of it. French officials
+shake their heads when opium is mentioned; and the agents of the
+farmer blush for their employment. Those that live in glass houses
+should not throw stones; as a subject of the British crown, I am an
+unwilling shareholder in the largest opium business under heaven.
+But the British case is highly complicated; it implies the
+livelihood of millions; and must be reformed, when it can be
+reformed at all, with prudence. This French business, on the other
+hand, is a nostrum and a mere excrescence. No native industry was
+to be encouraged: the poison is solemnly imported. No native
+habit was to be considered: the vice has been gratuitously
+introduced. And no creature profits, save the Government at
+Papeete--the not very enviable gentlemen who pay them, and the
+Chinese underlings who do the dirty work.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX--THE HOUSE OF TEMOANA
+
+
+
+The history of the Marquesas is, of late years, much confused by
+the coming and going of the French. At least twice they have
+seized the archipelago, at least once deserted it; and in the
+meanwhile the natives pursued almost without interruption their
+desultory cannibal wars. Through these events and changing
+dynasties, a single considerable figure may be seen to move: that
+of the high chief, a king, Temoana. Odds and ends of his history
+came to my ears: how he was at first a convert to the Protestant
+mission; how he was kidnapped or exiled from his native land,
+served as cook aboard a whaler, and was shown, for small charge, in
+English seaports; how he returned at last to the Marquesas, fell
+under the strong and benign influence of the late bishop, extended
+his influence in the group, was for a while joint ruler with the
+prelate, and died at last the chief supporter of Catholicism and
+the French. His widow remains in receipt of two pounds a month
+from the French Government. Queen she is usually called, but in
+the official almanac she figures as 'Madame Vaekehu, Grande
+Chefesse.' His son (natural or adoptive, I know not which),
+Stanislao Moanatini, chief of Akaui, serves in Tai-o-hae as a kind
+of Minister of Public Works; and the daughter of Stanislao is High
+Chiefess of the southern island of Tauata. These, then, are the
+greatest folk of the archipelago; we thought them also the most
+estimable. This is the rule in Polynesia, with few exceptions; the
+higher the family, the better the man--better in sense, better in
+manners, and usually taller and stronger in body. A stranger
+advances blindfold. He scrapes acquaintance as he can. Save the
+tattoo in the Marquesas, nothing indicates the difference of rank;
+and yet almost invariably we found, after we had made them, that
+our friends were persons of station. I have said 'usually taller
+and stronger.' I might have been more absolute,--over all
+Polynesia, and a part of Micronesia, the rule holds good; the great
+ones of the isle, and even of the village, are greater of bone and
+muscle, and often heavier of flesh, than any commoner. The usual
+explanation--that the high-born child is more industriously
+shampooed, is probably the true one. In New Caledonia, at least,
+where the difference does not exist, has never been remarked, the
+practice of shampooing seems to be itself unknown. Doctors would
+be well employed in a study of the point.
+
+Vaekehu lives at the other end of the town from the Residency,
+beyond the buildings of the mission. Her house is on the European
+plan: a table in the midst of the chief room; photographs and
+religious pictures on the wall. It commands to either hand a
+charming vista: through the front door, a peep of green lawn,
+scurrying pigs, the pendent fans of the coco-palm and splendour of
+the bursting surf: through the back, mounting forest glades and
+coronals of precipice. Here, in the strong thorough-draught, Her
+Majesty received us in a simple gown of print, and with no mark of
+royalty but the exquisite finish of her tattooed mittens, the
+elaboration of her manners, and the gentle falsetto in which all
+the highly refined among Marquesan ladies (and Vaekehu above all
+others) delight to sing their language. An adopted daughter
+interpreted, while we gave the news, and rehearsed by name our
+friends of Anaho. As we talked, we could see, through the landward
+door, another lady of the household at her toilet under the green
+trees; who presently, when her hair was arranged, and her hat
+wreathed with flowers, appeared upon the back verandah with
+gracious salutations.
+
+Vaekehu is very deaf; 'merci' is her only word of French; and I do
+not know that she seemed clever. An exquisite, kind refinement,
+with a shade of quietism, gathered perhaps from the nuns, was what
+chiefly struck us. Or rather, upon that first occasion, we were
+conscious of a sense as of district-visiting on our part, and
+reduced evangelical gentility on the part of our hostess. The
+other impression followed after she was more at ease, and came with
+Stanislao and his little girl to dine on board the Casco. She had
+dressed for the occasion: wore white, which very well became her
+strong brown face; and sat among us, eating or smoking her
+cigarette, quite cut off from all society, or only now and then
+included through the intermediary of her son. It was a position
+that might have been ridiculous, and she made it ornamental; making
+believe to hear and to be entertained; her face, whenever she met
+our eyes, lighting with the smile of good society; her
+contributions to the talk, when she made any, and that was seldom,
+always complimentary and pleasing. No attention was paid to the
+child, for instance, but what she remarked and thanked us for. Her
+parting with each, when she came to leave, was gracious and pretty,
+as had been every step of her behaviour. When Mrs. Stevenson held
+out her hand to say good-bye, Vaekehu took it, held it, and a
+moment smiled upon her; dropped it, and then, as upon a kindly
+after-thought, and with a sort of warmth of condescension, held out
+both hands and kissed my wife upon both cheeks. Given the same
+relation of years and of rank, the thing would have been so done on
+the boards of the Comedie Francaise; just so might Madame Brohan
+have warmed and condescended to Madame Broisat in the Marquis de
+Villemer. It was my part to accompany our guests ashore: when I
+kissed the little girl good-bye at the pier steps, Vaekehu gave a
+cry of gratification, reached down her hand into the boat, took
+mine, and pressed it with that flattering softness which seems the
+coquetry of the old lady in every quarter of the earth. The next
+moment she had taken Stanislao's arm, and they moved off along the
+pier in the moonlight, leaving me bewildered. This was a queen of
+cannibals; she was tattooed from hand to foot, and perhaps the
+greatest masterpiece of that art now extant, so that a while ago,
+before she was grown prim, her leg was one of the sights of Tai-o-
+hae; she had been passed from chief to chief; she had been fought
+for and taken in war; perhaps, being so great a lady, she had sat
+on the high place, and throned it there, alone of her sex, while
+the drums were going twenty strong and the priests carried up the
+blood-stained baskets of long-pig. And now behold her, out of that
+past of violence and sickening feasts, step forth, in her age, a
+quiet, smooth, elaborate old lady, such as you might find at home
+(mittened also, but not often so well-mannered) in a score of
+country houses. Only Vaekehu's mittens were of dye, not of silk;
+and they had been paid for, not in money, but the cooked flesh of
+men. It came in my mind with a clap, what she could think of it
+herself, and whether at heart, perhaps, she might not regret and
+aspire after the barbarous and stirring past. But when I asked
+Stanislao--'Ah!' said he, 'she is content; she is religious, she
+passes all her days with the sisters.'
+
+Stanislao (Stanislaos, with the final consonant evaded after the
+Polynesian habit) was sent by Bishop Dordillon to South America,
+and there educated by the fathers. His French is fluent, his talk
+sensible and spirited, and in his capacity of ganger-in-chief, he
+is of excellent service to the French. With the prestige of his
+name and family, and with the stick when needful, he keeps the
+natives working and the roads passable. Without Stanislao and the
+convicts, I am in doubt what would become of the present regimen in
+Nuka-hiva; whether the highways might not be suffered to close up,
+the pier to wash away, and the Residency to fall piecemeal about
+the ears of impotent officials. And yet though the hereditary
+favourer, and one of the chief props of French authority, he has
+always an eye upon the past. He showed me where the old public
+place had stood, still to be traced by random piles of stone; told
+me how great and fine it was, and surrounded on all sides by
+populous houses, whence, at the beating of the drums, the folk
+crowded to make holiday. The drum-beat of the Polynesian has a
+strange and gloomy stimulation for the nerves of all. White
+persons feel it--at these precipitate sounds their hearts beat
+faster; and, according to old residents, its effect on the natives
+was extreme. Bishop Dordillon might entreat; Temoana himself
+command and threaten; at the note of the drum wild instincts
+triumphed. And now it might beat upon these ruins, and who should
+assemble? The houses are down, the people dead, their lineage
+extinct; and the sweepings and fugitives of distant bays and
+islands encamp upon their graves. The decline of the dance
+Stanislao especially laments. 'Chaque pays a ses coutumes,' said
+he; but in the report of any gendarme, perhaps corruptly eager to
+increase the number of delits and the instruments of his own power,
+custom after custom is placed on the expurgatorial index. 'Tenez,
+une danse qui n'est pas permise,' said Stanislao: 'je ne sais pas
+pourquoi, elle est tres jolie, elle va comme ca,' and sticking his
+umbrella upright in the road, he sketched the steps and gestures.
+All his criticisms of the present, all his regrets for the past,
+struck me as temperate and sensible. The short term of office of
+the Resident he thought the chief defect of the administration;
+that officer having scarce begun to be efficient ere he was
+recalled. I thought I gathered, too, that he regarded with some
+fear the coming change from a naval to a civil governor. I am sure
+at least that I regard it so myself; for the civil servants of
+France have never appeared to any foreigner as at all the flower of
+their country, while her naval officers may challenge competition
+with the world. In all his talk, Stanislao was particular to speak
+of his own country as a land of savages; and when he stated an
+opinion of his own, it was with some apologetic preface, alleging
+that he was 'a savage who had travelled.' There was a deal, in
+this elaborate modesty, of honest pride. Yet there was something
+in the precaution that saddened me; and I could not but fear he was
+only forestalling a taunt that he had heard too often.
+
+I recall with interest two interviews with Stanislao. The first
+was a certain afternoon of tropic rain, which we passed together in
+the verandah of the club; talking at times with heightened voices
+as the showers redoubled overhead, passing at times into the
+billiard-room, to consult, in the dim, cloudy daylight, that map of
+the world which forms its chief adornment. He was naturally
+ignorant of English history, so that I had much of news to
+communicate. The story of Gordon I told him in full, and many
+episodes of the Indian Mutiny, Lucknow, the second battle of Cawn-
+pore, the relief of Arrah, the death of poor Spottis-woode, and Sir
+Hugh Rose's hotspur, midland campaign. He was intent to hear; his
+brown face, strongly marked with small-pox, kindled and changed
+with each vicissitude. His eyes glowed with the reflected light of
+battle; his questions were many and intelligent, and it was chiefly
+these that sent us so often to the map. But it is of our parting
+that I keep the strongest sense. We were to sail on the morrow,
+and the night had fallen, dark, gusty, and rainy, when we stumbled
+up the hill to bid farewell to Stanislao. He had already loaded us
+with gifts; but more were waiting. We sat about the table over
+cigars and green cocoa-nuts; claps of wind blew through the house
+and extinguished the lamp, which was always instantly relighted
+with a single match; and these recurrent intervals of darkness were
+felt as a relief. For there was something painful and embarrassing
+in the kindness of that separation. 'Ah, vous devriez rester ici,
+mon cher ami!' cried Stanislao. 'Vous etes les gens qu'il faut
+pour les Kanaques; vous etes doux, vous et votre famille; vous
+seriez obeis dans toutes les iles.' We had been civil; not always
+that, my conscience told me, and never anything beyond; and all
+this to-do is a measure, not of our considerateness, but of the
+want of it in others. The rest of the evening, on to Vaekehu's and
+back as far as to the pier, Stanislao walked with my arm and
+sheltered me with his umbrella; and after the boat had put off, we
+could still distinguish, in the murky darkness, his gestures of
+farewell. His words, if there were any, were drowned by the rain
+and the loud surf.
+
+I have mentioned presents, a vexed question in the South Seas; and
+one which well illustrates the common, ignorant habit of regarding
+races in a lump. In many quarters the Polynesian gives only to
+receive. I have visited islands where the population mobbed me for
+all the world like dogs after the waggon of cat's-meat; and where
+the frequent proposition, 'You my pleni (friend),' or (with more of
+pathos) 'You all 'e same my father,' must be received with hearty
+laughter and a shout. And perhaps everywhere, among the greedy and
+rapacious, a gift is regarded as a sprat to catch a whale. It is
+the habit to give gifts and to receive returns, and such
+characters, complying with the custom, will look to it nearly that
+they do not lose. But for persons of a different stamp the
+statement must be reversed. The shabby Polynesian is anxious till
+he has received the return gift; the generous is uneasy until he
+has made it. The first is disappointed if you have not given more
+than he; the second is miserable if he thinks he has given less
+than you. This is my experience; if it clash with that of others,
+I pity their fortune, and praise mine: the circumstances cannot
+change what I have seen, nor lessen what I have received. And
+indeed I find that those who oppose me often argue from a ground of
+singular presumptions; comparing Polynesians with an ideal person,
+compact of generosity and gratitude, whom I never had the pleasure
+of encountering; and forgetting that what is almost poverty to us
+is wealth almost unthinkable to them. I will give one instance: I
+chanced to speak with consideration of these gifts of Stanislao's
+with a certain clever man, a great hater and contemner of Kanakas.
+'Well! what were they?' he cried. 'A pack of old men's beards.
+Trash!' And the same gentleman, some half an hour later, being
+upon a different train of thought, dwelt at length on the esteem in
+which the Marquesans held that sort of property, how they preferred
+it to all others except land, and what fancy prices it would fetch.
+Using his own figures, I computed that, in this commodity alone,
+the gifts of Vaekehu and Stanislao represented between two and
+three hundred dollars; and the queen's official salary is of two
+hundred and forty in the year.
+
+But generosity on the one hand, and conspicuous meanness on the
+other, are in the South Seas, as at home, the exception. It is
+neither with any hope of gain, nor with any lively wish to please,
+that the ordinary Polynesian chooses and presents his gifts. A
+plain social duty lies before him, which he performs correctly, but
+without the least enthusiasm. And we shall best understand his
+attitude of mind, if we examine our own to the cognate absurdity of
+marriage presents. There we give without any special thought of a
+return; yet if the circumstance arise, and the return be withheld,
+we shall judge ourselves insulted. We give them usually without
+affection, and almost never with a genuine desire to please; and
+our gift is rather a mark of our own status than a measure of our
+love to the recipients. So in a great measure and with the common
+run of the Polynesians; their gifts are formal; they imply no more
+than social recognition; and they are made and reciprocated, as we
+pay and return our morning visits. And the practice of marking and
+measuring events and sentiments by presents is universal in the
+island world. A gift plays with them the part of stamp and seal;
+and has entered profoundly into the mind of islanders. Peace and
+war, marriage, adoption and naturalisation, are celebrated or
+declared by the acceptance or the refusal of gifts; and it is as
+natural for the islander to bring a gift as for us to carry a card-
+case.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X--A PORTRAIT AND A STORY
+
+
+
+I have had occasion several times to name the late bishop, Father
+Dordillon, 'Monseigneur,' as he is still almost universally called,
+Vicar-Apostolic of the Marquesas and Bishop of Cambysopolis in
+partibus. Everywhere in the islands, among all classes and races,
+this fine, old, kindly, cheerful fellow is remembered with
+affection and respect. His influence with the natives was
+paramount. They reckoned him the highest of men--higher than an
+admiral; brought him their money to keep; took his advice upon
+their purchases; nor would they plant trees upon their own land
+till they had the approval of the father of the islands. During
+the time of the French exodus he singly represented Europe, living
+in the Residency, and ruling by the hand of Temoana. The first
+roads were made under his auspices and by his persuasion. The old
+road between Hatiheu and Anaho was got under way from either side
+on the ground that it would be pleasant for an evening promenade,
+and brought to completion by working on the rivalry of the two
+villages. The priest would boast in Hatiheu of the progress made
+in Anaho, and he would tell the folk of Anaho, 'If you don't take
+care, your neighbours will be over the hill before you are at the
+top.' It could not be so done to-day; it could then; death, opium,
+and depopulation had not gone so far; and the people of Hatiheu, I
+was told, still vied with each other in fine attire, and used to go
+out by families, in the cool of the evening, boat-sailing and
+racing in the bay. There seems some truth at least in the common
+view, that this joint reign of Temoana and the bishop was the last
+and brief golden age of the Marquesas. But the civil power
+returned, the mission was packed out of the Residency at twenty-
+four hours' notice, new methods supervened, and the golden age
+(whatever it quite was) came to an end. It is the strongest proof
+of Father Dordillon's prestige that it survived, seemingly without
+loss, this hasty deposition.
+
+His method with the natives was extremely mild. Among these
+barbarous children he still played the part of the smiling father;
+and he was careful to observe, in all indifferent matters, the
+Marquesan etiquette. Thus, in the singular system of artificial
+kinship, the bishop had been adopted by Vaekehu as a grandson; Miss
+Fisher, of Hatiheu, as a daughter. From that day, Monseigneur
+never addressed the young lady except as his mother, and closed his
+letters with the formalities of a dutiful son. With Europeans he
+could be strict, even to the extent of harshness. He made no
+distinction against heretics, with whom he was on friendly terms;
+but the rules of his own Church he would see observed; and once at
+least he had a white man clapped in jail for the desecration of a
+saint's day. But even this rigour, so intolerable to laymen, so
+irritating to Protestants, could not shake his popularity. We
+shall best conceive him by examples nearer home; we may all have
+known some divine of the old school in Scotland, a literal
+Sabbatarian, a stickler for the letter of the law, who was yet in
+private modest, innocent, genial and mirthful. Much such a man, it
+seems, was Father Dordillon. And his popularity bore a test yet
+stronger. He had the name, and probably deserved it, of a shrewd
+man in business and one that made the mission pay. Nothing so much
+stirs up resentment as the inmixture in commerce of religious
+bodies; but even rival traders spoke well of Monseigneur.
+
+His character is best portrayed in the story of the days of his
+decline. A time came when, from the failure of sight, he must
+desist from his literary labours: his Marquesan hymns, grammars,
+and dictionaries; his scientific papers, lives of saints, and
+devotional poetry. He cast about for a new interest: pitched on
+gardening, and was to be seen all day, with spade and water-pot, in
+his childlike eagerness, actually running between the borders.
+Another step of decay, and he must leave his garden also.
+Instantly a new occupation was devised, and he sat in the mission
+cutting paper flowers and wreaths. His diocese was not great
+enough for his activity; the churches of the Marquesas were papered
+with his handiwork, and still he must be making more. 'Ah,' said
+he, smiling, 'when I am dead what a fine time you will have
+clearing out my trash!' He had been dead about six months; but I
+was pleased to see some of his trophies still exposed, and looked
+upon them with a smile: the tribute (if I have read his cheerful
+character aright) which he would have preferred to any useless
+tears. Disease continued progressively to disable him; he who had
+clambered so stalwartly over the rude rocks of the Marquesas,
+bringing peace to warfaring clans, was for some time carried in a
+chair between the mission and the church, and at last confined to
+bed, impotent with dropsy, and tormented with bed-sores and
+sciatica. Here he lay two months without complaint; and on the
+11th January 1888, in the seventy-ninth year of his life, and the
+thirty-fourth of his labours in the Marquesas, passed away.
+
+Those who have a taste for hearing missions, Protestant or
+Catholic, decried, must seek their pleasure elsewhere than in my
+pages. Whether Catholic or Protestant, with all their gross blots,
+with all their deficiency of candour, of humour, and of common
+sense, the missionaries are the best and the most useful whites in
+the Pacific. This is a subject which will follow us throughout;
+but there is one part of it that may conveniently be treated here.
+The married and the celibate missionary, each has his particular
+advantage and defect. The married missionary, taking him at the
+best, may offer to the native what he is much in want of--a higher
+picture of domestic life; but the woman at his elbow tends to keep
+him in touch with Europe and out of touch with Polynesia, and to
+perpetuate, and even to ingrain, parochial decencies far best
+forgotten. The mind of the female missionary tends, for instance,
+to be continually busied about dress. She can be taught with
+extreme difficulty to think any costume decent but that to which
+she grew accustomed on Clapham Common; and to gratify this
+prejudice, the native is put to useless expense, his mind is
+tainted with the morbidities of Europe, and his health is set in
+danger. The celibate missionary, on the other hand, and whether at
+best or worst, falls readily into native ways of life; to which he
+adds too commonly what is either a mark of celibate man at large,
+or an inheritance from mediaeval saints--I mean slovenly habits and
+an unclean person. There are, of course, degrees in this; and the
+sister (of course, and all honour to her) is as fresh as a lady at
+a ball. For the diet there is nothing to be said--it must amaze
+and shock the Polynesian--but for the adoption of native habits
+there is much. 'Chaque pays a ses coutumes,' said Stanislao; these
+it is the missionary's delicate task to modify; and the more he can
+do so from within, and from a native standpoint, the better he will
+do his work; and here I think the Catholics have sometimes the
+advantage; in the Vicariate of Dordillon, I am sure they had it. I
+have heard the bishop blamed for his indulgence to the natives, and
+above all because he did not rage with sufficient energy against
+cannibalism. It was a part of his policy to live among the natives
+like an elder brother; to follow where he could; to lead where it
+was necessary; never to drive; and to encourage the growth of new
+habits, instead of violently rooting up the old. And it might be
+better, in the long-run, if this policy were always followed.
+
+It might be supposed that native missionaries would prove more
+indulgent, but the reverse is found to be the case. The new broom
+sweeps clean; and the white missionary of to-day is often
+embarrassed by the bigotry of his native coadjutor. What else
+should we expect? On some islands, sorcery, polygamy, human
+sacrifice, and tobacco-smoking have been prohibited, the dress of
+the native has been modified, and himself warned in strong terms
+against rival sects of Christianity; all by the same man, at the
+same period of time, and with the like authority. By what
+criterion is the convert to distinguish the essential from the
+unessential? He swallows the nostrum whole; there has been no play
+of mind, no instruction, and, except for some brute utility in the
+prohibitions, no advance. To call things by their proper names,
+this is teaching superstition. It is unfortunate to use the word;
+so few people have read history, and so many have dipped into
+little atheistic manuals, that the majority will rush to a
+conclusion, and suppose the labour lost. And far from that: These
+semi-spontaneous superstitions, varying with the sect of the
+original evangelist and the customs of the island, are found in
+practice to be highly fructifying; and in particular those who have
+learned and who go forth again to teach them offer an example to
+the world. The best specimen of the Christian hero that I ever met
+was one of these native missionaries. He had saved two lives at
+the risk of his own; like Nathan, he had bearded a tyrant in his
+hour of blood; when a whole white population fled, he alone stood
+to his duty; and his behaviour under domestic sorrow with which the
+public has no concern filled the beholder with sympathy and
+admiration. A poor little smiling laborious man he looked; and you
+would have thought he had nothing in him but that of which indeed
+he had too much--facile good-nature.
+
+It chances that the only rivals of Monseigneur and his mission in
+the Marquesas were certain of these brown-skinned evangelists,
+natives from Hawaii. I know not what they thought of Father
+Dordillon: they are the only class I did not question; but I
+suspect the prelate to have regarded them askance, for he was
+eminently human. During my stay at Tai-o-hae, the time of the
+yearly holiday came round at the girls' school; and a whole fleet
+of whale-boats came from Ua-pu to take the daughters of that island
+home. On board of these was Kauwealoha, one of the pastors, a
+fine, rugged old gentleman, of that leonine type so common in
+Hawaii. He paid me a visit in the Casco, and there entertained me
+with a tale of one of his colleagues, Kekela, a missionary in the
+great cannibal isle of Hiva-oa. It appears that shortly after a
+kidnapping visit from a Peruvian slaver, the boats of an American
+whaler put into a bay upon that island, were attacked, and made
+their escape with difficulty, leaving their mate, a Mr. Whalon, in
+the hands of the natives. The captive, with his arms bound behind
+his back, was cast into a house; and the chief announced the
+capture to Kekela. And here I begin to follow the version of
+Kauwealoha; it is a good specimen of Kanaka English; and the reader
+is to conceive it delivered with violent emphasis and speaking
+pantomime.
+
+'"I got 'Melican mate," the chief he say. "What you go do 'Melican
+mate?" Kekela he say. "I go make fire, I go kill, I go eat him,"
+he say; "you come to-mollow eat piece." "I no WANT eat 'Melican
+mate!" Kekela he say; "why you want?" "This bad shippee, this
+slave shippee," the chief he say. "One time a shippee he come from
+Pelu, he take away plenty Kanaka, he take away my son. 'Melican
+mate he bad man. I go eat him; you eat piece." "I no WANT eat
+'Melican mate!" Kekela he say; and he CLY--all night he cly! To-
+mollow Kekela he get up, he put on blackee coat, he go see chief;
+he see Missa Whela, him hand tie' like this. (Pantomime.) Kekela
+he cly. He say chief:- "Chief, you like things of mine? you like
+whale-boat?" "Yes," he say. "You like file-a'm?" (fire-arms).
+"Yes," he say. "You like blackee coat?" "Yes," he say. Kekela he
+take Missa Whela by he shoul'a' (shoulder), he take him light out
+house; he give chief he whale-boat, he file-a'm, he blackee coat.
+He take Missa Whela he house, make him sit down with he wife and
+chil'en. Missa Whela all-the-same pelison (prison); he wife, he
+chil'en in Amelica; he cly--O, he cly. Kekela he solly. One day
+Kekela he see ship. (Pantomime.) He say Missa Whela, "Ma' Whala?"
+Missa Whela he say, "Yes." Kanaka they begin go down beach.
+Kekela he get eleven Kanaka, get oa' (oars), get evely thing. He
+say Missa Whela, "Now you go quick." They jump in whale-boat.
+"Now you low!" Kekela he say: "you low quick, quick!" (Violent
+pantomime, and a change indicating that the narrator has left the
+boat and returned to the beach.) All the Kanaka they say, "How!
+'Melican mate he go away?"--jump in boat; low afta. (Violent
+pantomime, and change again to boat.) Kekela he say, "Low quick!"'
+
+Here I think Kauwealoha's pantomime had confused me; I have no more
+of his ipsissima verba; and can but add, in my own less spirited
+manner, that the ship was reached, Mr. Whalon taken aboard, and
+Kekela returned to his charge among the cannibals. But how unjust
+it is to repeat the stumblings of a foreigner in a language only
+partly acquired! A thoughtless reader might conceive Kauwealoha
+and his colleague to be a species of amicable baboon; but I have
+here the anti-dote. In return for his act of gallant charity,
+Kekela was presented by the American Government with a sum of
+money, and by President Lincoln personally with a gold watch. From
+his letter of thanks, written in his own tongue, I give the
+following extract. I do not envy the man who can read it without
+emotion.
+
+
+'When I saw one of your countrymen, a citizen of your great nation,
+ill-treated, and about to be baked and eaten, as a pig is eaten, I
+ran to save him, full of pity and grief at the evil deed of these
+benighted people. I gave my boat for the stranger's life. This
+boat came from James Hunnewell, a gift of friendship. It became
+the ransom of this countryman of yours, that he might not be eaten
+by the savages who knew not Jehovah. This was Mr. Whalon, and the
+date, Jan. 14, 1864.
+
+As to this friendly deed of mine in saving Mr. Whalon, its seed
+came from your great land, and was brought by certain of your
+countrymen, who had received the love of God. It was planted in
+Hawaii, and I brought it to plant in this land and in these dark
+regions, that they might receive the root of all that is good and
+true, which is LOVE.
+
+'1. Love to Jehovah.
+
+'2. Love to self.
+
+'3. Love to our neighbour.
+
+'If a man have a sufficiency of these three, he is good and holy,
+like his God, Jehovah, in his triune character (Father, Son, and
+Holy Ghost), one-three, three-one. If he have two and wants one,
+it is not well; and if he have one and wants two, indeed, is not
+well; but if he cherishes all three, then is he holy, indeed, after
+the manner of the Bible.
+
+'This is a great thing for your great nation to boast of, before
+all the nations of the earth. From your great land a most precious
+seed was brought to the land of darkness. It was planted here, not
+by means of guns and men-of-war and threatening. It was planted by
+means of the ignorant, the neglected, the despised. Such was the
+introduction of the word of the Almighty God into this group of
+Nuuhiwa. Great is my debt to Americans, who have taught me all
+things pertaining to this life and to that which is to come.
+
+'How shall I repay your great kindness to me? Thus David asked of
+Jehovah, and thus I ask of you, the President of the United States.
+This is my only payment--that which I have received of the Lord,
+love--(aloha).'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI--LONG-PIG--A CANNIBAL HIGH PLACE
+
+
+
+Nothing more strongly arouses our disgust than cannibalism, nothing
+so surely unmortars a society; nothing, we might plausibly argue,
+will so harden and degrade the minds of those that practise it.
+And yet we ourselves make much the same appearance in the eyes of
+the Buddhist and the vegetarian. We consume the carcasses of
+creatures of like appetites, passions, and organs with ourselves;
+we feed on babes, though not our own; and the slaughter-house
+resounds daily with screams of pain and fear. We distinguish,
+indeed; but the unwillingness of many nations to eat the dog, an
+animal with whom we live on terms of the next intimacy, shows how
+precariously the distinction is grounded. The pig is the main
+element of animal food among the islands; and I had many occasions,
+my mind being quickened by my cannibal surroundings, to observe his
+character and the manner of his death. Many islanders live with
+their pigs as we do with our dogs; both crowd around the hearth
+with equal freedom; and the island pig is a fellow of activity,
+enterprise, and sense. He husks his own cocoa-nuts, and (I am
+told) rolls them into the sun to burst; he is the terror of the
+shepherd. Mrs. Stevenson, senior, has seen one fleeing to the
+woods with a lamb in his mouth; and I saw another come rapidly (and
+erroneously) to the conclusion that the Casco was going down, and
+swim through the flush water to the rail in search of an escape.
+It was told us in childhood that pigs cannot swim; I have known one
+to leap overboard, swim five hundred yards to shore, and return to
+the house of his original owner. I was once, at Tautira, a pig-
+master on a considerable scale; at first, in my pen, the utmost
+good feeling prevailed; a little sow with a belly-ache came and
+appealed to us for help in the manner of a child; and there was one
+shapely black boar, whom we called Catholicus, for he was a
+particular present from the Catholics of the village, and who early
+displayed the marks of courage and friendliness; no other animal,
+whether dog or pig, was suffered to approach him at his food, and
+for human beings he showed a full measure of that toadying fondness
+so common in the lower animals, and possibly their chief title to
+the name. One day, on visiting my piggery, I was amazed to see
+Catholicus draw back from my approach with cries of terror; and if
+I was amazed at the change, I was truly embarrassed when I learnt
+its reason. One of the pigs had been that morning killed;
+Catholicus had seen the murder, he had discovered he was dwelling
+in the shambles, and from that time his confidence and his delight
+in life were ended. We still reserved him a long while, but he
+could not endure the sight of any two-legged creature, nor could
+we, under the circumstances, encounter his eye without confusion.
+I have assisted besides, by the ear, at the act of butchery itself;
+the victim's cries of pain I think I could have borne, but the
+execution was mismanaged, and his expression of terror was
+contagious: that small heart moved to the same tune with ours.
+Upon such 'dread foundations' the life of the European reposes, and
+yet the European is among the less cruel of races. The
+paraphernalia of murder, the preparatory brutalities of his
+existence, are all hid away; an extreme sensibility reigns upon the
+surface; and ladies will faint at the recital of one tithe of what
+they daily expect of their butchers. Some will be even crying out
+upon me in their hearts for the coarseness of this paragraph. And
+so with the island cannibals. They were not cruel; apart from this
+custom, they are a race of the most kindly; rightly speaking, to
+cut a man's flesh after he is dead is far less hateful than to
+oppress him whilst he lives; and even the victims of their appetite
+were gently used in life and suddenly and painlessly despatched at
+last. In island circles of refinement it was doubtless thought bad
+taste to expatiate on what was ugly in the practice.
+
+Cannibalism is traced from end to end of the Pacific, from the
+Marquesas to New Guinea, from New Zealand to Hawaii, here in the
+lively haunt of its exercise, there by scanty but significant
+survivals. Hawaii is the most doubtful. We find cannibalism
+chronicled in Hawaii, only in the history of a single war, where it
+seems to have been thought exception, as in the case of mountain
+outlaws, such as fell by the hand of Theseus. In Tahiti, a single
+circumstance survived, but that appears conclusive. In historic
+times, when human oblation was made in the marae, the eyes of the
+victim were formally offered to the chief: a delicacy to the
+leading guest. All Melanesia appears tainted. In Micronesia, in
+the Marshalls, with which my acquaintance is no more than that of a
+tourist, I could find no trace at all; and even in the Gilbert zone
+I long looked and asked in vain. I was told tales indeed of men
+who had been eaten in a famine; but these were nothing to my
+purpose, for the same thing is done under the same stress by all
+kindreds and generations of men. At last, in some manuscript notes
+of Dr. Turner's, which I was allowed to consult at Malua, I came on
+one damning evidence: on the island of Onoatoa the punishment for
+theft was to be killed and eaten. How shall we account for the
+universality of the practice over so vast an area, among people of
+such varying civilisation, and, with whatever intermixture, of such
+different blood? What circumstance is common to them all, but that
+they lived on islands destitute, or very nearly so, of animal food?
+I can never find it in my appetite that man was meant to live on
+vegetables only. When our stores ran low among the islands, I grew
+to weary for the recurrent day when economy allowed us to open
+another tin of miserable mutton. And in at least one ocean
+language, a particular word denotes that a man is 'hungry for
+fish,' having reached that stage when vegetables can no longer
+satisfy, and his soul, like those of the Hebrews in the desert,
+begins to lust after flesh-pots. Add to this the evidences of
+over-population and imminent famine already adduced, and I think we
+see some ground of indulgence for the island cannibal.
+
+It is right to look at both sides of any question; but I am far
+from making the apology of this worse than bestial vice. The
+higher Polynesian races, such as the Tahitians, Hawaiians, and
+Samoans, had one and all outgrown, and some of them had in part
+forgot, the practice, before Cook or Bougainville had shown a top-
+sail in their waters. It lingered only in some low islands where
+life was difficult to maintain, and among inveterate savages like
+the New-Zealanders or the Marquesans. The Marquesans intertwined
+man-eating with the whole texture of their lives; long-pig was in a
+sense their currency and sacrament; it formed the hire of the
+artist, illustrated public events, and was the occasion and
+attraction of a feast. To-day they are paying the penalty of this
+bloody commixture. The civil power, in its crusade against man-
+eating, has had to examine one after another all Marquesan arts and
+pleasures, has found them one after another tainted with a cannibal
+element, and one after another has placed them on the proscript
+list. Their art of tattooing stood by itself, the execution
+exquisite, the designs most beautiful and intricate; nothing more
+handsomely sets off a handsome man; it may cost some pain in the
+beginning, but I doubt if it be near so painful in the long-run,
+and I am sure it is far more becoming than the ignoble European
+practice of tight-lacing among women. And now it has been found
+needful to forbid the art. Their songs and dances were numerous
+(and the law has had to abolish them by the dozen). They now face
+empty-handed the tedium of their uneventful days; and who shall
+pity them? The least rigorous will say that they were justly
+served.
+
+Death alone could not satisfy Marquesan vengeance: the flesh must
+be eaten. The chief who seized Mr. Whalon preferred to eat him;
+and he thought he had justified the wish when he explained it was a
+vengeance. Two or three years ago, the people of a valley seized
+and slew a wretch who had offended them. His offence, it is to be
+supposed, was dire; they could not bear to leave their vengeance
+incomplete, and, under the eyes of the French, they did not dare to
+hold a public festival. The body was accordingly divided; and
+every man retired to his own house to consummate the rite in
+secret, carrying his proportion of the dreadful meat in a Swedish
+match-box. The barbarous substance of the drama and the European
+properties employed offer a seizing contrast to the imagination.
+Yet more striking is another incident of the very year when I was
+there myself, 1888. In the spring, a man and woman skulked about
+the school-house in Hiva-oa till they found a particular child
+alone. Him they approached with honeyed words and carneying
+manners--'You are So-and-so, son of So-and-so?' they asked; and
+caressed and beguiled him deeper in the woods. Some instinct woke
+in the child's bosom, or some look betrayed the horrid purpose of
+his deceivers. He sought to break from them; he screamed; and
+they, casting off the mask, seized him the more strongly and began
+to run. His cries were heard; his schoolmates, playing not far
+off, came running to the rescue; and the sinister couple fled and
+vanished in the woods. They were never identified; no prosecution
+followed; but it was currently supposed they had some grudge
+against the boy's father, and designed to eat him in revenge. All
+over the islands, as at home among our own ancestors, it will be
+observed that the avenger takes no particular heed to strike an
+individual. A family, a class, a village, a whole valley or
+island, a whole race of mankind, share equally the guilt of any
+member. So, in the above story, the son was to pay the penalty for
+his father; so Mr. Whalon, the mate of an American whaler, was to
+bleed and be eaten for the misdeeds of a Peruvian slaver. I am
+reminded of an incident in Jaluit in the Marshall group, which was
+told me by an eye-witness, and which I tell here again for the
+strangeness of the scene. Two men had awakened the animosity of
+the Jaluit chiefs; and it was their wives who were selected to be
+punished. A single native served as executioner. Early in the
+morning, in the face of a large concourse of spectators, he waded
+out upon the reef between his victims. These neither complained
+nor resisted; accompanied their destroyer patiently; stooped down,
+when they had waded deep enough, at his command; and he (laying one
+hand upon the shoulders of each) held them under water till they
+drowned. Doubtless, although my informant did not tell me so,
+their families would be lamenting aloud upon the beach.
+
+It was from Hatiheu that I paid my first visit to a cannibal high
+place.
+
+The day was sultry and clouded. Drenching tropical showers
+succeeded bursts of sweltering sunshine. The green pathway of the
+road wound steeply upward. As we went, our little schoolboy guide
+a little ahead of us, Father Simeon had his portfolio in his hand,
+and named the trees for me, and read aloud from his notes the
+abstract of their virtues. Presently the road, mounting, showed us
+the vale of Hatiheu, on a larger scale; and the priest, with
+occasional reference to our guide, pointed out the boundaries and
+told me the names of the larger tribes that lived at perpetual war
+in the old days: one on the north-east, one along the beach, one
+behind upon the mountain. With a survivor of this latter clan
+Father Simeon had spoken; until the pacification he had never been
+to the sea's edge, nor, if I remember exactly, eaten of sea-fish.
+Each in its own district, the septs lived cantoned and beleaguered.
+One step without the boundaries was to affront death. If famine
+came, the men must out to the woods to gather chestnuts and small
+fruits; even as to this day, if the parents are backward in their
+weekly doles, school must be broken up and the scholars sent
+foraging. But in the old days, when there was trouble in one clan,
+there would be activity in all its neighbours; the woods would be
+laid full of ambushes; and he who went after vegetables for himself
+might remain to be a joint for his hereditary foes. Nor was the
+pointed occasion needful. A dozen different natural signs and
+social junctures called this people to the war-path and the
+cannibal hunt. Let one of chiefly rank have finished his
+tattooing, the wife of one be near upon her time, two of the
+debauching streams have deviated nearer on the beach of Hatiheu, a
+certain bird have been heard to sing, a certain ominous formation
+of cloud observed above the northern sea; and instantly the arms
+were oiled, and the man-hunters swarmed into the wood to lay their
+fratricidal ambuscades. It appears besides that occasionally,
+perhaps in famine, the priest would shut himself in his house,
+where he lay for a stated period like a person dead. When he came
+forth it was to run for three days through the territory of the
+clan, naked and starving, and to sleep at night alone in the high
+place. It was now the turn of the others to keep the house, for to
+encounter the priest upon his rounds was death. On the eve of the
+fourth day the time of the running was over; the priest returned to
+his roof, the laymen came forth, and in the morning the number of
+the victims was announced. I have this tale of the priest on one
+authority--I think a good one,--but I set it down with diffidence.
+The particulars are so striking that, had they been true, I almost
+think I must have heard them oftener referred to. Upon one point
+there seems to be no question: that the feast was sometimes
+furnished from within the clan. In times of scarcity, all who were
+not protected by their family connections--in the Highland
+expression, all the commons of the clan--had cause to tremble. It
+was vain to resist, it was useless to flee. They were begirt upon
+all hands by cannibals; and the oven was ready to smoke for them
+abroad in the country of their foes, or at home in the valley of
+their fathers.
+
+At a certain corner of the road our scholar-guide struck off to his
+left into the twilight of the forest. We were now on one of the
+ancient native roads, plunged in a high vault of wood, and
+clambering, it seemed, at random over boulders and dead trees; but
+the lad wound in and out and up and down without a check, for these
+paths are to the natives as marked as the king's highway is to us;
+insomuch that, in the days of the man-hunt, it was their labour
+rather to block and deface than to improve them. In the crypt of
+the wood the air was clammy and hot and cold; overhead, upon the
+leaves, the tropical rain uproariously poured, but only here and
+there, as through holes in a leaky roof, a single drop would fall,
+and make a spot upon my mackintosh. Presently the huge trunk of a
+banyan hove in sight, standing upon what seemed the ruins of an
+ancient fort; and our guide, halting and holding forth his arm,
+announced that we had reached the paepae tapu.
+
+Paepae signifies a floor or platform such as a native house is
+built on; and even such a paepae--a paepae hae--may be called a
+paepae tapu in a lesser sense when it is deserted and becomes the
+haunt of spirits; but the public high place, such as I was now
+treading, was a thing on a great scale. As far as my eyes could
+pierce through the dark undergrowth, the floor of the forest was
+all paved. Three tiers of terrace ran on the slope of the hill; in
+front, a crumbling parapet contained the main arena; and the
+pavement of that was pierced and parcelled out with several wells
+and small enclosures. No trace remained of any superstructure, and
+the scheme of the amphitheatre was difficult to seize. I visited
+another in Hiva-oa, smaller but more perfect, where it was easy to
+follow rows of benches, and to distinguish isolated seats of honour
+for eminent persons; and where, on the upper platform, a single
+joist of the temple or dead-house still remained, its uprights
+richly carved. In the old days the high place was sedulously
+tended. No tree except the sacred banyan was suffered to encroach
+upon its grades, no dead leaf to rot upon the pavement. The stones
+were smoothly set, and I am told they were kept bright with oil.
+On all sides the guardians lay encamped in their subsidiary huts to
+watch and cleanse it. No other foot of man was suffered to draw
+near; only the priest, in the days of his running, came there to
+sleep--perhaps to dream of his ungodly errand; but, in the time of
+the feast, the clan trooped to the high place in a body, and each
+had his appointed seat. There were places for the chiefs, the
+drummers, the dancers, the women, and the priests. The drums--
+perhaps twenty strong, and some of them twelve feet high--
+continuously throbbed in time. In time the singers kept up their
+long-drawn, lugubrious, ululating song; in time, too, the dancers,
+tricked out in singular finery, stepped, leaped, swayed, and
+gesticulated--their plumed fingers fluttering in the air like
+butterflies. The sense of time, in all these ocean races, is
+extremely perfect; and I conceive in such a festival that almost
+every sound and movement fell in one. So much the more unanimously
+must have grown the agitation of the feasters; so much the more
+wild must have been the scene to any European who could have beheld
+them there, in the strong sun and the strong shadow of the banyan,
+rubbed with saffron to throw in a more high relief the arabesque of
+the tattoo; the women bleached by days of confinement to a
+complexion almost European; the chiefs crowned with silver plumes
+of old men's beards and girt with kirtles of the hair of dead
+women. All manner of island food was meanwhile spread for the
+women and the commons; and, for those who were privileged to eat of
+it, there were carried up to the dead-house the baskets of long-
+pig. It is told that the feasts were long kept up; the people came
+from them brutishly exhausted with debauchery, and the chiefs heavy
+with their beastly food. There are certain sentiments which we
+call emphatically human--denying the honour of that name to those
+who lack them. In such feasts--particularly where the victim has
+been slain at home, and men banqueted on the poor clay of a comrade
+with whom they had played in infancy, or a woman whose favours they
+had shared--the whole body of these sentiments is outraged. To
+consider it too closely is to understand, if not to excuse, the
+fervours of self-righteous old ship-captains, who would man their
+guns, and open fire in passing, on a cannibal island.
+
+And yet it was strange. There, upon the spot, as I stood under the
+high, dripping vault of the forest, with the young priest on the
+one hand, in his kilted gown, and the bright-eyed Marquesan
+schoolboy on the other, the whole business appeared infinitely
+distant, and fallen in the cold perspective and dry light of
+history. The bearing of the priest, perhaps, affected me. He
+smiled; he jested with the boy, the heir both of these feasters and
+their meat; he clapped his hands, and gave me a stave of one of the
+old, ill-omened choruses. Centuries might have come and gone since
+this slimy theatre was last in operation; and I beheld the place
+with no more emotion than I might have felt in visiting Stonehenge.
+In Hiva-oa, as I began to appreciate that the thing was still
+living and latent about my footsteps, and that it was still within
+the bounds of possibility that I might hear the cry of the trapped
+victim, my historic attitude entirely failed, and I was sensible of
+some repugnance for the natives. But here, too, the priests
+maintained their jocular attitude: rallying the cannibals as upon
+an eccentricity rather absurd than horrible; seeking, I should say,
+to shame them from the practice by good-natured ridicule, as we
+shame a child from stealing sugar. We may here recognise the
+temperate and sagacious mind of Bishop Dordillon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII--THE STORY OF A PLANTATION
+
+
+
+Taahauku, on the south-westerly coast of the island of Hiva-oa--
+Tahuku, say the slovenly whites--may be called the port of Atuona.
+It is a narrow and small anchorage, set between low cliffy points,
+and opening above upon a woody valley: a little French fort, now
+disused and deserted, overhangs the valley and the inlet. Atuona
+itself, at the head of the next bay, is framed in a theatre of
+mountains, which dominate the more immediate settling of Taahauku
+and give the salient character of the scene. They are reckoned at
+no higher than four thousand feet; but Tahiti with eight thousand,
+and Hawaii with fifteen, can offer no such picture of abrupt,
+melancholy alps. In the morning, when the sun falls directly on
+their front, they stand like a vast wall: green to the summit, if
+by any chance the summit should be clear--water-courses here and
+there delineated on their face, as narrow as cracks. Towards
+afternoon, the light falls more obliquely, and the sculpture of the
+range comes in relief, huge gorges sinking into shadow, huge,
+tortuous buttresses standing edged with sun. At all hours of the
+day they strike the eye with some new beauty, and the mind with the
+same menacing gloom.
+
+The mountains, dividing and deflecting the endless airy deluge of
+the Trade, are doubtless answerable for the climate. A strong
+draught of wind blew day and night over the anchorage. Day and
+night the same fantastic and attenuated clouds fled across the
+heavens, the same dusky cap of rain and vapour fell and rose on the
+mountain. The land-breezes came very strong and chill, and the
+sea, like the air, was in perpetual bustle. The swell crowded into
+the narrow anchorage like sheep into a fold; broke all along both
+sides, high on the one, low on the other; kept a certain blowhole
+sounding and smoking like a cannon; and spent itself at last upon
+the beach.
+
+On the side away from Atuona, the sheltering promontory was a
+nursery of coco-trees. Some were mere infants, none had attained
+to any size, none had yet begun to shoot skyward with that whip-
+like shaft of the mature palm. In the young trees the colour
+alters with the age and growth. Now all is of a grass-like hue,
+infinitely dainty; next the rib grows golden, the fronds remaining
+green as ferns; and then, as the trunk continues to mount and to
+assume its final hue of grey, the fans put on manlier and more
+decided depths of verdure, stand out dark upon the distance,
+glisten against the sun, and flash like silver fountains in the
+assault of the wind. In this young wood of Taahauku, all these
+hues and combinations were exampled and repeated by the score. The
+trees grew pleasantly spaced upon a hilly sward, here and there
+interspersed with a rack for drying copra, or a tumble-down hut for
+storing it. Every here and there the stroller had a glimpse of the
+Casco tossing in the narrow anchorage below; and beyond he had ever
+before him the dark amphitheatre of the Atuona mountains and the
+cliffy bluff that closes it to seaward. The trade-wind moving in
+the fans made a ceaseless noise of summer rain; and from time to
+time, with the sound of a sudden and distant drum-beat, the surf
+would burst in a sea-cave.
+
+At the upper end of the inlet, its low, cliffy lining sinks, at
+both sides, into a beach. A copra warehouse stands in the shadow
+of the shoreside trees, flitted about for ever by a clan of
+dwarfish swallows; and a line of rails on a high wooden staging
+bends back into the mouth of the valley. Walking on this, the new-
+landed traveller becomes aware of a broad fresh-water lagoon (one
+arm of which he crosses), and beyond, of a grove of noble palms,
+sheltering the house of the trader, Mr. Keane. Overhead, the cocos
+join in a continuous and lofty roof; blackbirds are heard lustily
+singing; the island cock springs his jubilant rattle and airs his
+golden plumage; cow-bells sound far and near in the grove; and when
+you sit in the broad verandah, lulled by this symphony, you may say
+to yourself, if you are able: 'Better fifty years of Europe . . .'
+Farther on, the floor of the valley is flat and green, and dotted
+here and there with stripling coco-palms. Through the midst, with
+many changes of music, the river trots and brawls; and along its
+course, where we should look for willows, puraos grow in clusters,
+and make shadowy pools after an angler's heart. A vale more rich
+and peaceful, sweeter air, a sweeter voice of rural sounds, I have
+found nowhere. One circumstance alone might strike the
+experienced: here is a convenient beach, deep soil, good water,
+and yet nowhere any paepaes, nowhere any trace of island
+habitation.
+
+It is but a few years since this valley was a place choked with
+jungle, the debatable land and battle-ground of cannibals. Two
+clans laid claim to it--neither could substantiate the claim, and
+the roads lay desert, or were only visited by men in arms. It is
+for this very reason that it wears now so smiling an appearance:
+cleared, planted, built upon, supplied with railways, boat-houses,
+and bath-houses. For, being no man's land, it was the more readily
+ceded to a stranger. The stranger was Captain John Hart: Ima
+Hati, 'Broken-arm,' the natives call him, because when he first
+visited the islands his arm was in a sling. Captain Hart, a man of
+English birth, but an American subject, had conceived the idea of
+cotton culture in the Marquesas during the American War, and was at
+first rewarded with success. His plantation at Anaho was highly
+productive; island cotton fetched a high price, and the natives
+used to debate which was the stronger power, Ima Hati or the
+French: deciding in favour of the captain, because, though the
+French had the most ships, he had the more money.
+
+He marked Taahauku for a suitable site, acquired it, and offered
+the superintendence to Mr. Robert Stewart, a Fifeshire man, already
+some time in the islands, who had just been ruined by a war on
+Tauata. Mr. Stewart was somewhat averse to the adventure, having
+some acquaintance with Atuona and its notorious chieftain, Moipu.
+He had once landed there, he told me, about dusk, and found the
+remains of a man and woman partly eaten. On his starting and
+sickening at the sight, one of Moipu's young men picked up a human
+foot, and provocatively staring at the stranger, grinned and
+nibbled at the heel. None need be surprised if Mr. Stewart fled
+incontinently to the bush, lay there all night in a great horror of
+mind, and got off to sea again by daylight on the morrow. 'It was
+always a bad place, Atuona,' commented Mr. Stewart, in his homely
+Fifeshire voice. In spite of this dire introduction, he accepted
+the captain's offer, was landed at Taahauku with three Chinamen,
+and proceeded to clear the jungle.
+
+War was pursued at that time, almost without interval, between the
+men of Atuona and the men of Haamau; and one day, from the opposite
+sides of the valley, battle--or I should rather say the noise of
+battle--raged all the afternoon: the shots and insults of the
+opposing clans passing from hill to hill over the heads of Mr.
+Stewart and his Chinamen. There was no genuine fighting; it was
+like a bicker of schoolboys, only some fool had given the children
+guns. One man died of his exertions in running, the only casualty.
+With night the shots and insults ceased; the men of Haamau
+withdrew; and victory, on some occult principle, was scored to
+Moipu. Perhaps, in consequence, there came a day when Moipu made a
+feast, and a party from Haamau came under safe-conduct to eat of
+it. These passed early by Taahauku, and some of Moipu's young men
+were there to be a guard of honour. They were not long gone before
+there came down from Haamau, a man, his wife, and a girl of twelve,
+their daughter, bringing fungus. Several Atuona lads were hanging
+round the store; but the day being one of truce none apprehended
+danger. The fungus was weighed and paid for; the man of Haamau
+proposed he should have his axe ground in the bargain; and Mr.
+Stewart demurring at the trouble, some of the Atuona lads offered
+to grind it for him, and set it on the wheel. While the axe was
+grinding, a friendly native whispered Mr. Stewart to have a care of
+himself, for there was trouble in hand; and, all at once, the man
+of Haamau was seized, and his head and arm stricken from his body,
+the head at one sweep of his own newly sharpened axe. In the first
+alert, the girl escaped among the cotton; and Mr. Stewart, having
+thrust the wife into the house and locked her in from the outside,
+supposed the affair was over. But the business had not passed
+without noise, and it reached the ears of an older girl who had
+loitered by the way, and who now came hastily down the valley,
+crying as she came for her father. Her, too, they seized and
+beheaded; I know not what they had done with the axe, it was a
+blunt knife that served their butcherly turn upon the girl; and the
+blood spurted in fountains and painted them from head to foot.
+Thus horrible from crime, the party returned to Atuona, carrying
+the heads to Moipu. It may be fancied how the feast broke up; but
+it is notable that the guests were honourably suffered to retire.
+These passed back through Taahauku in extreme disorder; a little
+after the valley began to be overrun with shouting and triumphing
+braves; and a letter of warning coming at the same time to Mr.
+Stewart, he and his Chinamen took refuge with the Protestant
+missionary in Atuona. That night the store was gutted, and the
+bodies cast in a pit and covered with leaves. Three days later the
+schooner had come in; and things appearing quieter, Mr. Stewart and
+the captain landed in Taahauku to compute the damage and to view
+the grave, which was already indicated by the stench. While they
+were so employed, a party of Moipu's young men, decked with red
+flannel to indicate martial sentiments, came over the hills from
+Atuona, dug up the bodies, washed them in the river, and carried
+them away on sticks. That night the feast began.
+
+Those who knew Mr. Stewart before this experience declare the man
+to be quite altered. He stuck, however, to his post; and somewhat
+later, when the plantation was already well established, and gave
+employment to sixty Chinamen and seventy natives, he found himself
+once more in dangerous times. The men of Haamau, it was reported,
+had sworn to plunder and erase the settlement; letters came
+continually from the Hawaiian missionary, who acted as intelligence
+department; and for six weeks Mr. Stewart and three other whites
+slept in the cotton-house at night in a rampart of bales, and (what
+was their best defence) ostentatiously practised rifle-shooting by
+day upon the beach. Natives were often there to watch them; the
+practice was excellent; and the assault was never delivered--if it
+ever was intended, which I doubt, for the natives are more famous
+for false rumours than for deeds of energy. I was told the late
+French war was a case in point; the tribes on the beach accusing
+those in the mountains of designs which they had never the
+hardihood to entertain. And the same testimony to their
+backwardness in open battle reached me from all sides. Captain
+Hart once landed after an engagement in a certain bay; one man had
+his hand hurt, an old woman and two children had been slain; and
+the captain improved the occasion by poulticing the hand, and
+taunting both sides upon so wretched an affair. It is true these
+wars were often merely formal--comparable with duels to the first
+blood. Captain Hart visited a bay where such a war was being
+carried on between two brothers, one of whom had been thought
+wanting in civility to the guests of the other. About one-half of
+the population served day about on alternate sides, so as to be
+well with each when the inevitable peace should follow. The forts
+of the belligerents were over against each other, and close by.
+Pigs were cooking. Well-oiled braves, with well-oiled muskets,
+strutted on the paepae or sat down to feast. No business, however
+needful, could be done, and all thoughts were supposed to be
+centred in this mockery of war. A few days later, by a regrettable
+accident, a man was killed; it was felt at once the thing had gone
+too far, and the quarrel was instantly patched up. But the more
+serious wars were prosecuted in a similar spirit; a gift of pigs
+and a feast made their inevitable end; the killing of a single man
+was a great victory, and the murder of defenceless solitaries
+counted a heroic deed.
+
+The foot of the cliffs, about all these islands, is the place of
+fishing. Between Taahauku and Atuona we saw men, but chiefly
+women, some nearly naked, some in thin white or crimson dresses,
+perched in little surf-beat promontories--the brown precipice
+overhanging them, and the convolvulus overhanging that, as if to
+cut them off the more completely from assistance. There they would
+angle much of the morning; and as fast as they caught any fish, eat
+them, raw and living, where they stood. It was such helpless ones
+that the warriors from the opposite island of Tauata slew, and
+carried home and ate, and were thereupon accounted mighty men of
+valour. Of one such exploit I can give the account of an eye-
+witness. 'Portuguese Joe,' Mr. Keane's cook, was once pulling an
+oar in an Atuona boat, when they spied a stranger in a canoe with
+some fish and a piece of tapu. The Atuona men cried upon him to
+draw near and have a smoke. He complied, because, I suppose, he
+had no choice; but he knew, poor devil, what he was coming to, and
+(as Joe said) 'he didn't seem to care about the smoke.' A few
+questions followed, as to where he came from, and what was his
+business. These he must needs answer, as he must needs draw at the
+unwelcome pipe, his heart the while drying in his bosom. And then,
+of a sudden, a big fellow in Joe's boat leaned over, plucked the
+stranger from his canoe, struck him with a knife in the neck--
+inward and downward, as Joe showed in pantomime more expressive
+than his words--and held him under water, like a fowl, until his
+struggles ceased. Whereupon the long-pig was hauled on board, the
+boat's head turned about for Atuona, and these Marquesan braves
+pulled home rejoicing. Moipu was on the beach and rejoiced with
+them on their arrival. Poor Joe toiled at his oar that day with a
+white face, yet he had no fear for himself. 'They were very good
+to me--gave me plenty grub: never wished to eat white man,' said
+he.
+
+If the most horrible experience was Mr. Stewart's, it was Captain
+Hart himself who ran the nearest danger. He had bought a piece of
+land from Timau, chief of a neighbouring bay, and put some Chinese
+there to work. Visiting the station with one of the Godeffroys, he
+found his Chinamen trooping to the beach in terror: Timau had
+driven them out, seized their effects, and was in war attire with
+his young men. A boat was despatched to Taahauku for
+reinforcement; as they awaited her return, they could see, from the
+deck of the schooner, Timau and his young men dancing the war-dance
+on the hill-top till past twelve at night; and so soon as the boat
+came (bringing three gendarmes, armed with chassepots, two white
+men from Taahauku station, and some native warriors) the party set
+out to seize the chief before he should awake. Day was not come,
+and it was a very bright moonlight morning, when they reached the
+hill-top where (in a house of palm-leaves) Timau was sleeping off
+his debauch. The assailants were fully exposed, the interior of
+the hut quite dark; the position far from sound. The gendarmes
+knelt with their pieces ready, and Captain Hart advanced alone. As
+he drew near the door he heard the snap of a gun cocking from
+within, and in sheer self-defence--there being no other escape--
+sprang into the house and grappled Timau. 'Timau, come with me!'
+he cried. But Timau--a great fellow, his eyes blood-red with the
+abuse of kava, six foot three in stature--cast him on one side; and
+the captain, instantly expecting to be either shot or brained,
+discharged his pistol in the dark. When they carried Timau out at
+the door into the moonlight, he was already dead, and, upon this
+unlooked-for termination of their sally, the whites appeared to
+have lost all conduct, and retreated to the boats, fired upon by
+the natives as they went. Captain Hart, who almost rivals Bishop
+Dordillon in popularity, shared with him the policy of extreme
+indulgence to the natives, regarding them as children, making light
+of their defects, and constantly in favour of mild measures. The
+death of Timau has thus somewhat weighed upon his mind; the more
+so, as the chieftain's musket was found in the house unloaded. To
+a less delicate conscience the matter will seem light. If a
+drunken savage elects to cock a fire-arm, a gentleman advancing
+towards him in the open cannot wait to make sure if it be charged.
+
+I have touched on the captain's popularity. It is one of the
+things that most strikes a stranger in the Marquesas. He comes
+instantly on two names, both new to him, both locally famous, both
+mentioned by all with affection and respect--the bishop's and the
+captain's. It gave me a strong desire to meet with the survivor,
+which was subsequently gratified--to the enrichment of these pages.
+Long after that again, in the Place Dolorous--Molokai--I came once
+more on the traces of that affectionate popularity. There was a
+blind white leper there, an old sailor--'an old tough,' he called
+himself--who had long sailed among the eastern islands. Him I used
+to visit, and, being fresh from the scenes of his activity, gave
+him the news. This (in the true island style) was largely a
+chronicle of wrecks; and it chanced I mentioned the case of one not
+very successful captain, and how he had lost a vessel for Mr. Hart;
+thereupon the blind leper broke forth in lamentation. 'Did he lose
+a ship of John Hart's?' he cried; 'poor John Hart! Well, I'm sorry
+it was Hart's,' with needless force of epithet, which I neglect to
+reproduce.
+
+Perhaps, if Captain Hart's affairs had continued to prosper, his
+popularity might have been different. Success wins glory, but it
+kills affection, which misfortune fosters. And the misfortune
+which overtook the captain's enterprise was truly singular. He was
+at the top of his career. Ile Masse belonged to him, given by the
+French as an indemnity for the robberies at Taahauku. But the Ile
+Masse was only suitable for cattle; and his two chief stations were
+Anaho, in Nuka-hiva, facing the north-east, and Taahauku in Hiva-
+oa, some hundred miles to the southward, and facing the south-west.
+Both these were on the same day swept by a tidal wave, which was
+not felt in any other bay or island of the group. The south coast
+of Hiva-oa was bestrewn with building timber and camphor-wood
+chests, containing goods; which, on the promise of a reasonable
+salvage, the natives very honestly brought back, the chests
+apparently not opened, and some of the wood after it had been built
+into their houses. But the recovery of such jetsam could not
+affect the result. It was impossible the captain should withstand
+this partiality of fortune; and with his fall the prosperity of the
+Marquesas ended. Anaho is truly extinct, Taahauku but a shadow of
+itself; nor has any new plantation arisen in their stead.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII--CHARACTERS
+
+
+
+There was a certain traffic in our anchorage at Atuona; different
+indeed from the dead inertia and quiescence of the sister island,
+Nuka-hiva. Sails were seen steering from its mouth; now it would
+be a whale-boat manned with native rowdies, and heavy with copra
+for sale; now perhaps a single canoe come after commodities to buy.
+The anchorage was besides frequented by fishers; not only the lone
+females perched in niches of the cliff, but whole parties, who
+would sometimes camp and build a fire upon the beach, and sometimes
+lie in their canoes in the midst of the haven and jump by turns in
+the water; which they would cast eight or nine feet high, to drive,
+as we supposed, the fish into their nets. The goods the purchasers
+came to buy were sometimes quaint. I remarked one outrigger
+returning with a single ham swung from a pole in the stern. And
+one day there came into Mr. Keane's store a charming lad,
+excellently mannered, speaking French correctly though with a
+babyish accent; very handsome too, and much of a dandy, as was
+shown not only in his shining raiment, but by the nature of his
+purchases. These were five ship-biscuits, a bottle of scent, and
+two balls of washing blue. He was from Tauata, whither he returned
+the same night in an outrigger, daring the deep with these young-
+ladyish treasures. The gross of the native passengers were more
+ill-favoured: tall, powerful fellows, well tattooed, and with
+disquieting manners. Something coarse and jeering distinguished
+them, and I was often reminded of the slums of some great city.
+One night, as dusk was falling, a whale-boat put in on that part of
+the beach where I chanced to be alone. Six or seven ruffianly
+fellows scrambled out; all had enough English to give me 'good-
+bye,' which was the ordinary salutation; or 'good-morning,' which
+they seemed to regard as an intensitive; jests followed, they
+surrounded me with harsh laughter and rude looks, and I was glad to
+move away. I had not yet encountered Mr. Stewart, or I should have
+been reminded of his first landing at Atuona and the humorist who
+nibbled at the heel. But their neighbourhood depressed me; and I
+felt, if I had been there a castaway and out of reach of help, my
+heart would have been sick.
+
+Nor was the traffic altogether native. While we lay in the
+anchorage there befell a strange coincidence. A schooner was
+observed at sea and aiming to enter. We knew all the schooners in
+the group, but this appeared larger than any; she was rigged,
+besides, after the English manner; and, coming to an anchor some
+way outside the Casco, showed at last the blue ensign. There were
+at that time, according to rumour, no fewer than four yachts in the
+Pacific; but it was strange that any two of them should thus lie
+side by side in that outlandish inlet: stranger still that in the
+owner of the Nyanza, Captain Dewar, I should find a man of the same
+country and the same county with myself, and one whom I had seen
+walking as a boy on the shores of the Alpes Maritimes.
+
+We had besides a white visitor from shore, who came and departed in
+a crowded whale-boat manned by natives; having read of yachts in
+the Sunday papers, and being fired with the desire to see one.
+Captain Chase, they called him, an old whaler-man, thickset and
+white-bearded, with a strong Indiana drawl; years old in the
+country, a good backer in battle, and one of those dead shots whose
+practice at the target struck terror in the braves of Haamau.
+Captain Chase dwelt farther east in a bay called Hanamate, with a
+Mr. M'Callum; or rather they had dwelt together once, and were now
+amicably separated. The captain is to be found near one end of the
+bay, in a wreck of a house, and waited on by a Chinese. At the
+point of the opposing corner another habitation stands on a tall
+paepae. The surf runs there exceeding heavy, seas of seven and
+eight feet high bursting under the walls of the house, which is
+thus continually filled with their clamour, and rendered fit only
+for solitary, or at least for silent, inmates. Here it is that Mr.
+M'Callum, with a Shakespeare and a Burns, enjoys the society of the
+breakers. His name and his Burns testify to Scottish blood; but he
+is an American born, somewhere far east; followed the trade of a
+ship-carpenter; and was long employed, the captain of a hundred
+Indians, breaking up wrecks about Cape Flattery. Many of the
+whites who are to be found scattered in the South Seas represent
+the more artistic portion of their class; and not only enjoy the
+poetry of that new life, but came there on purpose to enjoy it. I
+have been shipmates with a man, no longer young, who sailed upon
+that voyage, his first time to sea, for the mere love of Samoa; and
+it was a few letters in a newspaper that sent him on that
+pilgrimage. Mr. M'Callum was another instance of the same. He had
+read of the South Seas; loved to read of them; and let their image
+fasten in his heart: till at length he could refrain no longer--
+must set forth, a new Rudel, for that unseen homeland--and has now
+dwelt for years in Hiva-oa, and will lay his bones there in the end
+with full content; having no desire to behold again the places of
+his boyhood, only, perhaps--once, before he dies--the rude and
+wintry landscape of Cape Flattery. Yet he is an active man, full
+of schemes; has bought land of the natives; has planted five
+thousand coco-palms; has a desert island in his eye, which he
+desires to lease, and a schooner in the stocks, which he has laid
+and built himself, and even hopes to finish. Mr. M'Callum and I
+did not meet, but, like gallant troubadours, corresponded in verse.
+I hope he will not consider it a breach of copyright if I give here
+a specimen of his muse. He and Bishop Dordillon are the two
+European bards of the Marquesas.
+
+
+'Sail, ho! Ahoy! Casco,
+First among the pleasure fleet
+That came around to greet
+These isles from San Francisco,
+
+And first, too; only one
+Among the literary men
+That this way has ever been -
+Welcome, then, to Stevenson.
+
+Please not offended be
+At this little notice
+Of the Casco, Captain Otis,
+With the novelist's family.
+
+Avoir une voyage magnifical
+Is our wish sincere,
+That you'll have from here
+Allant sur la Grande Pacifical.'
+
+
+But our chief visitor was one Mapiao, a great Tahuku--which seems
+to mean priest, wizard, tattooer, practiser of any art, or, in a
+word, esoteric person--and a man famed for his eloquence on public
+occasions and witty talk in private. His first appearance was
+typical of the man. He came down clamorous to the eastern landing,
+where the surf was running very high; scorned all our signals to go
+round the bay; carried his point, was brought aboard at some hazard
+to our skiff, and set down in one corner of the cockpit to his
+appointed task. He had been hired, as one cunning in the art, to
+make my old men's beards into a wreath: what a wreath for Celia's
+arbour! His own beard (which he carried, for greater safety, in a
+sailor's knot) was not merely the adornment of his age, but a
+substantial piece of property. One hundred dollars was the
+estimated value; and as Brother Michel never knew a native to
+deposit a greater sum with Bishop Dordillon, our friend was a rich
+man in virtue of his chin. He had something of an East Indian
+cast, but taller and stronger: his nose hooked, his face narrow,
+his forehead very high, the whole elaborately tattooed. I may say
+I have never entertained a guest so trying. In the least
+particular he must be waited on; he would not go to the scuttle-
+butt for water; he would not even reach to get the glass, it must
+be given him in his hand; if aid were denied him, he would fold his
+arms, bow his head, and go without: only the work would suffer.
+Early the first forenoon he called aloud for biscuit and salmon;
+biscuit and ham were brought; he looked on them inscrutably, and
+signed they should be set aside. A number of considerations
+crowded on my mind; how the sort of work on which he was engaged
+was probably tapu in a high degree; should by rights, perhaps, be
+transacted on a tapu platform which no female might approach; and
+it was possible that fish might be the essential diet. Some salted
+fish I therefore brought him, and along with that a glass of rum:
+at sight of which Mapiao displayed extraordinary animation, pointed
+to the zenith, made a long speech in which I picked up umati--the
+word for the sun--and signed to me once more to place these
+dainties out of reach. At last I had understood, and every day the
+programme was the same. At an early period of the morning his
+dinner must be set forth on the roof of the house and at a proper
+distance, full in view but just out of reach; and not until the fit
+hour, which was the point of noon, would the artificer partake.
+This solemnity was the cause of an absurd misadventure. He was
+seated plaiting, as usual, at the beards, his dinner arrayed on the
+roof, and not far off a glass of water standing. It appears he
+desired to drink; was of course far too great a gentleman to rise
+and get the water for himself; and spying Mrs. Stevenson,
+imperiously signed to her to hand it. The signal was
+misunderstood; Mrs. Stevenson was, by this time, prepared for any
+eccentricity on the part of our guest; and instead of passing him
+the water, flung his dinner overboard. I must do Mapiao justice:
+all laughed, but his laughter rang the loudest.
+
+These troubles of service were at worst occasional; the
+embarrassment of the man's talk incessant. He was plainly a
+practised conversationalist; the nicety of his inflections, the
+elegance of his gestures, and the fine play of his expression, told
+us that. We, meanwhile, sat like aliens in a playhouse; we could
+see the actors were upon some material business and performing
+well, but the plot of the drama remained undiscoverable. Names of
+places, the name of Captain Hart, occasional disconnected words,
+tantalised without enlightening us; and the less we understood, the
+more gallantly, the more copiously, and with still the more
+explanatory gestures, Mapiao returned to the assault. We could see
+his vanity was on the rack; being come to a place where that fine
+jewel of his conversational talent could earn him no respect; and
+he had times of despair when he desisted from the endeavour, and
+instants of irritation when he regarded us with unconcealed
+contempt. Yet for me, as the practitioner of some kindred mystery
+to his own, he manifested to the last a measure of respect. As we
+sat under the awning in opposite corners of the cockpit, he
+braiding hairs from dead men's chins, I forming runes upon a sheet
+of folio paper, he would nod across to me as one Tahuku to another,
+or, crossing the cockpit, study for a while my shapeless scrawl and
+encourage me with a heartfelt 'mitai!--good!' So might a deaf
+painter sympathise far off with a musician, as the slave and master
+of some uncomprehended and yet kindred art. A silly trade, he
+doubtless considered it; but a man must make allowance for
+barbarians--chaque pays a ses coutumes--and he felt the principle
+was there.
+
+The time came at last when his labours, which resembled those
+rather of Penelope than Hercules, could be no more spun out, and
+nothing remained but to pay him and say farewell. After a long,
+learned argument in Marquesan, I gathered that his mind was set on
+fish-hooks; with three of which, and a brace of dollars, I thought
+he was not ill rewarded for passing his forenoons in our cockpit,
+eating, drinking, delivering his opinions, and pressing the ship's
+company into his menial service. For all that, he was a man of so
+high a bearing, and so like an uncle of my own who should have gone
+mad and got tattooed, that I applied to him, when we were both on
+shore, to know if he were satisfied. 'Mitai ehipe?' I asked. And
+he, with rich unction, offering at the same time his hand--'Mitai
+ehipe, mitai kaehae; kaoha nui!'--or, to translate freely: 'The
+ship is good, the victuals are up to the mark, and we part in
+friendship.' Which testimonial uttered, he set off along the beach
+with his head bowed and the air of one deeply injured.
+
+I saw him go, on my side, with relief. It would be more
+interesting to learn how our relation seemed to Mapiao. His
+exigence, we may suppose, was merely loyal. He had been hired by
+the ignorant to do a piece of work; and he was bound that he would
+do it the right way. Countless obstacles, continual ignorant
+ridicule, availed not to dissuade him. He had his dinner laid out;
+watched it, as was fit, the while he worked; ate it at the fit
+hour; was in all things served and waited on; and could take his
+hire in the end with a clear conscience, telling himself the
+mystery was performed duly, the beards rightfully braided, and we
+(in spite of ourselves) correctly served. His view of our
+stupidity, even he, the mighty talker, must have lacked language to
+express. He never interfered with my Tahuku work; civilly praised
+it, idle as it seemed; civilly supposed that I was competent in my
+own mystery: such being the attitude of the intelligent and the
+polite. And we, on the other hand--who had yet the most to gain or
+lose, since the product was to be ours--who had professed our
+disability by the very act of hiring him to do it--were never weary
+of impeding his own more important labours, and sometimes lacked
+the sense and the civility to refrain from laughter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV--IN A CANNIBAL VALLEY
+
+
+
+The road from Taahauku to Atuona skirted the north-westerly side of
+the anchorage, somewhat high up, edged, and sometimes shaded, by
+the splendid flowers of the flamboyant--its English name I do not
+know. At the turn of the hand, Atuona came in view: a long beach,
+a heavy and loud breach of surf, a shore-side village scattered
+among trees, and the guttered mountains drawing near on both sides
+above a narrow and rich ravine. Its infamous repute perhaps
+affected me; but I thought it the loveliest, and by far the most
+ominous and gloomy, spot on earth. Beautiful it surely was; and
+even more salubrious. The healthfulness of the whole group is
+amazing; that of Atuona almost in the nature of a miracle. In
+Atuona, a village planted in a shore-side marsh, the houses
+standing everywhere intermingled with the pools of a taro-garden,
+we find every condition of tropical danger and discomfort; and yet
+there are not even mosquitoes--not even the hateful day-fly of
+Nuka-hiva--and fever, and its concomitant, the island fe'efe'e, are
+unknown.
+
+This is the chief station of the French on the man-eating isle of
+Hiva-oa. The sergeant of gendarmerie enjoys the style of the vice-
+resident, and hoists the French colours over a quite extensive
+compound. A Chinaman, a waif from the plantation, keeps a
+restaurant in the rear quarters of the village; and the mission is
+well represented by the sister's school and Brother Michel's
+church. Father Orens, a wonderful octogenarian, his frame scarce
+bowed, the fire of his eye undimmed, has lived, and trembled, and
+suffered in this place since 1843. Again and again, when Moipu had
+made coco-brandy, he has been driven from his house into the woods.
+'A mouse that dwelt in a cat's ear' had a more easy resting-place;
+and yet I have never seen a man that bore less mark of years. He
+must show us the church, still decorated with the bishop's artless
+ornaments of paper--the last work of industrious old hands, and the
+last earthly amusement of a man that was much of a hero. In the
+sacristy we must see his sacred vessels, and, in particular, a
+vestment which was a 'vraie curiosite,' because it had been given
+by a gendarme. To the Protestant there is always something
+embarrassing in the eagerness with which grown and holy men regard
+these trifles; but it was touching and pretty to see Orens, his
+aged eyes shining in his head, display his sacred treasures.
+
+August 26.--The vale behind the village, narrowing swiftly to a
+mere ravine, was choked with profitable trees. A river gushed in
+the midst. Overhead, the tall coco-palms made a primary covering;
+above that, from one wall of the mountain to another, the ravine
+was roofed with cloud; so that we moved below, amid teeming
+vegetation, in a covered house of heat. On either hand, at every
+hundred yards, instead of the houseless, disembowelling paepaes of
+Nuka-hiva, populous houses turned out their inhabitants to cry
+'Kaoha!' to the passers-by. The road, too, was busy: strings of
+girls, fair and foul, as in less favoured countries; men bearing
+breadfruit; the sisters, with a little guard of pupils; a fellow
+bestriding a horse--passed and greeted us continually; and now it
+was a Chinaman who came to the gate of his flower-yard, and gave us
+'Good-day' in excellent English; and a little farther on it would
+be some natives who set us down by the wayside, made us a feast of
+mummy-apple, and entertained us as we ate with drumming on a tin
+case. With all this fine plenty of men and fruit, death is at work
+here also. The population, according to the highest estimate, does
+not exceed six hundred in the whole vale of Atuona; and yet, when I
+once chanced to put the question, Brother Michel counted up ten
+whom he knew to be sick beyond recovery. It was here, too, that I
+could at last gratify my curiosity with the sight of a native house
+in the very article of dissolution. It had fallen flat along the
+paepae, its poles sprawling ungainly; the rains and the mites
+contended against it; what remained seemed sound enough, but much
+was gone already; and it was easy to see how the insects consumed
+the walls as if they had been bread, and the air and the rain ate
+into them like vitriol.
+
+A little ahead of us, a young gentleman, very well tattooed, and
+dressed in a pair of white trousers and a flannel shirt, had been
+marching unconcernedly. Of a sudden, without apparent cause, he
+turned back, took us in possession, and led us undissuadably along
+a by-path to the river's edge. There, in a nook of the most
+attractive amenity, he bade us to sit down: the stream splashing
+at our elbow, a shock of nondescript greenery enshrining us from
+above; and thither, after a brief absence, he brought us a cocoa-
+nut, a lump of sandal-wood, and a stick he had begun to carve: the
+nut for present refreshment, the sandal-wood for a precious gift,
+and the stick--in the simplicity of his vanity--to harvest
+premature praise. Only one section was yet carved, although the
+whole was pencil-marked in lengths; and when I proposed to buy it,
+Poni (for that was the artist's name) recoiled in horror. But I
+was not to be moved, and simply refused restitution, for I had long
+wondered why a people who displayed, in their tattooing, so great a
+gift of arabesque invention, should display it nowhere else. Here,
+at last, I had found something of the same talent in another
+medium; and I held the incompleteness, in these days of world-wide
+brummagem, for a happy mark of authenticity. Neither my reasons
+nor my purpose had I the means of making clear to Poni; I could
+only hold on to the stick, and bid the artist follow me to the
+gendarmerie, where I should find interpreters and money; but we
+gave him, in the meanwhile, a boat-call in return for his sandal-
+wood. As he came behind us down the vale he sounded upon this
+continually. And continually, from the wayside houses, there
+poured forth little groups of girls in crimson, or of men in white.
+And to these must Poni pass the news of who the strangers were, of
+what they had been doing, of why it was that Poni had a boat-
+whistle; and of why he was now being haled to the vice-residency,
+uncertain whether to be punished or rewarded, uncertain whether he
+had lost a stick or made a bargain, but hopeful on the whole, and
+in the meanwhile highly consoled by the boat-whistle. Whereupon he
+would tear himself away from this particular group of inquirers,
+and once more we would hear the shrill call in our wake.
+
+August 27.--I made a more extended circuit in the vale with Brother
+Michel. We were mounted on a pair of sober nags, suitable to these
+rude paths; the weather was exquisite, and the company in which I
+found myself no less agreeable than the scenes through which I
+passed. We mounted at first by a steep grade along the summit of
+one of those twisted spurs that, from a distance, mark out
+provinces of sun and shade upon the mountain-side. The ground fell
+away on either hand with an extreme declivity. From either hand,
+out of profound ravines, mounted the song of falling water and the
+smoke of household fires. Here and there the hills of foliage
+would divide, and our eye would plunge down upon one of these deep-
+nested habitations. And still, high in front, arose the
+precipitous barrier of the mountain, greened over where it seemed
+that scarce a harebell could find root, barred with the zigzags of
+a human road where it seemed that not a goat could scramble. And
+in truth, for all the labour that it cost, the road is regarded
+even by the Marquesans as impassable; they will not risk a horse on
+that ascent; and those who lie to the westward come and go in their
+canoes. I never knew a hill to lose so little on a near approach:
+a consequence, I must suppose, of its surprising steepness. When
+we turned about, I was amazed to behold so deep a view behind, and
+so high a shoulder of blue sea, crowned by the whale-like island of
+Motane. And yet the wall of mountain had not visibly dwindled, and
+I could even have fancied, as I raised my eyes to measure it, that
+it loomed higher than before.
+
+We struck now into covert paths, crossed and heard more near at
+hand the bickering of the streams, and tasted the coolness of those
+recesses where the houses stood. The birds sang about us as we
+descended. All along our path my guide was being hailed by voices:
+'Mikael--Kaoha, Mikael!' From the doorstep, from the cotton-patch,
+or out of the deep grove of island-chestnuts, these friendly cries
+arose, and were cheerily answered as we passed. In a sharp angle
+of a glen, on a rushing brook and under fathoms of cool foliage, we
+struck a house upon a well-built paepae, the fire brightly burning
+under the popoi-shed against the evening meal; and here the cries
+became a chorus, and the house folk, running out, obliged us to
+dismount and breathe. It seemed a numerous family: we saw eight
+at least; and one of these honoured me with a particular attention.
+This was the mother, a woman naked to the waist, of an aged
+countenance, but with hair still copious and black, and breasts
+still erect and youthful. On our arrival I could see she remarked
+me, but instead of offering any greeting, disappeared at once into
+the bush. Thence she returned with two crimson flowers. 'Good-
+bye!' was her salutation, uttered not without coquetry; and as she
+said it she pressed the flowers into my hand--'Good-bye! I speak
+Inglis.' It was from a whaler-man, who (she informed me) was 'a
+plenty good chap,' that she had learned my language; and I could
+not but think how handsome she must have been in these times of her
+youth, and could not but guess that some memories of the dandy
+whaler-man prompted her attentions to myself. Nor could I refrain
+from wondering what had befallen her lover; in the rain and mire of
+what sea-ports he had tramped since then; in what close and garish
+drinking-dens had found his pleasure; and in the ward of what
+infirmary dreamed his last of the Marquesas. But she, the more
+fortunate, lived on in her green island. The talk, in this lost
+house upon the mountains, ran chiefly upon Mapiao and his visits to
+the Casco: the news of which had probably gone abroad by then to
+all the island, so that there was no paepae in Hiva-oa where they
+did not make the subject of excited comment.
+
+Not much beyond we came upon a high place in the foot of the
+ravine. Two roads divided it, and met in the midst. Save for this
+intersection the amphitheatre was strangely perfect, and had a
+certain ruder air of things Roman. Depths of foliage and the bulk
+of the mountain kept it in a grateful shadow. On the benches
+several young folk sat clustered or apart. One of these, a girl
+perhaps fourteen years of age, buxom and comely, caught the eye of
+Brother Michel. Why was she not at school?--she was done with
+school now. What was she doing here?--she lived here now. Why
+so?--no answer but a deepening blush. There was no severity in
+Brother Michel's manner; the girl's own confusion told her story.
+'Elle a honte,' was the missionary's comment, as we rode away.
+Near by in the stream, a grown girl was bathing naked in a goyle
+between two stepping-stones; and it amused me to see with what
+alacrity and real alarm she bounded on her many-coloured under-
+clothes. Even in these daughters of cannibals shame was eloquent.
+
+It is in Hiva-oa, owing to the inveterate cannibalism of the
+natives, that local beliefs have been most rudely trodden
+underfoot. It was here that three religious chiefs were set under
+a bridge, and the women of the valley made to defile over their
+heads upon the road-way: the poor, dishonoured fellows sitting
+there (all observers agree) with streaming tears. Not only was one
+road driven across the high place, but two roads intersected in its
+midst. There is no reason to suppose that the last was done of
+purpose, and perhaps it was impossible entirely to avoid the
+numerous sacred places of the islands. But these things are not
+done without result. I have spoken already of the regard of
+Marquesans for the dead, making (as it does) so strange a contrast
+with their unconcern for death. Early on this day's ride, for
+instance, we encountered a petty chief, who inquired (of course)
+where we were going, and suggested by way of amendment. 'Why do
+you not rather show him the cemetery?' I saw it; it was but newly
+opened, the third within eight years. They are great builders here
+in Hiva-oa; I saw in my ride paepaes that no European dry-stone
+mason could have equalled, the black volcanic stones were laid so
+justly, the corners were so precise, the levels so true; but the
+retaining-wall of the new graveyard stood apart, and seemed to be a
+work of love. The sentiment of honour for the dead is therefore
+not extinct. And yet observe the consequence of violently
+countering men's opinions. Of the four prisoners in Atuona gaol,
+three were of course thieves; the fourth was there for sacrilege.
+He had levelled up a piece of the graveyard--to give a feast upon,
+as he informed the court--and declared he had no thought of doing
+wrong. Why should he? He had been forced at the point of the
+bayonet to destroy the sacred places of his own piety; when he had
+recoiled from the task, he had been jeered at for a superstitious
+fool. And now it is supposed he will respect our European
+superstitions as by second nature.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV--THE TWO CHIEFS OF ATUONA
+
+
+
+It had chanced (as the Casco beat through the Bordelais Straits for
+Taahauku) she approached on one board very near the land in the
+opposite isle of Tauata, where houses were to be seen in a grove of
+tall coco-palms. Brother Michel pointed out the spot. 'I am at
+home now,' said he. 'I believe I have a large share in these
+cocoa-nuts; and in that house madame my mother lives with her two
+husbands!' 'With two husbands?' somebody inquired. 'C'est ma
+honte,' replied the brother drily.
+
+A word in passing on the two husbands. I conceive the brother to
+have expressed himself loosely. It seems common enough to find a
+native lady with two consorts; but these are not two husbands. The
+first is still the husband; the wife continues to be referred to by
+his name; and the position of the coadjutor, or pikio, although
+quite regular, appears undoubtedly subordinate. We had
+opportunities to observe one household of the sort. The pikio was
+recognised; appeared openly along with the husband when the lady
+was thought to be insulted, and the pair made common cause like
+brothers. At home the inequality was more apparent. The husband
+sat to receive and entertain visitors; the pikio was running the
+while to fetch cocoa-nuts like a hired servant, and I remarked he
+was sent on these errands in preference even to the son. Plainly
+we have here no second husband; plainly we have the tolerated
+lover. Only, in the Marquesas, instead of carrying his lady's fan
+and mantle, he must turn his hand to do the husband's housework.
+
+The sight of Brother Michel's family estate led the conversation
+for some while upon the method and consequence of artificial
+kinship. Our curiosity became extremely whetted; the brother
+offered to have the whole of us adopted, and some two days later we
+became accordingly the children of Paaaeua, appointed chief of
+Atuona. I was unable to be present at the ceremony, which was
+primitively simple. The two Mrs. Stevensons and Mr. Osbourne,
+along with Paaaeua, his wife, and an adopted child of theirs, son
+of a shipwrecked Austrian, sat down to an excellent island meal, of
+which the principal and the only necessary dish was pig. A
+concourse watched them through the apertures of the house; but
+none, not even Brother Michel, might partake; for the meal was
+sacramental, and either creative or declaratory of the new
+relationship. In Tahiti things are not so strictly ordered; when
+Ori and I 'made brothers,' both our families sat with us at table,
+yet only he and I, who had eaten with intention were supposed to be
+affected by the ceremony. For the adoption of an infant I believe
+no formality to be required; the child is handed over by the
+natural parents, and grows up to inherit the estates of the
+adoptive. Presents are doubtless exchanged, as at all junctures of
+island life, social or international; but I never heard of any
+banquet--the child's presence at the daily board perhaps sufficing.
+We may find the rationale in the ancient Arabian idea that a common
+diet makes a common blood, with its derivative axiom that 'he is
+the father who gives the child its morning draught.' In the
+Marquesan practice, the sense would thus be evanescent; from the
+Tahitian, a mere survival, it will have entirely fled. An
+interesting parallel will probably occur to many of my readers.
+
+What is the nature of the obligation assumed at such a festival?
+It will vary with the characters of those engaged, and with the
+circumstances of the case. Thus it would be absurd to take too
+seriously our adoption at Atuona. On the part of Paaaeua it was an
+affair of social ambition; when he agreed to receive us in his
+family the man had not so much as seen us, and knew only that we
+were inestimably rich and travelled in a floating palace. We, upon
+our side, ate of his baked meats with no true animus affiliandi,
+but moved by the single sentiment of curiosity. The affair was
+formal, and a matter of parade, as when in Europe sovereigns call
+each other cousin. Yet, had we stayed at Atuona, Paaaeua would
+have held himself bound to establish us upon his land, and to set
+apart young men for our service, and trees for our support. I have
+mentioned the Austrian. He sailed in one of two sister ships,
+which left the Clyde in coal; both rounded the Horn, and both, at
+several hundred miles of distance, though close on the same point
+of time, took fire at sea on the Pacific. One was destroyed; the
+derelict iron frame of the second, after long, aimless cruising,
+was at length recovered, refitted, and hails to-day from San
+Francisco. A boat's crew from one of these disasters reached,
+after great hardships, the isle of Hiva-oa. Some of these men
+vowed they would never again confront the chances of the sea; but
+alone of them all the Austrian has been exactly true to his
+engagement, remains where he landed, and designs to die where he
+has lived. Now, with such a man, falling and taking root among
+islanders, the processes described may be compared to a gardener's
+graft. He passes bodily into the native stock; ceases wholly to be
+alien; has entered the commune of the blood, shares the prosperity
+and consideration of his new family, and is expected to impart with
+the same generosity the fruits of his European skill and knowledge.
+It is this implied engagement that so frequently offends the
+ingrafted white. To snatch an immediate advantage--to get (let us
+say) a station for his store--he will play upon the native custom
+and become a son or a brother for the day, promising himself to
+cast down the ladder by which he shall have ascended, and repudiate
+the kinship so soon as it shall grow burdensome. And he finds
+there are two parties to the bargain. Perhaps his Polynesian
+relative is simple, and conceived the blood-bond literally; perhaps
+he is shrewd, and himself entered the covenant with a view to gain.
+And either way the store is ravaged, the house littered with lazy
+natives; and the richer the man grows, the more numerous, the more
+idle, and the more affectionate he finds his native relatives.
+Most men thus circumstanced contrive to buy or brutally manage to
+enforce their independence; but many vegetate without hope,
+strangled by parasites.
+
+We had no cause to blush with Brother Michel. Our new parents were
+kind, gentle, well-mannered, and generous in gifts; the wife was a
+most motherly woman, the husband a man who stood justly high with
+his employers. Enough has been said to show why Moipu should be
+deposed; and in Paaaeua the French had found a reputable
+substitute. He went always scrupulously dressed, and looked the
+picture of propriety, like a dark, handsome, stupid, and probably
+religious young man hot from a European funeral. In character he
+seemed the ideal of what is known as the good citizen. He wore
+gravity like an ornament. None could more nicely represent the
+desired character as an appointed chief, the outpost of
+civilisation and reform. And yet, were the French to go and native
+manners to revive, fancy beholds him crowned with old men's beards
+and crowding with the first to a man-eating festival. But I must
+not seem to be unjust to Paaaeua. His respectability went deeper
+than the skin; his sense of the becoming sometimes nerved him for
+unexpected rigours.
+
+One evening Captain Otis and Mr. Osbourne were on shore in the
+village. All was agog; dancing had begun; it was plain it was to
+be a night of festival, and our adventurers were overjoyed at their
+good fortune. A strong fall of rain drove them for shelter to the
+house of Paaaeua, where they were made welcome, wiled into a
+chamber, and shut in. Presently the rain took off, the fun was to
+begin in earnest, and the young bloods of Atuona came round the
+house and called to my fellow-travellers through the interstices of
+the wall. Late into the night the calls were continued and
+resumed, and sometimes mingled with taunts; late into the night the
+prisoners, tantalised by the noises of the festival, renewed their
+efforts to escape. But all was vain; right across the door lay
+that god-fearing householder, Paaaeua, feigning sleep; and my
+friends had to forego their junketing. In this incident, so
+delightfully European, we thought we could detect three strands of
+sentiment. In the first place, Paaaeua had a charge of souls:
+these were young men, and he judged it right to withhold them from
+the primrose path. Secondly, he was a public character, and it was
+not fitting that his guests should countenance a festival of which
+he disapproved. So might some strict clergyman at home address a
+worldly visitor: 'Go to the theatre if you like, but, by your
+leave, not from my house!' Thirdly, Paaaeua was a man jealous, and
+with some cause (as shall be shown) for jealousy; and the feasters
+were the satellites of his immediate rival, Moipu.
+
+For the adoption had caused much excitement in the village; it made
+the strangers popular. Paaaeua, in his difficult posture of
+appointed chief, drew strength and dignity from their alliance, and
+only Moipu and his followers were malcontent. For some reason
+nobody (except myself) appears to dislike Moipu. Captain Hart, who
+has been robbed and threatened by him; Father Orens, whom he has
+fired at, and repeatedly driven to the woods; my own family, and
+even the French officials--all seemed smitten with an irrepressible
+affection for the man. His fall had been made soft; his son, upon
+his death, was to succeed Paaaeua in the chieftaincy; and he lived,
+at the time of our visit, in the shoreward part of the village in a
+good house, and with a strong following of young men, his late
+braves and pot-hunters. In this society, the coming of the Casco,
+the adoption, the return feast on board, and the presents exchanged
+between the whites and their new parents, were doubtless eagerly
+and bitterly canvassed. It was felt that a few years ago the
+honours would have gone elsewhere. In this unwonted business, in
+this reception of some hitherto undreamed-of and outlandish
+potentate--some Prester John or old Assaracus--a few years back it
+would have been the part of Moipu to play the hero and the host,
+and his young men would have accompanied and adorned the various
+celebrations as the acknowledged leaders of society. And now, by a
+malign vicissitude of fortune, Moipu must sit in his house quite
+unobserved; and his young men could but look in at the door while
+their rivals feasted. Perhaps M. Grevy felt a touch of bitterness
+towards his successor when he beheld him figure on the broad stage
+of the centenary of eighty-nine; the visit of the Casco which Moipu
+had missed by so few years was a more unusual occasion in Atuona
+than a centenary in France; and the dethroned chief determined to
+reassert himself in the public eye.
+
+Mr. Osbourne had gone into Atuona photographing; the population of
+the village had gathered together for the occasion on the place
+before the church, and Paaaeua, highly delighted with this new
+appearance of his family, played the master of ceremonies. The
+church had been taken, with its jolly architect before the door;
+the nuns with their pupils; sundry damsels in the ancient and
+singularly unbecoming robes of tapa; and Father Orens in the midst
+of a group of his parishioners. I know not what else was in hand,
+when the photographer became aware of a sensation in the crowd,
+and, looking around, beheld a very noble figure of a man appear
+upon the margin of a thicket and stroll nonchalantly near. The
+nonchalance was visibly affected; it was plain he came there to
+arouse attention, and his success was instant. He was introduced;
+he was civil, he was obliging, he was always ineffably superior and
+certain of himself; a well-graced actor. It was presently
+suggested that he should appear in his war costume; he gracefully
+consented; and returned in that strange, inappropriate and ill-
+omened array (which very well became his handsome person) to strut
+in a circle of admirers, and be thenceforth the centre of
+photography. Thus had Moipu effected his introduction, as by
+accident, to the white strangers, made it a favour to display his
+finery, and reduced his rival to a secondary role on the theatre of
+the disputed village. Paaaeua felt the blow; and, with a spirit
+which we never dreamed he could possess, asserted his priority. It
+was found impossible that day to get a photograph of Moipu alone;
+for whenever he stood up before the camera his successor placed
+himself unbidden by his side, and gently but firmly held to his
+position. The portraits of the pair, Jacob and Esau, standing
+shoulder to shoulder, one in his careful European dress, one in his
+barbaric trappings, figure the past and present of their island. A
+graveyard with its humble crosses would be the aptest symbol of the
+future.
+
+We are all impressed with the belief that Moipu had planned his
+campaign from the beginning to the end. It is certain that he lost
+no time in pushing his advantage. Mr. Osbourne was inveigled to
+his house; various gifts were fished out of an old sea-chest;
+Father Orens was called into service as interpreter, and Moipu
+formally proposed to 'make brothers' with Mata-Galahi--Glass-Eyes,-
+-the not very euphonious name under which Mr. Osbourne passed in
+the Marquesas. The feast of brotherhood took place on board the
+Casco. Paaaeua had arrived with his family, like a plain man; and
+his presents, which had been numerous, had followed one another, at
+intervals through several days. Moipu, as if to mark at every
+point the opposition, came with a certain feudal pomp, attended by
+retainers bearing gifts of all descriptions, from plumes of old
+men's beard to little, pious, Catholic engravings.
+
+I had met the man before this in the village, and detested him on
+sight; there was something indescribably raffish in his looks and
+ways that raised my gorge; and when man-eating was referred to, and
+he laughed a low, cruel laugh, part boastful, part bashful, like
+one reminded of some dashing peccadillo, my repugnance was mingled
+with nausea. This is no very human attitude, nor one at all
+becoming in a traveller. And, seen more privately, the man
+improved. Something negroid in character and face was still
+displeasing; but his ugly mouth became attractive when he smiled,
+his figure and bearing were certainly noble, and his eyes superb.
+In his appreciation of jams and pickles, in is delight in the
+reverberating mirrors of the dining cabin, and consequent endless
+repetition of Moipus and Mata-Galahis, he showed himself engagingly
+a child. And yet I am not sure; and what seemed childishness may
+have been rather courtly art. His manners struck me as beyond the
+mark; they were refined and caressing to the point of grossness,
+and when I think of the serene absent-mindedness with which he
+first strolled in upon our party, and then recall him running on
+hands and knees along the cabin sofas, pawing the velvet, dipping
+into the beds, and bleating commendatory 'mitais' with exaggerated
+emphasis, like some enormous over-mannered ape, I feel the more
+sure that both must have been calculated. And I sometimes wonder
+next, if Moipu were quite alone in this polite duplicity, and ask
+myself whether the Casco were quite so much admired in the
+Marquesas as our visitors desired us to suppose.
+
+I will complete this sketch of an incurable cannibal grandee with
+two incongruous traits. His favourite morsel was the human hand,
+of which he speaks to-day with an ill-favoured lustfulness. And
+when he said good-bye to Mrs. Stevenson, holding her hand, viewing
+her with tearful eyes, and chanting his farewell improvisation in
+the falsetto of Marquesan high society, he wrote upon her mind a
+sentimental impression which I try in vain to share.
+
+
+
+
+PART II: THE PAUMOTUS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--THE DANGEROUS ARCHIPELAGO--ATOLLS AT A DISTANCE
+
+
+
+In the early morning of 4th September a whale-boat manned by
+natives dragged us down the green lane of the anchorage and round
+the spouting promontory. On the shore level it was a hot,
+breathless, and yet crystal morning; but high overhead the hills of
+Atuona were all cowled in cloud, and the ocean-river of the trades
+streamed without pause. As we crawled from under the immediate
+shelter of the land, we reached at last the limit of their
+influence. The wind fell upon our sails in puffs, which
+strengthened and grew more continuous; presently the Casco heeled
+down to her day's work; the whale-boat, quite outstripped, clung
+for a noisy moment to her quarter; the stipulated bread, rum, and
+tobacco were passed in; a moment more and the boat was in our wake,
+and our late pilots were cheering our departure.
+
+This was the more inspiriting as we were bound for scenes so
+different, and though on a brief voyage, yet for a new province of
+creation. That wide field of ocean, called loosely the South Seas,
+extends from tropic to tropic, and from perhaps 123 degrees W. to
+150 degrees E., a parallelogram of one hundred degrees by forty-
+seven, where degrees are the most spacious. Much of it lies
+vacant, much is closely sown with isles, and the isles are of two
+sorts. No distinction is so continually dwelt upon in South Sea
+talk as that between the 'low' and the 'high' island, and there is
+none more broadly marked in nature. The Himalayas are not more
+different from the Sahara. On the one hand, and chiefly in groups
+of from eight to a dozen, volcanic islands rise above the sea; few
+reach an altitude of less than 4000 feet; one exceeds 13,000; their
+tops are often obscured in cloud, they are all clothed with various
+forests, all abound in food, and are all remarkable for picturesque
+and solemn scenery. On the other hand, we have the atoll; a thing
+of problematic origin and history, the reputed creature of an
+insect apparently unidentified; rudely annular in shape; enclosing
+a lagoon; rarely extending beyond a quarter of a mile at its chief
+width; often rising at its highest point to less than the stature
+of a man--man himself, the rat and the land crab, its chief
+inhabitants; not more variously supplied with plants; and offering
+to the eye, even when perfect, only a ring of glittering beach and
+verdant foliage, enclosing and enclosed by the blue sea.
+
+In no quarter are the atolls so thickly congregated, in none are
+they so varied in size from the greatest to the least, and in none
+is navigation so beset with perils, as in that archipelago that we
+were now to thread. The huge system of the trades is, for some
+reason, quite confounded by this multiplicity of reefs, the wind
+intermits, squalls are frequent from the west and south-west,
+hurricanes are known. The currents are, besides, inextricably
+intermixed; dead reckoning becomes a farce; the charts are not to
+be trusted; and such is the number and similarity of these islands
+that, even when you have picked one up, you may be none the wiser.
+The reputation of the place is consequently infamous; insurance
+offices exclude it from their field, and it was not without
+misgiving that my captain risked the Casco in such waters. I
+believe, indeed, it is almost understood that yachts are to avoid
+this baffling archipelago; and it required all my instances--and
+all Mr. Otis's private taste for adventure--to deflect our course
+across its midst.
+
+For a few days we sailed with a steady trade, and a steady westerly
+current setting us to leeward; and toward sundown of the seventh it
+was supposed we should have sighted Takaroa, one of Cook's so-
+called King George Islands. The sun set; yet a while longer the
+old moon--semi-brilliant herself, and with a silver belly, which
+was her successor--sailed among gathering clouds; she, too,
+deserted us; stars of every degree of sheen, and clouds of every
+variety of form disputed the sub-lustrous night; and still we gazed
+in vain for Takaroa. The mate stood on the bowsprit, his tall grey
+figure slashing up and down against the stars, and still
+
+
+'nihil astra praeter
+Vidit et undas.
+
+
+The rest of us were grouped at the port anchor davit, staring with
+no less assiduity, but with far less hope on the obscure horizon.
+Islands we beheld in plenty, but they were of 'such stuff as dreams
+are made on,' and vanished at a wink, only to appear in other
+places; and by and by not only islands, but refulgent and revolving
+lights began to stud the darkness; lighthouses of the mind or of
+the wearied optic nerve, solemnly shining and winking as we passed.
+At length the mate himself despaired, scrambled on board again from
+his unrestful perch, and announced that we had missed our
+destination. He was the only man of practice in these waters, our
+sole pilot, shipped for that end at Tai-o-hae. If he declared we
+had missed Takaroa, it was not for us to quarrel with the fact,
+but, if we could, to explain it. We had certainly run down our
+southing. Our canted wake upon the sea and our somewhat drunken-
+looking course upon the chart both testified with no less certainty
+to an impetuous westward current. We had no choice but to conclude
+we were again set down to leeward; and the best we could do was to
+bring the Casco to the wind, keep a good watch, and expect morning.
+
+I slept that night, as was then my somewhat dangerous practice, on
+deck upon the cockpit bench. A stir at last awoke me, to see all
+the eastern heaven dyed with faint orange, the binnacle lamp
+already dulled against the brightness of the day, and the steersman
+leaning eagerly across the wheel. 'There it is, sir!' he cried,
+and pointed in the very eyeball of the dawn. For awhile I could
+see nothing but the bluish ruins of the morning bank, which lay far
+along the horizon, like melting icebergs. Then the sun rose,
+pierced a gap in these debris of vapours, and displayed an
+inconsiderable islet, flat as a plate upon the sea, and spiked with
+palms of disproportioned altitude.
+
+So far, so good. Here was certainly an atoll; and we were
+certainly got among the archipelago. But which? And where? The
+isle was too small for either Takaroa: in all our neighbourhood,
+indeed, there was none so inconsiderable, save only Tikei; and
+Tikei, one of Roggewein's so-called Pernicious Islands, seemed
+beside the question. At that rate, instead of drifting to the
+west, we must have fetched up thirty miles to windward. And how
+about the current? It had been setting us down, by observation,
+all these days: by the deflection of our wake, it should be
+setting us down that moment. When had it stopped? When had it
+begun again? and what kind of torrent was that which had swept us
+eastward in the interval? To these questions, so typical of
+navigation in that range of isles, I have no answer. Such were at
+least the facts; Tikei our island turned out to be; and it was our
+first experience of the dangerous archipelago, to make our landfall
+thirty miles out.
+
+The sight of Tikei, thrown direct against the splendour of the
+morning, robbed of all its colour, and deformed with
+disproportioned trees like bristles on a broom, had scarce prepared
+us to be much in love with atolls. Later the same day we saw under
+more fit conditions the island of Taiaro. Lost in the Sea is
+possibly the meaning of the name. And it was so we saw it; lost in
+blue sea and sky: a ring of white beach, green underwood, and
+tossing palms, gem-like in colour; of a fairy, of a heavenly
+prettiness. The surf ran all around it, white as snow, and broke
+at one point, far to seaward, on what seems an uncharted reef.
+There was no smoke, no sign of man; indeed, the isle is not
+inhabited, only visited at intervals. And yet a trader (Mr. Narii
+Salmon) was watching from the shore and wondering at the unexpected
+ship. I have spent since then long months upon low islands; I know
+the tedium of their undistinguished days; I know the burden of
+their diet. With whatever envy we may have looked from the deck on
+these green coverts, it was with a tenfold greater that Mr. Salmon
+and his comrades saw us steer, in our trim ship, to seaward.
+
+The night fell lovely in the extreme. After the moon went down,
+the heaven was a thing to wonder at for stars. And as I lay in the
+cockpit and looked upon the steersman I was haunted by Emerson's
+verses:
+
+
+'And the lone seaman all the night
+Sails astonished among stars.'
+
+
+By this glittering and imperfect brightness, about four bells in
+the first watch we made our third atoll, Raraka. The low line of
+the isle lay straight along the sky; so that I was at first
+reminded of a towpath, and we seemed to be mounting some engineered
+and navigable stream. Presently a red star appeared, about the
+height and brightness of a danger signal, and with that my simile
+was changed; we seemed rather to skirt the embankment of a railway,
+and the eye began to look instinctively for the telegraph-posts,
+and the ear to expect the coming of a train. Here and there, but
+rarely, faint tree-tops broke the level. And the sound of the surf
+accompanied us, now in a drowsy monotone, now with a menacing
+swing.
+
+The isle lay nearly east and west, barring our advance on Fakarava.
+We must, therefore, hug the coast until we gained the western end,
+where, through a passage eight miles wide, we might sail southward
+between Raraka and the next isle, Kauehi. We had the wind free, a
+lightish air; but clouds of an inky blackness were beginning to
+arise, and at times it lightened--without thunder. Something, I
+know not what, continually set us up upon the island. We lay more
+and more to the nor'ard; and you would have thought the shore
+copied our manoeuvre and outsailed us. Once and twice Raraka headed
+us again--again, in the sea fashion, the quite innocent steersman
+was abused--and again the Casco kept away. Had I been called on,
+with no more light than that of our experience, to draw the
+configuration of that island, I should have shown a series of bow-
+window promontories, each overlapping the other to the nor'ard, and
+the trend of the land from the south-east to the north-west, and
+behold, on the chart it lay near east and west in a straight line.
+
+We had but just repeated our manoeuvre and kept away--for not more
+than five minutes the railway embankment had been lost to view and
+the surf to hearing--when I was aware of land again, not only on
+the weather bow, but dead ahead. I played the part of the
+judicious landsman, holding my peace till the last moment; and
+presently my mariners perceived it for themselves.
+
+'Land ahead!' said the steersman.
+
+'By God, it's Kauehi!' cried the mate.
+
+And so it was. And with that I began to be sorry for
+cartographers. We were scarce doing three and a half; and they
+asked me to believe that (in five minutes) we had dropped an
+island, passed eight miles of open water, and run almost high and
+dry upon the next. But my captain was more sorry for himself to be
+afloat in such a labyrinth; laid the Casco to, with the log line up
+and down, and sat on the stern rail and watched it till the
+morning. He had enough of night in the Paumotus.
+
+By daylight on the 9th we began to skirt Kauehi, and had now an
+opportunity to see near at hand the geography of atolls. Here and
+there, where it was high, the farther side loomed up; here and
+there the near side dipped entirely and showed a broad path of
+water into the lagoon; here and there both sides were equally
+abased, and we could look right through the discontinuous ring to
+the sea horizon on the south. Conceive, on a vast scale, the
+submerged hoop of the duck-hunter, trimmed with green rushes to
+conceal his head--water within, water without--you have the image
+of the perfect atoll. Conceive one that has been partly plucked of
+its rush fringe; you have the atoll of Kauehi. And for either
+shore of it at closer quarters, conceive the line of some old Roman
+highway traversing a wet morass, and here sunk out of view and
+there re-arising, crowned with a green tuft of thicket; only
+instead of the stagnant waters of a marsh, the live ocean now
+boiled against, now buried the frail barrier. Last night's
+impression in the dark was thus confirmed by day, and not
+corrected. We sailed indeed by a mere causeway in the sea, of
+nature's handiwork, yet of no greater magnitude than many of the
+works of man.
+
+The isle was uninhabited; it was all green brush and white sand,
+set in transcendently blue water; even the coco-palms were rare,
+though some of these completed the bright harmony of colour by
+hanging out a fan of golden yellow. For long there was no sign of
+life beyond the vegetable, and no sound but the continuous grumble
+of the surf. In silence and desertion these fair shores slipped
+past, and were submerged and rose again with clumps of thicket from
+the sea. And then a bird or two appeared, hovering and crying;
+swiftly these became more numerous, and presently, looking ahead,
+we were aware of a vast effervescence of winged life. In this
+place the annular isle was mostly under water, carrying here and
+there on its submerged line a wooded islet. Over one of these the
+birds hung and flew with an incredible density like that of gnats
+or hiving bees; the mass flashed white and black, and heaved and
+quivered, and the screaming of the creatures rose over the voice of
+the surf in a shrill clattering whirr. As you descend some inland
+valley a not dissimilar sound announces the nearness of a mill and
+pouring river. Some stragglers, as I said, came to meet our
+approach; a few still hung about the ship as we departed. The
+crying died away, the last pair of wings was left behind, and once
+more the low shores of Kauehi streamed past our eyes in silence
+like a picture. I supposed at the time that the birds lived, like
+ants or citizens, concentred where we saw them. I have been told
+since (I know not if correctly) that the whole isle, or much of it,
+is similarly peopled; and that the effervescence at a single spot
+would be the mark of a boat's crew of egg-hunters from one of the
+neighbouring inhabited atolls. So that here at Kauehi, as the day
+before at Taiaro, the Casco sailed by under the fire of unsuspected
+eyes. And one thing is surely true, that even on these ribbons of
+land an army might lie hid and no passing mariner divine its
+presence.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--FAKARAVA: AN ATOLL AT HAND
+
+
+
+By a little before noon we were running down the coast of our
+destination, Fakarava: the air very light, the sea near smooth;
+though still we were accompanied by a continuous murmur from the
+beach, like the sound of a distant train. The isle is of a huge
+longitude, the enclosed lagoon thirty miles by ten or twelve, and
+the coral tow-path, which they call the land, some eighty or ninety
+miles by (possibly) one furlong. That part by which we sailed was
+all raised; the underwood excellently green, the topping wood of
+coco-palms continuous--a mark, if I had known it, of man's
+intervention. For once more, and once more unconsciously, we were
+within hail of fellow-creatures, and that vacant beach was but a
+pistol-shot from the capital city of the archipelago. But the life
+of an atoll, unless it be enclosed, passes wholly on the shores of
+the lagoon; it is there the villages are seated, there the canoes
+ply and are drawn up; and the beach of the ocean is a place
+accursed and deserted, the fit scene only for wizardry and
+shipwreck, and in the native belief a haunting ground of murderous
+spectres.
+
+By and by we might perceive a breach in the low barrier; the woods
+ceased; a glittering point ran into the sea, tipped with an emerald
+shoal the mark of entrance. As we drew near we met a little run of
+sea--the private sea of the lagoon having there its origin and end,
+and here, in the jaws of the gateway, trying vain conclusions with
+the more majestic heave of the Pacific. The Casco scarce avowed a
+shock; but there are times and circumstances when these harbour
+mouths of inland basins vomit floods, deflecting, burying, and
+dismasting ships. For, conceive a lagoon perfectly sealed but in
+the one point, and that of merely navigable width; conceive the
+tide and wind to have heaped for hours together in that coral fold
+a superfluity of waters, and the tide to change and the wind fall--
+the open sluice of some great reservoirs at home will give an image
+of the unstemmable effluxion.
+
+We were scarce well headed for the pass before all heads were
+craned over the rail. For the water, shoaling under our board,
+became changed in a moment to surprising hues of blue and grey; and
+in its transparency the coral branched and blossomed, and the fish
+of the inland sea cruised visibly below us, stained and striped,
+and even beaked like parrots. I have paid in my time to view many
+curiosities; never one so curious as that first sight over the
+ship's rail in the lagoon of Fakarava. But let not the reader be
+deceived with hope. I have since entered, I suppose, some dozen
+atolls in different parts of the Pacific, and the experience has
+never been repeated. That exquisite hue and transparency of
+submarine day, and these shoals of rainbow fish, have not
+enraptured me again.
+
+Before we could raise our eyes from that engaging spectacle the
+schooner had slipped betwixt the pierheads of the reef, and was
+already quite committed to the sea within. The containing shores
+are so little erected, and the lagoon itself is so great, that, for
+the more part, it seemed to extend without a check to the horizon.
+Here and there, indeed, where the reef carried an inlet, like a
+signet-ring upon a finger, there would be a pencilling of palms;
+here and there, the green wall of wood ran solid for a length of
+miles; and on the port hand, under the highest grove of trees, a
+few houses sparkled white--Rotoava, the metropolitan settlement of
+the Paumotus. Hither we beat in three tacks, and came to an anchor
+close in shore, in the first smooth water since we had left San
+Francisco, five fathoms deep, where a man might look overboard all
+day at the vanishing cable, the coral patches, and the many-
+coloured fish.
+
+Fakarava was chosen to be the seat of Government from nautical
+considerations only. It is eccentrically situate; the productions,
+even for a low island, poor; the population neither many nor--for
+Low Islanders--industrious. But the lagoon has two good passages,
+one to leeward, one to windward, so that in all states of the wind
+it can be left and entered, and this advantage, for a government of
+scattered islands, was decisive. A pier of coral, landing-stairs,
+a harbour light upon a staff and pillar, and two spacious
+Government bungalows in a handsome fence, give to the northern end
+of Rotoava a great air of consequence. This is confirmed on the
+one hand by an empty prison, on the other by a gendarmerie pasted
+over with hand-bills in Tahitian, land-law notices from Papeete,
+and republican sentiments from Paris, signed (a little after date)
+'Jules Grevy, Perihidente.' Quite at the far end a belfried
+Catholic chapel concludes the town; and between, on a smooth floor
+of white coral sand and under the breezy canopy of coco-palms, the
+houses of the natives stand irregularly scattered, now close on the
+lagoon for the sake of the breeze, now back under the palms for
+love of shadow.
+
+Not a soul was to be seen. But for the thunder of the surf on the
+far side, it seemed you might have heard a pin drop anywhere about
+that capital city. There was something thrilling in the unexpected
+silence, something yet more so in the unexpected sound. Here
+before us a sea reached to the horizon, rippling like an inland
+mere; and behold! close at our back another sea assaulted with
+assiduous fury the reverse of the position. At night the lantern
+was run up and lit a vacant pier. In one house lights were seen
+and voices heard, where the population (I was told) sat playing
+cards. A little beyond, from deep in the darkness of the palm-
+grove, we saw the glow and smelt the aromatic odour of a coal of
+cocoa-nut husk, a relic of the evening kitchen. Crickets sang;
+some shrill thing whistled in a tuft of weeds; and the mosquito
+hummed and stung. There was no other trace that night of man,
+bird, or insect in the isle. The moon, now three days old, and as
+yet but a silver crescent on a still visible sphere, shone through
+the palm canopy with vigorous and scattered lights. The alleys
+where we walked were smoothed and weeded like a boulevard; here and
+there were plants set out; here and there dusky cottages clustered
+in the shadow, some with verandahs. A public garden by night, a
+rich and fashionable watering-place in a by-season, offer sights
+and vistas not dissimilar. And still, on the one side, stretched
+the lapping mere, and from the other the deep sea still growled in
+the night. But it was most of all on board, in the dead hours,
+when I had been better sleeping, that the spell of Fakarava seized
+and held me. The moon was down. The harbour lantern and two of
+the greater planets drew vari-coloured wakes on the lagoon. From
+shore the cheerful watch-cry of cocks rang out at intervals above
+the organ-point of surf. And the thought of this depopulated
+capital, this protracted thread of annular island with its crest of
+coco-palms and fringe of breakers, and that tranquil inland sea
+that stretched before me till it touched the stars, ran in my head
+for hours with delight.
+
+So long as I stayed upon that isle these thoughts were constant. I
+lay down to sleep, and woke again with an unblunted sense of my
+surroundings. I was never weary of calling up the image of that
+narrow causeway, on which I had my dwelling, lying coiled like a
+serpent, tail to mouth, in the outrageous ocean, and I was never
+weary of passing--a mere quarter-deck parade--from the one side to
+the other, from the shady, habitable shores of the lagoon to the
+blinding desert and uproarious breakers of the opposite beach. The
+sense of insecurity in such a thread of residence is more than
+fanciful. Hurricanes and tidal waves over-leap these humble
+obstacles; Oceanus remembers his strength, and, where houses stood
+and palms flourished, shakes his white beard again over the barren
+coral. Fakarava itself has suffered; the trees immediately beyond
+my house were all of recent replantation; and Anaa is only now
+recovered from a heavier stroke. I knew one who was then dwelling
+in the isle. He told me that he and two ship captains walked to
+the sea beach. There for a while they viewed the oncoming
+breakers, till one of the captains clapped suddenly his hand before
+his eyes and cried aloud that he could endure no longer to behold
+them. This was in the afternoon; in the dark hours of the night
+the sea burst upon the island like a flood; the settlement was
+razed all but the church and presbytery; and, when day returned,
+the survivors saw themselves clinging in an abattis of uprooted
+coco-palms and ruined houses.
+
+Danger is but a small consideration. But men are more nicely
+sensible of a discomfort; and the atoll is a discomfortable home.
+There are some, and these probably ancient, where a deep soil has
+formed and the most valuable fruit-trees prosper. I have walked in
+one, with equal admiration and surprise, through a forest of huge
+breadfruits, eating bananas and stumbling among taro as I went.
+This was in the atoll of Namorik in the Marshall group, and stands
+alone in my experience. To give the opposite extreme, which is yet
+far more near the average, I will describe the soil and productions
+of Fakarava. The surface of that narrow strip is for the more part
+of broken coral lime-stone, like volcanic clinkers, and
+excruciating to the naked foot; in some atolls, I believe, not in
+Fakarava, it gives a fine metallic ring when struck. Here and
+there you come upon a bank of sand, exceeding fine and white, and
+these parts are the least productive. The plants (such as they
+are) spring from and love the broken coral, whence they grow with
+that wonderful verdancy that makes the beauty of the atoll from the
+sea. The coco-palm in particular luxuriates in that stern solum,
+striking down his roots to the brackish, percolated water, and
+bearing his green head in the wind with every evidence of health
+and pleasure. And yet even the coco-palm must be helped in infancy
+with some extraneous nutriment, and through much of the low
+archipelago there is planted with each nut a piece of ship's
+biscuit and a rusty nail. The pandanus comes next in importance,
+being also a food tree; and he, too, does bravely. A green bush
+called miki runs everywhere; occasionally a purao is seen; and
+there are several useless weeds. According to M. Cuzent, the whole
+number of plants on an atoll such as Fakarava will scarce exceed,
+even if it reaches to, one score. Not a blade of grass appears;
+not a grain of humus, save when a sack or two has been imported to
+make the semblance of a garden; such gardens as bloom in cities on
+the window-sill. Insect life is sometimes dense; a cloud o'
+mosquitoes, and, what is far worse, a plague of flies blackening
+our food, has sometimes driven us from a meal on Apemama; and even
+in Fakarava the mosquitoes were a pest. The land crab may be seen
+scuttling to his hole, and at night the rats besiege the houses and
+the artificial gardens. The crab is good eating; possibly so is
+the rat; I have not tried. Pandanus fruit is made, in the
+Gilberts, into an agreeable sweetmeat, such as a man may trifle
+with at the end of a long dinner; for a substantial meal I have no
+use for it. The rest of the food-supply, in a destitute atoll such
+as Fakarava, can be summed up in the favourite jest of the
+archipelago--cocoa-nut beefsteak. Cocoa-nut green, cocoa-nut ripe,
+cocoa-nut germinated; cocoa-nut to eat and cocoa-nut to drink;
+cocoa-nut raw and cooked, cocoa-nut hot and cold--such is the bill
+of fare. And some of the entrees are no doubt delicious. The
+germinated nut, cooked in the shell and eaten with a spoon, forms a
+good pudding; cocoa-nut milk--the expressed juice of a ripe nut,
+not the water of a green one--goes well in coffee, and is a
+valuable adjunct in cookery through the South Seas; and cocoa-nut
+salad, if you be a millionaire, and can afford to eat the value of
+a field of corn for your dessert, is a dish to be remembered with
+affection. But when all is done there is a sameness, and the
+Israelites of the low islands murmur at their manna.
+
+The reader may think I have forgot the sea. The two beaches do
+certainly abound in life, and they are strangely different. In the
+lagoon the water shallows slowly on a bottom of the fine slimy
+sand, dotted with clumps of growing coral. Then comes a strip of
+tidal beach on which the ripples lap. In the coral clumps the
+great holy-water clam (Tridacna) grows plentifully; a little deeper
+lie the beds of the pearl-oyster and sail the resplendent fish that
+charmed us at our entrance; and these are all more or less
+vigorously coloured. But the other shells are white like lime, or
+faintly tinted with a little pink, the palest possible display;
+many of them dead besides, and badly rolled. On the ocean side, on
+the mounds of the steep beach, over all the width of the reef right
+out to where the surf is bursting, in every cranny, under every
+scattered fragment of the coral, an incredible plenty of marine
+life displays the most wonderful variety and brilliancy of hues.
+The reef itself has no passage of colour but is imitated by some
+shell. Purple and red and white, and green and yellow, pied and
+striped and clouded, the living shells wear in every combination
+the livery of the dead reef--if the reef be dead--so that the eye
+is continually baffled and the collector continually deceived. I
+have taken shells for stones and stones for shells, the one as
+often as the other. A prevailing character of the coral is to be
+dotted with small spots of red, and it is wonderful how many
+varieties of shell have adopted the same fashion and donned the
+disguise of the red spot. A shell I had found in plenty in the
+Marquesas I found here also unchanged in all things else, but there
+were the red spots. A lively little crab wore the same markings.
+The case of the hermit or soldier crab was more conclusive, being
+the result of conscious choice. This nasty little wrecker,
+scavenger, and squatter has learned the value of a spotted house;
+so it be of the right colour he will choose the smallest shard,
+tuck himself in a mere corner of a broken whorl, and go about the
+world half naked; but I never found him in this imperfect armour
+unless it was marked with the red spot.
+
+Some two hundred yards distant is the beach of the lagoon. Collect
+the shells from each, set them side by side, and you would suppose
+they came from different hemispheres; the one so pale, the other so
+brilliant; the one prevalently white, the other of a score of hues,
+and infected with the scarlet spot like a disease. This seems the
+more strange, since the hermit crabs pass and repass the island,
+and I have met them by the Residency well, which is about central,
+journeying either way. Without doubt many of the shells in the
+lagoon are dead. But why are they dead? Without doubt the living
+shells have a very different background set for imitation. But why
+are these so different? We are only on the threshold of the
+mysteries.
+
+Either beach, I have said, abounds with life. On the sea-side and
+in certain atolls this profusion of vitality is even shocking: the
+rock under foot is mined with it. I have broken off--notably in
+Funafuti and Arorai--great lumps of ancient weathered rock that
+rang under my blows like iron, and the fracture has been full of
+pendent worms as long as my hand, as thick as a child's finger, of
+a slightly pinkish white, and set as close as three or even four to
+the square inch. Even in the lagoon, where certain shell-fish seem
+to sicken, others (it is notorious) prosper exceedingly and make
+the riches of these islands. Fish, too, abound; the lagoon is a
+closed fish-pond, such as might rejoice the fancy of an abbot;
+sharks swarm there, and chiefly round the passages, to feast upon
+this plenty, and you would suppose that man had only to prepare his
+angle. Alas! it is not so. Of these painted fish that came in
+hordes about the entering Casco, some bore poisonous spines, and
+others were poisonous if eaten. The stranger must refrain, or take
+his chance of painful and dangerous sickness. The native, on his
+own isle, is a safe guide; transplant him to the next, and he is
+helpless as yourself. For it is a question both of time and place.
+A fish caught in a lagoon may be deadly; the same fish caught the
+same day at sea, and only a few hundred yards without the passage,
+will be wholesome eating: in a neighbouring isle perhaps the case
+will be reversed; and perhaps a fortnight later you shall be able
+to eat of them indifferently from within and from without.
+According to the natives, these bewildering vicissitudes are ruled
+by the movement of the heavenly bodies. The beautiful planet Venus
+plays a great part in all island tales and customs; and among other
+functions, some of them more awful, she regulates the season of
+good fish. With Venus in one phase, as we had her, certain fish
+were poisonous in the lagoon: with Venus in another, the same fish
+was harmless and a valued article of diet. White men explain these
+changes by the phases of the coral.
+
+It adds a last touch of horror to the thought of this precarious
+annular gangway in the sea, that even what there is of it is not of
+honest rock, but organic, part alive, part putrescent; even the
+clean sea and the bright fish about it poisoned, the most stubborn
+boulder burrowed in by worms, the lightest dust venomous as an
+apothecary's drugs.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--A HOUSE TO LET IN A LOW ISLAND
+
+
+
+Never populous, it was yet by a chapter of accidents that I found
+the island so deserted that no sound of human life diversified the
+hours; that we walked in that trim public garden of a town, among
+closed houses, without even a lodging-bill in a window to prove
+some tenancy in the back quarters; and, when we visited the
+Government bungalow, that Mr. Donat, acting Vice-Resident, greeted
+us alone, and entertained us with cocoa-nut punches in the Sessions
+Hall and seat of judgment of that widespread archipelago, our
+glasses standing arrayed with summonses and census returns. The
+unpopularity of a late Vice-Resident had begun the movement of
+exodus, his native employes resigning court appointments and
+retiring each to his own coco-patch in the remoter districts of the
+isle. Upon the back of that, the Governor in Papeete issued a
+decree: All land in the Paumotus must be defined and registered by
+a certain date. Now, the folk of the archipelago are half nomadic;
+a man can scarce be said to belong to a particular atoll; he
+belongs to several, perhaps holds a stake and counts cousinship in
+half a score; and the inhabitants of Rotoava in particular, man,
+woman, and child, and from the gendarme to the Mormon prophet and
+the schoolmaster, owned--I was going to say land--owned at least
+coral blocks and growing coco-palms in some adjacent isle.
+Thither--from the gendarme to the babe in arms, the pastor followed
+by his flock, the schoolmaster carrying along with him his
+scholars, and the scholars with their books and slates--they had
+taken ship some two days previous to our arrival, and were all now
+engaged disputing boundaries. Fancy overhears the shrillness of
+their disputation mingle with the surf and scatter sea-fowl. It
+was admirable to observe the completeness of their flight, like
+that of hibernating birds; nothing left but empty houses, like old
+nests to be reoccupied in spring; and even the harmless necessary
+dominie borne with them in their transmigration. Fifty odd set
+out, and only seven, I was informed, remained. But when I made a
+feast on board the Casco, more than seven, and nearer seven times
+seven, appeared to be my guests. Whence they appeared, how they
+were summoned, whither they vanished when the feast was eaten, I
+have no guess. In view of Low Island tales, and that awful
+frequentation which makes men avoid the seaward beaches of an
+atoll, some two score of those that ate with us may have returned,
+for the occasion, from the kingdom of the dead.
+
+It was this solitude that put it in our minds to hire a house, and
+become, for the time being, indwellers of the isle--a practice I
+have ever since, when it was possible, adhered to. Mr. Donat
+placed us, with that intent, under the convoy of one Taniera
+Mahinui, who combined the incongruous characters of catechist and
+convict. The reader may smile, but I affirm he was well qualified
+for either part. For that of convict, first of all, by a good
+substantial felony, such as in all lands casts the perpetrator in
+chains and dungeons. Taniera was a man of birth--the chief a while
+ago, as he loved to tell, of a district in Anaa of 800 souls. In
+an evil hour it occurred to the authorities in Papeete to charge
+the chiefs with the collection of the taxes. It is a question if
+much were collected; it is certain that nothing was handed on; and
+Taniera, who had distinguished himself by a visit to Papeete and
+some high living in restaurants, was chosen for the scapegoat. The
+reader must understand that not Taniera but the authorities in
+Papeete were first in fault. The charge imposed was
+disproportioned. I have not yet heard of any Polynesian capable of
+such a burden; honest and upright Hawaiians--one in particular, who
+was admired even by the whites as an inflexible magistrate--have
+stumbled in the narrow path of the trustee. And Taniera, when the
+pinch came, scorned to denounce accomplices; others had shared the
+spoil, he bore the penalty alone. He was condemned in five years.
+The period, when I had the pleasure of his friendship, was not yet
+expired; he still drew prison rations, the sole and not unwelcome
+reminder of his chains, and, I believe, looked forward to the date
+of his enfranchisement with mere alarm. For he had no sense of
+shame in the position; complained of nothing but the defective
+table of his place of exile; regretted nothing but the fowls and
+eggs and fish of his own more favoured island. And as for his
+parishioners, they did not think one hair the less of him. A
+schoolboy, mulcted in ten thousand lines of Greek and dwelling
+sequestered in the dormitories, enjoys unabated consideration from
+his fellows. So with Taniera: a marked man, not a dishonoured;
+having fallen under the lash of the unthinkable gods; a Job,
+perhaps, or say a Taniera in the den of lions. Songs are likely
+made and sung about this saintly Robin Hood. On the other hand, he
+was even highly qualified for his office in the Church; being by
+nature a grave, considerate, and kindly man; his face rugged and
+serious, his smile bright; the master of several trades, a builder
+both of boats and houses; endowed with a fine pulpit voice; endowed
+besides with such a gift of eloquence that at the grave of the late
+chief of Fakarava he set all the assistants weeping. I never met a
+man of a mind more ecclesiastical; he loved to dispute and to
+inform himself of doctrine and the history of sects; and when I
+showed him the cuts in a volume of Chambers's Encyclopaedia--except
+for one of an ape--reserved his whole enthusiasm for cardinals'
+hats, censers, candlesticks, and cathedrals. Methought when he
+looked upon the cardinal's hat a voice said low in his ear: 'Your
+foot is on the ladder.'
+
+Under the guidance of Taniera we were soon installed in what I
+believe to have been the best-appointed private house in Fakarava.
+It stood just beyond the church in an oblong patch of cultivation.
+More than three hundred sacks of soil were imported from Tahiti for
+the Residency garden; and this must shortly be renewed, for the
+earth blows away, sinks in crevices of the coral, and is sought for
+at last in vain. I know not how much earth had gone to the garden
+of my villa; some at least, for an alley of prosperous bananas ran
+to the gate, and over the rest of the enclosure, which was covered
+with the usual clinker-like fragments of smashed coral, not only
+coco-palms and mikis but also fig-trees flourished, all of a
+delicious greenness. Of course there was no blade of grass. In
+front a picket fence divided us from the white road, the palm-
+fringed margin of the lagoon, and the lagoon itself, reflecting
+clouds by day and stars by night. At the back, a bulwark of
+uncemented coral enclosed us from the narrow belt of bush and the
+nigh ocean beach where the seas thundered, the roar and wash of
+them still humming in the chambers of the house.
+
+This itself was of one story, verandahed front and back. It
+contained three rooms, three sewing-machines, three sea-chests,
+chairs, tables, a pair of beds, a cradle, a double-barrelled gun, a
+pair of enlarged coloured photographs, a pair of coloured prints
+after Wilkie and Mulready, and a French lithograph with the legend:
+'Le brigade du General Lepasset brulant son drapeau devant Metz.'
+Under the stilts of the house a stove was rusting, till we drew it
+forth and put it in commission. Not far off was the burrow in the
+coral whence we supplied ourselves with brackish water. There was
+live stock, besides, on the estate--cocks and hens and a brace of
+ill-regulated cats, whom Taniera came every morning with the sun to
+feed on grated cocoa-nut. His voice was our regular reveille,
+ringing pleasantly about the garden: 'Pooty--pooty--poo--poo--
+poo!'
+
+Far as we were from the public offices, the nearness of the chapel
+made our situation what is called eligible in advertisements, and
+gave us a side look on some native life. Every morning, as soon as
+he had fed the fowls, Taniera set the bell agoing in the small
+belfry; and the faithful, who were not very numerous, gathered to
+prayers. I was once present: it was the Lord's day, and seven
+females and eight males composed the congregation. A woman played
+precentor, starting with a longish note; the catechist joined in
+upon the second bar; and then the faithful in a body. Some had
+printed hymn-books which they followed; some of the rest filled up
+with 'eh--eh--eh,' the Paumotuan tol-de-rol. After the hymn, we
+had an antiphonal prayer or two; and then Taniera rose from the
+front bench, where he had been sitting in his catechist's robes,
+passed within the altar-rails, opened his Tahitian Bible, and began
+to preach from notes. I understood one word--the name of God; but
+the preacher managed his voice with taste, used rare and expressive
+gestures, and made a strong impression of sincerity. The plain
+service, the vernacular Bible, the hymn-tunes mostly on an English
+pattern--'God save the Queen,' I was informed, a special
+favourite,--all, save some paper flowers upon the altar, seemed not
+merely but austerely Protestant. It is thus the Catholics have met
+their low island proselytes half-way.
+
+Taniera had the keys of our house; it was with him I made my
+bargain, if that could be called a bargain in which all was
+remitted to my generosity; it was he who fed the cats and poultry,
+he who came to call and pick a meal with us like an acknowledged
+friend; and we long fondly supposed he was our landlord. This
+belief was not to bear the test of experience; and, as my chapter
+has to relate, no certainty succeeded it.
+
+We passed some days of airless quiet and great heat; shell-
+gatherers were warned from the ocean beach, where sunstroke waited
+them from ten till four; the highest palm hung motionless, there
+was no voice audible but that of the sea on the far side. At last,
+about four of a certain afternoon, long cat's-paws flawed the face
+of the lagoon; and presently in the tree-tops there awoke the
+grateful bustle of the trades, and all the houses and alleys of the
+island were fanned out. To more than one enchanted ship, that had
+lain long becalmed in view of the green shore, the wind brought
+deliverance; and by daylight on the morrow a schooner and two
+cutters lay moored in the port of Rotoava. Not only in the outer
+sea, but in the lagoon itself, a certain traffic woke with the
+reviving breeze; and among the rest one Francois, a half-blood, set
+sail with the first light in his own half-decked cutter. He had
+held before a court appointment; being, I believe, the Residency
+sweeper-out. Trouble arising with the unpopular Vice-Resident, he
+had thrown his honours down, and fled to the far parts of the atoll
+to plant cabbages--or at least coco-palms. Thence he was now
+driven by such need as even a Cincinnatus must acknowledge, and
+fared for the capital city, the seat of his late functions, to
+exchange half a ton of copra for necessary flour. And here, for a
+while, the story leaves to tell of his voyaging.
+
+It must tell, instead, of our house, where, toward seven at night,
+the catechist came suddenly in with his pleased air of being
+welcome; armed besides with a considerable bunch of keys. These he
+proceeded to try on the sea-chests, drawing each in turn from its
+place against the wall. Heads of strangers appeared in the doorway
+and volunteered suggestions. All in vain. Either they were the
+wrong keys or the wrong boxes, or the wrong man was trying them.
+For a little Taniera fumed and fretted; then had recourse to the
+more summary method of the hatchet; one of the chests was broken
+open, and an armful of clothing, male and female, baled out and
+handed to the strangers on the verandah.
+
+These were Francois, his wife, and their child. About eight a.m.,
+in the midst of the lagoon, their cutter had capsized in jibbing.
+They got her righted, and though she was still full of water put
+the child on board. The mainsail had been carried away, but the
+jib still drew her sluggishly along, and Francois and the woman
+swam astern and worked the rudder with their hands. The cold was
+cruel; the fatigue, as time went on, became excessive; and in that
+preserve of sharks, fear hunted them. Again and again, Francois,
+the half-breed, would have desisted and gone down; but the woman,
+whole blood of an amphibious race, still supported him with
+cheerful words. I am reminded of a woman of Hawaii who swam with
+her husband, I dare not say how many miles, in a high sea, and came
+ashore at last with his dead body in her arms. It was about five
+in the evening, after nine hours' swimming, that Francois and his
+wife reached land at Rotoava. The gallant fight was won, and
+instantly the more childish side of native character appears. They
+had supped, and told and retold their story, dripping as they came;
+the flesh of the woman, whom Mrs. Stevenson helped to shift, was
+cold as stone; and Francois, having changed to a dry cotton shirt
+and trousers, passed the remainder of the evening on my floor and
+between open doorways, in a thorough draught. Yet Francois, the
+son of a French father, speaks excellent French himself and seems
+intelligent.
+
+It was our first idea that the catechist, true to his evangelical
+vocation, was clothing the naked from his superfluity. Then it
+came out that Francois was but dealing with his own. The clothes
+were his, so was the chest, so was the house. Francois was in fact
+the landlord. Yet you observe he had hung back on the verandah
+while Taniera tried his 'prentice hand upon the locks: and even
+now, when his true character appeared, the only use he made of the
+estate was to leave the clothes of his family drying on the fence.
+Taniera was still the friend of the house, still fed the poultry,
+still came about us on his daily visits, Francois, during the
+remainder of his stay, holding bashfully aloof. And there was
+stranger matter. Since Francois had lost the whole load of his
+cutter, the half ton of copra, an axe, bowls, knives, and clothes--
+since he had in a manner to begin the world again, and his
+necessary flour was not yet bought or paid for--I proposed to
+advance him what he needed on the rent. To my enduring amazement
+he refused, and the reason he gave--if that can be called a reason
+which but darkens counsel--was that Taniera was his friend. His
+friend, you observe; not his creditor. I inquired into that, and
+was assured that Taniera, an exile in a strange isle, might
+possibly be in debt himself, but certainly was no man's creditor.
+
+Very early one morning we were awakened by a bustling presence in
+the yard, and found our camp had been surprised by a tall, lean old
+native lady, dressed in what were obviously widow's weeds. You
+could see at a glance she was a notable woman, a housewife, sternly
+practical, alive with energy, and with fine possibilities of
+temper. Indeed, there was nothing native about her but the skin;
+and the type abounds, and is everywhere respected, nearer home. It
+did us good to see her scour the grounds, examining the plants and
+chickens; watering, feeding, trimming them; taking angry, purpose-
+like possession. When she neared the house our sympathy abated;
+when she came to the broken chest I wished I were elsewhere. We
+had scarce a word in common; but her whole lean body spoke for her
+with indignant eloquence. 'My chest!' it cried, with a stress on
+the possessive. 'My chest--broken open! This is a fine state of
+things!' I hastened to lay the blame where it belonged--on
+Francois and his wife--and found I had made things worse instead of
+better. She repeated the names at first with incredulity, then
+with despair. A while she seemed stunned, next fell to
+disembowelling the box, piling the goods on the floor, and visibly
+computing the extent of Francois's ravages; and presently after she
+was observed in high speech with Taniera, who seemed to hang an ear
+like one reproved.
+
+Here, then, by all known marks, should be my land-lady at last;
+here was every character of the proprietor fully developed. Should
+I not approach her on the still depending question of my rent? I
+carried the point to an adviser. 'Nonsense!' he cried. 'That's
+the old woman, the mother. It doesn't belong to her. I believe
+that's the man the house belongs to,' and he pointed to one of the
+coloured photographs on the wall. On this I gave up all desire of
+understanding; and when the time came for me to leave, in the
+judgment-hall of the archipelago, and with the awful countenance of
+the acting Governor, I duly paid my rent to Taniera. He was
+satisfied, and so was I. But what had he to do with it? Mr.
+Donat, acting magistrate and a man of kindred blood, could throw no
+light upon the mystery; a plain private person, with a taste for
+letters, cannot be expected to do more.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--TRAITS AND SECTS IN THE PAUMOTUS
+
+
+
+The most careless reader must have remarked a change of air since
+the Marquesas. The house, crowded with effects, the bustling
+housewife counting her possessions, the serious, indoctrinated
+island pastor, the long fight for life in the lagoon: here are
+traits of a new world. I read in a pamphlet (I will not give the
+author's name) that the Marquesan especially resembles the
+Paumotuan. I should take the two races, though so near in
+neighbourhood, to be extremes of Polynesian diversity. The
+Marquesan is certainly the most beautiful of human races, and one
+of the tallest--the Paumotuan averaging a good inch shorter, and
+not even handsome; the Marquesan open-handed, inert, insensible to
+religion, childishly self-indulgent--the Paumotuan greedy, hardy,
+enterprising, a religious disputant, and with a trace of the
+ascetic character.
+
+Yet a few years ago, and the people of the archipelago were crafty
+savages. Their isles might be called sirens' isles, not merely
+from the attraction they exerted on the passing mariner, but from
+the perils that awaited him on shore. Even to this day, in certain
+outlying islands, danger lingers; and the civilized Paumotuan
+dreads to land and hesitates to accost his backward brother. But,
+except in these, to-day the peril is a memory. When our generation
+were yet in the cradle and playroom it was still a living fact.
+Between 1830 and 1840, Hao, for instance, was a place of the most
+dangerous approach, where ships were seized and crews kidnapped.
+As late as 1856, the schooner Sarah Ann sailed from Papeete and was
+seen no more. She had women on board, and children, the captain's
+wife, a nursemaid, a baby, and the two young sons of a Captain
+Steven on their way to the mainland for schooling. All were
+supposed to have perished in a squall. A year later, the captain
+of the Julia, coasting along the island variously called Bligh,
+Lagoon, and Tematangi saw armed natives follow the course of his
+schooner, clad in many-coloured stuffs. Suspicion was at once
+aroused; the mother of the lost children was profuse of money; and
+one expedition having found the place deserted, and returned
+content with firing a few shots, she raised and herself accompanied
+another. None appeared to greet or to oppose them; they roamed a
+while among abandoned huts and empty thickets; then formed two
+parties and set forth to beat, from end to end, the pandanus jungle
+of the island. One man remained alone by the landing-place--Teina,
+a chief of Anaa, leader of the armed natives who made the strength
+of the expedition. Now that his comrades were departed this way
+and that, on their laborious exploration, the silence fell
+profound; and this silence was the ruin of the islanders. A sound
+of stones rattling caught the ear of Teina. He looked, thinking to
+perceive a crab, and saw instead the brown hand of a human being
+issue from a fissure in the ground. A shout recalled the search
+parties and announced their doom to the buried caitiffs. In the
+cave below, sixteen were found crouching among human bones and
+singular and horrid curiosities. One was a head of golden hair,
+supposed to be a relic of the captain's wife; another was half of
+the body of a European child, sun-dried and stuck upon a stick,
+doubtless with some design of wizardry.
+
+The Paumotuan is eager to be rich. He saves, grudges, buries
+money, fears not work. For a dollar each, two natives passed the
+hours of daylight cleaning our ship's copper. It was strange to
+see them so indefatigable and so much at ease in the water--working
+at times with their pipes lighted, the smoker at times submerged
+and only the glowing bowl above the surface; it was stranger still
+to think they were next congeners to the incapable Marquesan. But
+the Paumotuan not only saves, grudges, and works, he steals
+besides; or, to be more precise, he swindles. He will never deny a
+debt, he only flees his creditor. He is always keen for an
+advance; so soon as he has fingered it he disappears. He knows
+your ship; so soon as it nears one island, he is off to another.
+You may think you know his name; he has already changed it.
+Pursuit in that infinity of isles were fruitless. The result can
+be given in a nutshell. It has been actually proposed in a
+Government report to secure debts by taking a photograph of the
+debtor; and the other day in Papeete credits on the Paumotus to the
+amount of sixteen thousand pounds were sold for less than forty--
+quatre cent mille francs pour moins de mille francs. Even so, the
+purchase was thought hazardous; and only the man who made it and
+who had special opportunities could have dared to give so much.
+
+The Paumotuan is sincerely attached to those of his own blood and
+household. A touching affection sometimes unites wife and husband.
+Their children, while they are alive, completely rule them; after
+they are dead, their bones or their mummies are often jealously
+preserved and carried from atoll to atoll in the wanderings of the
+family. I was told there were many houses in Fakarava with the
+mummy of a child locked in a sea-chest; after I heard it, I would
+glance a little jealously at those by my own bed; in that cupboard,
+also, it was possible there was a tiny skeleton.
+
+The race seems in a fair way to survive. From fifteen islands,
+whose rolls I had occasion to consult, I found a proportion of 59
+births to 47 deaths for 1887. Dropping three out of the fifteen,
+there remained for the other twelve the comfortable ratio of 50
+births to 32 deaths. Long habits of hardship and activity
+doubtless explain the contrast with Marquesan figures. But the
+Paumotuan displays, besides, a certain concern for health and the
+rudiments of a sanitary discipline. Public talk with these free-
+spoken people plays the part of the Contagious Diseases Act; in-
+comers to fresh islands anxiously inquire if all be well; and
+syphilis, when contracted, is successfully treated with indigenous
+herbs. Like their neighbours of Tahiti, from whom they have
+perhaps imbibed the error, they regard leprosy with comparative
+indifference, elephantiasis with disproportionate fear. But,
+unlike indeed to the Tahitian, their alarm puts on the guise of
+self-defence. Any one stricken with this painful and ugly malady
+is confined to the ends of villages, denied the use of paths and
+highways, and condemned to transport himself between his house and
+coco-patch by water only, his very footprint being held infectious.
+Fe'efe'e, being a creature of marshes and the sequel of malarial
+fever, is not original in atolls. On the single isle of Makatea,
+where the lagoon is now a marsh, the disease has made a home. Many
+suffer; they are excluded (if Mr. Wilmot be right) from much of the
+comfort of society; and it is believed they take a secret
+vengeance. The defections of the sick are considered highly
+poisonous. Early in the morning, it is narrated, aged and
+malicious persons creep into the sleeping village, and stealthily
+make water at the doors of the houses of young men. Thus they
+propagate disease; thus they breathe on and obliterate comeliness
+and health, the objects of their envy. Whether horrid fact or more
+abominable legend, it equally depicts that something bitter and
+energetic which distinguishes Paumotuan man.
+
+The archipelago is divided between two main religions, Catholic and
+Mormon. They front each other proudly with a false air of
+permanence; yet are but shapes, their membership in a perpetual
+flux. The Mormon attends mass with devotion: the Catholic sits
+attentive at a Mormon sermon, and to-morrow each may have
+transferred allegiance. One man had been a pillar of the Church of
+Rome for fifteen years; his wife dying, he decided that must be a
+poor religion that could not save a man his wife, and turned
+Mormon. According to one informant, Catholicism was the more
+fashionable in health, but on the approach of sickness it was
+judged prudent to secede. As a Mormon, there were five chances out
+of six you might recover; as a Catholic, your hopes were small; and
+this opinion is perhaps founded on the comfortable rite of unction.
+
+We all know what Catholics are, whether in the Paumotus or at home.
+But the Paumotuan Mormon seemed a phenomenon apart. He marries but
+the one wife, uses the Protestant Bible, observes Protestant forms
+of worship, forbids the use of liquor and tobacco, practises adult
+baptism by immersion, and after every public sin, rechristens the
+backslider. I advised with Mahinui, whom I found well informed in
+the history of the American Mormons, and he declared against the
+least connection. 'Pour moi,' said he, with a fine charity, 'les
+Mormons ici un petit Catholiques.' Some months later I had an
+opportunity to consult an orthodox fellow-countryman, an old
+dissenting Highlander, long settled in Tahiti, but still breathing
+of the heather of Tiree. 'Why do they call themselves Mormons?' I
+asked. 'My dear, and that is my question!' he exclaimed. 'For by
+all that I can hear of their doctrine, I have nothing to say
+against it, and their life, it is above reproach.' And for all
+that, Mormons they are, but of the earlier sowing: the so-called
+Josephites, the followers of Joseph Smith, the opponents of Brigham
+Young.
+
+Grant, then, the Mormons to be Mormons. Fresh points at once
+arise: What are the Israelites? and what the Kanitus? For a long
+while back the sect had been divided into Mormons proper and so-
+called Israelites, I never could hear why. A few years since there
+came a visiting missionary of the name of Williams, who made an
+excellent collection, and retired, leaving fresh disruption
+imminent. Something irregular (as I was told) in his way of
+'opening the service' had raised partisans and enemies; the church
+was once more rent asunder; and a new sect, the Kanitu, issued from
+the division. Since then Kanitus and Israelites, like the
+Cameronians and the United Presbyterians, have made common cause;
+and the ecclesiastical history of the Paumotus is, for the moment,
+uneventful. There will be more doing before long, and these isles
+bid fair to be the Scotland of the South. Two things I could never
+learn. The nature of the innovations of the Rev. Mr. Williams none
+would tell me, and of the meaning of the name Kanitu none had a
+guess. It was not Tahitian, it was not Marquesan; it formed no
+part of that ancient speech of the Paumotus, now passing swiftly
+into obsolescence. One man, a priest, God bless him! said it was
+the Latin for a little dog. I have found it since as the name of a
+god in New Guinea; it must be a bolder man than I who should hint
+at a connection. Here, then, is a singular thing: a brand-new
+sect, arising by popular acclamation, and a nonsense word invented
+for its name.
+
+The design of mystery seems obvious, and according to a very
+intelligent observer, Mr. Magee of Mangareva, this element of the
+mysterious is a chief attraction of the Mormon Church. It enjoys
+some of the status of Freemasonry at home, and there is for the
+convert some of the exhilaration of adventure. Other attractions
+are certainly conjoined. Perpetual rebaptism, leading to a
+succession of baptismal feasts, is found, both from the social and
+the spiritual side, a pleasing feature. More important is the fact
+that all the faithful enjoy office; perhaps more important still,
+the strictness of the discipline. 'The veto on liquor,' said Mr.
+Magee, 'brings them plenty members.' There is no doubt these
+islanders are fond of drink, and no doubt they refrain from the
+indulgence; a bout on a feast-day, for instance, may be followed by
+a week or a month of rigorous sobriety. Mr. Wilmot attributes this
+to Paumotuan frugality and the love of hoarding; it goes far
+deeper. I have mentioned that I made a feast on board the Casco.
+To wash down ship's bread and jam, each guest was given the choice
+of rum or syrup, and out of the whole number only one man voted--in
+a defiant tone, and amid shouts of mirth--for 'Trum'! This was in
+public. I had the meanness to repeat the experiment, whenever I
+had a chance, within the four walls of my house; and three at
+least, who had refused at the festival, greedily drank rum behind a
+door. But there were others thoroughly consistent. I said the
+virtues of the race were bourgeois and puritan; and how bourgeois
+is this! how puritanic! how Scottish! and how Yankee!--the
+temptation, the resistance, the public hypocritical conformity, the
+Pharisees, the Holy Willies, and the true disciples. With such a
+people the popularity of an ascetic Church appears legitimate; in
+these strict rules, in this perpetual supervision, the weak find
+their advantage, the strong a certain pleasure; and the doctrine of
+rebaptism, a clean bill and a fresh start, will comfort many
+staggering professors.
+
+There is yet another sect, or what is called a sect--no doubt
+improperly--that of the Whistlers. Duncan Cameron, so clear in
+favour of the Mormons, was no less loud in condemnation of the
+Whistlers. Yet I do not know; I still fancy there is some
+connection, perhaps fortuitous, probably disavowed. Here at least
+are some doings in the house of an Israelite clergyman (or prophet)
+in the island of Anaa, of which I am equally sure that Duncan would
+disclaim and the Whistlers hail them for an imitation of their own.
+My informant, a Tahitian and a Catholic, occupied one part of the
+house; the prophet and his family lived in the other. Night after
+night the Mormons, in the one end, held their evening sacrifice of
+song; night after night, in the other, the wife of the Tahitian lay
+awake and listened to their singing with amazement. At length she
+could contain herself no longer, woke her husband, and asked him
+what he heard. 'I hear several persons singing hymns,' said he.
+'Yes,' she returned, 'but listen again! Do you not hear something
+supernatural?' His attention thus directed, he was aware of a
+strange buzzing voice--and yet he declared it was beautiful--which
+justly accompanied the singers. The next day he made inquiries.
+'It is a spirit,' said the prophet, with entire simplicity, 'which
+has lately made a practice of joining us at family worship.' It
+did not appear the thing was visible, and like other spirits raised
+nearer home in these degenerate days, it was rudely ignorant, at
+first could only buzz, and had only learned of late to bear a part
+correctly in the music.
+
+The performances of the Whistlers are more business-like. Their
+meetings are held publicly with open doors, all being 'cordially
+invited to attend.' The faithful sit about the room--according to
+one informant, singing hymns; according to another, now singing and
+now whistling; the leader, the wizard--let me rather say, the
+medium--sits in the midst, enveloped in a sheet and silent; and
+presently, from just above his head, or sometimes from the midst of
+the roof, an aerial whistling proceeds, appalling to the
+inexperienced. This, it appears, is the language of the dead; its
+purport is taken down progressively by one of the experts, writing,
+I was told, 'as fast as a telegraph operator'; and the
+communications are at last made public. They are of the baldest
+triviality; a schooner is, perhaps, announced, some idle gossip
+reported of a neighbour, or if the spirit shall have been called to
+consultation on a case of sickness, a remedy may be suggested. One
+of these, immersion in scalding water, not long ago proved fatal to
+the patient. The whole business is very dreary, very silly, and
+very European; it has none of the picturesque qualities of similar
+conjurations in New Zealand; it seems to possess no kernel of
+possible sense, like some that I shall describe among the Gilbert
+islanders. Yet I was told that many hardy, intelligent natives
+were inveterate Whistlers. 'Like Mahinui?' I asked, willing to
+have a standard; and I was told 'Yes.' Why should I wonder? Men
+more enlightened than my convict-catechist sit down at home to
+follies equally sterile and dull.
+
+The medium is sometimes female. It was a woman, for instance, who
+introduced these practices on the north coast of Taiarapu, to the
+scandal of her own connections, her brother-in-law in particular
+declaring she was drunk. But what shocked Tahiti might seem fit
+enough in the Paumotus, the more so as certain women there possess,
+by the gift of nature, singular and useful powers. They say they
+are honest, well-intentioned ladies, some of them embarrassed by
+their weird inheritance. And indeed the trouble caused by this
+endowment is so great, and the protection afforded so
+infinitesimally small, that I hesitate whether to call it a gift or
+a hereditary curse. You may rob this lady's coco-patch, steal her
+canoes, burn down her house, and slay her family scatheless; but
+one thing you must not do: you must not lay a hand upon her
+sleeping-mat, or your belly will swell, and you can only be cured
+by the lady or her husband. Here is the report of an eye-witness,
+Tasmanian born, educated, a man who has made money--certainly no
+fool. In 1886 he was present in a house on Makatea, where two lads
+began to skylark on the mats, and were (I think) ejected.
+Instantly after, their bellies began to swell; pains took hold on
+them; all manner of island remedies were exhibited in vain, and
+rubbing only magnified their sufferings. The man of the house was
+called, explained the nature of the visitation, and prepared the
+cure. A cocoa-nut was husked, filled with herbs, and with all the
+ceremonies of a launch, and the utterance of spells in the
+Paumotuan language, committed to the sea. From that moment the
+pains began to grow more easy and the swelling to subside. The
+reader may stare. I can assure him, if he moved much among old
+residents of the archipelago, he would be driven to admit one thing
+of two--either that there is something in the swollen bellies or
+nothing in the evidence of man.
+
+I have not met these gifted ladies; but I had an experience of my
+own, for I have played, for one night only, the part of the
+whistling spirit. It had been blowing wearily all day, but with
+the fall of night the wind abated, and the moon, which was then
+full, rolled in a clear sky. We went southward down the island on
+the side of the lagoon, walking through long-drawn forest aisles of
+palm, and on a floor of snowy sand. No life was abroad, nor sound
+of life; till in a clear part of the isle we spied the embers of a
+fire, and not far off, in a dark house, heard natives talking
+softly. To sit without a light, even in company, and under cover,
+is for a Paumotuan a somewhat hazardous extreme. The whole scene--
+the strong moonlight and crude shadows on the sand, the scattered
+coals, the sound of the low voices from the house, and the lap of
+the lagoon along the beach--put me (I know not how) on thoughts of
+superstition. I was barefoot, I observed my steps were noiseless,
+and drawing near to the dark house, but keeping well in shadow,
+began to whistle. 'The Heaving of the Lead' was my air--no very
+tragic piece. With the first note the conversation and all
+movement ceased; silence accompanied me while I continued; and when
+I passed that way on my return I found the lamp was lighted in the
+house, but the tongues were still mute. All night, as I now think,
+the wretches shivered and were silent. For indeed, I had no guess
+at the time at the nature and magnitude of the terrors I inflicted,
+or with what grisly images the notes of that old song had peopled
+the dark house.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--A PAUMOTUAN FUNERAL
+
+
+
+No, I had no guess of these men's terrors. Yet I had received ere
+that a hint, if I had understood; and the occasion was a funeral.
+
+A little apart in the main avenue of Rotoava, in a low hut of
+leaves that opened on a small enclosure, like a pigsty on a pen, an
+old man dwelt solitary with his aged wife. Perhaps they were too
+old to migrate with the others; perhaps they were too poor, and had
+no possessions to dispute. At least they had remained behind; and
+it thus befell that they were invited to my feast. I dare say it
+was quite a piece of politics in the pigsty whether to come or not
+to come, and the husband long swithered between curiosity and age,
+till curiosity conquered, and they came, and in the midst of that
+last merrymaking death tapped him on the shoulder. For some days,
+when the sky was bright and the wind cool, his mat would be spread
+in the main highway of the village, and he was to be seen lying
+there inert, a mere handful of a man, his wife inertly seated by
+his head. They seemed to have outgrown alike our needs and
+faculties; they neither spoke nor listened; they suffered us to
+pass without a glance; the wife did not fan, she seemed not to
+attend upon her husband, and the two poor antiques sat juxtaposed
+under the high canopy of palms, the human tragedy reduced to its
+bare elements, a sight beyond pathos, stirring a thrill of
+curiosity. And yet there was one touch of the pathetic haunted me:
+that so much youth and expectation should have run in these starved
+veins, and the man should have squandered all his lees of life on a
+pleasure party.
+
+On the morning of 17th September the sufferer died, and, time
+pressing, he was buried the same day at four. The cemetery lies to
+seaward behind Government House; broken coral, like so much road-
+metal, forms the surface; a few wooden crosses, a few
+inconsiderable upright stones, designate graves; a mortared wall,
+high enough to lean on, rings it about; a clustering shrub
+surrounds it with pale leaves. Here was the grave dug that
+morning, doubtless by uneasy diggers, to the sound of the nigh sea
+and the cries of sea-birds; meanwhile the dead man waited in his
+house, and the widow and another aged woman leaned on the fence
+before the door, no speech upon their lips, no speculation in their
+eyes.
+
+Sharp at the hour the procession was in march, the coffin wrapped
+in white and carried by four bearers; mourners behind--not many,
+for not many remained in Rotoava, and not many in black, for these
+were poor; the men in straw hats, white coats, and blue trousers or
+the gorgeous parti-coloured pariu, the Tahitian kilt; the women,
+with a few exceptions, brightly habited. Far in the rear came the
+widow, painfully carrying the dead man's mat; a creature aged
+beyond humanity, to the likeness of some missing link.
+
+The dead man had been a Mormon; but the Mormon clergyman was gone
+with the rest to wrangle over boundaries in the adjacent isle, and
+a layman took his office. Standing at the head of the open grave,
+in a white coat and blue pariu, his Tahitian Bible in his hand and
+one eye bound with a red handkerchief, he read solemnly that
+chapter in Job which has been read and heard over the bones of so
+many of our fathers, and with a good voice offered up two prayers.
+The wind and the surf bore a burthen. By the cemetery gate a
+mother in crimson suckled an infant rolled in blue. In the midst
+the widow sat upon the ground and polished one of the coffin-
+stretchers with a piece of coral; a little later she had turned her
+back to the grave and was playing with a leaf. Did she understand?
+God knows. The officiant paused a moment, stooped, and gathered
+and threw reverently on the coffin a handful of rattling coral.
+Dust to dust: but the grains of this dust were gross like
+cherries, and the true dust that was to follow sat near by, still
+cohering (as by a miracle) in the tragic semblance of a female ape.
+
+So far, Mormon or not, it was a Christian funeral. The well-known
+passage had been read from Job, the prayers had been rehearsed, the
+grave was filled, the mourners straggled homeward. With a little
+coarser grain of covering earth, a little nearer outcry of the sea,
+a stronger glare of sunlight on the rude enclosure, and some
+incongruous colours of attire, the well-remembered form had been
+observed.
+
+By rights it should have been otherwise. The mat should have been
+buried with its owner; but, the family being poor, it was thriftily
+reserved for a fresh service. The widow should have flung herself
+upon the grave and raised the voice of official grief, the
+neighbours have chimed in, and the narrow isle rung for a space
+with lamentation. But the widow was old; perhaps she had
+forgotten, perhaps never understood, and she played like a child
+with leaves and coffin-stretchers. In all ways my guest was buried
+with maimed rites. Strange to think that his last conscious
+pleasure was the Casco and my feast; strange to think that he had
+limped there, an old child, looking for some new good. And the
+good thing, rest, had been allotted him.
+
+But though the widow had neglected much, there was one part she
+must not utterly neglect. She came away with the dispersing
+funeral; but the dead man's mat was left behind upon the grave, and
+I learned that by set of sun she must return to sleep there. This
+vigil is imperative. From sundown till the rising of the morning
+star the Paumotuan must hold his watch above the ashes of his
+kindred. Many friends, if the dead have been a man of mark, will
+keep the watchers company; they will be well supplied with
+coverings against the weather; I believe they bring food, and the
+rite is persevered in for two weeks. Our poor survivor, if,
+indeed, she properly survived, had little to cover, and few to sit
+with her; on the night of the funeral a strong squall chased her
+from her place of watch; for days the weather held uncertain and
+outrageous; and ere seven nights were up she had desisted, and
+returned to sleep in her low roof. That she should be at the pains
+of returning for so short a visit to a solitary house, that this
+borderer of the grave should fear a little wind and a wet blanket,
+filled me at the time with musings. I could not say she was
+indifferent; she was so far beyond me in experience that the court
+of my criticism waived jurisdiction; but I forged excuses, telling
+myself she had perhaps little to lament, perhaps suffered much,
+perhaps understood nothing. And lo! in the whole affair there was
+no question whether of tenderness or piety, and the sturdy return
+of this old remnant was a mark either of uncommon sense or of
+uncommon fortitude.
+
+Yet one thing had occurred that partly set me on the trail. I have
+said the funeral passed much as at home. But when all was over,
+when we were trooping in decent silence from the graveyard gate and
+down the path to the settlement, a sudden inbreak of a different
+spirit startled and perhaps dismayed us. Two people walked not far
+apart in our procession: my friend Mr. Donat--Donat-Rimarau:
+'Donat the much-handed'--acting Vice-Resident, present ruler of the
+archipelago, by far the man of chief importance on the scene, but
+known besides for one of an unshakable good temper; and a certain
+comely, strapping young Paumotuan woman, the comeliest on the isle,
+not (let us hope) the bravest or the most polite. Of a sudden, ere
+yet the grave silence of the funeral was broken, she made a leap at
+the Resident, with pointed finger, shrieked a few words, and fell
+back again with a laughter, not a natural mirth. 'What did she say
+to you?' I asked. 'She did not speak to ME,' said Donat, a shade
+perturbed; 'she spoke to the ghost of the dead man.' And the
+purport of her speech was this: 'See there! Donat will be a fine
+feast for you to-night.'
+
+'M. Donat called it a jest,' I wrote at the time in my diary. 'It
+seemed to me more in the nature of a terrified conjuration, as
+though she would divert the ghost's attention from herself. A
+cannibal race may well have cannibal phantoms.' The guesses of the
+traveller appear foredoomed to be erroneous; yet in these I was
+precisely right. The woman had stood by in terror at the funeral,
+being then in a dread spot, the graveyard. She looked on in terror
+to the coming night, with that ogre, a new spirit, loosed upon the
+isle. And the words she had cried in Donat's face were indeed a
+terrified conjuration, basely to shield herself, basely to dedicate
+another in her stead. One thing is to be said in her excuse.
+Doubtless she partly chose Donat because he was a man of great
+good-nature, but partly, too, because he was a man of the half-
+caste. For I believe all natives regard white blood as a kind of
+talisman against the powers of hell. In no other way can they
+explain the unpunished recklessness of Europeans.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--GRAVEYARD STORIES
+
+
+
+WITH my superstitious friend, the islander, I fear I am not wholly
+frank, often leading the way with stories of my own, and being
+always a grave and sometimes an excited hearer. But the deceit is
+scarce mortal, since I am as pleased to hear as he to tell, as
+pleased with the story as he with the belief; and, besides, it is
+entirely needful. For it is scarce possible to exaggerate the
+extent and empire of his superstitions; they mould his life, they
+colour his thinking; and when he does not speak to me of ghosts,
+and gods, and devils, he is playing the dissembler and talking only
+with his lips. With thoughts so different, one must indulge the
+other; and I would rather that I should indulge his superstition
+than he my incredulity. Of one thing, besides, I may be sure: Let
+me indulge it as I please, I shall not hear the whole; for he is
+already on his guard with me, and the amount of the lore is
+boundless.
+
+I will give but a few instances at random, chiefly from my own
+doorstep in Upolu, during the past month (October 1890). One of my
+workmen was sent the other day to the banana patch, there to dig;
+this is a hollow of the mountain, buried in woods, out of all sight
+and cry of mankind; and long before dusk Lafaele was back again
+beside the cook-house with embarrassed looks; he dared not longer
+stay alone, he was afraid of 'spirits in the bush.' It seems these
+are the souls of the unburied dead, haunting where they fell, and
+wearing woodland shapes of pig, or bird, or insect; the bush is
+full of them, they seem to eat nothing, slay solitary wanderers
+apparently in spite, and at times, in human form, go down to
+villages and consort with the inhabitants undetected. So much I
+learned a day or so after, walking in the bush with a very
+intelligent youth, a native. It was a little before noon; a grey
+day and squally; and perhaps I had spoken lightly. A dark squall
+burst on the side of the mountain; the woods shook and cried; the
+dead leaves rose from the ground in clouds, like butterflies; and
+my companion came suddenly to a full stop. He was afraid, he said,
+of the trees falling; but as soon as I had changed the subject of
+our talk he proceeded with alacrity. A day or two before a
+messenger came up the mountain from Apia with a letter; I was in
+the bush, he must await my return, then wait till I had answered:
+and before I was done his voice sounded shrill with terror of the
+coming night and the long forest road. These are the commons.
+Take the chiefs. There has been a great coming and going of signs
+and omens in our group. One river ran down blood; red eels were
+captured in another; an unknown fish was thrown upon the coast, an
+ominous word found written on its scales. So far we might be
+reading in a monkish chronicle; now we come on a fresh note, at
+once modern and Polynesian. The gods of Upolu and Savaii, our two
+chief islands, contended recently at cricket. Since then they are
+at war. Sounds of battle are heard to roll along the coast. A
+woman saw a man swim from the high seas and plunge direct into the
+bush; he was no man of that neighbourhood; and it was known he was
+one of the gods, speeding to a council. Most perspicuous of all, a
+missionary on Savaii, who is also a medical man, was disturbed late
+in the night by knocking; it was no hour for the dispensary, but at
+length he woke his servant and sent him to inquire; the servant,
+looking from a window, beheld crowds of persons, all with grievous
+wounds, lopped limbs, broken heads, and bleeding bullet-holes; but
+when the door was opened all had disappeared. They were gods from
+the field of battle. Now these reports have certainly
+significance; it is not hard to trace them to political grumblers
+or to read in them a threat of coming trouble; from that merely
+human side I found them ominous myself. But it was the spiritual
+side of their significance that was discussed in secret council by
+my rulers. I shall best depict this mingled habit of the
+Polynesian mind by two connected instances. I once lived in a
+village, the name of which I do not mean to tell. The chief and
+his sister were persons perfectly intelligent: gentlefolk, apt of
+speech. The sister was very religious, a great church-goer, one
+that used to reprove me if I stayed away; I found afterwards that
+she privately worshipped a shark. The chief himself was somewhat
+of a freethinker; at the least, a latitudinarian: he was a man,
+besides, filled with European knowledge and accomplishments; of an
+impassive, ironical habit; and I should as soon have expected
+superstition in Mr. Herbert Spencer. Hear the sequel. I had
+discovered by unmistakable signs that they buried too shallow in
+the village graveyard, and I took my friend, as the responsible
+authority, to task. 'There is something wrong about your
+graveyard,' said I, 'which you must attend to, or it may have very
+bad results.' 'Something wrong? What is it?' he asked, with an
+emotion that surprised me. 'If you care to go along there any
+evening about nine o'clock you can see for yourself,' said I. He
+stepped backward. 'A ghost!' he cried.
+
+In short, in the whole field of the South Seas, there is not one to
+blame another. Half blood and whole, pious and debauched,
+intelligent and dull, all men believe in ghosts, all men combine
+with their recent Christianity fear of and a lingering faith in the
+old island deities. So, in Europe, the gods of Olympus slowly
+dwindled into village bogies; so to-day, the theological Highlander
+sneaks from under the eye of the Free Church divine to lay an
+offering by a sacred well.
+
+I try to deal with the whole matter here because of a particular
+quality in Paumotuan superstitions. It is true I heard them told
+by a man with a genius for such narrations. Close about our
+evening lamp, within sound of the island surf, we hung on his
+words, thrilling. The reader, in far other scenes, must listen
+close for the faint echo.
+
+This bundle of weird stories sprang from the burial and the woman's
+selfish conjuration. I was dissatisfied with what I heard, harped
+upon questions, and struck at last this vein of metal. It is from
+sundown to about four in the morning that the kinsfolk camp upon
+the grave; and these are the hours of the spirits' wanderings. At
+any time of the night--it may be earlier, it may be later--a sound
+is to be heard below, which is the noise of his liberation; at four
+sharp, another and a louder marks the instant of the re-
+imprisonment; between-whiles, he goes his malignant rounds. 'Did
+you ever see an evil spirit?' was once asked of a Paumotuan.
+'Once.' 'Under what form?' 'It was in the form of a crane.' 'And
+how did you know that crane to be a spirit?' was asked. 'I will
+tell you,' he answered; and this was the purport of his
+inconclusive narrative. His father had been dead nearly a
+fortnight; others had wearied of the watch; and as the sun was
+setting, he found himself by the grave alone. It was not yet dark,
+rather the hour of the afterglow, when he was aware of a snow-white
+crane upon the coral mound; presently more cranes came, some white,
+some black; then the cranes vanished, and he saw in their place a
+white cat, to which there was silently joined a great company of
+cats of every hue conceivable; then these also disappeared, and he
+was left astonished.
+
+This was an anodyne appearance. Take instead the experience of
+Rua-a-mariterangi on the isle of Katiu. He had a need for some
+pandanus, and crossed the isle to the sea-beach, where it chiefly
+flourishes. The day was still, and Rua was surprised to hear a
+crashing sound among the thickets, and then the fall of a
+considerable tree. Here must be some one building a canoe; and he
+entered the margin of the wood to find and pass the time of day
+with this chance neighbour. The crashing sounded more at hand; and
+then he was aware of something drawing swiftly near among the tree-
+tops. It swung by its heels downward, like an ape, so that its
+hands were free for murder; it depended safely by the slightest
+twigs; the speed of its coming was incredible; and soon Rua
+recognised it for a corpse, horrible with age, its bowels hanging
+as it came. Prayer was the weapon of Christian in the Valley of
+the Shadow, and it is to prayer that Rua-a-mariterangi attributes
+his escape. No merely human expedition had availed.
+
+This demon was plainly from the grave; yet you will observe he was
+abroad by day. And inconsistent as it may seem with the hours of
+the night watch and the many references to the rising of the
+morning star, it is no singular exception. I could never find a
+case of another who had seen this ghost, diurnal and arboreal in
+its habits; but others have heard the fall of the tree, which seems
+the signal of its coming. Mr. Donat was once pearling on the
+uninhabited isle of Haraiki. It was a day without a breath of
+wind, such as alternate in the archipelago with days of
+contumelious breezes. The divers were in the midst of the lagoon
+upon their employment; the cook, a boy of ten, was over his pots in
+the camp. Thus were all souls accounted for except a single native
+who accompanied Donat into the wood in quest of sea-fowls' eggs.
+In a moment, out of the stillness, came the sound of the fall of a
+great tree. Donat would have passed on to find the cause. 'No,'
+cried his companion, 'that was no tree. It was something NOT
+RIGHT. Let us go back to camp.' Next Sunday the divers were
+turned on, all that part of the isle was thoroughly examined, and
+sure enough no tree had fallen. A little later Mr. Donat saw one
+of his divers flee from a similar sound, in similar unaffected
+panic, on the same isle. But neither would explain, and it was not
+till afterwards, when he met with Rua, that he learned the occasion
+of their terrors.
+
+But whether by day or night, the purpose of the dead in these
+abhorred activities is still the same. In Samoa, my informant had
+no idea of the food of the bush spirits; no such ambiguity would
+exist in the mind of a Paumotuan. In that hungry archipelago,
+living and dead must alike toil for nutriment; and the race having
+been cannibal in the past, the spirits are so still. When the
+living ate the dead, horrified nocturnal imagination drew the
+shocking inference that the dead might eat the living. Doubtless
+they slay men, doubtless even mutilate them, in mere malice.
+Marquesan spirits sometimes tear out the eyes of travellers; but
+even that may be more practical than appears, for the eye is a
+cannibal dainty. And certainly the root-idea of the dead, at least
+in the far eastern islands, is to prowl for food. It was as a
+dainty morsel for a meal that the woman denounced Donat at the
+funeral. There are spirits besides who prey in particular not on
+the bodies but on the souls of the dead. The point is clearly made
+in a Tahitian story. A child fell sick, grew swiftly worse, and at
+last showed signs of death. The mother hastened to the house of a
+sorcerer, who lived hard by. 'You are yet in time,' said he; 'a
+spirit has just run past my door carrying the soul of your child
+wrapped in the leaf of a purao; but I have a spirit stronger and
+swifter who will run him down ere he has time to eat it.' Wrapped
+in a leaf: like other things edible and corruptible.
+
+Or take an experience of Mr. Donat's on the island of Anaa. It was
+a night of a high wind, with violent squalls; his child was very
+sick, and the father, though he had gone to bed, lay wakeful,
+hearkening to the gale. All at once a fowl was violently dashed on
+the house wall. Supposing he had forgot to put it in shelter with
+the rest, Donat arose, found the bird (a cock) lying on the
+verandah, and put it in the hen-house, the door of which he
+securely fastened. Fifteen minutes later the business was
+repeated, only this time, as it was being dashed against the wall,
+the bird crew. Again Donat replaced it, examining the hen-house
+thoroughly and finding it quite perfect; as he was so engaged the
+wind puffed out his light, and he must grope back to the door a
+good deal shaken. Yet a third time the bird was dashed upon the
+wall; a third time Donat set it, now near dead, beside its mates;
+and he was scarce returned before there came a rush, like that of a
+furious strong man, against the door, and a whistle as loud as that
+of a railway engine rang about the house. The sceptical reader may
+here detect the finger of the tempest; but the women gave up all
+for lost and clustered on the beds lamenting. Nothing followed,
+and I must suppose the gale somewhat abated, for presently after a
+chief came visiting. He was a bold man to be abroad so late, but
+doubtless carried a bright lantern. And he was certainly a man of
+counsel, for as soon as he heard the details of these disturbances
+he was in a position to explain their nature. 'Your child,' said
+he, 'must certainly die. This is the evil spirit of our island who
+lies in wait to eat the spirits of the newly dead.' And then he
+went on to expatiate on the strangeness of the spirit's conduct.
+He was not usually, he explained, so open of assault, but sat
+silent on the house-top waiting, in the guise of a bird, while
+within the people tended the dying and bewailed the dead, and had
+no thought of peril. But when the day came and the doors were
+opened, and men began to go abroad, blood-stains on the wall
+betrayed the tragedy.
+
+This is the quality I admire in Paumotuan legend. In Tahiti the
+spirit-eater is said to assume a vesture which has much more of
+pomp, but how much less of horror. It has been seen by all sorts
+and conditions, native and foreign; only the last insist it is a
+meteor. My authority was not so sure. He was riding with his wife
+about two in the morning; both were near asleep, and the horses not
+much better. It was a brilliant and still night, and the road
+wound over a mountain, near by a deserted marae (old Tahitian
+temple). All at once the appearance passed above them: a form of
+light; the head round and greenish; the body long, red, and with a
+focus of yet redder brilliancy about the midst. A buzzing hoot
+accompanied its passage; it flew direct out of one marae, and
+direct for another down the mountain side. And this, as my
+informant argued, is suggestive. For why should a mere meteor
+frequent the altars of abominable gods? The horses, I should say,
+were equally dismayed with their riders. Now I am not dismayed at
+all--not even agreeably. Give me rather the bird upon the house-
+top and the morning blood-gouts on the wall.
+
+But the dead are not exclusive in their diet. They carry with them
+to the grave, in particular, the Polynesian taste for fish, and
+enter at times with the living into a partnership in fishery. Rua-
+a-mariterangi is again my authority; I feel it diminishes the
+credit of the fact, but how it builds up the image of this
+inveterate ghost-seer! He belongs to the miserably poor island of
+Taenga, yet his father's house was always well supplied. As Rua
+grew up he was called at last to go a-fishing with this fortunate
+parent. They rowed the lagoon at dusk, to an unlikely place, and
+the lay down in the stern, and the father began vainly to cast his
+line over the bows. It is to be supposed that Rua slept; and when
+he awoke there was the figure of another beside his father, and his
+father was pulling in the fish hand over hand. 'Who is that man,
+father?' Rua asked. 'It is none of your business,' said the
+father; and Rua supposed the stranger had swum off to them from
+shore. Night after night they fared into the lagoon, often to the
+most unlikely places; night after night the stranger would suddenly
+be seen on board, and as suddenly be missed; and morning after
+morning the canoe returned laden with fish. 'My father is a very
+lucky man,' thought Rua. At last, one fine day, there came first
+one boat party and then another, who must be entertained; father
+and son put off later than usual into the lagoon; and before the
+canoe was landed it was four o'clock, and the morning star was
+close on the horizon. Then the stranger appeared seized with some
+distress; turned about, showing for the first time his face, which
+was that of one long dead, with shining eyes; stared into the east,
+set the tips of his fingers to his mouth like one a-cold, uttered a
+strange, shuddering sound between a whistle and a moan--a thing to
+freeze the blood; and, the day-star just rising from the sea, he
+suddenly was not. Then Rua understood why his father prospered,
+why his fishes rotted early in the day, and why some were always
+carried to the cemetery and laid upon the graves. My informant is
+a man not certainly averse to superstition, but he keeps his head,
+and takes a certain superior interest, which I may be allowed to
+call scientific. The last point reminding him of some parallel
+practice in Tahiti, he asked Rua if the fish were left, or carried
+home again after a formal dedication. It appears old Mariterangi
+practised both methods; sometimes treating his shadowy partner to a
+mere oblation, sometimes honestly leaving his fish to rot upon the
+grave.
+
+It is plain we have in Europe stories of a similar complexion; and
+the Polynesian varua ino or aitu o le vao is clearly the near
+kinsman of the Transylvanian vampire. Here is a tale in which the
+kinship appears broadly marked. On the atoll of Penrhyn, then
+still partly savage, a certain chief was long the salutary terror
+of the natives. He died, he was buried; and his late neighbours
+had scarce tasted the delights of licence ere his ghost appeared
+about the village. Fear seized upon all; a council was held of the
+chief men and sorcerers; and with the approval of the Rarotongan
+missionary, who was as frightened as the rest, and in the presence
+of several whites--my friend Mr. Ben Hird being one--the grave was
+opened, deepened until water came, and the body re-interred face
+down. The still recent staking of suicides in England and the
+decapitation of vampires in the east of Europe form close
+parallels.
+
+So in Samoa only the spirits of the unburied awake fear. During
+the late war many fell in the bush; their bodies, sometimes
+headless, were brought back by native pastors and interred; but
+this (I know not why) was insufficient, and the spirit still
+lingered on the theatre of death. When peace returned a singular
+scene was enacted in many places, and chiefly round the high gorges
+of Lotoanuu, where the struggle was long centred and the loss had
+been severe. Kinswomen of the dead came carrying a mat or sheet
+and guided by survivors of the fight. The place of death was
+earnestly sought out; the sheet was spread upon the ground; and the
+women, moved with pious anxiety, sat about and watched it. If any
+living thing alighted it was twice brushed away; upon the third
+coming it was known to be the spirit of the dead, was folded in,
+carried home and buried beside the body; and the aitu rested. The
+rite was practised beyond doubt in simple piety; the repose of the
+soul was its object: its motive, reverent affection. The present
+king disowns indeed all knowledge of a dangerous aitu; he declares
+the souls of the unburied were only wanderers in limbo, lacking an
+entrance to the proper country of the dead, unhappy, nowise
+hurtful. And this severely classic opinion doubtless represents
+the views of the enlightened. But the flight of my Lafaele marks
+the grosser terrors of the ignorant.
+
+This belief in the exorcising efficacy of funeral rites perhaps
+explains a fact, otherwise amazing, that no Polynesian seems at all
+to share our European horror of human bones and mummies. Of the
+first they made their cherished ornaments; they preserved them in
+houses or in mortuary caves; and the watchers of royal sepulchres
+dwelt with their children among the bones of generations. The
+mummy, even in the making, was as little feared. In the Marquesas,
+on the extreme coast, it was made by the household with continual
+unction and exposure to the sun; in the Carolines, upon the
+farthest west, it is still cured in the smoke of the family hearth.
+Head-hunting, besides, still lives around my doorstep in Samoa.
+And not ten years ago, in the Gilberts, the widow must disinter,
+cleanse, polish, and thenceforth carry about her, by day and night,
+the head of her dead husband. In all these cases we may suppose
+the process, whether of cleansing or drying, to have fully
+exorcised the aitu.
+
+But the Paumotuan belief is more obscure. Here the man is duly
+buried, and he has to be watched. He is duly watched, and the
+spirit goes abroad in spite of watches. Indeed, it is not the
+purpose of the vigils to prevent these wanderings; only to mollify
+by polite attention the inveterate malignity of the dead. Neglect
+(it is supposed) may irritate and thus invite his visits, and the
+aged and weakly sometimes balance risks and stay at home. Observe,
+it is the dead man's kindred and next friends who thus deprecate
+his fury with nocturnal watchings. Even the placatory vigil is
+held perilous, except in company, and a boy was pointed out to me
+in Rotoava, because he had watched alone by his own father. Not
+the ties of the dead, nor yet their proved character, affect the
+issue. A late Resident, who died in Fakarava of sunstroke, was
+beloved in life and is still remembered with affection; none the
+less his spirit went about the island clothed with terrors, and the
+neighbourhood of Government House was still avoided after dark. We
+may sum up the cheerful doctrine thus: All men become vampires,
+and the vampire spares none. And here we come face to face with a
+tempting inconsistency. For the whistling spirits are notoriously
+clannish; I understood them to wait upon and to enlighten kinsfolk
+only, and that the medium was always of the race of the
+communicating spirit. Here, then, we have the bonds of the family,
+on the one hand, severed at the hour of death; on the other,
+helpfully persisting.
+
+The child's soul in the Tahitian tale was wrapped in leaves. It is
+the spirits of the newly dead that are the dainty. When they are
+slain, the house is stained with blood. Rua's dead fisherman was
+decomposed; so--and horribly--was his arboreal demon. The spirit,
+then, is a thing material; and it is by the material ensigns of
+corruption that he is distinguished from the living man. This
+opinion is widespread, adds a gross terror to the more ugly
+Polynesian tales, and sometimes defaces the more engaging with a
+painful and incongruous touch. I will give two examples
+sufficiently wide apart, one from Tahiti, one from Samoa.
+
+And first from Tahiti. A man went to visit the husband of his
+sister, then some time dead. In her life the sister had been
+dainty in the island fashion, and went always adorned with a
+coronet of flowers. In the midst of the night the brother awoke
+and was aware of a heavenly fragrance going to and fro in the dark
+house. The lamp I must suppose to have burned out; no Tahitian
+would have lain down without one lighted. A while he lay wondering
+and delighted; then called upon the rest. 'Do none of you smell
+flowers?' he asked. 'O,' said his brother-in-law, 'we are used to
+that here.' The next morning these two men went walking, and the
+widower confessed that his dead wife came about the house
+continually, and that he had even seen her. She was shaped and
+dressed and crowned with flowers as in her lifetime; only she moved
+a few inches above the earth with a very easy progress, and flitted
+dryshod above the surface of the river. And now comes my point:
+It was always in a back view that she appeared; and these brothers-
+in-law, debating the affair, agreed that this was to conceal the
+inroads of corruption.
+
+Now for the Samoan story. I owe it to the kindness of Dr. F. Otto
+Sierich, whose collection of folk-tales I expect with a high degree
+of interest. A man in Manu'a was married to two wives and had no
+issue. He went to Savaii, married there a third, and was more
+fortunate. When his wife was near her time he remembered he was in
+a strange island, like a poor man; and when his child was born he
+must be shamed for lack of gifts. It was in vain his wife
+dissuaded him. He returned to his father in Manu'a seeking help;
+and with what he could get he set off in the night to re-embark.
+Now his wives heard of his coming; they were incensed that he did
+not stay to visit them; and on the beach, by his canoe, intercepted
+and slew him. Now the third wife lay asleep in Savaii;--her babe
+was born and slept by her side; and she was awakened by the spirit
+of her husband. 'Get up,' he said, 'my father is sick in Manu'a
+and we must go to visit him.' 'It is well,' said she; 'take you
+the child, while I carry its mats.' 'I cannot carry the child,'
+said the spirit; 'I am too cold from the sea.' When they were got
+on board the canoe the wife smelt carrion. 'How is this?' she
+said. 'What have you in the canoe that I should smell carrion?'
+'It is nothing in the canoe,' said the spirit. 'It is the land-
+wind blowing down the mountains, where some beast lies dead.' It
+appears it was still night when they reached Manu'a--the swiftest
+passage on record--and as they entered the reef the bale-fires
+burned in the village. Again she asked him to carry the child; but
+now he need no more dissemble. 'I cannot carry your child,' said
+he, 'for I am dead, and the fires you see are burning for my
+funeral.'
+
+The curious may learn in Dr. Sierich's book the unexpected sequel
+of the tale. Here is enough for my purpose. Though the man was
+but new dead, the ghost was already putrefied, as though
+putrefaction were the mark and of the essence of a spirit. The
+vigil on the Paumotuan grave does not extend beyond two weeks, and
+they told me this period was thought to coincide with that of the
+resolution of the body. The ghost always marked with decay--the
+danger seemingly ending with the process of dissolution--here is
+tempting matter for the theorist. But it will not do. The lady of
+the flowers had been long dead, and her spirit was still supposed
+to bear the brand of perishability. The Resident had been more
+than a fortnight buried, and his vampire was still supposed to go
+the rounds.
+
+Of the lost state of the dead, from the lurid Mangaian legend, in
+which infernal deities hocus and destroy the souls of all, to the
+various submarine and aerial limbos where the dead feast, float
+idle, or resume the occupations of their life on earth, it would be
+wearisome to tell. One story I give, for it is singular in itself,
+is well-known in Tahiti, and has this of interest, that it is post-
+Christian, dating indeed from but a few years back. A princess of
+the reigning house died; was transported to the neighbouring isle
+of Raiatea; fell there under the empire of a spirit who condemned
+her to climb coco-palms all day and bring him the nuts; was found
+after some time in this miserable servitude by a second spirit, one
+of her own house; and by him, upon her lamentations, reconveyed to
+Tahiti, where she found her body still waked, but already swollen
+with the approaches of corruption. It is a lively point in the
+tale that, on the sight of this dishonoured tabernacle, the
+princess prayed she might continue to be numbered with the dead.
+But it seems it was too late, her spirit was replaced by the least
+dignified of entrances, and her startled family beheld the body
+move. The seemingly purgatorial labours, the helpful kindred
+spirit, and the horror of the princess at the sight of her tainted
+body, are all points to be remarked.
+
+The truth is, the tales are not necessarily consistent in
+themselves; and they are further darkened for the stranger by an
+ambiguity of language. Ghosts, vampires, spirits, and gods are all
+confounded. And yet I seem to perceive that (with exceptions)
+those whom we would count gods were less maleficent. Permanent
+spirits haunt and do murder in corners of Samoa; but those
+legitimate gods of Upolu and Savaii, whose wars and cricketings of
+late convulsed society, I did not gather to be dreaded, or not with
+a like fear. The spirit of Aana that ate souls is certainly a
+fearsome inmate; but the high gods, even of the archipelago, seem
+helpful. Mahinui--from whom our convict-catechist had been named--
+the spirit of the sea, like a Proteus endowed with endless avatars,
+came to the assistance of the shipwrecked and carried them ashore
+in the guise of a ray fish. The same divinity bore priests from
+isle to isle about the archipelago, and by his aid, within the
+century, persons have been seen to fly. The tutelar deity of each
+isle is likewise helpful, and by a particular form of wedge-shaped
+cloud on the horizon announces the coming of a ship.
+
+To one who conceives of these atolls, so narrow, so barren, so
+beset with sea, here would seem a superfluity of ghostly denizens.
+And yet there are more. In the various brackish pools and ponds,
+beautiful women with long red hair are seen to rise and bathe; only
+(timid as mice) on the first sound of feet upon the coral they dive
+again for ever. They are known to be healthy and harmless living
+people, dwellers of an underworld; and the same fancy is current in
+Tahiti, where also they have the hair red. Tetea is the Tahitian
+name; the Paumotuan, Mokurea.
+
+
+
+
+PART III: THE GILBERTS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--BUTARITARI
+
+
+
+At Honolulu we had said farewell to the Casco and to Captain Otis,
+and our next adventure was made in changed conditions. Passage was
+taken for myself, my wife, Mr. Osbourne, and my China boy, Ah Fu,
+on a pigmy trading schooner, the Equator, Captain Dennis Reid; and
+on a certain bright June day in 1889, adorned in the Hawaiian
+fashion with the garlands of departure, we drew out of port and
+bore with a fair wind for Micronesia.
+
+The whole extent of the South Seas is a desert of ships; more
+especially that part where we were now to sail. No post runs in
+these islands; communication is by accident; where you may have
+designed to go is one thing, where you shall be able to arrive
+another. It was my hope, for instance, to have reached the
+Carolines, and returned to the light of day by way of Manila and
+the China ports; and it was in Samoa that we were destined to re-
+appear and be once more refreshed with the sight of mountains.
+Since the sunset faded from the peaks of Oahu six months had
+intervened, and we had seen no spot of earth so high as an ordinary
+cottage. Our path had been still on the flat sea, our dwellings
+upon unerected coral, our diet from the pickle-tub or out of tins;
+I had learned to welcome shark's flesh for a variety; and a
+mountain, an onion, an Irish potato or a beef-steak, had been long
+lost to sense and dear to aspiration.
+
+The two chief places of our stay, Butaritari and Apemama, lie near
+the line; the latter within thirty miles. Both enjoy a superb
+ocean climate, days of blinding sun and bracing wind, nights of a
+heavenly brightness. Both are somewhat wider than Fakarava,
+measuring perhaps (at the widest) a quarter of a mile from beach to
+beach. In both, a coarse kind of taro thrives; its culture is a
+chief business of the natives, and the consequent mounds and
+ditches make miniature scenery and amuse the eye. In all else they
+show the customary features of an atoll: the low horizon, the
+expanse of the lagoon, the sedge-like rim of palm-tops, the
+sameness and smallness of the land, the hugely superior size and
+interest of sea and sky. Life on such islands is in many points
+like life on shipboard. The atoll, like the ship, is soon taken
+for granted; and the islanders, like the ship's crew, become soon
+the centre of attention. The isles are populous, independent,
+seats of kinglets, recently civilised, little visited. In the last
+decade many changes have crept in; women no longer go unclothed
+till marriage; the widow no longer sleeps at night and goes abroad
+by day with the skull of her dead husband; and, fire-arms being
+introduced, the spear and the shark-tooth sword are sold for
+curiosities. Ten years ago all these things and practices were to
+be seen in use; yet ten years more, and the old society will have
+entirely vanished. We came in a happy moment to see its
+institutions still erect and (in Apemama) scarce decayed.
+
+Populous and independent--warrens of men, ruled over with some
+rustic pomp--such was the first and still the recurring impression
+of these tiny lands. As we stood across the lagoon for the town of
+Butaritari, a stretch of the low shore was seen to be crowded with
+the brown roofs of houses; those of the palace and king's summer
+parlour (which are of corrugated iron) glittered near one end
+conspicuously bright; the royal colours flew hard by on a tall
+flagstaff; in front, on an artificial islet, the gaol played the
+part of a martello. Even upon this first and distant view, the
+place had scarce the air of what it truly was, a village; rather of
+that which it was also, a petty metropolis, a city rustic and yet
+royal.
+
+The lagoon is shoal. The tide being out, we waded for some quarter
+of a mile in tepid shallows, and stepped ashore at last into a
+flagrant stagnancy of sun and heat. The lee side of a line island
+after noon is indeed a breathless place; on the ocean beach the
+trade will be still blowing, boisterous and cool; out in the lagoon
+it will be blowing also, speeding the canoes; but the screen of
+bush completely intercepts it from the shore, and sleep and silence
+and companies of mosquitoes brood upon the towns.
+
+We may thus be said to have taken Butaritari by surprise. A few
+inhabitants were still abroad in the north end, at which we landed.
+As we advanced, we were soon done with encounter, and seemed to
+explore a city of the dead. Only, between the posts of open
+houses, we could see the townsfolk stretched in the siesta,
+sometimes a family together veiled in a mosquito-net, sometimes a
+single sleeper on a platform like a corpse on a bier.
+
+The houses were of all dimensions, from those of toys to those of
+churches. Some might hold a battalion, some were so minute they
+could scarce receive a pair of lovers; only in the playroom, when
+the toys are mingled, do we meet such incongruities of scale. Many
+were open sheds; some took the form of roofed stages; others were
+walled and the walls pierced with little windows. A few were
+perched on piles in the lagoon; the rest stood at random on a
+green, through which the roadway made a ribbon of sand, or along
+the embankments of a sheet of water like a shallow dock. One and
+all were the creatures of a single tree; palm-tree wood and palm-
+tree leaf their materials; no nail had been driven, no hammer
+sounded, in their building, and they were held together by lashings
+of palm-tree sinnet.
+
+In the midst of the thoroughfare, the church stands like an island,
+a lofty and dim house with rows of windows; a rich tracery of
+framing sustains the roof; and through the door at either end the
+street shows in a vista. The proportions of the place, in such
+surroundings, and built of such materials, appeared august; and we
+threaded the nave with a sentiment befitting visitors in a
+cathedral. Benches run along either side. In the midst, on a
+crazy dais, two chairs stand ready for the king and queen when they
+shall choose to worship; over their heads a hoop, apparently from a
+hogshead, depends by a strip of red cotton; and the hoop (which
+hangs askew) is dressed with streamers of the same material, red
+and white.
+
+This was our first advertisement of the royal dignity, and
+presently we stood before its seat and centre. The palace is built
+of imported wood upon a European plan; the roof of corrugated iron,
+the yard enclosed with walls, the gate surmounted by a sort of
+lych-house. It cannot be called spacious; a labourer in the States
+is sometimes more commodiously lodged; but when we had the chance
+to see it within, we found it was enriched (beyond all island
+expectation) with coloured advertisements and cuts from the
+illustrated papers. Even before the gate some of the treasures of
+the crown stand public: a bell of a good magnitude, two pieces of
+cannon, and a single shell. The bell cannot be rung nor the guns
+fired; they are curiosities, proofs of wealth, a part of the parade
+of the royalty, and stand to be admired like statues in a square.
+A straight gut of water like a canal runs almost to the palace
+door; the containing quay-walls excellently built of coral; over
+against the mouth, by what seems an effect of landscape art, the
+martello-like islet of the gaol breaks the lagoon. Vassal chiefs
+with tribute, neighbour monarchs come a-roving, might here sail in,
+view with surprise these extensive public works, and be awed by
+these mouths of silent cannon. It was impossible to see the place
+and not to fancy it designed for pageantry. But the elaborate
+theatre then stood empty; the royal house deserted, its doors and
+windows gaping; the whole quarter of the town immersed in silence.
+On the opposite bank of the canal, on a roofed stage, an ancient
+gentleman slept publicly, sole visible inhabitant; and beyond on
+the lagoon a canoe spread a striped lateen, the sole thing moving.
+
+The canal is formed on the south by a pier or causeway with a
+parapet. At the far end the parapet stops, and the quay expands
+into an oblong peninsula in the lagoon, the breathing-place and
+summer parlour of the king. The midst is occupied by an open house
+or permanent marquee--called here a maniapa, or, as the word is now
+pronounced, a maniap'--at the lowest estimation forty feet by
+sixty. The iron roof, lofty but exceedingly low-browed, so that a
+woman must stoop to enter, is supported externally on pillars of
+coral, within by a frame of wood. The floor is of broken coral,
+divided in aisles by the uprights of the frame; the house far
+enough from shore to catch the breeze, which enters freely and
+disperses the mosquitoes; and under the low eaves the sun is seen
+to glitter and the waves to dance on the lagoon.
+
+It was now some while since we had met any but slumberers; and when
+we had wandered down the pier and stumbled at last into this bright
+shed, we were surprised to find it occupied by a society of wakeful
+people, some twenty souls in all, the court and guardsmen of
+Butaritari. The court ladies were busy making mats; the guardsmen
+yawned and sprawled. Half a dozen rifles lay on a rock and a
+cutlass was leaned against a pillar: the armoury of these drowsy
+musketeers. At the far end, a little closed house of wood
+displayed some tinsel curtains, and proved, upon examination, to be
+a privy on the European model. In front of this, upon some mats,
+lolled Tebureimoa, the king; behind him, on the panels of the
+house, two crossed rifles represented fasces. He wore pyjamas
+which sorrowfully misbecame his bulk; his nose was hooked and
+cruel, his body overcome with sodden corpulence, his eye timorous
+and dull: he seemed at once oppressed with drowsiness and held
+awake by apprehension: a pepper rajah muddled with opium, and
+listening for the march of a Dutch army, looks perhaps not
+otherwise. We were to grow better acquainted, and first and last I
+had the same impression; he seemed always drowsy, yet always to
+hearken and start; and, whether from remorse or fear, there is no
+doubt he seeks a refuge in the abuse of drugs.
+
+The rajah displayed no sign of interest in our coming. But the
+queen, who sat beside him in a purple sacque, was more accessible;
+and there was present an interpreter so willing that his volubility
+became at last the cause of our departure. He had greeted us upon
+our entrance:- 'That is the honourable King, and I am his
+interpreter,' he had said, with more stateliness than truth. For
+he held no appointment in the court, seemed extremely ill-
+acquainted with the island language, and was present, like
+ourselves, upon a visit of civility. Mr. Williams was his name:
+an American darkey, runaway ship's cook, and bar-keeper at The Land
+we Live in tavern, Butaritari. I never knew a man who had more
+words in his command or less truth to communicate; neither the
+gloom of the monarch, nor my own efforts to be distant, could in
+the least abash him; and when the scene closed, the darkey was left
+talking.
+
+The town still slumbered, or had but just begun to turn and stretch
+itself; it was still plunged in heat and silence. So much the more
+vivid was the impression that we carried away of the house upon the
+islet, the Micronesian Saul wakeful amid his guards, and his
+unmelodious David, Mr. Williams, chattering through the drowsy
+hours.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--THE FOUR BROTHERS
+
+
+
+The kingdom of Tebureimoa includes two islands, Great and Little
+Makin; some two thousand subjects pay him tribute, and two semi-
+independent chieftains do him qualified homage. The importance of
+the office is measured by the man; he may be a nobody, he may be
+absolute; and both extremes have been exemplified within the memory
+of residents.
+
+On the death of king Tetimararoa, Tebureimoa's father, Nakaeia, the
+eldest son, succeeded. He was a fellow of huge physical strength,
+masterful, violent, with a certain barbaric thrift and some
+intelligence of men and business. Alone in his islands, it was he
+who dealt and profited; he was the planter and the merchant; and
+his subjects toiled for his behoof in servitude. When they wrought
+long and well their taskmaster declared a holiday, and supplied and
+shared a general debauch. The scale of his providing was at times
+magnificent; six hundred dollars' worth of gin and brandy was set
+forth at once; the narrow land resounded with the noise of revelry:
+and it was a common thing to see the subjects (staggering
+themselves) parade their drunken sovereign on the fore-hatch of a
+wrecked vessel, king and commons howling and singing as they went.
+At a word from Nakaeia's mouth the revel ended; Makin became once
+more an isle of slaves and of teetotalers; and on the morrow all
+the population must be on the roads or in the taro-patches toiling
+under his bloodshot eye.
+
+The fear of Nakaeia filled the land. No regularity of justice was
+affected; there was no trial, there were no officers of the law; it
+seems there was but one penalty, the capital; and daylight assault
+and midnight murder were the forms of process. The king himself
+would play the executioner: and his blows were dealt by stealth,
+and with the help and countenance of none but his own wives. These
+were his oarswomen; one that caught a crab, he slew incontinently
+with the tiller; thus disciplined, they pulled him by night to the
+scene of his vengeance, which he would then execute alone and
+return well-pleased with his connubial crew. The inmates of the
+harem held a station hard for us to conceive. Beasts of draught,
+and driven by the fear of death, they were yet implicitly trusted
+with their sovereign's life; they were still wives and queens, and
+it was supposed that no man should behold their faces. They killed
+by the sight like basilisks; a chance view of one of those
+boatwomen was a crime to be wiped out with blood. In the days of
+Nakaeia the palace was beset with some tall coco-palms which
+commanded the enclosure. It chanced one evening, while Nakaeia sat
+below at supper with his wives, that the owner of the grove was in
+a tree-top drawing palm-tree wine; it chanced that he looked down,
+and the king at the same moment looking up, their eyes encountered.
+Instant flight preserved the involuntary criminal. But during the
+remainder of that reign he must lurk and be hid by friends in
+remote parts of the isle; Nakaeia hunted him without remission,
+although still in vain; and the palms, accessories to the fact,
+were ruthlessly cut down. Such was the ideal of wifely purity in
+an isle where nubile virgins went naked as in paradise. And yet
+scandal found its way into Nakaeia's well-guarded harem. He was at
+that time the owner of a schooner, which he used for a pleasure-
+house, lodging on board as she lay anchored; and thither one day he
+summoned a new wife. She was one that had been sealed to him; that
+is to say (I presume), that he was married to her sister, for the
+husband of an elder sister has the call of the cadets. She would
+be arrayed for the occasion; she would come scented, garlanded,
+decked with fine mats and family jewels, for marriage, as her
+friends supposed; for death, as she well knew. 'Tell me the man's
+name, and I will spare you,' said Nakaeia. But the girl was
+staunch; she held her peace, saved her lover and the queens
+strangled her between the mats.
+
+Nakaeia was feared; it does not appear that he was hated. Deeds
+that smell to us of murder wore to his subjects the reverend face
+of justice; his orgies made him popular; natives to this day recall
+with respect the firmness of his government; and even the whites,
+whom he long opposed and kept at arm's-length, give him the name
+(in the canonical South Sea phrase) of 'a perfect gentleman when
+sober.'
+
+When he came to lie, without issue, on the bed of death, he
+summoned his next brother, Nanteitei, made him a discourse on royal
+policy, and warned him he was too weak to reign. The warning was
+taken to heart, and for some while the government moved on the
+model of Nakaeia's. Nanteitei dispensed with guards, and walked
+abroad alone with a revolver in a leather mail-bag. To conceal his
+weakness he affected a rude silence; you might talk to him all day;
+advice, reproof, appeal, and menace alike remained unanswered.
+
+The number of his wives was seventeen, many of them heiresses; for
+the royal house is poor, and marriage was in these days a chief
+means of buttressing the throne. Nakaeia kept his harem busy for
+himself; Nanteitei hired it out to others. In his days, for
+instance, Messrs. Wightman built a pier with a verandah at the
+north end of the town. The masonry was the work of the seventeen
+queens, who toiled and waded there like fisher lasses; but the man
+who was to do the roofing durst not begin till they had finished,
+lest by chance he should look down and see them.
+
+It was perhaps the last appearance of the harem gang. For some
+time already Hawaiian missionaries had been seated at Butaritari--
+Maka and Kanoa, two brave childlike men. Nakaeia would none of
+their doctrine; he was perhaps jealous of their presence; being
+human, he had some affection for their persons. In the house,
+before the eyes of Kanoa, he slew with his own hand three sailors
+of Oahu, crouching on their backs to knife them, and menacing the
+missionary if he interfered; yet he not only spared him at the
+moment, but recalled him afterwards (when he had fled) with some
+expressions of respect. Nanteitei, the weaker man, fell more
+completely under the spell. Maka, a light-hearted, lovable, yet in
+his own trade very rigorous man, gained and improved an influence
+on the king which soon grew paramount. Nanteitei, with the royal
+house, was publicly converted; and, with a severity which liberal
+missionaries disavow, the harem was at once reduced. It was a
+compendious act. The throne was thus impoverished, its influence
+shaken, the queen's relatives mortified, and sixteen chief women
+(some of great possessions) cast in a body on the market. I have
+been shipmates with a Hawaiian sailor who was successively married
+to two of these impromptu widows, and successively divorced by both
+for misconduct. That two great and rich ladies (for both of these
+were rich) should have married 'a man from another island' marks
+the dissolution of society. The laws besides were wholly
+remodelled, not always for the better. I love Maka as a man; as a
+legislator he has two defects: weak in the punishment of crime,
+stern to repress innocent pleasures.
+
+War and revolution are the common successors of reform; yet
+Nanteitei died (of an overdose of chloroform), in quiet possession
+of the throne, and it was in the reign of the third brother,
+Nabakatokia, a man brave in body and feeble of character, that the
+storm burst. The rule of the high chiefs and notables seems to
+have always underlain and perhaps alternated with monarchy. The
+Old Men (as they were called) have a right to sit with the king in
+the Speak House and debate: and the king's chief superiority is a
+form of closure--'The Speaking is over.' After the long monocracy
+of Nakaeia and the changes of Nanteitei, the Old Men were doubtless
+grown impatient of obscurity, and they were beyond question jealous
+of the influence of Maka. Calumny, or rather caricature, was
+called in use; a spoken cartoon ran round society; Maka was
+reported to have said in church that the king was the first man in
+the island and himself the second; and, stung by the supposed
+affront, the chiefs broke into rebellion and armed gatherings. In
+the space of one forenoon the throne of Nakaeia was humbled in the
+dust. The king sat in the maniap' before the palace gate expecting
+his recruits; Maka by his side, both anxious men; and meanwhile, in
+the door of a house at the north entry of the town, a chief had
+taken post and diverted the succours as they came. They came
+singly or in groups, each with his gun or pistol slung about his
+neck. 'Where are you going?' asked the chief. 'The king called
+us,' they would reply. 'Here is your place. Sit down,' returned
+the chief. With incredible disloyalty, all obeyed; and sufficient
+force being thus got together from both sides, Nabakatokia was
+summoned and surrendered. About this period, in almost every part
+of the group, the kings were murdered; and on Tapituea, the
+skeleton of the last hangs to this day in the chief Speak House of
+the isle, a menace to ambition. Nabakatokia was more fortunate;
+his life and the royal style were spared to him, but he was
+stripped of power. The Old Men enjoyed a festival of public
+speaking; the laws were continually changed, never enforced; the
+commons had an opportunity to regret the merits of Nakaeia; and the
+king, denied the resource of rich marriages and the service of a
+troop of wives, fell not only in disconsideration but in debt.
+
+He died some months before my arrival on the islands, and no one
+regretted him; rather all looked hopefully to his successor. This
+was by repute the hero of the family. Alone of the four brothers,
+he had issue, a grown son, Natiata, and a daughter three years old;
+it was to him, in the hour of the revolution, that Nabakatokia
+turned too late for help; and in earlier days he had been the right
+hand of the vigorous Nakaeia. Nontemat', Mr. Corpse, was his
+appalling nickname, and he had earned it well. Again and again, at
+the command of Nakaeia, he had surrounded houses in the dead of
+night, cut down the mosquito bars and butchered families. Here was
+the hand of iron; here was Nakaeia redux. He came, summoned from
+the tributary rule of Little Makin: he was installed, he proved a
+puppet and a trembler, the unwieldy shuttlecock of orators; and the
+reader has seen the remains of him in his summer parlour under the
+name of Tebureimoa.
+
+The change in the man's character was much commented on in the
+island, and variously explained by opium and Christianity. To my
+eyes, there seemed no change at all, rather an extreme consistency.
+Mr. Corpse was afraid of his brother: King Tebureimoa is afraid of
+the Old Men. Terror of the first nerved him for deeds of
+desperation; fear of the second disables him for the least act of
+government. He played his part of bravo in the past, following the
+line of least resistance, butchering others in his own defence:
+to-day, grown elderly and heavy, a convert, a reader of the Bible,
+perhaps a penitent, conscious at least of accumulated hatreds, and
+his memory charged with images of violence and blood, he
+capitulates to the Old Men, fuddles himself with opium, and sits
+among his guards in dreadful expectation. The same cowardice that
+put into his hand the knife of the assassin deprives him of the
+sceptre of a king.
+
+A tale that I was told, a trifling incident that fell in my
+observation, depicts him in his two capacities. A chief in Little
+Makin asked, in an hour of lightness, 'Who is Kaeia?' A bird
+carried the saying; and Nakaeia placed the matter in the hands of a
+committee of three. Mr. Corpse was chairman; the second
+commissioner died before my arrival; the third was yet alive and
+green, and presented so venerable an appearance that we gave him
+the name of Abou ben Adhem. Mr. Corpse was troubled with a
+scruple; the man from Little Makin was his adopted brother; in such
+a case it was not very delicate to appear at all, to strike the
+blow (which it seems was otherwise expected of him) would be worse
+than awkward. 'I will strike the blow,' said the venerable Abou;
+and Mr. Corpse (surely with a sigh) accepted the compromise. The
+quarry was decoyed into the bush; he was set to carrying a log; and
+while his arms were raised Abou ripped up his belly at a blow.
+Justice being thus done, the commission, in a childish horror,
+turned to flee. But their victim recalled them to his side. 'You
+need not run away now,' he said. 'You have done this thing to me.
+Stay.' He was some twenty minutes dying, and his murderers sat
+with him the while: a scene for Shakespeare. All the stages of a
+violent death, the blood, the failing voice, the decomposing
+features, the changed hue, are thus present in the memory of Mr.
+Corpse; and since he studied them in the brother he betrayed, he
+has some reason to reflect on the possibilities of treachery. I
+was never more sure of anything than the tragic quality of the
+king's thoughts; and yet I had but the one sight of him at
+unawares. I had once an errand for his ear. It was once more the
+hour of the siesta; but there were loiterers abroad, and these
+directed us to a closed house on the bank of the canal where
+Tebureimoa lay unguarded. We entered without ceremony, being in
+some haste. He lay on the floor upon a bed of mats, reading in his
+Gilbert Island Bible with compunction. On our sudden entrance the
+unwieldy man reared himself half-sitting so that the Bible rolled
+on the floor, stared on us a moment with blank eyes, and, having
+recognised his visitors, sank again upon the mats. So Eglon looked
+on Ehud.
+
+The justice of facts is strange, and strangely just; Nakaeia, the
+author of these deeds, died at peace discoursing on the craft of
+kings; his tool suffers daily death for his enforced complicity.
+Not the nature, but the congruity of men's deeds and circumstances
+damn and save them; and Tebureimoa from the first has been
+incongruously placed. At home, in a quiet bystreet of a village,
+the man had been a worthy carpenter, and, even bedevilled as he is,
+he shows some private virtues. He has no lands, only the use of
+such as are impignorate for fines; he cannot enrich himself in the
+old way by marriages; thrift is the chief pillar of his future, and
+he knows and uses it. Eleven foreign traders pay him a patent of a
+hundred dollars, some two thousand subjects pay capitation at the
+rate of a dollar for a man, half a dollar for a woman, and a
+shilling for a child: allowing for the exchange, perhaps a total
+of three hundred pounds a year. He had been some nine months on
+the throne: had bought his wife a silk dress and hat, figure
+unknown, and himself a uniform at three hundred dollars; had sent
+his brother's photograph to be enlarged in San Francisco at two
+hundred and fifty dollars; had greatly reduced that brother's
+legacy of debt and had still sovereigns in his pocket. An
+affectionate brother, a good economist; he was besides a handy
+carpenter, and cobbled occasionally on the woodwork of the palace.
+It is not wonderful that Mr. Corpse has virtues; that Tebureimoa
+should have a diversion filled me with surprise.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--AROUND OUR HOUSE
+
+
+
+When we left the palace we were still but seafarers ashore; and
+within the hour we had installed our goods in one of the six
+foreign houses of Butaritari, namely, that usually occupied by
+Maka, the Hawaiian missionary. Two San Francisco firms are here
+established, Messrs. Crawford and Messrs. Wightman Brothers; the
+first hard by the palace of the mid town, the second at the north
+entry; each with a store and bar-room. Our house was in the
+Wightman compound, betwixt the store and bar, within a fenced
+enclosure. Across the road a few native houses nestled in the
+margin of the bush, and the green wall of palms rose solid,
+shutting out the breeze. A little sandy cove of the lagoon ran in
+behind, sheltered by a verandah pier, the labour of queens' hands.
+Here, when the tide was high, sailed boats lay to be loaded; when
+the tide was low, the boats took ground some half a mile away, and
+an endless series of natives descended the pier stair, tailed
+across the sand in strings and clusters, waded to the waist with
+the bags of copra, and loitered backward to renew their charge.
+The mystery of the copra trade tormented me, as I sat and watched
+the profits drip on the stair and the sands.
+
+In front, from shortly after four in the morning until nine at
+night, the folk of the town streamed by us intermittingly along the
+road: families going up the island to make copra on their lands;
+women bound for the bush to gather flowers against the evening
+toilet; and, twice a day, the toddy-cutters, each with his knife
+and shell. In the first grey of the morning, and again late in the
+afternoon, these would straggle past about their tree-top business,
+strike off here and there into the bush, and vanish from the face
+of the earth. At about the same hour, if the tide be low in the
+lagoon, you are likely to be bound yourself across the island for a
+bath, and may enter close at their heels alleys of the palm wood.
+Right in front, although the sun is not yet risen, the east is
+already lighted with preparatory fires, and the huge accumulations
+of the trade-wind cloud glow with and heliograph the coming day.
+The breeze is in your face; overhead in the tops of the palms, its
+playthings, it maintains a lively bustle; look where you will,
+above or below, there is no human presence, only the earth and
+shaken forest. And right overhead the song of an invisible singer
+breaks from the thick leaves; from farther on a second tree-top
+answers; and beyond again, in the bosom of the woods, a still more
+distant minstrel perches and sways and sings. So, all round the
+isle, the toddy-cutters sit on high, and are rocked by the trade,
+and have a view far to seaward, where they keep watch for sails,
+and like huge birds utter their songs in the morning. They sing
+with a certain lustiness and Bacchic glee; the volume of sound and
+the articulate melody fall unexpected from the tree-top, whence we
+anticipate the chattering of fowls. And yet in a sense these songs
+also are but chatter; the words are ancient, obsolete, and sacred;
+few comprehend them, perhaps no one perfectly; but it was
+understood the cutters 'prayed to have good toddy, and sang of
+their old wars.' The prayer is at least answered; and when the
+foaming shell is brought to your door, you have a beverage well
+'worthy of a grace.' All forenoon you may return and taste; it
+only sparkles, and sharpens, and grows to be a new drink, not less
+delicious; but with the progress of the day the fermentation
+quickens and grows acid; in twelve hours it will be yeast for
+bread, in two days more a devilish intoxicant, the counsellor of
+crime.
+
+The men are of a marked Arabian cast of features, often bearded and
+mustached, often gaily dressed, some with bracelets and anklets,
+all stalking hidalgo-like, and accepting salutations with a haughty
+lip. The hair (with the dandies of either sex) is worn turban-wise
+in a frizzled bush; and like the daggers of the Japanese a pointed
+stick (used for a comb) is thrust gallantly among the curls. The
+women from this bush of hair look forth enticingly: the race
+cannot be compared with the Tahitian for female beauty; I doubt
+even if the average be high; but some of the prettiest girls, and
+one of the handsomest women I ever saw, were Gilbertines.
+Butaritari, being the commercial centre of the group, is
+Europeanised; the coloured sacque or the white shift are common
+wear, the latter for the evening; the trade hat, loaded with
+flowers, fruit, and ribbons, is unfortunately not unknown; and the
+characteristic female dress of the Gilberts no longer universal.
+The ridi is its name: a cutty petticoat or fringe of the smoked
+fibre of cocoa-nut leaf, not unlike tarry string: the lower edge
+not reaching the mid-thigh, the upper adjusted so low upon the
+haunches that it seems to cling by accident. A sneeze, you think,
+and the lady must surely be left destitute. 'The perilous,
+hairbreadth ridi' was our word for it; and in the conflict that
+rages over women's dress it has the misfortune to please neither
+side, the prudish condemning it as insufficient, the more frivolous
+finding it unlovely in itself. Yet if a pretty Gilbertine would
+look her best, that must be her costume. In that and naked
+otherwise, she moves with an incomparable liberty and grace and
+life, that marks the poetry of Micronesia. Bundle her in a gown,
+the charm is fled, and she wriggles like an Englishwoman.
+
+Towards dusk the passers-by became more gorgeous. The men broke
+out in all the colours of the rainbow--or at least of the trade-
+room,--and both men and women began to be adorned and scented with
+new flowers. A small white blossom is the favourite, sometimes
+sown singly in a woman's hair like little stars, now composed in a
+thick wreath. With the night, the crowd sometimes thickened in the
+road, and the padding and brushing of bare feet became continuous;
+the promenades mostly grave, the silence only interrupted by some
+giggling and scampering of girls; even the children quiet. At
+nine, bed-time struck on a bell from the cathedral, and the life of
+the town ceased. At four the next morning the signal is repeated
+in the darkness, and the innocent prisoners set free; but for seven
+hours all must lie--I was about to say within doors, of a place
+where doors, and even walls, are an exception--housed, at least,
+under their airy roofs and clustered in the tents of the mosquito-
+nets. Suppose a necessary errand to occur, suppose it imperative
+to send abroad, the messenger must then go openly, advertising
+himself to the police with a huge brand of cocoa-nut, which flares
+from house to house like a moving bonfire. Only the police
+themselves go darkling, and grope in the night for misdemeanants.
+I used to hate their treacherous presence; their captain in
+particular, a crafty old man in white, lurked nightly about my
+premises till I could have found it in my heart to beat him. But
+the rogue was privileged.
+
+Not one of the eleven resident traders came to town, no captain
+cast anchor in the lagoon, but we saw him ere the hour was out.
+This was owing to our position between the store and the bar--the
+Sans Souci, as the last was called. Mr. Rick was not only Messrs.
+Wightman's manager, but consular agent for the States; Mrs. Rick
+was the only white woman on the island, and one of the only two in
+the archipelago; their house besides, with its cool verandahs, its
+bookshelves, its comfortable furniture, could not be rivalled
+nearer than Jaluit or Honolulu. Every one called in consequence,
+save such as might be prosecuting a South Sea quarrel, hingeing on
+the price of copra and the odd cent, or perhaps a difference about
+poultry. Even these, if they did not appear upon the north, would
+be presently visible to the southward, the Sans Souci drawing them
+as with cords. In an island with a total population of twelve
+white persons, one of the two drinking-shops might seem
+superfluous: but every bullet has its billet, and the double
+accommodation of Butaritari is found in practice highly convenient
+by the captains and the crews of ships: The Land we Live in being
+tacitly resigned to the forecastle, the Sans Souci tacitly reserved
+for the afterguard. So aristocratic were my habits, so commanding
+was my fear of Mr. Williams, that I have never visited the first;
+but in the other, which was the club or rather the casino of the
+island, I regularly passed my evenings. It was small, but neatly
+fitted, and at night (when the lamp was lit) sparkled with glass
+and glowed with coloured pictures like a theatre at Christmas. The
+pictures were advertisements, the glass coarse enough, the
+carpentry amateur; but the effect, in that incongruous isle, was of
+unbridled luxury and inestimable expense. Here songs were sung,
+tales told, tricks performed, games played. The Ricks, ourselves,
+Norwegian Tom the bar-keeper, a captain or two from the ships, and
+perhaps three or four traders come down the island in their boats
+or by the road on foot, made up the usual company. The traders,
+all bred to the sea, take a humorous pride in their new business;
+'South Sea Merchants' is the title they prefer. 'We are all
+sailors here'--'Merchants, if you please'--'South Sea Merchants,'--
+was a piece of conversation endlessly repeated, that never seemed
+to lose in savour. We found them at all times simple, genial, gay,
+gallant, and obliging; and, across some interval of time, recall
+with pleasure the traders of Butaritari. There was one black sheep
+indeed. I tell of him here where he lived, against my rule; for in
+this case I have no measure to preserve, and the man is typical of
+a class of ruffians that once disgraced the whole field of the
+South Seas, and still linger in the rarely visited isles of
+Micronesia. He had the name on the beach of 'a perfect gentleman
+when sober,' but I never saw him otherwise than drunk. The few
+shocking and savage traits of the Micronesian he has singled out
+with the skill of a collector, and planted in the soil of his
+original baseness. He has been accused and acquitted of a
+treacherous murder; and has since boastfully owned it, which
+inclines me to suppose him innocent. His daughter is defaced by
+his erroneous cruelty, for it was his wife he had intended to
+disfigure, and in the darkness of the night and the frenzy of coco-
+brandy, fastened on the wrong victim. The wife has since fled and
+harbours in the bush with natives; and the husband still demands
+from deaf ears her forcible restoration. The best of his business
+is to make natives drink, and then advance the money for the fine
+upon a lucrative mortgage. 'Respect for whites' is the man's word:
+'What is the matter with this island is the want of respect for
+whites.' On his way to Butaritari, while I was there, he spied his
+wife in the bush with certain natives and made a dash to capture
+her; whereupon one of her companions drew a knife and the husband
+retreated: 'Do you call that proper respect for whites?' he cried.
+At an early stage of the acquaintance we proved our respect for his
+kind of white by forbidding him our enclosure under pain of death.
+Thenceforth he lingered often in the neighbourhood with I knew not
+what sense of envy or design of mischief; his white, handsome face
+(which I beheld with loathing) looked in upon us at all hours
+across the fence; and once, from a safe distance, he avenged
+himself by shouting a recondite island insult, to us quite
+inoffensive, on his English lips incredibly incongruous.
+
+Our enclosure, round which this composite of degradations wandered,
+was of some extent. In one corner was a trellis with a long table
+of rough boards. Here the Fourth of July feast had been held not
+long before with memorable consequences, yet to be set forth; here
+we took our meals; here entertained to a dinner the king and
+notables of Makin. In the midst was the house, with a verandah
+front and back, and three is rooms within. In the verandah we
+slung our man-of-war hammocks, worked there by day, and slept at
+night. Within were beds, chairs, a round table, a fine hanging
+lamp, and portraits of the royal family of Hawaii. Queen Victoria
+proves nothing; Kalakaua and Mrs. Bishop are diagnostic; and the
+truth is we were the stealthy tenants of the parsonage. On the day
+of our arrival Maka was away; faithless trustees unlocked his
+doors; and the dear rigorous man, the sworn foe of liquor and
+tobacco, returned to find his verandah littered with cigarettes and
+his parlour horrible with bottles. He made but one condition--on
+the round table, which he used in the celebration of the
+sacraments, he begged us to refrain from setting liquor; in all
+else he bowed to the accomplished fact, refused rent, retired
+across the way into a native house, and, plying in his boat, beat
+the remotest quarters of the isle for provender. He found us pigs-
+-I could not fancy where--no other pigs were visible; he brought us
+fowls and taro; when we gave our feast to the monarch and gentry,
+it was he who supplied the wherewithal, he who superintended the
+cooking, he who asked grace at table, and when the king's health
+was proposed, he also started the cheering with an English hip-hip-
+hip. There was never a more fortunate conception; the heart of the
+fatted king exulted in his bosom at the sound.
+
+Take him for all in all, I have never known a more engaging
+creature than this parson of Butaritari: his mirth, his kindness,
+his noble, friendly feelings, brimmed from the man in speech and
+gesture. He loved to exaggerate, to act and overact the momentary
+part, to exercise his lungs and muscles, and to speak and laugh
+with his whole body. He had the morning cheerfulness of birds and
+healthy children; and his humour was infectious. We were next
+neighbours and met daily, yet our salutations lasted minutes at a
+stretch--shaking hands, slapping shoulders, capering like a pair of
+Merry-Andrews, laughing to split our sides upon some pleasantry
+that would scarce raise a titter in an infant-school. It might be
+five in the morning, the toddy-cutters just gone by, the road
+empty, the shade of the island lying far on the lagoon: and the
+ebullition cheered me for the day.
+
+Yet I always suspected Maka of a secret melancholy--these jubilant
+extremes could scarce be constantly maintained. He was besides
+long, and lean, and lined, and corded, and a trifle grizzled; and
+his Sabbath countenance was even saturnine. On that day we made a
+procession to the church, or (as I must always call it) the
+cathedral: Maka (a blot on the hot landscape) in tall hat, black
+frock-coat, black trousers; under his arm the hymn-book and the
+Bible; in his face, a reverent gravity:- beside him Mary his wife,
+a quiet, wise, and handsome elderly lady, seriously attired:-
+myself following with singular and moving thoughts. Long before,
+to the sound of bells and streams and birds, through a green
+Lothian glen, I had accompanied Sunday by Sunday a minister in
+whose house I lodged; and the likeness, and the difference, and the
+series of years and deaths, profoundly touched me. In the great,
+dusky, palm-tree cathedral the congregation rarely numbered thirty:
+the men on one side, the women on the other, myself posted (for a
+privilege) amongst the women, and the small missionary contingent
+gathered close around the platform, we were lost in that round
+vault. The lessons were read antiphonally, the flock was
+catechised, a blind youth repeated weekly a long string of psalms,
+hymns were sung--I never heard worse singing,--and the sermon
+followed. To say I understood nothing were untrue; there were
+points that I learned to expect with certainty; the name of
+Honolulu, that of Kalakaua, the word Cap'n-man-o'-wa', the word
+ship, and a description of a storm at sea, infallibly occurred; and
+I was not seldom rewarded with the name of my own Sovereign in the
+bargain. The rest was but sound to the ears, silence for the mind:
+a plain expanse of tedium, rendered unbearable by heat, a hard
+chair, and the sight through the wide doors of the more happy
+heathen on the green. Sleep breathed on my joints and eyelids,
+sleep hummed in my ears; it reigned in the dim cathedral. The
+congregation stirred and stretched; they moaned, they groaned
+aloud; they yawned upon a singing note, as you may sometimes hear a
+dog when he has reached the tragic bitterest of boredom. In vain
+the preacher thumped the table; in vain he singled and addressed by
+name particular hearers. I was myself perhaps a more effective
+excitant; and at least to one old gentleman the spectacle of my
+successful struggles against sleep--and I hope they were
+successful--cheered the flight of time. He, when he was not
+catching flies or playing tricks upon his neighbours, gloated with
+a fixed, truculent eye upon the stages of my agony; and once, when
+the service was drawing towards a close, he winked at me across the
+church.
+
+I write of the service with a smile; yet I was always there--always
+with respect for Maka, always with admiration for his deep
+seriousness, his burning energy, the fire of his roused eye, the
+sincere and various accents of his voice. To see him weekly
+flogging a dead horse and blowing a cold fire was a lesson in
+fortitude and constancy. It may be a question whether if the
+mission were fully supported, and he was set free from business
+avocations, more might not result; I think otherwise myself; I
+think not neglect but rigour has reduced his flock, that rigour
+which has once provoked a revolution, and which to-day, in a man so
+lively and engaging, amazes the beholder. No song, no dance, no
+tobacco, no liquor, no alleviative of life--only toil and church-
+going; so says a voice from his face; and the face is the face of
+the Polynesian Esau, but the voice is the voice of a Jacob from a
+different world. And a Polynesian at the best makes a singular
+missionary in the Gilberts, coming from a country recklessly
+unchaste to one conspicuously strict; from a race hag-ridden with
+bogies to one comparatively bold against the terrors of the dark.
+The thought was stamped one morning in my mind, when I chanced to
+be abroad by moonlight, and saw all the town lightless, but the
+lamp faithfully burning by the missionary's bed. It requires no
+law, no fire, and no scouting police, to withhold Maka and his
+countrymen from wandering in the night unlighted.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--A TALE OF A TAPU
+
+
+
+On the morrow of our arrival (Sunday, 14th July 1889) our
+photographers were early stirring. Once more we traversed a silent
+town; many were yet abed and asleep; some sat drowsily in their
+open houses; there was no sound of intercourse or business. In
+that hour before the shadows, the quarter of the palace and canal
+seemed like a landing-place in the Arabian Nights or from the
+classic poets; here were the fit destination of some 'faery
+frigot,' here some adventurous prince might step ashore among new
+characters and incidents; and the island prison, where it floated
+on the luminous face of the lagoon, might have passed for the
+repository of the Grail. In such a scene, and at such an hour, the
+impression received was not so much of foreign travel--rather of
+past ages; it seemed not so much degrees of latitude that we had
+crossed, as centuries of time that we had re-ascended; leaving, by
+the same steps, home and to-day. A few children followed us,
+mostly nude, all silent; in the clear, weedy waters of the canal
+some silent damsels waded, baring their brown thighs; and to one of
+the maniap's before the palace gate we were attracted by a low but
+stirring hum of speech.
+
+The oval shed was full of men sitting cross-legged. The king was
+there in striped pyjamas, his rear protected by four guards with
+Winchesters, his air and bearing marked by unwonted spirit and
+decision; tumblers and black bottles went the round; and the talk,
+throughout loud, was general and animated. I was inclined at first
+to view this scene with suspicion. But the hour appeared
+unsuitable for a carouse; drink was besides forbidden equally by
+the law of the land and the canons of the church; and while I was
+yet hesitating, the king's rigorous attitude disposed of my last
+doubt. We had come, thinking to photograph him surrounded by his
+guards, and at the first word of the design his piety revolted. We
+were reminded of the day--the Sabbath, in which thou shalt take no
+photographs--and returned with a flea in our ear, bearing the
+rejected camera.
+
+At church, a little later, I was struck to find the throne
+unoccupied. So nice a Sabbatarian might have found the means to be
+present; perhaps my doubts revived; and before I got home they were
+transformed to certainties. Tom, the bar-keeper of the Sans Souci,
+was in conversation with two emissaries from the court. The
+'keen,' they said, wanted 'din,' failing which 'perandi.' No din,
+was Tom's reply, and no perandi; but 'pira' if they pleased. It
+seems they had no use for beer, and departed sorrowing.
+
+'Why, what is the meaning of all this?' I asked. 'Is the island on
+the spree?'
+
+Such was the fact. On the 4th of July a feast had been made, and
+the king, at the suggestion of the whites, had raised the tapu
+against liquor. There is a proverb about horses; it scarce applies
+to the superior animal, of whom it may be rather said, that any one
+can start him drinking, not any twenty can prevail on him to stop.
+The tapu, raised ten days before, was not yet re-imposed; for ten
+days the town had been passing the bottle or lying (as we had seen
+it the afternoon before) in hoggish sleep; and the king, moved by
+the Old Men and his own appetites, continued to maintain the
+liberty, to squander his savings on liquor, and to join in and lead
+the debauch. The whites were the authors of this crisis; it was
+upon their own proposal that the freedom had been granted at the
+first; and for a while, in the interests of trade, they were
+doubtless pleased it should continue. That pleasure had now
+sometime ceased; the bout had been prolonged (it was conceded)
+unduly; and it now began to be a question how it might conclude.
+Hence Tom's refusal. Yet that refusal was avowedly only for the
+moment, and it was avowedly unavailing; the king's foragers, denied
+by Tom at the Sans Souci, would be supplied at The Land we Live in
+by the gobbling Mr. Williams.
+
+The degree of the peril was not easy to measure at the time, and I
+am inclined to think now it was easy to exaggerate. Yet the
+conduct of drunkards even at home is always matter for anxiety; and
+at home our populations are not armed from the highest to the
+lowest with revolvers and repeating rifles, neither do we go on a
+debauch by the whole townful--and I might rather say, by the whole
+polity--king, magistrates, police, and army joining in one common
+scene of drunkenness. It must be thought besides that we were here
+in barbarous islands, rarely visited, lately and partly civilised.
+First and last, a really considerable number of whites have
+perished in the Gilberts, chiefly through their own misconduct; and
+the natives have displayed in at least one instance a disposition
+to conceal an accident under a butchery, and leave nothing but dumb
+bones. This last was the chief consideration against a sudden
+closing of the bars; the bar-keepers stood in the immediate breach
+and dealt direct with madmen; too surly a refusal might at any
+moment precipitate a blow, and the blow might prove the signal for
+a massacre.
+
+Monday, 15th.--At the same hour we returned to the same muniap'.
+Kummel (of all drinks) was served in tumblers; in the midst sat the
+crown prince, a fatted youth, surrounded by fresh bottles and
+busily plying the corkscrew; and king, chief, and commons showed
+the loose mouth, the uncertain joints, and the blurred and animated
+eye of the early drinker. It was plain we were impatiently
+expected; the king retired with alacrity to dress, the guards were
+despatched after their uniforms; and we were left to await the
+issue of these preparations with a shedful of tipsy natives. The
+orgie had proceeded further than on Sunday. The day promised to be
+of great heat; it was already sultry, the courtiers were already
+fuddled; and still the kummel continued to go round, and the crown
+prince to play butler. Flemish freedom followed upon Flemish
+excess; and a funny dog, a handsome fellow, gaily dressed, and with
+a full turban of frizzed hair, delighted the company with a
+humorous courtship of a lady in a manner not to be described. It
+was our diversion, in this time of waiting, to observe the
+gathering of the guards. They have European arms, European
+uniforms, and (to their sorrow) European shoes. We saw one warrior
+(like Mars) in the article of being armed; two men and a stalwart
+woman were scarce strong enough to boot him; and after a single
+appearance on parade the army is crippled for a week.
+
+At last, the gates under the king's house opened; the army issued,
+one behind another, with guns and epaulettes; the colours stooped
+under the gateway; majesty followed in his uniform bedizened with
+gold lace; majesty's wife came next in a hat and feathers, and an
+ample trained silk gown; the royal imps succeeded; there stood the
+pageantry of Makin marshalled on its chosen theatre. Dickens might
+have told how serious they were; how tipsy; how the king melted and
+streamed under his cocked hat; how he took station by the larger of
+his two cannons--austere, majestic, but not truly vertical; how the
+troops huddled, and were straightened out, and clubbed again; how
+they and their firelocks raked at various inclinations like the
+masts of ships; and how an amateur photographer reviewed, arrayed,
+and adjusted them, to see his dispositions change before he reached
+the camera.
+
+The business was funny to see; I do not know that it is graceful to
+laugh at; and our report of these transactions was received on our
+return with the shaking of grave heads.
+
+The day had begun ill; eleven hours divided us from sunset; and at
+any moment, on the most trifling chance, the trouble might begin.
+The Wightman compound was in a military sense untenable, commanded
+on three sides by houses and thick bush; the town was computed to
+contain over a thousand stand of excellent new arms; and retreat to
+the ships, in the case of an alert, was a recourse not to be
+thought of. Our talk that morning must have closely reproduced the
+talk in English garrisons before the Sepoy mutiny; the sturdy doubt
+that any mischief was in prospect, the sure belief that (should any
+come) there was nothing left but to go down fighting, the half-
+amused, half-anxious attitude of mind in which we were awaiting
+fresh developments.
+
+The kummel soon ran out; we were scarce returned before the king
+had followed us in quest of more. Mr. Corpse was now divested of
+his more awful attitude, the lawless bulk of him again encased in
+striped pyjamas; a guardsman brought up the rear with his rifle at
+the trail: and his majesty was further accompanied by a Rarotongan
+whalerman and the playful courtier with the turban of frizzed hair.
+There was never a more lively deputation. The whalerman was
+gapingly, tearfully tipsy: the courtier walked on air; the king
+himself was even sportive. Seated in a chair in the Ricks'
+sitting-room, he bore the brunt of our prayers and menaces unmoved.
+He was even rated, plied with historic instances, threatened with
+the men-of-war, ordered to restore the tapu on the spot--and
+nothing in the least affected him. It should be done to-morrow, he
+said; to-day it was beyond his power, to-day he durst not. 'Is
+that royal?' cried indignant Mr. Rick. No, it was not royal; had
+the king been of a royal character we should ourselves have held a
+different language; and royal or not, he had the best of the
+dispute. The terms indeed were hardly equal; for the king was the
+only man who could restore the tapu, but the Ricks were not the
+only people who sold drink. He had but to hold his ground on the
+first question, and they were sure to weaken on the second. A
+little struggle they still made for the fashion's sake; and then
+one exceedingly tipsy deputation departed, greatly rejoicing, a
+case of brandy wheeling beside them in a barrow. The Rarotongan
+(whom I had never seen before) wrung me by the hand like a man
+bound on a far voyage. 'My dear frien'!' he cried, 'good-bye, my
+dear frien'!'--tears of kummel standing in his eyes; the king
+lurched as he went, the courtier ambled,--a strange party of
+intoxicated children to be entrusted with that barrowful of
+madness.
+
+You could never say the town was quiet; all morning there was a
+ferment in the air, an aimless movement and congregation of natives
+in the street. But it was not before half-past one that a sudden
+hubbub of voices called us from the house, to find the whole white
+colony already gathered on the spot as by concerted signal. The
+Sans Souci was overrun with rabble, the stair and verandah
+thronged. From all these throats an inarticulate babbling cry went
+up incessantly; it sounded like the bleating of young lambs, but
+angrier. In the road his royal highness (whom I had seen so lately
+in the part of butler) stood crying upon Tom; on the top step,
+tossed in the hurly-burly, Tom was shouting to the prince. Yet a
+while the pack swayed about the bar, vociferous. Then came a
+brutal impulse; the mob reeled, and returned, and was rejected; the
+stair showed a stream of heads; and there shot into view, through
+the disbanding ranks, three men violently dragging in their midst a
+fourth. By his hair and his hands, his head forced as low as his
+knees, his face concealed, he was wrenched from the verandah and
+whisked along the road into the village, howling as he disappeared.
+Had his face been raised, we should have seen it bloodied, and the
+blood was not his own. The courtier with the turban of frizzed
+hair had paid the costs of this disturbance with the lower part of
+one ear.
+
+So the brawl passed with no other casualty than might seem comic to
+the inhumane. Yet we looked round on serious faces and--a fact
+that spoke volumes--Tom was putting up the shutters on the bar.
+Custom might go elsewhere, Mr. Williams might profit as he pleased,
+but Tom had had enough of bar-keeping for that day. Indeed the
+event had hung on a hair. A man had sought to draw a revolver--on
+what quarrel I could never learn, and perhaps he himself could not
+have told; one shot, when the room was so crowded, could scarce
+have failed to take effect; where many were armed and all tipsy, it
+could scarce have failed to draw others; and the woman who spied
+the weapon and the man who seized it may very well have saved the
+white community.
+
+The mob insensibly melted from the scene; and for the rest of the
+day our neighbourhood was left in peace and a good deal in
+solitude. But the tranquillity was only local; din and perandi
+still flowed in other quarters: and we had one more sight of
+Gilbert Island violence. In the church, where we had wandered
+photographing, we were startled by a sudden piercing outcry. The
+scene, looking forth from the doors of that great hall of shadow,
+was unforgettable. The palms, the quaint and scattered houses, the
+flag of the island streaming from its tall staff, glowed with
+intolerable sunshine. In the midst two women rolled fighting on
+the grass. The combatants were the more easy to be distinguished,
+because the one was stripped to the ridi and the other wore a
+holoku (sacque) of some lively colour. The first was uppermost,
+her teeth locked in her adversary's face, shaking her like a dog;
+the other impotently fought and scratched. So for a moment we saw
+them wallow and grapple there like vermin; then the mob closed and
+shut them in.
+
+It was a serious question that night if we should sleep ashore.
+But we were travellers, folk that had come far in quest of the
+adventurous; on the first sign of an adventure it would have been a
+singular inconsistency to have withdrawn; and we sent on board
+instead for our revolvers. Mindful of Taahauku, Mr. Rick, Mr.
+Osbourne, and Mrs. Stevenson held an assault of arms on the public
+highway, and fired at bottles to the admiration of the natives.
+Captain Reid of the Equator stayed on shore with us to be at hand
+in case of trouble, and we retired to bed at the accustomed hour,
+agreeably excited by the day's events. The night was exquisite,
+the silence enchanting; yet as I lay in my hammock looking on the
+strong moonshine and the quiescent palms, one ugly picture haunted
+me of the two women, the naked and the clad, locked in that hostile
+embrace. The harm done was probably not much, yet I could have
+looked on death and massacre with less revolt. The return to these
+primeval weapons, the vision of man's beastliness, of his ferality,
+shocked in me a deeper sense than that with which we count the cost
+of battles. There are elements in our state and history which it
+is a pleasure to forget, which it is perhaps the better wisdom not
+to dwell on. Crime, pestilence, and death are in the day's work;
+the imagination readily accepts them. It instinctively rejects, on
+the contrary, whatever shall call up the image of our race upon its
+lowest terms, as the partner of beasts, beastly itself, dwelling
+pell-mell and hugger-mugger, hairy man with hairy woman, in the
+caves of old. And yet to be just to barbarous islanders we must
+not forget the slums and dens of our cities; I must not forget that
+I have passed dinnerward through Soho, and seen that which cured me
+of my dinner.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--A TALE OF A TAPU--continued
+
+
+
+Tuesday, July 16.--It rained in the night, sudden and loud, in
+Gilbert Island fashion. Before the day, the crowing of a cock
+aroused me and I wandered in the compound and along the street.
+The squall was blown by, the moon shone with incomparable lustre,
+the air lay dead as in a room, and yet all the isle sounded as
+under a strong shower, the eaves thickly pattering, the lofty palms
+dripping at larger intervals and with a louder note. In this bold
+nocturnal light the interior of the houses lay inscrutable, one
+lump of blackness, save when the moon glinted under the roof, and
+made a belt of silver, and drew the slanting shadows of the pillars
+on the floor. Nowhere in all the town was any lamp or ember; not a
+creature stirred; I thought I was alone to be awake; but the police
+were faithful to their duty; secretly vigilant, keeping account of
+time; and a little later, the watchman struck slowly and repeatedly
+on the cathedral bell; four o'clock, the warning signal. It seemed
+strange that, in a town resigned to drunkenness and tumult, curfew
+and reveille should still be sounded and still obeyed.
+
+The day came, and brought little change. The place still lay
+silent; the people slept, the town slept. Even the few who were
+awake, mostly women and children, held their peace and kept within
+under the strong shadow of the thatch, where you must stop and peer
+to see them. Through the deserted streets, and past the sleeping
+houses, a deputation took its way at an early hour to the palace;
+the king was suddenly awakened, and must listen (probably with a
+headache) to unpalatable truths. Mrs. Rick, being a sufficient
+mistress of that difficult tongue, was spokeswoman; she explained
+to the sick monarch that I was an intimate personal friend of Queen
+Victoria's; that immediately on my return I should make her a
+report upon Butaritari; and that if my house should have been again
+invaded by natives, a man-of-war would be despatched to make
+reprisals. It was scarce the fact--rather a just and necessary
+parable of the fact, corrected for latitude; and it certainly told
+upon the king. He was much affected; he had conceived the notion
+(he said) that I was a man of some importance, but not dreamed it
+was as bad as this; and the missionary house was tapu'd under a
+fine of fifty dollars.
+
+So much was announced on the return of the deputation; not any
+more; and I gathered subsequently that much more had passed. The
+protection gained was welcome. It had been the most annoying and
+not the least alarming feature of the day before, that our house
+was periodically filled with tipsy natives, twenty or thirty at a
+time, begging drink, fingering our goods, hard to be dislodged,
+awkward to quarrel with. Queen Victoria's friend (who was soon
+promoted to be her son) was free from these intrusions. Not only
+my house, but my neighbourhood as well, was left in peace; even on
+our walks abroad we were guarded and prepared for; and, like great
+persons visiting a hospital, saw only the fair side. For the
+matter of a week we were thus suffered to go out and in and live in
+a fool's paradise, supposing the king to have kept his word, the
+tapu to be revived and the island once more sober.
+
+Tuesday, July 23.--We dined under a bare trellis erected for the
+Fourth of July; and here we used to linger by lamplight over coffee
+and tobacco. In that climate evening approaches without sensible
+chill; the wind dies out before sunset; heaven glows a while and
+fades, and darkens into the blueness of the tropical night; swiftly
+and insensibly the shadows thicken, the stars multiply their
+number; you look around you and the day is gone. It was then that
+we would see our Chinaman draw near across the compound in a
+lurching sphere of light, divided by his shadows; and with the
+coming of the lamp the night closed about the table. The faces of
+the company, the spars of the trellis, stood out suddenly bright on
+a ground of blue and silver, faintly designed with palm-tops and
+the peaked roofs of houses. Here and there the gloss upon a leaf,
+or the fracture of a stone, returned an isolated sparkle. All else
+had vanished. We hung there, illuminated like a galaxy of stars in
+vacuo; we sat, manifest and blind, amid the general ambush of the
+darkness; and the islanders, passing with light footfalls and low
+voices in the sand of the road, lingered to observe us, unseen.
+
+On Tuesday the dusk had fallen, the lamp had just been brought,
+when a missile struck the table with a rattling smack and rebounded
+past my ear. Three inches to one side and this page had never been
+written; for the thing travelled like a cannon ball. It was
+supposed at the time to be a nut, though even at the time I thought
+it seemed a small one and fell strangely.
+
+Wednesday, July 24.--The dusk had fallen once more, and the lamp
+been just brought out, when the same business was repeated. And
+again the missile whistled past my ear. One nut I had been willing
+to accept; a second, I rejected utterly. A cocoa-nut does not come
+slinging along on a windless evening, making an angle of about
+fifteen degrees with the horizon; cocoa-nuts do not fall on
+successive nights at the same hour and spot; in both cases,
+besides, a specific moment seemed to have been chosen, that when
+the lamp was just carried out, a specific person threatened, and
+that the head of the family. I may have been right or wrong, but I
+believed I was the mark of some intimidation; believed the missile
+was a stone, aimed not to hit, but to frighten.
+
+No idea makes a man more angry. I ran into the road, where the
+natives were as usual promenading in the dark; Maka joined me with
+a lantern; and I ran from one to another, glared in quite innocent
+faces, put useless questions, and proffered idle threats. Thence I
+carried my wrath (which was worthy the son of any queen in history)
+to the Ricks. They heard me with depression, assured me this trick
+of throwing a stone into a family dinner was not new; that it meant
+mischief, and was of a piece with the alarming disposition of the
+natives. And then the truth, so long concealed from us, came out.
+The king had broken his promise, he had defied the deputation; the
+tapu was still dormant, The Land we Live in still selling drink,
+and that quarter of the town disturbed and menaced by perpetual
+broils. But there was worse ahead: a feast was now preparing for
+the birthday of the little princess; and the tributary chiefs of
+Kuma and Little Makin were expected daily. Strong in a following
+of numerous and somewhat savage clansmen, each of these was
+believed, like a Douglas of old, to be of doubtful loyalty. Kuma
+(a little pot-bellied fellow) never visited the palace, never
+entered the town, but sat on the beach on a mat, his gun across his
+knees, parading his mistrust and scorn; Karaiti of Makin, although
+he was more bold, was not supposed to be more friendly; and not
+only were these vassals jealous of the throne, but the followers on
+either side shared in the animosity. Brawls had already taken
+place; blows had passed which might at any moment be repaid in
+blood. Some of the strangers were already here and already
+drinking; if the debauch continued after the bulk of them had come,
+a collision, perhaps a revolution, was to be expected.
+
+The sale of drink is in this group a measure of the jealousy of
+traders; one begins, the others are constrained to follow; and to
+him who has the most gin, and sells it the most recklessly, the
+lion's share of copra is assured. It is felt by all to be an
+extreme expedient, neither safe, decent, nor dignified. A trader
+on Tarawa, heated by an eager rivalry, brought many cases of gin.
+He told me he sat afterwards day and night in his house till it was
+finished, not daring to arrest the sale, not venturing to go forth,
+the bush all round him filled with howling drunkards. At night,
+above all, when he was afraid to sleep, and heard shots and voices
+about him in the darkness, his remorse was black.
+
+'My God!' he reflected, 'if I was to lose my life on such a
+wretched business!' Often and often, in the story of the Gilberts,
+this scene has been repeated; and the remorseful trader sat beside
+his lamp, longing for the day, listening with agony for the sound
+of murder, registering resolutions for the future. For the
+business is easy to begin, but hazardous to stop. The natives are
+in their way a just and law-abiding people, mindful of their debts,
+docile to the voice of their own institutions; when the tapu is re-
+enforced they will cease drinking; but the white who seeks to
+antedate the movement by refusing liquor does so at his peril.
+
+Hence, in some degree, the anxiety and helplessness of Mr. Rick.
+He and Tom, alarmed by the rabblement of the Sans Souci, had
+stopped the sale; they had done so without danger, because The Land
+we Live in still continued selling; it was claimed, besides, that
+they had been the first to begin. What step could be taken? Could
+Mr. Rick visit Mr. Muller (with whom he was not on terms) and
+address him thus: 'I was getting ahead of you, now you are getting
+ahead of me, and I ask you to forego your profit. I got my place
+closed in safety, thanks to your continuing; but now I think you
+have continued long enough. I begin to be alarmed; and because I
+am afraid I ask you to confront a certain danger'? It was not to
+be thought of. Something else had to be found; and there was one
+person at one end of the town who was at least not interested in
+copra. There was little else to be said in favour of myself as an
+ambassador. I had arrived in the Wightman schooner, I was living
+in the Wightman compound, I was the daily associate of the Wightman
+coterie. It was egregious enough that I should now intrude unasked
+in the private affairs of Crawford's agent, and press upon him the
+sacrifice of his interests and the venture of his life. But bad as
+I might be, there was none better; since the affair of the stone I
+was, besides, sharp-set to be doing, the idea of a delicate
+interview attracted me, and I thought it policy to show myself
+abroad.
+
+The night was very dark. There was service in the church, and the
+building glimmered through all its crevices like a dim Kirk
+Allowa'. I saw few other lights, but was indistinctly aware of
+many people stirring in the darkness, and a hum and sputter of low
+talk that sounded stealthy. I believe (in the old phrase) my beard
+was sometimes on my shoulder as I went. Muller's was but partly
+lighted, and quite silent, and the gate was fastened. I could by
+no means manage to undo the latch. No wonder, since I found it
+afterwards to be four or five feet long--a fortification in itself.
+As I still fumbled, a dog came on the inside and sniffed
+suspiciously at my hands, so that I was reduced to calling 'House
+ahoy!' Mr. Muller came down and put his chin across the paling in
+the dark. 'Who is that?' said he, like one who has no mind to
+welcome strangers.
+
+'My name is Stevenson,' said I.
+
+'O, Mr. Stevens! I didn't know you. Come inside.' We stepped
+into the dark store, when I leaned upon the counter and he against
+the wall. All the light came from the sleeping-room, where I saw
+his family being put to bed; it struck full in my face, but Mr.
+Muller stood in shadow. No doubt he expected what was Coming, and
+sought the advantage of position; but for a man who wished to
+persuade and had nothing to conceal, mine was the preferable.
+
+'Look here,' I began, 'I hear you are selling to the natives.'
+
+'Others have done that before me,' he returned pointedly.
+
+'No doubt,' said I, 'and I have nothing to do with the past, but
+the future. I want you to promise you will handle these spirits
+carefully.'
+
+'Now what is your motive in this?' he asked, and then, with a
+sneer, 'Are you afraid of your life?'
+
+'That is nothing to the purpose,' I replied. 'I know, and you
+know, these spirits ought not to be used at all.'
+
+'Tom and Mr. Rick have sold them before.'
+
+'I have nothing to do with Tom and Mr. Rick. All I know is I have
+heard them both refuse.'
+
+'No, I suppose you have nothing to do with them. Then you are just
+afraid of your life.'
+
+'Come now,' I cried, being perhaps a little stung, 'you know in
+your heart I am asking a reasonable thing. I don't ask you to lose
+your profit--though I would prefer to see no spirits brought here,
+as you would--'
+
+'I don't say I wouldn't. I didn't begin this,' he interjected.
+
+'No, I don't suppose you did,' said I. 'And I don't ask you to
+lose; I ask you to give me your word, man to man, that you will
+make no native drunk.'
+
+Up to now Mr. Muller had maintained an attitude very trying to my
+temper; but he had maintained it with difficulty, his sentiment
+being all upon my side; and here he changed ground for the worse.
+'It isn't me that sells,' said he.
+
+'No, it's that nigger,' I agreed. 'But he's yours to buy and sell;
+you have your hand on the nape of his neck; and I ask you--I have
+my wife here--to use the authority you have.'
+
+He hastily returned to his old ward. 'I don't deny I could if I
+wanted,' said he. 'But there's no danger, the natives are all
+quiet. You're just afraid of your life.'
+
+I do not like to be called a coward, even by implication; and here
+I lost my temper and propounded an untimely ultimatum. 'You had
+better put it plain,' I cried. 'Do you mean to refuse me what I
+ask?'
+
+'I don't want either to refuse it or grant it,' he replied.
+
+'You'll find you have to do the one thing or the other, and right
+now!' I cried, and then, striking into a happier vein, 'Come,' said
+I, 'you're a better sort than that. I see what's wrong with you--
+you think I came from the opposite camp. I see the sort of man you
+are, and you know that what I ask is right.'
+
+Again he changed ground. 'If the natives get any drink, it isn't
+safe to stop them,' he objected.
+
+'I'll be answerable for the bar,' I said. 'We are three men and
+four revolvers; we'll come at a word, and hold the place against
+the village.'
+
+'You don't know what you're talking about; it's too dangerous!' he
+cried.
+
+'Look here,' said I, 'I don't mind much about losing that life you
+talk so much of; but I mean to lose it the way I want to, and that
+is, putting a stop to all this beastliness.'
+
+He talked a while about his duty to the firm; I minded not at all,
+I was secure of victory. He was but waiting to capitulate, and
+looked about for any potent to relieve the strain. In the gush of
+light from the bedroom door I spied a cigar-holder on the desk.
+'That is well coloured,' said I.
+
+'Will you take a cigar?' said he.
+
+I took it and held it up unlighted. 'Now,' said I, 'you promise
+me.'
+
+'I promise you you won't have any trouble from natives that have
+drunk at my place,' he replied.
+
+'That is all I ask,' said I, and showed it was not by immediately
+offering to try his stock.
+
+So far as it was anyway critical our interview here ended. Mr.
+Muller had thenceforth ceased to regard me as an emissary from his
+rivals, dropped his defensive attitude, and spoke as he believed.
+I could make out that he would already, had he dared, have stopped
+the sale himself. Not quite daring, it may be imagined how he
+resented the idea of interference from those who had (by his own
+statement) first led him on, then deserted him in the breach, and
+now (sitting themselves in safety) egged him on to a new peril,
+which was all gain to them, all loss to him! I asked him what he
+thought of the danger from the feast.
+
+'I think worse of it than any of you,' he answered. 'They were
+shooting around here last night, and I heard the balls too. I said
+to myself, "That's bad." What gets me is why you should be making
+this row up at your end. I should be the first to go.'
+
+It was a thoughtless wonder. The consolation of being second is
+not great; the fact, not the order of going--there was our concern.
+
+Scott talks moderately of looking forward to a time of fighting
+'with a feeling that resembled pleasure.' The resemblance seems
+rather an identity. In modern life, contact is ended; man grows
+impatient of endless manoeuvres; and to approach the fact, to find
+ourselves where we can push an advantage home, and stand a fair
+risk, and see at last what we are made of, stirs the blood. It was
+so at least with all my family, who bubbled with delight at the
+approach of trouble; and we sat deep into the night like a pack of
+schoolboys, preparing the revolvers and arranging plans against the
+morrow. It promised certainly to be a busy and eventful day. The
+Old Men were to be summoned to confront me on the question of the
+tapu; Muller might call us at any moment to garrison his bar; and
+suppose Muller to fail, we decided in a family council to take that
+matter into our own hands, The Land we Live in at the pistol's
+mouth, and with the polysyllabic Williams, dance to a new tune. As
+I recall our humour I think it would have gone hard with the
+mulatto.
+
+Wednesday, July 24.--It was as well, and yet it was disappointing
+that these thunder-clouds rolled off in silence. Whether the Old
+Men recoiled from an interview with Queen Victoria's son, whether
+Muller had secretly intervened, or whether the step flowed
+naturally from the fears of the king and the nearness of the feast,
+the tapu was early that morning re-enforced; not a day too soon,
+from the manner the boats began to arrive thickly, and the town was
+filled with the big rowdy vassals of Karaiti.
+
+The effect lingered for some time on the minds of the traders; it
+was with the approval of all present that I helped to draw up a
+petition to the United States, praying for a law against the liquor
+trade in the Gilberts; and it was at this request that I added,
+under my own name, a brief testimony of what had passed;--useless
+pains; since the whole reposes, probably unread and possibly
+unopened, in a pigeon-hole at Washington.
+
+Sunday, July 28.--This day we had the afterpiece of the debauch.
+The king and queen, in European clothes, and followed by armed
+guards, attended church for the first time, and sat perched aloft
+in a precarious dignity under the barrel-hoops. Before sermon his
+majesty clambered from the dais, stood lopsidedly upon the gravel
+floor, and in a few words abjured drinking. The queen followed
+suit with a yet briefer allocution. All the men in church were
+next addressed in turn; each held up his right hand, and the affair
+was over--throne and church were reconciled.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--THE FIVE DAYS' FESTIVAL
+
+
+
+Thursday, July 25.--The street was this day much enlivened by the
+presence of the men from Little Makin; they average taller than
+Butaritarians, and being on a holiday, went wreathed with yellow
+leaves and gorgeous in vivid colours. They are said to be more
+savage, and to be proud of the distinction. Indeed, it seemed to
+us they swaggered in the town, like plaided Highlanders upon the
+streets of Inverness, conscious of barbaric virtues.
+
+In the afternoon the summer parlour was observed to be packed with
+people; others standing outside and stooping to peer under the
+eaves, like children at home about a circus. It was the Makin
+company, rehearsing for the day of competition. Karaiti sat in the
+front row close to the singers, where we were summoned (I suppose
+in honour of Queen Victoria) to join him. A strong breathless heat
+reigned under the iron roof, and the air was heavy with the scent
+of wreaths. The singers, with fine mats about their loins, cocoa-
+nut feathers set in rings upon their fingers, and their heads
+crowned with yellow leaves, sat on the floor by companies. A
+varying number of soloists stood up for different songs; and these
+bore the chief part in the music. But the full force of the
+companies, even when not singing, contributed continuously to the
+effect, and marked the ictus of the measure, mimicking, grimacing,
+casting up their heads and eyes, fluttering the feathers on their
+fingers, clapping hands, or beating (loud as a kettledrum) on the
+left breast; the time was exquisite, the music barbarous, but full
+of conscious art. I noted some devices constantly employed. A
+sudden change would be introduced (I think of key) with no break of
+the measure, but emphasised by a sudden dramatic heightening of the
+voice and a swinging, general gesticulation. The voices of the
+soloists would begin far apart in a rude discord, and gradually
+draw together to a unison; which, when, they had reached, they were
+joined and drowned by the full chorus. The ordinary, hurried,
+barking unmelodious movement of the voices would at times be broken
+and glorified by a psalm-like strain of melody, often well
+constructed, or seeming so by contrast. There was much variety of
+measure, and towards the end of each piece, when the fun became
+fast and furious, a recourse to this figure -
+
+[Musical notation which cannot be produced. It means two/four time
+with quaver, quaver, crotchet repeated for three bars.]
+
+It is difficult to conceive what fire and devilry they get into
+these hammering finales; all go together, voices, hands, eyes,
+leaves, and fluttering finger-rings; the chorus swings to the eye,
+the song throbs on the ear; the faces are convulsed with enthusiasm
+and effort.
+
+Presently the troop stood up in a body, the drums forming a half-
+circle for the soloists, who were sometimes five or even more in
+number. The songs that followed were highly dramatic; though I had
+none to give me any explanation, I would at times make out some
+shadowy but decisive outline of a plot; and I was continually
+reminded of certain quarrelsome concerted scenes in grand operas at
+home; just so the single voices issue from and fall again into the
+general volume; just so do the performers separate and crowd
+together, brandish the raised hand, and roll the eye to heaven--or
+the gallery. Already this is beyond the Thespian model; the art of
+this people is already past the embryo: song, dance, drums,
+quartette and solo--it is the drama full developed although still
+in miniature. Of all so-called dancing in the South Seas, that
+which I saw in Butaritari stands easily the first. The hula, as it
+may be viewed by the speedy globe-trotter in Honolulu, is surely
+the most dull of man's inventions, and the spectator yawns under
+its length as at a college lecture or a parliamentary debate. But
+the Gilbert Island dance leads on the mind; it thrills, rouses,
+subjugates; it has the essence of all art, an unexplored imminent
+significance. Where so many are engaged, and where all must make
+(at a given moment) the same swift, elaborate, and often arbitrary
+movement, the toil of rehearsal is of course extreme. But they
+begin as children. A child and a man may often be seen together in
+a maniap': the man sings and gesticulates, the child stands before
+him with streaming tears and tremulously copies him in act and
+sound; it is the Gilbert Island artist learning (as all artists
+must) his art in sorrow.
+
+I may seem to praise too much; here is a passage from my wife's
+diary, which proves that I was not alone in being moved, and
+completes the picture:- 'The conductor gave the cue, and all the
+dancers, waving their arms, swaying their bodies, and clapping
+their breasts in perfect time, opened with an introductory. The
+performers remained seated, except two, and once three, and twice a
+single soloist. These stood in the group, making a slight movement
+with the feet and rhythmical quiver of the body as they sang.
+There was a pause after the introductory, and then the real
+business of the opera--for it was no less--began; an opera where
+every singer was an accomplished actor. The leading man, in an
+impassioned ecstasy which possessed him from head to foot, seemed
+transfigured; once it was as though a strong wind had swept over
+the stage--their arms, their feathered fingers thrilling with an
+emotion that shook my nerves as well: heads and bodies followed
+like a field of grain before a gust. My blood came hot and cold,
+tears pricked my eyes, my head whirled, I felt an almost
+irresistible impulse to join the dancers. One drama, I think, I
+very nearly understood. A fierce and savage old man took the solo
+part. He sang of the birth of a prince, and how he was tenderly
+rocked in his mother's arms; of his boyhood, when he excelled his
+fellows in swimming, climbing, and all athletic sports; of his
+youth, when he went out to sea with his boat and fished; of his
+manhood, when he married a wife who cradled a son of his own in her
+arms. Then came the alarm of war, and a great battle, of which for
+a time the issue was doubtful; but the hero conquered, as he always
+does, and with a tremendous burst of the victors the piece closed.
+There were also comic pieces, which caused great amusement. During
+one, an old man behind me clutched me by the arm, shook his finger
+in my face with a roguish smile, and said something with a chuckle,
+which I took to be the equivalent of "O, you women, you women; it
+is true of you all!" I fear it was not complimentary. At no time
+was there the least sign of the ugly indecency of the eastern
+islands. All was poetry pure and simple. The music itself was as
+complex as our own, though constructed on an entirely different
+basis; once or twice I was startled by a bit of something very like
+the best English sacred music, but it was only for an instant. At
+last there was a longer pause, and this time the dancers were all
+on their feet. As the drama went on, the interest grew. The
+performers appealed to each other, to the audience, to the heaven
+above; they took counsel with each other, the conspirators drew
+together in a knot; it was just an opera, the drums coming in at
+proper intervals, the tenor, baritone, and bass all where they
+should be--except that the voices were all of the same calibre. A
+woman once sang from the back row with a very fine contralto voice
+spoilt by being made artificially nasal; I notice all the women
+affect that unpleasantness. At one time a boy of angelic beauty
+was the soloist; and at another, a child of six or eight, doubtless
+an infant phenomenon being trained, was placed in the centre. The
+little fellow was desperately frightened and embarrassed at first,
+but towards the close warmed up to his work and showed much
+dramatic talent. The changing expressions on the faces of the
+dancers were so speaking, that it seemed a great stupidity not to
+understand them.'
+
+Our neighbour at this performance, Karaiti, somewhat favours his
+Butaritarian majesty in shape and feature, being, like him, portly,
+bearded, and Oriental. In character he seems the reverse: alert,
+smiling, jovial, jocular, industrious. At home in his own island,
+he labours himself like a slave, and makes his people labour like a
+slave-driver. He takes an interest in ideas. George the trader
+told him about flying-machines. 'Is that true, George?' he asked.
+'It is in the papers,' replied George. 'Well,' said Karaiti, 'if
+that man can do it with machinery, I can do it without'; and he
+designed and made a pair of wings, strapped them on his shoulders,
+went to the end of a pier, launched himself into space, and fell
+bulkily into the sea. His wives fished him out, for his wings
+hindered him in swimming. 'George,' said he, pausing as he went up
+to change, 'George, you lie.' He had eight wives, for his small
+realm still follows ancient customs; but he showed embarrassment
+when this was mentioned to my wife. 'Tell her I have only brought
+one here,' he said anxiously. Altogether the Black Douglas pleased
+us much; and as we heard fresh details of the king's uneasiness,
+and saw for ourselves that all the weapons in the summer parlour
+had been hid, we watched with the more admiration the cause of all
+this anxiety rolling on his big legs, with his big smiling face,
+apparently unarmed, and certainly unattended, through the hostile
+town. The Red Douglas, pot-bellied Kuma, having perhaps heard word
+of the debauch, remained upon his fief; his vassals thus came
+uncommanded to the feast, and swelled the following of Karaiti.
+
+Friday, July 26.--At night in the dark, the singers of Makin
+paraded in the road before our house and sang the song of the
+princess. 'This is the day; she was born to-day; Nei Kamaunave was
+born to-day--a beautiful princess, Queen of Butaritari.' So I was
+told it went in endless iteration. The song was of course out of
+season, and the performance only a rehearsal. But it was a
+serenade besides; a delicate attention to ourselves from our new
+friend, Karaiti.
+
+Saturday, July 27.--We had announced a performance of the magic
+lantern to-night in church; and this brought the king to visit us.
+In honour of the Black Douglas (I suppose) his usual two guardsmen
+were now increased to four; and the squad made an outlandish figure
+as they straggled after him, in straw hats, kilts and jackets.
+Three carried their arms reversed, the butts over their shoulders,
+the muzzles menacing the king's plump back; the fourth had passed
+his weapon behind his neck, and held it there with arms extended
+like a backboard. The visit was extraordinarily long. The king,
+no longer galvanised with gin, said and did nothing. He sat
+collapsed in a chair and let a cigar go out. It was hot, it was
+sleepy, it was cruel dull; there was no resource but to spy in the
+countenance of Tebureimoa for some remaining trait of Mr. Corpse
+the butcher. His hawk nose, crudely depressed and flattened at the
+point, did truly seem to us to smell of midnight murder. When he
+took his leave, Maka bade me observe him going down the stair (or
+rather ladder) from the verandah. 'Old man,' said Maka. 'Yes,'
+said I, 'and yet I suppose not old man.' 'Young man,' returned
+Maka, 'perhaps fo'ty.' And I have heard since he is most likely
+younger.
+
+While the magic lantern was showing, I skulked without in the dark.
+The voice of Maka, excitedly explaining the Scripture slides,
+seemed to fill not the church only, but the neighbourhood. All
+else was silent. Presently a distant sound of singing arose and
+approached; and a procession drew near along the road, the hot
+clean smell of the men and women striking in my face delightfully.
+At the corner, arrested by the voice of Maka and the lightening and
+darkening of the church, they paused. They had no mind to go
+nearer, that was plain. They were Makin people, I believe,
+probably staunch heathens, contemners of the missionary and his
+works. Of a sudden, however, a man broke from their company, took
+to his heels, and fled into the church; next moment three had
+followed him; the next it was a covey of near upon a score, all
+pelting for their lives. So the little band of the heathen paused
+irresolute at the corner, and melted before the attractions of a
+magic lantern, like a glacier in spring. The more staunch vainly
+taunted the deserters; three fled in a guilty silence, but still
+fled; and when at length the leader found the wit or the authority
+to get his troop in motion and revive the singing, it was with much
+diminished forces that they passed musically on up the dark road.
+
+Meanwhile inside the luminous pictures brightened and faded. I
+stood for some while unobserved in the rear of the spectators, when
+I could hear just in front of me a pair of lovers following the
+show with interest, the male playing the part of interpreter and
+(like Adam) mingling caresses with his lecture. The wild animals,
+a tiger in particular, and that old school-treat favourite, the
+sleeper and the mouse, were hailed with joy; but the chief marvel
+and delight was in the gospel series. Maka, in the opinion of his
+aggrieved wife, did not properly rise to the occasion. 'What is
+the matter with the man? Why can't he talk?' she cried. The
+matter with the man, I think, was the greatness of the opportunity;
+he reeled under his good fortune; and whether he did ill or well,
+the exposure of these pious 'phantoms' did as a matter of fact
+silence in all that part of the island the voice of the scoffer.
+'Why then,' the word went round, 'why then, the Bible is true!'
+And on our return afterwards we were told the impression was yet
+lively, and those who had seen might be heard telling those who had
+not, 'O yes, it is all true; these things all happened, we have
+seen the pictures.' The argument is not so childish as it seems;
+for I doubt if these islanders are acquainted with any other mode
+of representation but photography; so that the picture of an event
+(on the old melodrama principle that 'the camera cannot lie,
+Joseph,') would appear strong proof of its occurrence. The fact
+amused us the more because our slides were some of them ludicrously
+silly, and one (Christ before Pilate) was received with shouts of
+merriment, in which even Maka was constrained to join.
+
+Sunday, July 28.--Karaiti came to ask for a repetition of the
+'phantoms'--this was the accepted word--and, having received a
+promise, turned and left my humble roof without the shadow of a
+salutation. I felt it impolite to have the least appearance of
+pocketing a slight; the times had been too difficult, and were
+still too doubtful; and Queen Victoria's son was bound to maintain
+the honour of his house. Karaiti was accordingly summoned that
+evening to the Ricks, where Mrs. Rick fell foul of him in words,
+and Queen Victoria's son assailed him with indignant looks. I was
+the ass with the lion's skin; I could not roar in the language of
+the Gilbert Islands; but I could stare. Karaiti declared he had
+meant no offence; apologised in a sound, hearty, gentlemanly
+manner; and became at once at his ease. He had in a dagger to
+examine, and announced he would come to price it on the morrow, to-
+day being Sunday; this nicety in a heathen with eight wives
+surprised me. The dagger was 'good for killing fish,' he said
+roguishly; and was supposed to have his eye upon fish upon two
+legs. It is at least odd that in Eastern Polynesia fish was the
+accepted euphemism for the human sacrifice. Asked as to the
+population of his island, Karaiti called out to his vassals who sat
+waiting him outside the door, and they put it at four hundred and
+fifty; but (added Karaiti jovially) there will soon be plenty more,
+for all the women are in the family way. Long before we separated
+I had quite forgotten his offence. He, however, still bore it in
+mind; and with a very courteous inspiration returned early on the
+next day, paid us a long visit, and punctiliously said farewell
+when he departed.
+
+Monday, July 29.--The great day came round at last. In the first
+hours the night was startled by the sound of clapping hands and the
+chant of Nei Kamaunava; its melancholy, slow, and somewhat menacing
+measures broken at intervals by a formidable shout. The little
+morsel of humanity thus celebrated in the dark hours was observed
+at midday playing on the green entirely naked, and equally
+unobserved and unconcerned.
+
+The summer parlour on its artificial islet, relieved against the
+shimmering lagoon, and shimmering itself with sun and tinned iron,
+was all day crowded about by eager men and women. Within, it was
+boxed full of islanders, of any age and size, and in every degree
+of nudity and finery. So close we squatted, that at one time I had
+a mighty handsome woman on my knees, two little naked urchins
+having their feet against my back. There might be a dame in full
+attire of holoku and hat and flowers; and her next neighbour might
+the next moment strip some little rag of a shift from her fat
+shoulders and come out a monument of flesh, painted rather than
+covered by the hairbreadth ridi. Little ladies who thought
+themselves too great to appear undraped upon so high a festival
+were seen to pause outside in the bright sunshine, their miniature
+ridis in their hand; a moment more and they were full-dressed and
+entered the concert-room.
+
+At either end stood up to sing, or sat down to rest, the alternate
+companies of singers; Kuma and Little Makin on the north,
+Butaritari and its conjunct hamlets on the south; both groups
+conspicuous in barbaric bravery. In the midst, between these rival
+camps of troubadours, a bench was placed; and here the king and
+queen throned it, some two or three feet above the crowded audience
+on the floor--Tebureimoa as usual in his striped pyjamas with a
+satchel strapped across one shoulder, doubtless (in the island
+fashion) to contain his pistols; the queen in a purple holoku, her
+abundant hair let down, a fan in her hand. The bench was turned
+facing to the strangers, a piece of well-considered civility; and
+when it was the turn of Butaritari to sing, the pair must twist
+round on the bench, lean their elbows on the rail, and turn to us
+the spectacle of their broad backs. The royal couple occasionally
+solaced themselves with a clay pipe; and the pomp of state was
+further heightened by the rifles of a picket of the guard.
+
+With this kingly countenance, and ourselves squatted on the ground,
+we heard several songs from one side or the other. Then royalty
+and its guards withdrew, and Queen Victoria's son and daughter-in-
+law were summoned by acclamation to the vacant throne. Our pride
+was perhaps a little modified when we were joined on our high
+places by a certain thriftless loafer of a white; and yet I was
+glad too, for the man had a smattering of native, and could give me
+some idea of the subject of the songs. One was patriotic, and
+dared Tembinok' of Apemama, the terror of the group, to an
+invasion. One mixed the planting of taro and the harvest-home.
+Some were historical, and commemorated kings and the illustrious
+chances of their time, such as a bout of drinking or a war. One,
+at least, was a drama of domestic interest, excellently played by
+the troop from Makin. It told the story of a man who has lost his
+wife, at first bewails her loss, then seeks another: the earlier
+strains (or acts) are played exclusively by men; but towards the
+end a woman appears, who has just lost her husband; and I suppose
+the pair console each other, for the finale seemed of happy omen.
+Of some of the songs my informant told me briefly they were 'like
+about the weemen'; this I could have guessed myself. Each side (I
+should have said) was strengthened by one or two women. They were
+all soloists, did not very often join in the performance, but stood
+disengaged at the back part of the stage, and looked (in ridi,
+necklace, and dressed hair) for all the world like European ballet-
+dancers. When the song was anyway broad these ladies came
+particularly to the front; and it was singular to see that, after
+each entry, the premiere danseuse pretended to be overcome by
+shame, as though led on beyond what she had meant, and her male
+assistants made a feint of driving her away like one who had
+disgraced herself. Similar affectations accompany certain truly
+obscene dances of Samoa, where they are very well in place. Here
+it was different. The words, perhaps, in this free-spoken world,
+were gross enough to make a carter blush; and the most suggestive
+feature was this feint of shame. For such parts the women showed
+some disposition; they were pert, they were neat, they were
+acrobatic, they were at times really amusing, and some of them were
+pretty. But this is not the artist's field; there is the whole
+width of heaven between such capering and ogling, and the strange
+rhythmic gestures, and strange, rapturous, frenzied faces with
+which the best of the male dancers held us spellbound through a
+Gilbert Island ballet.
+
+Almost from the first it was apparent that the people of the city
+were defeated. I might have thought them even good, only I had the
+other troop before my eyes to correct my standard, and remind me
+continually of 'the little more, and how much it is.' Perceiving
+themselves worsted, the choir of Butaritari grew confused,
+blundered, and broke down; amid this hubbub of unfamiliar intervals
+I should not myself have recognised the slip, but the audience were
+quick to catch it, and to jeer. To crown all, the Makin company
+began a dance of truly superlative merit. I know not what it was
+about, I was too much absorbed to ask. In one act a part of the
+chorus, squealing in some strange falsetto, produced very much the
+effect of our orchestra; in another, the dancers, leaping like
+jumping-jacks, with arms extended, passed through and through each
+other's ranks with extraordinary speed, neatness, and humour. A
+more laughable effect I never saw; in any European theatre it would
+have brought the house down, and the island audience roared with
+laughter and applause. This filled up the measure for the rival
+company, and they forgot themselves and decency. After each act or
+figure of the ballet, the performers pause a moment standing, and
+the next is introduced by the clapping of hands in triplets. Not
+until the end of the whole ballet do they sit down, which is the
+signal for the rivals to stand up. But now all rules were to be
+broken. During the interval following on this great applause, the
+company of Butaritari leaped suddenly to their feet and most
+unhandsomely began a performance of their own. It was strange to
+see the men of Makin staring; I have seen a tenor in Europe stare
+with the same blank dignity into a hissing theatre; but presently,
+to my surprise, they sobered down, gave up the unsung remainder of
+their ballet, resumed their seats, and suffered their ungallant
+adversaries to go on and finish. Nothing would suffice. Again, at
+the first interval, Butaritari unhandsomely cut in; Makin,
+irritated in turn, followed the example; and the two companies of
+dancers remained permanently standing, continuously clapping hands,
+and regularly cutting across each other at each pause. I expected
+blows to begin with any moment; and our position in the midst was
+highly unstrategical. But the Makin people had a better thought;
+and upon a fresh interruption turned and trooped out of the house.
+We followed them, first because these were the artists, second
+because they were guests and had been scurvily ill-used. A large
+population of our neighbours did the same, so that the causeway was
+filled from end to end by the procession of deserters; and the
+Butaritari choir was left to sing for its own pleasure in an empty
+house, having gained the point and lost the audience. It was
+surely fortunate that there was no one drunk; but, drunk or sober,
+where else would a scene so irritating have concluded without
+blows?
+
+The last stage and glory of this auspicious day was of our own
+providing--the second and positively the last appearance of the
+phantoms. All round the church, groups sat outside, in the night,
+where they could see nothing; perhaps ashamed to enter, certainly
+finding some shadowy pleasure in the mere proximity. Within, about
+one-half of the great shed was densely packed with people. In the
+midst, on the royal dais, the lantern luminously smoked; chance
+rays of light struck out the earnest countenance of our Chinaman
+grinding the hand-organ; a fainter glimmer showed off the rafters
+and their shadows in the hollow of the roof; the pictures shone and
+vanished on the screen; and as each appeared, there would run a
+hush, a whisper, a strong shuddering rustle, and a chorus of small
+cries among the crowd. There sat by me the mate of a wrecked
+schooner. 'They would think this a strange sight in Europe or the
+States,' said he, 'going on in a building like this, all tied with
+bits of string.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII--HUSBAND AND WIFE
+
+
+
+The trader accustomed to the manners of Eastern Polynesia has a
+lesson to learn among the Gilberts. The ridi is but a spare
+attire; as late as thirty years back the women went naked until
+marriage; within ten years the custom lingered; and these facts,
+above all when heard in description, conveyed a very false idea of
+the manners of the group. A very intelligent missionary described
+it (in its former state) as a 'Paradise of naked women' for the
+resident whites. It was at least a platonic Paradise, where
+Lothario ventured at his peril. Since 1860, fourteen whites have
+perished on a single island, all for the same cause, all found
+where they had no business, and speared by some indignant father of
+a family; the figure was given me by one of their contemporaries
+who had been more prudent and survived. The strange persistence of
+these fourteen martyrs might seem to point to monomania or a series
+of romantic passions; gin is the more likely key. The poor
+buzzards sat alone in their houses by an open case; they drank;
+their brain was fired; they stumbled towards the nearest houses on
+chance; and the dart went through their liver. In place of a
+Paradise the trader found an archipelago of fierce husbands and of
+virtuous women. 'Of course if you wish to make love to them, it's
+the same as anywhere else,' observed a trader innocently; but he
+and his companions rarely so choose.
+
+The trader must be credited with a virtue: he often makes a kind
+and loyal husband. Some of the worst beachcombers in the Pacific,
+some of the last of the old school, have fallen in my path, and
+some of them were admirable to their native wives, and one made a
+despairing widower. The position of a trader's wife in the
+Gilberts is, besides, unusually enviable. She shares the
+immunities of her husband. Curfew in Butaritari sounds for her in
+vain. Long after the bell is rung and the great island ladies are
+confined for the night to their own roof, this chartered libertine
+may scamper and giggle through the deserted streets or go down to
+bathe in the dark. The resources of the store are at her hand; she
+goes arrayed like a queen, and feasts delicately everyday upon
+tinned meats. And she who was perhaps of no regard or station
+among natives sits with captains, and is entertained on board of
+schooners. Five of these privileged dames were some time our
+neighbours. Four were handsome skittish lasses, gamesome like
+children, and like children liable to fits of pouting. They wore
+dresses by day, but there was a tendency after dark to strip these
+lendings and to career and squall about the compound in the
+aboriginal ridi. Games of cards were continually played, with
+shells for counters; their course was much marred by cheating; and
+the end of a round (above all if a man was of the party) resolved
+itself into a scrimmage for the counters. The fifth was a matron.
+It was a picture to see her sail to church on a Sunday, a parasol
+in hand, a nursemaid following, and the baby buried in a trade hat
+and armed with a patent feeding-bottle. The service was enlivened
+by her continual supervision and correction of the maid. It was
+impossible not to fancy the baby was a doll, and the church some
+European playroom. All these women were legitimately married. It
+is true that the certificate of one, when she proudly showed it,
+proved to run thus, that she was 'married for one night,' and her
+gracious partner was at liberty to 'send her to hell' the next
+morning; but she was none the wiser or the worse for the dastardly
+trick. Another, I heard, was married on a work of mine in a
+pirated edition; it answered the purpose as well as a Hall Bible.
+Notwithstanding all these allurements of social distinction, rare
+food and raiment, a comparative vacation from toil, and legitimate
+marriage contracted on a pirated edition, the trader must sometimes
+seek long before he can be mated. While I was in the group one had
+been eight months on the quest, and he was still a bachelor.
+
+Within strictly native society the old laws and practices were
+harsh, but not without a certain stamp of high-mindedness.
+Stealthy adultery was punished with death; open elopement was
+properly considered virtue in comparison, and compounded for a fine
+in land. The male adulterer alone seems to have been punished. It
+is correct manners for a jealous man to hang himself; a jealous
+woman has a different remedy--she bites her rival. Ten or twenty
+years ago it was a capital offence to raise a woman's ridi; to this
+day it is still punished with a heavy fine; and the garment itself
+is still symbolically sacred. Suppose a piece of land to be
+disputed in Butaritari, the claimant who shall first hang a ridi on
+the tapu-post has gained his cause, since no one can remove or
+touch it but himself.
+
+The ridi was the badge not of the woman but the wife, the mark not
+of her sex but of her station. It was the collar on the slave's
+neck, the brand on merchandise. The adulterous woman seems to have
+been spared; were the husband offended, it would be a poor
+consolation to send his draught cattle to the shambles. Karaiti,
+to this day, calls his eight wives 'his horses,' some trader having
+explained to him the employment of these animals on farms; and
+Nanteitei hired out his wives to do mason-work. Husbands, at least
+when of high rank, had the power of life and death; even whites
+seem to have possessed it; and their wives, when they had
+transgressed beyond forgiveness, made haste to pronounce the
+formula of deprecation--I KANA KIM. This form of words had so much
+virtue that a condemned criminal repeating it on a particular day
+to the king who had condemned him, must be instantly released. It
+is an offer of abasement, and, strangely enough, the reverse--the
+imitation--is a common vulgar insult in Great Britain to this day.
+I give a scene between a trader and his Gilbert Island wife, as it
+was told me by the husband, now one of the oldest residents, but
+then a freshman in the group.
+
+'Go and light a fire,' said the trader, 'and when I have brought
+this oil I will cook some fish.' The woman grunted at him, island
+fashion. 'I am not a pig that you should grunt at me,' said he.
+
+'I know you are not a pig,' said the woman, 'neither am I your
+slave.'
+
+'To be sure you are not my slave, and if you do not care to stop
+with me, you had better go home to your people,' said he. 'But in
+the mean time go and light the fire; and when I have brought this
+oil I will cook some fish.'
+
+She went as if to obey; and presently when the trader looked she
+had built a fire so big that the cook-house was catching in flames.
+
+'I Kana Kim!' she cried, as she saw him coming; but he recked not,
+and hit her with a cooking-pot. The leg pierced her skull, blood
+spouted, it was thought she was a dead woman, and the natives
+surrounded the house in a menacing expectation. Another white was
+present, a man of older experience. 'You will have us both killed
+if you go on like this,' he cried. 'She had said I Kana Kim!' If
+she had not said I Kana Kim he might have struck her with a
+caldron. It was not the blow that made the crime, but the
+disregard of an accepted formula.
+
+Polygamy, the particular sacredness of wives, their semi-servile
+state, their seclusion in kings' harems, even their privilege of
+biting, all would seem to indicate a Mohammedan society and the
+opinion of the soullessness of woman. And not so in the least. It
+is a mere appearance. After you have studied these extremes in one
+house, you may go to the next and find all reversed, the woman the
+mistress, the man only the first of her thralls. The authority is
+not with the husband as such, nor the wife as such. It resides in
+the chief or the chief-woman; in him or her who has inherited the
+lands of the clan, and stands to the clansman in the place of
+parent, exacting their service, answerable for their fines. There
+is but the one source of power and the one ground of dignity--rank.
+The king married a chief-woman; she became his menial, and must
+work with her hands on Messrs. Wightman's pier. The king divorced
+her; she regained at once her former state and power. She married
+the Hawaiian sailor, and behold the man is her flunkey and can be
+shown the door at pleasure. Nay, and such low-born lords are even
+corrected physically, and, like grown but dutiful children, must
+endure the discipline.
+
+We were intimate in one such household, that of Nei Takauti and Nan
+Tok'; I put the lady first of necessity. During one week of fool's
+paradise, Mrs. Stevenson had gone alone to the sea-side of the
+island after shells. I am very sure the proceeding was unsafe; and
+she soon perceived a man and woman watching her. Do what she
+would, her guardians held her steadily in view; and when the
+afternoon began to fall, and they thought she had stayed long
+enough, took her in charge, and by signs and broken English ordered
+her home. On the way the lady drew from her earring-hole a clay
+pipe, the husband lighted it, and it was handed to my unfortunate
+wife, who knew not how to refuse the incommodious favour; and when
+they were all come to our house, the pair sat down beside her on
+the floor, and improved the occasion with prayer. From that day
+they were our family friends; bringing thrice a day the beautiful
+island garlands of white flowers, visiting us any evening, and
+frequently carrying us down to their own maniap' in return, the
+woman leading Mrs. Stevenson by the hand like one child with
+another.
+
+Nan Tok', the husband, was young, extremely handsome, of the most
+approved good humour, and suffering in his precarious station from
+suppressed high spirits. Nei Takauti, the wife, was getting old;
+her grown son by a former marriage had just hanged himself before
+his mother's eyes in despair at a well-merited rebuke. Perhaps she
+had never been beautiful, but her face was full of character, her
+eye of sombre fire. She was a high chief-woman, but by a strange
+exception for a person of her rank, was small, spare, and sinewy,
+with lean small hands and corded neck. Her full dress of an
+evening was invariably a white chemise--and for adornment, green
+leaves (or sometimes white blossoms) stuck in her hair and thrust
+through her huge earring-holes. The husband on the contrary
+changed to view like a kaleidoscope. Whatever pretty thing my wife
+might have given to Nei Takauti--a string of beads, a ribbon, a
+piece of bright fabric--appeared the next evening on the person of
+Nan Tok'. It was plain he was a clothes-horse; that he wore
+livery; that, in a word, he was his wife's wife. They reversed the
+parts indeed, down to the least particular; it was the husband who
+showed himself the ministering angel in the hour of pain, while the
+wife displayed the apathy and heartlessness of the proverbial man.
+
+When Nei Takauti had a headache Nan Tok' was full of attention and
+concern. When the husband had a cold and a racking toothache the
+wife heeded not, except to jeer. It is always the woman's part to
+fill and light the pipe; Nei Takauti handed hers in silence to the
+wedded page; but she carried it herself, as though the page were
+not entirely trusted. Thus she kept the money, but it was he who
+ran the errands, anxiously sedulous. A cloud on her face dimmed
+instantly his beaming looks; on an early visit to their maniap' my
+wife saw he had cause to be wary. Nan Tok' had a friend with him,
+a giddy young thing, of his own age and sex; and they had worked
+themselves into that stage of jocularity when consequences are too
+often disregarded. Nei Takauti mentioned her own name. Instantly
+Nan Tok' held up two fingers, his friend did likewise, both in an
+ecstasy of slyness. It was plain the lady had two names; and from
+the nature of their merriment, and the wrath that gathered on her
+brow, there must be something ticklish in the second. The husband
+pronounced it; a well-directed cocoa-nut from the hand of his wife
+caught him on the side of the head, and the voices and the mirth of
+these indiscreet young gentlemen ceased for the day.
+
+The people of Eastern Polynesia are never at a loss; their
+etiquette is absolute and plenary; in every circumstance it tells
+them what to do and how to do it. The Gilbertines are seemingly
+more free, and pay for their freedom (like ourselves) in frequent
+perplexity. This was often the case with the topsy-turvy couple.
+We had once supplied them during a visit with a pipe and tobacco;
+and when they had smoked and were about to leave, they found
+themselves confronted with a problem: should they take or leave
+what remained of the tobacco? The piece of plug was taken up, it
+was laid down again, it was handed back and forth, and argued over,
+till the wife began to look haggard and the husband elderly. They
+ended by taking it, and I wager were not yet clear of the compound
+before they were sure they had decided wrong. Another time they
+had been given each a liberal cup of coffee, and Nan Tok' with
+difficulty and disaffection made an end of his. Nei Takauti had
+taken some, she had no mind for more, plainly conceived it would be
+a breach of manners to set down the cup unfinished, and ordered her
+wedded retainer to dispose of what was left. 'I have swallowed all
+I can, I cannot swallow more, it is a physical impossibility,' he
+seemed to say; and his stern officer reiterated her commands with
+secret imperative signals. Luckless dog! but in mere humanity we
+came to the rescue and removed the cup.
+
+I cannot but smile over this funny household; yet I remember the
+good souls with affection and respect. Their attention to
+ourselves was surprising. The garlands are much esteemed, the
+blossoms must be sought far and wide; and though they had many
+retainers to call to their aid, we often saw themselves passing
+afield after the blossoms, and the wife engaged with her own in
+putting them together. It was no want of only that disregard so
+incident to husbands, that made Nei Takauti despise the sufferings
+of Nan Tok'. When my wife was unwell she proved a diligent and
+kindly nurse; and the pair, to the extreme embarrassment of the
+sufferer, became fixtures in the sick-room. This rugged, capable,
+imperious old dame, with the wild eyes, had deep and tender
+qualities: her pride in her young husband it seemed that she
+dissembled, fearing possibly to spoil him; and when she spoke of
+her dead son there came something tragic in her face. But I seemed
+to trace in the Gilbertines a virility of sense and sentiment which
+distinguishes them (like their harsh and uncouth language) from
+their brother islanders in the east.
+
+
+
+
+PART IV: THE GILBERTS--APEMAMA
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE ROYAL TRADER
+
+
+
+There is one great personage in the Gilberts: Tembinok' of
+Apemama: solely conspicuous, the hero of song, the butt of gossip.
+Through the rest of the group the kings are slain or fallen in
+tutelage: Tembinok' alone remains, the last tyrant, the last erect
+vestige of a dead society. The white man is everywhere else,
+building his houses, drinking his gin, getting in and out of
+trouble with the weak native governments. There is only one white
+on Apemama, and he on sufferance, living far from court, and
+hearkening and watching his conduct like a mouse in a cat's ear.
+Through all the other islands a stream of native visitors comes and
+goes, travelling by families, spending years on the grand tour.
+Apemama alone is left upon one side, the tourist dreading to risk
+himself within the clutch of Tembinok'. And fear of the same
+Gorgon follows and troubles them at home. Maiana once paid him
+tribute; he once fell upon and seized Nonuti: first steps to the
+empire of the archipelago. A British warship coming on the scene,
+the conqueror was driven to disgorge, his career checked in the
+outset, his dear-bought armoury sunk in his own lagoon. But the
+impression had been made; periodical fear of him still shakes the
+islands; rumour depicts him mustering his canoes for a fresh
+onfall; rumour can name his destination; and Tembinok' figures in
+the patriotic war-songs of the Gilberts like Napoleon in those of
+our grandfathers.
+
+We were at sea, bound from Mariki to Nonuti and Tapituea, when the
+wind came suddenly fair for Apemama. The course was at once
+changed; all hands were turned-to to clean ship, the decks holy-
+stoned, all the cabin washed, the trade-room overhauled. In all
+our cruising we never saw the Equator so smart as she was made for
+Tembinok'. Nor was Captain Reid alone in these coquetries; for,
+another schooner chancing to arrive during my stay in Apemama, I
+found that she also was dandified for the occasion. And the two
+cases stand alone in my experience of South Sea traders.
+
+We had on board a family of native tourists, from the grandsire to
+the babe in arms, trying (against an extraordinary series of ill-
+luck) to regain their native island of Peru. Five times already
+they had paid their fare and taken ship; five times they had been
+disappointed, dropped penniless upon strange islands, or carried
+back to Butaritari, whence they sailed. This last attempt had been
+no better-starred; their provisions were exhausted. Peru was
+beyond hope, and they had cheerfully made up their minds to a fresh
+stage of exile in Tapituea or Nonuti. With this slant of wind
+their random destination became once more changed; and like the
+Calendar's pilot, when the 'black mountains' hove in view, they
+changed colour and beat upon their breasts. Their camp, which was
+on deck in the ship's waist, resounded with complaint. They would
+be set to work, they must become slaves, escape was hopeless, they
+must live and toil and die in Apemama, in the tyrant's den. With
+this sort of talk they so greatly terrified their children, that
+one (a big hulking boy) must at last be torn screaming from the
+schooner's side. And their fears were wholly groundless. I have
+little doubt they were not suffered to be idle; but I can vouch for
+it that they were kindly and generously used. For, the matter of a
+year later, I was once more shipmate with these inconsistent
+wanderers on board the Janet Nicoll. Their fare was paid by
+Tembinok'; they who had gone ashore from the Equator destitute,
+reappeared upon the Janet with new clothes, laden with mats and
+presents, and bringing with them a magazine of food, on which they
+lived like fighting-cocks throughout the voyage; I saw them at
+length repatriated, and I must say they showed more concern on
+quitting Apemama than delight at reaching home.
+
+We entered by the north passage (Sunday, September 1st), dodging
+among shoals. It was a day of fierce equatorial sunshine; but the
+breeze was strong and chill; and the mate, who conned the schooner
+from the cross-trees, returned shivering to the deck. The lagoon
+was thick with many-tinted wavelets; a continuous roaring of the
+outer sea overhung the anchorage; and the long, hollow crescent of
+palm ruffled and sparkled in the wind. Opposite our berth the
+beach was seen to be surmounted for some distance by a terrace of
+white coral seven or eight feet high and crowned in turn by the
+scattered and incongruous buildings of the palace. The village
+adjoins on the south, a cluster of high-roofed maniap's. And
+village and palace seemed deserted.
+
+We were scarce yet moored, however, before distant and busy figures
+appeared upon the beach, a boat was launched, and a crew pulled out
+to us bringing the king's ladder. Tembinok' had once an accident;
+has feared ever since to entrust his person to the rotten chandlery
+of South Sea traders; and devised in consequence a frame of wood,
+which is brought on board a ship as soon as she appears, and
+remains lashed to her side until she leave. The boat's crew,
+having applied this engine, returned at once to shore. They might
+not come on board; neither might we land, or not without danger of
+offence; the king giving pratique in person. An interval followed,
+during which dinner was delayed for the great man--the prelude of
+the ladder, giving us some notion of his weighty body and sensible,
+ingenious character, had highly whetted our curiosity; and it was
+with something like excitement that we saw the beach and terrace
+suddenly blacken with attendant vassals, the king and party embark,
+the boat (a man-of-war gig) come flying towards us dead before the
+wind, and the royal coxswain lay us cleverly aboard, mount the
+ladder with a jealous diffidence, and descend heavily on deck.
+
+Not long ago he was overgrown with fat, obscured to view, and a
+burthen to himself. Captains visiting the island advised him to
+walk; and though it broke the habits of a life and the traditions
+of his rank, he practised the remedy with benefit. His corpulence
+is now portable; you would call him lusty rather than fat; but his
+gait is still dull, stumbling, and elephantine. He neither stops
+nor hastens, but goes about his business with an implacable
+deliberation. We could never see him and not be struck with his
+extraordinary natural means for the theatre: a beaked profile like
+Dante's in the mask, a mane of long black hair, the eye brilliant,
+imperious, and inquiring: for certain parts, and to one who could
+have used it, the face was a fortune. His voice matched it well,
+being shrill, powerful, and uncanny, with a note like a sea-bird's.
+Where there are no fashions, none to set them, few to follow them
+if they were set, and none to criticise, he dresses--as Sir Charles
+Grandison lived--'to his own heart.' Now he wears a woman's frock,
+now a naval uniform; now (and more usually) figures in a masquerade
+costume of his own design: trousers and a singular jacket with
+shirt tails, the cut and fit wonderful for island workmanship, the
+material always handsome, sometimes green velvet, sometimes
+cardinal red silk. This masquerade becomes him admirably. In the
+woman's frock he looks ominous and weird beyond belief. I see him
+now come pacing towards me in the cruel sun, solitary, a figure out
+of Hoffmann.
+
+A visit on board ship, such as that at which we now assisted, makes
+a chief part and by far the chief diversion of the life of
+Tembinok'. He is not only the sole ruler, he is the sole merchant
+of his triple kingdom, Apemama, Aranuka, and Kuria, well-planted
+islands. The taro goes to the chiefs, who divide as they please
+among their immediate adherents; but certain fish, turtles--which
+abound in Kuria,--and the whole produce of the coco-palm, belong
+exclusively to Tembinok'. 'A' cobra berong me,' observed his
+majesty with a wave of his hand; and he counts and sells it by the
+houseful. 'You got copra, king?' I have heard a trader ask. 'I
+got two, three outches,' his majesty replied: 'I think three.'
+Hence the commercial importance of Apemama, the trade of three
+islands being centred there in a single hand; hence it is that so
+many whites have tried in vain to gain or to preserve a footing;
+hence ships are adorned, cooks have special orders, and captains
+array themselves in smiles, to greet the king. If he be pleased
+with his welcome and the fare he may pass days on board, and, every
+day, and sometimes every hour, will be of profit to the ship. He
+oscillates between the cabin, where he is entertained with strange
+meats, and the trade-room, where he enjoys the pleasures of
+shopping on a scale to match his person. A few obsequious
+attendants squat by the house door, awaiting his least signal. In
+the boat, which has been suffered to drop astern, one or two of his
+wives lie covered from the sun under mats, tossed by the short sea
+of the lagoon, and enduring agonies of heat and tedium. This
+severity is now and then relaxed and the wives allowed on board.
+Three or four were thus favoured on the day of our arrival:
+substantial ladies airily attired in ridis. Each had a share of
+copra, her peculium, to dispose of for herself. The display in the
+trade-room--hats, ribbbons, dresses, scents, tins of salmon--the
+pride of the eye and the lust of the flesh--tempted them in vain.
+They had but the one idea--tobacco, the island currency, tantamount
+to minted gold; returned to shore with it, burthened but rejoicing;
+and late into the night, on the royal terrace, were to be seen
+counting the sticks by lamplight in the open air.
+
+The king is no such economist. He is greedy of things new and
+foreign. House after house, chest after chest, in the palace
+precinct, is already crammed with clocks, musical boxes, blue
+spectacles, umbrellas, knitted waistcoats, bolts of stuff, tools,
+rifles, fowling-pieces, medicines, European foods, sewing-machines,
+and, what is more extraordinary, stoves: all that ever caught his
+eye, tickled his appetite, pleased him for its use, or puzzled him
+with its apparent inutility. And still his lust is unabated. He
+is possessed by the seven devils of the collector. He hears a
+thing spoken of, and a shadow comes on his face. 'I think I no got
+him,' he will say; and the treasures he has seem worthless in
+comparison. If a ship be bound for Apemama, the merchant racks his
+brain to hit upon some novelty. This he leaves carelessly in the
+main cabin or partly conceals in his own berth, so that the king
+shall spy it for himself. 'How much you want?' inquires Tembinok',
+passing and pointing. 'No, king; that too dear,' returns the
+trader. 'I think I like him,' says the king. This was a bowl of
+gold-fish. On another occasion it was scented soap. 'No, king;
+that cost too much,' said the trader; 'too good for a Kanaka.'
+'How much you got? I take him all,' replied his majesty, and
+became the lord of seventeen boxes at two dollars a cake. Or
+again, the merchant feigns the article is not for sale, is private
+property, an heirloom or a gift; and the trick infallibly succeeds.
+Thwart the king and you hold him. His autocratic nature rears at
+the affront of opposition. He accepts it for a challenge; sets his
+teeth like a hunter going at a fence; and with no mark of emotion,
+scarce even of interest, stolidly piles up the price. Thus, for
+our sins, he took a fancy to my wife's dressing-bag, a thing
+entirely useless to the man, and sadly battered by years of
+service. Early one forenoon he came to our house, sat down, and
+abruptly offered to purchase it. I told him I sold nothing, and
+the bag at any rate was a present from a friend; but he was
+acquainted with these pretexts from of old, and knew what they were
+worth and how to meet them. Adopting what I believe is called 'the
+object method,' he drew out a bag of English gold, sovereigns and
+half-sovereigns, and began to lay them one by one in silence on the
+table; at each fresh piece reading our faces with a look. In vain
+I continued to protest I was no trader; he deigned not to reply.
+There must have been twenty pounds on the table, he was still going
+on, and irritation had begun to mingle with our embarrassment, when
+a happy idea came to our delivery. Since his majesty thought so
+much of the bag, we said, we must beg him to accept it as a
+present. It was the most surprising turn in Tembinok's experience.
+He perceived too late that his persistence was unmannerly; hung his
+head a while in silence; then, lifting up a sheepish countenance,
+'I 'shamed,' said the tyrant. It was the first and the last time
+we heard him own to a flaw in his behaviour. Half an hour after he
+sent us a camphor-wood chest worth only a few dollars--but then
+heaven knows what Tembinok' had paid for it.
+
+Cunning by nature, and versed for forty years in the government of
+men, it must not be supposed that he is cheated blindly, or has
+resigned himself without resistance to be the milch-cow of the
+passing trader. His efforts have been even heroic. Like Nakaeia
+of Makin, he has owned schooners. More fortunate than Nakaeia, he
+has found captains. Ships of his have sailed as far as to the
+colonies. He has trafficked direct, in his own bottoms, with New
+Zealand. And even so, even there, the world-enveloping dishonesty
+of the white man prevented him; his profit melted, his ship
+returned in debt, the money for the insurance was embezzled, and
+when the Coronet came to be lost, he was astonished to find he had
+lost all. At this he dropped his weapons; owned he might as
+hopefully wrestle with the winds of heaven; and like an experienced
+sheep, submitted his fleece thenceforward to the shearers. He is
+the last man in the world to waste anger on the incurable; accepts
+it with cynical composure; asks no more in those he deals with than
+a certain decency of moderation; drives as good a bargain as he
+can; and when he considers he is more than usually swindled, writes
+it in his memory against the merchant's name. He once ran over to
+me a list of captains and supercargoes with whom he had done
+business, classing them under three heads: 'He cheat a litty'--'He
+cheat plenty'--and 'I think he cheat too much.' For the first two
+classes he expressed perfect toleration; sometimes, but not always,
+for the third. I was present when a certain merchant was turned
+about his business, and was the means (having a considerable
+influence ever since the bag) of patching up the dispute. Even on
+the day of our arrival there was like to have been a hitch with
+Captain Reid: the ground of which is perhaps worth recital. Among
+goods exported specially for Tembinok' there is a beverage known
+(and labelled) as Hennessy's brandy. It is neither Hennessy, nor
+even brandy; is about the colour of sherry, but is not sherry;
+tastes of kirsch, and yet neither is it kirsch. The king, at
+least, has grown used to this amazing brand, and rather prides
+himself upon the taste; and any substitution is a double offence,
+being at once to cheat him and to cast a doubt upon his palate. A
+similar weakness is to be observed in all connoisseurs. Now the
+last case sold by the Equator was found to contain a different and
+I would fondly fancy a superior distillation; and the conversation
+opened very black for Captain Reid. But Tembinok' is a moderate
+man. He was reminded and admitted that all men were liable to
+error, even himself; accepted the principle that a fault handsomely
+acknowledged should be condoned; and wound the matter up with this
+proposal: 'Tuppoti I mi'take, you 'peakee me. Tuppoti you
+mi'take, I 'peakee you. Mo' betta.'
+
+After dinner and supper in the cabin, a glass or two of 'Hennetti'-
+-the genuine article this time, with the kirsch bouquet,--and five
+hours' lounging on the trade-room counter, royalty embarked for
+home. Three tacks grounded the boat before the palace; the wives
+were carried ashore on the backs of vassals; Tembinok' stepped on a
+railed platform like a steamer's gangway, and was borne shoulder
+high through the shallows, up the beach, and by an inclined plane,
+paved with pebbles, to the glaring terrace where he dwells.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--THE KING OF APEMAMA: FOUNDATION OF EQUATOR TOWN
+
+
+
+Our first sight of Tembinok' was a matter of concern, almost alarm,
+to my whole party. We had a favour to seek; we must approach in
+the proper courtly attitude of a suitor; and must either please him
+or fail in the main purpose of our voyage. It was our wish to land
+and live in Apemama, and see more near at hand the odd character of
+the man and the odd (or rather ancient) condition of his island.
+In all other isles of the South Seas a white man may land with his
+chest, and set up house for a lifetime, if he choose, and if he
+have the money or the trade; no hindrance is conceivable. But
+Apemama is a close island, lying there in the sea with closed
+doors; the king himself, like a vigilant officer, ready at the
+wicket to scrutinise and reject intrenching visitors. Hence the
+attraction of our enterprise; not merely because it was a little
+difficult, but because this social quarantine, a curiosity in
+itself, has been the preservative of others.
+
+Tembinok', like most tyrants, is a conservative; like many
+conservatives, he eagerly welcomes new ideas, and, except in the
+field of politics, leans to practical reform. When the
+missionaries came, professing a knowledge of the truth, he readily
+received them; attended their worship, acquired the accomplishment
+of public prayer, and made himself a student at their feet. It is
+thus--it is by the cultivation of similar passing chances--that he
+has learned to read, to write, to cipher, and to speak his queer,
+personal English, so different from ordinary 'Beach de Mar,' so
+much more obscure, expressive, and condensed. His education
+attended to, he found time to become critical of the new inmates.
+Like Nakaeia of Makin, he is an admirer of silence in the island;
+broods over it like a great ear; has spies who report daily; and
+had rather his subjects sang than talked. The service, and in
+particular the sermon, were thus sure to become offences: 'Here,
+in my island, _I_ 'peak,' he once observed to me. 'My chieps no
+'peak--do what I talk.' He looked at the missionary, and what did
+he see? 'See Kanaka 'peak in a big outch!' he cried, with a strong
+ring of sarcasm. Yet he endured the subversive spectacle, and
+might even have continued to endure it, had not a fresh point
+arisen. He looked again, to employ his own figure; and the Kanaka
+was no longer speaking, he was doing worse--he was building a
+copra-house. The king was touched in his chief interests; revenue
+and prerogative were threatened. He considered besides (and some
+think with him) that trade is incompatible with the missionary
+claims. 'Tuppoti mitonary think "good man": very good. Tuppoti
+he think "cobra": no good. I send him away ship.' Such was his
+abrupt history of the evangelist in Apemama.
+
+Similar deportations are common: 'I send him away ship' is the
+epitaph of not a few, his majesty paying the exile's fare to the
+next place of call. For instance, being passionately fond of
+European food, he has several times added to his household a white
+cook, and one after another these have been deported. They, on
+their side, swear they were not paid their wages; he, on his, that
+they robbed and swindled him beyond endurance: both perhaps
+justly. A more important case was that of an agent, despatched (as
+I heard the story) by a firm of merchants to worm his way into the
+king's good graces, become, if possible, premier, and handle the
+copra in the interest of his employers. He obtained authority to
+land, practised his fascinations, was patiently listened to by
+Tembinok', supposed himself on the highway to success; and behold!
+when the next ship touched at Apemama, the would-be premier was
+flung into a boat--had on board--his fare paid, and so good-bye.
+But it is needless to multiply examples; the proof of the pudding
+is in the eating. When we came to Apemama, of so many white men
+who have scrambled for a place in that rich market, one remained--a
+silent, sober, solitary, niggardly recluse, of whom the king
+remarks, 'I think he good; he no 'peak.'
+
+I was warned at the outset we might very well fail in our design:
+yet never dreamed of what proved to be the fact, that we should be
+left four-and-twenty hours in suspense and come within an ace of
+ultimate rejection. Captain Reid had primed himself; no sooner was
+the king on board, and the Hennetti question amicably settled, than
+he proceeded to express my request and give an abstract of my
+claims and virtues. The gammon about Queen Victoria's son might do
+for Butaritari; it was out of the question here; and I now figured
+as 'one of the Old Men of England,' a person of deep knowledge,
+come expressly to visit Tembinok's dominion, and eager to report
+upon it to the no less eager Queen Victoria. The king made no
+shadow of an answer, and presently began upon a different subject.
+We might have thought that he had not heard, or not understood;
+only that we found ourselves the subject of a constant study. As
+we sat at meals, he took us in series and fixed upon each, for near
+a minute at a time, the same hard and thoughtful stare. As he thus
+looked he seemed to forget himself, the subject and the company,
+and to become absorbed in the process of his thought; the look was
+wholly impersonal; I have seen the same in the eyes of portrait-
+painters. The counts upon which whites have been deported are
+mainly four: cheating Tembinok', meddling overmuch with copra,
+which is the source of his wealth, and one of the sinews of his
+power, 'PEAKING, and political intrigue. I felt guiltless upon
+all; but how to show it? I would not have taken copra in a gift:
+how to express that quality by my dinner-table bearing? The rest
+of the party shared my innocence and my embarrassment. They shared
+also in my mortification when after two whole meal-times and the
+odd moments of an afternoon devoted to this reconnoitring,
+Tembinok' took his leave in silence. Next morning, the same
+undisguised study, the same silence, was resumed; and the second
+day had come to its maturity before I was informed abruptly that I
+had stood the ordeal. 'I look your eye. You good man. You no
+lie,' said the king: a doubtful compliment to a writer of romance.
+Later he explained he did not quite judge by the eye only, but the
+mouth as well. 'Tuppoti I see man,' he explained. 'I no tavvy
+good man, bad man. I look eye, look mouth. Then I tavvy. Look
+EYE, look mouth,' he repeated. And indeed in our case the mouth
+had the most to do with it, and it was by our talk that we gained
+admission to the island; the king promising himself (and I believe
+really amassing) a vast amount of useful knowledge ere we left.
+
+The terms of our admission were as follows: We were to choose a
+site, and the king should there build us a town. His people should
+work for us, but the king only was to give them orders. One of his
+cooks should come daily to help mine, and to learn of him. In case
+our stores ran out, he would supply us, and be repaid on the return
+of the Equator. On the other hand, he was to come to meals with us
+when so inclined; when he stayed at home, a dish was to be sent him
+from our table; and I solemnly engaged to give his subjects no
+liquor or money (both of which they are forbidden to possess) and
+no tobacco, which they were to receive only from the royal hand. I
+think I remember to have protested against the stringency of this
+last article; at least, it was relaxed, and when a man worked for
+me I was allowed to give him a pipe of tobacco on the premises, but
+none to take away.
+
+The site of Equator City--we named our city for the schooner--was
+soon chosen. The immediate shores of the lagoon are windy and
+blinding; Tembinok' himself is glad to grope blue-spectacled on his
+terrace; and we fled the neighbourhood of the red conjunctiva, the
+suppurating eyeball, and the beggar who pursues and beseeches the
+passing foreigner for eye wash. Behind the town the country is
+diversified; here open, sandy, uneven, and dotted with dwarfish
+palms; here cut up with taro trenches, deep and shallow, and,
+according to the growth of the plants, presenting now the
+appearance of a sandy tannery, now of an alleyed and green garden.
+A path leads towards the sea, mounting abruptly to the main level
+of the island--twenty or even thirty feet, although Findlay gives
+five; and just hard by the top of the rise, where the coco-palms
+begin to be well grown, we found a grove of pandanus, and a piece
+of soil pleasantly covered with green underbush. A well was not
+far off under a rustic well-house; nearer still, in a sandy cup of
+the land, a pond where we might wash our clothes. The place was
+out of the wind, out of the sun, and out of sight of the village.
+It was shown to the king, and the town promised for the morrow.
+
+The morrow came, Mr. Osbourne landed, found nothing done, and
+carried his complaint to Tembinok'. He heard it, rose, called for
+a Winchester, stepped without the royal palisade, and fired two
+shots in the air. A shot in the air is the first Apemama warning;
+it has the force of a proclamation in more loquacious countries;
+and his majesty remarked agreeably that it would make his labourers
+'mo' bright.' In less than thirty minutes, accordingly, the men
+had mustered, the work was begun, and we were told that we might
+bring our baggage when we pleased.
+
+It was two in the afternoon ere the first boat was beached, and the
+long procession of chests and crates and sacks began to straggle
+through the sandy desert towards Equator Town. The grove of
+pandanus was practically a thing of the past. Fire surrounded and
+smoke rose in the green underbush. In a wide circuit the axes were
+still crashing. Those very advantages for which the place was
+chosen, it had been the king's first idea to abolish; and in the
+midst of this devastation there stood already a good-sized maniap'
+and a small closed house. A mat was spread near by for Tembinok';
+here he sat superintending, in cardinal red, a pith helmet on his
+head, a meerschaum pipe in his mouth, a wife stretched at his back
+with custody of the matches and tobacco. Twenty or thirty feet in
+front of him the bulk of the workers squatted on the ground; some
+of the bush here survived and in this the commons sat nearly to
+their shoulders, and presented only an arc of brown faces, black
+heads, and attentive eyes fixed on his majesty. Long pauses
+reigned, during which the subjects stared and the king smoked.
+Then Tembinok' would raise his voice and speak shrilly and briefly.
+There was never a response in words; but if the speech were
+jesting, there came by way of answer discreet, obsequious laughter-
+-such laughter as we hear in schoolrooms; and if it were practical,
+the sudden uprising and departure of the squad. Twice they so
+disappeared, and returned with further elements of the city: a
+second house and a second maniap'. It was singular to spy, far off
+through the coco stems, the silent oncoming of the maniap', at
+first (it seemed) swimming spontaneously in the air--but on a
+nearer view betraying under the eaves many score of moving naked
+legs. In all the affair servile obedience was no less remarkable
+than servile deliberation. The gang had here mustered by the note
+of a deadly weapon; the man who looked on was the unquestioned
+master of their lives; and except for civility, they bestirred
+themselves like so many American hotel clerks. The spectator was
+aware of an unobtrusive yet invincible inertia, at which the
+skipper of a trading dandy might have torn his hair.
+
+Yet the work was accomplished. By dusk, when his majesty withdrew,
+the town was founded and complete, a new and ruder Amphion having
+called it from nothing with three cracks of a rifle. And the next
+morning the same conjurer obliged us with a further miracle: a
+mystic rampart fencing us, so that the path which ran by our doors
+became suddenly impassable, the inhabitants who had business across
+the isle must fetch a wide circuit, and we sat in the midst in a
+transparent privacy, seeing, seen, but unapproachable, like bees in
+a glass hive. The outward and visible sign of this glamour was no
+more than a few ragged coco-leaf garlands round the stems of the
+outlying palms; but its significance reposed on the tremendous
+sanction of the tapu and the guns of Tembinok'.
+
+We made our first meal that night in the improvised city, where we
+were to stay two months, and which--so soon as we had done with it-
+-was to vanish in a day as it appeared, its elements returning
+whence they came, the tapu raised, the traffic on the path resumed,
+the sun and the moon peering in vain between the palm-trees for the
+bygone work, the wind blowing over an empty site. Yet the place,
+which is now only an episode in some memories, seemed to have been
+built, and to be destined to endure, for years. It was a busy
+hamlet. One of the maniap's we made our dining-room, one the
+kitchen. The houses we reserved for sleeping. They were on the
+admirable Apemama plan: out and away the best house in the South
+Seas; standing some three feet above the ground on posts; the sides
+of woven flaps, which can be raised to admit light and air, or
+lowered to shut out the wind and the rain: airy, healthy, clean,
+and watertight. We had a hen of a remarkable kind: almost unique
+in my experience, being a hen that occasionally laid eggs. Not far
+off, Mrs. Stevenson tended a garden of salad and shalots. The
+salad was devoured by the hen--which was her bane. The shalots
+were served out a leaf at a time, and welcomed and relished like
+peaches. Toddy and green cocoa-nuts were brought us daily. We
+once had a present of fish from the king, and once of a turtle.
+Sometimes we shot so-called plover along on the shore, sometimes
+wild chicken in the bush. The rest of our diet was from tins.
+
+Our occupations were very various. While some of the party would
+be away sketching, Mr. Osbourne and I hammered away at a novel. We
+read Gibbon and Carlyle aloud; we blew on flageolets, we strummed
+on guitars; we took photographs by the light of the sun, the moon,
+and flash-powder; sometimes we played cards. Pot-hunting engaged a
+part of our leisure. I have myself passed afternoons in the
+exciting but innocuous pursuit of winged animals with a revolver;
+and it was fortunate there were better shots of the party, and
+fortunate the king could lend us a more suitable weapon, in the
+form of an excellent fowling-piece, or our spare diet had been
+sparer still.
+
+Night was the time to see our city, after the moon was up, after
+the lamps were lighted, and so long as the fire sparkled in the
+cook-house. We suffered from a plague of flies and mosquitoes,
+comparable to that of Egypt; our dinner-table (lent, like all our
+furniture, by the king) must be enclosed in a tent of netting, our
+citadel and refuge; and this became all luminous, and bulged and
+beaconed under the eaves, like the globe of some monstrous lamp
+under the margin of its shade. Our cabins, the sides being propped
+at a variety of inclinations, spelled out strange, angular patterns
+of brightness. In his roofed and open kitchen, Ah Fu was to be
+seen by lamp and firelight, dabbling among pots. Over all, there
+fell in the season an extraordinary splendour of mellow moonshine.
+The sand sparkled as with the dust of diamonds; the stars had
+vanished. At intervals, a dusky night-bird, slow and low flying,
+passed in the colonnade of the tree stems and uttered a hoarse
+croaking cry.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE PALACE OF MANY WOMEN
+
+
+
+The palace, or rather the ground which it includes, is several
+acres in extent. A terrace encloses it toward the lagoon; on the
+side of the land, a palisade with several gates. These are scarce
+intended for defence; a man, if he were strong, might easily pluck
+down the palisade; he need not be specially active to leap from the
+beach upon the terrace. There is no parade of guards, soldiers, or
+weapons; the armoury is under lock and key; and the only sentinels
+are certain inconspicuous old women lurking day and night before
+the gates. By day, these crones were often engaged in boiling
+syrup or the like household occupation; by night, they lay ambushed
+in the shadow or crouched along the palisade, filling the office of
+eunuchs to this harem, sole guards upon a tyrant life.
+
+Female wardens made a fit outpost for this palace of many women.
+Of the number of the king's wives I have no guess; and but a loose
+idea of their function. He himself displayed embarrassment when
+they were referred to as his wives, called them himself 'my
+pamily,' and explained they were his 'cutcheons'--cousins. We
+distinguished four of the crowd: the king's mother; his sister, a
+grave, trenchant woman, with much of her brother's intelligence;
+the queen proper, to whom (and to whom alone) my wife was formally
+presented; and the favourite of the hour, a pretty, graceful girl,
+who sat with the king daily, and once (when he shed tears) consoled
+him with caresses. I am assured that even with her his relations
+are platonic. In the background figured a multitude of ladies, the
+lean, the plump, and the elephantine, some in sacque frocks, some
+in the hairbreadth ridi; high-born and low, slave and mistress;
+from the queen to the scullion, from the favourite to the scraggy
+sentries at the palisade. Not all of these of course are of 'my
+pamily,'--many are mere attendants; yet a surprising number shared
+the responsibility of the king's trust. These were key-bearers,
+treasurers, wardens of the armoury, the napery, and the stores.
+Each knew and did her part to admiration. Should anything be
+required--a particular gun, perhaps, or a particular bolt of
+stuff,--the right queen was summoned; she came bringing the right
+chest, opened it in the king's presence, and displayed her charge
+in perfect preservation--the gun cleaned and oiled, the goods duly
+folded. Without delay or haste, and with the minimum of speech,
+the whole great establishment turned on wheels like a machine.
+Nowhere have I seen order more complete and pervasive. And yet I
+was always reminded of Norse tales of trolls and ogres who kept
+their hearts buried in the ground for the mere safety, and must
+confide the secret to their wives. For these weapons are the life
+of Tembinok'. He does not aim at popularity; but drives and braves
+his subjects, with a simplicity of domination which it is
+impossible not to admire, hard not to sympathise with. Should one
+out of so many prove faithless, should the armoury be secretly
+unlocked, should the crones have dozed by the palisade and the
+weapons find their way unseen into the village, revolution would be
+nearly certain, death the most probable result, and the spirit of
+the tyrant of Apemama flit to rejoin his predecessors of Mariki and
+Tapituea. Yet those whom he so trusts are all women, and all
+rivals.
+
+There is indeed a ministry and staff of males: cook, steward,
+carpenter, and supercargoes: the hierarchy of a schooner. The
+spies, 'his majesty's daily papers,' as we called them, come every
+morning to report, and go again. The cook and steward are
+concerned with the table only. The supercargoes, whose business it
+is to keep tally of the copra at three pounds a month and a
+percentage, are rarely in the palace; and two at least are in the
+other islands. The carpenter, indeed, shrewd and jolly old Rubam--
+query, Reuben?--promoted on my last visit to the greater dignity of
+governor, is daily present, altering, extending, embellishing,
+pursuing the endless series of the king's inventions; and his
+majesty will sometimes pass an afternoon watching and talking with
+Rubam at his work. But the males are still outsiders; none seems
+to be armed, none is entrusted with a key; by dusk they are all
+usually departed from the palace; and the weight of the monarchy
+and of the monarch's life reposes unshared on the women.
+
+Here is a household unlike, indeed, to one of ours; more unlike
+still to the Oriental harem: that of an elderly childless man, his
+days menaced, dwelling alone amid a bevy of women of all ages,
+ranks, and relationships,--the mother, the sister, the cousin, the
+legitimate wife, the concubine, the favourite, the eldest born, and
+she of yesterday; he, in their midst, the only master, the only
+male, the sole dispenser of honours, clothes, and luxuries, the
+sole mark of multitudinous ambitions and desires. I doubt if you
+could find a man in Europe so bold as to attempt this piece of tact
+and government. And seemingly Tembinok' himself had trouble in the
+beginning. I hear of him shooting at a wife for some levity on
+board a schooner. Another, on some more serious offence, he slew
+outright; he exposed her body in an open box, and (to make the
+warning more memorable) suffered it to putrefy before the palace
+gate. Doubtless his growing years have come to his assistance; for
+upon so large a scale it is more easy to play the father than the
+husband. And to-day, at least to the eye of a stranger, all seems
+to go smoothly, and the wives to be proud of their trust, proud of
+their rank, and proud of their cunning lord.
+
+I conceived they made rather a hero of the man. A popular master
+in a girls' school might, perhaps, offer a figure of his
+preponderating station. But then the master does not eat, sleep,
+live, and wash his dirty linen in the midst of his admirers; he
+escapes, he has a room of his own, he leads a private life; if he
+had nothing else, he has the holidays, and the more unhappy
+Tembinok' is always on the stage and on the stretch.
+
+In all my coming and going, I never heard him speak harshly or
+express the least displeasure. An extreme, rather heavy,
+benignity--the benignity of one sure to be obeyed--marked his
+demeanour; so that I was at times reminded of Samual Richardson in
+his circle of admiring women. The wives spoke up and seemed to
+volunteer opinions, like our wives at home--or, say, like doting
+but respectable aunts. Altogether, I conclude that he rules his
+seraglio much more by art than terror; and those who give a
+different account (and who have none of them enjoyed my
+opportunities of observation) perhaps failed to distinguish between
+degrees of rank, between 'my pamily' and the hangers-on,
+laundresses, and prostitutes.
+
+A notable feature is the evening game of cards when lamps are set
+forth upon the terrace, and 'I and my pamily' play for tobacco by
+the hour. It is highly characteristic of Tembinok' that he must
+invent a game for himself; highly characteristic of his worshipping
+household that they should swear by the absurd invention. It is
+founded on poker, played with the honours out of many packs, and
+inconceivably dreary. But I have a passion for all games, studied
+it, and am supposed to be the only white who ever fairly grasped
+its principle: a fact for which the wives (with whom I was not
+otherwise popular) admired me with acclamation. It was impossible
+to be deceived; this was a genuine feeling: they were proud of
+their private game, had been cut to the quick by the want of
+interest shown in it by others, and expanded under the flattery of
+my attention. Tembinok' puts up a double stake, and receives in
+return two hands to choose from: a shallow artifice which the
+wives (in all these years) have not yet fathomed. He himself, when
+talking with me privately, made not the least secret that he was
+secure of winning; and it was thus he explained his recent
+liberality on board the Equator. He let the wives buy their own
+tobacco, which pleased them at the moment. He won it back at
+cards, which made him once more, and without fresh expense, that
+which he ought to be,--the sole fount of all indulgences. And he
+summed the matter up in that phrase with which he almost always
+concludes any account of his policy: 'Mo' betta.'
+
+The palace compound is laid with broken coral, excruciating to the
+eyes and the bare feet, but exquisitely raked and weeded. A score
+or more of buildings lie in a sort of street along the palisade and
+scattered on the margin of the terrace; dwelling-houses for the
+wives and the attendants, storehouses for the king's curios and
+treasures, spacious maniap's for feast or council, some on pillars
+of wood, some on piers of masonry. One was still in hand, a new
+invention, the king's latest born: a European frame-house built
+for coolness inside a lofty maniap': its roof planked like a
+ship's deck to be a raised, shady, and yet private promenade. It
+was here the king spent hours with Rubam; here I would sometimes
+join them; the place had a most singular appearance; and I must say
+I was greatly taken with the fancy, and joined with relish in the
+counsels of the architects.
+
+Suppose we had business with his majesty by day: we strolled over
+the sand and by the dwarfish palms, exchanged a 'Konamaori' with
+the crone on duty, and entered the compound. The wide sheet of
+coral glared before us deserted; all having stowed themselves in
+dark canvas from the excess of room. I have gone to and fro in
+that labyrinth of a place, seeking the king; and the only breathing
+creature I could find was when I peered under the eaves of a
+maniap', and saw the brawny body of one of the wives stretched on
+the floor, a naked Amazon plunged in noiseless slumber. If it were
+still the hour of the 'morning papers' the quest would be more
+easy, the half-dozen obsequious, sly dogs squatting on the ground
+outside a house, crammed as far as possible in its narrow shadow,
+and turning to the king a row of leering faces. Tembinok' would be
+within, the flaps of the cabin raised, the trade blowing through,
+hearing their report. Like journalists nearer home, when the day's
+news were scanty, these would make the more of it in words; and I
+have known one to fill up a barren morning with an imaginary
+conversation of two dogs. Sometimes the king deigns to laugh,
+sometimes to question or jest with them, his voice sounding shrilly
+from the cabin. By his side he may have the heir-apparent, Paul,
+his nephew and adopted son, six years old, stark naked, and a model
+of young human beauty. And there will always be the favourite and
+perhaps two other wives awake; four more lying supine under mats
+and whelmed in slumber. Or perhaps we came later, fell on a more
+private hour, and found Tembinok' retired in the house with the
+favourite, an earthenware spittoon, a leaden inkpot, and a
+commercial ledger. In the last, lying on his belly, he writes from
+day to day the uneventful history of his reign; and when thus
+employed he betrayed a touch of fretfulness on interruption with
+which I was well able to sympathise. The royal annalist once read
+me a page or so, translating as he went; but the passage being
+genealogical, and the author boggling extremely in his version, I
+own I have been sometimes better entertained. Nor does he confine
+himself to prose, but touches the lyre, too, in his leisure
+moments, and passes for the chief bard of his kingdom, as he is its
+sole public character, leading architect, and only merchant.
+
+His competence, however, does not reach to music; and his verses,
+when they are ready, are taught to a professional musician, who
+sets them and instructs the chorus. Asked what his songs were
+about, Tembinok' replied, 'Sweethearts and trees and the sea. Not
+all the same true, all the same lie.' For a condensed view of
+lyrical poetry (except that he seems to have forgot the stars and
+flowers) this would be hard to mend. These multifarious
+occupations bespeak (in a native and an absolute prince) unusual
+activity of mind.
+
+The palace court at noon is a spot to be remembered with awe, the
+visitor scrambling there, on the loose stones, through a splendid
+nightmare of light and heat; but the sweep of the wind delivers it
+from flies and mosquitoes; and with the set of sun it became
+heavenly. I remember it best on moonless nights. The air was like
+a bath of milk. Countless shining stars were overhead, the lagoon
+paved with them. Herds of wives squatted by companies on the
+gravel, softly chatting. Tembinok' would doff his jacket, and sit
+bare and silent, perhaps meditating songs; the favourite usually by
+him, silent also. Meanwhile in the midst of the court, the palace
+lanterns were being lit and marshalled in rank upon the ground--six
+or eight square yards of them; a sight that gave one strange ideas
+of the number of 'my pamily': such a sight as may be seen about
+dusk in a corner of some great terminus at home. Presently these
+fared off into all corners of the precinct, lighting the last
+labours of the day, lighting one after another to their rest that
+prodigious company of women. A few lingered in the middle of the
+court for the card-party, and saw the honours shuffled and dealt,
+and Tembinok' deliberating between his two; hands, and the queens
+losing their tobacco. Then these also were scattered and
+extinguished; and their place was taken by a great bonfire, the
+night-light of the palace. When this was no more, smaller fires
+burned likewise at the gates. These were tended by the crones,
+unseen, unsleeping--not always unheard. Should any approach in the
+dark hours, a guarded alert made the circuit of the palisade; each
+sentry signalled her neighbour with a stone; the rattle of falling
+pebbles passed and died away; and the wardens of Tembinok' crouched
+in their places silent as before.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--THE KING OF APEMAMA: EQUATOR TOWN AND THE PALACE
+
+
+
+Five persons were detailed to wait upon us. Uncle Parker, who
+brought us toddy and green nuts, was an elderly, almost an old man,
+with the spirits, the industry, and the morals of a boy of ten.
+His face was ancient, droll, and diabolical, the skin stretched
+over taut sinews, like a sail on the guide-rope; and he smiled with
+every muscle of his head. His nuts must be counted every day, or
+he would deceive us in the tale; they must be daily examined, or
+some would prove to be unhusked; nothing but the king's name, and
+scarcely that, would hold him to his duty. After his toils were
+over he was given a pipe, matches, and tobacco, and sat on the
+floor in the maniap' to smoke. He would not seem to move from his
+position, and yet every day, when the things fell to be returned
+the plug had disappeared; he had found the means to conceal it in
+the roof, whence he could radiantly produce it on the morrow.
+Although this piece of legerdemain was performed regularly before
+three or four pairs of eyes, we could never catch him in the fact;
+although we searched after he was gone, we could never find the
+tobacco. Such were the diversions of Uncle Parker, a man nearing
+sixty. But he was punished according unto his deeds: Mrs.
+Stevenson took a fancy to paint him, and the sufferings of the
+sitter were beyond description.
+
+Three lasses came from the palace to do our washing and racket with
+Ah Fu. They were of the lowest class, hangers-on kept for the
+convenience of merchant skippers, probably low-born, perhaps out-
+islanders, with little refinement whether of manner or appearance,
+but likely and jolly enough wenches in their way. We called one
+Guttersnipe, for you may find her image in the slums of any city;
+the same lean, dark-eyed, eager, vulgar face, the same sudden,
+hoarse guffaws, the same forward and yet anxious manner, as with a
+tail of an eye on the policeman: only the policeman here was a
+live king, and his truncheon a rifle. I doubt if you could find
+anywhere out of the islands, or often there, the parallel of Fatty,
+a mountain of a girl, who must have weighed near as many stones as
+she counted summers, could have given a good account of a life-
+guardsman, had the face of a baby, and applied her vast mechanical
+forces almost exclusively to play. But they were all three of the
+same merry spirit. Our washing was conducted in a game of romps;
+and they fled and pursued, and splashed, and pelted, and rolled
+each other in the sand, and kept up a continuous noise of cries and
+laughter like holiday children. Indeed, and however strange their
+own function in that austere establishment, were they not escaped
+for the day from the largest and strictest Ladies' School in the
+South Seas?
+
+Our fifth attendant was no less a person than the royal cook. He
+was strikingly handsome both in face and body, lazy as a slave, and
+insolent as a butcher's boy. He slept and smoked on our premises
+in various graceful attitudes; but so far from helping Ah Fu, he
+was not at the pains to watch him. It may be said of him that he
+came to learn, and remained to teach; and his lessons were at times
+difficult to stomach. For example, he was sent to fill a bucket
+from the well. About half-way he found my wife watering her
+onions, changed buckets with her, and leaving her the empty,
+returned to the kitchen with the full. On another occasion he was
+given a dish of dumplings for the king, was told they must be eaten
+hot, and that he should carry them as fast as possible. The wretch
+set off at the rate of about a mile in the hour, head in air, toes
+turned out. My patience, after a month of trial, failed me at the
+sight. I pursued, caught him by his two big shoulders, and
+thrusting him before me, ran with him down the hill, over the
+sands, and through the applauding village, to the Speak House,
+where the king was then holding a pow-wow. He had the impudence to
+pretend he was internally injured by my violence, and to profess
+serious apprehensions for his life.
+
+All this we endured; for the ways of Tembinok' are summary, and I
+was not yet ripe to take a hand in the man's death. But in the
+meanwhile, here was my unfortunate China boy slaving for the pair,
+and presently he fell sick. I was now in the position of Cimondain
+Lantenac, and indeed all the characters in Quatre-Vingt-Treize: to
+continue to spare the guilty, I must sacrifice the innocent. I
+took the usual course and tried to save both, with the usual
+consequence of failure. Well rehearsed, I went down to the palace,
+found the king alone, and obliged him with a vast amount of
+rigmarole. The cook was too old to learn: I feared he was not
+making progress; how if we had a boy instead?--boys were more
+teachable. It was all in vain; the king pierced through my
+disguises to the root of the fact; saw that the cook had
+desperately misbehaved; and sat a while glooming. 'I think he
+tavvy too much,' he said at last, with grim concision; and
+immediately turned the talk to other subjects. The same day
+another high officer, the steward, appeared in the cook's place,
+and, I am bound to say, proved civil and industrious.
+
+As soon as I left, it seems the king called for a Winchester and
+strolled outside the palisade, awaiting the defaulter. That day
+Tembinok' wore the woman's frock; as like as not, his make-up was
+completed by a pith helmet and blue spectacles. Conceive the
+glaring stretch of sandhills, the dwarf palms with their noon-day
+shadows, the line of the palisade, the crone sentries (each by a
+small clear fire) cooking syrup on their posts--and this chimaera
+waiting with his deadly engine. To him, enter at last the cook,
+strolling down the sandhill from Equator Town, listless, vain and
+graceful; with no thought of alarm. As soon as he was well within
+range, the travestied monarch fired the six shots over his head, at
+his feet, and on either hand of him: the second Apemama warning,
+startling in itself, fatal in significance, for the next time his
+majesty will aim to hit. I am told the king is a crack shot; that
+when he aims to kill, the grave may be got ready; and when he aims
+to miss, misses by so near a margin that the culprit tastes six
+times the bitterness of death. The effect upon the cook I had an
+opportunity of seeing for myself. My wife and I were returning
+from the sea-side of the island, when we spied one coming to meet
+us at a very quick, disordered pace, between a walk and a run. As
+we drew nearer we saw it was the cook, beside himself with some
+emotion, his usual warm, mulatto colour declined into a bluish
+pallor. He passed us without word or gesture, staring on us with
+the face of a Satan, and plunged on across the wood for the
+unpeopled quarter of the island and the long, desert beach, where
+he might rage to and fro unseen, and froth out the vials of his
+wrath, fear, and humiliation. Doubtless in the curses that he
+there uttered to the bursting surf and the tropic birds, the name
+of the Kaupoi--the rich man--was frequently repeated. I had made
+him the laughing-stock of the village in the affair of the king's
+dumplings; I had brought him by my machinations into disgrace and
+the immediate jeopardy of his days; last, and perhaps bitterest, he
+had found me there by the way to spy upon him in the hour of his
+disorder.
+
+Time passed, and we saw no more of him. The season of the full
+moon came round, when a man thinks shame to lie sleeping; and I
+continued until late--perhaps till twelve or one in the morning--to
+walk on the bright sand and in the tossing shadow of the palms. I
+played, as I wandered, on a flageolet, which occupied much of my
+attention; the fans overhead rattled in the wind with a metallic
+chatter; and a bare foot falls at any rate almost noiseless on that
+shifting soil. Yet when I got back to Equator Town, where all the
+lights were out, and my wife (who was still awake, and had been
+looking forth) asked me who it was that followed me, I thought she
+spoke in jest. 'Not at all,' she said. 'I saw him twice as you
+passed, walking close at your heels. He only left you at the
+corner of the maniap'; he must be still behind the cook-house.'
+Thither I ran--like a fool, without any weapon--and came face to
+face with the cook. He was within my tapu-line, which was death in
+itself; he could have no business there at such an hour but either
+to steal or to kill; guilt made him timorous; and he turned and
+fled before me in the night in silence. As he went I kicked him in
+that place where honour lies, and he gave tongue faintly like an
+injured mouse. At the moment I daresay he supposed it was a deadly
+instrument that touched him.
+
+What had the man been after? I have found my music better
+qualified to scatter than to collect an audience. Amateur as I
+was, I could not suppose him interested in my reading of the
+Carnival of Venice, or that he would deny himself his natural rest
+to follow my variations on The Ploughboy. And whatever his design,
+it was impossible I should suffer him to prowl by night among the
+houses. A word to the king, and the man were not, his case being
+far beyond pardon. But it is one thing to kill a man yourself;
+quite another to bear tales behind his back and have him shot by a
+third party; and I determined to deal with the fellow in some
+method of my own. I told Ah Fu the story, and bade him fetch me
+the cook whenever he should find him. I had supposed this would be
+a matter of difficulty; and far from that, he came of his own
+accord: an act really of desperation, since his life hung by my
+silence, and the best he could hope was to be forgotten. Yet he
+came with an assured countenance, volunteered no apology or
+explanation, complained of injuries received, and pretended he was
+unable to sit down. I suppose I am the weakest man God made; I had
+kicked him in the least vulnerable part of his big carcase; my foot
+was bare, and I had not even hurt my foot. Ah Fu could not control
+his merriment. On my side, knowing what must be the nature of his
+apprehensions, I found in so much impudence a kind of gallantry,
+and secretly admired the man. I told him I should say nothing of
+his night's adventure to the king; that I should still allow him,
+when he had an errand, to come within my tapu-line by day; but if
+ever I found him there after the set of the sun I would shoot him
+on the spot; and to the proof showed him a revolver. He must have
+been incredibly relieved; but he showed no sign of it, took himself
+off with his usual dandy nonchalance, and was scarce seen by us
+again.
+
+These five, then, with the substitution of the steward for the
+cook, came and went, and were our only visitors. The circle of the
+tapu held at arm's-length the inhabitants of the village. As for
+'my pamily,' they dwelt like nuns in their enclosure; only once
+have I met one of them abroad, and she was the king's sister, and
+the place in which I found her (the island infirmary) was very
+likely privileged. There remains only the king to be accounted
+for. He would come strolling over, always alone, a little before a
+meal-time, take a chair, and talk and eat with us like an old
+family friend. Gilbertine etiquette appears defective on the point
+of leave-taking. It may be remembered we had trouble in the matter
+with Karaiti; and there was something childish and disconcerting in
+Tembinok's abrupt 'I want go home now,' accompanied by a kind of
+ducking rise, and followed by an unadorned retreat. It was the
+only blot upon his manners, which were otherwise plain, decent,
+sensible, and dignified. He never stayed long nor drank much, and
+copied our behaviour where he perceived it to differ from his own.
+Very early in the day, for instance, he ceased eating with his
+knife. It was plain he was determined in all things to wring
+profit from our visit, and chiefly upon etiquette. The quality of
+his white visitors puzzled and concerned him; he would bring up
+name after name, and ask if its bearer were a 'big chiep,' or even
+a 'chiep' at all--which, as some were my excellent good friends,
+and none were actually born in the purple, became at times
+embarrassing. He was struck to learn that our classes were
+distinguishable by their speech, and that certain words (for
+instance) were tapu on the quarter-deck of a man-of-war; and he
+begged in consequence that we should watch and correct him on the
+point. We were able to assure him that he was beyond correction.
+His vocabulary is apt and ample to an extraordinary degree. God
+knows where he collected it, but by some instinct or some accident
+he has avoided all profane or gross expressions. 'Obliged,'
+'stabbed,' 'gnaw,' 'lodge,' 'power,' 'company,' 'slender,'
+'smooth,' and 'wonderful,' are a few of the unexpected words that
+enrich his dialect. Perhaps what pleased him most was to hear
+about saluting the quarter-deck of a man-of-war. In his gratitude
+for this hint he became fulsome. 'Schooner cap'n no tell me,' he
+cried; 'I think no tavvy! You tavvy too much; tavvy 'teama', tavvy
+man-a-wa'. I think you tavvy everything.' Yet he gravelled me
+often enough with his perpetual questions; and the false Mr. Barlow
+stood frequently exposed before the royal Sandford. I remember
+once in particular. We were showing the magic-lantern; a slide of
+Windsor Castle was put in, and I told him there was the 'outch' of
+Victoreea. 'How many pathom he high?' he asked, and I was dumb
+before him. It was the builder, the indefatigable architect of
+palaces, that spoke; collector though he was, he did not collect
+useless information; and all his questions had a purpose. After
+etiquette, government, law, the police, money, and medicine were
+his chief interests--things vitally important to himself as a king
+and the father of his people. It was my part not only to supply
+new information, but to correct the old. 'My patha he tell me,' or
+'White man he tell me,' would be his constant beginning; 'You think
+he lie?' Sometimes I thought he did. Tembinok' once brought me a
+difficulty of this kind, which I was long of comprehending. A
+schooner captain had told him of Captain Cook; the king was much
+interested in the story; and turned for more information--not to
+Mr. Stephen's Dictionary, not to the Britannica, but to the Bible
+in the Gilbert Island version (which consists chiefly of the New
+Testament and the Psalms). Here he sought long and earnestly; Paul
+he found, and Festus and Alexander the coppersmith: no word of
+Cook. The inference was obvious: the explorer was a myth. So
+hard it is, even for a man of great natural parts like Tembinok',
+to grasp the ideas of a new society and culture.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--KING AND COMMONS
+
+
+
+We saw but little of the commons of the isle. At first we met them
+at the well, where they washed their linen and we drew water for
+the table. The combination was distasteful; and, having a tyrant
+at command, we applied to the king and had the place enclosed in
+our tapu. It was one of the few favours which Tembinok' visibly
+boggled about granting, and it may be conceived how little popular
+it made the strangers. Many villagers passed us daily going
+afield; but they fetched a wide circuit round our tapu, and seemed
+to avert their looks. At times we went ourselves into the village-
+-a strange place. Dutch by its canals, Oriental by the height and
+steepness of the roofs, which looked at dusk like temples; but we
+were rarely called into a house: no welcome, no friendship, was
+offered us; and of home life we had but the one view: the waking
+of a corpse, a frigid, painful scene: the widow holding on her lap
+the cold, bluish body of her husband, and now partaking of the
+refreshments which made the round of the company, now weeping and
+kissing the pale mouth. ('I fear you feel this affliction deeply,'
+said the Scottish minister. 'Eh, sir, and that I do!' replied the
+widow. 'I've been greetin' a' nicht; an' noo I'm just gaun to sup
+this bit parritch, and then I'll begin an' greet again.') In our
+walks abroad I have always supposed the islanders avoided us,
+perhaps from distaste, perhaps by order; and those whom we met we
+took generally by surprise. The surface of the isle is diversified
+with palm groves, thickets, and romantic dingles four feet deep,
+relics of old taro plantation; and it is thus possible to stumble
+unawares on folk resting or hiding from their work. About pistol-
+shot from our township there lay a pond in the bottom of a jungle;
+here the maids of the isle came to bathe, and were several times
+alarmed by our intrusion. Not for them are the bright cold rivers
+of Tahiti or Upolu, not for them to splash and laugh in the hour of
+the dusk with a villageful of gay companions; but to steal here
+solitary, to crouch in a place like a cow-wallow, and wash (if that
+can be called washing) in lukewarm mud, brown as their own skins.
+Other, but still rare, encounters occur to my memory. I was
+several times arrested by a tender sound in the bush of voices
+talking, soft as flutes and with quiet intonations. Hope told a
+flattering tale; I put aside the leaves; and behold! in place of
+the expected dryads, a pair of all too solid ladies squatting over
+a clay pipe in the ungraceful ridi. The beauty of the voice and
+the eye was all that remained to those vast dames; but that of the
+voice was indeed exquisite. It is strange I should have never
+heard a more winning sound of speech, yet the dialect should be one
+remarkable for violent, ugly, and outlandish vocables; so that
+Tembinok' himself declared it made him weary, and professed to find
+repose in talking English.
+
+The state of this folk, of whom I saw so little, I can merely guess
+at. The king himself explains the situation with some art. 'No; I
+no pay them,' he once said. 'I give them tobacco. They work for
+me ALL THE SAME BROTHERS.' It is true there was a brother once in
+Arden! But we prefer the shorter word. They bear every servile
+mark,--levity like a child's, incurable idleness, incurious
+content. The insolence of the cook was a trait of his own; not so
+his levity, which he shared with the innocent Uncle Parker. With
+equal unconcern both gambolled under the shadow of the gallows, and
+took liberties with death that might have surprised a careless
+student of man's nature. I wrote of Parker that he behaved like a
+boy of ten: what was he else, being a slave of sixty? He had
+passed all his years in school, fed, clad, thought for, commanded;
+and had grown familiar and coquetted with the fear of punishment.
+By terror you may drive men long, but not far. Here, in Apemama,
+they work at the constant and the instant peril of their lives; and
+are plunged in a kind of lethargy of laziness. It is common to see
+one go afield in his stiff mat ungirt, so that he walks elbows-in
+like a trussed fowl; and whatsoever his right hand findeth to do,
+the other must be off duty holding on his clothes. It is common to
+see two men carrying between them on a pole a single bucket of
+water. To make two bites of a cherry is good enough: to make two
+burthens of a soldier's kit, for a distance of perhaps half a
+furlong, passes measure. Woman, being the less childish animal, is
+less relaxed by servile conditions. Even in the king's absence,
+even when they were alone, I have seen Apemama women work with
+constancy. But the outside to be hoped for in a man is that he may
+attack his task in little languid fits, and lounge between-whiles.
+So I have seen a painter, with his pipe going, and a friend by the
+studio fireside. You might suppose the race to lack civility, even
+vitality, until you saw them in the dance. Night after night, and
+sometimes day after day, they rolled out their choruses in the
+great Speak House--solemn andantes and adagios, led by the clapped
+hand, and delivered with an energy that shook the roof. The time
+was not so slow, though it was slow for the islands; but I have
+chosen rather to indicate the effect upon the hearer. Their music
+had a church-like character from near at hand, and seemed to
+European ears more regular than the run of island music. Twice I
+have heard a discord regularly solved. From farther off, heard at
+Equator Town for instance, the measures rose and fell and
+crepitated like the barking of hounds in a distant kennel.
+
+The slaves are certainly not overworked--children of ten do more
+without fatigue--and the Apemama labourers have holidays, when the
+singing begins early in the afternoon. The diet is hard; copra and
+a sweetmeat of pounded pandanus are the only dishes I observed
+outside the palace; but there seems no defect in quantity, and the
+king shares with them his turtles. Three came in a boat from Kuria
+during our stay; one was kept for the palace, one sent to us, one
+presented to the village. It is the habit of the islanders to cook
+the turtle in its carapace; we had been promised the shells, and we
+asked a tapu on this foolish practice. The face of Tembinok'
+darkened and he answered nothing. Hesitation in the question of
+the well I could understand, for water is scarce on a low island;
+that he should refuse to interfere upon a point of cookery was more
+than I had dreamed of; and I gathered (rightly or wrongly) that he
+was scrupulous of touching in the least degree the private life and
+habits of his slaves. So that even here, in full despotism, public
+opinion has weight; even here, in the midst of slavery, freedom has
+a corner.
+
+Orderly, sober, and innocent, life flows in the isle from day to
+day as in a model plantation under a model planter. It is
+impossible to doubt the beneficence of that stern rule. A curious
+politeness, a soft and gracious manner, something effeminate and
+courtly, distinguishes the islanders of Apemama; it is talked of by
+all the traders, it was felt even by residents so little beloved as
+ourselves, and noticeable even in the cook, and even in that
+scoundrel's hours of insolence. The king, with his manly and plain
+bearing, stood out alone; you might say he was the only Gilbert
+Islander in Apemama. Violence, so common in Butaritari, seems
+unknown. So are theft and drunkenness. I am assured the
+experiment has been made of leaving sovereigns on the beach before
+the village; they lay there untouched. In all our time on the
+island I was but once asked for drink. This was by a mighty
+plausible fellow, wearing European clothes and speaking excellent
+English--Tamaiti his name, or, as the whites have now corrupted it,
+'Tom White': one of the king's supercargoes at three pounds a
+month and a percentage, a medical man besides, and in his private
+hours a wizard. He found me one day in the outskirts of the
+village, in a secluded place, hot and private, where the taro-pits
+are deep and the plants high. Here he buttonholed me, and, looking
+about him like a conspirator, inquired if I had gin.
+
+I told him I had. He remarked that gin was forbidden, lauded the
+prohibition a while, and then went on to explain that he was a
+doctor, or 'dogstar' as he pronounced the word, that gin was
+necessary to him for his medical infusions, that he was quite out
+of it, and that he would be obliged to me for some in a bottle. I
+told him I had passed the king my word on landing; but since his
+case was so exceptional, I would go down to the palace at once, and
+had no doubt that Tembinok' would set me free. Tom White was
+immediately overwhelmed with embarrassment and terror, besought me
+in the most moving terms not to betray him, and fled my
+neighbourhood. He had none of the cook's valour; it was weeks
+before he dared to meet my eye; and then only by the order of the
+king and on particular business.
+
+The more I viewed and admired this triumph of firm rule, the more I
+was haunted and troubled by a problem, the problem (perhaps) of to-
+morrow for ourselves. Here was a people protected from all serious
+misfortune, relieved of all serious anxieties, and deprived of what
+we call our liberty. Did they like it? and what was their
+sentiment toward the ruler? The first question I could not of
+course ask, nor perhaps the natives answer. Even the second was
+delicate; yet at last, and under charming and strange
+circumstances, I found my opportunity to put it and a man to reply.
+It was near the full of the moon, with a delicious breeze; the isle
+was bright as day--to sleep would have been sacrilege; and I walked
+in the bush, playing my pipe. It must have been the sound of what
+I am pleased to call my music that attracted in my direction
+another wanderer of the night. This was a young man attired in a
+fine mat, and with a garland on his hair, for he was new come from
+dancing and singing in the public hall; and his body, his face, and
+his eyes were all of an enchanting beauty. Every here and there in
+the Gilberts youths are to be found of this absurd perfection; I
+have seen five of us pass half an hour in admiration of a boy at
+Mariki; and Te Kop (my friend in the fine mat and garland) I had
+already several times remarked, and long ago set down as the
+loveliest animal in Apemama. The philtre of admiration must be
+very strong, or these natives specially susceptible to its effects,
+for I have scarce ever admired a person in the islands but what he
+has sought my particular acquaintance. So it was with Te Kop. He
+led me to the ocean side; and for an hour or two we sat smoking and
+talking on the resplendent sand and under the ineffable brightness
+of the moon. My friend showed himself very sensible of the beauty
+and amenity of the hour. 'Good night! Good wind!' he kept
+exclaiming, and as he said the words he seemed to hug myself. I
+had long before invented such reiterated expressions of delight for
+a character (Felipe, in the story of Olalla) intended to be partly
+bestial. But there was nothing bestial in Te Kop; only a childish
+pleasure in the moment. He was no less pleased with his companion,
+or was good enough to say so; honoured me, before he left, by
+calling me Te Kop; apostrophised me as 'My name!' with an
+intonation exquisitely tender, laying his hand at the same time
+swiftly on my knee; and after we had risen, and our paths began to
+separate in the bush, twice cried to me with a sort of gentle
+ecstasy, 'I like you too much!' From the beginning he had made no
+secret of his terror of the king; would not sit down nor speak
+above a whisper till he had put the whole breadth of the isle
+between himself and his monarch, then harmlessly asleep; and even
+there, even within a stone-cast of the outer sea, our talk covered
+by the sound of the surf and the rattle of the wind among the
+palms, continued to speak guardedly, softening his silver voice
+(which rang loud enough in the chorus) and looking about him like a
+man in fear of spies. The strange thing is that I should have
+beheld him no more. In any other island in the whole South Seas,
+if I had advanced half as far with any native, he would have been
+at my door next morning, bringing and expecting gifts. But Te Kop
+vanished in the bush for ever. My house, of course, was
+unapproachable; but he knew where to find me on the ocean beach,
+where I went daily. I was the Kaupoi, the rich man; my tobacco and
+trade were known to be endless: he was sure of a present. I am at
+a loss how to explain his behaviour, unless it be supposed that he
+recalled with terror and regret a passage in our interview. Here
+it is:
+
+'The king, he good man?' I asked.
+
+'Suppose he like you, he good man,' replied Te Kop: 'no like, no
+good.'
+
+That is one way of putting it, of course. Te Kop himself was
+probably no favourite, for he scarce appealed to my judgment as a
+type of industry. And there must be many others whom the king (to
+adhere to the formula) does not like. Do these unfortunates like
+the king? Or is not rather the repulsion mutual? and the
+conscientious Tembinok', like the conscientious Braxfield before
+him, and many other conscientious rulers and judges before either,
+surrounded by a considerable body of 'grumbletonians'? Take the
+cook, for instance, when he passed us by, blue with rage and
+terror. He was very wroth with me; I think by all the old
+principles of human nature he was not very well pleased with his
+sovereign. It was the rich man he sought to waylay: I think it
+must have been by the turn of a hair that it was not the king he
+waylaid instead. And the king gives, or seems to give, plenty of
+opportunities; day and night he goes abroad alone, whether armed or
+not I can but guess; and the taro-patches, where his business must
+so often carry him, seem designed for assassination. The case of
+the cook was heavy indeed to my conscience. I did not like to kill
+my enemy at second-hand; but had I a right to conceal from the
+king, who had trusted me, the dangerous secret character of his
+attendant? And suppose the king should fall, what would be the
+fate of the king's friends? It was our opinion at the time that we
+should pay dear for the closing of the well; that our breath was in
+the king's nostrils; that if the king should by any chance be
+bludgeoned in a taro-patch, the philosophical and musical
+inhabitants of Equator Town might lay aside their pleasant
+instruments, and betake themselves to what defence they had, with a
+very dim prospect of success. These speculations were forced upon
+us by an incident which I am ashamed to betray. The schooner H. L.
+Haseltine (since capsized at sea, with the loss of eleven lives)
+put into Apemama in a good hour for us, who had near exhausted our
+supplies. The king, after his habit, spent day after day on board;
+the gin proved unhappily to his taste; he brought a store of it
+ashore with him; and for some time the sole tyrant of the isle was
+half-seas-over. He was not drunk--the man is not a drunkard, he
+has always stores of liquor at hand, which he uses with
+moderation,--but he was muzzy, dull, and confused. He came one day
+to lunch with us, and while the cloth was being laid fell asleep in
+his chair. His confusion, when he awoke and found he had been
+detected, was equalled by our uneasiness. When he was gone we sat
+and spoke of his peril, which we thought to be in some degree our
+own; of how easily the man might be surprised in such a state by
+grumbletonians; of the strange scenes that would follow--the royal
+treasures and stores at the mercy of the rabble, the palace
+overrun, the garrison of women turned adrift. And as we talked we
+were startled by a gun-shot and a sudden, barbaric outcry. I
+believe we all changed colour; but it was only the king firing at a
+dog and the chorus striking up in the Speak House. A day or two
+later I learned the king was very sick; went down, diagnosed the
+case; and took at once the highest medical degree by the exhibition
+of bicarbonate of soda. Within the hour Richard was himself again;
+and I found him at the unfinished house, enjoying the double
+pleasure of directing Rubam and making a dinner of cocoa-nut
+dumplings, and all eagerness to have the formula of this new sort
+of pain-killer--for pain-killer in the islands is the generic name
+of medicine. So ended the king's modest spree and our anxiety.
+
+On the face of things, I ought to say, loyalty appeared unshaken.
+When the schooner at last returned for us, after much experience of
+baffling winds, she brought a rumour that Tebureimoa had declared
+war on Apemama. Tembinok' became a new man; his face radiant; his
+attitude, as I saw him preside over a council of chiefs in one of
+the palace maniap's, eager as a boy's; his voice sounding abroad,
+shrill and jubilant, over half the compound. War is what he wants,
+and here was his chance. The English captain, when he flung his
+arms in the lagoon, had forbidden him (except in one case) all
+military adventures in the future: here was the case arrived. All
+morning the council sat; men were drilled, arms were bought, the
+sound of firing disturbed the afternoon; the king devised and
+communicated to me his plan of campaign, which was highly elaborate
+and ingenious, but perhaps a trifle fine-spun for the rough and
+random vicissitudes of war. And in all this bustle the temper of
+the people appeared excellent, an unwonted animation in every face,
+and even Uncle Parker burning with military zeal.
+
+Of course it was a false alarm. Tebureimoa had other fish to fry.
+The ambassador who accompanied us on our return to Butaritari found
+him retired to a small island on the reef, in a huff with the Old
+Men, a tiff with the traders, and more fear of insurrection at home
+than appetite for wars abroad. The plenipotentiary had been placed
+under my protection; and we solemnly saluted when we met. He
+proved an excellent fisherman, and caught bonito over the ship's
+side. He pulled a good oar, and made himself useful for a whole
+fiery afternoon, towing the becalmed Equator off Mariki. He went
+to his post and did no good. He returned home again, having done
+no harm. O si sic omnes!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--THE KING OF APEMAMA: DEVIL-WORK
+
+
+
+The ocean beach of Apemama was our daily resort. The coast is
+broken by shallow bays. The reef is detached, elevated, and
+includes a lagoon about knee-deep, the unrestful spending-basin of
+the surf. The beach is now of fine sand, now of broken coral. The
+trend of the coast being convex, scarce a quarter of a mile of it
+is to be seen at once; the land being so low, the horizon appears
+within a stone-cast; and the narrow prospect enhances the sense of
+privacy. Man avoids the place--even his footprints are uncommon;
+but a great number of birds hover and pipe there fishing, and leave
+crooked tracks upon the sand. Apart from these, the only sound
+(and I was going to say the only society), is that of the breakers
+on the reef.
+
+On each projection of the coast, the bank of coral clinkers
+immediately above the beach has been levelled, and a pillar built,
+perhaps breast-high. These are not sepulchral; all the dead being
+buried on the inhabited side of the island, close to men's houses,
+and (what is worse) to their wells. I was told they were to
+protect the isle against inroads from the sea--divine or diabolical
+martellos, probably sacred to Taburik, God of Thunder.
+
+The bay immediately opposite Equator Town, which we called Fu Bay,
+in honour of our cook, was thus fortified on either horn. It was
+well sheltered by the reef, the enclosed water clear and tranquil,
+the enclosing beach curved like a horseshoe, and both steep and
+broad. The path debouched about the midst of the re-entrant angle,
+the woods stopping some distance inland. In front, between the
+fringe of the wood and the crown of the beach, there had been
+designed a regular figure, like the court for some new variety of
+tennis, with borders of round stones imbedded, and pointed at the
+angles with low posts, likewise of stone. This was the king's Pray
+Place. When he prayed, what he prayed for, and to whom he
+addressed his supplications I could never learn. The ground was
+tapu.
+
+In the angle, by the mouth of the path, stood a deserted maniap'.
+Near by there had been a house before our coming, which was now
+transported and figured for the moment in Equator Town. It had
+been, and it would be again when we departed, the residence of the
+guardian and wizard of the spot--Tamaiti. Here, in this lone
+place, within sound of the sea, he had his dwelling and uncanny
+duties. I cannot call to mind another case of a man living on the
+ocean side of any open atoll; and Tamaiti must have had strong
+nerves, the greater confidence in his own spells, or, what I
+believe to be the truth, an enviable scepticism. Whether Tamaiti
+had any guardianship of the Pray Place I never heard. But his own
+particular chapel stood farther back in the fringe of the wood. It
+was a tree of respectable growth. Around it there was drawn a
+circle of stones like those that enclosed the Pray Place; in front,
+facing towards the sea, a stone of a much greater size, and
+somewhat hollowed, like a piscina, stood close against the trunk;
+in front of that again a conical pile of gravel. In the hollow of
+what I have called the piscina (though it proved to be a magic
+seat) lay an offering of green cocoa-nuts; and when you looked up
+you found the boughs of the tree to be laden with strange fruit:
+palm-branches elaborately plaited, and beautiful models of canoes,
+finished and rigged to the least detail. The whole had the
+appearance of a mid-summer and sylvan Christmas-tree al fresco.
+Yet we were already well enough acquainted in the Gilberts to
+recognise it, at the first sight, for a piece of wizardry, or, as
+they say in the group, of Devil-work.
+
+The plaited palms were what we recognised. We had seen them before
+on Apaiang, the most christianised of all these islands; where
+excellent Mr. Bingham lived and laboured and has left golden
+memories; whence all the education in the northern Gilberts traces
+its descent; and where we were boarded by little native Sunday-
+school misses in clean frocks, with demure faces, and singing hymns
+as to the manner born.
+
+Our experience of Devil-work at Apaiang had been as follows:- It
+chanced we were benighted at the house of Captain Tierney. My wife
+and I lodged with a Chinaman some half a mile away; and thither
+Captain Reid and a native boy escorted us by torch-light. On the
+way the torch went out, and we took shelter in a small and lonely
+Christian chapel to rekindle it. Stuck in the rafters of the
+chapel was a branch of knotted palm. 'What is that?' I asked. 'O,
+that's Devil-work,' said the Captain. 'And what is Devil-work?' I
+inquired. 'If you like, I'll show you some when we get to
+Johnnie's,' he replied. 'Johnnie's' was a quaint little house upon
+the crest of the beach, raised some three feet on posts, approached
+by stairs; part walled, part trellised. Trophies of advertisement-
+photographs were hung up within for decoration. There was a table
+and a recess-bed, in which Mrs. Stevenson slept; while I camped on
+the matted floor with Johnnie, Mrs. Johnnie, her sister, and the
+devil's own regiment of cockroaches. Hither was summoned an old
+witch, who looked the part to horror. The lamp was set on the
+floor; the crone squatted on the threshold, a green palm-branch in
+her hand, the light striking full on her aged features and picking
+out behind her, from the black night, timorous faces of spectators.
+Our sorceress began with a chanted incantation; it was in the old
+tongue, for which I had no interpreter; but ever and again there
+ran among the crowd outside that laugh which every traveller in the
+islands learns so soon to recognise,--the laugh of terror.
+Doubtless these half-Christian folk were shocked, these half-
+heathen folk alarmed. Chench or Taburik thus invoked, we put our
+questions; the witch knotted the leaves, here a leaf and there a
+leaf, plainly on some arithmetical system; studied the result with
+great apparent contention of mind; and gave the answers. Sidney
+Colvin was in robust health and gone a journey; and we should have
+a fair wind upon the morrow: that was the result of our
+consultation, for which we paid a dollar. The next day dawned
+cloudless and breathless; but I think Captain Reid placed a secret
+reliance on the sibyl, for the schooner was got ready for sea. By
+eight the lagoon was flawed with long cat's-paws, and the palms
+tossed and rustled; before ten we were clear of the passage and
+skimming under all plain sail, with bubbling scuppers. So we had
+the breeze, which was well worth a dollar in itself; but the
+bulletin about my friend in England proved, some six months later,
+when I got my mail, to have been groundless. Perhaps London lies
+beyond the horizon of the island gods.
+
+Tembinok', in his first dealings, showed himself sternly averse
+from superstition: and had not the Equator delayed, we might have
+left the island and still supposed him an agnostic. It chanced one
+day, however, that he came to our maniap', and found Mrs. Stevenson
+in the midst of a game of patience. She explained the game as well
+as she was able, and wound up jocularly by telling him this was her
+devil-work, and if she won, the Equator would arrive next day.
+Tembinok' must have drawn a long breath; we were not so high-and-
+dry after all; he need no longer dissemble, and he plunged at once
+into confessions. He made devil-work every day, he told us, to
+know if ships were coming in; and thereafter brought us regular
+reports of the results. It was surprising how regularly he was
+wrong; but he always had an explanation ready. There had been some
+schooner in the offing out of view; but either she was not bound
+for Apemama, or had changed her course, or lay becalmed. I used to
+regard the king with veneration as he thus publicly deceived
+himself. I saw behind him all the fathers of the Church, all the
+philosophers and men of science of the past; before him, all those
+that are to come; himself in the midst; the whole visionary series
+bowed over the same task of welding incongruities. To the end
+Tembinok' spoke reluctantly of the island gods and their worship,
+and I learned but little. Taburik is the god of thunder, and deals
+in wind and weather. A while since there were wizards who could
+call him down in the form of lightning. 'My patha he tell me he
+see: you think he lie?' Tienti--pronounced something like
+'Chench,' and identified by his majesty with the devil--sends and
+removes bodily sickness. He is whistled for in the Paumotuan
+manner, and is said to appear; but the king has never seen him.
+The doctors treat disease by the aid of Chench: eclectic Tembinok'
+at the same time administering 'pain-killer' from his medicine-
+chest, so as to give the sufferer both chances. 'I think mo'
+betta,' observed his majesty, with more than his usual self-
+approval. Apparently the gods are not jealous, and placidly enjoy
+both shrine and priest in common. On Tamaiti's medicine-tree, for
+instance, the model canoes are hung up ex voto for a prosperous
+voyage, and must therefore be dedicated to Taburik, god of the
+weather; but the stone in front is the place of sick folk come to
+pacify Chench.
+
+It chanced, by great good luck, that even as we spoke of these
+affairs, I found myself threatened with a cold. I do not suppose I
+was ever glad of a cold before, or shall ever be again; but the
+opportunity to see the sorcerers at work was priceless, and I
+called in the faculty of Apemama. They came in a body, all in
+their Sunday's best and hung with wreaths and shells, the insignia
+of the devil-worker. Tamaiti I knew already: Terutak' I saw for
+the first time--a tall, lank, raw-boned, serious North-Sea
+fisherman turned brown; and there was a third in their company
+whose name I never heard, and who played to Tamaiti the part of
+famulus. Tamaiti took me in hand first, and led me, conversing
+agreeably, to the shores of Fu Bay. The famulus climbed a tree for
+some green cocoa-nuts. Tamaiti himself disappeared a while in the
+bush and returned with coco tinder, dry leaves, and a spray of
+waxberry. I was placed on the stone, with my back to the tree and
+my face to windward; between me and the gravel-heap one of the
+green nuts was set; and then Tamaiti (having previously bared his
+feet, for he had come in canvas shoes, which tortured him) joined
+me within the magic circle, hollowed out the top of the gravel-
+heap, built his fire in the bottom, and applied a match: it was
+one of Bryant and May's. The flame was slow to catch, and the
+irreverent sorcerer filled in the time with talk of foreign places-
+-of London, and 'companies,' and how much money they had; of San
+Francisco, and the nefarious fogs, 'all the same smoke,' which had
+been so nearly the occasion of his death. I tried vainly to lead
+him to the matter in hand. 'Everybody make medicine,' he said
+lightly. And when I asked him if he were himself a good
+practitioner--'No savvy,' he replied, more lightly still. At
+length the leaves burst in a flame, which he continued to feed; a
+thick, light smoke blew in my face, and the flames streamed against
+and scorched my clothes. He in the meanwhile addressed, or
+affected to address, the evil spirit, his lips moving fast, but
+without sound; at the same time he waved in the air and twice
+struck me on the breast with his green spray. So soon as the
+leaves were consumed the ashes were buried, the green spray was
+imbedded in the gravel, and the ceremony was at an end.
+
+A reader of the Arabian Nights felt quite at home. Here was the
+suffumigation; here was the muttering wizard; here was the desert
+place to which Aladdin was decoyed by the false uncle. But they
+manage these things better in fiction. The effect was marred by
+the levity of the magician, entertaining his patient with small
+talk like an affable dentist, and by the incongruous presence of
+Mr. Osbourne with a camera. As for my cold, it was neither better
+nor worse.
+
+I was now handed over to Terutak', the leading practitioner or
+medical baronet of Apemama. His place is on the lagoon side of the
+island, hard by the palace. A rail of light wood, some two feet
+high, encloses an oblong piece of gravel like the king's Pray
+Place; in the midst is a green tree; below, a stone table bears a
+pair of boxes covered with a fine mat; and in front of these an
+offering of food, a cocoa-nut, a piece of taro or a fish, is placed
+daily. On two sides the enclosure is lined with maniap's; and one
+of our party, who had been there to sketch, had remarked a daily
+concourse of people and an extraordinary number of sick children;
+for this is in fact the infirmary of Apemama. The doctor and
+myself entered the sacred place alone; the boxes and the mat were
+displaced; and I was enthroned in their stead upon the stone,
+facing once more to the east. For a while the sorcerer remained
+unseen behind me, making passes in the air with a branch of palm.
+Then he struck lightly on the brim of my straw hat; and this blow
+he continued to repeat at intervals, sometimes brushing instead my
+arm and shoulder. I have had people try to mesmerise me a dozen
+times, and never with the least result. But at the first tap--on a
+quarter no more vital than my hat-brim, and from nothing more
+virtuous than a switch of palm wielded by a man I could not even
+see--sleep rushed upon me like an armed man. My sinews fainted, my
+eyes closed, my brain hummed, with drowsiness. I resisted, at
+first instinctively, then with a certain flurry of despair, in the
+end successfully; if that were indeed success which enabled me to
+scramble to my feet, to stumble home somnambulous, to cast myself
+at once upon my bed, and sink at once into a dreamless stupor.
+When I awoke my cold was gone. So I leave a matter that I do not
+understand.
+
+Meanwhile my appetite for curiosities (not usually very keen) had
+been strangely whetted by the sacred boxes. They were of pandanus
+wood, oblong in shape, with an effect of pillaring along the sides
+like straw work, lightly fringed with hair or fibre and standing on
+four legs. The outside was neat as a toy; the inside a mystery I
+was resolved to penetrate. But there was a lion in the path. I
+might not approach Terutak', since I had promised to buy nothing in
+the island; I dared not have recourse to the king, for I had
+already received from him more gifts than I knew how to repay. In
+this dilemma (the schooner being at last returned) we hit on a
+device. Captain Reid came forward in my stead, professed an
+unbridled passion for the boxes, and asked and obtained leave to
+bargain for them with the wizard. That same afternoon the captain
+and I made haste to the infirmary, entered the enclosure, raised
+the mat, and had begun to examine the boxes at our leisure, when
+Terutak's wife bounced out of one of the nigh houses, fell upon us,
+swept up the treasures, and was gone. There was never a more
+absolute surprise. She came, she took, she vanished, we had not a
+guess whither; and we remained, with foolish looks and laughter on
+the empty field. Such was the fit prologue of our memorable
+bargaining.
+
+Presently Terutak' came, bringing Tamaiti along with him, both
+smiling; and we four squatted without the rail. In the three
+maniap's of the infirmary a certain audience was gathered: the
+family of a sick child under treatment, the king's sister playing
+cards, a pretty girl, who swore I was the image of her father; in
+all perhaps a score. Terutak's wife had returned (even as she had
+vanished) unseen, and now sat, breathless and watchful, by her
+husband's side. Perhaps some rumour of our quest had gone abroad,
+or perhaps we had given the alert by our unseemly freedom:
+certain, at least, that in the faces of all present, expectation
+and alarm were mingled.
+
+Captain Reid announced, without preface or disguise, that I was
+come to purchase; Terutak', with sudden gravity, refused to sell.
+He was pressed; he persisted. It was explained we only wanted one:
+no matter, two were necessary for the healing of the sick. He was
+rallied, he was reasoned with: in vain. He sat there, serious and
+still, and refused. All this was only a preliminary skirmish;
+hitherto no sum of money had been mentioned; but now the captain
+brought his great guns to bear. He named a pound, then two, then
+three. Out of the maniap's one person after another came to join
+the group, some with mere excitement, others with consternation in
+their faces. The pretty girl crept to my side; it was then that--
+surely with the most artless flattery--she informed me of my
+likeness to her father. Tamaiti the infidel sat with hanging head
+and every mark of dejection. Terutak' streamed with sweat, his eye
+was glazed, his face wore a painful rictus, his chest heaved like
+that of one spent with running. The man must have been by nature
+covetous; and I doubt if ever I saw moral agony more tragically
+displayed. His wife by his side passionately encouraged his
+resistance.
+
+And now came the charge of the old guard. The captain, making a
+skip, named the surprising figure of five pounds. At the word the
+maniap's were emptied. The king's sister flung down her cards and
+came to the front to listen, a cloud on her brow. The pretty girl
+beat her breast and cried with wearisome iteration that if the box
+were hers I should have it. Terutak's wife was beside herself with
+pious fear, her face discomposed, her voice (which scarce ceased
+from warning and encouragement) shrill as a whistle. Even Terutak'
+lost that image-like immobility which he had hitherto maintained.
+He rocked on his mat, threw up his closed knees alternately, and
+struck himself on the breast after the manner of dancers. But he
+came gold out of the furnace; and with what voice was left him
+continued to reject the bribe.
+
+And now came a timely interjection. 'Money will not heal the
+sick,' observed the king's sister sententiously; and as soon as I
+heard the remark translated my eyes were unsealed, and I began to
+blush for my employment. Here was a sick child, and I sought, in
+the view of its parents, to remove the medicine-box. Here was the
+priest of a religion, and I (a heathen millionaire) was corrupting
+him to sacrilege. Here was a greedy man, torn in twain betwixt
+greed and conscience; and I sat by and relished, and lustfully
+renewed his torments. Ave, Caesar! Smothered in a corner, dormant
+but not dead, we have all the one touch of nature: an infant
+passion for the sand and blood of the arena. So I brought to an
+end my first and last experience of the joys of the millionaire,
+and departed amid silent awe. Nowhere else can I expect to stir
+the depths of human nature by an offer of five pounds; nowhere
+else, even at the expense of millions, could I hope to see the evil
+of riches stand so legibly exposed. Of all the bystanders, none
+but the king's sister retained any memory of the gravity and danger
+of the thing in hand. Their eyes glowed, the girl beat her breast,
+in senseless animal excitement. Nothing was offered them; they
+stood neither to gain nor to lose; at the mere name and wind of
+these great sums Satan possessed them.
+
+From this singular interview I went straight to the palace; found
+the king; confessed what I had been doing; begged him, in my name,
+to compliment Terutak' on his virtue, and to have a similar box
+made for me against the return of the schooner. Tembinok', Rubam,
+and one of the Daily Papers--him we used to call 'the Facetiae
+Column'--laboured for a while of some idea, which was at last
+intelligibly delivered. They feared I thought the box would cure
+me; whereas, without the wizard, it was useless; and when I was
+threatened with another cold I should do better to rely on pain-
+killer. I explained I merely wished to keep it in my 'outch' as a
+thing made in Apemama and these honest men were much relieved.
+
+Late the same evening, my wife, crossing the isle to windward, was
+aware of singing in the bush. Nothing is more common in that hour
+and place than the jubilant carol of the toddy-cutter, swinging
+high overhead, beholding below him the narrow ribbon of the isle,
+the surrounding field of ocean, and the fires of the sunset. But
+this was of a graver character, and seemed to proceed from the
+ground-level. Advancing a little in the thicket, Mrs. Stevenson
+saw a clear space, a fine mat spread in the midst, and on the mat a
+wreath of white flowers and one of the devil-work boxes. A woman--
+whom we guess to have been Mrs. Terutak'--sat in front, now
+drooping over the box like a mother over a cradle, now lifting her
+face and directing her song to heaven. A passing toddy-cutter told
+my wife that she was praying. Probably she did not so much pray as
+deprecate; and perhaps even the ceremony was one of disenchantment.
+For the box was already doomed; it was to pass from its green
+medicine-tree, reverend precinct, and devout attendants; to be
+handled by the profane; to cross three seas; to come to land under
+the foolscap of St. Paul's; to be domesticated within the hail of
+Lillie Bridge; there to be dusted by the British housemaid, and to
+take perhaps the roar of London for the voice of the outer sea
+along the reef. Before even we had finished dinner Chench had
+begun his journey, and one of the newspapers had already placed the
+box upon my table as the gift of Tembinok'.
+
+I made haste to the palace, thanked the king, but offered to
+restore the box, for I could not bear that the sick of the island
+should be made to suffer. I was amazed by his reply. Terutak', it
+appeared, had still three or four in reserve against an accident;
+and his reluctance, and the dread painted at first on every face,
+was not in the least occasioned by the prospect of medical
+destitution, but by the immediate divinity of Chench. How much
+more did I respect the king's command, which had been able to
+extort in a moment and for nothing a sacrilegious favour that I had
+in vain solicited with millions! But now I had a difficult task in
+front of me; it was not in my view that Terutak' should suffer by
+his virtue; and I must persuade the king to share my opinion, to
+let me enrich one of his subjects, and (what was yet more delicate)
+to pay for my present. Nothing shows the king in a more becoming
+light than the fact that I succeeded. He demurred at the
+principle; he exclaimed, when he heard it, at the sum. 'Plenty
+money!' cried he, with contemptuous displeasure. But his
+resistance was never serious; and when he had blown off his ill-
+humour--'A' right,' said he. 'You give him. Mo' betta.'
+
+Armed with this permission, I made straight for the infirmary. The
+night was now come, cool, dark, and starry. On a mat hard by a
+clear fire of wood and coco shell, Terutak' lay beside his wife.
+Both were smiling; the agony was over, the king's command had
+reconciled (I must suppose) their agitating scruples; and I was
+bidden to sit by them and share the circulating pipe. I was a
+little moved myself when I placed five gold sovereigns in the
+wizard's hand; but there was no sign of emotion in Terutak' as he
+returned them, pointed to the palace, and named Tembinok'. It was
+a changed scene when I had managed to explain. Terutak', long,
+dour Scots fisherman as he was, expressed his satisfaction within
+bounds; but the wife beamed; and there was an old gentleman
+present--her father, I suppose--who seemed nigh translated. His
+eyes stood out of his head; 'Kaupoi, Kaupoi--rich, rich!' ran on
+his lips like a refrain; and he could not meet my eye but what he
+gurgled into foolish laughter.
+
+I might now go home, leaving that fire-lit family party gloating
+over their new millions, and consider my strange day. I had tried
+and rewarded the virtue of Terutak'. I had played the millionaire,
+had behaved abominably, and then in some degree repaired my
+thoughtlessness. And now I had my box, and could open it and look
+within. It contained a miniature sleeping-mat and a white shell.
+Tamaiti, interrogated next day as to the shell, explained it was
+not exactly Chench, but a cell, or body, which he would at times
+inhabit. Asked why there was a sleeping-mat, he retorted
+indignantly, 'Why have you mats?' And this was the sceptical
+Tamaiti! But island scepticism is never deeper than the lips.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII--THE KING OF APEMAMA
+
+
+
+Thus all things on the island, even the priests of the gods, obey
+the word of Tembinok'. He can give and take, and slay, and allay
+the scruples of the conscientious, and do all things (apparently)
+but interfere in the cookery of a turtle. 'I got power' is his
+favourite word; it interlards his conversation; the thought haunts
+him and is ever fresh; and when be has asked and meditates of
+foreign countries, he looks up with a smile and reminds you, '_I_
+got POWER.' Nor is his delight only in the possession, but in the
+exercise. He rejoices in the crooked and violent paths of kingship
+like a strong man to run a race, or like an artist in his art. To
+feel, to use his power, to embellish his island and the picture of
+the island life after a private ideal, to milk the island
+vigorously, to extend his singular museum--these employ
+delightfully the sum of his abilities. I never saw a man more
+patently in the right trade.
+
+It would be natural to suppose this monarchy inherited intact
+through generations. And so far from that, it is a thing of
+yesterday. I was already a boy at school while Apemama was yet
+republican, ruled by a noisy council of Old Men, and torn with
+incurable feuds. And Tembinok' is no Bourbon; rather the son of a
+Napoleon. Of course he is well-born. No man need aspire high in
+the isles of the Pacific unless his pedigree be long and in the
+upper regions mythical. And our king counts cousinship with most
+of the high families in the archipelago, and traces his descent to
+a shark and a heroic woman. Directed by an oracle, she swam beyond
+sight of land to meet her revolting paramour, and received at sea
+the seed of a predestined family. 'I think lie,' is the king's
+emphatic commentary; yet he is proud of the legend. From this
+illustrious beginning the fortunes of the race must have declined;
+and Tenkoruti, the grandfather of Tembinok', was the chief of a
+village at the north end of the island. Kuria and Aranuka were yet
+independent; Apemama itself the arena of devastating feuds.
+Through this perturbed period of history the figure of Tenkoruti
+stalks memorable. In war he was swift and bloody; several towns
+fell to his spear, and the inhabitants were butchered to a man. In
+civil life this arrogance was unheard of. When the council of Old
+Men was summoned, he went to the Speak House, delivered his mind,
+and left without waiting to be answered. Wisdom had spoken: let
+others opine according to their folly. He was feared and hated,
+and this was his pleasure. He was no poet; he cared not for arts
+or knowledge. 'My gran'patha one thing savvy, savvy pight,'
+observed the king. In some lull of their own disputes the Old Men
+of Apemama adventured on the conquest of Apemama; and this unlicked
+Caius Marcius was elected general of the united troops. Success
+attended him; the islands were reduced, and Tenkoruti returned to
+his own government, glorious and detested. He died about 1860, in
+the seventieth year of his age and the full odour of unpopularity.
+He was tall and lean, says his grandson, looked extremely old, and
+'walked all the same young man.' The same observer gave me a
+significant detail. The survivors of that rough epoch were all
+defaced with spearmarks; there was none on the body of this skilful
+fighter. 'I see old man, no got a spear,' said the king.
+
+Tenkoruti left two sons, Tembaitake and Tembinatake. Tembaitake,
+our king's father, was short, middling stout, a poet, a good
+genealogist, and something of a fighter; it seems he took himself
+seriously, and was perhaps scarce conscious that he was in all
+things the creature and nursling of his brother. There was no
+shadow of dispute between the pair: the greater man filled with
+alacrity and content the second place; held the breach in war, and
+all the portfolios in the time of peace; and, when his brother
+rated him, listened in silence, looking on the ground. Like
+Tenkoruti, he was tall and lean and a swift talker--a rare trait in
+the islands. He possessed every accomplishment. He knew sorcery,
+he was the best genealogist of his day, he was a poet, he could
+dance and make canoes and armour; and the famous mast of Apemama,
+which ran one joint higher than the mainmast of a full-rigged ship,
+was of his conception and design. But these were avocations, and
+the man's trade was war. 'When my uncle go make wa', he laugh,'
+said Tembinok'. He forbade the use of field fortification, that
+protractor of native hostilities; his men must fight in the open,
+and win or be beaten out of hand; his own activity inspired his
+followers; and the swiftness of his blows beat down, in one
+lifetime, the resistance of three islands. He made his brother
+sovereign, he left his nephew absolute. 'My uncle make all
+smooth,' said Tembinok'. 'I mo' king than my patha: I got power,'
+he said, with formidable relish.
+
+Such is the portrait of the uncle drawn by the nephew. I can set
+beside it another by a different artist, who has often--I may say
+always--delighted me with his romantic taste in narrative, but not
+always--and I may say not often--persuaded me of his exactitude. I
+have already denied myself the use of so much excellent matter from
+the same source, that I begin to think it time to reward good
+resolution; and his account of Tembinatake agrees so well with the
+king's, that it may very well be (what I hope it is) the record of
+a fact, and not (what I suspect) the pleasing exercise of an
+imagination more than sailorly. A., for so I had perhaps better
+call him, was walking up the island after dusk, when he came on a
+lighted village of some size, was directed to the chief's house,
+and asked leave to rest and smoke a pipe. 'You will sit down, and
+smoke a pipe, and wash, and eat, and sleep,' replied the chief,
+'and to-morrow you will go again.' Food was brought, prayers were
+held (for this was in the brief day of Christianity), and the chief
+himself prayed with eloquence and seeming sincerity. All evening
+A. sat and admired the man by the firelight. He was six feet high,
+lean, with the appearance of many years, and an extraordinary air
+of breeding and command. 'He looked like a man who would kill you
+laughing,' said A., in singular echo of one of the king's
+expressions. And again: 'I had been reading the Musketeer books,
+and he reminded me of Aramis.' Such is the portrait of
+Tembinatake, drawn by an expert romancer.
+
+We had heard many tales of 'my patha'; never a word of my uncle
+till two days before we left. As the time approached for our
+departure Tembinok' became greatly changed; a softer, a more
+melancholy, and, in particular, a more confidential man appeared in
+his stead. To my wife he contrived laboriously to explain that
+though he knew he must lose his father in the course of nature, he
+had not minded nor realised it till the moment came; and that now
+he was to lose us he repeated the experience. We showed fireworks
+one evening on the terrace. It was a heavy business; the sense of
+separation was in all our minds, and the talk languished. The king
+was specially affected, sat disconsolate on his mat, and often
+sighed. Of a sudden one of the wives stepped forth from a cluster,
+came and kissed him in silence, and silently went again. It was
+just such a caress as we might give to a disconsolate child, and
+the king received it with a child's simplicity. Presently after we
+said good-night and withdrew; but Tembinok' detained Mr. Osbourne,
+patting the mat by his side and saying: 'Sit down. I feel bad, I
+like talk.' Osbourne sat down by him. 'You like some beer?' said
+he; and one of the wives produced a bottle. The king did not
+partake, but sat sighing and smoking a meerschaum pipe. 'I very
+sorry you go,' he said at last. 'Miss Stlevens he good man, woman
+he good man, boy he good man; all good man. Woman he smart all the
+same man. My woman' (glancing towards his wives) 'he good woman,
+no very smart. I think Miss Stlevens he is chiep all the same
+cap'n man-o-wa'. I think Miss Stlevens he rich man all the same
+me. All go schoona. I very sorry. My patha he go, my uncle he
+go, my cutcheons he go, Miss Stlevens he go: all go. You no see
+king cry before. King all the same man: feel bad, he cry. I very
+sorry.'
+
+In the morning it was the common topic in the village that the king
+had wept. To me he said: 'Last night I no can 'peak: too much
+here,' laying his hand upon his bosom. 'Now you go away all the
+same my pamily. My brothers, my uncle go away. All the same.'
+This was said with a dejection almost passionate. And it was the
+first time I had heard him name his uncle, or indeed employ the
+word. The same day he sent me a present of two corselets, made in
+the island fashion of plaited fibre, heavy and strong. One had
+been worn by Tenkoruti, one by Tembaitake; and the gift being
+gratefully received, he sent me, on the return of his messengers, a
+third--that of Tembinatake. My curiosity was roused; I begged for
+information as to the three wearers; and the king entered with
+gusto into the details already given. Here was a strange thing,
+that he should have talked so much of his family, and not once
+mentioned that relative of whom he was plainly the most proud.
+Nay, more: he had hitherto boasted of his father; thenceforth he
+had little to say of him; and the qualities for which he had
+praised him in the past were now attributed where they were due,--
+to the uncle. A confusion might be natural enough among islanders,
+who call all the sons of their grandfather by the common name of
+father. But this was not the case with Tembinok'. Now the ice was
+broken the word uncle was perpetually in his mouth; he who had been
+so ready to confound was now careful to distinguish; and the father
+sank gradually into a self-complacent ordinary man, while the uncle
+rose to his true stature as the hero and founder of the race.
+
+The more I heard and the more I considered, the more this mystery
+of Tembinok's behaviour puzzled and attracted me. And the
+explanation, when it came, was one to strike the imagination of a
+dramatist. Tembinok' had two brothers. One, detected in private
+trading, was banished, then forgiven, lives to this day in the
+island, and is the father of the heir-apparent, Paul. The other
+fell beyond forgiveness. I have heard it was a love-affair with
+one of the king's wives, and the thing is highly possible in that
+romantic archipelago. War was attempted to be levied; but
+Tembinok' was too swift for the rebels, and the guilty brother
+escaped in a canoe. He did not go alone. Tembinatake had a hand
+in the rebellion, and the man who had gained a kingdom for a
+weakling brother was banished by that brother's son. The fugitives
+came to shore in other islands, but Tembinok' remains to this day
+ignorant of their fate.
+
+So far history. And now a moment for conjecture. Tembinok'
+confused habitually, not only the attributes and merits of his
+father and his uncle, but their diverse personal appearance.
+Before he had even spoken, or thought to speak, of Tembinatake, he
+had told me often of a tall, lean father, skilled in war, and his
+own schoolmaster in genealogy and island arts. How if both were
+fathers, one natural, one adoptive? How if the heir of Tembaitake,
+like the heir of Tembinok' himself, were not a son, but an adopted
+nephew? How if the founder of the monarchy, while he worked for
+his brother, worked at the same time for the child of his loins?
+How if on the death of Tembaitake, the two stronger natures, father
+and son, king and kingmaker, clashed, and Tembinok', when he drove
+out his uncle, drove out the author of his days? Here is at least
+a tragedy four-square.
+
+The king took us on board in his own gig, dressed for the occasion
+in the naval uniform. He had little to say, he refused
+refreshments, shook us briefly by the hand, and went ashore again.
+That night the palm-tops of Apemama had dipped behind the sea, and
+the schooner sailed solitary under the stars.
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, IN THE SOUTH SEAS ***
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII">
+<title>In the South Seas</title>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">In the South Seas, by Robert Louis Stevenson</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of In the South Seas, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+(#20 in our series by Robert Louis Stevenson)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: In the South Seas
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+Release Date: March, 1996 [EBook #464]
+[This file was first posted on January 23, 1996]
+[Most recently updated: August 18, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+</pre>
+<p>
+<a name="startoftext"></a>
+Transcribed from the 1908 Chatto &amp; Windus edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+IN THE SOUTH SEAS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+PART 1: THE MARQUESAS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER I - AN ISLAND LANDFALL<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+For nearly ten years my health had been declining; and for some while
+before I set forth upon my voyage, I believed I was come to the afterpiece
+of life, and had only the nurse and undertaker to expect.&nbsp; It was
+suggested that I should try the South Seas; and I was not unwilling
+to visit like a ghost, and be carried like a bale, among scenes that
+had attracted me in youth and health.&nbsp; I chartered accordingly
+Dr. Merrit&rsquo;s schooner yacht, the <i>Casco</i>, seventy-four tons
+register; sailed from San Francisco towards the end of June 1888, visited
+the eastern islands, and was left early the next year at Honolulu.&nbsp;
+Hence, lacking courage to return to my old life of the house and sick-room,
+I set forth to leeward in a trading schooner, the <i>Equator</i>, of
+a little over seventy tons, spent four months among the atolls (low
+coral islands) of the Gilbert group, and reached Samoa towards the close
+of &lsquo;89.&nbsp; By that time gratitude and habit were beginning
+to attach me to the islands; I had gained a competency of strength;
+I had made friends; I had learned new interests; the time of my voyages
+had passed like days in fairyland; and I decided to remain.&nbsp; I
+began to prepare these pages at sea, on a third cruise, in the trading
+steamer <i>Janet Nicoll</i>.&nbsp; If more days are granted me, they
+shall be passed where I have found life most pleasant and man most interesting;
+the axes of my black boys are already clearing the foundations of my
+future house; and I must learn to address readers from the uttermost
+parts of the sea.<br>
+<br>
+That I should thus have reversed the verdict of Lord Tennyson&rsquo;s
+hero is less eccentric than appears.&nbsp; Few men who come to the islands
+leave them; they grow grey where they alighted; the palm shades and
+the trade-wind fans them till they die, perhaps cherishing to the last
+the fancy of a visit home, which is rarely made, more rarely enjoyed,
+and yet more rarely repeated.&nbsp; No part of the world exerts the
+same attractive power upon the visitor, and the task before me is to
+communicate to fireside travellers some sense of its seduction, and
+to describe the life, at sea and ashore, of many hundred thousand persons,
+some of our own blood and language, all our contemporaries, and yet
+as remote in thought and habit as Rob Roy or Barbarossa, the Apostles
+or the Caesars.<br>
+<br>
+The first experience can never be repeated.&nbsp; The first love, the
+first sunrise, the first South Sea island, are memories apart and touched
+a virginity of sense.&nbsp; On the 28th of July 1888 the moon was an
+hour down by four in the morning.&nbsp; In the east a radiating centre
+of brightness told of the day; and beneath, on the skyline, the morning
+bank was already building, black as ink.&nbsp; We have all read of the
+swiftness of the day&rsquo;s coming and departure in low latitudes;
+it is a point on which the scientific and sentimental tourist are at
+one, and has inspired some tasteful poetry.&nbsp; The period certainly
+varies with the season; but here is one case exactly noted.&nbsp; Although
+the dawn was thus preparing by four, the sun was not up till six; and
+it was half-past five before we could distinguish our expected islands
+from the clouds on the horizon.&nbsp; Eight degrees south, and the day
+two hours a-coming.&nbsp; The interval was passed on deck in the silence
+of expectation, the customary thrill of landfall heightened by the strangeness
+of the shores that we were then approaching.&nbsp; Slowly they took
+shape in the attenuating darkness.&nbsp; Ua-huna, piling up to a truncated
+summit, appeared the first upon the starboard bow; almost abeam arose
+our destination, Nuka-hiva, whelmed in cloud; and betwixt and to the
+southward, the first rays of the sun displayed the needles of Ua-pu.&nbsp;
+These pricked about the line of the horizon; like the pinnacles of some
+ornate and monstrous church, they stood there, in the sparkling brightness
+of the morning, the fit signboard of a world of wonders.<br>
+<br>
+Not one soul aboard the <i>Casco</i> had set foot upon the islands,
+or knew, except by accident, one word of any of the island tongues;
+and it was with something perhaps of the same anxious pleasure as thrilled
+the bosom of discoverers that we drew near these problematic shores.&nbsp;
+The land heaved up in peaks and rising vales; it fell in cliffs and
+buttresses; its colour ran through fifty modulations in a scale of pearl
+and rose and olive; and it was crowned above by opalescent clouds.&nbsp;
+The suffusion of vague hues deceived the eye; the shadows of clouds
+were confounded with the articulations of the mountains; and the isle
+and its unsubstantial canopy rose and shimmered before us like a single
+mass.&nbsp; There was no beacon, no smoke of towns to be expected, no
+plying pilot.&nbsp; Somewhere, in that pale phantasmagoria of cliff
+and cloud, our haven lay concealed; and somewhere to the east of it
+- the only sea-mark given - a certain headland, known indifferently
+as Cape Adam and Eve, or Cape Jack and Jane, and distinguished by two
+colossal figures, the gross statuary of nature.&nbsp; These we were
+to find; for these we craned and stared, focused glasses, and wrangled
+over charts; and the sun was overhead and the land close ahead before
+we found them.&nbsp; To a ship approaching, like the <i>Casco</i>, from
+the north, they proved indeed the least conspicuous features of a striking
+coast; the surf flying high above its base; strange, austere, and feathered
+mountains rising behind; and Jack and Jane, or Adam and Eve, impending
+like a pair of warts above the breakers.<br>
+<br>
+Thence we bore away along shore.&nbsp; On our port beam we might hear
+the explosions of the surf; a few birds flew fishing under the prow;
+there was no other sound or mark of life, whether of man or beast, in
+all that quarter of the island.&nbsp; Winged by her own impetus and
+the dying breeze, the <i>Casco</i> skimmed under cliffs, opened out
+a cove, showed us a beach and some green trees, and flitted by again,
+bowing to the swell.&nbsp; The trees, from our distance, might have
+been hazel; the beach might have been in Europe; the mountain forms
+behind modelled in little from the Alps, and the forest which clustered
+on their ramparts a growth no more considerable than our Scottish heath.&nbsp;
+Again the cliff yawned, but now with a deeper entry; and the <i>Casco</i>,
+hauling her wind, began to slide into the bay of Anaho.&nbsp; The cocoa-palm,
+that giraffe of vegetables, so graceful, so ungainly, to the European
+eye so foreign, was to be seen crowding on the beach, and climbing and
+fringing the steep sides of mountains.&nbsp; Rude and bare hills embraced
+the inlet upon either hand; it was enclosed to the landward by a bulk
+of shattered mountains.&nbsp; In every crevice of that barrier the forest
+harboured, roosting and nestling there like birds about a ruin; and
+far above, it greened and roughened the razor edges of the summit.<br>
+<br>
+Under the eastern shore, our schooner, now bereft of any breeze, continued
+to creep in: the smart creature, when once under way, appearing motive
+in herself.&nbsp; From close aboard arose the bleating of young lambs;
+a bird sang in the hillside; the scent of the land and of a hundred
+fruits or flowers flowed forth to meet us; and, presently, a house or
+two appeared, standing high upon the ankles of the hills, and one of
+these surrounded with what seemed a garden.&nbsp; These conspicuous
+habitations, that patch of culture, had we but known it, were a mark
+of the passage of whites; and we might have approached a hundred islands
+and not found their parallel.&nbsp; It was longer ere we spied the native
+village, standing (in the universal fashion) close upon a curve of beach,
+close under a grove of palms; the sea in front growling and whitening
+on a concave arc of reef.&nbsp; For the cocoa-tree and the island man
+are both lovers and neighbours of the surf.&nbsp; &lsquo;The coral waxes,
+the palm grows, but man departs,&rsquo; says the sad Tahitian proverb;
+but they are all three, so long as they endure, co-haunters of the beach.&nbsp;
+The mark of anchorage was a blow-hole in the rocks, near the south-easterly
+corner of the bay.&nbsp; Punctually to our use, the blow-hole spouted;
+the schooner turned upon her heel; the anchor plunged.&nbsp; It was
+a small sound, a great event; my soul went down with these moorings
+whence no windlass may extract nor any diver fish it up; and I, and
+some part of my ship&rsquo;s company, were from that hour the bondslaves
+of the isles of Vivien.<br>
+<br>
+Before yet the anchor plunged a canoe was already paddling from the
+hamlet.&nbsp; It contained two men: one white, one brown and tattooed
+across the face with bands of blue, both in immaculate white European
+clothes: the resident trader, Mr. Regler, and the native chief, Taipi-Kikino.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Captain, is it permitted to come on board?&rsquo; were the first
+words we heard among the islands.&nbsp; Canoe followed canoe till the
+ship swarmed with stalwart, six-foot men in every stage of undress;
+some in a shirt, some in a loin-cloth, one in a handkerchief imperfectly
+adjusted; some, and these the more considerable, tattooed from head
+to foot in awful patterns; some barbarous and knived; one, who sticks
+in my memory as something bestial, squatting on his hams in a canoe,
+sucking an orange and spitting it out again to alternate sides with
+ape-like vivacity - all talking, and we could not understand one word;
+all trying to trade with us who had no thought of trading, or offering
+us island curios at prices palpably absurd.&nbsp; There was no word
+of welcome; no show of civility; no hand extended save that of the chief
+and Mr. Regler.&nbsp; As we still continued to refuse the proffered
+articles, complaint ran high and rude; and one, the jester of the party,
+railed upon our meanness amid jeering laughter.&nbsp; Amongst other
+angry pleasantries - &lsquo;Here is a mighty fine ship,&rsquo; said
+he, &lsquo;to have no money on board!&rsquo;&nbsp; I own I was inspired
+with sensible repugnance; even with alarm.&nbsp; The ship was manifestly
+in their power; we had women on board; I knew nothing of my guests beyond
+the fact that they were cannibals; the Directory (my only guide) was
+full of timid cautions; and as for the trader, whose presence might
+else have reassured me, were not whites in the Pacific the usual instigators
+and accomplices of native outrage?&nbsp; When he reads this confession,
+our kind friend, Mr. Regler, can afford to smile.<br>
+<br>
+Later in the day, as I sat writing up my journal, the cabin was filled
+from end to end with Marquesans: three brown-skinned generations, squatted
+cross-legged upon the floor, and regarding me in silence with embarrassing
+eyes.&nbsp; The eyes of all Polynesians are large, luminous, and melting;
+they are like the eyes of animals and some Italians.&nbsp; A kind of
+despair came over me, to sit there helpless under all these staring
+orbs, and be thus blocked in a corner of my cabin by this speechless
+crowd: and a kind of rage to think they were beyond the reach of articulate
+communication, like furred animals, or folk born deaf, or the dwellers
+of some alien planet.<br>
+<br>
+To cross the Channel is, for a boy of twelve, to change heavens; to
+cross the Atlantic, for a man of twenty-four, is hardly to modify his
+diet.&nbsp; But I was now escaped out of the shadow of the Roman empire,
+under whose toppling monuments we were all cradled, whose laws and letters
+are on every hand of us, constraining and preventing.&nbsp; I was now
+to see what men might be whose fathers had never studied Virgil, had
+never been conquered by Caesar, and never been ruled by the wisdom of
+Gaius or Papinian.&nbsp; By the same step I had journeyed forth out
+of that comfortable zone of kindred languages, where the curse of Babel
+is so easy to be remedied; and my new fellow-creatures sat before me
+dumb like images.&nbsp; Methought, in my travels, all human relation
+was to be excluded; and when I returned home (for in those days I still
+projected my return) I should have but dipped into a picture-book without
+a text.&nbsp; Nay, and I even questioned if my travels should be much
+prolonged; perhaps they were destined to a speedy end; perhaps my subsequent
+friend, Kauanui, whom I remarked there, sitting silent with the rest,
+for a man of some authority, might leap from his hams with an ear-splitting
+signal, the ship be carried at a rush, and the ship&rsquo;s company
+butchered for the table.<br>
+<br>
+There could be nothing more natural than these apprehensions, nor anything
+more groundless.&nbsp; In my experience of the islands, I had never
+again so menacing a reception; were I to meet with such to-day, I should
+be more alarmed and tenfold more surprised.&nbsp; The majority of Polynesians
+are easy folk to get in touch with, frank, fond of notice, greedy of
+the least affection, like amiable, fawning dogs; and even with the Marquesans,
+so recently and so imperfectly redeemed from a blood-boltered barbarism,
+all were to become our intimates, and one, at least, was to mourn sincerely
+our departure.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER II - MAKING FRIENDS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The impediment of tongues was one that I particularly over-estimated.&nbsp;
+The languages of Polynesia are easy to smatter, though hard to speak
+with elegance.&nbsp; And they are extremely similar, so that a person
+who has a tincture of one or two may risk, not without hope, an attempt
+upon the others.<br>
+<br>
+And again, not only is Polynesian easy to smatter, but interpreters
+abound.&nbsp; Missionaries, traders, and broken white folk living on
+the bounty of the natives, are to be found in almost every isle and
+hamlet; and even where these are unserviceable, the natives themselves
+have often scraped up a little English, and in the French zone (though
+far less commonly) a little French-English, or an efficient pidgin,
+what is called to the westward &lsquo;Beach-la-Mar,&rsquo; comes easy
+to the Polynesian; it is now taught, besides, in the schools of Hawaii;
+and from the multiplicity of British ships, and the nearness of the
+States on the one hand and the colonies on the other, it may be called,
+and will almost certainly become, the tongue of the Pacific.&nbsp; I
+will instance a few examples.&nbsp; I met in Majuro a Marshall Island
+boy who spoke excellent English; this he had learned in the German firm
+in Jaluit, yet did not speak one word of German.&nbsp; I heard from
+a gendarme who had taught school in Rapa-iti that while the children
+had the utmost difficulty or reluctance to learn French, they picked
+up English on the wayside, and as if by accident.&nbsp; On one of the
+most out-of-the-way atolls in the Carolines, my friend Mr. Benjamin
+Hird was amazed to find the lads playing cricket on the beach and talking
+English; and it was in English that the crew of the <i>Janet Nicoll</i>,
+a set of black boys from different Melanesian islands, communicated
+with other natives throughout the cruise, transmitted orders, and sometimes
+jested together on the fore-hatch.&nbsp; But what struck me perhaps
+most of all was a word I heard on the verandah of the Tribunal at Noumea.&nbsp;
+A case had just been heard - a trial for infanticide against an ape-like
+native woman; and the audience were smoking cigarettes as they awaited
+the verdict.&nbsp; An anxious, amiable French lady, not far from tears,
+was eager for acquittal, and declared she would engage the prisoner
+to be her children&rsquo;s nurse.&nbsp; The bystanders exclaimed at
+the proposal; the woman was a savage, said they, and spoke no language.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Mais, vous savez</i>,&rsquo; objected the fair sentimentalist;
+&lsquo;<i>ils apprennent si vite l&rsquo;anglais</i>!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But to be able to speak to people is not all.&nbsp; And in the first
+stage of my relations with natives I was helped by two things.&nbsp;
+To begin with, I was the show-man of the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; She, her
+fine lines, tall spars, and snowy decks, the crimson fittings of the
+saloon, and the white, the gilt, and the repeating mirrors of the tiny
+cabin, brought us a hundred visitors.&nbsp; The men fathomed out her
+dimensions with their arms, as their fathers fathomed out the ships
+of Cook; the women declared the cabins more lovely than a church; bouncing
+Junos were never weary of sitting in the chairs and contemplating in
+the glass their own bland images; and I have seen one lady strip up
+her dress, and, with cries of wonder and delight, rub herself bare-breeched
+upon the velvet cushions.&nbsp; Biscuit, jam, and syrup was the entertainment;
+and, as in European parlours, the photograph album went the round.&nbsp;
+This sober gallery, their everyday costumes and physiognomies, had become
+transformed, in three weeks&rsquo; sailing, into things wonderful and
+rich and foreign; alien faces, barbaric dresses, they were now beheld
+and fingered, in the swerving cabin, with innocent excitement and surprise.&nbsp;
+Her Majesty was often recognised, and I have seen French subjects kiss
+her photograph; Captain Speedy - in an Abyssinian war-dress, supposed
+to be the uniform of the British army - met with much acceptance; and
+the effigies of Mr. Andrew Lang were admired in the Marquesas.&nbsp;
+There is the place for him to go when he shall be weary of Middlesex
+and Homer.<br>
+<br>
+It was perhaps yet more important that I had enjoyed in my youth some
+knowledge of our Scots folk of the Highlands and the Islands.&nbsp;
+Not much beyond a century has passed since these were in the same convulsive
+and transitionary state as the Marquesans of to-day.&nbsp; In both cases
+an alien authority enforced, the clans disarmed, the chiefs deposed,
+new customs introduced, and chiefly that fashion of regarding money
+as the means and object of existence.&nbsp; The commercial age, in each,
+succeeding at a bound to an age of war abroad and patriarchal communism
+at home.&nbsp; In one the cherished practice of tattooing, in the other
+a cherished costume, proscribed.&nbsp; In each a main luxury cut off:
+beef, driven under cloud of night from Lowland pastures, denied to the
+meat-loving Highlander; long-pig, pirated from the next village, to
+the man-eating Kanaka.&nbsp; The grumbling, the secret ferment, the
+fears and resentments, the alarms and sudden councils of Marquesan chiefs,
+reminded me continually of the days of Lovat and Struan.&nbsp; Hospitality,
+tact, natural fine manners, and a touchy punctilio, are common to both
+races: common to both tongues the trick of dropping medial consonants.&nbsp;
+Here is a table of two widespread Polynesian words:-<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</pre><pre><i>House</i></pre><pre>.&nbsp; </pre><pre><i>Love.
+
+</i></pre><pre>Tahitian&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; FARE&nbsp; &nbsp; AROHA
+
+New Zealand&nbsp; WHARE
+
+Samoan&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; FALE&nbsp; &nbsp; TALOFA
+
+Manihiki&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; FALE&nbsp; &nbsp; ALOHA
+
+Hawaiian&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; HALE&nbsp; &nbsp; ALOHA
+
+Marquesan&nbsp; &nbsp; HA&rsquo;E&nbsp; &nbsp; KAOHA
+
+
+</pre><p>The elision of medial consonants, so marked in these Marquesan
+instances, is no less common both in Gaelic and the Lowland Scots.&nbsp;
+Stranger still, that prevalent Polynesian sound, the so-called catch,
+written with an apostrophe, and often or always the gravestone of a
+perished consonant, is to be heard in Scotland to this day.&nbsp; When
+a Scot pronounces water, better, or bottle - <i>wa&rsquo;er, be&rsquo;er</i>,
+or <i>bo&rsquo;le</i> - the sound is precisely that of the catch; and
+I think we may go beyond, and say, that if such a population could be
+isolated, and this mispronunciation should become the rule, it might
+prove the first stage of transition from <i>t</i> to <i>k</i>, which
+is the disease of Polynesian languages.&nbsp; The tendency of the Marquesans,
+however, is to urge against consonants, or at least on the very common
+letter <i>l</i>, a war of mere extermination.&nbsp; A hiatus is agreeable
+to any Polynesian ear; the ear even of the stranger soon grows used
+to these barbaric voids; but only in the Marquesan will you find such
+names as <i>Haaii</i> and <i>Paaaeua</i>, when each individual vowel
+must be separately uttered.<br>
+<br>
+These points of similarity between a South Sea people and some of my
+own folk at home ran much in my head in the islands; and not only inclined
+me to view my fresh acquaintances with favour, but continually modified
+my judgment.&nbsp; A polite Englishman comes to-day to the Marquesans
+and is amazed to find the men tattooed; polite Italians came not long
+ago to England and found our fathers stained with woad; and when I paid
+the return visit as a little boy, I was highly diverted with the backwardness
+of Italy: so insecure, so much a matter of the day and hour, is the
+pre-eminence of race.&nbsp; It was so that I hit upon a means of communication
+which I recommend to travellers.&nbsp; When I desired any detail of
+savage custom, or of superstitious belief, I cast back in the story
+of my fathers, and fished for what I wanted with some trait of equal
+barbarism: Michael Scott, Lord Derwentwater&rsquo;s head, the second-sight,
+the Water Kelpie, - each of these I have found to be a killing bait;
+the black bull&rsquo;s head of Stirling procured me the legend of <i>Rahero</i>;
+and what I knew of the Cluny Macphersons, or the Appin Stewarts, enabled
+me to learn, and helped me to understand, about the <i>Tevas</i> of
+Tahiti.&nbsp; The native was no longer ashamed, his sense of kinship
+grew warmer, and his lips were opened.&nbsp; It is this sense of kinship
+that the traveller must rouse and share; or he had better content himself
+with travels from the blue bed to the brown.&nbsp; And the presence
+of one Cockney titterer will cause a whole party to walk in clouds of
+darkness.<br>
+<br>
+The hamlet of Anaho stands on a margin of flat land between the west
+of the beach and the spring of the impending mountains.&nbsp; A grove
+of palms, perpetually ruffling its green fans, carpets it (as for a
+triumph) with fallen branches, and shades it like an arbour.&nbsp; A
+road runs from end to end of the covert among beds of flowers, the milliner&rsquo;s
+shop of the community; and here and there, in the grateful twilight,
+in an air filled with a diversity of scents, and still within hearing
+of the surf upon the reef, the native houses stand in scattered neighbourhood.&nbsp;
+The same word, as we have seen, represents in many tongues of Polynesia,
+with scarce a shade of difference, the abode of man.&nbsp; But although
+the word be the same, the structure itself continually varies; and the
+Marquesan, among the most backward and barbarous of islanders, is yet
+the most commodiously lodged.&nbsp; The grass huts of Hawaii, the birdcage
+houses of Tahiti, or the open shed, with the crazy Venetian blinds,
+of the polite Samoan - none of these can be compared with the Marquesan
+<i>paepae-hae</i>, or dwelling platform.&nbsp; The paepae is an oblong
+terrace built without cement or black volcanic stone, from twenty to
+fifty feet in length, raised from four to eight feet from the earth,
+and accessible by a broad stair.&nbsp; Along the back of this, and coming
+to about half its width, runs the open front of the house, like a covered
+gallery: the interior sometimes neat and almost elegant in its bareness,
+the sleeping space divided off by an endlong coaming, some bright raiment
+perhaps hanging from a nail, and a lamp and one of White&rsquo;s sewing-machines
+the only marks of civilization.&nbsp; On the outside, at one end of
+the terrace, burns the cooking-fire under a shed; at the other there
+is perhaps a pen for pigs; the remainder is the evening lounge and <i>al
+fresco</i> banquet-hall of the inhabitants.&nbsp; To some houses water
+is brought down the mountains in bamboo pipes, perforated for the sake
+of sweetness.&nbsp; With the Highland comparison in my mind, I was struck
+to remember the sluttish mounds of turf and stone in which I have sat
+and been entertained in the Hebrides and the North Islands.&nbsp; Two
+things, I suppose, explain the contrast.&nbsp; In Scotland wood is rare,
+and with materials so rude as turf and stone the very hope of neatness
+is excluded.&nbsp; And in Scotland it is cold.&nbsp; Shelter and a hearth
+are needs so pressing that a man looks not beyond; he is out all day
+after a bare bellyful, and at night when he saith, &lsquo;Aha, it is
+warm!&rsquo; he has not appetite for more.&nbsp; Or if for something
+else, then something higher; a fine school of poetry and song arose
+in these rough shelters, and an air like &lsquo;<i>Lochaber no more</i>&rsquo;
+is an evidence of refinement more convincing, as well as more imperishable,
+than a palace.<br>
+<br>
+To one such dwelling platform a considerable troop of relatives and
+dependants resort.&nbsp; In the hour of the dusk, when the fire blazes,
+and the scent of the cooked breadfruit fills the air, and perhaps the
+lamp glints already between the pillars and the house, you shall behold
+them silently assemble to this meal, men, women, and children; and the
+dogs and pigs frisk together up the terrace stairway, switching rival
+tails.&nbsp; The strangers from the ship were soon equally welcome:
+welcome to dip their fingers in the wooden dish, to drink cocoanuts,
+to share the circulating pipe, and to hear and hold high debate about
+the misdeeds of the French, the Panama Canal, or the geographical position
+of San Francisco and New Yo&rsquo;ko.&nbsp; In a Highland hamlet, quite
+out of reach of any tourist, I have met the same plain and dignified
+hospitality.<br>
+<br>
+I have mentioned two facts - the distasteful behaviour of our earliest
+visitors, and the case of the lady who rubbed herself upon the cushions
+- which would give a very false opinion of Marquesan manners.&nbsp;
+The great majority of Polynesians are excellently mannered; but the
+Marquesan stands apart, annoying and attractive, wild, shy, and refined.&nbsp;
+If you make him a present he affects to forget it, and it must be offered
+him again at his going: a pretty formality I have found nowhere else.&nbsp;
+A hint will get rid of any one or any number; they are so fiercely proud
+and modest; while many of the more lovable but blunter islanders crowd
+upon a stranger, and can be no more driven off than flies.&nbsp; A slight
+or an insult the Marquesan seems never to forget.&nbsp; I was one day
+talking by the wayside with my friend Hoka, when I perceived his eyes
+suddenly to flash and his stature to swell.&nbsp; A white horseman was
+coming down the mountain, and as he passed, and while he paused to exchange
+salutations with myself, Hoka was still staring and ruffling like a
+gamecock.&nbsp; It was a Corsican who had years before called him <i>cochon
+sauvage - co&ccedil;on chauvage</i>, as Hoka mispronounced it.&nbsp;
+With people so nice and so touchy, it was scarce to be supposed that
+our company of greenhorns should not blunder into offences.&nbsp; Hoka,
+on one of his visits, fell suddenly in a brooding silence, and presently
+after left the ship with cold formality.&nbsp; When he took me back
+into favour, he adroitly and pointedly explained the nature of my offence:
+I had asked him to sell cocoa-nuts; and in Hoka&rsquo;s view articles
+of food were things that a gentleman should give, not sell; or at least
+that he should not sell to any friend.&nbsp; On another occasion I gave
+my boat&rsquo;s crew a luncheon of chocolate and biscuits.&nbsp; I had
+sinned, I could never learn how, against some point of observance; and
+though I was drily thanked, my offerings were left upon the beach.&nbsp;
+But our worst mistake was a slight we put on Toma, Hoka&rsquo;s adoptive
+father, and in his own eyes the rightful chief of Anaho.&nbsp; In the
+first place, we did not call upon him, as perhaps we should, in his
+fine new European house, the only one in the hamlet.&nbsp; In the second,
+when we came ashore upon a visit to his rival, Taipi-Kikino, it was
+Toma whom we saw standing at the head of the beach, a magnificent figure
+of a man, magnificently tattooed; and it was of Toma that we asked our
+question: &lsquo;Where is the chief?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;What chief?&rsquo;
+cried Toma, and turned his back on the blasphemers.&nbsp; Nor did he
+forgive us.&nbsp; Hoka came and went with us daily; but, alone I believe
+of all the countryside, neither Toma nor his wife set foot on board
+the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; The temptation resisted it is hard for a European
+to compute.&nbsp; The flying city of Laputa moored for a fortnight in
+St. James&rsquo;s Park affords but a pale figure of the <i>Casco</i>
+anchored before Anaho; for the Londoner has still his change of pleasures,
+but the Marquesan passes to his grave through an unbroken uniformity
+of days.<br>
+<br>
+On the afternoon before it was intended we should sail, a valedictory
+party came on board: nine of our particular friends equipped with gifts
+and dressed as for a festival.&nbsp; Hoka, the chief dancer and singer,
+the greatest dandy of Anaho, and one of the handsomest young fellows
+in the world-sullen, showy, dramatic, light as a feather and strong
+as an ox - it would have been hard, on that occasion, to recognise,
+as he sat there stooped and silent, his face heavy and grey.&nbsp; It
+was strange to see the lad so much affected; stranger still to recognise
+in his last gift one of the curios we had refused on the first day,
+and to know our friend, so gaily dressed, so plainly moved at our departure,
+for one of the half-naked crew that had besieged and insulted us on
+our arrival: strangest of all, perhaps, to find, in that carved handle
+of a fan, the last of those curiosities of the first day which had now
+all been given to us by their possessors - their chief merchandise,
+for which they had sought to ransom us as long as we were strangers,
+which they pressed on us for nothing as soon as we were friends.&nbsp;
+The last visit was not long protracted.&nbsp; One after another they
+shook hands and got down into their canoe; when Hoka turned his back
+immediately upon the ship, so that we saw his face no more.&nbsp; Taipi,
+on the other hand, remained standing and facing us with gracious valedictory
+gestures; and when Captain Otis dipped the ensign, the whole party saluted
+with their hats.&nbsp; This was the farewell; the episode of our visit
+to Anaho was held concluded; and though the <i>Casco</i> remained nearly
+forty hours at her moorings, not one returned on board, and I am inclined
+to think they avoided appearing on the beach.&nbsp; This reserve and
+dignity is the finest trait of the Marquesan.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER III - THE MAROON<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Of the beauties of Anaho books might be written.&nbsp; I remember waking
+about three, to find the air temperate and scented.&nbsp; The long swell
+brimmed into the bay, and seemed to fill it full and then subside.&nbsp;
+Gently, deeply, and silently the <i>Casco</i> rolled; only at times
+a block piped like a bird.&nbsp; Oceanward, the heaven was bright with
+stars and the sea with their reflections.&nbsp; If I looked to that
+side, I might have sung with the Hawaiian poet:<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<i>Ua maomao ka lani, ua kahaea luna,<br>
+Ua pipi ka maka o ka hoku.<br>
+</i>(The heavens were fair, they stretched above,<br>
+Many were the eyes of the stars.)<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+And then I turned shoreward, and high squalls were overhead; the mountains
+loomed up black; and I could have fancied I had slipped ten thousand
+miles away and was anchored in a Highland loch; that when the day came,
+it would show pine, and heather, and green fern, and roofs of turf sending
+up the smoke of peats; and the alien speech that should next greet my
+ears must be Gaelic, not Kanaka.<br>
+<br>
+And day, when it came, brought other sights and thoughts.&nbsp; I have
+watched the morning break in many quarters of the world; it has been
+certainly one of the chief joys of my existence, and the dawn that I
+saw with most emotion shone upon the bay of Anaho.&nbsp; The mountains
+abruptly overhang the port with every variety of surface and of inclination,
+lawn, and cliff, and forest.&nbsp; Not one of these but wore its proper
+tint of saffron, of sulphur, of the clove, and of the rose.&nbsp; The
+lustre was like that of satin; on the lighter hues there seemed to float
+an efflorescence; a solemn bloom appeared on the more dark.&nbsp; The
+light itself was the ordinary light of morning, colourless and clean;
+and on this ground of jewels, pencilled out the least detail of drawing.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile, around the hamlet, under the palms, where the blue shadow
+lingered, the red coals of cocoa husk and the light trails of smoke
+betrayed the awakening business of the day; along the beach men and
+women, lads and lasses, were returning from the bath in bright raiment,
+red and blue and green, such as we delighted to see in the coloured
+little pictures of our childhood; and presently the sun had cleared
+the eastern hill, and the glow of the day was over all.<br>
+<br>
+The glow continued and increased, the business, from the main part,
+ceased before it had begun.&nbsp; Twice in the day there was a certain
+stir of shepherding along the seaward hills.&nbsp; At times a canoe
+went out to fish.&nbsp; At times a woman or two languidly filled a basket
+in the cotton patch.&nbsp; At times a pipe would sound out of the shadow
+of a house, ringing the changes on its three notes, with an effect like
+<i>Que le</i> <i>jour me dure</i>, repeated endlessly.&nbsp; Or at times,
+across a corner of the bay, two natives might communicate in the Marquesan
+manner with conventional whistlings.&nbsp; All else was sleep and silence.&nbsp;
+The surf broke and shone around the shores; a species of black crane
+fished in the broken water; the black pigs were continually galloping
+by on some affair; but the people might never have awaked, or they might
+all be dead.<br>
+<br>
+My favourite haunt was opposite the hamlet, where was a landing in a
+cove under a lianaed cliff.&nbsp; The beach was lined with palms and
+a tree called the purao, something between the fig and mulberry in growth,
+and bearing a flower like a great yellow poppy with a maroon heart.&nbsp;
+In places rocks encroached upon the sand; the beach would be all submerged;
+and the surf would bubble warmly as high as to my knees, and play with
+cocoa-nut husks as our more homely ocean plays with wreck and wrack
+and bottles.&nbsp; As the reflux drew down, marvels of colour and design
+streamed between my feet; which I would grasp at, miss, or seize: now
+to find them what they promised, shells to grace a cabinet or be set
+in gold upon a lady&rsquo;s finger; now to catch only <i>maya</i> of
+coloured sand, pounded fragments and pebbles, that, as soon as they
+were dry, became as dull and homely as the flints upon a garden path.&nbsp;
+I have toiled at this childish pleasure for hours in the strong sun,
+conscious of my incurable ignorance; but too keenly pleased to be ashamed.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile, the blackbird (or his tropical understudy) would be fluting
+in the thickets overhead.<br>
+<br>
+A little further, in the turn of the bay, a streamlet trickled in the
+bottom of a den, thence spilling down a stair of rock into the sea.&nbsp;
+The draught of air drew down under the foliage in the very bottom of
+the den, which was a perfect arbour for coolness.&nbsp; In front it
+stood open on the blue bay and the <i>Casco</i> lying there under her
+awning and her cheerful colours.&nbsp; Overhead was a thatch of puraos,
+and over these again palms brandished their bright fans, as I have seen
+a conjurer make himself a halo out of naked swords.&nbsp; For in this
+spot, over a neck of low land at the foot of the mountains, the trade-wind
+streams into Anaho Bay in a flood of almost constant volume and velocity,
+and of a heavenly coolness.<br>
+<br>
+It chanced one day that I was ashore in the cove, with Mrs. Stevenson
+and the ship&rsquo;s cook.&nbsp; Except for the <i>Casco</i> lying outside,
+and a crane or two, and the ever-busy wind and sea, the face of the
+world was of a prehistoric emptiness; life appeared to stand stock-still,
+and the sense of isolation was profound and refreshing.&nbsp; On a sudden,
+the trade-wind, coming in a gust over the isthmus, struck and scattered
+the fans of the palms above the den; and, behold! in two of the tops
+there sat a native, motionless as an idol and watching us, you would
+have said, without a wink.&nbsp; The next moment the tree closed, and
+the glimpse was gone.&nbsp; This discovery of human presences latent
+overhead in a place where we had supposed ourselves alone, the immobility
+of our tree-top spies, and the thought that perhaps at all hours we
+were similarly supervised, struck us with a chill.&nbsp; Talk languished
+on the beach.&nbsp; As for the cook (whose conscience was not clear),
+he never afterwards set foot on shore, and twice, when the <i>Casco</i>
+appeared to be driving on the rocks, it was amusing to observe that
+man&rsquo;s alacrity; death, he was persuaded, awaiting him upon the
+beach.&nbsp; It was more than a year later, in the Gilberts, that the
+explanation dawned upon myself.&nbsp; The natives were drawing palm-tree
+wine, a thing forbidden by law; and when the wind thus suddenly revealed
+them, they were doubtless more troubled than ourselves.<br>
+<br>
+At the top of the den there dwelt an old, melancholy, grizzled man of
+the name of Tari (Charlie) Coffin.&nbsp; He was a native of Oahu, in
+the Sandwich Islands; and had gone to sea in his youth in the American
+whalers; a circumstance to which he owed his name, his English, his
+down-east twang, and the misfortune of his innocent life.&nbsp; For
+one captain, sailing out of New Bedford, carried him to Nuka-hiva and
+marooned him there among the cannibals.&nbsp; The motive for this act
+was inconceivably small; poor Tari&rsquo;s wages, which were thus economised,
+would scarce have shook the credit of the New Bedford owners.&nbsp;
+And the act itself was simply murder.&nbsp; Tari&rsquo;s life must have
+hung in the beginning by a hair.&nbsp; In the grief and terror of that
+time, it is not unlikely he went mad, an infirmity to which he was still
+liable; or perhaps a child may have taken a fancy to him and ordained
+him to be spared.&nbsp; He escaped at least alive, married in the island,
+and when I knew him was a widower with a married son and a granddaughter.&nbsp;
+But the thought of Oahu haunted him; its praise was for ever on his
+lips; he beheld it, looking back, as a place of ceaseless feasting,
+song, and dance; and in his dreams I daresay he revisits it with joy.&nbsp;
+I wonder what he would think if he could be carried there indeed, and
+see the modern town of Honolulu brisk with traffic, and the palace with
+its guards, and the great hotel, and Mr. Berger&rsquo;s band with their
+uniforms and outlandish instruments; or what he would think to see the
+brown faces grown so few and the white so many; and his father&rsquo;s
+land sold, for planting sugar, and his father&rsquo;s house quite perished,
+or perhaps the last of them struck leprous and immured between the surf
+and the cliffs on Molokai?&nbsp; So simply, even in South Sea Islands,
+and so sadly, the changes come.<br>
+<br>
+Tari was poor, and poorly lodged.&nbsp; His house was a wooden frame,
+run up by Europeans; it was indeed his official residence, for Tari
+was the shepherd of the promontory sheep.&nbsp; I can give a perfect
+inventory of its contents: three kegs, a tin biscuit-box, an iron saucepan,
+several cocoa-shell cups, a lantern, and three bottles, probably containing
+oil; while the clothes of the family and a few mats were thrown across
+the open rafters.&nbsp; Upon my first meeting with this exile he had
+conceived for me one of the baseless island friendships, had given me
+nuts to drink, and carried me up the den &lsquo;to see my house&rsquo;
+- the only entertainment that he had to offer.&nbsp; He liked the &lsquo;Amelican,&rsquo;
+he said, and the &lsquo;Inglisman,&rsquo; but the &lsquo;Flessman&rsquo;
+was his abhorrence; and he was careful to explain that if he had thought
+us &lsquo;Fless,&rsquo; we should have had none of his nuts, and never
+a sight of his house.&nbsp; His distaste for the French I can partly
+understand, but not at all his toleration of the Anglo-Saxon.&nbsp;
+The next day he brought me a pig, and some days later one of our party
+going ashore found him in act to bring a second.&nbsp; We were still
+strange to the islands; we were pained by the poor man&rsquo;s generosity,
+which he could ill afford, and, by a natural enough but quite unpardonable
+blunder, we refused the pig.&nbsp; Had Tari been a Marquesan we should
+have seen him no more; being what he was, the most mild, long-suffering,
+melancholy man, he took a revenge a hundred times more painful.&nbsp;
+Scarce had the canoe with the nine villagers put off from their farewell
+before the <i>Casco</i> was boarded from the other side.&nbsp; It was
+Tari; coming thus late because he had no canoe of his own, and had found
+it hard to borrow one; coming thus solitary (as indeed we always saw
+him), because he was a stranger in the land, and the dreariest of company.&nbsp;
+The rest of my family basely fled from the encounter.&nbsp; I must receive
+our injured friend alone; and the interview must have lasted hard upon
+an hour, for he was loath to tear himself away.&nbsp; &lsquo;You go
+&rsquo;way.&nbsp; I see you no more - no, sir!&rsquo; he lamented; and
+then looking about him with rueful admiration, &lsquo;This goodee ship
+- no, sir! - goodee ship!&rsquo; he would exclaim: the &lsquo;no, sir,&rsquo;
+thrown out sharply through the nose upon a rising inflection, an echo
+from New Bedford and the fallacious whaler.&nbsp; From these expressions
+of grief and praise, he would return continually to the case of the
+rejected pig.&nbsp; &lsquo;I like give present all &lsquo;e same you,&rsquo;
+he complained; &lsquo;only got pig: you no take him!&rsquo;&nbsp; He
+was a poor man; he had no choice of gifts; he had only a pig, he repeated;
+and I had refused it.&nbsp; I have rarely been more wretched than to
+see him sitting there, so old, so grey, so poor, so hardly fortuned,
+of so rueful a countenance, and to appreciate, with growing keenness,
+the affront which I had so innocently dealt him; but it was one of those
+cases in which speech is vain.<br>
+<br>
+Tari&rsquo;s son was smiling and inert; his daughter-in-law, a girl
+of sixteen, pretty, gentle, and grave, more intelligent than most Anaho
+women, and with a fair share of French; his grandchild, a mite of a
+creature at the breast.&nbsp; I went up the den one day when Tari was
+from home, and found the son making a cotton sack, and madame suckling
+mademoiselle.&nbsp; When I had sat down with them on the floor, the
+girl began to question me about England; which I tried to describe,
+piling the pan and the cocoa shells one upon another to represent the
+houses, and explaining, as best I was able, and by word and gesture,
+the over-population, the hunger, and the perpetual toil.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Pas</i>
+<i>de cocotiers? pas do popoi</i>?&rsquo; she asked.&nbsp; I told her
+it was too cold, and went through an elaborate performance, shutting
+out draughts, and crouching over an imaginary fire, to make sure she
+understood.&nbsp; But she understood right well; remarked it must be
+bad for the health, and sat a while gravely reflecting on that picture
+of unwonted sorrows.&nbsp; I am sure it roused her pity, for it struck
+in her another thought always uppermost in the Marquesan bosom; and
+she began with a smiling sadness, and looking on me out of melancholy
+eyes, to lament the decease of her own people.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Ici pas
+de</i> <i>Kanaques</i>,&rsquo; said she; and taking the baby from her
+breast, she held it out to me with both her hands.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Tenez</i>
+- a little baby like this; then dead.&nbsp; All the Kanaques die.&nbsp;
+Then no more.&rsquo;&nbsp; The smile, and this instancing by the girl-mother
+of her own tiny flesh and blood, affected me strangely; they spoke of
+so tranquil a despair.&nbsp; Meanwhile the husband smilingly made his
+sack; and the unconscious babe struggled to reach a pot of raspberry
+jam, friendship&rsquo;s offering, which I had just brought up the den;
+and in a perspective of centuries I saw their case as ours, death coming
+in like a tide, and the day already numbered when there should be no
+more Beretani, and no more of any race whatever, and (what oddly touched
+me) no more literary works and no more readers.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER IV - DEATH<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The thought of death, I have said, is uppermost in the mind of the Marquesan.&nbsp;
+It would be strange if it were otherwise.&nbsp; The race is perhaps
+the handsomest extant.&nbsp; Six feet is about the middle height of
+males; they are strongly muscled, free from fat, swift in action, graceful
+in repose; and the women, though fatter and duller, are still comely
+animals.&nbsp; To judge by the eye, there is no race more viable; and
+yet death reaps them with both hands.&nbsp; When Bishop Dordillon first
+came to Tai-o-hae, he reckoned the inhabitants at many thousands; he
+was but newly dead, and in the same bay Stanislao Moanatini counted
+on his fingers eight residual natives.&nbsp; Or take the valley of Hapaa,
+known to readers of Herman Melville under the grotesque misspelling
+of Hapar.&nbsp; There are but two writers who have touched the South
+Seas with any genius, both Americans: Melville and Charles Warren Stoddard;
+and at the christening of the first and greatest, some influential fairy
+must have been neglected: &lsquo;He shall be able to see,&rsquo; &lsquo;He
+shall be able to tell,&rsquo; &lsquo;He shall be able to charm,&rsquo;
+said the friendly godmothers; &lsquo;But he shall not be able to hear,&rsquo;
+exclaimed the last.&nbsp; The tribe of Hapaa is said to have numbered
+some four hundred, when the small-pox came and reduced them by one-fourth.&nbsp;
+Six months later a woman developed tubercular consumption; the disease
+spread like a fire about the valley, and in less than a year two survivors,
+a man and a woman, fled from that new-created solitude.&nbsp; A similar
+Adam and Eve may some day wither among new races, the tragic residue
+of Britain.&nbsp; When I first heard this story the date staggered me;
+but I am now inclined to think it possible.&nbsp; Early in the year
+of my visit, for example, or late the year before, a first case of phthisis
+appeared in a household of seventeen persons, and by the month of August,
+when the tale was told me, one soul survived, and that was a boy who
+had been absent at his schooling.&nbsp; And depopulation works both
+ways, the doors of death being set wide open, and the door of birth
+almost closed.&nbsp; Thus, in the half-year ending July 1888 there were
+twelve deaths and but one birth in the district of the Hatiheu.&nbsp;
+Seven or eight more deaths were to be looked for in the ordinary course;
+and M. Aussel, the observant gendarme, knew of but one likely birth.&nbsp;
+At this rate it is no matter of surprise if the population in that part
+should have declined in forty years from six thousand to less than four
+hundred; which are, once more on the authority of M. Aussel, the estimated
+figures.&nbsp; And the rate of decline must have even accelerated towards
+the end.<br>
+<br>
+A good way to appreciate the depopulation is to go by land from Anaho
+to Hatiheu on the adjacent bay.&nbsp; The road is good travelling, but
+cruelly steep.&nbsp; We seemed scarce to have passed the deserted house
+which stands highest in Anaho before we were looking dizzily down upon
+its roof; the <i>Casco</i> well out in the bay, and rolling for a wager,
+shrank visibly; and presently through the gap of Tari&rsquo;s isthmus,
+Ua-huna was seen to hang cloudlike on the horizon.&nbsp; Over the summit,
+where the wind blew really chill, and whistled in the reed-like grass,
+and tossed the grassy fell of the pandanus, we stepped suddenly, as
+through a door, into the next vale and bay of Hatiheu.&nbsp; A bowl
+of mountains encloses it upon three sides.&nbsp; On the fourth this
+rampart has been bombarded into ruins, runs down to seaward in imminent
+and shattered crags, and presents the one practicable breach of the
+blue bay.&nbsp; The interior of this vessel is crowded with lovely and
+valuable trees, - orange, breadfruit, mummy-apple, cocoa, the island
+chestnut, and for weeds, the pine and the banana.&nbsp; Four perennial
+streams water and keep it green; and along the dell, first of one, then
+of another, of these, the road, for a considerable distance, descends
+into this fortunate valley.&nbsp; The song of the waters and the familiar
+disarray of boulders gave us a strong sense of home, which the exotic
+foliage, the daft-like growth of the pandanus, the buttressed trunk
+of the banyan, the black pigs galloping in the bush, and the architecture
+of the native houses dissipated ere it could be enjoyed.<br>
+<br>
+The houses on the Hatiheu side begin high up; higher yet, the more melancholy
+spectacle of empty paepaes.&nbsp; When a native habitation is deserted,
+the superstructure - pandanus thatch, wattle, unstable tropical timber
+- speedily rots, and is speedily scattered by the wind.&nbsp; Only the
+stones of the terrace endure; nor can any ruin, cairn, or standing stone,
+or vitrified fort present a more stern appearance of antiquity.&nbsp;
+We must have passed from six to eight of these now houseless platforms.&nbsp;
+On the main road of the island, where it crosses the valley of Taipi,
+Mr. Osbourne tells me they are to be reckoned by the dozen; and as the
+roads have been made long posterior to their erection, perhaps to their
+desertion, and must simply be regarded as lines drawn at random through
+the bush, the forest on either hand must be equally filled with these
+survivals: the gravestones of whole families.&nbsp; Such ruins are tapu
+in the strictest sense; no native must approach them; they have become
+outposts of the kingdom of the grave.&nbsp; It might appear a natural
+and pious custom in the hundreds who are left, the rearguard of perished
+thousands, that their feet should leave untrod these hearthstones of
+their fathers.&nbsp; I believe, in fact, the custom rests on different
+and more grim conceptions.&nbsp; But the house, the grave, and even
+the body of the dead, have been always particularly honoured by Marquesans.&nbsp;
+Until recently the corpse was sometimes kept in the family and daily
+oiled and sunned, until, by gradual and revolting stages, it dried into
+a kind of mummy.&nbsp; Offerings are still laid upon the grave.&nbsp;
+In Traitor&rsquo;s Bay, Mr. Osbourne saw a man buy a looking-glass to
+lay upon his son&rsquo;s.&nbsp; And the sentiment against the desecration
+of tombs, thoughtlessly ruffled in the laying down of the new roads,
+is a chief ingredient in the native hatred for the French.<br>
+<br>
+The Marquesan beholds with dismay the approaching extinction of his
+race.&nbsp; The thought of death sits down with him to meat, and rises
+with him from his bed; he lives and breathes under a shadow of mortality
+awful to support; and he is so inured to the apprehension that he greets
+the reality with relief.&nbsp; He does not even seek to support a disappointment;
+at an affront, at a breach of one of his fleeting and communistic love-affairs,
+he seeks an instant refuge in the grave.&nbsp; Hanging is now the fashion.&nbsp;
+I heard of three who had hanged themselves in the west end of Hiva-oa
+during the first half of 1888; but though this be a common form of suicide
+in other parts of the South Seas, I cannot think it will continue popular
+in the Marquesas.&nbsp; Far more suitable to Marquesan sentiment is
+the old form of poisoning with the fruit of the eva, which offers to
+the native suicide a cruel but deliberate death, and gives time for
+those decencies of the last hour, to which he attaches such remarkable
+importance.&nbsp; The coffin can thus be at hand, the pigs killed, the
+cry of the mourners sounding already through the house; and then it
+is, and not before, that the Marquesan is conscious of achievement,
+his life all rounded in, his robes (like Caesar&rsquo;s) adjusted for
+the final act.&nbsp; Praise not any man till he is dead, said the ancients;
+envy not any man till you hear the mourners, might be the Marquesan
+parody.&nbsp; The coffin, though of late introduction, strangely engages
+their attention.&nbsp; It is to the mature Marquesan what a watch is
+to the European schoolboy.&nbsp; For ten years Queen Vaekehu had dunned
+the fathers; at last, but the other day, they let her have her will,
+gave her her coffin, and the woman&rsquo;s soul is at rest.&nbsp; I
+was told a droll instance of the force of this preoccupation.&nbsp;
+The Polynesians are subject to a disease seemingly rather of the will
+than of the body.&nbsp; I was told the Tahitians have a word for it,
+<i>erimatua</i>, but cannot find it in my dictionary.&nbsp; A gendarme,
+M. Nouveau, has seen men beginning to succumb to this insubstantial
+malady, has routed them from their houses, turned them on to do their
+trick upon the roads, and in two days has seen them cured.&nbsp; But
+this other remedy is more original: a Marquesan, dying of this discouragement
+- perhaps I should rather say this acquiescence - has been known, at
+the fulfilment of his crowning wish, on the mere sight of that desired
+hermitage, his coffin - to revive, recover, shake off the hand of death,
+and be restored for years to his occupations - carving tikis (idols),
+let us say, or braiding old men&rsquo;s beards.&nbsp; From all this
+it may be conceived how easily they meet death when it approaches naturally.&nbsp;
+I heard one example, grim and picturesque.&nbsp; In the time of the
+small-pox in Hapaa, an old man was seized with the disease; he had no
+thought of recovery; had his grave dug by a wayside, and lived in it
+for near a fortnight, eating, drinking, and smoking with the passers-by,
+talking mostly of his end, and equally unconcerned for himself and careless
+of the friends whom he infected.<br>
+<br>
+This proneness to suicide, and loose seat in life, is not peculiar to
+the Marquesan.&nbsp; What is peculiar is the widespread depression and
+acceptance of the national end.&nbsp; Pleasures are neglected, the dance
+languishes, the songs are forgotten.&nbsp; It is true that some, and
+perhaps too many, of them are proscribed; but many remain, if there
+were spirit to support or to revive them.&nbsp; At the last feast of
+the Bastille, Stanislao Moanatini shed tears when he beheld the inanimate
+performance of the dancers.&nbsp; When the people sang for us in Anaho,
+they must apologise for the smallness of their repertory.&nbsp; They
+were only young folk present, they said, and it was only the old that
+knew the songs.&nbsp; The whole body of Marquesan poetry and music was
+being suffered to die out with a single dispirited generation.&nbsp;
+The full import is apparent only to one acquainted with other Polynesian
+races; who knows how the Samoan coins a fresh song for every trifling
+incident, or who has heard (on Penrhyn, for instance) a band of little
+stripling maids from eight to twelve keep up their minstrelsy for hours
+upon a stretch, one song following another without pause.&nbsp; In like
+manner, the Marquesan, never industrious, begins now to cease altogether
+from production.&nbsp; The exports of the group decline out of all proportion
+even with the death-rate of the islanders.&nbsp; &lsquo;The coral waxes,
+the palm grows, and man departs,&rsquo; says the Marquesan; and he folds
+his hands.&nbsp; And surely this is nature.&nbsp; Fond as it may appear,
+we labour and refrain, not for the rewards of any single life, but with
+a timid eye upon the lives and memories of our successors; and where
+no one is to succeed, of his own family, or his own tongue, I doubt
+whether Rothschilds would make money or Cato practise virtue.&nbsp;
+It is natural, also, that a temporary stimulus should sometimes rouse
+the Marquesan from his lethargy.&nbsp; Over all the landward shore of
+Anaho cotton runs like a wild weed; man or woman, whoever comes to pick
+it, may earn a dollar in the day; yet when we arrived, the trader&rsquo;s
+store-house was entirely empty; and before we left it was near full.&nbsp;
+So long as the circus was there, so long as the <i>Casco</i> was yet
+anchored in the bay, it behoved every one to make his visit; and to
+this end every woman must have a new dress, and every man a shirt and
+trousers.&nbsp; Never before, in Mr. Regler&rsquo;s experience, had
+they displayed so much activity.<br>
+<br>
+In their despondency there is an element of dread.&nbsp; The fear of
+ghosts and of the dark is very deeply written in the mind of the Polynesian;
+not least of the Marquesan.&nbsp; Poor Taipi, the chief of Anaho, was
+condemned to ride to Hatiheu on a moonless night.&nbsp; He borrowed
+a lantern, sat a long while nerving himself for the adventure, and when
+he at last departed, wrung the <i>Cascos</i> by the hand as for a final
+separation.&nbsp; Certain presences, called Vehinehae, frequent and
+make terrible the nocturnal roadside; I was told by one they were like
+so much mist, and as the traveller walked into them dispersed and dissipated;
+another described them as being shaped like men and having eyes like
+cats; from none could I obtain the smallest clearness as to what they
+did, or wherefore they were dreaded.&nbsp; We may be sure at least they
+represent the dead; for the dead, in the minds of the islanders, are
+all-pervasive.&nbsp; &lsquo;When a native says that he is a man,&rsquo;
+writes Dr. Codrington, &lsquo;he means that he is a man and not a ghost;
+not that he is a man and not a beast.&nbsp; The intelligent agents of
+this world are to his mind the men who are alive, and the ghosts the
+men who are dead.&rsquo;&nbsp; Dr. Codrington speaks of Melanesia; from
+what I have learned his words are equally true of the Polynesian.&nbsp;
+And yet more.&nbsp; Among cannibal Polynesians a dreadful suspicion
+rests generally on the dead; and the Marquesans, the greatest cannibals
+of all, are scarce likely to be free from similar beliefs.&nbsp; I hazard
+the guess that the Vehinehae are the hungry spirits of the dead, continuing
+their life&rsquo;s business of the cannibal ambuscade, and lying everywhere
+unseen, and eager to devour the living.&nbsp; Another superstition I
+picked up through the troubled medium of Tari Coffin&rsquo;s English.&nbsp;
+The dead, he told me, came and danced by night around the paepae of
+their former family; the family were thereupon overcome by some emotion
+(but whether of pious sorrow or of fear I could not gather), and must
+&lsquo;make a feast,&rsquo; of which fish, pig, and popoi were indispensable
+ingredients.&nbsp; So far this is clear enough.&nbsp; But here Tari
+went on to instance the new house of Toma and the house-warming feast
+which was just then in preparation as instances in point.&nbsp; Dare
+we indeed string them together, and add the case of the deserted ruin,
+as though the dead continually besieged the paepaes of the living: were
+kept at arm&rsquo;s-length, even from the first foundation, only by
+propitiatory feasts, and, so soon as the fire of life went out upon
+the hearth, swarmed back into possession of their ancient seat?<br>
+<br>
+I speak by guess of these Marquesan superstitions.&nbsp; On the cannibal
+ghost I shall return elsewhere with certainty.&nbsp; And it is enough,
+for the present purpose, to remark that the men of the Marquesas, from
+whatever reason, fear and shrink from the presence of ghosts.&nbsp;
+Conceive how this must tell upon the nerves in islands where the number
+of the dead already so far exceeds that of the living, and the dead
+multiply and the living dwindle at so swift a rate.&nbsp; Conceive how
+the remnant huddles about the embers of the fire of life; even as old
+Red Indians, deserted on the march and in the snow, the kindly tribe
+all gone, the last flame expiring, and the night around populous with
+wolves.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER V - DEPOPULATION<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Over the whole extent of the South Seas, from one tropic to another,
+we find traces of a bygone state of over-population, when the resources
+of even a tropical soil were taxed, and even the improvident Polynesian
+trembled for the future.&nbsp; We may accept some of the ideas of Mr.
+Darwin&rsquo;s theory of coral islands, and suppose a rise of the sea,
+or the subsidence of some former continental area, to have driven into
+the tops of the mountains multitudes of refugees.&nbsp; Or we may suppose,
+more soberly, a people of sea-rovers, emigrants from a crowded country,
+to strike upon and settle island after island, and as time went on to
+multiply exceedingly in their new seats.&nbsp; In either case the end
+must be the same; soon or late it must grow apparent that the crew are
+too numerous, and that famine is at hand.&nbsp; The Polynesians met
+this emergent danger with various expedients of activity and prevention.&nbsp;
+A way was found to preserve breadfruit by packing it in artificial pits;
+pits forty feet in depth and of proportionate bore are still to be seen,
+I am told, in the Marquesas; and yet even these were insufficient for
+the teeming people, and the annals of the past are gloomy with famine
+and cannibalism.&nbsp; Among the Hawaiians - a hardier people, in a
+more exacting climate - agriculture was carried far; the land was irrigated
+with canals; and the fish-ponds of Molokai prove the number and diligence
+of the old inhabitants.&nbsp; Meanwhile, over all the island world,
+abortion and infanticide prevailed.&nbsp; On coral atolls, where the
+danger was most plainly obvious, these were enforced by law and sanctioned
+by punishment.&nbsp; On Vaitupu, in the Ellices, only two children were
+allowed to a couple; on Nukufetau, but one.&nbsp; On the latter the
+punishment was by fine; and it is related that the fine was sometimes
+paid, and the child spared.<br>
+<br>
+This is characteristic.&nbsp; For no people in the world are so fond
+or so long-suffering with children - children make the mirth and the
+adornment of their homes, serving them for playthings and for picture-galleries.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Happy is the man that has his quiver full of them.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The stray bastard is contended for by rival families; and the natural
+and the adopted children play and grow up together undistinguished.&nbsp;
+The spoiling, and I may almost say the deification, of the child, is
+nowhere carried so far as in the eastern islands; and furthest, according
+to my opportunities of observation, in the Paumotu group, the so-called
+Low or Dangerous Archipelago.&nbsp; I have seen a Paumotuan native turn
+from me with embarrassment and disaffection because I suggested that
+a brat would be the better for a beating.&nbsp; It is a daily matter
+in some eastern islands to see a child strike or even stone its mother,
+and the mother, so far from punishing, scarce ventures to resist.&nbsp;
+In some, when his child was born, a chief was superseded and resigned
+his name; as though, like a drone, he had then fulfilled the occasion
+of his being.&nbsp; And in some the lightest words of children had the
+weight of oracles.&nbsp; Only the other day, in the Marquesas, if a
+child conceived a distaste to any stranger, I am assured the stranger
+would be slain.&nbsp; And I shall have to tell in another place an instance
+of the opposite: how a child in Manihiki having taken a fancy to myself,
+her adoptive parents at once accepted the situation and loaded me with
+gifts.<br>
+<br>
+With such sentiments the necessity for child-destruction would not fail
+to clash, and I believe we find the trace of divided feeling in the
+Tahitian brotherhood of Oro.&nbsp; At a certain date a new god was added
+to the Society-Island Olympus, or an old one refurbished and made popular.&nbsp;
+Oro was his name, and he may be compared with the Bacchus of the ancients.&nbsp;
+His zealots sailed from bay to bay, and from island to island; they
+were everywhere received with feasting; wore fine clothes; sang, danced,
+acted; gave exhibitions of dexterity and strength; and were the artists,
+the acrobats, the bards, and the harlots of the group.&nbsp; Their life
+was public and epicurean; their initiation a mystery; and the highest
+in the land aspired to join the brotherhood.&nbsp; If a couple stood
+next in line to a high-chieftaincy, they were suffered, on grounds of
+policy, to spare one child; all other children, who had a father or
+a mother in the company of Oro, stood condemned from the moment of conception.&nbsp;
+A freemasonry, an agnostic sect, a company of artists, its members all
+under oath to spread unchastity, and all forbidden to leave offspring
+- I do not know how it may appear to others, but to me the design seems
+obvious.&nbsp; Famine menacing the islands, and the needful remedy repulsive,
+it was recommended to the native mind by these trappings of mystery,
+pleasure, and parade.&nbsp; This is the more probable, and the secret,
+serious purpose of the institution appears the more plainly, if it be
+true that, after a certain period of life, the obligation of the votary
+was changed; at first, bound to be profligate: afterwards, expected
+to be chaste.<br>
+<br>
+Here, then, we have one side of the case.&nbsp; Man-eating among kindly
+men, child-murder among child-lovers, industry in a race the most idle,
+invention in a race the least progressive, this grim, pagan salvation-army
+of the brotherhood of Oro, the report of early voyagers, the widespread
+vestiges of former habitation, and the universal tradition of the islands,
+all point to the same fact of former crowding and alarm.&nbsp; And to-day
+we are face to face with the reverse.&nbsp; To-day in the Marquesas,
+in the Eight Islands of Hawaii, in Mangareva, in Easter Island, we find
+the same race perishing like flies.&nbsp; Why this change?&nbsp; Or,
+grant that the coming of the whites, the change of habits, and the introduction
+of new maladies and vices, fully explain the depopulation, why is that
+depopulation not universal?&nbsp; The population of Tahiti, after a
+period of alarming decrease, has again become stationary.&nbsp; I hear
+of a similar result among some Maori tribes; in many of the Paumotus
+a slight increase is to be observed; and the Samoans are to-day as healthy
+and at least as fruitful as before the change.&nbsp; Grant that the
+Tahitians, the Maoris, and the Paumotuans have become inured to the
+new conditions; and what are we to make of the Samoans, who have never
+suffered?<br>
+<br>
+Those who are acquainted only with a single group are apt to be ready
+with solutions.&nbsp; Thus I have heard the mortality of the Maoris
+attributed to their change of residence - from fortified hill-tops to
+the low, marshy vicinity of their plantations.&nbsp; How plausible!&nbsp;
+And yet the Marquesans are dying out in the same houses where their
+fathers multiplied.&nbsp; Or take opium.&nbsp; The Marquesas and Hawaii
+are the two groups the most infected with this vice; the population
+of the one is the most civilised, that of the other by far the most
+barbarous, of Polynesians; and they are two of those that perish the
+most rapidly.&nbsp; Here is a strong case against opium.&nbsp; But let
+us take unchastity, and we shall find the Marquesas and Hawaii figuring
+again upon another count.&nbsp; Thus, Samoans are the most chaste of
+Polynesians, and they are to this day entirely fertile; Marquesans are
+the most debauched: we have seen how they are perishing; Hawaiians are
+notoriously lax, and they begin to be dotted among deserts.&nbsp; So
+here is a case stronger still against unchastity; and here also we have
+a correction to apply.&nbsp; Whatever the virtues of the Tahitian, neither
+friend nor enemy dares call him chaste; and yet he seems to have outlived
+the time of danger.&nbsp; One last example: syphilis has been plausibly
+credited with much of the sterility.&nbsp; But the Samoans are, by all
+accounts, as fruitful as at first; by some accounts more so; and it
+is not seriously to be argued that the Samoans have escaped syphilis.<br>
+<br>
+These examples show how dangerous it is to reason from any particular
+cause, or even from many in a single group.&nbsp; I have in my eye an
+able and amiable pamphlet by the Rev. S. E. Bishop: &lsquo;Why are the
+Hawaiians Dying Out?&rsquo;&nbsp; Any one interested in the subject
+ought to read this tract, which contains real information; and yet Mr.
+Bishop&rsquo;s views would have been changed by an acquaintance with
+other groups.&nbsp; Samoa is, for the moment, the main and the most
+instructive exception to the rule.&nbsp; The people are the most chaste
+and one of the most temperate of island peoples.&nbsp; They have never
+been tried and depressed with any grave pestilence.&nbsp; Their clothing
+has scarce been tampered with; at the simple and becoming tabard of
+the girls, Tartuffe, in many another island, would have cried out; for
+the cool, healthy, and modest lava-lava or kilt, Tartuffe has managed
+in many another island to substitute stifling and inconvenient trousers.&nbsp;
+Lastly, and perhaps chiefly, so far from their amusements having been
+curtailed, I think they have been, upon the whole, extended.&nbsp; The
+Polynesian falls easily into despondency: bereavement, disappointment,
+the fear of novel visitations, the decay or proscription of ancient
+pleasures, easily incline him to be sad; and sadness detaches him from
+life.&nbsp; The melancholy of the Hawaiian and the emptiness of his
+new life are striking; and the remark is yet more apposite to the Marquesas.&nbsp;
+In Samoa, on the other hand, perpetual song and dance, perpetual games,
+journeys, and pleasures, make an animated and a smiling picture of the
+island life.&nbsp; And the Samoans are to-day the gayest and the best
+entertained inhabitants of our planet.&nbsp; The importance of this
+can scarcely be exaggerated.&nbsp; In a climate and upon a soil where
+a livelihood can be had for the stooping, entertainment is a prime necessity.&nbsp;
+It is otherwise with us, where life presents us with a daily problem,
+and there is a serious interest, and some of the heat of conflict, in
+the mere continuing to be.&nbsp; So, in certain atolls, where there
+is no great gaiety, but man must bestir himself with some vigour for
+his daily bread, public health and the population are maintained; but
+in the lotos islands, with the decay of pleasures, life itself decays.&nbsp;
+It is from this point of view that we may instance, among other causes
+of depression, the decay of war.&nbsp; We have been so long used in
+Europe to that dreary business of war on the great scale, trailing epidemics
+and leaving pestilential corpses in its train, that we have almost forgotten
+its original, the most healthful, if not the most humane, of all field
+sports - hedge-warfare.&nbsp; From this, as well as from the rest of
+his amusements and interests, the islander, upon a hundred islands,
+has been recently cut off.&nbsp; And to this, as well as to so many
+others, the Samoan still makes good a special title.<br>
+<br>
+Upon the whole, the problem seems to me to stand thus:- Where there
+have been fewest changes, important or unimportant, salutary or hurtful,
+there the race survives.&nbsp; Where there have been most, important
+or unimportant, salutary or hurtful, there it perishes.&nbsp; Each change,
+however small, augments the sum of new conditions to which the race
+has to become inured.&nbsp; There may seem, <i>a priori</i>, no comparison
+between the change from &lsquo;sour toddy&rsquo; to bad gin, and that
+from the island kilt to a pair of European trousers.&nbsp; Yet I am
+far from persuaded that the one is any more hurtful than the other;
+and the unaccustomed race will sometimes die of pin-pricks.&nbsp; We
+are here face to face with one of the difficulties of the missionary.&nbsp;
+In Polynesian islands he easily obtains pre-eminent authority; the king
+becomes his <i>mairedupalais</i>; he can proscribe, he can command;
+and the temptation is ever towards too much.&nbsp; Thus (by all accounts)
+the Catholics in Mangareva, and thus (to my own knowledge) the Protestants
+in Hawaii, have rendered life in a more or less degree unliveable to
+their converts.&nbsp; And the mild, uncomplaining creatures (like children
+in a prison) yawn and await death.&nbsp; It is easy to blame the missionary.&nbsp;
+But it is his business to make changes.&nbsp; It is surely his business,
+for example, to prevent war; and yet I have instanced war itself as
+one of the elements of health.&nbsp; On the other hand, it were, perhaps,
+easy for the missionary to proceed more gently, and to regard every
+change as an affair of weight.&nbsp; I take the average missionary;
+I am sure I do him no more than justice when I suppose that he would
+hesitate to bombard a village, even in order to convert an archipelago.&nbsp;
+Experience begins to show us (at least in Polynesian islands) that change
+of habit is bloodier than a bombardment.<br>
+<br>
+There is one point, ere I have done, where I may go to meet criticism.&nbsp;
+I have said nothing of faulty hygiene, bathing during fevers, mistaken
+treatment of children, native doctoring, or abortion - all causes frequently
+adduced.&nbsp; And I have said nothing of them because they are conditions
+common to both epochs, and even more efficient in the past than in the
+present.&nbsp; Was it not the same with unchastity, it may be asked?&nbsp;
+Was not the Polynesian always unchaste?&nbsp; Doubtless he was so always:
+doubtless he is more so since the coming of his remarkably chaste visitors
+from Europe.&nbsp; Take the Hawaiian account of Cook: I have no doubt
+it is entirely fair.&nbsp; Take Krusenstern&rsquo;s candid, almost innocent,
+description of a Russian man-of-war at the Marquesas; consider the disgraceful
+history of missions in Hawaii itself, where (in the war of lust) the
+American missionaries were once shelled by an English adventurer, and
+once raided and mishandled by the crew of an American warship; add the
+practice of whaling fleets to call at the Marquesas, and carry off a
+complement of women for the cruise; consider, besides, how the whites
+were at first regarded in the light of demi-gods, as appears plainly
+in the reception of Cook upon Hawaii; and again, in the story of the
+discovery of Tutuila, when the really decent women of Samoa prostituted
+themselves in public to the French; and bear in mind how it was the
+custom of the adventurers, and we may almost say the business of the
+missionaries, to deride and infract even the most salutary tapus.&nbsp;
+Here we see every engine of dissolution directed at once against a virtue
+never and nowhere very strong or popular; and the result, even in the
+most degraded islands, has been further degradation.&nbsp; Mr. Lawes,
+the missionary of Savage Island, told me the standard of female chastity
+had declined there since the coming of the whites.&nbsp; In heathen
+time, if a girl gave birth to a bastard, her father or brother would
+dash the infant down the cliffs; and to-day the scandal would be small.&nbsp;
+Or take the Marquesas.&nbsp; Stanislao Moanatini told me that in his
+own recollection, the young were strictly guarded; they were not suffered
+so much as to look upon one another in the street, but passed (so my
+informant put it) like dogs; and the other day the whole school-children
+of Nuka-hiva and Ua-pu escaped in a body to the woods, and lived there
+for a fortnight in promiscuous liberty.&nbsp; Readers of travels may
+perhaps exclaim at my authority, and declare themselves better informed.&nbsp;
+I should prefer the statement of an intelligent native like Stanislao
+(even if it stood alone, which it is far from doing) to the report of
+the most honest traveller.&nbsp; A ship of war comes to a haven, anchors,
+lands a party, receives and returns a visit, and the captain writes
+a chapter on the manners of the island.&nbsp; It is not considered what
+class is mostly seen.&nbsp; Yet we should not be pleased if a Lascar
+foremast hand were to judge England by the ladies who parade Ratcliffe
+Highway, and the gentlemen who share with them their hire.&nbsp; Stanislao&rsquo;s
+opinion of a decay of virtue even in these unvirtuous islands has been
+supported to me by others; his very example, the progress of dissolution
+amongst the young, is adduced by Mr. Bishop in Hawaii.&nbsp; And so
+far as Marquesans are concerned, we might have hazarded a guess of some
+decline in manners.&nbsp; I do not think that any race could ever have
+prospered or multiplied with such as now obtain; I am sure they would
+have been never at the pains to count paternal kinship.&nbsp; It is
+not possible to give details; suffice it that their manners appear to
+be imitated from the dreams of ignorant and vicious children, and their
+debauches persevered in until energy, reason, and almost life itself
+are in abeyance.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VI - CHIEFS AND TAPUS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+We used to admire exceedingly the bland and gallant manners of the chief
+called Taipi-Kikino.&nbsp; An elegant guest at table, skilled in the
+use of knife and fork, a brave figure when he shouldered a gun and started
+for the woods after wild chickens, always serviceable, always ingratiating
+and gay, I would sometimes wonder where he found his cheerfulness.&nbsp;
+He had enough to sober him, I thought, in his official budget.&nbsp;
+His expenses - for he was always seen attired in virgin white - must
+have by far exceeded his income of six dollars in the year, or say two
+shillings a month.&nbsp; And he was himself a man of no substance; his
+house the poorest in the village.&nbsp; It was currently supposed that
+his elder brother, Kauanui, must have helped him out.&nbsp; But how
+comes it that the elder brother should succeed to the family estate,
+and be a wealthy commoner, and the younger be a poor man, and yet rule
+as chief in Anaho?&nbsp; That the one should be wealthy, and the other
+almost indigent is probably to be explained by some adoption; for comparatively
+few children are brought up in the house or succeed to the estates of
+their natural begetters.&nbsp; That the one should be chief instead
+of the other must be explained (in a very Irish fashion) on the ground
+that neither of them is a chief at all.<br>
+<br>
+Since the return and the wars of the French, many chiefs have been deposed,
+and many so-called chiefs appointed.&nbsp; We have seen, in the same
+house, one such upstart drinking in the company of two such extruded
+island Bourbons, men, whose word a few years ago was life and death,
+now sunk to be peasants like their neighbours.&nbsp; So when the French
+overthrew hereditary tyrants, dubbed the commons of the Marquesas freeborn
+citizens of the republic, and endowed them with a vote for a <i>conseiller-g&eacute;n&eacute;ral</i>
+at Tahiti, they probably conceived themselves upon the path to popularity;
+and so far from that, they were revolting public sentiment.&nbsp; The
+deposition of the chiefs was perhaps sometimes needful; the appointment
+of others may have been needful also; it was at least a delicate business.&nbsp;
+The Government of George II. exiled many Highland magnates.&nbsp; It
+never occurred to them to manufacture substitutes; and if the French
+have been more bold, we have yet to see with what success.<br>
+<br>
+Our chief at Anaho was always called, he always called himself, Taipi-Kikino;
+and yet that was not his name, but only the wand of his false position.&nbsp;
+As soon as he was appointed chief, his name - which signified, if I
+remember exactly, <i>Prince born among</i> <i>flowers</i> - fell in
+abeyance, and he was dubbed instead by the expressive byword, Taipi-Kikino
+- <i>Highwater man-of-no-account</i> - or, Englishing more boldly, <i>Beggar</i>
+<i>on horseback</i> - a witty and a wicked cut.&nbsp; A nickname in
+Polynesia destroys almost the memory of the original name.&nbsp; To-day,
+if we were Polynesians, Gladstone would be no more heard of.&nbsp; We
+should speak of and address our Nestor as the Grand Old Man, and it
+is so that himself would sign his correspondence.&nbsp; Not the prevalence,
+then, but the significancy of the nickname is to be noted here.&nbsp;
+The new authority began with small prestige.&nbsp; Taipi has now been
+some time in office; from all I saw he seemed a person very fit.&nbsp;
+He is not the least unpopular, and yet his power is nothing.&nbsp; He
+is a chief to the French, and goes to breakfast with the Resident; but
+for any practical end of chieftaincy a rag doll were equally efficient.<br>
+<br>
+We had been but three days in Anaho when we received the visit of the
+chief of Hatiheu, a man of weight and fame, late leader of a war upon
+the French, late prisoner in Tahiti, and the last eater of long-pig
+in Nuka-hiva.&nbsp; Not many years have elapsed since he was seen striding
+on the beach of Anaho, a dead man&rsquo;s arm across his shoulder.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;So does Kooamua to his enemies!&rsquo; he roared to the passers-by,
+and took a bite from the raw flesh.&nbsp; And now behold this gentleman,
+very wisely replaced in office by the French, paying us a morning visit
+in European clothes.&nbsp; He was the man of the most character we had
+yet seen: his manners genial and decisive, his person tall, his face
+rugged, astute, formidable, and with a certain similarity to Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s
+- only for the brownness of the skin, and the high-chief&rsquo;s tattooing,
+all one side and much of the other being of an even blue.&nbsp; Further
+acquaintance increased our opinion of his sense.&nbsp; He viewed the
+<i>Casco</i> in a manner then quite new to us, examining her lines and
+the running of the gear; to a piece of knitting on which one of the
+party was engaged, he must have devoted ten minutes&rsquo; patient study;
+nor did he desist before he had divined the principles; and he was interested
+even to excitement by a type-writer, which he learned to work.&nbsp;
+When he departed he carried away with him a list of his family, with
+his own name printed by his own hand at the bottom.&nbsp; I should add
+that he was plainly much of a humorist, and not a little of a humbug.&nbsp;
+He told us, for instance, that he was a person of exact sobriety; such
+being the obligation of his high estate: the commons might be sots,
+but the chief could not stoop so low.&nbsp; And not many days after
+he was to be observed in a state of smiling and lop-sided imbecility,
+the <i>Casco</i> ribbon upside down on his dishonoured hat.<br>
+<br>
+But his business that morning in Anaho is what concerns us here.&nbsp;
+The devil-fish, it seems, were growing scarce upon the reef; it was
+judged fit to interpose what we should call a close season; for that
+end, in Polynesia, a tapu (vulgarly spelt &lsquo;taboo&rsquo;) has to
+be declared, and who was to declare it?&nbsp; Taipi might; he ought;
+it was a chief part of his duty; but would any one regard the inhibition
+of a Beggar on Horse-back?&nbsp; He might plant palm branches: it did
+not in the least follow that the spot was sacred.&nbsp; He might recite
+the spell: it was shrewdly supposed the spirits would not hearken.&nbsp;
+And so the old, legitimate cannibal must ride over the mountains to
+do it for him; and the respectable official in white clothes could but
+look on and envy.&nbsp; At about the same time, though in a different
+manner, Kooamua established a forest law.&nbsp; It was observed the
+cocoa-palms were suffering, for the plucking of green nuts impoverishes
+and at last endangers the tree.&nbsp; Now Kooamua could tapu the reef,
+which was public property, but he could not tapu other people&rsquo;s
+palms; and the expedient adopted was interesting.&nbsp; He tapu&rsquo;d
+his own trees, and his example was imitated over all Hatiheu and Anaho.&nbsp;
+I fear Taipi might have tapu&rsquo;d all that he possessed and found
+none to follow him.&nbsp; So much for the esteem in which the dignity
+of an appointed chief is held by others; a single circumstance will
+show what he thinks of it himself.&nbsp; I never met one, but he took
+an early opportunity to explain his situation.&nbsp; True, he was only
+an appointed chief when I beheld him; but somewhere else, perhaps upon
+some other isle, he was a chieftain by descent: upon which ground, he
+asked me (so to say it) to excuse his mushroom honours.<br>
+<br>
+It will be observed with surprise that both these tapus are for thoroughly
+sensible ends.&nbsp; With surprise, I say, because the nature of that
+institution is much misunderstood in Europe.&nbsp; It is taken usually
+in the sense of a meaningless or wanton prohibition, such as that which
+to-day prevents women in some countries from smoking, or yesterday prevented
+any one in Scotland from taking a walk on Sunday.&nbsp; The error is
+no less natural than it is unjust.&nbsp; The Polynesians have not been
+trained in the bracing, practical thought of ancient Rome; with them
+the idea of law has not been disengaged from that of morals or propriety;
+so that tapu has to cover the whole field, and implies indifferently
+that an act is criminal, immoral, against sound public policy, unbecoming
+or (as we say) &lsquo;not in good form.&rsquo;&nbsp; Many tapus were
+in consequence absurd enough, such as those which deleted words out
+of the language, and particularly those which related to women.&nbsp;
+Tapu encircled women upon all hands.&nbsp; Many things were forbidden
+to men; to women we may say that few were permitted.&nbsp; They must
+not sit on the paepae; they must not go up to it by the stair; they
+must not eat pork; they must not approach a boat; they must not cook
+at a fire which any male had kindled.&nbsp; The other day, after the
+roads were made, it was observed the women plunged along margin through
+the bush, and when they came to a bridge waded through the water: roads
+and bridges were the work of men&rsquo;s hands, and tapu for the foot
+of women.&nbsp; Even a man&rsquo;s saddle, if the man be native, is
+a thing no self-respecting lady dares to use.&nbsp; Thus on the Anaho
+side of the island, only two white men, Mr. Regler and the gendarme,
+M. Aussel, possess saddles; and when a woman has a journey to make she
+must borrow from one or other.&nbsp; It will be noticed that these prohibitions
+tend, most of them, to an increased reserve between the sexes.&nbsp;
+Regard for female chastity is the usual excuse for these disabilities
+that men delight to lay upon their wives and mothers.&nbsp; Here the
+regard is absent; and behold the women still bound hand and foot with
+meaningless proprieties!&nbsp; The women themselves, who are survivors
+of the old regimen, admit that in those days life was not worth living.&nbsp;
+And yet even then there were exceptions.&nbsp; There were female chiefs
+and (I am assured) priestesses besides; nice customs curtseyed to great
+dames, and in the most sacred enclosure of a High Place, Father Sim&eacute;on
+Delmar was shown a stone, and told it was the throne of some well-descended
+lady.&nbsp; How exactly parallel is this with European practice, when
+princesses were suffered to penetrate the strictest cloister, and women
+could rule over a land in which they were denied the control of their
+own children.<br>
+<br>
+But the tapu is more often the instrument of wise and needful restrictions.&nbsp;
+We have seen it as the organ of paternal government.&nbsp; It serves
+besides to enforce, in the rare case of some one wishing to enforce
+them, rights of private property.&nbsp; Thus a man, weary of the coming
+and going of Marquesan visitors, tapus his door; and to this day you
+may see the palm-branch signal, even as our great-grandfathers saw the
+peeled wand before a Highland inn.&nbsp; Or take another case.&nbsp;
+Anaho is known as &lsquo;the country without popoi.&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+word popoi serves in different islands to indicate the main food of
+the people: thus, in Hawaii, it implies a preparation of taro; in the
+Marquesas, of breadfruit.&nbsp; And a Marquesan does not readily conceive
+life possible without his favourite diet.&nbsp; A few years ago a drought
+killed the breadfruit trees and the bananas in the district of Anaho;
+and from this calamity, and the open-handed customs of the island, a
+singular state of things arose.&nbsp; Well-watered Hatiheu had escaped
+the drought; every householder of Anaho accordingly crossed the pass,
+chose some one in Hatiheu, &lsquo;gave him his name&rsquo; - an onerous
+gift, but one not to be rejected - and from this improvised relative
+proceeded to draw his supplies, for all the world as though he had paid
+for them.&nbsp; Hence a continued traffic on the road.&nbsp; Some stalwart
+fellow, in a loin-cloth, and glistening with sweat, may be seen at all
+hours of the day, a stick across his bare shoulders, tripping nervously
+under a double burthen of green fruits.&nbsp; And on the far side of
+the gap a dozen stone posts on the wayside in the shadow of a grove
+mark the breathing-space of the popoi-carriers.&nbsp; A little back
+from the beach, and not half a mile from Anaho, I was the more amazed
+to find a cluster of well-doing breadfruits heavy with their harvest.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Why do you not take these?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tapu,&rsquo;
+said Hoka; and I thought to myself (after the manner of dull travellers)
+what children and fools these people were to toil over the mountain
+and despoil innocent neighbours when the staff of life was thus growing
+at their door.&nbsp; I was the more in error.&nbsp; In the general destruction
+these surviving trees were enough only for the family of the proprietor,
+and by the simple expedient of declaring a tapu he enforced his right.<br>
+<br>
+The sanction of the tapu is superstitious; and the punishment of infraction
+either a wasting or a deadly sickness.&nbsp; A slow disease follows
+on the eating of tapu fish, and can only be cured with the bones of
+the same fish burned with the due mysteries.&nbsp; The cocoa-nut and
+breadfruit tapu works more swiftly.&nbsp; Suppose you have eaten tapu
+fruit at the evening meal, at night your sleep will be uneasy; in the
+morning, swelling and a dark discoloration will have attacked your neck,
+whence they spread upward to the face; and in two days, unless the cure
+be interjected, you must die.&nbsp; This cure is prepared from the rubbed
+leaves of the tree from which the patient stole; so that he cannot be
+saved without confessing to the Tahuku the person whom he wronged.&nbsp;
+In the experience of my informant, almost no tapu had been put in use,
+except the two described: he had thus no opportunity to learn the nature
+and operation of the others; and, as the art of making them was jealously
+guarded amongst the old men, he believed the mystery would soon die
+out.&nbsp; I should add that he was no Marquesan, but a Chinaman, a
+resident in the group from boyhood, and a reverent believer in the spells
+which he described.&nbsp; White men, amongst whom Ah Fu included himself,
+were exempt; but he had a tale of a Tahitian woman, who had come to
+the Marquesas, eaten tapu fish, and, although uninformed of her offence
+and danger, had been afflicted and cured exactly like a native.<br>
+<br>
+Doubtless the belief is strong; doubtless, with this weakly and fanciful
+race, it is in many cases strong enough to kill; it should be strong
+indeed in those who tapu their trees secretly, so that they may detect
+a depredator by his sickness.&nbsp; Or, perhaps, we should understand
+the idea of the hidden tapu otherwise, as a politic device to spread
+uneasiness and extort confessions: so that, when a man is ailing, he
+shall ransack his brain for any possible offence, and send at once for
+any proprietor whose rights he has invaded.&nbsp; &lsquo;Had you hidden
+a tapu?&rsquo; we may conceive him asking; and I cannot imagine the
+proprietor gainsaying it; and this is perhaps the strangest feature
+of the system - that it should be regarded from without with such a
+mental and implicit awe, and, when examined from within, should present
+so many apparent evidences of design.<br>
+<br>
+We read in Dr. Campbell&rsquo;s <i>Poenamo</i> of a New Zealand girl,
+who was foolishly told that she had eaten a tapu yam, and who instantly
+sickened, and died in the two days of simple terror.&nbsp; The period
+is the same as in the Marquesas; doubtless the symptoms were so too.&nbsp;
+How singular to consider that a superstition of such sway is possibly
+a manufactured article; and that, even if it were not originally invented,
+its details have plainly been arranged by the authorities of some Polynesian
+Scotland Yard.&nbsp; Fitly enough, the belief is to-day - and was probably
+always - far from universal.&nbsp; Hell at home is a strong deterrent
+with some; a passing thought with others; with others, again, a theme
+of public mockery, not always well assured; and so in the Marquesas
+with the tapu.&nbsp; Mr. Regler has seen the two extremes of scepticism
+and implicit fear.&nbsp; In the tapu grove he found one fellow stealing
+breadfruit, cheerful and impudent as a street arab; and it was only
+on a menace of exposure that he showed himself the least discountenanced.&nbsp;
+The other case was opposed in every point.&nbsp; Mr. Regler asked a
+native to accompany him upon a voyage; the man went gladly enough, but
+suddenly perceiving a dead tapu fish in the bottom of the boat, leaped
+back with a scream; nor could the promise of a dollar prevail upon him
+to advance.<br>
+<br>
+The Marquesan, it will be observed, adheres to the old idea of the local
+circumscription of beliefs and duties.&nbsp; Not only are the whites
+exempt from consequences; but their transgressions seem to be viewed
+without horror.&nbsp; It was Mr. Regler who had killed the fish; yet
+the devout native was not shocked at Mr. Regler - only refused to join
+him in his boat.&nbsp; A white is a white: the servant (so to speak)
+of other and more liberal gods; and not to be blamed if he profit by
+his liberty.&nbsp; The Jews were perhaps the first to interrupt this
+ancient comity of faiths; and the Jewish virus is still strong in Christianity.&nbsp;
+All the world must respect our tapus, or we gnash our teeth.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VII - HATIHEU<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The bays of Anaho and Hatiheu are divided at their roots by the knife-edge
+of a single hill - the pass so often mentioned; but this isthmus expands
+to the seaward in a considerable peninsula: very bare and grassy; haunted
+by sheep and, at night and morning, by the piercing cries of the shepherds;
+wandered over by a few wild goats; and on its sea-front indented with
+long, clamorous caves, and faced with cliffs of the colour and ruinous
+outline of an old peat-stack.&nbsp; In one of these echoing and sunless
+gullies we saw, clustered like sea-birds on a splashing ledge, shrill
+as sea-birds in their salutation to the passing boat, a group of fisherwomen,
+stripped to their gaudy under-clothes.&nbsp; (The clash of the surf
+and the thin female voices echo in my memory.)&nbsp; We had that day
+a native crew and steersman, Kauanui; it was our first experience of
+Polynesian seamanship, which consists in hugging every point of land.&nbsp;
+There is no thought in this of saving time, for they will pull a long
+way in to skirt a point that is embayed.&nbsp; It seems that, as they
+can never get their houses near enough the surf upon the one side, so
+they can never get their boats near enough upon the other.&nbsp; The
+practice in bold water is not so dangerous as it looks - the reflex
+from the rocks sending the boat off.&nbsp; Near beaches with a heavy
+run of sea, I continue to think it very hazardous, and find the composure
+of the natives annoying to behold.&nbsp; We took unmingled pleasure,
+on the way out, to see so near at hand the beach and the wonderful colours
+of the surf.&nbsp; On the way back, when the sea had risen and was running
+strong against us, the fineness of the steersman&rsquo;s aim grew more
+embarrassing.&nbsp; As we came abreast of the sea-front, where the surf
+broke highest, Kauanui embraced the occasion to light his pipe, which
+then made the circuit of the boat - each man taking a whiff or two,
+and, ere he passed it on, filling his lungs and cheeks with smoke.&nbsp;
+Their faces were all puffed out like apples as we came abreast of the
+cliff foot, and the bursting surge fell back into the boat in showers.&nbsp;
+At the next point &lsquo;cocanetti&rsquo; was the word, and the stroke
+borrowed my knife, and desisted from his labours to open nuts.&nbsp;
+These untimely indulgences may be compared to the tot of grog served
+out before a ship goes into action.<br>
+<br>
+My purpose in this visit led me first to the boys&rsquo; school, for
+Hatiheu is the university of the north islands.&nbsp; The hum of the
+lesson came out to meet us.&nbsp; Close by the door, where the draught
+blew coolest, sat the lay brother; around him, in a packed half-circle,
+some sixty high-coloured faces set with staring eyes; and in the background
+of the barn-like room benches were to be seen, and blackboards with
+sums on them in chalk.&nbsp; The brother rose to greet us, sensibly
+humble.&nbsp; Thirty years he had been there, he said, and fingered
+his white locks as a bashful child pulls out his pinafore. <i>&lsquo;Et
+point de r&eacute;sultats, monsieur, presque pas de r&eacute;sultats</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He pointed to the scholars: &lsquo;You see, sir, all the youth of Nuka-hiva
+and Ua-pu.&nbsp; Between the ages of six and fifteen this is all that
+remains; and it is but a few years since we had a hundred and twenty
+from Nuka-hiva alone.&nbsp; <i>Oui, monsieur, cela se d&eacute;p&eacute;rit</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Prayers, and reading and writing, prayers again and arithmetic, and
+more prayers to conclude: such appeared to be the dreary nature of the
+course.&nbsp; For arithmetic all island people have a natural taste.&nbsp;
+In Hawaii they make good progress in mathematics.&nbsp; In one of the
+villages on Majuro, and generally in the Marshall group, the whole population
+sit about the trader when he is weighing copra, and each on his own
+slate takes down the figures and computes the total.&nbsp; The trader,
+finding them so apt, introduced fractions, for which they had been taught
+no rule.&nbsp; At first they were quite gravelled but ultimately, by
+sheer hard thinking, reasoned out the result, and came one after another
+to assure the trader he was right.&nbsp; Not many people in Europe could
+have done the like.&nbsp; The course at Hatiheu is therefore less dispiriting
+to Polynesians than a stranger might have guessed; and yet how bald
+it is at best!&nbsp; I asked the brother if he did not tell them stories,
+and he stared at me; if he did not teach them history, and he said,
+&lsquo;O yes, they had a little Scripture history - from the New Testament&rsquo;;
+and repeated his lamentations over the lack of results.&nbsp; I had
+not the heart to put more questions; I could but say it must be very
+discouraging, and resist the impulse to add that it seemed also very
+natural.&nbsp; He looked up - &lsquo;My days are far spent,&rsquo; he
+said; &lsquo;heaven awaits me.&rsquo;&nbsp; May that heaven forgive
+me, but I was angry with the old man and his simple consolation.&nbsp;
+For think of his opportunity!&nbsp; The youth, from six to fifteen,
+are taken from their homes by Government, centralised at Hatiheu, where
+they are supported by a weekly tax of food; and, with the exception
+of one month in every year, surrendered wholly to the direction of the
+priests.&nbsp; Since the escapade already mentioned the holiday occurs
+at a different period for the girls and for the boys; so that a Marquesan
+brother and sister meet again, after their education is complete, a
+pair of strangers.&nbsp; It is a harsh law, and highly unpopular; but
+what a power it places in the hands of the instructors, and how languidly
+and dully is that power employed by the mission!&nbsp; Too much concern
+to make the natives pious, a design in which they all confess defeat,
+is, I suppose, the explanation of their miserable system.&nbsp; But
+they might see in the girls&rsquo; school at Tai-o-hae, under the brisk,
+housewifely sisters, a different picture of efficiency, and a scene
+of neatness, airiness, and spirited and mirthful occupation that should
+shame them into cheerier methods.&nbsp; The sisters themselves lament
+their failure.&nbsp; They complain the annual holiday undoes the whole
+year&rsquo;s work; they complain particularly of the heartless indifference
+of the girls.&nbsp; Out of so many pretty and apparently affectionate
+pupils whom they have taught and reared, only two have ever returned
+to pay a visit of remembrance to their teachers.&nbsp; These, indeed,
+come regularly, but the rest, so soon as their school-days are over,
+disappear into the woods like captive insects.&nbsp; It is hard to imagine
+anything more discouraging; and yet I do not believe these ladies need
+despair.&nbsp; For a certain interval they keep the girls alive and
+innocently busy; and if it be at all possible to save the race, this
+would be the means.&nbsp; No such praise can be given to the boys&rsquo;
+school at Hatiheu.&nbsp; The day is numbered already for them all; alike
+for the teacher and the scholars death is girt; he is afoot upon the
+march; and in the frequent interval they sit and yawn.&nbsp; But in
+life there seems a thread of purpose through the least significant;
+the drowsiest endeavour is not lost, and even the school at Hatiheu
+may be more useful than it seems.<br>
+<br>
+Hatiheu is a place of some pretensions.&nbsp; The end of the bay towards
+Anaho may be called the civil compound, for it boasts the house of Kooamua,
+and close on the beach, under a great tree, that of the gendarme, M.
+Armand Aussel, with his garden, his pictures, his books, and his excellent
+table, to which strangers are made welcome.&nbsp; No more singular contrast
+is possible than between the gendarmerie and the priesthood, who are
+besides in smouldering opposition and full of mutual complaints.&nbsp;
+A priest&rsquo;s kitchen in the eastern islands is a depressing spot
+to see; and many, or most of them, make no attempt to keep a garden,
+sparsely subsisting on their rations.&nbsp; But you will never dine
+with a gendarme without smacking your lips; and M. Aussel&rsquo;s home-made
+sausage and the salad from his garden are unforgotten delicacies.&nbsp;
+Pierre Loti may like to know that he is M. Aussel&rsquo;s favourite
+author, and that his books are read in the fit scenery of Hatiheu bay.<br>
+<br>
+The other end is all religious.&nbsp; It is here that an overhanging
+and tip-tilted horn, a good sea-mark for Hatiheu, bursts naked from
+the verdure of the climbing forest, and breaks down shoreward in steep
+taluses and cliffs.&nbsp; From the edge of one of the highest, perhaps
+seven hundred or a thousand feet above the beach, a Virgin looks insignificantly
+down, like a poor lost doll, forgotten there by a giant child.&nbsp;
+This laborious symbol of the Catholics is always strange to Protestants;
+we conceive with wonder that men should think it worth while to toil
+so many days, and clamber so much about the face of precipices, for
+an end that makes us smile; and yet I believe it was the wise Bishop
+Dordillon who chose the place, and I know that those who had a hand
+in the enterprise look back with pride upon its vanquished dangers.&nbsp;
+The boys&rsquo; school is a recent importation; it was at first in Tai-o-hae,
+beside the girls&rsquo;; and it was only of late, after their joint
+escapade, that the width of the island was interposed between the sexes.&nbsp;
+But Hatiheu must have been a place of missionary importance from before.&nbsp;
+About midway of the beach no less than three churches stand grouped
+in a patch of bananas, intermingled with some pine-apples.&nbsp; Two
+are of wood: the original church, now in disuse; and a second that,
+for some mysterious reason, has never been used.&nbsp; The new church
+is of stone, with twin towers, walls flangeing into buttresses, and
+sculptured front.&nbsp; The design itself is good, simple, and shapely;
+but the character is all in the detail, where the architect has bloomed
+into the sculptor.&nbsp; It is impossible to tell in words of the angels
+(although they are more like winged archbishops) that stand guard upon
+the door, of the cherubs in the corners, of the scapegoat gargoyles,
+or the quaint and spirited relief, where St. Michael (the artist&rsquo;s
+patron) makes short work of a protesting Lucifer.&nbsp; We were never
+weary of viewing the imagery, so innocent, sometimes so funny, and yet
+in the best sense - in the sense of inventive gusto and expression -
+so artistic.&nbsp; I know not whether it was more strange to find a
+building of such merit in a corner of a barbarous isle, or to see a
+building so antique still bright with novelty.&nbsp; The architect,
+a French lay brother, still alive and well, and meditating fresh foundations,
+must have surely drawn his descent from a master-builder in the age
+of the cathedrals; and it was in looking on the church of Hatiheu that
+I seemed to perceive the secret charm of mediaeval sculpture; that combination
+of the childish courage of the amateur, attempting all things, like
+the schoolboy on his slate, with the manly perseverance of the artist
+who does not know when he is conquered.<br>
+<br>
+I had always afterwards a strong wish to meet the architect, Brother
+Michel; and one day, when I was talking with the Resident in Tai-o-hae
+(the chief port of the island), there were shown in to us an old, worn,
+purblind, ascetic-looking priest, and a lay brother, a type of all that
+is most sound in France, with a broad, clever, honest, humorous countenance,
+an eye very large and bright, and a strong and healthy body inclining
+to obesity.&nbsp; But that his blouse was black and his face shaven
+clean, you might pick such a man to-day, toiling cheerfully in his own
+patch of vines, from half a dozen provinces of France; and yet he had
+always for me a haunting resemblance to an old kind friend of my boyhood,
+whom I name in case any of my readers should share with me that memory
+- Dr. Paul, of the West Kirk.&nbsp; Almost at the first word I was sure
+it was my architect, and in a moment we were deep in a discussion of
+Hatiheu church.&nbsp; Brother Michel spoke always of his labours with
+a twinkle of humour, underlying which it was possible to spy a serious
+pride, and the change from one to another was often very human and diverting.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Et vos gargouilles</i> <i>moyen-&acirc;ge</i>,&rsquo; cried
+I; &lsquo;<i>comme elles sont originates</i>!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>N&rsquo;est</i>-<i>ce
+pas?&nbsp; Elles sont bien dr&ocirc;les</i>!&rsquo; he said, smiling
+broadly; and the next moment, with a sudden gravity: &lsquo;<i>Cependant
+il y en a une qui a une patte de cass&eacute;</i>; <i>il faut que je
+voie</i> <i>cela</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; I asked if he had any model - a point
+we much discussed.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Non</i>,&rsquo; said he simply; &lsquo;<i>c&rsquo;est
+une &eacute;glise id&eacute;ale</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; The relievo was his
+favourite performance, and very justly so.&nbsp; The angels at the door,
+he owned, he would like to destroy and replace.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Ils
+n&rsquo;ont pas de vie, ils</i> <i>manquent de vie.&nbsp; Vous devriez
+voir mon &eacute;glise &agrave; la Dominique; j&rsquo;ai l&agrave; une
+Vierge qui est vraiment gentille</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Ah,&rsquo;
+I cried, &lsquo;they told me you had said you would never build another
+church, and I wrote in my journal I could not believe it.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Oui, j&rsquo;aimerais bien en fairs une autre</i>,&rsquo;
+he confessed, and smiled at the confession.&nbsp; An artist will understand
+how much I was attracted by this conversation.&nbsp; There is no bond
+so near as a community in that unaffected interest and slightly shame-faced
+pride which mark the intelligent man enamoured of an art.&nbsp; He sees
+the limitations of his aim, the defects of his practice; he smiles to
+be so employed upon the shores of death, yet sees in his own devotion
+something worthy.&nbsp; Artists, if they had the same sense of humour
+with the Augurs, would smile like them on meeting, but the smile would
+not be scornful.<br>
+<br>
+I had occasion to see much of this excellent man.&nbsp; He sailed with
+us from Tai-o-hae to Hiva-oa, a dead beat of ninety miles against a
+heavy sea.&nbsp; It was what is called a good passage, and a feather
+in the <i>Casco&rsquo;s</i> cap; but among the most miserable forty
+hours that any one of us had ever passed.&nbsp; We were swung and tossed
+together all that time like shot in a stage thunder-box.&nbsp; The mate
+was thrown down and had his head cut open; the captain was sick on deck;
+the cook sick in the galley.&nbsp; Of all our party only two sat down
+to dinner.&nbsp; I was one.&nbsp; I own that I felt wretchedly; and
+I can only say of the other, who professed to feel quite well, that
+she fled at an early moment from the table.&nbsp; It was in these circumstances
+that we skirted the windward shore of that indescribable island of Ua-pu;
+viewing with dizzy eyes the coves, the capes, the breakers, the climbing
+forests, and the inaccessible stone needles that surmount the mountains.&nbsp;
+The place persists, in a dark corner of our memories, like a piece of
+the scenery of nightmares.&nbsp; The end of this distressful passage,
+where we were to land our passengers, was in a similar vein of roughness.&nbsp;
+The surf ran high on the beach at Taahauku; the boat broached-to and
+capsized; and all hands were submerged.&nbsp; Only the brother himself,
+who was well used to the experience, skipped ashore, by some miracle
+of agility, with scarce a sprinkling.&nbsp; Thenceforward, during our
+stay at Hiva-oa, he was our cicerone and patron; introducing us, taking
+us excursions, serving us in every way, and making himself daily more
+beloved.<br>
+<br>
+Michel Blanc had been a carpenter by trade; had made money and retired,
+supposing his active days quite over; and it was only when he found
+idleness dangerous that he placed his capital and acquirements at the
+service of the mission.&nbsp; He became their carpenter, mason, architect,
+and engineer; added sculpture to his accomplishments, and was famous
+for his skill in gardening.&nbsp; He wore an enviable air of having
+found a port from life&rsquo;s contentions and lying there strongly
+anchored; went about his business with a jolly simplicity; complained
+of no lack of results - perhaps shyly thinking his own statuary result
+enough; and was altogether a pattern of the missionary layman.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VIII - THE PORT OF ENTRY<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The port - the mart, the civil and religious capital of these rude islands
+- is called Tai-o-hae, and lies strung along the beach of a precipitous
+green bay in Nuka-hiva.&nbsp; It was midwinter when we came thither,
+and the weather was sultry, boisterous, and inconstant.&nbsp; Now the
+wind blew squally from the land down gaps of splintered precipice; now,
+between the sentinel islets of the entry, it came in gusts from seaward.&nbsp;
+Heavy and dark clouds impended on the summits; the rain roared and ceased;
+the scuppers of the mountain gushed; and the next day we would see the
+sides of the amphitheatre bearded with white falls.&nbsp; Along the
+beach the town shows a thin file of houses, mostly white, and all ensconced
+in the foliage of an avenue of green puraos; a pier gives access from
+the sea across the belt of breakers; to the eastward there stands, on
+a projecting bushy hill, the old fort which is now the calaboose, or
+prison; eastward still, alone in a garden, the Residency flies the colours
+of France.&nbsp; Just off Calaboose Hill, the tiny Government schooner
+rides almost permanently at anchor, marks eight bells in the morning
+(there or thereabout) with the unfurling of her flag, and salutes the
+setting sun with the report of a musket.<br>
+<br>
+Here dwell together, and share the comforts of a club (which may be
+enumerated as a billiard-board, absinthe, a map of the world on Mercator&rsquo;s
+projection, and one of the most agreeable verandahs in the tropics),
+a handful of whites of varying nationality, mostly French officials,
+German and Scottish merchant clerks, and the agents of the opium monopoly.&nbsp;
+There are besides three tavern-keepers, the shrewd Scot who runs the
+cotton gin-mill, two white ladies, and a sprinkling of people &lsquo;on
+the beach&rsquo; - a South Sea expression for which there is no exact
+equivalent.&nbsp; It is a pleasant society, and a hospitable.&nbsp;
+But one man, who was often to be seen seated on the logs at the pier-head,
+merits a word for the singularity of his history and appearance.&nbsp;
+Long ago, it seems, he fell in love with a native lady, a High Chiefess
+in Ua-pu.&nbsp; She, on being approached, declared she could never marry
+a man who was untattooed; it looked so naked; whereupon, with some greatness
+of soul, our hero put himself in the hands of the Tahukus, and, with
+still greater, persevered until the process was complete.&nbsp; He had
+certainly to bear a great expense, for the Tahuku will not work without
+reward; and certainly exquisite pain.&nbsp; Kooamua, high chief as he
+was, and one of the old school, was only part tattooed; he could not,
+he told us with lively pantomime, endure the torture to an end.&nbsp;
+Our enamoured countryman was more resolved; he was tattooed from head
+to foot in the most approved methods of the art; and at last presented
+himself before his mistress a new man.&nbsp; The fickle fair one could
+never behold him from that day except with laughter.&nbsp; For my part,
+I could never see the man without a kind of admiration; of him it might
+be said, if ever of any, that he had loved not wisely, but too well.<br>
+<br>
+The Residency stands by itself, Calaboose Hill screening it from the
+fringe of town along the further bay.&nbsp; The house is commodious,
+with wide verandahs; all day it stands open, back and front, and the
+trade blows copiously over its bare floors.&nbsp; On a week-day the
+garden offers a scene of most untropical animation, half a dozen convicts
+toiling there cheerfully with spade and barrow, and touching hats and
+smiling to the visitor like old attached family servants.&nbsp; On Sunday
+these are gone, and nothing to be seen but dogs of all ranks and sizes
+peacefully slumbering in the shady grounds; for the dogs of Tai-o-hae
+are very courtly-minded, and make the seat of Government their promenade
+and place of siesta.&nbsp; In front and beyond, a strip of green down
+loses itself in a low wood of many species of acacia; and deep in the
+wood a ruinous wall encloses the cemetery of the Europeans.&nbsp; English
+and Scottish sleep there, and Scandinavians, and French <i>ma&icirc;tres
+de manoeuvres</i> and <i>ma&icirc;tres ouvriers</i>: mingling alien
+dust.&nbsp; Back in the woods, perhaps, the blackbird, or (as they call
+him there) the island nightingale, will be singing home strains; and
+the ceaseless requiem of the surf hangs on the ear.&nbsp; I have never
+seen a resting-place more quiet; but it was a long thought how far these
+sleepers had all travelled, and from what diverse homes they had set
+forth, to lie here in the end together.<br>
+<br>
+On the summit of its promontory hill, the calaboose stands all day with
+doors and window-shutters open to the trade.&nbsp; On my first visit
+a dog was the only guardian visible.&nbsp; He, indeed, rose with an
+attitude so menacing that I was glad to lay hands on an old barrel-hoop;
+and I think the weapon must have been familiar, for the champion instantly
+retreated, and as I wandered round the court and through the building,
+I could see him, with a couple of companions, humbly dodging me about
+the corners.&nbsp; The prisoners&rsquo; dormitory was a spacious, airy
+room, devoid of any furniture; its whitewashed walls covered with inscriptions
+in Marquesan and rude drawings: one of the pier, not badly done; one
+of a murder; several of French soldiers in uniform.&nbsp; There was
+one legend in French: &lsquo;<i>Je n&rsquo;est</i>&rsquo; (sic) &lsquo;<i>pas
+le sou</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; From this noontide quietude it must not be
+supposed the prison was untenanted; the calaboose at Tai-o-hae does
+a good business.&nbsp; But some of its occupants were gardening at the
+Residency, and the rest were probably at work upon the streets, as free
+as our scavengers at home, although not so industrious.&nbsp; On the
+approach of evening they would be called in like children from play;
+and the harbour-master (who is also the jailer) would go through the
+form of locking them up until six the next morning.&nbsp; Should a prisoner
+have any call in town, whether of pleasure or affairs, he has but to
+unhook the window-shutters; and if he is back again, and the shutter
+decently replaced, by the hour of call on the morrow, he may have met
+the harbour-master in the avenue, and there will be no complaint, far
+less any punishment.&nbsp; But this is not all.&nbsp; The charming French
+Resident, M. Delaruelle, carried me one day to the calaboose on an official
+visit.&nbsp; In the green court, a very ragged gentleman, his legs deformed
+with the island elephantiasis, saluted us smiling.&nbsp; &lsquo;One
+of our political prisoners - an insurgent from Raiatea,&rsquo; said
+the Resident; and then to the jailer: &lsquo;I thought I had ordered
+him a new pair of trousers.&rsquo;&nbsp; Meanwhile no other convict
+was to be seen - &lsquo;<i>Eh bien</i>,&rsquo; said the Resident<i>,
+&lsquo;o&ugrave; sont vos prisonniers</i>?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Monsieur
+le R&eacute;sident</i>,&rsquo; replied the jailer, saluting with soldierly
+formality, <i>&lsquo;comme c&rsquo;est jour de f&ecirc;te, je les ai
+laiss&eacute; aller &agrave; la chasse</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; They were all
+upon the mountains hunting goats!&nbsp; Presently we came to the quarters
+of the women, likewise deserted - &lsquo;<i>O&ugrave;</i> <i>sont vos
+bonnes femmes</i>?&rsquo; asked the Resident; and the jailer cheerfully
+responded: &lsquo;<i>Je crois, Monsieur le R&eacute;sident, qu&rsquo;elles
+sont all&eacute;es quelquepart faire une visite</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; It
+had been the design of M. Delaruelle, who was much in love with the
+whimsicalities of his small realm, to elicit something comical; but
+not even he expected anything so perfect as the last.&nbsp; To complete
+the picture of convict life in Tai-o-hae, it remains to be added that
+these criminals draw a salary as regularly as the President of the Republic.&nbsp;
+Ten sous a day is their hire.&nbsp; Thus they have money, food, shelter,
+clothing, and, I was about to write, their liberty.&nbsp; The French
+are certainly a good-natured people, and make easy masters.&nbsp; They
+are besides inclined to view the Marquesans with an eye of humorous
+indulgence.&nbsp; &lsquo;They are dying, poor devils!&rsquo; said M.
+Delaruelle: &lsquo;the main thing is to let them die in peace.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And it was not only well said, but I believe expressed the general thought.&nbsp;
+Yet there is another element to be considered; for these convicts are
+not merely useful, they are almost essential to the French existence.&nbsp;
+With a people incurably idle, dispirited by what can only be called
+endemic pestilence, and inflamed with ill-feeling against their new
+masters, crime and convict labour are a godsend to the Government.<br>
+<br>
+Theft is practically the sole crime.&nbsp; Originally petty pilferers,
+the men of Tai-o-hae now begin to force locks and attack strong-boxes.&nbsp;
+Hundreds of dollars have been taken at a time; though, with that redeeming
+moderation so common in Polynesian theft, the Marquesan burglar will
+always take a part and leave a part, sharing (so to speak) with the
+proprietor.&nbsp; If it be Chilian coin - the island currency - he will
+escape; if the sum is in gold, French silver, or bank-notes, the police
+wait until the money begins to come in circulation, and then easily
+pick out their man.&nbsp; And now comes the shameful part.&nbsp; In
+plain English, the prisoner is tortured until he confesses and (if that
+be possible) restores the money.&nbsp; To keep him alone, day and night,
+in the black hole, is to inflict on the Marquesan torture inexpressible.&nbsp;
+Even his robberies are carried on in the plain daylight, under the open
+sky, with the stimulus of enterprise, and the countenance of an accomplice;
+his terror of the dark is still insurmountable; conceive, then, what
+he endures in his solitary dungeon; conceive how he longs to confess,
+become a full-fledged convict, and be allowed to sleep beside his comrades.&nbsp;
+While we were in Tai-o-hae a thief was under prevention.&nbsp; He had
+entered a house about eight in the morning, forced a trunk, and stolen
+eleven hundred francs; and now, under the horrors of darkness, solitude,
+and a bedevilled cannibal imagination, he was reluctantly confessing
+and giving up his spoil.&nbsp; From one cache, which he had already
+pointed out, three hundred francs had been recovered, and it was expected
+that he would presently disgorge the rest.&nbsp; This would be ugly
+enough if it were all; but I am bound to say, because it is a matter
+the French should set at rest, that worse is continually hinted.&nbsp;
+I heard that one man was kept six days with his arms bound backward
+round a barrel; and it is the universal report that every gendarme in
+the South Seas is equipped with something in the nature of a thumbscrew.&nbsp;
+I do not know this.&nbsp; I never had the face to ask any of the gendarmes
+- pleasant, intelligent, and kindly fellows - with whom I have been
+intimate, and whose hospitality I have enjoyed; and perhaps the tale
+reposes (as I hope it does) on a misconstruction of that ingenious cat&rsquo;s-cradle
+with which the French agent of police so readily secures a prisoner.&nbsp;
+But whether physical or moral, torture is certainly employed; and by
+a barbarous injustice, the state of accusation (in which a man may very
+well be innocently placed) is positively painful; the state of conviction
+(in which all are supposed guilty) is comparatively free, and positively
+pleasant.&nbsp; Perhaps worse still, - not only the accused, but sometimes
+his wife, his mistress, or his friend, is subjected to the same hardships.&nbsp;
+I was admiring, in the tapu system, the ingenuity of native methods
+of detection; there is not much to admire in those of the French, and
+to lock up a timid child in a dark room, and, if he proved obstinate,
+lock up his sister in the next, is neither novel nor humane.<br>
+<br>
+The main occasion of these thefts is the new vice of opium-eating.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Here nobody ever works, and all eat opium,&rsquo; said a gendarme;
+and Ah Fu knew a woman who ate a dollar&rsquo;s worth in a day.&nbsp;
+The successful thief will give a handful of money to each of his friends,
+a dress to a woman, pass an evening in one of the taverns of Tai-o-hae,
+during which he treats all comers, produce a big lump of opium, and
+retire to the bush to eat and sleep it off.&nbsp; A trader, who did
+not sell opium, confessed to me that he was at his wit&rsquo;s end.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I do not sell it, but others do,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+natives only work to buy it; if they walk over to me to sell their cotton,
+they have just to walk over to some one else to buy their opium with
+my money.&nbsp; And why should they be at the bother of two walks?&nbsp;
+There is no use talking,&rsquo; he added - &lsquo;opium is the currency
+of this country.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The man under prevention during my stay at Tai-o-hae lost patience while
+the Chinese opium-seller was being examined in his presence.&nbsp; &lsquo;Of
+course he sold me opium!&rsquo; he broke out; &lsquo;all the Chinese
+here sell opium.&nbsp; It was only to buy opium that I stole; it is
+only to buy opium that anybody steals.&nbsp; And what you ought to do
+is to let no opium come here, and no Chinamen.&rsquo;&nbsp; This is
+precisely what is done in Samoa by a native Government; but the French
+have bound their own hands, and for forty thousand francs sold native
+subjects to crime and death.&nbsp; This horrid traffic may be said to
+have sprung up by accident.&nbsp; It was Captain Hart who had the misfortune
+to be the means of beginning it, at a time when his plantations flourished
+in the Marquesas, and he found a difficulty in keeping Chinese coolies.&nbsp;
+To-day the plantations are practically deserted and the Chinese gone;
+but in the meanwhile the natives have learned the vice, the patent brings
+in a round sum, and the needy Government at Papeete shut their eyes
+and open their pockets.&nbsp; Of course, the patentee is supposed to
+sell to Chinamen alone; equally of course, no one could afford to pay
+forty thousand francs for the privilege of supplying a scattered handful
+of Chinese; and every one knows the truth, and all are ashamed of it.&nbsp;
+French officials shake their heads when opium is mentioned; and the
+agents of the farmer blush for their employment.&nbsp; Those that live
+in glass houses should not throw stones; as a subject of the British
+crown, I am an unwilling shareholder in the largest opium business under
+heaven.&nbsp; But the British case is highly complicated; it implies
+the livelihood of millions; and must be reformed, when it can be reformed
+at all, with prudence.&nbsp; This French business, on the other hand,
+is a nostrum and a mere excrescence.&nbsp; No native industry was to
+be encouraged: the poison is solemnly imported.&nbsp; No native habit
+was to be considered: the vice has been gratuitously introduced.&nbsp;
+And no creature profits, save the Government at Papeete - the not very
+enviable gentlemen who pay them, and the Chinese underlings who do the
+dirty work.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER IX - THE HOUSE OF TEMOANA<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The history of the Marquesas is, of late years, much confused by the
+coming and going of the French.&nbsp; At least twice they have seized
+the archipelago, at least once deserted it; and in the meanwhile the
+natives pursued almost without interruption their desultory cannibal
+wars.&nbsp; Through these events and changing dynasties, a single considerable
+figure may be seen to move: that of the high chief, a king, Temoana.&nbsp;
+Odds and ends of his history came to my ears: how he was at first a
+convert to the Protestant mission; how he was kidnapped or exiled from
+his native land, served as cook aboard a whaler, and was shown, for
+small charge, in English seaports; how he returned at last to the Marquesas,
+fell under the strong and benign influence of the late bishop, extended
+his influence in the group, was for a while joint ruler with the prelate,
+and died at last the chief supporter of Catholicism and the French.&nbsp;
+His widow remains in receipt of two pounds a month from the French Government.&nbsp;
+Queen she is usually called, but in the official almanac she figures
+as &lsquo;<i>Madame Vaekehu, Grande Chefesse</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; His son
+(natural or adoptive, I know not which), Stanislao Moanatini, chief
+of Akaui, serves in Tai-o-hae as a kind of Minister of Public Works;
+and the daughter of Stanislao is High Chiefess of the southern island
+of Tauata.&nbsp; These, then, are the greatest folk of the archipelago;
+we thought them also the most estimable.&nbsp; This is the rule in Polynesia,
+with few exceptions; the higher the family, the better the man - better
+in sense, better in manners, and usually taller and stronger in body.&nbsp;
+A stranger advances blindfold.&nbsp; He scrapes acquaintance as he can.&nbsp;
+Save the tattoo in the Marquesas, nothing indicates the difference of
+rank; and yet almost invariably we found, after we had made them, that
+our friends were persons of station.&nbsp; I have said &lsquo;usually
+taller and stronger.&rsquo;&nbsp; I might have been more absolute, -
+over all Polynesia, and a part of Micronesia, the rule holds good; the
+great ones of the isle, and even of the village, are greater of bone
+and muscle, and often heavier of flesh, than any commoner.&nbsp; The
+usual explanation - that the high-born child is more industriously shampooed,
+is probably the true one.&nbsp; In New Caledonia, at least, where the
+difference does not exist, has never been remarked, the practice of
+shampooing seems to be itself unknown.&nbsp; Doctors would be well employed
+in a study of the point.<br>
+<br>
+Vaekehu lives at the other end of the town from the Residency, beyond
+the buildings of the mission.&nbsp; Her house is on the European plan:
+a table in the midst of the chief room; photographs and religious pictures
+on the wall.&nbsp; It commands to either hand a charming vista: through
+the front door, a peep of green lawn, scurrying pigs, the pendent fans
+of the coco-palm and splendour of the bursting surf: through the back,
+mounting forest glades and coronals of precipice.&nbsp; Here, in the
+strong thorough-draught, Her Majesty received us in a simple gown of
+print, and with no mark of royalty but the exquisite finish of her tattooed
+mittens, the elaboration of her manners, and the gentle falsetto in
+which all the highly refined among Marquesan ladies (and Vaekehu above
+all others) delight to sing their language.&nbsp; An adopted daughter
+interpreted, while we gave the news, and rehearsed by name our friends
+of Anaho.&nbsp; As we talked, we could see, through the landward door,
+another lady of the household at her toilet under the green trees; who
+presently, when her hair was arranged, and her hat wreathed with flowers,
+appeared upon the back verandah with gracious salutations.<br>
+<br>
+Vaekehu is very deaf; &lsquo;<i>merci</i>&rsquo; is her only word of
+French; and I do not know that she seemed clever.&nbsp; An exquisite,
+kind refinement, with a shade of quietism, gathered perhaps from the
+nuns, was what chiefly struck us.&nbsp; Or rather, upon that first occasion,
+we were conscious of a sense as of district-visiting on our part, and
+reduced evangelical gentility on the part of our hostess.&nbsp; The
+other impression followed after she was more at ease, and came with
+Stanislao and his little girl to dine on board the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp;
+She had dressed for the occasion: wore white, which very well became
+her strong brown face; and sat among us, eating or smoking her cigarette,
+quite cut off from all society, or only now and then included through
+the intermediary of her son.&nbsp; It was a position that might have
+been ridiculous, and she made it ornamental; making believe to hear
+and to be entertained; her face, whenever she met our eyes, lighting
+with the smile of good society; her contributions to the talk, when
+she made any, and that was seldom, always complimentary and pleasing.&nbsp;
+No attention was paid to the child, for instance, but what she remarked
+and thanked us for.&nbsp; Her parting with each, when she came to leave,
+was gracious and pretty, as had been every step of her behaviour.&nbsp;
+When Mrs. Stevenson held out her hand to say good-bye, Vaekehu took
+it, held it, and a moment smiled upon her; dropped it, and then, as
+upon a kindly after-thought, and with a sort of warmth of condescension,
+held out both hands and kissed my wife upon both cheeks.&nbsp; Given
+the same relation of years and of rank, the thing would have been so
+done on the boards of the <i>Com&eacute;die Fran&ccedil;aise</i>; just
+so might Madame Brohan have warmed and condescended to Madame Broisat
+in the <i>Marquis de Villemer</i>.&nbsp; It was my part to accompany
+our guests ashore: when I kissed the little girl good-bye at the pier
+steps, Vaekehu gave a cry of gratification, reached down her hand into
+the boat, took mine, and pressed it with that flattering softness which
+seems the coquetry of the old lady in every quarter of the earth.&nbsp;
+The next moment she had taken Stanislao&rsquo;s arm, and they moved
+off along the pier in the moonlight, leaving me bewildered.&nbsp; This
+was a queen of cannibals; she was tattooed from hand to foot, and perhaps
+the greatest masterpiece of that art now extant, so that a while ago,
+before she was grown prim, her leg was one of the sights of Tai-o-hae;
+she had been passed from chief to chief; she had been fought for and
+taken in war; perhaps, being so great a lady, she had sat on the high
+place, and throned it there, alone of her sex, while the drums were
+going twenty strong and the priests carried up the blood-stained baskets
+of long-pig.&nbsp; And now behold her, out of that past of violence
+and sickening feasts, step forth, in her age, a quiet, smooth, elaborate
+old lady, such as you might find at home (mittened also, but not often
+so well-mannered) in a score of country houses.&nbsp; Only Vaekehu&rsquo;s
+mittens were of dye, not of silk; and they had been paid for, not in
+money, but the cooked flesh of men.&nbsp; It came in my mind with a
+clap, what she could think of it herself, and whether at heart, perhaps,
+she might not regret and aspire after the barbarous and stirring past.&nbsp;
+But when I asked Stanislao - &lsquo;Ah!&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;she is
+content; she is religious, she passes all her days with the sisters.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Stanislao (Stanislaos, with the final consonant evaded after the Polynesian
+habit) was sent by Bishop Dordillon to South America, and there educated
+by the fathers.&nbsp; His French is fluent, his talk sensible and spirited,
+and in his capacity of ganger-in-chief, he is of excellent service to
+the French.&nbsp; With the prestige of his name and family, and with
+the stick when needful, he keeps the natives working and the roads passable.&nbsp;
+Without Stanislao and the convicts, I am in doubt what would become
+of the present regimen in Nuka-hiva; whether the highways might not
+be suffered to close up, the pier to wash away, and the Residency to
+fall piecemeal about the ears of impotent officials.&nbsp; And yet though
+the hereditary favourer, and one of the chief props of French authority,
+he has always an eye upon the past.&nbsp; He showed me where the old
+public place had stood, still to be traced by random piles of stone;
+told me how great and fine it was, and surrounded on all sides by populous
+houses, whence, at the beating of the drums, the folk crowded to make
+holiday.&nbsp; The drum-beat of the Polynesian has a strange and gloomy
+stimulation for the nerves of all.&nbsp; White persons feel it - at
+these precipitate sounds their hearts beat faster; and, according to
+old residents, its effect on the natives was extreme.&nbsp; Bishop Dordillon
+might entreat; Temoana himself command and threaten; at the note of
+the drum wild instincts triumphed.&nbsp; And now it might beat upon
+these ruins, and who should assemble?&nbsp; The houses are down, the
+people dead, their lineage extinct; and the sweepings and fugitives
+of distant bays and islands encamp upon their graves.&nbsp; The decline
+of the dance Stanislao especially laments.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Chaque pays
+a ses coutumes</i>,&rsquo; said he; but in the report of any gendarme,
+perhaps corruptly eager to increase the number of <i>d&eacute;lits</i>
+and the instruments of his own power, custom after custom is placed
+on the expurgatorial index.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Tenez, une</i> <i>danse
+qui n&rsquo;est pas permise</i>,&rsquo; said Stanislao: &lsquo;<i>je
+ne sais</i> <i>pas pourquoi, elle est tr&egrave;s jolie, elle va comme
+&ccedil;a</i>,&rsquo; and sticking his umbrella upright in the road,
+he sketched the steps and gestures.&nbsp; All his criticisms of the
+present, all his regrets for the past, struck me as temperate and sensible.&nbsp;
+The short term of office of the Resident he thought the chief defect
+of the administration; that officer having scarce begun to be efficient
+ere he was recalled.&nbsp; I thought I gathered, too, that he regarded
+with some fear the coming change from a naval to a civil governor.&nbsp;
+I am sure at least that I regard it so myself; for the civil servants
+of France have never appeared to any foreigner as at all the flower
+of their country, while her naval officers may challenge competition
+with the world.&nbsp; In all his talk, Stanislao was particular to speak
+of his own country as a land of savages; and when he stated an opinion
+of his own, it was with some apologetic preface, alleging that he was
+&lsquo;a savage who had travelled.&rsquo;&nbsp; There was a deal, in
+this elaborate modesty, of honest pride.&nbsp; Yet there was something
+in the precaution that saddened me; and I could not but fear he was
+only forestalling a taunt that he had heard too often.<br>
+<br>
+I recall with interest two interviews with Stanislao.&nbsp; The first
+was a certain afternoon of tropic rain, which we passed together in
+the verandah of the club; talking at times with heightened voices as
+the showers redoubled overhead, passing at times into the billiard-room,
+to consult, in the dim, cloudy daylight, that map of the world which
+forms its chief adornment.&nbsp; He was naturally ignorant of English
+history, so that I had much of news to communicate.&nbsp; The story
+of Gordon I told him in full, and many episodes of the Indian Mutiny,
+Lucknow, the second battle of Cawn-pore, the relief of Arrah, the death
+of poor Spottis-woode, and Sir Hugh Rose&rsquo;s hotspur, midland campaign.&nbsp;
+He was intent to hear; his brown face, strongly marked with small-pox,
+kindled and changed with each vicissitude.&nbsp; His eyes glowed with
+the reflected light of battle; his questions were many and intelligent,
+and it was chiefly these that sent us so often to the map.&nbsp; But
+it is of our parting that I keep the strongest sense.&nbsp; We were
+to sail on the morrow, and the night had fallen, dark, gusty, and rainy,
+when we stumbled up the hill to bid farewell to Stanislao.&nbsp; He
+had already loaded us with gifts; but more were waiting.&nbsp; We sat
+about the table over cigars and green cocoa-nuts; claps of wind blew
+through the house and extinguished the lamp, which was always instantly
+relighted with a single match; and these recurrent intervals of darkness
+were felt as a relief.&nbsp; For there was something painful and embarrassing
+in the kindness of that separation.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Ah, vous devriez
+rester ici, mon</i> <i>cher ami</i>!&rsquo; cried Stanislao.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Vous
+&ecirc;tes les gens qu&rsquo;il faut pour les Kanaques; vous &ecirc;tes
+doux, vous et votre famille</i>; <i>vous seriez ob&eacute;is dans toutes
+les &icirc;les</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; We had been civil; not always that,
+my conscience told me, and never anything beyond; and all this to-do
+is a measure, not of our considerateness, but of the want of it in others.&nbsp;
+The rest of the evening, on to Vaekehu&rsquo;s and back as far as to
+the pier, Stanislao walked with my arm and sheltered me with his umbrella;
+and after the boat had put off, we could still distinguish, in the murky
+darkness, his gestures of farewell.&nbsp; His words, if there were any,
+were drowned by the rain and the loud surf.<br>
+<br>
+I have mentioned presents, a vexed question in the South Seas; and one
+which well illustrates the common, ignorant habit of regarding races
+in a lump.&nbsp; In many quarters the Polynesian gives only to receive.&nbsp;
+I have visited islands where the population mobbed me for all the world
+like dogs after the waggon of cat&rsquo;s-meat; and where the frequent
+proposition, &lsquo;You my pleni (friend),&rsquo; or (with more of pathos)
+&lsquo;You all &lsquo;e same my father,&rsquo; must be received with
+hearty laughter and a shout.&nbsp; And perhaps everywhere, among the
+greedy and rapacious, a gift is regarded as a sprat to catch a whale.&nbsp;
+It is the habit to give gifts and to receive returns, and such characters,
+complying with the custom, will look to it nearly that they do not lose.&nbsp;
+But for persons of a different stamp the statement must be reversed.&nbsp;
+The shabby Polynesian is anxious till he has received the return gift;
+the generous is uneasy until he has made it.&nbsp; The first is disappointed
+if you have not given more than he; the second is miserable if he thinks
+he has given less than you.&nbsp; This is my experience; if it clash
+with that of others, I pity their fortune, and praise mine: the circumstances
+cannot change what I have seen, nor lessen what I have received.&nbsp;
+And indeed I find that those who oppose me often argue from a ground
+of singular presumptions; comparing Polynesians with an ideal person,
+compact of generosity and gratitude, whom I never had the pleasure of
+encountering; and forgetting that what is almost poverty to us is wealth
+almost unthinkable to them.&nbsp; I will give one instance: I chanced
+to speak with consideration of these gifts of Stanislao&rsquo;s with
+a certain clever man, a great hater and contemner of Kanakas.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Well! what were they?&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp; &lsquo;A pack of
+old men&rsquo;s beards.&nbsp; Trash!&rsquo;&nbsp; And the same gentleman,
+some half an hour later, being upon a different train of thought, dwelt
+at length on the esteem in which the Marquesans held that sort of property,
+how they preferred it to all others except land, and what fancy prices
+it would fetch.&nbsp; Using his own figures, I computed that, in this
+commodity alone, the gifts of Vaekehu and Stanislao represented between
+two and three hundred dollars; and the queen&rsquo;s official salary
+is of two hundred and forty in the year.<br>
+<br>
+But generosity on the one hand, and conspicuous meanness on the other,
+are in the South Seas, as at home, the exception.&nbsp; It is neither
+with any hope of gain, nor with any lively wish to please, that the
+ordinary Polynesian chooses and presents his gifts.&nbsp; A plain social
+duty lies before him, which he performs correctly, but without the least
+enthusiasm.&nbsp; And we shall best understand his attitude of mind,
+if we examine our own to the cognate absurdity of marriage presents.&nbsp;
+There we give without any special thought of a return; yet if the circumstance
+arise, and the return be withheld, we shall judge ourselves insulted.&nbsp;
+We give them usually without affection, and almost never with a genuine
+desire to please; and our gift is rather a mark of our own status than
+a measure of our love to the recipients.&nbsp; So in a great measure
+and with the common run of the Polynesians; their gifts are formal;
+they imply no more than social recognition; and they are made and reciprocated,
+as we pay and return our morning visits.&nbsp; And the practice of marking
+and measuring events and sentiments by presents is universal in the
+island world.&nbsp; A gift plays with them the part of stamp and seal;
+and has entered profoundly into the mind of islanders.&nbsp; Peace and
+war, marriage, adoption and naturalisation, are celebrated or declared
+by the acceptance or the refusal of gifts; and it is as natural for
+the islander to bring a gift as for us to carry a card-case.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER X - A PORTRAIT AND A STORY<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+I have had occasion several times to name the late bishop, Father Dordillon,
+&lsquo;Monseigneur,&rsquo; as he is still almost universally called,
+Vicar-Apostolic of the Marquesas and Bishop of Cambysopolis <i>in partibus</i>.&nbsp;
+Everywhere in the islands, among all classes and races, this fine, old,
+kindly, cheerful fellow is remembered with affection and respect.&nbsp;
+His influence with the natives was paramount.&nbsp; They reckoned him
+the highest of men - higher than an admiral; brought him their money
+to keep; took his advice upon their purchases; nor would they plant
+trees upon their own land till they had the approval of the father of
+the islands.&nbsp; During the time of the French exodus he singly represented
+Europe, living in the Residency, and ruling by the hand of Temoana.&nbsp;
+The first roads were made under his auspices and by his persuasion.&nbsp;
+The old road between Hatiheu and Anaho was got under way from either
+side on the ground that it would be pleasant for an evening promenade,
+and brought to completion by working on the rivalry of the two villages.&nbsp;
+The priest would boast in Hatiheu of the progress made in Anaho, and
+he would tell the folk of Anaho, &lsquo;If you don&rsquo;t take care,
+your neighbours will be over the hill before you are at the top.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It could not be so done to-day; it could then; death, opium, and depopulation
+had not gone so far; and the people of Hatiheu, I was told, still vied
+with each other in fine attire, and used to go out by families, in the
+cool of the evening, boat-sailing and racing in the bay.&nbsp; There
+seems some truth at least in the common view, that this joint reign
+of Temoana and the bishop was the last and brief golden age of the Marquesas.&nbsp;
+But the civil power returned, the mission was packed out of the Residency
+at twenty-four hours&rsquo; notice, new methods supervened, and the
+golden age (whatever it quite was) came to an end.&nbsp; It is the strongest
+proof of Father Dordillon&rsquo;s prestige that it survived, seemingly
+without loss, this hasty deposition.<br>
+<br>
+His method with the natives was extremely mild.&nbsp; Among these barbarous
+children he still played the part of the smiling father; and he was
+careful to observe, in all indifferent matters, the Marquesan etiquette.&nbsp;
+Thus, in the singular system of artificial kinship, the bishop had been
+adopted by Vaekehu as a grandson; Miss Fisher, of Hatiheu, as a daughter.&nbsp;
+From that day, Monseigneur never addressed the young lady except as
+his mother, and closed his letters with the formalities of a dutiful
+son.&nbsp; With Europeans he could be strict, even to the extent of
+harshness.&nbsp; He made no distinction against heretics, with whom
+he was on friendly terms; but the rules of his own Church he would see
+observed; and once at least he had a white man clapped in jail for the
+desecration of a saint&rsquo;s day.&nbsp; But even this rigour, so intolerable
+to laymen, so irritating to Protestants, could not shake his popularity.&nbsp;
+We shall best conceive him by examples nearer home; we may all have
+known some divine of the old school in Scotland, a literal Sabbatarian,
+a stickler for the letter of the law, who was yet in private modest,
+innocent, genial and mirthful.&nbsp; Much such a man, it seems, was
+Father Dordillon.&nbsp; And his popularity bore a test yet stronger.&nbsp;
+He had the name, and probably deserved it, of a shrewd man in business
+and one that made the mission pay.&nbsp; Nothing so much stirs up resentment
+as the inmixture in commerce of religious bodies; but even rival traders
+spoke well of Monseigneur.<br>
+<br>
+His character is best portrayed in the story of the days of his decline.&nbsp;
+A time came when, from the failure of sight, he must desist from his
+literary labours: his Marquesan hymns, grammars, and dictionaries; his
+scientific papers, lives of saints, and devotional poetry.&nbsp; He
+cast about for a new interest: pitched on gardening, and was to be seen
+all day, with spade and water-pot, in his childlike eagerness, actually
+running between the borders.&nbsp; Another step of decay, and he must
+leave his garden also.&nbsp; Instantly a new occupation was devised,
+and he sat in the mission cutting paper flowers and wreaths.&nbsp; His
+diocese was not great enough for his activity; the churches of the Marquesas
+were papered with his handiwork, and still he must be making more.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Ah,&rsquo; said he, smiling, &lsquo;when I am dead what a fine
+time you will have clearing out my trash!&rsquo;&nbsp; He had been dead
+about six months; but I was pleased to see some of his trophies still
+exposed, and looked upon them with a smile: the tribute (if I have read
+his cheerful character aright) which he would have preferred to any
+useless tears.&nbsp; Disease continued progressively to disable him;
+he who had clambered so stalwartly over the rude rocks of the Marquesas,
+bringing peace to warfaring clans, was for some time carried in a chair
+between the mission and the church, and at last confined to bed, impotent
+with dropsy, and tormented with bed-sores and sciatica.&nbsp; Here he
+lay two months without complaint; and on the 11th January 1888, in the
+seventy-ninth year of his life, and the thirty-fourth of his labours
+in the Marquesas, passed away.<br>
+<br>
+Those who have a taste for hearing missions, Protestant or Catholic,
+decried, must seek their pleasure elsewhere than in my pages.&nbsp;
+Whether Catholic or Protestant, with all their gross blots, with all
+their deficiency of candour, of humour, and of common sense, the missionaries
+are the best and the most useful whites in the Pacific.&nbsp; This is
+a subject which will follow us throughout; but there is one part of
+it that may conveniently be treated here.&nbsp; The married and the
+celibate missionary, each has his particular advantage and defect.&nbsp;
+The married missionary, taking him at the best, may offer to the native
+what he is much in want of - a higher picture of domestic life; but
+the woman at his elbow tends to keep him in touch with Europe and out
+of touch with Polynesia, and to perpetuate, and even to ingrain, parochial
+decencies far best forgotten.&nbsp; The mind of the female missionary
+tends, for instance, to be continually busied about dress.&nbsp; She
+can be taught with extreme difficulty to think any costume decent but
+that to which she grew accustomed on Clapham Common; and to gratify
+this prejudice, the native is put to useless expense, his mind is tainted
+with the morbidities of Europe, and his health is set in danger.&nbsp;
+The celibate missionary, on the other hand, and whether at best or worst,
+falls readily into native ways of life; to which he adds too commonly
+what is either a mark of celibate man at large, or an inheritance from
+mediaeval saints - I mean slovenly habits and an unclean person.&nbsp;
+There are, of course, degrees in this; and the sister (of course, and
+all honour to her) is as fresh as a lady at a ball.&nbsp; For the diet
+there is nothing to be said - it must amaze and shock the Polynesian
+- but for the adoption of native habits there is much.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Chaque
+pays a ses coutumes</i>,&rsquo; said Stanislao; these it is the missionary&rsquo;s
+delicate task to modify; and the more he can do so from within, and
+from a native standpoint, the better he will do his work; and here I
+think the Catholics have sometimes the advantage; in the Vicariate of
+Dordillon, I am sure they had it.&nbsp; I have heard the bishop blamed
+for his indulgence to the natives, and above all because he did not
+rage with sufficient energy against cannibalism.&nbsp; It was a part
+of his policy to live among the natives like an elder brother; to follow
+where he could; to lead where it was necessary; never to drive; and
+to encourage the growth of new habits, instead of violently rooting
+up the old.&nbsp; And it might be better, in the long-run, if this policy
+were always followed.<br>
+<br>
+It might be supposed that native missionaries would prove more indulgent,
+but the reverse is found to be the case.&nbsp; The new broom sweeps
+clean; and the white missionary of to-day is often embarrassed by the
+bigotry of his native coadjutor.&nbsp; What else should we expect?&nbsp;
+On some islands, sorcery, polygamy, human sacrifice, and tobacco-smoking
+have been prohibited, the dress of the native has been modified, and
+himself warned in strong terms against rival sects of Christianity;
+all by the same man, at the same period of time, and with the like authority.&nbsp;
+By what criterion is the convert to distinguish the essential from the
+unessential?&nbsp; He swallows the nostrum whole; there has been no
+play of mind, no instruction, and, except for some brute utility in
+the prohibitions, no advance.&nbsp; To call things by their proper names,
+this is teaching superstition.&nbsp; It is unfortunate to use the word;
+so few people have read history, and so many have dipped into little
+atheistic manuals, that the majority will rush to a conclusion, and
+suppose the labour lost.&nbsp; And far from that: These semi-spontaneous
+superstitions, varying with the sect of the original evangelist and
+the customs of the island, are found in practice to be highly fructifying;
+and in particular those who have learned and who go forth again to teach
+them offer an example to the world.&nbsp; The best specimen of the Christian
+hero that I ever met was one of these native missionaries.&nbsp; He
+had saved two lives at the risk of his own; like Nathan, he had bearded
+a tyrant in his hour of blood; when a whole white population fled, he
+alone stood to his duty; and his behaviour under domestic sorrow with
+which the public has no concern filled the beholder with sympathy and
+admiration.&nbsp; A poor little smiling laborious man he looked; and
+you would have thought he had nothing in him but that of which indeed
+he had too much - facile good-nature.<br>
+<br>
+It chances that the only rivals of Monseigneur and his mission in the
+Marquesas were certain of these brown-skinned evangelists, natives from
+Hawaii.&nbsp; I know not what they thought of Father Dordillon: they
+are the only class I did not question; but I suspect the prelate to
+have regarded them askance, for he was eminently human.&nbsp; During
+my stay at Tai-o-hae, the time of the yearly holiday came round at the
+girls&rsquo; school; and a whole fleet of whale-boats came from Ua-pu
+to take the daughters of that island home.&nbsp; On board of these was
+Kauwealoha, one of the pastors, a fine, rugged old gentleman, of that
+leonine type so common in Hawaii.&nbsp; He paid me a visit in the <i>Casco</i>,
+and there entertained me with a tale of one of his colleagues, Kekela,
+a missionary in the great cannibal isle of Hiva-oa.&nbsp; It appears
+that shortly after a kidnapping visit from a Peruvian slaver, the boats
+of an American whaler put into a bay upon that island, were attacked,
+and made their escape with difficulty, leaving their mate, a Mr. Whalon,
+in the hands of the natives.&nbsp; The captive, with his arms bound
+behind his back, was cast into a house; and the chief announced the
+capture to Kekela.&nbsp; And here I begin to follow the version of Kauwealoha;
+it is a good specimen of Kanaka English; and the reader is to conceive
+it delivered with violent emphasis and speaking pantomime.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;&ldquo;I got &lsquo;Melican mate,&rdquo; the chief he say.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What you go do &lsquo;Melican mate?&rdquo; Kekela he say.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I go make fire, I go kill, I go eat him,&rdquo; he say; &ldquo;you
+come to-mollow eat piece.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I no <i>want</i> eat &lsquo;Melican
+mate!&rdquo; Kekela he say; &ldquo;why you want?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;This
+bad shippee, this slave shippee,&rdquo; the chief he say.&nbsp; &ldquo;One
+time a shippee he come from Pelu, he take away plenty Kanaka, he take
+away my son.&nbsp; &lsquo;Melican mate he bad man.&nbsp; I go eat him;
+you eat piece.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I no <i>want</i> eat &lsquo;Melican
+mate!&rdquo; Kekela he say; and he <i>cly</i> - all night he cly!&nbsp;
+To-mollow Kekela he get up, he put on blackee coat, he go see chief;
+he see Missa Whela, him hand tie&rsquo; like this.&nbsp; (<i>Pantomime</i>.)&nbsp;
+Kekela he cly.&nbsp; He say chief:- &ldquo;Chief, you like things of
+mine? you like whale-boat?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he say.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You like file-a&rsquo;m?&rdquo; (fire-arms).&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo;
+he say.&nbsp; &ldquo;You like blackee coat?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo;
+he say.&nbsp; Kekela he take Missa Whela by he shoul&rsquo;a&rsquo;
+(shoulder), he take him light out house; he give chief he whale-boat,
+he file-a&rsquo;m, he blackee coat.&nbsp; He take Missa Whela he house,
+make him sit down with he wife and chil&rsquo;en.&nbsp; Missa Whela
+all-the-same pelison (prison); he wife, he chil&rsquo;en in Amelica;
+he cly - O, he cly.&nbsp; Kekela he solly.&nbsp; One day Kekela he see
+ship.&nbsp; (<i>Pantomime</i>.)&nbsp; He say Missa Whela, &ldquo;Ma&rsquo;
+Whala?&rdquo;&nbsp; Missa Whela he say, &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;&nbsp; Kanaka
+they begin go down beach.&nbsp; Kekela he get eleven Kanaka, get oa&rsquo;
+(oars), get evely thing.&nbsp; He say Missa Whela, &ldquo;Now you go
+quick.&rdquo;&nbsp; They jump in whale-boat.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now you low!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Kekela he say: &ldquo;you low quick, quick!&rdquo;&nbsp; (<i>Violent
+pantomime</i>, <i>and a change indicating that the narrator has left
+the boat</i> <i>and returned to the beach</i>.)&nbsp; All the Kanaka
+they say, &ldquo;How!&nbsp; &lsquo;Melican mate he go away?&rdquo; -
+jump in boat; low afta.&nbsp; (<i>Violent pantomime, and change again
+to boat</i>.)&nbsp; Kekela he say, &ldquo;Low quick!&rdquo;&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Here I think Kauwealoha&rsquo;s pantomime had confused me; I have no
+more of his <i>ipsissima verba</i>; and can but add, in my own less
+spirited manner, that the ship was reached, Mr. Whalon taken aboard,
+and Kekela returned to his charge among the cannibals.&nbsp; But how
+unjust it is to repeat the stumblings of a foreigner in a language only
+partly acquired!&nbsp; A thoughtless reader might conceive Kauwealoha
+and his colleague to be a species of amicable baboon; but I have here
+the anti-dote.&nbsp; In return for his act of gallant charity, Kekela
+was presented by the American Government with a sum of money, and by
+President Lincoln personally with a gold watch.&nbsp; From his letter
+of thanks, written in his own tongue, I give the following extract.&nbsp;
+I do not envy the man who can read it without emotion.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;When I saw one of your countrymen, a citizen of your great nation,
+ill-treated, and about to be baked and eaten, as a pig is eaten, I ran
+to save him, full of pity and grief at the evil deed of these benighted
+people.&nbsp; I gave my boat for the stranger&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; This
+boat came from James Hunnewell, a gift of friendship.&nbsp; It became
+the ransom of this countryman of yours, that he might not be eaten by
+the savages who knew not Jehovah.&nbsp; This was Mr. Whalon, and the
+date, Jan. 14, 1864.<br>
+<br>
+As to this friendly deed of mine in saving Mr. Whalon, its seed came
+from your great land, and was brought by certain of your countrymen,
+who had received the love of God.&nbsp; It was planted in Hawaii, and
+I brought it to plant in this land and in these dark regions, that they
+might receive the root of all that is good and true, which is <i>love.<br>
+<br>
+</i>&lsquo;1. Love to Jehovah.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. Love to self.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. Love to our neighbour.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;If a man have a sufficiency of these three, he is good and holy,
+like his God, Jehovah, in his triune character (Father, Son, and Holy
+Ghost), one-three, three-one.&nbsp; If he have two and wants one, it
+is not well; and if he have one and wants two, indeed, is not well;
+but if he cherishes all three, then is he holy, indeed, after the manner
+of the Bible.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;This is a great thing for your great nation to boast of, before
+all the nations of the earth.&nbsp; From your great land a most precious
+seed was brought to the land of darkness.&nbsp; It was planted here,
+not by means of guns and men-of-war and threatening.&nbsp; It was planted
+by means of the ignorant, the neglected, the despised.&nbsp; Such was
+the introduction of the word of the Almighty God into this group of
+Nuuhiwa.&nbsp; Great is my debt to Americans, who have taught me all
+things pertaining to this life and to that which is to come.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;How shall I repay your great kindness to me?&nbsp; Thus David
+asked of Jehovah, and thus I ask of you, the President of the United
+States.&nbsp; This is my only payment - that which I have received of
+the Lord, love - (aloha).&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER XI - LONG-PIG - A CANNIBAL HIGH PLACE<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Nothing more strongly arouses our disgust than cannibalism, nothing
+so surely unmortars a society; nothing, we might plausibly argue, will
+so harden and degrade the minds of those that practise it.&nbsp; And
+yet we ourselves make much the same appearance in the eyes of the Buddhist
+and the vegetarian.&nbsp; We consume the carcasses of creatures of like
+appetites, passions, and organs with ourselves; we feed on babes, though
+not our own; and the slaughter-house resounds daily with screams of
+pain and fear.&nbsp; We distinguish, indeed; but the unwillingness of
+many nations to eat the dog, an animal with whom we live on terms of
+the next intimacy, shows how precariously the distinction is grounded.&nbsp;
+The pig is the main element of animal food among the islands; and I
+had many occasions, my mind being quickened by my cannibal surroundings,
+to observe his character and the manner of his death.&nbsp; Many islanders
+live with their pigs as we do with our dogs; both crowd around the hearth
+with equal freedom; and the island pig is a fellow of activity, enterprise,
+and sense.&nbsp; He husks his own cocoa-nuts, and (I am told) rolls
+them into the sun to burst; he is the terror of the shepherd.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Stevenson, senior, has seen one fleeing to the woods with a lamb
+in his mouth; and I saw another come rapidly (and erroneously) to the
+conclusion that the <i>Casco</i> was going down, and swim through the
+flush water to the rail in search of an escape.&nbsp; It was told us
+in childhood that pigs cannot swim; I have known one to leap overboard,
+swim five hundred yards to shore, and return to the house of his original
+owner.&nbsp; I was once, at Tautira, a pig-master on a considerable
+scale; at first, in my pen, the utmost good feeling prevailed; a little
+sow with a belly-ache came and appealed to us for help in the manner
+of a child; and there was one shapely black boar, whom we called Catholicus,
+for he was a particular present from the Catholics of the village, and
+who early displayed the marks of courage and friendliness; no other
+animal, whether dog or pig, was suffered to approach him at his food,
+and for human beings he showed a full measure of that toadying fondness
+so common in the lower animals, and possibly their chief title to the
+name.&nbsp; One day, on visiting my piggery, I was amazed to see Catholicus
+draw back from my approach with cries of terror; and if I was amazed
+at the change, I was truly embarrassed when I learnt its reason.&nbsp;
+One of the pigs had been that morning killed; Catholicus had seen the
+murder, he had discovered he was dwelling in the shambles, and from
+that time his confidence and his delight in life were ended.&nbsp; We
+still reserved him a long while, but he could not endure the sight of
+any two-legged creature, nor could we, under the circumstances, encounter
+his eye without confusion.&nbsp; I have assisted besides, by the ear,
+at the act of butchery itself; the victim&rsquo;s cries of pain I think
+I could have borne, but the execution was mismanaged, and his expression
+of terror was contagious: that small heart moved to the same tune with
+ours.&nbsp; Upon such &lsquo;dread foundations&rsquo; the life of the
+European reposes, and yet the European is among the less cruel of races.&nbsp;
+The paraphernalia of murder, the preparatory brutalities of his existence,
+are all hid away; an extreme sensibility reigns upon the surface; and
+ladies will faint at the recital of one tithe of what they daily expect
+of their butchers.&nbsp; Some will be even crying out upon me in their
+hearts for the coarseness of this paragraph.&nbsp; And so with the island
+cannibals.&nbsp; They were not cruel; apart from this custom, they are
+a race of the most kindly; rightly speaking, to cut a man&rsquo;s flesh
+after he is dead is far less hateful than to oppress him whilst he lives;
+and even the victims of their appetite were gently used in life and
+suddenly and painlessly despatched at last.&nbsp; In island circles
+of refinement it was doubtless thought bad taste to expatiate on what
+was ugly in the practice.<br>
+<br>
+Cannibalism is traced from end to end of the Pacific, from the Marquesas
+to New Guinea, from New Zealand to Hawaii, here in the lively haunt
+of its exercise, there by scanty but significant survivals.&nbsp; Hawaii
+is the most doubtful.&nbsp; We find cannibalism chronicled in Hawaii,
+only in the history of a single war, where it seems to have been thought
+exception, as in the case of mountain outlaws, such as fell by the hand
+of Theseus.&nbsp; In Tahiti, a single circumstance survived, but that
+appears conclusive.&nbsp; In historic times, when human oblation was
+made in the marae, the eyes of the victim were formally offered to the
+chief: a delicacy to the leading guest.&nbsp; All Melanesia appears
+tainted.&nbsp; In Micronesia, in the Marshalls, with which my acquaintance
+is no more than that of a tourist, I could find no trace at all; and
+even in the Gilbert zone I long looked and asked in vain.&nbsp; I was
+told tales indeed of men who had been eaten in a famine; but these were
+nothing to my purpose, for the same thing is done under the same stress
+by all kindreds and generations of men.&nbsp; At last, in some manuscript
+notes of Dr. Turner&rsquo;s, which I was allowed to consult at Malua,
+I came on one damning evidence: on the island of Onoatoa the punishment
+for theft was to be killed and eaten.&nbsp; How shall we account for
+the universality of the practice over so vast an area, among people
+of such varying civilisation, and, with whatever intermixture, of such
+different blood?&nbsp; What circumstance is common to them all, but
+that they lived on islands destitute, or very nearly so, of animal food?&nbsp;
+I can never find it in my appetite that man was meant to live on vegetables
+only.&nbsp; When our stores ran low among the islands, I grew to weary
+for the recurrent day when economy allowed us to open another tin of
+miserable mutton.&nbsp; And in at least one ocean language, a particular
+word denotes that a man is &lsquo;hungry for fish,&rsquo; having reached
+that stage when vegetables can no longer satisfy, and his soul, like
+those of the Hebrews in the desert, begins to lust after flesh-pots.&nbsp;
+Add to this the evidences of over-population and imminent famine already
+adduced, and I think we see some ground of indulgence for the island
+cannibal.<br>
+<br>
+It is right to look at both sides of any question; but I am far from
+making the apology of this worse than bestial vice.&nbsp; The higher
+Polynesian races, such as the Tahitians, Hawaiians, and Samoans, had
+one and all outgrown, and some of them had in part forgot, the practice,
+before Cook or Bougainville had shown a top-sail in their waters.&nbsp;
+It lingered only in some low islands where life was difficult to maintain,
+and among inveterate savages like the New-Zealanders or the Marquesans.&nbsp;
+The Marquesans intertwined man-eating with the whole texture of their
+lives; long-pig was in a sense their currency and sacrament; it formed
+the hire of the artist, illustrated public events, and was the occasion
+and attraction of a feast.&nbsp; To-day they are paying the penalty
+of this bloody commixture.&nbsp; The civil power, in its crusade against
+man-eating, has had to examine one after another all Marquesan arts
+and pleasures, has found them one after another tainted with a cannibal
+element, and one after another has placed them on the proscript list.&nbsp;
+Their art of tattooing stood by itself, the execution exquisite, the
+designs most beautiful and intricate; nothing more handsomely sets off
+a handsome man; it may cost some pain in the beginning, but I doubt
+if it be near so painful in the long-run, and I am sure it is far more
+becoming than the ignoble European practice of tight-lacing among women.&nbsp;
+And now it has been found needful to forbid the art.&nbsp; Their songs
+and dances were numerous (and the law has had to abolish them by the
+dozen).&nbsp; They now face empty-handed the tedium of their uneventful
+days; and who shall pity them?&nbsp; The least rigorous will say that
+they were justly served.<br>
+<br>
+Death alone could not satisfy Marquesan vengeance: the flesh must be
+eaten.&nbsp; The chief who seized Mr. Whalon preferred to eat him; and
+he thought he had justified the wish when he explained it was a vengeance.&nbsp;
+Two or three years ago, the people of a valley seized and slew a wretch
+who had offended them.&nbsp; His offence, it is to be supposed, was
+dire; they could not bear to leave their vengeance incomplete, and,
+under the eyes of the French, they did not dare to hold a public festival.&nbsp;
+The body was accordingly divided; and every man retired to his own house
+to consummate the rite in secret, carrying his proportion of the dreadful
+meat in a Swedish match-box.&nbsp; The barbarous substance of the drama
+and the European properties employed offer a seizing contrast to the
+imagination.&nbsp; Yet more striking is another incident of the very
+year when I was there myself, 1888.&nbsp; In the spring, a man and woman
+skulked about the school-house in Hiva-oa till they found a particular
+child alone.&nbsp; Him they approached with honeyed words and carneying
+manners - &lsquo;You are So-and-so, son of So-and-so?&rsquo; they asked;
+and caressed and beguiled him deeper in the woods.&nbsp; Some instinct
+woke in the child&rsquo;s bosom, or some look betrayed the horrid purpose
+of his deceivers.&nbsp; He sought to break from them; he screamed; and
+they, casting off the mask, seized him the more strongly and began to
+run.&nbsp; His cries were heard; his schoolmates, playing not far off,
+came running to the rescue; and the sinister couple fled and vanished
+in the woods.&nbsp; They were never identified; no prosecution followed;
+but it was currently supposed they had some grudge against the boy&rsquo;s
+father, and designed to eat him in revenge.&nbsp; All over the islands,
+as at home among our own ancestors, it will be observed that the avenger
+takes no particular heed to strike an individual.&nbsp; A family, a
+class, a village, a whole valley or island, a whole race of mankind,
+share equally the guilt of any member.&nbsp; So, in the above story,
+the son was to pay the penalty for his father; so Mr. Whalon, the mate
+of an American whaler, was to bleed and be eaten for the misdeeds of
+a Peruvian slaver.&nbsp; I am reminded of an incident in Jaluit in the
+Marshall group, which was told me by an eye-witness, and which I tell
+here again for the strangeness of the scene.&nbsp; Two men had awakened
+the animosity of the Jaluit chiefs; and it was their wives who were
+selected to be punished.&nbsp; A single native served as executioner.&nbsp;
+Early in the morning, in the face of a large concourse of spectators,
+he waded out upon the reef between his victims.&nbsp; These neither
+complained nor resisted; accompanied their destroyer patiently; stooped
+down, when they had waded deep enough, at his command; and he (laying
+one hand upon the shoulders of each) held them under water till they
+drowned.&nbsp; Doubtless, although my informant did not tell me so,
+their families would be lamenting aloud upon the beach.<br>
+<br>
+It was from Hatiheu that I paid my first visit to a cannibal high place.<br>
+<br>
+The day was sultry and clouded.&nbsp; Drenching tropical showers succeeded
+bursts of sweltering sunshine.&nbsp; The green pathway of the road wound
+steeply upward.&nbsp; As we went, our little schoolboy guide a little
+ahead of us, Father Simeon had his portfolio in his hand, and named
+the trees for me, and read aloud from his notes the abstract of their
+virtues.&nbsp; Presently the road, mounting, showed us the vale of Hatiheu,
+on a larger scale; and the priest, with occasional reference to our
+guide, pointed out the boundaries and told me the names of the larger
+tribes that lived at perpetual war in the old days: one on the north-east,
+one along the beach, one behind upon the mountain.&nbsp; With a survivor
+of this latter clan Father Simeon had spoken; until the pacification
+he had never been to the sea&rsquo;s edge, nor, if I remember exactly,
+eaten of sea-fish.&nbsp; Each in its own district, the septs lived cantoned
+and beleaguered.&nbsp; One step without the boundaries was to affront
+death.&nbsp; If famine came, the men must out to the woods to gather
+chestnuts and small fruits; even as to this day, if the parents are
+backward in their weekly doles, school must be broken up and the scholars
+sent foraging.&nbsp; But in the old days, when there was trouble in
+one clan, there would be activity in all its neighbours; the woods would
+be laid full of ambushes; and he who went after vegetables for himself
+might remain to be a joint for his hereditary foes.&nbsp; Nor was the
+pointed occasion needful.&nbsp; A dozen different natural signs and
+social junctures called this people to the war-path and the cannibal
+hunt.&nbsp; Let one of chiefly rank have finished his tattooing, the
+wife of one be near upon her time, two of the debauching streams have
+deviated nearer on the beach of Hatiheu, a certain bird have been heard
+to sing, a certain ominous formation of cloud observed above the northern
+sea; and instantly the arms were oiled, and the man-hunters swarmed
+into the wood to lay their fratricidal ambuscades.&nbsp; It appears
+besides that occasionally, perhaps in famine, the priest would shut
+himself in his house, where he lay for a stated period like a person
+dead.&nbsp; When he came forth it was to run for three days through
+the territory of the clan, naked and starving, and to sleep at night
+alone in the high place.&nbsp; It was now the turn of the others to
+keep the house, for to encounter the priest upon his rounds was death.&nbsp;
+On the eve of the fourth day the time of the running was over; the priest
+returned to his roof, the laymen came forth, and in the morning the
+number of the victims was announced.&nbsp; I have this tale of the priest
+on one authority - I think a good one, - but I set it down with diffidence.&nbsp;
+The particulars are so striking that, had they been true, I almost think
+I must have heard them oftener referred to.&nbsp; Upon one point there
+seems to be no question: that the feast was sometimes furnished from
+within the clan.&nbsp; In times of scarcity, all who were not protected
+by their family connections - in the Highland expression, all the commons
+of the clan - had cause to tremble.&nbsp; It was vain to resist, it
+was useless to flee.&nbsp; They were begirt upon all hands by cannibals;
+and the oven was ready to smoke for them abroad in the country of their
+foes, or at home in the valley of their fathers.<br>
+<br>
+At a certain corner of the road our scholar-guide struck off to his
+left into the twilight of the forest.&nbsp; We were now on one of the
+ancient native roads, plunged in a high vault of wood, and clambering,
+it seemed, at random over boulders and dead trees; but the lad wound
+in and out and up and down without a check, for these paths are to the
+natives as marked as the king&rsquo;s highway is to us; insomuch that,
+in the days of the man-hunt, it was their labour rather to block and
+deface than to improve them.&nbsp; In the crypt of the wood the air
+was clammy and hot and cold; overhead, upon the leaves, the tropical
+rain uproariously poured, but only here and there, as through holes
+in a leaky roof, a single drop would fall, and make a spot upon my mackintosh.&nbsp;
+Presently the huge trunk of a banyan hove in sight, standing upon what
+seemed the ruins of an ancient fort; and our guide, halting and holding
+forth his arm, announced that we had reached the <i>paepae tapu.<br>
+<br>
+Paepae</i> signifies a floor or platform such as a native house is built
+on; and even such a paepae - a paepae hae - may be called a paepae tapu
+in a lesser sense when it is deserted and becomes the haunt of spirits;
+but the public high place, such as I was now treading, was a thing on
+a great scale.&nbsp; As far as my eyes could pierce through the dark
+undergrowth, the floor of the forest was all paved.&nbsp; Three tiers
+of terrace ran on the slope of the hill; in front, a crumbling parapet
+contained the main arena; and the pavement of that was pierced and parcelled
+out with several wells and small enclosures.&nbsp; No trace remained
+of any superstructure, and the scheme of the amphitheatre was difficult
+to seize.&nbsp; I visited another in Hiva-oa, smaller but more perfect,
+where it was easy to follow rows of benches, and to distinguish isolated
+seats of honour for eminent persons; and where, on the upper platform,
+a single joist of the temple or dead-house still remained, its uprights
+richly carved.&nbsp; In the old days the high place was sedulously tended.&nbsp;
+No tree except the sacred banyan was suffered to encroach upon its grades,
+no dead leaf to rot upon the pavement.&nbsp; The stones were smoothly
+set, and I am told they were kept bright with oil.&nbsp; On all sides
+the guardians lay encamped in their subsidiary huts to watch and cleanse
+it.&nbsp; No other foot of man was suffered to draw near; only the priest,
+in the days of his running, came there to sleep - perhaps to dream of
+his ungodly errand; but, in the time of the feast, the clan trooped
+to the high place in a body, and each had his appointed seat.&nbsp;
+There were places for the chiefs, the drummers, the dancers, the women,
+and the priests.&nbsp; The drums - perhaps twenty strong, and some of
+them twelve feet high - continuously throbbed in time.&nbsp; In time
+the singers kept up their long-drawn, lugubrious, ululating song; in
+time, too, the dancers, tricked out in singular finery, stepped, leaped,
+swayed, and gesticulated - their plumed fingers fluttering in the air
+like butterflies.&nbsp; The sense of time, in all these ocean races,
+is extremely perfect; and I conceive in such a festival that almost
+every sound and movement fell in one.&nbsp; So much the more unanimously
+must have grown the agitation of the feasters; so much the more wild
+must have been the scene to any European who could have beheld them
+there, in the strong sun and the strong shadow of the banyan, rubbed
+with saffron to throw in a more high relief the arabesque of the tattoo;
+the women bleached by days of confinement to a complexion almost European;
+the chiefs crowned with silver plumes of old men&rsquo;s beards and
+girt with kirtles of the hair of dead women.&nbsp; All manner of island
+food was meanwhile spread for the women and the commons; and, for those
+who were privileged to eat of it, there were carried up to the dead-house
+the baskets of long-pig.&nbsp; It is told that the feasts were long
+kept up; the people came from them brutishly exhausted with debauchery,
+and the chiefs heavy with their beastly food.&nbsp; There are certain
+sentiments which we call emphatically human - denying the honour of
+that name to those who lack them.&nbsp; In such feasts - particularly
+where the victim has been slain at home, and men banqueted on the poor
+clay of a comrade with whom they had played in infancy, or a woman whose
+favours they had shared - the whole body of these sentiments is outraged.&nbsp;
+To consider it too closely is to understand, if not to excuse, the fervours
+of self-righteous old ship-captains, who would man their guns, and open
+fire in passing, on a cannibal island.<br>
+<br>
+And yet it was strange.&nbsp; There, upon the spot, as I stood under
+the high, dripping vault of the forest, with the young priest on the
+one hand, in his kilted gown, and the bright-eyed Marquesan schoolboy
+on the other, the whole business appeared infinitely distant, and fallen
+in the cold perspective and dry light of history.&nbsp; The bearing
+of the priest, perhaps, affected me. He smiled; he jested with the boy,
+the heir both of these feasters and their meat; he clapped his hands,
+and gave me a stave of one of the old, ill-omened choruses.&nbsp; Centuries
+might have come and gone since this slimy theatre was last in operation;
+and I beheld the place with no more emotion than I might have felt in
+visiting Stonehenge.&nbsp; In Hiva-oa, as I began to appreciate that
+the thing was still living and latent about my footsteps, and that it
+was still within the bounds of possibility that I might hear the cry
+of the trapped victim, my historic attitude entirely failed, and I was
+sensible of some repugnance for the natives.&nbsp; But here, too, the
+priests maintained their jocular attitude: rallying the cannibals as
+upon an eccentricity rather absurd than horrible; seeking, I should
+say, to shame them from the practice by good-natured ridicule, as we
+shame a child from stealing sugar.&nbsp; We may here recognise the temperate
+and sagacious mind of Bishop Dordillon.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER XII - THE STORY OF A PLANTATION<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Taahauku, on the south-westerly coast of the island of Hiva-oa - Tahuku,
+say the slovenly whites - may be called the port of Atuona.&nbsp; It
+is a narrow and small anchorage, set between low cliffy points, and
+opening above upon a woody valley: a little French fort, now disused
+and deserted, overhangs the valley and the inlet.&nbsp; Atuona itself,
+at the head of the next bay, is framed in a theatre of mountains, which
+dominate the more immediate settling of Taahauku and give the salient
+character of the scene.&nbsp; They are reckoned at no higher than four
+thousand feet; but Tahiti with eight thousand, and Hawaii with fifteen,
+can offer no such picture of abrupt, melancholy alps.&nbsp; In the morning,
+when the sun falls directly on their front, they stand like a vast wall:
+green to the summit, if by any chance the summit should be clear - water-courses
+here and there delineated on their face, as narrow as cracks.&nbsp;
+Towards afternoon, the light falls more obliquely, and the sculpture
+of the range comes in relief, huge gorges sinking into shadow, huge,
+tortuous buttresses standing edged with sun.&nbsp; At all hours of the
+day they strike the eye with some new beauty, and the mind with the
+same menacing gloom.<br>
+<br>
+The mountains, dividing and deflecting the endless airy deluge of the
+Trade, are doubtless answerable for the climate.&nbsp; A strong draught
+of wind blew day and night over the anchorage.&nbsp; Day and night the
+same fantastic and attenuated clouds fled across the heavens, the same
+dusky cap of rain and vapour fell and rose on the mountain.&nbsp; The
+land-breezes came very strong and chill, and the sea, like the air,
+was in perpetual bustle.&nbsp; The swell crowded into the narrow anchorage
+like sheep into a fold; broke all along both sides, high on the one,
+low on the other; kept a certain blowhole sounding and smoking like
+a cannon; and spent itself at last upon the beach.<br>
+<br>
+On the side away from Atuona, the sheltering promontory was a nursery
+of coco-trees.&nbsp; Some were mere infants, none had attained to any
+size, none had yet begun to shoot skyward with that whip-like shaft
+of the mature palm.&nbsp; In the young trees the colour alters with
+the age and growth.&nbsp; Now all is of a grass-like hue, infinitely
+dainty; next the rib grows golden, the fronds remaining green as ferns;
+and then, as the trunk continues to mount and to assume its final hue
+of grey, the fans put on manlier and more decided depths of verdure,
+stand out dark upon the distance, glisten against the sun, and flash
+like silver fountains in the assault of the wind.&nbsp; In this young
+wood of Taahauku, all these hues and combinations were exampled and
+repeated by the score.&nbsp; The trees grew pleasantly spaced upon a
+hilly sward, here and there interspersed with a rack for drying copra,
+or a tumble-down hut for storing it.&nbsp; Every here and there the
+stroller had a glimpse of the <i>Casco</i> tossing in the narrow anchorage
+below; and beyond he had ever before him the dark amphitheatre of the
+Atuona mountains and the cliffy bluff that closes it to seaward.&nbsp;
+The trade-wind moving in the fans made a ceaseless noise of summer rain;
+and from time to time, with the sound of a sudden and distant drum-beat,
+the surf would burst in a sea-cave.<br>
+<br>
+At the upper end of the inlet, its low, cliffy lining sinks, at both
+sides, into a beach.&nbsp; A copra warehouse stands in the shadow of
+the shoreside trees, flitted about for ever by a clan of dwarfish swallows;
+and a line of rails on a high wooden staging bends back into the mouth
+of the valley.&nbsp; Walking on this, the new-landed traveller becomes
+aware of a broad fresh-water lagoon (one arm of which he crosses), and
+beyond, of a grove of noble palms, sheltering the house of the trader,
+Mr. Keane.&nbsp; Overhead, the cocos join in a continuous and lofty
+roof; blackbirds are heard lustily singing; the island cock springs
+his jubilant rattle and airs his golden plumage; cow-bells sound far
+and near in the grove; and when you sit in the broad verandah, lulled
+by this symphony, you may say to yourself, if you are able: &lsquo;Better
+fifty years of Europe . . .&rsquo;&nbsp; Farther on, the floor of the
+valley is flat and green, and dotted here and there with stripling coco-palms.&nbsp;
+Through the midst, with many changes of music, the river trots and brawls;
+and along its course, where we should look for willows, puraos grow
+in clusters, and make shadowy pools after an angler&rsquo;s heart.&nbsp;
+A vale more rich and peaceful, sweeter air, a sweeter voice of rural
+sounds, I have found nowhere.&nbsp; One circumstance alone might strike
+the experienced: here is a convenient beach, deep soil, good water,
+and yet nowhere any paepaes, nowhere any trace of island habitation.<br>
+<br>
+It is but a few years since this valley was a place choked with jungle,
+the debatable land and battle-ground of cannibals.&nbsp; Two clans laid
+claim to it - neither could substantiate the claim, and the roads lay
+desert, or were only visited by men in arms.&nbsp; It is for this very
+reason that it wears now so smiling an appearance: cleared, planted,
+built upon, supplied with railways, boat-houses, and bath-houses.&nbsp;
+For, being no man&rsquo;s land, it was the more readily ceded to a stranger.&nbsp;
+The stranger was Captain John Hart: Ima Hati, &lsquo;Broken-arm,&rsquo;
+the natives call him, because when he first visited the islands his
+arm was in a sling.&nbsp; Captain Hart, a man of English birth, but
+an American subject, had conceived the idea of cotton culture in the
+Marquesas during the American War, and was at first rewarded with success.&nbsp;
+His plantation at Anaho was highly productive; island cotton fetched
+a high price, and the natives used to debate which was the stronger
+power, Ima Hati or the French: deciding in favour of the captain, because,
+though the French had the most ships, he had the more money.<br>
+<br>
+He marked Taahauku for a suitable site, acquired it, and offered the
+superintendence to Mr. Robert Stewart, a Fifeshire man, already some
+time in the islands, who had just been ruined by a war on Tauata.&nbsp;
+Mr. Stewart was somewhat averse to the adventure, having some acquaintance
+with Atuona and its notorious chieftain, Moipu.&nbsp; He had once landed
+there, he told me, about dusk, and found the remains of a man and woman
+partly eaten.&nbsp; On his starting and sickening at the sight, one
+of Moipu&rsquo;s young men picked up a human foot, and provocatively
+staring at the stranger, grinned and nibbled at the heel.&nbsp; None
+need be surprised if Mr. Stewart fled incontinently to the bush, lay
+there all night in a great horror of mind, and got off to sea again
+by daylight on the morrow.&nbsp; &lsquo;It was always a bad place, Atuona,&rsquo;
+commented Mr. Stewart, in his homely Fifeshire voice.&nbsp; In spite
+of this dire introduction, he accepted the captain&rsquo;s offer, was
+landed at Taahauku with three Chinamen, and proceeded to clear the jungle.<br>
+<br>
+War was pursued at that time, almost without interval, between the men
+of Atuona and the men of Haamau; and one day, from the opposite sides
+of the valley, battle - or I should rather say the noise of battle -
+raged all the afternoon: the shots and insults of the opposing clans
+passing from hill to hill over the heads of Mr. Stewart and his Chinamen.&nbsp;
+There was no genuine fighting; it was like a bicker of schoolboys, only
+some fool had given the children guns.&nbsp; One man died of his exertions
+in running, the only casualty.&nbsp; With night the shots and insults
+ceased; the men of Haamau withdrew; and victory, on some occult principle,
+was scored to Moipu.&nbsp; Perhaps, in consequence, there came a day
+when Moipu made a feast, and a party from Haamau came under safe-conduct
+to eat of it.&nbsp; These passed early by Taahauku, and some of Moipu&rsquo;s
+young men were there to be a guard of honour.&nbsp; They were not long
+gone before there came down from Haamau, a man, his wife, and a girl
+of twelve, their daughter, bringing fungus.&nbsp; Several Atuona lads
+were hanging round the store; but the day being one of truce none apprehended
+danger.&nbsp; The fungus was weighed and paid for; the man of Haamau
+proposed he should have his axe ground in the bargain; and Mr. Stewart
+demurring at the trouble, some of the Atuona lads offered to grind it
+for him, and set it on the wheel.&nbsp; While the axe was grinding,
+a friendly native whispered Mr. Stewart to have a care of himself, for
+there was trouble in hand; and, all at once, the man of Haamau was seized,
+and his head and arm stricken from his body, the head at one sweep of
+his own newly sharpened axe.&nbsp; In the first alert, the girl escaped
+among the cotton; and Mr. Stewart, having thrust the wife into the house
+and locked her in from the outside, supposed the affair was over.&nbsp;
+But the business had not passed without noise, and it reached the ears
+of an older girl who had loitered by the way, and who now came hastily
+down the valley, crying as she came for her father.&nbsp; Her, too,
+they seized and beheaded; I know not what they had done with the axe,
+it was a blunt knife that served their butcherly turn upon the girl;
+and the blood spurted in fountains and painted them from head to foot.&nbsp;
+Thus horrible from crime, the party returned to Atuona, carrying the
+heads to Moipu.&nbsp; It may be fancied how the feast broke up; but
+it is notable that the guests were honourably suffered to retire.&nbsp;
+These passed back through Taahauku in extreme disorder; a little after
+the valley began to be overrun with shouting and triumphing braves;
+and a letter of warning coming at the same time to Mr. Stewart, he and
+his Chinamen took refuge with the Protestant missionary in Atuona.&nbsp;
+That night the store was gutted, and the bodies cast in a pit and covered
+with leaves.&nbsp; Three days later the schooner had come in; and things
+appearing quieter, Mr. Stewart and the captain landed in Taahauku to
+compute the damage and to view the grave, which was already indicated
+by the stench.&nbsp; While they were so employed, a party of Moipu&rsquo;s
+young men, decked with red flannel to indicate martial sentiments, came
+over the hills from Atuona, dug up the bodies, washed them in the river,
+and carried them away on sticks.&nbsp; That night the feast began.<br>
+<br>
+Those who knew Mr. Stewart before this experience declare the man to
+be quite altered.&nbsp; He stuck, however, to his post; and somewhat
+later, when the plantation was already well established, and gave employment
+to sixty Chinamen and seventy natives, he found himself once more in
+dangerous times.&nbsp; The men of Haamau, it was reported, had sworn
+to plunder and erase the settlement; letters came continually from the
+Hawaiian missionary, who acted as intelligence department; and for six
+weeks Mr. Stewart and three other whites slept in the cotton-house at
+night in a rampart of bales, and (what was their best defence) ostentatiously
+practised rifle-shooting by day upon the beach.&nbsp; Natives were often
+there to watch them; the practice was excellent; and the assault was
+never delivered - if it ever was intended, which I doubt, for the natives
+are more famous for false rumours than for deeds of energy.&nbsp; I
+was told the late French war was a case in point; the tribes on the
+beach accusing those in the mountains of designs which they had never
+the hardihood to entertain.&nbsp; And the same testimony to their backwardness
+in open battle reached me from all sides.&nbsp; Captain Hart once landed
+after an engagement in a certain bay; one man had his hand hurt, an
+old woman and two children had been slain; and the captain improved
+the occasion by poulticing the hand, and taunting both sides upon so
+wretched an affair.&nbsp; It is true these wars were often merely formal
+- comparable with duels to the first blood.&nbsp; Captain Hart visited
+a bay where such a war was being carried on between two brothers, one
+of whom had been thought wanting in civility to the guests of the other.&nbsp;
+About one-half of the population served day about on alternate sides,
+so as to be well with each when the inevitable peace should follow.&nbsp;
+The forts of the belligerents were over against each other, and close
+by.&nbsp; Pigs were cooking.&nbsp; Well-oiled braves, with well-oiled
+muskets, strutted on the paepae or sat down to feast.&nbsp; No business,
+however needful, could be done, and all thoughts were supposed to be
+centred in this mockery of war.&nbsp; A few days later, by a regrettable
+accident, a man was killed; it was felt at once the thing had gone too
+far, and the quarrel was instantly patched up.&nbsp; But the more serious
+wars were prosecuted in a similar spirit; a gift of pigs and a feast
+made their inevitable end; the killing of a single man was a great victory,
+and the murder of defenceless solitaries counted a heroic deed.<br>
+<br>
+The foot of the cliffs, about all these islands, is the place of fishing.&nbsp;
+Between Taahauku and Atuona we saw men, but chiefly women, some nearly
+naked, some in thin white or crimson dresses, perched in little surf-beat
+promontories - the brown precipice overhanging them, and the convolvulus
+overhanging that, as if to cut them off the more completely from assistance.&nbsp;
+There they would angle much of the morning; and as fast as they caught
+any fish, eat them, raw and living, where they stood.&nbsp; It was such
+helpless ones that the warriors from the opposite island of Tauata slew,
+and carried home and ate, and were thereupon accounted mighty men of
+valour.&nbsp; Of one such exploit I can give the account of an eye-witness.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Portuguese Joe,&rsquo; Mr. Keane&rsquo;s cook, was once pulling
+an oar in an Atuona boat, when they spied a stranger in a canoe with
+some fish and a piece of tapu.&nbsp; The Atuona men cried upon him to
+draw near and have a smoke.&nbsp; He complied, because, I suppose, he
+had no choice; but he knew, poor devil, what he was coming to, and (as
+Joe said) &lsquo;he didn&rsquo;t seem to care about the smoke.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+A few questions followed, as to where he came from, and what was his
+business.&nbsp; These he must needs answer, as he must needs draw at
+the unwelcome pipe, his heart the while drying in his bosom.&nbsp; And
+then, of a sudden, a big fellow in Joe&rsquo;s boat leaned over, plucked
+the stranger from his canoe, struck him with a knife in the neck - inward
+and downward, as Joe showed in pantomime more expressive than his words
+- and held him under water, like a fowl, until his struggles ceased.&nbsp;
+Whereupon the long-pig was hauled on board, the boat&rsquo;s head turned
+about for Atuona, and these Marquesan braves pulled home rejoicing.&nbsp;
+Moipu was on the beach and rejoiced with them on their arrival.&nbsp;
+Poor Joe toiled at his oar that day with a white face, yet he had no
+fear for himself.&nbsp; &lsquo;They were very good to me - gave me plenty
+grub: never wished to eat white man,&rsquo; said he.<br>
+<br>
+If the most horrible experience was Mr. Stewart&rsquo;s, it was Captain
+Hart himself who ran the nearest danger.&nbsp; He had bought a piece
+of land from Timau, chief of a neighbouring bay, and put some Chinese
+there to work.&nbsp; Visiting the station with one of the Godeffroys,
+he found his Chinamen trooping to the beach in terror: Timau had driven
+them out, seized their effects, and was in war attire with his young
+men.&nbsp; A boat was despatched to Taahauku for reinforcement; as they
+awaited her return, they could see, from the deck of the schooner, Timau
+and his young men dancing the war-dance on the hill-top till past twelve
+at night; and so soon as the boat came (bringing three gendarmes, armed
+with chassepots, two white men from Taahauku station, and some native
+warriors) the party set out to seize the chief before he should awake.&nbsp;
+Day was not come, and it was a very bright moonlight morning, when they
+reached the hill-top where (in a house of palm-leaves) Timau was sleeping
+off his debauch.&nbsp; The assailants were fully exposed, the interior
+of the hut quite dark; the position far from sound.&nbsp; The gendarmes
+knelt with their pieces ready, and Captain Hart advanced alone.&nbsp;
+As he drew near the door he heard the snap of a gun cocking from within,
+and in sheer self-defence - there being no other escape - sprang into
+the house and grappled Timau.&nbsp; &lsquo;Timau, come with me!&rsquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; But Timau - a great fellow, his eyes blood-red with
+the abuse of kava, six foot three in stature - cast him on one side;
+and the captain, instantly expecting to be either shot or brained, discharged
+his pistol in the dark.&nbsp; When they carried Timau out at the door
+into the moonlight, he was already dead, and, upon this unlooked-for
+termination of their sally, the whites appeared to have lost all conduct,
+and retreated to the boats, fired upon by the natives as they went.&nbsp;
+Captain Hart, who almost rivals Bishop Dordillon in popularity, shared
+with him the policy of extreme indulgence to the natives, regarding
+them as children, making light of their defects, and constantly in favour
+of mild measures.&nbsp; The death of Timau has thus somewhat weighed
+upon his mind; the more so, as the chieftain&rsquo;s musket was found
+in the house unloaded.&nbsp; To a less delicate conscience the matter
+will seem light.&nbsp; If a drunken savage elects to cock a fire-arm,
+a gentleman advancing towards him in the open cannot wait to make sure
+if it be charged.<br>
+<br>
+I have touched on the captain&rsquo;s popularity.&nbsp; It is one of
+the things that most strikes a stranger in the Marquesas.&nbsp; He comes
+instantly on two names, both new to him, both locally famous, both mentioned
+by all with affection and respect - the bishop&rsquo;s and the captain&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+It gave me a strong desire to meet with the survivor, which was subsequently
+gratified - to the enrichment of these pages.&nbsp; Long after that
+again, in the Place Dolorous - Molokai - I came once more on the traces
+of that affectionate popularity.&nbsp; There was a blind white leper
+there, an old sailor - &lsquo;an old tough,&rsquo; he called himself
+- who had long sailed among the eastern islands.&nbsp; Him I used to
+visit, and, being fresh from the scenes of his activity, gave him the
+news.&nbsp; This (in the true island style) was largely a chronicle
+of wrecks; and it chanced I mentioned the case of one not very successful
+captain, and how he had lost a vessel for Mr. Hart; thereupon the blind
+leper broke forth in lamentation.&nbsp; &lsquo;Did he lose a ship of
+John Hart&rsquo;s?&rsquo; he cried; &lsquo;poor John Hart!&nbsp; Well,
+I&rsquo;m sorry it was Hart&rsquo;s,&rsquo; with needless force of epithet,
+which I neglect to reproduce.<br>
+<br>
+Perhaps, if Captain Hart&rsquo;s affairs had continued to prosper, his
+popularity might have been different.&nbsp; Success wins glory, but
+it kills affection, which misfortune fosters.&nbsp; And the misfortune
+which overtook the captain&rsquo;s enterprise was truly singular.&nbsp;
+He was at the top of his career.&nbsp; Ile Masse belonged to him, given
+by the French as an indemnity for the robberies at Taahauku.&nbsp; But
+the Ile Masse was only suitable for cattle; and his two chief stations
+were Anaho, in Nuka-hiva, facing the north-east, and Taahauku in Hiva-oa,
+some hundred miles to the southward, and facing the south-west.&nbsp;
+Both these were on the same day swept by a tidal wave, which was not
+felt in any other bay or island of the group.&nbsp; The south coast
+of Hiva-oa was bestrewn with building timber and camphor-wood chests,
+containing goods; which, on the promise of a reasonable salvage, the
+natives very honestly brought back, the chests apparently not opened,
+and some of the wood after it had been built into their houses.&nbsp;
+But the recovery of such jetsam could not affect the result.&nbsp; It
+was impossible the captain should withstand this partiality of fortune;
+and with his fall the prosperity of the Marquesas ended.&nbsp; Anaho
+is truly extinct, Taahauku but a shadow of itself; nor has any new plantation
+arisen in their stead.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER XIII - CHARACTERS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+There was a certain traffic in our anchorage at Atuona; different indeed
+from the dead inertia and quiescence of the sister island, Nuka-hiva.&nbsp;
+Sails were seen steering from its mouth; now it would be a whale-boat
+manned with native rowdies, and heavy with copra for sale; now perhaps
+a single canoe come after commodities to buy.&nbsp; The anchorage was
+besides frequented by fishers; not only the lone females perched in
+niches of the cliff, but whole parties, who would sometimes camp and
+build a fire upon the beach, and sometimes lie in their canoes in the
+midst of the haven and jump by turns in the water; which they would
+cast eight or nine feet high, to drive, as we supposed, the fish into
+their nets.&nbsp; The goods the purchasers came to buy were sometimes
+quaint.&nbsp; I remarked one outrigger returning with a single ham swung
+from a pole in the stern.&nbsp; And one day there came into Mr. Keane&rsquo;s
+store a charming lad, excellently mannered, speaking French correctly
+though with a babyish accent; very handsome too, and much of a dandy,
+as was shown not only in his shining raiment, but by the nature of his
+purchases.&nbsp; These were five ship-biscuits, a bottle of scent, and
+two balls of washing blue.&nbsp; He was from Tauata, whither he returned
+the same night in an outrigger, daring the deep with these young-ladyish
+treasures.&nbsp; The gross of the native passengers were more ill-favoured:
+tall, powerful fellows, well tattooed, and with disquieting manners.&nbsp;
+Something coarse and jeering distinguished them, and I was often reminded
+of the slums of some great city.&nbsp; One night, as dusk was falling,
+a whale-boat put in on that part of the beach where I chanced to be
+alone.&nbsp; Six or seven ruffianly fellows scrambled out; all had enough
+English to give me &lsquo;good-bye,&rsquo; which was the ordinary salutation;
+or &lsquo;good-morning,&rsquo; which they seemed to regard as an intensitive;
+jests followed, they surrounded me with harsh laughter and rude looks,
+and I was glad to move away.&nbsp; I had not yet encountered Mr. Stewart,
+or I should have been reminded of his first landing at Atuona and the
+humorist who nibbled at the heel.&nbsp; But their neighbourhood depressed
+me; and I felt, if I had been there a castaway and out of reach of help,
+my heart would have been sick.<br>
+<br>
+Nor was the traffic altogether native.&nbsp; While we lay in the anchorage
+there befell a strange coincidence.&nbsp; A schooner was observed at
+sea and aiming to enter.&nbsp; We knew all the schooners in the group,
+but this appeared larger than any; she was rigged, besides, after the
+English manner; and, coming to an anchor some way outside the <i>Casco</i>,
+showed at last the blue ensign.&nbsp; There were at that time, according
+to rumour, no fewer than four yachts in the Pacific; but it was strange
+that any two of them should thus lie side by side in that outlandish
+inlet: stranger still that in the owner of the <i>Nyanza</i>, Captain
+Dewar, I should find a man of the same country and the same county with
+myself, and one whom I had seen walking as a boy on the shores of the
+Alpes Maritimes.<br>
+<br>
+We had besides a white visitor from shore, who came and departed in
+a crowded whale-boat manned by natives; having read of yachts in the
+Sunday papers, and being fired with the desire to see one.&nbsp; Captain
+Chase, they called him, an old whaler-man, thickset and white-bearded,
+with a strong Indiana drawl; years old in the country, a good backer
+in battle, and one of those dead shots whose practice at the target
+struck terror in the braves of Haamau.&nbsp; Captain Chase dwelt farther
+east in a bay called Hanamate, with a Mr. M&rsquo;Callum; or rather
+they had dwelt together once, and were now amicably separated.&nbsp;
+The captain is to be found near one end of the bay, in a wreck of a
+house, and waited on by a Chinese.&nbsp; At the point of the opposing
+corner another habitation stands on a tall paepae.&nbsp; The surf runs
+there exceeding heavy, seas of seven and eight feet high bursting under
+the walls of the house, which is thus continually filled with their
+clamour, and rendered fit only for solitary, or at least for silent,
+inmates.&nbsp; Here it is that Mr. M&rsquo;Callum, with a Shakespeare
+and a Burns, enjoys the society of the breakers.&nbsp; His name and
+his Burns testify to Scottish blood; but he is an American born, somewhere
+far east; followed the trade of a ship-carpenter; and was long employed,
+the captain of a hundred Indians, breaking up wrecks about Cape Flattery.&nbsp;
+Many of the whites who are to be found scattered in the South Seas represent
+the more artistic portion of their class; and not only enjoy the poetry
+of that new life, but came there on purpose to enjoy it.&nbsp; I have
+been shipmates with a man, no longer young, who sailed upon that voyage,
+his first time to sea, for the mere love of Samoa; and it was a few
+letters in a newspaper that sent him on that pilgrimage.&nbsp; Mr. M&rsquo;Callum
+was another instance of the same.&nbsp; He had read of the South Seas;
+loved to read of them; and let their image fasten in his heart: till
+at length he could refrain no longer - must set forth, a new Rudel,
+for that unseen homeland - and has now dwelt for years in Hiva-oa, and
+will lay his bones there in the end with full content; having no desire
+to behold again the places of his boyhood, only, perhaps - once, before
+he dies - the rude and wintry landscape of Cape Flattery.&nbsp; Yet
+he is an active man, full of schemes; has bought land of the natives;
+has planted five thousand coco-palms; has a desert island in his eye,
+which he desires to lease, and a schooner in the stocks, which he has
+laid and built himself, and even hopes to finish.&nbsp; Mr. M&rsquo;Callum
+and I did not meet, but, like gallant troubadours, corresponded in verse.&nbsp;
+I hope he will not consider it a breach of copyright if I give here
+a specimen of his muse.&nbsp; He and Bishop Dordillon are the two European
+bards of the Marquesas.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Sail, ho!&nbsp; Ahoy!&nbsp; <i>Casco,<br>
+</i>First among the pleasure fleet<br>
+That came around to greet<br>
+These isles from San Francisco,<br>
+<br>
+And first, too; only one<br>
+Among the literary men<br>
+That this way has ever been -<br>
+Welcome, then, to Stevenson.<br>
+<br>
+Please not offended be<br>
+At this little notice<br>
+Of the <i>Casco</i>, Captain Otis,<br>
+With the novelist&rsquo;s family.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Avoir une voyage magnifical<br>
+</i>Is our wish sincere,<br>
+That you&rsquo;ll have from here<br>
+<i>Allant sur la Grande Pacifical</i>.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+But our chief visitor was one Mapiao, a great Tahuku - which seems to
+mean priest, wizard, tattooer, practiser of any art, or, in a word,
+esoteric person - and a man famed for his eloquence on public occasions
+and witty talk in private.&nbsp; His first appearance was typical of
+the man.&nbsp; He came down clamorous to the eastern landing, where
+the surf was running very high; scorned all our signals to go round
+the bay; carried his point, was brought aboard at some hazard to our
+skiff, and set down in one corner of the cockpit to his appointed task.&nbsp;
+He had been hired, as one cunning in the art, to make my old men&rsquo;s
+beards into a wreath: what a wreath for Celia&rsquo;s arbour!&nbsp;
+His own beard (which he carried, for greater safety, in a sailor&rsquo;s
+knot) was not merely the adornment of his age, but a substantial piece
+of property.&nbsp; One hundred dollars was the estimated value; and
+as Brother Michel never knew a native to deposit a greater sum with
+Bishop Dordillon, our friend was a rich man in virtue of his chin.&nbsp;
+He had something of an East Indian cast, but taller and stronger: his
+nose hooked, his face narrow, his forehead very high, the whole elaborately
+tattooed.&nbsp; I may say I have never entertained a guest so trying.&nbsp;
+In the least particular he must be waited on; he would not go to the
+scuttle-butt for water; he would not even reach to get the glass, it
+must be given him in his hand; if aid were denied him, he would fold
+his arms, bow his head, and go without: only the work would suffer.&nbsp;
+Early the first forenoon he called aloud for biscuit and salmon; biscuit
+and ham were brought; he looked on them inscrutably, and signed they
+should be set aside.&nbsp; A number of considerations crowded on my
+mind; how the sort of work on which he was engaged was probably tapu
+in a high degree; should by rights, perhaps, be transacted on a tapu
+platform which no female might approach; and it was possible that fish
+might be the essential diet.&nbsp; Some salted fish I therefore brought
+him, and along with that a glass of rum: at sight of which Mapiao displayed
+extraordinary animation, pointed to the zenith, made a long speech in
+which I picked up <i>umati</i> - the word for the sun - and signed to
+me once more to place these dainties out of reach.&nbsp; At last I had
+understood, and every day the programme was the same.&nbsp; At an early
+period of the morning his dinner must be set forth on the roof of the
+house and at a proper distance, full in view but just out of reach;
+and not until the fit hour, which was the point of noon, would the artificer
+partake.&nbsp; This solemnity was the cause of an absurd misadventure.&nbsp;
+He was seated plaiting, as usual, at the beards, his dinner arrayed
+on the roof, and not far off a glass of water standing.&nbsp; It appears
+he desired to drink; was of course far too great a gentleman to rise
+and get the water for himself; and spying Mrs. Stevenson, imperiously
+signed to her to hand it.&nbsp; The signal was misunderstood; Mrs. Stevenson
+was, by this time, prepared for any eccentricity on the part of our
+guest; and instead of passing him the water, flung his dinner overboard.&nbsp;
+I must do Mapiao justice: all laughed, but his laughter rang the loudest.<br>
+<br>
+These troubles of service were at worst occasional; the embarrassment
+of the man&rsquo;s talk incessant.&nbsp; He was plainly a practised
+conversationalist; the nicety of his inflections, the elegance of his
+gestures, and the fine play of his expression, told us that.&nbsp; We,
+meanwhile, sat like aliens in a playhouse; we could see the actors were
+upon some material business and performing well, but the plot of the
+drama remained undiscoverable.&nbsp; Names of places, the name of Captain
+Hart, occasional disconnected words, tantalised without enlightening
+us; and the less we understood, the more gallantly, the more copiously,
+and with still the more explanatory gestures, Mapiao returned to the
+assault.&nbsp; We could see his vanity was on the rack; being come to
+a place where that fine jewel of his conversational talent could earn
+him no respect; and he had times of despair when he desisted from the
+endeavour, and instants of irritation when he regarded us with unconcealed
+contempt.&nbsp; Yet for me, as the practitioner of some kindred mystery
+to his own, he manifested to the last a measure of respect.&nbsp; As
+we sat under the awning in opposite corners of the cockpit, he braiding
+hairs from dead men&rsquo;s chins, I forming runes upon a sheet of folio
+paper, he would nod across to me as one Tahuku to another, or, crossing
+the cockpit, study for a while my shapeless scrawl and encourage me
+with a heartfelt &lsquo;<i>mitai</i>! - good!&rsquo;&nbsp; So might
+a deaf painter sympathise far off with a musician, as the slave and
+master of some uncomprehended and yet kindred art.&nbsp; A silly trade,
+he doubtless considered it; but a man must make allowance for barbarians
+- <i>chaque pays a ses coutumes</i> - and he felt the principle was
+there.<br>
+<br>
+The time came at last when his labours, which resembled those rather
+of Penelope than Hercules, could be no more spun out, and nothing remained
+but to pay him and say farewell.&nbsp; After a long, learned argument
+in Marquesan, I gathered that his mind was set on fish-hooks; with three
+of which, and a brace of dollars, I thought he was not ill rewarded
+for passing his forenoons in our cockpit, eating, drinking, delivering
+his opinions, and pressing the ship&rsquo;s company into his menial
+service.&nbsp; For all that, he was a man of so high a bearing, and
+so like an uncle of my own who should have gone mad and got tattooed,
+that I applied to him, when we were both on shore, to know if he were
+satisfied.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Mitai ehipe</i>?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp; And
+he, with rich unction, offering at the same time his hand - &lsquo;<i>Mitai
+ehipe, mitai</i> <i>kaehae; kaoha nui</i>!&rsquo; - or, to translate
+freely: &lsquo;The ship is good, the victuals are up to the mark, and
+we part in friendship.&rsquo;&nbsp; Which testimonial uttered, he set
+off along the beach with his head bowed and the air of one deeply injured.<br>
+<br>
+I saw him go, on my side, with relief.&nbsp; It would be more interesting
+to learn how our relation seemed to Mapiao.&nbsp; His exigence, we may
+suppose, was merely loyal.&nbsp; He had been hired by the ignorant to
+do a piece of work; and he was bound that he would do it the right way.&nbsp;
+Countless obstacles, continual ignorant ridicule, availed not to dissuade
+him.&nbsp; He had his dinner laid out; watched it, as was fit, the while
+he worked; ate it at the fit hour; was in all things served and waited
+on; and could take his hire in the end with a clear conscience, telling
+himself the mystery was performed duly, the beards rightfully braided,
+and we (in spite of ourselves) correctly served.&nbsp; His view of our
+stupidity, even he, the mighty talker, must have lacked language to
+express.&nbsp; He never interfered with my Tahuku work; civilly praised
+it, idle as it seemed; civilly supposed that I was competent in my own
+mystery: such being the attitude of the intelligent and the polite.&nbsp;
+And we, on the other hand - who had yet the most to gain or lose, since
+the product was to be ours - who had professed our disability by the
+very act of hiring him to do it - were never weary of impeding his own
+more important labours, and sometimes lacked the sense and the civility
+to refrain from laughter.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER XIV - IN A CANNIBAL VALLEY<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The road from Taahauku to Atuona skirted the north-westerly side of
+the anchorage, somewhat high up, edged, and sometimes shaded, by the
+splendid flowers of the <i>flamboyant</i> - its English name I do not
+know.&nbsp; At the turn of the hand, Atuona came in view: a long beach,
+a heavy and loud breach of surf, a shore-side village scattered among
+trees, and the guttered mountains drawing near on both sides above a
+narrow and rich ravine.&nbsp; Its infamous repute perhaps affected me;
+but I thought it the loveliest, and by far the most ominous and gloomy,
+spot on earth.&nbsp; Beautiful it surely was; and even more salubrious.&nbsp;
+The healthfulness of the whole group is amazing; that of Atuona almost
+in the nature of a miracle.&nbsp; In Atuona, a village planted in a
+shore-side marsh, the houses standing everywhere intermingled with the
+pools of a taro-garden, we find every condition of tropical danger and
+discomfort; and yet there are not even mosquitoes - not even the hateful
+day-fly of Nuka-hiva - and fever, and its concomitant, the island fe&rsquo;efe&rsquo;e,
+are unknown.<br>
+<br>
+This is the chief station of the French on the man-eating isle of Hiva-oa.&nbsp;
+The sergeant of gendarmerie enjoys the style of the vice-resident, and
+hoists the French colours over a quite extensive compound.&nbsp; A Chinaman,
+a waif from the plantation, keeps a restaurant in the rear quarters
+of the village; and the mission is well represented by the sister&rsquo;s
+school and Brother Michel&rsquo;s church.&nbsp; Father Orens, a wonderful
+octogenarian, his frame scarce bowed, the fire of his eye undimmed,
+has lived, and trembled, and suffered in this place since 1843.&nbsp;
+Again and again, when Moipu had made coco-brandy, he has been driven
+from his house into the woods.&nbsp; &lsquo;A mouse that dwelt in a
+cat&rsquo;s ear&rsquo; had a more easy resting-place; and yet I have
+never seen a man that bore less mark of years.&nbsp; He must show us
+the church, still decorated with the bishop&rsquo;s artless ornaments
+of paper - the last work of industrious old hands, and the last earthly
+amusement of a man that was much of a hero.&nbsp; In the sacristy we
+must see his sacred vessels, and, in particular, a vestment which was
+a &lsquo;<i>vraie curiosit&eacute;</i>,&rsquo; because it had been given
+by a gendarme.&nbsp; To the Protestant there is always something embarrassing
+in the eagerness with which grown and holy men regard these trifles;
+but it was touching and pretty to see Orens, his aged eyes shining in
+his head, display his sacred treasures.<br>
+<br>
+<i>August</i> 26. - The vale behind the village, narrowing swiftly to
+a mere ravine, was choked with profitable trees.&nbsp; A river gushed
+in the midst.&nbsp; Overhead, the tall coco-palms made a primary covering;
+above that, from one wall of the mountain to another, the ravine was
+roofed with cloud; so that we moved below, amid teeming vegetation,
+in a covered house of heat.&nbsp; On either hand, at every hundred yards,
+instead of the houseless, disembowelling paepaes of Nuka-hiva, populous
+houses turned out their inhabitants to cry &lsquo;Kaoha!&rsquo; to the
+passers-by.&nbsp; The road, too, was busy: strings of girls, fair and
+foul, as in less favoured countries; men bearing breadfruit; the sisters,
+with a little guard of pupils; a fellow bestriding a horse - passed
+and greeted us continually; and now it was a Chinaman who came to the
+gate of his flower-yard, and gave us &lsquo;Good-day&rsquo; in excellent
+English; and a little farther on it would be some natives who set us
+down by the wayside, made us a feast of mummy-apple, and entertained
+us as we ate with drumming on a tin case.&nbsp; With all this fine plenty
+of men and fruit, death is at work here also.&nbsp; The population,
+according to the highest estimate, does not exceed six hundred in the
+whole vale of Atuona; and yet, when I once chanced to put the question,
+Brother Michel counted up ten whom he knew to be sick beyond recovery.&nbsp;
+It was here, too, that I could at last gratify my curiosity with the
+sight of a native house in the very article of dissolution.&nbsp; It
+had fallen flat along the paepae, its poles sprawling ungainly; the
+rains and the mites contended against it; what remained seemed sound
+enough, but much was gone already; and it was easy to see how the insects
+consumed the walls as if they had been bread, and the air and the rain
+ate into them like vitriol.<br>
+<br>
+A little ahead of us, a young gentleman, very well tattooed, and dressed
+in a pair of white trousers and a flannel shirt, had been marching unconcernedly.&nbsp;
+Of a sudden, without apparent cause, he turned back, took us in possession,
+and led us undissuadably along a by-path to the river&rsquo;s edge.&nbsp;
+There, in a nook of the most attractive amenity, he bade us to sit down:
+the stream splashing at our elbow, a shock of nondescript greenery enshrining
+us from above; and thither, after a brief absence, he brought us a cocoa-nut,
+a lump of sandal-wood, and a stick he had begun to carve: the nut for
+present refreshment, the sandal-wood for a precious gift, and the stick
+- in the simplicity of his vanity - to harvest premature praise.&nbsp;
+Only one section was yet carved, although the whole was pencil-marked
+in lengths; and when I proposed to buy it, Poni (for that was the artist&rsquo;s
+name) recoiled in horror.&nbsp; But I was not to be moved, and simply
+refused restitution, for I had long wondered why a people who displayed,
+in their tattooing, so great a gift of arabesque invention, should display
+it nowhere else.&nbsp; Here, at last, I had found something of the same
+talent in another medium; and I held the incompleteness, in these days
+of world-wide brummagem, for a happy mark of authenticity.&nbsp; Neither
+my reasons nor my purpose had I the means of making clear to Poni; I
+could only hold on to the stick, and bid the artist follow me to the
+gendarmerie, where I should find interpreters and money; but we gave
+him, in the meanwhile, a boat-call in return for his sandal-wood.&nbsp;
+As he came behind us down the vale he sounded upon this continually.&nbsp;
+And continually, from the wayside houses, there poured forth little
+groups of girls in crimson, or of men in white.&nbsp; And to these must
+Poni pass the news of who the strangers were, of what they had been
+doing, of why it was that Poni had a boat-whistle; and of why he was
+now being haled to the vice-residency, uncertain whether to be punished
+or rewarded, uncertain whether he had lost a stick or made a bargain,
+but hopeful on the whole, and in the meanwhile highly consoled by the
+boat-whistle.&nbsp; Whereupon he would tear himself away from this particular
+group of inquirers, and once more we would hear the shrill call in our
+wake.<br>
+<br>
+<i>August</i> 27. - I made a more extended circuit in the vale with
+Brother Michel.&nbsp; We were mounted on a pair of sober nags, suitable
+to these rude paths; the weather was exquisite, and the company in which
+I found myself no less agreeable than the scenes through which I passed.&nbsp;
+We mounted at first by a steep grade along the summit of one of those
+twisted spurs that, from a distance, mark out provinces of sun and shade
+upon the mountain-side.&nbsp; The ground fell away on either hand with
+an extreme declivity.&nbsp; From either hand, out of profound ravines,
+mounted the song of falling water and the smoke of household fires.&nbsp;
+Here and there the hills of foliage would divide, and our eye would
+plunge down upon one of these deep-nested habitations.&nbsp; And still,
+high in front, arose the precipitous barrier of the mountain, greened
+over where it seemed that scarce a harebell could find root, barred
+with the zigzags of a human road where it seemed that not a goat could
+scramble.&nbsp; And in truth, for all the labour that it cost, the road
+is regarded even by the Marquesans as impassable; they will not risk
+a horse on that ascent; and those who lie to the westward come and go
+in their canoes.&nbsp; I never knew a hill to lose so little on a near
+approach: a consequence, I must suppose, of its surprising steepness.&nbsp;
+When we turned about, I was amazed to behold so deep a view behind,
+and so high a shoulder of blue sea, crowned by the whale-like island
+of Motane.&nbsp; And yet the wall of mountain had not visibly dwindled,
+and I could even have fancied, as I raised my eyes to measure it, that
+it loomed higher than before.<br>
+<br>
+We struck now into covert paths, crossed and heard more near at hand
+the bickering of the streams, and tasted the coolness of those recesses
+where the houses stood.&nbsp; The birds sang about us as we descended.&nbsp;
+All along our path my guide was being hailed by voices: &lsquo;Mika&euml;l
+- Kaoha, Mika&euml;l!&rsquo;&nbsp; From the doorstep, from the cotton-patch,
+or out of the deep grove of island-chestnuts, these friendly cries arose,
+and were cheerily answered as we passed.&nbsp; In a sharp angle of a
+glen, on a rushing brook and under fathoms of cool foliage, we struck
+a house upon a well-built paepae, the fire brightly burning under the
+popoi-shed against the evening meal; and here the cries became a chorus,
+and the house folk, running out, obliged us to dismount and breathe.&nbsp;
+It seemed a numerous family: we saw eight at least; and one of these
+honoured me with a particular attention.&nbsp; This was the mother,
+a woman naked to the waist, of an aged countenance, but with hair still
+copious and black, and breasts still erect and youthful.&nbsp; On our
+arrival I could see she remarked me, but instead of offering any greeting,
+disappeared at once into the bush.&nbsp; Thence she returned with two
+crimson flowers.&nbsp; &lsquo;Good-bye!&rsquo; was her salutation, uttered
+not without coquetry; and as she said it she pressed the flowers into
+my hand - &lsquo;Good-bye!&nbsp; I speak Inglis.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was
+from a whaler-man, who (she informed me) was &lsquo;a plenty good chap,&rsquo;
+that she had learned my language; and I could not but think how handsome
+she must have been in these times of her youth, and could not but guess
+that some memories of the dandy whaler-man prompted her attentions to
+myself.&nbsp; Nor could I refrain from wondering what had befallen her
+lover; in the rain and mire of what sea-ports he had tramped since then;
+in what close and garish drinking-dens had found his pleasure; and in
+the ward of what infirmary dreamed his last of the Marquesas.&nbsp;
+But she, the more fortunate, lived on in her green island.&nbsp; The
+talk, in this lost house upon the mountains, ran chiefly upon Mapiao
+and his visits to the <i>Casco</i>: the news of which had probably gone
+abroad by then to all the island, so that there was no paepae in Hiva-oa
+where they did not make the subject of excited comment.<br>
+<br>
+Not much beyond we came upon a high place in the foot of the ravine.&nbsp;
+Two roads divided it, and met in the midst.&nbsp; Save for this intersection
+the amphitheatre was strangely perfect, and had a certain ruder air
+of things Roman.&nbsp; Depths of foliage and the bulk of the mountain
+kept it in a grateful shadow.&nbsp; On the benches several young folk
+sat clustered or apart.&nbsp; One of these, a girl perhaps fourteen
+years of age, buxom and comely, caught the eye of Brother Michel.&nbsp;
+Why was she not at school? - she was done with school now.&nbsp; What
+was she doing here? - she lived here now.&nbsp; Why so? - no answer
+but a deepening blush.&nbsp; There was no severity in Brother Michel&rsquo;s
+manner; the girl&rsquo;s own confusion told her story.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>Elle
+a honte</i>,&rsquo; was the missionary&rsquo;s comment, as we rode away.&nbsp;
+Near by in the stream, a grown girl was bathing naked in a goyle between
+two stepping-stones; and it amused me to see with what alacrity and
+real alarm she bounded on her many-coloured under-clothes.&nbsp; Even
+in these daughters of cannibals shame was eloquent.<br>
+<br>
+It is in Hiva-oa, owing to the inveterate cannibalism of the natives,
+that local beliefs have been most rudely trodden underfoot.&nbsp; It
+was here that three religious chiefs were set under a bridge, and the
+women of the valley made to defile over their heads upon the road-way:
+the poor, dishonoured fellows sitting there (all observers agree) with
+streaming tears.&nbsp; Not only was one road driven across the high
+place, but two roads intersected in its midst.&nbsp; There is no reason
+to suppose that the last was done of purpose, and perhaps it was impossible
+entirely to avoid the numerous sacred places of the islands.&nbsp; But
+these things are not done without result.&nbsp; I have spoken already
+of the regard of Marquesans for the dead, making (as it does) so strange
+a contrast with their unconcern for death.&nbsp; Early on this day&rsquo;s
+ride, for instance, we encountered a petty chief, who inquired (of course)
+where we were going, and suggested by way of amendment.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why
+do you not rather show him the cemetery?&rsquo;&nbsp; I saw it; it was
+but newly opened, the third within eight years.&nbsp; They are great
+builders here in Hiva-oa; I saw in my ride paepaes that no European
+dry-stone mason could have equalled, the black volcanic stones were
+laid so justly, the corners were so precise, the levels so true; but
+the retaining-wall of the new graveyard stood apart, and seemed to be
+a work of love.&nbsp; The sentiment of honour for the dead is therefore
+not extinct.&nbsp; And yet observe the consequence of violently countering
+men&rsquo;s opinions.&nbsp; Of the four prisoners in Atuona gaol, three
+were of course thieves; the fourth was there for sacrilege.&nbsp; He
+had levelled up a piece of the graveyard - to give a feast upon, as
+he informed the court - and declared he had no thought of doing wrong.&nbsp;
+Why should he?&nbsp; He had been forced at the point of the bayonet
+to destroy the sacred places of his own piety; when he had recoiled
+from the task, he had been jeered at for a superstitious fool.&nbsp;
+And now it is supposed he will respect our European superstitions as
+by second nature.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER XV - THE TWO CHIEFS OF ATUONA<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+It had chanced (as the <i>Casco</i> beat through the Bordelais Straits
+for Taahauku) she approached on one board very near the land in the
+opposite isle of Tauata, where houses were to be seen in a grove of
+tall coco-palms.&nbsp; Brother Michel pointed out the spot.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+am at home now,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;I believe I have a large
+share in these cocoa-nuts; and in that house madame my mother lives
+with her two husbands!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;With two husbands?&rsquo;
+somebody inquired.&nbsp; &lsquo;<i>C&rsquo;est ma honte</i>,&rsquo;
+replied the brother drily.<br>
+<br>
+A word in passing on the two husbands.&nbsp; I conceive the brother
+to have expressed himself loosely.&nbsp; It seems common enough to find
+a native lady with two consorts; but these are not two husbands.&nbsp;
+The first is still the husband; the wife continues to be referred to
+by his name; and the position of the coadjutor, or <i>pikio</i>, although
+quite regular, appears undoubtedly subordinate.&nbsp; We had opportunities
+to observe one household of the sort.&nbsp; The <i>pikio</i> was recognised;
+appeared openly along with the husband when the lady was thought to
+be insulted, and the pair made common cause like brothers.&nbsp; At
+home the inequality was more apparent.&nbsp; The husband sat to receive
+and entertain visitors; the <i>pikio</i> was running the while to fetch
+cocoa-nuts like a hired servant, and I remarked he was sent on these
+errands in preference even to the son.&nbsp; Plainly we have here no
+second husband; plainly we have the tolerated lover.&nbsp; Only, in
+the Marquesas, instead of carrying his lady&rsquo;s fan and mantle,
+he must turn his hand to do the husband&rsquo;s housework.<br>
+<br>
+The sight of Brother Michel&rsquo;s family estate led the conversation
+for some while upon the method and consequence of artificial kinship.&nbsp;
+Our curiosity became extremely whetted; the brother offered to have
+the whole of us adopted, and some two days later we became accordingly
+the children of Paaaeua, appointed chief of Atuona.&nbsp; I was unable
+to be present at the ceremony, which was primitively simple.&nbsp; The
+two Mrs. Stevensons and Mr. Osbourne, along with Paaaeua, his wife,
+and an adopted child of theirs, son of a shipwrecked Austrian, sat down
+to an excellent island meal, of which the principal and the only necessary
+dish was pig.&nbsp; A concourse watched them through the apertures of
+the house; but none, not even Brother Michel, might partake; for the
+meal was sacramental, and either creative or declaratory of the new
+relationship.&nbsp; In Tahiti things are not so strictly ordered; when
+Ori and I &lsquo;made brothers,&rsquo; both our families sat with us
+at table, yet only he and I, who had eaten with intention were supposed
+to be affected by the ceremony.&nbsp; For the adoption of an infant
+I believe no formality to be required; the child is handed over by the
+natural parents, and grows up to inherit the estates of the adoptive.&nbsp;
+Presents are doubtless exchanged, as at all junctures of island life,
+social or international; but I never heard of any banquet - the child&rsquo;s
+presence at the daily board perhaps sufficing.&nbsp; We may find the
+rationale in the ancient Arabian idea that a common diet makes a common
+blood, with its derivative axiom that &lsquo;he is the father who gives
+the child its morning draught.&rsquo;&nbsp; In the Marquesan practice,
+the sense would thus be evanescent; from the Tahitian, a mere survival,
+it will have entirely fled.&nbsp; An interesting parallel will probably
+occur to many of my readers.<br>
+<br>
+What is the nature of the obligation assumed at such a festival?&nbsp;
+It will vary with the characters of those engaged, and with the circumstances
+of the case.&nbsp; Thus it would be absurd to take too seriously our
+adoption at Atuona.&nbsp; On the part of Paaaeua it was an affair of
+social ambition; when he agreed to receive us in his family the man
+had not so much as seen us, and knew only that we were inestimably rich
+and travelled in a floating palace.&nbsp; We, upon our side, ate of
+his baked meats with no true <i>animus affiliandi</i>, but moved by
+the single sentiment of curiosity.&nbsp; The affair was formal, and
+a matter of parade, as when in Europe sovereigns call each other cousin.&nbsp;
+Yet, had we stayed at Atuona, Paaaeua would have held himself bound
+to establish us upon his land, and to set apart young men for our service,
+and trees for our support.&nbsp; I have mentioned the Austrian.&nbsp;
+He sailed in one of two sister ships, which left the Clyde in coal;
+both rounded the Horn, and both, at several hundred miles of distance,
+though close on the same point of time, took fire at sea on the Pacific.&nbsp;
+One was destroyed; the derelict iron frame of the second, after long,
+aimless cruising, was at length recovered, refitted, and hails to-day
+from San Francisco.&nbsp; A boat&rsquo;s crew from one of these disasters
+reached, after great hardships, the isle of Hiva-oa.&nbsp; Some of these
+men vowed they would never again confront the chances of the sea; but
+alone of them all the Austrian has been exactly true to his engagement,
+remains where he landed, and designs to die where he has lived.&nbsp;
+Now, with such a man, falling and taking root among islanders, the processes
+described may be compared to a gardener&rsquo;s graft.&nbsp; He passes
+bodily into the native stock; ceases wholly to be alien; has entered
+the commune of the blood, shares the prosperity and consideration of
+his new family, and is expected to impart with the same generosity the
+fruits of his European skill and knowledge.&nbsp; It is this implied
+engagement that so frequently offends the ingrafted white.&nbsp; To
+snatch an immediate advantage - to get (let us say) a station for his
+store - he will play upon the native custom and become a son or a brother
+for the day, promising himself to cast down the ladder by which he shall
+have ascended, and repudiate the kinship so soon as it shall grow burdensome.&nbsp;
+And he finds there are two parties to the bargain.&nbsp; Perhaps his
+Polynesian relative is simple, and conceived the blood-bond literally;
+perhaps he is shrewd, and himself entered the covenant with a view to
+gain.&nbsp; And either way the store is ravaged, the house littered
+with lazy natives; and the richer the man grows, the more numerous,
+the more idle, and the more affectionate he finds his native relatives.&nbsp;
+Most men thus circumstanced contrive to buy or brutally manage to enforce
+their independence; but many vegetate without hope, strangled by parasites.<br>
+<br>
+We had no cause to blush with Brother Michel.&nbsp; Our new parents
+were kind, gentle, well-mannered, and generous in gifts; the wife was
+a most motherly woman, the husband a man who stood justly high with
+his employers.&nbsp; Enough has been said to show why Moipu should be
+deposed; and in Paaaeua the French had found a reputable substitute.&nbsp;
+He went always scrupulously dressed, and looked the picture of propriety,
+like a dark, handsome, stupid, and probably religious young man hot
+from a European funeral.&nbsp; In character he seemed the ideal of what
+is known as the good citizen.&nbsp; He wore gravity like an ornament.&nbsp;
+None could more nicely represent the desired character as an appointed
+chief, the outpost of civilisation and reform.&nbsp; And yet, were the
+French to go and native manners to revive, fancy beholds him crowned
+with old men&rsquo;s beards and crowding with the first to a man-eating
+festival.&nbsp; But I must not seem to be unjust to Paaaeua.&nbsp; His
+respectability went deeper than the skin; his sense of the becoming
+sometimes nerved him for unexpected rigours.<br>
+<br>
+One evening Captain Otis and Mr. Osbourne were on shore in the village.&nbsp;
+All was agog; dancing had begun; it was plain it was to be a night of
+festival, and our adventurers were overjoyed at their good fortune.&nbsp;
+A strong fall of rain drove them for shelter to the house of Paaaeua,
+where they were made welcome, wiled into a chamber, and shut in.&nbsp;
+Presently the rain took off, the fun was to begin in earnest, and the
+young bloods of Atuona came round the house and called to my fellow-travellers
+through the interstices of the wall.&nbsp; Late into the night the calls
+were continued and resumed, and sometimes mingled with taunts; late
+into the night the prisoners, tantalised by the noises of the festival,
+renewed their efforts to escape.&nbsp; But all was vain; right across
+the door lay that god-fearing householder, Paaaeua, feigning sleep;
+and my friends had to forego their junketing.&nbsp; In this incident,
+so delightfully European, we thought we could detect three strands of
+sentiment.&nbsp; In the first place, Paaaeua had a charge of souls:
+these were young men, and he judged it right to withhold them from the
+primrose path.&nbsp; Secondly, he was a public character, and it was
+not fitting that his guests should countenance a festival of which he
+disapproved.&nbsp; So might some strict clergyman at home address a
+worldly visitor: &lsquo;Go to the theatre if you like, but, by your
+leave, not from my house!&rsquo;&nbsp; Thirdly, Paaaeua was a man jealous,
+and with some cause (as shall be shown) for jealousy; and the feasters
+were the satellites of his immediate rival, Moipu.<br>
+<br>
+For the adoption had caused much excitement in the village; it made
+the strangers popular.&nbsp; Paaaeua, in his difficult posture of appointed
+chief, drew strength and dignity from their alliance, and only Moipu
+and his followers were malcontent.&nbsp; For some reason nobody (except
+myself) appears to dislike Moipu.&nbsp; Captain Hart, who has been robbed
+and threatened by him; Father Orens, whom he has fired at, and repeatedly
+driven to the woods; my own family, and even the French officials -
+all seemed smitten with an irrepressible affection for the man.&nbsp;
+His fall had been made soft; his son, upon his death, was to succeed
+Paaaeua in the chieftaincy; and he lived, at the time of our visit,
+in the shoreward part of the village in a good house, and with a strong
+following of young men, his late braves and pot-hunters.&nbsp; In this
+society, the coming of the <i>Casco</i>, the adoption, the return feast
+on board, and the presents exchanged between the whites and their new
+parents, were doubtless eagerly and bitterly canvassed.&nbsp; It was
+felt that a few years ago the honours would have gone elsewhere.&nbsp;
+In this unwonted business, in this reception of some hitherto undreamed-of
+and outlandish potentate - some Prester John or old Assaracus - a few
+years back it would have been the part of Moipu to play the hero and
+the host, and his young men would have accompanied and adorned the various
+celebrations as the acknowledged leaders of society.&nbsp; And now,
+by a malign vicissitude of fortune, Moipu must sit in his house quite
+unobserved; and his young men could but look in at the door while their
+rivals feasted.&nbsp; Perhaps M. Gr&eacute;vy felt a touch of bitterness
+towards his successor when he beheld him figure on the broad stage of
+the centenary of eighty-nine; the visit of the <i>Casco</i> which Moipu
+had missed by so few years was a more unusual occasion in Atuona than
+a centenary in France; and the dethroned chief determined to reassert
+himself in the public eye.<br>
+<br>
+Mr. Osbourne had gone into Atuona photographing; the population of the
+village had gathered together for the occasion on the place before the
+church, and Paaaeua, highly delighted with this new appearance of his
+family, played the master of ceremonies.&nbsp; The church had been taken,
+with its jolly architect before the door; the nuns with their pupils;
+sundry damsels in the ancient and singularly unbecoming robes of tapa;
+and Father Orens in the midst of a group of his parishioners.&nbsp;
+I know not what else was in hand, when the photographer became aware
+of a sensation in the crowd, and, looking around, beheld a very noble
+figure of a man appear upon the margin of a thicket and stroll nonchalantly
+near.&nbsp; The nonchalance was visibly affected; it was plain he came
+there to arouse attention, and his success was instant.&nbsp; He was
+introduced; he was civil, he was obliging, he was always ineffably superior
+and certain of himself; a well-graced actor.&nbsp; It was presently
+suggested that he should appear in his war costume; he gracefully consented;
+and returned in that strange, inappropriate and ill-omened array (which
+very well became his handsome person) to strut in a circle of admirers,
+and be thenceforth the centre of photography.&nbsp; Thus had Moipu effected
+his introduction, as by accident, to the white strangers, made it a
+favour to display his finery, and reduced his rival to a secondary <i>r&ocirc;le</i>
+on the theatre of the disputed village.&nbsp; Paaaeua felt the blow;
+and, with a spirit which we never dreamed he could possess, asserted
+his priority.&nbsp; It was found impossible that day to get a photograph
+of Moipu alone; for whenever he stood up before the camera his successor
+placed himself unbidden by his side, and gently but firmly held to his
+position.&nbsp; The portraits of the pair, Jacob and Esau, standing
+shoulder to shoulder, one in his careful European dress, one in his
+barbaric trappings, figure the past and present of their island.&nbsp;
+A graveyard with its humble crosses would be the aptest symbol of the
+future.<br>
+<br>
+We are all impressed with the belief that Moipu had planned his campaign
+from the beginning to the end.&nbsp; It is certain that he lost no time
+in pushing his advantage.&nbsp; Mr. Osbourne was inveigled to his house;
+various gifts were fished out of an old sea-chest; Father Orens was
+called into service as interpreter, and Moipu formally proposed to &lsquo;make
+brothers&rsquo; with Mata-Galahi - Glass-Eyes, - the not very euphonious
+name under which Mr. Osbourne passed in the Marquesas.&nbsp; The feast
+of brotherhood took place on board the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; Paaaeua had
+arrived with his family, like a plain man; and his presents, which had
+been numerous, had followed one another, at intervals through several
+days.&nbsp; Moipu, as if to mark at every point the opposition, came
+with a certain feudal pomp, attended by retainers bearing gifts of all
+descriptions, from plumes of old men&rsquo;s beard to little, pious,
+Catholic engravings.<br>
+<br>
+I had met the man before this in the village, and detested him on sight;
+there was something indescribably raffish in his looks and ways that
+raised my gorge; and when man-eating was referred to, and he laughed
+a low, cruel laugh, part boastful, part bashful, like one reminded of
+some dashing peccadillo, my repugnance was mingled with nausea.&nbsp;
+This is no very human attitude, nor one at all becoming in a traveller.&nbsp;
+And, seen more privately, the man improved.&nbsp; Something negroid
+in character and face was still displeasing; but his ugly mouth became
+attractive when he smiled, his figure and bearing were certainly noble,
+and his eyes superb.&nbsp; In his appreciation of jams and pickles,
+in is delight in the reverberating mirrors of the dining cabin, and
+consequent endless repetition of Moipus and Mata-Galahis, he showed
+himself engagingly a child.&nbsp; And yet I am not sure; and what seemed
+childishness may have been rather courtly art.&nbsp; His manners struck
+me as beyond the mark; they were refined and caressing to the point
+of grossness, and when I think of the serene absent-mindedness with
+which he first strolled in upon our party, and then recall him running
+on hands and knees along the cabin sofas, pawing the velvet, dipping
+into the beds, and bleating commendatory &lsquo;<i>mitais</i>&rsquo;
+with exaggerated emphasis, like some enormous over-mannered ape, I feel
+the more sure that both must have been calculated.&nbsp; And I sometimes
+wonder next, if Moipu were quite alone in this polite duplicity, and
+ask myself whether the <i>Casco</i> were quite so much admired in the
+Marquesas as our visitors desired us to suppose.<br>
+<br>
+I will complete this sketch of an incurable cannibal grandee with two
+incongruous traits.&nbsp; His favourite morsel was the human hand, of
+which he speaks to-day with an ill-favoured lustfulness.&nbsp; And when
+he said good-bye to Mrs. Stevenson, holding her hand, viewing her with
+tearful eyes, and chanting his farewell improvisation in the falsetto
+of Marquesan high society, he wrote upon her mind a sentimental impression
+which I try in vain to share.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+PART II: THE PAUMOTUS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER I - THE DANGEROUS ARCHIPELAGO - ATOLLS AT A DISTANCE<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+In the early morning of 4th September a whale-boat manned by natives
+dragged us down the green lane of the anchorage and round the spouting
+promontory.&nbsp; On the shore level it was a hot, breathless, and yet
+crystal morning; but high overhead the hills of Atuona were all cowled
+in cloud, and the ocean-river of the trades streamed without pause.&nbsp;
+As we crawled from under the immediate shelter of the land, we reached
+at last the limit of their influence.&nbsp; The wind fell upon our sails
+in puffs, which strengthened and grew more continuous; presently the
+<i>Casco</i> heeled down to her day&rsquo;s work; the whale-boat, quite
+outstripped, clung for a noisy moment to her quarter; the stipulated
+bread, rum, and tobacco were passed in; a moment more and the boat was
+in our wake, and our late pilots were cheering our departure.<br>
+<br>
+This was the more inspiriting as we were bound for scenes so different,
+and though on a brief voyage, yet for a new province of creation.&nbsp;
+That wide field of ocean, called loosely the South Seas, extends from
+tropic to tropic, and from perhaps 123 degrees W. to 150 degrees E.,
+a parallelogram of one hundred degrees by forty-seven, where degrees
+are the most spacious.&nbsp; Much of it lies vacant, much is closely
+sown with isles, and the isles are of two sorts.&nbsp; No distinction
+is so continually dwelt upon in South Sea talk as that between the &lsquo;low&rsquo;
+and the &lsquo;high&rsquo; island, and there is none more broadly marked
+in nature.&nbsp; The Himalayas are not more different from the Sahara.&nbsp;
+On the one hand, and chiefly in groups of from eight to a dozen, volcanic
+islands rise above the sea; few reach an altitude of less than 4000
+feet; one exceeds 13,000; their tops are often obscured in cloud, they
+are all clothed with various forests, all abound in food, and are all
+remarkable for picturesque and solemn scenery.&nbsp; On the other hand,
+we have the atoll; a thing of problematic origin and history, the reputed
+creature of an insect apparently unidentified; rudely annular in shape;
+enclosing a lagoon; rarely extending beyond a quarter of a mile at its
+chief width; often rising at its highest point to less than the stature
+of a man - man himself, the rat and the land crab, its chief inhabitants;
+not more variously supplied with plants; and offering to the eye, even
+when perfect, only a ring of glittering beach and verdant foliage, enclosing
+and enclosed by the blue sea.<br>
+<br>
+In no quarter are the atolls so thickly congregated, in none are they
+so varied in size from the greatest to the least, and in none is navigation
+so beset with perils, as in that archipelago that we were now to thread.&nbsp;
+The huge system of the trades is, for some reason, quite confounded
+by this multiplicity of reefs, the wind intermits, squalls are frequent
+from the west and south-west, hurricanes are known.&nbsp; The currents
+are, besides, inextricably intermixed; dead reckoning becomes a farce;
+the charts are not to be trusted; and such is the number and similarity
+of these islands that, even when you have picked one up, you may be
+none the wiser.&nbsp; The reputation of the place is consequently infamous;
+insurance offices exclude it from their field, and it was not without
+misgiving that my captain risked the <i>Casco</i> in such waters.&nbsp;
+I believe, indeed, it is almost understood that yachts are to avoid
+this baffling archipelago; and it required all my instances - and all
+Mr. Otis&rsquo;s private taste for adventure - to deflect our course
+across its midst.<br>
+<br>
+For a few days we sailed with a steady trade, and a steady westerly
+current setting us to leeward; and toward sundown of the seventh it
+was supposed we should have sighted Takaroa, one of Cook&rsquo;s so-called
+King George Islands.&nbsp; The sun set; yet a while longer the old moon
+- semi-brilliant herself, and with a silver belly, which was her successor
+- sailed among gathering clouds; she, too, deserted us; stars of every
+degree of sheen, and clouds of every variety of form disputed the sub-lustrous
+night; and still we gazed in vain for Takaroa.&nbsp; The mate stood
+on the bowsprit, his tall grey figure slashing up and down against the
+stars, and still<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;nihil astra praeter<br>
+Vidit et undas.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The rest of us were grouped at the port anchor davit, staring with no
+less assiduity, but with far less hope on the obscure horizon.&nbsp;
+Islands we beheld in plenty, but they were of &lsquo;such stuff as dreams
+are made on,&rsquo; and vanished at a wink, only to appear in other
+places; and by and by not only islands, but refulgent and revolving
+lights began to stud the darkness; lighthouses of the mind or of the
+wearied optic nerve, solemnly shining and winking as we passed.&nbsp;
+At length the mate himself despaired, scrambled on board again from
+his unrestful perch, and announced that we had missed our destination.&nbsp;
+He was the only man of practice in these waters, our sole pilot, shipped
+for that end at Tai-o-hae.&nbsp; If he declared we had missed Takaroa,
+it was not for us to quarrel with the fact, but, if we could, to explain
+it.&nbsp; We had certainly run down our southing.&nbsp; Our canted wake
+upon the sea and our somewhat drunken-looking course upon the chart
+both testified with no less certainty to an impetuous westward current.&nbsp;
+We had no choice but to conclude we were again set down to leeward;
+and the best we could do was to bring the <i>Casco</i> to the wind,
+keep a good watch, and expect morning.<br>
+<br>
+I slept that night, as was then my somewhat dangerous practice, on deck
+upon the cockpit bench.&nbsp; A stir at last awoke me, to see all the
+eastern heaven dyed with faint orange, the binnacle lamp already dulled
+against the brightness of the day, and the steersman leaning eagerly
+across the wheel.&nbsp; &lsquo;There it is, sir!&rsquo; he cried, and
+pointed in the very eyeball of the dawn.&nbsp; For awhile I could see
+nothing but the bluish ruins of the morning bank, which lay far along
+the horizon, like melting icebergs.&nbsp; Then the sun rose, pierced
+a gap in these <i>d&eacute;bris</i> of vapours, and displayed an inconsiderable
+islet, flat as a plate upon the sea, and spiked with palms of disproportioned
+altitude.<br>
+<br>
+So far, so good.&nbsp; Here was certainly an atoll; and we were certainly
+got among the archipelago.&nbsp; But which?&nbsp; And where?&nbsp; The
+isle was too small for either Takaroa: in all our neighbourhood, indeed,
+there was none so inconsiderable, save only Tikei; and Tikei, one of
+Roggewein&rsquo;s so-called Pernicious Islands, seemed beside the question.&nbsp;
+At that rate, instead of drifting to the west, we must have fetched
+up thirty miles to windward.&nbsp; And how about the current?&nbsp;
+It had been setting us down, by observation, all these days: by the
+deflection of our wake, it should be setting us down that moment.&nbsp;
+When had it stopped?&nbsp; When had it begun again? and what kind of
+torrent was that which had swept us eastward in the interval?&nbsp;
+To these questions, so typical of navigation in that range of isles,
+I have no answer.&nbsp; Such were at least the facts; Tikei our island
+turned out to be; and it was our first experience of the dangerous archipelago,
+to make our landfall thirty miles out.<br>
+<br>
+The sight of Tikei, thrown direct against the splendour of the morning,
+robbed of all its colour, and deformed with disproportioned trees like
+bristles on a broom, had scarce prepared us to be much in love with
+atolls.&nbsp; Later the same day we saw under more fit conditions the
+island of Taiaro.&nbsp; <i>Lost in the Sea</i> is possibly the meaning
+of the name.&nbsp; And it was so we saw it; lost in blue sea and sky:
+a ring of white beach, green underwood, and tossing palms, gem-like
+in colour; of a fairy, of a heavenly prettiness.&nbsp; The surf ran
+all around it, white as snow, and broke at one point, far to seaward,
+on what seems an uncharted reef.&nbsp; There was no smoke, no sign of
+man; indeed, the isle is not inhabited, only visited at intervals.&nbsp;
+And yet a trader (Mr.&nbsp; Narii Salmon) was watching from the shore
+and wondering at the unexpected ship.&nbsp; I have spent since then
+long months upon low islands; I know the tedium of their undistinguished
+days; I know the burden of their diet.&nbsp; With whatever envy we may
+have looked from the deck on these green coverts, it was with a tenfold
+greater that Mr. Salmon and his comrades saw us steer, in our trim ship,
+to seaward.<br>
+<br>
+The night fell lovely in the extreme.&nbsp; After the moon went down,
+the heaven was a thing to wonder at for stars.&nbsp; And as I lay in
+the cockpit and looked upon the steersman I was haunted by Emerson&rsquo;s
+verses:<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And the lone seaman all the night<br>
+Sails astonished among stars.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+By this glittering and imperfect brightness, about four bells in the
+first watch we made our third atoll, Raraka.&nbsp; The low line of the
+isle lay straight along the sky; so that I was at first reminded of
+a towpath, and we seemed to be mounting some engineered and navigable
+stream.&nbsp; Presently a red star appeared, about the height and brightness
+of a danger signal, and with that my simile was changed; we seemed rather
+to skirt the embankment of a railway, and the eye began to look instinctively
+for the telegraph-posts, and the ear to expect the coming of a train.&nbsp;
+Here and there, but rarely, faint tree-tops broke the level.&nbsp; And
+the sound of the surf accompanied us, now in a drowsy monotone, now
+with a menacing swing.<br>
+<br>
+The isle lay nearly east and west, barring our advance on Fakarava.&nbsp;
+We must, therefore, hug the coast until we gained the western end, where,
+through a passage eight miles wide, we might sail southward between
+Raraka and the next isle, Kauehi.&nbsp; We had the wind free, a lightish
+air; but clouds of an inky blackness were beginning to arise, and at
+times it lightened - without thunder.&nbsp; Something, I know not what,
+continually set us up upon the island.&nbsp; We lay more and more to
+the nor&rsquo;ard; and you would have thought the shore copied our manoeuvre
+and outsailed us. Once and twice Raraka headed us again - again, in
+the sea fashion, the quite innocent steersman was abused - and again
+the <i>Casco</i> kept away.&nbsp; Had I been called on, with no more
+light than that of our experience, to draw the configuration of that
+island, I should have shown a series of bow-window promontories, each
+overlapping the other to the nor&rsquo;ard, and the trend of the land
+from the south-east to the north-west, and behold, on the chart it lay
+near east and west in a straight line.<br>
+<br>
+We had but just repeated our manoeuvre and kept away - for not more
+than five minutes the railway embankment had been lost to view and the
+surf to hearing - when I was aware of land again, not only on the weather
+bow, but dead ahead.&nbsp; I played the part of the judicious landsman,
+holding my peace till the last moment; and presently my mariners perceived
+it for themselves.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Land ahead!&rsquo; said the steersman.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;By God, it&rsquo;s Kauehi!&rsquo; cried the mate.<br>
+<br>
+And so it was.&nbsp; And with that I began to be sorry for cartographers.&nbsp;
+We were scarce doing three and a half; and they asked me to believe
+that (in five minutes) we had dropped an island, passed eight miles
+of open water, and run almost high and dry upon the next.&nbsp; But
+my captain was more sorry for himself to be afloat in such a labyrinth;
+laid the <i>Casco</i> to, with the log line up and down, and sat on
+the stern rail and watched it till the morning.&nbsp; He had enough
+of night in the Paumotus.<br>
+<br>
+By daylight on the 9th we began to skirt Kauehi, and had now an opportunity
+to see near at hand the geography of atolls.&nbsp; Here and there, where
+it was high, the farther side loomed up; here and there the near side
+dipped entirely and showed a broad path of water into the lagoon; here
+and there both sides were equally abased, and we could look right through
+the discontinuous ring to the sea horizon on the south.&nbsp; Conceive,
+on a vast scale, the submerged hoop of the duck-hunter, trimmed with
+green rushes to conceal his head - water within, water without - you
+have the image of the perfect atoll.&nbsp; Conceive one that has been
+partly plucked of its rush fringe; you have the atoll of Kauehi.&nbsp;
+And for either shore of it at closer quarters, conceive the line of
+some old Roman highway traversing a wet morass, and here sunk out of
+view and there re-arising, crowned with a green tuft of thicket; only
+instead of the stagnant waters of a marsh, the live ocean now boiled
+against, now buried the frail barrier.&nbsp; Last night&rsquo;s impression
+in the dark was thus confirmed by day, and not corrected.&nbsp; We sailed
+indeed by a mere causeway in the sea, of nature&rsquo;s handiwork, yet
+of no greater magnitude than many of the works of man.<br>
+<br>
+The isle was uninhabited; it was all green brush and white sand, set
+in transcendently blue water; even the coco-palms were rare, though
+some of these completed the bright harmony of colour by hanging out
+a fan of golden yellow.&nbsp; For long there was no sign of life beyond
+the vegetable, and no sound but the continuous grumble of the surf.&nbsp;
+In silence and desertion these fair shores slipped past, and were submerged
+and rose again with clumps of thicket from the sea.&nbsp; And then a
+bird or two appeared, hovering and crying; swiftly these became more
+numerous, and presently, looking ahead, we were aware of a vast effervescence
+of winged life.&nbsp; In this place the annular isle was mostly under
+water, carrying here and there on its submerged line a wooded islet.&nbsp;
+Over one of these the birds hung and flew with an incredible density
+like that of gnats or hiving bees; the mass flashed white and black,
+and heaved and quivered, and the screaming of the creatures rose over
+the voice of the surf in a shrill clattering whirr.&nbsp; As you descend
+some inland valley a not dissimilar sound announces the nearness of
+a mill and pouring river.&nbsp; Some stragglers, as I said, came to
+meet our approach; a few still hung about the ship as we departed.&nbsp;
+The crying died away, the last pair of wings was left behind, and once
+more the low shores of Kauehi streamed past our eyes in silence like
+a picture.&nbsp; I supposed at the time that the birds lived, like ants
+or citizens, concentred where we saw them.&nbsp; I have been told since
+(I know not if correctly) that the whole isle, or much of it, is similarly
+peopled; and that the effervescence at a single spot would be the mark
+of a boat&rsquo;s crew of egg-hunters from one of the neighbouring inhabited
+atolls.&nbsp; So that here at Kauehi, as the day before at Taiaro, the
+<i>Casco</i> sailed by under the fire of unsuspected eyes.&nbsp; And
+one thing is surely true, that even on these ribbons of land an army
+might lie hid and no passing mariner divine its presence.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER II - FAKARAVA: AN ATOLL AT HAND<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+By a little before noon we were running down the coast of our destination,
+Fakarava: the air very light, the sea near smooth; though still we were
+accompanied by a continuous murmur from the beach, like the sound of
+a distant train.&nbsp; The isle is of a huge longitude, the enclosed
+lagoon thirty miles by ten or twelve, and the coral tow-path, which
+they call the land, some eighty or ninety miles by (possibly) one furlong.&nbsp;
+That part by which we sailed was all raised; the underwood excellently
+green, the topping wood of coco-palms continuous - a mark, if I had
+known it, of man&rsquo;s intervention.&nbsp; For once more, and once
+more unconsciously, we were within hail of fellow-creatures, and that
+vacant beach was but a pistol-shot from the capital city of the archipelago.&nbsp;
+But the life of an atoll, unless it be enclosed, passes wholly on the
+shores of the lagoon; it is there the villages are seated, there the
+canoes ply and are drawn up; and the beach of the ocean is a place accursed
+and deserted, the fit scene only for wizardry and shipwreck, and in
+the native belief a haunting ground of murderous spectres.<br>
+<br>
+By and by we might perceive a breach in the low barrier; the woods ceased;
+a glittering point ran into the sea, tipped with an emerald shoal the
+mark of entrance.&nbsp; As we drew near we met a little run of sea -
+the private sea of the lagoon having there its origin and end, and here,
+in the jaws of the gateway, trying vain conclusions with the more majestic
+heave of the Pacific.&nbsp; The <i>Casco</i> scarce avowed a shock;
+but there are times and circumstances when these harbour mouths of inland
+basins vomit floods, deflecting, burying, and dismasting ships.&nbsp;
+For, conceive a lagoon perfectly sealed but in the one point, and that
+of merely navigable width; conceive the tide and wind to have heaped
+for hours together in that coral fold a superfluity of waters, and the
+tide to change and the wind fall - the open sluice of some great reservoirs
+at home will give an image of the unstemmable effluxion.<br>
+<br>
+We were scarce well headed for the pass before all heads were craned
+over the rail.&nbsp; For the water, shoaling under our board, became
+changed in a moment to surprising hues of blue and grey; and in its
+transparency the coral branched and blossomed, and the fish of the inland
+sea cruised visibly below us, stained and striped, and even beaked like
+parrots.&nbsp; I have paid in my time to view many curiosities; never
+one so curious as that first sight over the ship&rsquo;s rail in the
+lagoon of Fakarava.&nbsp; But let not the reader be deceived with hope.&nbsp;
+I have since entered, I suppose, some dozen atolls in different parts
+of the Pacific, and the experience has never been repeated.&nbsp; That
+exquisite hue and transparency of submarine day, and these shoals of
+rainbow fish, have not enraptured me again.<br>
+<br>
+Before we could raise our eyes from that engaging spectacle the schooner
+had slipped betwixt the pierheads of the reef, and was already quite
+committed to the sea within.&nbsp; The containing shores are so little
+erected, and the lagoon itself is so great, that, for the more part,
+it seemed to extend without a check to the horizon.&nbsp; Here and there,
+indeed, where the reef carried an inlet, like a signet-ring upon a finger,
+there would be a pencilling of palms; here and there, the green wall
+of wood ran solid for a length of miles; and on the port hand, under
+the highest grove of trees, a few houses sparkled white - Rotoava, the
+metropolitan settlement of the Paumotus.&nbsp; Hither we beat in three
+tacks, and came to an anchor close in shore, in the first smooth water
+since we had left San Francisco, five fathoms deep, where a man might
+look overboard all day at the vanishing cable, the coral patches, and
+the many-coloured fish.<br>
+<br>
+Fakarava was chosen to be the seat of Government from nautical considerations
+only.&nbsp; It is eccentrically situate; the productions, even for a
+low island, poor; the population neither many nor - for Low Islanders
+- industrious.&nbsp; But the lagoon has two good passages, one to leeward,
+one to windward, so that in all states of the wind it can be left and
+entered, and this advantage, for a government of scattered islands,
+was decisive.&nbsp; A pier of coral, landing-stairs, a harbour light
+upon a staff and pillar, and two spacious Government bungalows in a
+handsome fence, give to the northern end of Rotoava a great air of consequence.&nbsp;
+This is confirmed on the one hand by an empty prison, on the other by
+a gendarmerie pasted over with hand-bills in Tahitian, land-law notices
+from Papeete, and republican sentiments from Paris, signed (a little
+after date) &lsquo;Jules Gr&eacute;vy, <i>Perihidente</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Quite at the far end a belfried Catholic chapel concludes the town;
+and between, on a smooth floor of white coral sand and under the breezy
+canopy of coco-palms, the houses of the natives stand irregularly scattered,
+now close on the lagoon for the sake of the breeze, now back under the
+palms for love of shadow.<br>
+<br>
+Not a soul was to be seen.&nbsp; But for the thunder of the surf on
+the far side, it seemed you might have heard a pin drop anywhere about
+that capital city.&nbsp; There was something thrilling in the unexpected
+silence, something yet more so in the unexpected sound.&nbsp; Here before
+us a sea reached to the horizon, rippling like an inland mere; and behold!
+close at our back another sea assaulted with assiduous fury the reverse
+of the position.&nbsp; At night the lantern was run up and lit a vacant
+pier.&nbsp; In one house lights were seen and voices heard, where the
+population (I was told) sat playing cards.&nbsp; A little beyond, from
+deep in the darkness of the palm-grove, we saw the glow and smelt the
+aromatic odour of a coal of cocoa-nut husk, a relic of the evening kitchen.&nbsp;
+Crickets sang; some shrill thing whistled in a tuft of weeds; and the
+mosquito hummed and stung.&nbsp; There was no other trace that night
+of man, bird, or insect in the isle.&nbsp; The moon, now three days
+old, and as yet but a silver crescent on a still visible sphere, shone
+through the palm canopy with vigorous and scattered lights.&nbsp; The
+alleys where we walked were smoothed and weeded like a boulevard; here
+and there were plants set out; here and there dusky cottages clustered
+in the shadow, some with verandahs.&nbsp; A public garden by night,
+a rich and fashionable watering-place in a by-season, offer sights and
+vistas not dissimilar.&nbsp; And still, on the one side, stretched the
+lapping mere, and from the other the deep sea still growled in the night.&nbsp;
+But it was most of all on board, in the dead hours, when I had been
+better sleeping, that the spell of Fakarava seized and held me.&nbsp;
+The moon was down.&nbsp; The harbour lantern and two of the greater
+planets drew vari-coloured wakes on the lagoon.&nbsp; From shore the
+cheerful watch-cry of cocks rang out at intervals above the organ-point
+of surf.&nbsp; And the thought of this depopulated capital, this protracted
+thread of annular island with its crest of coco-palms and fringe of
+breakers, and that tranquil inland sea that stretched before me till
+it touched the stars, ran in my head for hours with delight.<br>
+<br>
+So long as I stayed upon that isle these thoughts were constant.&nbsp;
+I lay down to sleep, and woke again with an unblunted sense of my surroundings.&nbsp;
+I was never weary of calling up the image of that narrow causeway, on
+which I had my dwelling, lying coiled like a serpent, tail to mouth,
+in the outrageous ocean, and I was never weary of passing - a mere quarter-deck
+parade - from the one side to the other, from the shady, habitable shores
+of the lagoon to the blinding desert and uproarious breakers of the
+opposite beach.&nbsp; The sense of insecurity in such a thread of residence
+is more than fanciful.&nbsp; Hurricanes and tidal waves over-leap these
+humble obstacles; Oceanus remembers his strength, and, where houses
+stood and palms flourished, shakes his white beard again over the barren
+coral.&nbsp; Fakarava itself has suffered; the trees immediately beyond
+my house were all of recent replantation; and Anaa is only now recovered
+from a heavier stroke.&nbsp; I knew one who was then dwelling in the
+isle.&nbsp; He told me that he and two ship captains walked to the sea
+beach.&nbsp; There for a while they viewed the oncoming breakers, till
+one of the captains clapped suddenly his hand before his eyes and cried
+aloud that he could endure no longer to behold them.&nbsp; This was
+in the afternoon; in the dark hours of the night the sea burst upon
+the island like a flood; the settlement was razed all but the church
+and presbytery; and, when day returned, the survivors saw themselves
+clinging in an abattis of uprooted coco-palms and ruined houses.<br>
+<br>
+Danger is but a small consideration.&nbsp; But men are more nicely sensible
+of a discomfort; and the atoll is a discomfortable home.&nbsp; There
+are some, and these probably ancient, where a deep soil has formed and
+the most valuable fruit-trees prosper.&nbsp; I have walked in one, with
+equal admiration and surprise, through a forest of huge breadfruits,
+eating bananas and stumbling among taro as I went.&nbsp; This was in
+the atoll of Namorik in the Marshall group, and stands alone in my experience.&nbsp;
+To give the opposite extreme, which is yet far more near the average,
+I will describe the soil and productions of Fakarava.&nbsp; The surface
+of that narrow strip is for the more part of broken coral lime-stone,
+like volcanic clinkers, and excruciating to the naked foot; in some
+atolls, I believe, not in Fakarava, it gives a fine metallic ring when
+struck.&nbsp; Here and there you come upon a bank of sand, exceeding
+fine and white, and these parts are the least productive.&nbsp; The
+plants (such as they are) spring from and love the broken coral, whence
+they grow with that wonderful verdancy that makes the beauty of the
+atoll from the sea.&nbsp; The coco-palm in particular luxuriates in
+that stern <i>solum</i>, striking down his roots to the brackish, percolated
+water, and bearing his green head in the wind with every evidence of
+health and pleasure.&nbsp; And yet even the coco-palm must be helped
+in infancy with some extraneous nutriment, and through much of the low
+archipelago there is planted with each nut a piece of ship&rsquo;s biscuit
+and a rusty nail.&nbsp; The pandanus comes next in importance, being
+also a food tree; and he, too, does bravely.&nbsp; A green bush called
+<i>miki</i> runs everywhere; occasionally a purao is seen; and there
+are several useless weeds.&nbsp; According to M. Cuzent, the whole number
+of plants on an atoll such as Fakarava will scarce exceed, even if it
+reaches to, one score.&nbsp; Not a blade of grass appears; not a grain
+of humus, save when a sack or two has been imported to make the semblance
+of a garden; such gardens as bloom in cities on the window-sill.&nbsp;
+Insect life is sometimes dense; a cloud o&rsquo; mosquitoes, and, what
+is far worse, a plague of flies blackening our food, has sometimes driven
+us from a meal on Apemama; and even in Fakarava the mosquitoes were
+a pest.&nbsp; The land crab may be seen scuttling to his hole, and at
+night the rats besiege the houses and the artificial gardens.&nbsp;
+The crab is good eating; possibly so is the rat; I have not tried.&nbsp;
+Pandanus fruit is made, in the Gilberts, into an agreeable sweetmeat,
+such as a man may trifle with at the end of a long dinner; for a substantial
+meal I have no use for it.&nbsp; The rest of the food-supply, in a destitute
+atoll such as Fakarava, can be summed up in the favourite jest of the
+archipelago - cocoa-nut beefsteak.&nbsp; Cocoa-nut green, cocoa-nut
+ripe, cocoa-nut germinated; cocoa-nut to eat and cocoa-nut to drink;
+cocoa-nut raw and cooked, cocoa-nut hot and cold - such is the bill
+of fare.&nbsp; And some of the entr&eacute;es are no doubt delicious.&nbsp;
+The germinated nut, cooked in the shell and eaten with a spoon, forms
+a good pudding; cocoa-nut milk - the expressed juice of a ripe nut,
+not the water of a green one - goes well in coffee, and is a valuable
+adjunct in cookery through the South Seas; and cocoa-nut salad, if you
+be a millionaire, and can afford to eat the value of a field of corn
+for your dessert, is a dish to be remembered with affection.&nbsp; But
+when all is done there is a sameness, and the Israelites of the low
+islands murmur at their manna.<br>
+<br>
+The reader may think I have forgot the sea.&nbsp; The two beaches do
+certainly abound in life, and they are strangely different.&nbsp; In
+the lagoon the water shallows slowly on a bottom of the fine slimy sand,
+dotted with clumps of growing coral.&nbsp; Then comes a strip of tidal
+beach on which the ripples lap.&nbsp; In the coral clumps the great
+holy-water clam <i>(Tridacna</i>) grows plentifully; a little deeper
+lie the beds of the pearl-oyster and sail the resplendent fish that
+charmed us at our entrance; and these are all more or less vigorously
+coloured.&nbsp; But the other shells are white like lime, or faintly
+tinted with a little pink, the palest possible display; many of them
+dead besides, and badly rolled.&nbsp; On the ocean side, on the mounds
+of the steep beach, over all the width of the reef right out to where
+the surf is bursting, in every cranny, under every scattered fragment
+of the coral, an incredible plenty of marine life displays the most
+wonderful variety and brilliancy of hues.&nbsp; The reef itself has
+no passage of colour but is imitated by some shell.&nbsp; Purple and
+red and white, and green and yellow, pied and striped and clouded, the
+living shells wear in every combination the livery of the dead reef
+- if the reef be dead - so that the eye is continually baffled and the
+collector continually deceived.&nbsp; I have taken shells for stones
+and stones for shells, the one as often as the other.&nbsp; A prevailing
+character of the coral is to be dotted with small spots of red, and
+it is wonderful how many varieties of shell have adopted the same fashion
+and donned the disguise of the red spot.&nbsp; A shell I had found in
+plenty in the Marquesas I found here also unchanged in all things else,
+but there were the red spots.&nbsp; A lively little crab wore the same
+markings.&nbsp; The case of the hermit or soldier crab was more conclusive,
+being the result of conscious choice.&nbsp; This nasty little wrecker,
+scavenger, and squatter has learned the value of a spotted house; so
+it be of the right colour he will choose the smallest shard, tuck himself
+in a mere corner of a broken whorl, and go about the world half naked;
+but I never found him in this imperfect armour unless it was marked
+with the red spot.<br>
+<br>
+Some two hundred yards distant is the beach of the lagoon.&nbsp; Collect
+the shells from each, set them side by side, and you would suppose they
+came from different hemispheres; the one so pale, the other so brilliant;
+the one prevalently white, the other of a score of hues, and infected
+with the scarlet spot like a disease.&nbsp; This seems the more strange,
+since the hermit crabs pass and repass the island, and I have met them
+by the Residency well, which is about central, journeying either way.&nbsp;
+Without doubt many of the shells in the lagoon are dead.&nbsp; But why
+are they dead?&nbsp; Without doubt the living shells have a very different
+background set for imitation.&nbsp; But why are these so different?&nbsp;
+We are only on the threshold of the mysteries.<br>
+<br>
+Either beach, I have said, abounds with life.&nbsp; On the sea-side
+and in certain atolls this profusion of vitality is even shocking: the
+rock under foot is mined with it.&nbsp; I have broken off - notably
+in Funafuti and Arorai - great lumps of ancient weathered rock that
+rang under my blows like iron, and the fracture has been full of pendent
+worms as long as my hand, as thick as a child&rsquo;s finger, of a slightly
+pinkish white, and set as close as three or even four to the square
+inch.&nbsp; Even in the lagoon, where certain shell-fish seem to sicken,
+others (it is notorious) prosper exceedingly and make the riches of
+these islands.&nbsp; Fish, too, abound; the lagoon is a closed fish-pond,
+such as might rejoice the fancy of an abbot; sharks swarm there, and
+chiefly round the passages, to feast upon this plenty, and you would
+suppose that man had only to prepare his angle.&nbsp; Alas! it is not
+so.&nbsp; Of these painted fish that came in hordes about the entering
+<i>Casco</i>, some bore poisonous spines, and others were poisonous
+if eaten.&nbsp; The stranger must refrain, or take his chance of painful
+and dangerous sickness.&nbsp; The native, on his own isle, is a safe
+guide; transplant him to the next, and he is helpless as yourself.&nbsp;
+For it is a question both of time and place.&nbsp; A fish caught in
+a lagoon may be deadly; the same fish caught the same day at sea, and
+only a few hundred yards without the passage, will be wholesome eating:
+in a neighbouring isle perhaps the case will be reversed; and perhaps
+a fortnight later you shall be able to eat of them indifferently from
+within and from without.&nbsp; According to the natives, these bewildering
+vicissitudes are ruled by the movement of the heavenly bodies.&nbsp;
+The beautiful planet Venus plays a great part in all island tales and
+customs; and among other functions, some of them more awful, she regulates
+the season of good fish.&nbsp; With Venus in one phase, as we had her,
+certain fish were poisonous in the lagoon: with Venus in another, the
+same fish was harmless and a valued article of diet.&nbsp; White men
+explain these changes by the phases of the coral.<br>
+<br>
+It adds a last touch of horror to the thought of this precarious annular
+gangway in the sea, that even what there is of it is not of honest rock,
+but organic, part alive, part putrescent; even the clean sea and the
+bright fish about it poisoned, the most stubborn boulder burrowed in
+by worms, the lightest dust venomous as an apothecary&rsquo;s drugs.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER III - A HOUSE TO LET IN A LOW ISLAND<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Never populous, it was yet by a chapter of accidents that I found the
+island so deserted that no sound of human life diversified the hours;
+that we walked in that trim public garden of a town, among closed houses,
+without even a lodging-bill in a window to prove some tenancy in the
+back quarters; and, when we visited the Government bungalow, that Mr.
+Donat, acting Vice-Resident, greeted us alone, and entertained us with
+cocoa-nut punches in the Sessions Hall and seat of judgment of that
+widespread archipelago, our glasses standing arrayed with summonses
+and census returns.&nbsp; The unpopularity of a late Vice-Resident had
+begun the movement of exodus, his native employ&eacute;s resigning court
+appointments and retiring each to his own coco-patch in the remoter
+districts of the isle.&nbsp; Upon the back of that, the Governor in
+Papeete issued a decree: All land in the Paumotus must be defined and
+registered by a certain date.&nbsp; Now, the folk of the archipelago
+are half nomadic; a man can scarce be said to belong to a particular
+atoll; he belongs to several, perhaps holds a stake and counts cousinship
+in half a score; and the inhabitants of Rotoava in particular, man,
+woman, and child, and from the gendarme to the Mormon prophet and the
+schoolmaster, owned - I was going to say land - owned at least coral
+blocks and growing coco-palms in some adjacent isle.&nbsp; Thither -
+from the gendarme to the babe in arms, the pastor followed by his flock,
+the schoolmaster carrying along with him his scholars, and the scholars
+with their books and slates - they had taken ship some two days previous
+to our arrival, and were all now engaged disputing boundaries.&nbsp;
+Fancy overhears the shrillness of their disputation mingle with the
+surf and scatter sea-fowl.&nbsp; It was admirable to observe the completeness
+of their flight, like that of hibernating birds; nothing left but empty
+houses, like old nests to be reoccupied in spring; and even the harmless
+necessary dominie borne with them in their transmigration.&nbsp; Fifty
+odd set out, and only seven, I was informed, remained.&nbsp; But when
+I made a feast on board the <i>Casco</i>, more than seven, and nearer
+seven times seven, appeared to be my guests.&nbsp; Whence they appeared,
+how they were summoned, whither they vanished when the feast was eaten,
+I have no guess.&nbsp; In view of Low Island tales, and that awful frequentation
+which makes men avoid the seaward beaches of an atoll, some two score
+of those that ate with us may have returned, for the occasion, from
+the kingdom of the dead.<br>
+<br>
+It was this solitude that put it in our minds to hire a house, and become,
+for the time being, indwellers of the isle - a practice I have ever
+since, when it was possible, adhered to.&nbsp; Mr. Donat placed us,
+with that intent, under the convoy of one Taniera Mahinui, who combined
+the incongruous characters of catechist and convict.&nbsp; The reader
+may smile, but I affirm he was well qualified for either part.&nbsp;
+For that of convict, first of all, by a good substantial felony, such
+as in all lands casts the perpetrator in chains and dungeons.&nbsp;
+Taniera was a man of birth - the chief a while ago, as he loved to tell,
+of a district in Anaa of 800 souls.&nbsp; In an evil hour it occurred
+to the authorities in Papeete to charge the chiefs with the collection
+of the taxes.&nbsp; It is a question if much were collected; it is certain
+that nothing was handed on; and Taniera, who had distinguished himself
+by a visit to Papeete and some high living in restaurants, was chosen
+for the scapegoat.&nbsp; The reader must understand that not Taniera
+but the authorities in Papeete were first in fault.&nbsp; The charge
+imposed was disproportioned.&nbsp; I have not yet heard of any Polynesian
+capable of such a burden; honest and upright Hawaiians - one in particular,
+who was admired even by the whites as an inflexible magistrate - have
+stumbled in the narrow path of the trustee.&nbsp; And Taniera, when
+the pinch came, scorned to denounce accomplices; others had shared the
+spoil, he bore the penalty alone.&nbsp; He was condemned in five years.&nbsp;
+The period, when I had the pleasure of his friendship, was not yet expired;
+he still drew prison rations, the sole and not unwelcome reminder of
+his chains, and, I believe, looked forward to the date of his enfranchisement
+with mere alarm.&nbsp; For he had no sense of shame in the position;
+complained of nothing but the defective table of his place of exile;
+regretted nothing but the fowls and eggs and fish of his own more favoured
+island.&nbsp; And as for his parishioners, they did not think one hair
+the less of him.&nbsp; A schoolboy, mulcted in ten thousand lines of
+Greek and dwelling sequestered in the dormitories, enjoys unabated consideration
+from his fellows.&nbsp; So with Taniera: a marked man, not a dishonoured;
+having fallen under the lash of the unthinkable gods; a Job, perhaps,
+or say a Taniera in the den of lions.&nbsp; Songs are likely made and
+sung about this saintly Robin Hood.&nbsp; On the other hand, he was
+even highly qualified for his office in the Church; being by nature
+a grave, considerate, and kindly man; his face rugged and serious, his
+smile bright; the master of several trades, a builder both of boats
+and houses; endowed with a fine pulpit voice; endowed besides with such
+a gift of eloquence that at the grave of the late chief of Fakarava
+he set all the assistants weeping.&nbsp; I never met a man of a mind
+more ecclesiastical; he loved to dispute and to inform himself of doctrine
+and the history of sects; and when I showed him the cuts in a volume
+of Chambers&rsquo;s <i>Encyclopaedia</i> - except for one of an ape
+- reserved his whole enthusiasm for cardinals&rsquo; hats, censers,
+candlesticks, and cathedrals.&nbsp; Methought when he looked upon the
+cardinal&rsquo;s hat a voice said low in his ear: &lsquo;Your foot is
+on the ladder.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Under the guidance of Taniera we were soon installed in what I believe
+to have been the best-appointed private house in Fakarava.&nbsp; It
+stood just beyond the church in an oblong patch of cultivation.&nbsp;
+More than three hundred sacks of soil were imported from Tahiti for
+the Residency garden; and this must shortly be renewed, for the earth
+blows away, sinks in crevices of the coral, and is sought for at last
+in vain.&nbsp; I know not how much earth had gone to the garden of my
+villa; some at least, for an alley of prosperous bananas ran to the
+gate, and over the rest of the enclosure, which was covered with the
+usual clinker-like fragments of smashed coral, not only coco-palms and
+mikis but also fig-trees flourished, all of a delicious greenness.&nbsp;
+Of course there was no blade of grass.&nbsp; In front a picket fence
+divided us from the white road, the palm-fringed margin of the lagoon,
+and the lagoon itself, reflecting clouds by day and stars by night.&nbsp;
+At the back, a bulwark of uncemented coral enclosed us from the narrow
+belt of bush and the nigh ocean beach where the seas thundered, the
+roar and wash of them still humming in the chambers of the house.<br>
+<br>
+This itself was of one story, verandahed front and back.&nbsp; It contained
+three rooms, three sewing-machines, three sea-chests, chairs, tables,
+a pair of beds, a cradle, a double-barrelled gun, a pair of enlarged
+coloured photographs, a pair of coloured prints after Wilkie and Mulready,
+and a French lithograph with the legend: &lsquo;<i>Le brigade du G&eacute;n&eacute;ral
+Lepasset br&ucirc;lant son drapeau</i> <i>devant Metz</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Under the stilts of the house a stove was rusting, till we drew it forth
+and put it in commission.&nbsp; Not far off was the burrow in the coral
+whence we supplied ourselves with brackish water.&nbsp; There was live
+stock, besides, on the estate - cocks and hens and a brace of ill-regulated
+cats, whom Taniera came every morning with the sun to feed on grated
+cocoa-nut.&nbsp; His voice was our regular r&eacute;veille, ringing
+pleasantly about the garden: &lsquo;Pooty - pooty - poo - poo - poo!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Far as we were from the public offices, the nearness of the chapel made
+our situation what is called eligible in advertisements, and gave us
+a side look on some native life.&nbsp; Every morning, as soon as he
+had fed the fowls, Taniera set the bell agoing in the small belfry;
+and the faithful, who were not very numerous, gathered to prayers.&nbsp;
+I was once present: it was the Lord&rsquo;s day, and seven females and
+eight males composed the congregation.&nbsp; A woman played precentor,
+starting with a longish note; the catechist joined in upon the second
+bar; and then the faithful in a body.&nbsp; Some had printed hymn-books
+which they followed; some of the rest filled up with &lsquo;eh - eh
+- eh,&rsquo; the Paumotuan tol-de-rol.&nbsp; After the hymn, we had
+an antiphonal prayer or two; and then Taniera rose from the front bench,
+where he had been sitting in his catechist&rsquo;s robes, passed within
+the altar-rails, opened his Tahitian Bible, and began to preach from
+notes.&nbsp; I understood one word - the name of God; but the preacher
+managed his voice with taste, used rare and expressive gestures, and
+made a strong impression of sincerity.&nbsp; The plain service, the
+vernacular Bible, the hymn-tunes mostly on an English pattern - &lsquo;God
+save the Queen,&rsquo; I was informed, a special favourite, - all, save
+some paper flowers upon the altar, seemed not merely but austerely Protestant.&nbsp;
+It is thus the Catholics have met their low island proselytes half-way.<br>
+<br>
+Taniera had the keys of our house; it was with him I made my bargain,
+if that could be called a bargain in which all was remitted to my generosity;
+it was he who fed the cats and poultry, he who came to call and pick
+a meal with us like an acknowledged friend; and we long fondly supposed
+he was our landlord.&nbsp; This belief was not to bear the test of experience;
+and, as my chapter has to relate, no certainty succeeded it.<br>
+<br>
+We passed some days of airless quiet and great heat; shell-gatherers
+were warned from the ocean beach, where sunstroke waited them from ten
+till four; the highest palm hung motionless, there was no voice audible
+but that of the sea on the far side.&nbsp; At last, about four of a
+certain afternoon, long cat&rsquo;s-paws flawed the face of the lagoon;
+and presently in the tree-tops there awoke the grateful bustle of the
+trades, and all the houses and alleys of the island were fanned out.&nbsp;
+To more than one enchanted ship, that had lain long becalmed in view
+of the green shore, the wind brought deliverance; and by daylight on
+the morrow a schooner and two cutters lay moored in the port of Rotoava.&nbsp;
+Not only in the outer sea, but in the lagoon itself, a certain traffic
+woke with the reviving breeze; and among the rest one Fran&ccedil;ois,
+a half-blood, set sail with the first light in his own half-decked cutter.&nbsp;
+He had held before a court appointment; being, I believe, the Residency
+sweeper-out.&nbsp; Trouble arising with the unpopular Vice-Resident,
+he had thrown his honours down, and fled to the far parts of the atoll
+to plant cabbages - or at least coco-palms.&nbsp; Thence he was now
+driven by such need as even a Cincinnatus must acknowledge, and fared
+for the capital city, the seat of his late functions, to exchange half
+a ton of copra for necessary flour.&nbsp; And here, for a while, the
+story leaves to tell of his voyaging.<br>
+<br>
+It must tell, instead, of our house, where, toward seven at night, the
+catechist came suddenly in with his pleased air of being welcome; armed
+besides with a considerable bunch of keys.&nbsp; These he proceeded
+to try on the sea-chests, drawing each in turn from its place against
+the wall.&nbsp; Heads of strangers appeared in the doorway and volunteered
+suggestions.&nbsp; All in vain.&nbsp; Either they were the wrong keys
+or the wrong boxes, or the wrong man was trying them.&nbsp; For a little
+Taniera fumed and fretted; then had recourse to the more summary method
+of the hatchet; one of the chests was broken open, and an armful of
+clothing, male and female, baled out and handed to the strangers on
+the verandah.<br>
+<br>
+These were Fran&ccedil;ois, his wife, and their child.&nbsp; About eight
+a.m., in the midst of the lagoon, their cutter had capsized in jibbing.&nbsp;
+They got her righted, and though she was still full of water put the
+child on board.&nbsp; The mainsail had been carried away, but the jib
+still drew her sluggishly along, and Fran&ccedil;ois and the woman swam
+astern and worked the rudder with their hands.&nbsp; The cold was cruel;
+the fatigue, as time went on, became excessive; and in that preserve
+of sharks, fear hunted them.&nbsp; Again and again, Fran&ccedil;ois,
+the half-breed, would have desisted and gone down; but the woman, whole
+blood of an amphibious race, still supported him with cheerful words.&nbsp;
+I am reminded of a woman of Hawaii who swam with her husband, I dare
+not say how many miles, in a high sea, and came ashore at last with
+his dead body in her arms.&nbsp; It was about five in the evening, after
+nine hours&rsquo; swimming, that Fran&ccedil;ois and his wife reached
+land at Rotoava.&nbsp; The gallant fight was won, and instantly the
+more childish side of native character appears.&nbsp; They had supped,
+and told and retold their story, dripping as they came; the flesh of
+the woman, whom Mrs. Stevenson helped to shift, was cold as stone; and
+Fran&ccedil;ois, having changed to a dry cotton shirt and trousers,
+passed the remainder of the evening on my floor and between open doorways,
+in a thorough draught.&nbsp; Yet Fran&ccedil;ois, the son of a French
+father, speaks excellent French himself and seems intelligent.<br>
+<br>
+It was our first idea that the catechist, true to his evangelical vocation,
+was clothing the naked from his superfluity.&nbsp; Then it came out
+that Fran&ccedil;ois was but dealing with his own.&nbsp; The clothes
+were his, so was the chest, so was the house.&nbsp; Fran&ccedil;ois
+was in fact the landlord.&nbsp; Yet you observe he had hung back on
+the verandah while Taniera tried his &lsquo;prentice hand upon the locks:
+and even now, when his true character appeared, the only use he made
+of the estate was to leave the clothes of his family drying on the fence.&nbsp;
+Taniera was still the friend of the house, still fed the poultry, still
+came about us on his daily visits, Fran&ccedil;ois, during the remainder
+of his stay, holding bashfully aloof.&nbsp; And there was stranger matter.&nbsp;
+Since Fran&ccedil;ois had lost the whole load of his cutter, the half
+ton of copra, an axe, bowls, knives, and clothes - since he had in a
+manner to begin the world again, and his necessary flour was not yet
+bought or paid for - I proposed to advance him what he needed on the
+rent.&nbsp; To my enduring amazement he refused, and the reason he gave
+- if that can be called a reason which but darkens counsel - was that
+Taniera was his friend.&nbsp; His friend, you observe; not his creditor.&nbsp;
+I inquired into that, and was assured that Taniera, an exile in a strange
+isle, might possibly be in debt himself, but certainly was no man&rsquo;s
+creditor.<br>
+<br>
+Very early one morning we were awakened by a bustling presence in the
+yard, and found our camp had been surprised by a tall, lean old native
+lady, dressed in what were obviously widow&rsquo;s weeds.&nbsp; You
+could see at a glance she was a notable woman, a housewife, sternly
+practical, alive with energy, and with fine possibilities of temper.&nbsp;
+Indeed, there was nothing native about her but the skin; and the type
+abounds, and is everywhere respected, nearer home.&nbsp; It did us good
+to see her scour the grounds, examining the plants and chickens; watering,
+feeding, trimming them; taking angry, purpose-like possession.&nbsp;
+When she neared the house our sympathy abated; when she came to the
+broken chest I wished I were elsewhere.&nbsp; We had scarce a word in
+common; but her whole lean body spoke for her with indignant eloquence.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My chest!&rsquo; it cried, with a stress on the possessive.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My chest - broken open!&nbsp; This is a fine state of things!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I hastened to lay the blame where it belonged - on Fran&ccedil;ois and
+his wife - and found I had made things worse instead of better.&nbsp;
+She repeated the names at first with incredulity, then with despair.&nbsp;
+A while she seemed stunned, next fell to disembowelling the box, piling
+the goods on the floor, and visibly computing the extent of Fran&ccedil;ois&rsquo;s
+ravages; and presently after she was observed in high speech with Taniera,
+who seemed to hang an ear like one reproved.<br>
+<br>
+Here, then, by all known marks, should be my land-lady at last; here
+was every character of the proprietor fully developed.&nbsp; Should
+I not approach her on the still depending question of my rent?&nbsp;
+I carried the point to an adviser.&nbsp; &lsquo;Nonsense!&rsquo; he
+cried.&nbsp; &lsquo;That&rsquo;s the old woman, the mother.&nbsp; It
+doesn&rsquo;t belong to her.&nbsp; I believe that&rsquo;s the man the
+house belongs to,&rsquo; and he pointed to one of the coloured photographs
+on the wall.&nbsp; On this I gave up all desire of understanding; and
+when the time came for me to leave, in the judgment-hall of the archipelago,
+and with the awful countenance of the acting Governor, I duly paid my
+rent to Taniera.&nbsp; He was satisfied, and so was I.&nbsp; But what
+had he to do with it?&nbsp; Mr. Donat, acting magistrate and a man of
+kindred blood, could throw no light upon the mystery; a plain private
+person, with a taste for letters, cannot be expected to do more.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER IV - TRAITS AND SECTS IN THE PAUMOTUS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The most careless reader must have remarked a change of air since the
+Marquesas.&nbsp; The house, crowded with effects, the bustling housewife
+counting her possessions, the serious, indoctrinated island pastor,
+the long fight for life in the lagoon: here are traits of a new world.&nbsp;
+I read in a pamphlet (I will not give the author&rsquo;s name) that
+the Marquesan especially resembles the Paumotuan.&nbsp; I should take
+the two races, though so near in neighbourhood, to be extremes of Polynesian
+diversity.&nbsp; The Marquesan is certainly the most beautiful of human
+races, and one of the tallest - the Paumotuan averaging a good inch
+shorter, and not even handsome; the Marquesan open-handed, inert, insensible
+to religion, childishly self-indulgent - the Paumotuan greedy, hardy,
+enterprising, a religious disputant, and with a trace of the ascetic
+character.<br>
+<br>
+Yet a few years ago, and the people of the archipelago were crafty savages.&nbsp;
+Their isles might be called sirens&rsquo; isles, not merely from the
+attraction they exerted on the passing mariner, but from the perils
+that awaited him on shore.&nbsp; Even to this day, in certain outlying
+islands, danger lingers; and the civilized Paumotuan dreads to land
+and hesitates to accost his backward brother.&nbsp; But, except in these,
+to-day the peril is a memory.&nbsp; When our generation were yet in
+the cradle and playroom it was still a living fact.&nbsp; Between 1830
+and 1840, Hao, for instance, was a place of the most dangerous approach,
+where ships were seized and crews kidnapped.&nbsp; As late as 1856,
+the schooner <i>Sarah Ann</i> sailed from Papeete and was seen no more.&nbsp;
+She had women on board, and children, the captain&rsquo;s wife, a nursemaid,
+a baby, and the two young sons of a Captain Steven on their way to the
+mainland for schooling.&nbsp; All were supposed to have perished in
+a squall.&nbsp; A year later, the captain of the <i>Julia</i>, coasting
+along the island variously called Bligh, Lagoon, and Tematangi saw armed
+natives follow the course of his schooner, clad in many-coloured stuffs.&nbsp;
+Suspicion was at once aroused; the mother of the lost children was profuse
+of money; and one expedition having found the place deserted, and returned
+content with firing a few shots, she raised and herself accompanied
+another.&nbsp; None appeared to greet or to oppose them; they roamed
+a while among abandoned huts and empty thickets; then formed two parties
+and set forth to beat, from end to end, the pandanus jungle of the island.&nbsp;
+One man remained alone by the landing-place - Teina, a chief of Anaa,
+leader of the armed natives who made the strength of the expedition.&nbsp;
+Now that his comrades were departed this way and that, on their laborious
+exploration, the silence fell profound; and this silence was the ruin
+of the islanders.&nbsp; A sound of stones rattling caught the ear of
+Teina.&nbsp; He looked, thinking to perceive a crab, and saw instead
+the brown hand of a human being issue from a fissure in the ground.&nbsp;
+A shout recalled the search parties and announced their doom to the
+buried caitiffs.&nbsp; In the cave below, sixteen were found crouching
+among human bones and singular and horrid curiosities.&nbsp; One was
+a head of golden hair, supposed to be a relic of the captain&rsquo;s
+wife; another was half of the body of a European child, sun-dried and
+stuck upon a stick, doubtless with some design of wizardry.<br>
+<br>
+The Paumotuan is eager to be rich.&nbsp; He saves, grudges, buries money,
+fears not work.&nbsp; For a dollar each, two natives passed the hours
+of daylight cleaning our ship&rsquo;s copper.&nbsp; It was strange to
+see them so indefatigable and so much at ease in the water - working
+at times with their pipes lighted, the smoker at times submerged and
+only the glowing bowl above the surface; it was stranger still to think
+they were next congeners to the incapable Marquesan.&nbsp; But the Paumotuan
+not only saves, grudges, and works, he steals besides; or, to be more
+precise, he swindles.&nbsp; He will never deny a debt, he only flees
+his creditor.&nbsp; He is always keen for an advance; so soon as he
+has fingered it he disappears.&nbsp; He knows your ship; so soon as
+it nears one island, he is off to another.&nbsp; You may think you know
+his name; he has already changed it.&nbsp; Pursuit in that infinity
+of isles were fruitless.&nbsp; The result can be given in a nutshell.&nbsp;
+It has been actually proposed in a Government report to secure debts
+by taking a photograph of the debtor; and the other day in Papeete credits
+on the Paumotus to the amount of sixteen thousand pounds were sold for
+less than forty - <i>quatre cent mille francs pour moins de mille</i>
+<i>francs</i>.&nbsp; Even so, the purchase was thought hazardous; and
+only the man who made it and who had special opportunities could have
+dared to give so much.<br>
+<br>
+The Paumotuan is sincerely attached to those of his own blood and household.&nbsp;
+A touching affection sometimes unites wife and husband.&nbsp; Their
+children, while they are alive, completely rule them; after they are
+dead, their bones or their mummies are often jealously preserved and
+carried from atoll to atoll in the wanderings of the family.&nbsp; I
+was told there were many houses in Fakarava with the mummy of a child
+locked in a sea-chest; after I heard it, I would glance a little jealously
+at those by my own bed; in that cupboard, also, it was possible there
+was a tiny skeleton.<br>
+<br>
+The race seems in a fair way to survive.&nbsp; From fifteen islands,
+whose rolls I had occasion to consult, I found a proportion of 59 births
+to 47 deaths for 1887.&nbsp; Dropping three out of the fifteen, there
+remained for the other twelve the comfortable ratio of 50 births to
+32 deaths.&nbsp; Long habits of hardship and activity doubtless explain
+the contrast with Marquesan figures.&nbsp; But the Paumotuan displays,
+besides, a certain concern for health and the rudiments of a sanitary
+discipline.&nbsp; Public talk with these free-spoken people plays the
+part of the Contagious Diseases Act; in-comers to fresh islands anxiously
+inquire if all be well; and syphilis, when contracted, is successfully
+treated with indigenous herbs.&nbsp; Like their neighbours of Tahiti,
+from whom they have perhaps imbibed the error, they regard leprosy with
+comparative indifference, elephantiasis with disproportionate fear.&nbsp;
+But, unlike indeed to the Tahitian, their alarm puts on the guise of
+self-defence.&nbsp; Any one stricken with this painful and ugly malady
+is confined to the ends of villages, denied the use of paths and highways,
+and condemned to transport himself between his house and coco-patch
+by water only, his very footprint being held infectious.&nbsp; Fe&rsquo;efe&rsquo;e,
+being a creature of marshes and the sequel of malarial fever, is not
+original in atolls.&nbsp; On the single isle of Makatea, where the lagoon
+is now a marsh, the disease has made a home.&nbsp; Many suffer; they
+are excluded (if Mr. Wilmot be right) from much of the comfort of society;
+and it is believed they take a secret vengeance.&nbsp; The defections
+of the sick are considered highly poisonous.&nbsp; Early in the morning,
+it is narrated, aged and malicious persons creep into the sleeping village,
+and stealthily make water at the doors of the houses of young men.&nbsp;
+Thus they propagate disease; thus they breathe on and obliterate comeliness
+and health, the objects of their envy.&nbsp; Whether horrid fact or
+more abominable legend, it equally depicts that something bitter and
+energetic which distinguishes Paumotuan man.<br>
+<br>
+The archipelago is divided between two main religions, Catholic and
+Mormon.&nbsp; They front each other proudly with a false air of permanence;
+yet are but shapes, their membership in a perpetual flux.&nbsp; The
+Mormon attends mass with devotion: the Catholic sits attentive at a
+Mormon sermon, and to-morrow each may have transferred allegiance.&nbsp;
+One man had been a pillar of the Church of Rome for fifteen years; his
+wife dying, he decided that must be a poor religion that could not save
+a man his wife, and turned Mormon.&nbsp; According to one informant,
+Catholicism was the more fashionable in health, but on the approach
+of sickness it was judged prudent to secede.&nbsp; As a Mormon, there
+were five chances out of six you might recover; as a Catholic, your
+hopes were small; and this opinion is perhaps founded on the comfortable
+rite of unction.<br>
+<br>
+We all know what Catholics are, whether in the Paumotus or at home.&nbsp;
+But the Paumotuan Mormon seemed a phenomenon apart.&nbsp; He marries
+but the one wife, uses the Protestant Bible, observes Protestant forms
+of worship, forbids the use of liquor and tobacco, practises adult baptism
+by immersion, and after every public sin, rechristens the backslider.&nbsp;
+I advised with Mahinui, whom I found well informed in the history of
+the American Mormons, and he declared against the least connection.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>Pour moi</i>,&rsquo; said he, with a fine charity, &lsquo;<i>les
+Mormons ici un petit Catholiques</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Some months later
+I had an opportunity to consult an orthodox fellow-countryman, an old
+dissenting Highlander, long settled in Tahiti, but still breathing of
+the heather of Tiree.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why do they call themselves Mormons?&rsquo;
+I asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;My dear, and that is my question!&rsquo; he exclaimed.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;For by all that I can hear of their doctrine, I have nothing
+to say against it, and their life, it is above reproach.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And for all that, Mormons they are, but of the earlier sowing: the so-called
+Josephites, the followers of Joseph Smith, the opponents of Brigham
+Young.<br>
+<br>
+Grant, then, the Mormons to be Mormons.&nbsp; Fresh points at once arise:
+What are the Israelites? and what the Kanitus?&nbsp; For a long while
+back the sect had been divided into Mormons proper and so-called Israelites,
+I never could hear why.&nbsp; A few years since there came a visiting
+missionary of the name of Williams, who made an excellent collection,
+and retired, leaving fresh disruption imminent.&nbsp; Something irregular
+(as I was told) in his way of &lsquo;opening the service&rsquo; had
+raised partisans and enemies; the church was once more rent asunder;
+and a new sect, the Kanitu, issued from the division.&nbsp; Since then
+Kanitus and Israelites, like the Cameronians and the United Presbyterians,
+have made common cause; and the ecclesiastical history of the Paumotus
+is, for the moment, uneventful.&nbsp; There will be more doing before
+long, and these isles bid fair to be the Scotland of the South.&nbsp;
+Two things I could never learn.&nbsp; The nature of the innovations
+of the Rev. Mr. Williams none would tell me, and of the meaning of the
+name Kanitu none had a guess.&nbsp; It was not Tahitian, it was not
+Marquesan; it formed no part of that ancient speech of the Paumotus,
+now passing swiftly into obsolescence.&nbsp; One man, a priest, God
+bless him! said it was the Latin for a little dog.&nbsp; I have found
+it since as the name of a god in New Guinea; it must be a bolder man
+than I who should hint at a connection.&nbsp; Here, then, is a singular
+thing: a brand-new sect, arising by popular acclamation, and a nonsense
+word invented for its name.<br>
+<br>
+The design of mystery seems obvious, and according to a very intelligent
+observer, Mr. Magee of Mangareva, this element of the mysterious is
+a chief attraction of the Mormon Church.&nbsp; It enjoys some of the
+status of Freemasonry at home, and there is for the convert some of
+the exhilaration of adventure.&nbsp; Other attractions are certainly
+conjoined.&nbsp; Perpetual rebaptism, leading to a succession of baptismal
+feasts, is found, both from the social and the spiritual side, a pleasing
+feature.&nbsp; More important is the fact that all the faithful enjoy
+office; perhaps more important still, the strictness of the discipline.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The veto on liquor,&rsquo; said Mr. Magee, &lsquo;brings them
+plenty members.&rsquo;&nbsp; There is no doubt these islanders are fond
+of drink, and no doubt they refrain from the indulgence; a bout on a
+feast-day, for instance, may be followed by a week or a month of rigorous
+sobriety.&nbsp; Mr. Wilmot attributes this to Paumotuan frugality and
+the love of hoarding; it goes far deeper.&nbsp; I have mentioned that
+I made a feast on board the <i>Casco</i>.&nbsp; To wash down ship&rsquo;s
+bread and jam, each guest was given the choice of rum or syrup, and
+out of the whole number only one man voted - in a defiant tone, and
+amid shouts of mirth - for &lsquo;Trum&rsquo;!&nbsp; This was in public.&nbsp;
+I had the meanness to repeat the experiment, whenever I had a chance,
+within the four walls of my house; and three at least, who had refused
+at the festival, greedily drank rum behind a door.&nbsp; But there were
+others thoroughly consistent.&nbsp; I said the virtues of the race were
+bourgeois and puritan; and how bourgeois is this! how puritanic! how
+Scottish! and how Yankee! - the temptation, the resistance, the public
+hypocritical conformity, the Pharisees, the Holy Willies, and the true
+disciples.&nbsp; With such a people the popularity of an ascetic Church
+appears legitimate; in these strict rules, in this perpetual supervision,
+the weak find their advantage, the strong a certain pleasure; and the
+doctrine of rebaptism, a clean bill and a fresh start, will comfort
+many staggering professors.<br>
+<br>
+There is yet another sect, or what is called a sect - no doubt improperly
+- that of the Whistlers.&nbsp; Duncan Cameron, so clear in favour of
+the Mormons, was no less loud in condemnation of the Whistlers.&nbsp;
+Yet I do not know; I still fancy there is some connection, perhaps fortuitous,
+probably disavowed.&nbsp; Here at least are some doings in the house
+of an Israelite clergyman (or prophet) in the island of Anaa, of which
+I am equally sure that Duncan would disclaim and the Whistlers hail
+them for an imitation of their own.&nbsp; My informant, a Tahitian and
+a Catholic, occupied one part of the house; the prophet and his family
+lived in the other.&nbsp; Night after night the Mormons, in the one
+end, held their evening sacrifice of song; night after night, in the
+other, the wife of the Tahitian lay awake and listened to their singing
+with amazement.&nbsp; At length she could contain herself no longer,
+woke her husband, and asked him what he heard.&nbsp; &lsquo;I hear several
+persons singing hymns,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; she
+returned, &lsquo;but listen again!&nbsp; Do you not hear something supernatural?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+His attention thus directed, he was aware of a strange buzzing voice
+- and yet he declared it was beautiful - which justly accompanied the
+singers.&nbsp; The next day he made inquiries.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is a
+spirit,&rsquo; said the prophet, with entire simplicity, &lsquo;which
+has lately made a practice of joining us at family worship.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It did not appear the thing was visible, and like other spirits raised
+nearer home in these degenerate days, it was rudely ignorant, at first
+could only buzz, and had only learned of late to bear a part correctly
+in the music.<br>
+<br>
+The performances of the Whistlers are more business-like.&nbsp; Their
+meetings are held publicly with open doors, all being &lsquo;cordially
+invited to attend.&rsquo;&nbsp; The faithful sit about the room - according
+to one informant, singing hymns; according to another, now singing and
+now whistling; the leader, the wizard - let me rather say, the medium
+- sits in the midst, enveloped in a sheet and silent; and presently,
+from just above his head, or sometimes from the midst of the roof, an
+aerial whistling proceeds, appalling to the inexperienced.&nbsp; This,
+it appears, is the language of the dead; its purport is taken down progressively
+by one of the experts, writing, I was told, &lsquo;as fast as a telegraph
+operator&rsquo;; and the communications are at last made public.&nbsp;
+They are of the baldest triviality; a schooner is, perhaps, announced,
+some idle gossip reported of a neighbour, or if the spirit shall have
+been called to consultation on a case of sickness, a remedy may be suggested.&nbsp;
+One of these, immersion in scalding water, not long ago proved fatal
+to the patient.&nbsp; The whole business is very dreary, very silly,
+and very European; it has none of the picturesque qualities of similar
+conjurations in New Zealand; it seems to possess no kernel of possible
+sense, like some that I shall describe among the Gilbert islanders.&nbsp;
+Yet I was told that many hardy, intelligent natives were inveterate
+Whistlers.&nbsp; &lsquo;Like Mahinui?&rsquo; I asked, willing to have
+a standard; and I was told &lsquo;Yes.&rsquo;&nbsp; Why should I wonder?&nbsp;
+Men more enlightened than my convict-catechist sit down at home to follies
+equally sterile and dull.<br>
+<br>
+The medium is sometimes female.&nbsp; It was a woman, for instance,
+who introduced these practices on the north coast of Taiarapu, to the
+scandal of her own connections, her brother-in-law in particular declaring
+she was drunk.&nbsp; But what shocked Tahiti might seem fit enough in
+the Paumotus, the more so as certain women there possess, by the gift
+of nature, singular and useful powers.&nbsp; They say they are honest,
+well-intentioned ladies, some of them embarrassed by their weird inheritance.&nbsp;
+And indeed the trouble caused by this endowment is so great, and the
+protection afforded so infinitesimally small, that I hesitate whether
+to call it a gift or a hereditary curse.&nbsp; You may rob this lady&rsquo;s
+coco-patch, steal her canoes, burn down her house, and slay her family
+scatheless; but one thing you must not do: you must not lay a hand upon
+her sleeping-mat, or your belly will swell, and you can only be cured
+by the lady or her husband.&nbsp; Here is the report of an eye-witness,
+Tasmanian born, educated, a man who has made money - certainly no fool.&nbsp;
+In 1886 he was present in a house on Makatea, where two lads began to
+skylark on the mats, and were (I think) ejected.&nbsp; Instantly after,
+their bellies began to swell; pains took hold on them; all manner of
+island remedies were exhibited in vain, and rubbing only magnified their
+sufferings.&nbsp; The man of the house was called, explained the nature
+of the visitation, and prepared the cure.&nbsp; A cocoa-nut was husked,
+filled with herbs, and with all the ceremonies of a launch, and the
+utterance of spells in the Paumotuan language, committed to the sea.&nbsp;
+From that moment the pains began to grow more easy and the swelling
+to subside.&nbsp; The reader may stare.&nbsp; I can assure him, if he
+moved much among old residents of the archipelago, he would be driven
+to admit one thing of two - either that there is something in the swollen
+bellies or nothing in the evidence of man.<br>
+<br>
+I have not met these gifted ladies; but I had an experience of my own,
+for I have played, for one night only, the part of the whistling spirit.&nbsp;
+It had been blowing wearily all day, but with the fall of night the
+wind abated, and the moon, which was then full, rolled in a clear sky.&nbsp;
+We went southward down the island on the side of the lagoon, walking
+through long-drawn forest aisles of palm, and on a floor of snowy sand.&nbsp;
+No life was abroad, nor sound of life; till in a clear part of the isle
+we spied the embers of a fire, and not far off, in a dark house, heard
+natives talking softly.&nbsp; To sit without a light, even in company,
+and under cover, is for a Paumotuan a somewhat hazardous extreme.&nbsp;
+The whole scene - the strong moonlight and crude shadows on the sand,
+the scattered coals, the sound of the low voices from the house, and
+the lap of the lagoon along the beach - put me (I know not how) on thoughts
+of superstition.&nbsp; I was barefoot, I observed my steps were noiseless,
+and drawing near to the dark house, but keeping well in shadow, began
+to whistle.&nbsp; &lsquo;The Heaving of the Lead&rsquo; was my air -
+no very tragic piece.&nbsp; With the first note the conversation and
+all movement ceased; silence accompanied me while I continued; and when
+I passed that way on my return I found the lamp was lighted in the house,
+but the tongues were still mute.&nbsp; All night, as I now think, the
+wretches shivered and were silent.&nbsp; For indeed, I had no guess
+at the time at the nature and magnitude of the terrors I inflicted,
+or with what grisly images the notes of that old song had peopled the
+dark house.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER V - A PAUMOTUAN FUNERAL<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+No, I had no guess of these men&rsquo;s terrors.&nbsp; Yet I had received
+ere that a hint, if I had understood; and the occasion was a funeral.<br>
+<br>
+A little apart in the main avenue of Rotoava, in a low hut of leaves
+that opened on a small enclosure, like a pigsty on a pen, an old man
+dwelt solitary with his aged wife.&nbsp; Perhaps they were too old to
+migrate with the others; perhaps they were too poor, and had no possessions
+to dispute.&nbsp; At least they had remained behind; and it thus befell
+that they were invited to my feast.&nbsp; I dare say it was quite a
+piece of politics in the pigsty whether to come or not to come, and
+the husband long swithered between curiosity and age, till curiosity
+conquered, and they came, and in the midst of that last merrymaking
+death tapped him on the shoulder.&nbsp; For some days, when the sky
+was bright and the wind cool, his mat would be spread in the main highway
+of the village, and he was to be seen lying there inert, a mere handful
+of a man, his wife inertly seated by his head.&nbsp; They seemed to
+have outgrown alike our needs and faculties; they neither spoke nor
+listened; they suffered us to pass without a glance; the wife did not
+fan, she seemed not to attend upon her husband, and the two poor antiques
+sat juxtaposed under the high canopy of palms, the human tragedy reduced
+to its bare elements, a sight beyond pathos, stirring a thrill of curiosity.&nbsp;
+And yet there was one touch of the pathetic haunted me: that so much
+youth and expectation should have run in these starved veins, and the
+man should have squandered all his lees of life on a pleasure party.<br>
+<br>
+On the morning of 17th September the sufferer died, and, time pressing,
+he was buried the same day at four.&nbsp; The cemetery lies to seaward
+behind Government House; broken coral, like so much road-metal, forms
+the surface; a few wooden crosses, a few inconsiderable upright stones,
+designate graves; a mortared wall, high enough to lean on, rings it
+about; a clustering shrub surrounds it with pale leaves.&nbsp; Here
+was the grave dug that morning, doubtless by uneasy diggers, to the
+sound of the nigh sea and the cries of sea-birds; meanwhile the dead
+man waited in his house, and the widow and another aged woman leaned
+on the fence before the door, no speech upon their lips, no speculation
+in their eyes.<br>
+<br>
+Sharp at the hour the procession was in march, the coffin wrapped in
+white and carried by four bearers; mourners behind - not many, for not
+many remained in Rotoava, and not many in black, for these were poor;
+the men in straw hats, white coats, and blue trousers or the gorgeous
+parti-coloured pariu, the Tahitian kilt; the women, with a few exceptions,
+brightly habited.&nbsp; Far in the rear came the widow, painfully carrying
+the dead man&rsquo;s mat; a creature aged beyond humanity, to the likeness
+of some missing link.<br>
+<br>
+The dead man had been a Mormon; but the Mormon clergyman was gone with
+the rest to wrangle over boundaries in the adjacent isle, and a layman
+took his office.&nbsp; Standing at the head of the open grave, in a
+white coat and blue pariu, his Tahitian Bible in his hand and one eye
+bound with a red handkerchief, he read solemnly that chapter in Job
+which has been read and heard over the bones of so many of our fathers,
+and with a good voice offered up two prayers.&nbsp; The wind and the
+surf bore a burthen.&nbsp; By the cemetery gate a mother in crimson
+suckled an infant rolled in blue.&nbsp; In the midst the widow sat upon
+the ground and polished one of the coffin-stretchers with a piece of
+coral; a little later she had turned her back to the grave and was playing
+with a leaf.&nbsp; Did she understand?&nbsp; God knows.&nbsp; The officiant
+paused a moment, stooped, and gathered and threw reverently on the coffin
+a handful of rattling coral.&nbsp; Dust to dust: but the grains of this
+dust were gross like cherries, and the true dust that was to follow
+sat near by, still cohering (as by a miracle) in the tragic semblance
+of a female ape.<br>
+<br>
+So far, Mormon or not, it was a Christian funeral.&nbsp; The well-known
+passage had been read from Job, the prayers had been rehearsed, the
+grave was filled, the mourners straggled homeward.&nbsp; With a little
+coarser grain of covering earth, a little nearer outcry of the sea,
+a stronger glare of sunlight on the rude enclosure, and some incongruous
+colours of attire, the well-remembered form had been observed.<br>
+<br>
+By rights it should have been otherwise.&nbsp; The mat should have been
+buried with its owner; but, the family being poor, it was thriftily
+reserved for a fresh service.&nbsp; The widow should have flung herself
+upon the grave and raised the voice of official grief, the neighbours
+have chimed in, and the narrow isle rung for a space with lamentation.&nbsp;
+But the widow was old; perhaps she had forgotten, perhaps never understood,
+and she played like a child with leaves and coffin-stretchers.&nbsp;
+In all ways my guest was buried with maimed rites.&nbsp; Strange to
+think that his last conscious pleasure was the <i>Casco</i> and my feast;
+strange to think that he had limped there, an old child, looking for
+some new good.&nbsp; And the good thing, rest, had been allotted him.<br>
+<br>
+But though the widow had neglected much, there was one part she must
+not utterly neglect.&nbsp; She came away with the dispersing funeral;
+but the dead man&rsquo;s mat was left behind upon the grave, and I learned
+that by set of sun she must return to sleep there.&nbsp; This vigil
+is imperative.&nbsp; From sundown till the rising of the morning star
+the Paumotuan must hold his watch above the ashes of his kindred.&nbsp;
+Many friends, if the dead have been a man of mark, will keep the watchers
+company; they will be well supplied with coverings against the weather;
+I believe they bring food, and the rite is persevered in for two weeks.&nbsp;
+Our poor survivor, if, indeed, she properly survived, had little to
+cover, and few to sit with her; on the night of the funeral a strong
+squall chased her from her place of watch; for days the weather held
+uncertain and outrageous; and ere seven nights were up she had desisted,
+and returned to sleep in her low roof.&nbsp; That she should be at the
+pains of returning for so short a visit to a solitary house, that this
+borderer of the grave should fear a little wind and a wet blanket, filled
+me at the time with musings.&nbsp; I could not say she was indifferent;
+she was so far beyond me in experience that the court of my criticism
+waived jurisdiction; but I forged excuses, telling myself she had perhaps
+little to lament, perhaps suffered much, perhaps understood nothing.&nbsp;
+And lo! in the whole affair there was no question whether of tenderness
+or piety, and the sturdy return of this old remnant was a mark either
+of uncommon sense or of uncommon fortitude.<br>
+<br>
+Yet one thing had occurred that partly set me on the trail.&nbsp; I
+have said the funeral passed much as at home.&nbsp; But when all was
+over, when we were trooping in decent silence from the graveyard gate
+and down the path to the settlement, a sudden inbreak of a different
+spirit startled and perhaps dismayed us.&nbsp; Two people walked not
+far apart in our procession: my friend Mr. Donat - Donat-Rimarau: &lsquo;Donat
+the much-handed&rsquo; - acting Vice-Resident, present ruler of the
+archipelago, by far the man of chief importance on the scene, but known
+besides for one of an unshakable good temper; and a certain comely,
+strapping young Paumotuan woman, the comeliest on the isle, not (let
+us hope) the bravest or the most polite.&nbsp; Of a sudden, ere yet
+the grave silence of the funeral was broken, she made a leap at the
+Resident, with pointed finger, shrieked a few words, and fell back again
+with a laughter, not a natural mirth.&nbsp; &lsquo;What did she say
+to you?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;She did not speak to <i>me</i>,&rsquo;
+said Donat, a shade perturbed; &lsquo;she spoke to the ghost of the
+dead man.&rsquo;&nbsp; And the purport of her speech was this: &lsquo;See
+there!&nbsp; Donat will be a fine feast for you to-night.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;M. Donat called it a jest,&rsquo; I wrote at the time in my diary.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;It seemed to me more in the nature of a terrified conjuration,
+as though she would divert the ghost&rsquo;s attention from herself.&nbsp;
+A cannibal race may well have cannibal phantoms.&rsquo;&nbsp; The guesses
+of the traveller appear foredoomed to be erroneous; yet in these I was
+precisely right.&nbsp; The woman had stood by in terror at the funeral,
+being then in a dread spot, the graveyard.&nbsp; She looked on in terror
+to the coming night, with that ogre, a new spirit, loosed upon the isle.&nbsp;
+And the words she had cried in Donat&rsquo;s face were indeed a terrified
+conjuration, basely to shield herself, basely to dedicate another in
+her stead.&nbsp; One thing is to be said in her excuse.&nbsp; Doubtless
+she partly chose Donat because he was a man of great good-nature, but
+partly, too, because he was a man of the half-caste.&nbsp; For I believe
+all natives regard white blood as a kind of talisman against the powers
+of hell.&nbsp; In no other way can they explain the unpunished recklessness
+of Europeans.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VI - GRAVEYARD STORIES<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+WITH my superstitious friend, the islander, I fear I am not wholly frank,
+often leading the way with stories of my own, and being always a grave
+and sometimes an excited hearer.&nbsp; But the deceit is scarce mortal,
+since I am as pleased to hear as he to tell, as pleased with the story
+as he with the belief; and, besides, it is entirely needful.&nbsp; For
+it is scarce possible to exaggerate the extent and empire of his superstitions;
+they mould his life, they colour his thinking; and when he does not
+speak to me of ghosts, and gods, and devils, he is playing the dissembler
+and talking only with his lips.&nbsp; With thoughts so different, one
+must indulge the other; and I would rather that I should indulge his
+superstition than he my incredulity.&nbsp; Of one thing, besides, I
+may be sure: Let me indulge it as I please, I shall not hear the whole;
+for he is already on his guard with me, and the amount of the lore is
+boundless.<br>
+<br>
+I will give but a few instances at random, chiefly from my own doorstep
+in Upolu, during the past month (October 1890).&nbsp; One of my workmen
+was sent the other day to the banana patch, there to dig; this is a
+hollow of the mountain, buried in woods, out of all sight and cry of
+mankind; and long before dusk Lafaele was back again beside the cook-house
+with embarrassed looks; he dared not longer stay alone, he was afraid
+of &lsquo;spirits in the bush.&rsquo;&nbsp; It seems these are the souls
+of the unburied dead, haunting where they fell, and wearing woodland
+shapes of pig, or bird, or insect; the bush is full of them, they seem
+to eat nothing, slay solitary wanderers apparently in spite, and at
+times, in human form, go down to villages and consort with the inhabitants
+undetected.&nbsp; So much I learned a day or so after, walking in the
+bush with a very intelligent youth, a native.&nbsp; It was a little
+before noon; a grey day and squally; and perhaps I had spoken lightly.&nbsp;
+A dark squall burst on the side of the mountain; the woods shook and
+cried; the dead leaves rose from the ground in clouds, like butterflies;
+and my companion came suddenly to a full stop.&nbsp; He was afraid,
+he said, of the trees falling; but as soon as I had changed the subject
+of our talk he proceeded with alacrity.&nbsp; A day or two before a
+messenger came up the mountain from Apia with a letter; I was in the
+bush, he must await my return, then wait till I had answered: and before
+I was done his voice sounded shrill with terror of the coming night
+and the long forest road.&nbsp; These are the commons.&nbsp; Take the
+chiefs.&nbsp; There has been a great coming and going of signs and omens
+in our group.&nbsp; One river ran down blood; red eels were captured
+in another; an unknown fish was thrown upon the coast, an ominous word
+found written on its scales.&nbsp; So far we might be reading in a monkish
+chronicle; now we come on a fresh note, at once modern and Polynesian.&nbsp;
+The gods of Upolu and Savaii, our two chief islands, contended recently
+at cricket.&nbsp; Since then they are at war.&nbsp; Sounds of battle
+are heard to roll along the coast.&nbsp; A woman saw a man swim from
+the high seas and plunge direct into the bush; he was no man of that
+neighbourhood; and it was known he was one of the gods, speeding to
+a council.&nbsp; Most perspicuous of all, a missionary on Savaii, who
+is also a medical man, was disturbed late in the night by knocking;
+it was no hour for the dispensary, but at length he woke his servant
+and sent him to inquire; the servant, looking from a window, beheld
+crowds of persons, all with grievous wounds, lopped limbs, broken heads,
+and bleeding bullet-holes; but when the door was opened all had disappeared.&nbsp;
+They were gods from the field of battle.&nbsp; Now these reports have
+certainly significance; it is not hard to trace them to political grumblers
+or to read in them a threat of coming trouble; from that merely human
+side I found them ominous myself.&nbsp; But it was the spiritual side
+of their significance that was discussed in secret council by my rulers.&nbsp;
+I shall best depict this mingled habit of the Polynesian mind by two
+connected instances.&nbsp; I once lived in a village, the name of which
+I do not mean to tell.&nbsp; The chief and his sister were persons perfectly
+intelligent: gentlefolk, apt of speech.&nbsp; The sister was very religious,
+a great church-goer, one that used to reprove me if I stayed away; I
+found afterwards that she privately worshipped a shark.&nbsp; The chief
+himself was somewhat of a freethinker; at the least, a latitudinarian:
+he was a man, besides, filled with European knowledge and accomplishments;
+of an impassive, ironical habit; and I should as soon have expected
+superstition in Mr. Herbert Spencer.&nbsp; Hear the sequel.&nbsp; I
+had discovered by unmistakable signs that they buried too shallow in
+the village graveyard, and I took my friend, as the responsible authority,
+to task.&nbsp; &lsquo;There is something wrong about your graveyard,&rsquo;
+said I, &lsquo;which you must attend to, or it may have very bad results.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Something wrong?&nbsp; What is it?&rsquo; he asked, with an emotion
+that surprised me.&nbsp; &lsquo;If you care to go along there any evening
+about nine o&rsquo;clock you can see for yourself,&rsquo; said I.&nbsp;
+He stepped backward.&nbsp; &lsquo;A ghost!&rsquo; he cried.<br>
+<br>
+In short, in the whole field of the South Seas, there is not one to
+blame another.&nbsp; Half blood and whole, pious and debauched, intelligent
+and dull, all men believe in ghosts, all men combine with their recent
+Christianity fear of and a lingering faith in the old island deities.&nbsp;
+So, in Europe, the gods of Olympus slowly dwindled into village bogies;
+so to-day, the theological Highlander sneaks from under the eye of the
+Free Church divine to lay an offering by a sacred well.<br>
+<br>
+I try to deal with the whole matter here because of a particular quality
+in Paumotuan superstitions.&nbsp; It is true I heard them told by a
+man with a genius for such narrations.&nbsp; Close about our evening
+lamp, within sound of the island surf, we hung on his words, thrilling.&nbsp;
+The reader, in far other scenes, must listen close for the faint echo.<br>
+<br>
+This bundle of weird stories sprang from the burial and the woman&rsquo;s
+selfish conjuration.&nbsp; I was dissatisfied with what I heard, harped
+upon questions, and struck at last this vein of metal.&nbsp; It is from
+sundown to about four in the morning that the kinsfolk camp upon the
+grave; and these are the hours of the spirits&rsquo; wanderings.&nbsp;
+At any time of the night - it may be earlier, it may be later - a sound
+is to be heard below, which is the noise of his liberation; at four
+sharp, another and a louder marks the instant of the re-imprisonment;
+between-whiles, he goes his malignant rounds.&nbsp; &lsquo;Did you ever
+see an evil spirit?&rsquo; was once asked of a Paumotuan.&nbsp; &lsquo;Once.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Under what form?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;It was in the form of a
+crane.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And how did you know that crane to be a spirit?&rsquo;
+was asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;I will tell you,&rsquo; he answered; and this
+was the purport of his inconclusive narrative.&nbsp; His father had
+been dead nearly a fortnight; others had wearied of the watch; and as
+the sun was setting, he found himself by the grave alone.&nbsp; It was
+not yet dark, rather the hour of the afterglow, when he was aware of
+a snow-white crane upon the coral mound; presently more cranes came,
+some white, some black; then the cranes vanished, and he saw in their
+place a white cat, to which there was silently joined a great company
+of cats of every hue conceivable; then these also disappeared, and he
+was left astonished.<br>
+<br>
+This was an anodyne appearance.&nbsp; Take instead the experience of
+Rua-a-mariterangi on the isle of Katiu.&nbsp; He had a need for some
+pandanus, and crossed the isle to the sea-beach, where it chiefly flourishes.&nbsp;
+The day was still, and Rua was surprised to hear a crashing sound among
+the thickets, and then the fall of a considerable tree.&nbsp; Here must
+be some one building a canoe; and he entered the margin of the wood
+to find and pass the time of day with this chance neighbour.&nbsp; The
+crashing sounded more at hand; and then he was aware of something drawing
+swiftly near among the tree-tops.&nbsp; It swung by its heels downward,
+like an ape, so that its hands were free for murder; it depended safely
+by the slightest twigs; the speed of its coming was incredible; and
+soon Rua recognised it for a corpse, horrible with age, its bowels hanging
+as it came.&nbsp; Prayer was the weapon of Christian in the Valley of
+the Shadow, and it is to prayer that Rua-a-mariterangi attributes his
+escape.&nbsp; No merely human expedition had availed.<br>
+<br>
+This demon was plainly from the grave; yet you will observe he was abroad
+by day.&nbsp; And inconsistent as it may seem with the hours of the
+night watch and the many references to the rising of the morning star,
+it is no singular exception.&nbsp; I could never find a case of another
+who had seen this ghost, diurnal and arboreal in its habits; but others
+have heard the fall of the tree, which seems the signal of its coming.&nbsp;
+Mr. Donat was once pearling on the uninhabited isle of Haraiki.&nbsp;
+It was a day without a breath of wind, such as alternate in the archipelago
+with days of contumelious breezes.&nbsp; The divers were in the midst
+of the lagoon upon their employment; the cook, a boy of ten, was over
+his pots in the camp.&nbsp; Thus were all souls accounted for except
+a single native who accompanied Donat into the wood in quest of sea-fowls&rsquo;
+eggs.&nbsp; In a moment, out of the stillness, came the sound of the
+fall of a great tree.&nbsp; Donat would have passed on to find the cause.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;No,&rsquo; cried his companion, &lsquo;that was no tree.&nbsp;
+It was something <i>not right</i>.&nbsp; Let us go back to camp.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Next Sunday the divers were turned on, all that part of the isle was
+thoroughly examined, and sure enough no tree had fallen.&nbsp; A little
+later Mr. Donat saw one of his divers flee from a similar sound, in
+similar unaffected panic, on the same isle.&nbsp; But neither would
+explain, and it was not till afterwards, when he met with Rua, that
+he learned the occasion of their terrors.<br>
+<br>
+But whether by day or night, the purpose of the dead in these abhorred
+activities is still the same.&nbsp; In Samoa, my informant had no idea
+of the food of the bush spirits; no such ambiguity would exist in the
+mind of a Paumotuan.&nbsp; In that hungry archipelago, living and dead
+must alike toil for nutriment; and the race having been cannibal in
+the past, the spirits are so still.&nbsp; When the living ate the dead,
+horrified nocturnal imagination drew the shocking inference that the
+dead might eat the living.&nbsp; Doubtless they slay men, doubtless
+even mutilate them, in mere malice.&nbsp; Marquesan spirits sometimes
+tear out the eyes of travellers; but even that may be more practical
+than appears, for the eye is a cannibal dainty.&nbsp; And certainly
+the root-idea of the dead, at least in the far eastern islands, is to
+prowl for food.&nbsp; It was as a dainty morsel for a meal that the
+woman denounced Donat at the funeral.&nbsp; There are spirits besides
+who prey in particular not on the bodies but on the souls of the dead.&nbsp;
+The point is clearly made in a Tahitian story.&nbsp; A child fell sick,
+grew swiftly worse, and at last showed signs of death.&nbsp; The mother
+hastened to the house of a sorcerer, who lived hard by.&nbsp; &lsquo;You
+are yet in time,&rsquo; said he; &lsquo;a spirit has just run past my
+door carrying the soul of your child wrapped in the leaf of a purao;
+but I have a spirit stronger and swifter who will run him down ere he
+has time to eat it.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wrapped in a leaf: like other things
+edible and corruptible.<br>
+<br>
+Or take an experience of Mr. Donat&rsquo;s on the island of Anaa.&nbsp;
+It was a night of a high wind, with violent squalls; his child was very
+sick, and the father, though he had gone to bed, lay wakeful, hearkening
+to the gale.&nbsp; All at once a fowl was violently dashed on the house
+wall.&nbsp; Supposing he had forgot to put it in shelter with the rest,
+Donat arose, found the bird (a cock) lying on the verandah, and put
+it in the hen-house, the door of which he securely fastened.&nbsp; Fifteen
+minutes later the business was repeated, only this time, as it was being
+dashed against the wall, the bird crew.&nbsp; Again Donat replaced it,
+examining the hen-house thoroughly and finding it quite perfect; as
+he was so engaged the wind puffed out his light, and he must grope back
+to the door a good deal shaken.&nbsp; Yet a third time the bird was
+dashed upon the wall; a third time Donat set it, now near dead, beside
+its mates; and he was scarce returned before there came a rush, like
+that of a furious strong man, against the door, and a whistle as loud
+as that of a railway engine rang about the house.&nbsp; The sceptical
+reader may here detect the finger of the tempest; but the women gave
+up all for lost and clustered on the beds lamenting.&nbsp; Nothing followed,
+and I must suppose the gale somewhat abated, for presently after a chief
+came visiting.&nbsp; He was a bold man to be abroad so late, but doubtless
+carried a bright lantern.&nbsp; And he was certainly a man of counsel,
+for as soon as he heard the details of these disturbances he was in
+a position to explain their nature.&nbsp; &lsquo;Your child,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;must certainly die.&nbsp; This is the evil spirit of
+our island who lies in wait to eat the spirits of the newly dead.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And then he went on to expatiate on the strangeness of the spirit&rsquo;s
+conduct.&nbsp; He was not usually, he explained, so open of assault,
+but sat silent on the house-top waiting, in the guise of a bird, while
+within the people tended the dying and bewailed the dead, and had no
+thought of peril.&nbsp; But when the day came and the doors were opened,
+and men began to go abroad, blood-stains on the wall betrayed the tragedy.<br>
+<br>
+This is the quality I admire in Paumotuan legend.&nbsp; In Tahiti the
+spirit-eater is said to assume a vesture which has much more of pomp,
+but how much less of horror.&nbsp; It has been seen by all sorts and
+conditions, native and foreign; only the last insist it is a meteor.&nbsp;
+My authority was not so sure.&nbsp; He was riding with his wife about
+two in the morning; both were near asleep, and the horses not much better.&nbsp;
+It was a brilliant and still night, and the road wound over a mountain,
+near by a deserted marae (old Tahitian temple).&nbsp; All at once the
+appearance passed above them: a form of light; the head round and greenish;
+the body long, red, and with a focus of yet redder brilliancy about
+the midst.&nbsp; A buzzing hoot accompanied its passage; it flew direct
+out of one marae, and direct for another down the mountain side.&nbsp;
+And this, as my informant argued, is suggestive.&nbsp; For why should
+a mere meteor frequent the altars of abominable gods?&nbsp; The horses,
+I should say, were equally dismayed with their riders.&nbsp; Now I am
+not dismayed at all - not even agreeably.&nbsp; Give me rather the bird
+upon the house-top and the morning blood-gouts on the wall.<br>
+<br>
+But the dead are not exclusive in their diet.&nbsp; They carry with
+them to the grave, in particular, the Polynesian taste for fish, and
+enter at times with the living into a partnership in fishery.&nbsp;
+Rua-a-mariterangi is again my authority; I feel it diminishes the credit
+of the fact, but how it builds up the image of this inveterate ghost-seer!&nbsp;
+He belongs to the miserably poor island of Taenga, yet his father&rsquo;s
+house was always well supplied.&nbsp; As Rua grew up he was called at
+last to go a-fishing with this fortunate parent.&nbsp; They rowed the
+lagoon at dusk, to an unlikely place, and the lay down in the stern,
+and the father began vainly to cast his line over the bows.&nbsp; It
+is to be supposed that Rua slept; and when he awoke there was the figure
+of another beside his father, and his father was pulling in the fish
+hand over hand.&nbsp; &lsquo;Who is that man, father?&rsquo; Rua asked.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;It is none of your business,&rsquo; said the father; and Rua
+supposed the stranger had swum off to them from shore.&nbsp; Night after
+night they fared into the lagoon, often to the most unlikely places;
+night after night the stranger would suddenly be seen on board, and
+as suddenly be missed; and morning after morning the canoe returned
+laden with fish.&nbsp; &lsquo;My father is a very lucky man,&rsquo;
+thought Rua.&nbsp; At last, one fine day, there came first one boat
+party and then another, who must be entertained; father and son put
+off later than usual into the lagoon; and before the canoe was landed
+it was four o&rsquo;clock, and the morning star was close on the horizon.&nbsp;
+Then the stranger appeared seized with some distress; turned about,
+showing for the first time his face, which was that of one long dead,
+with shining eyes; stared into the east, set the tips of his fingers
+to his mouth like one a-cold, uttered a strange, shuddering sound between
+a whistle and a moan - a thing to freeze the blood; and, the day-star
+just rising from the sea, he suddenly was not.&nbsp; Then Rua understood
+why his father prospered, why his fishes rotted early in the day, and
+why some were always carried to the cemetery and laid upon the graves.&nbsp;
+My informant is a man not certainly averse to superstition, but he keeps
+his head, and takes a certain superior interest, which I may be allowed
+to call scientific.&nbsp; The last point reminding him of some parallel
+practice in Tahiti, he asked Rua if the fish were left, or carried home
+again after a formal dedication.&nbsp; It appears old Mariterangi practised
+both methods; sometimes treating his shadowy partner to a mere oblation,
+sometimes honestly leaving his fish to rot upon the grave.<br>
+<br>
+It is plain we have in Europe stories of a similar complexion; and the
+Polynesian <i>varua ino</i> or <i>aitu o le</i> <i>vao</i> is clearly
+the near kinsman of the Transylvanian vampire.&nbsp; Here is a tale
+in which the kinship appears broadly marked.&nbsp; On the atoll of Penrhyn,
+then still partly savage, a certain chief was long the salutary terror
+of the natives.&nbsp; He died, he was buried; and his late neighbours
+had scarce tasted the delights of licence ere his ghost appeared about
+the village.&nbsp; Fear seized upon all; a council was held of the chief
+men and sorcerers; and with the approval of the Rarotongan missionary,
+who was as frightened as the rest, and in the presence of several whites
+- my friend Mr. Ben Hird being one - the grave was opened, deepened
+until water came, and the body re-interred face down.&nbsp; The still
+recent staking of suicides in England and the decapitation of vampires
+in the east of Europe form close parallels.<br>
+<br>
+So in Samoa only the spirits of the unburied awake fear.&nbsp; During
+the late war many fell in the bush; their bodies, sometimes headless,
+were brought back by native pastors and interred; but this (I know not
+why) was insufficient, and the spirit still lingered on the theatre
+of death.&nbsp; When peace returned a singular scene was enacted in
+many places, and chiefly round the high gorges of Lotoanuu, where the
+struggle was long centred and the loss had been severe.&nbsp; Kinswomen
+of the dead came carrying a mat or sheet and guided by survivors of
+the fight.&nbsp; The place of death was earnestly sought out; the sheet
+was spread upon the ground; and the women, moved with pious anxiety,
+sat about and watched it.&nbsp; If any living thing alighted it was
+twice brushed away; upon the third coming it was known to be the spirit
+of the dead, was folded in, carried home and buried beside the body;
+and the aitu rested.&nbsp; The rite was practised beyond doubt in simple
+piety; the repose of the soul was its object: its motive, reverent affection.&nbsp;
+The present king disowns indeed all knowledge of a dangerous aitu; he
+declares the souls of the unburied were only wanderers in limbo, lacking
+an entrance to the proper country of the dead, unhappy, nowise hurtful.&nbsp;
+And this severely classic opinion doubtless represents the views of
+the enlightened.&nbsp; But the flight of my Lafaele marks the grosser
+terrors of the ignorant.<br>
+<br>
+This belief in the exorcising efficacy of funeral rites perhaps explains
+a fact, otherwise amazing, that no Polynesian seems at all to share
+our European horror of human bones and mummies.&nbsp; Of the first they
+made their cherished ornaments; they preserved them in houses or in
+mortuary caves; and the watchers of royal sepulchres dwelt with their
+children among the bones of generations.&nbsp; The mummy, even in the
+making, was as little feared.&nbsp; In the Marquesas, on the extreme
+coast, it was made by the household with continual unction and exposure
+to the sun; in the Carolines, upon the farthest west, it is still cured
+in the smoke of the family hearth.&nbsp; Head-hunting, besides, still
+lives around my doorstep in Samoa.&nbsp; And not ten years ago, in the
+Gilberts, the widow must disinter, cleanse, polish, and thenceforth
+carry about her, by day and night, the head of her dead husband.&nbsp;
+In all these cases we may suppose the process, whether of cleansing
+or drying, to have fully exorcised the aitu.<br>
+<br>
+But the Paumotuan belief is more obscure.&nbsp; Here the man is duly
+buried, and he has to be watched.&nbsp; He is duly watched, and the
+spirit goes abroad in spite of watches.&nbsp; Indeed, it is not the
+purpose of the vigils to prevent these wanderings; only to mollify by
+polite attention the inveterate malignity of the dead.&nbsp; Neglect
+(it is supposed) may irritate and thus invite his visits, and the aged
+and weakly sometimes balance risks and stay at home.&nbsp; Observe,
+it is the dead man&rsquo;s kindred and next friends who thus deprecate
+his fury with nocturnal watchings.&nbsp; Even the placatory vigil is
+held perilous, except in company, and a boy was pointed out to me in
+Rotoava, because he had watched alone by his own father.&nbsp; Not the
+ties of the dead, nor yet their proved character, affect the issue.&nbsp;
+A late Resident, who died in Fakarava of sunstroke, was beloved in life
+and is still remembered with affection; none the less his spirit went
+about the island clothed with terrors, and the neighbourhood of Government
+House was still avoided after dark.&nbsp; We may sum up the cheerful
+doctrine thus: All men become vampires, and the vampire spares none.&nbsp;
+And here we come face to face with a tempting inconsistency.&nbsp; For
+the whistling spirits are notoriously clannish; I understood them to
+wait upon and to enlighten kinsfolk only, and that the medium was always
+of the race of the communicating spirit.&nbsp; Here, then, we have the
+bonds of the family, on the one hand, severed at the hour of death;
+on the other, helpfully persisting.<br>
+<br>
+The child&rsquo;s soul in the Tahitian tale was wrapped in leaves.&nbsp;
+It is the spirits of the newly dead that are the dainty.&nbsp; When
+they are slain, the house is stained with blood.&nbsp; Rua&rsquo;s dead
+fisherman was decomposed; so - and horribly - was his arboreal demon.&nbsp;
+The spirit, then, is a thing material; and it is by the material ensigns
+of corruption that he is distinguished from the living man.&nbsp; This
+opinion is widespread, adds a gross terror to the more ugly Polynesian
+tales, and sometimes defaces the more engaging with a painful and incongruous
+touch.&nbsp; I will give two examples sufficiently wide apart, one from
+Tahiti, one from Samoa.<br>
+<br>
+And first from Tahiti.&nbsp; A man went to visit the husband of his
+sister, then some time dead.&nbsp; In her life the sister had been dainty
+in the island fashion, and went always adorned with a coronet of flowers.&nbsp;
+In the midst of the night the brother awoke and was aware of a heavenly
+fragrance going to and fro in the dark house.&nbsp; The lamp I must
+suppose to have burned out; no Tahitian would have lain down without
+one lighted.&nbsp; A while he lay wondering and delighted; then called
+upon the rest.&nbsp; &lsquo;Do none of you smell flowers?&rsquo; he
+asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;O,&rsquo; said his brother-in-law, &lsquo;we are
+used to that here.&rsquo;&nbsp; The next morning these two men went
+walking, and the widower confessed that his dead wife came about the
+house continually, and that he had even seen her.&nbsp; She was shaped
+and dressed and crowned with flowers as in her lifetime; only she moved
+a few inches above the earth with a very easy progress, and flitted
+dryshod above the surface of the river.&nbsp; And now comes my point:
+It was always in a back view that she appeared; and these brothers-in-law,
+debating the affair, agreed that this was to conceal the inroads of
+corruption.<br>
+<br>
+Now for the Samoan story.&nbsp; I owe it to the kindness of Dr. F. Otto
+Sierich, whose collection of folk-tales I expect with a high degree
+of interest.&nbsp; A man in Manu&rsquo;a was married to two wives and
+had no issue.&nbsp; He went to Savaii, married there a third, and was
+more fortunate.&nbsp; When his wife was near her time he remembered
+he was in a strange island, like a poor man; and when his child was
+born he must be shamed for lack of gifts.&nbsp; It was in vain his wife
+dissuaded him.&nbsp; He returned to his father in Manu&rsquo;a seeking
+help; and with what he could get he set off in the night to re-embark.&nbsp;
+Now his wives heard of his coming; they were incensed that he did not
+stay to visit them; and on the beach, by his canoe, intercepted and
+slew him.&nbsp; Now the third wife lay asleep in Savaii; - her babe
+was born and slept by her side; and she was awakened by the spirit of
+her husband.&nbsp; &lsquo;Get up,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;my father is
+sick in Manu&rsquo;a and we must go to visit him.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;It
+is well,&rsquo; said she; &lsquo;take you the child, while I carry its
+mats.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I cannot carry the child,&rsquo; said the
+spirit; &lsquo;I am too cold from the sea.&rsquo;&nbsp; When they were
+got on board the canoe the wife smelt carrion.&nbsp; &lsquo;How is this?&rsquo;
+she said.&nbsp; &lsquo;What have you in the canoe that I should smell
+carrion?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;It is nothing in the canoe,&rsquo; said
+the spirit.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is the land-wind blowing down the mountains,
+where some beast lies dead.&rsquo;&nbsp; It appears it was still night
+when they reached Manu&rsquo;a - the swiftest passage on record - and
+as they entered the reef the bale-fires burned in the village.&nbsp;
+Again she asked him to carry the child; but now he need no more dissemble.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I cannot carry your child,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;for I am dead,
+and the fires you see are burning for my funeral.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The curious may learn in Dr. Sierich&rsquo;s book the unexpected sequel
+of the tale.&nbsp; Here is enough for my purpose.&nbsp; Though the man
+was but new dead, the ghost was already putrefied, as though putrefaction
+were the mark and of the essence of a spirit.&nbsp; The vigil on the
+Paumotuan grave does not extend beyond two weeks, and they told me this
+period was thought to coincide with that of the resolution of the body.&nbsp;
+The ghost always marked with decay - the danger seemingly ending with
+the process of dissolution - here is tempting matter for the theorist.&nbsp;
+But it will not do.&nbsp; The lady of the flowers had been long dead,
+and her spirit was still supposed to bear the brand of perishability.&nbsp;
+The Resident had been more than a fortnight buried, and his vampire
+was still supposed to go the rounds.<br>
+<br>
+Of the lost state of the dead, from the lurid Mangaian legend, in which
+infernal deities hocus and destroy the souls of all, to the various
+submarine and aerial limbos where the dead feast, float idle, or resume
+the occupations of their life on earth, it would be wearisome to tell.&nbsp;
+One story I give, for it is singular in itself, is well-known in Tahiti,
+and has this of interest, that it is post-Christian, dating indeed from
+but a few years back.&nbsp; A princess of the reigning house died; was
+transported to the neighbouring isle of Raiatea; fell there under the
+empire of a spirit who condemned her to climb coco-palms all day and
+bring him the nuts; was found after some time in this miserable servitude
+by a second spirit, one of her own house; and by him, upon her lamentations,
+reconveyed to Tahiti, where she found her body still waked, but already
+swollen with the approaches of corruption.&nbsp; It is a lively point
+in the tale that, on the sight of this dishonoured tabernacle, the princess
+prayed she might continue to be numbered with the dead.&nbsp; But it
+seems it was too late, her spirit was replaced by the least dignified
+of entrances, and her startled family beheld the body move.&nbsp; The
+seemingly purgatorial labours, the helpful kindred spirit, and the horror
+of the princess at the sight of her tainted body, are all points to
+be remarked.<br>
+<br>
+The truth is, the tales are not necessarily consistent in themselves;
+and they are further darkened for the stranger by an ambiguity of language.&nbsp;
+Ghosts, vampires, spirits, and gods are all confounded.&nbsp; And yet
+I seem to perceive that (with exceptions) those whom we would count
+gods were less maleficent.&nbsp; Permanent spirits haunt and do murder
+in corners of Samoa; but those legitimate gods of Upolu and Savaii,
+whose wars and cricketings of late convulsed society, I did not gather
+to be dreaded, or not with a like fear.&nbsp; The spirit of Aana that
+ate souls is certainly a fearsome inmate; but the high gods, even of
+the archipelago, seem helpful.&nbsp; Mahinui - from whom our convict-catechist
+had been named - the spirit of the sea, like a Proteus endowed with
+endless avatars, came to the assistance of the shipwrecked and carried
+them ashore in the guise of a ray fish.&nbsp; The same divinity bore
+priests from isle to isle about the archipelago, and by his aid, within
+the century, persons have been seen to fly.&nbsp; The tutelar deity
+of each isle is likewise helpful, and by a particular form of wedge-shaped
+cloud on the horizon announces the coming of a ship.<br>
+<br>
+To one who conceives of these atolls, so narrow, so barren, so beset
+with sea, here would seem a superfluity of ghostly denizens.&nbsp; And
+yet there are more.&nbsp; In the various brackish pools and ponds, beautiful
+women with long red hair are seen to rise and bathe; only (timid as
+mice) on the first sound of feet upon the coral they dive again for
+ever.&nbsp; They are known to be healthy and harmless living people,
+dwellers of an underworld; and the same fancy is current in Tahiti,
+where also they have the hair red.&nbsp; <i>Tetea</i> is the Tahitian
+name; the Paumotuan, <i>Mokurea</i>.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+PART III: THE GILBERTS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER I - BUTARITARI<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+At Honolulu we had said farewell to the <i>Casco</i> and to Captain
+Otis, and our next adventure was made in changed conditions.&nbsp; Passage
+was taken for myself, my wife, Mr. Osbourne, and my China boy, Ah Fu,
+on a pigmy trading schooner, the <i>Equator</i>, Captain Dennis Reid;
+and on a certain bright June day in 1889, adorned in the Hawaiian fashion
+with the garlands of departure, we drew out of port and bore with a
+fair wind for Micronesia.<br>
+<br>
+The whole extent of the South Seas is a desert of ships; more especially
+that part where we were now to sail.&nbsp; No post runs in these islands;
+communication is by accident; where you may have designed to go is one
+thing, where you shall be able to arrive another.&nbsp; It was my hope,
+for instance, to have reached the Carolines, and returned to the light
+of day by way of Manila and the China ports; and it was in Samoa that
+we were destined to re-appear and be once more refreshed with the sight
+of mountains.&nbsp; Since the sunset faded from the peaks of Oahu six
+months had intervened, and we had seen no spot of earth so high as an
+ordinary cottage.&nbsp; Our path had been still on the flat sea, our
+dwellings upon unerected coral, our diet from the pickle-tub or out
+of tins; I had learned to welcome shark&rsquo;s flesh for a variety;
+and a mountain, an onion, an Irish potato or a beef-steak, had been
+long lost to sense and dear to aspiration.<br>
+<br>
+The two chief places of our stay, Butaritari and Apemama, lie near the
+line; the latter within thirty miles.&nbsp; Both enjoy a superb ocean
+climate, days of blinding sun and bracing wind, nights of a heavenly
+brightness.&nbsp; Both are somewhat wider than Fakarava, measuring perhaps
+(at the widest) a quarter of a mile from beach to beach.&nbsp; In both,
+a coarse kind of <i>taro</i> thrives; its culture is a chief business
+of the natives, and the consequent mounds and ditches make miniature
+scenery and amuse the eye.&nbsp; In all else they show the customary
+features of an atoll: the low horizon, the expanse of the lagoon, the
+sedge-like rim of palm-tops, the sameness and smallness of the land,
+the hugely superior size and interest of sea and sky.&nbsp; Life on
+such islands is in many points like life on shipboard.&nbsp; The atoll,
+like the ship, is soon taken for granted; and the islanders, like the
+ship&rsquo;s crew, become soon the centre of attention.&nbsp; The isles
+are populous, independent, seats of kinglets, recently civilised, little
+visited.&nbsp; In the last decade many changes have crept in; women
+no longer go unclothed till marriage; the widow no longer sleeps at
+night and goes abroad by day with the skull of her dead husband; and,
+fire-arms being introduced, the spear and the shark-tooth sword are
+sold for curiosities.&nbsp; Ten years ago all these things and practices
+were to be seen in use; yet ten years more, and the old society will
+have entirely vanished.&nbsp; We came in a happy moment to see its institutions
+still erect and (in Apemama) scarce decayed.<br>
+<br>
+Populous and independent - warrens of men, ruled over with some rustic
+pomp - such was the first and still the recurring impression of these
+tiny lands.&nbsp; As we stood across the lagoon for the town of Butaritari,
+a stretch of the low shore was seen to be crowded with the brown roofs
+of houses; those of the palace and king&rsquo;s summer parlour (which
+are of corrugated iron) glittered near one end conspicuously bright;
+the royal colours flew hard by on a tall flagstaff; in front, on an
+artificial islet, the gaol played the part of a martello.&nbsp; Even
+upon this first and distant view, the place had scarce the air of what
+it truly was, a village; rather of that which it was also, a petty metropolis,
+a city rustic and yet royal.<br>
+<br>
+The lagoon is shoal.&nbsp; The tide being out, we waded for some quarter
+of a mile in tepid shallows, and stepped ashore at last into a flagrant
+stagnancy of sun and heat.&nbsp; The lee side of a line island after
+noon is indeed a breathless place; on the ocean beach the trade will
+be still blowing, boisterous and cool; out in the lagoon it will be
+blowing also, speeding the canoes; but the screen of bush completely
+intercepts it from the shore, and sleep and silence and companies of
+mosquitoes brood upon the towns.<br>
+<br>
+We may thus be said to have taken Butaritari by surprise.&nbsp; A few
+inhabitants were still abroad in the north end, at which we landed.&nbsp;
+As we advanced, we were soon done with encounter, and seemed to explore
+a city of the dead.&nbsp; Only, between the posts of open houses, we
+could see the townsfolk stretched in the siesta, sometimes a family
+together veiled in a mosquito-net, sometimes a single sleeper on a platform
+like a corpse on a bier.<br>
+<br>
+The houses were of all dimensions, from those of toys to those of churches.&nbsp;
+Some might hold a battalion, some were so minute they could scarce receive
+a pair of lovers; only in the playroom, when the toys are mingled, do
+we meet such incongruities of scale.&nbsp; Many were open sheds; some
+took the form of roofed stages; others were walled and the walls pierced
+with little windows.&nbsp; A few were perched on piles in the lagoon;
+the rest stood at random on a green, through which the roadway made
+a ribbon of sand, or along the embankments of a sheet of water like
+a shallow dock.&nbsp; One and all were the creatures of a single tree;
+palm-tree wood and palm-tree leaf their materials; no nail had been
+driven, no hammer sounded, in their building, and they were held together
+by lashings of palm-tree sinnet.<br>
+<br>
+In the midst of the thoroughfare, the church stands like an island,
+a lofty and dim house with rows of windows; a rich tracery of framing
+sustains the roof; and through the door at either end the street shows
+in a vista.&nbsp; The proportions of the place, in such surroundings,
+and built of such materials, appeared august; and we threaded the nave
+with a sentiment befitting visitors in a cathedral.&nbsp; Benches run
+along either side.&nbsp; In the midst, on a crazy dais, two chairs stand
+ready for the king and queen when they shall choose to worship; over
+their heads a hoop, apparently from a hogshead, depends by a strip of
+red cotton; and the hoop (which hangs askew) is dressed with streamers
+of the same material, red and white.<br>
+<br>
+This was our first advertisement of the royal dignity, and presently
+we stood before its seat and centre.&nbsp; The palace is built of imported
+wood upon a European plan; the roof of corrugated iron, the yard enclosed
+with walls, the gate surmounted by a sort of lych-house.&nbsp; It cannot
+be called spacious; a labourer in the States is sometimes more commodiously
+lodged; but when we had the chance to see it within, we found it was
+enriched (beyond all island expectation) with coloured advertisements
+and cuts from the illustrated papers.&nbsp; Even before the gate some
+of the treasures of the crown stand public: a bell of a good magnitude,
+two pieces of cannon, and a single shell.&nbsp; The bell cannot be rung
+nor the guns fired; they are curiosities, proofs of wealth, a part of
+the parade of the royalty, and stand to be admired like statues in a
+square.&nbsp; A straight gut of water like a canal runs almost to the
+palace door; the containing quay-walls excellently built of coral; over
+against the mouth, by what seems an effect of landscape art, the martello-like
+islet of the gaol breaks the lagoon.&nbsp; Vassal chiefs with tribute,
+neighbour monarchs come a-roving, might here sail in, view with surprise
+these extensive public works, and be awed by these mouths of silent
+cannon.&nbsp; It was impossible to see the place and not to fancy it
+designed for pageantry.&nbsp; But the elaborate theatre then stood empty;
+the royal house deserted, its doors and windows gaping; the whole quarter
+of the town immersed in silence.&nbsp; On the opposite bank of the canal,
+on a roofed stage, an ancient gentleman slept publicly, sole visible
+inhabitant; and beyond on the lagoon a canoe spread a striped lateen,
+the sole thing moving.<br>
+<br>
+The canal is formed on the south by a pier or causeway with a parapet.&nbsp;
+At the far end the parapet stops, and the quay expands into an oblong
+peninsula in the lagoon, the breathing-place and summer parlour of the
+king.&nbsp; The midst is occupied by an open house or permanent marquee
+- called here a maniapa, or, as the word is now pronounced, a maniap&rsquo;
+- at the lowest estimation forty feet by sixty.&nbsp; The iron roof,
+lofty but exceedingly low-browed, so that a woman must stoop to enter,
+is supported externally on pillars of coral, within by a frame of wood.&nbsp;
+The floor is of broken coral, divided in aisles by the uprights of the
+frame; the house far enough from shore to catch the breeze, which enters
+freely and disperses the mosquitoes; and under the low eaves the sun
+is seen to glitter and the waves to dance on the lagoon.<br>
+<br>
+It was now some while since we had met any but slumberers; and when
+we had wandered down the pier and stumbled at last into this bright
+shed, we were surprised to find it occupied by a society of wakeful
+people, some twenty souls in all, the court and guardsmen of Butaritari.&nbsp;
+The court ladies were busy making mats; the guardsmen yawned and sprawled.&nbsp;
+Half a dozen rifles lay on a rock and a cutlass was leaned against a
+pillar: the armoury of these drowsy musketeers.&nbsp; At the far end,
+a little closed house of wood displayed some tinsel curtains, and proved,
+upon examination, to be a privy on the European model.&nbsp; In front
+of this, upon some mats, lolled Tebureimoa, the king; behind him, on
+the panels of the house, two crossed rifles represented fasces.&nbsp;
+He wore pyjamas which sorrowfully misbecame his bulk; his nose was hooked
+and cruel, his body overcome with sodden corpulence, his eye timorous
+and dull: he seemed at once oppressed with drowsiness and held awake
+by apprehension: a pepper rajah muddled with opium, and listening for
+the march of a Dutch army, looks perhaps not otherwise.&nbsp; We were
+to grow better acquainted, and first and last I had the same impression;
+he seemed always drowsy, yet always to hearken and start; and, whether
+from remorse or fear, there is no doubt he seeks a refuge in the abuse
+of drugs.<br>
+<br>
+The rajah displayed no sign of interest in our coming.&nbsp; But the
+queen, who sat beside him in a purple sacque, was more accessible; and
+there was present an interpreter so willing that his volubility became
+at last the cause of our departure.&nbsp; He had greeted us upon our
+entrance:- &lsquo;That is the honourable King, and I am his interpreter,&rsquo;
+he had said, with more stateliness than truth.&nbsp; For he held no
+appointment in the court, seemed extremely ill-acquainted with the island
+language, and was present, like ourselves, upon a visit of civility.&nbsp;
+Mr. Williams was his name: an American darkey, runaway ship&rsquo;s
+cook, and bar-keeper at <i>The Land we Live in</i> tavern, Butaritari.&nbsp;
+I never knew a man who had more words in his command or less truth to
+communicate; neither the gloom of the monarch, nor my own efforts to
+be distant, could in the least abash him; and when the scene closed,
+the darkey was left talking.<br>
+<br>
+The town still slumbered, or had but just begun to turn and stretch
+itself; it was still plunged in heat and silence.&nbsp; So much the
+more vivid was the impression that we carried away of the house upon
+the islet, the Micronesian Saul wakeful amid his guards, and his unmelodious
+David, Mr. Williams, chattering through the drowsy hours.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER II - THE FOUR BROTHERS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The kingdom of Tebureimoa includes two islands, Great and Little Makin;
+some two thousand subjects pay him tribute, and two semi-independent
+chieftains do him qualified homage.&nbsp; The importance of the office
+is measured by the man; he may be a nobody, he may be absolute; and
+both extremes have been exemplified within the memory of residents.<br>
+<br>
+On the death of king Tetimararoa, Tebureimoa&rsquo;s father, Nakaeia,
+the eldest son, succeeded.&nbsp; He was a fellow of huge physical strength,
+masterful, violent, with a certain barbaric thrift and some intelligence
+of men and business.&nbsp; Alone in his islands, it was he who dealt
+and profited; he was the planter and the merchant; and his subjects
+toiled for his behoof in servitude.&nbsp; When they wrought long and
+well their taskmaster declared a holiday, and supplied and shared a
+general debauch.&nbsp; The scale of his providing was at times magnificent;
+six hundred dollars&rsquo; worth of gin and brandy was set forth at
+once; the narrow land resounded with the noise of revelry: and it was
+a common thing to see the subjects (staggering themselves) parade their
+drunken sovereign on the fore-hatch of a wrecked vessel, king and commons
+howling and singing as they went.&nbsp; At a word from Nakaeia&rsquo;s
+mouth the revel ended; Makin became once more an isle of slaves and
+of teetotalers; and on the morrow all the population must be on the
+roads or in the taro-patches toiling under his bloodshot eye.<br>
+<br>
+The fear of Nakaeia filled the land.&nbsp; No regularity of justice
+was affected; there was no trial, there were no officers of the law;
+it seems there was but one penalty, the capital; and daylight assault
+and midnight murder were the forms of process.&nbsp; The king himself
+would play the executioner: and his blows were dealt by stealth, and
+with the help and countenance of none but his own wives.&nbsp; These
+were his oarswomen; one that caught a crab, he slew incontinently with
+the tiller; thus disciplined, they pulled him by night to the scene
+of his vengeance, which he would then execute alone and return well-pleased
+with his connubial crew.&nbsp; The inmates of the harem held a station
+hard for us to conceive.&nbsp; Beasts of draught, and driven by the
+fear of death, they were yet implicitly trusted with their sovereign&rsquo;s
+life; they were still wives and queens, and it was supposed that no
+man should behold their faces.&nbsp; They killed by the sight like basilisks;
+a chance view of one of those boatwomen was a crime to be wiped out
+with blood.&nbsp; In the days of Nakaeia the palace was beset with some
+tall coco-palms which commanded the enclosure.&nbsp; It chanced one
+evening, while Nakaeia sat below at supper with his wives, that the
+owner of the grove was in a tree-top drawing palm-tree wine; it chanced
+that he looked down, and the king at the same moment looking up, their
+eyes encountered.&nbsp; Instant flight preserved the involuntary criminal.&nbsp;
+But during the remainder of that reign he must lurk and be hid by friends
+in remote parts of the isle; Nakaeia hunted him without remission, although
+still in vain; and the palms, accessories to the fact, were ruthlessly
+cut down.&nbsp; Such was the ideal of wifely purity in an isle where
+nubile virgins went naked as in paradise.&nbsp; And yet scandal found
+its way into Nakaeia&rsquo;s well-guarded harem.&nbsp; He was at that
+time the owner of a schooner, which he used for a pleasure-house, lodging
+on board as she lay anchored; and thither one day he summoned a new
+wife.&nbsp; She was one that had been sealed to him; that is to say
+(I presume), that he was married to her sister, for the husband of an
+elder sister has the call of the cadets.&nbsp; She would be arrayed
+for the occasion; she would come scented, garlanded, decked with fine
+mats and family jewels, for marriage, as her friends supposed; for death,
+as she well knew.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tell me the man&rsquo;s name, and I will
+spare you,&rsquo; said Nakaeia.&nbsp; But the girl was staunch; she
+held her peace, saved her lover and the queens strangled her between
+the mats.<br>
+<br>
+Nakaeia was feared; it does not appear that he was hated.&nbsp; Deeds
+that smell to us of murder wore to his subjects the reverend face of
+justice; his orgies made him popular; natives to this day recall with
+respect the firmness of his government; and even the whites, whom he
+long opposed and kept at arm&rsquo;s-length, give him the name (in the
+canonical South Sea phrase) of &lsquo;a perfect gentleman when sober.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When he came to lie, without issue, on the bed of death, he summoned
+his next brother, Nanteitei, made him a discourse on royal policy, and
+warned him he was too weak to reign.&nbsp; The warning was taken to
+heart, and for some while the government moved on the model of Nakaeia&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Nanteitei dispensed with guards, and walked abroad alone with a revolver
+in a leather mail-bag.&nbsp; To conceal his weakness he affected a rude
+silence; you might talk to him all day; advice, reproof, appeal, and
+menace alike remained unanswered.<br>
+<br>
+The number of his wives was seventeen, many of them heiresses; for the
+royal house is poor, and marriage was in these days a chief means of
+buttressing the throne.&nbsp; Nakaeia kept his harem busy for himself;
+Nanteitei hired it out to others.&nbsp; In his days, for instance, Messrs.&nbsp;
+Wightman built a pier with a verandah at the north end of the town.&nbsp;
+The masonry was the work of the seventeen queens, who toiled and waded
+there like fisher lasses; but the man who was to do the roofing durst
+not begin till they had finished, lest by chance he should look down
+and see them.<br>
+<br>
+It was perhaps the last appearance of the harem gang.&nbsp; For some
+time already Hawaiian missionaries had been seated at Butaritari - Maka
+and Kanoa, two brave childlike men.&nbsp; Nakaeia would none of their
+doctrine; he was perhaps jealous of their presence; being human, he
+had some affection for their persons.&nbsp; In the house, before the
+eyes of Kanoa, he slew with his own hand three sailors of Oahu, crouching
+on their backs to knife them, and menacing the missionary if he interfered;
+yet he not only spared him at the moment, but recalled him afterwards
+(when he had fled) with some expressions of respect.&nbsp; Nanteitei,
+the weaker man, fell more completely under the spell.&nbsp; Maka, a
+light-hearted, lovable, yet in his own trade very rigorous man, gained
+and improved an influence on the king which soon grew paramount.&nbsp;
+Nanteitei, with the royal house, was publicly converted; and, with a
+severity which liberal missionaries disavow, the harem was at once reduced.&nbsp;
+It was a compendious act.&nbsp; The throne was thus impoverished, its
+influence shaken, the queen&rsquo;s relatives mortified, and sixteen
+chief women (some of great possessions) cast in a body on the market.&nbsp;
+I have been shipmates with a Hawaiian sailor who was successively married
+to two of these <i>impromptu</i> widows, and successively divorced by
+both for misconduct.&nbsp; That two great and rich ladies (for both
+of these were rich) should have married &lsquo;a man from another island&rsquo;
+marks the dissolution of society.&nbsp; The laws besides were wholly
+remodelled, not always for the better.&nbsp; I love Maka as a man; as
+a legislator he has two defects: weak in the punishment of crime, stern
+to repress innocent pleasures.<br>
+<br>
+War and revolution are the common successors of reform; yet Nanteitei
+died (of an overdose of chloroform), in quiet possession of the throne,
+and it was in the reign of the third brother, Nabakatokia, a man brave
+in body and feeble of character, that the storm burst.&nbsp; The rule
+of the high chiefs and notables seems to have always underlain and perhaps
+alternated with monarchy.&nbsp; The Old Men (as they were called) have
+a right to sit with the king in the Speak House and debate: and the
+king&rsquo;s chief superiority is a form of closure - &lsquo;The Speaking
+is over.&rsquo;&nbsp; After the long monocracy of Nakaeia and the changes
+of Nanteitei, the Old Men were doubtless grown impatient of obscurity,
+and they were beyond question jealous of the influence of Maka.&nbsp;
+Calumny, or rather caricature, was called in use; a spoken cartoon ran
+round society; Maka was reported to have said in church that the king
+was the first man in the island and himself the second; and, stung by
+the supposed affront, the chiefs broke into rebellion and armed gatherings.&nbsp;
+In the space of one forenoon the throne of Nakaeia was humbled in the
+dust.&nbsp; The king sat in the maniap&rsquo; before the palace gate
+expecting his recruits; Maka by his side, both anxious men; and meanwhile,
+in the door of a house at the north entry of the town, a chief had taken
+post and diverted the succours as they came.&nbsp; They came singly
+or in groups, each with his gun or pistol slung about his neck.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Where are you going?&rsquo; asked the chief.&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+king called us,&rsquo; they would reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;Here is your place.&nbsp;
+Sit down,&rsquo; returned the chief.&nbsp; With incredible disloyalty,
+all obeyed; and sufficient force being thus got together from both sides,
+Nabakatokia was summoned and surrendered.&nbsp; About this period, in
+almost every part of the group, the kings were murdered; and on Tapituea,
+the skeleton of the last hangs to this day in the chief Speak House
+of the isle, a menace to ambition.&nbsp; Nabakatokia was more fortunate;
+his life and the royal style were spared to him, but he was stripped
+of power.&nbsp; The Old Men enjoyed a festival of public speaking; the
+laws were continually changed, never enforced; the commons had an opportunity
+to regret the merits of Nakaeia; and the king, denied the resource of
+rich marriages and the service of a troop of wives, fell not only in
+disconsideration but in debt.<br>
+<br>
+He died some months before my arrival on the islands, and no one regretted
+him; rather all looked hopefully to his successor.&nbsp; This was by
+repute the hero of the family.&nbsp; Alone of the four brothers, he
+had issue, a grown son, Natiata, and a daughter three years old; it
+was to him, in the hour of the revolution, that Nabakatokia turned too
+late for help; and in earlier days he had been the right hand of the
+vigorous Nakaeia.&nbsp; Nontemat&rsquo;, <i>Mr. Corpse</i>, was his
+appalling nickname, and he had earned it well.&nbsp; Again and again,
+at the command of Nakaeia, he had surrounded houses in the dead of night,
+cut down the mosquito bars and butchered families.&nbsp; Here was the
+hand of iron; here was Nakaeia <i>redux</i>.&nbsp; He came, summoned
+from the tributary rule of Little Makin: he was installed, he proved
+a puppet and a trembler, the unwieldy shuttlecock of orators; and the
+reader has seen the remains of him in his summer parlour under the name
+of Tebureimoa.<br>
+<br>
+The change in the man&rsquo;s character was much commented on in the
+island, and variously explained by opium and Christianity.&nbsp; To
+my eyes, there seemed no change at all, rather an extreme consistency.&nbsp;
+Mr. Corpse was afraid of his brother: King Tebureimoa is afraid of the
+Old Men.&nbsp; Terror of the first nerved him for deeds of desperation;
+fear of the second disables him for the least act of government.&nbsp;
+He played his part of bravo in the past, following the line of least
+resistance, butchering others in his own defence: to-day, grown elderly
+and heavy, a convert, a reader of the Bible, perhaps a penitent, conscious
+at least of accumulated hatreds, and his memory charged with images
+of violence and blood, he capitulates to the Old Men, fuddles himself
+with opium, and sits among his guards in dreadful expectation.&nbsp;
+The same cowardice that put into his hand the knife of the assassin
+deprives him of the sceptre of a king.<br>
+<br>
+A tale that I was told, a trifling incident that fell in my observation,
+depicts him in his two capacities.&nbsp; A chief in Little Makin asked,
+in an hour of lightness, &lsquo;Who is Kaeia?&rsquo;&nbsp; A bird carried
+the saying; and Nakaeia placed the matter in the hands of a committee
+of three.&nbsp; Mr. Corpse was chairman; the second commissioner died
+before my arrival; the third was yet alive and green, and presented
+so venerable an appearance that we gave him the name of Abou ben Adhem.&nbsp;
+Mr. Corpse was troubled with a scruple; the man from Little Makin was
+his adopted brother; in such a case it was not very delicate to appear
+at all, to strike the blow (which it seems was otherwise expected of
+him) would be worse than awkward.&nbsp; &lsquo;I will strike the blow,&rsquo;
+said the venerable Abou; and Mr. Corpse (surely with a sigh) accepted
+the compromise.&nbsp; The quarry was decoyed into the bush; he was set
+to carrying a log; and while his arms were raised Abou ripped up his
+belly at a blow.&nbsp; Justice being thus done, the commission, in a
+childish horror, turned to flee.&nbsp; But their victim recalled them
+to his side.&nbsp; &lsquo;You need not run away now,&rsquo; he said.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You have done this thing to me.&nbsp; Stay.&rsquo;&nbsp; He was
+some twenty minutes dying, and his murderers sat with him the while:
+a scene for Shakespeare.&nbsp; All the stages of a violent death, the
+blood, the failing voice, the decomposing features, the changed hue,
+are thus present in the memory of Mr. Corpse; and since he studied them
+in the brother he betrayed, he has some reason to reflect on the possibilities
+of treachery.&nbsp; I was never more sure of anything than the tragic
+quality of the king&rsquo;s thoughts; and yet I had but the one sight
+of him at unawares.&nbsp; I had once an errand for his ear.&nbsp; It
+was once more the hour of the siesta; but there were loiterers abroad,
+and these directed us to a closed house on the bank of the canal where
+Tebureimoa lay unguarded.&nbsp; We entered without ceremony, being in
+some haste.&nbsp; He lay on the floor upon a bed of mats, reading in
+his Gilbert Island Bible with compunction.&nbsp; On our sudden entrance
+the unwieldy man reared himself half-sitting so that the Bible rolled
+on the floor, stared on us a moment with blank eyes, and, having recognised
+his visitors, sank again upon the mats.&nbsp; So Eglon looked on Ehud.<br>
+<br>
+The justice of facts is strange, and strangely just; Nakaeia, the author
+of these deeds, died at peace discoursing on the craft of kings; his
+tool suffers daily death for his enforced complicity.&nbsp; Not the
+nature, but the congruity of men&rsquo;s deeds and circumstances damn
+and save them; and Tebureimoa from the first has been incongruously
+placed.&nbsp; At home, in a quiet bystreet of a village, the man had
+been a worthy carpenter, and, even bedevilled as he is, he shows some
+private virtues.&nbsp; He has no lands, only the use of such as are
+impignorate for fines; he cannot enrich himself in the old way by marriages;
+thrift is the chief pillar of his future, and he knows and uses it.&nbsp;
+Eleven foreign traders pay him a patent of a hundred dollars, some two
+thousand subjects pay capitation at the rate of a dollar for a man,
+half a dollar for a woman, and a shilling for a child: allowing for
+the exchange, perhaps a total of three hundred pounds a year.&nbsp;
+He had been some nine months on the throne: had bought his wife a silk
+dress and hat, figure unknown, and himself a uniform at three hundred
+dollars; had sent his brother&rsquo;s photograph to be enlarged in San
+Francisco at two hundred and fifty dollars; had greatly reduced that
+brother&rsquo;s legacy of debt and had still sovereigns in his pocket.&nbsp;
+An affectionate brother, a good economist; he was besides a handy carpenter,
+and cobbled occasionally on the woodwork of the palace.&nbsp; It is
+not wonderful that Mr. Corpse has virtues; that Tebureimoa should have
+a diversion filled me with surprise.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER III - AROUND OUR HOUSE<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+When we left the palace we were still but seafarers ashore; and within
+the hour we had installed our goods in one of the six foreign houses
+of Butaritari, namely, that usually occupied by Maka, the Hawaiian missionary.&nbsp;
+Two San Francisco firms are here established, Messrs. Crawford and Messrs.
+Wightman Brothers; the first hard by the palace of the mid town, the
+second at the north entry; each with a store and bar-room.&nbsp; Our
+house was in the Wightman compound, betwixt the store and bar, within
+a fenced enclosure.&nbsp; Across the road a few native houses nestled
+in the margin of the bush, and the green wall of palms rose solid, shutting
+out the breeze.&nbsp; A little sandy cove of the lagoon ran in behind,
+sheltered by a verandah pier, the labour of queens&rsquo; hands.&nbsp;
+Here, when the tide was high, sailed boats lay to be loaded; when the
+tide was low, the boats took ground some half a mile away, and an endless
+series of natives descended the pier stair, tailed across the sand in
+strings and clusters, waded to the waist with the bags of copra, and
+loitered backward to renew their charge.&nbsp; The mystery of the copra
+trade tormented me, as I sat and watched the profits drip on the stair
+and the sands.<br>
+<br>
+In front, from shortly after four in the morning until nine at night,
+the folk of the town streamed by us intermittingly along the road: families
+going up the island to make copra on their lands; women bound for the
+bush to gather flowers against the evening toilet; and, twice a day,
+the toddy-cutters, each with his knife and shell.&nbsp; In the first
+grey of the morning, and again late in the afternoon, these would straggle
+past about their tree-top business, strike off here and there into the
+bush, and vanish from the face of the earth.&nbsp; At about the same
+hour, if the tide be low in the lagoon, you are likely to be bound yourself
+across the island for a bath, and may enter close at their heels alleys
+of the palm wood.&nbsp; Right in front, although the sun is not yet
+risen, the east is already lighted with preparatory fires, and the huge
+accumulations of the trade-wind cloud glow with and heliograph the coming
+day.&nbsp; The breeze is in your face; overhead in the tops of the palms,
+its playthings, it maintains a lively bustle; look where you will, above
+or below, there is no human presence, only the earth and shaken forest.&nbsp;
+And right overhead the song of an invisible singer breaks from the thick
+leaves; from farther on a second tree-top answers; and beyond again,
+in the bosom of the woods, a still more distant minstrel perches and
+sways and sings.&nbsp; So, all round the isle, the toddy-cutters sit
+on high, and are rocked by the trade, and have a view far to seaward,
+where they keep watch for sails, and like huge birds utter their songs
+in the morning.&nbsp; They sing with a certain lustiness and Bacchic
+glee; the volume of sound and the articulate melody fall unexpected
+from the tree-top, whence we anticipate the chattering of fowls.&nbsp;
+And yet in a sense these songs also are but chatter; the words are ancient,
+obsolete, and sacred; few comprehend them, perhaps no one perfectly;
+but it was understood the cutters &lsquo;prayed to have good toddy,
+and sang of their old wars.&rsquo;&nbsp; The prayer is at least answered;
+and when the foaming shell is brought to your door, you have a beverage
+well &lsquo;worthy of a grace.&rsquo;&nbsp; All forenoon you may return
+and taste; it only sparkles, and sharpens, and grows to be a new drink,
+not less delicious; but with the progress of the day the fermentation
+quickens and grows acid; in twelve hours it will be yeast for bread,
+in two days more a devilish intoxicant, the counsellor of crime.<br>
+<br>
+The men are of a marked Arabian cast of features, often bearded and
+mustached, often gaily dressed, some with bracelets and anklets, all
+stalking hidalgo-like, and accepting salutations with a haughty lip.&nbsp;
+The hair (with the dandies of either sex) is worn turban-wise in a frizzled
+bush; and like the daggers of the Japanese a pointed stick (used for
+a comb) is thrust gallantly among the curls.&nbsp; The women from this
+bush of hair look forth enticingly: the race cannot be compared with
+the Tahitian for female beauty; I doubt even if the average be high;
+but some of the prettiest girls, and one of the handsomest women I ever
+saw, were Gilbertines.&nbsp; Butaritari, being the commercial centre
+of the group, is Europeanised; the coloured sacque or the white shift
+are common wear, the latter for the evening; the trade hat, loaded with
+flowers, fruit, and ribbons, is unfortunately not unknown; and the characteristic
+female dress of the Gilberts no longer universal.&nbsp; The <i>ridi</i>
+is its name: a cutty petticoat or fringe of the smoked fibre of cocoa-nut
+leaf, not unlike tarry string: the lower edge not reaching the mid-thigh,
+the upper adjusted so low upon the haunches that it seems to cling by
+accident.&nbsp; A sneeze, you think, and the lady must surely be left
+destitute.&nbsp; &lsquo;The perilous, hairbreadth ridi&rsquo; was our
+word for it; and in the conflict that rages over women&rsquo;s dress
+it has the misfortune to please neither side, the prudish condemning
+it as insufficient, the more frivolous finding it unlovely in itself.&nbsp;
+Yet if a pretty Gilbertine would look her best, that must be her costume.&nbsp;
+In that and naked otherwise, she moves with an incomparable liberty
+and grace and life, that marks the poetry of Micronesia.&nbsp; Bundle
+her in a gown, the charm is fled, and she wriggles like an Englishwoman.<br>
+<br>
+Towards dusk the passers-by became more gorgeous.&nbsp; The men broke
+out in all the colours of the rainbow - or at least of the trade-room,
+- and both men and women began to be adorned and scented with new flowers.&nbsp;
+A small white blossom is the favourite, sometimes sown singly in a woman&rsquo;s
+hair like little stars, now composed in a thick wreath.&nbsp; With the
+night, the crowd sometimes thickened in the road, and the padding and
+brushing of bare feet became continuous; the promenades mostly grave,
+the silence only interrupted by some giggling and scampering of girls;
+even the children quiet.&nbsp; At nine, bed-time struck on a bell from
+the cathedral, and the life of the town ceased.&nbsp; At four the next
+morning the signal is repeated in the darkness, and the innocent prisoners
+set free; but for seven hours all must lie - I was about to say within
+doors, of a place where doors, and even walls, are an exception - housed,
+at least, under their airy roofs and clustered in the tents of the mosquito-nets.&nbsp;
+Suppose a necessary errand to occur, suppose it imperative to send abroad,
+the messenger must then go openly, advertising himself to the police
+with a huge brand of cocoa-nut, which flares from house to house like
+a moving bonfire.&nbsp; Only the police themselves go darkling, and
+grope in the night for misdemeanants.&nbsp; I used to hate their treacherous
+presence; their captain in particular, a crafty old man in white, lurked
+nightly about my premises till I could have found it in my heart to
+beat him.&nbsp; But the rogue was privileged.<br>
+<br>
+Not one of the eleven resident traders came to town, no captain cast
+anchor in the lagoon, but we saw him ere the hour was out.&nbsp; This
+was owing to our position between the store and the bar - the <i>Sans
+Souci</i>, as the last was called.&nbsp; Mr. Rick was not only Messrs.
+Wightman&rsquo;s manager, but consular agent for the States; Mrs. Rick
+was the only white woman on the island, and one of the only two in the
+archipelago; their house besides, with its cool verandahs, its bookshelves,
+its comfortable furniture, could not be rivalled nearer than Jaluit
+or Honolulu.&nbsp; Every one called in consequence, save such as might
+be prosecuting a South Sea quarrel, hingeing on the price of copra and
+the odd cent, or perhaps a difference about poultry.&nbsp; Even these,
+if they did not appear upon the north, would be presently visible to
+the southward, the <i>Sans Souci</i> drawing them as with cords.&nbsp;
+In an island with a total population of twelve white persons, one of
+the two drinking-shops might seem superfluous: but every bullet has
+its billet, and the double accommodation of Butaritari is found in practice
+highly convenient by the captains and the crews of ships: <i>The Land
+we Live in</i> being tacitly resigned to the forecastle, the <i>Sans
+Souci</i> tacitly reserved for the afterguard.&nbsp; So aristocratic
+were my habits, so commanding was my fear of Mr. Williams, that I have
+never visited the first; but in the other, which was the club or rather
+the casino of the island, I regularly passed my evenings.&nbsp; It was
+small, but neatly fitted, and at night (when the lamp was lit) sparkled
+with glass and glowed with coloured pictures like a theatre at Christmas.&nbsp;
+The pictures were advertisements, the glass coarse enough, the carpentry
+amateur; but the effect, in that incongruous isle, was of unbridled
+luxury and inestimable expense.&nbsp; Here songs were sung, tales told,
+tricks performed, games played.&nbsp; The Ricks, ourselves, Norwegian
+Tom the bar-keeper, a captain or two from the ships, and perhaps three
+or four traders come down the island in their boats or by the road on
+foot, made up the usual company.&nbsp; The traders, all bred to the
+sea, take a humorous pride in their new business; &lsquo;South Sea Merchants&rsquo;
+is the title they prefer.&nbsp; &lsquo;We are all sailors here&rsquo;
+- &lsquo;Merchants, if you please&rsquo; - &lsquo;<i>South Sea</i> Merchants,&rsquo;
+- was a piece of conversation endlessly repeated, that never seemed
+to lose in savour.&nbsp; We found them at all times simple, genial,
+gay, gallant, and obliging; and, across some interval of time, recall
+with pleasure the traders of Butaritari.&nbsp; There was one black sheep
+indeed.&nbsp; I tell of him here where he lived, against my rule; for
+in this case I have no measure to preserve, and the man is typical of
+a class of ruffians that once disgraced the whole field of the South
+Seas, and still linger in the rarely visited isles of Micronesia.&nbsp;
+He had the name on the beach of &lsquo;a perfect gentleman when sober,&rsquo;
+but I never saw him otherwise than drunk.&nbsp; The few shocking and
+savage traits of the Micronesian he has singled out with the skill of
+a collector, and planted in the soil of his original baseness.&nbsp;
+He has been accused and acquitted of a treacherous murder; and has since
+boastfully owned it, which inclines me to suppose him innocent.&nbsp;
+His daughter is defaced by his erroneous cruelty, for it was his wife
+he had intended to disfigure, and in the darkness of the night and the
+frenzy of coco-brandy, fastened on the wrong victim.&nbsp; The wife
+has since fled and harbours in the bush with natives; and the husband
+still demands from deaf ears her forcible restoration.&nbsp; The best
+of his business is to make natives drink, and then advance the money
+for the fine upon a lucrative mortgage.&nbsp; &lsquo;Respect for whites&rsquo;
+is the man&rsquo;s word: &lsquo;What is the matter with this island
+is the want of respect for whites.&rsquo;&nbsp; On his way to Butaritari,
+while I was there, he spied his wife in the bush with certain natives
+and made a dash to capture her; whereupon one of her companions drew
+a knife and the husband retreated: &lsquo;Do you call that proper respect
+for whites?&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp; At an early stage of the acquaintance
+we proved our respect for his kind of white by forbidding him our enclosure
+under pain of death.&nbsp; Thenceforth he lingered often in the neighbourhood
+with I knew not what sense of envy or design of mischief; his white,
+handsome face (which I beheld with loathing) looked in upon us at all
+hours across the fence; and once, from a safe distance, he avenged himself
+by shouting a recondite island insult, to us quite inoffensive, on his
+English lips incredibly incongruous.<br>
+<br>
+Our enclosure, round which this composite of degradations wandered,
+was of some extent.&nbsp; In one corner was a trellis with a long table
+of rough boards.&nbsp; Here the Fourth of July feast had been held not
+long before with memorable consequences, yet to be set forth; here we
+took our meals; here entertained to a dinner the king and notables of
+Makin.&nbsp; In the midst was the house, with a verandah front and back,
+and three is rooms within.&nbsp; In the verandah we slung our man-of-war
+hammocks, worked there by day, and slept at night.&nbsp; Within were
+beds, chairs, a round table, a fine hanging lamp, and portraits of the
+royal family of Hawaii.&nbsp; Queen Victoria proves nothing; Kalakaua
+and Mrs. Bishop are diagnostic; and the truth is we were the stealthy
+tenants of the parsonage.&nbsp; On the day of our arrival Maka was away;
+faithless trustees unlocked his doors; and the dear rigorous man, the
+sworn foe of liquor and tobacco, returned to find his verandah littered
+with cigarettes and his parlour horrible with bottles.&nbsp; He made
+but one condition - on the round table, which he used in the celebration
+of the sacraments, he begged us to refrain from setting liquor; in all
+else he bowed to the accomplished fact, refused rent, retired across
+the way into a native house, and, plying in his boat, beat the remotest
+quarters of the isle for provender.&nbsp; He found us pigs - I could
+not fancy where - no other pigs were visible; he brought us fowls and
+taro; when we gave our feast to the monarch and gentry, it was he who
+supplied the wherewithal, he who superintended the cooking, he who asked
+grace at table, and when the king&rsquo;s health was proposed, he also
+started the cheering with an English hip-hip-hip.&nbsp; There was never
+a more fortunate conception; the heart of the fatted king exulted in
+his bosom at the sound.<br>
+<br>
+Take him for all in all, I have never known a more engaging creature
+than this parson of Butaritari: his mirth, his kindness, his noble,
+friendly feelings, brimmed from the man in speech and gesture.&nbsp;
+He loved to exaggerate, to act and overact the momentary part, to exercise
+his lungs and muscles, and to speak and laugh with his whole body.&nbsp;
+He had the morning cheerfulness of birds and healthy children; and his
+humour was infectious.&nbsp; We were next neighbours and met daily,
+yet our salutations lasted minutes at a stretch - shaking hands, slapping
+shoulders, capering like a pair of Merry-Andrews, laughing to split
+our sides upon some pleasantry that would scarce raise a titter in an
+infant-school.&nbsp; It might be five in the morning, the toddy-cutters
+just gone by, the road empty, the shade of the island lying far on the
+lagoon: and the ebullition cheered me for the day.<br>
+<br>
+Yet I always suspected Maka of a secret melancholy - these jubilant
+extremes could scarce be constantly maintained.&nbsp; He was besides
+long, and lean, and lined, and corded, and a trifle grizzled; and his
+Sabbath countenance was even saturnine.&nbsp; On that day we made a
+procession to the church, or (as I must always call it) the cathedral:
+Maka (a blot on the hot landscape) in tall hat, black frock-coat, black
+trousers; under his arm the hymn-book and the Bible; in his face, a
+reverent gravity:- beside him Mary his wife, a quiet, wise, and handsome
+elderly lady, seriously attired:- myself following with singular and
+moving thoughts.&nbsp; Long before, to the sound of bells and streams
+and birds, through a green Lothian glen, I had accompanied Sunday by
+Sunday a minister in whose house I lodged; and the likeness, and the
+difference, and the series of years and deaths, profoundly touched me.&nbsp;
+In the great, dusky, palm-tree cathedral the congregation rarely numbered
+thirty: the men on one side, the women on the other, myself posted (for
+a privilege) amongst the women, and the small missionary contingent
+gathered close around the platform, we were lost in that round vault.&nbsp;
+The lessons were read antiphonally, the flock was catechised, a blind
+youth repeated weekly a long string of psalms, hymns were sung - I never
+heard worse singing, - and the sermon followed.&nbsp; To say I understood
+nothing were untrue; there were points that I learned to expect with
+certainty; the name of Honolulu, that of Kalakaua, the word Cap&rsquo;n-man-o&rsquo;-wa&rsquo;,
+the word ship, and a description of a storm at sea, infallibly occurred;
+and I was not seldom rewarded with the name of my own Sovereign in the
+bargain.&nbsp; The rest was but sound to the ears, silence for the mind:
+a plain expanse of tedium, rendered unbearable by heat, a hard chair,
+and the sight through the wide doors of the more happy heathen on the
+green.&nbsp; Sleep breathed on my joints and eyelids, sleep hummed in
+my ears; it reigned in the dim cathedral.&nbsp; The congregation stirred
+and stretched; they moaned, they groaned aloud; they yawned upon a singing
+note, as you may sometimes hear a dog when he has reached the tragic
+bitterest of boredom.&nbsp; In vain the preacher thumped the table;
+in vain he singled and addressed by name particular hearers.&nbsp; I
+was myself perhaps a more effective excitant; and at least to one old
+gentleman the spectacle of my successful struggles against sleep - and
+I hope they were successful - cheered the flight of time.&nbsp; He,
+when he was not catching flies or playing tricks upon his neighbours,
+gloated with a fixed, truculent eye upon the stages of my agony; and
+once, when the service was drawing towards a close, he winked at me
+across the church.<br>
+<br>
+I write of the service with a smile; yet I was always there - always
+with respect for Maka, always with admiration for his deep seriousness,
+his burning energy, the fire of his roused eye, the sincere and various
+accents of his voice.&nbsp; To see him weekly flogging a dead horse
+and blowing a cold fire was a lesson in fortitude and constancy.&nbsp;
+It may be a question whether if the mission were fully supported, and
+he was set free from business avocations, more might not result; I think
+otherwise myself; I think not neglect but rigour has reduced his flock,
+that rigour which has once provoked a revolution, and which to-day,
+in a man so lively and engaging, amazes the beholder.&nbsp; No song,
+no dance, no tobacco, no liquor, no alleviative of life - only toil
+and church-going; so says a voice from his face; and the face is the
+face of the Polynesian Esau, but the voice is the voice of a Jacob from
+a different world.&nbsp; And a Polynesian at the best makes a singular
+missionary in the Gilberts, coming from a country recklessly unchaste
+to one conspicuously strict; from a race hag-ridden with bogies to one
+comparatively bold against the terrors of the dark.&nbsp; The thought
+was stamped one morning in my mind, when I chanced to be abroad by moonlight,
+and saw all the town lightless, but the lamp faithfully burning by the
+missionary&rsquo;s bed.&nbsp; It requires no law, no fire, and no scouting
+police, to withhold Maka and his countrymen from wandering in the night
+unlighted.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER IV - A TALE OF A TAPU<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+On the morrow of our arrival (Sunday, 14th July 1889) our photographers
+were early stirring.&nbsp; Once more we traversed a silent town; many
+were yet abed and asleep; some sat drowsily in their open houses; there
+was no sound of intercourse or business.&nbsp; In that hour before the
+shadows, the quarter of the palace and canal seemed like a landing-place
+in the <i>Arabian Nights</i> or from the classic poets; here were the
+fit destination of some &lsquo;faery frigot,&rsquo; here some adventurous
+prince might step ashore among new characters and incidents; and the
+island prison, where it floated on the luminous face of the lagoon,
+might have passed for the repository of the Grail.&nbsp; In such a scene,
+and at such an hour, the impression received was not so much of foreign
+travel - rather of past ages; it seemed not so much degrees of latitude
+that we had crossed, as centuries of time that we had re-ascended; leaving,
+by the same steps, home and to-day.&nbsp; A few children followed us,
+mostly nude, all silent; in the clear, weedy waters of the canal some
+silent damsels waded, baring their brown thighs; and to one of the maniap&rsquo;s
+before the palace gate we were attracted by a low but stirring hum of
+speech.<br>
+<br>
+The oval shed was full of men sitting cross-legged.&nbsp; The king was
+there in striped pyjamas, his rear protected by four guards with Winchesters,
+his air and bearing marked by unwonted spirit and decision; tumblers
+and black bottles went the round; and the talk, throughout loud, was
+general and animated.&nbsp; I was inclined at first to view this scene
+with suspicion.&nbsp; But the hour appeared unsuitable for a carouse;
+drink was besides forbidden equally by the law of the land and the canons
+of the church; and while I was yet hesitating, the king&rsquo;s rigorous
+attitude disposed of my last doubt.&nbsp; We had come, thinking to photograph
+him surrounded by his guards, and at the first word of the design his
+piety revolted.&nbsp; We were reminded of the day - the Sabbath, in
+which thou shalt take no photographs - and returned with a flea in our
+ear, bearing the rejected camera.<br>
+<br>
+At church, a little later, I was struck to find the throne unoccupied.&nbsp;
+So nice a Sabbatarian might have found the means to be present; perhaps
+my doubts revived; and before I got home they were transformed to certainties.&nbsp;
+Tom, the bar-keeper of the <i>Sans Souci</i>, was in conversation with
+two emissaries from the court.&nbsp; The &lsquo;keen,&rsquo; they said,
+wanted &lsquo;din,&rsquo; failing which &lsquo;perandi.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+No din, was Tom&rsquo;s reply, and no perandi; but &lsquo;pira&rsquo;
+if they pleased.&nbsp; It seems they had no use for beer, and departed
+sorrowing.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Why, what is the meaning of all this?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp; &lsquo;Is
+the island on the spree?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Such was the fact.&nbsp; On the 4th of July a feast had been made, and
+the king, at the suggestion of the whites, had raised the tapu against
+liquor.&nbsp; There is a proverb about horses; it scarce applies to
+the superior animal, of whom it may be rather said, that any one can
+start him drinking, not any twenty can prevail on him to stop.&nbsp;
+The tapu, raised ten days before, was not yet re-imposed; for ten days
+the town had been passing the bottle or lying (as we had seen it the
+afternoon before) in hoggish sleep; and the king, moved by the Old Men
+and his own appetites, continued to maintain the liberty, to squander
+his savings on liquor, and to join in and lead the debauch.&nbsp; The
+whites were the authors of this crisis; it was upon their own proposal
+that the freedom had been granted at the first; and for a while, in
+the interests of trade, they were doubtless pleased it should continue.&nbsp;
+That pleasure had now sometime ceased; the bout had been prolonged (it
+was conceded) unduly; and it now began to be a question how it might
+conclude.&nbsp; Hence Tom&rsquo;s refusal.&nbsp; Yet that refusal was
+avowedly only for the moment, and it was avowedly unavailing; the king&rsquo;s
+foragers, denied by Tom at the <i>Sans Souci</i>, would be supplied
+at <i>The Land we Live in</i> by the gobbling Mr. Williams.<br>
+<br>
+The degree of the peril was not easy to measure at the time, and I am
+inclined to think now it was easy to exaggerate.&nbsp; Yet the conduct
+of drunkards even at home is always matter for anxiety; and at home
+our populations are not armed from the highest to the lowest with revolvers
+and repeating rifles, neither do we go on a debauch by the whole townful
+- and I might rather say, by the whole polity - king, magistrates, police,
+and army joining in one common scene of drunkenness.&nbsp; It must be
+thought besides that we were here in barbarous islands, rarely visited,
+lately and partly civilised.&nbsp; First and last, a really considerable
+number of whites have perished in the Gilberts, chiefly through their
+own misconduct; and the natives have displayed in at least one instance
+a disposition to conceal an accident under a butchery, and leave nothing
+but dumb bones.&nbsp; This last was the chief consideration against
+a sudden closing of the bars; the bar-keepers stood in the immediate
+breach and dealt direct with madmen; too surly a refusal might at any
+moment precipitate a blow, and the blow might prove the signal for a
+massacre.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Monday</i>, 15th. - At the same hour we returned to the same muniap&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+K&uuml;mmel (of all drinks) was served in tumblers; in the midst sat
+the crown prince, a fatted youth, surrounded by fresh bottles and busily
+plying the corkscrew; and king, chief, and commons showed the loose
+mouth, the uncertain joints, and the blurred and animated eye of the
+early drinker.&nbsp; It was plain we were impatiently expected; the
+king retired with alacrity to dress, the guards were despatched after
+their uniforms; and we were left to await the issue of these preparations
+with a shedful of tipsy natives.&nbsp; The orgie had proceeded further
+than on Sunday.&nbsp; The day promised to be of great heat; it was already
+sultry, the courtiers were already fuddled; and still the k&uuml;mmel
+continued to go round, and the crown prince to play butler.&nbsp; Flemish
+freedom followed upon Flemish excess; and a funny dog, a handsome fellow,
+gaily dressed, and with a full turban of frizzed hair, delighted the
+company with a humorous courtship of a lady in a manner not to be described.&nbsp;
+It was our diversion, in this time of waiting, to observe the gathering
+of the guards.&nbsp; They have European arms, European uniforms, and
+(to their sorrow) European shoes.&nbsp; We saw one warrior (like Mars)
+in the article of being armed; two men and a stalwart woman were scarce
+strong enough to boot him; and after a single appearance on parade the
+army is crippled for a week.<br>
+<br>
+At last, the gates under the king&rsquo;s house opened; the army issued,
+one behind another, with guns and epaulettes; the colours stooped under
+the gateway; majesty followed in his uniform bedizened with gold lace;
+majesty&rsquo;s wife came next in a hat and feathers, and an ample trained
+silk gown; the royal imps succeeded; there stood the pageantry of Makin
+marshalled on its chosen theatre.&nbsp; Dickens might have told how
+serious they were; how tipsy; how the king melted and streamed under
+his cocked hat; how he took station by the larger of his two cannons
+- austere, majestic, but not truly vertical; how the troops huddled,
+and were straightened out, and clubbed again; how they and their firelocks
+raked at various inclinations like the masts of ships; and how an amateur
+photographer reviewed, arrayed, and adjusted them, to see his dispositions
+change before he reached the camera.<br>
+<br>
+The business was funny to see; I do not know that it is graceful to
+laugh at; and our report of these transactions was received on our return
+with the shaking of grave heads.<br>
+<br>
+The day had begun ill; eleven hours divided us from sunset; and at any
+moment, on the most trifling chance, the trouble might begin.&nbsp;
+The Wightman compound was in a military sense untenable, commanded on
+three sides by houses and thick bush; the town was computed to contain
+over a thousand stand of excellent new arms; and retreat to the ships,
+in the case of an alert, was a recourse not to be thought of.&nbsp;
+Our talk that morning must have closely reproduced the talk in English
+garrisons before the Sepoy mutiny; the sturdy doubt that any mischief
+was in prospect, the sure belief that (should any come) there was nothing
+left but to go down fighting, the half-amused, half-anxious attitude
+of mind in which we were awaiting fresh developments.<br>
+<br>
+The k&uuml;mmel soon ran out; we were scarce returned before the king
+had followed us in quest of more.&nbsp; Mr. Corpse was now divested
+of his more awful attitude, the lawless bulk of him again encased in
+striped pyjamas; a guardsman brought up the rear with his rifle at the
+trail: and his majesty was further accompanied by a Rarotongan whalerman
+and the playful courtier with the turban of frizzed hair.&nbsp; There
+was never a more lively deputation.&nbsp; The whalerman was gapingly,
+tearfully tipsy: the courtier walked on air; the king himself was even
+sportive.&nbsp; Seated in a chair in the Ricks&rsquo; sitting-room,
+he bore the brunt of our prayers and menaces unmoved.&nbsp; He was even
+rated, plied with historic instances, threatened with the men-of-war,
+ordered to restore the tapu on the spot - and nothing in the least affected
+him.&nbsp; It should be done to-morrow, he said; to-day it was beyond
+his power, to-day he durst not.&nbsp; &lsquo;Is that royal?&rsquo; cried
+indignant Mr. Rick.&nbsp; No, it was not royal; had the king been of
+a royal character we should ourselves have held a different language;
+and royal or not, he had the best of the dispute.&nbsp; The terms indeed
+were hardly equal; for the king was the only man who could restore the
+tapu, but the Ricks were not the only people who sold drink.&nbsp; He
+had but to hold his ground on the first question, and they were sure
+to weaken on the second.&nbsp; A little struggle they still made for
+the fashion&rsquo;s sake; and then one exceedingly tipsy deputation
+departed, greatly rejoicing, a case of brandy wheeling beside them in
+a barrow.&nbsp; The Rarotongan (whom I had never seen before) wrung
+me by the hand like a man bound on a far voyage.&nbsp; &lsquo;My dear
+frien&rsquo;!&rsquo; he cried, &lsquo;good-bye, my dear frien&rsquo;!&rsquo;
+- tears of k&uuml;mmel standing in his eyes; the king lurched as he
+went, the courtier ambled, - a strange party of intoxicated children
+to be entrusted with that barrowful of madness.<br>
+<br>
+You could never say the town was quiet; all morning there was a ferment
+in the air, an aimless movement and congregation of natives in the street.&nbsp;
+But it was not before half-past one that a sudden hubbub of voices called
+us from the house, to find the whole white colony already gathered on
+the spot as by concerted signal.&nbsp; The <i>Sans Souci</i> was overrun
+with rabble, the stair and verandah thronged.&nbsp; From all these throats
+an inarticulate babbling cry went up incessantly; it sounded like the
+bleating of young lambs, but angrier.&nbsp; In the road his royal highness
+(whom I had seen so lately in the part of butler) stood crying upon
+Tom; on the top step, tossed in the hurly-burly, Tom was shouting to
+the prince.&nbsp; Yet a while the pack swayed about the bar, vociferous.&nbsp;
+Then came a brutal impulse; the mob reeled, and returned, and was rejected;
+the stair showed a stream of heads; and there shot into view, through
+the disbanding ranks, three men violently dragging in their midst a
+fourth.&nbsp; By his hair and his hands, his head forced as low as his
+knees, his face concealed, he was wrenched from the verandah and whisked
+along the road into the village, howling as he disappeared.&nbsp; Had
+his face been raised, we should have seen it bloodied, and the blood
+was not his own.&nbsp; The courtier with the turban of frizzed hair
+had paid the costs of this disturbance with the lower part of one ear.<br>
+<br>
+So the brawl passed with no other casualty than might seem comic to
+the inhumane.&nbsp; Yet we looked round on serious faces and - a fact
+that spoke volumes - Tom was putting up the shutters on the bar.&nbsp;
+Custom might go elsewhere, Mr. Williams might profit as he pleased,
+but Tom had had enough of bar-keeping for that day.&nbsp; Indeed the
+event had hung on a hair.&nbsp; A man had sought to draw a revolver
+- on what quarrel I could never learn, and perhaps he himself could
+not have told; one shot, when the room was so crowded, could scarce
+have failed to take effect; where many were armed and all tipsy, it
+could scarce have failed to draw others; and the woman who spied the
+weapon and the man who seized it may very well have saved the white
+community.<br>
+<br>
+The mob insensibly melted from the scene; and for the rest of the day
+our neighbourhood was left in peace and a good deal in solitude.&nbsp;
+But the tranquillity was only local; <i>din</i> and<i> perandi</i> still
+flowed in other quarters: and we had one more sight of Gilbert Island
+violence.&nbsp; In the church, where we had wandered photographing,
+we were startled by a sudden piercing outcry.&nbsp; The scene, looking
+forth from the doors of that great hall of shadow, was unforgettable.&nbsp;
+The palms, the quaint and scattered houses, the flag of the island streaming
+from its tall staff, glowed with intolerable sunshine.&nbsp; In the
+midst two women rolled fighting on the grass.&nbsp; The combatants were
+the more easy to be distinguished, because the one was stripped to the
+<i>ridi</i> and the other wore a holoku (sacque) of some lively colour.&nbsp;
+The first was uppermost, her teeth locked in her adversary&rsquo;s face,
+shaking her like a dog; the other impotently fought and scratched.&nbsp;
+So for a moment we saw them wallow and grapple there like vermin; then
+the mob closed and shut them in.<br>
+<br>
+It was a serious question that night if we should sleep ashore.&nbsp;
+But we were travellers, folk that had come far in quest of the adventurous;
+on the first sign of an adventure it would have been a singular inconsistency
+to have withdrawn; and we sent on board instead for our revolvers.&nbsp;
+Mindful of Taahauku, Mr. Rick, Mr. Osbourne, and Mrs. Stevenson held
+an assault of arms on the public highway, and fired at bottles to the
+admiration of the natives.&nbsp; Captain Reid of the <i>Equator</i>
+stayed on shore with us to be at hand in case of trouble, and we retired
+to bed at the accustomed hour, agreeably excited by the day&rsquo;s
+events.&nbsp; The night was exquisite, the silence enchanting; yet as
+I lay in my hammock looking on the strong moonshine and the quiescent
+palms, one ugly picture haunted me of the two women, the naked and the
+clad, locked in that hostile embrace.&nbsp; The harm done was probably
+not much, yet I could have looked on death and massacre with less revolt.&nbsp;
+The return to these primeval weapons, the vision of man&rsquo;s beastliness,
+of his ferality, shocked in me a deeper sense than that with which we
+count the cost of battles.&nbsp; There are elements in our state and
+history which it is a pleasure to forget, which it is perhaps the better
+wisdom not to dwell on.&nbsp; Crime, pestilence, and death are in the
+day&rsquo;s work; the imagination readily accepts them.&nbsp; It instinctively
+rejects, on the contrary, whatever shall call up the image of our race
+upon its lowest terms, as the partner of beasts, beastly itself, dwelling
+pell-mell and hugger-mugger, hairy man with hairy woman, in the caves
+of old.&nbsp; And yet to be just to barbarous islanders we must not
+forget the slums and dens of our cities; I must not forget that I have
+passed dinnerward through Soho, and seen that which cured me of my dinner.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER V - A TALE OF A TAPU - <i>continued<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Tuesday, July</i> 16. - It rained in the night, sudden and loud, in
+Gilbert Island fashion.&nbsp; Before the day, the crowing of a cock
+aroused me and I wandered in the compound and along the street.&nbsp;
+The squall was blown by, the moon shone with incomparable lustre, the
+air lay dead as in a room, and yet all the isle sounded as under a strong
+shower, the eaves thickly pattering, the lofty palms dripping at larger
+intervals and with a louder note.&nbsp; In this bold nocturnal light
+the interior of the houses lay inscrutable, one lump of blackness, save
+when the moon glinted under the roof, and made a belt of silver, and
+drew the slanting shadows of the pillars on the floor.&nbsp; Nowhere
+in all the town was any lamp or ember; not a creature stirred; I thought
+I was alone to be awake; but the police were faithful to their duty;
+secretly vigilant, keeping account of time; and a little later, the
+watchman struck slowly and repeatedly on the cathedral bell; four o&rsquo;clock,
+the warning signal.&nbsp; It seemed strange that, in a town resigned
+to drunkenness and tumult, curfew and r&eacute;veille should still be
+sounded and still obeyed.<br>
+<br>
+The day came, and brought little change.&nbsp; The place still lay silent;
+the people slept, the town slept.&nbsp; Even the few who were awake,
+mostly women and children, held their peace and kept within under the
+strong shadow of the thatch, where you must stop and peer to see them.&nbsp;
+Through the deserted streets, and past the sleeping houses, a deputation
+took its way at an early hour to the palace; the king was suddenly awakened,
+and must listen (probably with a headache) to unpalatable truths.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Rick, being a sufficient mistress of that difficult tongue, was
+spokeswoman; she explained to the sick monarch that I was an intimate
+personal friend of Queen Victoria&rsquo;s; that immediately on my return
+I should make her a report upon Butaritari; and that if my house should
+have been again invaded by natives, a man-of-war would be despatched
+to make reprisals.&nbsp; It was scarce the fact - rather a just and
+necessary parable of the fact, corrected for latitude; and it certainly
+told upon the king.&nbsp; He was much affected; he had conceived the
+notion (he said) that I was a man of some importance, but not dreamed
+it was as bad as this; and the missionary house was tapu&rsquo;d under
+a fine of fifty dollars.<br>
+<br>
+So much was announced on the return of the deputation; not any more;
+and I gathered subsequently that much more had passed.&nbsp; The protection
+gained was welcome.&nbsp; It had been the most annoying and not the
+least alarming feature of the day before, that our house was periodically
+filled with tipsy natives, twenty or thirty at a time, begging drink,
+fingering our goods, hard to be dislodged, awkward to quarrel with.&nbsp;
+Queen Victoria&rsquo;s friend (who was soon promoted to be her son)
+was free from these intrusions.&nbsp; Not only my house, but my neighbourhood
+as well, was left in peace; even on our walks abroad we were guarded
+and prepared for; and, like great persons visiting a hospital, saw only
+the fair side.&nbsp; For the matter of a week we were thus suffered
+to go out and in and live in a fool&rsquo;s paradise, supposing the
+king to have kept his word, the tapu to be revived and the island once
+more sober.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tuesday, July</i> 23. - We dined under a bare trellis erected for
+the Fourth of July; and here we used to linger by lamplight over coffee
+and tobacco.&nbsp; In that climate evening approaches without sensible
+chill; the wind dies out before sunset; heaven glows a while and fades,
+and darkens into the blueness of the tropical night; swiftly and insensibly
+the shadows thicken, the stars multiply their number; you look around
+you and the day is gone.&nbsp; It was then that we would see our Chinaman
+draw near across the compound in a lurching sphere of light, divided
+by his shadows; and with the coming of the lamp the night closed about
+the table.&nbsp; The faces of the company, the spars of the trellis,
+stood out suddenly bright on a ground of blue and silver, faintly designed
+with palm-tops and the peaked roofs of houses.&nbsp; Here and there
+the gloss upon a leaf, or the fracture of a stone, returned an isolated
+sparkle.&nbsp; All else had vanished.&nbsp; We hung there, illuminated
+like a galaxy of stars <i>in</i> <i>vacuo</i>; we sat, manifest and
+blind, amid the general ambush of the darkness; and the islanders, passing
+with light footfalls and low voices in the sand of the road, lingered
+to observe us, unseen.<br>
+<br>
+On Tuesday the dusk had fallen, the lamp had just been brought, when
+a missile struck the table with a rattling smack and rebounded past
+my ear.&nbsp; Three inches to one side and this page had never been
+written; for the thing travelled like a cannon ball.&nbsp; It was supposed
+at the time to be a nut, though even at the time I thought it seemed
+a small one and fell strangely.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Wednesday, July</i> 24. - The dusk had fallen once more, and the
+lamp been just brought out, when the same business was repeated.&nbsp;
+And again the missile whistled past my ear.&nbsp; One nut I had been
+willing to accept; a second, I rejected utterly.&nbsp; A cocoa-nut does
+not come slinging along on a windless evening, making an angle of about
+fifteen degrees with the horizon; cocoa-nuts do not fall on successive
+nights at the same hour and spot; in both cases, besides, a specific
+moment seemed to have been chosen, that when the lamp was just carried
+out, a specific person threatened, and that the head of the family.&nbsp;
+I may have been right or wrong, but I believed I was the mark of some
+intimidation; believed the missile was a stone, aimed not to hit, but
+to frighten.<br>
+<br>
+No idea makes a man more angry.&nbsp; I ran into the road, where the
+natives were as usual promenading in the dark; Maka joined me with a
+lantern; and I ran from one to another, glared in quite innocent faces,
+put useless questions, and proffered idle threats.&nbsp; Thence I carried
+my wrath (which was worthy the son of any queen in history) to the Ricks.&nbsp;
+They heard me with depression, assured me this trick of throwing a stone
+into a family dinner was not new; that it meant mischief, and was of
+a piece with the alarming disposition of the natives.&nbsp; And then
+the truth, so long concealed from us, came out.&nbsp; The king had broken
+his promise, he had defied the deputation; the tapu was still dormant,
+<i>The Land we Live in</i> still selling drink, and that quarter of
+the town disturbed and menaced by perpetual broils.&nbsp; But there
+was worse ahead: a feast was now preparing for the birthday of the little
+princess; and the tributary chiefs of Kuma and Little Makin were expected
+daily.&nbsp; Strong in a following of numerous and somewhat savage clansmen,
+each of these was believed, like a Douglas of old, to be of doubtful
+loyalty.&nbsp; Kuma (a little pot-bellied fellow) never visited the
+palace, never entered the town, but sat on the beach on a mat, his gun
+across his knees, parading his mistrust and scorn; Karaiti of Makin,
+although he was more bold, was not supposed to be more friendly; and
+not only were these vassals jealous of the throne, but the followers
+on either side shared in the animosity.&nbsp; Brawls had already taken
+place; blows had passed which might at any moment be repaid in blood.&nbsp;
+Some of the strangers were already here and already drinking; if the
+debauch continued after the bulk of them had come, a collision, perhaps
+a revolution, was to be expected.<br>
+<br>
+The sale of drink is in this group a measure of the jealousy of traders;
+one begins, the others are constrained to follow; and to him who has
+the most gin, and sells it the most recklessly, the lion&rsquo;s share
+of copra is assured.&nbsp; It is felt by all to be an extreme expedient,
+neither safe, decent, nor dignified.&nbsp; A trader on Tarawa, heated
+by an eager rivalry, brought many cases of gin.&nbsp; He told me he
+sat afterwards day and night in his house till it was finished, not
+daring to arrest the sale, not venturing to go forth, the bush all round
+him filled with howling drunkards.&nbsp; At night, above all, when he
+was afraid to sleep, and heard shots and voices about him in the darkness,
+his remorse was black.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;My God!&rsquo; he reflected, &lsquo;if I was to lose my life
+on such a wretched business!&rsquo;&nbsp; Often and often, in the story
+of the Gilberts, this scene has been repeated; and the remorseful trader
+sat beside his lamp, longing for the day, listening with agony for the
+sound of murder, registering resolutions for the future.&nbsp; For the
+business is easy to begin, but hazardous to stop.&nbsp; The natives
+are in their way a just and law-abiding people, mindful of their debts,
+docile to the voice of their own institutions; when the tapu is re-enforced
+they will cease drinking; but the white who seeks to antedate the movement
+by refusing liquor does so at his peril.<br>
+<br>
+Hence, in some degree, the anxiety and helplessness of Mr. Rick.&nbsp;
+He and Tom, alarmed by the rabblement of the <i>Sans Souci</i>, had
+stopped the sale; they had done so without danger, because <i>The Land
+we Live in</i> still continued selling; it was claimed, besides, that
+they had been the first to begin.&nbsp; What step could be taken?&nbsp;
+Could Mr. Rick visit Mr. Muller (with whom he was not on terms) and
+address him thus: &lsquo;I was getting ahead of you, now you are getting
+ahead of me, and I ask you to forego your profit.&nbsp; I got my place
+closed in safety, thanks to your continuing; but now I think you have
+continued long enough.&nbsp; I begin to be alarmed; and because I am
+afraid I ask you to confront a certain danger&rsquo;?&nbsp; It was not
+to be thought of.&nbsp; Something else had to be found; and there was
+one person at one end of the town who was at least not interested in
+copra.&nbsp; There was little else to be said in favour of myself as
+an ambassador.&nbsp; I had arrived in the Wightman schooner, I was living
+in the Wightman compound, I was the daily associate of the Wightman
+coterie.&nbsp; It was egregious enough that I should now intrude unasked
+in the private affairs of Crawford&rsquo;s agent, and press upon him
+the sacrifice of his interests and the venture of his life.&nbsp; But
+bad as I might be, there was none better; since the affair of the stone
+I was, besides, sharp-set to be doing, the idea of a delicate interview
+attracted me, and I thought it policy to show myself abroad.<br>
+<br>
+The night was very dark.&nbsp; There was service in the church, and
+the building glimmered through all its crevices like a dim Kirk Allowa&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+I saw few other lights, but was indistinctly aware of many people stirring
+in the darkness, and a hum and sputter of low talk that sounded stealthy.&nbsp;
+I believe (in the old phrase) my beard was sometimes on my shoulder
+as I went.&nbsp; Muller&rsquo;s was but partly lighted, and quite silent,
+and the gate was fastened.&nbsp; I could by no means manage to undo
+the latch.&nbsp; No wonder, since I found it afterwards to be four or
+five feet long - a fortification in itself.&nbsp; As I still fumbled,
+a dog came on the inside and sniffed suspiciously at my hands, so that
+I was reduced to calling &lsquo;House ahoy!&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Muller
+came down and put his chin across the paling in the dark.&nbsp; &lsquo;Who
+is that?&rsquo; said he, like one who has no mind to welcome strangers.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;My name is Stevenson,&rsquo; said I.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O, Mr. Stevens!&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t know you.&nbsp; Come inside.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+We stepped into the dark store, when I leaned upon the counter and he
+against the wall.&nbsp; All the light came from the sleeping-room, where
+I saw his family being put to bed; it struck full in my face, but Mr.
+Muller stood in shadow.&nbsp; No doubt he expected what was Coming,
+and sought the advantage of position; but for a man who wished to persuade
+and had nothing to conceal, mine was the preferable.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Look here,&rsquo; I began, &lsquo;I hear you are selling to the
+natives.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Others have done that before me,&rsquo; he returned pointedly.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;No doubt,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;and I have nothing to do with
+the past, but the future.&nbsp; I want you to promise you will handle
+these spirits carefully.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now what is your motive in this?&rsquo; he asked, and then, with
+a sneer, &lsquo;Are you afraid of your life?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;That is nothing to the purpose,&rsquo; I replied.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+know, and you know, these spirits ought not to be used at all.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Tom and Mr. Rick have sold them before.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I have nothing to do with Tom and Mr. Rick.&nbsp; All I know
+is I have heard them both refuse.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;No, I suppose you have nothing to do with them.&nbsp; Then you
+are just afraid of your life.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Come now,&rsquo; I cried, being perhaps a little stung, &lsquo;you
+know in your heart I am asking a reasonable thing.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+ask you to lose your profit - though I would prefer to see no spirits
+brought here, as you would - &rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I don&rsquo;t say I wouldn&rsquo;t.&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t begin
+this,&rsquo; he interjected.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;No, I don&rsquo;t suppose you did,&rsquo; said I.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+I don&rsquo;t ask you to lose; I ask you to give me your word, man to
+man, that you will make no native drunk.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Up to now Mr. Muller had maintained an attitude very trying to my temper;
+but he had maintained it with difficulty, his sentiment being all upon
+my side; and here he changed ground for the worse.&nbsp; &lsquo;It isn&rsquo;t
+me that sells,&rsquo; said he.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;No, it&rsquo;s that nigger,&rsquo; I agreed.&nbsp; &lsquo;But
+he&rsquo;s yours to buy and sell; you have your hand on the nape of
+his neck; and I ask you - I have my wife here - to use the authority
+you have.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+He hastily returned to his old ward.&nbsp; &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t deny
+I could if I wanted,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;But there&rsquo;s
+no danger, the natives are all quiet.&nbsp; You&rsquo;re just afraid
+of your life.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+I do not like to be called a coward, even by implication; and here I
+lost my temper and propounded an untimely ultimatum.&nbsp; &lsquo;You
+had better put it plain,&rsquo; I cried.&nbsp; &lsquo;Do you mean to
+refuse me what I ask?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I don&rsquo;t want either to refuse it or grant it,&rsquo; he
+replied.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;You&rsquo;ll find you have to do the one thing or the other,
+and right now!&rsquo; I cried, and then, striking into a happier vein,
+&lsquo;Come,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re a better sort than that.&nbsp;
+I see what&rsquo;s wrong with you - you think I came from the opposite
+camp.&nbsp; I see the sort of man you are, and you know that what I
+ask is right.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Again he changed ground.&nbsp; &lsquo;If the natives get any drink,
+it isn&rsquo;t safe to stop them,&rsquo; he objected.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I&rsquo;ll be answerable for the bar,&rsquo; I said.&nbsp; &lsquo;We
+are three men and four revolvers; we&rsquo;ll come at a word, and hold
+the place against the village.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;You don&rsquo;t know what you&rsquo;re talking about; it&rsquo;s
+too dangerous!&rsquo; he cried.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Look here,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t mind much about
+losing that life you talk so much of; but I mean to lose it the way
+I want to, and that is, putting a stop to all this beastliness.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+He talked a while about his duty to the firm; I minded not at all, I
+was secure of victory.&nbsp; He was but waiting to capitulate, and looked
+about for any potent to relieve the strain.&nbsp; In the gush of light
+from the bedroom door I spied a cigar-holder on the desk.&nbsp; &lsquo;That
+is well coloured,&rsquo; said I.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Will you take a cigar?&rsquo; said he.<br>
+<br>
+I took it and held it up unlighted.&nbsp; &lsquo;Now,&rsquo; said I,
+&lsquo;you promise me.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I promise you you won&rsquo;t have any trouble from natives that
+have drunk at my place,&rsquo; he replied.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;That is all I ask,&rsquo; said I, and showed it was not by immediately
+offering to try his stock.<br>
+<br>
+So far as it was anyway critical our interview here ended.&nbsp; Mr.
+Muller had thenceforth ceased to regard me as an emissary from his rivals,
+dropped his defensive attitude, and spoke as he believed.&nbsp; I could
+make out that he would already, had he dared, have stopped the sale
+himself.&nbsp; Not quite daring, it may be imagined how he resented
+the idea of interference from those who had (by his own statement) first
+led him on, then deserted him in the breach, and now (sitting themselves
+in safety) egged him on to a new peril, which was all gain to them,
+all loss to him!&nbsp; I asked him what he thought of the danger from
+the feast.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I think worse of it than any of you,&rsquo; he answered.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;They were shooting around here last night, and I heard the balls
+too.&nbsp; I said to myself, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s bad.&rdquo;&nbsp; What
+gets me is why you should be making this row up at your end.&nbsp; I
+should be the first to go.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+It was a thoughtless wonder.&nbsp; The consolation of being second is
+not great; the fact, not the order of going - there was our concern.<br>
+<br>
+Scott talks moderately of looking forward to a time of fighting &lsquo;with
+a feeling that resembled pleasure.&rsquo;&nbsp; The resemblance seems
+rather an identity.&nbsp; In modern life, contact is ended; man grows
+impatient of endless manoeuvres; and to approach the fact, to find ourselves
+where we can push an advantage home, and stand a fair risk, and see
+at last what we are made of, stirs the blood.&nbsp; It was so at least
+with all my family, who bubbled with delight at the approach of trouble;
+and we sat deep into the night like a pack of schoolboys, preparing
+the revolvers and arranging plans against the morrow.&nbsp; It promised
+certainly to be a busy and eventful day.&nbsp; The Old Men were to be
+summoned to confront me on the question of the tapu; Muller might call
+us at any moment to garrison his bar; and suppose Muller to fail, we
+decided in a family council to take that matter into our own hands,
+<i>The Land we Live</i> <i>in</i> at the pistol&rsquo;s mouth, and with
+the polysyllabic Williams, dance to a new tune.&nbsp; As I recall our
+humour I think it would have gone hard with the mulatto.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Wednesday</i>, <i>July</i> 24. - It was as well, and yet it was disappointing
+that these thunder-clouds rolled off in silence.&nbsp; Whether the Old
+Men recoiled from an interview with Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son, whether
+Muller had secretly intervened, or whether the step flowed naturally
+from the fears of the king and the nearness of the feast, the tapu was
+early that morning re-enforced; not a day too soon, from the manner
+the boats began to arrive thickly, and the town was filled with the
+big rowdy vassals of Karaiti.<br>
+<br>
+The effect lingered for some time on the minds of the traders; it was
+with the approval of all present that I helped to draw up a petition
+to the United States, praying for a law against the liquor trade in
+the Gilberts; and it was at this request that I added, under my own
+name, a brief testimony of what had passed; - useless pains; since the
+whole reposes, probably unread and possibly unopened, in a pigeon-hole
+at Washington.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Sunday, July</i> 28. - This day we had the afterpiece of the debauch.&nbsp;
+The king and queen, in European clothes, and followed by armed guards,
+attended church for the first time, and sat perched aloft in a precarious
+dignity under the barrel-hoops.&nbsp; Before sermon his majesty clambered
+from the dais, stood lopsidedly upon the gravel floor, and in a few
+words abjured drinking.&nbsp; The queen followed suit with a yet briefer
+allocution.&nbsp; All the men in church were next addressed in turn;
+each held up his right hand, and the affair was over - throne and church
+were reconciled.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VI - THE FIVE DAYS&rsquo; FESTIVAL<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<i>Thursday, July</i> 25. - The street was this day much enlivened by
+the presence of the men from Little Makin; they average taller than
+Butaritarians, and being on a holiday, went wreathed with yellow leaves
+and gorgeous in vivid colours.&nbsp; They are said to be more savage,
+and to be proud of the distinction.&nbsp; Indeed, it seemed to us they
+swaggered in the town, like plaided Highlanders upon the streets of
+Inverness, conscious of barbaric virtues.<br>
+<br>
+In the afternoon the summer parlour was observed to be packed with people;
+others standing outside and stooping to peer under the eaves, like children
+at home about a circus.&nbsp; It was the Makin company, rehearsing for
+the day of competition.&nbsp; Karaiti sat in the front row close to
+the singers, where we were summoned (I suppose in honour of Queen Victoria)
+to join him.&nbsp; A strong breathless heat reigned under the iron roof,
+and the air was heavy with the scent of wreaths.&nbsp; The singers,
+with fine mats about their loins, cocoa-nut feathers set in rings upon
+their fingers, and their heads crowned with yellow leaves, sat on the
+floor by companies.&nbsp; A varying number of soloists stood up for
+different songs; and these bore the chief part in the music.&nbsp; But
+the full force of the companies, even when not singing, contributed
+continuously to the effect, and marked the ictus of the measure, mimicking,
+grimacing, casting up their heads and eyes, fluttering the feathers
+on their fingers, clapping hands, or beating (loud as a kettledrum)
+on the left breast; the time was exquisite, the music barbarous, but
+full of conscious art.&nbsp; I noted some devices constantly employed.&nbsp;
+A sudden change would be introduced (I think of key) with no break of
+the measure, but emphasised by a sudden dramatic heightening of the
+voice and a swinging, general gesticulation.&nbsp; The voices of the
+soloists would begin far apart in a rude discord, and gradually draw
+together to a unison; which, when, they had reached, they were joined
+and drowned by the full chorus.&nbsp; The ordinary, hurried, barking
+unmelodious movement of the voices would at times be broken and glorified
+by a psalm-like strain of melody, often well constructed, or seeming
+so by contrast.&nbsp; There was much variety of measure, and towards
+the end of each piece, when the fun became fast and furious, a recourse
+to this figure -<br>
+<br>
+[Musical notation which cannot be produced.&nbsp; It means two/four
+time with quaver, quaver, crotchet repeated for three bars.]<br>
+<br>
+It is difficult to conceive what fire and devilry they get into these
+hammering finales; all go together, voices, hands, eyes, leaves, and
+fluttering finger-rings; the chorus swings to the eye, the song throbs
+on the ear; the faces are convulsed with enthusiasm and effort.<br>
+<br>
+Presently the troop stood up in a body, the drums forming a half-circle
+for the soloists, who were sometimes five or even more in number.&nbsp;
+The songs that followed were highly dramatic; though I had none to give
+me any explanation, I would at times make out some shadowy but decisive
+outline of a plot; and I was continually reminded of certain quarrelsome
+concerted scenes in grand operas at home; just so the single voices
+issue from and fall again into the general volume; just so do the performers
+separate and crowd together, brandish the raised hand, and roll the
+eye to heaven - or the gallery.&nbsp; Already this is beyond the Thespian
+model; the art of this people is already past the embryo: song, dance,
+drums, quartette and solo - it is the drama full developed although
+still in miniature.&nbsp; Of all so-called dancing in the South Seas,
+that which I saw in Butaritari stands easily the first.&nbsp; The <i>hula</i>,
+as it may be viewed by the speedy globe-trotter in Honolulu, is surely
+the most dull of man&rsquo;s inventions, and the spectator yawns under
+its length as at a college lecture or a parliamentary debate.&nbsp;
+But the Gilbert Island dance leads on the mind; it thrills, rouses,
+subjugates; it has the essence of all art, an unexplored imminent significance.&nbsp;
+Where so many are engaged, and where all must make (at a given moment)
+the same swift, elaborate, and often arbitrary movement, the toil of
+rehearsal is of course extreme.&nbsp; But they begin as children.&nbsp;
+A child and a man may often be seen together in a maniap&rsquo;: the
+man sings and gesticulates, the child stands before him with streaming
+tears and tremulously copies him in act and sound; it is the Gilbert
+Island artist learning (as all artists must) his art in sorrow.<br>
+<br>
+I may seem to praise too much; here is a passage from my wife&rsquo;s
+diary, which proves that I was not alone in being moved, and completes
+the picture:- &lsquo;The conductor gave the cue, and all the dancers,
+waving their arms, swaying their bodies, and clapping their breasts
+in perfect time, opened with an introductory.&nbsp; The performers remained
+seated, except two, and once three, and twice a single soloist.&nbsp;
+These stood in the group, making a slight movement with the feet and
+rhythmical quiver of the body as they sang.&nbsp; There was a pause
+after the introductory, and then the real business of the opera - for
+it was no less - began; an opera where every singer was an accomplished
+actor.&nbsp; The leading man, in an impassioned ecstasy which possessed
+him from head to foot, seemed transfigured; once it was as though a
+strong wind had swept over the stage - their arms, their feathered fingers
+thrilling with an emotion that shook my nerves as well: heads and bodies
+followed like a field of grain before a gust.&nbsp; My blood came hot
+and cold, tears pricked my eyes, my head whirled, I felt an almost irresistible
+impulse to join the dancers.&nbsp; One drama, I think, I very nearly
+understood.&nbsp; A fierce and savage old man took the solo part.&nbsp;
+He sang of the birth of a prince, and how he was tenderly rocked in
+his mother&rsquo;s arms; of his boyhood, when he excelled his fellows
+in swimming, climbing, and all athletic sports; of his youth, when he
+went out to sea with his boat and fished; of his manhood, when he married
+a wife who cradled a son of his own in her arms.&nbsp; Then came the
+alarm of war, and a great battle, of which for a time the issue was
+doubtful; but the hero conquered, as he always does, and with a tremendous
+burst of the victors the piece closed.&nbsp; There were also comic pieces,
+which caused great amusement.&nbsp; During one, an old man behind me
+clutched me by the arm, shook his finger in my face with a roguish smile,
+and said something with a chuckle, which I took to be the equivalent
+of &ldquo;O, you women, you women; it is true of you all!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I fear it was not complimentary.&nbsp; At no time was there the least
+sign of the ugly indecency of the eastern islands.&nbsp; All was poetry
+pure and simple.&nbsp; The music itself was as complex as our own, though
+constructed on an entirely different basis; once or twice I was startled
+by a bit of something very like the best English sacred music, but it
+was only for an instant.&nbsp; At last there was a longer pause, and
+this time the dancers were all on their feet.&nbsp; As the drama went
+on, the interest grew.&nbsp; The performers appealed to each other,
+to the audience, to the heaven above; they took counsel with each other,
+the conspirators drew together in a knot; it was just an opera, the
+drums coming in at proper intervals, the tenor, baritone, and bass all
+where they should be - except that the voices were all of the same calibre.&nbsp;
+A woman once sang from the back row with a very fine contralto voice
+spoilt by being made artificially nasal; I notice all the women affect
+that unpleasantness.&nbsp; At one time a boy of angelic beauty was the
+soloist; and at another, a child of six or eight, doubtless an infant
+phenomenon being trained, was placed in the centre.&nbsp; The little
+fellow was desperately frightened and embarrassed at first, but towards
+the close warmed up to his work and showed much dramatic talent.&nbsp;
+The changing expressions on the faces of the dancers were so speaking,
+that it seemed a great stupidity not to understand them.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Our neighbour at this performance, Karaiti, somewhat favours his Butaritarian
+majesty in shape and feature, being, like him, portly, bearded, and
+Oriental.&nbsp; In character he seems the reverse: alert, smiling, jovial,
+jocular, industrious.&nbsp; At home in his own island, he labours himself
+like a slave, and makes his people labour like a slave-driver.&nbsp;
+He takes an interest in ideas.&nbsp; George the trader told him about
+flying-machines.&nbsp; &lsquo;Is that true, George?&rsquo; he asked.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;It is in the papers,&rsquo; replied George.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo;
+said Karaiti, &lsquo;if that man can do it with machinery, I can do
+it without&rsquo;; and he designed and made a pair of wings, strapped
+them on his shoulders, went to the end of a pier, launched himself into
+space, and fell bulkily into the sea.&nbsp; His wives fished him out,
+for his wings hindered him in swimming.&nbsp; &lsquo;George,&rsquo;
+said he, pausing as he went up to change, &lsquo;George, you lie.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He had eight wives, for his small realm still follows ancient customs;
+but he showed embarrassment when this was mentioned to my wife.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Tell her I have only brought one here,&rsquo; he said anxiously.&nbsp;
+Altogether the Black Douglas pleased us much; and as we heard fresh
+details of the king&rsquo;s uneasiness, and saw for ourselves that all
+the weapons in the summer parlour had been hid, we watched with the
+more admiration the cause of all this anxiety rolling on his big legs,
+with his big smiling face, apparently unarmed, and certainly unattended,
+through the hostile town.&nbsp; The Red Douglas, pot-bellied Kuma, having
+perhaps heard word of the debauch, remained upon his fief; his vassals
+thus came uncommanded to the feast, and swelled the following of Karaiti.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Friday</i>, <i>July</i> 26. - At night in the dark, the singers of
+Makin paraded in the road before our house and sang the song of the
+princess.&nbsp; &lsquo;This is the day; she was born to-day; Nei Kamaunave
+was born to-day - a beautiful princess, Queen of Butaritari.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So I was told it went in endless iteration.&nbsp; The song was of course
+out of season, and the performance only a rehearsal.&nbsp; But it was
+a serenade besides; a delicate attention to ourselves from our new friend,
+Karaiti.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Saturday</i>, <i>July</i> 27. - We had announced a performance of
+the magic lantern to-night in church; and this brought the king to visit
+us.&nbsp; In honour of the Black Douglas (I suppose) his usual two guardsmen
+were now increased to four; and the squad made an outlandish figure
+as they straggled after him, in straw hats, kilts and jackets.&nbsp;
+Three carried their arms reversed, the butts over their shoulders, the
+muzzles menacing the king&rsquo;s plump back; the fourth had passed
+his weapon behind his neck, and held it there with arms extended like
+a backboard.&nbsp; The visit was extraordinarily long.&nbsp; The king,
+no longer galvanised with gin, said and did nothing.&nbsp; He sat collapsed
+in a chair and let a cigar go out.&nbsp; It was hot, it was sleepy,
+it was cruel dull; there was no resource but to spy in the countenance
+of Tebureimoa for some remaining trait of <i>Mr. Corpse</i> the butcher.&nbsp;
+His hawk nose, crudely depressed and flattened at the point, did truly
+seem to us to smell of midnight murder.&nbsp; When he took his leave,
+Maka bade me observe him going down the stair (or rather ladder) from
+the verandah.&nbsp; &lsquo;Old man,&rsquo; said Maka.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo;
+said I, &lsquo;and yet I suppose not old man.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Young
+man,&rsquo; returned Maka, &lsquo;perhaps fo&rsquo;ty.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And I have heard since he is most likely younger.<br>
+<br>
+While the magic lantern was showing, I skulked without in the dark.&nbsp;
+The voice of Maka, excitedly explaining the Scripture slides, seemed
+to fill not the church only, but the neighbourhood.&nbsp; All else was
+silent.&nbsp; Presently a distant sound of singing arose and approached;
+and a procession drew near along the road, the hot clean smell of the
+men and women striking in my face delightfully.&nbsp; At the corner,
+arrested by the voice of Maka and the lightening and darkening of the
+church, they paused.&nbsp; They had no mind to go nearer, that was plain.&nbsp;
+They were Makin people, I believe, probably staunch heathens, contemners
+of the missionary and his works.&nbsp; Of a sudden, however, a man broke
+from their company, took to his heels, and fled into the church; next
+moment three had followed him; the next it was a covey of near upon
+a score, all pelting for their lives.&nbsp; So the little band of the
+heathen paused irresolute at the corner, and melted before the attractions
+of a magic lantern, like a glacier in spring.&nbsp; The more staunch
+vainly taunted the deserters; three fled in a guilty silence, but still
+fled; and when at length the leader found the wit or the authority to
+get his troop in motion and revive the singing, it was with much diminished
+forces that they passed musically on up the dark road.<br>
+<br>
+Meanwhile inside the luminous pictures brightened and faded.&nbsp; I
+stood for some while unobserved in the rear of the spectators, when
+I could hear just in front of me a pair of lovers following the show
+with interest, the male playing the part of interpreter and (like Adam)
+mingling caresses with his lecture.&nbsp; The wild animals, a tiger
+in particular, and that old school-treat favourite, the sleeper and
+the mouse, were hailed with joy; but the chief marvel and delight was
+in the gospel series.&nbsp; Maka, in the opinion of his aggrieved wife,
+did not properly rise to the occasion.&nbsp; &lsquo;What is the matter
+with the man?&nbsp; Why can&rsquo;t he talk?&rsquo; she cried.&nbsp;
+The matter with the man, I think, was the greatness of the opportunity;
+he reeled under his good fortune; and whether he did ill or well, the
+exposure of these pious &lsquo;phantoms&rsquo; did as a matter of fact
+silence in all that part of the island the voice of the scoffer.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Why then,&rsquo; the word went round, &lsquo;why then, the Bible
+is true!&rsquo;&nbsp; And on our return afterwards we were told the
+impression was yet lively, and those who had seen might be heard telling
+those who had not, &lsquo;O yes, it is all true; these things all happened,
+we have seen the pictures.&rsquo;&nbsp; The argument is not so childish
+as it seems; for I doubt if these islanders are acquainted with any
+other mode of representation but photography; so that the picture of
+an event (on the old melodrama principle that &lsquo;the camera cannot
+lie, Joseph,&rsquo;) would appear strong proof of its occurrence.&nbsp;
+The fact amused us the more because our slides were some of them ludicrously
+silly, and one (Christ before Pilate) was received with shouts of merriment,
+in which even Maka was constrained to join.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Sunday</i>, <i>July</i> 28. - Karaiti came to ask for a repetition
+of the &lsquo;phantoms&rsquo; - this was the accepted word - and, having
+received a promise, turned and left my humble roof without the shadow
+of a salutation.&nbsp; I felt it impolite to have the least appearance
+of pocketing a slight; the times had been too difficult, and were still
+too doubtful; and Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son was bound to maintain the
+honour of his house.&nbsp; Karaiti was accordingly summoned that evening
+to the Ricks, where Mrs. Rick fell foul of him in words, and Queen Victoria&rsquo;s
+son assailed him with indignant looks.&nbsp; I was the ass with the
+lion&rsquo;s skin; I could not roar in the language of the Gilbert Islands;
+but I could stare.&nbsp; Karaiti declared he had meant no offence; apologised
+in a sound, hearty, gentlemanly manner; and became at once at his ease.&nbsp;
+He had in a dagger to examine, and announced he would come to price
+it on the morrow, to-day being Sunday; this nicety in a heathen with
+eight wives surprised me.&nbsp; The dagger was &lsquo;good for killing
+fish,&rsquo; he said roguishly; and was supposed to have his eye upon
+fish upon two legs.&nbsp; It is at least odd that in Eastern Polynesia
+fish was the accepted euphemism for the human sacrifice.&nbsp; Asked
+as to the population of his island, Karaiti called out to his vassals
+who sat waiting him outside the door, and they put it at four hundred
+and fifty; but (added Karaiti jovially) there will soon be plenty more,
+for all the women are in the family way.&nbsp; Long before we separated
+I had quite forgotten his offence.&nbsp; He, however, still bore it
+in mind; and with a very courteous inspiration returned early on the
+next day, paid us a long visit, and punctiliously said farewell when
+he departed.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Monday</i>, <i>July</i> 29. - The great day came round at last.&nbsp;
+In the first hours the night was startled by the sound of clapping hands
+and the chant of Nei Kamaunava; its melancholy, slow, and somewhat menacing
+measures broken at intervals by a formidable shout.&nbsp; The little
+morsel of humanity thus celebrated in the dark hours was observed at
+midday playing on the green entirely naked, and equally unobserved and
+unconcerned.<br>
+<br>
+The summer parlour on its artificial islet, relieved against the shimmering
+lagoon, and shimmering itself with sun and tinned iron, was all day
+crowded about by eager men and women.&nbsp; Within, it was boxed full
+of islanders, of any age and size, and in every degree of nudity and
+finery.&nbsp; So close we squatted, that at one time I had a mighty
+handsome woman on my knees, two little naked urchins having their feet
+against my back.&nbsp; There might be a dame in full attire of <i>holoku</i>
+and hat and flowers; and her next neighbour might the next moment strip
+some little rag of a shift from her fat shoulders and come out a monument
+of flesh, painted rather than covered by the hairbreadth <i>ridi</i>.&nbsp;
+Little ladies who thought themselves too great to appear undraped upon
+so high a festival were seen to pause outside in the bright sunshine,
+their miniature ridis in their hand; a moment more and they were full-dressed
+and entered the concert-room.<br>
+<br>
+At either end stood up to sing, or sat down to rest, the alternate companies
+of singers; Kuma and Little Makin on the north, Butaritari and its conjunct
+hamlets on the south; both groups conspicuous in barbaric bravery.&nbsp;
+In the midst, between these rival camps of troubadours, a bench was
+placed; and here the king and queen throned it, some two or three feet
+above the crowded audience on the floor - Tebureimoa as usual in his
+striped pyjamas with a satchel strapped across one shoulder, doubtless
+(in the island fashion) to contain his pistols; the queen in a purple
+<i>holoku</i>, her abundant hair let down, a fan in her hand.&nbsp;
+The bench was turned facing to the strangers, a piece of well-considered
+civility; and when it was the turn of Butaritari to sing, the pair must
+twist round on the bench, lean their elbows on the rail, and turn to
+us the spectacle of their broad backs.&nbsp; The royal couple occasionally
+solaced themselves with a clay pipe; and the pomp of state was further
+heightened by the rifles of a picket of the guard.<br>
+<br>
+With this kingly countenance, and ourselves squatted on the ground,
+we heard several songs from one side or the other.&nbsp; Then royalty
+and its guards withdrew, and Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son and daughter-in-law
+were summoned by acclamation to the vacant throne.&nbsp; Our pride was
+perhaps a little modified when we were joined on our high places by
+a certain thriftless loafer of a white; and yet I was glad too, for
+the man had a smattering of native, and could give me some idea of the
+subject of the songs.&nbsp; One was patriotic, and dared Tembinok&rsquo;
+of Apemama, the terror of the group, to an invasion.&nbsp; One mixed
+the planting of taro and the harvest-home.&nbsp; Some were historical,
+and commemorated kings and the illustrious chances of their time, such
+as a bout of drinking or a war.&nbsp; One, at least, was a drama of
+domestic interest, excellently played by the troop from Makin.&nbsp;
+It told the story of a man who has lost his wife, at first bewails her
+loss, then seeks another: the earlier strains (or acts) are played exclusively
+by men; but towards the end a woman appears, who has just lost her husband;
+and I suppose the pair console each other, for the finale seemed of
+happy omen.&nbsp; Of some of the songs my informant told me briefly
+they were &lsquo;like about the <i>weemen</i>&rsquo;; this I could have
+guessed myself.&nbsp; Each side (I should have said) was strengthened
+by one or two women.&nbsp; They were all soloists, did not very often
+join in the performance, but stood disengaged at the back part of the
+stage, and looked (in <i>ridi</i>, necklace, and dressed hair) for all
+the world like European ballet-dancers.&nbsp; When the song was anyway
+broad these ladies came particularly to the front; and it was singular
+to see that, after each entry, the <i>premi&egrave;re</i> <i>danseuse</i>
+pretended to be overcome by shame, as though led on beyond what she
+had meant, and her male assistants made a feint of driving her away
+like one who had disgraced herself.&nbsp; Similar affectations accompany
+certain truly obscene dances of Samoa, where they are very well in place.&nbsp;
+Here it was different.&nbsp; The words, perhaps, in this free-spoken
+world, were gross enough to make a carter blush; and the most suggestive
+feature was this feint of shame.&nbsp; For such parts the women showed
+some disposition; they were pert, they were neat, they were acrobatic,
+they were at times really amusing, and some of them were pretty.&nbsp;
+But this is not the artist&rsquo;s field; there is the whole width of
+heaven between such capering and ogling, and the strange rhythmic gestures,
+and strange, rapturous, frenzied faces with which the best of the male
+dancers held us spellbound through a Gilbert Island ballet.<br>
+<br>
+Almost from the first it was apparent that the people of the city were
+defeated.&nbsp; I might have thought them even good, only I had the
+other troop before my eyes to correct my standard, and remind me continually
+of &lsquo;the little more, and how much it is.&rsquo;&nbsp; Perceiving
+themselves worsted, the choir of Butaritari grew confused, blundered,
+and broke down; amid this hubbub of unfamiliar intervals I should not
+myself have recognised the slip, but the audience were quick to catch
+it, and to jeer.&nbsp; To crown all, the Makin company began a dance
+of truly superlative merit.&nbsp; I know not what it was about, I was
+too much absorbed to ask.&nbsp; In one act a part of the chorus, squealing
+in some strange falsetto, produced very much the effect of our orchestra;
+in another, the dancers, leaping like jumping-jacks, with arms extended,
+passed through and through each other&rsquo;s ranks with extraordinary
+speed, neatness, and humour.&nbsp; A more laughable effect I never saw;
+in any European theatre it would have brought the house down, and the
+island audience roared with laughter and applause.&nbsp; This filled
+up the measure for the rival company, and they forgot themselves and
+decency.&nbsp; After each act or figure of the ballet, the performers
+pause a moment standing, and the next is introduced by the clapping
+of hands in triplets.&nbsp; Not until the end of the whole ballet do
+they sit down, which is the signal for the rivals to stand up.&nbsp;
+But now all rules were to be broken.&nbsp; During the interval following
+on this great applause, the company of Butaritari leaped suddenly to
+their feet and most unhandsomely began a performance of their own.&nbsp;
+It was strange to see the men of Makin staring; I have seen a tenor
+in Europe stare with the same blank dignity into a hissing theatre;
+but presently, to my surprise, they sobered down, gave up the unsung
+remainder of their ballet, resumed their seats, and suffered their ungallant
+adversaries to go on and finish.&nbsp; Nothing would suffice.&nbsp;
+Again, at the first interval, Butaritari unhandsomely cut in; Makin,
+irritated in turn, followed the example; and the two companies of dancers
+remained permanently standing, continuously clapping hands, and regularly
+cutting across each other at each pause.&nbsp; I expected blows to begin
+with any moment; and our position in the midst was highly unstrategical.&nbsp;
+But the Makin people had a better thought; and upon a fresh interruption
+turned and trooped out of the house.&nbsp; We followed them, first because
+these were the artists, second because they were guests and had been
+scurvily ill-used.&nbsp; A large population of our neighbours did the
+same, so that the causeway was filled from end to end by the procession
+of deserters; and the Butaritari choir was left to sing for its own
+pleasure in an empty house, having gained the point and lost the audience.&nbsp;
+It was surely fortunate that there was no one drunk; but, drunk or sober,
+where else would a scene so irritating have concluded without blows?<br>
+<br>
+The last stage and glory of this auspicious day was of our own providing
+- the second and positively the last appearance of the phantoms.&nbsp;
+All round the church, groups sat outside, in the night, where they could
+see nothing; perhaps ashamed to enter, certainly finding some shadowy
+pleasure in the mere proximity.&nbsp; Within, about one-half of the
+great shed was densely packed with people.&nbsp; In the midst, on the
+royal dais, the lantern luminously smoked; chance rays of light struck
+out the earnest countenance of our Chinaman grinding the hand-organ;
+a fainter glimmer showed off the rafters and their shadows in the hollow
+of the roof; the pictures shone and vanished on the screen; and as each
+appeared, there would run a hush, a whisper, a strong shuddering rustle,
+and a chorus of small cries among the crowd.&nbsp; There sat by me the
+mate of a wrecked schooner.&nbsp; &lsquo;They would think this a strange
+sight in Europe or the States,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;going on in a
+building like this, all tied with bits of string.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VII - HUSBAND AND WIFE<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The trader accustomed to the manners of Eastern Polynesia has a lesson
+to learn among the Gilberts.&nbsp; The <i>ridi</i> is but a spare attire;
+as late as thirty years back the women went naked until marriage; within
+ten years the custom lingered; and these facts, above all when heard
+in description, conveyed a very false idea of the manners of the group.&nbsp;
+A very intelligent missionary described it (in its former state) as
+a &lsquo;Paradise of naked women&rsquo; for the resident whites.&nbsp;
+It was at least a platonic Paradise, where Lothario ventured at his
+peril.&nbsp; Since 1860, fourteen whites have perished on a single island,
+all for the same cause, all found where they had no business, and speared
+by some indignant father of a family; the figure was given me by one
+of their contemporaries who had been more prudent and survived.&nbsp;
+The strange persistence of these fourteen martyrs might seem to point
+to monomania or a series of romantic passions; gin is the more likely
+key.&nbsp; The poor buzzards sat alone in their houses by an open case;
+they drank; their brain was fired; they stumbled towards the nearest
+houses on chance; and the dart went through their liver.&nbsp; In place
+of a Paradise the trader found an archipelago of fierce husbands and
+of virtuous women.&nbsp; &lsquo;Of course if you wish to make love to
+them, it&rsquo;s the same as anywhere else,&rsquo; observed a trader
+innocently; but he and his companions rarely so choose.<br>
+<br>
+The trader must be credited with a virtue: he often makes a kind and
+loyal husband.&nbsp; Some of the worst beachcombers in the Pacific,
+some of the last of the old school, have fallen in my path, and some
+of them were admirable to their native wives, and one made a despairing
+widower.&nbsp; The position of a trader&rsquo;s wife in the Gilberts
+is, besides, unusually enviable.&nbsp; She shares the immunities of
+her husband.&nbsp; Curfew in Butaritari sounds for her in vain.&nbsp;
+Long after the bell is rung and the great island ladies are confined
+for the night to their own roof, this chartered libertine may scamper
+and giggle through the deserted streets or go down to bathe in the dark.&nbsp;
+The resources of the store are at her hand; she goes arrayed like a
+queen, and feasts delicately everyday upon tinned meats.&nbsp; And she
+who was perhaps of no regard or station among natives sits with captains,
+and is entertained on board of schooners.&nbsp; Five of these privileged
+dames were some time our neighbours.&nbsp; Four were handsome skittish
+lasses, gamesome like children, and like children liable to fits of
+pouting.&nbsp; They wore dresses by day, but there was a tendency after
+dark to strip these lendings and to career and squall about the compound
+in the aboriginal <i>ridi</i>.&nbsp; Games of cards were continually
+played, with shells for counters; their course was much marred by cheating;
+and the end of a round (above all if a man was of the party) resolved
+itself into a scrimmage for the counters.&nbsp; The fifth was a matron.&nbsp;
+It was a picture to see her sail to church on a Sunday, a parasol in
+hand, a nursemaid following, and the baby buried in a trade hat and
+armed with a patent feeding-bottle.&nbsp; The service was enlivened
+by her continual supervision and correction of the maid.&nbsp; It was
+impossible not to fancy the baby was a doll, and the church some European
+playroom.&nbsp; All these women were legitimately married.&nbsp; It
+is true that the certificate of one, when she proudly showed it, proved
+to run thus, that she was &lsquo;married for one night,&rsquo; and her
+gracious partner was at liberty to &lsquo;send her to hell&rsquo; the
+next morning; but she was none the wiser or the worse for the dastardly
+trick.&nbsp; Another, I heard, was married on a work of mine in a pirated
+edition; it answered the purpose as well as a Hall Bible.&nbsp; Notwithstanding
+all these allurements of social distinction, rare food and raiment,
+a comparative vacation from toil, and legitimate marriage contracted
+on a pirated edition, the trader must sometimes seek long before he
+can be mated.&nbsp; While I was in the group one had been eight months
+on the quest, and he was still a bachelor.<br>
+<br>
+Within strictly native society the old laws and practices were harsh,
+but not without a certain stamp of high-mindedness.&nbsp; Stealthy adultery
+was punished with death; open elopement was properly considered virtue
+in comparison, and compounded for a fine in land.&nbsp; The male adulterer
+alone seems to have been punished.&nbsp; It is correct manners for a
+jealous man to hang himself; a jealous woman has a different remedy
+- she bites her rival.&nbsp; Ten or twenty years ago it was a capital
+offence to raise a woman&rsquo;s <i>ridi</i>; to this day it is still
+punished with a heavy fine; and the garment itself is still symbolically
+sacred.&nbsp; Suppose a piece of land to be disputed in Butaritari,
+the claimant who shall first hang a <i>ridi</i> on the tapu-post has
+gained his cause, since no one can remove or touch it but himself.<br>
+<br>
+The <i>ridi</i> was the badge not of the woman but the wife, the mark
+not of her sex but of her station.&nbsp; It was the collar on the slave&rsquo;s
+neck, the brand on merchandise.&nbsp; The adulterous woman seems to
+have been spared; were the husband offended, it would be a poor consolation
+to send his draught cattle to the shambles.&nbsp; Karaiti, to this day,
+calls his eight wives &lsquo;his horses,&rsquo; some trader having explained
+to him the employment of these animals on farms; and Nanteitei hired
+out his wives to do mason-work.&nbsp; Husbands, at least when of high
+rank, had the power of life and death; even whites seem to have possessed
+it; and their wives, when they had transgressed beyond forgiveness,
+made haste to pronounce the formula of deprecation - <i>I Kana Kim</i>.&nbsp;
+This form of words had so much virtue that a condemned criminal repeating
+it on a particular day to the king who had condemned him, must be instantly
+released.&nbsp; It is an offer of abasement, and, strangely enough,
+the reverse - the imitation - is a common vulgar insult in Great Britain
+to this day.&nbsp; I give a scene between a trader and his Gilbert Island
+wife, as it was told me by the husband, now one of the oldest residents,
+but then a freshman in the group.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Go and light a fire,&rsquo; said the trader, &lsquo;and when
+I have brought this oil I will cook some fish.&rsquo;&nbsp; The woman
+grunted at him, island fashion.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am not a pig that you
+should grunt at me,&rsquo; said he.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I know you are not a pig,&rsquo; said the woman, &lsquo;neither
+am I your slave.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;To be sure you are not my slave, and if you do not care to stop
+with me, you had better go home to your people,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;But in the mean time go and light the fire; and when I have brought
+this oil I will cook some fish.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+She went as if to obey; and presently when the trader looked she had
+built a fire so big that the cook-house was catching in flames.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;<i>I Kana Kim</i>!&rsquo; she cried, as she saw him coming; but
+he recked not, and hit her with a cooking-pot.&nbsp; The leg pierced
+her skull, blood spouted, it was thought she was a dead woman, and the
+natives surrounded the house in a menacing expectation.&nbsp; Another
+white was present, a man of older experience.&nbsp; &lsquo;You will
+have us both killed if you go on like this,&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp; &lsquo;She
+had said <i>I Kana Kim</i>!&rsquo;&nbsp; If she had not said <i>I Kana
+Kim</i> he might have struck her with a caldron.&nbsp; It was not the
+blow that made the crime, but the disregard of an accepted formula.<br>
+<br>
+Polygamy, the particular sacredness of wives, their semi-servile state,
+their seclusion in kings&rsquo; harems, even their privilege of biting,
+all would seem to indicate a Mohammedan society and the opinion of the
+soullessness of woman.&nbsp; And not so in the least.&nbsp; It is a
+mere appearance.&nbsp; After you have studied these extremes in one
+house, you may go to the next and find all reversed, the woman the mistress,
+the man only the first of her thralls.&nbsp; The authority is not with
+the husband as such, nor the wife as such.&nbsp; It resides in the chief
+or the chief-woman; in him or her who has inherited the lands of the
+clan, and stands to the clansman in the place of parent, exacting their
+service, answerable for their fines.&nbsp; There is but the one source
+of power and the one ground of dignity - rank.&nbsp; The king married
+a chief-woman; she became his menial, and must work with her hands on
+Messrs. Wightman&rsquo;s pier.&nbsp; The king divorced her; she regained
+at once her former state and power.&nbsp; She married the Hawaiian sailor,
+and behold the man is her flunkey and can be shown the door at pleasure.&nbsp;
+Nay, and such low-born lords are even corrected physically, and, like
+grown but dutiful children, must endure the discipline.<br>
+<br>
+We were intimate in one such household, that of Nei Takauti and Nan
+Tok&rsquo;; I put the lady first of necessity.&nbsp; During one week
+of fool&rsquo;s paradise, Mrs. Stevenson had gone alone to the sea-side
+of the island after shells.&nbsp; I am very sure the proceeding was
+unsafe; and she soon perceived a man and woman watching her.&nbsp; Do
+what she would, her guardians held her steadily in view; and when the
+afternoon began to fall, and they thought she had stayed long enough,
+took her in charge, and by signs and broken English ordered her home.&nbsp;
+On the way the lady drew from her earring-hole a clay pipe, the husband
+lighted it, and it was handed to my unfortunate wife, who knew not how
+to refuse the incommodious favour; and when they were all come to our
+house, the pair sat down beside her on the floor, and improved the occasion
+with prayer.&nbsp; From that day they were our family friends; bringing
+thrice a day the beautiful island garlands of white flowers, visiting
+us any evening, and frequently carrying us down to their own maniap&rsquo;
+in return, the woman leading Mrs. Stevenson by the hand like one child
+with another.<br>
+<br>
+Nan Tok&rsquo;, the husband, was young, extremely handsome, of the most
+approved good humour, and suffering in his precarious station from suppressed
+high spirits.&nbsp; Nei Takauti, the wife, was getting old; her grown
+son by a former marriage had just hanged himself before his mother&rsquo;s
+eyes in despair at a well-merited rebuke.&nbsp; Perhaps she had never
+been beautiful, but her face was full of character, her eye of sombre
+fire.&nbsp; She was a high chief-woman, but by a strange exception for
+a person of her rank, was small, spare, and sinewy, with lean small
+hands and corded neck.&nbsp; Her full dress of an evening was invariably
+a white chemise - and for adornment, green leaves (or sometimes white
+blossoms) stuck in her hair and thrust through her huge earring-holes.&nbsp;
+The husband on the contrary changed to view like a kaleidoscope.&nbsp;
+Whatever pretty thing my wife might have given to Nei Takauti - a string
+of beads, a ribbon, a piece of bright fabric - appeared the next evening
+on the person of Nan Tok&rsquo;.&nbsp; It was plain he was a clothes-horse;
+that he wore livery; that, in a word, he was his wife&rsquo;s wife.&nbsp;
+They reversed the parts indeed, down to the least particular; it was
+the husband who showed himself the ministering angel in the hour of
+pain, while the wife displayed the apathy and heartlessness of the proverbial
+man.<br>
+<br>
+When Nei Takauti had a headache Nan Tok&rsquo; was full of attention
+and concern.&nbsp; When the husband had a cold and a racking toothache
+the wife heeded not, except to jeer.&nbsp; It is always the woman&rsquo;s
+part to fill and light the pipe; Nei Takauti handed hers in silence
+to the wedded page; but she carried it herself, as though the page were
+not entirely trusted.&nbsp; Thus she kept the money, but it was he who
+ran the errands, anxiously sedulous.&nbsp; A cloud on her face dimmed
+instantly his beaming looks; on an early visit to their maniap&rsquo;
+my wife saw he had cause to be wary.&nbsp; Nan Tok&rsquo; had a friend
+with him, a giddy young thing, of his own age and sex; and they had
+worked themselves into that stage of jocularity when consequences are
+too often disregarded.&nbsp; Nei Takauti mentioned her own name.&nbsp;
+Instantly Nan Tok&rsquo; held up two fingers, his friend did likewise,
+both in an ecstasy of slyness.&nbsp; It was plain the lady had two names;
+and from the nature of their merriment, and the wrath that gathered
+on her brow, there must be something ticklish in the second.&nbsp; The
+husband pronounced it; a well-directed cocoa-nut from the hand of his
+wife caught him on the side of the head, and the voices and the mirth
+of these indiscreet young gentlemen ceased for the day.<br>
+<br>
+The people of Eastern Polynesia are never at a loss; their etiquette
+is absolute and plenary; in every circumstance it tells them what to
+do and how to do it.&nbsp; The Gilbertines are seemingly more free,
+and pay for their freedom (like ourselves) in frequent perplexity.&nbsp;
+This was often the case with the topsy-turvy couple.&nbsp; We had once
+supplied them during a visit with a pipe and tobacco; and when they
+had smoked and were about to leave, they found themselves confronted
+with a problem: should they take or leave what remained of the tobacco?&nbsp;
+The piece of plug was taken up, it was laid down again, it was handed
+back and forth, and argued over, till the wife began to look haggard
+and the husband elderly.&nbsp; They ended by taking it, and I wager
+were not yet clear of the compound before they were sure they had decided
+wrong.&nbsp; Another time they had been given each a liberal cup of
+coffee, and Nan Tok&rsquo; with difficulty and disaffection made an
+end of his.&nbsp; Nei Takauti had taken some, she had no mind for more,
+plainly conceived it would be a breach of manners to set down the cup
+unfinished, and ordered her wedded retainer to dispose of what was left.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I have swallowed all I can, I cannot swallow more, it is a physical
+impossibility,&rsquo; he seemed to say; and his stern officer reiterated
+her commands with secret imperative signals.&nbsp; Luckless dog! but
+in mere humanity we came to the rescue and removed the cup.<br>
+<br>
+I cannot but smile over this funny household; yet I remember the good
+souls with affection and respect.&nbsp; Their attention to ourselves
+was surprising.&nbsp; The garlands are much esteemed, the blossoms must
+be sought far and wide; and though they had many retainers to call to
+their aid, we often saw themselves passing afield after the blossoms,
+and the wife engaged with her own in putting them together.&nbsp; It
+was no want of only that disregard so incident to husbands, that made
+Nei Takauti despise the sufferings of Nan Tok&rsquo;.&nbsp; When my
+wife was unwell she proved a diligent and kindly nurse; and the pair,
+to the extreme embarrassment of the sufferer, became fixtures in the
+sick-room.&nbsp; This rugged, capable, imperious old dame, with the
+wild eyes, had deep and tender qualities: her pride in her young husband
+it seemed that she dissembled, fearing possibly to spoil him; and when
+she spoke of her dead son there came something tragic in her face.&nbsp;
+But I seemed to trace in the Gilbertines a virility of sense and sentiment
+which distinguishes them (like their harsh and uncouth language) from
+their brother islanders in the east.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+PART IV: THE GILBERTS - APEMAMA<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER I - THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE ROYAL TRADER<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+There is one great personage in the Gilberts: Tembinok&rsquo; of Apemama:
+solely conspicuous, the hero of song, the butt of gossip.&nbsp; Through
+the rest of the group the kings are slain or fallen in tutelage: Tembinok&rsquo;
+alone remains, the last tyrant, the last erect vestige of a dead society.&nbsp;
+The white man is everywhere else, building his houses, drinking his
+gin, getting in and out of trouble with the weak native governments.&nbsp;
+There is only one white on Apemama, and he on sufferance, living far
+from court, and hearkening and watching his conduct like a mouse in
+a cat&rsquo;s ear.&nbsp; Through all the other islands a stream of native
+visitors comes and goes, travelling by families, spending years on the
+grand tour.&nbsp; Apemama alone is left upon one side, the tourist dreading
+to risk himself within the clutch of Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; And fear
+of the same Gorgon follows and troubles them at home.&nbsp; Maiana once
+paid him tribute; he once fell upon and seized Nonuti: first steps to
+the empire of the archipelago.&nbsp; A British warship coming on the
+scene, the conqueror was driven to disgorge, his career checked in the
+outset, his dear-bought armoury sunk in his own lagoon.&nbsp; But the
+impression had been made; periodical fear of him still shakes the islands;
+rumour depicts him mustering his canoes for a fresh onfall; rumour can
+name his destination; and Tembinok&rsquo; figures in the patriotic war-songs
+of the Gilberts like Napoleon in those of our grandfathers.<br>
+<br>
+We were at sea, bound from Mariki to Nonuti and Tapituea, when the wind
+came suddenly fair for Apemama.&nbsp; The course was at once changed;
+all hands were turned-to to clean ship, the decks holy-stoned, all the
+cabin washed, the trade-room overhauled.&nbsp; In all our cruising we
+never saw the <i>Equator</i> so smart as she was made for Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+Nor was Captain Reid alone in these coquetries; for, another schooner
+chancing to arrive during my stay in Apemama, I found that she also
+was dandified for the occasion.&nbsp; And the two cases stand alone
+in my experience of South Sea traders.<br>
+<br>
+We had on board a family of native tourists, from the grandsire to the
+babe in arms, trying (against an extraordinary series of ill-luck) to
+regain their native island of Peru.&nbsp; Five times already they had
+paid their fare and taken ship; five times they had been disappointed,
+dropped penniless upon strange islands, or carried back to Butaritari,
+whence they sailed.&nbsp; This last attempt had been no better-starred;
+their provisions were exhausted.&nbsp; Peru was beyond hope, and they
+had cheerfully made up their minds to a fresh stage of exile in Tapituea
+or Nonuti.&nbsp; With this slant of wind their random destination became
+once more changed; and like the Calendar&rsquo;s pilot, when the &lsquo;black
+mountains&rsquo; hove in view, they changed colour and beat upon their
+breasts.&nbsp; Their camp, which was on deck in the ship&rsquo;s waist,
+resounded with complaint.&nbsp; They would be set to work, they must
+become slaves, escape was hopeless, they must live and toil and die
+in Apemama, in the tyrant&rsquo;s den.&nbsp; With this sort of talk
+they so greatly terrified their children, that one (a big hulking boy)
+must at last be torn screaming from the schooner&rsquo;s side.&nbsp;
+And their fears were wholly groundless.&nbsp; I have little doubt they
+were not suffered to be idle; but I can vouch for it that they were
+kindly and generously used.&nbsp; For, the matter of a year later, I
+was once more shipmate with these inconsistent wanderers on board the
+<i>Janet Nicoll</i>.&nbsp; Their fare was paid by Tembinok&rsquo;; they
+who had gone ashore from the <i>Equator</i> destitute, reappeared upon
+the <i>Janet</i> with new clothes, laden with mats and presents, and
+bringing with them a magazine of food, on which they lived like fighting-cocks
+throughout the voyage; I saw them at length repatriated, and I must
+say they showed more concern on quitting Apemama than delight at reaching
+home.<br>
+<br>
+We entered by the north passage (Sunday, September 1st), dodging among
+shoals.&nbsp; It was a day of fierce equatorial sunshine; but the breeze
+was strong and chill; and the mate, who conned the schooner from the
+cross-trees, returned shivering to the deck.&nbsp; The lagoon was thick
+with many-tinted wavelets; a continuous roaring of the outer sea overhung
+the anchorage; and the long, hollow crescent of palm ruffled and sparkled
+in the wind.&nbsp; Opposite our berth the beach was seen to be surmounted
+for some distance by a terrace of white coral seven or eight feet high
+and crowned in turn by the scattered and incongruous buildings of the
+palace.&nbsp; The village adjoins on the south, a cluster of high-roofed
+maniap&rsquo;s.&nbsp; And village and palace seemed deserted.<br>
+<br>
+We were scarce yet moored, however, before distant and busy figures
+appeared upon the beach, a boat was launched, and a crew pulled out
+to us bringing the king&rsquo;s ladder.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; had once
+an accident; has feared ever since to entrust his person to the rotten
+chandlery of South Sea traders; and devised in consequence a frame of
+wood, which is brought on board a ship as soon as she appears, and remains
+lashed to her side until she leave.&nbsp; The boat&rsquo;s crew, having
+applied this engine, returned at once to shore.&nbsp; They might not
+come on board; neither might we land, or not without danger of offence;
+the king giving pratique in person.&nbsp; An interval followed, during
+which dinner was delayed for the great man - the prelude of the ladder,
+giving us some notion of his weighty body and sensible, ingenious character,
+had highly whetted our curiosity; and it was with something like excitement
+that we saw the beach and terrace suddenly blacken with attendant vassals,
+the king and party embark, the boat (a man-of-war gig) come flying towards
+us dead before the wind, and the royal coxswain lay us cleverly aboard,
+mount the ladder with a jealous diffidence, and descend heavily on deck.<br>
+<br>
+Not long ago he was overgrown with fat, obscured to view, and a burthen
+to himself.&nbsp; Captains visiting the island advised him to walk;
+and though it broke the habits of a life and the traditions of his rank,
+he practised the remedy with benefit.&nbsp; His corpulence is now portable;
+you would call him lusty rather than fat; but his gait is still dull,
+stumbling, and elephantine.&nbsp; He neither stops nor hastens, but
+goes about his business with an implacable deliberation.&nbsp; We could
+never see him and not be struck with his extraordinary natural means
+for the theatre: a beaked profile like Dante&rsquo;s in the mask, a
+mane of long black hair, the eye brilliant, imperious, and inquiring:
+for certain parts, and to one who could have used it, the face was a
+fortune.&nbsp; His voice matched it well, being shrill, powerful, and
+uncanny, with a note like a sea-bird&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Where there are
+no fashions, none to set them, few to follow them if they were set,
+and none to criticise, he dresses - as Sir Charles Grandison lived -
+&lsquo;to his own heart.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now he wears a woman&rsquo;s frock,
+now a naval uniform; now (and more usually) figures in a masquerade
+costume of his own design: trousers and a singular jacket with shirt
+tails, the cut and fit wonderful for island workmanship, the material
+always handsome, sometimes green velvet, sometimes cardinal red silk.&nbsp;
+This masquerade becomes him admirably.&nbsp; In the woman&rsquo;s frock
+he looks ominous and weird beyond belief.&nbsp; I see him now come pacing
+towards me in the cruel sun, solitary, a figure out of Hoffmann.<br>
+<br>
+A visit on board ship, such as that at which we now assisted, makes
+a chief part and by far the chief diversion of the life of Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+He is not only the sole ruler, he is the sole merchant of his triple
+kingdom, Apemama, Aranuka, and Kuria, well-planted islands.&nbsp; The
+taro goes to the chiefs, who divide as they please among their immediate
+adherents; but certain fish, turtles - which abound in Kuria, - and
+the whole produce of the coco-palm, belong exclusively to Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;A&rsquo; cobra berong me,&rsquo; observed his majesty with a
+wave of his hand; and he counts and sells it by the houseful.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You got copra, king?&rsquo; I have heard a trader ask.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I got two, three outches,&rsquo; his majesty replied: &lsquo;I
+think three.&rsquo;&nbsp; Hence the commercial importance of Apemama,
+the trade of three islands being centred there in a single hand; hence
+it is that so many whites have tried in vain to gain or to preserve
+a footing; hence ships are adorned, cooks have special orders, and captains
+array themselves in smiles, to greet the king.&nbsp; If he be pleased
+with his welcome and the fare he may pass days on board, and, every
+day, and sometimes every hour, will be of profit to the ship.&nbsp;
+He oscillates between the cabin, where he is entertained with strange
+meats, and the trade-room, where he enjoys the pleasures of shopping
+on a scale to match his person.&nbsp; A few obsequious attendants squat
+by the house door, awaiting his least signal.&nbsp; In the boat, which
+has been suffered to drop astern, one or two of his wives lie covered
+from the sun under mats, tossed by the short sea of the lagoon, and
+enduring agonies of heat and tedium.&nbsp; This severity is now and
+then relaxed and the wives allowed on board.&nbsp; Three or four were
+thus favoured on the day of our arrival: substantial ladies airily attired
+in <i>ridis</i>.&nbsp; Each had a share of copra, her <i>peculium</i>,
+to dispose of for herself.&nbsp; The display in the trade-room - hats,
+ribbbons, dresses, scents, tins of salmon - the pride of the eye and
+the lust of the flesh - tempted them in vain.&nbsp; They had but the
+one idea - tobacco, the island currency, tantamount to minted gold;
+returned to shore with it, burthened but rejoicing; and late into the
+night, on the royal terrace, were to be seen counting the sticks by
+lamplight in the open air.<br>
+<br>
+The king is no such economist.&nbsp; He is greedy of things new and
+foreign.&nbsp; House after house, chest after chest, in the palace precinct,
+is already crammed with clocks, musical boxes, blue spectacles, umbrellas,
+knitted waistcoats, bolts of stuff, tools, rifles, fowling-pieces, medicines,
+European foods, sewing-machines, and, what is more extraordinary, stoves:
+all that ever caught his eye, tickled his appetite, pleased him for
+its use, or puzzled him with its apparent inutility.&nbsp; And still
+his lust is unabated.&nbsp; He is possessed by the seven devils of the
+collector.&nbsp; He hears a thing spoken of, and a shadow comes on his
+face.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think I no got him,&rsquo; he will say; and the
+treasures he has seem worthless in comparison.&nbsp; If a ship be bound
+for Apemama, the merchant racks his brain to hit upon some novelty.&nbsp;
+This he leaves carelessly in the main cabin or partly conceals in his
+own berth, so that the king shall spy it for himself.&nbsp; &lsquo;How
+much you want?&rsquo; inquires Tembinok&rsquo;, passing and pointing.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;No, king; that too dear,&rsquo; returns the trader.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+think I like him,&rsquo; says the king.&nbsp; This was a bowl of gold-fish.&nbsp;
+On another occasion it was scented soap.&nbsp; &lsquo;No, king; that
+cost too much,&rsquo; said the trader; &lsquo;too good for a Kanaka.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;How much you got?&nbsp; I take him all,&rsquo; replied his majesty,
+and became the lord of seventeen boxes at two dollars a cake.&nbsp;
+Or again, the merchant feigns the article is not for sale, is private
+property, an heirloom or a gift; and the trick infallibly succeeds.&nbsp;
+Thwart the king and you hold him.&nbsp; His autocratic nature rears
+at the affront of opposition.&nbsp; He accepts it for a challenge; sets
+his teeth like a hunter going at a fence; and with no mark of emotion,
+scarce even of interest, stolidly piles up the price.&nbsp; Thus, for
+our sins, he took a fancy to my wife&rsquo;s dressing-bag, a thing entirely
+useless to the man, and sadly battered by years of service.&nbsp; Early
+one forenoon he came to our house, sat down, and abruptly offered to
+purchase it.&nbsp; I told him I sold nothing, and the bag at any rate
+was a present from a friend; but he was acquainted with these pretexts
+from of old, and knew what they were worth and how to meet them.&nbsp;
+Adopting what I believe is called &lsquo;the object method,&rsquo; he
+drew out a bag of English gold, sovereigns and half-sovereigns, and
+began to lay them one by one in silence on the table; at each fresh
+piece reading our faces with a look.&nbsp; In vain I continued to protest
+I was no trader; he deigned not to reply.&nbsp; There must have been
+twenty pounds on the table, he was still going on, and irritation had
+begun to mingle with our embarrassment, when a happy idea came to our
+delivery.&nbsp; Since his majesty thought so much of the bag, we said,
+we must beg him to accept it as a present.&nbsp; It was the most surprising
+turn in Tembinok&rsquo;s experience.&nbsp; He perceived too late that
+his persistence was unmannerly; hung his head a while in silence; then,
+lifting up a sheepish countenance, &lsquo;I &lsquo;shamed,&rsquo; said
+the tyrant.&nbsp; It was the first and the last time we heard him own
+to a flaw in his behaviour.&nbsp; Half an hour after he sent us a camphor-wood
+chest worth only a few dollars - but then heaven knows what Tembinok&rsquo;
+had paid for it.<br>
+<br>
+Cunning by nature, and versed for forty years in the government of men,
+it must not be supposed that he is cheated blindly, or has resigned
+himself without resistance to be the milch-cow of the passing trader.&nbsp;
+His efforts have been even heroic.&nbsp; Like Nakaeia of Makin, he has
+owned schooners.&nbsp; More fortunate than Nakaeia, he has found captains.&nbsp;
+Ships of his have sailed as far as to the colonies.&nbsp; He has trafficked
+direct, in his own bottoms, with New Zealand.&nbsp; And even so, even
+there, the world-enveloping dishonesty of the white man prevented him;
+his profit melted, his ship returned in debt, the money for the insurance
+was embezzled, and when the <i>Coronet</i> came to be lost, he was astonished
+to find he had lost all.&nbsp; At this he dropped his weapons; owned
+he might as hopefully wrestle with the winds of heaven; and like an
+experienced sheep, submitted his fleece thenceforward to the shearers.&nbsp;
+He is the last man in the world to waste anger on the incurable; accepts
+it with cynical composure; asks no more in those he deals with than
+a certain decency of moderation; drives as good a bargain as he can;
+and when he considers he is more than usually swindled, writes it in
+his memory against the merchant&rsquo;s name.&nbsp; He once ran over
+to me a list of captains and supercargoes with whom he had done business,
+classing them under three heads: &lsquo;He cheat a litty&rsquo; - &lsquo;He
+cheat plenty&rsquo; - and &lsquo;I think he cheat too much.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+For the first two classes he expressed perfect toleration; sometimes,
+but not always, for the third.&nbsp; I was present when a certain merchant
+was turned about his business, and was the means (having a considerable
+influence ever since the bag) of patching up the dispute.&nbsp; Even
+on the day of our arrival there was like to have been a hitch with Captain
+Reid: the ground of which is perhaps worth recital.&nbsp; Among goods
+exported specially for Tembinok&rsquo; there is a beverage known (and
+labelled) as Hennessy&rsquo;s brandy.&nbsp; It is neither Hennessy,
+nor even brandy; is about the colour of sherry, but is not sherry; tastes
+of kirsch, and yet neither is it kirsch.&nbsp; The king, at least, has
+grown used to this amazing brand, and rather prides himself upon the
+taste; and any substitution is a double offence, being at once to cheat
+him and to cast a doubt upon his palate.&nbsp; A similar weakness is
+to be observed in all connoisseurs.&nbsp; Now the last case sold by
+the <i>Equator</i> was found to contain a different and I would fondly
+fancy a superior distillation; and the conversation opened very black
+for Captain Reid.&nbsp; But Tembinok&rsquo; is a moderate man.&nbsp;
+He was reminded and admitted that all men were liable to error, even
+himself; accepted the principle that a fault handsomely acknowledged
+should be condoned; and wound the matter up with this proposal: &lsquo;Tuppoti
+I mi&rsquo;take, you &lsquo;peakee me.&nbsp; Tuppoti you mi&rsquo;take,
+I &lsquo;peakee you.&nbsp; Mo&rsquo; betta.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+After dinner and supper in the cabin, a glass or two of &lsquo;Hennetti&rsquo;
+- the genuine article this time, with the kirsch bouquet, - and five
+hours&rsquo; lounging on the trade-room counter, royalty embarked for
+home.&nbsp; Three tacks grounded the boat before the palace; the wives
+were carried ashore on the backs of vassals; Tembinok&rsquo; stepped
+on a railed platform like a steamer&rsquo;s gangway, and was borne shoulder
+high through the shallows, up the beach, and by an inclined plane, paved
+with pebbles, to the glaring terrace where he dwells.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER II - THE KING OF APEMAMA: FOUNDATION OF EQUATOR TOWN<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Our first sight of Tembinok&rsquo; was a matter of concern, almost alarm,
+to my whole party.&nbsp; We had a favour to seek; we must approach in
+the proper courtly attitude of a suitor; and must either please him
+or fail in the main purpose of our voyage.&nbsp; It was our wish to
+land and live in Apemama, and see more near at hand the odd character
+of the man and the odd (or rather ancient) condition of his island.&nbsp;
+In all other isles of the South Seas a white man may land with his chest,
+and set up house for a lifetime, if he choose, and if he have the money
+or the trade; no hindrance is conceivable.&nbsp; But Apemama is a close
+island, lying there in the sea with closed doors; the king himself,
+like a vigilant officer, ready at the wicket to scrutinise and reject
+intrenching visitors.&nbsp; Hence the attraction of our enterprise;
+not merely because it was a little difficult, but because this social
+quarantine, a curiosity in itself, has been the preservative of others.<br>
+<br>
+Tembinok&rsquo;, like most tyrants, is a conservative; like many conservatives,
+he eagerly welcomes new ideas, and, except in the field of politics,
+leans to practical reform.&nbsp; When the missionaries came, professing
+a knowledge of the truth, he readily received them; attended their worship,
+acquired the accomplishment of public prayer, and made himself a student
+at their feet.&nbsp; It is thus - it is by the cultivation of similar
+passing chances - that he has learned to read, to write, to cipher,
+and to speak his queer, personal English, so different from ordinary
+&lsquo;Beach de Mar,&rsquo; so much more obscure, expressive, and condensed.&nbsp;
+His education attended to, he found time to become critical of the new
+inmates.&nbsp; Like Nakaeia of Makin, he is an admirer of silence in
+the island; broods over it like a great ear; has spies who report daily;
+and had rather his subjects sang than talked.&nbsp; The service, and
+in particular the sermon, were thus sure to become offences: &lsquo;Here,
+in my island, <i>I</i> &lsquo;peak,&rsquo; he once observed to me.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My chieps no &lsquo;peak - do what I talk.&rsquo;&nbsp; He looked
+at the missionary, and what did he see?&nbsp; &lsquo;See Kanaka &lsquo;peak
+in a big outch!&rsquo; he cried, with a strong ring of sarcasm.&nbsp;
+Yet he endured the subversive spectacle, and might even have continued
+to endure it, had not a fresh point arisen.&nbsp; He looked again, to
+employ his own figure; and the Kanaka was no longer speaking, he was
+doing worse - he was building a copra-house.&nbsp; The king was touched
+in his chief interests; revenue and prerogative were threatened.&nbsp;
+He considered besides (and some think with him) that trade is incompatible
+with the missionary claims.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tuppoti mitonary think &ldquo;good
+man&rdquo;: very good.&nbsp; Tuppoti he think &ldquo;cobra&rdquo;: no
+good.&nbsp; I send him away ship.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such was his abrupt history
+of the evangelist in Apemama.<br>
+<br>
+Similar deportations are common: &lsquo;I send him away ship&rsquo;
+is the epitaph of not a few, his majesty paying the exile&rsquo;s fare
+to the next place of call.&nbsp; For instance, being passionately fond
+of European food, he has several times added to his household a white
+cook, and one after another these have been deported.&nbsp; They, on
+their side, swear they were not paid their wages; he, on his, that they
+robbed and swindled him beyond endurance: both perhaps justly.&nbsp;
+A more important case was that of an agent, despatched (as I heard the
+story) by a firm of merchants to worm his way into the king&rsquo;s
+good graces, become, if possible, premier, and handle the copra in the
+interest of his employers.&nbsp; He obtained authority to land, practised
+his fascinations, was patiently listened to by Tembinok&rsquo;, supposed
+himself on the highway to success; and behold! when the next ship touched
+at Apemama, the would-be premier was flung into a boat - had on board
+- his fare paid, and so good-bye.&nbsp; But it is needless to multiply
+examples; the proof of the pudding is in the eating.&nbsp; When we came
+to Apemama, of so many white men who have scrambled for a place in that
+rich market, one remained - a silent, sober, solitary, niggardly recluse,
+of whom the king remarks, &lsquo;I think he good; he no &lsquo;peak.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+I was warned at the outset we might very well fail in our design: yet
+never dreamed of what proved to be the fact, that we should be left
+four-and-twenty hours in suspense and come within an ace of ultimate
+rejection.&nbsp; Captain Reid had primed himself; no sooner was the
+king on board, and the Hennetti question amicably settled, than he proceeded
+to express my request and give an abstract of my claims and virtues.&nbsp;
+The gammon about Queen Victoria&rsquo;s son might do for Butaritari;
+it was out of the question here; and I now figured as &lsquo;one of
+the Old Men of England,&rsquo; a person of deep knowledge, come expressly
+to visit Tembinok&rsquo;s dominion, and eager to report upon it to the
+no less eager Queen Victoria.&nbsp; The king made no shadow of an answer,
+and presently began upon a different subject.&nbsp; We might have thought
+that he had not heard, or not understood; only that we found ourselves
+the subject of a constant study.&nbsp; As we sat at meals, he took us
+in series and fixed upon each, for near a minute at a time, the same
+hard and thoughtful stare.&nbsp; As he thus looked he seemed to forget
+himself, the subject and the company, and to become absorbed in the
+process of his thought; the look was wholly impersonal; I have seen
+the same in the eyes of portrait-painters.&nbsp; The counts upon which
+whites have been deported are mainly four: cheating Tembinok&rsquo;,
+meddling overmuch with copra, which is the source of his wealth, and
+one of the sinews of his power, <i>&lsquo;peaking</i>, and political
+intrigue.&nbsp; I felt guiltless upon all; but how to show it?&nbsp;
+I would not have taken copra in a gift: how to express that quality
+by my dinner-table bearing?&nbsp; The rest of the party shared my innocence
+and my embarrassment.&nbsp; They shared also in my mortification when
+after two whole meal-times and the odd moments of an afternoon devoted
+to this reconnoitring, Tembinok&rsquo; took his leave in silence.&nbsp;
+Next morning, the same undisguised study, the same silence, was resumed;
+and the second day had come to its maturity before I was informed abruptly
+that I had stood the ordeal.&nbsp; &lsquo;I look your eye.&nbsp; You
+good man.&nbsp; You no lie,&rsquo; said the king: a doubtful compliment
+to a writer of romance.&nbsp; Later he explained he did not quite judge
+by the eye only, but the mouth as well.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tuppoti I see man,&rsquo;
+he explained.&nbsp; &lsquo;I no tavvy good man, bad man.&nbsp; I look
+eye, look mouth.&nbsp; Then I tavvy.&nbsp; Look <i>eye</i>, look mouth,&rsquo;
+he repeated.&nbsp; And indeed in our case the mouth had the most to
+do with it, and it was by our talk that we gained admission to the island;
+the king promising himself (and I believe really amassing) a vast amount
+of useful knowledge ere we left.<br>
+<br>
+The terms of our admission were as follows: We were to choose a site,
+and the king should there build us a town.&nbsp; His people should work
+for us, but the king only was to give them orders.&nbsp; One of his
+cooks should come daily to help mine, and to learn of him.&nbsp; In
+case our stores ran out, he would supply us, and be repaid on the return
+of the <i>Equator</i>.&nbsp; On the other hand, he was to come to meals
+with us when so inclined; when he stayed at home, a dish was to be sent
+him from our table; and I solemnly engaged to give his subjects no liquor
+or money (both of which they are forbidden to possess) and no tobacco,
+which they were to receive only from the royal hand.&nbsp; I think I
+remember to have protested against the stringency of this last article;
+at least, it was relaxed, and when a man worked for me I was allowed
+to give him a pipe of tobacco on the premises, but none to take away.<br>
+<br>
+The site of Equator City - we named our city for the schooner - was
+soon chosen.&nbsp; The immediate shores of the lagoon are windy and
+blinding; Tembinok&rsquo; himself is glad to grope blue-spectacled on
+his terrace; and we fled the neighbourhood of the red <i>conjunctiva</i>,
+the suppurating eyeball, and the beggar who pursues and beseeches the
+passing foreigner for eye wash.&nbsp; Behind the town the country is
+diversified; here open, sandy, uneven, and dotted with dwarfish palms;
+here cut up with taro trenches, deep and shallow, and, according to
+the growth of the plants, presenting now the appearance of a sandy tannery,
+now of an alleyed and green garden.&nbsp; A path leads towards the sea,
+mounting abruptly to the main level of the island - twenty or even thirty
+feet, although Findlay gives five; and just hard by the top of the rise,
+where the coco-palms begin to be well grown, we found a grove of pandanus,
+and a piece of soil pleasantly covered with green underbush.&nbsp; A
+well was not far off under a rustic well-house; nearer still, in a sandy
+cup of the land, a pond where we might wash our clothes.&nbsp; The place
+was out of the wind, out of the sun, and out of sight of the village.&nbsp;
+It was shown to the king, and the town promised for the morrow.<br>
+<br>
+The morrow came, Mr. Osbourne landed, found nothing done, and carried
+his complaint to Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He heard it, rose, called for
+a Winchester, stepped without the royal palisade, and fired two shots
+in the air.&nbsp; A shot in the air is the first Apemama warning; it
+has the force of a proclamation in more loquacious countries; and his
+majesty remarked agreeably that it would make his labourers &lsquo;mo&rsquo;
+bright.&rsquo;&nbsp; In less than thirty minutes, accordingly, the men
+had mustered, the work was begun, and we were told that we might bring
+our baggage when we pleased.<br>
+<br>
+It was two in the afternoon ere the first boat was beached, and the
+long procession of chests and crates and sacks began to straggle through
+the sandy desert towards Equator Town.&nbsp; The grove of pandanus was
+practically a thing of the past.&nbsp; Fire surrounded and smoke rose
+in the green underbush.&nbsp; In a wide circuit the axes were still
+crashing.&nbsp; Those very advantages for which the place was chosen,
+it had been the king&rsquo;s first idea to abolish; and in the midst
+of this devastation there stood already a good-sized maniap&rsquo; and
+a small closed house.&nbsp; A mat was spread near by for Tembinok&rsquo;;
+here he sat superintending, in cardinal red, a pith helmet on his head,
+a meerschaum pipe in his mouth, a wife stretched at his back with custody
+of the matches and tobacco.&nbsp; Twenty or thirty feet in front of
+him the bulk of the workers squatted on the ground; some of the bush
+here survived and in this the commons sat nearly to their shoulders,
+and presented only an arc of brown faces, black heads, and attentive
+eyes fixed on his majesty.&nbsp; Long pauses reigned, during which the
+subjects stared and the king smoked.&nbsp; Then Tembinok&rsquo; would
+raise his voice and speak shrilly and briefly.&nbsp; There was never
+a response in words; but if the speech were jesting, there came by way
+of answer discreet, obsequious laughter - such laughter as we hear in
+schoolrooms; and if it were practical, the sudden uprising and departure
+of the squad.&nbsp; Twice they so disappeared, and returned with further
+elements of the city: a second house and a second maniap&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+It was singular to spy, far off through the coco stems, the silent oncoming
+of the maniap&rsquo;, at first (it seemed) swimming spontaneously in
+the air - but on a nearer view betraying under the eaves many score
+of moving naked legs.&nbsp; In all the affair servile obedience was
+no less remarkable than servile deliberation.&nbsp; The gang had here
+mustered by the note of a deadly weapon; the man who looked on was the
+unquestioned master of their lives; and except for civility, they bestirred
+themselves like so many American hotel clerks.&nbsp; The spectator was
+aware of an unobtrusive yet invincible inertia, at which the skipper
+of a trading dandy might have torn his hair.<br>
+<br>
+Yet the work was accomplished.&nbsp; By dusk, when his majesty withdrew,
+the town was founded and complete, a new and ruder Amphion having called
+it from nothing with three cracks of a rifle.&nbsp; And the next morning
+the same conjurer obliged us with a further miracle: a mystic rampart
+fencing us, so that the path which ran by our doors became suddenly
+impassable, the inhabitants who had business across the isle must fetch
+a wide circuit, and we sat in the midst in a transparent privacy, seeing,
+seen, but unapproachable, like bees in a glass hive.&nbsp; The outward
+and visible sign of this glamour was no more than a few ragged coco-leaf
+garlands round the stems of the outlying palms; but its significance
+reposed on the tremendous sanction of the tapu and the guns of Tembinok&rsquo;.<br>
+<br>
+We made our first meal that night in the improvised city, where we were
+to stay two months, and which - so soon as we had done with it - was
+to vanish in a day as it appeared, its elements returning whence they
+came, the tapu raised, the traffic on the path resumed, the sun and
+the moon peering in vain between the palm-trees for the bygone work,
+the wind blowing over an empty site.&nbsp; Yet the place, which is now
+only an episode in some memories, seemed to have been built, and to
+be destined to endure, for years.&nbsp; It was a busy hamlet.&nbsp;
+One of the maniap&rsquo;s we made our dining-room, one the kitchen.&nbsp;
+The houses we reserved for sleeping.&nbsp; They were on the admirable
+Apemama plan: out and away the best house in the South Seas; standing
+some three feet above the ground on posts; the sides of woven flaps,
+which can be raised to admit light and air, or lowered to shut out the
+wind and the rain: airy, healthy, clean, and watertight.&nbsp; We had
+a hen of a remarkable kind: almost unique in my experience, being a
+hen that occasionally laid eggs.&nbsp; Not far off, Mrs. Stevenson tended
+a garden of salad and shalots.&nbsp; The salad was devoured by the hen
+- which was her bane.&nbsp; The shalots were served out a leaf at a
+time, and welcomed and relished like peaches.&nbsp; Toddy and green
+cocoa-nuts were brought us daily.&nbsp; We once had a present of fish
+from the king, and once of a turtle.&nbsp; Sometimes we shot so-called
+plover along on the shore, sometimes wild chicken in the bush.&nbsp;
+The rest of our diet was from tins.<br>
+<br>
+Our occupations were very various.&nbsp; While some of the party would
+be away sketching, Mr. Osbourne and I hammered away at a novel.&nbsp;
+We read Gibbon and Carlyle aloud; we blew on flageolets, we strummed
+on guitars; we took photographs by the light of the sun, the moon, and
+flash-powder; sometimes we played cards.&nbsp; Pot-hunting engaged a
+part of our leisure.&nbsp; I have myself passed afternoons in the exciting
+but innocuous pursuit of winged animals with a revolver; and it was
+fortunate there were better shots of the party, and fortunate the king
+could lend us a more suitable weapon, in the form of an excellent fowling-piece,
+or our spare diet had been sparer still.<br>
+<br>
+Night was the time to see our city, after the moon was up, after the
+lamps were lighted, and so long as the fire sparkled in the cook-house.&nbsp;
+We suffered from a plague of flies and mosquitoes, comparable to that
+of Egypt; our dinner-table (lent, like all our furniture, by the king)
+must be enclosed in a tent of netting, our citadel and refuge; and this
+became all luminous, and bulged and beaconed under the eaves, like the
+globe of some monstrous lamp under the margin of its shade.&nbsp; Our
+cabins, the sides being propped at a variety of inclinations, spelled
+out strange, angular patterns of brightness.&nbsp; In his roofed and
+open kitchen, Ah Fu was to be seen by lamp and firelight, dabbling among
+pots.&nbsp; Over all, there fell in the season an extraordinary splendour
+of mellow moonshine.&nbsp; The sand sparkled as with the dust of diamonds;
+the stars had vanished.&nbsp; At intervals, a dusky night-bird, slow
+and low flying, passed in the colonnade of the tree stems and uttered
+a hoarse croaking cry.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER III - THE KING OF APEMAMA: THE PALACE OF MANY WOMEN<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The palace, or rather the ground which it includes, is several acres
+in extent.&nbsp; A terrace encloses it toward the lagoon; on the side
+of the land, a palisade with several gates.&nbsp; These are scarce intended
+for defence; a man, if he were strong, might easily pluck down the palisade;
+he need not be specially active to leap from the beach upon the terrace.&nbsp;
+There is no parade of guards, soldiers, or weapons; the armoury is under
+lock and key; and the only sentinels are certain inconspicuous old women
+lurking day and night before the gates.&nbsp; By day, these crones were
+often engaged in boiling syrup or the like household occupation; by
+night, they lay ambushed in the shadow or crouched along the palisade,
+filling the office of eunuchs to this harem, sole guards upon a tyrant
+life.<br>
+<br>
+Female wardens made a fit outpost for this palace of many women.&nbsp;
+Of the number of the king&rsquo;s wives I have no guess; and but a loose
+idea of their function.&nbsp; He himself displayed embarrassment when
+they were referred to as his wives, called them himself &lsquo;my pamily,&rsquo;
+and explained they were his &lsquo;cutcheons&rsquo; - cousins.&nbsp;
+We distinguished four of the crowd: the king&rsquo;s mother; his sister,
+a grave, trenchant woman, with much of her brother&rsquo;s intelligence;
+the queen proper, to whom (and to whom alone) my wife was formally presented;
+and the favourite of the hour, a pretty, graceful girl, who sat with
+the king daily, and once (when he shed tears) consoled him with caresses.&nbsp;
+I am assured that even with her his relations are platonic.&nbsp; In
+the background figured a multitude of ladies, the lean, the plump, and
+the elephantine, some in sacque frocks, some in the hairbreadth <i>ridi</i>;
+high-born and low, slave and mistress; from the queen to the scullion,
+from the favourite to the scraggy sentries at the palisade.&nbsp; Not
+all of these of course are of &lsquo;my pamily,&rsquo; - many are mere
+attendants; yet a surprising number shared the responsibility of the
+king&rsquo;s trust.&nbsp; These were key-bearers, treasurers, wardens
+of the armoury, the napery, and the stores.&nbsp; Each knew and did
+her part to admiration.&nbsp; Should anything be required - a particular
+gun, perhaps, or a particular bolt of stuff, - the right queen was summoned;
+she came bringing the right chest, opened it in the king&rsquo;s presence,
+and displayed her charge in perfect preservation - the gun cleaned and
+oiled, the goods duly folded.&nbsp; Without delay or haste, and with
+the minimum of speech, the whole great establishment turned on wheels
+like a machine.&nbsp; Nowhere have I seen order more complete and pervasive.&nbsp;
+And yet I was always reminded of Norse tales of trolls and ogres who
+kept their hearts buried in the ground for the mere safety, and must
+confide the secret to their wives.&nbsp; For these weapons are the life
+of Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He does not aim at popularity; but drives
+and braves his subjects, with a simplicity of domination which it is
+impossible not to admire, hard not to sympathise with.&nbsp; Should
+one out of so many prove faithless, should the armoury be secretly unlocked,
+should the crones have dozed by the palisade and the weapons find their
+way unseen into the village, revolution would be nearly certain, death
+the most probable result, and the spirit of the tyrant of Apemama flit
+to rejoin his predecessors of Mariki and Tapituea.&nbsp; Yet those whom
+he so trusts are all women, and all rivals.<br>
+<br>
+There is indeed a ministry and staff of males: cook, steward, carpenter,
+and supercargoes: the hierarchy of a schooner.&nbsp; The spies, &lsquo;his
+majesty&rsquo;s daily papers,&rsquo; as we called them, come every morning
+to report, and go again.&nbsp; The cook and steward are concerned with
+the table only.&nbsp; The supercargoes, whose business it is to keep
+tally of the copra at three pounds a month and a percentage, are rarely
+in the palace; and two at least are in the other islands.&nbsp; The
+carpenter, indeed, shrewd and jolly old Rubam - query, Reuben? - promoted
+on my last visit to the greater dignity of governor, is daily present,
+altering, extending, embellishing, pursuing the endless series of the
+king&rsquo;s inventions; and his majesty will sometimes pass an afternoon
+watching and talking with Rubam at his work.&nbsp; But the males are
+still outsiders; none seems to be armed, none is entrusted with a key;
+by dusk they are all usually departed from the palace; and the weight
+of the monarchy and of the monarch&rsquo;s life reposes unshared on
+the women.<br>
+<br>
+Here is a household unlike, indeed, to one of ours; more unlike still
+to the Oriental harem: that of an elderly childless man, his days menaced,
+dwelling alone amid a bevy of women of all ages, ranks, and relationships,
+- the mother, the sister, the cousin, the legitimate wife, the concubine,
+the favourite, the eldest born, and she of yesterday; he, in their midst,
+the only master, the only male, the sole dispenser of honours, clothes,
+and luxuries, the sole mark of multitudinous ambitions and desires.&nbsp;
+I doubt if you could find a man in Europe so bold as to attempt this
+piece of tact and government.&nbsp; And seemingly Tembinok&rsquo; himself
+had trouble in the beginning.&nbsp; I hear of him shooting at a wife
+for some levity on board a schooner.&nbsp; Another, on some more serious
+offence, he slew outright; he exposed her body in an open box, and (to
+make the warning more memorable) suffered it to putrefy before the palace
+gate.&nbsp; Doubtless his growing years have come to his assistance;
+for upon so large a scale it is more easy to play the father than the
+husband.&nbsp; And to-day, at least to the eye of a stranger, all seems
+to go smoothly, and the wives to be proud of their trust, proud of their
+rank, and proud of their cunning lord.<br>
+<br>
+I conceived they made rather a hero of the man.&nbsp; A popular master
+in a girls&rsquo; school might, perhaps, offer a figure of his preponderating
+station.&nbsp; But then the master does not eat, sleep, live, and wash
+his dirty linen in the midst of his admirers; he escapes, he has a room
+of his own, he leads a private life; if he had nothing else, he has
+the holidays, and the more unhappy Tembinok&rsquo; is always on the
+stage and on the stretch.<br>
+<br>
+In all my coming and going, I never heard him speak harshly or express
+the least displeasure.&nbsp; An extreme, rather heavy, benignity - the
+benignity of one sure to be obeyed - marked his demeanour; so that I
+was at times reminded of Samual Richardson in his circle of admiring
+women.&nbsp; The wives spoke up and seemed to volunteer opinions, like
+our wives at home - or, say, like doting but respectable aunts.&nbsp;
+Altogether, I conclude that he rules his seraglio much more by art than
+terror; and those who give a different account (and who have none of
+them enjoyed my opportunities of observation) perhaps failed to distinguish
+between degrees of rank, between &lsquo;my pamily&rsquo; and the hangers-on,
+laundresses, and prostitutes.<br>
+<br>
+A notable feature is the evening game of cards when lamps are set forth
+upon the terrace, and &lsquo;I and my pamily&rsquo; play for tobacco
+by the hour.&nbsp; It is highly characteristic of Tembinok&rsquo; that
+he must invent a game for himself; highly characteristic of his worshipping
+household that they should swear by the absurd invention.&nbsp; It is
+founded on poker, played with the honours out of many packs, and inconceivably
+dreary.&nbsp; But I have a passion for all games, studied it, and am
+supposed to be the only white who ever fairly grasped its principle:
+a fact for which the wives (with whom I was not otherwise popular) admired
+me with acclamation.&nbsp; It was impossible to be deceived; this was
+a genuine feeling: they were proud of their private game, had been cut
+to the quick by the want of interest shown in it by others, and expanded
+under the flattery of my attention.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; puts up a
+double stake, and receives in return two hands to choose from: a shallow
+artifice which the wives (in all these years) have not yet fathomed.&nbsp;
+He himself, when talking with me privately, made not the least secret
+that he was secure of winning; and it was thus he explained his recent
+liberality on board the <i>Equator</i>.&nbsp; He let the wives buy their
+own tobacco, which pleased them at the moment.&nbsp; He won it back
+at cards, which made him once more, and without fresh expense, that
+which he ought to be, - the sole fount of all indulgences.&nbsp; And
+he summed the matter up in that phrase with which he almost always concludes
+any account of his policy: &lsquo;Mo&rsquo; betta.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The palace compound is laid with broken coral, excruciating to the eyes
+and the bare feet, but exquisitely raked and weeded.&nbsp; A score or
+more of buildings lie in a sort of street along the palisade and scattered
+on the margin of the terrace; dwelling-houses for the wives and the
+attendants, storehouses for the king&rsquo;s curios and treasures, spacious
+maniap&rsquo;s for feast or council, some on pillars of wood, some on
+piers of masonry.&nbsp; One was still in hand, a new invention, the
+king&rsquo;s latest born: a European frame-house built for coolness
+inside a lofty maniap&rsquo;: its roof planked like a ship&rsquo;s deck
+to be a raised, shady, and yet private promenade.&nbsp; It was here
+the king spent hours with Rubam; here I would sometimes join them; the
+place had a most singular appearance; and I must say I was greatly taken
+with the fancy, and joined with relish in the counsels of the architects.<br>
+<br>
+Suppose we had business with his majesty by day: we strolled over the
+sand and by the dwarfish palms, exchanged a &lsquo;<i>K&otilde;namaori</i>&rsquo;
+with the crone on duty, and entered the compound.&nbsp; The wide sheet
+of coral glared before us deserted; all having stowed themselves in
+dark canvas from the excess of room.&nbsp; I have gone to and fro in
+that labyrinth of a place, seeking the king; and the only breathing
+creature I could find was when I peered under the eaves of a maniap&rsquo;,
+and saw the brawny body of one of the wives stretched on the floor,
+a naked Amazon plunged in noiseless slumber.&nbsp; If it were still
+the hour of the &lsquo;morning papers&rsquo; the quest would be more
+easy, the half-dozen obsequious, sly dogs squatting on the ground outside
+a house, crammed as far as possible in its narrow shadow, and turning
+to the king a row of leering faces.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; would be within,
+the flaps of the cabin raised, the trade blowing through, hearing their
+report.&nbsp; Like journalists nearer home, when the day&rsquo;s news
+were scanty, these would make the more of it in words; and I have known
+one to fill up a barren morning with an imaginary conversation of two
+dogs.&nbsp; Sometimes the king deigns to laugh, sometimes to question
+or jest with them, his voice sounding shrilly from the cabin.&nbsp;
+By his side he may have the heir-apparent, Paul, his nephew and adopted
+son, six years old, stark naked, and a model of young human beauty.&nbsp;
+And there will always be the favourite and perhaps two other wives awake;
+four more lying supine under mats and whelmed in slumber.&nbsp; Or perhaps
+we came later, fell on a more private hour, and found Tembinok&rsquo;
+retired in the house with the favourite, an earthenware spittoon, a
+leaden inkpot, and a commercial ledger.&nbsp; In the last, lying on
+his belly, he writes from day to day the uneventful history of his reign;
+and when thus employed he betrayed a touch of fretfulness on interruption
+with which I was well able to sympathise.&nbsp; The royal annalist once
+read me a page or so, translating as he went; but the passage being
+genealogical, and the author boggling extremely in his version, I own
+I have been sometimes better entertained.&nbsp; Nor does he confine
+himself to prose, but touches the lyre, too, in his leisure moments,
+and passes for the chief bard of his kingdom, as he is its sole public
+character, leading architect, and only merchant.<br>
+<br>
+His competence, however, does not reach to music; and his verses, when
+they are ready, are taught to a professional musician, who sets them
+and instructs the chorus.&nbsp; Asked what his songs were about, Tembinok&rsquo;
+replied, &lsquo;Sweethearts and trees and the sea.&nbsp; Not all the
+same true, all the same lie.&rsquo;&nbsp; For a condensed view of lyrical
+poetry (except that he seems to have forgot the stars and flowers) this
+would be hard to mend.&nbsp; These multifarious occupations bespeak
+(in a native and an absolute prince) unusual activity of mind.<br>
+<br>
+The palace court at noon is a spot to be remembered with awe, the visitor
+scrambling there, on the loose stones, through a splendid nightmare
+of light and heat; but the sweep of the wind delivers it from flies
+and mosquitoes; and with the set of sun it became heavenly.&nbsp; I
+remember it best on moonless nights.&nbsp; The air was like a bath of
+milk.&nbsp; Countless shining stars were overhead, the lagoon paved
+with them.&nbsp; Herds of wives squatted by companies on the gravel,
+softly chatting.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; would doff his jacket, and sit
+bare and silent, perhaps meditating songs; the favourite usually by
+him, silent also.&nbsp; Meanwhile in the midst of the court, the palace
+lanterns were being lit and marshalled in rank upon the ground - six
+or eight square yards of them; a sight that gave one strange ideas of
+the number of &lsquo;my pamily&rsquo;: such a sight as may be seen about
+dusk in a corner of some great terminus at home.&nbsp; Presently these
+fared off into all corners of the precinct, lighting the last labours
+of the day, lighting one after another to their rest that prodigious
+company of women.&nbsp; A few lingered in the middle of the court for
+the card-party, and saw the honours shuffled and dealt, and Tembinok&rsquo;
+deliberating between his two; hands, and the queens losing their tobacco.&nbsp;
+Then these also were scattered and extinguished; and their place was
+taken by a great bonfire, the night-light of the palace.&nbsp; When
+this was no more, smaller fires burned likewise at the gates.&nbsp;
+These were tended by the crones, unseen, unsleeping - not always unheard.&nbsp;
+Should any approach in the dark hours, a guarded alert made the circuit
+of the palisade; each sentry signalled her neighbour with a stone; the
+rattle of falling pebbles passed and died away; and the wardens of Tembinok&rsquo;
+crouched in their places silent as before.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER IV - THE KING OF APEMAMA: EQUATOR TOWN AND THE PALACE<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Five persons were detailed to wait upon us.&nbsp; Uncle Parker, who
+brought us toddy and green nuts, was an elderly, almost an old man,
+with the spirits, the industry, and the morals of a boy of ten.&nbsp;
+His face was ancient, droll, and diabolical, the skin stretched over
+taut sinews, like a sail on the guide-rope; and he smiled with every
+muscle of his head.&nbsp; His nuts must be counted every day, or he
+would deceive us in the tale; they must be daily examined, or some would
+prove to be unhusked; nothing but the king&rsquo;s name, and scarcely
+that, would hold him to his duty.&nbsp; After his toils were over he
+was given a pipe, matches, and tobacco, and sat on the floor in the
+maniap&rsquo; to smoke.&nbsp; He would not seem to move from his position,
+and yet every day, when the things fell to be returned the plug had
+disappeared; he had found the means to conceal it in the roof, whence
+he could radiantly produce it on the morrow.&nbsp; Although this piece
+of legerdemain was performed regularly before three or four pairs of
+eyes, we could never catch him in the fact; although we searched after
+he was gone, we could never find the tobacco.&nbsp; Such were the diversions
+of Uncle Parker, a man nearing sixty.&nbsp; But he was punished according
+unto his deeds: Mrs. Stevenson took a fancy to paint him, and the sufferings
+of the sitter were beyond description.<br>
+<br>
+Three lasses came from the palace to do our washing and racket with
+Ah Fu.&nbsp; They were of the lowest class, hangers-on kept for the
+convenience of merchant skippers, probably low-born, perhaps out-islanders,
+with little refinement whether of manner or appearance, but likely and
+jolly enough wenches in their way.&nbsp; We called one <i>Guttersnipe</i>,
+for you may find her image in the slums of any city; the same lean,
+dark-eyed, eager, vulgar face, the same sudden, hoarse guffaws, the
+same forward and yet anxious manner, as with a tail of an eye on the
+policeman: only the policeman here was a live king, and his truncheon
+a rifle.&nbsp; I doubt if you could find anywhere out of the islands,
+or often there, the parallel of <i>Fatty</i>, a mountain of a girl,
+who must have weighed near as many stones as she counted summers, could
+have given a good account of a life-guardsman, had the face of a baby,
+and applied her vast mechanical forces almost exclusively to play.&nbsp;
+But they were all three of the same merry spirit.&nbsp; Our washing
+was conducted in a game of romps; and they fled and pursued, and splashed,
+and pelted, and rolled each other in the sand, and kept up a continuous
+noise of cries and laughter like holiday children.&nbsp; Indeed, and
+however strange their own function in that austere establishment, were
+they not escaped for the day from the largest and strictest Ladies&rsquo;
+School in the South Seas?<br>
+<br>
+Our fifth attendant was no less a person than the royal cook.&nbsp;
+He was strikingly handsome both in face and body, lazy as a slave, and
+insolent as a butcher&rsquo;s boy.&nbsp; He slept and smoked on our
+premises in various graceful attitudes; but so far from helping Ah Fu,
+he was not at the pains to watch him.&nbsp; It may be said of him that
+he came to learn, and remained to teach; and his lessons were at times
+difficult to stomach.&nbsp; For example, he was sent to fill a bucket
+from the well.&nbsp; About half-way he found my wife watering her onions,
+changed buckets with her, and leaving her the empty, returned to the
+kitchen with the full.&nbsp; On another occasion he was given a dish
+of dumplings for the king, was told they must be eaten hot, and that
+he should carry them as fast as possible.&nbsp; The wretch set off at
+the rate of about a mile in the hour, head in air, toes turned out.&nbsp;
+My patience, after a month of trial, failed me at the sight.&nbsp; I
+pursued, caught him by his two big shoulders, and thrusting him before
+me, ran with him down the hill, over the sands, and through the applauding
+village, to the Speak House, where the king was then holding a pow-wow.&nbsp;
+He had the impudence to pretend he was internally injured by my violence,
+and to profess serious apprehensions for his life.<br>
+<br>
+All this we endured; for the ways of Tembinok&rsquo; are summary, and
+I was not yet ripe to take a hand in the man&rsquo;s death.&nbsp; But
+in the meanwhile, here was my unfortunate China boy slaving for the
+pair, and presently he fell sick.&nbsp; I was now in the position of
+Cimondain Lantenac, and indeed all the characters in <i>Quatre-Vingt-Treize</i>:
+to continue to spare the guilty, I must sacrifice the innocent.&nbsp;
+I took the usual course and tried to save both, with the usual consequence
+of failure.&nbsp; Well rehearsed, I went down to the palace, found the
+king alone, and obliged him with a vast amount of rigmarole.&nbsp; The
+cook was too old to learn: I feared he was not making progress; how
+if we had a boy instead? - boys were more teachable.&nbsp; It was all
+in vain; the king pierced through my disguises to the root of the fact;
+saw that the cook had desperately misbehaved; and sat a while glooming.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I think he tavvy too much,&rsquo; he said at last, with grim
+concision; and immediately turned the talk to other subjects.&nbsp;
+The same day another high officer, the steward, appeared in the cook&rsquo;s
+place, and, I am bound to say, proved civil and industrious.<br>
+<br>
+As soon as I left, it seems the king called for a Winchester and strolled
+outside the palisade, awaiting the defaulter.&nbsp; That day Tembinok&rsquo;
+wore the woman&rsquo;s frock; as like as not, his make-up was completed
+by a pith helmet and blue spectacles.&nbsp; Conceive the glaring stretch
+of sandhills, the dwarf palms with their noon-day shadows, the line
+of the palisade, the crone sentries (each by a small clear fire) cooking
+syrup on their posts - and this chimaera waiting with his deadly engine.&nbsp;
+To him, enter at last the cook, strolling down the sandhill from Equator
+Town, listless, vain and graceful; with no thought of alarm.&nbsp; As
+soon as he was well within range, the travestied monarch fired the six
+shots over his head, at his feet, and on either hand of him: the second
+Apemama warning, startling in itself, fatal in significance, for the
+next time his majesty will aim to hit.&nbsp; I am told the king is a
+crack shot; that when he aims to kill, the grave may be got ready; and
+when he aims to miss, misses by so near a margin that the culprit tastes
+six times the bitterness of death.&nbsp; The effect upon the cook I
+had an opportunity of seeing for myself.&nbsp; My wife and I were returning
+from the sea-side of the island, when we spied one coming to meet us
+at a very quick, disordered pace, between a walk and a run.&nbsp; As
+we drew nearer we saw it was the cook, beside himself with some emotion,
+his usual warm, mulatto colour declined into a bluish pallor.&nbsp;
+He passed us without word or gesture, staring on us with the face of
+a Satan, and plunged on across the wood for the unpeopled quarter of
+the island and the long, desert beach, where he might rage to and fro
+unseen, and froth out the vials of his wrath, fear, and humiliation.&nbsp;
+Doubtless in the curses that he there uttered to the bursting surf and
+the tropic birds, the name of the Kaupoi - the rich man - was frequently
+repeated.&nbsp; I had made him the laughing-stock of the village in
+the affair of the king&rsquo;s dumplings; I had brought him by my machinations
+into disgrace and the immediate jeopardy of his days; last, and perhaps
+bitterest, he had found me there by the way to spy upon him in the hour
+of his disorder.<br>
+<br>
+Time passed, and we saw no more of him.&nbsp; The season of the full
+moon came round, when a man thinks shame to lie sleeping; and I continued
+until late - perhaps till twelve or one in the morning - to walk on
+the bright sand and in the tossing shadow of the palms.&nbsp; I played,
+as I wandered, on a flageolet, which occupied much of my attention;
+the fans overhead rattled in the wind with a metallic chatter; and a
+bare foot falls at any rate almost noiseless on that shifting soil.&nbsp;
+Yet when I got back to Equator Town, where all the lights were out,
+and my wife (who was still awake, and had been looking forth) asked
+me who it was that followed me, I thought she spoke in jest.&nbsp; &lsquo;Not
+at all,&rsquo; she said.&nbsp; &lsquo;I saw him twice as you passed,
+walking close at your heels.&nbsp; He only left you at the corner of
+the maniap&rsquo;; he must be still behind the cook-house.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Thither I ran - like a fool, without any weapon - and came face to face
+with the cook.&nbsp; He was within my tapu-line, which was death in
+itself; he could have no business there at such an hour but either to
+steal or to kill; guilt made him timorous; and he turned and fled before
+me in the night in silence.&nbsp; As he went I kicked him in that place
+where honour lies, and he gave tongue faintly like an injured mouse.&nbsp;
+At the moment I daresay he supposed it was a deadly instrument that
+touched him.<br>
+<br>
+What had the man been after?&nbsp; I have found my music better qualified
+to scatter than to collect an audience.&nbsp; Amateur as I was, I could
+not suppose him interested in my reading of the <i>Carnival of Venice</i>,
+or that he would deny himself his natural rest to follow my variations
+on <i>The Ploughboy</i>.&nbsp; And whatever his design, it was impossible
+I should suffer him to prowl by night among the houses.&nbsp; A word
+to the king, and the man were not, his case being far beyond pardon.&nbsp;
+But it is one thing to kill a man yourself; quite another to bear tales
+behind his back and have him shot by a third party; and I determined
+to deal with the fellow in some method of my own.&nbsp; I told Ah Fu
+the story, and bade him fetch me the cook whenever he should find him.&nbsp;
+I had supposed this would be a matter of difficulty; and far from that,
+he came of his own accord: an act really of desperation, since his life
+hung by my silence, and the best he could hope was to be forgotten.&nbsp;
+Yet he came with an assured countenance, volunteered no apology or explanation,
+complained of injuries received, and pretended he was unable to sit
+down.&nbsp; I suppose I am the weakest man God made; I had kicked him
+in the least vulnerable part of his big carcase; my foot was bare, and
+I had not even hurt my foot.&nbsp; Ah Fu could not control his merriment.&nbsp;
+On my side, knowing what must be the nature of his apprehensions, I
+found in so much impudence a kind of gallantry, and secretly admired
+the man.&nbsp; I told him I should say nothing of his night&rsquo;s
+adventure to the king; that I should still allow him, when he had an
+errand, to come within my tapu-line by day; but if ever I found him
+there after the set of the sun I would shoot him on the spot; and to
+the proof showed him a revolver.&nbsp; He must have been incredibly
+relieved; but he showed no sign of it, took himself off with his usual
+dandy nonchalance, and was scarce seen by us again.<br>
+<br>
+These five, then, with the substitution of the steward for the cook,
+came and went, and were our only visitors.&nbsp; The circle of the tapu
+held at arm&rsquo;s-length the inhabitants of the village.&nbsp; As
+for &lsquo;my pamily,&rsquo; they dwelt like nuns in their enclosure;
+only once have I met one of them abroad, and she was the king&rsquo;s
+sister, and the place in which I found her (the island infirmary) was
+very likely privileged.&nbsp; There remains only the king to be accounted
+for.&nbsp; He would come strolling over, always alone, a little before
+a meal-time, take a chair, and talk and eat with us like an old family
+friend.&nbsp; Gilbertine etiquette appears defective on the point of
+leave-taking.&nbsp; It may be remembered we had trouble in the matter
+with Karaiti; and there was something childish and disconcerting in
+Tembinok&rsquo;s abrupt &lsquo;I want go home now,&rsquo; accompanied
+by a kind of ducking rise, and followed by an unadorned retreat.&nbsp;
+It was the only blot upon his manners, which were otherwise plain, decent,
+sensible, and dignified.&nbsp; He never stayed long nor drank much,
+and copied our behaviour where he perceived it to differ from his own.&nbsp;
+Very early in the day, for instance, he ceased eating with his knife.&nbsp;
+It was plain he was determined in all things to wring profit from our
+visit, and chiefly upon etiquette.&nbsp; The quality of his white visitors
+puzzled and concerned him; he would bring up name after name, and ask
+if its bearer were a &lsquo;big chiep,&rsquo; or even a &lsquo;chiep&rsquo;
+at all - which, as some were my excellent good friends, and none were
+actually born in the purple, became at times embarrassing.&nbsp; He
+was struck to learn that our classes were distinguishable by their speech,
+and that certain words (for instance) were tapu on the quarter-deck
+of a man-of-war; and he begged in consequence that we should watch and
+correct him on the point.&nbsp; We were able to assure him that he was
+beyond correction.&nbsp; His vocabulary is apt and ample to an extraordinary
+degree.&nbsp; God knows where he collected it, but by some instinct
+or some accident he has avoided all profane or gross expressions.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Obliged,&rsquo; &lsquo;stabbed,&rsquo; &lsquo;gnaw,&rsquo; &lsquo;lodge,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;power,&rsquo; &lsquo;company,&rsquo; &lsquo;slender,&rsquo; &lsquo;smooth,&rsquo;
+and &lsquo;wonderful,&rsquo; are a few of the unexpected words that
+enrich his dialect.&nbsp; Perhaps what pleased him most was to hear
+about saluting the quarter-deck of a man-of-war.&nbsp; In his gratitude
+for this hint he became fulsome.&nbsp; &lsquo;Schooner cap&rsquo;n no
+tell me,&rsquo; he cried; &lsquo;I think no tavvy!&nbsp; You tavvy too
+much; tavvy &lsquo;teama&rsquo;, tavvy man-a-wa&rsquo;.&nbsp; I think
+you tavvy everything.&rsquo; Yet he gravelled me often enough with his
+perpetual questions; and the false Mr. Barlow stood frequently exposed
+before the royal Sandford.&nbsp; I remember once in particular.&nbsp;
+We were showing the magic-lantern; a slide of Windsor Castle was put
+in, and I told him there was the &lsquo;outch&rsquo; of Victoreea.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;How many pathom he high?&rsquo; he asked, and I was dumb before
+him.&nbsp; It was the builder, the indefatigable architect of palaces,
+that spoke; collector though he was, he did not collect useless information;
+and all his questions had a purpose.&nbsp; After etiquette, government,
+law, the police, money, and medicine were his chief interests - things
+vitally important to himself as a king and the father of his people.&nbsp;
+It was my part not only to supply new information, but to correct the
+old.&nbsp; &lsquo;My patha he tell me,&rsquo; or &lsquo;White man he
+tell me,&rsquo; would be his constant beginning; &lsquo;You think he
+lie?&rsquo;&nbsp; Sometimes I thought he did.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo;
+once brought me a difficulty of this kind, which I was long of comprehending.&nbsp;
+A schooner captain had told him of Captain Cook; the king was much interested
+in the story; and turned for more information - not to Mr. Stephen&rsquo;s
+Dictionary, not to the <i>Britannica</i>, but to the Bible in the Gilbert
+Island version (which consists chiefly of the New Testament and the
+Psalms).&nbsp; Here he sought long and earnestly; Paul he found, and
+Festus and Alexander the coppersmith: no word of Cook.&nbsp; The inference
+was obvious: the explorer was a myth.&nbsp; So hard it is, even for
+a man of great natural parts like Tembinok&rsquo;, to grasp the ideas
+of a new society and culture.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER V - KING AND COMMONS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+We saw but little of the commons of the isle.&nbsp; At first we met
+them at the well, where they washed their linen and we drew water for
+the table.&nbsp; The combination was distasteful; and, having a tyrant
+at command, we applied to the king and had the place enclosed in our
+tapu.&nbsp; It was one of the few favours which Tembinok&rsquo; visibly
+boggled about granting, and it may be conceived how little popular it
+made the strangers.&nbsp; Many villagers passed us daily going afield;
+but they fetched a wide circuit round our tapu, and seemed to avert
+their looks.&nbsp; At times we went ourselves into the village - a strange
+place.&nbsp; Dutch by its canals, Oriental by the height and steepness
+of the roofs, which looked at dusk like temples; but we were rarely
+called into a house: no welcome, no friendship, was offered us; and
+of home life we had but the one view: the waking of a corpse, a frigid,
+painful scene: the widow holding on her lap the cold, bluish body of
+her husband, and now partaking of the refreshments which made the round
+of the company, now weeping and kissing the pale mouth.&nbsp; (&lsquo;I
+fear you feel this affliction deeply,&rsquo; said the Scottish minister.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Eh, sir, and that I do!&rsquo; replied the widow.&nbsp; &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve
+been greetin&rsquo; a&rsquo; nicht; an&rsquo; noo I&rsquo;m just gaun
+to sup this bit parritch, and then I&rsquo;ll begin an&rsquo; greet
+again.&rsquo;)&nbsp; In our walks abroad I have always supposed the
+islanders avoided us, perhaps from distaste, perhaps by order; and those
+whom we met we took generally by surprise.&nbsp; The surface of the
+isle is diversified with palm groves, thickets, and romantic dingles
+four feet deep, relics of old taro plantation; and it is thus possible
+to stumble unawares on folk resting or hiding from their work.&nbsp;
+About pistol-shot from our township there lay a pond in the bottom of
+a jungle; here the maids of the isle came to bathe, and were several
+times alarmed by our intrusion.&nbsp; Not for them are the bright cold
+rivers of Tahiti or Upolu, not for them to splash and laugh in the hour
+of the dusk with a villageful of gay companions; but to steal here solitary,
+to crouch in a place like a cow-wallow, and wash (if that can be called
+washing) in lukewarm mud, brown as their own skins.&nbsp; Other, but
+still rare, encounters occur to my memory.&nbsp; I was several times
+arrested by a tender sound in the bush of voices talking, soft as flutes
+and with quiet intonations.&nbsp; Hope told a flattering tale; I put
+aside the leaves; and behold! in place of the expected dryads, a pair
+of all too solid ladies squatting over a clay pipe in the ungraceful
+<i>ridi</i>.&nbsp; The beauty of the voice and the eye was all that
+remained to those vast dames; but that of the voice was indeed exquisite.&nbsp;
+It is strange I should have never heard a more winning sound of speech,
+yet the dialect should be one remarkable for violent, ugly, and outlandish
+vocables; so that Tembinok&rsquo; himself declared it made him weary,
+and professed to find repose in talking English.<br>
+<br>
+The state of this folk, of whom I saw so little, I can merely guess
+at.&nbsp; The king himself explains the situation with some art.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;No; I no pay them,&rsquo; he once said.&nbsp; &lsquo;I give them
+tobacco.&nbsp; They work for me <i>all the same brothers</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It is true there was a brother once in Arden!&nbsp; But we prefer the
+shorter word.&nbsp; They bear every servile mark, - levity like a child&rsquo;s,
+incurable idleness, incurious content.&nbsp; The insolence of the cook
+was a trait of his own; not so his levity, which he shared with the
+innocent Uncle Parker.&nbsp; With equal unconcern both gambolled under
+the shadow of the gallows, and took liberties with death that might
+have surprised a careless student of man&rsquo;s nature.&nbsp; I wrote
+of Parker that he behaved like a boy of ten: what was he else, being
+a slave of sixty?&nbsp; He had passed all his years in school, fed,
+clad, thought for, commanded; and had grown familiar and coquetted with
+the fear of punishment.&nbsp; By terror you may drive men long, but
+not far.&nbsp; Here, in Apemama, they work at the constant and the instant
+peril of their lives; and are plunged in a kind of lethargy of laziness.&nbsp;
+It is common to see one go afield in his stiff mat ungirt, so that he
+walks elbows-in like a trussed fowl; and whatsoever his right hand findeth
+to do, the other must be off duty holding on his clothes.&nbsp; It is
+common to see two men carrying between them on a pole a single bucket
+of water.&nbsp; To make two bites of a cherry is good enough: to make
+two burthens of a soldier&rsquo;s kit, for a distance of perhaps half
+a furlong, passes measure.&nbsp; Woman, being the less childish animal,
+is less relaxed by servile conditions.&nbsp; Even in the king&rsquo;s
+absence, even when they were alone, I have seen Apemama women work with
+constancy.&nbsp; But the outside to be hoped for in a man is that he
+may attack his task in little languid fits, and lounge between-whiles.&nbsp;
+So I have seen a painter, with his pipe going, and a friend by the studio
+fireside.&nbsp; You might suppose the race to lack civility, even vitality,
+until you saw them in the dance.&nbsp; Night after night, and sometimes
+day after day, they rolled out their choruses in the great Speak House
+- solemn andantes and adagios, led by the clapped hand, and delivered
+with an energy that shook the roof.&nbsp; The time was not so slow,
+though it was slow for the islands; but I have chosen rather to indicate
+the effect upon the hearer.&nbsp; Their music had a church-like character
+from near at hand, and seemed to European ears more regular than the
+run of island music.&nbsp; Twice I have heard a discord regularly solved.&nbsp;
+From farther off, heard at Equator Town for instance, the measures rose
+and fell and crepitated like the barking of hounds in a distant kennel.<br>
+<br>
+The slaves are certainly not overworked - children of ten do more without
+fatigue - and the Apemama labourers have holidays, when the singing
+begins early in the afternoon.&nbsp; The diet is hard; copra and a sweetmeat
+of pounded pandanus are the only dishes I observed outside the palace;
+but there seems no defect in quantity, and the king shares with them
+his turtles.&nbsp; Three came in a boat from Kuria during our stay;
+one was kept for the palace, one sent to us, one presented to the village.&nbsp;
+It is the habit of the islanders to cook the turtle in its carapace;
+we had been promised the shells, and we asked a tapu on this foolish
+practice.&nbsp; The face of Tembinok&rsquo; darkened and he answered
+nothing.&nbsp; Hesitation in the question of the well I could understand,
+for water is scarce on a low island; that he should refuse to interfere
+upon a point of cookery was more than I had dreamed of; and I gathered
+(rightly or wrongly) that he was scrupulous of touching in the least
+degree the private life and habits of his slaves.&nbsp; So that even
+here, in full despotism, public opinion has weight; even here, in the
+midst of slavery, freedom has a corner.<br>
+<br>
+Orderly, sober, and innocent, life flows in the isle from day to day
+as in a model plantation under a model planter.&nbsp; It is impossible
+to doubt the beneficence of that stern rule.&nbsp; A curious politeness,
+a soft and gracious manner, something effeminate and courtly, distinguishes
+the islanders of Apemama; it is talked of by all the traders, it was
+felt even by residents so little beloved as ourselves, and noticeable
+even in the cook, and even in that scoundrel&rsquo;s hours of insolence.&nbsp;
+The king, with his manly and plain bearing, stood out alone; you might
+say he was the only Gilbert Islander in Apemama.&nbsp; Violence, so
+common in Butaritari, seems unknown.&nbsp; So are theft and drunkenness.&nbsp;
+I am assured the experiment has been made of leaving sovereigns on the
+beach before the village; they lay there untouched.&nbsp; In all our
+time on the island I was but once asked for drink.&nbsp; This was by
+a mighty plausible fellow, wearing European clothes and speaking excellent
+English - Tamaiti his name, or, as the whites have now corrupted it,
+&lsquo;Tom White&rsquo;: one of the king&rsquo;s supercargoes at three
+pounds a month and a percentage, a medical man besides, and in his private
+hours a wizard.&nbsp; He found me one day in the outskirts of the village,
+in a secluded place, hot and private, where the taro-pits are deep and
+the plants high.&nbsp; Here he buttonholed me, and, looking about him
+like a conspirator, inquired if I had gin.<br>
+<br>
+I told him I had.&nbsp; He remarked that gin was forbidden, lauded the
+prohibition a while, and then went on to explain that he was a doctor,
+or &lsquo;dogstar&rsquo; as he pronounced the word, that gin was necessary
+to him for his medical infusions, that he was quite out of it, and that
+he would be obliged to me for some in a bottle.&nbsp; I told him I had
+passed the king my word on landing; but since his case was so exceptional,
+I would go down to the palace at once, and had no doubt that Tembinok&rsquo;
+would set me free.&nbsp; Tom White was immediately overwhelmed with
+embarrassment and terror, besought me in the most moving terms not to
+betray him, and fled my neighbourhood.&nbsp; He had none of the cook&rsquo;s
+valour; it was weeks before he dared to meet my eye; and then only by
+the order of the king and on particular business.<br>
+<br>
+The more I viewed and admired this triumph of firm rule, the more I
+was haunted and troubled by a problem, the problem (perhaps) of to-morrow
+for ourselves.&nbsp; Here was a people protected from all serious misfortune,
+relieved of all serious anxieties, and deprived of what we call our
+liberty.&nbsp; Did they like it? and what was their sentiment toward
+the ruler?&nbsp; The first question I could not of course ask, nor perhaps
+the natives answer.&nbsp; Even the second was delicate; yet at last,
+and under charming and strange circumstances, I found my opportunity
+to put it and a man to reply.&nbsp; It was near the full of the moon,
+with a delicious breeze; the isle was bright as day - to sleep would
+have been sacrilege; and I walked in the bush, playing my pipe.&nbsp;
+It must have been the sound of what I am pleased to call my music that
+attracted in my direction another wanderer of the night.&nbsp; This
+was a young man attired in a fine mat, and with a garland on his hair,
+for he was new come from dancing and singing in the public hall; and
+his body, his face, and his eyes were all of an enchanting beauty.&nbsp;
+Every here and there in the Gilberts youths are to be found of this
+absurd perfection; I have seen five of us pass half an hour in admiration
+of a boy at Mariki; and Te Kop (my friend in the fine mat and garland)
+I had already several times remarked, and long ago set down as the loveliest
+animal in Apemama.&nbsp; The philtre of admiration must be very strong,
+or these natives specially susceptible to its effects, for I have scarce
+ever admired a person in the islands but what he has sought my particular
+acquaintance.&nbsp; So it was with Te Kop.&nbsp; He led me to the ocean
+side; and for an hour or two we sat smoking and talking on the resplendent
+sand and under the ineffable brightness of the moon.&nbsp; My friend
+showed himself very sensible of the beauty and amenity of the hour.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Good night! Good wind!&rsquo; he kept exclaiming, and as he said
+the words he seemed to hug myself.&nbsp; I had long before invented
+such reiterated expressions of delight for a character (Felipe, in the
+story of <i>Olalla</i>) intended to be partly bestial.&nbsp; But there
+was nothing bestial in Te Kop; only a childish pleasure in the moment.&nbsp;
+He was no less pleased with his companion, or was good enough to say
+so; honoured me, before he left, by calling me Te Kop; apostrophised
+me as &lsquo;My name!&rsquo; with an intonation exquisitely tender,
+laying his hand at the same time swiftly on my knee; and after we had
+risen, and our paths began to separate in the bush, twice cried to me
+with a sort of gentle ecstasy, &lsquo;I like you too much!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+From the beginning he had made no secret of his terror of the king;
+would not sit down nor speak above a whisper till he had put the whole
+breadth of the isle between himself and his monarch, then harmlessly
+asleep; and even there, even within a stone-cast of the outer sea, our
+talk covered by the sound of the surf and the rattle of the wind among
+the palms, continued to speak guardedly, softening his silver voice
+(which rang loud enough in the chorus) and looking about him like a
+man in fear of spies.&nbsp; The strange thing is that I should have
+beheld him no more.&nbsp; In any other island in the whole South Seas,
+if I had advanced half as far with any native, he would have been at
+my door next morning, bringing and expecting gifts.&nbsp; But Te Kop
+vanished in the bush for ever.&nbsp; My house, of course, was unapproachable;
+but he knew where to find me on the ocean beach, where I went daily.&nbsp;
+I was the <i>Kaupoi</i>, the rich man; my tobacco and trade were known
+to be endless: he was sure of a present.&nbsp; I am at a loss how to
+explain his behaviour, unless it be supposed that he recalled with terror
+and regret a passage in our interview.&nbsp; Here it is:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;The king, he good man?&rsquo; I asked.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Suppose he like you, he good man,&rsquo; replied Te Kop: &lsquo;no
+like, no good.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+That is one way of putting it, of course.&nbsp; Te Kop himself was probably
+no favourite, for he scarce appealed to my judgment as a type of industry.&nbsp;
+And there must be many others whom the king (to adhere to the formula)
+does not like.&nbsp; Do these unfortunates like the king?&nbsp; Or is
+not rather the repulsion mutual? and the conscientious Tembinok&rsquo;,
+like the conscientious Braxfield before him, and many other conscientious
+rulers and judges before either, surrounded by a considerable body of
+&lsquo;grumbletonians&rsquo;?&nbsp; Take the cook, for instance, when
+he passed us by, blue with rage and terror.&nbsp; He was very wroth
+with me; I think by all the old principles of human nature he was not
+very well pleased with his sovereign.&nbsp; It was the rich man he sought
+to waylay: I think it must have been by the turn of a hair that it was
+not the king he waylaid instead.&nbsp; And the king gives, or seems
+to give, plenty of opportunities; day and night he goes abroad alone,
+whether armed or not I can but guess; and the taro-patches, where his
+business must so often carry him, seem designed for assassination.&nbsp;
+The case of the cook was heavy indeed to my conscience.&nbsp; I did
+not like to kill my enemy at second-hand; but had I a right to conceal
+from the king, who had trusted me, the dangerous secret character of
+his attendant?&nbsp; And suppose the king should fall, what would be
+the fate of the king&rsquo;s friends?&nbsp; It was our opinion at the
+time that we should pay dear for the closing of the well; that our breath
+was in the king&rsquo;s nostrils; that if the king should by any chance
+be bludgeoned in a taro-patch, the philosophical and musical inhabitants
+of Equator Town might lay aside their pleasant instruments, and betake
+themselves to what defence they had, with a very dim prospect of success.&nbsp;
+These speculations were forced upon us by an incident which I am ashamed
+to betray.&nbsp; The schooner <i>H. L. Haseltine</i> (since capsized
+at sea, with the loss of eleven lives) put into Apemama in a good hour
+for us, who had near exhausted our supplies.&nbsp; The king, after his
+habit, spent day after day on board; the gin proved unhappily to his
+taste; he brought a store of it ashore with him; and for some time the
+sole tyrant of the isle was half-seas-over.&nbsp; He was not drunk -
+the man is not a drunkard, he has always stores of liquor at hand, which
+he uses with moderation, - but he was muzzy, dull, and confused.&nbsp;
+He came one day to lunch with us, and while the cloth was being laid
+fell asleep in his chair.&nbsp; His confusion, when he awoke and found
+he had been detected, was equalled by our uneasiness.&nbsp; When he
+was gone we sat and spoke of his peril, which we thought to be in some
+degree our own; of how easily the man might be surprised in such a state
+by <i>grumbletonians</i>; of the strange scenes that would follow -
+the royal treasures and stores at the mercy of the rabble, the palace
+overrun, the garrison of women turned adrift.&nbsp; And as we talked
+we were startled by a gun-shot and a sudden, barbaric outcry.&nbsp;
+I believe we all changed colour; but it was only the king firing at
+a dog and the chorus striking up in the Speak House.&nbsp; A day or
+two later I learned the king was very sick; went down, diagnosed the
+case; and took at once the highest medical degree by the exhibition
+of bicarbonate of soda.&nbsp; Within the hour Richard was himself again;
+and I found him at the unfinished house, enjoying the double pleasure
+of directing Rubam and making a dinner of cocoa-nut dumplings, and all
+eagerness to have the formula of this new sort of <i>pain-killer</i>
+- for <i>pain-killer</i> in the islands is the generic name of medicine.&nbsp;
+So ended the king&rsquo;s modest spree and our anxiety.<br>
+<br>
+On the face of things, I ought to say, loyalty appeared unshaken.&nbsp;
+When the schooner at last returned for us, after much experience of
+baffling winds, she brought a rumour that Tebureimoa had declared war
+on Apemama.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; became a new man; his face radiant;
+his attitude, as I saw him preside over a council of chiefs in one of
+the palace maniap&rsquo;s, eager as a boy&rsquo;s; his voice sounding
+abroad, shrill and jubilant, over half the compound.&nbsp; War is what
+he wants, and here was his chance.&nbsp; The English captain, when he
+flung his arms in the lagoon, had forbidden him (except in one case)
+all military adventures in the future: here was the case arrived.&nbsp;
+All morning the council sat; men were drilled, arms were bought, the
+sound of firing disturbed the afternoon; the king devised and communicated
+to me his plan of campaign, which was highly elaborate and ingenious,
+but perhaps a trifle fine-spun for the rough and random vicissitudes
+of war.&nbsp; And in all this bustle the temper of the people appeared
+excellent, an unwonted animation in every face, and even Uncle Parker
+burning with military zeal.<br>
+<br>
+Of course it was a false alarm.&nbsp; Tebureimoa had other fish to fry.&nbsp;
+The ambassador who accompanied us on our return to Butaritari found
+him retired to a small island on the reef, in a huff with the Old Men,
+a tiff with the traders, and more fear of insurrection at home than
+appetite for wars abroad.&nbsp; The plenipotentiary had been placed
+under my protection; and we solemnly saluted when we met.&nbsp; He proved
+an excellent fisherman, and caught bonito over the ship&rsquo;s side.&nbsp;
+He pulled a good oar, and made himself useful for a whole fiery afternoon,
+towing the becalmed <i>Equator</i> off Mariki.&nbsp; He went to his
+post and did no good.&nbsp; He returned home again, having done no harm.&nbsp;
+<i>O si sic omnes</i>!<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VI - THE KING OF APEMAMA: DEVIL-WORK<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+The ocean beach of Apemama was our daily resort.&nbsp; The coast is
+broken by shallow bays.&nbsp; The reef is detached, elevated, and includes
+a lagoon about knee-deep, the unrestful spending-basin of the surf.&nbsp;
+The beach is now of fine sand, now of broken coral.&nbsp; The trend
+of the coast being convex, scarce a quarter of a mile of it is to be
+seen at once; the land being so low, the horizon appears within a stone-cast;
+and the narrow prospect enhances the sense of privacy.&nbsp; Man avoids
+the place - even his footprints are uncommon; but a great number of
+birds hover and pipe there fishing, and leave crooked tracks upon the
+sand.&nbsp; Apart from these, the only sound (and I was going to say
+the only society), is that of the breakers on the reef.<br>
+<br>
+On each projection of the coast, the bank of coral clinkers immediately
+above the beach has been levelled, and a pillar built, perhaps breast-high.&nbsp;
+These are not sepulchral; all the dead being buried on the inhabited
+side of the island, close to men&rsquo;s houses, and (what is worse)
+to their wells.&nbsp; I was told they were to protect the isle against
+inroads from the sea - divine or diabolical martellos, probably sacred
+to Taburik, God of Thunder.<br>
+<br>
+The bay immediately opposite Equator Town, which we called Fu Bay, in
+honour of our cook, was thus fortified on either horn.&nbsp; It was
+well sheltered by the reef, the enclosed water clear and tranquil, the
+enclosing beach curved like a horseshoe, and both steep and broad.&nbsp;
+The path debouched about the midst of the re-entrant angle, the woods
+stopping some distance inland.&nbsp; In front, between the fringe of
+the wood and the crown of the beach, there had been designed a regular
+figure, like the court for some new variety of tennis, with borders
+of round stones imbedded, and pointed at the angles with low posts,
+likewise of stone.&nbsp; This was the king&rsquo;s Pray Place.&nbsp;
+When he prayed, what he prayed for, and to whom he addressed his supplications
+I could never learn.&nbsp; The ground was tapu.<br>
+<br>
+In the angle, by the mouth of the path, stood a deserted maniap&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+Near by there had been a house before our coming, which was now transported
+and figured for the moment in Equator Town.&nbsp; It had been, and it
+would be again when we departed, the residence of the guardian and wizard
+of the spot - Tamaiti.&nbsp; Here, in this lone place, within sound
+of the sea, he had his dwelling and uncanny duties.&nbsp; I cannot call
+to mind another case of a man living on the ocean side of any open atoll;
+and Tamaiti must have had strong nerves, the greater confidence in his
+own spells, or, what I believe to be the truth, an enviable scepticism.&nbsp;
+Whether Tamaiti had any guardianship of the Pray Place I never heard.&nbsp;
+But his own particular chapel stood farther back in the fringe of the
+wood.&nbsp; It was a tree of respectable growth.&nbsp; Around it there
+was drawn a circle of stones like those that enclosed the Pray Place;
+in front, facing towards the sea, a stone of a much greater size, and
+somewhat hollowed, like a piscina, stood close against the trunk; in
+front of that again a conical pile of gravel.&nbsp; In the hollow of
+what I have called the piscina (though it proved to be a magic seat)
+lay an offering of green cocoa-nuts; and when you looked up you found
+the boughs of the tree to be laden with strange fruit: palm-branches
+elaborately plaited, and beautiful models of canoes, finished and rigged
+to the least detail.&nbsp; The whole had the appearance of a mid-summer
+and sylvan Christmas-tree <i>al fresco</i>.&nbsp; Yet we were already
+well enough acquainted in the Gilberts to recognise it, at the first
+sight, for a piece of wizardry, or, as they say in the group, of Devil-work.<br>
+<br>
+The plaited palms were what we recognised.&nbsp; We had seen them before
+on Apaiang, the most christianised of all these islands; where excellent
+Mr. Bingham lived and laboured and has left golden memories; whence
+all the education in the northern Gilberts traces its descent; and where
+we were boarded by little native Sunday-school misses in clean frocks,
+with demure faces, and singing hymns as to the manner born.<br>
+<br>
+Our experience of Devil-work at Apaiang had been as follows:- It chanced
+we were benighted at the house of Captain Tierney.&nbsp; My wife and
+I lodged with a Chinaman some half a mile away; and thither Captain
+Reid and a native boy escorted us by torch-light.&nbsp; On the way the
+torch went out, and we took shelter in a small and lonely Christian
+chapel to rekindle it.&nbsp; Stuck in the rafters of the chapel was
+a branch of knotted palm.&nbsp; &lsquo;What is that?&rsquo; I asked.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;O, that&rsquo;s Devil-work,&rsquo; said the Captain.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+what is Devil-work?&rsquo; I inquired.&nbsp; &lsquo;If you like, I&rsquo;ll
+show you some when we get to Johnnie&rsquo;s,&rsquo; he replied.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Johnnie&rsquo;s&rsquo; was a quaint little house upon the crest
+of the beach, raised some three feet on posts, approached by stairs;
+part walled, part trellised.&nbsp; Trophies of advertisement-photographs
+were hung up within for decoration.&nbsp; There was a table and a recess-bed,
+in which Mrs. Stevenson slept; while I camped on the matted floor with
+Johnnie, Mrs. Johnnie, her sister, and the devil&rsquo;s own regiment
+of cockroaches.&nbsp; Hither was summoned an old witch, who looked the
+part to horror.&nbsp; The lamp was set on the floor; the crone squatted
+on the threshold, a green palm-branch in her hand, the light striking
+full on her aged features and picking out behind her, from the black
+night, timorous faces of spectators.&nbsp; Our sorceress began with
+a chanted incantation; it was in the old tongue, for which I had no
+interpreter; but ever and again there ran among the crowd outside that
+laugh which every traveller in the islands learns so soon to recognise,
+- the laugh of terror.&nbsp; Doubtless these half-Christian folk were
+shocked, these half-heathen folk alarmed.&nbsp; Chench or Taburik thus
+invoked, we put our questions; the witch knotted the leaves, here a
+leaf and there a leaf, plainly on some arithmetical system; studied
+the result with great apparent contention of mind; and gave the answers.&nbsp;
+Sidney Colvin was in robust health and gone a journey; and we should
+have a fair wind upon the morrow: that was the result of our consultation,
+for which we paid a dollar.&nbsp; The next day dawned cloudless and
+breathless; but I think Captain Reid placed a secret reliance on the
+sibyl, for the schooner was got ready for sea.&nbsp; By eight the lagoon
+was flawed with long cat&rsquo;s-paws, and the palms tossed and rustled;
+before ten we were clear of the passage and skimming under all plain
+sail, with bubbling scuppers.&nbsp; So we had the breeze, which was
+well worth a dollar in itself; but the bulletin about my friend in England
+proved, some six months later, when I got my mail, to have been groundless.&nbsp;
+Perhaps London lies beyond the horizon of the island gods.<br>
+<br>
+Tembinok&rsquo;, in his first dealings, showed himself sternly averse
+from superstition: and had not the <i>Equator</i> delayed, we might
+have left the island and still supposed him an agnostic.&nbsp; It chanced
+one day, however, that he came to our maniap&rsquo;, and found Mrs.
+Stevenson in the midst of a game of patience.&nbsp; She explained the
+game as well as she was able, and wound up jocularly by telling him
+this was her devil-work, and if she won, the <i>Equator</i> would arrive
+next day.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo; must have drawn a long breath; we were
+not so high-and-dry after all; he need no longer dissemble, and he plunged
+at once into confessions.&nbsp; He made devil-work every day, he told
+us, to know if ships were coming in; and thereafter brought us regular
+reports of the results.&nbsp; It was surprising how regularly he was
+wrong; but he always had an explanation ready.&nbsp; There had been
+some schooner in the offing out of view; but either she was not bound
+for Apemama, or had changed her course, or lay becalmed.&nbsp; I used
+to regard the king with veneration as he thus publicly deceived himself.&nbsp;
+I saw behind him all the fathers of the Church, all the philosophers
+and men of science of the past; before him, all those that are to come;
+himself in the midst; the whole visionary series bowed over the same
+task of welding incongruities.&nbsp; To the end Tembinok&rsquo; spoke
+reluctantly of the island gods and their worship, and I learned but
+little.&nbsp; Taburik is the god of thunder, and deals in wind and weather.&nbsp;
+A while since there were wizards who could call him down in the form
+of lightning.&nbsp; &lsquo;My patha he tell me he see: you think he
+lie?&rsquo;&nbsp; Tienti - pronounced something like &lsquo;Chench,&rsquo;
+and identified by his majesty with the devil - sends and removes bodily
+sickness.&nbsp; He is whistled for in the Paumotuan manner, and is said
+to appear; but the king has never seen him.&nbsp; The doctors treat
+disease by the aid of Chench: eclectic Tembinok&rsquo; at the same time
+administering &lsquo;pain-killer&rsquo; from his medicine-chest, so
+as to give the sufferer both chances.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think mo&rsquo;
+betta,&rsquo; observed his majesty, with more than his usual self-approval.&nbsp;
+Apparently the gods are not jealous, and placidly enjoy both shrine
+and priest in common.&nbsp; On Tamaiti&rsquo;s medicine-tree, for instance,
+the model canoes are hung up <i>ex voto</i> for a prosperous voyage,
+and must therefore be dedicated to Taburik, god of the weather; but
+the stone in front is the place of sick folk come to pacify Chench.<br>
+<br>
+It chanced, by great good luck, that even as we spoke of these affairs,
+I found myself threatened with a cold.&nbsp; I do not suppose I was
+ever glad of a cold before, or shall ever be again; but the opportunity
+to see the sorcerers at work was priceless, and I called in the faculty
+of Apemama.&nbsp; They came in a body, all in their Sunday&rsquo;s best
+and hung with wreaths and shells, the insignia of the devil-worker.&nbsp;
+Tamaiti I knew already: Terutak&rsquo; I saw for the first time - a
+tall, lank, raw-boned, serious North-Sea fisherman turned brown; and
+there was a third in their company whose name I never heard, and who
+played to Tamaiti the part of <i>famulus</i>.&nbsp; Tamaiti took me
+in hand first, and led me, conversing agreeably, to the shores of Fu
+Bay.&nbsp; The <i>famulus</i> climbed a tree for some green cocoa-nuts.&nbsp;
+Tamaiti himself disappeared a while in the bush and returned with coco
+tinder, dry leaves, and a spray of waxberry.&nbsp; I was placed on the
+stone, with my back to the tree and my face to windward; between me
+and the gravel-heap one of the green nuts was set; and then Tamaiti
+(having previously bared his feet, for he had come in canvas shoes,
+which tortured him) joined me within the magic circle, hollowed out
+the top of the gravel-heap, built his fire in the bottom, and applied
+a match: it was one of Bryant and May&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The flame was slow
+to catch, and the irreverent sorcerer filled in the time with talk of
+foreign places - of London, and &lsquo;companies,&rsquo; and how much
+money they had; of San Francisco, and the nefarious fogs, &lsquo;all
+the same smoke,&rsquo; which had been so nearly the occasion of his
+death.&nbsp; I tried vainly to lead him to the matter in hand.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Everybody make medicine,&rsquo; he said lightly.&nbsp; And when
+I asked him if he were himself a good practitioner - &lsquo;No savvy,&rsquo;
+he replied, more lightly still.&nbsp; At length the leaves burst in
+a flame, which he continued to feed; a thick, light smoke blew in my
+face, and the flames streamed against and scorched my clothes.&nbsp;
+He in the meanwhile addressed, or affected to address, the evil spirit,
+his lips moving fast, but without sound; at the same time he waved in
+the air and twice struck me on the breast with his green spray.&nbsp;
+So soon as the leaves were consumed the ashes were buried, the green
+spray was imbedded in the gravel, and the ceremony was at an end.<br>
+<br>
+A reader of the <i>Arabian Nights</i> felt quite at home.&nbsp; Here
+was the suffumigation; here was the muttering wizard; here was the desert
+place to which Aladdin was decoyed by the false uncle.&nbsp; But they
+manage these things better in fiction.&nbsp; The effect was marred by
+the levity of the magician, entertaining his patient with small talk
+like an affable dentist, and by the incongruous presence of Mr. Osbourne
+with a camera.&nbsp; As for my cold, it was neither better nor worse.<br>
+<br>
+I was now handed over to Terutak&rsquo;, the leading practitioner or
+medical baronet of Apemama.&nbsp; His place is on the lagoon side of
+the island, hard by the palace.&nbsp; A rail of light wood, some two
+feet high, encloses an oblong piece of gravel like the king&rsquo;s
+Pray Place; in the midst is a green tree; below, a stone table bears
+a pair of boxes covered with a fine mat; and in front of these an offering
+of food, a cocoa-nut, a piece of taro or a fish, is placed daily.&nbsp;
+On two sides the enclosure is lined with maniap&rsquo;s; and one of
+our party, who had been there to sketch, had remarked a daily concourse
+of people and an extraordinary number of sick children; for this is
+in fact the infirmary of Apemama.&nbsp; The doctor and myself entered
+the sacred place alone; the boxes and the mat were displaced; and I
+was enthroned in their stead upon the stone, facing once more to the
+east.&nbsp; For a while the sorcerer remained unseen behind me, making
+passes in the air with a branch of palm.&nbsp; Then he struck lightly
+on the brim of my straw hat; and this blow he continued to repeat at
+intervals, sometimes brushing instead my arm and shoulder.&nbsp; I have
+had people try to mesmerise me a dozen times, and never with the least
+result.&nbsp; But at the first tap - on a quarter no more vital than
+my hat-brim, and from nothing more virtuous than a switch of palm wielded
+by a man I could not even see - sleep rushed upon me like an armed man.&nbsp;
+My sinews fainted, my eyes closed, my brain hummed, with drowsiness.&nbsp;
+I resisted, at first instinctively, then with a certain flurry of despair,
+in the end successfully; if that were indeed success which enabled me
+to scramble to my feet, to stumble home somnambulous, to cast myself
+at once upon my bed, and sink at once into a dreamless stupor.&nbsp;
+When I awoke my cold was gone.&nbsp; So I leave a matter that I do not
+understand.<br>
+<br>
+Meanwhile my appetite for curiosities (not usually very keen) had been
+strangely whetted by the sacred boxes.&nbsp; They were of pandanus wood,
+oblong in shape, with an effect of pillaring along the sides like straw
+work, lightly fringed with hair or fibre and standing on four legs.&nbsp;
+The outside was neat as a toy; the inside a mystery I was resolved to
+penetrate.&nbsp; But there was a lion in the path.&nbsp; I might not
+approach Terutak&rsquo;, since I had promised to buy nothing in the
+island; I dared not have recourse to the king, for I had already received
+from him more gifts than I knew how to repay.&nbsp; In this dilemma
+(the schooner being at last returned) we hit on a device.&nbsp; Captain
+Reid came forward in my stead, professed an unbridled passion for the
+boxes, and asked and obtained leave to bargain for them with the wizard.&nbsp;
+That same afternoon the captain and I made haste to the infirmary, entered
+the enclosure, raised the mat, and had begun to examine the boxes at
+our leisure, when Terutak&rsquo;s wife bounced out of one of the nigh
+houses, fell upon us, swept up the treasures, and was gone.&nbsp; There
+was never a more absolute surprise.&nbsp; She came, she took, she vanished,
+we had not a guess whither; and we remained, with foolish looks and
+laughter on the empty field.&nbsp; Such was the fit prologue of our
+memorable bargaining.<br>
+<br>
+Presently Terutak&rsquo; came, bringing Tamaiti along with him, both
+smiling; and we four squatted without the rail.&nbsp; In the three maniap&rsquo;s
+of the infirmary a certain audience was gathered: the family of a sick
+child under treatment, the king&rsquo;s sister playing cards, a pretty
+girl, who swore I was the image of her father; in all perhaps a score.&nbsp;
+Terutak&rsquo;s wife had returned (even as she had vanished) unseen,
+and now sat, breathless and watchful, by her husband&rsquo;s side.&nbsp;
+Perhaps some rumour of our quest had gone abroad, or perhaps we had
+given the alert by our unseemly freedom: certain, at least, that in
+the faces of all present, expectation and alarm were mingled.<br>
+<br>
+Captain Reid announced, without preface or disguise, that I was come
+to purchase; Terutak&rsquo;, with sudden gravity, refused to sell.&nbsp;
+He was pressed; he persisted.&nbsp; It was explained we only wanted
+one: no matter, two were necessary for the healing of the sick.&nbsp;
+He was rallied, he was reasoned with: in vain.&nbsp; He sat there, serious
+and still, and refused.&nbsp; All this was only a preliminary skirmish;
+hitherto no sum of money had been mentioned; but now the captain brought
+his great guns to bear.&nbsp; He named a pound, then two, then three.&nbsp;
+Out of the maniap&rsquo;s one person after another came to join the
+group, some with mere excitement, others with consternation in their
+faces.&nbsp; The pretty girl crept to my side; it was then that - surely
+with the most artless flattery - she informed me of my likeness to her
+father.&nbsp; Tamaiti the infidel sat with hanging head and every mark
+of dejection.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo; streamed with sweat, his eye was
+glazed, his face wore a painful rictus, his chest heaved like that of
+one spent with running.&nbsp; The man must have been by nature covetous;
+and I doubt if ever I saw moral agony more tragically displayed.&nbsp;
+His wife by his side passionately encouraged his resistance.<br>
+<br>
+And now came the charge of the old guard.&nbsp; The captain, making
+a skip, named the surprising figure of five pounds.&nbsp; At the word
+the maniap&rsquo;s were emptied.&nbsp; The king&rsquo;s sister flung
+down her cards and came to the front to listen, a cloud on her brow.&nbsp;
+The pretty girl beat her breast and cried with wearisome iteration that
+if the box were hers I should have it.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo;s wife was
+beside herself with pious fear, her face discomposed, her voice (which
+scarce ceased from warning and encouragement) shrill as a whistle.&nbsp;
+Even Terutak&rsquo; lost that image-like immobility which he had hitherto
+maintained.&nbsp; He rocked on his mat, threw up his closed knees alternately,
+and struck himself on the breast after the manner of dancers.&nbsp;
+But he came gold out of the furnace; and with what voice was left him
+continued to reject the bribe.<br>
+<br>
+And now came a timely interjection.&nbsp; &lsquo;Money will not heal
+the sick,&rsquo; observed the king&rsquo;s sister sententiously; and
+as soon as I heard the remark translated my eyes were unsealed, and
+I began to blush for my employment.&nbsp; Here was a sick child, and
+I sought, in the view of its parents, to remove the medicine-box.&nbsp;
+Here was the priest of a religion, and I (a heathen millionaire) was
+corrupting him to sacrilege.&nbsp; Here was a greedy man, torn in twain
+betwixt greed and conscience; and I sat by and relished, and lustfully
+renewed his torments.&nbsp; <i>Ave, Caesar</i>!&nbsp; Smothered in a
+corner, dormant but not dead, we have all the one touch of nature: an
+infant passion for the sand and blood of the arena.&nbsp; So I brought
+to an end my first and last experience of the joys of the millionaire,
+and departed amid silent awe.&nbsp; Nowhere else can I expect to stir
+the depths of human nature by an offer of five pounds; nowhere else,
+even at the expense of millions, could I hope to see the evil of riches
+stand so legibly exposed.&nbsp; Of all the bystanders, none but the
+king&rsquo;s sister retained any memory of the gravity and danger of
+the thing in hand.&nbsp; Their eyes glowed, the girl beat her breast,
+in senseless animal excitement.&nbsp; Nothing was offered them; they
+stood neither to gain nor to lose; at the mere name and wind of these
+great sums Satan possessed them.<br>
+<br>
+From this singular interview I went straight to the palace; found the
+king; confessed what I had been doing; begged him, in my name, to compliment
+Terutak&rsquo; on his virtue, and to have a similar box made for me
+against the return of the schooner.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo;, Rubam, and
+one of the Daily Papers - him we used to call &lsquo;the Facetiae Column&rsquo;
+- laboured for a while of some idea, which was at last intelligibly
+delivered.&nbsp; They feared I thought the box would cure me; whereas,
+without the wizard, it was useless; and when I was threatened with another
+cold I should do better to rely on pain-killer.&nbsp; I explained I
+merely wished to keep it in my &lsquo;outch&rsquo; as a thing made in
+Apemama and these honest men were much relieved.<br>
+<br>
+Late the same evening, my wife, crossing the isle to windward, was aware
+of singing in the bush.&nbsp; Nothing is more common in that hour and
+place than the jubilant carol of the toddy-cutter, swinging high overhead,
+beholding below him the narrow ribbon of the isle, the surrounding field
+of ocean, and the fires of the sunset.&nbsp; But this was of a graver
+character, and seemed to proceed from the ground-level.&nbsp; Advancing
+a little in the thicket, Mrs. Stevenson saw a clear space, a fine mat
+spread in the midst, and on the mat a wreath of white flowers and one
+of the devil-work boxes.&nbsp; A woman - whom we guess to have been
+Mrs. Terutak&rsquo; - sat in front, now drooping over the box like a
+mother over a cradle, now lifting her face and directing her song to
+heaven.&nbsp; A passing toddy-cutter told my wife that she was praying.&nbsp;
+Probably she did not so much pray as deprecate; and perhaps even the
+ceremony was one of disenchantment.&nbsp; For the box was already doomed;
+it was to pass from its green medicine-tree, reverend precinct, and
+devout attendants; to be handled by the profane; to cross three seas;
+to come to land under the foolscap of St. Paul&rsquo;s; to be domesticated
+within the hail of Lillie Bridge; there to be dusted by the British
+housemaid, and to take perhaps the roar of London for the voice of the
+outer sea along the reef.&nbsp; Before even we had finished dinner Chench
+had begun his journey, and one of the newspapers had already placed
+the box upon my table as the gift of Tembinok&rsquo;.<br>
+<br>
+I made haste to the palace, thanked the king, but offered to restore
+the box, for I could not bear that the sick of the island should be
+made to suffer.&nbsp; I was amazed by his reply.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo;,
+it appeared, had still three or four in reserve against an accident;
+and his reluctance, and the dread painted at first on every face, was
+not in the least occasioned by the prospect of medical destitution,
+but by the immediate divinity of Chench.&nbsp; How much more did I respect
+the king&rsquo;s command, which had been able to extort in a moment
+and for nothing a sacrilegious favour that I had in vain solicited with
+millions!&nbsp; But now I had a difficult task in front of me; it was
+not in my view that Terutak&rsquo; should suffer by his virtue; and
+I must persuade the king to share my opinion, to let me enrich one of
+his subjects, and (what was yet more delicate) to pay for my present.&nbsp;
+Nothing shows the king in a more becoming light than the fact that I
+succeeded.&nbsp; He demurred at the principle; he exclaimed, when he
+heard it, at the sum.&nbsp; &lsquo;Plenty money!&rsquo; cried he, with
+contemptuous displeasure.&nbsp; But his resistance was never serious;
+and when he had blown off his ill-humour - &lsquo;A&rsquo; right,&rsquo;
+said he.&nbsp; &lsquo;You give him.&nbsp; Mo&rsquo; betta.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Armed with this permission, I made straight for the infirmary.&nbsp;
+The night was now come, cool, dark, and starry.&nbsp; On a mat hard
+by a clear fire of wood and coco shell, Terutak&rsquo; lay beside his
+wife.&nbsp; Both were smiling; the agony was over, the king&rsquo;s
+command had reconciled (I must suppose) their agitating scruples; and
+I was bidden to sit by them and share the circulating pipe.&nbsp; I
+was a little moved myself when I placed five gold sovereigns in the
+wizard&rsquo;s hand; but there was no sign of emotion in Terutak&rsquo;
+as he returned them, pointed to the palace, and named Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+It was a changed scene when I had managed to explain.&nbsp; Terutak&rsquo;,
+long, dour Scots fisherman as he was, expressed his satisfaction within
+bounds; but the wife beamed; and there was an old gentleman present
+- her father, I suppose - who seemed nigh translated.&nbsp; His eyes
+stood out of his head; &lsquo;<i>Kaupoi, Kaupoi</i> - rich, rich!&rsquo;
+ran on his lips like a refrain; and he could not meet my eye but what
+he gurgled into foolish laughter.<br>
+<br>
+I might now go home, leaving that fire-lit family party gloating over
+their new millions, and consider my strange day.&nbsp; I had tried and
+rewarded the virtue of Terutak&rsquo;.&nbsp; I had played the millionaire,
+had behaved abominably, and then in some degree repaired my thoughtlessness.&nbsp;
+And now I had my box, and could open it and look within.&nbsp; It contained
+a miniature sleeping-mat and a white shell.&nbsp; Tamaiti, interrogated
+next day as to the shell, explained it was not exactly Chench, but a
+cell, or body, which he would at times inhabit.&nbsp; Asked why there
+was a sleeping-mat, he retorted indignantly, &lsquo;Why have you mats?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And this was the sceptical Tamaiti!&nbsp; But island scepticism is never
+deeper than the lips.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+CHAPTER VII - THE KING OF APEMAMA<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Thus all things on the island, even the priests of the gods, obey the
+word of Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; He can give and take, and slay, and allay
+the scruples of the conscientious, and do all things (apparently) but
+interfere in the cookery of a turtle.&nbsp; &lsquo;I got power&rsquo;
+is his favourite word; it interlards his conversation; the thought haunts
+him and is ever fresh; and when be has asked and meditates of foreign
+countries, he looks up with a smile and reminds you, &lsquo;<i>I</i>
+got<i> Power</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nor is his delight only in the possession,
+but in the exercise.&nbsp; He rejoices in the crooked and violent paths
+of kingship like a strong man to run a race, or like an artist in his
+art.&nbsp; To feel, to use his power, to embellish his island and the
+picture of the island life after a private ideal, to milk the island
+vigorously, to extend his singular museum - these employ delightfully
+the sum of his abilities.&nbsp; I never saw a man more patently in the
+right trade.<br>
+<br>
+It would be natural to suppose this monarchy inherited intact through
+generations.&nbsp; And so far from that, it is a thing of yesterday.&nbsp;
+I was already a boy at school while Apemama was yet republican, ruled
+by a noisy council of Old Men, and torn with incurable feuds.&nbsp;
+And Tembinok&rsquo; is no Bourbon; rather the son of a Napoleon.&nbsp;
+Of course he is well-born.&nbsp; No man need aspire high in the isles
+of the Pacific unless his pedigree be long and in the upper regions
+mythical.&nbsp; And our king counts cousinship with most of the high
+families in the archipelago, and traces his descent to a shark and a
+heroic woman.&nbsp; Directed by an oracle, she swam beyond sight of
+land to meet her revolting paramour, and received at sea the seed of
+a predestined family.&nbsp; &lsquo;I think lie,&rsquo; is the king&rsquo;s
+emphatic commentary; yet he is proud of the legend.&nbsp; From this
+illustrious beginning the fortunes of the race must have declined; and
+Te&ntilde;koruti, the grandfather of Tembinok&rsquo;, was the chief
+of a village at the north end of the island.&nbsp; Kuria and Aranuka
+were yet independent; Apemama itself the arena of devastating feuds.&nbsp;
+Through this perturbed period of history the figure of Te&ntilde;koruti
+stalks memorable.&nbsp; In war he was swift and bloody; several towns
+fell to his spear, and the inhabitants were butchered to a man.&nbsp;
+In civil life this arrogance was unheard of.&nbsp; When the council
+of Old Men was summoned, he went to the Speak House, delivered his mind,
+and left without waiting to be answered.&nbsp; Wisdom had spoken: let
+others opine according to their folly.&nbsp; He was feared and hated,
+and this was his pleasure.&nbsp; He was no poet; he cared not for arts
+or knowledge.&nbsp; &lsquo;My gran&rsquo;patha one thing savvy, savvy
+pight,&rsquo; observed the king.&nbsp; In some lull of their own disputes
+the Old Men of Apemama adventured on the conquest of Apemama; and this
+unlicked Caius Marcius was elected general of the united troops.&nbsp;
+Success attended him; the islands were reduced, and Te&ntilde;koruti
+returned to his own government, glorious and detested.&nbsp; He died
+about 1860, in the seventieth year of his age and the full odour of
+unpopularity.&nbsp; He was tall and lean, says his grandson, looked
+extremely old, and &lsquo;walked all the same young man.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The same observer gave me a significant detail.&nbsp; The survivors
+of that rough epoch were all defaced with spearmarks; there was none
+on the body of this skilful fighter.&nbsp; &lsquo;I see old man, no
+got a spear,&rsquo; said the king.<br>
+<br>
+Te&ntilde;koruti left two sons, Tembaitake and Tembinatake.&nbsp; Tembaitake,
+our king&rsquo;s father, was short, middling stout, a poet, a good genealogist,
+and something of a fighter; it seems he took himself seriously, and
+was perhaps scarce conscious that he was in all things the creature
+and nursling of his brother.&nbsp; There was no shadow of dispute between
+the pair: the greater man filled with alacrity and content the second
+place; held the breach in war, and all the portfolios in the time of
+peace; and, when his brother rated him, listened in silence, looking
+on the ground.&nbsp; Like Te&ntilde;koruti, he was tall and lean and
+a swift talker - a rare trait in the islands.&nbsp; He possessed every
+accomplishment.&nbsp; He knew sorcery, he was the best genealogist of
+his day, he was a poet, he could dance and make canoes and armour; and
+the famous mast of Apemama, which ran one joint higher than the mainmast
+of a full-rigged ship, was of his conception and design.&nbsp; But these
+were avocations, and the man&rsquo;s trade was war.&nbsp; &lsquo;When
+my uncle go make wa&rsquo;, he laugh,&rsquo; said Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+He forbade the use of field fortification, that protractor of native
+hostilities; his men must fight in the open, and win or be beaten out
+of hand; his own activity inspired his followers; and the swiftness
+of his blows beat down, in one lifetime, the resistance of three islands.&nbsp;
+He made his brother sovereign, he left his nephew absolute.&nbsp; &lsquo;My
+uncle make all smooth,&rsquo; said Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; &lsquo;I mo&rsquo;
+king than my patha: I got power,&rsquo; he said, with formidable relish.<br>
+<br>
+Such is the portrait of the uncle drawn by the nephew.&nbsp; I can set
+beside it another by a different artist, who has often - I may say always
+- delighted me with his romantic taste in narrative, but not always
+- and I may say not often - persuaded me of his exactitude.&nbsp; I
+have already denied myself the use of so much excellent matter from
+the same source, that I begin to think it time to reward good resolution;
+and his account of Tembinatake agrees so well with the king&rsquo;s,
+that it may very well be (what I hope it is) the record of a fact, and
+not (what I suspect) the pleasing exercise of an imagination more than
+sailorly.&nbsp; A., for so I had perhaps better call him, was walking
+up the island after dusk, when he came on a lighted village of some
+size, was directed to the chief&rsquo;s house, and asked leave to rest
+and smoke a pipe.&nbsp; &lsquo;You will sit down, and smoke a pipe,
+and wash, and eat, and sleep,&rsquo; replied the chief, &lsquo;and to-morrow
+you will go again.&rsquo;&nbsp; Food was brought, prayers were held
+(for this was in the brief day of Christianity), and the chief himself
+prayed with eloquence and seeming sincerity.&nbsp; All evening A. sat
+and admired the man by the firelight.&nbsp; He was six feet high, lean,
+with the appearance of many years, and an extraordinary air of breeding
+and command.&nbsp; &lsquo;He looked like a man who would kill you laughing,&rsquo;
+said A., in singular echo of one of the king&rsquo;s expressions.&nbsp;
+And again: &lsquo;I had been reading the Musketeer books, and he reminded
+me of Aramis.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such is the portrait of Tembinatake, drawn
+by an expert romancer.<br>
+<br>
+We had heard many tales of &lsquo;my patha&rsquo;; never a word of my
+uncle till two days before we left.&nbsp; As the time approached for
+our departure Tembinok&rsquo; became greatly changed; a softer, a more
+melancholy, and, in particular, a more confidential man appeared in
+his stead.&nbsp; To my wife he contrived laboriously to explain that
+though he knew he must lose his father in the course of nature, he had
+not minded nor realised it till the moment came; and that now he was
+to lose us he repeated the experience.&nbsp; We showed fireworks one
+evening on the terrace.&nbsp; It was a heavy business; the sense of
+separation was in all our minds, and the talk languished.&nbsp; The
+king was specially affected, sat disconsolate on his mat, and often
+sighed.&nbsp; Of a sudden one of the wives stepped forth from a cluster,
+came and kissed him in silence, and silently went again.&nbsp; It was
+just such a caress as we might give to a disconsolate child, and the
+king received it with a child&rsquo;s simplicity.&nbsp; Presently after
+we said good-night and withdrew; but Tembinok&rsquo; detained Mr. Osbourne,
+patting the mat by his side and saying: &lsquo;Sit down.&nbsp; I feel
+bad, I like talk.&rsquo;&nbsp; Osbourne sat down by him.&nbsp; &lsquo;You
+like some beer?&rsquo; said he; and one of the wives produced a bottle.&nbsp;
+The king did not partake, but sat sighing and smoking a meerschaum pipe.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I very sorry you go,&rsquo; he said at last.&nbsp; &lsquo;Miss
+Stlevens he good man, woman he good man, boy he good man; all good man.&nbsp;
+Woman he smart all the same man.&nbsp; My woman&rsquo; (glancing towards
+his wives) &lsquo;he good woman, no very smart.&nbsp; I think Miss Stlevens
+he is chiep all the same cap&rsquo;n man-o-wa&rsquo;.&nbsp; I think
+Miss Stlevens he rich man all the same me.&nbsp; All go schoona.&nbsp;
+I very sorry.&nbsp; My patha he go, my uncle he go, my cutcheons he
+go, Miss Stlevens he go: all go.&nbsp; You no see king cry before.&nbsp;
+King all the same man: feel bad, he cry.&nbsp; I very sorry.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+In the morning it was the common topic in the village that the king
+had wept.&nbsp; To me he said: &lsquo;Last night I no can &lsquo;peak:
+too much here,&rsquo; laying his hand upon his bosom.&nbsp; &lsquo;Now
+you go away all the same my pamily.&nbsp; My brothers, my uncle go away.&nbsp;
+All the same.&rsquo;&nbsp; This was said with a dejection almost passionate.&nbsp;
+And it was the first time I had heard him name his uncle, or indeed
+employ the word.&nbsp; The same day he sent me a present of two corselets,
+made in the island fashion of plaited fibre, heavy and strong.&nbsp;
+One had been worn by Te&ntilde;koruti, one by Tembaitake; and the gift
+being gratefully received, he sent me, on the return of his messengers,
+a third - that of Tembinatake.&nbsp; My curiosity was roused; I begged
+for information as to the three wearers; and the king entered with gusto
+into the details already given.&nbsp; Here was a strange thing, that
+he should have talked so much of his family, and not once mentioned
+that relative of whom he was plainly the most proud.&nbsp; Nay, more:
+he had hitherto boasted of his father; thenceforth he had little to
+say of him; and the qualities for which he had praised him in the past
+were now attributed where they were due, - to the uncle.&nbsp; A confusion
+might be natural enough among islanders, who call all the sons of their
+grandfather by the common name of father.&nbsp; But this was not the
+case with Tembinok&rsquo;.&nbsp; Now the ice was broken the word uncle
+was perpetually in his mouth; he who had been so ready to confound was
+now careful to distinguish; and the father sank gradually into a self-complacent
+ordinary man, while the uncle rose to his true stature as the hero and
+founder of the race.<br>
+<br>
+The more I heard and the more I considered, the more this mystery of
+Tembinok&rsquo;s behaviour puzzled and attracted me.&nbsp; And the explanation,
+when it came, was one to strike the imagination of a dramatist.&nbsp;
+Tembinok&rsquo; had two brothers.&nbsp; One, detected in private trading,
+was banished, then forgiven, lives to this day in the island, and is
+the father of the heir-apparent, Paul.&nbsp; The other fell beyond forgiveness.&nbsp;
+I have heard it was a love-affair with one of the king&rsquo;s wives,
+and the thing is highly possible in that romantic archipelago.&nbsp;
+War was attempted to be levied; but Tembinok&rsquo; was too swift for
+the rebels, and the guilty brother escaped in a canoe.&nbsp; He did
+not go alone.&nbsp; Tembinatake had a hand in the rebellion, and the
+man who had gained a kingdom for a weakling brother was banished by
+that brother&rsquo;s son.&nbsp; The fugitives came to shore in other
+islands, but Tembinok&rsquo; remains to this day ignorant of their fate.<br>
+<br>
+So far history.&nbsp; And now a moment for conjecture.&nbsp; Tembinok&rsquo;
+confused habitually, not only the attributes and merits of his father
+and his uncle, but their diverse personal appearance.&nbsp; Before he
+had even spoken, or thought to speak, of Tembinatake, he had told me
+often of a tall, lean father, skilled in war, and his own schoolmaster
+in genealogy and island arts.&nbsp; How if both were fathers, one natural,
+one adoptive?&nbsp; How if the heir of Tembaitake, like the heir of
+Tembinok&rsquo; himself, were not a son, but an adopted nephew?&nbsp;
+How if the founder of the monarchy, while he worked for his brother,
+worked at the same time for the child of his loins?&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;
+&nbsp; How if on the death of Tembaitake, the two stronger natures,
+father and son, king and kingmaker, clashed, and Tembinok&rsquo;, when
+he drove out his uncle, drove out the author of his days?&nbsp; Here
+is at least a tragedy four-square.<br>
+<br>
+The king took us on board in his own gig, dressed for the occasion in
+the naval uniform.&nbsp; He had little to say, he refused refreshments,
+shook us briefly by the hand, and went ashore again.&nbsp; That night
+the palm-tops of Apemama had dipped behind the sea, and the schooner
+sailed solitary under the stars.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, IN THE SOUTH SEAS ***<br>
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