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+<title>The Hawaiian Archipelago | Project Gutenberg</title>
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 6750 ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE HAWAIIAN ARCHIPELAGO.</h1>
+<p>SIX MONTHS AMONG THE PALM GROVES, CORAL REEFS, AND VOLCANOES OF THE
+SANDWICH ISLANDS.</p>
+<p>BY ISABELLA L. BIRD.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Summer isles of Eden lying<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+dark purple spheres of sea.&rdquo;</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>To my sister, to whom these letters were originally written, they
+are now affectionately dedicated.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p>Within the last century the Hawaiian islands have been the topic
+of various works of merit, and some explanation of the reasons which
+have led me to enter upon the same subject are necessary.</p>
+<p>I was travelling for health, when circumstances induced me to land
+on the group, and the benefit which I derived from the climate tempted
+me to remain for nearly seven months.&nbsp; During that time the necessity
+of leading a life of open air and exercise as a means of recovery, led
+me to travel on horseback to and fro through the islands, exploring
+the interior, ascending the highest mountains, visiting the active volcanoes,
+and remote regions which are known to few even of the residents, living
+among the natives, and otherwise seeing Hawaiian life in all its phases.</p>
+<p>At the close of my visit, my Hawaiian friends urged me strongly to
+publish my impressions and experiences, on the ground that the best
+books already existing, besides being old, treat chiefly of aboriginal
+customs and habits now extinct, and of the introduction of Christianity
+and subsequent historical events.&nbsp; They also represented that I
+had seen the islands more thoroughly than any foreign visitor, and the
+volcano of Mauna Loa under specially favourable circumstances, and that
+I had so completely lived the island life, and acquainted myself with
+the existing state of the country, as to be rather a <i>kamaina</i>
+<a name="citation0"></a><a href="#footnote0">{0}</a> than a stranger,
+and that consequently I should be able to write on Hawaii with a degree
+of intimacy as well as freshness.&nbsp; My friends at home, who were
+interested in my narratives, urged me to give them to a wider circle,
+and my inclinations led me in the same direction, with a sort of longing
+to make others share something of my own interest and enjoyment.</p>
+<p>The letters which follow were written to a near relation, and often
+hastily and under great difficulties of circumstance, but even with
+these and other disadvantages, they appear to me the best form of conveying
+my impressions in their original vividness.&nbsp; With the exception
+of certain omissions and abridgments, they are printed as they were
+written, and for such demerits as arise from this mode of publication,
+I ask the kind indulgence of my readers.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ISABELLA
+L. BIRD.<br />January, 1875.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>TRAVELS IN THE SANDWICH ISLANDS.</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.</h3>
+<p>Canon Kingsley, in his charming book on the West Indies, says, &ldquo;The
+undoubted fact is known I find to few educated English people, that
+the Coco palm, which produces coir rope, cocoanuts, and a hundred other
+useful things, is not the same plant as the cacao bush which produces
+chocolate, or anything like it.&nbsp; I am sorry to have to insist upon
+this fact, but till Professor Huxley&rsquo;s dream and mine is fulfilled,
+and our schools deign to teach, in the intervals of Greek and Latin,
+some slight knowledge of this planet, and of those of its productions
+which are most commonly in use, even this fact may need to be re-stated
+more than once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There is no room for the supposition that the intelligence of Mr.
+Kingsley&rsquo;s &ldquo;educated English&rdquo; acquaintance is below
+the average, and I should be sorry to form an unworthy estimate of that
+of my own circle, though I have several times met with the foregoing
+confusion, as well as the following and other equally ill-informed questions,
+one or two of which I reluctantly admit that I might have been guilty
+of myself before I visited the Pacific: &ldquo;Whereabouts are the Sandwich
+Islands?&nbsp; They are not the same as the Fijis, are they?&nbsp; Are
+they the same as Otaheite?&nbsp; Are the natives all cannibals?&nbsp;
+What sort of idols do they worship?&nbsp; Are they as pretty as the
+other South Sea Islands?&nbsp; Does the king wear clothes?&nbsp; Who
+do they belong to?&nbsp; Does any one live on them but the savages?&nbsp;
+Will anything grow on them?&nbsp; Are the people very savage?&rdquo;
+etc.&nbsp; Their geographical position is a great difficulty.&nbsp;
+I saw a gentleman of very extensive information looking for them on
+the map in the neighbourhood of Tristran d&rsquo;Acunha; and the publishers
+of a high-class periodical lately advertised, &ldquo;Letters from the
+Sandwich Islands&rdquo; as &ldquo;Letters from the South Sea Islands.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In consequence of these and similar interrogatories, which are not altogether
+unreasonable, considering the imperfect teaching of physical geography,
+the extent of this planet, the multitude of its productions, and the
+enormous number of islands composing Polynesia, Micronesia, and Melanesia,
+it is necessary to preface the following letters with as many preliminary
+statements as shall serve to make them intelligible.</p>
+<p>The Sandwich Islands do not form one of the South Sea groups, and
+have no other connexion with them than certain affinities of race and
+language.&nbsp; They constitute the only important group in the vast
+North Pacific Ocean, in which they are so advantageously placed as to
+be pretty nearly equidistant from California, Mexico, China, and Japan.&nbsp;
+They are in the torrid zone, and extend from 18&deg; 50&rsquo; to 22&deg;
+20&rsquo; north latitude, and their longitude is from 154&deg; 53&rsquo;
+to 160&deg; 15&rsquo; west from Greenwich.&nbsp; They were discovered
+by Captain Cook in 1778.&nbsp; They are twelve in number, but only eight
+are inhabited, and these vary in size from Hawaii, which is 4000 square
+miles in extent, and 88 miles long by 73 broad, to Kahoolawe, which
+is only 11 miles long and 8 broad.&nbsp; Their entire superficial area
+is about 6,100 miles.&nbsp; They are to some extent bounded by barrier
+reefs of coral, and have few safe harbours.&nbsp; Their formation is
+altogether volcanic, and they possess the largest perpetually active
+volcano and the largest extinct crater in the world.&nbsp; They are
+very mountainous, and two mountain summits on Hawaii are nearly 14,000
+feet in height.&nbsp; Their climate for salubrity and general equability
+is reputed the finest on earth.&nbsp; It is almost absolutely equable,
+and a man may take his choice between broiling all the year round on
+the sea level on the leeward side of the islands at a temperature of
+80&deg;, and enjoying the charms of a fireside at an altitude where
+there is frost every night of the year.&nbsp; There is no sickly season,
+and there are no diseases of locality.&nbsp; The trade winds blow for
+nine months of the year, and on the windward coasts there is an abundance
+of rain, and a perennial luxuriance of vegetation.</p>
+<p>The Sandwich Islands are not the same as Otaheite nor as the Fijis,
+from which they are distant about 4,000 miles, nor are their people
+of the same race.&nbsp; The natives are not cannibals, and it is doubtful
+if they ever were so.&nbsp; Their idols only exist in missionary museums.&nbsp;
+They cast them away voluntarily in 1819, at the very time when missionaries
+from America sent out to Christianize the group were on their way round
+Cape Horn.&nbsp; The people are all clothed, and the king, who is an
+educated gentleman, wears the European dress.&nbsp; The official designation
+of the group is &ldquo;Hawaiian Islands,&rdquo; and they form an independent
+kingdom.</p>
+<p>The natives are not savages, most decidedly not.&nbsp; They are on
+the whole a quiet, courteous, orderly, harmless, Christian community.&nbsp;
+The native population has declined from 400,000 as estimated by Captain
+Cook in 1778 to 49,000, according to the census of 1872.&nbsp; There
+are about 5,000 foreign residents, who live on very friendly terms with
+the natives, and are mostly subjects of Kalakaua, the king of the group.</p>
+<p>The islands have a thoroughly civilized polity, and the Hawaiians
+show a great aptitude for political organization.&nbsp; They constitute
+a limited monarchy, and have a constitutional and hereditary king, a
+parliament with an upper and lower house, a cabinet, a standing army,
+a police force, a Supreme Court of Judicature, a most efficient postal
+system, a Governor and Sheriff on each of the larger islands, court
+officials, and court etiquette, a common school system, custom houses,
+a civil list, taxes, a national debt, and most of the other amenities
+and appliances of civilization.</p>
+<p>There is no State Church.&nbsp; The majority of the foreigners, as
+well as of the natives, are Congregationalists.&nbsp; The missionaries
+translated the Bible and other books into Hawaiian, taught the natives
+to read and write, gave the princes and nobles a high class education,
+induced the king and chiefs to renounce their oppressive feudal rights,
+with legal advice framed a constitution which became the law of the
+land, and obtained the recognition of the little Polynesian kingdom
+as a member of the brotherhood of civilized nations.</p>
+<p>With these few remarks I leave the subject of the volume to develop
+itself in my letters.&nbsp; They have not had the advantage of revision
+by any one familiar with the Sandwich Islands, and mistakes and inaccuracies
+may consequently appear, on which, I hope that my Hawaiian friends will
+not be very severe.&nbsp; In correcting them, I have availed myself
+of the very valuable &ldquo;History of the Hawaiian Islands,&rdquo;
+by Mr. Jackson Jarves, Ellis&rsquo; &ldquo;Tour Round Hawaii,&rdquo;
+Mr. Brigham&rsquo;s valuable monograph on &ldquo;The Hawaiian Volcanoes,&rdquo;
+and sundry reports presented to the legislature during its present session.&nbsp;
+I have also to express my obligations to the Hon. E. Allen, Chief Justice
+and Chancellor of the Hawaiian kingdom, Mr. Manley Hopkins, author of
+&ldquo;Hawaii,&rdquo; Dr. T. M. Coan, of New York, Professor W. Alexander,
+Daniel Smith, Esq., and other friends at Honolulu, for assistance most
+kindly rendered.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ISABELLA
+L. BIRD.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER I.</h3>
+<p>STEAMER NEVADA, NORTH PACIFIC, January 19.</p>
+<p>A white, unwinking, scintillating sun blazed down upon Auckland,
+New Zealand.&nbsp; Along the white glaring road from Onehunga, dusty
+trees and calla lilies drooped with the heat.&nbsp; Dusty thickets sheltered
+the cicada, whose triumphant din grated and rasped through the palpitating
+atmosphere.&nbsp; In dusty enclosures, supposed to be gardens, shrivelled
+geraniums scattered sparsely alone defied the heat.&nbsp; Flags drooped
+in the stifling air.&nbsp; Men on the verge of sunstroke plied their
+tasks mechanically, like automatons.&nbsp; Dogs, with flabby and protruding
+tongues, hid themselves away under archway shadows.&nbsp; The stones
+of the sidewalks and the brick of the houses radiated a furnace heat.&nbsp;
+All nature was limp, dusty, groaning, gasping.&nbsp; The day was the
+climax of a burning fortnight, of heat, draught, and dust, of baked,
+cracked, dewless land, and oily breezeless seas, of glaring days, passing
+through fierce fiery sunsets into stifling nights.</p>
+<p>I only remained long enough in the capital to observe that it had
+a look of having seen better days, and that its business streets had
+an American impress, and, taking a boat at a wharf, in whose seams the
+pitch was melting, I went off to the steamer <i>Nevada</i>, which was
+anchored out in the bay, preferring to spend the night in her than in
+the unbearable heat on shore.&nbsp; She belongs to the Webb line, an
+independent mail adventure, now dying a natural death, undertaken by
+the New Zealand Government, as much probably out of jealousy of Victoria
+as anything else.&nbsp; She nearly foundered on her last voyage; her
+passengers unanimously signed a protest against her unseaworthy condition.&nbsp;
+She was condemned by the Government surveyor, and her mails were sent
+to Melbourne.&nbsp; She has, however, been patched up for this trip,
+and eight passengers, including myself, have trusted ourselves to her.&nbsp;
+She is a huge paddle-steamer, of the old-fashioned American type, deck
+above deck, balconies, a pilot-house abaft the foremast, two monstrous
+walking beams, and two masts which, possibly in case of need, might
+serve as jury masts.</p>
+<p>Huge, airy, perfectly comfortable as she is, not a passenger stepped
+on board without breathing a more earnest prayer than usual that the
+voyage might end propitiously.&nbsp; The very first evening statements
+were whispered about to the effect that her state of disrepair is such
+that she has not been to her own port for nine months, and has been
+sailing for that time without a certificate; that her starboard shaft
+is partially fractured, and that to reduce the strain upon it the floats
+of her starboard wheel have been shortened five inches, the strain being
+further reduced by giving her a decided list to port; that her crank
+is &ldquo;bandaged,&rdquo; that she is leaky; that her mainmast is sprung,
+and that with only four hours&rsquo; steaming many of her boiler tubes,
+even some of those put in at Auckland, had already given way.&nbsp;
+I cannot testify concerning the mainmast, though it certainly does comport
+itself like no other mainmast I ever saw; but the other statements and
+many more which might be added, are, I believe, substantially correct.&nbsp;
+That the caulking of the deck was in evil case we very soon had proof,
+for during heavy rain above, it was a smart shower in the saloon and
+state rooms, keeping four stewards employed with buckets and swabs,
+and compelling us to dine in waterproofs and rubber shoes.</p>
+<p>In this dilapidated condition, when two days out from Auckland, we
+encountered a revolving South Sea hurricane, succinctly entered in the
+log of the day as &ldquo;Encountered a very severe hurricane with a
+very heavy sea.&rdquo;&nbsp; It began at eight in the morning, and never
+spent its fury till nine at night, and the wind changed its direction
+eleven times.&nbsp; The <i>Nevada</i> left Auckland two feet deeper
+in the water than she ought to have been, and laboured heavily.&nbsp;
+Seas struck her under the guards with a heavy, explosive <i>thud</i>,
+and she groaned and strained as if she would part asunder.&nbsp; It
+was a long weird day.&nbsp; We held no communication with each other,
+or with those who could form any rational estimate of the probabilities
+of our destiny; no officials appeared; the ordinary invariable routine
+of the steward department was suspended without notice; the sounds were
+tremendous, and a hot lurid obscurity filled the atmosphere.&nbsp; Soon
+after four the clamour increased, and the shock of a sea blowing up
+a part of the fore-guards made the groaning fabric reel and shiver throughout
+her whole huge bulk.&nbsp; At that time, by common consent, we assembled
+in the deck-house, which had windows looking in all directions, and
+sat there for five hours.&nbsp; Very few words were spoken, and very
+little fear was felt.&nbsp; We understood by intuition that if our crazy
+engines failed at any moment to keep the ship&rsquo;s head to the sea,
+her destruction would not occupy half-an-hour.&nbsp; It was all palpable.&nbsp;
+There was nothing which the most experienced seaman could explain to
+the merest novice.&nbsp; We hoped for the best, and there was no use
+in speaking about the worst.&nbsp; Nor, indeed, was speech possible,
+unless a human voice could have outshrieked the hurricane.</p>
+<p>In this deck-house the strainings, sunderings, and groanings were
+hardly audible, or rather were overpowered by a sound which, in thirteen
+months&rsquo; experience of the sea in all weathers, I have never heard,
+and hope never to hear again, unless in a staunch ship, one loud, awful,
+undying shriek, mingled with a prolonged relentless hiss.&nbsp; No gathering
+strength, no languid fainting into momentary lulls, but one protracted
+gigantic scream.&nbsp; And this was not the whistle of wind through
+cordage, but the actual sound of air travelling with tremendous velocity,
+carrying with it minute particles of water.&nbsp; Nor was the sea running
+mountains high, for the hurricane kept it down.&nbsp; Indeed during
+those fierce hours no sea was visible, for the whole surface was caught
+up and carried furiously into the air, like snow-drift on the prairies,
+sibilant, relentless.&nbsp; There was profound quiet on deck, the little
+life which existed being concentrated near the bow, where the captain
+was either lashed to the foremast, or in shelter in the pilot-house.&nbsp;
+Never a soul appeared on deck, the force of the hurricane being such
+that for four hours any man would have been carried off his feet.&nbsp;
+Through the swift strange evening our hopes rested on the engine, and
+amidst the uproar and din, and drifting spray, and shocks of pitiless
+seas, there was a sublime repose in the spectacle of the huge walking
+beams, alternately rising and falling, slowly, calmly, regularly, as
+if the <i>Nevada</i> were on a holiday trip within the Golden Gate.&nbsp;
+At eight in the evening we could hear each other speak, and a little
+later, through the great masses of hissing drift we discerned black
+water.&nbsp; At nine Captain Blethen appeared, smoking a cigar with
+nonchalance, and told us that the hurricane had nearly boxed the compass,
+and had been the most severe he had known for seventeen years.&nbsp;
+This grand old man, nearly the oldest captain in the Pacific, won our
+respect and confidence from the first, and his quiet and masterly handling
+of this dilapidated old ship is beyond all praise.</p>
+<p>When the strain of apprehension was mitigated, we became aware that
+we had not had anything to eat since breakfast, a clean sweep having
+been made, not only of the lunch, but of all the glass in the racks
+above it; but all requests to the stewards were insufficient to procure
+even biscuits, and at eleven we retired supperless to bed, amidst a
+confusion of awful sounds, and were deprived of lights as well as food.&nbsp;
+When we asked for food or light, and made weak appeals on the ground
+of faintness, the one steward who seemed to dawdle about for the sole
+purpose of making himself disagreeable, always replied, &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t
+get anything, the stewards are on duty.&rdquo;&nbsp; We were not accustomed
+to recognize that stewards had any other duty than that of feeding the
+passengers, but under the circumstances we meekly acquiesced.&nbsp;
+We were allowed to know that a part of the foreguards had been carried
+way, and that iron stanchions four inches thick had been gnarled and
+twisted like candy sticks, and the constant falling of the saloon casing
+of the mainmast, showed something wrong there.&nbsp; A heavy clang,
+heard at intervals by day and night, aroused some suspicions as to more
+serious damage, and these were afterwards confirmed.&nbsp; As the wind
+fell the sea rose, and for some hours realized every description I have
+read of the majesty and magnitude of the rollers of the South Pacific.</p>
+<p>The day after the hurricane something went wrong with the engines,
+and we were stationary for an hour.&nbsp; We all felt thankful that
+this derangement which would have jeopardised or sacrificed sixty lives,
+was then only a slight detention on a summer sea.</p>
+<p>Five days out from Auckland we entered the tropics with a temperature
+of 80&deg; in the water, and 85&deg; in the air, but as the light head
+airs blew the intense heat of our two smoke stacks aft, we often endured
+a temperature of 110&deg;.&nbsp; There were quiet, heavy tropical showers,
+and a general misty dampness, and the Navigator Islands, with their
+rainbow-tinted coral forests, their fringe of coco palms, and groves
+of banyan and breadfruit trees, these sunniest isles of the bright South
+Seas, resolved themselves into dark lumps looming through a drizzling
+mist.&nbsp; But the showers and the dampness were confined to that region,
+and for the last fortnight an unclouded tropical sun has blazed upon
+our crawling ship.&nbsp; The boiler tubes are giving way at the rate
+of from ten to twenty daily, the fracture in the shaft is extending,
+and so, partially maimed, the old ship drags her 320 feet of length
+slowly along.&nbsp; The captain is continually in the engine-room, and
+we know when things are looking more unpropitious than usual by his
+coming up puffing his cigar with unusual strength of determination.&nbsp;
+It has been so far a very pleasant voyage.&nbsp; The moral, mental,
+and social qualities of my fellow-passengers are of a high order, and
+since the hurricane we have been rather like a family circle than a
+miscellaneous accidental group.&nbsp; For some time our days went by
+in reading aloud, working, chess, draughts and conversation, with two
+hours at quoits in the afternoon for exercise; but four days ago the
+only son of Mrs. Dexter, who is the only lady on board besides myself,
+ruptured a blood vessel on the lungs, and lies in a most critical state
+in the deck-house from which he has not been moved, requiring most careful
+nursing, incessant fanning, and the attention of two persons by day
+and night.&nbsp; Mrs. D. had previously won the regard of everyone,
+and I had learned to look on her as a friend from whom I should be grieved
+to part.&nbsp; The only hope for the young man&rsquo;s life is that
+he should be landed at Honolulu, and she has urged me so strongly to
+land with her there, where she will be a complete stranger, that I have
+consented to do so, and consequently shall see the Sandwich Islands.&nbsp;
+This severe illness has cast a great gloom over our circle of six, and
+Mr. D. continues in a state of so much exhaustion and peril that all
+our arrangements as to occupation, recreation, and sleep, are made with
+reference to a sick, and as we sometimes fear, a dying man, whose state
+is much aggravated by the maltreatment and stupidity of a dilapidated
+Scotch doctor, who must be at least eighty, and whose intellects are
+obfuscated by years of whiskey drinking.&nbsp; Two of the gentlemen
+not only show the utmost tenderness as nurses, but possess a skill and
+experience which are invaluable.&nbsp; They never leave him by night,
+and scarcely take needed rest even in the day, one or other of them
+being always at hand to support him when faint, or raise him on his
+pillows.</p>
+<p>It is not only that the <i>Nevada</i> is barely seaworthy, and has
+kept us broiling in the tropics when we ought to have been at San Francisco,
+but her fittings are so old.&nbsp; The mattresses bulge and burst, and
+cockroaches creep in and out, the deck is so leaky that the water squishes
+up under the saloon matting as we walk over it, the bread swarms with
+minute ants, and we have to pick every piece over because of weevils.&nbsp;
+Existence at night is an unequal fight with rats and cockroaches, and
+at meals with the stewards for time to eat.&nbsp; The stewards outnumber
+the passengers, and are the veriest riff-raff I have seen on board ship.&nbsp;
+At meals, when the captain is not below, their sole object is to hurry
+us from the table in order that they may sit down to a protracted meal;
+they are insulting and disobliging, and since illness has been on board,
+have shown a want of common humanity which places them below the rest
+of their species.&nbsp; The unconcealed hostility with which they regard
+us is a marvellous contrast to the natural or purchasable civility or
+servility which prevails on British steamers.&nbsp; It has its comic
+side too, and we are content to laugh at it, and at all the other oddities
+of this vaunted &ldquo;Mail Line.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Our most serious grievance was the length of time that we were kept
+in the damp inter-island region of the Tropic of Capricorn.&nbsp; Early
+breakfasts, cold plunge baths, and the perfect ventilation of our cabins,
+only just kept us alive.&nbsp; We read, wrote, and talked like automatons,
+and our voices sounded thin and far away.&nbsp; We decided that heat
+was less felt in exercise, made up an afternoon quoit party, and played
+unsheltered from the nearly vertical sun, on decks so hot that we required
+thick boots for the protection of our feet, but for three days were
+limp and faint, and hardly able to crawl about or eat.&nbsp; The nights
+were insupportable.&nbsp; We used to lounge on the bow, and retire late
+at night to our cabins, to fight the heat, and scare rats and kill cockroaches
+with slippers, until driven by the solar heat to rise again unrefreshed
+to wrestle through another relentless day.&nbsp; We read the &ldquo;Idylls
+of the King&rdquo; and talked of misty meres and reedy fens, of the
+cool north, with its purple hills, leaping streams, and life-giving
+breezes, of long northern winters, and ice and snow, but the realities
+of sultriness and damp scared away our coolest imaginations.&nbsp; In
+this dismal region, when about forty miles east of Tutuila, a beast
+popularly known as the &ldquo;Flying fox&rdquo; <a name="citation14"></a><a href="#footnote14">{14}</a>
+alighted on our rigging, and was eventually captured as a prize for
+the zoological collection at San Francisco.&nbsp; He is a most interesting
+animal, something like an exaggerated bat.&nbsp; His wings are formed
+of a jet black membrane, and have a highly polished claw at the extremity
+of each, and his feet consist of five beautifully polished long black
+claws, with which he hangs on head downwards.&nbsp; His body is about
+twice the size of that of a very large rat, black and furry underneath,
+and with red foxy fur on his head and back.&nbsp; His face is pointed,
+with a very black nose and prominent black eyes, with a savage, remorseless
+expression.&nbsp; His wings, when extended, measure forty-eight inches
+across, and his flying powers are prodigious.&nbsp; He snapped like
+a dog at first, but is now quite tame, and devours quantities of dried
+figs, the only diet he will eat.</p>
+<p>We crossed the Equator in Long. 159&deg; 44&rsquo;, but in consequence
+of the misty weather it was not till we reached Lat. 10&deg; 6&rsquo;
+N. that the Pole star, cold and pure, glistened far above the horizon,
+and two hours later we saw the coruscating Pleiades, and the starry
+belt of Orion, the blessed familiar constellations of &ldquo;auld lang
+syne,&rdquo; and a &ldquo;breath of the cool north,&rdquo; the first
+I have felt for five months, fanned the tropic night and the calm silvery
+Pacific.&nbsp; From that time we have been indifferent to our crawling
+pace, except for the sick man&rsquo;s sake.&nbsp; The days dawn in rose
+colour and die in gold, and through their long hours a sea of delicious
+blue shimmers beneath the sun, so soft, so blue, so dreamlike, an ocean
+worthy of its name, the enchanted region of perpetual calm, and an endless
+summer.&nbsp; Far off, for many an azure league, rims of rock, fringed
+with the graceful coco palm, girdle still lagoons, and are themselves
+encircled by coral reefs on which the ocean breaks all the year in broad
+drifts of foam.&nbsp; Myriads of flying fish and a few dolphins and
+Portuguese men-of-war flash or float through the scarcely undulating
+water.&nbsp; But we look in vain for the &ldquo;sails of silk and ropes
+of sendal,&rdquo; which are alone appropriate to this dream-world.&nbsp;
+The Pacific in this region is an indolent blue expanse, pure and lonely,
+an almost untraversed sea.&nbsp; We revel in these tropic days of transcendent
+glory, in the balmy breath which just stirs the dreamy blue, in the
+brief, fierce crimson sunsets, in the soft splendour of the nights,
+when the moon and stars hang like lamps out of a lofty and distant vault,
+and in the pearly crystalline dawns, when the sun rising through a veil
+of rose and gold &ldquo;rejoices as a giant to run his course,&rdquo;
+and brightens by no &ldquo;pale gradations&rdquo; into the &ldquo;perfect
+day.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>P.S.--To-morrow morning we expect to sight land.&nbsp; In spite of
+minor evils, our voyage has been a singularly pleasant one.&nbsp; The
+condition of the ship and her machinery warrants the strongest condemnation,
+but her discipline is admirable, and so are many of her regulations,
+and we might have had a much more disagreeable voyage in a better ship.&nbsp;
+Captain Blethen is beyond all praise, and so is the chief engineer,
+whose duties are incessant and most harassing, owing to the critical
+state of the engines.&nbsp; The <i>Nevada</i> now presents a grotesque
+appearance, for within the last few hours she has received such an added
+list to port that her starboard wheel looks nearly out of the water.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER II.</h3>
+<p>HAWAIIAN HOTEL, HONOLULU, Jan. 26th.</p>
+<p>Yesterday morning at 6.30 I was aroused by the news that &ldquo;The
+Islands&rdquo; were in sight.&nbsp; Oahu in the distance, a group of
+grey, barren peaks rising verdureless out of the lonely sea, was not
+an exception to the rule that the first sight of land is a disappointment.&nbsp;
+Owing to the clear atmosphere, we seemed only five miles off, but in
+reality we were twenty, and the land improved as we neared it.&nbsp;
+It was the fiercest day we had had, the deck was almost too hot to stand
+upon, the sea and sky were both magnificently blue, and the unveiled
+sun turned every minute ripple into a diamond flash.&nbsp; As we approached,
+the island changed its character.&nbsp; There were lofty peaks, truly--grey
+and red, sun-scorched and wind-bleached, glowing here and there with
+traces of their fiery origin; but they were cleft by deep chasms and
+ravines of cool shadow and entrancing green, and falling water streaked
+their sides--a most welcome vision after eleven months of the desert
+sea and the dusty browns of Australia and New Zealand.&nbsp; Nearer
+yet, and the coast line came into sight, fringed by the feathery cocoanut
+tree of the tropics, and marked by a long line of surf.&nbsp; The grand
+promontory of Diamond Head, its fiery sides now softened by a haze of
+green, terminated the wavy line of palms; then the Punchbowl, a very
+perfect extinct crater, brilliant with every shade of red volcanic ash,
+blazed against the green skirts of the mountains.&nbsp; We were close
+to the coral reef before the cry, &ldquo;There&rsquo;s Honolulu!&rdquo;
+made us aware of the proximity of the capital of the island kingdom,
+and then, indeed, its existence had almost to be taken upon trust, for
+besides the lovely wooden and grass huts, with deep verandahs, which
+nestled under palms and bananas on soft green sward, margined by the
+bright sea sand, only two church spires and a few grey roofs appeared
+above the trees.</p>
+<p>We were just outside the reef, and near enough to hear that deep
+sound of the surf which, through the ever serene summer years girdles
+the Hawaiian Islands with perpetual thunder, before the pilot glided
+alongside, bringing the news which Mark Twain had prepared us to receive
+with interest, that &ldquo;Prince Bill&rdquo; had been unanimously elected
+to the throne.&nbsp; The surf ran white and pure over the environing
+coral reef, and as we passed through the narrow channel, we almost saw
+the coral forests deep down under the <i>Nevada&rsquo;s</i> keel; the
+coral fishers plied their graceful trade; canoes with outriggers rode
+the combers, and glided with inconceivable rapidity round our ship;
+amphibious brown beings sported in the transparent waves; and within
+the reef lay a calm surface of water of a wonderful blue, entered by
+a narrow, intricate passage of the deepest indigo.&nbsp; And beyond
+the reef and beyond the blue, nestling among cocoanut trees and bananas,
+umbrella trees and breadfruits, oranges, mangoes, hibiscus, algaroba,
+and passion-flowers, almost hidden in the deep, dense greenery, was
+Honolulu.&nbsp; Bright blossom of a summer sea!&nbsp; Fair Paradise
+of the Pacific!</p>
+<p>Inside the reef the magnificent iron-clad <i>California</i> (the
+flag-ship) and another huge American war vessel, the <i>Benicia</i>,
+are moored in line with the British corvette <i>Scout</i>, within 200
+yards of the shore; and their boats were constantly passing and re-passing,
+among countless canoes filled with natives.&nbsp; Two coasting schooners
+were just leaving the harbour, and the inter-island steamer <i>Kilauea</i>,
+with her deck crowded with natives, was just coming in.&nbsp; By noon
+the great decrepit <i>Nevada</i>, which has no wharf at which she can
+lie in sleepy New Zealand, was moored alongside a very respectable one
+in this enterprising little Hawaiian capital.</p>
+<p>We looked down from the towering deck on a crowd of two or three
+thousand people--whites, Kanakas, Chinamen--and hundreds of them at
+once made their way on board, and streamed over the ship, talking, laughing,
+and remarking upon us in a language which seemed without backbone.&nbsp;
+Such rich brown men and women they were, with wavy, shining black hair,
+large, brown, lustrous eyes, and rows of perfect teeth like ivory.&nbsp;
+Everyone was smiling.&nbsp; The forms of the women seem to be inclined
+towards obesity, but their drapery, which consists of a sleeved garment
+which falls in ample and unconfined folds from their shoulders to their
+feet, partly conceals this defect, which is here regarded as a beauty.&nbsp;
+Some of these dresses were black, but many of those worn by the younger
+women were of pure white, crimson, yellow, scarlet, blue, or light green.&nbsp;
+The men displayed their lithe, graceful figures to the best advantage
+in white trousers and gay Garibaldi shirts.&nbsp; A few of the women
+wore coloured handkerchiefs twined round their hair, but generally both
+men and women wore straw hats, which the men set jauntily on one side
+of their heads, and aggravated their appearance yet more by bandana
+handkerchiefs of rich bright colours round their necks, knotted loosely
+on the left side, with a grace to which, I think, no Anglo-Saxon dandy
+could attain.&nbsp; Without an exception the men and women wore wreaths
+and garlands of flowers, carmine, orange, or pure white, twined round
+their hats, and thrown carelessly round their necks, flowers unknown
+to me, but redolent of the tropics in fragrance and colour.&nbsp; Many
+of the young beauties wore the gorgeous blossom of the red hibiscus
+among their abundant, unconfined, black hair, and many, besides the
+garlands, wore festoons of a sweet-scented vine, or of an exquisitely
+beautiful fern, knotted behind and hanging half-way down their dresses.&nbsp;
+These adornments of natural flowers are most attractive.&nbsp; Chinamen,
+all alike, very yellow, with almond-shaped eyes, youthful, hairless
+faces, long pigtails, spotlessly clean clothes, and an expression of
+mingled cunning and simplicity, &ldquo;foreigners,&rdquo; half-whites,
+a few negroes, and a very few dark-skinned Polynesians from the far-off
+South Seas, made up the rest of the rainbow-tinted crowd.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;foreign&rdquo; ladies, who were there in great numbers,
+generally wore simple light prints or muslins, and white straw hats,
+and many of them so far conformed to native custom as to wear natural
+flowers round their hats and throats.&nbsp; But where were the hard,
+angular, careworn, sallow, passionate faces of men and women, such as
+form the majority of every crowd at home, as well as in America, and
+Australia?&nbsp; The conditions of life must surely be easier here,
+and people must have found rest from some of its burdensome conventionalities.&nbsp;
+The foreign ladies, in their simple, tasteful, fresh attire, innocent
+of the humpings and bunchings, the monstrosities and deformities of
+ultra-fashionable bad taste, beamed with cheerfulness, friendliness,
+and kindliness.&nbsp; Men and women looked as easy, contented, and happy
+as if care never came near them.&nbsp; I never saw such healthy, bright
+complexions as among the women, or such &ldquo;sparkling smiles,&rdquo;
+or such a diffusion of feminine grace and graciousness anywhere.</p>
+<p>Outside this motley, genial, picturesque crowd about 200 saddled
+horses were standing, each with the Mexican saddle, with its lassoing
+horn in front, high peak behind, immense wooden stirrups, with great
+leathern guards, silver or brass bosses, and coloured saddle-cloths.&nbsp;
+The saddles were the only element of the picturesque that these Hawaiian
+steeds possessed.&nbsp; They were sorry, lean, undersized beasts, looking
+in general as if the emergencies of life left them little time for eating
+or sleeping.&nbsp; They stood calmly in the broiling sun, heavy-headed
+and heavy-hearted, with flabby ears and pendulous lower lips, limp and
+rawboned, a doleful type of the &ldquo;creation which groaneth and travaileth
+in misery.&rdquo;&nbsp; All these belonged to the natives, who are passionately
+fond of riding.&nbsp; Every now and then a flower-wreathed Hawaiian
+woman, in her full radiant garment, sprang on one of these animals astride,
+and dashed along the road at full gallop, sitting on her horse as square
+and easy as a hussar.&nbsp; In the crowd and outside of it, and everywhere,
+there were piles of fruit for sale--oranges and guavas, strawberries,
+papayas, bananas (green and golden), cocoanuts, and other rich, fantastic
+productions of a prolific climate, where nature gives of her wealth
+the whole year round.&nbsp; Strange fishes, strange in shape and colour,
+crimson, blue, orange, rose, gold, such fishes as flash like living
+light through the coral groves of these enchanted seas, were there for
+sale, and coral divers were there with their treasures--branch coral,
+as white as snow, each perfect specimen weighing from eight to twenty
+pounds.&nbsp; But no one pushed his wares for sale--we were at liberty
+to look and admire, and pass on unmolested.&nbsp; No vexatious restrictions
+obstructed our landing.&nbsp; A sum of two dollars for the support of
+the Queen&rsquo;s Hospital is levied on each passenger, and the examination
+of ordinary luggage, if it exists, is a mere form.&nbsp; From the demeanour
+of the crowd it was at once apparent that the conditions of conquerors
+and conquered do not exist.&nbsp; On the contrary, many of the foreigners
+there were subjects of a Hawaiian king, a reversal of the ordinary relations
+between a white and a coloured race which it is not easy yet to appreciate.</p>
+<p>Two of my fellow-passengers, who were going on to San Francisco,
+were anxious that I should accompany them to the Pali, the great excursion
+from Honolulu; and leaving Mr. M--- to make all arrangements for the
+Dexters and myself, we hired a buggy, destitute of any peculiarity but
+a native driver, who spoke nothing but Hawaiian, and left the ship.&nbsp;
+This place is quite unique.&nbsp; It is said that 15,000 people are
+buried away in these low-browed, shadowy houses, under the glossy, dark-leaved
+trees, but except in one or two streets of miscellaneous, old-fashioned
+looking stores, arranged with a distinct leaning towards native tastes,
+it looks like a large village, or rather like an aggregate of villages.&nbsp;
+As we drove through the town we could only see our immediate surroundings,
+but each had a new fascination.&nbsp; We drove along roads with over-arching
+trees, through whose dense leafage the noon sunshine only trickled in
+dancing, broken lights; umbrella trees, caoutchouc, bamboo, mango, orange,
+breadfruit, candlenut, monkey pod, date and coco palms, alligator pears,
+&ldquo;prides&rdquo; of Barbary, India, and Peru, and huge-leaved, wide-spreading
+trees, exotics from the South Seas, many of them rich in parasitic ferns,
+and others blazing with bright, fantastic blossoms.&nbsp; The air was
+heavy with odours of gardenia, tuberose, oleanders, roses, lilies, and
+the great white trumpet-flower, and myriads of others whose names I
+do not know, and verandahs were festooned with a gorgeous trailer with
+magenta blossoms, passion-flowers, and a vine with masses of trumpet-shaped,
+yellow, waxy flowers.&nbsp; The delicate tamarind and the feathery algaroba
+intermingled their fragile grace with the dark, shiny foliage of the
+South Sea exotics, and the deep red, solitary flowers of the hibiscus
+rioted among dear familiar fuschias and geraniums, which here attain
+the height and size of large rhododendrons.</p>
+<p>Few of the new trees surprised me more than the papaya.&nbsp; It
+is a perfect gem of tropical vegetation.&nbsp; It has a soft, indented
+stem, which runs up quite straight to a height of from 15 to 30 feet,
+and is crowned by a profusion of large, deeply indented leaves, with
+long foot-stalks, and among, as well as considerably below these, are
+the flowers or the fruit, in all stages of development.&nbsp; This,
+when ripe, is bright yellow, and the size of a musk melon.&nbsp; Clumps
+of bananas, the first sight of which, like that of the palm, constitutes
+a new experience, shaded the native houses with their wonderful leaves,
+broad and deep green, from five to ten feet long.&nbsp; The breadfruit
+is a superb tree, about 60 feet high, with deep green, shining leaves,
+a foot broad, sharply and symmetrically cut, worthy, from their exceeding
+beauty of form, to take the place of the acanthus in architectural ornament,
+and throwing their pale green fruit into delicate contrast.&nbsp; All
+these, with the exquisite rose apple, with a deep red tinge in its young
+leaves, the fan palm, the chirimoya, and numberless others, and the
+slender shafts of the coco palms rising high above them, with their
+waving plumes and perpetual fruitage, were a perfect festival of beauty.</p>
+<p>In the deep shade of this perennial greenery the people dwell.&nbsp;
+The foreign houses show a very various individuality.&nbsp; The peculiarity
+in which all seem to share is, that everything is decorated and festooned
+with flowering trailers.&nbsp; It is often difficult to tell what the
+architecture is, or what is house and what is vegetation; for all angles,
+and lattices, and balustrades, and verandahs are hidden by jessamine
+or passion-flowers, or the gorgeous flame-like Bougainvillea.&nbsp;
+Many of the dwellings straggle over the ground without an upper story,
+and have very deep verandahs, through which I caught glimpses of cool,
+shady rooms, with matted floors.&nbsp; Some look as if they had been
+transported from the old-fashioned villages of the Connecticut Valley,
+with their clap-board fronts painted white and jalousies painted green;
+but then the deep verandah in which families lead an open-air life has
+been added, and the chimneys have been omitted, and the New England
+severity and angularity are toned down and draped out of sight by these
+festoons of large-leaved, bright-blossomed, tropical climbing plants.&nbsp;
+Besides the frame houses there are houses built of blocks of a cream-coloured
+coral conglomerate laid in cement, of adobe, or large sun-baked bricks,
+plastered; houses of grass and bamboo; houses on the ground and houses
+raised on posts; but nothing looks prosaic, commonplace, or mean, for
+the glow and luxuriance of the tropics rest on all.&nbsp; Each house
+has a large garden or &ldquo;yard,&rdquo; with lawns of bright perennial
+greens and banks of blazing, many-tinted flowers, and lines of Drac&aelig;na,
+and other foliage plants, with their great purple or crimson leaves,
+and clumps of marvellous lilies, gladiolas, ginger, and many plants
+unknown to me.&nbsp; Fences and walls are altogether buried by passion-flowers,
+the night-blowing Cereus, and the trop&aelig;olum, mixed with geraniums,
+fuchsia, and jessamine, which cluster and entangle over them in indescribable
+profusion.&nbsp; A soft air moves through the upper branches, and the
+drip of water from miniature fountains falls musically on the perfumed
+air.&nbsp; This is midwinter!&nbsp; The summer, they say, is thermometrically
+hotter, but practically cooler, because of the regular trades which
+set in in April, but now, with the shaded thermometer at 80&deg; and
+the sky without clouds, the heat is not oppressive.</p>
+<p>The mixture of the neat grass houses of the natives with the more
+elaborate homes of the foreign residents has a very pleasant look.&nbsp;
+The &ldquo;aborigines&rdquo; have not been crowded out of sight, or
+into a special &ldquo;quarter.&rdquo;&nbsp; We saw many groups of them
+sitting under the trees outside their houses, each group with a mat
+in the centre, with calabashes upon it containing <i>poi</i>, the national
+Hawaiian dish, a fermented paste made from the root of the <i>kalo</i>,
+or <i>arum esculentum</i>.&nbsp; As we emerged on the broad road which
+leads up the Nuuanu Valley to the mountains, we saw many patches of
+this <i>kalo</i>, a very handsome tropical plant, with large leaves
+of a bright tender green.&nbsp; Each plant was growing on a small hillock,
+with water round it.&nbsp; There were beautiful vegetable gardens also,
+in which Chinamen raise for sale not only melons, pineapples, sweet
+potatoes, and other edibles of hot climates, but the familiar fruits
+and vegetables of the temperate zones.&nbsp; In patches of surpassing
+neatness, there were strawberries, which are ripe here all the year,
+peas, carrots, turnips, asparagus, lettuce, and celery.&nbsp; I saw
+no other plants or trees which grow at home, but recognized as hardly
+less familiar growths the Victorian Eucalyptus, which has not had time
+to become gaunt and straggling, the Norfolk Island pine, which grows
+superbly here, and the handsome Moreton Bay fig.&nbsp; But the chief
+feature of this road is the number of residences; I had almost written
+of pretentious residences, but the term would be a base slander, as
+I have jumped to the conclusion that the twin vulgarities of ostentation
+and pretence have no place here.&nbsp; But certainly for a mile and
+a half or more there are many very comfortable-looking dwellings, very
+attractive to the eye, with an ease and imperturbable serenity of demeanour
+as if they had nothing to fear from heat, cold, wind, or criticism.&nbsp;
+Their architecture is absolutely unostentatious, and their one beauty
+is that they are embowered among trailers, shadowed by superb exotics,
+and surrounded by banks of flowers, while the stately cocoanut, the
+banana, and the candlenut, the aborigines of Oahu, are nowhere displaced.&nbsp;
+One house with extensive grounds, a perfect wilderness of vegetation,
+was pointed out as the summer palace of Queen Emma, or Kaleleonalani,
+widow of Kamehameha IV., who visited England a few years ago, and the
+finest garden of all was that of a much respected Chinese merchant,
+named Afong.&nbsp; Oahu, at least on this leeward side, is not tropical
+looking, and all this tropical variety and luxuriance which delight
+the eye result from foreign enthusiasm and love of beauty and shade.</p>
+<p>When we ascended above the scattered dwellings and had passed the
+tasteful mausoleum, with two tall Kahilis, <a name="citation28"></a><a href="#footnote28">{28}</a>
+or feather plumes, at the door of the tomb in which the last of the
+Kamehamehas received Christian burial, the glossy, redundant, arborescent
+vegetation ceased.&nbsp; At that height a shower of rain falls on nearly
+every day in the year, and the result is a green sward which England
+can hardly rival, a perfect sea of verdure, darkened in the valley and
+more than half way up the hill sides by the foliage of the yellow-blossomed
+and almost impenetrable hibiscus, brightened here and there by the pea-green
+candlenut.&nbsp; Streamlets leap from crags and ripple along the roadside,
+every rock and stone is hidden by moist-looking ferns, as a&euml;rial
+and delicate as marabout feathers, and when the windings of the valley
+and the projecting spurs of mountains shut out all indications of Honolulu,
+in the cool green loneliness one could image oneself in the temperate
+zones.&nbsp; The peculiarity of the scenery is, that the hills, which
+rise to a height of about 4,000 feet, are wall-like ridges of grey or
+coloured rock, rising precipitously out of the trees and grass, and
+that these walls are broken up into pinnacles and needles.&nbsp; At
+the Pali (wall-like precipice), the summit of the ascent of 1,000 feet,
+we left our buggy, and passing through a gash in the rock the celebrated
+view burst on us with overwhelming effect.&nbsp; Immense masses of black
+and ferruginous volcanic rock, hundreds of feet in nearly perpendicular
+height, formed the pali on either side, and the ridge extended northwards
+for many miles, presenting a lofty, abrupt mass of grey rock broken
+into fantastic pinnacles, which seemed to pierce the sky.&nbsp; A broad,
+umbrageous mass of green clothed the lower buttresses, and fringed itself
+away in clusters of coco palms on a garden-like stretch below, green
+with grass and sugar-cane, and dotted with white houses, each with its
+palm and banana grove, and varied by eminences which looked like long
+extinct tufa cones.&nbsp; Beyond this enchanted region stretched the
+coral reef, with its white wavy line of endless surf, and the broad
+blue Pacific, ruffled by a breeze whose icy freshness chilled us where
+we stood.&nbsp; Narrow streaks on the landscape, every now and then
+disappearing behind intervening hills, indicated bridle tracks connected
+with a frightfully steep and rough zigzag path cut out of the face of
+the cliff on our right.&nbsp; I could not go down this on foot without
+a sense of insecurity, but mounted natives driving loaded horses descended
+with perfect impunity into the dreamland below.</p>
+<p>This pali is the scene of one of the historic tragedies of this island.&nbsp;
+Kamehameha the Conqueror, who after fierce fighting and much ruthless
+destruction of human life united the island sovereignties in his own
+person, routed the forces of the King of Oahu in the Nuuanu Valley,
+and drove them in hundreds up the precipice, from which they leaped
+in despair and madness, and their bones lie bleaching 800 feet below.</p>
+<p>The drive back here was delightful, from the wintry height, where
+I must confess that we shivered, to the slumbrous calm of an endless
+summer, the glorious tropical trees, the distant view of cool chasm-like
+valleys, with Honolulu sleeping in perpetual shade, and the still blue
+ocean, without a single sail to disturb its profound solitude.&nbsp;
+Saturday afternoon is a gala-day here, and the broad road was so thronged
+with brilliant equestrians, that I thought we should be ridden over
+by the reckless laughing rout.&nbsp; There were hundreds of native horsemen
+and horsewomen, many of them doubtless on the dejected quadrupeds I
+saw at the wharf, but a judicious application of long rowelled Mexican
+spurs, and a degree of emulation, caused these animals to tear along
+at full gallop.&nbsp; The women seemed perfectly at home in their gay,
+brass-bossed, high peaked saddles, flying along astride, barefooted,
+with their orange and scarlet riding dresses streaming on each side
+beyond their horses&rsquo; tails, a bright kaleidoscopic flash of bright
+eyes, white teeth, shining hair, garlands of flowers and many-coloured
+dresses; while the men were hardly less gay, with fresh flowers round
+their jaunty hats, and the vermilion-coloured blossoms of the <i>Ohia</i>
+round their brown throats.&nbsp; Sometimes a troop of twenty of these
+free-and-easy female riders went by at a time, a graceful and exciting
+spectacle, with a running accompaniment of vociferation and laughter.&nbsp;
+Among these we met several of the <i>Nevada&rsquo;s</i> officers, riding
+in the stiff, wooden style which Anglo-Saxons love, and a horde of jolly
+British sailors from H.M.S. <i>Scout</i>, rushing helter skelter, colliding
+with everybody, bestriding their horses as they would a topsail-yard,
+hanging on to manes and lassoing horns, and enjoying themselves thoroughly.&nbsp;
+In the shady tortuous streets we met hundreds more of native riders,
+clashing at full gallop without fear of the police.&nbsp; Many of the
+women were in flowing riding-dresses of pure white, over which their
+unbound hair, and wreaths of carmine-tinted flowers fell most picturesquely.</p>
+<p>All this time I had not seen our domicile, and when our drive ended
+under the quivering shadow of large tamarind and algaroba trees, in
+front of a long, stone, two-storied house with two deep verandahs festooned
+with clematis and passion flowers, and a shady lawn in front, I felt
+as if in this fairy land anything might be expected.</p>
+<p>This is the perfection of an hotel.&nbsp; Hospitality seems to take
+possession of and appropriate one as soon as one enters its never-closed
+door, which is on the lower verandah.&nbsp; There is a basement, in
+which there are a good many bedrooms, the bar, and billiard-room.&nbsp;
+This is entered from the garden, under two semicircular flights of stairs
+which lead to the front entrance, a wide corridor conducting to the
+back entrance.&nbsp; This is crossed by another running the whole length,
+which opens into a very large many-windowed dining-room which occupies
+the whole width of the hotel.&nbsp; On the same level there is a large
+parlour, with French windows opening on the verandah.&nbsp; Upstairs
+there are two similar corridors on which all the bedrooms open, and
+each room has one or more French windows opening on the verandah, with
+doors as well, made like German shutters, to close instead of the windows,
+ensuring at once privacy and coolness.&nbsp; The rooms are tastefully
+furnished with varnished pine with a strong aromatic scent, and there
+are plenty of lounging-chairs on the verandah, where people sit and
+receive their intimate friends.&nbsp; The result of the construction
+of the hotel is that a breeze whispers through it by day and night.</p>
+<p>Everywhere, only pleasant objects meet the eye.&nbsp; One can sit
+all day on the back verandah, watching the play of light and colour
+on the mountains and the deep blue green of the Nuuanu Valley, where
+showers, sunshine, and rainbows make perpetual variety.&nbsp; The great
+dining-room is delicious.&nbsp; It has no curtains, and its decorations
+are cool and pale.&nbsp; Its windows look upon tropical trees in one
+direction, and up to the cool mountains in the other.&nbsp; Piles of
+bananas, guavas, limes, and oranges, decorate the tables at each meal,
+and strange vegetables, fish, and fruits vary the otherwise stereotyped
+American hotel fare.&nbsp; There are no female domestics.&nbsp; The
+host is a German, the manager an American, the steward an Hawaiian,
+and the servants are all Chinamen in spotless white linen, with pigtails
+coiled round their heads, and an air of superabundant good-nature.&nbsp;
+They know very little English, and make most absurd mistakes, but they
+are cordial, smiling, and obliging, and look cool and clean.&nbsp; The
+hotel seems the great public resort of Honolulu, the centre of stir--club-house,
+exchange and drawing-room in one.&nbsp; Its wide corridors and verandahs
+are lively with English and American naval uniforms, several planters&rsquo;
+families are here for the season; and with health seekers from California,
+resident boarders, whaling captains, tourists from the British Pacific
+Colonies, and a stream of townspeople always percolating through the
+corridors and verandahs, it seems as lively and free-and-easy as a place
+can be, pervaded by the kindliness and <i>bonhomie</i> which form an
+important item in my first impressions of the islands.&nbsp; The hotel
+was lately built by government at a cost of $120,000, a sum which forms
+a considerable part of that token of an advanced civilization, a National
+Debt.&nbsp; The minister whose scheme it was seems to be severely censured
+on account of it, but undoubtedly it brings strangers and their money
+into the kingdom, who would have avoided it had they been obliged as
+formerly to cast themselves on the hospitality of the residents.&nbsp;
+The present proprietor has it rent-free for a term of years, but I fear
+that it is not likely to prove a successful speculation either for him
+or the government.&nbsp; I dislike health resorts, and abhor this kind
+of life, but for those who like both, I cannot imagine a more fascinating
+residence.&nbsp; The charges are $15 a week, or $3 a day, but such a
+kindly, open-handed system prevails that I am not conscious that I am
+paying anything!&nbsp; This sum includes hot and cold plunge baths <i>ad
+libitum</i>, justly regarded as a necessity in this climate.</p>
+<p>Dr. McGrew has hope that our invalid will rally in this healing,
+equable atmosphere.&nbsp; Our kind fellow-passengers are here, and take
+turns in watching and fanning him.&nbsp; Through the half-closed jalousies
+we see breadfruit trees, delicate tamarinds and algarobas, fan-palms,
+date-palms and bananas, and the deep blue Pacific gleams here and there
+through the plumage of the cocoanut trees.&nbsp; A soft breeze, scented
+with a slight aromatic odour, wanders in at every opening, bringing
+with it, mellowed by distance, the hum and clatter of the busy cicada.&nbsp;
+The nights are glorious, and so absolutely still, that even the feathery
+foliage of the algaroba is at rest.&nbsp; The stars seem to hang among
+the trees like lamps, and the crescent moon gives more light than the
+full moon at home.&nbsp; The evening of the day we landed, parties of
+officers and ladies mounted at the door, and with much mirth disappeared
+on moonlight rides, and the white robes of flower-crowned girls gleamed
+among the trees, as groups of natives went by speaking a language which
+sounded more like the rippling of water than human speech.&nbsp; Soft
+music came from the ironclads in the harbour, and from the royal band
+at the king&rsquo;s palace, and a rich fragrance of dewy blossoms filled
+the delicious air.&nbsp; These are indeed the &ldquo;isles of Eden,&rdquo;
+the &ldquo;sun lands,&rdquo; musical with beauty.&nbsp; They seem to
+welcome us to their enchanted shores.&nbsp; Everything is new but nothing
+strange; for as I enjoyed the purple night, I remembered that I had
+seen such islands in dreams in the cold gray North.&nbsp; &ldquo;How
+sweet,&rdquo; I thought it would be, thus to hear far off, the low sweet
+murmur of the &ldquo;sparkling brine,&rdquo; to rest, and</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Ever
+to seem<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Falling asleep in a
+half-dream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A half-dream only, for one would not wish to be quite asleep and
+lose the consciousness of this delicious outer world.&nbsp; So I thought
+one moment.&nbsp; The next I heard a droning, humming sound, which certainly
+was not the surf upon the reef.&nbsp; It came nearer--there could be
+no mistake.&nbsp; I felt a stab, and found myself the centre of a swarm
+of droning, stabbing, malignant mosquitoes.&nbsp; No, even this is not
+paradise!&nbsp; I am ashamed to say that on my first night in Honolulu
+I sought an early refuge from this intolerable infliction, in profound
+and prosaic sleep behind mosquito curtains.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER III.</h3>
+<p>HAWAIIAN HOTEL, Jan. 28th.</p>
+<p>Sunday was a very pleasant day here.&nbsp; Church bells rang, and
+the shady streets were filled with people in holiday dress.&nbsp; There
+are two large native churches, the Kaumakapili, and the Kaiwaiaho, usually
+called the stone church.&nbsp; The latter is an immense substantial
+building, for the erection of which each Christian native brought a
+block of rock-coral.&nbsp; There is a large Roman Catholic church, the
+priests of which are said to have been somewhat successful in proselytizing
+operations.&nbsp; The Reformed Catholic, or English temporary cathedral,
+is a tasteful but very simple wooden building, standing in pretty grounds,
+on which a very useful institution for boarding and training native
+and half-white girls, and the reception of white girls as day scholars,
+also stands.&nbsp; This is in connection with Miss Sellon&rsquo;s Sisterhood
+at Devonport.&nbsp; Another building, alongside the cathedral, is used
+for English service in Hawaiian.&nbsp; There are two Congregational
+churches: the old &ldquo;Bethel,&rdquo; of which the Rev. S. C. Damon,
+known to all strangers, and one of the oldest and most respected Honolulu
+residents, is the minister; and the &ldquo;Fort St. Church,&rdquo; which
+has a large and influential congregation, and has been said to &ldquo;run
+the government,&rdquo; because its members compose the majority of the
+Cabinet.&nbsp; Lunalilo, the present king, has cast in his lot with
+the Congregationalists, but Queen Emma is an earnest member of the Anglican
+Church, and attends the Liturgical Hawaiian Service in order to throw
+the weight of her influence with the natives into the scale of that
+communion.&nbsp; Her husband spent many of his later days in translating
+the Prayer-Book.&nbsp; As is natural, most of the natives belong to
+the denomination from which they or their fathers received the Christian
+faith, and the majority of the foreigners are of the same persuasion.&nbsp;
+The New England Puritan influence, with its rigid Sabbatarianism, though
+considerably worn away, is still influential enough to produce a general
+appearance of Sabbath observance.&nbsp; The stores are closed, the church-going
+is very demonstrative, and the pleasure-seeking is very unobtrusive.&nbsp;
+The wharves are profoundly quiet.</p>
+<p>I went twice to the English Cathedral, and was interested to see
+there a lady in a nun&rsquo;s habit, with a number of brown girls, who
+was pointed out to me as Sister Bertha, who has been working here usefully
+for many years.&nbsp; The ritual is high.&nbsp; I am told that it is
+above the desires and the comprehension of most of the island episcopalians,
+but the zeal and disinterestedness of Bishop Willis will, in time, I
+doubt not, win upon those who prize such qualities.&nbsp; He called
+in the afternoon, and took me to his pretty, unpretending residence
+up the Nuuanu Valley.&nbsp; He has a training and boarding school there
+for native boys, some of whom were at church in the morning as a surpliced
+choir.&nbsp; The bishop, his sister, the schoolmaster, and fourteen
+boys take their meals together in a refectory, the boys acting as servitors
+by turns.&nbsp; There is service every morning at 6.30 in the private
+chapel attached to the house, and also in the cathedral a little later.&nbsp;
+Early risers, so near the equator, must get up by candlelight all the
+year round.</p>
+<p>This morning we joined our kind friends from the <i>Nevada</i> for
+the last time at breakfast.&nbsp; I have noticed that there is often
+a centrifugal force which acts upon passengers who have been long at
+sea together, dispersing them on reaching port.&nbsp; Indeed, the temporary
+enforced cohesion is often succeeded by violent repulsion.&nbsp; But
+in this instance we deeply regret the dissolution of our pleasant fraternity;
+the less so, however, that this wonderful climate has produced a favourable
+change in Mr. D., who no longer requires the hourly attention they have
+hitherto shown him.&nbsp; The mornings here, dew-bathed and rose-flushed,
+are, if possible, more lovely than the nights, and people are astir
+early to enjoy them.&nbsp; The American consul and Mr. Damon called
+while we were sitting at our eight-o&rsquo;clock breakfast, from which
+I gather that formalities are dispensed with.&nbsp; After spending the
+morning in hunting among the stores for things which were essential
+for the invalid, I lunched in the <i>Nevada</i> with Captain Blethen
+and our friends.</p>
+<p>Next to the advent of &ldquo;national ships&rdquo; (a euphemism for
+men-of-war), the arrivals and departures of the New Zealand mail-steamers
+constitute the great excitement of Honolulu, and the failures, mishaps,
+and wonderful unpunctuality of this Webb line are highly stimulating
+in a region where &ldquo;nothing happens.&rdquo;&nbsp; The loungers
+were saying that the <i>Nevada&rsquo;s</i> pumps were going for five
+days before we arrived, and pointed out the clearness of the water which
+was running from them at the wharf as an evidence that she was leaking
+badly. <a name="citation40"></a><a href="#footnote40">{40}</a>&nbsp;
+The crowd of natives was enormous, and the foreigners were there in
+hundreds.&nbsp; She was loading with oranges and green bananas up to
+the last moment,--those tasteless bananas which, out of the tropics,
+misrepresent this most delicious and ambrosial fruit.</p>
+<p>There was a far greater excitement for the natives, for King Lunalilo
+was about to pay a state visit to the American flag-ship <i>California</i>,
+and every available place along the wharves and roads was crowded with
+kanakas anxious to see him.&nbsp; I should tell you that the late king,
+being without heirs, ought to have nominated his successor; but it is
+said that a sorceress, under whose influence he was, persuaded him that
+his death would follow upon this act.&nbsp; When he died, two months
+ago, leaving the succession unprovided for, the duty of electing a sovereign,
+according to the constitution, devolved upon the people through their
+representatives, and they exercised it with a combination of order and
+enthusiasm which reflects great credit on their civilization.&nbsp;
+They chose the highest chief on the islands, Lunalilo (Above All), known
+among foreigners as &ldquo;Prince Bill,&rdquo; and at this time letters
+of congratulation are pouring in upon him from his brethren, the sovereigns
+of Europe.</p>
+<p>The spectacular effect of a pageant here is greatly heightened by
+the cloudless blue sky, and the wealth of light and colour.&nbsp; It
+was very hot, almost too hot for sight-seeing, on the <i>Nevada&rsquo;s</i>
+bow.&nbsp; Expectation among the lieges became tremendous and vociferous
+when Admiral Pennock&rsquo;s sixteen-oared barge, with a handsome awning,
+followed by two well-manned boats, swept across the strip of water which
+lies between the ships and the shore.&nbsp; Outrigger canoes, with garlanded
+men and women, were poised upon the motionless water or darted gracefully
+round the ironclads, as gracefully to come to rest.&nbsp; Then a stir
+and swaying of the crowd, and the American Admiral was seen standing
+at the steps of an English barouche and four, and an Hawaiian imitation
+of an English cheer rang out upon the air.&nbsp; More cheering, more
+excitement, and I saw nothing else till the Admiral&rsquo;s barge, containing
+the Admiral, and the king dressed in a plain morning suit with a single
+decoration, swept past the <i>Nevada</i>.&nbsp; The suite followed in
+the other boats,--brown men and white, governors, ministers, and court
+dignitaries, in Windsor uniforms, but with an added resplendency of
+plumes, epaulettes, and gold lace.&nbsp; As soon as Lunalilo reached
+the <i>California</i>, the yards of the three ships were manned, and
+amidst cheering which rent the air, and the deafening thunder of a royal
+salute from sixty-three guns of heavy calibre, the popular descendant
+of seventy generations of sceptred savages stepped on board the flag-ship&rsquo;s
+deck.&nbsp; No higher honours could have been paid to the Emperor &ldquo;of
+all the Russias.&rdquo;&nbsp; I have seen few sights more curious than
+that of the representative of the American Republic standing bare-headed
+before a coloured man, and the two mightiest empires on earth paying
+royal honours to a Polynesian sovereign, whose little kingdom in the
+North Pacific is known to many of us at home only as &ldquo;the group
+of islands where Captain Cook was killed.&rdquo;&nbsp; Ah! how lovely
+this Queen of Oceans is!&nbsp; Blue, bright, balm-breathing, gentle
+in its supreme strength, different both in motion and colour from the
+coarse &ldquo;vexed Atlantic!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>STEAMER KILAUEA, Jan. 29th.</p>
+<p>I was turning homewards, enjoying the prospect of a quiet week in
+Honolulu, when Mr. and Mrs. Damon seized upon me, and told me that a
+lady friend of theirs, anxious for a companion, was going to the volcano
+on Hawaii, that she was a most expert and intelligent traveller, that
+the <i>Kilauea</i> would sail in two hours, that unless I went now I
+should have no future opportunity during my limited stay on the islands,
+that Mrs. Dexter was anxious for me to go, that they would more than
+fill my place in my absence, that this was a golden opportunity, that
+in short I <i>must</i> go, and they would drive me back to the hotel
+to pack!&nbsp; The volcano is still a myth to me, and I wanted to &ldquo;read
+up&rdquo; before going, and above all was grieved to leave my friend,
+but she had already made some needful preparations, her son with his
+feeble voice urged my going, the doctor said that there was now no danger
+to be apprehended, and the Damons&rsquo; kind urgency left me so little
+choice, that by five I was with them on the wharf, being introduced
+to my travelling companion, and to many of my fellow-passengers.&nbsp;
+Such an unexpected move is very bewildering, and it is too experimental,
+and too much of a leap in the dark to be enjoyable at present.</p>
+<p>The wharf was one dense, well-compacted mass of natives taking leave
+of their friends with much effusiveness, and the steamer&rsquo;s encumbered
+deck was crowded with them, till there was hardly room to move; men,
+women, children, dogs, cats, mats, calabashes of <i>poi</i>, cocoanuts,
+bananas, dried fish, and every dusky individual of the throng was wreathed
+and garlanded with odorous and brilliant flowers.&nbsp; All were talking
+and laughing, and an immense amount of gesticulation seems to emphasize
+and supplement speech.&nbsp; We steamed through the reef in the brief
+red twilight, over the golden tropic sea, keeping on the leeward side
+of the islands.&nbsp; Before it was quite dark the sleeping arrangements
+were made, and the deck and skylights were covered with mats and mattresses
+on which 170 natives sat, slept, or smoked,--a motley, parti-coloured
+mass of humanity, in the midst of which I recognized Bishop Willis in
+the usual episcopal dress, lying on a mattress among the others, a prey
+to discomfort and weariness!&nbsp; What would his episcopal brethren
+at home think of such a hardship?</p>
+<p>There is a yellow-skinned, soft-voiced, fascinating Goa or Malay
+steward on board, who with infinite goodwill attends to the comfort
+of everybody.&nbsp; I was surprised when he asked me if I would like
+a mattress on the skylight, or a berth below, and in unhesitating ignorance
+replied severely, &ldquo;Oh, below, of course, please,&rdquo; thinking
+of a ladies&rsquo; cabin, but when I went down to supper, my eyes were
+enlightened.</p>
+<p>The <i>Kilauea</i> is a screw boat of 400 tons, most unprepossessing
+in appearance, slow, but sure, and capable of bearing an infinite amount
+of battering.&nbsp; It is jokingly said that her keel has rasped off
+the branch coral round all the islands.&nbsp; Though there are many
+inter-island schooners, she is the only sure mode of reaching the windward
+islands in less than a week; and though at present I am disposed to
+think rather slightingly of her, and to class her with the New Zealand
+coasting craft, yet the residents are very proud of her, and speak lovingly
+of her, and regard her as a blessed deliverance from the horrors of
+beating to windward.&nbsp; She has a shabby, obsolete look about her,
+like a second-rate coasting collier, or an old American tow-boat.&nbsp;
+She looks ill-found, too; I saw two essential pieces of tackle give
+way as they were hoisting the main sail. <a name="citation44"></a><a href="#footnote44">{44}</a>&nbsp;
+She has a small saloon with a double tier of berths, besides transoms,
+which give accommodation on the level of the lower berth.&nbsp; There
+is a stern cabin, which is a prolongation of the saloon, and not in
+any way separated from it.&nbsp; There is no ladies&rsquo; cabin; but
+sex, race, and colour are included in a promiscuous arrangement.</p>
+<p>Miss Karpe, my travelling companion, and two agreeable ladies, were
+already in their berths very sick, but I did not get into mine because
+a cockroach, looking as large as a mouse, occupied the pillow, and a
+companion not much smaller was roaming over the quilt without any definite
+purpose.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t vouch for the accuracy of my observation,
+but it seemed to me that these tremendous creatures were dark red, with
+eyes like lobsters&rsquo;, and antenn&aelig; two inches long.&nbsp;
+They looked capable of carrying out the most dangerous and inscrutable
+designs.&nbsp; I called the Malay steward; he smiled mournfully, but
+spoke reassuringly, and pledged his word for their innocuousness, but
+I never can believe that they are not the enemies of man; and I lay
+down on the transom, not to sleep, however, for it seemed essential
+to keep watch on the proceedings of these formidable vermin.</p>
+<p>The grotesqueness of the arrangements of the berths and their occupants
+grew on me during the night, and the climax was put upon it when a gentleman
+coming down in the early morning asked me if I knew that I was using
+the Governor of Maui&rsquo;s head for a footstool, this portly native
+&ldquo;Excellency&rdquo; being in profound slumber on the forward part
+of the transom.&nbsp; This diagram represents one side of the saloon
+and the &ldquo;happy family&rdquo; of English, Chinamen, Hawaiians,
+and Americans:</p>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Governor Lyman.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Miss Karpe.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Miss ---.</pre>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Afong.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Vacant.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Miss ---.</pre>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Governor Nahaolelua.&nbsp; Myself.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; An Hawaiian.</pre>
+<p>I noticed, too, that there were very few trunks and portmanteaus,
+but that the after end of the saloon was heaped with Mexican saddles
+and saddlebags, which I learned too late were the essential gear of
+every traveller on Hawaii.</p>
+<p>At five this morning we were at anchor in the roads of Lahaina, the
+chief village on the mountainous island of Maui.&nbsp; This place is
+very beautiful from the sea, for beyond the blue water and the foamy
+reef the eye rests gratefully on a picturesque collection of low, one-storied,
+thatched houses, many of frame, painted white; others of grass, but
+all with deep, cool verandahs, half hidden among palms, bananas, kukuis,
+breadfruit, and mangoes, dark groves against gentle slopes behind, covered
+with sugar-cane of a bright pea-green.&nbsp; It is but a narrow strip
+of land between the ocean and the red, flaring, almost inaccessible,
+Maui hills, which here rise abruptly to a height of 6,000 feet, pinnacled,
+chasmed, buttressed, and almost verdureless, except in a few deep clefts,
+green and cool with ferns and candlenut trees, and moist with falling
+water.&nbsp; Lahaina looked intensely tropical in the roseflush of the
+early morning, a dream of some bright southern isle, too surely to pass
+away.&nbsp; The sun blazed down on shore, ship, and sea, glorifying
+all things through the winter day.&nbsp; It was again ecstasy &ldquo;to
+dream, and dream&rdquo; under the awning, fanned by the light sea-breeze,
+with the murmur of an unknown musical tongue in one&rsquo;s ears, and
+the rich colouring and graceful grouping of a tropical race around one.&nbsp;
+We called at Maaleia, a neck of sandy, scorched, verdureless soil, and
+at Ulupalakua, or rather at the furnace seven times heated, which is
+the landing of the plantation of that name, on whose breezy slopes cane
+refreshes the eye at a height of 2,000 feet above the sea.&nbsp; We
+anchored at both places, and with what seemed to me a needless amount
+of delay, discharged goods and natives, and natives, mats, and calabashes
+were embarked.&nbsp; In addition to the essential mat and calabash of
+<i>poi</i>, every native carried some pet, either dog or cat, which
+was caressed, sung to, and talked to with extreme tenderness; but there
+were hardly any children, and I noticed that where there were any, the
+men took charge of them.&nbsp; There were very few fine, manly dogs;
+the pets in greatest favour are obviously those odious weak-eyed, pink-nosed
+Maltese terriers.</p>
+<p>The aspect of the sea was so completely lazy, that it was a fresh
+surprise as each indolent undulation touched the shore that it had latent
+vigour left to throw itself upwards into clouds of spray.&nbsp; We looked
+through limpid water into cool depths where strange bright fish darted
+through the submarine chapparal, but the coolness was imaginary, for
+the water was at 80.&deg; <a name="citation47"></a><a href="#footnote47">{47}</a>&nbsp;
+The air above the great black lava flood, which in prehistoric times
+had flowed into the sea, and had ever since declined the kindly draping
+offices of nature, vibrated in waves of heat.&nbsp; Even the imperishable
+cocoanut trees, whose tall, bare, curved trunks rose from the lava or
+the burnt red earth, were gaunt, tattered, and thirsty-looking, weary
+of crying for moisture to the pitiless skies.&nbsp; At last the ceaseless
+ripple of talk ceased, crew and passengers slept on the hot deck, and
+no sounds were heard but the drowsy flap of the awning, and the drowsier
+creak of the rudder, as the <i>Kilauea</i> swayed sleepily on the lazy
+undulations.&nbsp; The flag drooped and fainted with heat.&nbsp; The
+white sun blazed like a magnesium light on blue water, black lava, and
+fiery soil, roasting, blinding, scintillating, and flushed the red rocks
+of Maui into glory.&nbsp; It was a constant marvel that troops of mounted
+natives, male and female, could gallop on the scorching shore without
+being melted or shrivelled.&nbsp; It is all glorious, this fierce bright
+glow of the Tropic of Cancer, yet it was a relief to look up the great
+rolling featureless slopes above Ulupalakua to a forest belt of perennial
+green, watered, they say, by perpetual showers, and a little later to
+see a mountain summit uplifted into a region of endless winter, above
+a steady cloud-bank as white as snow.&nbsp; This mountain, Haleakala,
+the House of the Sun, is the largest extinct volcano in the world, its
+terminal crater being nineteen miles in circumference at a height of
+more than 10,000 feet.&nbsp; It, and its spurs, slopes, and clusters
+of small craters form East Maui.&nbsp; West Maui is composed mainly
+of the lofty picturesque group of the Eeka mountains.&nbsp; A desert
+strip of land, not much above high water mark, unites the twain, which
+form an island forty-eight miles long and thirty broad, with an area
+of 620 square miles.</p>
+<p>We left Maui in the afternoon, and spent the next six hours in crossing
+the channel between it and Hawaii, but the short tropic day did not
+allow us to see anything of the latter island but two snow-capped domes
+uplifted above the clouds.&nbsp; I have been reading Jarves&rsquo; excellent
+book on the islands as industriously as possible, as well as trying
+to get information from my fellow-passengers regarding the region into
+which I have been so suddenly and unintentionally projected.&nbsp; I
+really know nothing about Hawaii, or the size and phenomena of the volcano
+to which we are bound, or the state of society or of the native race,
+or of the relations existing between it and the foreign population,
+or of the details of the constitution.&nbsp; This ignorance is most
+oppressive, and I see that it will not be easily enlightened, for among
+several intelligent gentlemen who have been conversing with me, no two
+seem agreed on any matter of fact.</p>
+<p>From the hour of my landing I have observed the existence of two
+parties of <i>pro</i> and <i>anti</i> missionary leanings, with views
+on all island subjects in grotesque antagonism.&nbsp; So far, the former
+have left the undoubted results of missionary effort here to speak for
+themselves; and I am almost disposed, from the pertinacious aggressiveness
+of the latter party, to think that it must be weak.&nbsp; I have already
+been seized upon (a gentleman would write &ldquo;button-holed&rdquo;)
+by several persons, who, in their anxiety to be first in imprinting
+their own views on the <i>tabula rasa</i> of a stranger&rsquo;s mind,
+have exercised an unseemly overhaste in giving the conversation an anti-missionary
+twist.&nbsp; They apparently desire to convey the impression that the
+New England teachers, finding a people rejoicing in the innocence and
+simplicity of Eden, taught them the knowledge of evil, turned them into
+a nation of hypocrites, and with a strange mingling of fanaticism and
+selfishness, afflicted them with many woes calculated to accelerate
+their extinction, <i>clothing</i> among others.&nbsp; The animus appears
+strong and bitter.&nbsp; There are two intelligent and highly educated
+ladies on board, daughters of missionaries, and the candid and cautious
+tone in which they speak on the same subject impresses me favourably.&nbsp;
+Mr. Damon introduced me to a very handsome half white gentleman, a lawyer
+of ability, and lately interpreter to the Legislature, Mr. Ragsdale,
+or, as he is usually called, &ldquo;Bill Ragsdale,&rdquo; a leading
+spirit among the natives.&nbsp; His conversation was eloquent and poetic,
+though rather stilted, and he has a good deal of French mannerism; but
+if he is a specimen of native patriotic feeling, I think that the extinction
+of Hawaiian nationality must be far off.&nbsp; I was amused with the
+attention that he paid to his dress under very adverse circumstances.&nbsp;
+He has appeared in three different suits, with light kid gloves to match,
+all equally elegant, in two days.&nbsp; A Chinese gentleman, who is
+at the same time a wealthy merchant at Honolulu, and a successful planter
+on Hawaii, interests me, from the quiet keen intelligence of his face,
+and the courtesy and dignity of his manner.&nbsp; I hear that he possesses
+the respect of the whole community for his honour and integrity.&nbsp;
+It is quite unlike an ordinary miscellaneous herd of passengers.&nbsp;
+The tone is so cheerful, courteous, and friendly, and people speak without
+introductions, and help to make the time pass pleasantly to each other.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>HILO, HAWAII.</p>
+<p>The <i>Kilauea</i> is not a fast propeller, and as she lurched very
+much in crossing the channel most of the passengers were sea-sick, a
+casualty which did not impair their cheerfulness and good humour.&nbsp;
+After dark we called at Kawaihae (pronounced To-wee-hye), on the northwest
+of Hawaii, and then steamed through the channel to the east or windward
+side.&nbsp; I was only too glad on the second night to accept the offer
+of &ldquo;a mattrass on the skylight,&rdquo; but between the heavy rolling
+caused by the windward swell, and the natural excitement on nearing
+the land of volcanoes and earthquakes, I could not sleep, and no other
+person slept, for it was considered &ldquo;a very rough passage,&rdquo;
+though there was hardly a yachtsman&rsquo;s breeze.&nbsp; It would do
+these Sybarites good to give them a short spell of the howling horrors
+of the North or South Atlantic, an easterly snowstorm off Sable Island,
+or a winter gale in the latitude of Inaccessible Island!&nbsp; The night
+was cloudy, and so the glare from Kilauea which is often seen far out
+at sea was not visible.</p>
+<p>When the sun rose amidst showers and rainbows (for this is the showery
+season), I could hardly believe my eyes.&nbsp; Scenery, vegetation,
+colour were all changed.&nbsp; The glowing red, the fiery glare, the
+obtrusive lack of vegetation were all gone.&nbsp; There was a magnificent
+coast-line of grey cliffs many hundred feet in height, usually draped
+with green, but often black, caverned, and fantastic at their bases.&nbsp;
+Into cracks and caverns the heavy waves surged with a sound like artillery,
+sending their broad white sheets of foam high up among the ferns and
+trailers, and drowning for a time the endless baritone of the surf,
+which is never silent through the summer years.&nbsp; Cascades in numbers
+took one impulsive leap from the cliffs into the sea, or came thundering
+down clefts or &ldquo;gulches,&rdquo; which, widening at their extremities,
+opened on smooth green lawns, each one of which has its grass house
+or houses, <i>kalo</i> patch, bananas, and coco-palms, so close to the
+broad Pacific that its spray often frittered itself away over their
+fan-like leaves.&nbsp; Above the cliffs there were grassy uplands with
+park-like clumps of the screw-pine, and candle-nut, and glades and dells
+of dazzling green, bright with cataracts, opened up among the dark dense
+forests which for some thousands of feet girdle Mauna Kea and Mauna
+Loa, two vast volcanic mountains, whose snowcapped summits gleamed here
+and there above the clouds, at an altitude of nearly 14,000 feet.&nbsp;
+Creation surely cannot exhibit a more brilliant green than that which
+clothes windward Hawaii with perpetual spring.&nbsp; I have never seen
+such verdure.&nbsp; In the final twenty-nine miles there are more than
+sixty gulches, from 100 to 700 feet in depth, each with its cataracts,
+and wild vagaries of tropical luxuriance.&nbsp; Native churches, frame-built
+and painted white, are almost like mile-stones along the coast, far
+too large and too many for the notoriously dwindling population.&nbsp;
+Ten miles from Hilo we came in sight of the first sugar plantation,
+with its patches of yet brighter green, its white boiling house and
+tall chimney stack; then more churches, more plantations, more gulches,
+more houses, and before ten we steamed into Byron&rsquo;s, or as it
+is now called Hilo Bay.</p>
+<p>This is the paradise of Hawaii.&nbsp; What Honolulu attempts to be,
+Hilo is without effort.&nbsp; Its crescent-shaped bay, said to be the
+most beautiful in the Pacific, is a semi-circle of about two miles,
+with its farther extremity formed by Cocoanut Island, a black lava islet
+on which this palm attains great perfection, and beyond it again a fringe
+of cocoanuts marks the deep indentations of the shore.&nbsp; From this
+island to the north point of the bay, there is a band of golden sand
+on which the roar of the surf sounded thunderous and drowsy as it mingled
+with the music of living waters, the Waiakea and the Wailuku, which
+after lashing the sides of the mountains which give them birth, glide
+deep and fern-fringed into the ocean.&nbsp; Native houses, half hidden
+by greenery, line the bay, and stud the heights above the Wailuku, and
+near the landing some white frame houses and three church spires above
+the wood denote the foreign element.&nbsp; Hilo is unique.&nbsp; Its
+climate is humid, and the long repose which it has enjoyed from rude
+volcanic upheavals has mingled a great depth of vegetable mould with
+the decomposed lava.&nbsp; Rich soil, rain, heat, sunshine, stimulate
+nature to supreme efforts, and there is a luxuriant prodigality of vegetation
+which leaves nothing uncovered but the golden margin of the sea, and
+even that above high-water-mark is green with the Convolvulus maritimus.&nbsp;
+So dense is the wood that Hilo is rather suggested than seen.&nbsp;
+It is only on shore that one becomes aware of its bewildering variety
+of native and exotic trees and shrubs.&nbsp; From the sea it looks one
+dense mass of greenery, in which the bright foliage of the candle-nut
+relieves the glossy dark green of the breadfruit--a maze of preposterous
+bananas, out of which rise slender annulated trunks of palms giving
+their infinite grace to the grove.&nbsp; And palms along the bay, almost
+among the surf, toss their waving plumes in the sweet soft breeze, not
+&ldquo;palms in exile,&rdquo; but children of a blessed isle where &ldquo;never
+wind blows loudly.&rdquo;&nbsp; Above Hilo, broad lands sweeping up
+cloudwards, with their sugar cane, <i>kalo</i>, melons, pine-apples,
+and banana groves suggest the boundless liberality of Nature.&nbsp;
+Woods and waters, hill and valley are all there, and from the region
+of an endless summer the eye takes in the domain of an endless winter,
+where almost perpetual snow crowns the summits of Mauna Kea and Mauna
+Loa.&nbsp; Mauna Kea from Hilo has a shapely aspect, for its top is
+broken into peaks, said to be the craters of extinct volcanoes, but
+my eyes seek the dome-like curve of Mauna Loa with far deeper interest,
+for it is as yet an unfinished mountain.&nbsp; It has a huge crater
+on its summit 800 feet in depth, and a pit of unresting fire on its
+side; it throbs and rumbles, and palpitates; it has sent forth floods
+of fire over all this part of Hawaii, and at any moment it may be crowned
+with a lonely light, showing that its tremendous forces are again in
+activity.&nbsp; My imagination is already inflamed by hearing of marvels,
+and I am beginning to think tropically.</p>
+<p>Canoes came off from the shore, dusky swimmers glided through the
+water, youths, athletes, like the bronzes of the Naples Museum, rode
+the waves on their surf-boards, brilliantly dressed riders galloped
+along the sands and came trooping down the bridle-paths from all the
+vicinity till a many-coloured tropical crowd had assembled at the landing.&nbsp;
+Then a whaleboat came off, rowed by eight young men in white linen suits
+and white straw hats, with wreaths of carmine-coloured flowers round
+both hats and throats.&nbsp; They were singing a glee in honour of Mr.
+Ragsdale, whom they sprang on deck to welcome.&nbsp; Our crowd of native
+fellow-passengers, by some inscrutable process, had re-arrayed themselves
+and blossomed into brilliancy.&nbsp; Hordes of Hilo natives swarmed
+on deck, and it became a Babel of <i>alohas</i>, kisses, hand-shakings,
+and reiterated welcomes.&nbsp; The glee singers threw their beautiful
+garlands of roses and <i>ohias</i> over the foreign passengers, and
+music, flowers, good-will and kindliness made us welcome to these enchanted
+shores.&nbsp; We landed in a whaleboat, and were hoisted up a rude pier
+which was crowded, for what the arrival of the Australian mail-steamer
+is to Honolulu, the coming of the <i>Kilauea</i> is to Hilo.&nbsp; I
+had not time to feel myself a stranger, there were so many introductions,
+and so much friendliness.&nbsp; Mr. Coan and Mr. Lyman, two of the most
+venerable of the few surviving missionaries, were on the landing, and
+I was introduced to them and many others.&nbsp; There is no hotel in
+Hilo.&nbsp; The residents receive strangers, and Miss Karpe and I were
+soon installed in a large buff frame-house, with two deep verandahs,
+the residence of Mr. Severance, Sheriff of Hawaii.</p>
+<p>Unlike many other places, Hilo is more fascinating on closer acquaintance,
+so fascinating that it is hard to write about it in plain prose.&nbsp;
+Two narrow roads lead up from the sea to one as narrow, running parallel
+with it.&nbsp; Further up the hill another runs in the same direction.&nbsp;
+There are no conveyances, and outside the village these narrow roads
+dwindle into bridle-paths, with just room for one horse to pass another.&nbsp;
+The houses in which Mr. Coan, Mr. Lyman, Dr. Wetmore (formerly of the
+Mission), and one or two others live, have just enough suggestion of
+New England about them to remind one of the dominant influence on these
+islands, but the climate has idealized them, and clothed them with poetry
+and antiquity.</p>
+<p>Of the three churches, the most prominent is the Roman Catholic Church,
+a white frame building with two great towers; Mr. Coan&rsquo;s native
+church with a spire comes next; and then the neat little foreign church,
+also with a spire.&nbsp; The Romish Church is a rather noisy neighbour,
+for its bells ring at unnatural hours, and doleful strains of a band
+which cannot play either in time or tune proceed from it.&nbsp; The
+court-house, a large buff painted frame-building with two deep verandahs,
+standing on a well-kept lawn planted with exotic trees, is the most
+imposing building in Hilo.&nbsp; All the foreigners have carried out
+their individual tastes in their dwellings, and the result is very agreeable,
+though in picturesqueness they must yield the plain to the native houses,
+which whether of frame, or grass plain or plaited, whether one or two
+storied, all have the deep thatched roofs and verandahs plain or fantastically
+latticed, which are so in harmony with the surroundings.&nbsp; These
+lattices and single and double verandahs are gorgeous with trailers,
+and the general warm brown tint of the houses contrasts pleasantly with
+the deep green of the bananas which over-shadow them.&nbsp; There are
+living waters everywhere.&nbsp; Each house seems to possess its pure
+bright stream, which is arrested in bathing houses to be liberated among
+<i>kalo</i> patches of the brightest green.&nbsp; Every verandah appears
+a gathering place, and the bright <i>holukus</i> of the women, the gay
+shirts and bandanas of the men, the brilliant wreaths of natural flowers
+which adorn both, the hot-house temperature, the new trees and flowers
+which demand attention, the strange rich odours, and the low monotonous
+recitative which mourns through the groves make me feel that I am in
+a new world.&nbsp; Ah, this is all Polynesian!&nbsp; This must be the
+land to which the &ldquo;timid-eyed&rdquo; lotos-eaters came.&nbsp;
+There is a strange fascination in the languid air, and it is strangely
+sweet &ldquo;to dream of fatherland&rdquo; . . .<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER IV.</h3>
+<p>HILO, HAWAII.</p>
+<p>I find that I can send another short letter before leaving for the
+volcano.&nbsp; I cannot convey to you any idea of the greenness and
+lavish luxuriance of this place, where everything flourishes, and glorious
+trailers and parasitic ferns hide all unsightly objects out of sight.&nbsp;
+It presents a bewildering maze of lilies, roses, fuschias, clematis,
+begonias, convolvuli, the huge appalling looking granadilla, the purple
+and yellow water lemons, also varieties of passiflora, both with delicious
+edible fruit, custard apples, rose apples, mangoes, mangostein guavas,
+bamboos, alligator pears, oranges, tamarinds, papayas, bananas, breadfruit,
+magnolias, geraniums, candle-nut, gardenias, drac&aelig;nas, eucalyptus,
+pandanus, <i>ohias</i>, <a name="citation59a"></a><a href="#footnote59a">{59a}</a>
+<i>kamani</i> trees, <i>kalo</i>, <a name="citation59b"></a><a href="#footnote59b">{59b}</a>
+<i>noni</i>, <a name="citation59c"></a><a href="#footnote59c">{59c}</a>
+and quantities of other trees and flowers, of which I shall eventually
+learn the names, patches of pine-apple, melons, and sugar-cane for children
+to suck, <i>kalo</i> and sweet potatoes.</p>
+<p>In the vicinity of this and all other houses, Chili peppers, and
+a ginger-plant with a drooping flower-stalk with a great number of blossoms,
+which when not fully developed have a singular resemblance to very pure
+porcelain tinted with pink at the extremities of the buds, are to be
+seen growing in &ldquo;yards,&rdquo; to use a most unfitting Americanism.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t know how to introduce you to some of the things which
+delight my eyes here; but I must ask you to believe that the specimens
+of tropical growths which we see in conservatories at home are in general
+either misrepresentations, or very feeble representations of these growths
+in their natural homes.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t allude to flowers, and especially
+not to orchids, but in this instance very specially to bananas, coco-palms,
+and the pandanus.&nbsp; For example, there is a specimen of the Pandanus
+odoratissimus in the palm-house in the Edinburgh Botanic Gardens, which
+is certainly a malignant caricature, with its long straggling branches,
+and widely scattered tufts of poverty stricken foliage.&nbsp; The bananas
+and plantains in that same palm-house represent only the feeblest and
+poorest of their tribe.&nbsp; They require not only warmth and moisture,
+but the generous sunshine of the tropics for their development.&nbsp;
+In the same house the date and sugar-palms are tolerable specimens,
+but the cocoa-nut trees are most truly &ldquo;palms in exile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I suppose that few people ever forget the first sight of a palm-tree
+of any species.&nbsp; I vividly remember seeing one for the first time
+at Malaga, but the coco-palm groves of the Pacific have a strangeness
+and witchery of their own.&nbsp; As I write now I hear the moaning rustle
+of the wind through their plume-like tops, and their long slender stems,
+and crisp crown of leaves above the trees with shining leafage which
+revel in damp, have a suggestion of Orientalism about them.&nbsp; How
+do they come too, on every atoll or rock that raises its head throughout
+this lonely ocean?&nbsp; They fringe the shores of these islands.&nbsp;
+Wherever it is dry and fiercely hot, and the lava is black and hard,
+and nothing else grows, or can grow, there they are, close to the sea,
+sending their root-fibres seawards as if in search of salt water.&nbsp;
+Their long, curved, wrinkled, perfectly cylindrical stems, bulging near
+the ground like an apothecary&rsquo;s pestle, rise to a height of from
+sixty to one hundred feet.&nbsp; These stems are never straight, and
+in a grove lean and curve every way, and are apparently capable of enduring
+any force of wind or earthquake.&nbsp; They look as if they had never
+been young, and they show no signs of growth, rearing their plumy tufts
+so far aloft, and casting their shadows so far away, always supremely
+lonely, as though they belonged to the heavens rather than the earth.&nbsp;
+Then, while all else that grows is green they are yellowish.&nbsp; Their
+clusters of nuts in all stages of growth are yellow, their fan-like
+leaves, which are from twelve to twenty feet long, are yellow, and an
+amber light pervades and surrounds them.&nbsp; They provide milk, oil,
+food, rope, and matting, and each tree produces about one hundred nuts
+annually.</p>
+<p>The pandanus, or <i>lauhala</i>, is one of the most striking features
+of the islands.&nbsp; Its funereal foliage droops in Hilo, and it was
+it that I noticed all along the windward coast as having a most striking
+peculiarity of a&euml;rial roots which the branches send down to the
+ground, and which I now see have large cup-shaped spongioles.&nbsp;
+These air-roots seem like props, and appear to vary in length from three
+to twelve feet, according to the situation of the tree.&nbsp; There
+is one variety I saw to-day, the &ldquo;screw pine,&rdquo; which is
+really dangerous if one approached it unguardedly.&nbsp; It is a whorled
+pandanus, with long sword-shaped leaves, spirally arranged in three
+rows, and hard, saw-toothed edges, very sharp.&nbsp; When unbranched
+as I saw them, they resemble at a distance pine-apple plants thirty
+times magnified.&nbsp; But the mournful looking trees along the coast
+and all about Hilo are mostly the Pandanus odoratissimus, a spreading
+and branching tree which grows fully twenty-five feet high, supports
+itself among inaccessible rocks by its prop-like roots, and is one of
+the first plants to appear on the newly-formed Pacific islands. <a name="citation62"></a><a href="#footnote62">{62}</a>&nbsp;
+Its foliage is singularly dense, although it is borne in tufts of a
+quantity of long yucca-like leaves on the branches.&nbsp; The shape
+of the tree is usually circular.&nbsp; The mournful look is caused by
+the leaves taking a downward and very decided droop in the middle.&nbsp;
+At present each tuft of leaves has in its centre an object like a green
+pine-apple.&nbsp; This contains the seeds which are eatable, as is also
+the fleshy part of the drupes.&nbsp; I find that it is from the seeds
+of this tree and their coverings that the brilliant orange <i>leis</i>,
+or garlands of the natives, are made.&nbsp; The soft white case of the
+leaves and the terminal buds can also be eaten.&nbsp; The leaves are
+used for thatching, and their tough longitudinal fibres for mats and
+ropes.&nbsp; There is another kind, the Pandanus vacoa, the same as
+is used for making sugar bags in Mauritius, but I have not seen it.</p>
+<p>One does not forget the first sight of a palm.&nbsp; I think the
+banana comes next, and I see them in perfection here for the first time,
+as those in Honolulu grow in &ldquo;yards,&rdquo; and are tattered by
+the winds.&nbsp; It transports me into the tropics in feeling, as I
+am already in them in fact, and satisfies all my cravings for something
+which shall represent and epitomize their luxuriance, as well as for
+simplicity and grace in vegetable form.&nbsp; And here it is everywhere
+with its shining shade, its smooth fat green stem, its crown of huge
+curving leaves from four to ten feet long, and its heavy cluster of
+a whorl of green or golden fruit, with a pendant purple cone of undeveloped
+blossom below.&nbsp; It is of the tropics, tropical; a thing of beauty,
+and gladness, and sunshine.&nbsp; It is indigenous here, and wild, but
+never bears seeds, and is propagated solely by suckers, which spring
+up when the parent plant has fruited, or by cuttings.&nbsp; It bears
+seed, strange to say, only (so far as is known) in the Andaman Islands,
+where, stranger still, it springs up as a second growth wherever the
+forests are cleared.&nbsp; Go to the palm-house, find the Musa sapientum,
+magnify it ten times, glorify it immeasurably, and you will have a laggard
+idea of the banana groves of Hilo.</p>
+<p>The ground is carpeted with a grass of preternaturally vivid green
+and rankness of growth, mixed with a handsome fern, with a caudex a
+foot high, the Sadleria cyathoides, and another of exquisite beauty,
+the Micropia tenuifolia, which are said to be the commonest ferns on
+Hawaii.&nbsp; It looks Elysian.</p>
+<p>Hilo is a lively place for such a mere village; so many natives are
+stirring about, and dashing along the narrow roads on horseback.&nbsp;
+This is a large airy house, simple and tasteful, with pretty engravings
+and water-colour drawings on the walls.&nbsp; There is a large bath-house
+in the garden, into which a pure, cool stream has been led, and the
+gurgle and music of many such streams fill the sweet, soft air.&nbsp;
+There is a saying among sailors, &ldquo;Follow a Pacific shower, and
+it leads you to Hilo.&rdquo;&nbsp; Indeed I think they have a rainfall
+of from thirteen to sixteen feet annually.&nbsp; These deep verandahs
+are very pleasant, for they render window-blinds unnecessary; so there
+is nothing of that dark stuffiness which makes indoor life a trial in
+the closed, shadeless Australian houses.</p>
+<p>Miss Karpe, my travelling companion, is a lady of great energy, and
+apparently an adept in the art of travelling.&nbsp; Undismayed by three
+days of sea-sickness, and the prospect of the tremendous journey to
+the volcano to-morrow, she extemporised a ride to the Anuenue Falls
+on the Wailuku this afternoon, and I weakly accompanied her, a burly
+policeman being our guide.&nbsp; The track is only a scramble among
+rocks and holes, concealed by grass and ferns, and we had to cross a
+stream, full of great holes, several times.&nbsp; The Fall itself is
+very pretty, 110 feet in one descent, with a cavernous shrine behind
+the water, filled with ferns.&nbsp; There were large ferns all round
+the Fall, and a jungle of luxuriant tropical shrubs of many kinds.</p>
+<p>Three miles above this Fall there are the Pei-pei Falls, very interesting
+geologically.&nbsp; The Wailuku River is the boundary between the two
+great volcanoes, and its waters, it is supposed by learned men, have
+often flowed over heated beds of basalt, with the result of columnar
+formation radiating from the bottom of the stream.&nbsp; This structure
+is sometimes beautifully exhibited in the form of Gothic archways, through
+which the torrent pours into a basin, surrounded by curved, broken,
+and half-sunk prisms, black and prominent amidst the white foam of the
+Falls.&nbsp; In several places the river has just pierced the beds of
+lava, and in one passes under a thick rock bridge, several hundred feet
+wide.&nbsp; Often, where the water flows over beds of dark grey basalt,
+masses of trachyte, closely resembling syenite, have formed &ldquo;potholes,&rdquo;
+and by mutual action have been worn to pebbles.&nbsp; At Pei-pei there
+are three circular pools, each about fifty feet in diameter, and separated
+by walls six feet thick, in a bed of columnar basalt. <a name="citation65"></a><a href="#footnote65">{65}</a>&nbsp;
+During freshets the river sometimes rises thirty feet, and hides these
+pools, but during the dry season the upper bed is bare, and after a
+succession of cascades of various heights the stream pours into the
+first basin, filling it with foam.&nbsp; From this there is no apparent
+outlet, but leaves thrown in soon appear in the second basin, whose
+tranquillity is only disturbed by a few bubbles.&nbsp; Between this
+and the third there are two subterranean passages, and the water there
+leaps over a fall about forty feet high, nearly covering a perfect Gothic
+arch which is the entrance to a shallow cave.&nbsp; The scene is enclosed
+by high and nearly perpendicular walls. <a name="citation66"></a><a href="#footnote66">{66}</a></p>
+<p>Near the Anuenue Fall we stopped at a native house, outside which
+a woman, in a rose-coloured chemise, was stringing roses for a necklace,
+while her husband pounded the <i>kalo</i> root on a board.&nbsp; His
+only clothing was the <i>malo</i>, a narrow strip of cloth wound round
+the loins, and passed between the legs.&nbsp; This was the only covering
+worn by men before the introduction of Christianity.&nbsp; Females wore
+the <i>pau</i>, a short petticoat made of <i>tapa</i>, which reached
+from the waist to the knees.&nbsp; To our eyes, the brown skin produces
+nearly the effect of clothing.</p>
+<p>Everything was new and interesting, but the ride was spoiled by my
+insecure seat in my saddle, and the increased pain in my spine which
+riding produced.&nbsp; Once in crossing a stream the horses have to
+make a sort of downward jump from a rock, and I slipped round my horse&rsquo;s
+neck.&nbsp; Indeed on the way back I felt that on the ground of health
+I must give up the volcano, as I would never consent to be carried to
+it, like Lady Franklin, in a litter.&nbsp; When we returned, Mr. Severance
+suggested that it would be much better for me to follow the Hawaiian
+fashion, and ride astride, and put his saddle on the horse.&nbsp; It
+was only my strong desire to see the volcano which made me consent to
+a mode of riding against which I have so strong a prejudice, but the
+result of the experiment is that I shall visit Kilauea thus or not at
+all.&nbsp; The native women all ride astride, on ordinary occasions
+in the full sacks, or <i>holukus</i>, and on gala days in the <i>pau</i>,
+the gay, winged dress which I described in writing from Honolulu.&nbsp;
+A great many of the foreign ladies on Hawaii have adopted the Mexican
+saddle also, for greater security to themselves and ease to their horses,
+on the steep and perilous bridle-tracks, but they wear full Turkish
+trowsers and jauntily-made dresses reaching to the ankles.</p>
+<p>It appears that Hilo is free from the universally admitted nuisance
+of morning calls.&nbsp; The hours are simple--eight o&rsquo;clock breakfasts,
+one o&rsquo;clock dinners, six o&rsquo;clock suppers.&nbsp; If people
+want anything with you, they come at any hour of the day, but if they
+only wish to be sociable, the early evening is the recognized time for
+&ldquo;calling.&rdquo;&nbsp; After supper, when the day&rsquo;s work
+is done, people take their lanterns and visit each other, either in
+the verandahs or in the cheerful parlours which open upon them.&nbsp;
+There are no door-bells, or solemn announcements by servants of visitors&rsquo;
+names, or &ldquo;not-at-homes.&rdquo;&nbsp; If people are in their parlours,
+it is presumed that they receive their friends.&nbsp; Several pleasant
+people came in this evening.&nbsp; They seem to take great interest
+in two ladies going to the volcano without an escort, but no news has
+been received from it lately, and I fear that it is not very active
+as no glare is visible to-night.&nbsp; Mr. Thompson, the pastor of the
+small foreign congregation here, called on me.&nbsp; He is a very agreeable,
+accomplished man, and is acquainted with Dr. Holland and several of
+my New England friends.&nbsp; He kindly brought his wife&rsquo;s riding-costume
+for my trip to Kilauea.&nbsp; The Rev. Titus Coan, one of the first
+and most successful missionaries to Hawaii, also called.&nbsp; He is
+a tall, majestic-looking man, physically well fitted for the extraordinary
+exertions he has undergone in mission work, and intellectually also,
+I should think, for his face expresses great mental strength, and nothing
+of the weakness of a sanguine enthusiast.&nbsp; He has admitted about
+12,000 persons into the Christian Church.&nbsp; He is the greatest authority
+on volcanoes on the islands, and his enthusiastic manner and illuminated
+countenance as he spoke of Kilauea, have raised my expectations to the
+highest pitch.&nbsp; We are prepared for to-morrow, having engaged a
+native named Upa, who boasts a little English, as our guide.&nbsp; He
+provides three horses and himself for three days for the sum of thirty
+dollars.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER V.</h3>
+<p>VOLCANO OF KILAUEA, Jan. 31.</p>
+<p>Bruised aching bones, strained muscles, and overwhelming fatigue,
+render it hardly possible for me to undergo the physical labour of writing,
+but in spirit I am so elated with the triumph of success, and so thrilled
+by new sensations, that though I cannot communicate the incommunicable,
+I want to write to you while the impression of Kilauea is fresh, and
+by &ldquo;the light that never was on sea or shore.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By eight yesterday morning our preparations were finished, and Miss
+Karpe, whose conversance with the details of travelling I envy, mounted
+her horse on her own side-saddle, dressed in a short grey waterproof,
+and a broad-brimmed Leghorn hat tied so tightly over her ears with a
+green veil as to give it the look of a double spout.&nbsp; The only
+pack her horse carried was a bundle of cloaks and shawls, slung together
+with an umbrella on the horn of her saddle.&nbsp; Upa, who was most
+picturesquely got up in the native style with garlands of flowers round
+his hat and throat, carried our saddle-bags on the peak of his saddle,
+a bag with bananas, bread, and a bottle of tea on the horn, and a canteen
+of water round his waist.&nbsp; I had on my coarse Australian hat which
+serves the double purpose of sunshade and umbrella, Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s
+riding costume, my great rusty New Zealand boots, and my blanket strapped
+behind a very gaily ornamented brass-bossed <i>demi-pique</i> Mexican
+saddle, which one of the missionary&rsquo;s daughters had lent me.&nbsp;
+It has a horn in front, a low peak behind, large wooden stirrups with
+leathern flaps the length of the stirrup-leathers, to prevent the dress
+from coming in contact with the horse, and strong guards of hide which
+hang over and below the stirrup, and cover it and the foot up to the
+ancles, to prevent the feet or boots from being torn in riding through
+the bush.&nbsp; Each horse had four fathoms of tethering rope wound
+several times round his neck.&nbsp; In such fashion must all travelling
+be done on Hawaii, whether by ladies or gentlemen.</p>
+<p>Upa supplied the picturesque element, we the grotesque.&nbsp; The
+morning was moist and unpropitious looking.&nbsp; As the greater part
+of the thirty miles has to be travelled at a foot&rsquo;s-pace the guide
+took advantage of the soft grassy track which leads out of Hilo, to
+go off at full gallop, a proceeding which made me at once conscious
+of the demerits of my novel way of riding.&nbsp; To guide the horse
+and to clutch the horn of the saddle with both hands were clearly incompatible,
+so I abandoned the first as being the least important.&nbsp; Then my
+feet either slipped too far into the stirrups and were cut, or they
+were jerked out; every corner was a new terror, for at each I was nearly
+pitched off on one side, and when at last Upa stopped, and my beast
+stopped without consulting my wishes, only a desperate grasp of mane
+and tethering rope saved me from going over his head.&nbsp; At this
+ridiculous moment we came upon a bevy of brown maidens swimming in a
+lakelet by the roadside, who increased my confusion by a chorus of laughter.&nbsp;
+How fervently I hoped that the track would never admit of galloping
+again!</p>
+<p>Hilo fringes off with pretty native houses, <i>kalo</i> patches and
+mullet ponds, and in about four miles the track, then formed of rough
+hard lava, and not more than 24 inches wide, enters a forest of the
+densest description, a burst of true tropical jungle.&nbsp; I could
+not have imagined anything so perfectly beautiful, nature seemed to
+riot in the production of wonderful forms, as if the moist hot-house
+air encouraged her in lavish excesses.&nbsp; Such endless variety, such
+depths of green, such an impassable and altogether inextricable maze
+of forest trees, ferns, and lianas!&nbsp; There were palms, breadfruit
+trees, <i>ohias</i>, eugenias, candle-nuts of immense size, <i>Koa</i>
+(acacia), bananas, <i>noni</i>, bamboos, papayas (Carica papaya), guavas,
+<i>ti</i> trees (Cordyline terminalis), treeferns, climbing ferns, parasitic
+ferns, and ferns themselves the prey of parasites of their own species.&nbsp;
+The lianas were there in profusion climbing over the highest trees,
+and entangling them, with stems varying in size from those as thick
+as a man&rsquo;s arm to those as slender as whipcord, binding all in
+an impassable network, and hanging over our heads in rich festoons or
+tendrils swaying in the breeze.&nbsp; There were trailers, <i>i.e</i>.,
+(Freycinetia scandens) with heavy knotted stems, as thick as a frigate&rsquo;s
+stoutest hawser, coiling up to the tops of tall <i>ohias</i> with tufted
+leaves like yuccas, and crimson spikes of gaudy blossom.&nbsp; The shining
+festoons of the yam and the graceful trailers of the <i>mail&eacute;</i>
+(Alyxia Oliv&aelig;formis), a sweet scented vine, from which the natives
+make garlands, and glossy leaved climbers hung from tree to tree, and
+to brighten all, huge morning glories of a heavenly blue opened a thousand
+blossoms to the sun as if to give a tenderer loveliness to the forest.&nbsp;
+Here trees grow and fall, and nature covers them where they lie with
+a new vegetation which altogether obliterates their hasty decay.&nbsp;
+It is four miles of beautiful and inextricable confusion, untrodden
+by human feet except on the narrow track.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of every tree
+in this garden thou mayest freely eat,&rdquo; and no serpent or noxious
+thing trails its hideous form through this Eden.</p>
+<p>It was quite intoxicating, so new, wonderful, and solemn withal,
+that I was sorry when we emerged from its shady depths upon a grove
+of cocoanut trees and the glare of day.&nbsp; Two very poor-looking
+grass huts, with a ragged patch of sugar-cane beside them, gave us an
+excuse for half an hour&rsquo;s rest.&nbsp; An old woman in a red sack,
+much tattooed, with thick short grey hair bristling on her head, sat
+on a palm root, holding a nude brown child; a lean hideous old man,
+dressed only in a <i>malo</i>, leaned against its stem, our horses with
+their highly miscellaneous gear were tethered to a fern stump, and Upa,
+the most picturesque of the party, served out tea.&nbsp; He and the
+natives talked incessantly, and from the frequency with which the words
+&ldquo;<i>wahine haole</i>&rdquo; (foreign woman) occurred, the subject
+of their conversation was obvious.&nbsp; Upa has taken up the notion
+from something Mr. S--- said, that I am a &ldquo;high chief,&rdquo;
+and related to Queen Victoria, and he was doubtlessly imposing this
+fable on the people.&nbsp; In spite of their poverty and squalor, if
+squalor is a term which can be applied to aught beneath these sunny
+skies, there was a kindliness about them which they made us feel, and
+the <i>aloha</i> with which they parted from us had a sweet friendly
+sound.</p>
+<p>From this grove we travelled as before in single file over an immense
+expanse of lava of the kind called <i>pahoehoe</i>, or satin rock, to
+distinguish it from the <i>a-a</i>, or jagged, rugged, impassable rock.&nbsp;
+Savants all use these terms in the absence of any equally expressive
+in English.&nbsp; The <i>pahoehoe</i> extends in the Hilo direction
+from hence about twenty-three miles.&nbsp; It is the cooled and arrested
+torrent of lava which in past ages has flowed towards Hilo from Kilauea.&nbsp;
+It lies in hummocks, in coils, in rippled waves, in rivers, in huge
+convolutions, in pools smooth and still, and in caverns which are really
+bubbles.&nbsp; Hundreds of square miles of the island are made up of
+this and nothing more.&nbsp; A very frequent aspect of <i>pahoehoe</i>
+is the likeness on a magnificent scale of a thick coat of cream drawn
+in wrinkling folds to the side of a milk-pan.&nbsp; This lava is all
+grey, and the greater part of its surface is slightly roughened.&nbsp;
+Wherever this is not the case the horses slip upon it as upon ice.</p>
+<p>Here I began to realize the universally igneous origin of Hawaii,
+as I had not done among the finely disintegrated lava of Hilo.&nbsp;
+From the hard black rocks which border the sea, to the loftiest mountain
+dome or peak, every stone, atom of dust, and foot of fruitful or barren
+soil bears the Plutonic mark.&nbsp; In fact, the island has been raised
+heap on heap, ridge on ridge, mountain on mountain, to nearly the height
+of Mont Blanc, by the same volcanic forces which are still in operation
+here, and may still add at intervals to the height of the blue dome
+of Mauna Loa, of which we caught occasional glimpses above the clouds.&nbsp;
+Hawaii is actually at the present time being built up from the ocean,
+and this great sea of <i>pahoehoe</i> is not to be regarded as a vindictive
+eruption, bringing desolation on a fertile region, but as an architectural
+and formative process.</p>
+<p>There is no water, except a few deposits of rain-water in holes,
+but the moist air and incessant showers have aided nature to mantle
+this frightful expanse with an abundant vegetation, principally ferns
+of an exquisite green, the most conspicuous being the Sadleria, the
+Gleichenia Hawaiiensis, a running wire-like fern, and the exquisite
+Microlepia tenuifolia, dwarf guava, with its white flowers resembling
+orange flowers in odour, and <i>ohelos</i> (Vaccinium reticulatum),
+with their red and white berries, and a profusion of small-leaved <i>ohias</i>
+(Metrosideros polymorpha), with their deep crimson tasselled flowers,
+and their young shoots of bright crimson, relieved the monotony of green.&nbsp;
+These crimson tassels deftly strung on thread or fibres, are much used
+by the natives for their <i>leis</i>, or garlands.&nbsp; The <i>ti</i>
+tree (Cordyline terminalis) which abounds also on the lava, is most
+valuable.&nbsp; They cook their food wrapped up in its leaves, the porous
+root when baked, has the taste and texture of molasses candy, and when
+distilled yields a spirit, and the leaves form wrappings for fish, hard
+<i>poi</i>, and other edibles.&nbsp; Occasionally a clump of tufted
+coco-palms, or of the beautiful candle-nut rose among the smaller growths.&nbsp;
+To our left a fringe of palms marked the place where the lava and the
+ocean met, while, on our right, we were seldom out of sight of the dense
+timber belt, with its fringe of tree-ferns and bananas, which girdles
+Mauna Loa.</p>
+<p>The track, on the whole, is a perpetual upward scramble; for, though
+the ascent is so gradual, that it is only by the increasing coolness
+of the atmosphere that the increasing elevation is denoted, it is really
+nearly 4,000 feet in thirty miles.&nbsp; Only strong, sure-footed, well-shod
+horses can undertake this journey, for it is a constant scramble over
+rocks, going up or down natural steps, or cautiously treading along
+ledges.&nbsp; Most of the track is quite legible owing to the vegetation
+having been worn off the lava, but the rock itself hardly shows the
+slightest abrasion.</p>
+<p>Upa had indicated that we were to stop for rest at the &ldquo;Half
+Way House;&rdquo; and, as I was hardly able to sit on my horse owing
+to fatigue, I consoled myself by visions of a comfortable sofa and a
+cup of tea.&nbsp; It was with real dismay that I found the reality to
+consist of a grass hut, much out of repair, and which, bad as it was,
+was locked.&nbsp; Upa said we had ridden so slowly that it would be
+dark before we reached the volcano, and only allowed us to rest on the
+grass for half-an-hour.&nbsp; He had frequently reiterated &ldquo;Half
+Way House, you wear spur;&rdquo; and, on our remounting, he buckled
+on my foot a heavy rusty Mexican spur, with jingling ornaments and rowels
+an inch and a half long.&nbsp; These horses are so accustomed to be
+jogged with these instruments that they won&rsquo;t move without them.&nbsp;
+The prospect of five hours more riding looked rather black, for I was
+much exhausted, and my shoulders and knee-joints were in severe pain.&nbsp;
+Miss K.&rsquo;s horse showed no other appreciation of a stick with which
+she belaboured him than flourishes of his tail, so, for a time, he was
+put in the middle, that Upa might add his more forcible persuasions,
+and I rode first and succeeded in getting my lazy animal into the priestly
+amble known at home as &ldquo;a butter and eggs trot,&rdquo; the favourite
+travelling pace, but this not suiting the guide&rsquo;s notion of progress,
+he frequently rushed up behind with a torrent of Hawaiian, emphasized
+by heavy thumps on my horse&rsquo;s back, which so sorely jeopardised
+my seat on the animal, owing to his resenting the interference by kicking,
+that I &ldquo;dropped astern&rdquo; for the rest of the way, leaving
+Upa to belabour Miss K.&rsquo;s steed for his diversion.</p>
+<p>The country altered but little, only the variety of trees gave place
+to the <i>ohia</i> alone, with its sombre foliage.&nbsp; There were
+neither birds nor insects, and the only travellers we encountered in
+the solitude compelled us to give them a wide berth, for they were a
+drove of half wild random cattle, led by a lean bull of hideous aspect,
+with crumpled horns.&nbsp; Two picturesque native vaccheros on mules
+accompanied them, and my flagging spirits were raised by their news
+that the volcano was quite active.&nbsp; The owner of these cattle knows
+that he has 10,000 head, and may have a great many more.&nbsp; They
+are shot for their hides by men who make shooting and skinning them
+a profession, and, near settlements, the owners are thankful to get
+two cents a pound for sirloin and rump-steaks.&nbsp; These, and great
+herds which are actually wild and ownerless upon the mountains, are
+a degenerate breed, with some of the worst peculiarities of the Texas
+cattle, and are the descendants of those which Vancouver placed on the
+islands and which were under <i>Tabu</i> for ten years.&nbsp; They destroy
+the old trees by gnawing the bark, and render the growth of young ones
+impossible.</p>
+<p>As it was getting dark we passed through a forest strip, where tree-ferns
+from twelve to eighteen feet in height, and with fronds from five to
+seven feet long, were the most attractive novelties.&nbsp; As we emerged,
+&ldquo;with one stride came the dark,&rdquo; a great darkness, a cloudy
+night, with neither moon nor stars, and the track was further obscured
+by a belt of <i>ohias</i>.&nbsp; There were five miles of this, and
+I was so dead from fatigue and want of food, that I would willingly
+have lain down in the bush in the rain.&nbsp; I most heartlessly wished
+that Miss K. were tired too, for her voice, which seemed tireless as
+she rode ahead in the dark, rasped upon my ears.&nbsp; I could only
+keep on my saddle by leaning on the horn, and my clothes were soaked
+with the heavy rain.&nbsp; &ldquo;A dreadful ride,&rdquo; one and another
+had said, and I then believed them.&nbsp; It seemed an awful solitude
+full of mystery.&nbsp; Often, I only knew that my companions were ahead
+by the sparks struck from their horse&rsquo;s shoes.</p>
+<p>It became a darkness which could be felt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that possibly a pool of blood?&rdquo; I thought in horror,
+as a rain puddle glowed crimson on the track.&nbsp; Not that indeed!&nbsp;
+A glare brighter and redder than that from any furnace suddenly lightened
+the whole sky, and from that moment brightened our path.&nbsp; There
+sat Miss K. under her dripping umbrella as provokingly erect as when
+she left Hilo.&nbsp; There Upa jogged along, huddled up in his poncho,
+and his canteen shone red.&nbsp; There the <i>ohia</i> trees were relieved
+blackly against the sky.&nbsp; The scene started out from the darkness
+with the suddenness of a revelation.&nbsp; We felt the pungency of sulphurous
+fumes in the still night air.&nbsp; A sound as of the sea broke on our
+ears, rising and falling as if breaking on the shore, but the ocean
+was thirty miles away.&nbsp; The heavens became redder and brighter,
+and when we reached the crater-house at eight, clouds of red vapour
+mixed with flame were curling ceaselessly out of a huge invisible pit
+of blackness, and Kilauea was in all its fiery glory.&nbsp; We had reached
+the largest active volcano in the world, the &ldquo;place of everlasting
+burnings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rarely was light more welcome than that which twinkled from under
+the verandah of the lonely crater-house into the rainy night.&nbsp;
+The hospitable landlord of this unique dwelling lifted me from my horse,
+and carried me into a pleasant room thoroughly warmed by a large wood
+fire, and I hastily retired to bed to spend much of the bitterly cold
+night in watching the fiery vapours rolling up out of the infinite darkness,
+and in dreading the descent into the crater.&nbsp; The heavy clouds
+were crimson with the reflection, and soon after midnight jets of flame
+of a most peculiar colour leapt fitfully into the air, accompanied by
+a dull throbbing sound.</p>
+<p>This morning was wet and murky as many mornings are here, and the
+view from the door was a blank up to ten o&rsquo;clock, when the mist
+rolled away and revealed the mystery of last night, the mighty crater
+whose vast terminal wall is only a few yards from this house.&nbsp;
+We think of a volcano as a cone.&nbsp; This is a different thing.&nbsp;
+The abyss, which really is at a height of nearly 4,000 feet on the flank
+of Mauna Loa, has the appearance of a great pit on a rolling plain.&nbsp;
+But such a pit!&nbsp; It is nine miles in circumference, and its lowest
+area, which not long ago fell about 300 feet, just as ice on a pond
+falls when the water below it is withdrawn, covers six square miles.&nbsp;
+The depth of the crater varies from 800 to 1,100 feet in different years,
+according as the molten sea below is at flood or ebb.&nbsp; Signs of
+volcanic activity are present more or less throughout its whole depth,
+and for some distance round its margin, in the form of steam cracks,
+jets of sulphurous vapour, blowing cones, accumulating deposits of acicular
+crystals of sulphur, etc., and the pit itself is constantly rent and
+shaken by earthquakes.&nbsp; Grand eruptions occur at intervals with
+circumstances of indescribable terror and dignity, but Kilauea does
+not limit its activity to these outbursts, but has exhibited its marvellous
+phenomena through all known time in a lake or lakes in the southern
+part of the crater three miles from this side.</p>
+<p>This lake, the Hale-mau-mau, or House of Everlasting Fire of the
+Hawaiian mythology, the abode of the dreaded goddess Pel&eacute;, is
+approachable with safety except during an eruption.&nbsp; The spectacle,
+however, varies almost daily, and at times the level of the lava in
+the pit within a pit is so low, and the suffocating gases are evolved
+in such enormous quantities, that travellers are unable to see anything.&nbsp;
+There had been no news from it for a week, and as nothing was to be
+seen but a very faint bluish vapour hanging round its margin, the prospect
+was not encouraging.</p>
+<p>When I have learned more about the Hawaiian volcanoes, I shall tell
+you more of their phenomena, but tonight I shall only write to you my
+first impressions of what we actually saw on this January 31st.&nbsp;
+My highest expectations have been infinitely exceeded, and I can hardly
+write soberly after such a spectacle, especially while through the open
+door I see the fiery clouds of vapour from the pit rolling up into a
+sky, glowing as if itself on fire.</p>
+<p>We were accompanied into the crater by a comical native guide, who
+mimicked us constantly, our Hilo guide, who &ldquo;makes up&rdquo; a
+little English, a native woman from Kona, who speaks imperfect English
+poetically, and her brother who speaks none.&nbsp; I was conscious that
+we foreign women with our stout staffs and grotesque dress looked like
+caricatures, and the natives, who have a keen sense of the ludicrous,
+did not conceal that they thought us so.</p>
+<p>The first descent down the terminal wall of the crater is very precipitous,
+but it and the slope which extends to the second descent are thickly
+covered with <i>ohias</i>, <i>ohelos</i> (a species of whortleberry),
+sadlerias, polypodiums, silver grass, and a great variety of bulbous
+plants many of which bore clusters of berries of a brilliant turquoise
+blue.&nbsp; The &ldquo;beyond&rdquo; looked terrible.&nbsp; I could
+not help clinging to these vestiges of the kindlier mood of nature in
+which she sought to cover the horrors she had wrought.&nbsp; The next
+descent is over rough blocks and ridges of broken lava, and appears
+to form part of a break which extends irregularly round the whole crater,
+and which probably marks a tremendous subsidence of its floor.&nbsp;
+Here the last apparent vegetation was left behind, and the familiar
+earth.&nbsp; We were in a new Plutonic region of blackness and awful
+desolation, the accustomed sights and sounds of nature all gone.&nbsp;
+Terraces, cliffs, lakes, ridges, rivers, mountain sides, whirlpools,
+chasms of lava surrounded us, solid, black, and shining, as if vitrified,
+or an ashen grey, stained yellow with sulphur here and there, or white
+with alum.&nbsp; The lava was fissured and upheaved everywhere by earthquakes,
+hot underneath, and emitting a hot breath.</p>
+<p>After more than an hour of very difficult climbing we reached the
+lowest level of the crater, pretty nearly a mile across, presenting
+from above the appearance of a sea at rest, but on crossing it we found
+it to be an expanse of waves and convolutions of ashy-coloured lava,
+with huge cracks filled up with black iridescent rolls of lava, only
+a few weeks old.&nbsp; Parts of it are very rough and ridgy, jammed
+together like field ice, or compacted by rolls of lava which may have
+swelled up from beneath, but the largest part of the area presents the
+appearance of huge coiled hawsers, the ropy formation of the lava rendering
+the illusion almost perfect.&nbsp; These are riven by deep cracks which
+emit hot sulphurous vapours.&nbsp; Strange to say, in one of these,
+deep down in that black and awful region, three slender metamorphosed
+ferns were growing, three exquisite forms, the fragile heralds of the
+great forest of vegetation, which probably in coming years will clothe
+this pit with beauty.&nbsp; Truly they seemed to speak of the love of
+God.&nbsp; On our right there was a precipitous ledge, and a recent
+flow of lava had poured over it, cooling as it fell into columnar shapes
+as symmetrical as those of Staffa.&nbsp; It took us a full hour to cross
+this deep depression, and as long to master a steep hot ascent of about
+400 feet, formed by a recent lava-flow from Hale-mau-mau into the basin.&nbsp;
+This lava hill is an extraordinary sight--a flood of molten stone, solidifying
+as it ran down the declivity, forming arrested waves, streams, eddies,
+gigantic convolutions, forms of snakes, stems of trees, gnarled roots,
+crooked water-pipes, all involved and contorted on a gigantic scale,
+a wilderness of force and dread.&nbsp; Over one steeper place the lava
+had run in a fiery cascade about 100 feet wide.&nbsp; Some had reached
+the ground, some had been arrested midway, but all had taken the aspect
+of stems of trees.&nbsp; In some of the crevices I picked up a quantity
+of very curious filamentose lava, known as &ldquo;Pel&eacute;&rsquo;s
+hair.&rdquo;&nbsp; It resembles coarse spun glass, and is of a greenish
+or yellowish-brown colour.&nbsp; In many places the whole surface of
+the lava is covered with this substance seen through a glazed medium.&nbsp;
+During eruptions, when fire-fountains play to a great height, and drops
+of lava are thrown in all directions, the wind spins them out in clear
+green or yellow threads two or three feet long, which catch and adhere
+to projecting points.</p>
+<p>As we ascended, the flow became hotter under our feet, as well as
+more porous and glistening.&nbsp; It was so hot that a shower of rain
+hissed as it fell upon it.&nbsp; The crust became increasingly insecure,
+and necessitated our walking in single file with the guide in front,
+to test the security of the footing.&nbsp; I fell through several times,
+and always into holes full of sulphurous steam, so malignantly acid
+that my strong dog-skin gloves were burned through as I raised myself
+on my hands.</p>
+<p>We had followed a lava-flow for thirty miles up to the crater&rsquo;s
+brink, and now we had toiled over recent lava for three hours, and by
+all calculation were close to the pit, yet there was no smoke or sign
+of fire, and I felt sure that the volcano had died out for once for
+our especial disappointment.&nbsp; Indeed, I had been making up my mind
+for disappointment since we left the crater-house, in consequence of
+reading seven different accounts, in which language was exhausted in
+describing Kilauea.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, just above, and in front of us, gory drops were tossed
+in air, and springing forwards we stood on the brink of Hale-mau-mau,
+which was about 35 feet below us.&nbsp; I think we all screamed, I know
+we all wept, but we were speechless, for a new glory and terror had
+been added to the earth.&nbsp; It is the most unutterable of wonderful
+things.&nbsp; The words of common speech are quite useless.&nbsp; It
+is unimaginable, indescribable, a sight to remember for ever, a sight
+which at once took possession of every faculty of sense and soul, removing
+one altogether out of the range of ordinary life.&nbsp; Here was the
+real &ldquo;bottomless pit&rdquo;--the &ldquo;fire which is not quenched&rdquo;--&ldquo;the
+place of hell&rdquo;--&ldquo;the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone&rdquo;--the
+&ldquo;everlasting burnings&rdquo;--the fiery sea whose waves are never
+weary.&nbsp; There were groanings, rumblings, and detonations, rushings,
+hissings, and splashings, and the crashing sound of breakers on the
+coast, but it was the surging of fiery waves upon a fiery shore.&nbsp;
+But what can I write!&nbsp; Such words as jets, fountains, waves, spray,
+convey some idea of order and regularity, but here there was none.&nbsp;
+The inner lake, while we stood there, formed a sort of crater within
+itself, the whole lava sea rose about three feet, a blowing cone about
+eight feet high was formed, it was never the same two minutes together.&nbsp;
+And what we saw had no existence a month ago, and probably will be changed
+in every essential feature a month hence.</p>
+<p>What we did see was one irregularly-shaped lake, possibly 500 feet
+wide at its narrowest part and nearly half a mile at its broadest, almost
+divided into two by a low bank of lava, which extended nearly across
+it where it was narrowest, and which was raised visibly before our eyes.&nbsp;
+The sides of the nearest part of the lake were absolutely perpendicular,
+but nowhere more than 40 feet high; but opposite to us on the far side
+of the larger lake they were bold and craggy, and probably not less
+than 150 feet high.&nbsp; On one side there was an expanse entirely
+occupied with blowing cones, and jets of steam or vapour.&nbsp; The
+lake has been known to sink 400 feet, and a month ago it overflowed
+its banks.&nbsp; The prominent object was fire in motion, but the surface
+of the double lake was continually skinning over for a second or two
+with a cooled crust of a lustrous grey-white, like frosted silver, broken
+by jagged cracks of a bright rose-colour.&nbsp; The movement was nearly
+always from the sides to the centre, but the movement of the centre
+itself appeared independent and always took a southerly direction.&nbsp;
+Before each outburst of agitation there was much hissing and a throbbing
+internal roaring, as of imprisoned gases.&nbsp; Now it seemed furious,
+demoniacal, as if no power on earth could bind it, then playful and
+sportive, then for a second languid, but only because it was accumulating
+fresh force.&nbsp; On our arrival eleven fire fountains were playing
+joyously round the lakes, and sometimes the six of the nearer lake ran
+together in the centre to go wallowing down in one vortex, from which
+they reappeared bulging upwards, till they formed a huge cone 30 feet
+high, which plunged downwards in a whirlpool only to reappear in exactly
+the previous number of fountains in different parts of the lake, high
+leaping, raging, flinging themselves upwards.&nbsp; Sometimes the whole
+lake, abandoning its usual centripetal motion, as if impelled southwards,
+took the form of mighty waves, and surging heavily against the partial
+barrier with a sound like the Pacific surf, lashed, tore, covered it,
+and threw itself over it in clots of living fire.&nbsp; It was all confusion,
+commotion, force, terror, glory, majesty, mystery, and even beauty.&nbsp;
+And the colour!&nbsp; &ldquo;Eye hath not seen&rdquo; it!&nbsp; Molten
+metal has not that crimson gleam, nor blood that living light!&nbsp;
+Had I not seen this I should never have known that such a colour was
+possible.</p>
+<p>The crust perpetually wrinkled, folded over, and cracked, and great
+pieces were drawn downwards to be again thrown up on the crests of waves.&nbsp;
+The eleven fountains of gory fire played the greater part of the time,
+dancing round the lake with a strength of joyousness which was absolute
+beauty.&nbsp; Indeed after the first half hour of terror had gone by,
+the beauty of these jets made a profound impression upon me, and the
+sight of them must always remain one of the most fascinating recollections
+of my life.&nbsp; During three hours, the bank of lava which almost
+divided the lakes rose considerably, owing to the cooling of the spray
+as it dashed over it, and a cavern of considerable size was formed within
+it, the roof of which was hung with fiery stalactites, more than a foot
+long.&nbsp; Nearly the whole time the surges of the further lake taking
+a southerly direction, broke with a tremendous noise on the bold craggy
+cliffs which are its southern boundary, throwing their gory spray to
+a height of fully forty feet.&nbsp; At times an overhanging crag fell
+in, creating a vast splash of fire and increased commotion.</p>
+<p>Almost close below us there was an intermittent jet of lava, which
+kept cooling round what was possibly a blowhole forming a cone with
+an open top, which when we first saw it was about six feet high on its
+highest side, and about as many in diameter.&nbsp; Up this cone or chimney
+heavy jets of lava were thrown every second or two, and cooling as they
+fell over its edge, raised it rapidly before our eyes.&nbsp; Its fiery
+interior, and the singular sound with which the lava was vomited up,
+were very awful.&nbsp; There was no smoke rising from the lake, only
+a faint blue vapour which the wind carried in the opposite direction.&nbsp;
+The heat was excessive.&nbsp; We were obliged to stand the whole time,
+and the soles of our boots were burned, and my ear and one side of my
+face were blistered.&nbsp; Although there was no smoke from the lake
+itself, there was an awful region to the westward, of smoke and sound,
+and rolling clouds of steam and vapour whose phenomena it was not safe
+to investigate, where the blowing cones are, whose fires last night
+appeared stationary.&nbsp; We were able to stand quite near the margin,
+and look down into the lake, as you look into the sea from the deck
+of a ship, the only risk being that the fractured ledge might give way.</p>
+<p>Before we came away, a new impulse seized the lava.&nbsp; The fire
+was thrown to a great height; the fountains and jets all wallowed together;
+new ones appeared, and danced joyously round the margin, then converging
+towards the centre they merged into one glowing mass, which upheaved
+itself pyramidally and disappeared with a vast plunge.&nbsp; Then innumerable
+billows of fire dashed themselves into the air, crashing and lashing,
+and the lake dividing itself recoiled on either side, then hurling its
+fires together and rising as if by upheaval from below, it surged over
+the temporary rim which it had formed, passing downwards in a slow majestic
+flow, leaving the central surface swaying and dashing in fruitless agony
+as if sent on some errand it failed to accomplish.</p>
+<p>Farewell, I fear for ever, to the glorious Hale-mau-mau, the grandest
+type of force that the earth holds!&nbsp; &ldquo;Break, break, break,&rdquo;
+on through the coming years,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;No more by thee my steps shall
+be,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No more again for ever!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It seemed a dull trudge over the black and awful crater, and strange,
+like half-forgotten sights of a world with which I had ceased to have
+aught to do, were the dwarf tree-ferns, the lilies with their turquoise
+clusters, the crimson myrtle blossoms, and all the fair things which
+decked the precipice up which we slowly dragged our stiff and painful
+limbs.&nbsp; Yet it was but the exchange of a world of sublimity for
+a world of beauty, the &ldquo;place of hell,&rdquo; for the bright upper
+earth, with its endless summer, and its perennial foliage, blossom,
+and fruitage.</p>
+<p>Since writing the above I have been looking over the &ldquo;Volcano
+Book,&rdquo; which contains the observations and impressions of people
+from all parts of the world.&nbsp; Some of these are painstaking and
+valuable as showing the extent and rapidity of the changes which take
+place in the crater, but there is an immense quantity of flippant rubbish,
+and would-be wit, in which &ldquo;Madam Pel&eacute;,&rdquo; invariably
+occurs, this goddess, who was undoubtedly one of the grandest of heathen
+mythical creations, being caricatured in pencil and pen and ink, under
+every ludicrous aspect that can be conceived.&nbsp; Some of the entries
+are brief and absurd, &ldquo;Not much of a fizz,&rdquo; &ldquo;a grand
+splutter,&rdquo; &ldquo;Madam Pel&eacute; in the dumps,&rdquo; and so
+forth.&nbsp; These generally have English signatures.&nbsp; The American
+wit is far racier, but depends mainly on the profane use of certain
+passages of scripture, a species of wit which is at once easy and disgusting.&nbsp;
+People are all particular in giving the precise time of the departure
+from Hilo and arrival here, &ldquo;making good time&rdquo; being a thing
+much admired on Hawaii, but few can boast of more than three miles an
+hour.&nbsp; It is wonderful that people can parade their snobbishness
+within sight of Hale-mau-mau.</p>
+<p>This inn is a unique and interesting place.&nbsp; Its existence is
+strikingly precarious, for the whole region is in a state of perpetual
+throb from earthquakes, and the sights and sounds are gruesome and awful
+both by day and night.&nbsp; The surrounding country steams and smokes
+from cracks and pits, and a smell of sulphur fills the air.&nbsp; They
+cook their <i>kalo</i> in a steam apparatus of nature&rsquo;s own work
+just behind the house, and every drop of water is from a distillery
+similarly provided.&nbsp; The inn is a grass and bamboo house, very
+beautifully constructed without nails.&nbsp; It is a longish building
+with a steep roof divided inside by partitions which run up to the height
+of the walls.&nbsp; There is no ceiling.&nbsp; The joists which run
+across are concealed by wreaths of evergreens, from among which peep
+out here and there stars on a blue ground.&nbsp; The door opens from
+the verandah into a centre room with a large open brick fire place,
+in which a wood fire is constantly burning, for at this altitude the
+temperature is cool.&nbsp; Some chairs, two lounges, small tables, and
+some books and pictures on the walls give a look of comfort, and there
+is the reality of comfort in perfection.&nbsp; Our sleeping-place, a
+neat room with a matted floor opens from this, and on the other side
+there is a similar room, and a small eating-room with a grass cookhouse
+beyond, from which an obliging old Chinaman who persistently calls us
+&ldquo;sir,&rdquo; brings our food.&nbsp; We have had for each meal,
+tea, preserved milk, coffee, <i>kalo</i>, biscuits, butter, potatoes,
+goats&rsquo; flesh, and <i>ohelos</i>.&nbsp; The charge is five dollars
+a day, but everything except the potatoes and <i>ohelos</i> has to be
+brought twenty or thirty miles on mules&rsquo; backs.&nbsp; It is a
+very pretty picturesque house both within and without, and stands on
+a natural lawn of brilliant but unpalatable grass, surrounded by a light
+fence covered with a small trailing double rose.&nbsp; It is altogether
+a most magical building in the heart of a formidable volcanic wilderness.&nbsp;
+Mr. Gilman, our host, is a fine picturesque looking man, half Indian,
+and speaks remarkably good English, but his wife, a very pretty native
+woman, speaks none, and he attends to us entirely himself.</p>
+<p>A party of native travellers rainbound are here, and the native women
+are sitting on the floor stringing flowers and berries for <i>leis</i>.&nbsp;
+One very attractive-looking young woman, refined by consumption, is
+lying on some blankets, and three native men are smoking by the fire.&nbsp;
+Upa attempts conversation with us in broken English, and the others
+laugh and talk incessantly.&nbsp; My inkstand, pen, and small handwriting
+amuse them very much.&nbsp; Miss K., the typical American travelling
+lady, who is encountered everywhere from the Andes to the Pyramids,
+tireless, with an indomitable energy, Spartan endurance, and a genius
+for attaining everything, and myself, a limp, ragged, shoeless wretch,
+complete the group, and our heaps of saddles, blankets, spurs, and gear
+tell of real travelling, past and future.&nbsp; It is a most picturesque
+sight by the light of the flickering fire, and the fire which is unquenchable
+burns without.</p>
+<p>About 300 yards off there is a sulphur steam vapour-bath, highly
+recommended by the host as a panacea for the woeful aches, pains, and
+stiffness produced by the six-mile scramble through the crater, and
+I groaned and limped down to it: but it is a truly spasmodic arrangement,
+singularly independent of human control, and I have not the slightest
+doubt that the reason why Mr. Gilman obligingly remained in the vicinity
+was, lest I should be scalded or blown to atoms by a sudden freak of
+Kilauea, though I don&rsquo;t see that he was capable of preventing
+either catastrophe!&nbsp; A slight grass shed has been built over a
+sulphur steam crack, and within this there is a deep box with a sliding
+lid and a hole for the throat, and the victim is supposed to sit in
+this and be steamed.&nbsp; But on this occasion the temperature was
+so high, that my hand, which I unwisely experimented upon, was immediately
+peeled.&nbsp; In order not to wound Mr. Gilman&rsquo;s feelings, which
+are evidently sensitive on the subject of this irresponsible contrivance,
+I remained the prescribed time within the shed, and then managed to
+limp a little less, and go with him to what are called the Sulphur Banks,
+on which sulphurous vapour is perpetually depositing the most exquisite
+acicular sulphur crystals; these, as they aggregate, take entrancing
+forms, like the featherwork produced by the &ldquo;frost-fall&rdquo;
+in Colorado, but, like it, they perish with a touch, and can only be
+seen in the wonderful laboratory where they are formed.</p>
+<p>In addition to the natives before mentioned, there is an old man
+here who has been a bullock-hunter on Hawaii for forty years, and knows
+the island thoroughly.&nbsp; In common with all the residents I have
+seen, he takes an intense interest in volcanic phenomena, and has just
+been giving us a thrilling account of the great eruption in 1868, when
+beautiful Hilo was threatened with destruction.&nbsp; Three weeks ago,
+he says, a profound hush fell on Kilauea, and the summit crater of Mauna
+Loa became active, and amidst throbbings, rumblings, and earthquakes,
+broke into such magnificence that the light was visible 100 miles at
+sea, a burning mountain 13,750 feet high!&nbsp; The fires after two
+days died out as suddenly, and from here we can see the great dome-like
+top, snow-capped under the stars, serene in an eternal winter.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER VI.</h3>
+<p>HILO, HAWAII, Feb. 3.</p>
+<p>My plans are quite overturned.&nbsp; I was to have ridden with the
+native mail-carrier to the north of the island to take the steamer for
+Honolulu, but there are freshets in the gulches on the road, making
+the ride unsafe.&nbsp; There is no steamer from Hilo for three weeks,
+and in the meantime Mr. and Mrs. S. have kindly consented to receive
+me as a boarder; and I find the people, scenery, and life so charming,
+that I only regret my detention on Mrs. Dexter&rsquo;s account.&nbsp;
+I am already rested from the great volcano trip.</p>
+<p>We left Kilauea at seven in the morning of the 1st Feb. in a pouring
+rain.&nbsp; The natives decorated us with <i>leis</i> of turquoise and
+coral berries, and of crimson and yellow <i>ohia</i> blossoms.&nbsp;
+The saddles were wet, the crater was blotted out by mist, water dripped
+from the trees, we splashed through pools in the rocks, the horses plunged
+into mud up to their knees, and the drip, drip, of vertical, earnest,
+tepid, tropical rain accompanied us nearly to Hilo.&nbsp; Upa and Miss
+K. held umbrellas the whole way, but I required both hands for holding
+on to the horse whenever he chose to gallop.&nbsp; As soon as we left
+the crater-house Upa started over the grass at full speed, my horse
+of course followed, and my feet being jerked out of the stirrups, I
+found myself ignominiously sitting on the animal&rsquo;s back behind
+the saddle, and nearly slid over his tail, before, by skilful efforts,
+I managed to scramble over the peak back again, when I held on by horn
+and mane until the others stopped.&nbsp; Happily I was last, and I don&rsquo;t
+think they saw me.&nbsp; Upa amused me very much on the way; he insists
+that I am &ldquo;a high chief.&rdquo;&nbsp; He said a good deal about
+Queen Victoria, whose virtues seem well known here: &ldquo;Good Queen
+make good people,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;English very good!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He asked me how many chiefs we had, and supposing him to mean hereditary
+peers, I replied, over 500.&nbsp; &ldquo;Too many, too many!&rdquo;
+he answered emphatically--&ldquo;too much chief eat up people!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He asked me if all people were good in England, and I was sorry to tell
+him that this was very far from being the case.&nbsp; He was incredulous,
+or seemed so out of flattery, and said, &ldquo;You good Queen, you Bible
+long time, you good!&rdquo;&nbsp; I was surprised to find how much he
+knew of European politics, of the liberation of Italy, and the Franco-German
+war.&nbsp; He expressed a most orthodox horror of the Pope, who, he
+said, he knew from his Bible was the &ldquo;Beast!&rdquo;&nbsp; He said,
+&ldquo;I bring band and serenade for good Queen sake,&rdquo; but this
+has not come off yet.</p>
+<p>We straggled into Hilo just at dusk, thoroughly wet, jaded, and satisfied,
+but half-starved, for the rain had converted that which should have
+been our lunch into a brownish pulp of bread and newspaper, and we had
+subsisted only on some half-ripe guavas.&nbsp; After the black desolation
+of Kilauea, I realized more fully the beauty of Hilo, as it appeared
+in the gloaming.&nbsp; The rain had ceased, cool breezes rustled through
+the palm-groves and sighed through the funereal foliage of the pandanus.&nbsp;
+Under thick canopies of the glossy breadfruit and banana, groups of
+natives were twining garlands of roses and <i>ohia</i> blossoms.&nbsp;
+The lights of happy foreign homes flashed from under verandahs festooned
+with passion-flowers, and the low chant, to me nearly intolerable, but
+which the natives love, mingled with the ceaseless moaning of the surf
+and the sighing of the breeze through the trees, and a heavy fragrance,
+unlike the faint sweet odours of the north, filled the evening air.&nbsp;
+It was delicious.</p>
+<p>I suffered intensely from pain and stiffness, and was induced to
+try a true Hawaiian remedy, which is not only regarded as a cure for
+all physical ills, but as the greatest of physical luxuries; <i>i.e.
+lomi-lomi</i>.&nbsp; This is a compound of pinching, pounding, and squeezing,
+and Moi Moi, the fine old Hawaiian nurse in this family, is an adept
+in the art.&nbsp; She found out by instinct which were the most painful
+muscles, and subjected them to a doubly severe pounding, laughing heartily
+at my groans.&nbsp; However, I must admit that my arms and shoulders
+were almost altogether relieved before the <i>lomi-lomi</i> was finished.&nbsp;
+The first act of courtesy to a stranger in a native house is this, and
+it is varied in many ways.&nbsp; Now and then the patient lies face
+downwards, and children execute a sort of dance upon his spine. <a name="citation95"></a><a href="#footnote95">{95}</a>&nbsp;
+Formerly, the chiefs, when not engaged in active pursuits, exacted <i>lomi-lomi</i>
+as a constant service from their followers.</p>
+<p>A number of Hilo folk came in during the evening to inquire how we
+had sped, and for news of the volcano.&nbsp; I think the proximity of
+Kilauea gives sublimity to Hilo, and helps to lift conversation out
+of common-place ruts.&nbsp; It is no far-off spectacle, but an immediate
+source of wonder and apprehension, for it rocks the village with earthquakes,
+and renders the construction of stone houses and plastered ceilings
+impossible.&nbsp; It rolls vast tidal waves with infinite destruction
+on the coast, and of late years its fiery overflowings have twice threatened
+this paradise with annihilation.&nbsp; Then there is the dead volcano
+of Mauna Loa, from whose resurrection anything may be feared.&nbsp;
+Even last night a false rumour that a light was to be seen on its summit
+brought everyone out, but it was only an increased glare from the pit
+of Hale-mau-mau.&nbsp; It is most interesting to be in a region of such
+splendid possibilities.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER VII.</h3>
+<p>HILO, HAWAII.</p>
+<p>The white population here, which constitutes &ldquo;society,&rdquo;
+is very small.&nbsp; There are two venerable missionaries &ldquo;Father
+Coan&rdquo; and &ldquo;Father Lyman,&rdquo; the former pastor of a large
+native congregation, which, though much shrunken, is not only self-sustaining,
+but contributes $1200 a year to foreign missions, and the latter, though
+very old and frail, the indefatigable head of an industrial school for
+native young men.&nbsp; Their houses combine the trimness of New England,
+with the luxuriance of the tropics; they are cool retreats, embowered
+among breadfruit, tamarind, and bamboo, through whose graceful leafage
+the blue waters of the bay are visible.&nbsp; Innumerable exotics are
+domesticated round these fair homesteads.&nbsp; Two of &ldquo;Father
+Lyman&rsquo;s&rdquo; sons are influential residents, one being the Lieutenant-Governor
+of the island.&nbsp; Other sons of former missionaries are settled here
+in business, and there are a few strangers who have been attracted hither.&nbsp;
+Dr. Wetmore, formerly of the mission, is a typical New Englander of
+the old orthodox school.&nbsp; It is pleasant to see him brighten into
+almost youthful enthusiasm on the subject of Hawaiian ferns.&nbsp; My
+host, a genial, social, intelligent American, is sheriff of Hawaii,
+postmaster, etc., and with his charming wife (a missionary&rsquo;s daughter),
+and some friends who live with them, make their large house a centre
+of kindliness, friendliness, and hospitality.&nbsp; Mr. Thompson, pastor
+of the foreign church, is a man of very liberal culture, as well as
+wide sympathies.&nbsp; The lady principal of the Government school is
+a handsome, talented Vermont girl, and besides being an immense favourite,
+well deserves her unusual and lucrative position.</p>
+<p>There are hardly any young ladies, and very few young men, but plenty
+of rosy, blooming children, who run about barefoot all the year.&nbsp;
+Besides the Hilo residents, there are some planters&rsquo; families
+within seven miles, who come in to sewing circles, church, etc.&nbsp;
+There is a small class of reprobate white men who have ostracized themselves
+by means of drink and bad morals, and are a curse to the natives.&nbsp;
+The half whites, among whom &ldquo;Bill Ragsdale&rdquo; is the leading
+spirit, are not numerous.&nbsp; Hilo has no carriage roads and no carriages:
+every one must ride or travel in a litter.&nbsp; People are very kind
+to each other.&nbsp; Horses, dresses, patterns, books, and articles
+of domestic use, are lent and borrowed continually.&nbsp; The smallness
+of the society and the close proximity are too much like a ship.&nbsp;
+People know everything about the details of each other&rsquo;s daily
+life, income, and expenditure, and the day&rsquo;s doings of each member
+of the little circle are matters for conversation.&nbsp; Indeed, were
+it not for the volcano and its doings, conversation might degenerate
+into gossip.&nbsp; There is an immense deal of personal talk; the wonder
+is that there is so little ill-nature.&nbsp; Not only is what everybody
+does here common property, but the sayings, doings, goings, comings,
+and purchases of every one in all the other islands are common property
+also, made so by letters and oral communication.&nbsp; It is all very
+amusing, and on the whole very kindly, and human interests are always
+interesting; but it has its perilous side.&nbsp; They are very kind
+to each other.&nbsp; There is no distress which is not alleviated.&nbsp;
+There is no nurse, and in cases of sickness the ladies take it by turns
+to wait on the sufferer by day and night for weeks, and even months.&nbsp;
+Such inevitable mutual dependence of course promotes friendliness.</p>
+<p>The foreigners live very simply.&nbsp; The eating-rooms are used
+solely for eating, the &ldquo;parlours&rdquo; are always cheerful and
+tasteful, and the bedrooms very pretty, adorned with all manner of knick-knacks
+made by the ladies, who are indescribably deft with their fingers.&nbsp;
+Light Manilla matting is used instead of carpets.&nbsp; A Chinese man-cook,
+who leaves at seven in the evening, is the only servant, except in one
+or two cases, where, as here, a native woman condescends to come in
+during the day as a nurse.&nbsp; In the morning the ladies, in their
+fresh pretty wrappers and ruffled white aprons, sweep and dust the rooms,
+and I never saw women look more truly graceful and refined than they
+do, when engaged in the plain prose of these domestic duties.&nbsp;
+They make all their own dresses, and when any lady is busy and wants
+a dress in a hurry, two or three of them meet and make it for her.&nbsp;
+I never saw people live such easy pleasant lives.&nbsp; They have such
+good health, for one thing, partly no doubt because their domestic duties
+give them wholesome exercise without pressing upon them.&nbsp; They
+have abounding leisure for reading, music, choir practising, drawing,
+fern-printing, fancy work, picnics, riding parties, and enjoy sociability
+thoroughly.&nbsp; They usually ride in dainty bloomer costumes, even
+when they don&rsquo;t ride astride.&nbsp; All the houses are pretty,
+and it takes little to make them so in this climate.&nbsp; One novel
+fashion is to decorate the walls with festoons of the beautiful fern
+Microlepia tenuifolia, which are renewed as soon as they fade, and every
+room is adorned with a profusion of bouquets, which are easily obtained
+where flowers bloom all the year.&nbsp; Many of the residents possess
+valuable libraries, and these, with cabinets of minerals, volcanic specimens,
+shells, and coral, with weapons, calabashes, ornaments, and cloth of
+native manufacture, almost furnish a room in themselves.&nbsp; Some
+of the volcanic specimens and the coral are of almost inestimable value,
+as well as of exquisite beauty.</p>
+<p>The gentlemen don&rsquo;t seem to have near so much occupation as
+the ladies.&nbsp; There are two stores on the beach, and at these and
+at the Court-house they aggregate, for lack of club-house and exchange.&nbsp;
+Business is not here a synonym for hurry, and official duties are light;
+so light, that in these morning hours I see the governor, the sheriff,
+and the judge, with three other gentlemen, playing an interminable croquet
+game on the Court-house lawn.&nbsp; They purvey gossip for the ladies,
+and how much they invent, and how much they only circulate can never
+be known!</p>
+<p>There is a large native population in the village, along the beach,
+and on the heights above the Wailuku River.&nbsp; Frame houses with
+lattices, and grass houses with deep verandahs, peep out everywhere
+from among the mangoes and bananas.&nbsp; The governess of Hawaii, the
+Princess Keelikalani, has a house on the beach shaded by a large umbrella-tree
+and a magnificent clump of bamboos, 70 feet in height.&nbsp; The native
+life with which one comes constantly in contact, is very interesting.</p>
+<p>The men do whatever hard work is done in cultivating the <i>kalo</i>
+patches and pounding the <i>kalo</i>.&nbsp; Thus <i>kalo</i>, the Arum
+esculentum, forms the national diet.&nbsp; A Hawaiian could not exist
+without his calabash of <i>poi</i>.&nbsp; The root is an object of the
+tenderest solicitude, from the day it is planted until the hour when
+it is lovingly eaten.&nbsp; The eating of <i>poi</i> seems a ceremony
+of profound meaning; it is like the eating salt with an Arab, or a Masonic
+sign.&nbsp; The <i>kalo</i> root is an ovate oblong, as bulky as a Californian
+beet, and it has large leaves, shaped like a broad arrow, of a singularly
+bright green.&nbsp; The best kinds grow entirely in water.&nbsp; The
+patch is embanked and frequently inundated, and each plant grows on
+a small hillock of puddled earth.&nbsp; The cutting from which it grows
+is simply the top of the plant, with a little of the tuber.&nbsp; The
+men stand up to their knees in water while cultivating the root.&nbsp;
+It is excellent when boiled and sliced; but the preparation of <i>poi</i>
+is an elaborate process.&nbsp; The roots are baked in an underground
+oven, and are then laid on a slightly hollowed board, and beaten with
+a stone pestle.&nbsp; It is hard work, and the men don&rsquo;t wear
+any clothes while engaged in it.&nbsp; It is not a pleasant-looking
+operation.&nbsp; They often dip their hands in a calabash of water to
+aid them in removing the sticky mass, and they always look hot and tired.&nbsp;
+When it is removed from the board into large calabashes, it is reduced
+to paste by the addition of water, and set aside for two or three days
+to ferment.&nbsp; When ready for use it is either lilac or pink, and
+tastes like sour bookbinders&rsquo; paste.&nbsp; Before water is added,
+when it is in its dry state, it is called <i>paiai</i>, or hard food,
+and is then packed in <i>ti</i> leaves in 20 lb. bundles for inland
+carriage, and is exported to the Guano Islands.&nbsp; It is a prolific
+and nutritious plant.&nbsp; It is estimated that forty square feet will
+support an Hawaiian for a year.</p>
+<p>The melon and <i>kalo</i> patches represent a certain amount of spasmodic
+industry, but in most other things the natives take no thought for the
+morrow.&nbsp; Why should they indeed?&nbsp; For while they lie basking
+in the sun, without care of theirs, the cocoanut, the breadfruit, the
+yam, the guava, the banana, and the delicious <i>papaya</i>, which is
+a compound of a ripe apricot with a Cantaloupe melon, grow and ripen
+perpetually.&nbsp; Men and women are always amusing themselves, the
+men with surf-bathing, the women with making <i>leis</i>--both sexes
+with riding, gossiping, and singing.&nbsp; Every man and woman, almost
+every child, has a horse.&nbsp; There is a perfect plague of badly bred,
+badly developed, weedy looking animals.&nbsp; The beach and the pleasant
+lawn above it are always covered with men and women riding at a gallop,
+with bare feet, and stirrups tucked between the toes.&nbsp; To walk
+even 200 yards seems considered a degradation.&nbsp; The people meet
+outside each others&rsquo; houses all day long, and sit in picturesque
+groups on their mats, singing, laughing, talking, and quizzing the <i>haoles</i>,
+as if the primal curse had never fallen.&nbsp; Pleasant sights of out-door
+cooking gregariously carried on greet one everywhere.&nbsp; This style
+of cooking prevails all over Polynesia.&nbsp; A hole in the ground is
+lined with stones, wood is burned within it, and when the rude oven
+has been sufficiently heated, the pig, chicken, breadfruit, or <i>kalo</i>,
+wrapped in <i>ti</i> leaves is put in, a little water is thrown on,
+and the whole is covered up.&nbsp; It is a slow but sure process.</p>
+<p>Bright dresses, bright eyes, bright sunshine, music, dancing, a life
+without care, and a climate without asperities, make up the sunny side
+of native life as pictured at Hilo.&nbsp; But there are dark moral shadows,
+the population is shrinking away, and rumours of leprosy are afloat,
+so that some of these fair homes may be desolate ere long.&nbsp; However
+many causes for regret exist, one must not forget that only forty years
+ago the people inhabiting this strip of land between the volcanic wilderness
+and the sea were a vicious, sensual, shameless herd, that no man among
+them, except their chiefs, had any rights, that they were harried and
+oppressed almost to death, and had no consciousness of any moral obligations.&nbsp;
+Now, order and external decorum at least, prevail.&nbsp; There is not
+a locked door in Hilo, and nobody makes anybody else afraid.</p>
+<p>The people of Hawaii-nei are clothed and civilized in their habits;
+they have equal rights; 6,500 of them have <i>kuleanas</i> or freeholds,
+equable and enlightened laws are impartially administered; wrong and
+oppression are unknown; they enjoy one of the best administered governments
+in the world; education is universal, and the throne is occupied by
+a liberal sovereign of their own race and election.</p>
+<p>Few of them speak English.&nbsp; Their language is so easy that most
+of the foreigners acquire it readily.&nbsp; You know how stupid I am
+about languages, yet I have already picked up the names of most common
+things.&nbsp; There are only twelve letters, but some of these are made
+to do double duty, as K is also T, and L is also R.&nbsp; The most northern
+island of the group, Kauai, is as often pronounced as if it began with
+a T, and Kalo is usually Taro.&nbsp; It is a very musical language.&nbsp;
+Each syllable and word ends with a vowel, and there are none of our
+rasping and sibilant consonants.&nbsp; In their soft phraseology our
+hard rough surnames undergo a metamorphosis, as Fisk into Filikina,
+Wilson into Wilikina.&nbsp; Each vowel is distinctly pronounced, and
+usually with the Italian sound.&nbsp; The volcano is pronounced as if
+spelt Keel-ah-wee-ah, and Kauai as if Kah-wye-ee.&nbsp; The name Owhyhee
+for Hawaii had its origin in a mistake, for the island was never anything
+but Hawaii, pronounced Hah-wye-ee, but Captain Cook mistook the prefix
+O, which is the sign of the nominative case, for a part of the word.&nbsp;
+Many of the names of places, specially of those compounded with <i>wai</i>,
+water, are very musical; Wailuku, &ldquo;water of destruction;&rdquo;
+Waialeale, &ldquo;rippling water;&rdquo; Waioli, &ldquo;singing water;&rdquo;
+Waipio, &ldquo;vanquished water;&rdquo; Kaiwaihae, &ldquo;torn water.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Mauna, &ldquo;mountain,&rdquo; is a mere prefix, and though always used
+in naming the two giants of the Pacific, Mauna Kea, and Mauna Loa, is
+hardly ever applied to Hualalai, &ldquo;the offspring of the shining
+sun;&rdquo; or to Haleakala on Maui, &ldquo;the house of the sun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I notice that the foreigners never use the English or botanical names
+of trees or plants, but speak of <i>ohias</i>, <i>ohelos</i>, <i>kukui</i>
+(candle-nut), <i>lauhala</i> (pandanus), <i>pulu</i> (tree fern), <i>maman&eacute;</i>,
+<i>koa</i>, etc.&nbsp; There is one native word in such universal use
+that I already find I cannot get on without it, <i>pilikia</i>.&nbsp;
+It means anything, from a downright trouble to a slight difficulty or
+entanglement.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m in a pilikia,&rdquo; or &ldquo;very
+pilikia,&rdquo; or &ldquo;pilikia!&rdquo;&nbsp; A revolution would be
+&ldquo;a pilikia.&rdquo;&nbsp; The fact of the late king dying without
+naming a successor was pre-eminently a pilikia, and it would be a serious
+pilikia if a horse were to lose a shoe on the way to Kilauea.&nbsp;
+<i>Hou-hou</i>, meaning &ldquo;in a huff,&rdquo; I hear on all sides;
+and two words, <i>makai</i>, signifying &ldquo;on the sea-side,&rdquo;
+and <i>mauka</i>, &ldquo;on the mountain side.&rdquo;&nbsp; These terms
+are perfectly intelligible out of doors, but it is puzzling when one
+is asked to sit on &ldquo;the <i>mauka</i> side of the table.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The word <i>aloha</i>, in foreign use, has taken the place of every
+English equivalent.&nbsp; It is a greeting, a farewell, thanks, love,
+goodwill.&nbsp; <i>Aloha</i> looks at you from tidies and illuminations,
+it meets you on the roads and at house-doors, it is conveyed to you
+in letters, the air is full of it.&nbsp; &ldquo;My <i>aloha</i> to you,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;he sends you his <i>aloha</i>,&rdquo; &ldquo;they desire their
+<i>aloha</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; It already represents to me all of kindness
+and goodwill that language can express, and the convenience of it as
+compared with other phrases is, that it means exactly what the receiver
+understands it to mean, and consequently, in all cases can be conveyed
+by a third person.&nbsp; There is no word for &ldquo;thank you.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+<i>Maikai</i> &ldquo;good,&rdquo; is often useful in its place, and
+smiles supply the rest.&nbsp; There are no words which express &ldquo;gratitude&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;chastity,&rdquo; or some others of the virtues; and they have
+no word for &ldquo;weather,&rdquo; that which we understand by &ldquo;weather&rdquo;
+being absolutely unknown.</p>
+<p>Natives have no surnames.&nbsp; Our volcano guide is Upa, or Scissors,
+but his wife and children are anything else.&nbsp; The late king was
+Kamehameha, or the &ldquo;lonely one.&rdquo;&nbsp; The father of the
+present king is called Kanaina, but the king&rsquo;s name is Lunalilo,
+or &ldquo;above all.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nor does it appear that a man is always
+known by the same name, nor that a name necessarily indicates the sex
+of its possessor.&nbsp; Thus, in signing a paper the signature would
+be Hoapili <i>kanaka</i>, or Hoapili <i>wahine</i>, according as the
+signer was man or woman.&nbsp; I remember that in my first letter I
+fell into the vulgarism, initiated by the whaling crews, of calling
+the natives <i>Kanakas</i>.&nbsp; This is universally but very absurdly
+done, as <i>Kanaka</i> simply means man.&nbsp; If an Hawaiian word is
+absolutely necessary, we might translate native and have <i>maole</i>,
+pronounced <i>maori</i>, like that of the New Zealand aborigines.&nbsp;
+<i>Kanaka</i> is to me decidedly objectionable, as conveying the idea
+of canaille.</p>
+<p>I had written thus far when Mr. Severance came in to say that a grand
+display of the national sport of surf-bathing was going on, and a large
+party of us went down to the beach for two hours to enjoy it.&nbsp;
+It is really a most exciting pastime, and in a rough sea requires immense
+nerve.&nbsp; The surf-board is a tough plank shaped like a coffin lid,
+about two feet broad, and from six to nine feet long, well oiled and
+cared for.&nbsp; It is usually made of the erythrina, or the breadfruit
+tree.&nbsp; The surf was very heavy and favourable, and legions of natives
+were swimming and splashing in the sea, though not more than forty had
+their <i>Papa-he-nalu</i>, or &ldquo;wave sliding boards,&rdquo; with
+them.&nbsp; The men, dressed only in <i>malos</i>, carrying their boards
+under their arms, waded out from some rocks on which the sea was breaking,
+and, pushing their boards before them, swam out to the first line of
+breakers, and then diving down were seen no more till they re-appeared
+as a number of black heads bobbing about like corks in smooth water
+half a mile from shore.</p>
+<p>What they seek is a very high roller, on the top of which they leap
+from behind, lying face downwards on their boards.&nbsp; As the wave
+speeds on, and the bottom strikes the ground, the top breaks into a
+huge comber.&nbsp; The swimmers but appeared posing themselves on its
+highest edge by dexterous movements of their hands and feet, keeping
+just at the top of the curl, but always apparently coming down hill
+with a slanting motion.&nbsp; So they rode in majestically, always just
+ahead of the breaker, carried shorewards by its mighty impulse at the
+rate of forty miles an hour, yet seeming to have a volition of their
+own, as the more daring riders knelt and even stood on their surf-boards,
+waving their arms and uttering exultant cries.&nbsp; They were always
+apparently on the verge of engulfment by the fierce breaker whose towering
+white crest was ever above and just behind them, but just as one expected
+to see them dashed to pieces, they either waded quietly ashore, or sliding
+off their boards, dived under the surf, taking advantage of the undertow,
+and were next seen far out at sea, preparing for fresh exploits.</p>
+<p>The great art seems to be to mount the roller precisely at the right
+time, and to keep exactly on its curl just before it breaks.&nbsp; Two
+or three athletes, who stood erect on their boards as they swept exultingly
+shorewards, were received with ringing cheers by the crowd.&nbsp; Many
+of the less expert failed to throw themselves on the crest, and slid
+back into smooth water, or were caught in the combers which were fully
+ten feet high, and after being rolled over and over, ignominiously disappeared
+amidst roars of laughter, and shouts from the shore.&nbsp; At first
+I held my breath in terror, thinking the creatures were smothered or
+dashed to pieces, and then in a few seconds I saw the dark heads of
+the objects of my anxiety bobbing about behind the rollers waiting for
+another chance.&nbsp; The shore was thronged with spectators, and the
+presence of the elite of Hilo stimulated the swimmers to wonderful exploits.</p>
+<p>These people are truly amphibious.&nbsp; Both sexes seem to swim
+by nature, and the children riot in the waves from their infancy.&nbsp;
+They dive apparently by a mere effort of the will.&nbsp; In the deep
+basin of the Wailuku River, a little below the Falls, the maidens swim,
+float, and dive with garlands of flowers round their heads and throats.&nbsp;
+The more furious and agitated the water is, the greater the excitement,
+and the love of these watery exploits is not confined to the young.&nbsp;
+I saw great fat men with their hair streaked with grey, balancing themselves
+on their narrow surf-boards, and riding the surges shorewards with as
+much enjoyment as if they were in their first youth.&nbsp; I enjoyed
+the afternoon thoroughly.</p>
+<p>Is it &ldquo;always afternoon&rdquo; here, I wonder?&nbsp; The sea
+was so blue, the sunlight so soft, the air so sweet.&nbsp; There was
+no toil, clang, or hurry.&nbsp; People were all holidaymaking (if that
+can be where there is no work), and enjoying themselves, the surf-bathers
+in the sea, and hundreds of gaily-dressed men and women galloping on
+the beach.&nbsp; It was so serene and tropical.&nbsp; I sympathize with
+those who eat the lotus, and remain for ever on such enchanted shores.</p>
+<p>I am gaining health daily, and almost live in the open air.&nbsp;
+I have hired the native policeman&rsquo;s horse and saddle, and with
+a Macgregor flannel riding costume, which my kind friends have made
+for me, and a pair of jingling Mexican spurs am quite Hawaiianised.&nbsp;
+I ride alone once or twice a day exploring the neighbourhood, finding
+some new fern or flower daily, and abandon myself wholly to the fascination
+of this new existence.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER VIII.</h3>
+<p>ONOMEA, HAWAII.&nbsp; JUDGE AUSTIN&rsquo;S.</p>
+<p>Mrs. A. has been ill for some time, and Mrs. S. her sister and another
+friend &ldquo;plotted&rdquo; in a very &ldquo;clandestine&rdquo; manner
+that I should come here for a few days in order to give her &ldquo;a
+little change of society,&rdquo; but I am quite sure that under this
+they only veil a kind wish that I should see something of plantation
+life.&nbsp; There is a plan, too, that I should take a five days&rsquo;
+trip to a remarkable valley called Waipio, but this is only a &ldquo;castle
+in the air.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. A. sent in for me a capital little lean rat of a horse which
+by dint of spirit and activity managed to keep within sight of two large
+horses, ridden by Mr. Thompson, and a very handsome young lady riding
+&ldquo;cavalier fashion,&rdquo; who convoyed me out.&nbsp; Borrowed
+saddle-bags, and a couple of shingles for carrying ferns formed my outfit,
+and were carried behind my saddle.&nbsp; It is a magnificent ride here.&nbsp;
+The track crosses the deep, still, Wailuku River on a wooden bridge,
+and then after winding up a steep hill, among native houses fantastically
+situated, hangs on the verge of the lofty precipices which descend perpendicularly
+to the sea, dips into tremendous gulches, loses itself in the bright
+fern-fringed torrents which have cleft their way down from the mountains,
+and at last emerges on the delicious height on which this house is built.</p>
+<p>This coast looked beautiful from the deck of the <i>Kilauea</i>,
+but I am now convinced that I have never seen anything so perfectly
+lovely as it is when one is actually among its details.&nbsp; Onomea
+is 600 feet high, and every yard of the ascent from Hilo brings one
+into a fresher and purer air.&nbsp; One looks up the wooded, broken
+slopes to a wild volcanic wilderness and the snowy peaks of Mauna Kea
+on one side, and on the other down upon the calm blue Pacific, wrinkled
+by the sweet trade-wind, till it blends in far-off loveliness with the
+still, blue, sky; and heavy surges break on the reefs, and fritter themselves
+away on the rocks, tossing their pure foam over <i>ti</i> and <i>lauhala</i>
+trees, and the exquisite ferns and trailers which mantle the cliffs
+down to the water&rsquo;s edge.&nbsp; Here a native house stands, with
+passion-flowers clustering round its verandah, and the great solitary
+red blossoms of the hibiscus flaming out from dark surrounding leafage,
+and women in rose and green <i>holukus</i>, weaving garlands, greet
+us with &ldquo;<i>Aloha</i>&rdquo; as we pass.&nbsp; Then we come upon
+a whole cluster of grass houses under <i>lauhalas</i> and bananas.&nbsp;
+Then there is the sugar plantation of Kaiwiki, with its patches of bright
+green cane, its flumes crossing the track above our heads, bringing
+the cane down from the upland cane-fields to the crushing-mill, and
+the shifting, busy scenes of the sugar-boiling season.</p>
+<p>Then the track goes down with a great dip, along which we slip and
+slide in the mud to a deep broad stream.&nbsp; This is a most picturesque
+spot, the junction of two clear bright rivers, and a few native houses
+and a Chinaman&rsquo;s store are grouped close by under some palms,
+with the customary loungers on horseback, asking and receiving <i>nuhou</i>,
+or news, at the doors.&nbsp; Our accustomed horses leaped into a ferry-scow
+provided by Government, worked by a bearded female of hideous aspect,
+and leaped out on the other side to climb a track cut on the side of
+a precipice, which would be steep to mount on one&rsquo;s own feet.&nbsp;
+There we met parties of natives, all flower-wreathed, talking and singing,
+coming gaily down on their sure-footed horses, saluting us with the
+invariable &ldquo;<i>Aloha</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Every now and then we passed
+native churches, with spires painted white, or a native schoolhouse,
+or a group of scholars all ferns and flowers.&nbsp; The greenness of
+the vegetation merits the term &ldquo;dazzling.&rdquo;&nbsp; We think
+England green, but its colour is poor and pale as compared with that
+of tropical Hawaii.&nbsp; Palms, candlenuts, <i>ohias</i>, hibiscus,
+were it not for their exceeding beauty, would almost pall upon one from
+their abundance, and each gulch has its glorious entanglement of breadfruit,
+the large-leaved <i>ohia</i>, or native apple, a species of Eugenia
+(<i>Eugenia Malaccensis</i>), and the pandanus, with its a&euml;rial
+roots, all looped together by large sky-blue convolvuli and the running
+fern, and is marvellous with parasitic growths.</p>
+<p>The distracting beauty of this coast is what are called gulches--narrow
+deep ravines or gorges, from 100 to 2,000 feet in depth, each with a
+series of cascades from 10 to 1,800 feet in height.&nbsp; I dislike
+reducing their glories to the baldness of figures, but the depth of
+these clefts (originally, probably, the seams caused by fire torrents),
+cut and worn by the fierce streams fed by the snows of Mauna Kea, and
+the rains of the forest belt, cannot otherwise be expressed.&nbsp; The
+cascades are most truly beautiful, gleaming white among the dark depths
+of foliage far away, and falling into deep limpid basins, festooned
+and overhung with the richest and greenest vegetation of this prolific
+climate, from the huge-leaved banana and shining breadfruit to the most
+feathery of ferns and lycopodiums.&nbsp; Each gulch opens on a velvet
+lawn close to the sea, and most of them have space for a few grass houses,
+with cocoanut trees, bananas, and <i>kalo</i> patches.&nbsp; There are
+sixty-nine of these extraordinary chasms within a distance of thirty
+miles!</p>
+<p>I think we came through eleven, fording the streams in all but two.&nbsp;
+The descent into some of them is quite alarming.&nbsp; You go down almost
+standing in your stirrups, at a right angle with the horse&rsquo;s head,
+and up, grasping his mane to prevent the saddle slipping.&nbsp; He goes
+down like a goat, with his bare feet, looking cautiously at each step,
+sometimes putting out a foot and withdrawing it again in favour of better
+footing, and sometimes gathering his four feet under him and sliding
+or jumping.&nbsp; The Mexican saddle has great advantages on these tracks,
+which are nothing better than ledges cut on the sides of precipices,
+for one goes up and down not only in perfect security but without fatigue.&nbsp;
+I am beginning to hope that I am not too old, as I feared I was, to
+learn a new mode of riding, for my companions rode at full speed over
+places where I should have picked my way carefully at a foot&rsquo;s
+pace; and my horse followed them, galloping and stopping short at their
+pleasure, and I successfully kept my seat, though not without occasional
+fears of an ignominious downfall.&nbsp; I even wish that you could see
+me in my Rob Roy riding dress, with leather belt and pouch, a <i>lei</i>
+of the orange seeds of the pandanus round my throat, jingling Mexican
+spurs, blue saddle blanket, and Rob Roy blanket strapped on behind the
+saddle!</p>
+<p>This place is grandly situated 600 feet above a deep cove, into which
+two beautiful gulches of great size run, with heavy cascades, finer
+than Foyers at its best, and a native village is picturesquely situated
+between the two.&nbsp; The great white rollers, whiter by contrast with
+the dark deep water, come into the gulch just where we forded the river,
+and from the ford a passable road made for hauling sugar ascends to
+the house.&nbsp; The air is something absolutely delicious; and the
+murmur of the rollers and the deep boom of the cascades are very soothing.&nbsp;
+There is little rise or fall in the cadence of the surf anywhere on
+the windward coast, but one even sound, loud or soft, like that made
+by a train in a tunnel.</p>
+<p>We were kindly welcomed, and were at once &ldquo;made at home.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Delicious phrase! the full meaning of which I am learning on Hawaii,
+where, though everything has the fascination of novelty, I have ceased
+to feel myself a stranger.&nbsp; This is a roomy, rambling frame-house,
+with a verandah, and the door, as is usual here, opens directly into
+the sitting-room.&nbsp; The stair by which I go to my room suggests
+possibilities, for it has been removed three inches from the wall by
+an earthquake, which also brought down the tall chimney of the boiling-house.&nbsp;
+Close by there are small pretty frame-houses for the overseer, bookkeeper,
+sugar boiler, and machinist; a store, the factory, a pretty native church
+near the edge of the cliff, and quite a large native village below.&nbsp;
+It looks green and bright, and the atmosphere is perfect, with the cool
+air coming down from the mountains, and a soft breeze coming up from
+the blue dreamy ocean.&nbsp; Behind the house the uplands slope away
+to the colossal Mauna Kea.&nbsp; The actual, dense, impenetrable forest
+does not begin for a mile and a half from the coast, and its broad dark
+belt, extending to a height of 4,000 feet, and beautifully broken, throws
+out into greater brightness the upward glades of grass and the fields
+of sugar-cane.</p>
+<p>This is a very busy season, and as this is a large plantation there
+is an appearance of great animation.&nbsp; There are five or six saddled
+horses usually tethered below the house; and with overseers, white and
+coloured, and natives riding at full gallop, and people coming on all
+sorts of errands, the hum of the crushing-mill, the rush of water in
+the flumes, and the grind of the waggons carrying cane, there is no
+end of stir.</p>
+<p>The plantations in the Hilo district enjoy special advantages, for
+by turning some of the innumerable mountain streams into flumes the
+owners can bring a great part of their cane and all their wood for fuel
+down to the mills without other expense than the original cost of the
+woodwork.&nbsp; Mr. A. has 100 mules, but the greater part of their
+work is ploughing and hauling the kegs of sugar down to the cove, where
+in favourable weather they are put on board of a schooner for Honolulu.&nbsp;
+This plantation employs 185 hands, native and Chinese, and turns out
+600 tons of sugar a year.&nbsp; The natives are much liked as labourers,
+being docile and on the whole willing; but native labour is hard to
+get, as the natives do not like to work for a term unless obliged, and
+a pernicious system of &ldquo;advances&rdquo; is practised.&nbsp; The
+labourers hire themselves to the planters, in the case of natives usually
+for a year, by a contract which has to be signed before a notary public.&nbsp;
+The wages are about eight dollars a month with food, or eleven dollars
+without food, and the planters supply houses and medical attendance.&nbsp;
+The Chinese are imported as coolies, and usually contract to work for
+five years.&nbsp; As a matter of policy no less than of humanity the
+&ldquo;hands&rdquo; are well treated; for if a single instance of injustice
+were perpetrated on a plantation the factory might stand still the next
+year, for hardly a native would contract to serve again.</p>
+<p>The Chinese are quiet and industrious, but smoke opium, and are much
+addicted to gaming.&nbsp; Many of them save money, and, when their turn
+of service is over, set up stores, or grow vegetables for money.&nbsp;
+Each man employed has his horse, and on Saturday the hands form quite
+a cavalcade.&nbsp; Great tact, firmness, and knowledge of human nature
+are required in the manager of a plantation.&nbsp; The natives are at
+times disposed to shirk work without sufficient cause; the native <i>lunas</i>,
+or overseers, are not always reasonable, the Chinamen and natives do
+not always agree, and quarrels and entanglements arise, and everything
+is referred to the decision of the manager, who, besides all things
+else, must know the exact amount of work which ought to be performed,
+both in the fields and factory, and see that it is done.&nbsp; Mr. A.
+is a keen, shrewd man of business, kind without being weak, and with
+an eye on every detail of his plantations.&nbsp; The requirements are
+endless.&nbsp; It reminds me very much of plantation life in Georgia
+in the old days of slavery.&nbsp; I never elsewhere heard of so many
+headaches, sore hands, and other trifling ailments.&nbsp; It is very
+amusing to see the attempts which the would-be invalids make to lengthen
+their brief smiling faces into lugubriousness, and the sudden relaxation
+into naturalness when they are allowed a holiday.&nbsp; Mr. A. comes
+into the house constantly to consult his wife regarding the treatment
+of different ailments.</p>
+<p>I have made a second tour through the factory, and am rather disgusted
+with sugar making.&nbsp; &ldquo;All&rsquo;s well that ends well,&rdquo;
+however, and the delicate crystalline result makes one forget the initial
+stages of the manufacture.&nbsp; The cane, stripped of its leaves, passes
+from the flumes under the rollers of the crushing-mill, where it is
+subjected to a pressure of five or six tons.&nbsp; One hundred pounds
+of cane under this process yield up from sixty-five to seventy-five
+pounds of juice.&nbsp; This juice passes, as a pale green cataract,
+into a trough, which conducts it into a vat, where it is dosed with
+quicklime to neutralize its acid, and is then run off into large heated
+metal vessels.&nbsp; At this stage the smell is abominable, and the
+turbid fluid, with a thick scum upon it, is simply disgusting.&nbsp;
+After a preliminary heating and skimming it is passed off into iron
+pans, several in a row, and boiled and skimmed, and ladled from one
+to the other till it reaches the last, which is nearest to the fire,
+and there it boils with the greatest violence, seething and foaming,
+bringing all the remaining scum to the surface.&nbsp; After the concentration
+has proceeded far enough, the action of the heat is suspended, and the
+reddish-brown, oily-looking liquid is drawn into the vacuum-pan till
+it is about a third full; the concentration is completed by boiling
+the juice in vacuo at a temperature of 150&deg;, and even lower.&nbsp;
+As the boiling proceeds, the sugar boiler tests the contents of the
+pan by withdrawing a few drops, and holding them up to the light on
+his finger; and, by certain minute changes in their condition, he judges
+when it is time to add an additional quantity.&nbsp; When the pan is
+full, the contents have thickened into the consistency of thick gruel
+by the formation of minute crystals, and are then allowed to descend
+into an heater, where they are kept warm till they can be run into &ldquo;forms&rdquo;
+or tanks, where they are allowed to granulate.&nbsp; The liquid, or
+molasses, which remains after the first crystallization is returned
+to the vacuum pan and reboiled, and this reboiling of the drainings
+is repeated two or three times, with a gradually decreasing result in
+the quality and quantity of the sugar.&nbsp; The last process, which
+is used for getting rid of the treacle, is a most beautiful one.&nbsp;
+The mass of sugar and treacle is put into what are called &ldquo;centrifugal
+pans,&rdquo; which are drums about three feet in diameter and two feet
+high, which make about 1,000 revolutions a minute.&nbsp; These have
+false interiors of wire gauze, and the mass is forced violently against
+their sides by centrifugal action, and they let the treacle whirl through,
+and retain the sugar crystals, which lie in a dry heap in the centre.</p>
+<p>The cane is being flumed in with great rapidity, and the factory
+is working till late at night.&nbsp; The cane from which the juice has
+been expressed, called &ldquo;trash,&rdquo; is dried and used as fuel
+for the furnace which supplies the steam power.&nbsp; The sugar is packed
+in kegs, and a cooper and carpenter, as well as other mechanics, are
+employed.</p>
+<p>Sugar is now the great interest of the islands.&nbsp; Christian missions
+and whaling have had their day, and now people talk sugar.&nbsp; Hawaii
+thrills to the news of a cent up or a cent down in the American market.&nbsp;
+All the interests of the kingdom are threatened by this one, which,
+because it is grievously depressed and staggers under a heavy import
+duty in the American market, is now clamorous in some quarters for &ldquo;annexation,&rdquo;
+and in others for a &ldquo;reciprocity treaty,&rdquo; which last means
+the cession of the Pearl River lagoon on Oahu, with its adjacent shores,
+to America, for a Pacific naval station.&nbsp; There are 200,000 acres
+of productive soil on the islands, of which only a fifteenth is under
+cultivation, and of this large area 150,000 is said to be specially
+adapted for sugar culture.&nbsp; Herein is a prospective Utopia, and
+people are always dreaming of the sugar-growing capacities of the belt
+of rich disintegrated lava which slopes upwards from the sea to the
+bases of the mountains.&nbsp; Hitherto, sugar growing has been a very
+disastrous speculation, and few of the planters at present do more than
+keep their heads above water.</p>
+<p>Were labour plentiful and the duties removed, fortunes might be made;
+for the soil yields on an average about three times as much as that
+of the State of Louisiana.&nbsp; Two and a half tons to the acre is
+a common yield, five tons, a frequent one, and instances are known of
+the slowly matured cane of a high altitude yielding as much as seven
+tons!&nbsp; The magnificent climate makes it a very easy crop to grow.&nbsp;
+There is no brief harvest time with its rush, hurry, and frantic demand
+for labour, nor frost to render necessary the hasty cutting of an immature
+crop.&nbsp; The same number of hands is kept on all the year round.&nbsp;
+The planters can plant pretty much when they please, or not plant at
+all, for two or three years, the only difference in the latter case
+being that the <i>rattoons</i> which spring up after the cutting of
+the former crop are smaller in bulk.&nbsp; They can cut when they please,
+whether the cane be tasselled or not, and they can plant, cut, and grind
+at one time!</p>
+<p>It is a beautiful crop in any stage of growth, especially in the
+tasselled stage.&nbsp; Every part of it is useful--the cane pre-eminently--the
+leaves as food for horses and mules, and the tassels for making hats.&nbsp;
+Here and elsewhere there is a plate of cut cane always within reach,
+and the children chew it incessantly.&nbsp; I fear you will be tired
+of sugar, but I find it more interesting than the wool and mutton of
+Victoria and New Zealand, and it is a most important item of the wealth
+of this toy kingdom, which last year exported 16,995,402 lbs. of sugar
+and 192,105 gallons of molasses. <a name="citation121"></a><a href="#footnote121">{121}</a>&nbsp;
+With regard to molasses, the Government prohibits the manufacture of
+rum, so the planters are deprived of a fruitful source of profit.&nbsp;
+It is really difficult to tear myself from the subject of sugar, for
+I see the cane waving in the sun while I write, and hear the busy hum
+of the crushing-mill.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER IX.</h3>
+<p>ONOMEA, HAWAII.</p>
+<p>This is such a pleasant house and household, Mrs. A. is as bright
+as though she were not an invalid, and her room, except at meals, is
+the gathering-place of the family.&nbsp; The four boys are bright, intelligent
+beings, out of doors, barefooted, all day, and with a passion for horses,
+of which their father possesses about thirty.&nbsp; The youngest, Ephy,
+is the brightest child for three years old that I ever saw, but absolutely
+crazy about horses and mules.&nbsp; He talks of little else, and is
+constantly asking me to draw horses on his slate.&nbsp; He is a merry,
+audacious little creature, but came in this evening quite subdued.&nbsp;
+The sun was setting gloriously behind the forest-covered slopes, flooding
+the violet distances with a haze of gold, and, in a low voice, he said,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There is the usual Chinese cook, who cooks and waits and looks good-natured,
+and of course has his own horse, and his wife, a most minute Chinese
+woman, comes in and attends to the rooms and to Mrs. A., and sews and
+mends.&nbsp; She wears her native dress--a large, stiff, flat cane hat,
+like a tray, fastened firmly on or to her head; a scanty loose frock
+of blue denim down to her knees, wide trousers of the same down to her
+ancles, and slippers.&nbsp; Her hair is knotted up; she always wears
+silver armlets, and would not be seen without the hat for anything.&nbsp;
+There is not a bell in this or any house on the islands, and the bother
+of servants is hardly known, for the Chinamen do their work like automatons,
+and disappear at sunset.&nbsp; In a land where there are no carpets,
+no fires, no dust, no hot water needed, no windows to open and shut--for
+they are always open--no further service is really required.&nbsp; It
+is a simple arcadian life, and people live more happily than any that
+I have seen elsewhere.&nbsp; It is very cheerful to live among people
+whose faces are not soured by the east wind, or wrinkled by the worrying
+effort to &ldquo;keep up appearances,&rdquo; which deceive nobody; who
+have no formal visiting, but real sociability; who regard the light
+manual labour of domestic life as a pleasure, not a thing to be ashamed
+of; who are contented with their circumstances, and have leisure to
+be kind, cultured, and agreeable; and who live so tastefully, though
+simply, that they can at any time ask a passing stranger to occupy the
+simple guest chamber, or share the simple meal, without any of the soul-harassing
+preparations which often make the exercise of hospitality a thing of
+terror to people in the same circumstances at home.</p>
+<p>People will ask you, &ldquo;What is the food?&rdquo;&nbsp; We have
+everywhere bread and biscuit made of California flour, griddle cakes
+with molasses, and often cracked wheat, butter not very good, sweet
+potatoes, boiled <i>kalo</i>, Irish potatoes, and <i>poi</i>.&nbsp;
+I have not seen fish on any table except at the Honolulu Hotel, or any
+meat but beef, which is hard and dry as compared with ours.&nbsp; We
+have China or Japan tea, and island coffee.&nbsp; Honolulu is the only
+place in which intoxicants are allowed to be sold; and I have not seen
+beer, wine, or spirits in any house.&nbsp; Bananas are an important
+article of diet, and sliced guavas, eaten with milk and sugar, are very
+good.&nbsp; The cooking is always done in detached cook houses, in and
+on American cooking stoves.</p>
+<p>As to clothing.&nbsp; I wear my flannel riding dress for both riding
+and walking, and a black silk at other times.&nbsp; The resident ladies
+wear prints and silks, and the gentlemen black cloth or dark tweed suits.&nbsp;
+Flannel is not required, neither are puggarees or white hats or sunshades
+at any season.&nbsp; The changes of temperature are very slight, and
+there is no chill when the sun goes down.&nbsp; The air is always like
+balm; the rain is tepid and does not give cold; in summer it may be
+three or four degrees warmer.&nbsp; Windows and doors stand open the
+whole year.&nbsp; A blanket is agreeable at night, but not absolutely
+necessary.&nbsp; It is a truly delightful climate and mode of living,
+with such an abundance of air and sunshine.&nbsp; My health improves
+daily, and I do not consider myself an invalid.</p>
+<p>Between working, reading aloud, talking, riding, and &ldquo;loafing,&rdquo;
+I have very little time for letter writing; but I must tell you of a
+delightful fern-hunting expedition on the margin of the forest that
+I took yesterday, accompanied by Mr. Thompson and the two elder boys.&nbsp;
+We rode in the <i>mauka</i> direction, outside cane ready for cutting,
+with silvery tassels gleaming in the sun, till we reached the verge
+of the forest, where an old trail was nearly obliterated by a trailing
+matted grass four feet high, and thousands of woody ferns, which conceal
+streams, holes, and pitfalls.&nbsp; When further riding was impossible,
+we tethered our horses and proceeded on foot.&nbsp; We were then 1,500
+feet above the sea by the aneroid barometer, and the increased coolness
+was perceptible.&nbsp; The mercury is about four degrees lower for each
+1,000 feet of ascent--rather more than this indeed on the windward side
+of the islands.&nbsp; The forest would be quite impenetrable were it
+not for the remains of wood-hauling trails, which, though grown up to
+the height of my shoulders, are still passable.</p>
+<p>Underneath the green maze, invisible streams, deep down, made sweet
+music, sweeter even than the gentle murmur of the cool breeze among
+the trees.&nbsp; The forest on the volcano track, which I thought so
+tropical and wonderful a short time ago, is nothing for beauty to compare
+with this &ldquo;garden of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; I wish I could describe
+it, but cannot; and as you know only our pale, small-leaved trees, with
+their uniform green, I cannot say that it is like this or that.&nbsp;
+The first line of a hymn, &ldquo;Oh, Paradise! oh, Paradise!&rdquo;
+rings in my brain, and the rustic exclamation we used to hear when we
+were children, &ldquo;Well, I never!&rdquo; followed by innumerable
+notes of admiration, seems to exhaust the whole vocabulary of wonderment.&nbsp;
+The former cutting of some trees gives atmosphere, and the tumbled nature
+of the ground shows everything to the best advantage.&nbsp; There were
+openings over which huge candle-nuts, with their pea-green and silver
+foliage, spread their giant arms, and the light played through their
+branches on an infinite variety of ferns.&nbsp; There were groves of
+bananas and plantains with shiny leaves 8 feet long, like enormous hart&rsquo;s-tongue,
+the bright-leaved <i>noni</i>, the dark-leaved <i>koa</i>, the mahogany
+of the Pacific; the great glossy-leaved Eugenia--a forest tree as large
+as our largest elms; the small-leaved <i>ohia</i>, its rose-crimson
+flowers making a glory in the forests, and its young shoots of carmine
+red vying with the colouring of the New England fall; and the strange
+<i>lauhala</i> hung its stiff drooping plumes, which creak in the faintest
+breeze; and the superb breadfruit hung its untempting fruit, and from
+spreading guavas we shook the ripe yellow treasures, scooping out the
+inside, all juicy and crimson, to make drinking cups of the rind; and
+there were trees that had surrendered their own lives to a conquering
+army of vigorous parasites which had clothed their skeletons with an
+unapproachable and indistinguishable beauty, and over trees and parasites
+the tender tendrils of great mauve morning glories trailed and wreathed
+themselves, and the strong, strangling stems of the <i>i&eacute;</i>
+wound themselves round the tall <i>ohias</i>, which supported their
+quaint yucca-like spikes of leaves fifty feet from the ground.</p>
+<p>There were some superb plants of the glossy tropical-looking bird&rsquo;s-nest
+fern, or <i>Asplenium Nidus</i>, which makes its home on the stems and
+branches of trees, and brightens the forest with its great shining fronds.&nbsp;
+I got a specimen from a <i>koa</i> tree.&nbsp; The plant had nine fronds,
+each one measuring from 4 feet 1 inch to 4 feet 7 inches in length,
+and from 7 to 9 inches in breadth.&nbsp; There were some very fine tree-ferns
+<i>(Cibotium Chamissoi</i>?), two of which being accessible, we measured,
+and found them seventeen and twenty feet high, their fronds eight feet
+long, and their stems four feet ten inches in circumference three feet
+from the ground.&nbsp; They showed the most various shades of green,
+from the dark tint of the mature frond, to the pale pea green of those
+which were just uncurling themselves.&nbsp; I managed to get up into
+a tree for the first time in my life to secure specimens of two beautiful
+parasitic ferns (Polypodium tamariscinum and P. Hymenophylloides?).&nbsp;
+I saw for the first time, too, a lygodium and the large climbing potato-fern
+(Polypodium spectrum), very like a yam in the distance, and the Vittaria
+elongata, whose long grassy fronds adorn almost every tree.&nbsp; The
+beautiful Microlepia tenuifolia abounded, and there were a few plants
+of the loveliest fern I ever saw (Trichomanes meifolium), in specimens
+of which I indulged sparingly, and almost grudgingly, for it seemed
+unfitting that a form of such perfect beauty should be mummied in a
+herbarium.&nbsp; There was one fern in profusion, with from 90 to 130
+pair of pinn&aelig; on each frond; and the fronds, though often exceeding
+five feet in length, were only two inches broad (Nephrolepis pectinata).&nbsp;
+There were many prostrate trees, which nature has entirely covered with
+choice ferns, specially the rough stem of the tree-fern.&nbsp; I counted
+seventeen varieties on one trunk, and on the whole obtained thirty-five
+specimens for my collection.</p>
+<p>The forest soon became completely impenetrable, the beautiful Gleichenia
+Hawaiiensis forming an impassable network over all the undergrowth.&nbsp;
+And, indeed, without this it would have been risky to make further explorations,
+for often masses of wonderful matted vegetation sustained us temporarily
+over streams six or eight feet below, whose musical tinkle alone warned
+us of our peril.&nbsp; I shall never again see anything so beautiful
+as this fringe of the impassable timber belt.&nbsp; I enjoyed it more
+than anything I have yet seen; it was intoxicating, my eyes were &ldquo;satisfied
+with seeing.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was a dream, a rapture, this maze of form
+and colour, this entangled luxuriance, this bewildering beauty, through
+which we caught bright glimpses of a heavenly sky above, while far away,
+below glade and lawn, shimmered in surpassing loveliness the cool blue
+of the Pacific.&nbsp; To me, with my hatred of reptiles and insects,
+it is not the least among the charms of Hawaii, that these glorious
+entanglements and cool damp depths of a redundant vegetation give shelter
+to nothing of unseemly shape and venomous proboscis or fang.&nbsp; Here,
+in cool, dreamy, sunny Onomea, there are no horrid, drumming, stabbing,
+mosquitoes as at Honolulu, to remind me of what I forget sometimes,
+that I am not in Eden. <a name="citation128"></a><a href="#footnote128">{128}</a><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER X.</h3>
+<p>WAIPIO VALLEY, HAWAII.</p>
+<p>There is something fearful in the isolation of this valley, open
+at one end to the sea, and walled in on all others by <i>palis</i> or
+precipices, from 1,000 to 2,000 feet in height, over the easiest of
+which hangs the dizzy track, which after trailing over the country for
+sixty difficult miles, connects Waipio with the little world of Hilo.&nbsp;
+The evening is very sombre, and darkness comes on early between these
+high walls.&nbsp; I am in a native house in which not a word of English
+is spoken, and Deborah, among her own people, has returned with zest
+to the exclusive use of her own tongue.&nbsp; This is more solitary
+than solitude, and tired as I am with riding and roughing it, I must
+console myself with writing to you.&nbsp; The natives, after staring
+and giggling for some time, took this letter out of my hand, with many
+exclamations, which, Deborah tells me, are at the rapidity and minuteness
+of my writing.&nbsp; I told them the letter was to my sister, and they
+asked if I had your picture.&nbsp; They are delighted with it, and it
+is going round a large circle assembled without.&nbsp; They see very
+few foreign women here, and are surprised that I have not brought a
+foreign man with me.</p>
+<p>There was quite a bustle of small preparations before we left Onomea.&nbsp;
+Deborah was much excited, and I was not less so, for it is such a complete
+novelty to take a five days&rsquo; ride alone with natives.&nbsp; D.
+is a very nice native girl of seventeen, who speaks English tolerably,
+having been brought up by Mr. and Mrs. Austin.&nbsp; She was lately
+married to a white man employed on the plantation.&nbsp; Mr. A. most
+kindly lent me a favourite mule, but declined to state that she would
+not kick, or buck, or turn obstinate, or lie down in the water, all
+which performances are characteristic of mules.&nbsp; She has, however,
+as he expected, behaved as the most righteous of her species.&nbsp;
+Our equipment was a matter for some consideration, as I had no waterproof;
+but eventually I wore my flannel riding dress, and carried my plaid
+in front of the saddle.&nbsp; My saddle-bags, which were behind, contained
+besides our changes of clothes, a jar of Liebig&rsquo;s essence of beef,
+some potted beef, a tin of butter, a tin of biscuits, a tin of sardines,
+a small loaf, and some roast yams.&nbsp; Deborah looked very <i>piquante</i>
+in a bloomer dress of dark blue, with masses of shining hair in natural
+ringlets falling over the collar, mixing with her <i>lei</i> of red
+rose-buds.&nbsp; She rode a powerful horse, of which she has much need,
+as this is the most severe road on horses on Hawaii, and it takes a
+really good animal to come to Waipio and go back to Hilo.</p>
+<p>We got away at seven in bright sunshine, and D.&rsquo;s husband accompanied
+us the first mile to see that our girths and gear were all right.&nbsp;
+It was very slippery, but my mule deftly gathered her feet under her,
+and slid when she could not walk.&nbsp; From Onomea to the place where
+we expected to find the guide, we kept going up and down the steep sides
+of ravines, and scrambling through torrents till we reached a deep and
+most picturesque gulch, with a primitive school-house at the bottom,
+and some grass-houses clustering under palms and <i>papayas</i>, a valley
+scene of endless ease and perpetual afternoon.&nbsp; Here we found that
+D.&rsquo;s uncle, who was to have been our guide, could not go, because
+his horse was not strong enough, but her cousin volunteered his escort,
+and went away to catch his horse, while we tethered ours and went into
+the school-house.</p>
+<p>This reminded me somewhat of the very poorest schools connected with
+the Edinburgh Ladies&rsquo; Highland School Association, but the teacher
+had a remarkable paucity of clothing, and he seemed to have the charge
+of his baby, which, much clothed, and indeed much muffled, lay on the
+bench beside him.&nbsp; For there were benches, and a desk, and even
+a blackboard and primers down in the deep wild gulch, where the music
+of living waters, and the thunderous roll of the Pacific, accompanied
+the children&rsquo;s tuneless voices as they sang an Hawaiian hymn.&nbsp;
+I shall remember nothing of the scholars but rows of gleaming white
+teeth, and splendid brown eyes.&nbsp; I thought both teacher and children
+very apathetic.&nbsp; There were lamentably few, though the pretty rigidly
+enforced law, which compels all children between the ages of six and
+fifteen to attend school for forty weeks of the year, had probably gathered
+together all the children of the district.&nbsp; They all wore coloured
+chemises and <i>leis</i> of flowers.&nbsp; Outside, some natives presented
+us with some ripe <i>papayas</i>.</p>
+<p>Mounting again, we were joined by two native women, who were travelling
+the greater part of the way hither, and this made it more cheerful for
+D.&nbsp; The elder one had nothing on her head but her wild black hair,
+and she wore a black <i>holuku</i>, a <i>lei</i> of the orange seeds
+of the pandanus, orange trousers and big spurs strapped on her bare
+feet.&nbsp; A child of four, bundled up in a black poncho, rode on a
+blanket behind the saddle, and was tied to the woman&rsquo;s waist,
+by an orange shawl.&nbsp; The younger woman, who was very pretty, wore
+a sailor&rsquo;s hat, <i>leis</i> of crimson <i>ohia</i> blossoms round
+her hat and throat, a black <i>holuku</i>, a crimson poncho, and one
+spur, and held up a green umbrella whenever it rained.</p>
+<p>We were shortly joined by Kaluna, the cousin, on an old, big, wall-eyed,
+bare-tailed, raw-boned horse, whose wall-eyes contrived to express mingled
+suspicion and fear, while a flabby, pendant, lower lip, conveyed the
+impression of complete abjectness.&nbsp; He looked like some human beings
+who would be vicious if they dared, but the vice had been beaten out
+of him long ago, and only the fear remained.&nbsp; He has a raw suppurating
+sore under the saddle, glueing the blanket to his lean back, and crouches
+when he is mounted.&nbsp; Both legs on one side look shorter than on
+the other, giving a crooked look to himself and his rider, and his bare
+feet are worn thin as if he had been on lava.&nbsp; I rode him for a
+mile yesterday, and when he attempted a convulsive canter, with three
+short steps and a stumble in it, his abbreviated off legs made me feel
+as if I were rolling over on one side.&nbsp; Kaluna beats him the whole
+time with a heavy stick; but except when he strikes him most barbarously
+about his eyes and nose he only cringes, without quickening his pace.&nbsp;
+When I rode him mercifully the true hound nature came out.&nbsp; The
+sufferings of this wretched animal have been the great drawback on this
+journey.&nbsp; I have now bribed Kaluna with as much as the horse is
+worth to give him a month&rsquo;s rest, and long before that time I
+hope the owl-hawks will be picking his bones.</p>
+<p>The horse has come before the rider, but Kaluna is no nonentity.&nbsp;
+He is a very handsome youth of sixteen, with eyes which are remarkable,
+even in this land of splendid eyes, a straight nose, a very fine mouth,
+and beautiful teeth, a mass of wavy, almost curly hair, and a complexion
+not so brown as to conceal the mantling of the bright southern blood
+in his cheeks.&nbsp; His figure is lithe, athletic, and as pliable as
+if he were an invertebrate animal, capable of unlimited doublings up
+and contortions, to which his thin white shirt and blue cotton trousers
+are no impediment.&nbsp; He is almost a complete savage; his movements
+are impulsive and uncontrolled, and his handsome face looks as if it
+belonged to a half-tamed creature out of the woods.&nbsp; He talks loud,
+laughs incessantly, croons a monotonous chant, which sounds almost as
+heathenish as tom-toms, throws himself out of his saddle, hanging on
+by one foot, lingers behind to gather fruits, and then comes tearing
+up, beating his horse over the ears and nose, with a fearful yell and
+a prolonged sound like <i>har-r-r-ouche</i>, striking my mule and threatening
+to overturn me as he passes me on the narrow track.&nbsp; He is the
+most thoroughly careless and irresponsible being I ever saw, reckless
+about the horses, reckless about himself, without any manners or any
+obvious sense of right and propriety.&nbsp; In his mouth this musical
+tongue becomes as harsh as the speech of a cocatoo or parrot.&nbsp;
+His manner is familiar.&nbsp; He rides up to me, pokes his head under
+my hat, and says, interrogatively, &ldquo;Cold!&rdquo; by which I understand
+that the poor boy is shivering himself.&nbsp; In eating he plunges his
+hand into my bowl of fowl, or snatches half my biscuit.&nbsp; Yet I
+daresay he means well, and I am thoroughly amused with him, except when
+he maltreats his horse.</p>
+<p>It is a very strange life going about with natives, whose ideas,
+as shown by their habits, are, to say the least of it, very peculiar.&nbsp;
+Deborah speaks English fairly, having been brought up by white people,
+and is a very nice girl.&nbsp; But were she one of our own race I should
+not suppose her to be more than eleven years old, and she does not seem
+able to understand my ideas on any subject, though I can be very much
+interested and amused with hearing hers.</p>
+<p>We had a perfect day until the middle of the afternoon.&nbsp; The
+dimpling Pacific was never more than a mile from us as we kept the narrow
+track in the long green grass; and on our left the blunt snow-patched
+peaks of Mauna Kea rose from the girdle of forest, looking so delusively
+near that I fancied a two-hours&rsquo; climb would take us to his lofty
+summit.&nbsp; The track for twenty-six miles is just in and out of gulches,
+from 100 to 800 feet in depth, all opening on the sea, which sweeps
+into them in three booming rollers.&nbsp; The candle-nut or <i>kukui</i>
+(aleurites triloba) tree, which on the whole predominates, has leaves
+of a rich deep green when mature, which contrast beautifully with the
+flaky silvery look of the younger foliage.&nbsp; Some of the shallower
+gulches are filled exclusively with this tree, which in growing up to
+the light to within 100 feet of the top, presents a mass and density
+of leafage quite unique, giving the gulch the appearance as if billows
+of green had rolled in and solidified there.&nbsp; Each gulch has some
+specialty of ferns and trees, and in such a distance as sixty miles
+they vary considerably with the variations of soil, climate, and temperature.&nbsp;
+But everywhere the rocks, trees, and soil are covered and crowded with
+the most exquisite ferns and mosses, from the great tree-fern, whose
+bright fronds light up the darker foliage, to the lovely maiden-hair
+and graceful selaginellas which are mirrored in pools of sparkling water.&nbsp;
+Everywhere, too, the great blue morning glory opened to a heaven not
+bluer than itself.</p>
+<p>The descent into the gulches is always solemn.&nbsp; You canter along
+a bright breezy upland, and are suddenly arrested by a precipice, and
+from the depths of a forest abyss a low plash or murmur rises, or a
+deep bass sound, significant of water which must be crossed, and one
+reluctantly leaves the upper air to plunge into heavy shadow, and each
+experience increases one&rsquo;s apprehensions concerning the next.&nbsp;
+Though in some gulches the <i>kukui</i> preponderates, in others the
+<i>lauhala</i> whose a&euml;rial roots support it in otherwise impossible
+positions, and in others the sombre <i>ohia</i>, yet there were some
+grand clefts in which nature has mingled her treasures impartially,
+and out of cool depths of ferns rose the feathery coco-palm, the glorious
+breadfruit, with its green melon-like fruit, the large <i>ohia</i>,
+ideal in its beauty,--the most gorgeous flowering tree I have ever seen,
+with spikes of rose-crimson blossoms borne on the old wood, blazing
+among its shining many-tinted leafage,--the tall <i>papaya</i> with
+its fantastic crown, the profuse gigantic plantain, and innumerable
+other trees, shrubs, and lianas, in the beauty and bounteousness of
+an endless spring.&nbsp; Imagine my surprise on seeing at the bottom
+of one gulch, a grove of good-sized, dark-leaved, very handsome trees,
+with an abundance of smooth round green fruit upon them, and on reaching
+them finding that they were orange trees, their great size, far exceeding
+that of the largest at Valencia, having prevented me from recognizing
+them earlier!&nbsp; In another, some large shrubs with oval, shining,
+dark leaves, much crimped at the edges, bright green berries along the
+stalks, and masses of pure white flowers lying flat, like snow on evergreens,
+turned out to be coffee!&nbsp; The guava with its obtuse smooth leaves,
+sweet white blossoms on solitary axillary stalks, and yellow fruit was
+universal.&nbsp; The novelty of the fruit, foliage, and vegetation is
+an intense delight to me.&nbsp; I should like to see how the rigid aspect
+of a coniferous tree, of which there is not one indigenous to the islands,
+would look by contrast.&nbsp; We passed through a long thicket of sumach,
+an exotic from North America, which still retains its old habit of shedding
+its leaves, and its grey, wintry, desolate-looking branches reminded
+me that there are less-favoured parts of the world, and that you are
+among mist, cold, murk, slush, gales, leaflessness, and all the dismal
+concomitants of an English winter.</p>
+<p>It is wonderful that people should have thought of crossing these
+gulches on anything with four legs.&nbsp; Formerly, that is, within
+the last thirty years, the precipices could only be ascended by climbing
+with the utmost care, and descended by being lowered with ropes from
+crag to crag, and from tree to tree, when hanging on by the hands became
+impracticable to even the most experienced mountaineer.&nbsp; In this
+last fashion Mr. Coan and Mr. Lyons were let down to preach the gospel
+to the people of the then populous valleys.&nbsp; But within recent
+years, narrow tracks, allowing one horse to pass another, have been
+cut along the sides of these precipices, without any windings to make
+them easier, and only deviating enough from the perpendicular to allow
+of their descent by the sure-footed native-born animals.&nbsp; Most
+of them are worn by water and animals&rsquo; feet, broken, rugged, jagged,
+with steps of rock sometimes three feet high, produced by breakage here
+and there.&nbsp; Up and down these the animals slip, jump, and scramble,
+some of them standing still until severely spurred, or driven by some
+one from behind.&nbsp; Then there are softer descents, slippery with
+damp, and perilous in heavy rains, down which they slide dexterously,
+gathering all their legs under them.&nbsp; On a few of these tracks
+a false step means death, but the vegetation which clothes the <i>pali</i>
+below, blinds one to the risk.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t think anything would
+induce me to go up a swinging zigzag--up a terrible <i>pali</i> opposite
+to me as I write, the sides of which are quite undraped.</p>
+<p>All the gulches for the first twenty-four miles contain running water.&nbsp;
+The great Hakalau gulch we crossed early yesterday, has a river with
+a smooth bed as wide as the Thames at Eton.&nbsp; Some have only small
+quiet streams, which pass gently through ferny grottoes.&nbsp; Others
+have fierce strong torrents dashing between abrupt walls of rock, among
+immense boulders into deep abysses, and cast themselves over precipice
+after precipice into the ocean.&nbsp; Probably, many of these are the
+courses of fire torrents, whose jagged masses of <i>a-a</i> have since
+been worn smooth, and channelled into holes by the action of water.&nbsp;
+A few are crossed on narrow bridges, but the majority are forded, if
+that quiet conventional term can be applied to the violent flounderings
+by which the horses bring one through.&nbsp; The transparency deceives
+them, and however deep the water is, they always try to lift their fore
+feet out of it, which gives them a disagreeable rolling motion.&nbsp;
+(Mr. Brigham in his valuable monograph on the Hawaiian volcanoes quoted
+below, <a name="citation138"></a><a href="#footnote138">{138}</a> appears
+as much impressed with these gulches as I am.)</p>
+<p>We lunched in one glorious valley, and Kaluna made drinking cups
+which held fully a pint, out of the beautiful leaves of the Arum esculentum.&nbsp;
+Towards afternoon turbid-looking clouds lowered over the sea, and by
+the time we reached the worst <i>pali</i> of all, the south side of
+Laupahoehoe, they burst on us in torrents of rain accompanied by strong
+wind.&nbsp; This terrible precipice takes one entirely by surprise.&nbsp;
+Kaluna, who rode first, disappeared so suddenly that I thought he had
+gone over.&nbsp; It is merely a dangerous broken ledge, and besides
+that it looks as if there were only foothold for a goat, one is dizzied
+by the sight of the foaming ocean immediately below, and, when we actually
+reached the bottom, there was only a narrow strip of shingle between
+the stupendous cliff and the resounding surges, which came up as if
+bent on destruction.&nbsp; The path by which we descended looked a mere
+thread on the side of the precipice.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know what the
+word beetling means, but if it means anything bad, I will certainly
+apply it to that <i>pali</i>.</p>
+<p>A number of disastrous-looking native houses are clustered under
+some very tall palms in the open part of the gulch, but it is a most
+wretched situation; the roar of the surf is deafening, the scanty supply
+of water is brackish, there are rumours that leprosy is rife, and the
+people are said to be the poorest on Hawaii.&nbsp; We were warned that
+we could not spend a night comfortably there, so wet, tired, and stiff,
+we rode on another six miles to the house of a native called Bola-Bola,
+where we had been instructed to remain.&nbsp; The rain was heavy and
+ceaseless, and the trail had become so slippery that our progress was
+much retarded.&nbsp; It was a most unpropitious-looking evening, and
+I began to feel the painful stiffness arising from prolonged fatigue
+in saturated clothes.&nbsp; I indulged in various imaginations as we
+rode up the long ascent leading to Bola-Bola&rsquo;s, but this time
+they certainly were not of sofas and tea, and I never aspired to anything
+beyond drying my clothes by a good fire, for at Hilo some people had
+shrugged their shoulders, and others had laughed mysteriously at the
+idea of our sleeping there, and some had said it was one of the worst
+of native houses.</p>
+<p>A single glance was enough.&nbsp; It was a dilapidated frame-house,
+altogether forlorn, standing unsheltered on a slope of the mountain,
+with one or two yet more forlorn grass piggeries, which I supposed might
+be the cook house, and eating-house near it.</p>
+<p>A prolonged <i>har-r-r-rouche</i> from Kaluna brought out a man with
+a female horde behind him, all shuffling into clothes as we approached,
+and we stiffly dismounted from the wet saddles in which we had sat for
+ten hours, and stiffly hobbled up into the littered verandah, the water
+dripping from our clothes, and squeezing out of our boots at every step.&nbsp;
+Inside there was one room about 18 x 14 feet, which looked as if the
+people had just arrived and had thrown down their goods promiscuously.&nbsp;
+There were mats on the floor not over clean, and half the room was littered
+and piled with mats rolled up, boxes, bamboos, saddles, blankets, lassos,
+cocoanuts, <i>kalo</i> roots, bananas, quilts, pans, calabashes, bundles
+of hard <i>poi</i> in <i>ti</i> leaves, bones, cats, fowls, clothes.&nbsp;
+A frightful old woman, looking like a relic of the old heathen days,
+with bristling grey hair cut short, her body tattooed all over, and
+no clothing but a ragged blanket huddled round her shoulders; a girl
+about twelve, with torrents of shining hair, and a piece of bright green
+calico thrown round her, and two very good-looking young women in rose-coloured
+chemises, one of them holding a baby, were squatting and lying on the
+mats, one over another, like a heap of savages.</p>
+<p>When the man found that we were going to stay all night he bestirred
+himself, dragged some of the things to one side and put down a shake-down
+of <i>pulu</i> (the silky covering of the fronds of one species of tree-fern),
+with a sheet over it, and a gay quilt of orange and red cotton.&nbsp;
+There was a thin printed muslin curtain to divide off one half of the
+room, a usual arrangement in native houses.&nbsp; He then helped to
+unsaddle the horses, and the confusion of the room was increased by
+a heap of our wet saddles, blankets, and gear.&nbsp; All this time the
+women lay on the floor and stared at us.</p>
+<p>Rheumatism seemed impending, for the air up there was chilly, and
+I said to Deborah that I must make some change in my dress, and she
+signed to Kaluna, who sprang at my soaked boots and pulled them off,
+and my stockings too, with a savage alacrity which left it doubtful
+for a moment whether he had not also pulled off my feet!&nbsp; I had
+no means of making any further change except putting on a wrapper over
+my wet clothes.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the man killed and boiled a fowl, and boiled some sweet
+potato, and when these untempting viands, and a calabash of <i>poi</i>
+were put before us, we sat round them and eat; I with my knife, the
+others with their fingers.&nbsp; There was some coffee in a dirty bowl.&nbsp;
+The females had arranged a row of pillows on their mat, and all lay
+face downwards, with their chins resting upon them, staring at us with
+their great brown eyes, and talking and laughing incessantly.&nbsp;
+They had low sensual faces, like some low order of animal.&nbsp; When
+our meal was over, the man threw them the relics, and they soon picked
+the bones clean.&nbsp; It surprised me that after such a badly served
+meal the man brought a bowl of water for our hands, and something intended
+for a towel.</p>
+<p>By this time it was dark, and a stone, deeply hollowed at the top,
+was produced, containing beef fat and a piece of rag for a wick, which
+burned with a strong flaring light.&nbsp; The women gathered themselves
+up and sat round a large calabash of <i>poi</i>, conveying the sour
+paste to their mouths with an inimitable twist of the fingers, laying
+their heads back and closing their eyes with a look of animal satisfaction.&nbsp;
+When they had eaten they lay down as before, with their chins on their
+pillows, and again the row of great brown eyes confronted me.&nbsp;
+Deborah, Kaluna, and the women talked incessantly in loud shrill voices
+till Kaluna uttered the word <i>auw&eacute;</i> with a long groaning
+intonation, apparently signifying weariness, divested himself of his
+clothes and laid down on a mat alongside our shake-down, upon which
+we let down the dividing curtain and wrapped ourselves up as warmly
+as possible.</p>
+<p>I was uneasy about Deborah who had had a cough for some time, and
+consequently took the outside place under the window which was broken,
+and presently a large cat jumped through the hole and down upon me,
+followed by another and another, till five wild cats had effected an
+entrance, making me a stepping-stone to ulterior proceedings.&nbsp;
+Had there been a sixth I think I could not have borne the infliction
+quietly.&nbsp; Strips of jerked beef were hanging from the rafters,
+and by the light which was still burning I watched the cats climb up
+stealthily, seize on some of these, descend, and disappear through the
+window, making me a stepping-stone as before, but with all their craft
+they let some of the strips fall, which awoke Deborah, and next I saw
+Kaluna&rsquo;s magnificent eyes peering at us under the curtain.&nbsp;
+Then the natives got up, and smoked and eat more <i>poi</i> at intervals,
+and talked, and Kaluna and Deborah quarrelled, jokingly, about the time
+of night she told me, and the moon through the rain-clouds occasionally
+gave us delusive hopes of dawn, and I kept moving my place to get out
+of the drip from the roof, and so the night passed.&nbsp; I was amused
+all the time, though I should have preferred sleep to such nocturnal
+diversions.&nbsp; It was so new, and so odd, to be the only white person
+among eleven natives in a lonely house, and yet to be as secure from
+danger and annoyance as in our own home.</p>
+<p>At last a pale dawn did appear, but the rain was still coming down
+heavily, and our poor animals were standing dismally with their heads
+down and their tails turned towards the wind.&nbsp; Yesterday evening
+I took a change of clothes out of the damp saddle-bags, and put them
+into what I hoped was a dry place, but they were soaked, wetter even
+than those in which I had been sleeping, and my boots and Deborah&rsquo;s
+were so stiff, that we gladly availed ourselves of Kaluna&rsquo;s most
+willing services.&nbsp; The mode of washing was peculiar: he held a
+calabash with about half-a-pint of water in it, while we bathed our
+faces and hands, and all the natives looked on and tittered.&nbsp; This
+was apparently his idea of politeness, for no persuasion would induce
+him to put the bowl down on the mat, and Deborah evidently thought it
+was proper respect.&nbsp; We had a repetition of the same viands as
+the night before for breakfast, and, as before, the women lay with their
+chins on their pillows and stared at us.</p>
+<p>The rain ceased almost as soon as we started, and though it has not
+been a bright day, it has been very pleasant.&nbsp; There are no large
+gulches on to-day&rsquo;s journey.&nbsp; The track is mostly through
+long grass, over undulating uplands, with park-like clumps of trees,
+and thickets of guava and the exotic sumach.&nbsp; Different ferns,
+flowers, and vegetation, with much less luxuriance and little water,
+denoted a drier climate and a different soil.&nbsp; There are native
+churches at distances of six or seven miles all the way from Hilo, but
+they seem too large and too many for the scanty population.</p>
+<p>We moved on in single file at a jog-trot wherever the road admitted
+of it, meeting mounted natives now and then, which led to a delay for
+the exchange of <i>nuhou</i>; and twice we had to turn into the thicket
+to avoid what here seems to be considered a danger.&nbsp; There are
+many large herds of semi-wild bullocks on the mountains, branded cattle,
+as distinguished from the wild or unbranded, and when they are wanted
+for food, a number of experienced <i>vaccheros</i> on strong shod horses
+go up, and drive forty or fifty of them down.&nbsp; We met such a drove
+bound for Hilo, with one or two men in front and others at the sides
+and behind, uttering loud shouts.&nbsp; The bullocks are nearly mad
+with being hunted and driven, and at times rush like a living tornado,
+tearing up the earth with their horns.&nbsp; As soon as the galloping
+riders are seen and the crooked-horned beasts, you retire behind a screen.&nbsp;
+There must be some tradition of some one having been knocked down and
+hurt, for reckless as the natives are said to be, they are careful about
+this, and we were warned several times by travellers whom we met, that
+there were &ldquo;bullocks ahead.&rdquo;&nbsp; The law provides that
+the <i>vaccheros</i> shall station one of their number at the head of
+a gulch to give notice when cattle are to pass through.</p>
+<p>We jogged on again till we met a native who told us that we were
+quite close to our destination; but there were no signs of it, for we
+were still on the lofty uplands, and the only prominent objects were
+huge headlands confronting the sea.&nbsp; I got off to walk, as my mule
+seemed footsore, but had not gone many yards when we came suddenly to
+the verge of a <i>pali</i>, about 1,000 feet deep, with a narrow fertile
+valley below, with a yet higher <i>pali</i> on the other side, both
+abutting perpendicularly on the sea.&nbsp; I should think the valley
+is not more than three miles long, and it is walled in by high inaccessible
+mountains.&nbsp; It is in fact, a gulch on a vastly enlarged scale.&nbsp;
+The prospect below us was very charming, a fertile region perfectly
+level, protected from the sea by sandhills, watered by a winding stream,
+and bright with fishponds, meadow lands, <i>kalo</i> patches, orange
+and coffee groves, figs, breadfruit, and palms.&nbsp; There were a number
+of grass-houses, and a native church with a spire, and another up the
+valley testified to the energy and aggressiveness of Rome.&nbsp; We
+saw all this from the moment we reached the <i>pali</i>; and it enlarged,
+and the detail grew upon us with every yard of the laborious descent
+of broken craggy track, which is the only mode of access to the valley
+from the outer world.&nbsp; I got down on foot with difficulty; a difficulty
+much increased by the long rowels of my spurs, which caught on the rocks
+and entangled my dress, the simple expedient of taking them off not
+having occurred to me!</p>
+<p>A neat frame-house, with large stones between it and the river, was
+our destination.&nbsp; It belongs to a native named Halemanu, a great
+man in the district, for, besides being a member of the legislature,
+he is deputy sheriff.&nbsp; He is a man of property, also; and though
+he cannot speak a word of English, he is well educated in Hawaiian,
+and writes an excellent hand.&nbsp; I brought a letter of introduction
+to him from Mr. Severance, and we were at once received with every hospitality,
+our horses cared for, and ourselves luxuriously lodged.&nbsp; We walked
+up the valley before dark to get a view of a cascade, and found supper
+ready on our return.&nbsp; This is such luxury after last night.&nbsp;
+There is a very light bright sitting-room, with papered walls, and manilla
+matting on the floor, a round centre table with books and a photographic
+album upon it, two rocking-chairs, an office-desk, another table and
+chairs, and a Canadian lounge.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t imagine in what way
+this furniture was brought here.&nbsp; Our bedroom opens from this,
+and it actually has a four-post bedstead with mosquito bars, a lounge
+and two chairs, and the floor is covered with native matting.&nbsp;
+The washing apparatus is rather an anomaly, for it consists of a basin
+and crash towel placed in the verandah, in full view of fifteen people.&nbsp;
+The natives all bathe in the river.</p>
+<p>Halemanu has a cook house and native cook, and an eating-room, where
+I was surprised to find everything in foreign style--chairs, a table
+with a snow white cover, and table napkins, knives, forks, and even
+salt-cellars.&nbsp; I asked him to eat with us, and he used a knife
+and fork quite correctly, never, for instance, putting the knife into
+his mouth.&nbsp; I was amused to see him afterwards, sitting on a mat
+among his family and dependants, helping himself to <i>poi</i> from
+a calabash with his fingers.&nbsp; He gave us for supper delicious river
+fish fried, boiled <i>kalo</i>, and Waipio coffee with boiled milk.</p>
+<p>It is very annoying only to be able to converse with this man through
+an interpreter; and Deborah, as is natural, is rather unwilling to be
+troubled to speak English, now that she is among her own people.&nbsp;
+After supper we sat by candlelight in the parlour, and he showed me
+his photograph album.&nbsp; At eight he took a large Bible, put on glasses,
+and read a chapter in Hawaiian; after which he knelt and prayed with
+profound reverence of manner and tone.&nbsp; Towards the end I recognized
+the Hawaiian words for &ldquo;Our Father.&rdquo; <a name="citation148"></a><a href="#footnote148">{148}</a>&nbsp;
+Here in Waipio there is something pathetic in the idea of this Fatherhood,
+which is wider than the ties of kin and race.&nbsp; Even here not one
+is a stranger, an alien, a foreigner!&nbsp; And this man, so civilized
+and Christianized, only now in middle life, was, he said, &ldquo;a big
+boy when the first teachers came,&rdquo; and may very likely have witnessed
+horrors in the <i>heiau</i>, or temple, close by, of which little is
+left now.</p>
+<p>This bedroom is thoroughly comfortable.&nbsp; Kaluna wanted to sleep
+on the lounge here, probably because he is afraid of <i>akuas</i>, or
+spirits, but we have exiled him to a blanket on the parlour lounge.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER X.--(continued.)</h3>
+<p>We were thoroughly rested this morning, and very glad of a fine day
+for a visit to the great cascade which is rarely seen by foreigners.&nbsp;
+My mule was slightly galled with the girth, and having a strong fellow
+feeling with Elisha&rsquo;s servant, &ldquo;Alas, master, for it was
+borrowed!&rdquo; I have bought for $20 a pretty, light, half-broken
+bay mare, which I rode to-day and liked much.</p>
+<p>After breakfast, which was a repetition of last night&rsquo;s supper,
+we three, with Halemanu&rsquo;s daughter as guide, left on horseback
+for the waterfall, though the natives tried to dissuade us by saying
+that stones came down, and it was dangerous; also that people could
+not go in their clothes, there was so much wading.&nbsp; In deference
+to this last opinion, D. rode without boots, and I without stockings.&nbsp;
+We rode through the beautiful valley till we reached a deep gorge turning
+off from it, which opens out into a nearly circular chasm with walls
+2,000 feet in height, where we tethered our horses.&nbsp; A short time
+after leaving them, D. said, &ldquo;She says we can&rsquo;t go further
+in our clothes,&rdquo; but when the natives saw me plunge boldly into
+the river in my riding dress, which is really not unlike a fashionable
+Newport bathing suit, they thought better of it.&nbsp; It was a thoroughly
+rough tramp, wading ten times through the river, which was sometimes
+up to our knees, and sometimes to our waists, and besides the fighting
+among slippery rocks in rushing water, we had to crawl and slide up
+and down wet, mossy masses of dislodged rock, to push with eyes shut
+through wet jungles of Indian shot, guava, and a thorny vine, and sometimes
+to climb from tree to tree at a considerable height.&nbsp; When, after
+an hour&rsquo;s fighting we arrived in sight of the cascade, but not
+of the basin into which it falls, our pretty guide declined to go further,
+saying that the wind was rising, and that stones would fall and kill
+us, but being incredulous on this point, I left them, and with great
+difficulty and many bruises, got up the river to its exit from the basin,
+and there, being unable to climb the rocks on either side, stood up
+to my throat in the still tepid water till the scene became real to
+me.</p>
+<p>I do not care for any waterfall but Niagara, nor do I care in itself
+for this one, for though its first leap is 200 feet and its second 1,600,
+it is so frittered away and dissipated in spray, owing to the very magnitude
+of its descent, that there is no volume of water within sight to create
+mass or sound.&nbsp; But no words can paint the majesty of the surroundings,
+the caverned, precipitous walls of rock coming down in one black plunge
+from the blue sky above to the dark abyss of water below, the sullen
+shuddering sound with which pieces of rock came hurtling down among
+the trees, the thin tinkle of the water as it falls, the full rush of
+the river, the feathery growth of ferns, gigantic below, but so diminished
+by the height above, as only to show their presence by the green tinge
+upon the rocks, while in addition to the gloom produced by the stupendous
+height of the cliffs, there is a cool, green darkness of dense forest,
+and mighty trees of strange tropical forms glass themselves in the black
+mirror of the basin.&nbsp; For one moment a ray of sunshine turned the
+upper part of the spray into a rainbow, and never to my eyes had the
+bow of promise looked so heavenly as when it spanned the black, solemn,
+tree-shadowed abyss, whose deep, still waters only catch a sunbeam on
+five days of the year.</p>
+<p>I found the natives regaling themselves on <i>papaya</i>, and on
+live fresh-water shrimps, which they find in great numbers in the river.&nbsp;
+I remembered that white people at home calling themselves civilized,
+eat live, or at least raw, oysters, but the sight of these active, squirming
+shrimps struggling between the white teeth of my associates was yet
+more repulsive.</p>
+<p>We finished our adventurous expedition with limbs much bruised, as
+well as torn and scratched, and before we emerged from the chasm saw
+a rock dislodged, which came crashing down not far from us, carrying
+away an <i>ohia</i>.&nbsp; It is a gruesome and dowie den, but well
+worth a visit.</p>
+<p>We mounted again, and rode as far as we could up the valley, fording
+the river in deep water several times, and coming down the other side.&nbsp;
+The coffee trees in full blossom were very beautiful, and they, as well
+as the oranges, have escaped the blight which has fallen upon both in
+other parts of the island.&nbsp; In addition to the usual tropical productions,
+there were some very fine fig trees and thickets of the castor-oil plant,
+a very handsome shrub, when, as here, it grows to a height of from ten
+to twenty-two feet.&nbsp; The natives, having been joined by some Waipio
+women, rode at full gallop over all sorts of ground, and I enjoyed the
+speed of my mare without any apprehension of being thrown off.&nbsp;
+We rode among most extensive <i>kalo</i> plantations, and large artificial
+fish-ponds, in which hundreds of gold-fish were gleaming, and came back
+by the sea shore, green with the maritime convolvulus, and the smooth-bottomed
+river, which the Waipio folk use as a road.&nbsp; Canoes glide along
+it, brown-skinned men wade down it floating bundles of <i>kalo</i> after
+them, and strings of laden horses and mules follow each other along
+its still waters.&nbsp; I hear that in another and nearly unapproachable
+valley, a river serves the same purpose.&nbsp; While we were riding
+up it, a great gust lifted off its surface in fine spray, and almost
+blew us from our horses.&nbsp; Hawaii has no hurricanes, but at some
+hours of the day Waipio is subject to terrific gusts, which really justify
+the people in their objection to visiting the cascade.&nbsp; Some time
+ago, in one of these, this house was lifted up, carried twenty feet,
+and deposited in its present position.</p>
+<p>Supper was ready for us--<i>kalo</i>, yams, spatchcock, <i>poi</i>,
+coffee, rolls, and Oregon kippered salmon; and when I told Halemanu
+that the spatchcock and salmon reminded me of home, he was quite pleased,
+and said he would provide the same for breakfast to-morrow.</p>
+<p>The owner of the mare, which I have named &ldquo;Bessie Twinker,&rdquo;
+had willingly sold her to me, though I told him I could not pay him
+for her until I reached Onomea.&nbsp; I do not know what had caused
+my credit to suffer during my absence, but D., after talking long with
+him this evening, said to me, &ldquo;He says he can&rsquo;t let you
+have the horse, because when you&rsquo;ve taken it away, he thinks you
+will never send him the money.&rdquo;&nbsp; I told her indignantly to
+tell him that English women never cheated people, a broad and totally
+unsustainable assertion, which had the effect of satisfying the poor
+fellow.</p>
+<p>After Halemanu, Deborah, Kaluna, and a number of natives had eaten
+their <i>poi</i>, Halemanu brought in a very handsome silver candlestick,
+and expressed a wish that Deborah should interpret for us.&nbsp; He
+asked a great many sensible questions about England, specially about
+the state of the poor, the extent of the franchise, and the influence
+of religion.&nbsp; When he heard that I had spent some years in Scotland,
+he said, &ldquo;Do you know Mr. Wallace?&rdquo;&nbsp; I was quite puzzled,
+and tried to recall any man of that name who I had heard of as having
+visited Hawaii, when a happy flash of comprehension made me aware of
+his meaning, and I replied that I had seen his sword several times,
+but that he died long before I knew Scotland, and indeed before I was
+born; but that the Scotch held his memory in great veneration, and were
+putting up a monument to him.&nbsp; But for the mistake as to dates,
+he seemed to have the usual notions as to the exploits of Wallace.&nbsp;
+He deplores most deeply the dwindling of his people, and his manner
+became very sad about it.&nbsp; D. said, &ldquo;He&rsquo;s very unhappy;
+he says, soon there will be no more Kanakas.&rdquo;&nbsp; He told me
+that this beautiful valley was once very populous, and even forty years
+ago, when Mr. Ellis visited it, there were 1,300 people here.&nbsp;
+Now probably there are not more than 200.</p>
+<p>Here was the <i>Puhonua</i>, or place of refuge for all this part
+of the island.&nbsp; This, and the very complete one of Honaunau, on
+the other side of Hawaii, were the Hawaiian &ldquo;Cities of Refuge.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Could any tradition of the Mosaic ordinance on this subject have travelled
+hither?&nbsp; These two sanctuaries were absolutely inviolable.&nbsp;
+The gates stood perpetually open, and though the fugitive was liable
+to be pursued to their very threshold, he had no sooner crossed it than
+he was safe from king, chief, or avenger.&nbsp; These gates were wide,
+and some faced the sea, and others the mountains.&nbsp; Hither the murderer,
+the manslayer, the <i>tabu</i>-breaker fled, repaired to the presence
+of the idol, and thanked it for aiding him to reach the place of security.&nbsp;
+After a certain time the fugitives were allowed to return to their families,
+and none dared to injure those to whom the high gods had granted their
+protection.</p>
+<p>In time of war, tall spears from which white flags were unfurled,
+were placed at each end of the enclosure, and until the proclamation
+of peace invited the vanquished to enter.&nbsp; These flags were fixed
+a short distance outside the walls, and no pursuing warrior, even in
+the hot flush of victory, could pursue his routed foe one foot beyond.&nbsp;
+Within was the sacred pale of <i>pahu tabu</i>, and anyone attempting
+to strike his victim there would have been put to death by the priests
+and their adherents.&nbsp; In war time the children, old people, and
+many of the women of the neighbouring districts, were received within
+the enclosure, where they awaited the issue of the conflict in security,
+and were safe from violence in the event of defeat.&nbsp; These <i>puhonuas</i>
+contain pieces of stone weighing from two to three tons, raised six
+feet from the ground, and the walls, narrowing gradually towards the
+top, are fifteen feet wide at the base and twelve feet high.&nbsp; They
+are truly grand monuments of humanity in the midst of the barbarous
+institutions of heathenism, and it shows a considerable degree of enlightenment
+that even rebels in arms and fugitives from invading armies were safe,
+if they reached the sacred refuge, for the priests of <i>Keawe</i> knew
+no distinctions of party.</p>
+<p>In dreadful contrast to this place of mercy, there were some very
+large <i>heiaus</i> (or temples) here, on whose hideous altars eighty
+human sacrifices are said to have been offered at one time.&nbsp; One
+of the legends told me concerning this lovely valley is, that King Umi,
+having vanquished the kings of the six divisions of Hawaii, was sacrificing
+captives in one of these <i>heiaus</i>, when the voice of his god, <i>Kuahilo</i>,
+was heard from the clouds, demanding more slaughter.&nbsp; Fresh human
+blood streamed from the altars, but the insatiable demon continued to
+call for more, till Umi had sacrificed all the captives and all his
+own men but one, whom he at first refused to give up, as he was a great
+favourite, but <i>Kuahilo</i> thundered from heaven, till the favourite
+warrior was slain, and only the king and the sacrificing priest remained.</p>
+<p>This valley of the &ldquo;vanquished waters&rdquo; abounds in legends.&nbsp;
+Some of these are about a cruel monster, King Hooku, who lived here,
+and whose memory, so far as he is remembered, is much execrated.&nbsp;
+It is told of him that if a man were said to have a handsome head he
+sent some of his warriors to behead him, and then hacked and otherwise
+disfigured the face for a diversion.&nbsp; On one occasion he ordered
+a man&rsquo;s arm to be cut off and brought to him, simply because it
+was said to be more beautifully tattooed than his own.&nbsp; It is fifty-four
+years since the last human sacrifice was exposed on the Waipio altars,
+but there are several old people here who must have been at least thirty
+when Hawaii threw off idolatry for ever.&nbsp; Halemanu has again closed
+the evening with the simple worship of the true God.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XI.</h3>
+<p>HILO, HAWAII.</p>
+<p>There is a rumour that the king is coming as the guest of Admiral
+Pennock in the <i>Benicia</i>.&nbsp; If it turns out to be true, it
+will turn our quiet life upside down.</p>
+<p>We met with fearful adventures in the swollen gulches between Laupahoehoe
+and Onomea.&nbsp; It is difficult to begin my letter with the plain
+prose of our departure from Waipio, which we accomplished on the morning
+after I last wrote.&nbsp; On rising after a sound sleep, I found that
+my potted beef, which I had carefully hung from a nail the night before,
+had been almost carried away by small ants.&nbsp; These ants swarm in
+every house on low altitudes.&nbsp; They assemble in legions as if by
+magic, and by their orderly activity carry away all that they do not
+devour, of all eatables which have not been placed on tables which have
+rags dipped in a solution of corrosive sublimate wound round their legs.</p>
+<p>We breakfasted by lamplight, and because I had said that some of
+the viands reminded me of home, our kind host had provided them at that
+early hour.&nbsp; He absolutely refused to be paid anything for the
+accommodation of our party, and said he should be ashamed of himself
+if he took anything from a lady travelling without a husband.</p>
+<p>It was such a perfect morning.&nbsp; The full moon hung over the
+enclosing <i>palis</i>, gleaming on coffee and breadfruit groves, and
+on the surface of the river, which was just quivering under a soft sea
+breeze.&nbsp; The dew was heavy, smoke curled idly from native houses,
+the east was flushing with the dawn, and the valley looked the picture
+of perfect peace.&nbsp; A number of natives assembled to see us start,
+and they all shook hands with us, exchanging <i>alohas</i>, and presenting
+us with <i>leis</i> of roses and <i>ohias</i>.&nbsp; D. looked very
+pretty with a red hibiscus blossom in her shining hair.&nbsp; You would
+have been amused to see me shaking hands with men dressed only in <i>malos</i>,
+or in the short blue shirt reaching to the waist, much worn by them
+when at work.</p>
+<p>I rode my mare with some pride of proprietorship, and our baggage
+for a time was packed on the mule, and we started up the tremendous
+<i>pali</i> at the tail of a string of twenty mules and horses laden
+with <i>kalo</i>.&nbsp; This was in the form of <i>paiai</i>, or hard
+food, which is composed, as I think I mentioned before, of the root
+baked and pounded, but without water.&nbsp; It is put up in bundles
+wrapped in <i>ti</i> leaves, of from twenty to thirty pounds each, secured
+with cocoanut fibre, in which state it will keep for months, and much
+of the large quantity raised in Waipio is exported to the plantations,
+the Waimea ranches, and the neighbouring districts.&nbsp; A square mile
+of <i>kalo</i>, it is estimated, would feed 15,000 Hawaiians for a year.</p>
+<p>It was a beautiful view from the top of the <i>pali</i>.&nbsp; The
+white moon was setting, the earliest sunlight was lighting up the dewy
+depths of the lonely valley, reddening with a rich rose red the huge
+headland which forms one of its sentinels; heavy snow had fallen during
+the night on Mauna Kea, and his great ragged dome, snow-covered down
+to the forests, was blushing like an Alpine peak at the touch of the
+early sun.&nbsp; It ripened into a splendid joyous day, which redeemed
+the sweeping uplands of Hamakua from the dreariness which I had thought
+belonged to them.&nbsp; There was a fresh sea-breeze, and the sun, though
+unclouded, was not too hot.&nbsp; We halted for an early lunch at the
+clean grass-house we had stopped at before, and later in the afternoon
+at that of the woman with whom we had ridden from Hakalau, who received
+us very cordially, and regaled us with <i>poi</i> and pork.</p>
+<p>In order to avoid the amenities of Bola Bola&rsquo;s we rode thirty-four
+miles, and towards evening descended the tremendous steep, which leads
+to the surf-deafened village of Laupahoehoe.&nbsp; Halemanu had given
+me a note of introduction to a widow named Honolulu, which Deborah said
+began thus, &ldquo;As I know that you have the only clean house in L,&rdquo;
+and on presenting it we were made very welcome.&nbsp; Besides the widow,
+a very redundant beauty, there were her two brothers and two male cousins,
+and all bestirred themselves in our service, the men in killing and
+cooking the supper, and the woman in preparing the beds.&nbsp; It was
+quite a large room, with doors at the end and side, and fully a third
+was curtained off by a calico curtain, with a gorgeous Cr&eacute;tonne
+pattern upon it.&nbsp; I was delighted to see a four-post bed, with
+mosquito bars, and a clean <i>pulu</i> mattrass, with a linen sheet
+over it, covered with a beautiful quilt with a quaint arabesque pattern
+on a white ground running round it, and a wreath of green leaves in
+the centre.&nbsp; The native women exercise the utmost ingenuity in
+the patterns and colours of these quilts.&nbsp; Some of them are quite
+works of art.&nbsp; The materials, which are plain and printed cottons,
+cost about $8, and a complete quilt is worth from $18 to $50.&nbsp;
+The widow took six small pillows, daintily covered with silk, out of
+a chest, the uses of which were not obvious, as two large pillows were
+already on the bed.&nbsp; It was astonishing to see a native house so
+handsomely furnished in so poor a place.&nbsp; The mats on the floor
+were numerous and very fine.&nbsp; There were two tables, several chairs,
+a bureau with a swinging mirror upon it, a basin, crash towels, a carafe
+and a kerosene lamp.&nbsp; It is all very well to be able to rough it,
+and yet better to enjoy doing so, but such luxuries add much to one&rsquo;s
+contentment after eleven hours in the saddle.</p>
+<p>Honolulu wore a green chemise at first, but when supper was ready
+she put a Macgregor tartan <i>holuku</i> over it.&nbsp; The men were
+very active, and cooked the fowl in about the same time that it takes
+to pluck one at home.&nbsp; They spread the finest mat I have seen in
+the centre of the floor as a tablecloth, and put down on it bowls containing
+the fowl and sweet potatoes, and the unfailing calabash of <i>poi</i>.&nbsp;
+Tea, coffee and milk were not procurable, and as the water is slimy
+and brackish, I offered a boy a dime to get me a cocoanut, and presently
+eight great, misshapen things were rolled down at the door.&nbsp; The
+outside is a smooth buff rind, underneath which is a fibrous covering,
+enormously strong and about an inch thick, which when stripped off reveals
+the nut as we see it, but of a very pale colour.&nbsp; Those we opened
+were quite young, and each contained nearly three tumblers of almost
+effervescent, very sweet, slightly acidulated, perfectly limpid water,
+with a strong flavour of cocoanut.&nbsp; It is a delicious beverage.&nbsp;
+The meat was so thin and soft that it could have been spooned out like
+the white of an egg if we had had any spoons.&nbsp; We all sat cross-legged
+round our meal, and all Laupahoehoe crowded into the room and verandah
+with the most persistent, unwinking, gimleting stare I ever saw.&nbsp;
+It was really unpleasant, not only to hear a Babel of talking, of which,
+judging from the constant repetition of the words <i>wahine haole</i>,
+I was the subject, but to have to eat under the focussed stare of twenty
+pair of eyes.&nbsp; My folding camp-knife appears an object of great
+interest, and it was handed round, inside and outside the house.&nbsp;
+When I retired about seven, the assemblage was still in full session.</p>
+<p>The stars were then bright, but when I woke the next morning a strong
+breeze was blowing, the surf was roaring so loud as almost to drown
+human voices, and rolling up in gigantic surges, and to judge from appearances,
+the rain which was falling in torrents had been falling for some hours.&nbsp;
+There was much buzzing among the natives regarding our prospects for
+the day.&nbsp; I shall always think from their tone and manner, and
+the frequent repetition of the names of the three worst gulches, that
+the older men tried to dissuade us from going; but Deborah, who was
+very anxious to be at home by Sunday, said that the verdict was that
+if we started at once for our ride of twenty-three miles we might reach
+Onomea before the freshet came on.&nbsp; This might have been the case
+had it not been for Kaluna.&nbsp; Not only was his horse worn out, but
+nothing would induce him to lead the mule, and she went off on foraging
+expeditions continually, which further detained us.&nbsp; Kaluna had
+grown quite polite in his savage way.&nbsp; He always insisted on putting
+on and taking off my boots, carried me once through the Waipio river,
+helped me to pack the saddle-bags, and even offered to brush my hair!&nbsp;
+He frequently brought me guavas on the road, saying, &ldquo;eat,&rdquo;
+and often rode up, saying interrogatively, &ldquo;tired?&rdquo; &ldquo;cold?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+D. told me that he was very tired, and I was very sorry for him, for
+he was so thinly and poorly dressed, and the natives are not strong
+enough to bear exposure to cold as we can, and a temperature at 68&deg;
+is cold to them.&nbsp; But he was quite incorrigible, and thrashed his
+horse to the last.</p>
+<p>We breakfasted on fowl, <i>poi</i>, and cocoanut milk, in presence
+of even a larger number of spectators than the night before, one of
+them a very old man looking savagely picturesque, with a red blanket
+tied round his waist, leaving his lean chest and arms, which were elaborately
+tattooed, completely exposed.</p>
+<p>The mule had been slightly chafed by the gear, and in my anxiety
+about a borrowed animal, of which Mr. Austin makes a great joke, I put
+my saddle-bags on my own mare, in an evil hour, and not only these,
+but some fine cocoanuts, tied up in a waterproof which had long ago
+proved its worthlessness.&nbsp; It was a grotesquely miserable picture.&nbsp;
+The house is not far from the beach, and the surf, beyond which a heavy
+mist hung, was coming in with such a tremendous sound that we had to
+shout at the top of our voices in order to be heard.&nbsp; The sides
+of the great gulch rose like prison walls, cascades which had no existence
+the previous night hurled themselves from the summit of the cliffs directly
+into the sea, the rain, which fell in sheets, not drops, covered the
+ground to the depth of two or three inches, and dripped from the wretched,
+shivering horses, which stood huddled together with their tails between
+their legs.&nbsp; My thin flannel suit was wet through even before we
+mounted.&nbsp; I dispensed with stockings, as I was told that wearing
+them in rain chills and stiffens the limbs.&nbsp; D., about whom I was
+anxious, as well as about the mule, had a really waterproof cloak, and
+I am glad to say has quite lost the cough from which she suffered before
+our expedition.&nbsp; She does not care about rain any more than I do.</p>
+<p>We soon reached the top of the worst and dizziest of all the <i>palis</i>,
+and then splashed on mile after mile, down sliding banks, and along
+rocky tracks, from which the soil had been completely carried, the rain
+falling all the time.&nbsp; In some places several feet of soil had
+been carried away, and we passed through water-rents, the sides of which
+were as high as our horses&rsquo; heads, where the ground had been level
+a few days before.&nbsp; By noon the aspect of things became so bad
+that I wished we had a white man with us, as I was uneasy about some
+of the deepest gulches.&nbsp; When four hours&rsquo; journey from Onomea,
+Kaluna&rsquo;s horse broke down, and he left us to get another, and
+we rode a mile out of our way to visit Deborah&rsquo;s grandparents.</p>
+<p>Her uncle carried us across some water to their cook-house, where,
+happily, a <i>kalo</i> baking had just been accomplished, in a hole
+in the ground, lined with stones, among which the embers were still
+warm.&nbsp; In this very small hut, in which a man could hardly stand
+upright, there were five men only dressed in <i>malos</i>, four women,
+two of them very old, much tattooed, and huddled up in blankets, two
+children, five pertinaciously sociable dogs, two cats, and heaps of
+things of different kinds.&nbsp; They are a most gregarious people,
+always visiting each other, and living in each other&rsquo;s houses,
+and so hospitable that no Hawaiian, however poor, will refuse to share
+his last mouthful of <i>poi</i> with a stranger of his own race.&nbsp;
+These people looked very poor, but probably were not really so, as they
+had a nice grass-house, with very fine mats, within a few yards.</p>
+<p>A man went out, cut off the head of a fowl, singed it in the flame,
+cut it into pieces, put it into a pot to boil, and before our feet were
+warm the bird was cooked, and we ate it out of the pot with some baked
+<i>kalo</i>.&nbsp; D. took me out to see some mango trees, and a pond
+filled with gold-fish, which she said had been hers when she was a child.&nbsp;
+She seemed very fond of her relatives, among whom she looked like a
+fairy princess; and I think they admired her very much, and treated
+her with some deference.&nbsp; The object of our visit was to procure
+a <i>l&eacute;</i> of birds&rsquo; feathers which they had been making
+for her, and for which I am sure 300 birds must have been sacrificed.&nbsp;
+It was a very beautiful as well as costly ornament, <a name="citation165"></a><a href="#footnote165">{165}</a>
+and most ingeniously packed for travelling by being laid at full length
+within a slender cylinder of bamboo.</p>
+<p>We rode on again, somewhat unwillingly on my part, for though I thought
+my apprehensions might be cowardly and ignorant, yet D. was but a child,
+and had the attractive wilfulness of childhood, and she was, I saw,
+determined to get back to her husband, and the devotion and affection
+of the young wife were so pleasant to see, that I had not the heart
+to offer serious opposition to her wishes, especially as I knew that
+I might be exaggerating the possible peril.&nbsp; I gathered, however,
+from what she said, that her people wanted us to remain until Monday,
+especially as none of them could go with us, their horses being at some
+distance.&nbsp; I thought it a sign of difficulties ahead, that on one
+of the most frequented tracks in Hawaii, we had not met a single traveller,
+though it was Saturday, a special travelling day.</p>
+<p>We crossed one gulch in which the water was strong, and up to our
+horses&rsquo; bodies, and came upon the incorrigible Kaluna, who, instead
+of catching his horse, was recounting his adventures to a circle of
+natives, but promised to follow us soon.&nbsp; D. then said that the
+next gulch was rather a bad one, and that we must not wait for Kaluna,
+but ride fast, and try to get through it.&nbsp; When we reached the
+<i>pali</i> above it, we heard the roaring of a torrent, and when we
+descended to its brink it looked truly bad, but D. rode in, and I waited
+on the margin.&nbsp; She got safely across, but when she was near the
+opposite side her large horse plunged, slipped, and scrambled in a most
+unpleasant way, and she screamed something to me which I could not hear.&nbsp;
+Then I went in, and</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;At the first plunge the horse
+sank low,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the water broke
+o&rsquo;er the saddle bow:&rdquo;</p>
+<p>but the brave animal struggled through, with the water up to the
+top of her back, till she reached the place where D.&rsquo;s horse had
+looked so insecure.&nbsp; In another moment she and I rolled backwards
+into deep water, as if she had slipped from a submerged rock.&nbsp;
+I saw her fore feet pawing the air, and then only her head was above
+water.&nbsp; I struck her hard with my spurs, she snorted, clawed, made
+a desperate struggle, regained her footing, got into shallow water,
+and landed safely.&nbsp; It was a small but not an agreeable adventure.</p>
+<p>We went on again, the track now really dangerous from denudation
+and slipperiness.&nbsp; The rain came down, if possible, yet more heavily,
+and coursed fiercely down each <i>pali</i> track.&nbsp; Hundreds of
+cascades leapt from the cliffs, bringing down stones with a sharp rattling
+sound.&nbsp; We crossed a bridge over one gulch, where the water was
+thundering down in such volume that it seemed as if it must rend the
+hard basalt of the <i>palis</i>.&nbsp; Then we reached the lofty top
+of the great Hakalau gulch, the largest of all, with the double river,
+and the ocean close to the ford.&nbsp; Mingling with the deep reverberations
+of the surf, I heard the sharp crisp rush of a river, and of &ldquo;a
+river that has no bridge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The dense foliage, and the exigencies of the steep track, which had
+become very difficult, owing to the washing away of the soil, prevented
+me from seeing anything till I got down.&nbsp; I found Deborah speaking
+to a native, who was gesticulating very emphatically, and pointing up
+the river.&nbsp; The roar was deafening, and the sight terrific.&nbsp;
+Where there were two shallow streams a week ago, with a house and good-sized
+piece of ground above their confluence, there was now one spinning,
+rushing, chafing, foaming river, twice as wide as the Clyde at Glasgow,
+the land was submerged, and, if I remember correctly, the house only
+stood above the flood.&nbsp; And, most fearful to look upon, the ocean,
+in three huge breakers, had come quite in, and its mountains of white
+surge looked fearfully near the only possible crossing.&nbsp; I entreated
+D. not to go on.&nbsp; She said we could not go back, that the last
+gulch was already impassable, that between the two there was no house
+in which we could sleep, that the river had a good bottom, that the
+man thought if our horses were strong we could cross now, but not later,
+etc.&nbsp; In short, she overbore all opposition, and plunged in, calling
+to me, &ldquo;spur, spur, all the time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Just as I went in, I took my knife and cut open the cloak which contained
+the cocoanuts, one only remaining.&nbsp; Deborah&rsquo;s horse I knew
+was strong, and shod, but my unshod and untried mare, what of her?&nbsp;
+My soul and senses literally reeled among the dizzy horrors of the wide,
+wild tide, but with an effort I regained sense and self-possession,
+for we were in, and there was no turning.&nbsp; D., ahead, screeched
+to me what I could not hear; she said afterwards it was &ldquo;spur,
+spur, and keep up the river;&rdquo; the native was shrieking in Hawaiian
+from the hinder shore, and waving to the right, but the torrents of
+rain, the crash of the breakers, and the rush and hurry of the river
+confused both sight and hearing.&nbsp; I saw D.&rsquo;s great horse
+carried off his legs, my mare, too, was swimming, and shortly afterwards,
+between swimming, struggling, and floundering, we reached what had been
+the junction of the two rivers, where there was foothold, and the water
+was only up to the seat of the saddles.</p>
+<p>Remember, we were both sitting nearly up to our waists in water,
+and it was only by screaming that our voices were heard above the din,
+and to return or go on seemed equally perilous.&nbsp; Under these critical
+circumstances the following colloquy took place, on my side, with teeth
+chattering, and on hers, with a sudden forgetfulness of English produced
+by her first sense of the imminent danger we were in.</p>
+<p><i>Self</i>.--&ldquo;My mare is so tired, and so heavily weighted,
+we shall be drowned, or I shall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>Deborah</i> (with more reason on her side).--&ldquo;But can&rsquo;t
+go back, we no stay here, water higher all minutes, spur horse, think
+we come through.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>Self</i>.--&ldquo;But if we go on there is broader, deeper water
+between us and the shore; your husband would not like you to run such
+a risk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>Deborah</i>.--&ldquo;Think we get through, if horses give out,
+we let go; I swim and save you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even under these circumstances a gleam of the ludicrous shot through
+me at the idea of this small fragile being bearing up my weight among
+the breakers.&nbsp; I attempted to shift my saddle-bags upon her powerful
+horse, but being full of water and under water, the attempt failed,
+and as we spoke both our horses were carried off their vantage ground
+into deep water.</p>
+<p>With wilder fury the river rushed by, its waters whirled dizzily,
+and, in spite of spurring and lifting with the rein, the horses were
+swept seawards.&nbsp; It was a very fearful sight.&nbsp; I saw Deborah&rsquo;s
+horse spin round, and thought woefully of the possible fate of the bright
+young wife, almost a bride; only the horses&rsquo; heads and our own
+heads and shoulders were above water; the surf was thundering on our
+left, and we were drifting towards it &ldquo;broadside on.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+When I saw the young girl&rsquo;s face of horror I felt increased presence
+of mind, and raising my voice to a shriek, and telling her to do as
+I did, I lifted and turned my mare with the rein, so that her chest
+and not her side should receive the force of the river, and the brave
+animal, as if seeing what she should do, struck out desperately.&nbsp;
+It was a horrible suspense.&nbsp; Were we stemming the torrent, or was
+it sweeping us back that very short distance which lay between us and
+the mountainous breakers?&nbsp; I constantly spurred my mare, guiding
+her slightly to the left, the side grew nearer, and after exhausting
+struggles, Deborah&rsquo;s horse touched ground, and her voice came
+faintly towards me like a voice in a dream, still calling &ldquo;Spur,
+spur.&rdquo;&nbsp; My mare touched ground twice, and was carried off
+again before she fairly got to land some yards nearer the sea than the
+bridle track.</p>
+<p>When our tired horses were taking breath I felt as if my heart stopped,
+and I trembled all over, for we had narrowly escaped death.&nbsp; I
+then put our saddle-bags on Deborah&rsquo;s horse.&nbsp; It was one
+of the worst and steepest of the <i>palis</i> that we had to ascend;
+but I can&rsquo;t remember anything about the road except that we had
+to leap some place which we could not cross otherwise.&nbsp; Deborah,
+then thoroughly alive to a sense of risk, said that there was only one
+more bad gulch to cross before we reached Onomea, but it was the most
+dangerous of all, and we could not get across, she feared, but we might
+go and look at it.&nbsp; I only remember the extreme solitude of the
+region, and scrambling and sliding down a most precipitous <i>pali</i>,
+hearing a roar like cataract upon cataract, and coming suddenly down
+upon a sublime and picturesque scene, with only standing room, and that
+knee-deep in water, between a savage torrent and the cliff.&nbsp; This
+gulch, called the Scotchman&rsquo;s gulch, I am told, because a Scotchman
+was drowned there, must be at its crossing three-quarters of a mile
+inland, and three hundred feet above the sea.&nbsp; In going to Waipio,
+on noticing the deep holes and enormous boulders, some of them higher
+than a man on horseback, I had thought what a fearful place it would
+be if it were ever full; but my imagination had not reached the reality.&nbsp;
+One huge compressed impetuous torrent, leaping in creamy foam, boiling
+in creamy eddies, rioting in deep black chasms, roared and thundered
+over the whole in rapids of the most tempestuous kind, leaping down
+to the ocean in three grand broad cataracts, the nearest of them not
+more than forty feet from the crossing.&nbsp; Imagine the Moriston at
+the Falls, four times as wide and fifty times as furious, walled in
+by precipices, and with a miniature Niagara above and below, and you
+have a feeble illustration of it.</p>
+<p>Portions of two or three rocks only could be seen, and on one of
+these, about twelve feet from the shore, a nude native, beautifully
+tattooed, with a lasso in his hands, was standing nearly up to his knees
+in foam; and about a third of the way from the other side, another native
+in deeper water, steadying himself by a pole.&nbsp; A young woman on
+horseback, whose near relative was dangerously ill at Hilo, was jammed
+under the cliff, and the men were going to get her across.&nbsp; Deborah,
+to my dismay, said that if she got safely over we would go too, as these
+natives were very skilful.&nbsp; I asked if she thought her husband
+would let her cross, and she said &ldquo;No.&rdquo;&nbsp; I asked her
+if she were frightened, and she said &ldquo;Yes;&rdquo; but she wished
+so to get home, and her face was as pale as a brown face can be.&nbsp;
+I only hope the man will prove worthy of her affectionate devotion.</p>
+<p>Here, though people say it is a most perilous gulch, I was not afraid
+for her life or mine, with the amphibious natives to help us; but I
+was sorely afraid of being bruised, and scarred, and of breaking the
+horses&rsquo; legs, and I said I would not cross, but would sleep among
+the trees; but the tumult drowned our voices, though the Hawaiians by
+screeching could make themselves understood.&nbsp; The nearest man then
+approached the shore, put the lasso round the nose of the woman&rsquo;s
+horse, and dragged it into the torrent; and it was exciting to see a
+horse creeping from rock to rock in a cataract with alarming possibilities
+in every direction.&nbsp; But beasts may well be bold, as they have
+not &ldquo;the foreknowledge of death.&rdquo;&nbsp; When the nearest
+native had got the horse as far as he could, he threw the lasso to the
+man who was steadying himself with the pole, and urged the horse on.&nbsp;
+There was a deep chasm between the two into which the animal fell, as
+he tried to leap from one rock to another.&nbsp; I saw for a moment
+only a woman&rsquo;s head and shoulders, a horse&rsquo;s head, a commotion
+of foam, a native tugging at the lasso, and then a violent scramble
+on to a rock, and a plunging and floundering through deep water to shore.</p>
+<p>Then Deborah said she would go, that her horse was a better and stronger
+one; and the same process was repeated with the same slip into the chasm,
+only with the variation that for a second she went out of sight altogether.&nbsp;
+It was a terribly interesting and exciting spectacle with sublime accompaniments.&nbsp;
+Though I had no fear of absolute danger, yet my mare was tired, and
+I had made up my mind to remain on that side till the flood abated;
+but I could not make the natives understand that I wished to turn, and
+while I was screaming &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; and trying to withdraw my
+stiffened limbs from the stirrups, the noose was put round the mare&rsquo;s
+nose, and she went in.&nbsp; It was horrible to know that into the chasm
+as the others went I too must go, and in the mare went with a blind
+plunge.&nbsp; With violent plunging and struggling she got her fore
+feet on the rock, but just as she was jumping up to it altogether she
+slipped back snorting into the hole, and the water went over my eyes.&nbsp;
+I struck her with my spurs, the men screeched and shouted, the hinder
+man jumped in, they both tugged at the lasso, and slipping and struggling,
+the animal gained the rock, and plunged through deep water to shore,
+the water covering that rock with a rush of foam, being fully two feet
+deep.</p>
+<p>Kaluna came up just after we had crossed, undressed, made his clothes
+into a bundle, and got over amphibiously, leaping, swimming, and diving,
+looking like a water-god, with the horse and mule after him.&nbsp; His
+dexterity was a beautiful sight; but on looking back I wondered how
+human beings ever devised to cross such a flood.&nbsp; We got over just
+in time.&nbsp; Some travellers who reached Laupahoehoe shortly after
+we left, more experienced than we were, suffered a two days&rsquo; detention
+rather than incur a similar risk.&nbsp; Several mules and horses, they
+say, have had their legs broken in crossing this gulch by getting them
+fast between the rocks.</p>
+<p>Shortly after this, Deborah uttered a delighted exclamation, and
+her pretty face lighted up, and I saw her husband spurring along the
+top of the next <i>pali</i>, and he presently joined us, and I exchanged
+my tired mare for his fresh, powerful horse.&nbsp; He knew that a freshet
+was imminent, and believing that we should never leave Laupahoehoe,
+he was setting off, provided with tackle for getting himself across,
+intending to join us, and remain with us till the rivers fell.&nbsp;
+The presence of a responsible white man seemed a rest at once.&nbsp;
+We had several more gulches to cross, but none of them were dangerous;
+and we rode the last seven miles at a great pace, though the mire and
+water were often up to the horses&rsquo; knees, and came up to Onomea
+at full gallop, with spirit and strength enough for riding other twenty
+miles.&nbsp; Dry clothing, hot baths, and good tea followed delightfully
+upon our drowning ride.&nbsp; I remained over Sunday at Onomea, and
+yesterday rode here with a native in heavy rain, and received a warm
+welcome.&nbsp; Our adventures are a nine days&rsquo; wonder, and every
+one says that if we had had a white man or an experienced native with
+us, we should never have been allowed to attempt the perilous ride.&nbsp;
+I feel very thankful that we are living to tell of it, and that Deborah
+is not only not worse but considerably better.&nbsp; E--- will expect
+some reflections; but none were suggested at the time, and I will not
+now invent what I ought to have thought and felt.</p>
+<p>Due honour must be given to the Mexican saddle.&nbsp; Had I been
+on a side-saddle, and encumbered with a riding-habit, I should have
+been drowned.&nbsp; I feel able now to ride anywhere and any distance
+upon it, while Miss Karpe, who began by being much stronger than I was,
+has never recovered from the volcano ride, and seems quite ill.</p>
+<p>Last night Kilauea must have been tremendously active.&nbsp; At ten
+P.M., from the upper verandah, we saw the whole western sky fitfully
+illuminated, and the glare reddened the snow which is lying on Mauna
+Loa, an effect of fire on ice which can rarely be seen.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XII.</h3>
+<p>HILO, February 22.</p>
+<p>My sojourn here is very pleasant, owing to the kindness and sociability
+of the people.&nbsp; I think that so much culture and such a variety
+of refined tastes can seldom be found in so small a community.&nbsp;
+There have been pleasant little gatherings for sewing, while some gentlemen
+read aloud, fern-printing in the verandah, microscopic and musical evenings,
+little social luncheons, and on Sunday evenings what is colloquially
+termed, &ldquo;a sing,&rdquo; at this most social house.&nbsp; One of
+the things I have specially enjoyed has been spending an afternoon at
+the Rev. Titus Coan&rsquo;s.&nbsp; He is not only one of the most venerable
+of the remaining missionaries, but such an authority on the Hawaiian
+volcanoes as to entitle him to be designated &ldquo;the high-priest
+of P&eacute;l&eacute;!&rdquo;&nbsp; In his modest, quiet way he told
+thrilling stories of the old missionary days.</p>
+<p>As you know, the islands cast off idolatry in 1819, but it was not
+till 1835 that Mr. and Mrs. Coan arrived in Hilo, where Mr. and Mrs.
+Lyman had been toiling for some time, and had produced a marked change
+on the social condition of the people.&nbsp; Mr. C. was a fervid speaker,
+and physically very robust, and when he had mastered the language, he
+undertook much of the travelling and touring, and Mr. Lyman took charge
+of the home mission station, and the boarding and industrial school
+which he still indefatigably superintends.&nbsp; There were 15,000 natives
+then in the district, and its extremes were 100 miles apart.&nbsp; Portions
+of it could only be reached with peril to limbs and even life.&nbsp;
+Horses were only regarded as wild animals in those days, and Mr. C.
+traversed on foot the district I have just returned from, not lazily
+riding down the gulch sides, but climbing, or being let down by ropes
+from tree to tree, and from crag to crag.&nbsp; In times of rain like
+last week, when it was impossible to ford the rivers, he sometimes swam
+across, with a rope to prevent him from being carried away, through
+others he rode on the broad shoulders of a willing native, while a company
+of strong men locked hands and stretched themselves across the torrent,
+between him and the cataract, to prevent him from being carried over
+in case his bearer should fall.&nbsp; This experience was often repeated
+three or four times a day.&nbsp; His smallest weekly number of sermons
+was six or seven, and the largest from twenty-five to thirty.&nbsp;
+He often travelled in drowning rain, crossed dangerous streams, climbed
+slippery precipices, and frequently preached in wind and rain with all
+his garments saturated.&nbsp; On every occasion he received aid from
+the natives, who were so kind and friendly, that when he used to sleep
+in the woods at night, he hung his watch on a tree, knowing that it
+was perfectly safe from pilfering or curious touch.&nbsp; Indeed the
+Christian teachers seem to have been regarded as <i>tabu</i>.</p>
+<p>Before the end of that year, Mr. Coan had made the circuit of Hawaii,
+a foot and canoe trip of 300 miles, in which he nearly suffered canoe-wreck
+twice.&nbsp; In all, he has admitted into the Christian church by baptism,
+12,000 persons, besides 4000 infants.&nbsp; He gave a most interesting
+account of one great baptism.&nbsp; The greatest care was previously
+taken in selecting, teaching, watching, and examining the candidates.&nbsp;
+Those from the distant villages came and spent several months here for
+preliminary instruction.&nbsp; Many of these were converts of two years&rsquo;
+standing, a larger class had been on the list for more than a year,
+and a smaller one for a lesser period.&nbsp; The accepted candidates
+were announced by name several weeks previously, and friends and enemies
+everywhere were called upon to testify all that they knew about them.&nbsp;
+On the first Sunday in July, 1838, 1705 persons, formerly heathens,
+were baptised.&nbsp; They were seated close together on the earth-floor
+in rows, with just space between for one to walk, and Mr. Lyman and
+Mr. Coan passing through them, sprinkled every bowed head, after which
+Mr. C. admitted the weeping hundreds into the fellowship of the Universal
+Church by pronouncing the words, &ldquo;I baptise you all in the Name
+of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.&rdquo;&nbsp; After
+this, 2400 converts received the Holy Communion.&nbsp; I give Mr. C.&rsquo;s
+own words concerning those who partook of it, &ldquo;who truly and earnestly
+repented of their sins, and steadfastly purposed to lead new lives.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The old and decrepit, the lame, the blind, the maimed, the withered,
+the paralytic, and those afflicted with divers diseases and torments;
+those with eyes, noses, lips, and limbs consumed; with features distorted,
+and figures depraved and loathsome: these came hobbling upon their staves,
+or led and borne by others to the table of the Lord.&nbsp; Among the
+throng you would have seen the hoary priest of idolatry, with hands
+but recently washed from the blood of human victims, together with thieves,
+adulterers, highway robbers, murderers, and mothers whose hands reeked
+with the blood of their own children.&nbsp; It seemed like one of the
+crowds the Saviour gathered, and over which He pronounced the words
+of healing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though the people cast off idolatry in 1819, before the arrival of
+the missionaries, they were very indifferent to Christian teaching until
+1837, the year before the great baptism, when a great religious stir
+began, and for four years affected all the islands.&nbsp; I wish you
+could have heard Mr. C. and Mrs. Lyman tell of that stirring time, when
+nearly all the large population of the Hilo and Puna districts turned
+out to hear the Gospel, and how the young people went up into the mountains
+and carried the news of the love of God and the good life to come to
+the sick and old, who were afterwards baptized, when often the only
+water which could be obtained for the rite was that which dripped sparingly
+from the roofs of caves.&nbsp; The Hawaiian notions of a future state,
+where any existed, were peculiarly vague and dismal, and Mr. Ellis says
+that the greater part of the people seemed to regard the tidings of
+<i>ora loa ia Jesu</i> (endless life by Jesus) as the most joyful news
+they had ever heard, &ldquo;breaking upon them,&rdquo; to use their
+own phrase, &ldquo;like light in the morning.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Will
+my spirit never die, and can this poor weak body live again?&rdquo;
+an old chiefess exclaimed, and this delighted surprise seemed the general
+feeling of the natives.&nbsp; From less difficult distances the sick
+and lame were brought on litters and on the backs of men, and the infirm
+often crawled to the trail by which the missionary was to pass, that
+they might hear of this good news which had come to Hawaii-nei.</p>
+<p>There were but these two preachers for the 15,000 people scattered
+for 100 miles, who were all ravenous to hear, and could not wait for
+the tardy modes of evangelization. &ldquo;If we die,&rdquo; said they,
+&ldquo;let us die in the light.&rdquo;&nbsp; So this strange thing fell
+out, that whole villages from miles away gathered to the mission station.&nbsp;
+Two-thirds of the population of the district came in, and within the
+radius of a mile the grass and banana houses clustered as thick as they
+could stand.&nbsp; Beautiful Hilo in a short time swelled from a population
+of 1000 to 10,000; and at any hour of the day or night the sound of
+the conch shell brought together from 3000 to 6000 worshippers.&nbsp;
+It was a vast camp-meeting which continued for two years, but there
+was no disorder, and a decent quiet ruled throughout the strangely extemporized
+city.&nbsp; A new morality, a new social order, new notions on nearly
+all subjects, had to be inculcated as well as a new religion.&nbsp;
+Mrs. C. and Mrs. L. daily assembled the women and children, and taught
+them the habits and industries of civilization, to attend to their persons,
+to braid hats, and to wear and make clothes.</p>
+<p>During this time, on November 7, 1837, one of the striking phenomena
+which make the islands remarkable occurred.&nbsp; The crescent sand-beach,
+said to be the most beautiful in the Pacific, the fringe of palms, the
+far-reaching groves behind, and the great ocean, slept in summer calm,
+as they sleep to-day.&nbsp; Four sermons, as usual, had been preached
+to audiences of 6000 people.&nbsp; There had been a funeral, the natives
+say, though Mr. C. does not remember it, and his text had been &ldquo;Be
+ye also ready,&rdquo; and larger throngs than usual had followed the
+preachers to their homes.&nbsp; The fatiguing day was over, the natives
+were singing hymns in the still evening air, and Mr. C. &ldquo;had gathered
+his family for prayers&rdquo; in the very room in which he told me this
+story, when they were startled by &ldquo;a sound as if a heavy mountain
+had fallen on the beach.&rdquo;&nbsp; There was at once a fearful cry,
+wailing, and indescribable confusion.&nbsp; The quiet ocean had risen
+in a moment in a gigantic wave, which, rushing in with the speed of
+a racehorse, and uplifting itself over the shore, swept everything into
+promiscuous ruin; men, women, children, dogs, houses, food, canoes,
+clothing, floated wildly on the flood, and hundreds of people were struggling
+among the billows in the midst of their earthly all.&nbsp; Some were
+dashed on the shore, some were saved by friends who hurried to their
+aid, some were carried out to sea by the retiring water, and some stout
+swimmers sank exhausted; yet the loss of life was not nearly so great
+as it would have been among a less amphibious people.&nbsp; Mr. C. described
+the roaring of the ocean, the cries of distress, the shrieks of the
+perishing, the frantic rush of hundreds to the shore, and the desolation
+of the whole neighbourhood of the beach, as forming a scene of the most
+thrilling and awful interest.</p>
+<p>You will remember that I wrote from Kilauea regarding the terror
+which the Goddess of the Crater inspired, and her high-priest was necessarily
+a very awful personage.&nbsp; The particular high-priest of whom Mr.
+Coan told me was six feet five inches in height, and his sister, who
+was co-ordinate with him in authority, had a scarcely inferior altitude.&nbsp;
+His chief business was to keep P&eacute;l&eacute; appeased.&nbsp; He
+lived on the shore, but often went up to Kilauea with sacrifices.&nbsp;
+If a human victim were needed, he had only to point to a native, and
+the unfortunate wretch was at once strangled.&nbsp; He was not only
+the embodiment of heathen piety, but of heathen crime.&nbsp; Robbery
+was his pastime.&nbsp; His temper was so fierce and so uncurbed that
+no native dared even to tread on his shadow.&nbsp; More than once he
+had killed a man for the sake of food and clothes not worth fifty cents.&nbsp;
+He was a thoroughly wicked savage.&nbsp; Curiosity attracted him into
+one of the Hilo meetings, and the bad giant fell under the resistless,
+mysterious influence which was metamorphosing thousands of Hawaiians.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have been deceived,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have deceived
+others, I have lived in darkness, and did not know the true God.&nbsp;
+I worshipped what was no God.&nbsp; I renounce it all.&nbsp; The true
+God has come.&nbsp; He speaks.&nbsp; I bow down to Him.&nbsp; I wish
+to be His son.&rdquo;&nbsp; The priestess, his sister, came soon afterwards,
+and they remained here several months for instruction.&nbsp; They were
+then about seventy years old, but they imbibed the New Testament spirit
+so thoroughly that they became as gentle, loving, and quiet as little
+children.&nbsp; After a long probationary period they were baptized,
+and after several years of pious and lowly living, they passed gently
+and trustfully away.</p>
+<p>The old church which was the scene of these earlier assemblages,
+came down with a crash after a night of heavy rain, the large timbers,
+which were planted in the moist earth after the fashion of the country
+to support the framework, having become too rotten to support the weight
+of the saturated thatch.&nbsp; Without a day&rsquo;s loss of time the
+people began a new church.&nbsp; All were volunteers, some to remove
+from the wreck of the old building such timbers as might still be of
+service; some to quarry stone for a foundation, an extravagance never
+before dreamed of by an islander; some to bring sand in gourd-shells
+upon their heads, or laboriously gathered in the folds of bark-cloth
+aprons; some to bring lime from the coral reefs twenty feet under water;
+whilst the majority hurried to the forest belt, miles away on the mountain
+side, to fell the straightest and tallest trees.&nbsp; Then 50 or 100
+men, (for in that day horses and oxen were known only as wild beasts
+of the wilderness,) attached hawsers to the butt ends of logs, and dragged
+them away through bush and brake, through broken ground and river beds,
+till they deposited them on the site of the new church.&nbsp; The wild,
+monotonous chant, as the men hauled in the timber, lives in the memories
+of the missionaries&rsquo; children, who say that it seemed to them
+as if the preparations for Solomon&rsquo;s temple could not have exceeded
+the accumulations of the islanders!</p>
+<p>I think that the greater number of the converts of those four years
+must have died ere this.&nbsp; In 1867 the old church at Hilo was divided
+into seven congregations, six of them with native pastors.&nbsp; To
+meet the wants of the widely-scattered people, fifteen churches have
+been built, holding from 500 up to 1000.&nbsp; The present Hilo church,
+a very pretty wooden one, cost about $14,000.&nbsp; All these have been
+erected mainly by native money and labour.&nbsp; Probably the native
+Christians on Hawaii are not much better or worse than Christian communities
+elsewhere, but they do seem a singularly generous people.&nbsp; Besides
+liberally sustaining their own clergy, the Hilo Christians have contributed
+altogether $100,000 for religious purposes.&nbsp; Mr. Coan&rsquo;s native
+congregation, sorely dwindled as it is, raises over $1200 annually for
+foreign missions; and twelve of its members have gone as missionaries
+to the islands of Southern Polynesia.</p>
+<p>Poor people!&nbsp; It would be unfair to judge of them as we may
+legitimately be judged of, who inherit the influences of ten centuries
+of Christianity.&nbsp; They have only just emerged from a bloody and
+sensual heathenism, and to the instincts and volatility of these dark
+Polynesian races, the restraining influences of the Gospel are far more
+severe than to our cold, unimpulsive northern natures.&nbsp; The greatest
+of their disadvantages has been that some of the vilest of the whites
+who roamed the Pacific had settled on the islands before the arrival
+of the Christian teachers, dragging the people down to even lower depths
+of depravity than those of heathenism, and that there are still resident
+foreigners who corrupt and destroy them.</p>
+<p>I must tell you a story which the venerable Mrs. Lyman told me yesterday.&nbsp;
+In 1825, five years after the first missionaries landed, Kapiolani,
+a female <i>alii</i> of high rank, while living at Kaiwaaloa (where
+Captain Cook was murdered), became a Christian.&nbsp; Grieving for her
+people, most of whom still feared to anger P&eacute;l&eacute;, she announced
+that it was her intention to visit Kilauea, and dare the fearful goddess
+to do her worst.&nbsp; Her husband and many others tried to dissuade
+her, but she was resolute, and taking with her a large retinue, she
+took a journey of one hundred miles, mostly on foot, over the rugged
+lava, till she arrived near the crater.&nbsp; There a priestess of P&eacute;l&eacute;
+met her, threatened her with the displeasure of the goddess if she persisted
+in her hostile errand, and prophesied that she and her followers would
+perish miserably.&nbsp; Then, as now, <i>ohelo</i> berries grew profusely
+round the terminal wall of Kilauea, and there, as elsewhere, were sacred
+to P&eacute;l&eacute;, no one daring to eat of them till he had first
+offered some of them to the divinity.&nbsp; It was usual on arriving
+at the crater to break a branch covered with berries, and turning the
+face to the pit of fire, to throw half the branch over the precipice,
+saying, &ldquo;P&eacute;l&eacute;, here are your <i>ohelos</i>.&nbsp;
+I offer some to you, some I also eat,&rdquo; after which the natives
+partook of them freely.&nbsp; Kapiolani gathered and eat them without
+this formula, after which she and her company of eighty persons descended
+to the black edge of Hale-mau-mau.&nbsp; There, in full view of the
+fiery pit, she thus addressed her followers<i>:--&ldquo;Jehovah is my
+God.&nbsp; He kindled these fires.&nbsp; I fear not P&eacute;l&eacute;.&nbsp;
+If I perish by the anger of P&eacute;l&eacute;, then you may fear the
+power of P&eacute;l&eacute;; but if I trust in Jehovah, and he should
+save me from the wrath of P&eacute;l&eacute;, when I break through her
+tabus, then you must fear and serve the Lord Jehovah.&nbsp; All the
+Gods of Hawaii are vain!&nbsp; Great is Jehovah&rsquo;s goodness in
+sending teachers to turn us from these vanities to the living God and
+the way of righteousness!&rdquo;</i>&nbsp; Then they sang a hymn.&nbsp;
+I can fancy the strange procession winding its backward way over the
+cracked, hot, lava sea, the robust belief of the princess hardly sustaining
+the limping faith of her followers, whose fears would not be laid to
+rest until they reached the crater&rsquo;s rim without any signs of
+the pursuit of an avenging deity.&nbsp; It was more sublime than Elijah&rsquo;s
+appeal on the soft, green slopes of Carmel, but the popular belief in
+the Goddess of the Volcano survived this flagrant instance of her incapacity,
+and only died out many years afterwards.</p>
+<p>Besides these interesting reminiscences, I have been hearing most
+thrilling stories from Mrs. Lyman and Mr. Coan of volcanoes, earthquakes,
+and tidal waves.&nbsp; Told by eye-witnesses, and on the very spot where
+the incidents occurred, they make a profound, and, I fear, an incommunicable
+impression.&nbsp; I look on these venerable people as I should on people
+who had seen the Deluge, or the burial of Pompeii, and wonder that they
+eat and dress and live like other mortals!&nbsp; For they have felt
+the perpetual shudder of earthquakes, and their eyes, which look so
+calm and kind, have seen the inflowing of huge tidal waves, the dull
+red glow of lava streams, and the leaping of fire cataracts into deep-lying
+pools, burning them dry in a night time.&nbsp; There were years in which
+there was no day in which the smoke of underground furnaces was out
+of their sight, or night which was not lurid with flames.&nbsp; Once
+they traced a river of lava burrowing its way 1500 feet below the surface,
+and saw it emerge, break over a precipice, and fall hissing into the
+ocean.&nbsp; Once from their highest mountain a pillar of fire 200 feet
+in diameter lifted itself for three weeks 1000 feet into the air, making
+night day, for a hundred miles round, and leaving as its monument a
+cone a mile in circumference.&nbsp; We see a clothed and finished earth;
+they see the building of an island, layer on layer, hill on hill, the
+naked and deformed product of the melting, forging, and welding, which
+go on perpetually in the crater of Kilauea.</p>
+<p>I could fill many sheets with what I have heard, but must content
+myself with telling you very little.&nbsp; In 1855 the fourth recorded
+eruption of Mauna Loa occurred.&nbsp; The lava flowed directly Hilo-wards,
+and for several months, spreading through the dense forests which belt
+the mountain, crept slowly shorewards, threatening this beautiful portion
+of Hawaii with the fate of the Cities of the Plain.&nbsp; Mr. C. made
+several visits to the eruption, and on each return the simple people
+asked him how much longer it would last.&nbsp; For five months they
+watched the inundation, which came a little nearer every day.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Should they fly or not?&nbsp; Would their beautiful homes become
+a waste of jagged lava and black sand, like the neighbouring district
+of Puna, once as fair as Hilo?&rdquo;&nbsp; Such questions suggested
+themselves as they nightly watched the nearing glare, till the fiery
+waves met with obstacles which piled them up in hillocks, eight miles
+from Hilo, and the suspense was over.&nbsp; Only gigantic causes can
+account for the gigantic phenomena of this lava-flow.&nbsp; The eruption
+travelled forty miles in a straight line, or sixty, including sinuosities.&nbsp;
+It was from one to three miles broad, and from five to two hundred feet
+deep, according to the contours of the mountain slopes over which it
+flowed.&nbsp; It lasted for thirteen months, pouring out a torrent of
+lava which covered nearly 300 square miles of land, and whose volume
+was estimated at thirty-eight thousand millions of cubic feet!&nbsp;
+In 1859 lava fountains 400 feet in height, and with a nearly equal diameter,
+played on the summit of Mauna Loa.&nbsp; This eruption ran fifty miles
+to the sea in eight days, but the flow lasted much longer, and added
+a new promontory to Hawaii.</p>
+<p>These magnificent overflows, however threatening, had done little
+damage to cultivated regions, and none to human life; and people began
+to think that the volcano was reformed.&nbsp; But in 1868 terrors occurred
+which are without precedent in island history.&nbsp; While Mrs. L. was
+giving me the narrative in her graphic but simple way, and the sweet
+wind rustled through the palms, and brought the rich scent of the ginger
+plant into the shaded room, she seemed to be telling me some weird tale
+of another world.&nbsp; On March 27, five years ago, a series of earthquakes
+began, and became more startling from day to day, until their succession
+became so rapid that &ldquo;the island quivered like the lid of a boiling
+pot nearly all the time between the heavier shocks.&nbsp; The trembling
+was like that of a ship struck by a heavy wave.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then the
+terminal crater of Mauna Loa (Mokuaweoweo) sent up columns of smoke,
+steam, and red light, and it was shortly seen that the southern slope
+of its dome had been rent, and that four separate rivers of molten stone
+were pouring out of as many rents, and were flowing down the mountain
+sides in diverging lines.&nbsp; Suddenly the rivers were arrested, and
+the blue mountain dome appeared against the still blue sky without an
+indication of fire, steam, or smoke.&nbsp; Hilo was much agitated by
+the sudden lull.&nbsp; No one was deceived into security, for it was
+certain that the strangely pent-up fires must make themselves felt.</p>
+<p>The earthquakes became nearly continuous; scarcely an appreciable
+interval occurred between them; &ldquo;the throbbing, jerking, and quivering
+motions grew more positive, intense, and sharp; they were vertical,
+rotary, lateral, and undulating,&rdquo; producing nausea, vertigo, and
+vomiting.&nbsp; Late in the afternoon of a lovely day, April 2, the
+climax came.&nbsp; &ldquo;The crust of the earth rose and sank like
+the sea in a storm.&rdquo;&nbsp; Rocks were rent, mountains fell, buildings
+and their contents were shattered, trees swayed like reeds, animals
+were scared, and ran about demented; men thought the judgment had come.&nbsp;
+The earth opened in thousands of places, the roads in Hilo cracked open,
+horses and their riders, and people afoot, were thrown violently to
+the ground; &ldquo;it seemed as if the rocky ribs of the mountains,
+and the granite walls and pillars of the earth were breaking up.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+At Kilauea the shocks were as frequent as the ticking of a watch.&nbsp;
+In Kau, south of Hilo, they counted 300 shocks on this direful day;
+and Mrs. L.&rsquo;s son, who was in that district at the time, says
+that the earth swayed to and fro, north and south, then east and west,
+then round and round, up and down, in every imaginable direction, everything
+crashing about them, &ldquo;and the trees thrashing as if torn by a
+strong rushing wind.&rdquo;&nbsp; He and others sat on the ground bracing
+themselves with hands and feet to avoid being rolled over.&nbsp; They
+saw an avalanche of red earth, which they supposed to be lava, burst
+from the mountain side, throwing rocks high into the air, swallowing
+up houses, trees, men, and animals; and travelling three miles in as
+many minutes, burying a hamlet, with thirty-one inhabitants and 500
+head of cattle.&nbsp; The people of the valleys fled to the mountains,
+which themselves were splitting in all directions, and collecting on
+an elevated spot, with the earth reeling under them, they spent the
+night of April 2 in prayer and singing.&nbsp; Looking towards the shore,
+they saw it sink, and at the same moment a wave, whose height was estimated
+at from forty to sixty feet, hurled itself upon the coast, and receded
+five times, destroying whole villages, and even strong stone houses,
+with a touch, and engulfing for ever forty-six people who had lingered
+too near the shore.</p>
+<p>Still the earthquakes continued, and still the volcano gave no sign.&nbsp;
+The nerves of many people gave way in these fearful days.&nbsp; Some
+tried to get away to Honolulu, others kept horses saddled on which to
+fly, they knew not whither.&nbsp; The hourly question was, &ldquo;What
+of the volcano?&rdquo;&nbsp; People put their ears to the quivering
+ground, and heard, or thought they heard, the surgings of the imprisoned
+lava sea rending its way among the ribs of the earth.</p>
+<p>Five days after the destructive earthquake of April 2, the ground
+south of Hilo burst open with a crash and roar which at once answered
+all questions concerning the volcano.&nbsp; The molten river, after
+travelling underground for twenty miles, emerged through a fissure two
+miles in length with a tremendous force and volume.&nbsp; It was in
+a pleasant pastoral region, supposed to be at rest for ever, at the
+top of a grass-covered plateau sprinkled with native and foreign houses,
+and rich in herds of cattle.&nbsp; Four huge fountains boiled up with
+terrific fury, throwing crimson lava, and rocks weighing many tons,
+to a height of from 500 to 1000 feet.&nbsp; Mr.&nbsp; Whitney, of Honolulu,
+who was near the spot, says:--&ldquo;From these great fountains to the
+sea flowed a rapid stream of red lava, rolling, rushing, and tumbling,
+like a swollen river, bearing along in its current large rocks that
+made the lava foam as it dashed down the precipice and through the valley
+into the sea, surging and roaring throughout its length like a cataract,
+with a power and fury perfectly indescribable.&nbsp; It was nothing
+else than a <i>river of fire</i> from 200 to 800 feet wide and twenty
+deep, with a <i>speed varying from ten to twenty-five miles an hour!&rdquo;</i>&nbsp;
+This same intelligent observer noticed as a peculiarity of the spouting
+that the lava was ejected by a <i>rotary motion</i>, and in the air
+both lava and stones always rotated <i>towards the south</i>.&nbsp;
+At Kilauea I noticed that the lava was ejected in a southerly direction.&nbsp;
+From the scene of these fire fountains, whose united length was about
+a mile, the river in its rush to the sea divided itself into four streams,
+between which it shut up men and beasts.&nbsp; One stream hurried to
+the sea in four hours, but the others took two days to travel ten miles.&nbsp;
+The aggregate width was a mile and a half.&nbsp; Where it entered the
+sea it extended the coast-line half a mile, but this worthless accession
+to Hawaiian acreage was dearly purchased by the loss, for ages at least,
+of 4000 acres of valuable pasture land, and a much larger quantity of
+magnificent forest.&nbsp; The whole south-east shore of Hawaii sank
+from four to six feet, which involved the destruction of several hamlets
+and the beautiful fringe of cocoa-nut trees.&nbsp; Though the region
+was very thinly peopled, 200 houses and 100 lives were sacrificed in
+this week of horrors, and from the reeling mountains, the uplifted ocean,
+and the fiery inundation, the terrified survivors fled into Hilo, each
+with a tale of woe and loss.&nbsp; The number of shocks of earthquake
+counted was 2000 in two weeks, an average of 140 a day; but on the other
+side of the island the number was incalculable.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XIII.</h3>
+<p>HILO.&nbsp; HAWAII.&nbsp; February.</p>
+<p>The quiet, dreamy, afternoon existence of Hilo is disturbed.&nbsp;
+Two days ago an official intimation was received that the American Government
+had placed the U.S. ironclad &ldquo;Benicia&rdquo; at the disposal of
+King Lunalilo for a cruise round Hawaii, and that he would arrive here
+the following morning with Admiral Pennock and the U.S. generals Scholfield
+and Alexander.</p>
+<p>Now this monarchy is no longer an old-time chieftaincy, made up of
+calabashes and <i>poi</i>, feather-cloaks, <i>kahilis</i>, and a little
+fuss, but has a civilized constitutional king, the equal of Queen Victoria,
+a civil list, etc., and though Lunalilo comes here trying to be a private
+individual and to rest from <i>Hookupus</i>, state entertainments, and
+privy councils, he brings with him a royal chamberlain and an adjutant-general
+in attendance.&nbsp; So the good people of Hilo have been decorating
+their houses anew with ferns and flowers, furbishing up their clothes,
+and holding mysterious consultations regarding etiquette and entertainments,
+just as if royalty were about to drop down in similar fashion on Bude
+or Tobermory.&nbsp; There were amusing attempts to bring about a practical
+reconciliation between the free-and-easiness of Republican notions and
+the respect due to a sovereign who reigns by &ldquo;the will of the
+people&rdquo; as well as by &ldquo;the grace of God,&rdquo; but eventually
+the tact of the king made everything go smoothly.</p>
+<p>At eight yesterday morning the &ldquo;Benicia&rdquo; anchored inside
+the reef, and Hilo blossomed into a most striking display of bunting;
+the Hawaiian colours, eight blue, red and white stripes, with the English
+union in the corner, and the flaunting flag of America being predominant.&nbsp;
+My heart warmed towards our own flag as the soft breeze lifted its rich
+folds among the glories of the tropical trees.&nbsp; Indeed, bunting
+to my mind never looked so well as when floating and fainting among
+cocoa-nut palms and all the shining greenery of Hilo, in the sunshine
+of a radiant morning.&nbsp; It was bright and warm, but the cool bulk
+of Mauna Kea, literally covered with snow, looked down as winter upon
+summer.&nbsp; Natives galloped in from all quarters, brightly dressed,
+wreathed, and garlanded, delighted in their hearts at the attention
+paid to their sovereign by a great foreign power, though they had been
+very averse to this journey, from a strange but prevalent idea that
+once on board a U.S. ship the king would be kidnapped and conveyed to
+America.</p>
+<p>Lieut.-Governor Lyman and Mr. Severance, the sheriff, went out to
+the &ldquo;Benicia,&rdquo; and the king landed at ten o&rsquo;clock,
+being &ldquo;graciously pleased&rdquo; to accept the Governor&rsquo;s
+house as his residence during his visit.&nbsp; The American officers,
+naval and military, were received by the same loud, hospitable old whaling
+captain who entertained the Duke of Edinburgh some years ago here, and
+to judge from the hilarious sounds which came down the road from his
+house, they had what they would call &ldquo;a good time.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I had seen Lunalilo in state at Honolulu, but it was much more interesting
+to see him here, and this royalty is interesting in itself, as a thing
+on sufferance, standing between this helpless nationality and its absorption
+by America.&nbsp; The king is a very fine-looking man of thirty-eight,
+tall, well formed, broad-chested, with his head well set on his shoulders,
+and his feet and hands small.&nbsp; His appearance is decidedly commanding
+and aristocratic: he is certainly handsome even according to our notions.&nbsp;
+He has a fine open brow, significant at once of brains and straightforwardness,
+a straight proportionate nose, and a good mouth.&nbsp; The slight tendency
+to Polynesian overfulness about his lips is concealed by a well-shaped
+moustache.&nbsp; He wears whiskers cut in the English fashion.&nbsp;
+His eyes are large, dark-brown of course, and equally of course, he
+has a superb set of teeth.&nbsp; Owing to a slight fulness of the lower
+eyelid, which Queen Emma also has, his eyes have a singularly melancholy
+expression, very alien, I believe, to his character.&nbsp; He is remarkably
+gentlemanly looking, and has the grace of movement which seems usual
+with Hawaiians.&nbsp; When he landed he wore a dark morning suit and
+a black felt hat.</p>
+<p>As soon as he stepped on shore, the natives, who were in crowds on
+the beach, cheered, yelled, and waved their hats and handkerchiefs,
+and then a procession was formed, or rather formed itself, to escort
+him to the governor&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; A rabble of children ran in
+front, then came the king, over whom the natives had thrown some beautiful
+garlands of <i>ohia</i> and <i>mail&eacute;</i> (Alyxia oliv&aelig;formis),
+with the governor on one side and the sheriff on the other, the chamberlain
+and adjutant-general walking behind.&nbsp; Then a native staggering
+under the weight of an enormous Hawaiian flag, the Hilo band, with my
+friend Upa beating the big drum, and an irregular rabble (i.e. unorganised
+crowd) of men, women, and children, going at a trot to keep up with
+the king&rsquo;s rapid strides.&nbsp; The crowd was unwilling to disperse
+even when he entered the house, and he came out and made a short speech,
+the gist of which was that he was delighted to see his native subjects,
+and would hold a reception for them on the ensuing Monday, when we shall
+see a most interesting sight, a native crowd gathered from all Southern
+Hawaii for a <i>hookupu</i>, an old custom, signifying the bringing
+of gift-offerings to a king or chief.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon Dr. Wetmore and I rode to the beautiful Puna woods
+on a botanising excursion.&nbsp; We were galloping down to the beach
+round a sharp corner, when we had to pull our horses almost on their
+haunches to avoid knocking over the king, the American admiral, the
+captain of the &ldquo;Benicia,&rdquo; nine of their officers, and the
+two generals.&nbsp; When I saw the politely veiled stare of the white
+men it occurred to me that probably it was the first time that they
+had seen a white woman riding cavalier fashion!&nbsp; We had a delicious
+gallop over the sands to the Waiakea river, which we crossed, and came
+upon one of the vast lava-flows of ages since, over which we had to
+ride carefully, as the <i>pahoehoe</i> lies in rivers, coils, tortuosities,
+and holes partially concealed by a luxuriant growth of ferns and convolvuli.&nbsp;
+The country is thickly sprinkled with cocoa-nuts and bread-fruit trees,
+which merge into the dense, dark, glorious forest, which tenderly hides
+out of sight hideous broken lava, on which one cannot venture six feet
+from the track without the risk of breaking one&rsquo;s limbs.&nbsp;
+All these tropical forests are absolutely impenetrable, except to axe
+and billhook, and after a trail has been laboriously opened, it needs
+to be cut once or twice a year, so rapid is the growth of vegetation.&nbsp;
+This one, through the Puna woods, only admits of one person at a time.&nbsp;
+It was really rapturously lovely.&nbsp; Through the trees we saw the
+soft steel-blue of the summer sky: not a leaf stirred, not a bird sang,
+a hush had fallen on insect life, the quiet was perfect, even the ring
+of our horses&rsquo; hoofs on the lava was a discord.&nbsp; There was
+a slight coolness in the air and a fresh mossy smell.&nbsp; It only
+required some suggestion of decay, and the rustle of a fallen leaf now
+and then, to make it an exact reproduction of a fine day in our English
+October.&nbsp; The forest was enlivened by many natives bound for Hilo,
+driving horses loaded with cocoa-nuts, bread-fruit, live fowls, <i>poi</i>
+and <i>kalo</i>, while others with difficulty urged garlanded pigs in
+the same direction, all as presents for the king.&nbsp; We brought back
+some very scarce parasitic ferns.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>HILO, February 24.</p>
+<p>I rode over by myself to Onomea on Saturday to get a little rest
+from the excitements of Hilo.&nbsp; A gentleman lent me a strong showy
+mare to go out on, telling me that she was frisky and must be held while
+I mounted; but before my feet were fairly in the stirrups, she shook
+herself from the Chinaman who held her, and danced away.&nbsp; I rode
+her five miles before she quieted down.&nbsp; She pranced, jumped, danced,
+and fretted on the edge of precipices, was furious at the scow and fords,
+and seemed demented with good spirits.&nbsp; Onomea looked glorious,
+and its serenity was most refreshing.&nbsp; I rode into Hilo the next
+day in time for morning service, and the mare, after a good gallop,
+subsided into a staidness of demeanour befitting the day.&nbsp; Just
+as I was leaving, they asked me to take the news to the sheriff that
+a man had been killed a few hours before.&nbsp; He was riding into Hilo
+with a child behind him, and they went over by no means one of the worst
+of the <i>palis</i>.&nbsp; The man and horse were killed, but the child
+was unhurt, and his wailing among the deep ferns attracted the attention
+of passers-by to the disaster.&nbsp; The natives ride over these dangerous
+<i>palis</i> so carelessly, and on such tired, starved horses, that
+accidents are not infrequent.&nbsp; Hilo had never looked so lovely
+to me as in the pure bright calm of this Sunday morning.</p>
+<p>The verandahs of all the native houses were crowded with strangers,
+who had come in to share in the jubilations attending the king&rsquo;s
+visit.&nbsp; At the risk of emulating &ldquo;Jenkins,&rdquo; or the
+&ldquo;Court Newsman,&rdquo; I must tell you that Lunalilo, who is by
+no means an habitual churchgoer, attended Mr. Coan&rsquo;s native church
+in the morning, and the foreign church at night, when the choir sang
+a very fine anthem.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t wish to write about his faults,
+which have doubtless been rumoured in the English papers.&nbsp; It is
+hoped that his new responsibilities will assist him to conquer them,
+else I fear he may go the way of several of the Hawaiian kings.&nbsp;
+He has begun his reign with marked good sense in selecting as his advisers
+confessedly the best men in his kingdom, and all his public actions
+since his election have shown both tact and good feeling.&nbsp; If sons,
+as is often asserted, take their intellects from their mothers, he should
+be decidedly superior, for his mother, Kekauluohi, a chieftainess of
+the highest rank, and one of the queens of Kamehameha II., who died
+in London, was in 1839 chosen for her abilities by Kamehameha III. as
+his <i>kuhina nui</i>, or premier, an officer recognised under the old
+system of Hawaiian government as second only in authority to the king,
+and without whose signature even his act was not legal.&nbsp; As Kaahumanu
+II. she continued to hold this important position until her death in
+1845.</p>
+<p>But the present king does not come of the direct line of the Hawaiian
+kings, but of a far older family.&nbsp; His father is a commoner, but
+Hawaiian rank is inherited through the mother.&nbsp; He received a good
+English education at the school which the missionaries established for
+the sons of chiefs, and was noted as a very bright scholar, with an
+early developed taste for literature and poetry.&nbsp; His disposition
+is said to be most amiable and genial, and his affability endeared him
+especially to his own countrymen, by whom he was called <i>alii lokomaikai</i>,
+&ldquo;the kind chief.&rdquo;&nbsp; In spite of his high rank, which
+gave him precedence of all others on the islands, he was ignored by
+two previous governments, and often complained that he was never allowed
+any opportunity of becoming acquainted with public affairs, or of learning
+whether he possessed any capacity for business.&nbsp; Thus, without
+experience, but with noble and liberal instincts, and the highest and
+most patriotic aspirations for the welfare and improvement of his &ldquo;weak
+little kingdom,&rdquo; he was unexpectedly called to the throne about
+three months ago, amidst such an enthusiasm as had never before been
+witnessed on Hawaii-nei, as the unanimous choice of the people.&nbsp;
+He called on Mr. Coan the day of his arrival; and when the flute band
+of Mr. Lyman&rsquo;s school serenaded him, he made the youths a kind
+address, in which he said he had been taught as they were, and hoped
+hereafter to profit by the instruction he had received.</p>
+<p>This has been a great day in Hilo.&nbsp; The old native custom of
+<i>hookupu</i> was revived, and it has been a most interesting spectacle.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t think I ever enjoyed sight-seeing so much.&nbsp; The weather
+has been splendid, which was most fortunate, for many of the natives
+came in from distances of from sixty to eighty miles.&nbsp; From early
+daylight they trooped in on their half broken steeds, and by ten o&rsquo;clock
+there were fully a thousand horses tethered on the grass by the sea.&nbsp;
+Almost every house displayed flags, and the court-house, where the reception
+was to take place, was most tastefully decorated.&nbsp; It is a very
+pretty two-storied frame building, with deep double verandahs, and stands
+on a large lawn of fine <i>manienie</i> grass, <a name="citation199"></a><a href="#footnote199">{199}</a>
+with roads on three sides.&nbsp; Long before ten, crowds had gathered
+outside the low walls of the lawn, natives and foreigners galloped in
+all directions, boats and canoes enlivened the bay, bands played, and
+the foreigners, on this occasion rather a disregarded minority, assembled
+in holiday dress in the upper verandah of the court-house.&nbsp; Hawaiian
+flags on tall bamboos decorated the little gateways which gave admission
+to the lawn, an enormous standard on the government flagstaff could
+be seen for miles, and the stars and stripes waved from the neighbouring
+plantations and from several houses in Hilo.&nbsp; At ten punctually,
+Lunalilo, Governor Lyman, the sheriff of Hawaii, the royal chamberlain,
+and the adjutant-general, walked up to the court-house, and the king
+took his place, standing in the lower verandah with his suite about
+him.&nbsp; All the foreigners were either on the upper balcony, or on
+the stairs leading to it, on which, to get the best possible view of
+the spectacle, I stood for three mortal hours.&nbsp; The attendant gentlemen
+were well dressed, but wore &ldquo;shocking bad hats;&rdquo; and the
+king wore a sort of shooting suit, a short brown cut-away coat, an ash-coloured
+waistcoat and ash-coloured trousers with a blue stripe.&nbsp; He stood
+bareheaded.&nbsp; He dressed in this style in order that the natives
+might attend the reception in every-day dress, and not run the risk
+of spoiling their best clothes by Hilo torrents.&nbsp; The dress of
+the king and his attendants was almost concealed by wreaths of <i>ohia</i>
+blossoms and festoons of <i>mail&eacute;</i>, some of them two yards
+long, which had been thrown over them, and which bestowed a fantastic
+glamour on the otherwise prosaic inelegance of their European dress.&nbsp;
+But indeed the spectacle, as a whole, was altogether poetical, as it
+was an ebullition of natural, national, human feeling, in which the
+heart had the first place.&nbsp; I very soon ceased to notice the incongruous
+elements, which were supplied chiefly by the Americans present.&nbsp;
+There were Republicans by birth and nature, destitute of traditions
+of loyalty or reverence for aught on earth; who bore on their faces
+not only republicanism, but that quintessence of puritan republicanism
+which hails from New England; and these were subjects of a foreign king,
+nay, several of them office-holders who had taken the oath of allegiance,
+and from whose lips &ldquo;His Majesty, Your Majesty,&rdquo; flowed
+far more copiously than from ours which are &ldquo;to the manner born.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the king&rsquo;s appearance, the cheering was tremendous,--regular
+British cheering, well led, succeeded by that which is not British,
+&ldquo;three cheers and a tiger,&rdquo; but it was &ldquo;Hi, hi, hi,
+hullah!&rdquo;&nbsp; Every hat was off, every handkerchief in air, tears
+in many eyes, enthusiasm universal, for the people were come to welcome
+the king of their choice; the prospective restorer of the Constitution
+&ldquo;trampled upon&rdquo; by Kamehameha V., &ldquo;the kind chief,&rdquo;
+who was making them welcome to his presence after the fashion of their
+old feudal lords.&nbsp; When the cheering had subsided, the eighty boys
+of Missionary Lyman&rsquo;s School, who, dressed in white linen with
+crimson <i>leis</i>, were grouped in a hollow square round the flagstaff,
+sang the Hawaiian national anthem, the music of which is the same as
+ours.&nbsp; More cheering and enthusiasm, and then the natives came
+through the gate across the lawn, and up to the verandah where the king
+stood, in one continuous procession, till 2400 Hawaiians had enjoyed
+one moment of infinite and ever to be remembered satisfaction in the
+royal presence.&nbsp; Every now and then the white, pale-eyed, unpicturesque
+face of a foreigner passed by, but these were few, and the foreign school
+children were received by themselves after Mr. Lyman&rsquo;s boys.&nbsp;
+The Americans have introduced the villanous custom of shaking hands
+at these receptions, borrowing it, I suppose, from a presidential reception
+at Washington; and after the king had gone through this ceremony with
+each native, the present was deposited in front of the verandah, and
+the gratified giver took his place on the grass.&nbsp; Not a man, woman,
+or child came empty handed.&nbsp; Every face beamed with pride, wonder,
+and complacency, for here was a sovereign for whom cannon roared, and
+yards were manned, of their own colour, who called them his brethren.</p>
+<p>The variety of costume was infinite.&nbsp; All the women wore the
+native dress, the sack or <i>holuku</i>, many of which were black, blue,
+green, or bright rose colour, some were bright yellow, a few were pure
+white, and others were a mixture of orange and scarlet.&nbsp; Some wore
+very pretty hats made from cane-tops, and trimmed with hibiscus blossoms
+or passion-flowers; others wore bright-coloured handkerchiefs, knotted
+lightly round their flowing hair, or wreaths of the Microlepia tenuifolia.&nbsp;
+Many had tied bandanas in a graceful knot over the left shoulder.&nbsp;
+All wore two, three, four, or even six beautiful <i>leis</i>, besides
+long festoons of the fragrant <i>mail&eacute;</i>.&nbsp; <i>Leis</i>
+of the crimson <i>ohia</i> blossoms were universal; but besides these
+there were <i>leis</i> of small red and white double roses, <i>pohas</i>,
+<a name="citation203"></a><a href="#footnote203">{203}</a> yellow amaranth,
+sugar cane tassels like frosted silver, the orange pandanus, the delicious
+gardenia, and a very few of orange blossoms, and the great granadilla
+or passion-flower.&nbsp; Few if any of the women wore shoes, and none
+of the children had anything on their heads.</p>
+<p>A string of 200 Chinamen passed by, &ldquo;plantation hands,&rdquo;
+with boyish faces, and cunning, almond-shaped eyes.&nbsp; They were
+dressed in loose blue denim trousers with shirts of the same, fastening
+at the side over them, their front hair closely shaven, and the rest
+gathered into pigtails, which were wound several times round their heads.&nbsp;
+These all deposited money in the adjutant-general&rsquo;s hand.&nbsp;
+The dress of the Hawaiian men was more varied and singular than that
+of the women, every kind of dress and undress, with <i>leis</i> of <i>ohia</i>
+and garlands of <i>mail&eacute;</i> covering all deficiencies.&nbsp;
+The poor things came up with pathetic innocence, many of them with nothing
+on but an old shirt, and cotton trousers rolled up to the knees.&nbsp;
+Some had red shirts and blue trousers, others considered that a shirt
+was an effective outer garment.&nbsp; Some wore highly ornamental, dandified
+shirts, and trousers tucked into high, rusty, mud-covered boots.&nbsp;
+A few young men were in white straw hats, white shirts, and white trousers,
+with crimson <i>leis</i> round their hats and throats.&nbsp; Some had
+diggers&rsquo; scarves round their waists; but the most effective costume
+was sported by a few old men, who had tied crash towels over their shoulders.</p>
+<p>It was often amusing and pathetic at once to see them come up.&nbsp;
+Obviously, when the critical moment arrived, they were as anxious to
+do the right thing as a <i>d&eacute;butante</i> is to back her train
+successfully out of the royal presence at St. James&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Some
+were so agitated at last as to require much coaching from the governor
+as to how to present their gifts and shake hands.&nbsp; Some half dropped
+down on their knees, others passionately and with tears kissed the king&rsquo;s
+hand, or grasped it convulsively in both their own; while a few were
+so embarrassed by the presents they were carrying that they had no hands
+at all to shake, and the sovereign good-naturedly clapped them on the
+shoulders.&nbsp; Some of them, in shaking hands, adroitly slipped coins
+into the king&rsquo;s palm, so as to make sure that he received their
+loving tribute.&nbsp; There had been a <i>hui</i>, or native meeting,
+which had passed resolutions, afterwards presented to Lunalilo, setting
+forth that whereas he received a great deal of money in revenue from
+the <i>haoles</i>, they, his native people, would feel that he did not
+love them if he would not receive from their own hands contributions
+in silver for his support.&nbsp; So, in order not to wound their feelings,
+he accepted these rather troublesome cash donations.</p>
+<p>One woman, sorely afflicted with quaking palsy, dragged herself slowly
+along.&nbsp; One hand hung by her side helpless, and the other grasped
+a live fowl so tightly that she could not loosen it to shake hands,
+whereupon the king raised the helpless arm, which called forth much
+cheering.&nbsp; There was one poor cripple who had only the use of his
+arms.&nbsp; His knees were doubled under him, and he trailed his body
+along the ground.&nbsp; He had dragged himself two miles &ldquo;to lie
+for a moment at the king&rsquo;s feet,&rdquo; and even his poor arms
+carried a gift.&nbsp; He looked hardly like a human shape, as his desire
+was realised; and, I doubt not, would have been content then and there
+to die.&nbsp; There were ancient men, tattooed all over, who had passed
+their first youth when the idols were cast away, and who remembered
+the old days of tyranny when it was an offence, punishable with death,
+for a man to let his shadow fall on the king; and when none of &ldquo;the
+swinish multitude&rdquo; had any rights which they could sustain against
+their chiefs.&nbsp; These came up bewildered, trembling, almost falling
+on their knees, hardly daring to raise their eyes to the king&rsquo;s
+kind, encouraging face, and bathed his hand with tears while they kissed
+it.&nbsp; Numbers of little children were led up by their parents; there
+were babies in arms, and younglings carried on parents&rsquo; backs,
+and the king stooped and shook hands with all, and even pulled out the
+babies&rsquo; hands from under their mufflings, and the old people wept,
+and cheers rent the air.</p>
+<p>Next in interest to this procession of beaming faces, and the blaze
+of colour, was the sight of the presents, and the ungrudging generosity
+with which they were brought.&nbsp; Many of the women presented live
+fowls tied by the legs, which were deposited, one upon another, till
+they formed a fainting, palpitating heap under the hot sun.&nbsp; Some
+of the men brought decorated hogs tied by one leg, which squealed so
+persistently in the presence of royalty, that they were removed to the
+rear.&nbsp; Hundreds carried nets of sweet potatoes, eggs, and <i>kalo</i>,
+artistically arranged.&nbsp; Men staggered along in couples with bamboos
+between them, supporting clusters of bananas weighing nearly a hundredweight.&nbsp;
+Others brought yams, cocoa-nuts, oranges, onions, pumpkins, early pineapples,
+and even the great delicious granadilla, the fruit of the large passion-flower.&nbsp;
+A few maidens presented the king with bouquets of choice flowers, and
+costly <i>leis</i> of the yellow feathers of the Melithreptes Pacifica.&nbsp;
+There were fully two tons of <i>kalo</i> and sweet potatoes in front
+of the court house, hundreds of fowls, and piles of bananas, eggs, and
+cocoa-nuts.&nbsp; The <i>hookupu</i> was a beautiful sight, all the
+more so that not one of that radiant, loving, gift-offering throng came
+in quest of office, or for any other thing that he could obtain.&nbsp;
+It was just the old-time spirit of reverence for the man who typifies
+rule, blended with the extreme of personal devotion to the prince whom
+a united people had placed upon the throne.&nbsp; The feeling was genuine
+and pathetic in its intensity.&nbsp; It is said that the natives like
+their king better, because he was truly, &ldquo;above all,&rdquo; the
+last of a proud and imperious house, which, in virtue of a pedigree
+of centuries, looked down upon the nobility of the Kamehamehas.</p>
+<p>When the last gift was deposited, the lawn in front of the court-house
+was one densely-packed, variegated mass of excited, buzzing Hawaiians.&nbsp;
+While the king was taking a short rest, two ancient and hideous females,
+who looked like heathen priestesses, chanted a monotonous and heathenish-sounding
+chant or m&ecirc;l&eacute;, in eulogy of some ancient idolater.&nbsp;
+It just served to remind me that this attractive crowd was but one generation
+removed from slaughter-loving gods and human sacrifices.</p>
+<p>The king and his suite re-appeared in the upper balcony, where all
+the foreigners were assembled, including the two venerable missionaries
+and a French priest of benign aspect, and his appearance was the signal
+for a fresh outburst of enthusiasm.&nbsp; Advancing to the front, he
+made an extemporaneous speech, of which the following is a literal translation:--</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To all present I tender my warmest <i>aloha</i>.&nbsp; This
+day, on which you are gathered to pay your respects to me, I will remember
+to the day of my death.&nbsp; (Cheers.)&nbsp; I am filled with love
+for you all, fellow-citizens (<i>makaainana</i>), who have come here
+on this occasion, and for all the people, because by your unanimous
+choice I have been made your King, a young sovereign, to reign over
+you, and to fill the very distinguished office which I now occupy.&nbsp;
+(Cheers.)&nbsp; You are parents to me, and I will be your Father.&nbsp;
+(Tremendous cheering.)&nbsp; Formerly, in the days of our departed ancestors,
+you were not permitted to approach them; they and you were kept apart;
+but now we meet and associate together.&nbsp; (Cheers.)&nbsp; I urge
+you all to persevere in the right, to forsake the ignorant ways of the
+olden time.&nbsp; There is but one God, whom it is our duty to obey.&nbsp;
+Let us forsake every kind of idolatry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the year 1820 Rev. Messrs. Bingham, Thurston, and others
+came to these Islands and proclaimed the Word of God.&nbsp; It is their
+teachings which have enabled you to be what you are to-day.&nbsp; Now
+they have all gone to that spirit land, and only Mrs. Thurston remains.&nbsp;
+We are greatly indebted to them.&nbsp; (Cheers.)&nbsp; There are also
+among us here (alluding to Revs. Coan and Lyman) old and grey-haired
+fathers, whose examples we should endeavour to imitate, and obey their
+teachings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am very glad to see the young men of the present time so
+well instructed in knowledge--perhaps some of them are your children.&nbsp;
+You must persevere in your search of wisdom and in habits of morality.&nbsp;
+Do not be indolent.&nbsp; (Cheers.)&nbsp; Those who have striven hard
+after knowledge and good character, are the ones who deserve and shall
+receive places of trust hereafter under the government.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the present time I have four foreigners as my ministerial
+advisers.&nbsp; But if, among these young men now standing before me,
+and under this flag, there are any who shall qualify themselves to fill
+these positions, then I will select them to fill their places.&nbsp;
+(Loud cheers.)&nbsp; <i>Aloha</i> to you all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His manner as a speaker was extremely good, with sufficient gesticulation
+for the emphasis of particular points.&nbsp; The address was frequently
+interrupted by applause, and when at its conclusion he bowed gracefully
+to the crowd and said, &ldquo;My <i>aloha</i> to you all,&rdquo; the
+cheering and enthusiasm were absolutely unbounded.&nbsp; And so the
+great <i>hookupu</i> ended, and the assemblage broke up into knots to
+discuss the royal speech and the day&rsquo;s doings.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XIV.</h3>
+<p>HILO.&nbsp; HAWAII.</p>
+<p>The king &ldquo;signified his intention to honour Mr. and Mrs. Severance
+with his company&rdquo; on the evening of the day after the reception,
+and this involved a regular party and supper.&nbsp; You can hardly imagine
+the difficulties connected with &ldquo;refreshments,&rdquo; where few,
+if any, of the materials which we consider necessary for dishes suitable
+for such occasions can be procured at the stores, and even milk and
+butter are scarce commodities.&nbsp; I had won a reputation as a cook
+by making a much appreciated Bengal curry, and an English &ldquo;roly-poly&rdquo;
+pudding, and when I offered my services, Mrs. S. kindly accepted them,
+and she and I, with the Chinese cook and a Chinese prisoner to assist
+us, have been cooking for a day and a half.&nbsp; I wanted to make a
+gigantic trifle, a dish not known here, and we hunted every store, hoping
+to find almonds and raspberry jam among the &ldquo;assorted notions,&rdquo;
+but in vain; however, grated cocoa-nut supplied the place of the first,
+and a kind friend sent a pot of the last.&nbsp; The Chinamen were very
+diverting.&nbsp; The cook looked on, and laughed constantly, and perhaps
+was a little jealous: at all events when he thought we had spoilt some
+cakes in the oven, he capered into Mrs. S.&rsquo;s room, gesticulating,
+and exclaiming satirically, &ldquo;Lu, Lu! cakes so good, cakes so fine!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+No intoxicants were to be used on the occasion, Hilo notions being rigid
+on this subject; but I hope it was not a crime that I clandestinely
+used two glasses of sherry, without which my trifle would have been
+a failure.&nbsp; We worked hard, and made trifle, sponge cake, pound
+cake, spiced cake, dozens of cocoa-nut cakes and drops; custards, and
+sandwiches of potted meat, and enjoyed our preparations so much that
+we found it hard to exchange kitchen for social duties, and go to &ldquo;Father
+Lyman,&rdquo; who entertained the king and a number of Hilo folk in
+the evening.</p>
+<p>Their rooms, not very large, were quite full.&nbsp; When the king
+entered, the company received him standing, and the flute band in the
+verandah played the national anthem, and afterwards at intervals during
+the evening sang some Hawaiian songs of the king&rsquo;s composition.&nbsp;
+I was presented to him, and as he is very courteous to strangers, he
+talked to me a good deal.&nbsp; He is a very gentlemanly, courteous,
+unassuming man, hardly assuming enough in fact, and apparently very
+intelligent and well read.&nbsp; I was exceedingly pleased with him.&nbsp;
+He spoke a good deal of Queen Emma&rsquo;s reception in England, and
+of her raptures with Venice, and some other cities of the continent.&nbsp;
+He said he had the greatest desire to visit some parts of Europe, Great
+Britain specially, because he thought that by coming in contact with
+some of our leading statesmen, he might gain a more accurate knowledge
+than he possessed of the principles of constitutional government.&nbsp;
+He said he hoped that in two years Hawaii-nei would be so settled as
+to allow of his travelling, and that in the meantime he was studying
+French with a view to enjoying the continent.</p>
+<p>He asked a great many questions regarding things at home, especially
+concerning the limitation of the power of the Crown.&nbsp; He cannot
+reconcile the theoretical right of the sovereign to choose his advisers
+with his practically submitting to receive them from a Parliamentary
+majority.&nbsp; He seemed to find a difficulty in understanding that
+the sovereign&rsquo;s right to refuse his assent to a Bill which had
+passed both Houses was by no means the same thing in practice as the
+possession of a veto.&nbsp; He said that in his reading of our constitutional
+history, the power of the sovereign seemed almost absolute, while if
+he understood facts rightly, the throne was more of an &ldquo;ornament,&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;figure-head,&rdquo; than a power at all.&nbsp; He asked me
+if it was true that Republican feeling was spreading very much in England,
+and if I thought that the monarchy would survive the present sovereign,
+on whose prudence and exalted virtues he seemed to think it rested.&nbsp;
+He said he thought his little kingdom had aped the style of the great
+monarchies too much, and that he should like to abolish a good many
+high sounding titles, sinecure offices, the household troops, and some
+of the &ldquo;imitation pomp&rdquo; of his court.&nbsp; He said he had
+never enjoyed anything so much since his accession as the <i>hookupu</i>
+of the morning, and asked me what I thought of it.&nbsp; I was glad
+to be able to answer truthfully that I had never seen a state pageant
+or ceremonial that I had enjoyed half so much, or that had impressed
+me so favourably.&nbsp; He has a very musical voice, and a natural nobility
+and refinement of manner, with an obvious tact and good feeling, rather,
+I should think, the result of amiable and gentlemanly instincts than
+of training or consideration, all which combine to make him interesting,
+altogether apart from his position as a Polynesian sovereign.</p>
+<p>Where there are no servants, a party involves the hosts and their
+friends in the bustle of personal preparation, but all worked with a
+will, and by sunset the decorations were completed.&nbsp; All the Chinese
+lamps in Hilo were hung in the front verandah, and seats were placed
+in the front and side verandahs, on which the drawing-room opens by
+four doors, so there was plenty of room, though there were thirty people.&nbsp;
+The side verandah was enclosed by a drapery of flags, and the whole
+was tastefully decorated with festoons and wreaths of ferns.&nbsp; The
+king arrived early with his attendants, and was received by the host
+and hostess, and like a perfectly civilized guest, he handed Mrs. S.
+into the room.&nbsp; The great wish of the genial entertainers was to
+prevent stiffness and give the king a really social evening, so the
+&ldquo;chair game,&rdquo; magical music, and a refined kind of blind
+man&rsquo;s buff, better suited to the occasion, but less &ldquo;jolly&rdquo;
+than the old riotous game, were shortly introduced.&nbsp; Lunalilo only
+looked on at first, and then entered into the games with a heartiness
+and zest which showed that he at least enjoyed the evening.&nbsp; Supper
+was served at nine.&nbsp; Several nests of Japanese tables had been
+borrowed, and these, dispersed about the room and verandah, broke up
+the guests into little social knots.&nbsp; Three Hilo ladies and I were
+the waitresses, and I was pleased to see that the good things were thoroughly
+appreciated, and that the trifle was universally popular.&nbsp; After
+supper there was a little dancing, and as few of the Hilo people knew
+any dance correctly, it was very amusing for the onlookers.&nbsp; There
+was a great deal of promenading in the verandah, and a great deal of
+talking and merriment, which were enjoyed by a crowd of natives who
+stood the whole evening outside the garden fence.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+think that any of the Hilo people are so unhappy as to possess an evening
+dress, and the pretty morning dresses of the ladies, and the thick boots,
+easy morning coats, and black ties of the gentlemen, gave a jolly &ldquo;break-down&rdquo;
+look to the affair, which would have been deemed inadmissible in less
+civilized society.</p>
+<p>Some of my photographs of some of our eminent literary and scientific
+men were lying on the table, and the king in looking at them showed
+a surprising amount of knowledge of what they had written or done, quite
+entitling him to unite in Stanley&rsquo;s &ldquo;Communion of Educated
+Men.&rdquo;&nbsp; I had previously asked him for his signature for my
+autograph collection, and he said he had composed a stanza for me which
+he thought I might like to have in addition.&nbsp; He called with it
+on the following afternoon, apologising for his dress, a short jacket
+and blue trowsers, stuffed into boots plastered with mud up to the knees.&nbsp;
+I was surprised when he asked me if the lines were correctly spelt,
+for he speaks English remarkably well.&nbsp; They are simply a kind
+wish, unaffectedly expressed.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HILO.&nbsp;
+HAWAII, Feb. 26.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Wheresoe&rsquo;er thou may&rsquo;st
+roam,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Wheresoe&rsquo;er thou
+mak&rsquo;st thy home,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;May
+God thy footsteps guide,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Watch
+o&rsquo;er thee and provide.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;This
+is my earnest prayer for thee,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Welcome,
+stranger, from over the sea.&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LUNALILO
+R.</p>
+<p>It startles one sometimes to hear American vulgarisms uttered in
+his harmonious tones.&nbsp; The American admiral and generals had just
+arrived from the volcano, stiff, sore, bruised, jaded, &ldquo;done,&rdquo;
+and the king said, &ldquo;I guess the Admiral&rsquo;s about used up.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He is really remarkably attractive, but I am sorry to observe a look
+of irresolution about his mouth, indicative of a facility of disposition
+capable of being turned to the worst account.&nbsp; I think from what
+I have heard that the Hawaiian kings have fallen victims rather to unscrupulous
+foreigners, than to their own bad instincts.</p>
+<p>My last day has been taken up with farewell visits, and I finish
+this on board the &ldquo;Kilauea.&rdquo;&nbsp; Miss Karpe and I had
+to ride two miles, to a point at which it was possible to embark without
+risk, a heavy surf having for three weeks rendered it impossible for
+loaded boats to communicate with the shore at Hilo.&nbsp; My clothes
+were soaked when we reached the rocks, and Upa, very wet, carried us
+into a wet whale-boat, with water up to our ancles, which brought us
+over a heavy sickening swell into this steamer, which is dirty as well
+as wet.&nbsp; I told Upa to lead my mare, and ride his own horse, but
+the last I saw of him was on the mare&rsquo;s back, racing a troop of
+natives along the beach. <a name="citation215"></a><a href="#footnote215">{215}</a><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XV.</h3>
+<p>WAIMEA.&nbsp; HAWAII.</p>
+<p>There is no limit to the oddities of the steam-ship &ldquo;Kilauea.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She lay rolling on the Hilo swell for two hours, and two hours after
+we sailed her machinery broke down, and we lay-to for five hours, in
+what they here call a heavy gale and sea.&nbsp; It was a miserable night.&nbsp;
+No privacy: the saloon both hot and wet, almost every one sick.&nbsp;
+I lay in my berth in my soaked clothes watching the proceedings of a
+gigantic cockroach, and listening, not without amusement, to the awful
+groans of a Chinaman, and a &ldquo;rough customer&rdquo; from California,
+who occupied the next berths.</p>
+<p>In the middle of the night the water came in great dashes through
+the skylight upon the table, and soon the saloon was afloat to the depth
+of from four to six inches.&nbsp; When the &ldquo;Kilauea&rdquo; rolled,
+and the water splashed in simultaneously, we were treated to vigorous
+&ldquo;douches&rdquo; in our berths, which soon saturated the pillows,
+mattresses, and our clothing.&nbsp; One sea put out the lamp, and a
+ship&rsquo;s lantern, making &ldquo;darkness visible,&rdquo; was swung
+in its stead.&nbsp; In an English ship there would have been a great
+fuss and a great flying about of stewards, or pretence of mending matters,
+but when the passengers shouted for our good steward, the serene creature
+came in with a melancholy smile on his face, said nothing, but quietly
+sat down on the transom, with his bare feet in the water, contemplating
+it with a comic air of helplessness.&nbsp; Breakfast, of course, could
+not be served, but a plate was put at one end of the table for the silent
+old Scotch captain, who tucked up his feet and sat with his oilskins
+and sou&rsquo;-wester on, while the charming steward, with trousers
+rolled up to his knees, waded about, pacifying us by bringing us excellent
+curry as we sat on the edges of our berths, and putting on a sweetly
+apologetic manner, as if penitent for the gross misbehaviour of the
+ship.&nbsp; Such a man would reconcile me to far greater discomfort
+than that of the &ldquo;Kilauea.&rdquo;&nbsp; I wonder if he is ever
+unamiable, or tired, or perturbed?</p>
+<p>The next day was fine, and we were all much on deck to dry our clothes
+in the sun.&nbsp; The southern and leeward coasts of Hawaii as far as
+Kawaaloa are not much more attractive than coal-fields.&nbsp; Contrasted
+with the shining shores of Hilo, they are as dust and ashes; long reaches
+of black lava and miles of clinkers marking the courses of lava-flows,
+whose black desolation and deformity nature, as yet, has done almost
+nothing to clothe.&nbsp; Cocoa-nut trees usually, however, fringe the
+shore, but were it not for the wonderful colour of the ocean, like liquid
+transparent turquoise, revealing the coral forests shelving down into
+purple depths, and the exciting proximity of sharks, it would have been
+wearisome.&nbsp; After leaving the bay where Captain Cook met his death,
+we passed through a fleet of twenty-seven canoes, each one hollowed
+out of the trunk of a single tree, from fifteen to twenty-five feet
+long, about twenty inches deep, hardly wide enough for a fat man, and
+high and pointed at both ends.&nbsp; On one side there is an outrigger
+formed of two long bent sticks, to the outer ends of which is bound
+a curved beam of light wood, which skims along the surface of the water,
+rendering the canoe secure from an upset on that side, while the weight
+of the outrigger makes an upset on the other very unlikely.&nbsp; In
+calms they are paddled, and shoot over the water with great rapidity,
+but whenever there is any breeze a small sprit-sail is used.&nbsp; They
+are said to be able to stand very rough water, but they are singularly
+precarious and irresponsible looking contrivances, and for these, as
+well as for all other seas, I should much prefer a staunch whale-boat.&nbsp;
+We sailed for some hours along a lava coast, streamless, rainless, verdureless,
+blazing under the fierce light of a tropical sun, and some time after
+noon anchored in the scorching bay of Kawaihae.</p>
+<p>A foreign store, a number of native houses, a great <i>heiau</i>,
+or heathen temple on a height, a fringe of cocoa-nut palms, and a background
+of blazing hills, flaring with varieties of red, hardly toned down by
+any attempt at vegetation, a crystalline atmosphere palpitating with
+heat, deep, rippleless, clear water, with coral groves below, and a
+view of the three great Hawaiian mountains, are the salient features
+of this outlet of Hawaiian commerce.&nbsp; But ah! how soft and mild
+and blue the sky was, looking inland, where, for the first time, I saw
+far aloft, above solid masses of white cloud, sky hung, strangely uplifted,
+the great volcanic domes of Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa, and Hualalai, looking
+as if they had all passed into an endless repose.</p>
+<p>This bay, which affords excellent holding ground, and is screened
+by highlands from the sudden and violent gusts of wind, called &ldquo;<i>mumuku</i>,&rdquo;
+which sweep down between the mountains with almost irresistible fury,
+used to be a great place of call for whalers, who purchased large quantities
+of &ldquo;recruits&rdquo; here; yams in the earlier days, and more lately
+Irish potatoes, which flourish in the thirsty soil.&nbsp; But whaling
+in the North Pacific seems to be nearly &ldquo;played out,&rdquo; and
+the arrival of a whaler is not a common occurrence.</p>
+<p>Shortly before we arrived I found that the sailing of the San Francisco
+steamer is put off for a week, so I took advantage of a kind invitation
+I received some time ago to visit Waimea, and go from thence to Waimanu,
+a wonderful valley beyond Waipio, very little visited by foreigners.&nbsp;
+A gentleman and lady rode up here with me, and I got a horse on the
+beach with a native bullock saddle on him, an uncouth contrivance of
+wood not covered with hide, and a strong lassoing horn.&nbsp; The great
+wooden stirrups could not be shortened, but I soon found myself able,
+in true savage fashion, to gallop up and down hill without any.</p>
+<p>The chief object of interest on this ride is the great <i>heiau</i>,
+which stands on a bare steep hill above the sea, not easy of access.&nbsp;
+It was the last heathen temple built on Hawaii.&nbsp; On entering the
+huge pile, which stood gaunt and desolate in the thin red air, the story
+of the old bloody heathenism of the islands flashed upon my memory.&nbsp;
+The entrance is by a narrow passage between two high walls, and it was
+by this that the sacrificing priests dragged the human victims into
+the presence of Tairi, a hideous wooden idol, crowned with a helmet,
+and covered with red feathers, the favourite war-god of Kamehameha the
+Great, by whom this temple was built, before he proceeded to the conquest
+of Oahu.</p>
+<p>The shape is an irregular parallelogram, 224 feet long, and 100 wide.&nbsp;
+At each end, and on the <i>mauka</i> side, the walls, which are very
+solid and compact, though built of lava stones without mortar, are twenty
+feet high, and twelve feet wide at the bottom, but narrow gradually
+towards the top, where they are finished with a course of smooth stones
+six feet broad.&nbsp; On the sea side, the wall, which has been partly
+thrown down, was not more than six or seven feet high, and there were
+paved platforms for the accommodation of the <i>alii</i>, or chiefs,
+and the people in their orders.&nbsp; The upper terrace is spacious,
+and paved with flat smooth stones which were brought from a considerable
+distance, the greater part of the population of the island having been
+employed on the building.&nbsp; At the south end there was an inner
+court, where the principal idol stood, surrounded by a number of inferior
+deities, for the Hawaiians had &ldquo;gods many, and lords many.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Here also was the <i>anu</i>, a lofty frame of wickerwork, shaped like
+an obelisk, hollow, and five feet square at its base.&nbsp; Within this,
+the priest, who was the oracle of the god, stood, and of him the king
+used to inquire concerning war or peace, or any affair of national importance.&nbsp;
+It appears that the tones of the oracular voice were more distinct than
+the meaning of the utterances.&nbsp; However, the supposed answers were
+generally acted upon.</p>
+<p>On the outside of this inner court was the <i>l&eacute;l&eacute;</i>,
+or altar, on which human and other sacrifices were offered.&nbsp; On
+the day of the dedication of the temple to Tairi, vast offerings of
+fruit, dogs, and hogs were presented, and eleven human beings were immolated
+on the altar.&nbsp; These victims were taken from among captives, or
+those who had broken <i>Tabu</i>, or had rendered themselves obnoxious
+to the chiefs, and were often blind, maimed, or crippled persons.&nbsp;
+Sometimes they were dispatched at a distance with a stone or club, and
+their bodies were dragged along the narrow passage up which I walked
+shuddering; but oftener they were bound and taken alive into the <i>heiau</i>
+to be slain in the outer court.&nbsp; The priests, in slaying these
+sacrifices, were careful to mangle the bodies as little as possible.&nbsp;
+From two to twenty were offered at once.&nbsp; They were laid in a row
+with their faces downwards on the altar before the idol, to whom they
+were presented in a kind of prayer by the priest, and, if offerings
+of hogs were presented at the same time, these were piled upon them,
+and the whole mass was left to putrify.</p>
+<p>The only dwellings within the <i>heiau</i> were those of the priests,
+and the &ldquo;sacred house&rdquo; of the king, in which he resided
+during the seasons of strict <i>Tabu</i>.&nbsp; A doleful place this
+<i>heiau</i> is, haunted not only by the memories of almost unimaginable
+terrors, but by the sore thought that generations of Hawaiians lived
+and died in the unutterable darkness of this ignorant worship, passing
+in long procession from these grim rites into the presence of the Father
+whose infinite compassions they had never known.</p>
+<p>Every hundred feet of ascent from the rainless, fervid beach of Kawaihae
+increased the freshness of the temperature, and rendered exercise more
+delightful.&nbsp; From the fringe of palms along the coast to the damp
+hills north of Waimea, a distance of ten miles, there is not a tree
+or stream, though the scorched earth is deeply scored by the rush of
+fierce temporary torrents.&nbsp; Hitherto, I have only travelled over
+the green coast which faces the trade winds, where clouds gather and
+shed their rains, and this desert, which occupies a great part of leeward
+Hawaii, displeases me.&nbsp; It lies burning in the fierce splendours
+of a zone, which, until now, I had forgotten was the torrid zone, unwatered
+and unfruitful, red and desolate under the sun.&nbsp; The island is
+here only twenty-two miles wide, and strong winds sweep across it, whirling
+up its surface in great brown clouds, so that the uplands in part appear
+a smoking plain, backed by naked volcanic cones.&nbsp; No water, no
+grass, no ferns.&nbsp; Some thornless thistles, a little brush of sapless-looking
+indigo, and some species of composit&aelig; struggle for a doleful existence.&nbsp;
+There is nothing tropical about it but the intense heat.&nbsp; The red
+soil becomes suffused with a green tinge ten miles from the beach, and
+at the summit of the ascent the desert blends with this beautiful Waimea
+plain, one of the most marked features of Hawaii.&nbsp; The air became
+damp and cool; miles of fine smooth green grass stretched out before
+us; high hills, broken, pinnacled, wooded, and cleft with deep ravines,
+rose on our left; we heard the clash and music of falling water: to
+the north it was like the Munster Thal, to the south altogether volcanic.&nbsp;
+The tropics had vanished.&nbsp; There were frame houses sheltered from
+the winds by artificial screens of mulberry trees, and from the incursions
+of cattle by rough walls of lava stones five feet high; a mission and
+court house, a native church, much too large for the shrunken population,
+and other indications of an inhabited region.&nbsp; Except for the woods
+which clothe the hills, the characteristic of the scenery is baldness.</p>
+<p>On clambering over the wall which surrounds my host&rsquo;s kraal
+of dwellings, I heard in the dusk strange sweet voices crying rudely
+and emphatically, &ldquo;Who are you?&nbsp; What do you want?&rdquo;
+and was relieved to find that the somewhat inhospitable interrogation
+only proceeded from two Australian magpies.&nbsp; Mr. S--- is a Tasmanian,
+married to a young half-white lady: and her native mother and seven
+or eight dark girls are here, besides a number of natives and Chinese,
+and half Chinese, who are employed about the place.&nbsp; Sheep are
+the source of my host&rsquo;s wealth.&nbsp; He has 25,000 at three stations
+on Mauna Kea, and, at an altitude of 6000 feet they flourish, and are
+free from some of the maladies to which they are liable elsewhere.&nbsp;
+Though there are only three or four sheep owners on the islands, they
+exported 288,526 lbs. of wool last year. <a name="citation223"></a><a href="#footnote223">{223}</a>&nbsp;
+Mr. S--- has also 1000 head of cattle and 50 horses.</p>
+<p>The industry of Waimea is cattle raising, and some feeble attempts
+are being made to improve the degenerate island breed by the importation
+of a few short-horn cows from New Zealand.&nbsp; These plains afford
+magnificent pasturage as well as galloping ground.&nbsp; They are a
+very great thoroughfare.&nbsp; The island, which is an equilateral triangle,
+about 300 miles in &ldquo;circuit,&rdquo; can only be crossed here.&nbsp;
+Elsewhere, an impenetrable forest belt, and an impassable volcanic wilderness,
+compel travellers to take the burning track of adamant which snakes
+round the southern coast, when they are minded to go from one side of
+Hawaii to the other.&nbsp; Waimea also has the singular distinction
+of a road from the beach, which is traversed on great occasions by two
+or three oxen and mule teams, and very rarely by a more ambitious conveyance.&nbsp;
+There are few hours of day or night in which the tremulous <i>thud</i>
+of shoeless horses galloping on grass is not heard in Waimea.</p>
+<p>The altitude of this great table-land is 2500 feet, and the air is
+never too hot, the temperature averaging 64&deg; Fahrenheit.&nbsp; There
+is mist or rain on most days of the year for a short time, and the mornings
+and evenings are clear and cool.&nbsp; The long sweeping curves of the
+three great Hawaiian mountains spring from this level.&nbsp; The huge
+bulk of Mauna Kea without shoulders or spurs, rises directly from the
+Waimea level on the south to the altitude of 14,000 feet, and his base
+is thickly clustered with tufa-cones of a bright red colour, from 300
+to 1000 feet in height.&nbsp; Considerably further back, indeed forty
+miles away, the smooth dome of Mauna Loa appears very serene now, but
+only thirteen years ago the light was so brilliant, from one of its
+tremendous eruptions, that here it was possible to read a newspaper
+by it, and during its height candles were unnecessary in the evenings!&nbsp;
+Nearer the coast, and about thirty miles from here, is the less conspicuous
+dome of the dead volcano of Hualalai.&nbsp; If all Hawaii, south of
+Waimea, were submerged to a depth of 8000 feet, three nearly equi-distant,
+dome-shaped volcanic islands would remain, the highest of which would
+have an altitude of 6000 feet.&nbsp; To the south of these plains violent
+volcanic action is everywhere apparent, not only in tufa cones, but
+in tracts of ashes, scori&aelig;, and volcanic sand.&nbsp; Near the
+centre there are some very curious caves, possibly &ldquo;lava bubbles,&rdquo;
+which were used by the natives as places of sepulture.&nbsp; The Kohala
+hills, picturesque, wooded, and abrupt, bound Waimea on the north, with
+their exquisite grassy slopes, and bring down an abundance of water
+to the plain, but owing to the lightness of the soil and the evaporation
+produced by the tremendous winds, the moisture disappears within two
+miles of the hills, and an area of rich soil, ten miles by twelve, which,
+if irrigated, would be invaluable, is nothing but a worthless dusty
+desert, perpetually encroaching on the grass.&nbsp; As soon as the plains
+slope towards the east, the vegetation of the tropics reappears, and
+the face of the country is densely covered with a swampy and impenetrable
+bush hardly at all explored, which shades the sources of the streams
+which fall into the Waipio and Waimanu Valleys, and is supposed to contain
+water enough to irrigate the Saharas of leeward Hawaii.</p>
+<p>The climate of the plain is most invigorating.&nbsp; If there were
+waggon roads and obtainable comforts, Waimea, with its cool equable
+temperature, might become the great health resort of invalids from the
+Pacific coast.&nbsp; But Hawaii is not a place for the sick or old;
+for, if people cannot ride on horseback, they can have neither society
+nor change.&nbsp; Mr. Lyons, one of the most famous of the early missionaries,
+still clings to this place, where he has worked for forty years.&nbsp;
+He is an Hawaiian poet; and, besides translating some of our best hymns,
+has composed enough to make up the greater part of a bulky volume, which
+is said to be of great merit.&nbsp; He says that the language lends
+itself very readily to rhythmical expression.&nbsp; He was indefatigable
+in his youth, and was four times let down the <i>pali</i> by ropes to
+preach in the Waimanu Valley.&nbsp; Neither he nor his wife can mount
+a horse now, and it is very dreary for them, as the population has receded
+and dwindled from about them.&nbsp; Their house is made lively, however,
+by some bright little native girls, who board with them, and receive
+an English and industrial education.</p>
+<p>The moral atmosphere of Waimea has never been a wholesome one.&nbsp;
+The region was very early settled by a class of what may be truly termed
+&ldquo;mean whites,&rdquo; the &ldquo;beach-combers&rdquo; and riff-raff
+of the Pacific.&nbsp; They lived infamous lives, and added their own
+to the indigenous vices of the islands, turning the district into a
+perfect sink of iniquity, in which they were known by such befitting
+aliases as &ldquo;Jake the Devil,&rdquo; etc.&nbsp; The coming of the
+missionaries, and the settlement of moral, orderly whites on Hawaii,
+have slowly created a public opinion averse to flagrant immorality,
+and the outrageous license of former years would now meet with legal
+penalties.&nbsp; Many of the old settlers are dead, and others have
+drifted to regions beyond restraining influences, but still &ldquo;the
+Waimea crowd&rdquo; is not considered up to the mark.&nbsp; Most of
+the present set of foreigners are Englishmen who have married native
+women.&nbsp; It was in such quarters as this that the great antagonistic
+influence to the complete Christianization of the natives was created,
+and it is from such suspicious sources that the aspersions on missionary
+work are usually derived.</p>
+<p>Waimea has its own beauty--the grand breezy plain, the gigantic sweep
+of the mountain curves, the incessant changes of colour, and the morning
+view of Mauna Kea, with the pure snow on its ragged dome, rose-flushed
+in the early sunlight.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t agree with Disraeli that
+&ldquo;happiness is atmosphere;&rdquo; yet constant sunshine, and a
+climate which never threatens one with discomfort or ills, certainly
+conduce to equable cheerfulness.</p>
+<p>I am quite interested with a native lady here, the first I have met
+with who has been able to express her ideas in English.&nbsp; She is
+extremely shrewd and intelligent, very satirical, and a great mimic.&nbsp;
+She very cleverly burlesques the way in which white people express their
+admiration of scenery, and, in fact, ridicules admiration of scenery
+for itself.&nbsp; She evidently thinks us a sour, morose, worrying,
+forlorn race.&nbsp; &ldquo;We,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;are always happy;
+we never grieve long about anything; when any one dies we break our
+hearts for some days, and then we are happy again.&nbsp; We are happy
+all day long, not like white people, happy one moment, gloomy another:
+we&rsquo;ve no cares, the days are too short.&nbsp; What are <i>haoles</i>
+always unhappy about?&rdquo;&nbsp; Perhaps she expresses the general
+feeling of her careless, pleasure-loving, mirth-loving people, who,
+whatever commands they disobey, fulfil the one, &ldquo;Take no thought
+for the morrow.&rdquo;&nbsp; The fabrication of the beautiful quilts
+I before wrote of is a favourite occupation of native women, and they
+make all their own and their husbands&rsquo; clothes; but making <i>leis</i>,
+going into the woods to collect materials for them, talking, riding,
+bathing, visiting, and otherwise amusing themselves, take up the greater
+part of their time.&nbsp; Perhaps if we white women always wore <i>holukus</i>
+of one shape, we should have fewer gloomy moments!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XVI.</h3>
+<p>WAIMANU VALLEY.&nbsp; HAWAII.</p>
+<p>I am sitting at the door of a grass lodge, at the end of all things,
+for no one can pass further by land than this huge lonely cleft.&nbsp;
+About thirty natives are sitting about me, all staring, laughing, and
+chattering, and I am the only white person in the region.&nbsp; We have
+all had a meal, sitting round a large calabash of <i>poi</i> and a fowl,
+which was killed in my honour, and roasted in one of their stone ovens.&nbsp;
+I have forgotten my knife, and have had to help myself after the primitive
+fashion of aborigines, not without some fear, for some of them I am
+sure are in an advanced stage of leprosy.&nbsp; The brown tattooed limbs
+of one man are stretched across the mat, the others are sitting cross-legged,
+making <i>lauhala leis</i>.&nbsp; One man is making fishing-lines of
+a beautifully white and marvellously tenacious fibre, obtained from
+an Hawaiian &ldquo;flax&rdquo; plant (possibly <i>Urtica argentea</i>),
+very different from the New Zealand <i>Phormium tenax</i>.&nbsp; Nearly
+all the people of the valley are outside, having come to see the <i>wahine
+haole</i>: only one white woman, and she a resident of Hawaii, having
+been seen in Waimanu before.&nbsp; I am really alone, miles of mountain
+and gulch lie between me and the nearest whites.&nbsp; This is a wonderful
+place: a ravine about three miles long and three-quarters of a mile
+wide, without an obvious means of ingress, being walled in by precipices
+from 2000 to 4000 feet high.&nbsp; Five cascades dive from the <i>palis</i>
+at its head, and unite to form a placid river about up to a horse&rsquo;s
+body here, and deep enough for a horse to swim in a little below.&nbsp;
+Dense forests of various shades of green fill up the greater part of
+the valley, concealing the basins into which the cascades leap, and
+the grey basalt of the <i>palis</i> is mostly hidden by greenery.&nbsp;
+At the open end, two bald bluffs, one of them 2000 feet in height, confront
+the Pacific, and its loud booming surf comes up to within one hundred
+yards of the house where I am writing, but is banked off by a heaped-up
+barrier of colossal shingle.</p>
+<p>Hot and silent, a sunset world of an endless afternoon, it seems
+a palpable and living dream.&nbsp; And a few of these people, I understand,
+have dreamed away their lives here, never having been beyond their valley,
+at least by land.&nbsp; But it is a dream of ceaseless speech and rippling
+laughter.&nbsp; They are the merriest people I have yet seen, and doubtless
+their isolated life is dear to them.</p>
+<p>I wish I could sketch this most picturesque scene.&nbsp; In the verandah,
+which is formed of mats, two handsome youths, and five women in green,
+red, and orange chemises, all with <i>leis</i> of ferns round their
+hair, are reclining on the ground.&nbsp; Outside of this there is a
+pavement of large lava stones, and groups in all colours, wreathed and
+garlanded, including some much disfigured old people, crouching in red
+and yellow blankets, are sitting and lying there.&nbsp; Some are fondling
+small dogs; and a number of large ones, with a whole tribe of amicable
+cats, are picking bones.&nbsp; Surf-boards, paddles, saddles, lassos,
+spurs, gear, and bundles of <i>ti</i> leaves are lying about.&nbsp;
+Thirteen horses are tethered outside, some of which brought the riders
+who escorted me triumphantly from the head of the valley.&nbsp; The
+foreheads of the precipices opposite are reddening in the sunset, and
+between them and me horses and children are constantly swimming across
+the broad, still stream which divides the village into two parts; and
+now and then a man in a <i>malo</i>, and children who have come up the
+river swimming, with their clothes in one hand, increase the assemblage.</p>
+<p>All are intently watching me, but are as kind and good-natured as
+possible; and my guide from Waipio is discoursing to them about me.&nbsp;
+He knows a little abrupt, disjointed, almost unintelligible English,
+and comes up every now and then with an interrogation in his manner,
+&ldquo;Father? mother? married? watch?&nbsp; How came?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You&rdquo; appears beyond his efforts.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Kilauea?&nbsp;
+Lunalilo?&rdquo;</i>&nbsp; Then he goes back and orates rapidly, gesticulating
+emphatically.&nbsp; A very handsome, pleasant-looking man, with a red
+sash round his waist, who, I understand from signs, is the schoolmaster,
+emerged from the throng, and sat down beside me; but his English appears
+limited to these words, &ldquo;How old?&rdquo;&nbsp; When I told him
+by counting on my fingers he laughed heartily, and said &ldquo;Too old,&rdquo;
+and he told the others, and they all laughed.&nbsp; I have photographs
+of Queen Victoria and Mr. Coan in my writing-book, and when I exhibited
+them they crowded round me clapping their hands, and screaming with
+delight when they recognized Mr. Coan.&nbsp; The king&rsquo;s handwriting
+was then handed round amidst reverent &ldquo;ahs&rdquo; and &ldquo;ohs,&rdquo;
+or what sounded like them.&nbsp; This letter was also passed round and
+examined lengthwise, sidewise, and upside down.&nbsp; They shrieked
+with satirical laughter when I pressed some fragile ferns in my blotting-book.&nbsp;
+The natives think it quite idiotic in us to attach any value to withered
+leaves.&nbsp; My inkstand with its double-spring lids has been a great
+amusement.&nbsp; Each one opened both, and shut them again, and a chorus
+of &ldquo;<i>maikai, maikai</i>,&rdquo; (good) ran round the circle.&nbsp;
+They seem so simple and good that at last I have trusted them with my
+watch, which excites unbounded admiration, probably because of its small
+size.&nbsp; It is now on its travels; but I am not the least anxious
+about it.&nbsp; A man pointed to a hut some distance on the other side
+of the river, and appeared interrogative, and on my replying affirmatively,
+he mounted a horse and carried off the watch in the direction indicated.&nbsp;
+Mr. Ellis came to this valley in a canoe, and he mentions that when
+he preached, the natives, who seemed to be very indifferent to the general
+truths of Christianity, became very deeply interested when they heard
+of <i>Ora loa ia Jesu</i> (endless life by Jesus).&nbsp; While I was
+up the valley the poor people made a wonderful bed of seven fine mats,
+one over the other, on one side of the house, and screened it off with
+a flaring muslin curtain; but on the other side there are ten pillows
+in a row, so that I wonder how many are to occupy the den during the
+night.&nbsp; I am now writing inside the house, with a hollowed stone,
+with some beef fat and a wick in it, for a light, and two youths seem
+delegated to attend upon me.&nbsp; One holds my ink, and if I look up,
+the other rushes for something that I am supposed to want.&nbsp; They
+insist on thinking that I am cold because my clothes are wet, and have
+thrown over me several folds of <i>tapa</i>, made from the inner bark
+of the <i>wauti</i> or cloth plant (<i>Broussonetia papyrifera</i>).&nbsp;
+They brought me a <i>kalo</i> leaf containing a number of living freshwater
+shrimps, and were quite surprised when I did not eat them.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>WAIPIO, March 5th.</p>
+<p>It seems fully a week since I left Waimea yesterday morning, so many
+new experiences have been crowded into the time.&nbsp; I will try to
+sketch my expedition while my old friend Halemanu is preparing dinner.&nbsp;
+The morning opened gloriously.&nbsp; The broad Waimea plains were flooded
+with red and gold, and the snowy crest of Mauna Kea was cloudless.&nbsp;
+We breakfasted by lamp light (the days of course are short in this latitude),
+and were away before six.&nbsp; My host kindly provided me with a very
+fine horse and some provisions in a leather wallet, and with another
+white man and a native accompanied me as far as this valley, where they
+had some business.&nbsp; The morning deepened into gorgeousness.&nbsp;
+A blue mist hung in heavy folds round the violet bases of the mountains,
+which rose white and sharp into the rose-flushed sky; the dew lay blue
+and sparkling on the short crisp grass; the air was absolutely pure,
+and with a suspicion of frost in it.&nbsp; It was all very fair, and
+the horses enjoyed the morning freshness, and danced and champed their
+bits as though they disliked being reined in.&nbsp; We rode over level
+grass-covered ground, till we reached the Hamakua bush, fringed with
+dead trees, and full of <i>ohias</i> and immense fern trees, some of
+them with a double tier of fronds, far larger and finer than any that
+I saw in New Zealand.&nbsp; There are herds of wild goats, cattle, and
+pigs on the island, and they roam throughout this region, trampling,
+grubbing, and rending, grinding the bark of the old trees and eating
+up the young ones.&nbsp; This ravaging is threatening at no distant
+date to destroy the beauty and alter the climate of the mountainous
+region of Hawaii.&nbsp; The cattle are a hideous breed--all bones, hide,
+and horns.</p>
+<p>We were at the top of the Waipio <i>pali</i> at eight, and our barefooted
+horses, used to the soft pastures of Waimea, refused to carry us down
+its rocky steep, so we had to walk.&nbsp; I admired this lonely valley
+far more than before.&nbsp; It was full of infinite depths of blue--blue
+smoke in lazy spirals curled upwards; it was eloquent in a morning silence
+that I felt reluctant to break.&nbsp; Against its dewy greenness the
+beach shone like coarse gold, and its slow silver river lingered lovingly,
+as though loth to leave it, and be merged in the reckless loud-tongued
+Pacific.&nbsp; Across the valley, the track I was to take climbed up
+in thready zigzags, and disappeared round a bold headland.&nbsp; It
+was worth a second visit just to get a glimpse of such a vision of peace.</p>
+<p>Halemanu, with hospitable alacrity, soon made breakfast ready, after
+which Mr. S., having arranged for my further journey, left me here,
+and for the first time I found myself alone among natives ignorant of
+English.&nbsp; For the Waimanu trip it is essential to have a horse
+bred in the Waimanu Valley and used to its dizzy <i>palis</i>, and such
+a horse was procured, and a handsome native, called Hananui, as guide.&nbsp;
+We were away by ten, and galloped across the valley till we came to
+the nearly perpendicular <i>pali</i> on the other side.&nbsp; The sight
+of this air-hung trail from Halemanu&rsquo;s house has turned back several
+travellers who were bent on the trip, but I had been told that it was
+quite safe on a Waimanu horse; and keeping under my fears as best I
+could, I let Hananui precede me, and began the ascent, which is visible
+from here for an hour.&nbsp; The <i>pali</i> is as nearly perpendicular
+as can be.&nbsp; Not a bush or fern, hardly a tuft of any green thing,
+clothes its bare, scathed sides.&nbsp; It terminates precipitously on
+the sea at a height of 2000 feet.&nbsp; Up this shelving wall, something
+like a sheep track, from thirty to forty-six inches broad, goes in great
+swinging zigzags, sometimes as broken steps of rock breast high, at
+others as a smooth ledge with hardly foothold, in three places carried
+away by heavy rains--altogether the most frightful track that imagination
+can conceive. <a name="citation235"></a><a href="#footnote235">{235}</a>&nbsp;
+It was most unpleasant to see the guide&rsquo;s horse straining and
+scrambling, looking every now and then as if about to fall over backwards.&nbsp;
+My horse went up wisely and nobly, but slipping, jumping, scrambling,
+and sending stones over the ledge, now and then hanging for a second
+by his fore feet.&nbsp; The higher we went the narrower and worse it
+grew.&nbsp; The girth was loose, so as not to impede the horse&rsquo;s
+respiration, the broad cinch which usually passes under the body having
+been fastened round his chest, and yet it was once or twice necessary
+to run the risk of losing my balance by taking my left foot out of the
+stirrup to press it against the horse&rsquo;s neck to prevent it from
+being crushed, while my right hung over the precipice.&nbsp; We came
+to a place where the path had been carried away, leaving a declivity
+of loose sand and gravel.&nbsp; You can hardly realize how difficult
+it was to dismount, when there was no margin outside the horse.&nbsp;
+I somehow slid under him, being careful not to turn the saddle, and
+getting hold of his hind leg, screwed myself round carefully behind
+him.&nbsp; It was alarming to see these sure-footed creatures struggle
+and slide in the deep gravel as though they must go over, and not less
+so to find myself sliding, though I was grasping my horse&rsquo;s tail.</p>
+<p>Between the summit and Waimanu, a distance of ten miles, there are
+nine gulches, two of them about 900 feet deep, all very beautiful, owing
+to the broken ground, the luxuriant vegetation, and the bright streams,
+but the <i>kona</i>, or south wind, was blowing, bringing up the hot
+breath of the equatorial belt, and the sun was perfectly unclouded,
+so that the heat of the gorges was intense.&nbsp; They succeed each
+other occasionally with very great rapidity.&nbsp; Between two of the
+deepest and steepest there is a ridge not more than fifty yards wide.</p>
+<p>Soon after noon we simultaneously stopped our horses.&nbsp; The Waimanu
+Valley lay 2500 feet (it is said) below us, and the trail struck off
+into space.&nbsp; It was a scene of loneliness to which Waipio seems
+the world.&nbsp; In a second the eye took in the twenty grass lodges
+of its inhabitants, the five cascades which dive into the dense forests
+of its upper end, its river like a silver ribbon, and its meadows of
+living green.&nbsp; In ten seconds a bird could have spanned the ravine
+and feasted on its loveliness, but we could only tip over the dizzy
+ridge that overhangs the valley, and laboriously descend into its heat
+and silence.&nbsp; The track is as steep and broken as that which goes
+up from hence, but not nearly so narrow, and without its elements of
+terror, for <i>kukuis, lauhalas, ohias</i>, and <i>ti</i> trees, with
+a lavish growth of ferns and trailers, grow luxuriantly in every damp
+rift of rock, and screen from view the precipices of the <i>pali</i>.&nbsp;
+The valley looks as if it could only be reached in a long day&rsquo;s
+travel, so very far it is below, but the steepness of the track makes
+it accessible in an hour from the summit.&nbsp; As we descended, houses
+and a church which had looked like toys at first, dilated on our sight,
+the silver ribbon became a stream, the specks on the meadows turned
+into horses, the white wavy line on the Pacific beach turned into a
+curling wave, and lower still, I saw people, who had seen us coming
+down, hastily shuffling into clothes.</p>
+<p>There were four houses huddled between the <i>pali</i> and the river,
+and six or eight, with a church and schoolhouse on the other side; and
+between these and the ocean a steep narrow beach, composed of large
+stones worn as round and smooth as cannon balls, on which the surf roars
+the whole year round.&nbsp; The <i>pali</i> which walls in the valley
+on the other side is inaccessible.&nbsp; The school children and a great
+part of the population had assembled in front of the house which I described
+before.&nbsp; There was a sort of dyke of rough lava stones round it,
+difficult to climb, but the natives, though they are very kind, did
+not, on this or any similar occasion, offer me any help, which neglect,
+I suppose, arises from the fact that the native women never need help,
+as they are as strong, fearless, and active as the men, and rival them
+in swimming and other athletic sports.&nbsp; An old man, clothed only
+with his dark skin, was pounding baked <i>kalo</i> for <i>poi</i>, in
+front of the house; a woman with flowers in her hair, but apparently
+not otherwise clothed, was wading up to her waist in the river, pushing
+before her a light trumpet-shaped basket used for catching shrimps,
+and the other women wore the usual bright-coloured chemises.</p>
+<p>I wanted to make the most of the six hours of daylight left, and
+we remounted our horses and rode for some distance up the river, which
+is the highway of the valley, all the children swimming on our right
+and left, each holding up a bundle of clothes with one hand, and two
+canoes paddled behind us.&nbsp; The river is still and clear, with a
+smooth bottom, but comes halfway up a horse&rsquo;s body, and riders
+take their feet out of the stirrups, bring them to a level with the
+saddle, lean slightly back, and hold them against the horse&rsquo;s
+neck.&nbsp; Equestrians following this fashion, canoes gliding, children
+and dogs swimming, were a most amusing picture.&nbsp; Several of the
+children swim to and from school every day.&nbsp; I was anxious to get
+rid of this voluntary escort, and we took a gallop over the soft springy
+grass till we reached some very pretty grass houses, under the shade
+of the most magnificent bread-fruit trees on Hawaii, loaded with fruit.&nbsp;
+There were orange trees in blossom, and coffee trees with masses of
+sweet white flowers lying among their flaky branches like snow, and
+the unfailing cocoa-nut rising out of banana groves, and clusters of
+gardenia smothering the red hibiscus.&nbsp; Here Hananui adopted a showman&rsquo;s
+air; he made me feel as if I were one of Barnum&rsquo;s placarded monsters.&nbsp;
+I had nothing to do but sit on my horse and be stared at.&nbsp; I felt
+that my bleached face was unpleasing, that my eyes and hair were faded,
+and that I had a great deal to answer for in the way of colour and attire.&nbsp;
+From the way in which he asked me unintelligible questions, I gathered
+that the people were catechizing him about me, and that he was romancing
+largely at my expense.&nbsp; They brought me some bananas and cocoa-nut
+milk, which were most refreshing.</p>
+<p>Beyond the houses the valley became a jungle of Indian shot (<i>Canna
+indica</i>), eight or nine feet high, guavas and <i>ohias</i>, with
+an entangled undergrowth of ferns rather difficult to penetrate, and
+soon Hananui, whose soul was hankering after the delights of society,
+stopped, saying, &ldquo;<i>Lios</i> (horses) no go.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+try,&rdquo; I replied, and rode on first.&nbsp; He sat on his horse
+laughing immoderately, and then followed me.&nbsp; I see that in travelling
+with natives it is essential to have a definite plan of action in one&rsquo;s
+own mind, and to verge on self-assertion in carrying it out.&nbsp; We
+fought our way a little further, and then he went out of sight altogether
+in the jungle, his horse having floundered up to his girths in soft
+ground, on which we dismounted and tethered the horses.&nbsp; H. had
+never been any further, and as I failed to make him understand that
+I desired to visit the home of the five cascades, I had to reverse our
+positions and act as guide.&nbsp; We crept along the side of a torrent
+among exquisite trees, moss, and ferns, till we came to a place where
+it divided.&nbsp; There were three horses tethered there, some wearing
+apparel lying on the rocks, and some human footprints along one of the
+streams, which decided me in favour of the other.&nbsp; H. remonstrated
+by signs, as doubtless he espied an opportunity for much gossip in the
+other direction, but on my appearing persistent, he again laughed and
+followed me.</p>
+<p>From this point it was one perfect, rapturous, intoxicating, supreme
+vision of beauty, and I felt, as I now believe, that at last I had reached
+a scene on which foreign eyes had never looked.&nbsp; The glories of
+the tropical forest closed us in with their depth, colour, and redundancy.&nbsp;
+Here the operations of nature are rapid and decisive.&nbsp; A rainfall
+of eleven feet in a year and a hothouse temperature force every plant
+into ceaseless activity, and make short work of decay.&nbsp; Leafage,
+blossom, fruitage, are simultaneous and perennial.&nbsp; The river,
+about as broad as the Cam at Cambridge, leaped along, clear like amber,
+pausing to rest awhile in deep bright pools, where fish were sporting
+above the golden sand, a laughing, sparkling, rushing, terrorless stream,
+&ldquo;without mysteries or agonies,&rdquo; broken by rocks, green with
+mosses and fragile ferns, and in whose unchilled waters, not more than
+three feet deep, wading was both safe and pleasant.&nbsp; It was not
+possible to creep along its margin, the forest was so dense and tangled,
+so we waded the whole way, and wherever the water ran fiercely my unshod
+guide helped me.&nbsp; One varied, glorious maze of vegetation came
+down to it, and every green thing leant lovingly towards it, or stooped
+to touch it, and over its whole magic length was arched and interlaced
+the magnificent large-leaved <i>ohia</i>, whose millions of spikes of
+rose-crimson blossoms lit up the whole arcade, and the light of the
+afternoon sun slanted and trickled through them, dancing in the mirthful
+water, turning its far-down sands to gold, and brightening the many-shaded
+greens of candlenut and breadfruit.&nbsp; It shone on majestic fern-trees,
+on the fragile <i>Polypodium tamariscinum</i>, which clung tremblingly
+to the branches of the <i>ohia</i>, on the beautiful lygodium, which
+adorned the uncouth trunk of the breadfruit; on shining banana leaves
+and glossy trailing yams; on gigantic lianas, which, climbing to the
+tops of the largest trees, descended in vast festoons, passing from
+tree to tree, and interlacing the forest with a living network; and
+on lycopodiums of every kind, from those which wrapped the rocks in
+feathery green to others hardly distinguishable from ferns.&nbsp; But
+there were twilight depths too, where no sunlight penetrated the leafy
+gloom, damp and cool: dreamy shades, in which the music of the water
+was all too sweet, and the loveliness too entrancing, creating that
+sadness, hardly &ldquo;akin to pain,&rdquo; which is latent in all intense
+enjoyment.&nbsp; Here and there a tree had fallen across the river,
+from which grew upwards and trailed downwards, fairy-like, semi-transparent
+mosses and ferns, all glittering with moisture and sunshine, and now
+and then a scarlet tropic bird heightened the effect by the flash of
+his plumage.</p>
+<p>After an hour of wading we emerged into broad sunny daylight at the
+home of the five cascades, which fall from a semicircular precipice
+into three basins.&nbsp; It is not, however, possible to pass from one
+to the other.&nbsp; This great gulf is a grand sight, with its dark
+deep basin from which it seemed so far to look up to the heavenly blue,
+and the water falling calmly and unhurriedly, amidst innumerable rainbows,
+from a height of 3000 feet.&nbsp; The sides were draped with ferns flourishing
+under the spray, and at the base the rock was very deeply caverned.&nbsp;
+I enjoyed a delicious bath, relying on sun and wind to dry my clothes,
+and then reluctantly waded down the river.&nbsp; At its confluence with
+another stream, still arched by <i>ohias</i>, a man and two women appeared
+rising out of the water, like a vision of the elder world in the days
+of Fauns, and Naiads, and Hamadryads.&nbsp; The water was up to their
+waists, and <i>leis</i> of <i>ohia</i> blossoms and ferns, and masses
+of unbound hair fantastically wreathed with moss, fell over their faultless
+forms, and their rich brown skin gleamed in the slant sunshine.&nbsp;
+They were catching shrimps with trumpet-shaped baskets, perhaps rather
+a prosaic occupation.&nbsp; They joined us, and we waded down together
+to the place where they had left their horses.&nbsp; The women slipped
+into their <i>holukus</i>, and the man insisted on my riding his barebacked
+horse to the place where we had left our own, and then we all galloped
+over the soft grass.</p>
+<p>Waimanu had turned out to meet us about thirty people on horseback,
+all of whom shook hands with me, and some of them threw over me garlands
+of <i>ohia</i>, pandanus, and hibiscus.&nbsp; Where our cavalcade entered
+the river, a number of children and dogs and three canoes awaited us,
+and thus escorted I returned triumphantly to the house.&nbsp; The procession
+on the river of paddling canoes, swimming children, and dogs, and more
+than thirty riders, with their feet tucked up round their horses&rsquo;
+necks, all escorting a &ldquo;pale face,&rdquo; was grotesque and enchanting,
+and I revelled in this lapse into savagery, and enjoyed heartily the
+kindliness and goodwill of this unsophisticated people.</p>
+<p>When darkness spread over the valley, clear voices ascended in a
+weird recitative, the room filled up with people, pipes circulated freely,
+<i>poi</i> was again produced, and calabashes of cocoa-nut milk.&nbsp;
+The <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;s</i> were long, and I crept within my curtain
+and lay down, but the drowsiness which legitimately came over me after
+riding thirty miles and wading two, was broken in upon by two monstrous
+cockroaches really as large as mice, with fierce-looking antenn&aelig;
+and prominent eyes, both of which mounted guard on my pillow.&nbsp;
+On rising to drive them away, I found to my dismay that they were but
+the leaders of a host, which only made a temporary retreat, rustling
+over the mat and dried grass with the crisp tread of mice, and scaring
+away sleep for some hours.&nbsp; Worse than these were the mosquitoes,
+also an imported nuisance, which stabbed and stung without any preliminary
+droning; and the heat was worse still, for thirteen human beings were
+lying on the floor and the door was shut.&nbsp; Had I known that two
+of these were lepers, I should have felt far from comfortable.&nbsp;
+As it was, I got up soon after midnight, and cautiously stepping among
+the sleeping forms, went out of doors.&nbsp; Everything favoured reflection,
+but I think the topics to which my mind most frequently reverted were
+my own absolute security--a lone white woman among &ldquo;savages,&rdquo;
+and the civilizing influence which Christianity has exercised, so that
+even in this isolated valley, gouged out of a mountainous coast, there
+was nothing disagreeable or improper to be seen.&nbsp; The night was
+very still, but the sea was moaning; the river rippled very gently as
+it brushed past the reeds; there was a hardly perceptible vibration
+in the atmosphere, which suggested falling water and quivering leaves;
+and the air was full of a heavy, drowsy fragrance, the breath of orange
+flowers, perhaps, and of the night-blowing Cereus, which had opened
+its ivory urn to the moon.&nbsp; I should have liked to stay out all
+night in the vague, delicious moonlight, but the dew was heavy, and
+moreover I had not any boots on, so I reluctantly returned to the grass
+house, which was stifling with heat and smells of cocoa-nut oil, tobacco,
+and the rancid smoke from beef fat.</p>
+<p>Before sunrise this morning my horse was saddled, and a number of
+natives had assembled.&nbsp; Hananui had disappeared, but the man who
+lent me his bare-backed horse yesterday was ready to act as guide.&nbsp;
+My boots could not then be found, so I adopted the native fashion of
+riding with bare feet.&nbsp; We again rode up the river in that slow
+and solemn fashion in which horses walk in water, galloped over a stretch
+of grass, crossed a bright stream several times, and then entered a
+dense jungle of Indian shot, plantains, and sadlerias, with breadfruit,
+<i>kukui</i>, and <i>ohia</i> rising out of it.&nbsp; There were thousands
+of plantains, a fruit resembling the banana, but that it requires cooking.&nbsp;
+The Indian shot, the yellow-blossomed variety, was of a gigantic size.&nbsp;
+Its hard, black seeds put into a bladder furnish the <i>chic-chac</i>,
+which in many places is used as an accompaniment to the utterly abominable
+and heathenish tom-tom.&nbsp; Here guavas as large as oranges and as
+yellow as lemons ripened and fell unheeded.&nbsp; Sometimes deep down
+we heard the rush of water, and Paalau got down and groped for it on
+his hands and knees; sometimes we heard a noise as of hippopotami, but
+nothing could be seen but the tips of ears, as a herd of happy, unbroken
+horses, scared by our approach, crashed away through the jungle.&nbsp;
+Clear rapid streams, fern-fringed, sometimes offered us a few yards
+of highway, but the jungle ever grew more dense, the forest trees larger,
+the lianas more tangled, the streams more sunk and rocky, and though
+the horses shut their eyes and boldly pushed through the tangle, we
+were fairly foiled when within half a mile from the head of the valley.&nbsp;
+I thoroughly appreciated the unsightly leather guards which are here
+used to cover the stirrups and feet, as without them I could not have
+ridden ten yards.&nbsp; We were so hemmed in that it was difficult to
+dismount, but I bound some wild <i>kalo</i> leaves round my feet, and
+managed to get over some broken rock to a knoll, from which I obtained
+a superb view of the wonderful cleft.&nbsp; <i>Palis</i> 3000 feet in
+height walled in its head with a complete inaccessibility.&nbsp; It
+lay in cool dewy shadow till the sudden sun flushed its precipices with
+pink, and a broad bar of light revealed the great chasm in which it
+terminates, while far off its portals opened upon the red eastern sky.&nbsp;
+This little lonely world had become so very dear to me, that I found
+it hard to leave it.</p>
+<p>There was some stir near the sea, for a man was about to build a
+grass house, and they were preparing a stone pavement for it.&nbsp;
+Thirty people sat on the ground in a line from the beach, and passed
+stones from hand to hand, as men pass buckets at a fire.&nbsp; It seemed
+a very attractive occupation, and I could hardly get Hananui to leave
+it.&nbsp; The natives are most gregarious and social in their habits.&nbsp;
+They assemble together for everything that has to be made or done, and
+their occupations and amusements are shared by both sexes.&nbsp; In
+old days it is said that a king of Hawaii assembled most of the adults
+of the then populous island, and formed a human chain three miles long
+to pass up stones for the building of the great <i>Heiau</i> in Kona.&nbsp;
+It is said that this valley had 2000 inhabitants forty years ago, but
+they have dwindled to 117.&nbsp; The former estimate is probably not
+an excessive one, for nearly the whole valley is suitable for the culture
+of <i>kalo</i>, and a square mile of <i>kalo</i> will feed 15,000 natives
+for a year.</p>
+<p>Two women were shrimping in the river, the children were swimming
+to school, blue smoke curled up into the still air, <i>kalo</i> was
+baking among the stones, and a group of women sat sewing and making
+<i>leis</i> on the ground.&nbsp; The Waimanu day had begun; and it was
+odd to think that through the long summer years days dawned like this,
+and that the people of the valley grew grey and old in shrimping and
+sewing and <i>kalo</i> baking.&nbsp; All Waimanu shook hands with me,
+the kindly &ldquo;<i>Aloha</i>&rdquo; filled the air, and the women
+threw garlands over us both.&nbsp; I could hardly induce my host to
+accept a dollar and a half for my entertainment.&nbsp; From the dizzy
+summit of the <i>pali</i>, where the sun was high and hot, I looked
+my last on the dark, cool valley, slumbering in an endless calm, the
+deepest, greenest, quaintest cleft on all the island.</p>
+<p>The sun was fierce and bright, the ocean had a metallic glint, the
+hot breath of the <i>kona</i> was scorching.&nbsp; My hands, swollen
+from mosquito bites, could not be stuffed into my gloves, and inflamed
+under the sun, and my wet boots baked and stiffened on my feet.&nbsp;
+Hananui plaited a crown of leaves for my hot head, which I found a great
+relief.&nbsp; I was still minded to linger, for one side of each glorious
+gulch was cool with shadow and dripping with dew.&nbsp; The blue morning
+glories were yet unwilted, rivulets dropped down into ferny grottoes
+and lingered there, rose <i>ohia</i> blossoms lighted shady places,
+orange flowers gleamed like stars amidst the dense leafage, and the
+crimped-leaved coffee shrubs were white with their mimic snow.&nbsp;
+It was my last tropical dream, and I was rudely roused by finding myself
+on the unsightly verge of the great bluff on the north side of this
+valley, which plunges to the sea with an uncompromising perpendicular
+dip of 2000 feet, and carries on its dizzy brow a shelving trail not
+more than two feet wide!</p>
+<p>I felt that I must go back and live and die in Waimanu rather than
+descend that scathed steep, and being stupid with terror flung myself
+from my horse, forgetting that it was much safer to trust to his four
+feet than to my two, and to an animal without &ldquo;nerves,&rdquo;
+dizziness, or &ldquo;the fore-knowledge of death,&rdquo; than to my
+palsied, cowardly self.&nbsp; I had intended to go into details of the
+horrible descent, but the &ldquo;<i>pilikia</i>&rdquo; is over now,
+and Halemanu claps me on the shoulder with an approving smile, ejaculating,
+&ldquo;<i>Maikai, maikai</i>&rdquo; (good).&nbsp; Besides, my returning
+senses inform me that I have not tasted food since yesterday, and some
+delicious river fishes are smoking on the table. . . . .<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XVII.</h3>
+<p>STR. KILAUEA.</p>
+<p>. . .&nbsp; I have been spending the day at Lahaina on Maui, on my
+way from Kawaihae to Honolulu.&nbsp; Lahaina is thoroughly beautiful
+and tropical looking, with its white latticed houses peeping out from
+under coco palms, breadfruit, candlenut, tamarinds, mangoes, bananas,
+and oranges, with the brilliant green of a narrow strip of sugar-cane
+for a background, and above, the flushed mountains of Eeka, riven here
+and there by cool green chasms, rise to a height of 6000 feet.&nbsp;
+Beautiful Lahaina!&nbsp; It is an oasis in a dazzling desert, straggling
+for nearly two miles along the shore, but compressed into a width of
+half a mile.&nbsp; It was a great missionary centre, as well as a great
+whaling station, but the whalers have deserted it, and missions are
+represented now only by the seminary of Lahainaluna on the hillside.&nbsp;
+An old palace, the remains of a fort, a custom-house, and a native church
+are the most conspicuous buildings.&nbsp; The stores and dwellings of
+the foreign residents are scattered along the shore, and the light frame
+house, with its green verandah, buried amid gorgeous exotics and shaded
+by candlenut and breadfruit, looks as seemly and in keeping as in far-off
+Massachusetts, under hickory and elm.&nbsp; The grass houses of the
+natives cluster along the waters&rsquo; edge, or in lanes dark with
+mangoes and bananas, and fragrant with gardenia fringing the cane-fields.&nbsp;
+These, with adobe houses and walls, the flush of the soil, the gaudy
+dresses of the natives, the masses of brilliant exotics, the intense
+blue of the sea, and the dry blaze of the tropical heat, give a decided
+individuality to the capital of Maui.&nbsp; The heat of Lahaina is a
+dry, robust, bracing, joyous heat.&nbsp; The mercury stood at 80&deg;,
+the usual temperature of the &ldquo;flare&rdquo; or sea level on the
+leeward side of the islands; but I strolled through the cane-fields
+and along the glaring beach without suffering the least inconvenience
+from the sun, and found the unusual precaution of a white umbrella perfectly
+needless.</p>
+<p>The beach is formed of pure white broken coral; the sea is blue with
+the calm, pure blue of turquoise, but crystalline in its purity, and
+breaks for ever over the environing coral reef with a low deep music.&nbsp;
+Blue water stretched to the far horizon, the sky was blazing blue, the
+leafage was almost dazzling to the eye, the mountainous island of Molokai
+floated like a great blue morning glory on the yet bluer sea; a sweet,
+soft breeze rustled through the palms, lazy ripples plashed lightly
+on the sand; humanity basked, flower-clad, in sunny indolence; everything
+was redundant, fervid, beautiful.&nbsp; How can I make you realize the
+glorious, bountiful, sun-steeped tropics under our cold grey skies,
+and amidst our pale, monotonous, lustreless greens?</p>
+<p>Yet Molokai is only enchanting in the distance, for its blue petals
+enfold 400 lepers doomed to endless isolation, and 300 more are shortly
+to be weeded out and sent thither.&nbsp; In to-day&rsquo;s paper appeared
+the painful notice, &ldquo;All lepers are required to report themselves
+to the Government health officer within fourteen days from this date
+for inspection, and final banishment to Molokai.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is
+hoped that leprosy may be &ldquo;stamped out&rdquo; by these stringent
+measures, but the leprous taint must be strong in many families, and
+the social, gregarious natives smoke each other&rsquo;s pipes and wear
+each other&rsquo;s clothes, and either from fatalism or ignorance have
+disregarded all precautions regarding this woful disease; and now that
+measures are being taken for the isolation of lepers, they are concealing
+them under mats and in caves and woods.&nbsp; This forlorn malady, called
+here Chinese leprosy, in the cases that I have seen, confers nothing
+of the white, scaly look attributed to Syrian leprosy; but the face
+is red, puffed, bloated, and shining, and the eyes glazed, and I am
+told that in its advanced stage the swollen limbs decay and drop off.&nbsp;
+It is a fresh item of the infinite curse which has come upon this race,
+and with Molokai in sight the Hesperides vanished, and I ceased to believe
+that the Fortunate Islands exist here or elsewhere on this weary earth.</p>
+<p>My destination was the industrial training and boarding school for
+girls, taught and superintended by two English ladies of Miss Sellon&rsquo;s
+sisterhood, Sisters Mary Clara and Ph&oelig;be; and I found it buried
+under the shade of the finest candlenut trees I have yet seen.&nbsp;
+A rude wooden cross in front is a touching and fitting emblem of the
+Saviour, for whom these pious women have sacrificed friends, sympathy,
+and the social intercourse and amenities which are within daily reach
+of our workers at home.&nbsp; The large house, which is either plastered
+stone or adobe, contains the dormitories, visitors&rsquo; room, and
+oratory, and three houses at the back, all densely shaded, are used
+as schoolroom, cook-house, laundry, and refectory.&nbsp; There is a
+playground under some fine tamarind trees, and an adobe wall encloses,
+without secluding, the whole.&nbsp; The visitors&rsquo; room is about
+twelve feet by eight feet, very bare, with a deal table and three chairs
+in it, but it was vacant, and I crossed to the large, shady, airy schoolroom,
+where I found the senior sister engaged in teaching, while the junior
+was busy in the cook-house.&nbsp; These ladies in eight years have never
+left Lahaina.&nbsp; Other people may think it necessary to leave its
+broiling heat and seek health and recreation on the mountains, but their
+work has left them no leisure, and their zeal no desire, for a holiday.&nbsp;
+A very solid, careful English education is given here, as well as a
+thorough training in all housewifely arts, and in the more important
+matters of modest dress and deportment, and propriety in language.&nbsp;
+There are thirty-seven boarders, native and half-native, and mixed native
+and Chinese, between the ages of four and eighteen.&nbsp; They provide
+their own clothes, beds, and bedding, and I think pay forty dollars
+a year.&nbsp; The capitation grant from Government for two years was
+2325 dollars.&nbsp; Sister Ph&oelig;be was my cicerone, and I owe her
+one of the pleasantest days I have spent on the islands.&nbsp; The elder
+Sister is in middle life, but though fragile-looking, has a pure complexion
+and a lovely countenance; the younger is scarcely middle-aged, one of
+the brightest, bonniest, sweetest-looking women I ever saw, with fun
+dancing in her eyes and round the corners of her mouth; yet the regnant
+expression on both faces was serenity, as though they had attained to
+&ldquo;the love which looketh kindly, and the wisdom which looketh soberly
+on all things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I never saw such a mirthful-looking set of girls.&nbsp; Some were
+cooking the dinner, some ironing, others reading English aloud; but
+each occupation seemed a pastime, and whenever they spoke to the Sisters
+they clung about them as if they were their mothers.&nbsp; I heard them
+read the Bible and an historical lesson, as well as play on a piano
+and sing, and they wrote some very difficult passages from dictation
+without any errors, and in a flowing, legible handwriting that I am
+disposed to envy.&nbsp; Their accent and intonation were pleasing, and
+there was a briskness and emulation about their style of answering questions,
+rarely found in country schools with us, significant of intelligence
+and good teaching.&nbsp; All but the younger girls spoke English as
+fluently as Hawaiian.&nbsp; I cannot convey a notion of the blitheness
+and independence of manner of these children.&nbsp; To say that they
+were free and easy would be wrong; it was rather the manner of very
+frolicsome daughters to very indulgent mothers or aunts.&nbsp; It was
+a family manner rather than a school manner, and the rule is obviously
+one of love.&nbsp; The Sisters are very wise in adapting their discipline
+to the native character and circumstances.&nbsp; The rigidity which
+is customary in similar institutions at home would be out of place,
+as well as fatal here, and would ultimately lead to a rebound of a most
+injurious description.&nbsp; Strict obedience is of course required,
+but the rules are few and lenient, and there is no more pressure of
+discipline than in a well-ordered family.&nbsp; The native amusements
+generally are objectionable, but Hawaiians are a dancing people, and
+will dance, or else indulge in less innocent pastimes; so the Sisters
+have taught them various English dances, and I never saw anything prettier
+or more graceful than their style of dancing.&nbsp; There is no uniform
+dress.&nbsp; The girls wear pretty print frocks, made in the English
+style, and several of them wore the hibiscus in their shining hair.&nbsp;
+Some of the older girls were beautiful in face as well as graceful in
+figure, but there was a snaky undulation about their movements which
+I never saw among Europeans.&nbsp; All looked bubbling over with fun
+and frolic, and there was a refinement and intelligence about their
+expression which contrasted favourably with that of the ordinary female
+face on the islands.</p>
+<p>There are two dormitories, excellently ventilated, with a four-post
+bed, with mosquito-bars, for each girl, and the beds were covered with
+those brilliant-coloured quilts in which the natives delight, and in
+which they exercise considerable ingenuity as well as individuality
+of taste.&nbsp; One Sister sleeps in each dormitory, and these highly-educated
+and refined women have no place of retirement except a very plain oratory;
+and having taken the vow of poverty, they have of course no possessions,
+none of the books, pictures, and knick-knacks wherewith others adorn
+their surroundings.&nbsp; Their whole lives, with the exception of the
+time passed in the oratory, are spent with the girls, and in visiting
+the afflicted at their homes, and this through eight blazing years,
+with the mercury always at 80&deg;!</p>
+<p>The Hawaiian women have no notions of virtue as we understand it,
+and if there is to be any future for this race it must come through
+a higher morality.&nbsp; Consequently the removal of these girls from
+evil and impure surroundings, the placing them under the happiest influences
+in favour of purity and goodness, the forming and fostering of industrious
+and housewifely habits, and the raising them in their occupations and
+amusements above those which are natural to their race, are in themselves
+a noble, and in some degree, a hopeful work, but it admits of neither
+pause nor relaxation.&nbsp; Those who carry it on are truly &ldquo;the
+lowest in the meanest task,&rdquo; for they have undertaken not only
+the superintendence of menial work (so called), but the work itself,
+in teaching by example and instruction the womanly industries of home.&nbsp;
+They have no society, until lately no regular Liturgical worship, and
+of necessity a very infrequent celebration of the Holy Communion; and
+they have undergone the trial which arose very naturally out of the
+ecclesiastical relations of the American missionaries, of being regarded
+as enemies, or at least dangerous interlopers, by the excellent men
+who had long resided on the islands as Christian teachers, and with
+whose views on such matters as dress and recreation their own are somewhat
+at variance.&nbsp; In the first instance, the habit they wore, their
+designations, the presence of Miss Sellon, the fame of whose Ritualistic
+tendencies had reached the islands, and their manifest connection with
+a section of the English Church which is regarded here with peculiar
+disfavour, roused a strongly antagonistic feeling regarding their work
+and the drift of their religious teaching.&nbsp; They are not connected
+with what is known at home as the &ldquo;Honolulu Mission.&rdquo; <a name="citation256"></a><a href="#footnote256">{256}</a><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XVIII.</h3>
+<p>HAWAIIAN HOTEL, HONOLULU.&nbsp; March 20th.</p>
+<p>Oahu, with its grey pinnacles, its deep valleys, its cool chasms,
+its ruddy headlands, and volcanic cones, all clothed in green by the
+recent rains, looked unspeakably lovely as we landed by sunrise in a
+rose-flushed atmosphere, and Honolulu, shady, dew-bathed, and brilliant
+with flowers, deserved its name, &ldquo;The Paradise of the Pacific.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The hotel is pleasant, and Mrs. D.&rsquo;s presence makes it sweet and
+homelike; but in a very few days I have lost much of the health I gained
+on Hawaii, and the &ldquo;Rolling Moses&rdquo; and the Rocky Mountains
+can hardly come too soon.&nbsp; For Honolulu is truly a metropolis,
+gay, hospitable, and restless, and this hotel centralizes the restlessness.&nbsp;
+Visiting begins at breakfast time, when it ends I know not, and receiving
+and making visits, court festivities, entertainments given by the commissioners
+of the great powers, riding parties, picnics, verandah parties, &ldquo;sociables,&rdquo;
+and luncheon and evening parties on board the ships of war, succeed
+each other with frightful rapidity.&nbsp; This is all on the surface,
+but beneath and better than this is a kindness which leaves no stranger
+to a sense of loneliness, no want uncared for, and no sorrow unalleviated.&nbsp;
+This, more than its beauty and its glorious climate, makes Honolulu
+&ldquo;Paradise&rdquo; for the many who arrive here sick and friendless.&nbsp;
+I notice that the people are very intimate with each other, and generally
+address each other by their Christian names.&nbsp; Very many are the
+descendants of the clerical and secular members of the mission, and
+these, besides being naturally intimate, are further drawn and held
+together by a society called &ldquo;The Cousins&rsquo; Society,&rdquo;
+the objects of which are admirable.&nbsp; The people take an intense
+interest in each other, and love each other unusually.&nbsp; Possibly
+they may hate each other as cordially when occasion offers.&nbsp; It
+is a charming town, and the society is delightful.&nbsp; I wish I were
+well enough to enjoy it.</p>
+<p>For people in the early stages of consumption this climate is perfect,
+owing to its equability, as also for bronchial affections.&nbsp; Unlike
+the health resorts of the Mediterranean, Algeria, Madeira, and Florida,
+where great summer heats or an unhealthy season compel half-cured invalids
+to depart in the spring, to return the next winter with fresh colds
+to begin the half-cure process again, people can live here until they
+are completely cured, as the climate is never unhealthy, and never too
+hot.&nbsp; Though the regular trades, which blow for nine months of
+the year, have not yet set in, and the mercury stands at 80&deg;, there
+is no sultriness: a tremulous sea-breeze and a mountain breeze fan the
+town, and the purple nights, when the stars hang out like lamps, and
+the moon gives a light which is almost golden, are cool and delicious.&nbsp;
+Roughly computed, the annual mean temperature is 75&deg; 55&rsquo;,
+with a divergence in either direction of only 7&deg; 55&rsquo;.&nbsp;
+As a general rule the temperature is cooler by four degrees for every
+thousand feet of altitude, so that people can choose their climate to
+suit themselves without leaving the islands.</p>
+<p>I am gradually learning a little of the topography of this island
+and of Honolulu, but the last is very intricate.&nbsp; The appearance
+of Oahu from the sea is deceptive.&nbsp; It looks hardly larger than
+Arran, but it is really forty-six miles long by twenty-five broad, and
+is 530 square miles in extent.&nbsp; Diamond Hill, or Leahi, is the
+most prominent object south of the town, beyond the palm groves of Waikiki.&nbsp;
+It is red and arid, except when, as now, it is verdure-tinged by recent
+rains.&nbsp; Its height is 760 feet, and its crater nearly as deep,
+but its cone is rapidly diminishing.&nbsp; Some years ago, when the
+enormous quantity of thirty-six inches of rain fell in one week, the
+degradation of both exterior and interior was something incredible,
+and the same process is being carried on slowly or rapidly at all times.&nbsp;
+The Punchbowl, immediately behind Honolulu, is a crater of the same
+kind, but of yet more brilliant colouring: so red is it indeed, that
+one might suppose that its fires had but just died out.&nbsp; In 1786
+an observer noted it as being composed of high peaks; but atmospheric
+influences have reduced it to the appearance of a single wasting tufa
+cone, similar to those which stud the northern slopes of Mauna Kea.&nbsp;
+There are a number of shore craters on the island, and six groups of
+tufa cones, but from the disintegration of the lava, and the great depth
+of the soil in many places, it is supposed that volcanic action ceased
+earlier than on Maui or Hawaii.&nbsp; The shores are mostly fringed
+with coral reefs, often half a mile in width, composed of cemented coral
+fragments, shells, sand, and a growing species of zoophyte.&nbsp; The
+ancient reefs are elevated thirty, forty, and even 100 feet in some
+places, forming barriers which have changed lagoons into solid ground.&nbsp;
+Honolulu was a bay or lagoon, protected from the sea by a coral reef
+a mile wide; but the elevation of this reef twenty-five feet has furnished
+a site for the capital, by converting the bay into a low but beautifully
+situated plain.</p>
+<p>The mountainous range behind is a rocky wall with outlying ridges,
+valleys of great size cutting the mountain to its core on either side,
+until the culminating peaks of Waiolani and Konahuanui, 4000 feet above
+the sea, seem as if rent in twain to form the Nuuanu Valley.&nbsp; The
+windward side of this range is fertile, and is dotted over with rice
+and sugar plantations, but the leeward side has not a trace of the redundancy
+of the tropics, and this very barrenness gives a unique charm to the
+exotic beauty of Honolulu.</p>
+<p>To me it is daily a fresh pleasure to stroll along the shady streets
+and revel among palms and bananas, to see clusters of the granadilla
+and night-blowing cereus mixed with the double blue pea, tumbling over
+walls and fences, while the vermilion flowers of the <i>Erythrina umbrosa</i>,
+like spikes of red coral, and the flaring magenta Bougainvillea (which
+is not a flower at all, but an audacious freak of terminal leaves) light
+up the shade, and the purple-leaved Drac&aelig;na which we grow in pots
+for dinner-table ornament, is as common as a weed.</p>
+<p>Besides this hotel, and the handsome but exaggerated and inappropriate
+Government buildings not yet finished, there are few &ldquo;imposing
+edifices&rdquo; here.&nbsp; The tasteful but temporary English Cathedral,
+the Kaiwaiaho Church, diminished once to suit a dwindled population,
+but already too large again; the prison, a clean, roomy building, empty
+in the daytime, because the convicts are sent out to labour on roads
+and public works; the Queen&rsquo;s Hospital for Curables, for which
+Queen Emma and her husband became mendicants in Honolulu; the Court
+House, a staring, unshaded building; and the Iolani Palace, almost exhaust
+the category.&nbsp; Of this last, little can be said, except that it
+is appropriate and proportioned to a kingdom of 56,000 souls, which
+is more than can be said of the income of the king, the salaries of
+the ministers, and some other things.&nbsp; It stands in pleasure-grounds
+of about an acre in extent, with a fine avenue running through them,
+and is approached by a flight of steps which leads to a tolerably spacious
+hall, decorated in the European style.&nbsp; Portraits of Louis Philippe
+and his queen, presented by themselves, and of the late Admiral Thomas,
+adorn the walls.&nbsp; The Hawaiians have a profound respect for this
+officer&rsquo;s memory, as it was through him that the sovereignty of
+the islands was promptly restored to the native rulers, after the infamous
+affair of its cession to England, as represented by Lord George Paulet.&nbsp;
+There are also some ornamental vases and miniature copies of some of
+Thorwaldsen&rsquo;s works.&nbsp; The throne-room takes up the left wing
+of the palace.&nbsp; This unfortunately resembles a rather dreary drawing-room
+in London or New York, and has no distinctive features except a decorated
+chair, which is the Hawaiian throne.&nbsp; There is an Hawaiian crown
+also, neither grand nor costly, but this I have not seen.&nbsp; At present
+the palace is only used for state receptions and entertainments, for
+the king is living at his private residence of Haemoeipio, not far off.</p>
+<p>Miss W. kindly introduced me to Queen Emma, or Kaleleonalani, the
+widowed queen of Kamehameha IV., whom you will remember as having visited
+England a few years ago, when she received great attention.&nbsp; She
+has one-fourth of English blood in her veins, but her complexion is
+fully as dark as if she were of unmixed Hawaiian descent, and her features,
+though refined by education and circumstances, are also Hawaiian; but
+she is a very pretty, as well as a very graceful woman.&nbsp; She was
+brought up by Dr. Rooke, an English physician here, and though educated
+at the American school for the children of chiefs, is very English in
+her leanings and sympathies, an attached member of the English Church,
+and an ardent supporter of the &ldquo;Honolulu Mission.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Socially she is very popular, and her exceeding kindness and benevolence,
+with her strongly national feeling as an Hawaiian, make her much beloved
+by the natives.</p>
+<p>The winter palace, as her town house is called, is a large shady
+abode, like an old-fashioned New England house externally, but with
+two deep verandahs, and the entrance is on the upper one.&nbsp; The
+lower floor seemed given up to attendants and offices, and a native
+woman was ironing clothes under a tree.&nbsp; Upstairs, the house is
+like a tasteful English country house, with a pleasant English look,
+as if its furniture and ornaments had been gradually accumulating during
+a series of years, and possessed individual histories and reminiscences,
+rather than as if they had been ordered together as &ldquo;plenishings&rdquo;
+from stores.&nbsp; Indeed, it is the most English-looking house I have
+seen since I left home, except Bishopscourt at Melbourne.&nbsp; If there
+were a bell I did not see it; and we did not ring, for the queen received
+us at the door of the drawing-room, which was open.&nbsp; I had seen
+her before in European dress, driving a pair of showy black horses in
+a stylish English phaeton; but on this occasion she was not receiving
+visitors formally, and was indulging in wearing the native <i>holuku</i>,
+and her black wavy hair was left to its own devices.&nbsp; She is rather
+below the middle height, very young-looking for her age, which is thirty-seven,
+and very graceful in her movements.&nbsp; Her manner is indeed very
+fascinating from a combination of unconscious dignity with ladylike
+simplicity.&nbsp; Her expression is sweet and gentle, with the same
+look of sadness about her eyes that the king has, but she has a brightness
+and archness of expression which give a great charm to her appearance.&nbsp;
+She has sorrowed much: first, for the death, at the age of four, of
+her only child, the Prince of Hawaii, who when dying was baptized into
+the English Church by the name of Albert Edward, Queen Victoria and
+the Prince of Wales being his sponsors; and secondly, for the premature
+death of her husband, to whom she was much attached.&nbsp; She speaks
+English beautifully, only hesitating now and then for the most correct
+form of expression.&nbsp; She spoke a good deal and with great pleasure
+of England; and described Venice and the emotions it excited in her
+so admirably, that I should like to have heard her describe all Europe.</p>
+<p>A few days afterwards I went to a garden party at her house.&nbsp;
+It was a very pretty sight, and the &ldquo;everybody&rdquo; of Honolulu
+was there to the number of 250.&nbsp; I must describe it for the benefit
+of ----, who persists in thinking that coloured royalty must necessarily
+be grotesque.&nbsp; People arrived shortly before sunset, and were received
+by Queen Emma, who sat on the lawn, with her attendants about her, very
+simply dressed in black silk.&nbsp; The king, at whose entrance the
+band played the national anthem, stood on another lawn, where presentations
+were made by the chamberlain; and those who were already acquainted
+with him had an opportunity for a few minutes&rsquo; conversation.&nbsp;
+He was dressed in a very well-made black morning suit, and wore the
+ribbon and star of the Austrian order of Francis Joseph.&nbsp; His simplicity
+was atoned for by the superlative splendour of his suite; the governor
+of Oahu, and the high chief Kalakaua, who was a rival candidate for
+the throne, being conspicuously resplendent.&nbsp; The basis of the
+costume appeared to be the Windsor uniform, but it was smothered with
+epaulettes, cordons, and lace; and each dignitary has a uniform peculiar
+to his office, so that the display of gold lace was prodigious.&nbsp;
+The chiefs are so raised above the common people in height, size, and
+general nobility of aspect, that many have supposed them to be of a
+different race; and the <i>alii</i> who represented the dwindled order
+that night were certainly superb enough in appearance to justify the
+supposition.&nbsp; Beside their splendour and stateliness, the forty
+officers of the English and American war-ships, though all in full-dress
+uniform, looked decidedly insignificant; and I doubt not that the natives
+who were assembled outside the garden railings in crowds were not behind
+me in making invidious comparisons.</p>
+<p>Chairs and benches were placed under the beautiful trees, and people
+grouped themselves on these, and promenaded, flirted, talked politics
+and gossip, or listened to the royal band, which played at intervals,
+and played well.&nbsp; The dress of the ladies, whether white or coloured,
+was both pretty and appropriate.&nbsp; Most of the younger women were
+in white, and wore natural flowers in their hair; and many of the elder
+ladies wore black or coloured silks, with lace and trains.&nbsp; There
+were several beautiful <i>leis</i> of the gardenia, which filled all
+the garden with their delicious odour.&nbsp; Tea and ices were handed
+round on S&egrave;vres china by footmen and pages in appropriate liveries.&nbsp;
+What a wonderful leap from calabashes and <i>poi</i>, <i>malos</i> and
+<i>paus</i>, to this correct and tasteful civilization!&nbsp; As soon
+as the brief amber twilight of the tropics was over, the garden was
+suddenly illuminated by myriads of Chinese lanterns, and the effect
+was bewitching.&nbsp; The upper suite of rooms was thrown open for those
+who preferred dancing under cover; but I think that the greater part
+of the assemblage chose the shady walks and purple night.&nbsp; Supper
+was served at eleven, and the party broke up soon afterwards; but I
+must confess that, charming as it was, I left before eight, for society
+makes heavier demands on any strength than the rough open-air life of
+Hawaii.</p>
+<p>The dwindling of the race is a most pathetic subject.&nbsp; Here
+is a sovereign chosen amidst an outburst of popular enthusiasm, with
+a cabinet, a legislature, and a costly and elaborate governing machinery,
+sufficient in Yankee phrase to &ldquo;run&rdquo; an empire of several
+millions, and here are only 49,000 native Hawaiians; and if the decrease
+be not arrested, in a quarter of a century there will not be an Hawaiian
+to govern.&nbsp; The chiefs, or <i>alii</i>, are a nearly extinct order;
+and, with a few exceptions, those who remain are childless.&nbsp; In
+riding through Hawaii I came everywhere upon traces of a once numerous
+population, where the hill slopes are now only a wilderness of guava
+scrub, and upon churches and school-houses all too large, while in some
+hamlets the voices of young children were altogether wanting.&nbsp;
+This nation, with its elaborate governmental machinery, its churches
+and institutions, has to me the mournful aspect of a shrivelled and
+wizened old man dressed in clothing much too big, the garments of his
+once athletic and vigorous youth.&nbsp; Nor can I divest myself of the
+idea that the laughing, flower-clad hordes of riders who make the town
+gay with their presence, are but like butterflies fluttering out their
+short lives in the sunshine,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;.&nbsp; .&nbsp;
+.&nbsp; a wreck and residue,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whose
+only business is to perish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The statistics on this subject are perfectly appalling.&nbsp; If
+we reduce Captain Cook&rsquo;s estimate of the native population by
+one-fourth, it was 300,000 in 1779.&nbsp; In 1872 it was only 49,000.&nbsp;
+The first official census was in 1832, when the native population was
+130,000.&nbsp; This makes the decrease 80,000 in forty years, or at
+the rate of 2000 a year, and fixes the period for the final extinction
+of the race in 1897, if that rate were to continue.&nbsp; It is a pity,
+for many reasons, that it is dying out.&nbsp; It has shown a singular
+aptitude for politics and civilization, and it would have been interesting
+to watch the development of a strictly Polynesian monarchy starting
+under passably fair conditions.&nbsp; Whites have conveyed to these
+shores slow but infallible destruction on the one hand, and on the other
+the knowledge of the life that is to come; and the rival influences
+of blessing and cursing have now been fifty years at work, producing
+results with which most reading people are familiar.</p>
+<p>I have not heard the subject spoken of, but I should think that the
+decrease in the population must cause the burden of taxation to press
+heavily on that which remains.&nbsp; Kings, cabinet ministers, an army,
+a police, a national debt, a supreme court, and common schools, are
+costly luxuries or necessaries.&nbsp; The civil list is ludicrously
+out of proportion to the resources of the islands, and the heads of
+the four departments--Foreign Relations, Interior, Finance, and Law(Attorney-General)--receive
+$5,000 a year each!&nbsp; Expenses and salaries have been increasing
+for the last thirty years.&nbsp; For schools alone every man between
+twenty-one and sixty pays a tax of two dollars annually, and there is
+an additional general tax for the same purpose.&nbsp; I suppose that
+there is not a better educated country in the world.&nbsp; Education
+is compulsory; and besides the primary schools, there are a number of
+academies, all under Government supervision, and there are 324 teachers,
+or one for every twenty-seven children.&nbsp; There is a Board of Education,
+and Kamakau, its president, reported to the last biennial session of
+the legislature that out of 8931 children between the ages of six and
+fifteen, 8287 were actually attending school!&nbsp; Among other direct
+taxes, every quadruped that can be called a horse, above two years old,
+pays a dollar a year, and every dog a dollar and a half.&nbsp; Does
+not all this sound painfully civilized?&nbsp; If the influence of the
+tropics has betrayed me into rhapsody and ecstacy in earlier letters,
+these dry details will turn the scale in favour of prosaic sobriety!</p>
+<p>I have said little about Honolulu, except of its tropical beauty.&nbsp;
+It does not look as if it had &ldquo;seen better days.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Its wharves are well cared for, and its streets and roads are very clean.&nbsp;
+The retail stores are generally to be found in two long streets which
+run inland, and in a splay street which crosses both.&nbsp; The upper
+storekeepers, with a few exceptions, are Americans, but one street is
+nearly given up to Chinamen&rsquo;s stores, and one of the wealthiest
+and most honourable merchants in the town is a Chinaman.&nbsp; There
+is an ice factory, and icecream is included in the daily bill of fare
+here, and iced water is supplied without limit, but lately the machinery
+has only worked in spasms, and the absence of ice is regarded as a local
+calamity, though the water supplied from the waterworks is both cool
+and pure.&nbsp; There are two good photographers and two booksellers.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t think that plateglass fronts are yet to be seen.&nbsp;
+Many of the storekeepers employ native &ldquo;assistants;&rdquo; but
+the natives show little aptitude for mercantile affairs, or indeed for
+the &ldquo;splendid science&rdquo; of money-making generally, and in
+this respect contrast with the Chinamen, who, having come here as Coolies,
+have contrived to secure a large share of the small traffic of the islands.&nbsp;
+Most things are expensive, but they are good.&nbsp; I have seen little
+of such decided rubbish as is to be found in the cheap stores of London
+and Edinburgh, except in tawdry artificial flowers.&nbsp; Good black
+silks are to be bought, and are as essential to the equipment of a lady
+as at home.&nbsp; Saddles are to be had at most of the stores, from
+the elaborate Mexican and Californian saddle, worth from 30 to 50 dollars,
+to a worthless imitation of the English saddle, dear at five.&nbsp;
+Boots and shoes, perhaps because in this climate they are a mere luxury,
+are frightfully dear, and so are books, writing paper, and stationery
+generally; a sheet of Bristol board, which we buy at home for 6d., being
+half a dollar here.&nbsp; But it is quite a pleasure to make purchases
+in the stores.&nbsp; There is so much cordiality and courtesy that,
+as at this hotel, the bill recedes into the background, and the purchaser
+feels the indebted party.</p>
+<p>The money is extremely puzzling.&nbsp; These islands, like California,
+have repudiated greenbacks, and the only paper currency is a small number
+of treasury notes for large amounts.&nbsp; The coin in circulation is
+gold and silver, but gold is scarce, which is an incovenience to people
+who have to carry a large amount of money about with them.&nbsp; The
+coinage is nominally that of the United States, but the dollars are
+Mexican, or French 5 franc pieces, and people speak of &ldquo;rials,&rdquo;
+which have no existence here, and of &ldquo;bits,&rdquo; a Californian
+slang term for 12&frac12; cents, a coin which to my knowledge does not
+exist anywhere.&nbsp; A dime, or 10 cents, is the lowest coin I have
+seen, and copper is not in circulation.&nbsp; An envelope, a penny bottle
+of ink, a pencil, a spool of thread, cost 10 cents each; postage-stamps
+cost 2 cents each for inter-island postage, but one must buy five of
+them, and dimes slip away quickly and imperceptibly.&nbsp; There is
+a loss on English money, as half-a-crown only passes for a half-dollar,
+sixpence for a dime, and so forth; indeed, the average loss seems to
+be about twopence in the shilling.</p>
+<p>There are four newspapers: the <i>Honolulu Gazette</i>, the <i>Pacific
+Commercial Advertiser</i>, <i>Ka Nupepa Kuokoa</i> (the &ldquo;Independent
+Press&rdquo;), and a lately started spasmodic sheet, partly in English
+and partly in Hawaiian, the <i>Nuhou</i> (News). <a name="citation270"></a><a href="#footnote270">{270}</a>&nbsp;
+The two first are moral and respectable, but indulge in the American
+sins of personalities and mutual vituperation.&nbsp; The <i>Nuhou</i>
+is scurrilous and diverting, and appears &ldquo;run&rdquo; with a special
+object, which I have not as yet succeeded in unravelling from its pungent
+but not always intelligible pages.&nbsp; I think perhaps the writing
+in each paper has something of the American tendency to hysteria and
+convulsions, though these maladies are mild as compared with the &ldquo;real
+thing&rdquo; in the <i>Alta California</i>, which is largely taken here.&nbsp;
+Besides these there are monthly sheets called <i>The Friend</i>, the
+oldest paper in the Pacific, edited by good &ldquo;Father Damon,&rdquo;
+and the <i>Church Messenger</i>, edited by Bishop Willis, partly devotional
+and partly devoted to the Honolulu Mission.&nbsp; All our popular American
+and English literature is read here, and I have hardly seen a table
+without &ldquo;Scribner&rsquo;s&rdquo; or &ldquo;Harper&rsquo;s Monthly&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;Good Words.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have lived far too much in America to feel myself a stranger where,
+as here, American influence and customs are dominant; but the English
+who are in Honolulu just now, <i>in transitu</i> from New Zealand, complain
+bitterly of its &ldquo;Yankeeism,&rdquo; and are very far from being
+at home, and I doubt not that Mr. M---, whom you will see, will not
+confirm my favourable description.&nbsp; It is quite true that the islands
+are Americanized, and with the exception of the Finance Minister, who
+is a Scotchman, Americans &ldquo;run&rdquo; the Government and fill
+the Chief Justiceship and other high offices of State.&nbsp; It is,
+however, perfectly fair, for Americans have civilized and Christianized
+Hawaii-nei, and we have done little except make an unjust and afterwards
+disavowed seizure of the islands.</p>
+<p>On looking over this letter I find it an <i>olla podrida</i> of tropical
+glories, royal festivities, finance matters, and odds and ends in general.&nbsp;
+I dare say you will find it dull after my letters from Hawaii, but there
+are others who will prefer its prosaic details to Kilauea and Waimanu;
+and I confess that, amidst the general lusciousness of tropical life,
+I myself enjoy the dryness and tartness of statistics, and hard uncoloured
+facts.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XIX.</h3>
+<p>HAWAIIAN HOTEL, HONOLULU.</p>
+<p>My latest news of you is five months old, and though I have not the
+slightest expectation that I shall hear from you, I go up to the roof
+to look out for the &ldquo;Rolling Moses&rdquo; with more impatience
+and anxiety than those whose business journeys are being delayed by
+her non-arrival.&nbsp; If such an unlikely thing were to happen as that
+she were to bring a letter, I should be much tempted to stay five months
+longer on the islands rather than try the climate of Colorado, for I
+have come to feel at home, people are so very genial, and suggest so
+many plans for my future enjoyment, the islands in their physical and
+social aspects are so novel and interesting, and the climate is unrivalled
+and restorative.</p>
+<p>Honolulu has not yet lost the charm of novelty for me.&nbsp; I am
+never satiated with its exotic beauties, and the sight of a kaleidoscopic
+whirl of native riders is always fascinating.&nbsp; The passion for
+riding, in a people who only learned equitation in the last generation,
+is most curious.&nbsp; It is very curious, too, to see women incessantly
+enjoying and amusing themselves in riding, swimming, and making <i>leis</i>.&nbsp;
+They have few home ties in the shape of children, and I fear make them
+fewer still by neglecting them for the sake of riding and frolic, and
+man seems rather the help-meet than the &ldquo;oppressor&rdquo; of woman;
+though I believe that the women have abandoned that right of choosing
+their husbands, which, it is said, that they exercised in the old days.&nbsp;
+Used to the down-trodden look and harrassed care-worn faces of the over-worked
+women of the same class at home, and in the colonies, the laughing,
+careless faces of the Hawaiian women have the effect upon me of a perpetual
+marvel.&nbsp; But the expression generally has little of the courteousness,
+innocence, and childishness of the negro physiognomy.&nbsp; The Hawaiians
+are a handsome people, scornful and sarcastic-looking even with their
+mirthfulness; and those who know them say that they are always quizzing
+and mimicking the <i>haoles</i>, and that they give everyone a nickname,
+founded on some personal peculiarity.</p>
+<p>The women are free from our tasteless perversity as to colour and
+ornament, and have an instinct of the becoming.&nbsp; At first the <i>holuku</i>,
+which is only a full, yoke nightgown, is not attractive, but I admire
+it heartily now, and the sagacity of those who devised it.&nbsp; It
+conceals awkwardness, and befits grace of movement; it is fit for the
+climate, is equally adapted for walking and riding, and has that general
+appropriateness which is desirable in costume.&nbsp; The women have
+a most peculiar walk, with a swinging motion from the hip at each step,
+in which the shoulder sympathises.&nbsp; I never saw anything at all
+like it.&nbsp; It has neither the delicate shuffle of the Frenchwoman,
+the robust, decided jerk of the Englishwoman, the stately glide of the
+Spaniard, or the stealthiness of the squaw; and I should know a Hawaiian
+woman by it in any part of the world.&nbsp; A majestic <i>wahine</i>
+with small, bare feet, a grand, swinging, deliberate gait, hibiscus
+blossoms in her flowing hair, and a <i>l&eacute;</i> of yellow flowers
+falling over her <i>holuku</i>, marching through these streets, has
+a tragic grandeur of appearance, which makes the diminutive, fair-skinned
+<i>haole</i>, tottering along hesitatingly in high-heeled shoes, look
+grotesque by comparison.</p>
+<p>On Saturday, our kind host took Mrs. D. and myself to the market,
+where we saw the natives in all their glory.&nbsp; The women, in squads
+of a dozen at a time, their Pa-&uacute;s streaming behind them, were
+cantering up and down the streets, and men and women were thronging
+into the market-place; a brilliant, laughing, joking crowd, their jaunty
+hats trimmed with fresh flowers, and <i>leis</i> of the crimson <i>ohia</i>
+and orange <i>lauhala</i> falling over their costumes, which were white,
+green, black, scarlet, blue, and every other colour that can be dyed
+or imagined.&nbsp; The market is a straggling, open space, with a number
+of shabby stalls partially surrounding it, but really we could not see
+the place for the people.&nbsp; There must have been 2000 there.</p>
+<p>Some of the stalls were piled up with wonderful fish, crimson, green,
+rose, blue, opaline--fish that have spent their lives in coral groves
+under the warm, bright water.&nbsp; Some of them had wonderful shapes
+too, and there was one that riveted my attention and fascinated me.&nbsp;
+It was, I thought at first, a heap, composed of a dog fish, some limpets,
+and a multitude of water snakes, and other abominable forms; but my
+eyes slowly informed me of the fact, which I took in reluctantly and
+with extreme disgust, that the whole formed one living monster, a revolting
+compound of a large paunch with eyes, and a multitude of nervy, snaky,
+out-reaching, twining, grasping, tentacular arms, several feet in length,
+I should think, if extended, but then lying in a crowded undulating
+heap; the creature was dying, and the iridescence was passing over what
+seemed to be its body in waves of colour, such as glorify the last hour
+of the dolphin.&nbsp; But not the colours of the rainbow could glorify
+this hideous, abominable form, which ought to be left to riot in ocean
+depths, with its loathsome kindred.&nbsp; You have read &ldquo;<i>Les
+Travailleurs du Mer</i>,&rdquo; and can imagine with what feelings I
+looked upon a living Devil-fish!&nbsp; The monster is much esteemed
+by the natives as an article of food, and indeed is generally relished.&nbsp;
+I have seen it on foreign tables, salted, under the name of squid. <a name="citation276"></a><a href="#footnote276">{276}</a></p>
+<p>We passed on to beautiful creatures, the <i>kihi-kihi</i>, or sea-cock,
+with alternate black and yellow transverse bands on his body; the <i>hinalea</i>,
+like a glorified mullet, with bright green, longitudinal bands on a
+dark shining head, a purple body of different shades, and a blue spotted
+tail with a yellow tip.&nbsp; The <i>Ohua</i> too, a pink scaled fish,
+shaped like a trout; the <i>opukai</i>, beautifully striped and mottled;
+the mullet and flying fish as common here as mackerel at home; the <i>hala</i>,
+a fine pink-fleshed fish, the albicore, the bonita, the <i>manini</i>
+striped black and white, and many others.&nbsp; There was an abundance
+of <i>opilu</i> or limpets, also the <i>pipi</i>, a small oyster found
+among the coral; the <i>ula</i>, as large as a clawless lobster, but
+more beautiful and variegated; and turtles which were cheap and plentiful.&nbsp;
+Then there were purple-spiked sea urchins, black-spiked sea eggs or
+<i>wana</i>, and <i>ina</i> or eggs without spikes, and many other curiosities
+of the bright Pacific.&nbsp; It was odd to see the pearly teeth of a
+native meeting in some bright-coloured fish, while the tail hung out
+of his mouth, for they eat fish raw, and some of them were obviously
+at the height of epicurean enjoyment.&nbsp; Seaweed and fresh-water
+weed are much relished by Hawaiians, and there were four or five kinds
+for sale, all included in the term <i>limu</i>.&nbsp; Some of this was
+baked, and put up in balls weighing one pound each.&nbsp; There were
+packages of baked fish, and dried fish, and of many other things which
+looked uncleanly and disgusting; but no matter what the package was,
+the leaf of the <i>Ti</i> tree was invariably the wrapping, tied round
+with sennet, the coarse fibre obtained from the husk of the cocoa-nut.&nbsp;
+Fish, here, averages about ten cents per pound, and is dearer than meat;
+but in many parts of the islands it is cheap and abundant.</p>
+<p>There is a ferment going on in this kingdom, mainly got up by the
+sugar planters and the interests dependent on them, and two political
+lectures have lately been given in the large hall of the hotel in advocacy
+of their views; one, on annexation, by Mr. Phillips, who has something
+of the oratorical gift of his cousin, Wendell Phillips; and the other,
+on a reciprocity treaty, by Mr. Carter.&nbsp; Both were crowded by ladies
+and gentlemen, and the first was most enthusiastically received.&nbsp;
+Mrs. D. and I usually spend our evenings in writing and working in the
+verandah, or in each other&rsquo;s rooms; but I have become so interested
+in the affairs of this little state, that in spite of the mosquitos,
+I attended both lectures, but was not warmed into sympathy with the
+views of either speaker.</p>
+<p>I daresay that some of my friends here would quarrel with my conclusions,
+but I will briefly give the <i>data</i> on which they are based.&nbsp;
+The census of 1872 gives the native population at 49,044 souls; of whom,
+700 are lepers; and it is <i>decreasing</i> at the rate of from 1,200
+to 2,000 a year, while the excess of native males over females on the
+islands is 3,216.&nbsp; The foreign population is 5,366, and it is <i>increasing</i>
+at the rate of 200 a year; and the number of half-castes of all nations
+has <i>increased</i> at the rate of 140 a year.&nbsp; The Chinese, who
+came here originally as plantation coolies, outnumber all the other
+nationalities together, excluding the Americans; but the Americans constitute
+the ruling and the monied class.&nbsp; Sugar is the reigning interest
+on the islands, and it is almost entirely in American hands.&nbsp; It
+is burdened here by the difficulty of procuring labour, and at San Francisco
+by a heavy import duty.&nbsp; There are thirty-five plantations on the
+islands, and there is room for fifty more.&nbsp; The profit, as it is,
+is hardly worth mentioning, and few of the planters do more than keep
+their heads above water.&nbsp; Plantations which cost $50,000 have been
+sold for $15,000; and others, which cost $150,000 have been sold for
+$40,000.&nbsp; If the islands were annexed, and the duty taken off,
+many of these struggling planters would clear $50,000 a year and upwards.&nbsp;
+So, no wonder that Mr. Phillips&rsquo;s lecture was received with enthusiastic
+plaudits.&nbsp; It focussed all the clamour I have heard on Hawaii and
+elsewhere, exalted the &ldquo;almighty dollar,&rdquo; and was savoury
+with the odour of coming prosperity.&nbsp; But he went far, very far;
+he has aroused a cry among the natives &ldquo;<i>Hawaii for the Hawaiians</i>,&rdquo;
+which, very likely, may breed mischief; for I am very sure that this
+brief civilization has not quenched the &ldquo;red fire&rdquo; of race;
+and his hint regarding the judicious disposal of the king in the event
+of annexation, was felt by many of the more sober whites to be highly
+impolitic.</p>
+<p>The reciprocity treaty, very lucidly advocated by Mr. Carter, and
+which means the cession of a lagoon with a portion of circumjacent territory
+on this island, to the United States, for a Pacific naval station, meets
+with more general favour as a safer measure; but the natives are indisposed
+to bribe the great Republic to remit the sugar duties by the surrender
+of a square inch of Hawaiian soil; and, from a British point of view,
+I heartily sympathise with them.&nbsp; Foreign, <i>i.e</i>. American,
+feeling is running high upon the subject.&nbsp; People say that things
+are so bad that something must be done, and it remains to be seen whether
+natives or foreigners can exercise the strongest pressure on the king.&nbsp;
+I was unfavourably impressed in both lectures by the way in which the
+natives and their interests were quietly ignored, or as quietly subordinated
+to the sugar interest.</p>
+<p>It is never safe to forecast destiny; yet it seems most probable
+that sooner or later in this century, the closing catastrophe must come.&nbsp;
+The more thoughtful among the natives acquiesce helplessly and patiently
+in their advancing fate; but the less intelligent, as I had some opportunity
+of hearing at Hilo, are becoming restive and irritable, and may drift
+into something worse if the knowledge of the annexationist views of
+the foreigners is diffused among them.&nbsp; Things are preparing for
+change, and I think that the Americans will be wise in their generation
+if they let them ripen for many years to come.&nbsp; Lunalilo has a
+broken constitution, and probably will not live long.&nbsp; Kalakaua
+will probably succeed him, and &ldquo;after him the deluge,&rdquo; unless
+he leaves a suitable successor, for there are no more chiefs with pre-eminent
+claims to the throne.&nbsp; The feeling among the people is changing,
+the feudal instinct is disappearing, the old despotic line of the Kamehamehas
+is extinct; and king-making by paper ballots, introduced a few months
+ago, is an approximation to president-making, with the canvassing, stumping,
+and wrangling, incidental to such a contested election.&nbsp; Annexation,
+or peaceful absorption, is the &ldquo;manifest destiny&rdquo; of the
+islands, with the probable result lately most wittily prophesied by
+Mark Twain in the <i>New York Tribune</i>, but it is impious and impolitic
+to hasten it.&nbsp; Much as I like America, I shrink from the day when
+her universal political corruption and her unrivalled political immorality
+shall be naturalised on Hawaii-nei. . . .&nbsp; Sunday evening.&nbsp;
+The &ldquo;Rolling Moses&rdquo; is in, and Sabbatic quiet has given
+place to general excitement.&nbsp; People thought they heard her steaming
+in at 4 a.m., and got up in great agitation.&nbsp; Her guns fired during
+morning service, and I doubt whether I or any other person heard another
+word of the sermon.&nbsp; The first batch of letters for the hotel came,
+but none for me; the second, none for me; and I had gone to my room
+in cold despair, when some one tossed a large package in at my verandah
+door, and to my infinite joy I found that one of my benign fellow-passengers
+in the <i>Nevada</i>, had taken the responsibility of getting my letters
+at San Francisco and forwarding them here.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know
+how to be grateful enough to the good man.&nbsp; With such late and
+good news, everything seems bright; and I have at once decided to take
+the first schooner for the leeward group, and remain four months longer
+on the islands.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XX.</h3>
+<p>KOLOA, KAUAI, March 23rd.</p>
+<p>I am spending a few days on some quaint old mission premises, and
+the &ldquo;guest house,&rdquo; where I am lodged, is a dobe house, with
+walls two feet thick, and a very thick grass roof comes down six feet
+all round to shade the windows.&nbsp; It is itself shaded by date palms
+and algarobas, and is surrounded by hibiscus, oleanders, and the <i>datura
+arborea</i>(?), which at night fill the air with sweetness.&nbsp; I
+am the only guest, and the solitude of the guest house in which I am
+writing is most refreshing to tired nerves.&nbsp; There is not a sound
+but the rustling of trees.</p>
+<p>The first event to record is that the trade winds have set in, and
+though they may yet yield once or twice to the <i>kona</i>, they will
+soon be firmly established for nine months.&nbsp; They are not soft
+airs as I supposed, but riotous, rollicking breezes, which keep up a
+constant clamour, blowing the trees about, slamming doors, taking liberties
+with papers, making themselves heard and felt everywhere, flecking the
+blue Pacific with foam, lowering the mercury three degrees, bringing
+new health and vigour with them,--wholesome, cheery, frolicsome north-easters.&nbsp;
+They brought me here from Oahu in eighteen hours, for which I thank
+them heartily.</p>
+<p>You will think me a Sybarite for howling about those eighteen hours
+of running to leeward, when the residents of Kauai, if they have to
+go to Honolulu in the intervals between the quarterly trips of the <i>Kilauea</i>,
+have to spend from three to nine days in beating to windward.&nbsp;
+These inter-island voyages of extreme detention, rolling on a lazy swell
+in tropical heat, or beating for days against the strong trades without
+shelter from the sun, and without anything that could be called accommodation,
+were among the inevitable hardships to which the missionaries&rsquo;
+wives and children were exposed in every migration for nearly forty
+years.</p>
+<p>When I reached the wharf at Honolulu the sight of the <i>Jenny</i>,
+the small sixty-ton schooner by which I was to travel, nearly made me
+give up this pleasant plan, so small she looked, and so cumbered with
+natives and their accompaniments of mats, dogs, and calabashes of <i>poi</i>.&nbsp;
+But she is clean, and as sweet as a boat can be which carries through
+the tropics cattle, hides, sugar, and molasses.&nbsp; She is very low
+in the water, her deck is the real &ldquo;fisherman&rsquo;s walk, two
+steps and overboard;&rdquo; and on this occasion was occupied solely
+by natives.&nbsp; The Attorney General and Mrs. Judd were to have been
+my fellow voyagers, but my disappointment at their non-appearance was
+considerably mitigated by the fact that there was not stowage room for
+more than one white passenger!&nbsp; Mrs. Dexter pitied me heartily,
+for it made her quite ill to look down the cabin hatch; but I convinced
+her that no inconveniences are legitimate subjects for sympathy which
+are endured in the pursuit of pleasure.&nbsp; There was just room on
+deck for me to sit on a box, and the obliging, gentlemanly master, who,
+with his son and myself, were the only whites on board, sat on the taffrail.</p>
+<p>The <i>Jenny</i> spread her white duck sails, glided gracefully away
+from the wharf, and bounded through the coral reef; the red sunlight
+faded, the stars came out, the Honolulu light went down in the distance,
+and in two hours the little craft was out of sight of land on the broad,
+crisp Pacific.&nbsp; It was so chilly, that after admiring as long as
+I could, I dived into the cabin, a mere den, with a table, and a berth
+on each side, in one of which I lay down, and the other was alternately
+occupied by the captain and his son.&nbsp; But limited as I thought
+it, boards have been placed across on some occasions, and eleven whites
+have been packed into a space six feet by eight!&nbsp; The heat and
+suffocation were nearly intolerable, the black flies swarming, the mosquitos
+countless and vicious, the fleas agile beyond anything, and the cockroaches
+gigantic.&nbsp; Some of the finer cargo was in the cabin, and large
+rats, only too visible by the light of a swinging lamp, were assailing
+it, and one with a portentous tail ran over my berth more than once,
+producing a <i>stampede</i> among the cockroaches each time.&nbsp; I
+have seldom spent a more miserable night, though there was the extreme
+satisfaction of knowing that every inch of canvas was drawing.</p>
+<p>Towards morning the short jerking motion of a ship close hauled,
+made me know that we were standing in for the land, and at daylight
+we anchored in Koloa Roads.&nbsp; The view is a pleasant one.&nbsp;
+The rains have been abundant, and the land, which here rises rather
+gradually from the sea, is dotted with houses, abounds in signs of cultivation,
+and then spreads up into a rolling country between precipitous ranges
+of mountains.&nbsp; The hills look something like those of Oahu, but
+their wonderful greenness denotes a cooler climate and more copious
+rains, also their slopes and valleys are densely wooded, and Kauai obviously
+has its characteristic features, one of which must certainly be a superabundance
+of that most unsightly cactus, the prickly pear, to which the motto
+<i>nemo me impune lacessit</i> most literally applies.</p>
+<p>I had not time to tell you before that this trip to Kauai was hastily
+arranged for me by several of my Honolulu friends, some of whom gave
+me letters of introduction, while others wrote forewarning their friends
+of my arrival.&nbsp; I am often reminded of Hazael&rsquo;s question,
+&ldquo;Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+There is no inn or boarding house on the island, and I had hitherto
+believed that I could not be concussed into following the usual custom
+whereby a traveller throws himself on the hospitality of the residents.&nbsp;
+Yet, under the influence of Honolulu persuasions, I am doing this very
+thing, but with an amount of <i>mauvaise honte</i> and trepidation,
+which I will not voluntarily undergo again.</p>
+<p>My first introduction was to Mrs. Smith, wife of a secular member
+of the Mission, and it requested her to find means of forwarding me
+a distance of twenty-three miles.&nbsp; Her son was at the landing with
+a buggy, a most unpleasant index of the existence of carriage roads,
+and brought me here; and Mrs. Smith most courteously met me at the door.&nbsp;
+When I presented my letter I felt like a thief detected in a first offence,
+but I was at once made welcome, and my kind hosts insist on my remaining
+with them for some days.&nbsp; Their house is a pretty old-fashioned
+looking tropical dwelling, much shaded by exotics, and the parlour is
+homelike with new books.&nbsp; There are two sons and two daughters
+at home, all, as well as their parents, interesting themselves assiduously
+in the welfare of the natives.&nbsp; Six bright-looking native girls
+are receiving an industrial training in the house.&nbsp; Yesterday being
+Sunday, the young people taught a Sunday school twice, besides attending
+the native church, an act of respect to Divine service in Hawaiian which
+always has an influence on the native attendance.</p>
+<p>We have had some beautiful rides in the neighbourhood.&nbsp; It is
+a wild, lonely, picturesque coast, and the Pacific moans along it, casting
+itself on it in heavy surges, with a singularly dreary sound.&nbsp;
+There are some very fine specimens of the phenomena called &ldquo;blow-holes&rdquo;
+on the shore, not like the &ldquo;spouting cave&rdquo; at Iona, however.&nbsp;
+We spent a long time in watching the action of one, though not the finest.&nbsp;
+At half tide this &ldquo;spouting horn&rdquo; throws up a column of
+water over sixty feet in height from a very small orifice, and the effect
+of the compressed air rushing through a crevice near it, sometimes with
+groans and shrieks, and at others with a hollow roar like the warning
+fog-horn on a coast, is magnificent, when, as to-day, there is a heavy
+swell on the coast.</p>
+<p>Kauai is much out of the island world, owing to the infrequent visits
+of the <i>Kilauea</i>, but really it is only twelve hours by steam from
+the capital.&nbsp; Strangers visit it seldom, as it has no active volcano
+like Hawaii, or colossal crater like Maui, or anything sensational of
+any kind.&nbsp; It is called the &ldquo;Garden Island,&rdquo; and has
+no great wastes of black lava and red ash like its neighbours.&nbsp;
+It is queerly shaped, almost circular, with a diameter of from twenty-eight
+to thirty miles, and its area is about 500 square miles.&nbsp; Waialeale,
+its highest mountain, is 4,800 feet high, but little is known of it,
+for it is swampy and dangerous, and a part of it is a forest-covered
+and little explored tableland, terminating on the sea in a range of
+perpendicular precipices 2,000 feet in depth, so steep it is said, that
+a wild cat could not get round them.&nbsp; Owing to these, and the virtual
+inaccessibility of a large region behind them, no one can travel round
+the island by land, and small as it is, very little seems to be known
+of portions of its area.</p>
+<p>Kauai has apparently two centres of formation, and its mountains
+are thickly dotted with craters.&nbsp; The age and density of the vegetation
+within and without those in this Koloa district, indicate a very long
+cessation from volcanic action.&nbsp; It is truly an oddly contrived
+island.&nbsp; An elevated rolling region, park-like, liberally ornamented
+with clumps of <i>ohia</i>, <i>lauhala</i>, <i>hau</i>, (hibiscus) and
+<i>koa</i>, and intersected with gullies full of large eugenias, lies
+outside the mountain spurs behind Koloa.&nbsp; It is only the tropical
+trees, specially the <i>lauhala</i> or &ldquo;screw pine,&rdquo; the
+whimsical shapes of outlying ridges, which now and then lie like the
+leaves in a book, and the strange forms of extinct craters, which distinguish
+it from some of our most beautiful park scenery, such as Windsor Great
+Park or Belvoir.&nbsp; It is a soft tranquil beauty, and a tolerable
+road which owes little enough to art, increases the likeness to the
+sweet home scenery of England.&nbsp; In this part of the island the
+ground seems devoid of stones, and the grass is as fine and smooth as
+a race course.</p>
+<p>The latest traces of volcanic action are found here.&nbsp; From the
+Koloa Ridge to, and into the sea, a barren uneven surface of <i>pahoehoe</i>
+extends, often bulged up in immense bubbles, some of which have partially
+burst, leaving caverns, one of which, near the shore, is paved with
+the ancient coral reef!</p>
+<p>The valleys of Kauai are long, and widen to the sea, and their dark
+rich soil is often ten feet deep.&nbsp; On the windward side the rivers
+are very numerous and picturesque.&nbsp; Between the strong winds and
+the lightness of the soil, I should think that like some parts of the
+Highlands, &ldquo;it would take a shower every day.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+leeward side, quite close to the sea, is flushed and nearly barren,
+but there is very little of this desert region.&nbsp; Kauai is less
+legible in its formation than the other islands.&nbsp; Its mountains,
+from their impenetrable forests, dangerous breaks, and swampiness, are
+difficult of access, and its ridges are said to be more utterly irregular,
+its lavas more decomposed, and its natural sections more completely
+smothered under a profuse vegetation than those of any other island
+in the tropical Pacific.&nbsp; Geologists suppose, from the degradation
+of its ridges, and the absence of any recent volcanic products, that
+it is the oldest of the group, but so far as I have read, none of them
+venture to conjecture how many ages it has taken to convert its hard
+basalt into the rich soil which now sustains trees of enormous size.&nbsp;
+If this theory be correct, the volcanoes must have gone on dying out
+from west to east, from north to south, till only Kilauea remains, and
+its energies appear to be declining.&nbsp; The central mountain of this
+island is built of a heavy ferruginous basalt, but the shore ridges
+contain less iron, are more porous, and vary in their structure from
+a compact phonolite, to a ponderous basalt.</p>
+<p>The population of Kauai is a widely scattered one of 4,900, and as
+it is an out of the world region the people are probably better, and
+less sophisticated.&nbsp; They are accounted rustics, or &ldquo;pagans,&rdquo;
+in the classical sense, elsewhere.&nbsp; Horses are good and very cheap,
+and the natives of both sexes are most expert riders.&nbsp; Among their
+feats, are picking up small coins from the ground while going at full
+gallop, or while riding at the same speed wringing off the heads of
+unfortunate fowls, whose bodies are buried in the earth.</p>
+<p>There are very few foreigners, and they appear on the whole a good
+set, and very friendly among each other.&nbsp; Many of them are actively
+interested in promoting the improvement of the natives, but it is uphill
+work, and ill-rewarded, at least on earth.&nbsp; The four sugar plantations
+employ a good deal of Chinese labour, and I fear that the Chinamen are
+stealthily tempting the Hawaiians to smoke opium.</p>
+<p>All the world over, however far behind aborigines are in the useful
+arts, they exercise a singular ingenuity in devising means for intoxicating
+and stupifying themselves.&nbsp; On these islands distillation is illegal,
+and a foreigner is liable to conviction and punishment for giving spirits
+to a native Hawaiian, yet the natives contrive to distil very intoxicating
+drinks, specially from the root of the <i>ti</i> tree, and as the spirit
+is unrectified it is both fiery and unwholesome.&nbsp; Licences to sell
+spirits are confined to the capital.&nbsp; In spite of the notoriously
+bad effect of alcohol in the tropics, people drink hard, and the number
+of deaths which can be distinctly traced to spirit drinking is quite
+startling.</p>
+<p>The prohibition on selling liquor to natives is the subject of incessant
+discussions and &ldquo;interpellations&rdquo; in the national legislature.&nbsp;
+Probably all the natives agree in regarding it as a badge of the &ldquo;inferiority
+of colour;&rdquo; but I have been told generally that the most intelligent
+and thoughtful among them are in favour of its continuance, on the ground
+that if additional facilities for drinking were afforded, the decrease
+in the population would be accelerated.&nbsp; In the printed &ldquo;Parliamentary
+Proceedings,&rdquo; I see that petitions are constantly presented praying
+that the distillation of spirits may be declared free, while a few are
+in favour of &ldquo;total prohibition.&rdquo;&nbsp; Another prayer is
+&ldquo;that Hawaiians may have the same privileges as white people in
+buying and drinking spirituous liquors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A bill to repeal the invidious distinction was brought into the legislature
+not long since; but the influence of the descendants of the missionaries
+and of an influential part of the white community is so strongly against
+spirit drinking, as well as against the sale of drink to the natives,
+that the law remains on the Statute-book.</p>
+<p>The tone in which it was discussed is well indicated by the language
+of Kalakaua, the present king&rsquo;s rival: &ldquo;The restrictions
+imposed by this law do the people no good, but rather harm; for instead
+of inculcating the principles of honour, they teach them to steal behind
+the bar, the stable, and the closet, where they may be sheltered from
+the eyes of the law.&nbsp; The heavy licence imposed on the liquor dealers,
+and the prohibition against selling to the natives are an infringement
+of our civil rights, binding not only the purchaser but the dealer against
+acquiring and possessing property.&nbsp; Then, Mr. President, I ask,
+where lies virtue, where lies justice?&nbsp; Not in those that bind
+the liberty of this people, by refusing them the privilege that they
+now crave, of drinking spirituous liquors without restriction.&nbsp;
+Will you by persisting that this law remain in force make us a nation
+of hypocrites? or will you repeal it, that honour and virtue may for
+once be yours, O Hawaii.&rdquo;&nbsp; A committee of the Assembly, in
+reporting on the question of the prohibition of the sale of intoxicants
+to anybody, through its chairman, Mr. Carter, stated, &ldquo;Experience
+teaches that such prohibition could not be enforced without a strong
+public sentiment to indorse it, and such a sentiment does not prevail
+in this community, as is evidenced by the fact that the sale of intoxicating
+drinks to natives is largely practised in defiance of law and the executive,
+and that the manufacture of intoxicating drinks, though prohibited,
+is carried on in every district of the kingdom.&rdquo;&nbsp; So the
+question which is rising in every country ruled or colonised by Anglo-Saxons,
+is also agitated here with very strong feeling on both sides.</p>
+<p>I was led to this digression by seeing, for the first time, some
+very fine plants of the <i>Piper methysticum</i>.&nbsp; This is <i>awa</i>,
+truly a &ldquo;plant of renown&rdquo; throughout Polynesia.&nbsp; Strange
+tales are told of it.&nbsp; It is said to produce profound sleep, with
+visions more enchanting than those of opium or hasheesh, and that its
+repetition, instead of being deleterious, is harmless and even wholesome.&nbsp;
+Its sale is prohibited, except on the production of evidence that it
+has been prescribed as a drug.&nbsp; Nevertheless no law on the islands
+is so grossly violated.&nbsp; It is easy to <i>give</i> it, and easy
+to grow it, or dig it up in the woods, so that, in spite of the legal
+restrictions, it is used to an enormous extent.&nbsp; It was proposed
+absolutely to prohibit the sale of it, though the sum paid for the licence
+is no inconsiderable item in the revenue of a kingdom, which, like many
+others, is experiencing the difficulty of &ldquo;making both ends meet;&rdquo;
+but the committee which sat upon the subject reported &ldquo;that such
+prohibition is not practicable, unless its growth and cultivation are
+prevented.&nbsp; So long as public sentiment permits the open violation
+of the existing laws regulating its sale without rebuke, so long will
+it be of little use to attempt prohibition.&rdquo;&nbsp; One cannot
+be a day on the islands without hearing wonderful stories about <i>awa</i>;
+and its use is defended by some who are strongly opposed to the use
+as well as abuse of intoxicants.&nbsp; People who like &ldquo;The Earl
+and the Doctor&rdquo; delight themselves in the strongly sensuous element
+which pervades Polynesian life, delight themselves too, in contemplating
+the preparation and results of the <i>awa</i> beverage; but both are
+to me extremely disgusting, and I cannot believe that a drink, which
+stupifies the senses, and deprives a human being of the power to exercise
+reason and will, is anything but hurtful to the moral nature.</p>
+<p>While passing the Navigator group, one of my fellow-passengers, who
+had been for some time in Tutuila, described the preparation of <i>awa</i>
+poetically, the root &ldquo;being masticated by the pearly teeth of
+dusky flower-clad maidens;&rdquo; but I was an accidental witness of
+a nocturnal &ldquo;<i>awa</i> drinking&rdquo; on Hawaii, and saw nothing
+but very plain prose.&nbsp; I feel as if I must approach the subject
+mysteriously.&nbsp; I had no time to tell you of the circumstance when
+it occurred, when also I was completely ignorant that it was an illegal
+affair; and, now with a sort of &ldquo;guilty knowledge&rdquo; I tremble
+to relate what I saw, and to divulge that though I could not touch the
+beverage, I tasted the root, which has an acrid pungent taste, something
+like horse-radish, with an aromatic flavour in addition, and I can imagine
+that the acquired taste for it must, like other acquired tastes, be
+perfectly irresistible, even without the additional gratification of
+the results which follow its exercise.</p>
+<p>In the particular instance which I saw, two girls who were not beautiful,
+and an old man who would have been hideous but for a set of sound regular
+teeth, were sitting on the ground masticating the <i>awa</i> root, the
+process being contemplated with extreme interest by a number of adults.&nbsp;
+When, by careful chewing, they had reduced the root to a pulpy consistence,
+they tossed it into a large calabash, and relieved their mouths of superfluous
+saliva before preparing a fresh mouthful.&nbsp; This went on till a
+considerable quantity was provided, and then water was added, and the
+mass was kneaded and stirred with the hands till it looked like soap
+suds.&nbsp; It was then strained; and after more water had been added
+it was poured into cocoa-nut calabashes, and handed round.&nbsp; Its
+appearance eventually was like weak, frothy coffee and milk.&nbsp; The
+appearance of purely animal gratification on the faces of those who
+drank it, instead of being poetic, was of the low gross earth.&nbsp;
+Heads thrown back, lips parted with a feeble sensual smile, eyes hazy
+and unfocussed, arms folded on the breast, and the mental faculties
+numbed and sliding out of reach.</p>
+<p>Those who drink it pass through the stage of idiocy into a deep sleep,
+which it is said can be reproduced once without an extra dose, by bathing
+in cold water.&nbsp; Confirmed <i>awa</i> drinkers might be mistaken
+for lepers, for they are covered with whitish scales, and have inflamed
+eyes and a leathery skin, for the epidermis is thickened and whitened,
+and eventually peels off.&nbsp; The habit has been adopted by not a
+few whites, specially on Hawaii, though, of course, to a certain extent
+clandestinely.&nbsp; <i>Awa</i> is taken also as a medicine, and was
+supposed to be a certain cure for corpulence.</p>
+<p>The root and base of the stem are the parts used, and it is best
+when these are fresh.&nbsp; It seems to exercise a powerful fascination,
+and to be loved and glorified as whisky is in Scotland, and wine in
+southern Europe.&nbsp; In some of the other islands of Polynesia, on
+festive occasions, when the chewed root is placed in the calabash, and
+the water is poured on, the whole assemblage sings appropriate songs
+in its praise; and this is kept up until the decoction has been strained
+to its dregs.&nbsp; But here, as the using it as a beverage is an illicit
+process, a great mystery attends it.&nbsp; It is said that <i>awa</i>
+drinking is again on the increase, and with the illicit distillation
+of unwholesome spirits, and the illicit sale of imported spirits and
+the opium smoking, the consumption of stimulants and narcotics on the
+islands is very considerable. <a name="citation295"></a><a href="#footnote295">{295}</a></p>
+<p>To turn from drink to climate.&nbsp; It is strange that with such
+a heavy rainfall, dwellings built on the ground and never dried by fires
+should be so perfectly free from damp as they are.&nbsp; On seeing the
+houses here and in Honolulu, buried away in dense foliage, my first
+thought was, &ldquo;how lovely in summer, but how unendurably damp in
+winter,&rdquo; forgetting that I arrived in the nominal winter, and
+that it is really summer all the year.&nbsp; Lest you should think that
+I am perversely exaggerating the charms of the climate, I copy a sentence
+from a speech made by Kamehameha IV., at the opening of an Hawaiian
+agricultural society:--</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who ever heard of winter on our shores?&nbsp; Where among
+us shall we find the numberless drawbacks which, in less favoured countries,
+the labourer has to contend with?&nbsp; They have no place in our beautiful
+group, which rests like a water lily on the swelling bosom of the Pacific.&nbsp;
+The heaven is tranquil above our heads, and the sun keeps his jealous
+eye upon us every day, while his rays are so tempered that they never
+wither prematurely what they have warmed into life.&rdquo; <a name="citation296"></a><a href="#footnote296">{296}</a>&nbsp;
+The kindness of my hosts is quite overwhelming.&nbsp; They will not
+hear of my buying a horse, but insist on my taking away with me the
+one which I have been riding since I came, the best I have ridden on
+the islands, surefooted, fast, easy, and ambitious.&nbsp; I have complete
+sympathy with the passion which the natives have for riding.&nbsp; Horses
+are abundant and cheap on Kauai: a fairly good one can be bought for
+$20.&nbsp; I think every child possesses one.&nbsp; Indeed the horses
+seem to outnumber the people.</p>
+<p>The eight native girls who are being trained and educated here as
+a &ldquo;family school&rdquo; have their horses, and go out to ride
+as English children go for a romp into a play-ground.&nbsp; Yesterday
+Mrs. S. said, &ldquo;Now, girls, get the horses,&rdquo; and soon two
+little creatures of eight and ten came galloping up on two spirited
+animals.&nbsp; They had not only caught and bridled them, but had put
+on the complicated Mexican saddles as securely as if men had done it;
+and I got a lesson from them in making the Mexican knot with the thong
+which secures the cinch, which will make me independent henceforward.</p>
+<p>These children can all speak English, and their remarks are most
+original and amusing.&nbsp; They have not a particle of respect of manner,
+as we understand it, but seem very docile.&nbsp; They are na&iuml;ve
+and fascinating in their manners, and the most joyous children I ever
+saw.&nbsp; When they are not at their lessons, or household occupations,
+they are dancing on stilts, acting plays of their own invention, riding
+or bathing, and they laugh all day long.&nbsp; Mrs. S. has trained nearly
+seventy since she has been here.&nbsp; If there were nothing else they
+see family life in a pure and happy form, which must in itself be a
+moral training, and by dint of untiring watchfulness they are kept aloof
+from the corrupt native associations.&nbsp; Indeed they are not allowed
+to have any intercourse with natives, for, according to one of the missionaries
+who has spent many years on the islands: &ldquo;None know or can conceive
+without personal observation the nameless taint that pervades the whole
+garrulous talk and gregarious life of all heathen peoples, and above
+which our poor Hawaiian friends have not yet risen.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of
+this universal impurity of speech every one speaks in the strongest
+terms, and careful white parents not only seclude their children in
+early years from unrestrained intercourse with the natives, but prevent
+them from acquiring the Hawaiian tongue.&nbsp; In this respect the training
+of native girls involves a degree of patient watchfulness which must
+at times press heavily on those who undertake it, as the carefulness
+of years might fail of its result, if it were intermitted for one afternoon.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXI.</h3>
+<p>MAKAUELI, KAUAI.</p>
+<p>After my letters from Hawaii, and their narratives of volcanoes,
+freshets, and out of the world valleys, you will think my present letters
+dull, so I must begin this one pleasantly, by telling you that though
+I have no stirring adventures to relate, I am enjoying myself and improving
+again in health, and that the people are hospitable, genial, and cultivated,
+and that Kauai, though altogether different from Hawaii, has an extreme
+beauty altogether its own, which wins one&rsquo;s love, though it does
+not startle one into admiration like that of the Hawaiian gulches.&nbsp;
+Is it because that, though the magic of novelty is over it, there is
+a perpetual undercurrent of home resemblance?&nbsp; The dash of its
+musical waters might be in Cumberland; its swelling uplands, with their
+clumps of trees, might be in Kent; and then again, steep, broken, wooded
+ridges, with glades of grass, suggest the Val Moutiers; and broader
+sweeps of mountain outline, the finest scenery of the Alleghanies.</p>
+<p>But yet the very things which have a certain tenderness of familiarity,
+are in a foreign setting.&nbsp; The great expanse of restful sea, so
+faintly blue all day, and so faintly red in the late afternoon, is like
+no other ocean in its unutterable peace; and this joyous, riotous trade-wind,
+which rustles the trees all day, and falls asleep at night, and cools
+the air, seems to come from some widely different laboratory than that
+in which our vicious east winds, and damp west winds, and piercing north
+winds, and suffocating south winds are concocted.&nbsp; Here one cannot
+ride &ldquo;into the teeth of a north-easter,&rdquo; for such the trade-wind
+really is, without feeling at once invigorated, and wrapped in an atmosphere
+of balm.&nbsp; It is not here so tropical looking as in Hawaii, and
+though there are not the frightful volcanic wildernesses which make
+a thirsty solitude in the centre of that island, neither are there those
+bursts of tropical luxuriance which make every gulch an epitome of Paradise:
+I really cannot define the difference, for here, as there, palms glass
+themselves in still waters, bananas flourish, and the forests are green
+with ferns.</p>
+<p>We took three days for our journey of twenty-three miles from Koloa,
+the we, consisting of Mrs. ---, the widow of an early missionary teacher,
+venerable in years and character, a native boy of ten years old, her
+squire, a second Kaluna, without Kaluna&rsquo;s good qualities, and
+myself.&nbsp; Mrs. --- is not a bold horsewoman, and preferred to keep
+to a foot&rsquo;s pace, which fretted my ambitious animal, whose innocent
+antics alarmed her in turn.&nbsp; We only rode seven miles the first
+day, through a park-like region, very like Western Wisconsin, and just
+like what I expected and failed to find in New Zealand.&nbsp; Grass-land
+much tumbled about, the turf very fine and green, dotted over with clumps
+and single trees, with picturesque, rocky hills, deeply cleft by water-courses
+were on our right, and on our left the green slopes blended with the
+flushed, stony soil near the sea, on which indigo and various composit&aelig;
+are the chief vegetation.&nbsp; It was hot, but among the hills on our
+right, cool clouds were coming down in frequent showers, and the white
+foam of cascades gleamed among the <i>ohias</i>, whose dark foliage
+at a distance has almost the look of pine woods.</p>
+<p>Our first halting place was one of the prettiest places I ever saw,
+a buff frame-house, with a deep verandah festooned with passion flowers,
+two or three guest houses also bright with trailers, scattered about
+under the trees near it, a pretty garden, a background of grey rocky
+hills cool with woods and ravines, and over all the vicinity, that air
+of exquisite trimness which is artificially produced in England, but
+is natural here.</p>
+<p>Kaluna the Second soon showed symptoms of being troublesome.&nbsp;
+The native servants were away, and he was dull, and for that I pitied
+him.&nbsp; He asked leave to go back to Koloa for a &ldquo;sleeping
+tapa,&rdquo; which was refused, and either out of spite or carelessness,
+instead of fastening the horses into the pasture, he let them go, and
+the following morning when we were ready for our journey they were lost.&nbsp;
+Then he borrowed a horse, and late in the afternoon returned with the
+four animals, who were all white with foam and dust, and this escapade
+detained us another night.&nbsp; Subsequently, after disobeying orders,
+he lost his horse, which was a borrowed one, deserted his mistress,
+and absconded!</p>
+<p>The slopes over which we travelled were red, hot, and stony, cleft
+in one place however, by a green, fertile valley, full of rice and <i>kalo</i>
+patches, and native houses, with a broad river, the Hanap&eacute;p&eacute;,
+flowing quietly down the middle, which we forded near the sea, where
+it was half-way up my horse&rsquo;s sides.&nbsp; After plodding all
+day over stony soil in the changeless sunshine, as the shadows lengthened,
+we turned directly up towards the mountains and began a two hours ascent.&nbsp;
+It was delicious.&nbsp; They were so cool, so green, so varied, their
+grey pinnacles so splintered, their precipices so abrupt, their ravines
+so dark and deep, and their lower slopes covered with the greenest and
+finest grass; then dark <i>ohias</i> rose singly, then in twos and threes,
+and finally mixed in dense forest masses, with the pea-green of the
+<i>kukui</i>.</p>
+<p>It became yet lovelier as the track wound through deep wooded ravines,
+or snaked along the narrow tops of spine-like ridges; the air became
+cooler, damper, and more like elixir, till at a height of 1500 feet
+we came upon Makaueli, ideally situated upon an unequalled natural plateau,
+a house of patriarchal size for the islands, with a verandah festooned
+with roses, fuchsias, the water lemon, and other passion flowers, and
+with a large guest-house attached.&nbsp; It stands on a natural lawn,
+with abrupt slopes, sprinkled with orange trees burdened with fruit,
+<i>ohias</i>, and hibiscus.&nbsp; From the back verandah the forest-covered
+mountains rise, and in front a deep ravine widens to the grassy slopes
+below and the lonely Pacific,--as I write, a golden sea, on which the
+island of Niihau, eighteen miles distant, floats like an amethyst.</p>
+<p>The solitude is perfect.&nbsp; Except the &ldquo;quarters&rdquo;
+at the back, I think there is not a house, native or foreign, within
+six miles, though there are several hundred natives on the property.&nbsp;
+Birds sing in the morning, and the trees rustle throughout the day;
+but in the cool evenings the air is perfectly still, and the trickle
+of a stream is the only sound.</p>
+<p>The house has the striking novelty of a chimney, and there is a fire
+all day long in the dining-room.</p>
+<p>I must now say a little about my hosts and try to give you some idea
+of them.&nbsp; I heard their history from Mr. Damon, and thought it
+too strange to be altogether true until it was confirmed by themselves.
+<a name="citation303"></a><a href="#footnote303">{303}</a>&nbsp; The
+venerable lady at the head of the house emigrated from Scotland to New
+Zealand many years ago, where her husband was unfortunately drowned,
+and she being left to bring up a large family, and manage a large property,
+was equally successful with both.&nbsp; Her great ambition was to keep
+her family together, something on the old patriarchal system; and when
+her children grew up, and it seemed as if even their very extensive
+New Zealand property was not large enough for them, she sold it, and
+embarking her family and moveable possessions on board a clipper-ship,
+owned and commanded by one of her sons-in-law, they sailed through the
+Pacific in search of a home where they could remain together.</p>
+<p>They were strongly tempted by Tahiti, but some reasons having decided
+them against it, they sailed northwards and put into Honolulu.&nbsp;
+Mr. Damon, who was seaman&rsquo;s chaplain, on going down to the wharf
+one day, was surprised to find their trim barque, with this immense
+family party on board, with a beautiful and brilliant old lady at its
+head, books, pictures, work, and all that could add refinement to a
+floating home, about them, and cattle and sheep of valuable breeds in
+pens on deck.&nbsp; They then sailed for British Columbia, but were
+much disappointed with it, and in three months they re-appeared at Honolulu,
+much at a loss regarding their future prospects.</p>
+<p>The island of Niihau was then for sale, and in a very short time
+they purchased it of Kamehameha V. for a ridiculously low price, and
+taking their wooden houses with them, established themselves for seven
+years.&nbsp; It is truly isolated, both by a heavy surf and a disagreeable
+sea-passage, and they afterwards bought this beautiful and extensive
+property, made a road, and built the house.&nbsp; Only the second son
+and his wife live now on Niihau, where they are the only white residents
+among 350 natives.&nbsp; It has an area of 70,000 acres, and could sustain
+a far larger number of sheep than the 20,000 now upon it.&nbsp; It is
+said that the transfer of the island involved some hardships, owing
+to a number of the natives having neglected to legalise their claims
+to their <i>kuleanas</i>, but the present possessors have made themselves
+thoroughly acquainted with the language, and take the warmest interest
+in the island population.&nbsp; Niihau is famous for its very fine mats,
+and for necklaces of shells six yards long, as well as for the extreme
+beauty and variety of the shells which are found there.</p>
+<p>The household here consists first and foremost of its head, Mrs.
+---, a lady of the old Scotch type, very talented, bright, humorous,
+charming, with a definite character which impresses its force upon everybody;
+beautiful in her old age, disdaining that servile conformity to prevailing
+fashion which makes many old people at once ugly and contemptible: speaking
+English with a slight, old-fashioned, refined Scotch accent, which gives
+na&iuml;vet&eacute; to everything she says, up to the latest novelty
+in theology and politics: devoted to her children and grandchildren,
+the life of the family, and though upwards of seventy, the first to
+rise, and the last to retire in the house.&nbsp; She was away when I
+came, but some days afterwards rode up on horseback, in a large drawn
+silk bonnet, which she rarely lays aside, as light in her figure and
+step as a young girl, looking as if she had walked out of an old picture,
+or one of Dean Ramsay&rsquo;s books.</p>
+<p>Then there are her eldest son, a bachelor, two widowed daughters
+with six children between them, three of whom are grown up young men,
+and a tutor, a young Prussian officer, who was on Maximilian&rsquo;s
+staff up to the time of the Queretaro disaster, and is still suffering
+from Mexican barbarities.&nbsp; The remaining daughter is married to
+a Norwegian gentleman, who owns and resides on the next property.&nbsp;
+So the family is together, and the property is large enough to give
+scope to the grandchildren as they require it.</p>
+<p>They are thoroughly Hawaiianised.&nbsp; The young people all speak
+Hawaiian as easily as English, and the three young men, who are superb
+young fellows, about six feet high, not only emulate the natives in
+feats of horsemanship, such as throwing the lasso, and picking up a
+coin while going at full gallop, but are surf-board riders, an art which
+it has been said to be impossible for foreigners to acquire.</p>
+<p>The natives on Niihau and in this part of Kauai, call Mrs. --- &ldquo;Mama.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Their rent seems to consist in giving one or more days&rsquo; service
+in a month, so it is a revival of the old feudality.&nbsp; In order
+to patronise native labour, my hosts dispense with a Chinese, and employ
+a native cook, and native women come in and profess to do some of the
+housework, but it is a very troublesome arrangement, and ends in the
+ladies doing all the finer cooking, and superintending the coarser,
+setting the table, trimming the lamps, cutting out and &ldquo;fixing&rdquo;
+all the needlework, besides planning the indoor and outdoor work which
+the natives are supposed to do.&nbsp; Having related their proficiency
+in domestic duties, I must add that they are splendid horsewomen, one
+of them an excellent shot, and the other has enough practical knowledge
+of seamanship, as well as navigation, to enable her to take a ship round
+the world!&nbsp; It is a busy life, owing to the large number of natives
+daily employed, and the necessity of looking after the native <i>lunas</i>,
+or overseers.&nbsp; Dr. Smith at Koloa, twenty-two miles off, is the
+only doctor on the island, and the natives resort to this house in great
+numbers for advice and medicine in their many ailments.&nbsp; It is
+much such a life as people lead at Raasay, Applecross, or some other
+remote Highland place, only that people who come to visit here, unless
+they ride twenty-two miles, must come to the coast in the <i>Jenny</i>
+instead of being conveyed by one of David Hutcheson&rsquo;s luxurious
+steamers.&nbsp; If the <i>Clansman</i> were &ldquo;put on,&rdquo; probably
+the great house would not contain the strangers who would arrive!</p>
+<p>We were sitting in the library one morning when Mr. M., of Timaru,
+N.Z., rode up with an introduction, and was of course cordially welcomed.&nbsp;
+He goes on to England, where you will doubtless cross-question him concerning
+my statements.&nbsp; During his visit a large party of us made a delightful
+expedition to the Hanap&eacute;p&eacute; Falls, one of the &ldquo;lions&rdquo;
+of Kauai.&nbsp; It is often considered too &ldquo;rough&rdquo; for ladies,
+and when Mrs. --- and I said we were going, I saw Mr. M. look as if
+he thought we should be a dependent nuisance; I was amused afterwards
+with his surprise at Mrs. ---&rsquo;s courageous horsemanship, and at
+his obvious confusion as to whether he should help us, which question
+he wisely decided in the negative.</p>
+<p>If &ldquo;happiness is atmosphere,&rdquo; we were surely happy.&nbsp;
+The day was brilliant, and as cool as early June at home, but the sweet,
+joyous trade-wind could not be brewed elsewhere than on the Pacific.&nbsp;
+The scenery was glorious, and mountains, trees, frolicsome water, and
+scarlet birds, all rioted as if in conscious happiness.&nbsp; Existence
+was a luxury, and reckless riding a mere outcome of the animal spirits
+of horses and riders, and the <i>thud</i> of the shoeless feet as the
+horses galloped over the soft grass was sweeter than music.&nbsp; I
+could hardly hold my horse at all, and down hills as steep as the east
+side of Arthur&rsquo;s Seat, over knife-like ridges too narrow for two
+to ride abreast, and along side-tracks only a foot wide, we rode at
+full gallop, till we pulled up at the top of a descent of 2,000 feet
+with a broad, rapid river at its feet, emerging from between colossal
+walls of rock to girdle a natural lawn of the bright <i>manienie</i>
+grass.&nbsp; There had been a &ldquo;drive&rdquo; of horses, and numbers
+of these, with their picturesque saddles, were picketed there, while
+their yet more picturesque, scarlet-shirted riders lounged in the sun.</p>
+<p>It was a difficult two hours&rsquo; ride from thence to the Falls,
+worthy of Hawaii, and since my adventures in the Hilo gulches I cannot
+cross running water without feeling an amount of nervousness which I
+can conceal, but cannot reason myself out of.&nbsp; In going and returning,
+we forded the broad, rugged river twenty-six times, always in water
+up to my horse&rsquo;s girths, and the bottom was so rocky and full
+of holes, and the torrent so impetuous, that the animals floundered
+badly and evidently disliked the whole affair.&nbsp; Once it had been
+possible to ride along the edge, but the river had torn away what there
+was of margin in a freshet, so that we had to cross perpetually, to
+attain the rough, boulder-strewn strips which lay between the cliffs
+and itself.&nbsp; Sometimes we rode over roundish boulders like those
+on the top of Ben Cruachan, or like those of the landing at Iona, and
+most of those under the rush of the bright foaming water were covered
+with a silky green weed, on which the horses slipped alarmingly.&nbsp;
+My companions always took the lead, and by the time that each of their
+horses had struggled, slipped, and floundered in and out of holes, and
+breasted and leapt up steep banks, I was ready to echo Mr. M.&rsquo;s
+exclamation regarding Mrs. ---, &ldquo;I never saw such riding; I never
+saw ladies with such nerve.&rdquo;&nbsp; I certainly never saw people
+encounter such difficulties for the sake of scenery.&nbsp; Generally,
+a fall would be regarded as practically inaccessible which could only
+be approached in such a way.</p>
+<p>I will not inflict another description of similar scenery upon you,
+but this, though perhaps exceeding all others in beauty, is not only
+a type, perhaps the finest type, of a species of <i>ca&ntilde;on</i>
+very common on these islands, but is also so interesting geologically
+that you must tolerate a very few words upon it.</p>
+<p>The valley for two or three miles from the sea is nearly level, very
+fertile, and walled in by <i>palis</i> 250 feet high, much grooved vertically,
+and presenting fine layers of conglomerate and grey basalt; and the
+Hanap&eacute;p&eacute; winds quietly through the region which it fertilises,
+a stream several hundred feet wide, with a soft, smooth bottom.&nbsp;
+But four miles inland the bed becomes rugged and declivitous, and the
+mountain walls close in, forming a most magnificent <i>ca&ntilde;on</i>
+from 1,000 to 2,500 feet deep.&nbsp; Other <i>ca&ntilde;ons</i> of nearly
+equal beauty descend to swell the Hanap&eacute;p&eacute; with their
+clear, cool, tributaries, and there are &ldquo;meetings of the waters&rdquo;
+worthier of verse than those of Avoca.&nbsp; The walls are broken and
+highly fantastic, narrowing here, receding there, their strangely-arched
+recesses festooned with the feathery trichomanes, their clustering columns
+and broken buttresses suggesting some old-world minster, and their stately
+tiers of columnar basalt rising one above another in barren grey into
+the far-off blue sky.&nbsp; The river in carving out the gorge so grandly
+has most energetically removed all rubbish, and even the tributaries
+of the lateral <i>ca&ntilde;ons</i> do not accumulate any &ldquo;wash&rdquo;
+in the main bed.&nbsp; The walls as a rule rise clear from the stream,
+which, besides its lateral tributaries, receives other contributions
+in the form of waterfalls, which hurl themselves into it from the cliffs
+in one leap.</p>
+<p>After ascending it for four miles all further progress was barred
+by a <i>pali</i> which curves round from the right, and closes the chasm
+with a perpendicular wall, over which the Hanap&eacute;p&eacute; precipitates
+itself from a height of 326 feet, forming the Koula Falls.&nbsp; At
+the summit is a very fine entablature of curved columnar basalt, resembling
+the clam shell cave at Staffa, and two high, sharp, and impending peaks
+on the other side form a stately gateway for a stream which enters from
+another and broader valley; but it is but one among many small cascades,
+which round the arc of the falls flash out in foam among the dark foliage,
+and contribute their tiny warble to the diapason of the waterfall.&nbsp;
+It rewards one well for penetrating the deep gash which has been made
+into the earth.&nbsp; It seemed so very far away from all buzzing, frivolous,
+or vexing things, in the cool, dark abyss into which only the noon-day
+sun penetrates.&nbsp; All beautiful things which love damp; all exquisite,
+tender ferns and mosses; all shade-loving parasites flourish there in
+perennial beauty.&nbsp; And high above in the sunshine, the pea-green
+candle-nut struggles with the dark <i>ohia</i> for precarious roothold
+on rocky ledges, and dense masses of Eugenia, aflame with crimson flowers,
+and bananas, and all the leafy wealth born of heat and damp fill up
+the clefts which fissure the <i>pali</i>.&nbsp; Every now and then some
+scarlet tropic bird flashed across the shadow, but it was a very lifeless
+and a very silent scene.&nbsp; The arches, buttresses, and columns suggest
+a temple, and the deep tone of the fall is as organ music.&nbsp; It
+is all beauty, solemnity, and worship.</p>
+<p>It was sad to leave it and to think how very few eyes can ever feast
+themselves on its beauty.&nbsp; We came back again into gladness and
+sunshine, and to the vulgar necessity of eating, which the natives ministered
+to by presenting us with a substantial meal of stewed fowls and sweet
+potatoes at the nearest shanty.&nbsp; There must have been something
+intoxicating in the air, for we rode wildly and recklessly, galloping
+down steep hills (which on principle I object to), and putting our horses
+to their utmost speed.&nbsp; Mine ran off with me several times, and
+once nearly upset Mr. M.&rsquo;s horse, as he probably will tell you.</p>
+<p>The natives annoy me everywhere by their inhumanity to their horses.&nbsp;
+To-day I became an object of derision to them for hunting for sow-thistles,
+and bringing back a large bundle of them to my excellent animal.&nbsp;
+They starve their horses from mere carelessness or laziness, spur them
+mercilessly, when the jaded, famished things almost drop from exhaustion,
+ride them with great sores under the saddles, and with their bodies
+deeply cut with the rough girths; and though horses are not regarded
+as more essential in any part of the world, they neglect and maltreat
+them in every way, and laugh scornfully if one shows any consideration
+for them.&nbsp; Except for short shopping distances in Honolulu, I have
+never seen a native man or woman walking.&nbsp; They think walking a
+degradation, and I have seen men take the trouble to mount horses to
+go 100 yards.</p>
+<p>I have no time to tell you of a three days&rsquo; expedition which
+five of us made into the heart of the nearer mountainous district, attended
+by some mounted natives.&nbsp; Mr. K., from whose house we started,
+has the finest mango grove on the islands.&nbsp; It is a fine foliaged
+tree, but is everywhere covered with a black blight, which gives the
+groves the appearance of being in mourning, as the tough, glutinous
+film covers all the older leaves.&nbsp; The mango is an exotic fruit,
+and people think a great deal of it, and send boxes of mangoes as presents
+to their friends.&nbsp; It is yellow, with a reddish bloom, something
+like a magnum bonum plum, three times magnified.&nbsp; The only way
+of eating it in comfort is to have a tub of water beside you.&nbsp;
+It should be eaten in private by any one who wants to retain the admiration
+of his friends.&nbsp; It has an immense stone, and a disproportionately
+small pulp.&nbsp; I think it tastes strongly of turpentine at first,
+but this is a heresy.</p>
+<p>Beyond Waielva and its mango groves there is a very curious sand
+bank about 60 feet high, formed by wind and currents, and of a steep,
+uniform angle from top to bottom.&nbsp; It is very coarse sand, composed
+of shells, coral, and lava.&nbsp; When two handfuls are slapped together,
+a sound like the barking of a dog ensues, hence its name, the Barking
+Sands.&nbsp; It is a common amusement with strangers to slide their
+horses down the steep incline, which produces a sound like subterranean
+thunder, which terrifies unaccustomed animals.&nbsp; Besides this phenomenon,
+the mirage is often seen on the dry, hot soil, and so perfectly, too,
+that strangers have been known to attempt to ride round the large lake
+which they saw before them.</p>
+<p>Pleasant as our mountain trip was, both in itself, and as a specimen
+of the way in which foreigners recreate themselves on the islands, I
+was glad to get back to the broad Waimea, on which long shadows of palms
+reposed themselves in the slant sunshine, and in the short red twilight
+to arrive at this breezy height, and be welcomed by a blazing fire.</p>
+<p>Mrs. ---, in speaking of the mode of living here, was telling me
+that on a recent visit to England she felt depressed the whole time
+by what appeared to her &ldquo;the scarcity&rdquo; in the country.&nbsp;
+I never knew the meaning of the Old Testament blessing of &ldquo;plenty&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;bread to the full&rdquo; till I was in abundant Victoria,
+and it is much the same here.&nbsp; At home we know nothing of this,
+which was one of the chiefest of the blessings promised in the Old Testament.&nbsp;
+Its <i>genialising</i> effect is very obvious.&nbsp; A man feels more
+practically independent, I think, when he can say to all his friends,
+&ldquo;Drop in to dinner whenever you like,&rdquo; than if he possessed
+the franchise six times over; and people can indulge in hospitality
+and exercise the franchise, too, here, for meat is only twopence a pound,
+and bananas can be got for the gathering.&nbsp; The ever-increasing
+cost of food with us makes free-hearted hospitality an impossibility,
+and withers up all those kindly instincts which find expression in housing
+and feeding both friends and strangers.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXII.</h3>
+<p>LIHUE.&nbsp; KAUAI.</p>
+<p>I rode from Makaueli to Dr. Smith&rsquo;s, at Koloa, with two native
+attendants, a <i>luna</i> to sustain my dignity, and an inferior native
+to carry my carpet-bag.&nbsp; Horses are ridden with curb-bits here,
+and I had only brought a light snaffle, and my horse ran away with me
+again on the road, and when he stopped at last, these men rode alongside
+of me, mimicking me, throwing themselves back with their feet forwards,
+tugging at their bridles, and shrieking with laughter, exclaiming <i>Maikai</i>!&nbsp;
+<i>Maikai</i>!&nbsp; (good).</p>
+<p>I remained several days at Koloa, and would gladly have accepted
+the hospitable invitation to stay as many weeks, but for a cowardly
+objection to &ldquo;beating to windward&rdquo; in the <i>Jenny</i>.&nbsp;
+The scenery in the Koloa woods is exquisitely beautiful.&nbsp; Such
+supreme beauty produces on me some of the effects which fine music has
+upon those who have an exquisite sense of it.&nbsp; It speaks in a language
+of its own, like music, and is equally untranslatable.</p>
+<p>One day, the girls asked me to go with them to the forests and return
+by moonlight, but they only spoke of them as the haunts of ferns, because
+they supposed that I should think nothing of them after the forests
+of Australia and New Zealand!&nbsp; They were not like the tropical
+woods of Hawaii, and owe more to the exceeding picturesqueness of the
+natural scenery.&nbsp; Hawaii is all domes and humps, Kauai all peaks
+and sierras.&nbsp; There were deep ravines, along which bright fern-shrouded
+streams brawled among wild bananas, overarched by Eugenias, with their
+gory blossoms: walls of peaks, and broken precipices, grey ridges rising
+out of the blue forest gloom, high mountains with mists wreathing their
+spiky summits, for a background: gleams of a distant silver sea: and
+the nearer many-tinted woods were not matted together in jungle fashion,
+but festooned and adorned with numberless lianas, and even the prostrate
+trunks of fallen trees took on new beauty from the exquisite ferns which
+covered them.&nbsp; Long cathedral aisles stretched away in far-off
+vistas, and so perfect at times was the Gothic illusion, that I found
+myself listening for anthems and the roll of organs.&nbsp; So cool and
+moist it was, and triumphantly redundant in vagaries of form and greenery,
+it was a forest of forests, and it became a necessity to return the
+next day, and the next; and I think if I had remained at Koloa I should
+have been returning still.</p>
+<p>This place is outside the beauty, among cane-fields, and is much
+swept by the trade winds.&nbsp; Mr. Rice, my host, is the son of an
+esteemed missionary, and he and his wife take a deep interest in the
+natives.&nbsp; When he brought her here as a bride a few months ago,
+the natives were so delighted that he had married an island lady who
+could speak Hawaiian, that they gave them an <i>ahaaina</i>, or native
+feast, on a grand scale.&nbsp; The food was cooked in Polynesian style,
+by being wrapped up in greens called <i>luau</i>, and baked underground.&nbsp;
+There were two bullocks, nineteen hogs, a hundred fowls, any quantity
+of <i>poi</i> and fruit, and innumerable native dishes.&nbsp; Five hundred
+natives, profusely decorated with <i>leis</i> of flowers and <i>mail&eacute;</i>,
+were there, and each brought a gift for the bride.&nbsp; After the feast
+they chaunted m&ecirc;l&eacute;s in praise of Mr. Rice, and Mrs. Rice
+played to them on her piano, an instrument which they had not seen before,
+and sang songs to them in Hawaiian.&nbsp; Mr. and Mrs. R. teach in and
+superintend a native Sunday-school, and have enlisted twenty native
+teachers, and in order to keep up the interest and promote cordial feeling,
+they and the other teachers meet once a month for a regular teachers&rsquo;
+meeting, taking the houses in rotation.&nbsp; Refreshments are served
+afterwards, and they say that nothing can be more agreeable than the
+good feeling at the meetings, and the tact and graceful hospitality
+which prevail at the subsequent entertainments.</p>
+<p>The Hawaiians are a most pleasant people to foreigners, but many
+of their ways are altogether aggravating.&nbsp; Unlike the Chinamen,
+they seldom do a thing right twice.&nbsp; In my experience, they have
+almost never saddled and bridled my horse quite correctly.&nbsp; Either
+a strap has been left unbuckled, or the blanket has been wrinkled under
+the saddle.&nbsp; They are too easy to care much about anything.&nbsp;
+If any serious loss arises to themselves or others through their carelessness,
+they shrug their shoulders, and say, &ldquo;What does it matter?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Any trouble is just a <i>pilikia</i>.&nbsp; They can&rsquo;t help it.&nbsp;
+If they lose your horse from neglecting to tether it, they only laugh
+when they find you are wanting to proceed on your journey.&nbsp; Time,
+they think, is nothing to any one.&nbsp; &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the use
+of being in a hurry?&rdquo;&nbsp; Their neglect of their children, a
+cause from which a large proportion of the few born perish, is a part
+of this universal carelessness.&nbsp; The crime of infanticide, which
+formerly prevailed to a horrible extent, has long been extinct; but
+the love of pleasure and the dislike of trouble which partially actuated
+it, are apparently still stronger among the women than the maternal
+instinct, and they do not take the trouble necessary to rear their infants.&nbsp;
+They give their children away, too, to a great extent, and I have heard
+of instances in which children have been so passed from hand to hand,
+that they are quite ignorant of their real parents.&nbsp; It is an odd
+caprice in some cases, that women who have given away their own children
+are passionately attached to those whom they have received as presents,
+but I have nowhere seen such tenderness lavished upon infants as upon
+the pet dogs that the women carry about with them.&nbsp; Though they
+are so deficient in adhesiveness to family ties, that wives seek other
+husbands, and even children desert their parents for adoptive homes,
+the tie of race is intensely strong, and they are remarkably affectionate
+to each other, sharing with each other food, clothing, and all that
+they possess.&nbsp; There are no paupers among them but the lunatics
+and the lepers, and vagrancy is unknown.&nbsp; Happily on these sunny
+shores no man or woman can be tempted into sin by want.</p>
+<p>With all their faults, and their intolerable carelessness, all the
+foreigners like them, partly from the absolute security which they enjoy
+among them.&nbsp; They are so thoroughly good-natured, mirthful, and
+friendly, and so ready to enter heart and soul into all <i>haole</i>
+diversions, that the islands would be dreary indeed if the dwindling
+race became extinct.</p>
+<p>Among the many misfortunes of the islands, it has been a fortunate
+thing that the missionaries&rsquo; families have turned out so well,
+and that there is no ground for the common reproach that good men&rsquo;s
+sons turn out reprobates.</p>
+<p>The Americans show their usual practical sagacity in missionary matters.&nbsp;
+In 1853, when these islands were nominally Christianised, and a native
+ministry consisting of fifty-six pastors had been established, the American
+Board of Missions, which had expended during thirty-five years nine
+hundred and three thousand dollars in Christianising the group, and
+had sent out 149 male and female missionaries, resolved that it should
+not receive any further aid either in men or money.</p>
+<p>In the early days, the King and chiefs had bestowed lands upon the
+Mission, on which substantial mission premises had been erected, and
+on withdrawing from the islands, the Board wisely made over these lands
+to the Mission families as freehold property.&nbsp; The result has been
+that, instead of a universal migration of the young people to America,
+numbers of them have been attached to Hawaiian soil.&nbsp; The establishment
+at an early date of Punahou College, at which for a small sum both boys
+and girls receive a first-class English education, also contributed
+to retain them on the islands, and numbers of the young men entered
+into sugar-growing, cattle-raising, storekeeping, and other businesses
+here.&nbsp; At Honolulu and Hilo a large proportion of the residents
+of the upper class are missionaries&rsquo; children; most of the respectable
+foreigners on Kauai are either belonging to, or intimately connected
+with, the Mission families; and they are profusely scattered through
+Maui and Hawaii in various capacities, and are bound to each other by
+ties of extreme intimacy and friendliness, as well as by marriage and
+affinity.&nbsp; This &ldquo;clan&rdquo; has given society what it much
+wants--a sound moral core, and in spite of all disadvantageous influences,
+has successfully upheld a public opinion in favour of religion and virtue.&nbsp;
+The members of it possess the moral backbone of New England, and its
+solid good qualities, a thorough knowledge of the language and habits
+of the natives, a hereditary interest in them, a solid education, and
+in many cases much general culture.</p>
+<p>In former letters I have mentioned Mr. Coan and Mr. Lyons as missionaries.&nbsp;
+I must correct this, as there have been no actual missionaries on the
+islands for twenty years.&nbsp; When the Board withdrew its support,
+many of the missionaries returned to America; some, especially the secular
+members, went into other positions on the group, while the two first-mentioned
+and two or three besides, remained as pastors of native congregations.</p>
+<p>I venture to think that the Board has been premature in transferring
+the islands to a native pastorate at such a very early stage of their
+Christianity.&nbsp; Such a pastorate must be too feeble to uphold a
+robust Christian standard.&nbsp; As an adjunct it would be essential
+to the stability of native Christianity, but it is not possible that
+it can be trusted as the sole depository of doctrine and discipline,
+and even were it all it ought to be, it would lack the power to repress
+the lax morality which is ruining the nation.&nbsp; Probably each year
+will render the overhaste of this course more apparent, and it is likely
+that some other mode of upholding pure Christianity will have to be
+adopted, when the venerable men who now sustain and guide the native
+pastors by their influence shall have been gathered to their rest.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXIII.</h3>
+<p>LIHUE.&nbsp; KAUAI, April 17.</p>
+<p>Before leaving Kauai I must tell you of a solitary expedition I have
+just made to the lovely valley of Hanalei.&nbsp; It was only a three
+days &ldquo;frolic,&rdquo; but an essentially &ldquo;good time.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Mr. Rice provided me with a horse and a very pleasing native guide.&nbsp;
+I did not leave till two in the afternoon, as I only intended to ride
+fifteen miles, and, as the custom is, ask for a night&rsquo;s lodging
+at a settler&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; However, as I drew near Mr. B.&rsquo;s
+ranch, I felt my false courage oozing out of the tips of my fingers,
+and as I rode up to the door, certain obnoxious colonial words, such
+as &ldquo;sundowners,&rdquo; and &ldquo;bummers,&rdquo; occurred to
+me, and I felt myself a &ldquo;sundowner&rdquo; when the host came out
+and asked me to dismount.&nbsp; He said he was sorry his wife was away,
+but he would do his best for me in her absence, and took me down to
+a room where a very rough-looking man was tenderly nursing a baby a
+year old, which was badly burned or scalded, and which began to cry
+violently at my entrance, and required the united efforts of the two
+bereaved men to pacify it.&nbsp; They had the charge of it between them.&nbsp;
+I took it while they went to make some tea, and it kicked, roared, and
+fought until they came back.&nbsp; By that time I had prepared a neat
+little speech, saying that I was not the least tired, and would only
+trouble them for a glass of water; and, having covered my cowardice
+successfully, I went on, having been urged by the hospitable ranchman
+to be sure to stay for the night at his father-in-law&rsquo;s house,
+a few miles further on.&nbsp; I saw that the wishes of the native went
+in the same direction, but after my one experience I assured myself
+that I had not the necessary nerve for this species of mendicancy, and
+went on as fast as the horse could gallop wherever the ground admitted
+of it, the scenery becoming more magnificent as the dark, frowning mountains
+of Hanalei loomed through the gathering twilight.</p>
+<p>But they were fifteen miles off, and on the way we came to a broad,
+beautiful ravine, through which a broad, deep river glided into the
+breakers.&nbsp; I had received some warnings about this, but it was
+supposed that we could cross in a ferry scow, of which, however, I only
+found the bones.&nbsp; The guide and the people at the ferryman&rsquo;s
+house talked long without result, but eventually, by many signs, I contrived
+to get them to take me over in a crazy punt, half full of water, and
+the horses swam across.&nbsp; Before we reached the top of the ravine,
+the last redness of twilight had died from off the melancholy ocean,
+the black forms of mountains looked huge in the darkness, and the wind
+sighed so eerily through the creaking <i>lauhalas</i>, as to add much
+to the effect.&nbsp; It became so very dark that I could only just see
+my horse&rsquo;s ears, and we found ourselves occasionally in odd predicaments,
+such as getting into crevices, or dipping off from steep banks; and
+it was in dense darkness that we arrived above what appeared to be a
+valley with twinkling lights, lying at the foot of a precipice, and
+walled in on all sides but one by lofty mountains.&nbsp; It was rather
+queer, diving over the wooded <i>pali</i> on a narrow track, with nothing
+in sight but the white jacket of the native, who had already indicated
+that he was at the end of his resources regarding the way, but just
+as a river gleamed alarmingly through the gloom, a horseman on a powerful
+horse brushed through the wood, and on being challenged in Hawaiian
+replied in educated English, and very politely turned with me, and escorted
+me over a disagreeable ferry in a scow without rails, and to my destination,
+two miles beyond.</p>
+<p>Yesterday, when I left, the morning was brilliant, and after ascending
+the <i>pali</i>, I stayed for some time on an eminence which commands
+the valley, presented by Mr. Wyllie to Lady Franklin, in compliment
+to her admiration of its loveliness.&nbsp; Hanalei has been likened
+by some to Paradise, and by others to the Vale of Caschmir.&nbsp; Everyone
+who sees it raves about it.&nbsp; &ldquo;See Hanalei and die,&rdquo;
+is the feeling of the islanders, and certainly I was not disappointed,
+nor should I be with Paradise itself were it even a shade less fair!&nbsp;
+It has every element of beauty, and in the bright sunshine, with the
+dark shadows on the mountains, the waterfalls streaking their wooded
+sides, the river rushing under <i>kukuis</i> and <i>ohias</i>, and then
+lingering lovingly amidst living greenery, it looked as if the curse
+had never lighted there.</p>
+<p>Its mouth, where it opens on the Pacific, is from two to three miles
+wide, but the boundary mountains gradually approach each other, so that
+five miles from the sea a narrow gorge of wonderful beauty alone remains.&nbsp;
+The crystal Hanalei flows placidly to the sea for the last three or
+four miles, tired by its impetuous rush from the mountains, and mirrors
+on its breast hundreds of acres of cane, growing on a plantation formerly
+belonging to Mr. Wyllie, an enterprising Ayrshire man, and one of the
+ablest and most disinterested foreigners who ever administered Hawaiian
+affairs.&nbsp; Westward of the valley there is a region of mountains,
+slashed by deep ravines.&nbsp; The upper ridges are densely timbered,
+and many of the <i>ohias</i> have a circumference of twenty-five feet,
+three feet from the ground.&nbsp; It was sad to turn away for ever from
+the loveliness of Hanalei, even though by taking another route, which
+involved a ride of forty miles, I passed through and in view of, most
+entrancing picturesqueness.&nbsp; Indeed, for mere loveliness, I think
+that part of Kauai exceeds anything that I have seen.</p>
+<p>The atmosphere and scenery were so glorious that it was possible
+to think of nothing all day, but just allow oneself passively to drink
+in sensations of exquisite pleasure.&nbsp; I wish all the hard-worked
+people at home, who lead joyless lives in sunless alleys, could just
+have one such day, and enjoy it as I did, that they might know how fair
+God&rsquo;s earth is, and how far fairer His Paradise must be, if even
+from this we cannot conceive &ldquo;of the things which He hath prepared
+for them that love Him.&rdquo;&nbsp; I never before felt so sad for
+those whose lives are passed amidst unpropitious surroundings, or so
+thankful for my own capacity of enjoying nature.</p>
+<p>Just as we were coming up out of a deep river, a native riding about
+six feet from me was caught in a quicksand.&nbsp; He jumped off, but
+the horse sank half way up its body.&nbsp; I wanted to stay and see
+it extricated, for its struggles only sank it deeper, but the natives
+shrugged their shoulders, and said in Hawaiian, &ldquo;only a horse,&rdquo;
+and something they always say when anything happens, equivalent to &ldquo;What&rsquo;s
+the odds?&rdquo;&nbsp; It was a joyously-exciting day, and I was galloping
+down a grass hill at a pace which I should not have assumed had white
+people been with me, when a native rode up to me and said twice over,
+&ldquo;<i>maikai! paniola</i>,&rdquo; and laughed heartily.&nbsp; When
+my native came up, he pointed to me and again said &ldquo;<i>paniola</i>;&rdquo;
+and afterwards we were joined by two women, to whom my guide spoke of
+me as <i>paniola</i>; and on coming to the top of a hill they put their
+horses into a gallop, and we all rode down at a tremendous, and, as
+I should once have thought, a break-neck speed, when one of the women
+patted me on the shoulder, exclaiming, &ldquo;<i>maikai! maikai! paniola</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I thought they said &ldquo;<i>spaniola</i>,&rdquo; taking me for a Spaniard,
+but on reaching Lihue, and asking the meaning of the word, Mrs. Rice
+said, &ldquo;Oh, lassoing cattle, and all that kind of thing.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I was disposed to accept the inference as a compliment; but when I told
+Mrs. R. that the word had been applied to myself, she laughed very much,
+and said she would have toned down its meaning had she known that!</p>
+<p>We rode through forests lighted up by crimson flowers, through mountain
+valleys greener than Alpine meadows, descended steep <i>palis</i>, and
+forded deep, strong rivers, pausing at the beautiful Wailua Falls, which
+leap in a broad sheet of foam and a heavy body of water into a dark
+basin, walled in by cliffs so hard that even the ferns and mosses which
+revel in damp, fail to find roothold in the naked rock.&nbsp; Both above
+and below, this river passes through a majestic <i>ca&ntilde;on</i>,
+and its neighbourhood abounds in small cones, some with crateriform
+cavities at the top, some broken down, and others, apparently of great
+age, wooded to their summits.&nbsp; A singular ridge, called Mauna Kalalea,
+runs along this part of the island, picturesque beyond anything, and,
+from its abruptness and peculiar formation, it deceives the eye into
+judging it to be as high as the gigantic domes of Hawaii.&nbsp; Its
+peaks are needle-like, or else blunt projections of columnar basalt,
+rising ofttimes as terraces.&nbsp; At a beautiful village called Anahola
+the ridge terminates abruptly, and its highest portion is so thin that
+a large patch of sky can be seen through a hole which has been worn
+in it.</p>
+<p>I reached Lihue by daylight, having established my reputation as
+a <i>paniola</i> by riding forty miles in 7&frac12; hours, &ldquo;very
+good time&rdquo; for the islands.&nbsp; I hope to return here in August,
+as my hospitable friends will not allow me to leave on any other condition.&nbsp;
+The kindness I have received on Kauai is quite overwhelming, and I shall
+remember its refined and virtuous homes as long as its loveliness and
+delicious climate.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>HAWAIIAN HOTEL.&nbsp; HONOLULU.&nbsp; April 23rd.</p>
+<p>I have nothing new to add.&nbsp; Mr. Dexter is so far recovered that
+I fear I shall not find my friends here on my return.&nbsp; People are
+in the usual fever about the mail, and I must close this.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXIV.</h3>
+<p>ULUPALAKUA.&nbsp; MAUI.&nbsp; May 12th.</p>
+<p>It is three weeks since I left the Hawaiian Hotel and its green mist
+of algarobas, but my pleasant visits in this island do not furnish much
+that will interest you.&nbsp; There was great excitement on the wharf
+at Honolulu the evening I left.&nbsp; It was crowded with natives, the
+king&rsquo;s band was playing, old hags were chanting <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;s</i>,
+and several of the royal family, and of the &ldquo;upper ten thousand&rdquo;
+were there, taking leave of the Governess of Hawaii, the Princess Keelikolani,
+the late king&rsquo;s half-sister.&nbsp; The throng and excitement were
+so great, that we were outside the reef before I got a good view of
+this lady, the largest and the richest woman on the islands.&nbsp; Her
+size and appearance are most unfortunate, but she is said to be good
+and kind.&nbsp; She was dressed in a very common black <i>holuku</i>,
+with a red bandana round her throat, round which she wore a <i>l&eacute;</i>
+of immense oleanders, as well as round her hair, which was cut short.&nbsp;
+She had a large retinue, and her female attendants all wore <i>leis</i>
+of oleander.&nbsp; They spread very fine mats on the deck, under <i>pulu</i>
+beds, covered with gorgeous quilts, on which the Princess and her suite
+slept, and in the morning the beds were removed, breakfast was spread
+on the mats, and she, some of her attendants, and two or three white
+men who received invitations, sat on the deck round it.&nbsp; It was
+a far less attractive meal than that which the serene steward served
+below.&nbsp; The calabashes, which contained the pale pink <i>poi</i>,
+were of highly polished <i>kou</i> wood, but there were no foreign refinements.&nbsp;
+The other dishes were several kinds of raw fish, dried devil-fish, boiled
+<i>kalo</i>, sweet potatoes, bananas, and cocoa-nut milk.</p>
+<p>I had a very uncomfortable night on a mattress on the deck, which
+was overcrowded with natives, and some of the native women and two foreigners
+had got a whiskey bottle, and behaved disgracefully.&nbsp; We went round
+by the Leper Island.</p>
+<p>I landed at Maaleia, on the leeward side of the sandy isthmus which
+unites East and West Maui, got a good horse, and, with Mr. G---, rode
+across to the residence of &ldquo;Father Alexander,&rdquo; at Wailuku,
+a flourishing district of sugar plantations.&nbsp; Mr. and Mrs. Alexander
+were among the early missionaries, and still live on the mission premises.&nbsp;
+Several of their sons are settled on the island in the sugar business,
+and it was to the Heiku plantation, fifteen miles off, of which Mr.
+S. Alexander is manager, that I went on the following day, still escorted
+by Mr. G---.&nbsp; Here we heard that captains of schooners which had
+arrived from Hawaii, report that a light is visible on the terminal
+crater of Mauna Loa, 14,000 feet above the sea, that Kilauea, the flank
+crater, is unusually active, and that several severe shocks of earthquake
+have been felt.&nbsp; This is exciting news.</p>
+<p>Behind Wailuku is the Iao valley, up which I rode with two island
+friends, and spent a day of supreme, satisfied admiration.&nbsp; At
+Iao people may throw away pen and pencil in equal despair.&nbsp; The
+trail leads down a gorge dark with forest trees, and then opens out
+into an amphitheatre, walled in by precipices, from three to six thousand
+feet high, misty with a thousand waterfalls, plumed with <i>kukuis</i>,
+and feathery with ferns.&nbsp; A green-clad needle of stone, one thousand
+feet in height, the last refuge of an army routed when the Wailuku (waters
+of destruction) ran red with blood, keeps guard over the valley.&nbsp;
+Other needles there are; and mimic ruins of bastions and ramparts and
+towers came and passed mysteriously: and the shining fronts of turrets
+gleamed through trailing mists, changing into drifting visions of things
+that came and went, in sunshine and shadow, mountains raising battered
+peaks into a cloudless sky, green crags moist with ferns, and mists
+of water that could not fall, but frittered themselves away on slopes
+of maiden-hair, and depths of forest and ferns through which bright
+streams warble through the summer years.&nbsp; Clouds boiling up from
+below drifted at times across the mountain fronts, or lay like snow
+masses in the unsunned chasms: and over the grey crags and piled up
+pinnacles, and glorified green of the marvellous vision, lay a veil
+of thin blue haze, steeping the whole in a serenity which seemed hardly
+to belong to earth.</p>
+<p>The track from Wailuku to Heiku is over a Sahara in miniature, a
+dreary expanse of sand and shifting sandhills, with a dismal growth
+in some places of thornless thistles and indigo, and a tremendous surf
+thunders on the margin.&nbsp; Trackless, glaring, choking, a guide is
+absolutely necessary to a stranger, for the footprints or wheel-marks
+of one moment are obliterated the next.&nbsp; I crossed the isthmus
+three times, and the third time was quite as incapable of shaping my
+course across it as the first, and though I had recklessly declined
+a guide, was only too thankful for the one who was forced upon me.&nbsp;
+It is a hateful ride, yet anything so hideous and aggressively odious
+is a salutary experience in a land of so much beauty.&nbsp; Sand, sand,
+sand!&nbsp; Sand-hills, smooth and red; sand plains, rippled, whites
+and glaring; sand drifts shifting; sand clouds whirling; sand in your
+eyes, nose, and mouth; sand stinging your face like pin points; sand
+hiding even your horse&rsquo;s ears; sand rippling like waves, hissing
+like spin-drift, malignant, venomous!&nbsp; You can only open one eye
+at a time for a wink at where you are going.&nbsp; Looking down upon
+it from Heiku, you can see nothing all day but the dense brown clouds
+of a perpetual sand-storm.</p>
+<p>My charming hostess and her husband made Heiku so fascinating, that
+I only quitted it hoping to return.&nbsp; The object which usually attracts
+strangers to Maui is the great dead volcano of Haleakala, &ldquo;The
+house of the sun,&rdquo; and I was fortunate in all the circumstances
+of my ascent.&nbsp; My host at Heiku provided me with a horse and native
+attendant, and I rode over the evening before to the house of his brother,
+Mr. J. Alexander, who accompanied me, and his intelligent and cultured
+society was one of the pleasures of the day.</p>
+<p>People usually go up in the afternoon, camp near the summit, light
+a fire, are devoured by fleas, roast and freeze alternately till morning,
+and get up to see the grand spectacle of the sunrise, but I think our
+plan preferable, of leaving at two in the morning.&nbsp; The moon had
+set.&nbsp; It was densely dark, and it was raining on one side of the
+road, though quite fine on the other.&nbsp; By the lamplight which streamed
+from our early breakfast table, I only saw wet mules and horses, laden
+with gear for a mountain ascent, a trim little Japanese, who darted
+about helping, my native, who was picturesquely dressed in a Mexican
+poncho, Mr. Alexander, who wore something which made him unrecognisable;
+and myself, a tatterdemalion figure, wearing a much-worn green topcoat
+of his over my riding suit, and a tartan shawl arranged so as to fall
+nearly to my feet.&nbsp; Then we went forth into the darkness.&nbsp;
+The road soon degenerated into a wood road, then into a bridle track,
+then into a mere trail ascending all the way; and at dawn, when the
+rain was over, we found ourselves more than half-way up the mountain,
+amidst rocks, scori&aelig;, tussocks, <i>ohelos</i>, a few common composit&aelig;,
+and a few coarse ferns and woody plants, which became coarser and scantier
+the higher we went up, but never wholly ceased; for, at the very summit,
+10,200 feet high, there are some tufts of grass, and stunted specimens
+of a common asplenium in clefts.&nbsp; Many people suffer from mountain
+sickness on this ascent, but I suffered from nothing but the excruciating
+cold, which benumbed my limbs and penetrated to my bones; and though
+I dismounted several times and tried to walk, uphill exercise was impossible
+in the rarefied air.&nbsp; The atmosphere was but one degree below the
+freezing-point, but at that height, a brisk breeze on soaked clothes
+was scarcely bearable.</p>
+<p>The sunrise turned the densely packed clouds below into great rosy
+masses, which broke now and then, showing a vivid blue sea, and patches
+of velvety green.&nbsp; At seven, after toiling over a last steep bit,
+among scori&aelig;, and some very scanty and unlovely vegetation, we
+reached what was said to be the summit, where a ragged wall of rock
+shut out the forward view.&nbsp; Dismounting on some cinders, we stepped
+into a gap, and from thence looked down into the most gigantic crater
+on the earth.&nbsp; I confess that with the living fires of Kilauea
+in my memory, I was at first disappointed with the deadness of a volcano
+of whose activity there are no traditions extant.&nbsp; Though during
+the hours which followed, its majesty and wonderment grew upon me, yet
+a careful study of the admirable map of the crater, a comparison of
+the heights of the very considerable cones which are buried within it,
+and the attempt to realize the figures which represent its circumference,
+area, and depth, not only give a far better idea of it than any verbal
+description, but impress its singular sublimity and magnitude upon one
+far more forcibly than a single visit to the actual crater.</p>
+<p>I mentioned in one of my first letters that East Maui, that part
+of the island which lies east of the isthmus of perpetual dust-storms,
+consists of a mountain dome 10,000 feet in height, with a monstrous
+base.&nbsp; Its slopes are very regular, varying from eight to ten degrees.&nbsp;
+Its lava-beds differ from those of Kauai and Oahu in being lighter in
+colour, less cellular, and more impervious to water.&nbsp; The windward
+side of the mountain is gashed and slashed by streams, which in their
+violence have excavated large pot-holes, which serve as reservoirs,
+and it is covered to a height of over 2000 feet by a luxuriant growth
+of timber.&nbsp; On the leeward side, several black and very fresh-looking
+streams of lava run into the sea, and the whole coast for some height
+above the shore shows most vigorous volcanic action.&nbsp; Elsewhere
+the rock is red and broken, and lateral cones abound near the base.</p>
+<p>The ascent from Makawao, though it is over rather a desolate tract
+of land, has in its lower stages such a dismal growth of pining <i>koa</i>
+and spurious sandal-wood, and in its upper ones so much <i>ohelo</i>
+scrub, with grass and common aspleniums quite up to the top, that as
+one sits lazily on one&rsquo;s sure-footed horse, the fact that one
+is ascending a huge volcano is not forced upon one by any overmastering
+sterility and nakedness.&nbsp; Somehow, one expects to pass through
+some ulterior stage of blackness up to the summit.&nbsp; It is no such
+thing; and the great surprise of Haleakala to me was, that when according
+to calculation there should have been a summit, an abyss of vast dimensions
+opened below.&nbsp; The mountain top has been in fact blown off, and
+one is totally powerless to imagine what the forces must have been which
+rent it asunder.</p>
+<p>The crater was clear of fog and clouds, and lighted in every part
+by the risen sun.&nbsp; The whole, with its contents, can be seen at
+a single glance, though its girdling precipices are nineteen miles in
+extent.&nbsp; Its huge, irregular floor is 2000 feet below; New York
+might be hidden away within it, with abundant room to spare; and more
+than one of the numerous subsidiary cones which uplift themselves solitary
+or in clusters through the area, attain the height of Arthur&rsquo;s
+Seat at Edinburgh.&nbsp; On the north and east are the Koolau and Kaupo
+Gaps, as deep as the crater, through which oceans of lava found their
+way to the sea.&nbsp; It looks as if the volcanic forces, content with
+rending the mountain top in twain, had then passed into an endless repose.</p>
+<p>The crater appears to be composed of a hard grey clinkstone, much
+fissured; but lower down the mountain, the rock is softer, and has a
+bluish tinge.&nbsp; The internal cones are of very regular shape, and
+most of them look as if their fires had only just gone out, with their
+sides fiercely red, and their central cavities lined with layers of
+black ash.&nbsp; They are all composed of cinders of light specific
+gravity, and much of the ash is tinged with the hydrated oxide of iron.&nbsp;
+Very few of the usual volcanic products are present. <a name="citation335"></a><a href="#footnote335">{335}</a>&nbsp;
+Small quantities of sulphur, in a very impure form, exist here and there,
+but there are no sulphur or steam-cracks, or hot springs on any part
+of the mountain.&nbsp; With its cold ashes and dead force, it is a most
+tremendous spectacle of the power of fire.</p>
+<p>Some previous travellers had generously left some faggots on the
+summit, and we made a large fire for warmth, and I rolled my blanket
+round me, and sat with my feet among the hot embers, but all to no purpose.&nbsp;
+The wind was strong and keen, and the fierce splendour of the tropic
+sun conveyed no heat.&nbsp; Mr. A. went away investigating, the native
+rolled himself in his poncho and fell asleep by the fire, and I divided
+the time between glimpses into the awful desolation of the crater, snatched
+between the icy gusts of wind, and the enjoyment of the wonderful cloud
+scenery which to everybody is a great charm of the view from Haleakala.&nbsp;
+The day was perfect; for first we had an inimitable view of the crater
+and all that could be seen from the mountain-top, and then an equally
+inimitable view of Cloudland.&nbsp; There was the gaunt, hideous, desolate
+abyss, with its fiery cones, its rivers and surges of black lava and
+grey ash, crossing and mingling all over the area, mixed with splotches
+of colour and coils of satin rock, its walls dark and frowning, everywhere
+riven and splintered, and clouds perpetually drifting in through the
+great gaps, and filling up the whole crater with white swirling masses,
+which in a few minutes melted away in the sunshine, leaving it all as
+sharply definite as before.&nbsp; Before noon clouds surrounded the
+whole mountain, not in the vague flocculent, meaningless masses one
+usually sees, but in Arctic oceans, where lofty icebergs, floes and
+pack, lay piled on each other, glistening with the frost of a Polar
+winter; then alps on alps, and peaks of well remembered ranges gleaming
+above glaciers, and the semblance of forests in deep ravines loaded
+with new fallen snow.&nbsp; Snow-drifts, avalanches, oceans held in
+bondage of eternal ice, and all this massed together, shifting, breaking,
+glistering, filling up the broad channel which divides Maui from Hawaii,
+and far away above the lonely masses, rose, in turquoise blue, like
+distant islands, the lofty Hawaiian domes of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa,
+with snow on Mauna Kea yet more dazzling than the clouds.&nbsp; There
+never was a stranger contrast than between the hideous desolation of
+the crater below, and those blue and jewelled summits rising above the
+shifting clouds.</p>
+<p>After some time the scene shifted, and through glacial rifts appeared
+as in a dream the Eeka mountains which enfold the Iao valley, broad
+fields of cane 8000 feet below, the flushed palm-fringed coast, and
+the deep blue sea sleeping in perpetual calm.&nbsp; But according to
+the well-known fraud which isolated altitudes perpetrate upon the eye,
+it appeared as if we were looking up at our landscape, not down; and
+no effort of the eye or imagination would put things at their proper
+levels.</p>
+<p>But gradually the clouds massed themselves, the familiar earth disappeared,
+and we were &ldquo;pinnacled in mid-heaven&rdquo; in unutterable isolation,
+blank forgotten units, in a white, wonderful, illuminated world, without
+permanence or solidity.&nbsp; Our voices sounded thin in the upper air.&nbsp;
+The keen, incisive wind that swept the summit, had no kinship with the
+soft breezes which were rustling the tasselled cane in the green fields
+of earth which had lately gleamed through the drift.&nbsp; It was a
+new world and without sympathy, a solitude which could be felt.&nbsp;
+Was it nearer God, I wonder, because so far from man and his little
+works and ways?&nbsp; At least they seemed little there, in presence
+of the tokens of a catastrophe which had not only blown off a mountain
+top, and scattered it over the island, but had disembowelled the mountain
+itself to a depth of 2000 feet.</p>
+<p>Soon after noon we began to descend; and in a hollow of the mountain,
+not far from the ragged edge of the crater, then filled up with billows
+of cloud, we came upon what we were searching for; not, however, one
+or two, but thousands of silverswords, their cold, frosted silver gleam
+making the hill-side look like winter or moonlight.&nbsp; They can be
+preserved in their beauty by putting them under a glass shade, but it
+must be of monstrous dimensions, as the finer plants measure 2 ft. by
+18 in. without the flower stalk.&nbsp; They exactly resemble the finest
+work in frosted silver, the curve of their globular mass of leaves is
+perfect; and one thinks of them rather as the base of an <i>&eacute;pergne</i>
+for an imperial table, or as a prize at Ascot or Goodwood, than as anything
+organic.&nbsp; A particular altitude and temperature appear essential
+to them, and they are not found straggling above or below a given line.</p>
+<p>We reached Makawao very tired, soon after dark, to be heartily congratulated
+on our successful ascent, and bearing no worse traces of it than lobster-coloured
+faces, badly blistered.</p>
+<p>After accepting sundry hospitalities I rode over here, skirting the
+mountain at a height of 2000 feet, a most tedious ride, only enlivened
+by the blaze of nasturtiums in some of the shallow gulches.&nbsp; It
+is very pretty here, and I wish all invalids could revel in the sweet
+changeless air.&nbsp; The name signifies &ldquo;ripe bread-fruit of
+the gods.&rdquo;&nbsp; The plantation is 2000 feet above the sea, and
+is one of the finest on the islands; and owing to the slow maturity
+of the cane at so great a height, the yield is from five to six tons
+an acre.&nbsp; Water is very scarce; all that is used in the boiling-house
+and elsewhere has been carefully led into concrete tanks for storage,
+and even the walks in the proprietor&rsquo;s beautiful garden are laid
+with cement for the same purpose.&nbsp; He has planted many thousand
+Australian eucalyptus trees on the hillside in the hope of procuring
+a larger rainfall, so that the neighbourhood has quite an exotic appearance.</p>
+<p>The coast is black and volcanic-looking below, jutting into the sea
+in naked lava promontories, which nature has done nothing to drape.&nbsp;
+Concerning a river of specially black lava, which runs into the sea
+to the south of this house, the following legend is told:--</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A withered old woman stopped to ask food and hospitality at
+the house of a dweller on this promontory, noted for his penuriousness.&nbsp;
+His <i>kalo</i> patches flourished, cocoa-nuts and bananas shaded his
+hut, nature was lavish of her wealth all round him.&nbsp; But the withered
+hag was sent away unfed, and as she turned her back on the man she said,
+&lsquo;I will return to-morrow.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This was P&eacute;l&eacute;, the goddess of the volcano, and
+she kept her word, and came back the next day in earthquakes and thunderings,
+rent the mountain, and blotted out every trace of the man and his dwelling
+with a flood of fire.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Maui is very &ldquo;foreign&rdquo; and civilised, and although it
+has a native population of over 12,000, the natives are much crowded
+on plantations, and one encounters little of native life.&nbsp; There
+is a large society composed of planters&rsquo; and merchants&rsquo;
+families, and the residents are profuse in their hospitality.&nbsp;
+It is not infrequently taken undue advantage of, and I have heard of
+planters compelled to feign excuses for leaving their houses, in order
+to get rid of unintroduced and obnoxious visitors, who have quartered
+themselves on them for weeks at a time.&nbsp; It is wonderful that their
+patient hospitality is not worn out, even though, as they say, they
+sometimes &ldquo;entertain angels unawares.&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXV.</h3>
+<p>KALAIEHA.&nbsp; HAWAII.</p>
+<p>My departure from Ulupalakua illustrates some of the uncertainties
+of island travelling.&nbsp; On Monday night my things were packed, and
+my trunk sent off to the landing; but at five on Tuesday, Mr. Whipple
+came to my door to say that the <i>Kilauea</i> was not in Lahaina roads,
+and was probably laid up for repairs.&nbsp; I was much disappointed,
+for the mild climate had disagreed with me, and I was longing for the
+roystering winds and unconventional life of windward Hawaii, and there
+was not another steamer for three weeks.</p>
+<p>However, some time afterwards, I was unpacking, and in the midst
+of a floor littered with ferns, photographs, books, and clothes, when
+Mrs. W. rushed in to say that the steamer was just reaching the landing
+below, and that there was scarcely the barest hope of catching her.&nbsp;
+Hopeless as the case seemed, we crushed most of my things promiscuously
+into a carpet bag, Mr. W. rode off with it, a horse was imperfectly
+saddled for me, and I mounted him, with my bag, straps, spurs, and a
+package of ferns in one hand, and my plaid over the saddle, while Mrs.
+W. stuffed the rest of my possessions into a clothes bag, and the Chinaman
+ran away frantically to catch a horse on which to ride down with them.</p>
+<p>I galloped off after Mr. W., though people called to me that I could
+not catch the boat, and that my horse would fall on the steep broken
+descent.&nbsp; My saddle slipped over his neck, but he still sped down
+the hill with the rapid &ldquo;racking&rdquo; movement of a Narraganset
+pacer.&nbsp; First a new veil blew away, next my plaid was missing,
+then I passed my trunk on the ox-cart which should have been at the
+landing; but still though the heat was fierce, and the glare from the
+black lava blinding, I dashed heedlessly down, and in twenty minutes
+had ridden three miles down a descent of 2,000 feet, to find the <i>Kilauea</i>
+puffing and smoking with her anchor up; but I was in time, for her friendly
+clerk, knowing that I was coming, detained the scow.&nbsp; You will
+not wonder at my desperation when I tell you that half-way down, a person
+called to me, &ldquo;Mauna Loa is in action!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While I was slipping off the saddle and bridle, Mr. W. arrived with
+the carpet-bag, yet more over-heated and shaking with exertion than
+I was, then the Chinaman with a bag of oddments, next a native who had
+picked up my plaid and ferns on the road, and another with my trunk,
+which he had rescued from the ox-cart; so I only lost my veil and two
+brushes, which are irreplaceable here.</p>
+<p>The quiet of the nine hours&rsquo; trip in the <i>Kilauea</i> restored
+my equanimity, and prepared me to enjoy the delicious evening which
+followed.&nbsp; The silver waters of Kawaihae Bay reflected the full
+moon, the three great mountains of Hawaii were cloudless as I had not
+before seen them, all the asperity of the leeward shore was softened
+into beauty, and the long shadows of bending palms were as still and
+perfect as the palms themselves.&nbsp; But there was a new sight above
+the silver water, for the huge dome of Mauna Loa, forty miles away,
+was burning red and fitfully.&nbsp; A horse and servant awaited me,
+and we were soon clattering over the hard sand by the shining sea, and
+up the ascent which leads to the windy table-lands of Waimea.&nbsp;
+The air was like new life.&nbsp; At a height of 500 feet we met the
+first whiff of the trades, the atmosphere grew cooler and cooler, the
+night-wind fresher, the moonlight whiter; wider the sweeping uplands,
+redder the light of the burning mountain, till I wrapped my plaid about
+me, but still was chilled to the bone, and when the four hours&rsquo;
+ride was over, soon after midnight, my limbs were stiff with tropical
+cold.&nbsp; And this, within 20&deg; of the equator, and only 2,500
+feet above the fiery sea-shore, with its temperature of 80&deg;, where
+Sydney Smith would certainly have desired to &ldquo;take off his flesh,
+and sit in his bones!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I delight in Hawaii more than ever, with its unconventional life,
+great upland sweeps, unexplored forests, riotous breezes, and general
+atmosphere of freedom, airiness, and expansion.&nbsp; As I find that
+a lady can travel alone with perfect safety, I have many projects in
+view, but whatever I do or plan to do, I find my eyes always turning
+to the light on the top of Mauna Loa.&nbsp; I know that the ascent is
+not feasible for me, and that so far as I am concerned the mystery must
+remain unsolved; but that glory, nearly 14,000 feet aloft, rising, falling,
+&ldquo;a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night,&rdquo;
+uplifted in its awful loneliness above all human interests, has an intolerable
+fascination.&nbsp; As the twilight deepens, the light intensifies, and
+often as I watch it in the night, it seems to flare up and take the
+form of a fiery palm-tree.&nbsp; No one has ascended the mountain since
+the activity began a month ago; but the fire is believed to be in &ldquo;the
+old traditional crater of Mokuaweoweo, in a region rarely visited by
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few days ago I was so fortunate as to make the acquaintance of
+Mr. W. L. Green (now Minister of The Interior), an English resident
+in Honolulu, a gentleman of wide scientific and literary culture, one
+of whose objects in visiting Hawaii is the investigation of certain
+volcanic phenomena.&nbsp; He asked me to make the ascent of Mauna Kea
+with him, and we have satisfactorily accomplished it to-day.</p>
+<p>The interior of the island, in which we have spent the last two days,
+is totally different, not only from the luxuriant windward slopes, but
+from the fiery leeward margin.&nbsp; The altitude of the central plateau
+is from 5,000 to 6,000 feet, there is not a single native dwelling on
+it, or even a trail across it, it is totally destitute of water, and
+sustains only a miserable scrub of <i>maman&eacute;</i>, stunted <i>ohias,
+pukeawe, ohelos</i>, a few composit&aelig;, and some of the hardiest
+ferns.&nbsp; The transient residents of this sheep station, and those
+of another on Hualalai, thirty miles off, are the only human inhabitants
+of a region as large as Kent.&nbsp; Wild goats, wild geese (Bernicla
+sandvicensis), and the Melithreptes Pacifica, constitute its chief population.&nbsp;
+These geese are web-footed, though water does not exist.&nbsp; They
+build their nests in the grass, and lay two or three white eggs.</p>
+<p>Our track from Waimea lay for the first few miles over light soil,
+destitute of any vegetation, across dry glaring rocky beds of streams,
+and round the bases of numerous tufa cones, from 200 to 1500 feet in
+height, with steep smooth sides, composed of a very red ash.&nbsp; We
+crossed a flank of Mauna Kea at a height of 6000 feet, and a short descent
+brought us out upon this vast tableland, which lies between the bulbous
+domes of Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa, and Hualalai, the loneliest, saddest,
+dreariest expanse I ever saw.</p>
+<p>The air was clear and the sun bright, yet nothing softened into beauty
+this formless desert of volcanic sand, stones, and lava, on which tufts
+of grass and a harsh scrub war with wind and drought for a loveless
+existence.&nbsp; Yet, such is the effect of atmosphere, that Mauna Loa,
+utterly destitute of vegetation, and with his sides scored and stained
+by the black lava-flows of ages, looked like a sapphire streaked with
+lapis lazuli.&nbsp; Nearly blinded by scuds of sand, we rode for hours
+through the volcanic wilderness; always the same rigid <i>maman&eacute;</i>,
+(Sophora Chrysophylla?) the same withered grass, and the same thornless
+thistles, through which the strong wind swept with a desolate screech.</p>
+<p>The trail, which dips 1000 feet, again ascends, the country becomes
+very wild, there are ancient craters of great height densely wooded,
+wooded ravines, the great bulk of Mauna Kea with his ragged crest towers
+above tumbled rocky regions, which look as if nature, disgusted with
+her work, had broken it to pieces in a passion; there are living and
+dead trees, a steep elevation, and below, a broad river of most jagged
+and uneven <i>a-a</i>.&nbsp; The afternoon fog, which serves instead
+of rain, rolled up in dense masses, through which we heard the plaintive
+bleating of sheep, and among blasted trees and distorted rocks we came
+upon Kalaieha.</p>
+<p>I have described the &ldquo;foreign residences&rdquo; elsewhere.&nbsp;
+Here is one of another type, in which a wealthy sheep-owner&rsquo;s
+son, married to a very pretty native woman, leads for some months in
+the year from choice, a life so rough, that most people would think
+it a hardship to lead it from necessity.&nbsp; There are two apartments,
+a loft and a &ldquo;lean-to.&rdquo;&nbsp; The hospitable owners gave
+me their sleeping-room, which was divided from the &ldquo;living-room&rdquo;
+by a canvass partition.&nbsp; This last has a rude stone chimney split
+by an earthquake, holding fire enough to roast an ox.&nbsp; Round it
+the floor is paved with great rough stones.&nbsp; A fire of logs, fully
+three feet high, was burning, but there was a faulty draught, and it
+emitted a stinging smoke.&nbsp; I looked for something to sit upon,
+but there was nothing but a high bench, or chopping-block, and a fixed
+seat in the corner of the wall.&nbsp; The rest of the furniture consisted
+of a small table, some pots, a frying-pan, a tin dish and plates, a
+dipper, and some tin pannikins.&nbsp; Four or five rifles and &ldquo;shot-guns,&rdquo;
+and a piece of raw meat, were hanging against the wall.&nbsp; A tin
+bowl was brought to me for washing, which served the same purpose for
+every one.&nbsp; The oil was exhausted, so recourse was had to the native
+expedient of a jar of beef fat with a wick in it.</p>
+<p>We were most hospitably received, but the native wife, as is usually
+the case, was too shy to eat with us or even to appear at all.&nbsp;
+Our host is a superb young man, very frank and prepossessing looking,
+a thorough mountaineer, most expert with the lasso and in hunting wild
+cattle.&nbsp; The &ldquo;station&rdquo; consists of a wool shed, a low
+grass hut, a hut with one side gone, a bell-tent, and the more substantial
+cabin in which we are lodged.&nbsp; Several saddled horses were tethered
+outside, and some natives were shearing sheep, but the fog shut out
+whatever else there might be of an outer world.&nbsp; Every now and
+then a native came in and sat on the floor to warm himself, but there
+were no mats as in native houses.&nbsp; It was intolerably cold.&nbsp;
+I singed my clothes by sitting in the chimney, but could not warm myself.&nbsp;
+A fowl was stewed native fashion, and some rice was boiled, and we had
+sheep&rsquo;s milk and some ice cold water, the drip, I think, from
+a neighbouring cave, as running and standing water are unknown.</p>
+<p>There are 9000 sheep here, but they require hardly any attendance
+except at shearing time, and dogs are not used in herding them.&nbsp;
+Indeed, labour is much dispensed with, as the sheep are shorn unwashed,
+a great contrast to the elaborate washings of the flocks of the Australian
+Riverina.&nbsp; They come down at night of their own sagacity, in close
+converging columns, sleep on the gravel about the station, and in the
+early morning betake themselves to their feeding grounds on the mountain.</p>
+<p>Mauna Kea, and the forests which skirt his base, are the resort of
+thousands of wild cattle, and there are many men nearly as wild, who
+live half savage lives in the woods, gaining their living by lassoing
+and shooting these animals for their skins.&nbsp; Wild black swine also
+abound.</p>
+<p>The mist as usual disappeared at night, leaving a sky wonderful with
+stars, which burned blue and pale against the furnace glare on the top
+of Mauna Loa, to which we are comparatively near.&nbsp; I woke at three
+from the hopeless cold, and before five went out with Mr. Green to explore
+the adjacent lava.&nbsp; The atmosphere was perfectly pure, and suffused
+with rose-colour, not a cloud-fleece hung round the mountain tops, hoar-frost
+whitened the ground, the pure white smoke of the volcano rose into the
+reddening sky, and the air was elixir.&nbsp; It has been said and written
+that there are no steam-cracks or similar traces of volcanic action
+on Mauna Kea, but in several fissures I noticed ferns growing belonging
+to an altitude 4000 feet lower, and on putting my arm down, found a
+heat which compelled me to withdraw it, and as the sun rose these cracks
+steamed in all directions.&nbsp; There are caves full of ferns, lava
+bubbles in reality, crust over crust, each from twelve to eighteen inches
+thick, rolls of lava cooled in coils, and hideous <i>a-a</i> streams
+on which it is impossible to walk two yards without the risk of breaking
+one&rsquo;s limbs or cutting one&rsquo;s boots to pieces.</p>
+<p>While we breakfasted a young man in rags, without shoes or stockings,
+but with the accent and address of a gentleman, came in, a man of good
+family and education in England, but who had &ldquo;gone to the bad
+out here,&rdquo; and had joined a gang of bullock-catchers.&nbsp; Why
+do people persist in sending &ldquo;ne&rsquo;er-do-weels&rdquo; to such
+regions without a definite occupation?&nbsp; It is certain ruin.</p>
+<p>I will not weary you with the details of our mountain ascent.&nbsp;
+Our host provided ourselves and the native servant with three strong
+bullock-horses, and accompanied us himself.&nbsp; The first climb is
+through deep volcanic sand slashed by deep clefts, showing bands of
+red and black ash.&nbsp; We saw no birds, but twice started a rout of
+wild black hogs, and once came upon a wild bull of large size with some
+cows and a calf, all so tired with tramping over the lava that they
+only managed to keep just out of our way.&nbsp; They usually keep near
+the mountain top in the daytime for fear of the hunters, and come down
+at night to feed.&nbsp; About 11,000 were shot and lassoed last year.&nbsp;
+Mr. S--- says that they don&rsquo;t need any water but that of the dew-drenched
+grass, and that horses reared on the mountains refuse to drink, and
+are scared by the sight of pools or running streams.&nbsp; Unlike horses
+I saw at Waikiki, which shut their eyes and plunged their heads into
+water up to their ears, in search of a saltish weed which grows in the
+lagoons.</p>
+<p>The actual forest, which is principally <i>koa</i>, ceases at a height
+of about 6000 feet, but a deplorable vegetation beginning with <i>maman&eacute;</i>
+scrub, and ending with withered wormwood and tufts of coarse grass,
+straggles up 3000 feet higher, and a scaly orange lichen is found in
+rare pitches at a height of 11,000 feet.</p>
+<p>The side of Mauna Kea towards Waimea is precipitous and inaccessible,
+but to our powerful mountain horses the ascent from Kalaieha presented
+no difficulty.</p>
+<p>We rode on hour after hour in intense cold, till we reached a height
+where the last stain of lichen disappeared, and the desolation was complete
+and oppressive.&nbsp; This area of tufa cones, dark and grey basalt,
+clinkers, scori&aelig;, fine ash, and ferruginous basalt, is something
+gigantic.&nbsp; We were three hours in ascending through it, and the
+eye could at no time take in its limit, for the mountain which from
+any point of view below appears as a well defined dome with a ragged
+top, has at the summit the aspect of a ridge, or rather a number of
+ridges, with between 20 and 30 definite peaks, varying in height from
+900 to 1400 feet.&nbsp; Among these cones are large plains of clinkers
+and fine gravel, but no lava-streams, and at a height of 12,000 feet
+the sides of some of the valleys are filled up with snow, of a purity
+so immaculate and a brilliancy so intense as the fierce light of the
+tropical sun beat upon it, that I feared snow-blindness.&nbsp; We ascended
+one of the smaller cones which was about 900 feet high, and found it
+contained a crater of nearly the same depth, with a very even slope,
+and lined entirely with red ash, which at the bottom became so bright
+and fiery-looking that it looked as if the fires, which have not burned
+for ages, had only died out that morning.</p>
+<p>After riding steadily for six hours, our horses, snorting and panting,
+and plunging up to their knees in fine volcanic ash, and halting, trembling
+and exhausted, every few feet, carried us up the great tufa cone which
+crowns the summit of this vast fire-flushed, fire-created mountain,
+and we dismounted in deep snow on the crest of the highest peak in the
+Pacific, 13,953 feet above the sea.&nbsp; This summit is a group of
+six red tufa cones, with very little apparent difference in their altitude,
+and with deep valleys filled with red ash between them.&nbsp; The terminal
+cone on which we were has no cavity, but most of those forming the group,
+as well as the thirty which I counted around and below us, are truncated
+cones with craters within, and with outer slopes, whose estimated angle
+is about 30&deg;.&nbsp; On these slopes the snow lay heavily.&nbsp;
+In coming up we had had a superb view of Mauna Loa, but before we reached
+the top, the clouds had congregated, and lay in glistening masses all
+round the mountain about half-way up, shutting out the smiling earth,
+and leaving us alone with the view of the sublime desolation of the
+volcano.</p>
+<p>We only remained an hour on the top, and came down by a very circuitous
+route, which took us round numerous cones, and over miles of clinkers
+varying in size from a ton to a few ounces, and past a lake the edges
+of which were frozen, and which in itself is a curiosity, as no other
+part of the mountain &ldquo;holds water.&rdquo;&nbsp; Not far off is
+a cave, a lava-bubble, in which the natives used to live when they came
+up here to quarry a very hard adjacent phonolite for their axes and
+other tools.&nbsp; While the others poked about, I was glad to make
+it a refuge from the piercing wind.&nbsp; Hundreds of unfinished axes
+lie round the cave entrance, and there is quite a large mound of unfinished
+chips.</p>
+<p>This is a very interesting spot to Hawaiian antiquaries.&nbsp; They
+argue, from the amount of the chippings, that this mass of phonolite
+was quarried for ages by countless generations of men, and that the
+mountain top must have been upheaved, and the island inhabited, in a
+very remote past.&nbsp; The stones have not been worked since Captain
+Cook&rsquo;s day; yet there is not a weather-stain upon them, and the
+air is so dry and rarified that meat will keep fresh for three months.&nbsp;
+I found a mass of crystals of the greenish volcanic glass, called olivine,
+imbedded in a piece of phonolite which looked as blue and fresh as if
+only quarried yesterday.</p>
+<p>We travelled for miles through ashes and scori&aelig;, and then descended
+into a dense afternoon fog; but Mr. S. is a practised mountaineer, and
+never faltered for a moment, and our horses made such good speed that
+late in the afternoon we were able to warm ourselves by a gallop, which
+brought us in here ravenous for supper before dark, having ridden for
+thirteen hours.&nbsp; I hope I have made it clear that the top of this
+dead volcano, whether cones or ravines, is deep soft ashes and sand.</p>
+<p>To-morrow morning I intend to ride the thirty miles to Waimea with
+two native women, and the next day to go off on my adventurous expedition
+to Hilo, for which I have bought for $45 a big, strong, heavy horse,
+which I have named Kah&eacute;l&eacute;.&nbsp; He has the poking head
+and unmistakable gait of a bullock horse, but is said to be &ldquo;a
+good traveller.&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXVI.</h3>
+<p>&ldquo;MY CAMP,&rdquo; HAWAIIAN SLOPES.&nbsp; <i>May</i> 21.</p>
+<p>This is the height of enjoyment in travelling.&nbsp; I have just
+encamped under a <i>lauhala</i> tree, with my saddle inverted for a
+pillow, my horse tied by a long lariat to a guava bush, my gear, saddle-bags,
+and rations for two days lying about, and my saddle blanket drying in
+the sun.&nbsp; Overhead the sun blazes, and casts no shadow; a few fleecy
+clouds hover near him, and far below, the great expanse of the Pacific
+gleams in a deeper blue than the sky.&nbsp; Far above, towers the rugged
+and snow-patched, but no longer mysterious dome of Mauna Loa; while
+everywhere, ravines, woods, waterfalls, and stretches of lawn-like grass
+delight the eye.&nbsp; All green that I have ever seen, of English lawns
+in June, or Alpine valleys, seems poor and colourless as compared with
+the dazzling green of this sixty-five miles.&nbsp; It is a joyous green,
+a glory.&nbsp; Whenever I look up from my writing, I ask, Was there
+ever such green?&nbsp; Was there ever such sunshine?&nbsp; Was there
+ever such an atmosphere?&nbsp; Was there ever such an adventure?&nbsp;
+And Nature--for I have no other companion, and wish for none--answers,
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo;&nbsp; The novelty is that I am alone, my conveyance
+my own horse; no luggage to look after, for it is all in my saddle-bags;
+no guide to bother, hurry, or hinder me; and with knowledge enough of
+the country to stop when and where I please.&nbsp; A native guide, besides
+being a considerable expense, is a great nuisance; and as the trail
+is easy to find, and the rivers are low, I resolved for once to taste
+the delights of perfect independence!&nbsp; This is a blessed country,
+for a lady can travel everywhere in absolute security.</p>
+<p>My goal is the volcano of Kilauea, with various diverging expeditions,
+involving a ride of about 350 miles; but my health has so wonderfully
+improved, that it is easier to me now to ride forty miles in a day than
+ten some months ago.</p>
+<p>You have no idea of the preparations required for such a ride, and
+the importance which &ldquo;littles&rdquo; assume.&nbsp; Food for two
+days had to be taken, and all superfluous weight to be discarded, as
+every pound tells on a horse on a hard journey.&nbsp; My saddle-bags
+contain, besides &ldquo;Sunday clothes,&rdquo; dress for any &ldquo;gaieties&rdquo;
+which Hilo may offer; but I circumscribed my stock of clothes as much
+as possible, having fallen into the rough-and-ready practice of washing
+them at night, and putting them on unironed in the morning.&nbsp; I
+carry besides, a canvas bag on the horn of my saddle, containing two
+days&rsquo; provender, and a knife, horse-shoe nails, glycerine, thread,
+twine, leather thongs, with other little et ceteras, the lack of which
+might prove troublesome, a thermometer and aneroid in a leather case,
+and a plaid.&nbsp; I have discarded, owing to their weight, all the
+well-meant luxuries which were bestowed upon me, such as drinking cups,
+flasks, etnas, sandwich cases, knife cases, spoons, pocket mirrors,
+etc.&nbsp; The inside of a watchcase makes a sufficient mirror, and
+I make a cup from a <i>kalo</i> leaf.&nbsp; All cases are a mistake,--at
+least I think so, as I contemplate my light equipment with complacency.</p>
+<p>Yesterday&rsquo;s dawn was the reddest I have seen on the mountains,
+and the day was all the dawn promised.&nbsp; A three-mile gallop down
+the dewy grass, and slackened speed through the bush, brought me once
+again to the breezy slopes of Hamakua, and the trail I travelled in
+February, with Deborah and Kaluna.&nbsp; Though as green then as now,
+it was the rainy season, a carnival of rain and mud.&nbsp; Somehow the
+summer does make a difference, even in a land without a winter.&nbsp;
+The temperature was perfect.&nbsp; It was dreamily lovely.&nbsp; No
+song of birds, or busy hum of insects, accompanied the rustle of the
+<i>lauhala</i> leaves and the low murmur of the surf.&nbsp; But there
+is no hot sleep of noon here--the delicious trades keep the air always
+wakeful.</p>
+<p>When the gentleman who guided me through the bush left me on the
+side of a <i>pali</i>, I discovered that Kah&eacute;l&eacute;, though
+strong, gentle, and sure-footed, possesses the odious fault known as
+balking, and expressed his aversion to ascend the other side in a most
+unmistakable manner.&nbsp; He swung round, put his head down, and no
+amount of spurring could get him to do anything but turn round and round,
+till the gentleman, who had left me, returned, beat him with a stick,
+and threw stones at him, till he got him started again.</p>
+<p>I have tried coaxing him, but without result, and have had prolonged
+fights with him in nearly every gulch, and on the worst <i>pali</i>
+of all he refused for some time to breast a step, scrambled round and
+round in a most dangerous place, and slipped his hind legs quite over
+the edge before I could get him on.</p>
+<p>His sociability too is ridiculously annoying.&nbsp; Whenever he sees
+natives in the distance, he neighs, points his ears, holds up his heavy
+head, quickens his pace, and as soon as we meet them, swings round and
+joins them, and can only be extricated after a pitched battle.&nbsp;
+On a narrow bridge I met Kaluna on a good horse, improved in manners,
+appearance, and English, and at first he must have thought that I was
+singularly pleased to see him, by my turning round and joining him at
+once; but presently, seeing the true state of the case, he belaboured
+Kah&eacute;l&eacute; with a heavy stick.&nbsp; The animal is very gentle,
+and companionable, and I dislike to spur him; besides, he seems insensible
+to it; so the last time I tried Rarey&rsquo;s plan, and bringing his
+head quite round, twisted the bridle round the horn of the saddle, so
+that he had to turn round and round for my pleasure, rather than to
+indulge his own temper, a process which will, I hope, conquer him mercifully.</p>
+<p>But in consequence of these battles, and a halt which I made, as
+now, for no other purpose than to enjoy my felicitous circumstances,
+the sun was sinking in a mist of gold behind Mauna Loa long before I
+reached the end of my day&rsquo;s journey.&nbsp; It was extremely lovely.&nbsp;
+A heavy dew was falling, odours of Eden rose from the earth, colours
+glowed in the sky, and the dewiest and richest green was all round.&nbsp;
+It was eerie, but delightful.&nbsp; There were several gulches to cross
+after the sun had set, and a silence, which was almost audible, reigned
+in their leafy solitudes.&nbsp; It was quite dark when I reached the
+trail which dips over the great <i>pali</i> of Laupahoehoe, 700 feet
+in height; but I found myself riding carelessly down what I hardly dared
+to go up, carefully and in company, four months before.&nbsp; But whatever
+improvement time has made in my health and nerves, it has made none
+in this wretched zoophyte village.</p>
+<p>Leading Kah&eacute;l&eacute;, I groped about till I found the house
+of the widow Honolulu, with whom I had lodged before, and presently
+all the natives assembled to stare at me.&nbsp; After rubbing my horse
+and feeding him on a large bundle of <i>ti</i> leaves that I had secured
+on the road, I took my own meal as a spectacle.&nbsp; Two old crones
+seized on my ankles, murmuring <i>lomi, lomi</i>, and subjected them
+to the native process of shampooing.&nbsp; They had unrestrained curiosity
+as to the beginning and end of my journey.&nbsp; I said &ldquo;<i>Waimea,
+Hamakua</i>,&rdquo; when they all chorused, &ldquo;<i>Maikai</i>;&rdquo;
+for a ride of forty miles was not bad for a <i>wahine haole</i>.&nbsp;
+I said, &ldquo;<i>Wai, lio</i>,&rdquo; (water for the horse), when they
+signified that there was only some brackish stuff unfit for drinking.</p>
+<p>In spite of the garrulous assemblage, I was asleep before eight,
+and never woke till I found myself in a blaze of sunshine this morning,
+and in perfect solitude.&nbsp; I got myself some breakfast, and then
+looked about the village for some inhabitants, but found none, except
+an unhappy Portuguese with one leg, and an old man who looked like a
+leper, to whom I said, &ldquo;<i>Ko</i>&rdquo; (cane) &ldquo;<i>lio</i>&rdquo;
+(horse), exhibiting a rial at the same time, on which he cut me a large
+bundle, and I sat on a stone and watched Kah&eacute;l&eacute; as he
+munched it for an hour and a half.</p>
+<p>It was very hot and serene down there between those <i>palis</i>
+700 and 800 feet high.&nbsp; The huts of the village were all shut,
+and not a creature stirred.&nbsp; The palms above my head looked is
+if they had always been old, and there was no movement among their golden
+plumes.&nbsp; The sea itself rolled shorewards more silently and lazily
+than usual.&nbsp; An old dog slept in the sunshine, and whenever I moved,
+by a great effort, opened one eye.&nbsp; The man who cut the cane fell
+asleep on the grass.&nbsp; Kah&eacute;l&eacute; ate as slowly as if
+he had resolved to try my patience, and be revenged on me for my conquest
+of him yesterday, and his heavy munching was the only vital sound.&nbsp;
+I got up and walked about to assure myself that I was awake, saddled
+and bridled the horse, and mounted the great southward <i>pali</i>,
+thankful to reach the breeze and the upper air in full possession of
+my faculties, after the torpor and paralysis of the valley below.</p>
+<p>Never were waters so bright or stretches of upland lawns so joyous
+as to-day, or the forest entanglements so entrancing.&nbsp; The beautiful
+<i>Eugenia malaccensis</i> is now in full blossom, and its stems and
+branches are blazing in all the gulches, with bunches of rose-crimson
+stamens borne on short spikelets.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>HILO.&nbsp; HAWAII, <i>May</i> 24th.</p>
+<p>Once more I am in dear beautiful Hilo.&nbsp; Death entered my Hawaiian
+&ldquo;home&rdquo; lately, and took &ldquo;Baby Bell&rdquo; away, and
+I miss her sweet angel-presence at every turn; but otherwise there are
+no changes, and I am very happy to be under the roof of these dear friends
+again, and indeed each tree, flower, and fern in Hilo is a friend.&nbsp;
+I would not even wish the straggling Pride of India, and over-abundant
+lantana, away from this fairest of the island Edens.&nbsp; I wish I
+could transport you here this moment from our sour easterly skies to
+this endless summer and endless sunshine, and shimmer of a peaceful
+sea, and an atmosphere whose influences are all cheering.&nbsp; Though
+from 13 to 16 feet of rain fall here in the year the air is not damp.&nbsp;
+Wet clothes hung up in the verandah even during rain, dry rapidly, and
+a substance so sensitive to damp as botanical paper does not mildew.</p>
+<p>I met Deborah on horseback near Onomea, and she told me that the
+Austins were expecting me, and so I spent three days very pleasantly
+with them on my way here.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>That old <i>Kilauea</i> has just come in, and has brought the English
+mail, and a United States mail, an event which sets Hilo agog.&nbsp;
+Then for a few hours its still, drowsy life becomes galvanized, and
+people really persuade themselves that they have something to do, and
+all the foreigners write letters hastily, or add postscripts to those
+already written, and lose the mail, and rush down frantically to the
+beach to send their late letters by favour of the obliging purser.&nbsp;
+The mail to-day was an event to me, as it has brought your long-looked-for
+letters.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXVII.</h3>
+<p>HILO.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 1.</p>
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Severance and I have just returned from a three-days&rsquo;
+expedition to Puna in the south of Hawaii, and I preferred their agreeable
+company even to solitude!&nbsp; My sociable Kah&eacute;l&eacute; was
+also pleased, and consequently behaved very well.&nbsp; We were compelled
+to ride for twenty-three miles in single file, owing to the extreme
+narrowness of the lava track, which has been literally hammered down
+in some places to make it passable even for shod horses.&nbsp; We were
+a party of four, and a very fat policeman on a very fat horse brought
+up the rear.</p>
+<p>At some distance from Hilo there is a glorious burst of tropical
+forest, and then the track passes into green grass dotted over with
+clumps of the pandanus and the beautiful eugenia.&nbsp; In that hot
+dry district the fruit was already ripe, and we quenched our thirst
+with it.&nbsp; The &ldquo;native apple,&rdquo; as it is called, is of
+such a brilliant crimson colour as to be hardly less beautiful than
+the flowers.&nbsp; The rind is very thin, and the inside is white, juicy,
+and very slightly acidulated.&nbsp; We were always near the sea, and
+the surf kept bursting up behind the trees in great snowy drifts, and
+every opening gave us a glimpse of deep blue water.&nbsp; The coast
+the whole way is composed of great blocks of very hard black lava, more
+or less elevated, upon which the surges break in perpetual thunder.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the verdure ceased, and we emerged upon a hideous scene,
+one of the many lava flows from Kilauea, an irregular branching stream,
+about a mile broad.&nbsp; It is suggestive of fearful work on the part
+of nature, for here the volcano has not created but destroyed.&nbsp;
+The black tumbled sea mocked the bright sunshine, all tossed, jagged,
+spiked, twirled, thrown heap on heap, broken, rifted, upheaved in great
+masses, burrowing in ravines of its own making, full of broken bubble
+caves, and torn by <i>a-a</i> streams.&nbsp; Close to the track crystals
+of olivine lie in great profusion, and in a few of the crevices there
+are young plants of a fern which everywhere has the audacity to act
+as the herald of vegetation.</p>
+<p>Beyond this desert the country is different in its features from
+the rest of the island, a green smiling land of Beulah, varied by lines
+of craters covered within and without with vegetation.&nbsp; For thirty
+miles the track passes under the deep shade of coco palms, of which
+Puna is the true home; and from under their feathery shadow, and from
+amidst the dark leafage of the breadfruit, gleamed the rose-crimson
+apples of the eugenia, and the golden balls of the guava.&nbsp; I have
+not before seen this exquisite palm to advantage, for those which fringe
+the coast have, as compared with these, a look of tattered, sombre,
+harassed antiquity.&nbsp; Here they stood in thousands, young as well
+as old, their fronds gigantic, their stems curving every way, and the
+golden light, which is peculiar to them, toned into a golden green.&nbsp;
+They were loaded with fruit in all stages, indeed it is produced in
+such abundance that thousands of nuts lie unheeded on the ground.&nbsp;
+Animals, including dogs and cats, revel in the meat, and in the scarcity
+of good water the milk is a useful substitute.</p>
+<p>Late in the afternoon we reached our destination, a comfortable frame
+house, on one of those fine natural lawns in which Hawaii abounds.&nbsp;
+A shower at seven each morning keeps Puna always green.&nbsp; Our kind
+host, a German, married to a native woman, served our meals in a house
+made of grass and bamboo; but the wife and children, as is usual in
+these cases, never appeared at table, and contented themselves with
+contemplating us at a great distance.</p>
+<p>The next afternoon we rode to one of the natural curiosities of Puna,
+which gave me intense pleasure.&nbsp; It lies at the base of a cone
+crowned with a <i>heiau</i> and a clump of coco palms.&nbsp; Passing
+among bread-fruit and guavas into a palm grove of exquisite beauty,
+we came suddenly upon a lofty wooded cliff of hard basaltic rock, with
+ferns growing out of every crevice in its ragged but perpendicular sides.&nbsp;
+At its feet is a cleft about 60 feet long, 16 wide, and 18 deep, full
+of water at a temperature of 90&deg;.&nbsp; This has an absolute transparency
+of a singular kind, and perpetrates wonderful optical illusions.&nbsp;
+Every thing put into it is transformed.&nbsp; The rocks, broken timber,
+and old cocoa nuts which lie below it, are a frosted blue; the dusky
+skins of natives are changed to alabaster; and as my companion, in a
+light print <i>holuku</i>, swam to and fro, her feet and hands became
+like polished marble tinged with blue, and her dress floated through
+the water as if woven of blue light.&nbsp; Everything about this spring
+is far more striking and beautiful than the colour in the blue grotto
+of Capri.&nbsp; It is heaven in the water, a jewelled floor of marvels,
+&ldquo;a sea of glass,&rdquo; &ldquo;like unto sapphire,&rdquo; a type,
+perhaps, of that on which the blessed stand before the throne of God.&nbsp;
+Above, the feathery palms rose into the crystalline blue, and made an
+amber light below, and all fair and lovely things were mirrored in the
+wonderful waters.&nbsp; The specific gravity must be much greater than
+that of ordinary water, for it did not seem possible to sink, or even
+be thoroughly immersed in it.&nbsp; The mercury in the air was 79&deg;,
+but on coming out of the water we felt quite chilly.</p>
+<p>I like Puna.&nbsp; It is like nothing else, but something about it
+made us feel as if we were dwelling in a castle of indolence.&nbsp;
+I developed a capacity for doing nothing, which horrified me, and except
+when we energised ourselves to go to the hot spring, my companions and
+I were content to dream in the verandah, and watch the lengthening shadows,
+and drink cocoa-nut milk, till the abrupt exit of the sun startled us,
+and we saw the young moon carrying the old one tenderly, and a fitful
+glare 60 miles away, where the solemn fires of Mauna Loa are burning
+at a height of nearly 14,000 feet.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>HILO.</p>
+<p>There are many &ldquo;littles,&rdquo; but few &ldquo;mickles&rdquo;
+here.&nbsp; It is among the last that two foreign gentlemen have successfully
+accomplished the ascent of Mauna Loa, and the mystery of its fires is
+solved.&nbsp; I write &ldquo;successfully,&rdquo; as they went up and
+down in safety, but they were involved in a series of <i>pilikias</i>:
+girths, stirrup-leathers, and cruppers slipping and breaking, and their
+sufferings on the summit from cold and mountain sickness appear to have
+been nearly incapacitating.&nbsp; Although much excited, they are collected
+enough to pronounce it &ldquo;the most sublime sight ever seen.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+They, as well as several natives who have passed by Kilauea, report
+it as in full activity, which bears against the assertion that the flank
+crater becomes quiet when the summit crater is active.</p>
+<p>Another and sadder &ldquo;mickle&rdquo; has been the departure of
+ten lepers for Molokai.&nbsp; The <i>Kilauea</i>, with the Marshal,
+and Mr. Wilder who embodies the Board of Health, has just left the bay,
+taking away forty lepers on this cruise; and the relations of those
+who have been taken from Hilo are still howling on the beach.&nbsp;
+When one hears the wailing, and sees the temporary agony of the separated
+relatives, one longs for &ldquo;the days of the Son of Man,&rdquo; and
+that his healing touch, as of old in Galilee, might cleanse these unfortunates.&nbsp;
+Nine of the lepers were sent on board from the temporary pest-house,
+but their case, though deeply commiserated, has been overshadowed by
+that of the talented half-white, &ldquo;Bill Ragsdale,&rdquo; whom I
+mentioned in one of my earlier letters, and who is certainly the most
+&ldquo;notorious&rdquo; man in Hilo.&nbsp; He has a remarkable gift
+of eloquence, both in English and Hawaiian: a combination of pathos,
+invective, and sarcasm; and his manner, though theatrical, is considered
+perfect by his native admirers.&nbsp; His moral character, however,
+has been very low, which makes the outburst of feeling at his fate the
+more remarkable.</p>
+<p>Yesterday, he wrote a letter to Sheriff Severance, giving himself
+up as a leper to be dealt with by the law, expressing himself as ready
+to be expatriated to-day, but requesting that he might not be put into
+the leper-house, and that he might go on board the steamer alone.&nbsp;
+The fact of his giving himself up excited much sympathy, as, in his
+case, the signs of the malady are hardly apparent, and he might have
+escaped suspicion for some time.</p>
+<p>He was riding about all this morning, taking leave of people, and
+of the pleasant Hilo lanes, which he will never see again, and just
+as the steamer was weighing anchor, walked down to the shore as carefully
+dressed as usual, decorated with <i>leis</i> of <i>ohia</i> and gardenia,
+and escorted by nearly the whole native population.&nbsp; On my first
+landing here, the glee club, singing and flower-clad, went out to meet
+him; now tears and sobs accompanied him, and his countrymen and women
+clung to him, kissing him, to the last moment, whilst all the foreigners
+shook hands as they offered him their good wishes.&nbsp; He made a short
+speech in native, urging quiet submission to the stringent measures
+which government is taking in order to stamp out leprosy, and then said
+a few words in English.&nbsp; His last words, as he stepped into the
+boat, were to all: &ldquo;<i>Aloha</i>, may God bless you, my brothers,&rdquo;
+and then the whale boat took him the first stage towards his living
+grave.&nbsp; He took a horse, a Bible, and some legal books with him;
+and, doubtless, in consideration of the prominent positions he has filled,
+specially that of interpreter to the Legislature, unusual indulgence
+will be granted to him.</p>
+<p>At the weekly prayer meeting held this evening in the foreign church,
+the medical officer gave a very pathetic account of his interview with
+him this morning, in which he had feelingly requested the prayers of
+the church.&nbsp; It was with unusual fervour afterwards that prayer
+was offered, not for him only, but for &ldquo;all those who, living,
+have this day been consigned to the oblivion of the grave, and for the
+five hundred of our fellow-subjects now suffering on Molokai.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+A noble instance of devotion has just been given by Father Damiens,
+a Belgian priest, who has gone to spend his life amidst the hideous
+scenes, and the sickness and death of the ghastly valley of Kalawao.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>A CHAPTER ON THE LEPER SETTLEMENT ON MOLOKAI.</h3>
+<p>In 1865, the Hawaiian Legislature, recognizing the disastrous fact
+that leprosy is at once contagious and incurable, passed an act to prevent
+its spread, and eventually the Board of Health established a leper settlement
+on the island of Molokai for the isolation of lepers.&nbsp; In carrying
+out the painful task of weeding out and exiling the sufferers, the officials
+employed met with unusual difficulties; and the general foreign community
+was not itself aware of the importance of making an attempt to &ldquo;stamp
+out&rdquo; the disease, until the beginning of Lunalilo&rsquo;s reign,
+when the apparently rapid spread of leprosy, and sundry rumours that
+others than natives were affected by it, excited general alarm, and
+not unreasonably, for medical science, after protracted investigation,
+knows less of leprosy than of cholera.&nbsp; Nor are medical men wholly
+agreed as to the manner in which infection is communicated; and, as
+the white residents on the islands associate very freely and intimately
+with the natives, eating <i>poi</i> out of their calabashes, and sleeping
+in their houses and on their mats, there was just cause for uneasiness.</p>
+<p>The natives themselves have been, and still are, perfectly reckless
+about the risk of contagion, and although the family instinct among
+them is singularly weak, the gregarious or social instinct is singularly
+strong, and it has been found impossible to induce them to give up smoking
+the pipes, wearing the clothes, and sleeping on the mats of lepers,
+which three things are universally regarded by medical men as undoubted
+sources of infection.&nbsp; At the beginning of 1873, it was estimated
+that nearly 400 lepers were scattered up and down the islands, living
+among their families and friends, and the healthy associated with them
+in complete apathy or fatalism.&nbsp; However bloated the face and glazed
+the eyes, or however swollen or decayed the limbs were, the persons
+so afflicted appeared neither to scare nor disgust their friends, and,
+therefore, Hawaii has absolutely needed the coercive segregation of
+these living <i>foci</i> of disease.&nbsp; When the search for lepers
+was made, the natives hid their friends away under mats, and in forests
+and caves, till the peril of separation was over, and if they sought
+medical advice, they rejected foreign educated aid in favour of the
+highly paid services of Chinese and native quacks, who professed to
+work a cure by means of loathsome ointments and decoctions, and abominable
+broths worthy of the witches&rsquo; cauldron.</p>
+<p>However, as the year passed on, lepers were &ldquo;informed against,&rdquo;
+and it became the painful duty of the sheriffs of the islands, on the
+statement of a doctor that any individual was truly a leper, to commit
+him for life to Molokai.&nbsp; Some, whose swollen faces and glassy
+goggle eyes left no room for hope of escape, gave themselves up; and
+few, who, like Mr. Ragsdale, might have remained among their fellows
+almost without suspicion, surrendered themselves in a way which reflects
+much credit upon them.&nbsp; Mr. Park, the Marshal, and Mr. Wilder,
+of the Board of Health, went round the islands repeatedly in the <i>Kilauea</i>,
+and performed the painful duty of collecting the victims, with true
+sympathy and kindness.&nbsp; The woe of those who were taken, the dismal
+wailings of those who were left, and the agonised partings, when friends
+and relatives clung to the swollen limbs and kissed the glistering bloated
+faces of those who were exiled from them for ever, I shall never forget.</p>
+<p>There were no individual distinctions made among the sufferers.&nbsp;
+Queen Emma&rsquo;s cousin, a man of property, and Mr. Ragsdale, the
+most influential lawyer among the half-whites, shared the same doom
+as poor Upa, the volcano guide, and stricken Chinamen and labourers
+from the plantations.&nbsp; Before the search slackened, between three
+and four hundred men, women, and children were gathered out from among
+their families, and placed on Molokai.</p>
+<p>Between 1866 and April 1874, eleven hundred and forty-five lepers,
+five hundred and sixty of whom were sent from Kahili in the spring of
+1872, have arrived on Molokai, of which number four hundred and forty-two
+have died, the majority of the deaths having occurred since the beginning
+of Lunalilo&rsquo;s reign, when the work of segregation was undertaken
+in earnest.&nbsp; At the present time the number on the island is 703,
+including 22 children.&nbsp; These unfortunates are necessarily pauperised,
+and the small Hawaiian kingdom finds itself much burdened by their support.&nbsp;
+The strain on the national resources is very great, and it is not surprising
+that officials called upon to meet such a sad emergency should be assailed
+in all quarters of the globe by sentimental criticism and misstatements
+regarding the provision made for the lepers on Molokai.&nbsp; Most of
+these are unfounded, and the members of the Board of Health deserve
+great credit both for their humanity and for their prompt and careful
+attention to the complaints made by the sufferers.</p>
+<p>At present the two obvious blots on the system are, the insufficient
+house accommodation, involving a herding together which is repulsive
+to foreign, though not to native, ideas; and the absence of a resident
+physician to prescribe for the ailments from which leprosy is no exemption.&nbsp;
+Molokai, the island of exile, is <i>Molokai aina pali</i>, &ldquo;the
+land of precipices,&rdquo; in the old native m&eacute;l&eacute;s, and
+its walls of rock rise perpendicularly from the sea to a height varying
+from 1000 to 2500 feet, in extreme grandeur and picturesqueness, and
+are slashed, as on Hawaii, by gulches opening out on natural lawns on
+the sea level.&nbsp; The place chosen for the centralization and segregation
+of leprosy is a most singular plain of about 20,000 acres, hemmed in
+between the sea and a precipice 2000 feet high, passable only where
+a zigzag bridle track swings over its face, so narrow and difficult
+that it has been found impossible to get cattle down over it, so that
+the leper settlement below has depended for its supplies of fresh meat
+upon vessels.&nbsp; The settlement is accessible also by a very difficult
+landing at Kalaupapa on the windward side of Molokai.</p>
+<p>Three miles inland from Kalaupapa is the leper village of Kalawao,
+which may safely be pronounced one of the most horrible spots on all
+the earth; a home of hideous disease and slow coming death, with which
+science in despair has ceased to grapple; a community of doomed beings,
+socially dead, &ldquo;whose only business is to perish;&rdquo; wifeless
+husbands, husbandless wives, children without parents, and parents without
+children; men and women who have &ldquo;no more a portion for ever in
+anything that is done under the sun,&rdquo; condemned to watch the repulsive
+steps by which each of their doomed fellows passes down to a loathsome
+death, knowing that by the same they too must pass.</p>
+<p>A small stone church near the landing, and another at Kalawao, tell
+of the extraordinary devotion of a Catholic priest, who, with every
+prospect of advancement in his Church, and with youth, culture, and
+refinement to hold him back from the sacrifice, is in this hideous valley,
+a self exiled man, for Christ&rsquo;s sake.&nbsp; It was singular to
+hear the burst of spontaneous admiration which his act elicited.&nbsp;
+No unworthy motives were suggested, all envious speech was hushed; it
+was almost forgotten by the most rigid Protestants that Father Damiens,
+who has literally followed the example of Christ by &ldquo;laying down
+his life for the brethren,&rdquo; is a Romish priest, and an intuition,
+higher than all reasoning, hastened to number him with &ldquo;the noble
+army of martyrs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In Kalawao are placed not only the greater number of the lepers,
+but the hospital buildings.&nbsp; Most of the victims are of the poorer
+classes and live in brown huts; but two of rank, Mrs. Napela and the
+Hon. P. Y. Kaeo, Queen Emma&rsquo;s cousin, have neat wooden cottages
+on the way from the landing, with every comfort which their means can
+provide for them.&nbsp; The hospital buildings are about twelve in number,
+well and airily situated on a height; they are built of wood thoroughly
+whitewashed, and are enclosed by a fence.&nbsp; Although it is hoped
+that a leper hospital is not to be a permanent institution of the kingdom,
+the soft green grass of the enclosure has been liberally planted with
+algaroba trees, which in a year or two will form a goodly shade, and
+water has been brought in from a distance at considerable expense, so
+that an abundant supply is always at hand.&nbsp; The lepers are dying
+fast, and the number of advanced cases in the hospital averages forty.&nbsp;
+In the centre of the hospital square there are the office buildings,
+including the dispensary, which is well supplied with medicines, so
+that in the absence of a doctor, common ailments may be treated by an
+intelligent English leper.&nbsp; The superintendent&rsquo;s office,
+where the accounts and statistics of the settlement are kept, and where
+the leper governor holds his leper court, and the post-office, are also
+within the enclosure; but the true governor and law-giver is Death.</p>
+<p>When Mr. Ragsdale left Hilo as a leper, the course he was likely
+to take on Molokai could not be accurately forecasted; and it was felt
+that the presence in the leper community of a man of his gift of eloquence
+and influence might either be an invaluable assistance to the government,
+or else a serious embarrassment.&nbsp; In every position he had hitherto
+occupied, he had acquired and retained a remarkable notoriety; and no
+stranger could visit the islands without hearing of poor &ldquo;Bill
+Ragsdale&rsquo;s&rdquo; gifts, and the grievous failings by which they
+were accompanied.</p>
+<p>Hitherto the hopes of his well wishers have been fulfilled, and the
+government has found in him a most energetic as well as prudent agent.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It is better to be first in Britain than second in Rome;&rdquo;
+and probably this unfortunate man, superintendent of the leper settlement,
+and popularly known as &ldquo;Governor Ragsdale,&rdquo; has found a
+nobler scope for his ambition among his doomed brethren than in any
+previous position.&nbsp; His remarkable power of influencing his countrymen
+is at present used for their well being; and though his authority is
+practically almost absolute, owing to the isolation of the community,
+and its position almost outside the operation of law, he has hitherto
+used it with good faith and moderation.&nbsp; He is nominally assisted
+in his duties by a committee of twenty chosen from among the lepers
+themselves; but from his superior education and native mental ascendancy,
+all immediate matters in the settlement are decided by his judgment
+alone.</p>
+<p>The rations of food are ample and of good quality, and notwithstanding
+the increase in the number of lepers, and the difficulty of communication,
+there has not been any authenticated case of want.&nbsp; Each leper
+receives weekly 21 lbs. of <i>paiai</i>, and from 5 to 6 of beef, and
+when these fail to be landed, 9 lbs. of rice, 1 lb. of sugar, and 4
+lbs. of salmon.&nbsp; Soap and clothing are also supplied; but, for
+all beyond these necessaries, the lepers are dependent on their own
+industry, if they are able to exercise it, and the kindness of their
+friends.&nbsp; Coffee, tobacco, pipes, extra clothing, knives, toys,
+books, pictures, working implements and materials, have all been possessed
+by them in happier days; and though packages of such things have been
+sent by the charitable for distribution by Father Damiens, it is not
+possible for island benevolence fully to meet an emergency and needs
+so disproportionate to the population and resources of the kingdom.&nbsp;
+Besides the two Catholic churches, there are a Protestant chapel, with
+a pastor, himself a leper, who is a regularly ordained minister of the
+Hawaiian Board, and two school-houses, where the twenty-two children
+of the settlement receive instruction in Hawaiian from a leper teacher.&nbsp;
+There is a store, too, where those who are assisted by their friends
+can purchase small luxuries, which are sold at just such an advance
+on cost as is sufficient to clear the expense of freight.&nbsp; The
+taste for ornament has not died out in either sex, and women are to
+be seen in Kalawao, hideous and bloated beyond description, decorated
+with <i>leis</i> of flowers, and looking for admiration out of their
+glazed and goggle eyes.</p>
+<p>King Kalakaua and Queen Kapiolani have paid a visit to the settlement,
+and were received with hearty <i>alohas</i>, and the music of a leper
+band.&nbsp; The king made a short address to the lepers, the substance
+of which was &ldquo;that his heart was grieved with the necessity which
+had separated these, his subjects, from their homes and families, a
+necessity which they themselves recognised and acquiesced in, and it
+should be the earnest desire of himself and his government to render
+their condition in exile as comfortable as possible.&rdquo;&nbsp; While
+he spoke, though it is supposed that a merciful apathy attends upon
+leprosy, his hideous audience showed signs of deep feeling, and many
+shed tears at his thoughtfulness in coming to visit those, who, to use
+their own touching expression, were &ldquo;already in the grave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The account which follows is from the pen of a gentleman who accompanied
+the king, and visited the hospital on the same occasion, in company
+with two members of the Board of Health.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As our party stepped on shore, we found the lepers assembled
+to the number of two or three hundred--there are 697 all told in the
+settlement--for they had heard in advance of our coming, and our ears
+were greeted with the sound of lively music.&nbsp; This proceeded from
+the &lsquo;band,&rsquo; consisting of a drum, a fife, and two flutes,
+rather skilfully played upon by four young lads, whose visages were
+horribly marked and disfigured with leprosy.&nbsp; The sprightly airs
+with which these poor creatures welcomed the arrival of the party, sounded
+strangely incongruous and out of place, and grated harshly upon our
+feelings.&nbsp; And then as we proceeded up the beach, and the crowd
+gathered about us, eager and anxious for a recognition or a kind word
+of greeting--oh, the repulsive and sickening libels and distorted caricatures
+of the human face divine upon which we looked!&nbsp; And as they evidently
+read the ill-concealed aversion in our countenances, they withdrew the
+half-proffered hand, and slunk back with hanging heads.&nbsp; They felt
+again that they were lepers, the outcasts of society, and must not contaminate
+us with their touch.&nbsp; A few cheerful words of inquiry from the
+physician, Dr. Trousseau, addressed to individuals as to their particular
+cases, broke the embarrassment of this first meeting, and soon the crowd
+were chatting and laughing just like any other crowd of thoughtless
+Hawaiians, and with but few exceptions, these unfortunate exiles showed
+no signs of the settled melancholy that would naturally be looked for
+from people so hopelessly situated.&nbsp; Very happy were they when
+spoken to, and quite ready to answer any questions.&nbsp; We saw numbers
+whom we had known in years past, and who, having disappeared, we had
+thought dead.&nbsp; One we had known as a Representative, and a very
+intelligent one, too, in the Legislature of 1868.&nbsp; On greeting
+him as an old-time acquaintance, he observed, &lsquo;Yes, we meet again--in
+this living grave!&rsquo;&nbsp; He is a man of no little consideration
+among the people, being entrusted by the Board of Health with the care
+of the store which is kept here for the sale of such goods as the people
+require.&nbsp; All do not appear to be lepers who are leprous.&nbsp;
+We saw numbers who might pass along our streets any day without being
+suspected of the taint.&nbsp; They had it, however, in one way or another.&nbsp;
+Sometimes on the extremities only, eating away the flesh and rotting
+the bones of the hands or feet; and sometimes only appearing in black
+and indurated spots on the skin, noticed only on a somewhat close examination.&nbsp;
+This last sort is said to be the worst, as being most surely fatal and
+easiest transmitted.&nbsp; We saw women who had the disease in this
+stage, walking about, whom it was difficult to believe were lepers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If our sensibilities were shocked at the sight of the crowd
+of lepers we had met at the beach, walking about in physical strength
+and activity, how shall we describe our sensations in looking upon these
+loathsome creatures in the hospital, in whom it was indeed hard to recognise
+anything human?&nbsp; The rooms were cleanly kept and well ventilated,
+but the atmosphere within was pervaded with the sickening odour of the
+grave.&nbsp; At each end, squatted or lying prone on their respective
+mats or mattresses, were the yet breathing corpses of lepers in the
+last stages of various forms of the disease, who glanced inquisitively
+at us for a moment out of their ghoul-like eyes--those who were not
+already beyond seeing--and then withdrew within their dreadful selves.&nbsp;
+Was there ever a more pitiful sight?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In one room we saw a sight that will ever remain fixed indelibly
+on the tablets of memory.&nbsp; A little blue-eyed, flaxen haired child,
+apparently three or four years old, a half-caste, that looked up at
+us with an expression of timorous longing to be caressed and loved;
+but alas, in its glassy eyes and transparent cheeks were the unmistakable
+signs of the curse--the sin of the parents visited upon the child!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In another room was one--a mass of rotting flesh, with but
+little semblance of humanity remaining--who was dying, and whose breath
+came hurried and obstructed.&nbsp; A few hours at most, and his troubles
+would be over, and his happy release arrive.&nbsp; There had been fourteen
+deaths in the settlement during the previous fortnight.&nbsp; On the
+day of our visit there were fifty-eight inmates of the hospital.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though the lifting of the veil of mystery which hangs over the death
+valley of Molokai discloses some of the most woeful features of the
+curse, it is a relief to know the worst, and that the poor leprous outcasts
+in their &ldquo;living grave&rdquo; are not outside the pale of humanity
+and a judicious philanthropy.&nbsp; All that can be done for them is
+to encourage their remaining capacities for industry, and to smooth,
+as far as is possible, the journey of death.&nbsp; The Hawaiian Government
+is doing its best to &ldquo;stamp out&rdquo; the disease, and to provide
+for the comfort of those who are isolated; and, with the limited means
+at its disposal, has acted with an efficiency and humanity worthy of
+the foremost of civilised countries.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXVIII.</h3>
+<p>HILO.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 2<i>nd</i>.</p>
+<p>Often since I finished my last letter has Hazael&rsquo;s reply to
+Elisha occurred to me, &ldquo;Is thy servant a dog, that he should do
+this thing?&rdquo;&nbsp; For in answer to people who have said, &ldquo;I
+hope nothing will induce you to attempt the ascent of Mauna Loa,&rdquo;
+I always said, &ldquo;Oh, dear, no!&nbsp; I should never dream of it;&rdquo;
+or, &ldquo;Nothing would persuade me to think of it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This morning early, Mr. Green came in, on his way to Kilauea, to
+which I was to accompany him, and on my casually remarking that I envied
+him his further journey, he at once asked me to join him, and I joyfully
+accepted the invitation!&nbsp; For, indeed, my heart has been secretly
+set on going, and I have had to repeat to myself fifty times a day,
+&ldquo;no, I must not think of it, for it is impossible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Green is going up well equipped with a tent, horses, a baggage
+mule, and a servant, and is confident of being able to get a guide and
+additional mules fifty miles from Hilo.&nbsp; I had to go to the Union
+School examination where the Hilo world was gathered, but I could think
+of nothing but the future; and I can hardly write sense, the prospect
+of the next week is so exciting, and the time for making preparations
+is so short.&nbsp; It is an adventurous trip anyhow, and the sufferings
+which our predecessors have undergone, from Commodore Wilkes downwards,
+make me anxious not to omit any precaution.&nbsp; The distance which
+has to be travelled through an uninhabited region, the height and total
+isolation of the summit, the uncertainty as to the state of the crater,
+and the duration of its activity, with the possibility of total failure
+owing to fog or strong wind, combine to make our ascent an experimental
+trip.</p>
+<p>The news of the project soon spread through the village, and as the
+ascent has only once been performed by a woman, the kindly people are
+profuse in offers of assistance, and in interest in the journey, and
+every one is congratulating me on my good fortune in having Mr. Green
+for my travelling companion.&nbsp; I have hunted all the beach stores
+through for such essentials as will pack into small compass, and every
+one said &ldquo;So you are going to &lsquo;the mountain;&rsquo; I hope
+you&rsquo;ll have a good time;&rdquo; or, &ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;ll
+have the luck to get up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Among the friends of my hosts all sorts of useful articles were produced,
+a camp kettle, a camping blanket, a huge Mexican poncho, a cardigan,
+capacious saddlebags, etc.&nbsp; Nor was Kah&eacute;l&eacute; forgotten,
+for the last contribution was a bag of oats!&nbsp; The greatest difficulty
+was about warm clothing, for in this perfect climate, woollen underclothing
+is not necessary as in many tropical countries, but it is absolutely
+essential on yonder mountain, and till late in the afternoon the best
+intentions and the most energetic rummaging in old trunks failed to
+produce it.&nbsp; At last Mrs. ---, wife of an old Scotch settler, bestowed
+upon me the invaluable loan of a stout flannel shirt, and a pair of
+venerable worsted stockings, much darned, knitted in Fifeshire a quarter
+of a century ago.&nbsp; When she brought them, the excellent lady exclaimed,
+&ldquo;Oh, what some people will do!&rdquo; with an obvious personal
+reference.</p>
+<p>She tells us that her husband, who owns the ranch on the mountain
+at which we are to stay the last night, has been obliged to forbid any
+of his natives going up as guides, and that she fears we shall not get
+a guide, as the native who went up with Mr. Whyte suffered so dreadfully
+from mountain sickness, that they were obliged to help him down, and
+he declares that he will not go up again.&nbsp; Mr. Whyte tells us that
+he suffered himself from vomiting and vertigo for fourteen hours, and
+severely from thirst also, as the water froze in their canteens; but
+I am almost well now, and as my capacity for &ldquo;roughing it&rdquo;
+has been severely tested, I hope to &ldquo;get on&rdquo; much better.&nbsp;
+A party made the ascent nine months ago, and the members of it also
+suffered severely, but I see no reason why cautious people, who look
+well to their gear and clothing, and are prudent with regard to taking
+exercise at the top, should suffer anything worse than the inconveniences
+which are inseparable from nocturnal cold at a high elevation.</p>
+<p>My preparations are completed to-night, the last good wishes have
+been spoken, and we intend to leave early tomorrow morning.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXIX. <a name="citation381"></a><a href="#footnote381">{381}</a></h3>
+<p>CRATER HOUSE, KILAUEA.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 4<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>Once more I write with the splendours of the quenchless fires in
+sight, and the usual world seems twilight and commonplace by the fierce
+glare of Halemaumau, and the fitful glare of the other and loftier flame,
+which is burning ten thousand feet higher in lonely Mokua-weo-weo.</p>
+<p>Mr. Green and I left Hilo soon after daylight this morning, and made
+about &ldquo;the worst time&rdquo; ever made on the route.&nbsp; We
+jogged on slowly and silently for thirty miles in Indian file, through
+bursts of tropical beauty, over an ocean of fern-clad <i>pahoehoe</i>,
+the air hot and stagnant, the horses lazy and indifferent, till I was
+awoke from the kind of cautious doze into which one falls on a sure-footed
+horse, by a decided coolness in the atmosphere, and Kah&eacute;l&eacute;
+breaking into a lumbering gallop, which he kept up till we reached this
+house, where, in spite of the exercise, we are glad to get close to
+a large wood fire.&nbsp; Although we are shivering, the mercury is 57&deg;,
+but in this warm and equable climate, one&rsquo;s sensations are not
+significant of the height of the thermometer.</p>
+<p>It is very fascinating to be here on the crater&rsquo;s edge, and
+to look across its deep three miles of blackness to the clouds of red
+light which Halemaumau is sending up, but altogether exciting to watch
+the lofty curve of Mauna Loa upheave itself against the moon, while
+far and faint, we see, or think we see, that solemn light, which ever
+since my landing at Kawaihae has been so mysteriously attractive.&nbsp;
+It is three days off yet.&nbsp; Perhaps its spasmodic fires will die
+out, and we shall find only blackness.&nbsp; Perhaps anything, except
+our seeing it as it ought to be seen!&nbsp; The practical difficulty
+about a guide increases, and Mr. Gilman cannot help us to solve it.&nbsp;
+And if it be so cold at 4000 feet, what will it be at 14,000?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>KILAUEA.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 5<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>I have no room in my thoughts for anything but volcanoes, and it
+will be so for some days to come.&nbsp; We have been all day in the
+crater, in fact, I left Mr. Green and his native there, and came up
+with the guide, sore, stiff, bruised, cut, singed, grimy, with my thick
+gloves shrivelled off by the touch of sulphurous acid, and my boots
+nearly burned off.&nbsp; But what are cuts, bruises, fatigue, and singed
+eyelashes, in comparison with the awful sublimities I have witnessed
+to-day?&nbsp; The activity of Kilauea on Jan. 31 was as child&rsquo;s
+play to its activity to-day: as a display of fireworks compared to the
+conflagration of a metropolis.&nbsp; <i>Then</i>, the sense of awe gave
+way speedily to that of admiration of the dancing fire fountains of
+a fiery lake; <i>now</i>, it was all terror, horror, and sublimity,
+blackness, suffocating gases, scorching heat, crashings, surgings, detonations;
+half seen fires, hideous, tortured, wallowing waves.&nbsp; I feel as
+if the terrors of Kilauea would haunt me all my life, and be the Nemesis
+of weak and tired hours.</p>
+<p>We left early, and descended the terminal wall, still as before,
+green with ferns, <i>ohias</i>, and sandalwood, and bright with clusters
+of turquoise berries, and the red fruit and waxy blossoms of the <i>ohelo</i>.&nbsp;
+The lowest depression of the crater, which I described before as a level
+fissured sea of iridescent lava, has been apparently partially flooded
+by a recent overflow from Halemaumau, and the same agency has filled
+up the larger rifts with great shining rolls of black lava, obnoxiously
+like boa-constrictors in a state of repletion.&nbsp; In crossing this
+central area for the second time, with a mind less distracted by the
+novelty of the surroundings, I observed considerable deposits of remarkably
+impure sulphur, as well as sulphates of lime and alum in the larger
+fissures.&nbsp; The presence of moisture was always apparent in connexion
+with these formations.&nbsp; The solidified surges and convolutions
+in which the lava lies, the latter sometimes so beautifully formed as
+to look like coils of wire rope, are truly wonderful.&nbsp; Within the
+cracks there are extraordinary coloured growths, orange, grey, buff,
+like mineral lichens, but very hard and brittle.</p>
+<p>The recent lava flow by which Halemaumau has considerably heightened
+its walls, has raised the hill by which you ascend to the brink of the
+pit to a height of fully five hundred feet from the basin, and this
+elevation is at present much more fiery and precarious than the former
+one.&nbsp; It is dead, but not cold, lets one through into cracks hot
+with corrosive acid, rings hollow everywhere, and its steep acclivities
+lie in waves, streams, coils, twists, and tortuosities of all kinds,
+the surface glazed and smoothish, and with a metallic lustre.</p>
+<p>Somehow, I expected to find Kilauea as I had left it in January,
+though the volumes of dense white smoke which are now rolling up from
+it might have indicated a change; but after the toilsome, breathless
+climbing of the awful lava hill, with the crust becoming more brittle,
+and the footing hotter at each step, instead of laughing fire fountains
+tossing themselves in gory splendour above the rim, there was a hot,
+sulphurous, mephitic chaos, covering, who knows what, of horror?</p>
+<p>So far as we could judge, the level of the lake had sunk to about
+80 feet below the margin, and the lately formed precipice was overhanging
+it considerably.&nbsp; About seven feet back from the edge of the ledge,
+there was a fissure about eighteen inches wide, emitting heavy fumes
+of sulphurous acid gas.&nbsp; Our visit seemed in vain, for on the risky
+verge of this crack we could only get momentary glimpses of wallowing
+fire, glaring lurid through dense masses of furious smoke which were
+rolling themselves round in the abyss as if driven by a hurricane.</p>
+<p>After failing to get a better standpoint, we suffered so much from
+the gases, that we coasted the north, till we reached the south lake,
+one with the other on my former visit, but now separated by a solid
+lava barrier about three hundred feet broad, and eighty high.&nbsp;
+Here there was comparatively little smoke, and the whole mass of contained
+lava was ebullient and incandescent, its level marked the whole way
+round by a shelf or rim of molten lava, which adhered to the side, as
+ice often adheres to the margin of rapids, when the rest of the water
+is liberated and in motion.&nbsp; There was very little centripetal
+action apparent.&nbsp; Though the mass was violently agitated it always
+took a southerly direction, and dashed itself with fearful violence
+against some lofty, undermined cliffs which formed its southern limit.&nbsp;
+The whole region vibrated with the shock of the fiery surges.&nbsp;
+To stand there was &ldquo;to snatch a fearful joy,&rdquo; out of a pain
+and terror which were unendurable.&nbsp; For two or three minutes we
+kept going to the edge, seeing the spectacle as with a flash, through
+half closed eyes, and going back again; but a few trials, in which throats,
+nostrils, and eyes were irritated to torture by the acid gases, convinced
+us that it was unsafe to attempt to remain by the lake, as the pain
+and gasping for breath which followed each inhalation, threatened serious
+consequences.</p>
+<p>With regard to the north lake we were more fortunate, and more persevering,
+and I regard the three hours we spent by it as containing some of the
+most solemn, as well as most fascinating, experiences of my life.&nbsp;
+The aspect of the volcano had altogether changed within four months.&nbsp;
+At present there are two lakes surrounded by precipices about eighty
+feet high.&nbsp; Owing to the smoke and confusion, it is most difficult
+to estimate their size even approximately, but I think that the diameter
+of the two cannot be less than a fifth of a mile.</p>
+<p>Within the pit or lake by which we spent the morning, there were
+no fiery fountains, or regular plashings of fiery waves playing in indescribable
+beauty in a faint blue atmosphere, but lurid, gory, molten, raging,
+sulphurous, tormented masses of matter, half seen through masses as
+restless, of lurid smoke.&nbsp; Here, the violent action appeared centripetal,
+but with a southward tendency.&nbsp; Apparently, huge bulging masses
+of a lurid-coloured lava were wallowing the whole time one over another
+in a central whirlpool, which occasionally flung up a wave of fire thirty
+or forty feet.&nbsp; The greatest intensity of action was always preceded
+by a dull throbbing roar, as if the imprisoned gases were seeking the
+vent which was afforded them by the upward bulging of the wave and its
+bursting into spray.&nbsp; The colour of the lava which appeared to
+be thrown upwards from great depths, was more fiery and less gory than
+that nearer the surface.&nbsp; Now and then, through rifts in the smoke
+we saw a convergence of the whole molten mass into the centre, which
+rose wallowing and convulsed to a considerable height.&nbsp; The awful
+sublimity of what we did see, was enhanced by the knowledge that it
+was only a thousandth part of what we did not see, mere momentary glimpses
+of a terror and fearfulness which otherwise could not have been borne.</p>
+<p>A ledge, only three or four feet wide, hung over the lake, and between
+that and the comparative <i>terra firma</i> of the older lava, there
+was a fissure of unknown depth, emitting hot blasts of pernicious gases.&nbsp;
+The guide would not venture on the outside ledge, but Mr. Green, in
+his scientific zeal, crossed the crack, telling me not to follow him,
+but presently, in his absorption with what he saw, called to me to come,
+and I jumped across, and this remained our perilous standpoint. <a name="citation388"></a><a href="#footnote388">{388}</a></p>
+<p>Burned, singed, stifled, blinded, only able to stand on one foot
+at a time, jumping back across the fissure every two or three minutes
+to escape an unendurable whiff of heat and sulphurous stench, or when
+splitting sounds below threatened the disruption of the ledge: lured
+as often back by the fascination of the horrors below; so we spent three
+hours.</p>
+<p>There was every circumstance of awfulness to make the impression
+of the sight indelible.&nbsp; Sometimes dense volumes of smoke hid everything,
+and yet, upwards, from out &ldquo;their sulphurous canopy&rdquo; fearful
+sounds rose, crashings, thunderings, detonations, and we never knew
+then whether the spray of some hugely uplifted wave might not dash up
+to where we stood.&nbsp; At other times the smoke partially lifting,
+but still swirling in strong eddies, revealed a central whirlpool of
+fire, wallowing at unknown depths, to which the lava, from all parts
+of the lake, slid centrewards and downwards as into a vortex, where
+it mingled its waves with indescribable noise and fury, and then, breaking
+upwards, dashed itself to a great height in fierce, gory, gouts and
+clots, while hell itself seemed opening at our feet.&nbsp; At times,
+again, bits of the lake skinned over with a skin of a wonderful silvery,
+satiny sheen, to be immediately devoured; and as the lurid billows broke,
+they were mingled with misplaced patches as if of bright moonlight.&nbsp;
+Always changing, always suggesting force which nothing could repel,
+agony indescribable, mystery inscrutable, terror unutterable, a thing
+of eternal dread, revealed only in glimpses!</p>
+<p>It is natural to think that St. John the Evangelist, in some Patmos
+vision, was transported to the brink of this &ldquo;bottomless pit,&rdquo;
+and found in its blackness and turbulence of agony the fittest emblems
+of those tortures of remorse and memory, which we may well believe are
+the quenchless flames of the region of self-chosen exile from goodness
+and from God.&nbsp; As natural, too, that all Scripture phrases which
+typify the place of woe should recur to one with the force of a new
+interpretation, &ldquo;Who can dwell with the everlasting burnings?&rdquo;
+&ldquo;The smoke of their torment goeth up for ever and ever,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;The place of hell,&rdquo; &ldquo;The bottomless pit,&rdquo; &ldquo;The
+vengeance of eternal fire,&rdquo; &ldquo;A lake of fire burning with
+brimstone.&rdquo;&nbsp; No sight can be so fearful as this glimpse into
+the interior of the earth, where fires are for ever wallowing with purposeless
+force and aimless agony.</p>
+<p>Beyond the lake there is a horrible region in which dense volumes
+of smoke proceed from the upper ground, with loud bellowings and detonations,
+and we took our perilous way in that direction, over very hot lava which
+gave way constantly.&nbsp; It is near this that the steady fires are
+situated which are visible from this house at night.&nbsp; We came first
+upon a solitary &ldquo;blowing cone,&rdquo; beyond which there was a
+group of three or four, but it is not from these that the smoke proceeds,
+but from the extensive area beyond them, covered with smoke and steam
+cracks, and smoking banks, which are probably formed of sulphur deposits.&nbsp;
+I only visited the solitary cone, for the footing was so precarious,
+the sight so fearful, and the ebullitions of gases so dangerous, that
+I did not dare to go near the others, and never wish to look upon their
+like again.</p>
+<p>The one I saw was of beehive shape, about twelve feet high, hollow
+inside, and its walls were about two feet thick.&nbsp; A part of its
+imperfect top was blown off, and a piece of its side blown out, and
+the side rent gave one a frightful view of its interior, with the risk
+of having lava spat at one at intervals.&nbsp; The name &ldquo;Blowing
+Cone&rdquo; is an apt one, if the theory of their construction be correct.&nbsp;
+It is supposed that when the surface of the lava cools rapidly owing
+to enfeebled action below, the gases force their way upwards through
+small vents, which then serve as &ldquo;blow holes&rdquo; for the imprisoned
+fluid beneath.&nbsp; This, rapidly cooling as it is ejected, forms a
+ring on the surface of the crust, which, growing upwards by accretion,
+forms a chimney, eventually nearly or quite closed at the top, so as
+to form a cone.&nbsp; In this case the cone is about eighty feet above
+the present level of the lake, and fully one hundred yards distant from
+its present verge.</p>
+<p>The whole of the inside was red and molten, full of knobs, and great
+fiery stalactites.&nbsp; Jets of lava at a white heat were thrown up
+constantly, and frequently the rent in the side spat out lava in clots,
+which cooled rapidly, and looked like drops of bottle green glass.&nbsp;
+The glimpses I got of the interior were necessarily brief and intermittent.&nbsp;
+The blast or roar which came up from below was more than deafening;
+it was stunning: and accompanied with heavy subterranean rumblings and
+detonations.&nbsp; The chimney, so far as I could see, opened out gradually
+downwards to a great width, and appeared to be about forty feet deep;
+and at its base there was an abyss of lashing, tumbling, restless fire,
+emitting an ominous surging sound, and breaking upwards with a fury
+which threatened to blow the cone and the crust on which it stands,
+into the air.</p>
+<p>The heat was intense, and the stinging sulphurous gases which were
+given forth in large quantities, most poisonous.&nbsp; The group of
+cones west of this one, was visited by Mr. Green; but he found it impossible
+to make any further explorations.&nbsp; He has seen nearly all the recent
+volcanic phenomena, but says that these cones present the most &ldquo;infernal&rdquo;
+appearance he has ever witnessed.&nbsp; We returned for a last look
+at Halemaumau, but the smoke was so dense, and the sulphur fumes so
+stifling, that, as in a fearful dream, we only heard the thunder of
+its hidden surges.&nbsp; I write thunder, and one speaks of the lashing
+of its waves; but these are words pertaining to the familiar earth,
+and have no place in connection with Kilauea.&nbsp; The breaking lava
+has a voice all its own, full of compressed fury.&nbsp; Its sound, motion,
+and aspect are all infernal.&nbsp; Hellish, is the only fitting term.</p>
+<p>We are dwelling on a cooled crust all over Southern Hawaii, the whole
+region is recent lava, and between this and the sea there are several
+distinct lines of craters thirty miles long, all of which at some time
+or other have vomited forth the innumerable lava streams which streak
+the whole country in the districts of Kau, Puna, and Hilo.&nbsp; In
+fact, Hawaii is a great slag.&nbsp; There is something very solemn in
+the position of this crater-house: with smoke and steam coming out of
+every pore of the ground, and in front the huge crater, which to-night
+lights all the sky.&nbsp; My second visit has produced a far deeper
+impression even than the first, and one of awe and terror solely.</p>
+<p>Kilauea is altogether different from the European volcanoes which
+send lava and stones into the air in fierce sudden spasms, and then
+subside into harmlessness.&nbsp; Ever changing, never resting, the force
+which stirs it never weakening, raging for ever with tossing and strength
+like the ocean: its labours unfinished and possibly never to be finished,
+its very unexpectedness adds to its sublimity and terror, for until
+you reach the terminal wall of the crater, it looks by daylight but
+a smoking pit in the midst of a dreary stretch of waste land.</p>
+<p>Last night I thought the Southern Cross out of place; to-night it
+seems essential, as Calvary over against Sinai.&nbsp; For Halemaumau
+involuntarily typifies the wrath which shall consume all evil: and the
+constellation, pale against its lurid light, the great love and yearning
+of the Father, &ldquo;who spared not His own Son but delivered Him up
+for us all,&rdquo; that, &ldquo;as in Adam all die, even so in Christ
+shall all be made alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>AINEPO, HAWAII, <i>June</i> 5<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>We had a great fright last evening.&nbsp; We had been engaging mules,
+and talking over our plans with our half-Indian host, when he opened
+the door and exclaimed, &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no light on Mauna Loa;
+the fire&rsquo;s gone out.&rdquo;&nbsp; We rushed out, and though the
+night was clear and frosty, the mountain curve rose against the sky
+without the accustomed wavering glow upon it.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+afraid you&rsquo;ll have your trouble for nothing,&rdquo; Mr. Gilman
+unsympathisingly remarked; &ldquo;anyhow, its awfully cold up there,&rdquo;
+and rubbing his hands, reseated himself at the fire.&nbsp; Mr. G. and
+I stayed out till we were half-frozen, and I persuaded myself and him
+that there was a redder tinge than the moonlight above the summit, but
+the mountain has given no sign all day, so that I fear that I &ldquo;evolved&rdquo;
+the light out of my &ldquo;inner consciousness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Gilman was eloquent on the misfortunes of our predecessors, lent
+me a pair of woollen socks to put on over my gloves, told me privately
+that if anyone could succeed in getting a guide it would be Mr. Green,
+and dispatched us at eight this morning with a lurking smile at our
+&ldquo;fool&rsquo;s errand,&rdquo; thinly veiled by warm wishes for
+our success.&nbsp; Mr. Reid has two ranches on the mountain, seven miles
+distant from each other, and was expected every hour at the crater-house
+on his way to Hilo, but it was not known from which he was coming, and
+as it appeared that our last hope of getting a guide lay in securing
+his good will, Mr. G., his servant, and packmule took the lower trail,
+and I, with a native, a string of mules, and a pack-horse, the upper.&nbsp;
+Our plans for intercepting the good man were well laid and successful,
+but turned out resultless.</p>
+<p>This has been an irresistibly comical day, and it is just as well
+to have something amusing interjected between the sublimities of Kilauea,
+and whatever to-morrow may bring forth.&nbsp; When our cavalcades separated,
+I followed the guide on a blind trail into the little-known regions
+on the skirts of Mauna Loa.&nbsp; We only travelled two miles an hour,
+and the mules kept getting up rows, kicking, and entangling their legs
+in the lariats, and one peculiarly malign animal dealt poor Kah&eacute;l&eacute;
+a gratuitous kick on his nose, making it bleed.</p>
+<p>It is strange, unique country, without any beauty.&nbsp; The seaward
+view is over a great stretch of apparent table-land, spotted with craters,
+and split by cracks emitting smoke or steam.&nbsp; The whole region
+is black with streams of spiked and jagged lava, meandering over it,
+with charred stumps of trees rising out of them.</p>
+<p>The trail, if such it could be called, wound among <i>koa</i> and
+sandalwood trees occasionally, but habitually we picked our way over
+waves, coils, and hummocks of pahoehoe surrounded by volcanic sand,
+and with only a few tufts of grass, abortive <i>ohelos</i>, and vigorous
+sow thistles (much relished by Kah&eacute;l&eacute;) growing in their
+crevices.&nbsp; Horrid cracks, 50 or 60 feet wide, probably made by
+earthquakes, abounded, and a black chasm of most infernal aspect dogged
+us on the left.&nbsp; It was all scrambling up and down.&nbsp; Sometimes
+there was long, ugly grass, a brownish green, coarse and tufty, for
+a mile or more.&nbsp; Sometimes clumps of wintry-looking, dead trees,
+sometimes clumps of attenuated living ones; but nothing to please the
+eye.&nbsp; We saw neither man nor beast the whole way, except a wild
+bull, which, tearing down the mountain side, crossed the trail just
+in front of us, causing a stampede among the mules, and it was fully
+an hour before they were all caught again.</p>
+<p>The only other incident was an earthquake, the most severe, the men
+here tell me, that has been experienced for two years.&nbsp; One is
+prepared for any caprices on the part of the earth here, yet when there
+was a fearful internal throbbing and rumbling, and the trees and grass
+swayed rapidly, and great rocks and masses of soil were dislodged, and
+bounded down the hillside, and the earth reeled, and my poor horse staggered
+and stopped short; far from rising to the magnitude of the occasion,
+I thought I was attacked with vertigo, and grasped the horn of my saddle
+to save myself from falling.&nbsp; After a moment of profound stillness,
+there was again a subterranean sound like a train in a tunnel, and the
+earth reeled again with such violence that I felt as if the horse and
+myself had gone over.&nbsp; Poor K. was nervous for some time afterwards.&nbsp;
+The motion was as violent as that of a large ship in a mid-Atlantic
+storm.&nbsp; There were four minor shocks within half an hour afterwards.</p>
+<p>After crawling along for seven hours, and for the last two in a dripping
+fog, so dense that I had to keep within kicking range of the mules for
+fear of being lost, we heard the lowing of domestic cattle, and came
+to a place where felled trees, very difficult for the horses to cross,
+were lying.&nbsp; Then a rude boundary wall appeared, inside of which
+was a small, poor-looking grass house, consisting of one partially-divided
+room, with a small, ruinous-looking cook-house, a shed, and an unfinished
+frame house.&nbsp; It looked, and is, a disconsolate conclusion of a
+wet day&rsquo;s ride.&nbsp; I rode into the corral, and found two or
+three very rough-looking whites and half-whites standing, and addressing
+one of them, I found he was Mr. Reid&rsquo;s manager there.&nbsp; I
+asked if they could give me a night&rsquo;s lodging, which seemed a
+diverting notion to them; and they said they could give me the rough
+accommodation they had, but it was hard even for them, till the new
+house was put up.&nbsp; They brought me into this very rough shelter,
+a draughty grass room, with a bench, table, and one chair in it.&nbsp;
+Two men came in, but not the native wife and family, and sat down to
+a calabash of <i>poi</i> and some strips of dried beef, food so coarse,
+that they apologised for not offering it to me.&nbsp; They said they
+had sent to the lower ranch for some flour, and in the meantime they
+gave me some milk in a broken bowl, their &ldquo;nearest approach to
+a tumbler,&rdquo; they said.&nbsp; I was almost starving, for all our
+food was on the pack-mule.&nbsp; This is the place where we had been
+told that we could obtain tea, flour, beef, and fowls!</p>
+<p>By some fatality my pen, ink, and knitting were on the pack-mule;
+it was very cold, the afternoon fog closed us in, and darkness came
+on prematurely, so that I felt a most absurd sense of <i>ennui</i>,
+and went over to the cook-house, where I found Gandle cooking, and his
+native wife with a heap of children and dogs lying round the stove.&nbsp;
+I joined them till my clothes were dry, on which the man, who in spite
+of his rough exterior, was really friendly and hospitable, remarked
+that he saw I was &ldquo;one of the sort who knew how to take people
+as I found them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This regular afternoon mist which sets in at a certain altitude,
+blotting out the sun and sky, and bringing the horizon within a few
+yards, makes me certain after all that the mists of rainless Eden were
+a phenomenon, the loss of which is not to be regretted.</p>
+<p>Still the afternoon hung on, and I went back to the house feeling
+that the most desirable event which the future could produce would be--a
+meal.&nbsp; Now and then the men came in and talked for a while, and
+as the darkness and cold intensified, they brought in an arrangement
+extemporised out of what looked like a battered tin bath, half full
+of earth, with some lighted faggots at the top, which gave out a little
+warmth and much stinging smoke.&nbsp; Actual, undoubted, night came
+on without Mr. Green, of whose failure I felt certain, and without food,
+and being blinded by the smoke, I rolled myself in a blanket and fell
+asleep on the bench, only to wake in a great fright, believing that
+the volcano house was burning over my head, and that a venerable missionary
+was taking advantage of the confusion to rob my saddle-bags, which in
+truth one of the men was moving out of harm&rsquo;s way, having piled
+up the fire two feet high.</p>
+<p>Presently a number of voices outside shouted <i>Haole</i>! and Mr.
+Green came in shaking the water from his waterproof, with the welcome
+words, &ldquo;Everything&rsquo;s settled for to-morrow.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Mr. Reid threw cold water on the ascent, and could give no help; and
+Mr. G. being thus left to himself, after a great deal of trouble, has
+engaged as guide an active young goat-hunter, who, though he has never
+been to the top of the mountain, knows other parts of it so well that
+he is sure he can take us up.&nbsp; Mr. G. also brings an additional
+mule and pack-horse, so that our equipment is complete, except in the
+matter of cruppers, which we have been obliged to make for ourselves
+out of goats&rsquo; hair rope, and old stockings.&nbsp; If Mr. G. has
+an eye for the picturesque, he must have been gratified as he came in
+from the fog and darkness into the grass room, with the flaring fire
+in the middle, the rifles gleaming on the wall, the two men in very
+rough clothing, and myself huddled up in a blanket sitting on the floor,
+where my friend was very glad to join us.</p>
+<p>Mr. Green has brought nothing but tea from Kapapala, but Gandle has
+made some excellent rolls, besides feasting us on stewed fowl, dough-nuts,
+and milk!&nbsp; Little comfort is promised for to-night, as Gandle says
+with a twinkle of kindly malice in his eye, that we shall not &ldquo;get
+a wink of sleep, for the place swarms with fleas.&rdquo;&nbsp; They
+are a great pest of the colder regions of the islands, and like all
+other nuisances, are said to have been imported!&nbsp; Gandle and the
+other man have entertained us with the misfortunes of our predecessors,
+on which they seem to gloat with ill-omened satisfaction.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXIX.--Continued.</h3>
+<p>KAPAPALA, <i>June</i> 8<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>The fleas at Ainepo quite fulfilled Mr. Gandle&rsquo;s prognostications,
+and I was glad when the cold stars went out one by one, and a red, cloudless
+dawn broke over the mountain, accompanied by a heavy dew and a morning
+mist, which soon rolled itself up into rosy folds and disappeared, and
+there was a legitimate excuse for getting up.&nbsp; Our host provided
+us with flour, sugar, and dough-nuts, and a hot breakfast, and our expedition,
+comprising two natives who knew not a word of English, Mr. G. who does
+not know very much more Hawaiian than I do, and myself, started at seven.&nbsp;
+We had four superb mules, and two good pack-horses, a large tent, and
+a plentiful supply of camping blankets.&nbsp; I put on all my own warm
+clothes, as well as most of those which had been lent to me, which gave
+me the squat, padded, look of a puffin or Esquimaux, but all, and more
+were needed long before we reached the top.&nbsp; The mules were beyond
+all praise.&nbsp; They went up the most severe ascent I have ever seen,
+climbing steadily for nine hours, without a touch of the spur, and after
+twenty-four hours of cold, thirst, and hunger, came down again as actively
+as cats.&nbsp; The pack-horses too were very good, but from the comparative
+clumsiness with which they move their feet they were very severely cut.</p>
+<p>We went off, as usual, in single file, the guide first, and Mr. G.
+last.&nbsp; The track was passably legible for some time, and wound
+through long grass, and small <i>koa</i> trees, mixed with stunted <i>ohias</i>
+and a few common ferns.&nbsp; Half these <i>koa</i> trees are dead,
+and all, both living and dead, have their branches covered with a long
+hairy lichen, nearly white, making the dead forest in the slight mist
+look like a wood in England when covered with rime on a fine winter
+morning.&nbsp; The <i>koa</i> tree has a peculiarity of bearing two
+distinct species of leaves on the same twig, one like a curved willow
+leaf, the other that of an acacia.</p>
+<p>After two hours ascent we camped on the verge of the timber line,
+and fed our animals, while the two natives hewed firewood, and loaded
+the spare pack-horse with it.&nbsp; The sky was by that time cloudless,
+and the atmosphere brilliant, and both remained so until we reached
+the same place twenty-eight hours later, so that the weather favoured
+us in every respect, for there is &ldquo;weather&rdquo; on the mountain,
+rains, fogs, and wind storms.&nbsp; The grass only grows sparsely in
+tufts above this place, and though vegetation exists up to a height
+of 10,000 feet on this side, it consists, for the most part, of grey
+lichens, a little withered grass, and a hardy asplenium.</p>
+<p>At this spot the real business of the ascent begins, and we tightened
+our girths, distributed the baggage as fairly as possible, and made
+all secure before remounting.</p>
+<p>We soon entered on vast uplands of <i>pahoehoe</i> which ground away
+the animals&rsquo; feet, a horrid waste, extending upwards for 7000
+feet.&nbsp; For miles and miles, above and around, great billowy masses,
+tossed and twisted into an infinity of fantastic shapes, arrest and
+weary the eye, lava in all its forms, from a compact phonolite, to the
+lightest pumice stone, the mere froth of the volcano, exceeding in wildness
+and confusion the most extravagant nightmare ever inflicted on man.&nbsp;
+Recollect the vastness of this mountain.&nbsp; The whole south of this
+large island, down to, and below the water&rsquo;s edge, is composed
+of its slopes.&nbsp; Its height is nearly three miles, its base is 180
+miles in circumference, so that Wales might be packed away within it,
+leaving room to spare.&nbsp; Yet its whole huge bulk, above a height
+of about 8000 feet, is one frightful desert, at once the creation and
+the prey of the mightiest force on earth.</p>
+<p>Struggling, slipping, tumbling, jumping, ledge after ledge was surmounted,
+but still, upheaved against the glittering sky, rose new difficulties
+to be overcome.&nbsp; Immense bubbles have risen from the confused masses,
+and bursting, have yawned apart.&nbsp; Swift-running streams of more
+recent lava have cleft straight furrows through the older congealed
+surface.&nbsp; Massive flows have fallen in, exposing caverned depths
+of jagged outlines.&nbsp; Earthquakes have riven the mountain, splitting
+its sides and opening deep <i>crevasses</i>, which must be leapt or
+circumvented.&nbsp; Horrid streams of <i>a-a</i> have to be cautiously
+skirted, which after rushing remorselessly over the kindlier lava have
+heaped rugged pinnacles of brown scori&aelig; into impassable walls.&nbsp;
+Winding round the bases of tossed up, fissured hummocks of <i>pahoehoe</i>,
+leaping from one broken hummock to another, clambering up acclivities
+so steep that the pack-horse rolled backwards once, and my cat-like
+mule fell twice, moving cautiously over crusts which rang hollow to
+the tread; stepping over deep cracks, which, perhaps, led down to the
+burning fathomless sea, traversing hilly lakes ruptured by earthquakes,
+and split in cooling into a thousand fissures, painfully toiling up
+the sides of mounds of scori&aelig; frothed with pumice-stone, and again
+for miles surmounting rolling surfaces of billowy ropy lava--so passed
+the long day, under the tropic sun, and the deep blue sky.</p>
+<p>Towards afternoon, clouds heaped themselves in brilliant snowy masses,
+all radiance and beauty to us, all fog and gloom below, girdling the
+whole mountain, and interposing their glittering screen between us and
+the dark timber belt, the black smoking shores of Kau, and the blue
+shimmer of the Pacific.&nbsp; From that time, for twenty-four hours,
+the lower world, and &ldquo;works and ways of busy men&rdquo; were entirely
+shut out, and we were alone with this trackless and inanimate region
+of horror.</p>
+<p>For the first time our guide hesitated as to the right track, for
+the faint suspicion of white smoke, which had kept alive our hope that
+the fire was still burning, had ceased to be visible.&nbsp; We called
+a halt while he reconnoitred, tried to eat some food, found that our
+pulses were beating 100 a minute, bathed our heads, specially our temples,
+with snow, as we had been advised to do by the oldest mountaineer on
+Hawaii, and heaped on yet more clothing.&nbsp; In fact, I tied a double
+woollen scarf over all my face but my eyes, and put on a French soldier&rsquo;s
+overcoat, with cape and hood, which Mr. Green had brought in case of
+emergency.&nbsp; The cold had become intense.&nbsp; We had not wasted
+words at any time, and on remounting, preserved as profound a silence
+as if we were on a forlorn hope, even the natives intermitting their
+ceaseless gabble.</p>
+<p>Upwards still, in the cold bright air, coating the edges of deep
+cracks, climbing endless terraces, the mules panting heavily, our breath
+coming as if from excoriated lungs,--so we surmounted the highest ledge.&nbsp;
+But on reaching the apparent summit we were to all appearance as far
+from the faint smoke as ever, for this magnificent dome, whose base
+is sixty miles in diameter, is crowned by a ghastly volcanic table-land,
+creviced, riven, and ashy, twenty-four miles in circumference.&nbsp;
+A table-land, indeed, of dark grey lava, blotched by outbursts, and
+torn by streams of brown <i>a-a</i>, full of hideous <i>crevasses</i>
+and fearful shapes, as if a hundred waves of lava had rolled themselves
+one on another, and had congealed in confused heaps, and been tortured
+in all directions by the mighty power which had upheaved the whole.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Our guide took us a little wrong once, but soon recovered himself
+with much sagacity.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wrong&rdquo; on Mauna Loa means being
+arrested by an impassable <i>a-a</i> stream, and our last predecessors
+had nearly been stopped by getting into one in which they suffered severely.</p>
+<p>These <i>a-a</i> streams are very deep, and when in a state of fusion
+move along in a mass 20 feet high sometimes, with very solid walls.&nbsp;
+Professor Alexander, of Honolulu, supposes them to be from the beginning
+less fluid than <i>pahoehoe</i>, and that they advance very slowly,
+being full of solid points, or centres of cooling: that <i>a-a</i>,
+in fact, <i>grains</i> like sugar.&nbsp; Its hardness is indescribable.&nbsp;
+It is an aggregate of upright, rugged, adamantine points, and at a distance,
+a river of it looks like a dark brown <i>Mer de Glace</i>.</p>
+<p>At half-past four we reached the edge of an <i>a-a</i> stream, about
+as wide as the Ouse at Huntingdon Bridge, and it was obvious that somehow
+or other we must cross it: indeed, I know not if it be possible to reach
+the crater without passing through one or another of these obstacles.&nbsp;
+I should have liked to have left the animals there, but it was represented
+as impossible to proceed on foot, and though this was a decided misrepresentation,
+Mr. Green plunged in.&nbsp; I had resolved that he should never have
+any bother in consequence of his kindness in taking me with him, and,
+indeed, everyone had enough to do in taking care of himself and his
+own beast, but I never found it harder to repress a cry for help.&nbsp;
+Not that I was in the least danger, but there was every risk of the
+beautiful mule being much hurt, or breaking her legs.&nbsp; The fear
+shown by the animals was pathetic; they shrank back, cowered, trembled,
+breathed hard and heavily, and stumbled and plunged painfully.&nbsp;
+It was sickening to see their terror and suffering, the struggling and
+slipping into cracks, the blood and torture.&nbsp; The mules with their
+small legs and wonderful agility were more frightened than hurt, but
+the horses were splashed with blood up to their knees, and their poor
+eyes looked piteous.</p>
+<p>We were then, as we knew, close to the edge of the crater, but the
+faint smoke wreath had disappeared, and there was nothing but the westering
+sun hanging like a ball over the black horizon of the desolate summit.&nbsp;
+We rode as far as a deep fissure filled with frozen snow, with a ledge
+beyond, threw ourselves from our mules, jumped the fissure, and more
+than 800 feet below yawned the inaccessible blackness and horror of
+the crater of Mokuaweoweo, six miles in circumference, and 11,000 feet
+long by 8,000 wide.&nbsp; The mystery was solved, for at one end of
+the crater, in a deep gorge of its own, above the level of the rest
+of the area, there was the lonely fire, the reflection of which, for
+six weeks, has been seen for 100 miles.</p>
+<p>Nearly opposite us, a thing of beauty, a perfect fountain of pure
+yellow fire, unlike the gory gleam of Kilauea, was regularly playing
+in several united but independent jets, throwing up its glorious incandescence,
+to a height, as we afterwards ascertained, of from 150 to 300 feet,
+and attaining at one time 600!&nbsp; You cannot imagine such a beautiful
+sight.&nbsp; The sunset gold was not purer than the living fire.&nbsp;
+The distance which we were from it, divested it of the inevitable horrors
+which surround it.&nbsp; It was all beauty.&nbsp; For the last two miles
+of the ascent, we had heard a distant vibrating roar: there, at the
+crater&rsquo;s edge, it was a glorious sound, the roar of an ocean at
+dispeace, mingled with the hollow murmur of surf echoing in sea caves,
+booming on, rising and falling, like the thunder music of windward Hawaii.</p>
+<p>We sat on the ledge outside the fissure for some time, and Mr. Green
+actually proposed to pitch the tent there, but I dissuaded him, on the
+ground that an earthquake might send the whole thing tumbling into the
+crater; nor was this a whimsical objection, for during the night there
+were two such falls, and after breakfast, another quite near us.</p>
+<p>We had travelled for two days under a strong impression that the
+fires had died out, so you can imagine the sort of stupor of satisfaction
+with which we feasted on the glorious certainty.&nbsp; Yes, it was glorious,
+that far-off fire-fountain, and the lurid cracks in the slow-moving,
+black-crusted flood, which passed calmly down from the higher level
+to the grand area of the crater.</p>
+<p>This area, over two miles long, and a mile and a half wide, with
+precipitous sides 800 feet deep, and a broad second shelf about 300
+feet below the one we occupied, at that time appeared a dark grey, tolerably
+level lake, with great black blotches, and yellow and white stains,
+the whole much fissured.&nbsp; No steam or smoke proceeded from any
+part of the level surface, and it had the unnaturally dead look which
+follows the action of fire.&nbsp; A ledge, or false beach, which must
+mark a once higher level of the lava, skirts the lake, at an elevation
+of thirty feet probably, and this fringed the area with various signs
+of present volcanic action, steaming sulphur banks, and heavy jets of
+smoke.&nbsp; The other side, above the crater, has a ridgy broken look,
+giving the false impression of a mountainous region beyond.&nbsp; At
+this time the luminous fountain, and the red cracks in the river of
+lava which proceeded from it, were the only fires visible in the great
+area of blackness.&nbsp; In former days people have descended to the
+floor of the crater, but owing to the breaking away of the accessible
+part of the precipice, a descent now is not feasible, though I doubt
+not that a man might even now get down, if he went up with suitable
+tackle, and sufficient assistance.</p>
+<p>The one disappointment was that this extraordinary fire-fountain
+was not only 800 feet below us, but nearly three-quarters of a mile
+from us, and that it was impossible to get any nearer to it.&nbsp; Those
+who have made the ascent before have found themselves obliged either
+to camp on the very spot we occupied, or a little below it.</p>
+<p>The natives pitched the tent as near to the crater as was safe, with
+one pole in a crack, and the other in the great fissure, which was filled
+to within three feet of the top with snow and ice.&nbsp; As the opening
+of the tent was on the crater side, we could not get in or out without
+going down into this <i>crevasse</i>.&nbsp; The tent walls were held
+down with stones to make it as snug as possible, but snug is a word
+of the lower earth, and has no meaning on that frozen mountain top.&nbsp;
+The natural floor was of rough slabs of lava, laid partly edgewise,
+so that a newly macadamised road would have been as soft a bed.&nbsp;
+The natives spread the horse blankets over it, and I arranged the camping
+blankets, made my own part of the tent as comfortable as possible by
+putting my inverted saddle down for a pillow, put on my last reserve
+of warm clothing, took the food out of the saddle bags, and then felt
+how impossible it was to exert myself in the rarified air, or even to
+upbraid Mr. Green for having forgotten the tea, of which I had reminded
+him as often as was consistent with politeness!</p>
+<p>This discovery was not made till after we had boiled the kettle,
+and my dismay was softened by remembering that as water boils up there
+at 187&deg;, our tea would have been worthless.&nbsp; In spite of my
+objection to stimulants, and in defiance of the law against giving liquor
+to natives, I made a great tin of brandy toddy, of which all partook,
+along with tinned salmon and dough-nuts.&nbsp; Then the men piled faggots
+on the fire and began their everlasting chatter, and Mr. Green and I,
+huddled up in blankets, sat on the outer ledge in solemn silence, to
+devote ourselves to the volcano.</p>
+<p>The sun was just setting: the tooth-like peaks of Mauna Kea, cold
+and snow slashed, which were blushing red, the next minute turned ghastly
+against a chilly sky, and with the disappearance of the sun it became
+severely cold; yet we were able to remain there till 9.30, the first
+people to whom such a thing has been possible, so supremely favoured
+were we by the absence of wind.</p>
+<p>When the sun had set, and the brief red glow of the tropics had vanished,
+a new world came into being, and wonder after wonder flashed forth from
+the previously lifeless crater.&nbsp; Everywhere through its vast expanse
+appeared glints of fire--fires bright and steady, burning in rows like
+blast furnaces; fires lone and isolated, unwinking like planets, or
+twinkling like stars; rows of little fires marking the margin of the
+lowest level of the crater; fire molten in deep <i>crevasses</i>; fire
+in wavy lines; fire, calm, stationary, and restful: an incandescent
+lake two miles in length beneath a deceptive crust of darkness, and
+whose depth one dare not fathom even in thought.&nbsp; Broad in the
+glare, giving light enough to read by at a distance of three-quarters
+of a mile, making the moon look as blue as an ordinary English sky,
+its golden gleam changed to a vivid rose colour, lighting up the whole
+of the vast precipices of that part of the crater with a rosy red, bringing
+out every detail here, throwing cliffs and heights into huge black masses
+there, rising, falling, never intermitting, leaping in lofty jets with
+glorious shapes like wheatsheaves, coruscating, reddening, the most
+glorious thing beneath the moon was the fire-fountain of Mokuaweoweo.</p>
+<p>By day the cooled crust of the lake had looked black and even sooty,
+with a fountain of molten gold playing upwards from it; by night it
+was all incandescent, with black blotches of cooled scum upon it, which
+were perpetually being devoured.&nbsp; The centre of the lake was at
+a white heat, and waves of white hot lava appeared to be wallowing there
+as in a whirlpool, and from this centre the fountain rose, solid at
+its base, which is estimated at 150 feet in diameter, but thinning and
+frittering as it rose high into the air, and falling from the great
+altitude to which it attained, in fiery spray, which made a very distinct
+clatter on the fiery surface below.&nbsp; When one jet was about half
+high, another rose so as to keep up the action without intermission;
+and in the lower part of the fountain two subsidiary curved jets of
+great volume continually crossed each other.&nbsp; So, &ldquo;alone
+in its glory,&rdquo; perennial, self-born, springing up in sparkling
+light, the fire-fountain played on as the hours went by.</p>
+<p>From the nearer margin of this incandescent lake there was a mighty
+but deliberate overflow, a &ldquo;silent tide&rdquo; of fire, passing
+to the lower level, glowing under and amidst its crust, with the brightness
+of metal passing from a furnace.&nbsp; In the bank of partially cooled
+and crusted lava which appears to support the lake, there were rifts
+showing the molten lava within.&nbsp; In one place heavy white vapour
+blew off in powerful jets from the edge of the lake, and elsewhere there
+were frequent jets and ebullitions of the same, but there was not a
+trace of vapour over the burning lake itself.&nbsp; The crusted large
+area, with its blowing cones, blotches and rifts of fire, was nearly
+all visible, and from the thickness and quietness of the crust it was
+obvious that the ocean of lava below was comparatively at rest, but
+a dark precipice concealed a part of the glowing and highly agitated
+lake, adding another mystery to its sublimity.</p>
+<p>It is probable that the whole interior of this huge dome is fluid,
+for the eruptions from this summit crater do not proceed from its filling
+up and running over, but from the mountain sides being unable to bear
+the enormous pressure; when they give way, high or low, and bursting,
+allow the fiery contents to escape.&nbsp; So, in 1855, the mountain
+side split open, and the lava gushed forth for thirteen months in a
+stream which ran for 60 miles, and flooded Hawaii for 300 square miles.
+<a name="citation411"></a><a href="#footnote411">{411}</a></p>
+<p>From the camping ground, immense cracks parallel with the crater,
+extend for some distance, and the whole of the compact grey stone of
+the summit is much fissured.&nbsp; These cracks, like the one by which
+our tent was pitched, contain water resting on ice.&nbsp; It shows the
+extreme difference of climate on the two sides of Hawaii, that while
+vegetation straggles up to a height of 10,000 feet on the windward side
+in a few miserable blasted forms, it absolutely ceases at a height of
+7,000 feet on the leeward.</p>
+<p>It was too cold to sit up all night; so by the &ldquo;fire light&rdquo;
+I wrote the enclosed note to you with fingers nearly freezing on the
+pen, and climbed into the tent.</p>
+<p>It is possible that tent life in the East, or in the Rocky Mountains,
+with beds, tables, travelling knick-knacks of all descriptions, and
+servants who study their master&rsquo;s whims, may be very charming;
+but my experience of it having been of the make-shift and non-luxurious
+kind, is not delectable.&nbsp; A wooden saddle, without stuffing, made
+a very fair pillow; but the ridges of the lava were severe.&nbsp; I
+could not spare enough blankets to soften them, and one particularly
+intractable point persisted in making itself felt.&nbsp; I crowded on
+everything attainable, two pairs of gloves, with Mr. Gilman&rsquo;s
+socks over them, and a thick plaid muffled up my face.&nbsp; Mr. Green
+and the natives, buried in blankets, occupied the other part of the
+tent.&nbsp; The phrase, &ldquo;sleeping on the brink of a volcano,&rdquo;
+was literally true, for I fell asleep, and fear I might have been prosaic
+enough to sleep all night, had it not been for fleas which had come
+up in the camping blankets.&nbsp; When I woke, it was light enough to
+see that the three muffled figures were all asleep, instead of spending
+the night in shiverings and vertigo, as it appears that others have
+done.&nbsp; Doubtless the bathing of our heads several times with snow
+and ice-water had been beneficial.</p>
+<p>Circumstances were singular.&nbsp; It was a strange thing to sleep
+on a lava-bed at a height of nearly 14,000 feet, far away from the nearest
+dwelling, &ldquo;in a region,&rdquo; as Mr. Jarves says, &ldquo;rarely
+visited by man,&rdquo; hearing all the time the roar, clash, and thunder
+of the mightiest volcano in the world.&nbsp; It seemed all a wild dream,
+as that majestic sound moved on.&nbsp; There were two loud reports,
+followed by a prolonged crash, occasioned by parts of the crater walls
+giving way; vibrating rumblings, as if of earthquakes; and then a louder
+surging of the fiery ocean, and a series of most imposing detonations.&nbsp;
+Creeping over the sleeping forms, which never stirred even though I
+had to kneel upon one of the natives while I untied the flap of the
+tent, I crept cautiously into the <i>crevasse</i> in which the snow-water
+was then hard frozen, and out upon the projecting ledge.&nbsp; The four
+hours in which we had previously watched the volcano had passed like
+one; but the lonely hours which followed might have been two minutes
+or a year, for time was obliterated.</p>
+<p>Coldly the Pole-star shivered above the frozen summit, and a blue
+moon, nearly full, withdrew her faded light into infinite space.&nbsp;
+The Southern Cross had set.&nbsp; Two peaks below the Pole-star, sharply
+defined against the sky, were the only signs of any other world than
+the world of fire and mystery around.&nbsp; It was light, broadly, vividly
+light; the sun himself, one would have thought, might look pale beside
+it.&nbsp; But such a light!&nbsp; The silver index of my thermometer,
+which had fallen to 23&deg; Fahrenheit, was ruby red; that of the aneroid,
+which gave the height at 13,803 feet (an error of 43 feet in excess),
+was the same.&nbsp; The white duck of the tent was rosy, and all the
+crater walls and the dull-grey ridges which lie around were a vivid
+rose red.</p>
+<p>All Hawaii was sleeping.&nbsp; Our Hilo friends looked out the last
+thing; saw the glare, and probably wondered how we were &ldquo;getting
+on,&rdquo; high up among the stars.&nbsp; Mine were the only mortal
+eyes which saw what is perhaps the grandest spectacle on earth.&nbsp;
+Once or twice I felt so overwhelmed by the very sublimity of the loneliness,
+that I turned to the six animals, which stood shivering in the north
+wind, without any consciousness than that of cold, hunger, and thirst.&nbsp;
+It was some relief even to pity them, for pity was at least a human
+feeling, and a momentary rest from the thrill of the new sensations
+inspired by the circumstances.&nbsp; The moon herself looked a wan unfamiliar
+thing--not the same moon which floods the palm and mango groves of Hilo
+with light and tenderness.&nbsp; And those palm and mango groves, and
+lighted homes, and seas, and ships, and cities, and faces of friends,
+and all familiar things, and the day before, and the years before, were
+as things in dreams, coming up out of a vanished past.&nbsp; And would
+there ever be another day, and would the earth ever be young and green
+again, and would men buy and sell and strive for gold, and should I
+ever with a human voice tell living human beings of the things of this
+midnight?&nbsp; How far it was from all the world, uplifted above love,
+hate, and storms of passion, and war, and wreck of thrones, and dissonant
+clash of human thought, serene in the eternal solitudes!</p>
+<p>Things had changed, as they change hourly in craters.&nbsp; The previous
+loud detonations were probably connected with the evolutions of some
+&ldquo;blowing cones,&rdquo; which were now very fierce, and throwing
+up lava at the comparatively dead end of the crater.&nbsp; Lone stars
+of fire broke out frequently through the blackened crust.&nbsp; The
+molten river, flowing from the incandescent lake, had advanced and broadened
+considerably.&nbsp; That lake itself, whose diameter has been estimated
+at 800 feet, was rose-red and self-illuminated, and the increased noise
+was owing to the increased force of the fire-fountain, which was playing
+regularly at a height of 300 feet, with the cross fountains, like wheat-sheaves,
+at its lower part.&nbsp; These cross-fountains were the colour of a
+mixture of blood and fire, and the lower part of the perpendicular jets
+was the same; but as they rose and thinned, this colour passed into
+a vivid rose-red, and the spray and splashes were as rubies and flame
+mingled.&nbsp; For ever falling in fiery masses and fiery foam: accompanied
+by a thunder-music of its own: companioned only by the solemn stars:
+exhibiting no other token of its glories to man than the reflection
+of its fires on mist and smoke; it burns for the Creator&rsquo;s eye
+alone.&nbsp; No foot of mortal can approach it.</p>
+<p>Hours passed as I watched the indescribable glories of the fire-fountain,
+its beauty of form, and its radiant reflection on the precipices, eight
+hundred feet high, which wall it in, and listened to its surges beating,
+and the ebb and flow of its thunder-music.&nbsp; Then a change occurred.&nbsp;
+The jets, which for long had been playing at a height of 300 feet, suddenly
+became quite low, and for a few seconds appeared as cones of fire wallowing
+in a sea of light; then with a roar like the sound of gathering waters,
+nearly the whole surface of the lake was lifted up by the action of
+some powerful internal force, and rose three times with its whole radiant
+mass, in one glorious, upward burst, to a height, as estimated by the
+surrounding cliffs, of six hundred feet, while the earth trembled, and
+the moon and stars withdrew abashed into far-off space.&nbsp; After
+this the fire-fountain played as before.&nbsp; The cold had become intense,
+11&deg; of frost; and I crept back into the tent; those words occurring
+to me with a new meaning, &ldquo;dwelling in the light which no man
+can approach unto.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We remained in the tent till the sun had slightly warmed the air,
+and then attempted to prepare breakfast by the fire; but no one could
+eat anything, and the native from Waimea complained of severe headache,
+which shortly became agonizing, and he lay on the ground moaning, and
+completely prostrated by mountain sickness.&nbsp; I felt extreme lassitude,
+and exhaustion followed the slightest effort; but the use of snow to
+the head produced great relief.&nbsp; The water in our canteens was
+hard frozen, and the keenness of the cold aggravated the uncomfortable
+symptoms which accompany pulses at 110&deg;.&nbsp; The native guide
+was the only person capable of work, so we were late in getting off,
+and rode four and a half hours to the camping ground, only stopping
+once to tighten our girths.&nbsp; Not a rope, strap, or buckle, or any
+of our gear gave way, and though I rode without a crupper, the breeching
+of a pack mule&rsquo;s saddle kept mine steady.</p>
+<p>The descent, to the riders, is far more trying than the ascent, owing
+to the continued stretch of very steep declivity for eight thousand
+feet; but our mules never tripped, and came into Ainepo as if they had
+not travelled at all.&nbsp; The horses were terribly cut, both again
+in the <i>a-a</i> stream, and on the descent.&nbsp; It was sickening
+to follow them, for at first they left fragments of hide and hair on
+the rocks, then flesh, and when there was no more hide or flesh to come
+off their poor heels and fetlocks, blood dripped on every rock, and
+if they stood still for a few moments, every hoof left a little puddle
+of gore.&nbsp; We had all the enjoyment and they all the misery.&nbsp;
+I was much exhausted when we reached the camping-ground, but soon revived
+under the influence of food; but the poor native, who was really very
+ill, abandoned himself to wretchedness, and has only recovered to-day.</p>
+<p>The belt of cloud which was all radiance above, was all drizzling
+fog below, and we reached Ainepo in a regular Scotch mist.&nbsp; The
+ranchman seemed rather grumpy at our successful ascent, which involved
+the failure of all their prophecies, and, indeed, we were thoroughly
+unsatisfactory travellers, arriving fresh and complacent, with neither
+adventures nor disasters to gladden people&rsquo;s hearts.&nbsp; We
+started for this ranch seven miles further, soon after dark, and arrived
+before nine, after the most successful ascent of Mauna Loa ever made.</p>
+<p>Without being a Sybarite, I certainly do prefer a comfortable <i>pulu</i>
+bed to one of ridgy lava, and the fire which blazes on this broad hearth
+to the camp-fire on the frozen top of the volcano.&nbsp; The worthy
+ranchman expected us, and has treated us very sumptuously, and even
+Kah&eacute;l&eacute; is being regaled on Chinese sorghum.&nbsp; The
+Sunday&rsquo;s rest, too, is a luxury, which I wonder that travellers
+can ever forego.&nbsp; If one is always on the move, even very vivid
+impressions are hunted out of the memory by the last new thing.&nbsp;
+Though I am not unduly tired, even had it not been Sunday, I should
+have liked a day in which to recall and arrange my memories of Mauna
+Loa before the forty-eight miles&rsquo; ride to Hilo.</p>
+<p>This afternoon, we were sitting under the verandah talking volcanic
+talk, when there was a loud rumbling, and a severe shock of earthquake,
+and I have been twice interrupted in writing this letter by other shocks,
+in which all the frame-work of the house has yawned and closed again.&nbsp;
+They say that four years ago, at the time of the great &ldquo;mud flow&rdquo;
+which is close by, this house was moved several feet by an earthquake,
+and that all the cattle walls which surround it were thrown down.&nbsp;
+The ranchman tells us that on January 7th and 8th, 1873, there was a
+sudden and tremendous outburst of Mauna Loa.&nbsp; The ground, he says,
+throbbed and quivered for twenty miles; a tremendous roaring, like that
+of a blast furnace, was heard for the same distance, and clouds of black
+smoke trailed out over the sea for thirty miles.</p>
+<p>We have dismissed our guide with encomiums.&nbsp; His charge was
+$10; but Mr. Green would not allow me to share that, or any part of
+the expense, or pay anything, but $6 for my own mule.&nbsp; The guide
+is a goat-hunter, and the chase is very curiously pursued.&nbsp; The
+hunter catches sight of a flock of goats, and hunts them up the mountain,
+till, agile and fleet of foot as they are, he actually tires them out,
+and gets close enough to them to cut their throats for the sake of their
+skins.&nbsp; If I understand rightly, this young man has captured as
+many as seventy in a day.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>CRATER HOUSE, KILAUEA.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 9<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>This morning Mr. Green left for Kona, and I for Kilauea; the ranchman&rsquo;s
+native wife and her sister riding with me for several miles to put me
+on the right track.&nbsp; Kah&eacute;l&eacute;&rsquo;s sociable instincts
+are so strong, that, before they left me, I dismounted, blindfolded
+him, and led him round and round several times, a process which so successfully
+confused his intellects, that he started off in this direction with
+more alacrity than usual.&nbsp; They certainly put me on a track which
+could not be mistaken, for it was a narrow, straight path, cut and hammered
+through a broad horrible <i>a-a</i> stream, whose jagged spikes were
+the height of the horse.&nbsp; But beyond this lie ten miles of <i>pahoehoe</i>,
+the lava-flows of ages, with only now and then the vestige of a trail.</p>
+<p>Except the perilous crossing of the Hilo gulches in February, this
+is the most difficult ride I have had--eerie and impressive in every
+way.&nbsp; The loneliness was absolute.&nbsp; For several hours I saw
+no trace of human beings, except the very rare print of a shod horse&rsquo;s
+hoof.&nbsp; It is a region for ever &ldquo;desolate and without inhabitant,&rdquo;
+trackless, waterless, silent, as if it had passed into the passionless
+calm of lunar solitudes.&nbsp; It is composed of rough hummocks of <i>pahoehoe</i>,
+rising out of a sandy desert.&nbsp; Only stunted <i>ohias</i>, loaded
+with crimson tufts, raise themselves out of cracks: twisted, tortured
+growths, bearing their bright blossoms under protest, driven unwillingly
+to be gay by a fiery soil and a fiery sun.&nbsp; To the left, there
+was the high, dark wall of an <i>a-a</i> stream; further yet, a tremendous
+volcanic fissure, at times the bed of a fiery river, and above this
+the towering dome of Mauna Loa, a brilliant cobalt blue, lined and shaded
+with indigo where innumerable lava streams had seamed his portentous
+sides: his whole beauty the effect of atmosphere, on an object in itself
+hideous.&nbsp; Ahead and to the right were rolling miles of a <i>pahoehoe</i>
+sea, bounded by the unseen Pacific 3,000 feet below, with countless
+craters, fissures emitting vapour, and all other concomitants of volcanic
+action; bounded to the north by the vast crater of Kilauea.&nbsp; On
+all this deadly region the sun poured his tropic light and heat from
+one of the bluest skies I ever saw.</p>
+<p>The direction given me on leaving Kapapala was, that after the natives
+left me I was to keep a certain crater on the south-east till I saw
+the smoke of Kilauea; but there were many craters.&nbsp; Horses cross
+the sand and hummocks as nearly as possible on a bee line; but the lava
+rarely indicates that anything has passed over it, and this morning
+a strong breeze had rippled the sand, completely obliterating the hoof-marks
+of the last traveller, and at times I feared that losing myself, as
+many others have done, I should go mad with thirst.&nbsp; I examined
+the sand narrowly for hoof-marks, and every now and then found one,
+but always had the disappointment of finding that it was made by an
+unshod horse, therefore not a ridden one.&nbsp; Finding eyesight useless,
+I dismounted often, and felt with my finger along the rolling lava for
+the slightest marks of abrasion, which might show that shod animals
+had passed that way, got up into an <i>ohia</i> to look out for the
+smoke of Kilauea, and after three hours came out upon what I here learn
+is the old track, disused because of the insecurity of the ground.</p>
+<p>It runs quite close to the edge of the crater, there 1,000 feet in
+depth, and gives a magnificent view of the whole area, with the pit
+and the blowing cones.&nbsp; But the region through which the trail
+led was rather an alarming one, being hollow and porous, all cracks
+and fissures, nefariously concealed by scrub and ferns.&nbsp; I found
+a place, as I thought, free from risk, and gave Kah&eacute;l&eacute;
+a feed of oats on my plaid, but before he had finished them there was
+a rumbling and vibration, and he went into the ground above his knees,
+so snatching up the plaid and jumping on him I galloped away, convinced
+that that crack was following me!&nbsp; However, either the crack thought
+better of it, or Kah&eacute;l&eacute; travelled faster, for in another
+half-hour I arrived where the whole region steams, smokes, and fumes
+with sulphur, and was kindly welcomed here by Mr. Gilman, where he and
+the old Chinaman appear to be alone.</p>
+<p>After a seven hours&rsquo; ride the quiet and the log fire are very
+pleasant, and the host is a most intelligent and sympathising listener.&nbsp;
+It is a solemn night, for the earth quakes, and the sound of Halemaumau
+is like the surging of the sea.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>HILO.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 11<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>Once more I am among palm and mango grove, and friendly faces, and
+sounds of softer surges than those of Kilauea.&nbsp; I had a dreary
+ride yesterday, as the rain was incessant, and I saw neither man, bird,
+or beast the whole way.&nbsp; Kah&eacute;l&eacute; was so heavily loaded
+that I rode the thirty miles at a foot&rsquo;s pace, and he became so
+tired that I had to walk.</p>
+<p>It has been a splendid week, with every circumstance favourable,
+nothing sordid or worrying to disturb the impressions received, kindness
+and goodwill everywhere, a travelling companion whose consideration,
+endurance, and calmness were beyond all praise, and at the end the cordial
+welcomes of my Hawaiian &ldquo;home.&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXX. <a name="citation422"></a><a href="#footnote422">{422}</a></h3>
+<p>RIDGE HOUSE, KONA, HAWAII.&nbsp; <i>June</i> 12.</p>
+<p>I landed in Kealakakua Bay on a black lava block, on which tradition
+says that Captain Cook fell, struck with his death-wound, a century
+ago.&nbsp; The morning sun was flaming above the walls of lava 1,000
+feet in height which curve round the dark bay, the green deep water
+rolled shorewards in lazy undulations, canoes piled full of pineapples
+poised themselves on the swell, ancient cocopalms glassed themselves
+in still waters--it was hot, silent, tropical.</p>
+<p>The disturbance which made the bay famous is known to every schoolboy;
+how the great explorer, long supposed by the natives to be their vanished
+god <i>Lono</i>, betrayed his earthly lineage by groaning when he was
+wounded, and was then dispatched outright.&nbsp; A cocoanut stump, faced
+by a sheet of copper recording the circumstance, is the great circumnavigator&rsquo;s
+monument.&nbsp; A few miles beyond, is the enclosure of Haunaunau, the
+City of Refuge for western Hawaii.&nbsp; In this district there is a
+lava road ascribed to Umi, a legendary king, who is said to have lived
+500 years ago.&nbsp; It is very perfect, well defined on both sides
+with kerb-stones, and greatly resembles the chariot ways in Pompeii.&nbsp;
+Near it are several structures formed of four stones, three being set
+upright, and the fourth forming the roof.&nbsp; In a northerly direction
+is the place where Liholiho, the king who died in England, excited by
+drink and the persuasions of Kaahumanu, broke <i>tabu</i>, and made
+an end of the superstitions of heathenism.&nbsp; Not far off is the
+battle field on which the adherents of the idols rallied their forces
+against the iconoclasts, and were miserably and finally defeated.&nbsp;
+Recent lava streams have descended on each side of the bay, and from
+the bare black rock of the landing a flow may be traced up the steep
+ascent as far as a precipice, over which it falls in waves and twists,
+a cataract of stone.&nbsp; A late lava river passed through the magnificent
+forest on the southerly slope, and the impressions of the stems of coco
+and fan palms are stamped clearly on the smooth rock.&nbsp; The rainfall
+in Kona is heavy, but there is no standing water, and only one stream
+in a distance of 100 miles.</p>
+<p>This district is famous for oranges, coffee, pineapples, and silence.&nbsp;
+A flaming palm-fringed shore with a prolific strip of table land 1,500
+feet above it, a dense timber belt eight miles in breadth, and a volcano
+smoking somewhere between that and the heavens, and glaring through
+the trees at night, are the salient points of Kona if anything about
+it be salient.&nbsp; It is a region where falls not</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;.&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; Hail
+or any snow,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or ever wind blows
+loudly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Wind indeed, is a thing unknown.&nbsp; The scarcely audible whisper
+of soft airs through the trees morning and evening, rain drops falling
+gently, and the murmur of drowsy surges far below, alone break the stillness.&nbsp;
+No ripple ever disturbs the great expanse of ocean which gleams through
+the still, thick trees.&nbsp; Rose in the sweet cool morning, gold in
+the sweet cool evening, but always dreaming; and white sails come and
+go, no larger than a butterfly&rsquo;s wing on the horizon, of ships
+drifting on ocean currents, dreaming too!&nbsp; Nothing surely can ever
+happen here: it is so dumb and quiet, and people speak in hushed thin
+voices, and move as in a lethargy, dreaming too!&nbsp; No heat, cold,
+or wind, nothing emphasised or italicised, it is truly a region of endless
+afternoons, &ldquo;a land where all things always seem the same.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Life is dead, and existence is a languid swoon.</p>
+<p>This is the only regular boarding house on Hawaii.&nbsp; The company
+is accidental and promiscuous.&nbsp; The conversation consists of speculations,
+varied and repeated with the hours, as to the arrivals and departures
+of the Honolulu schooners <i>Uilama</i> and <i>Prince</i>, who they
+will bring, who they will take, and how long their respective passages
+will be.&nbsp; A certain amount of local gossip is also hashed up at
+each meal, and every stranger who has travelled through Hawaii for the
+last ten years is picked to pieces and worn threadbare, and his purse,
+weight, entertainers, and habits are thoroughly canvassed.&nbsp; On
+whatever subject the conversation begins it always ends in dollars;
+but even that most stimulating of all topics only arouses a languid
+interest among my fellow dreamers.&nbsp; I spend most of my time in
+riding in the forests, or along the bridle path which trails along the
+height, among grass and frame-houses, almost smothered by trees and
+trailers.</p>
+<p>Many of these are inhabited by white men, who, having drifted to
+these shores, have married native women, and are rearing a dusky race,
+of children who speak the maternal tongue only, and grow up with native
+habits.&nbsp; Some of these men came for health, others landed from
+whalers, but of all it is true that infatuated by the ease and lusciousness
+of this languid region,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;They sat them down upon the
+yellow sand,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Between
+the sun and moon upon the shore;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+sweet it was to dream of Fatherland,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.
+. . . ; but evermore<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Most weary
+seem&rsquo;d the sea, weary the oar,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Weary
+the wandering fields of barren foam.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then
+some one said, &ldquo;We will return no more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They have enough and more, and a life free from toil, but the obvious
+tendency of these marriages is to sink the white man to the level of
+native feelings and habits.</p>
+<p>There are two or three educated residents, and there is a small English
+church with daily service, conducted by a resident clergyman.</p>
+<p>The beauty of this part of Kona is wonderful.&nbsp; The interminable
+forest is richer and greener than anything I have yet seen, but penetrable
+only by narrow tracks which have been made for hauling timber.&nbsp;
+The trees are so dense, and so matted together with trailers, that no
+ray of noon-day sun brightens the moist tangle of exquisite mosses and
+ferns which covers the ground.&nbsp; Yams with their burnished leaves,
+and the Polypodium spectrum, wind round every tree stem, and the heavy
+<i>i&eacute;</i>, which here attains gigantic proportions, links the
+tops of the tallest trees together by its stout knotted coils.&nbsp;
+Hothouse flowers grow in rank profusion round every house, and tea-roses,
+fuchsias, geraniums fifteen feet high, Nile lilies, Chinese lantern
+plants, begonias, lantanas, hibiscus, passion-flowers, Cape jasmine,
+the hoya, the tuberose, the beautiful but overpoweringly sweet ginger
+plant, and a hundred others: while the whole district is overrun with
+the Datura brugmansia (?) here an arborescent shrub fourteen feet high,
+bearing seventy great trumpet-shaped white blossoms at a time, which
+at night vie with those of the night-blowing Cereus in filling the air
+with odours.</p>
+<p>Pineapples and melons grow like weeds among the grass, and everything
+that is good for food flourishes.&nbsp; Nothing can keep under the redundancy
+of nature in Kona; everything is profuse, fervid, passionate, vivified
+and pervaded by sunshine.&nbsp; The earth is restless in her productiveness,
+and forces up her hothouse growth perpetually, so that the miracle of
+Jonah&rsquo;s gourd is almost repeated nightly.&nbsp; All decay is hurried
+out of sight, and through the glowing year flowers blossom and fruits
+ripen; ferns are always uncurling their young fronds and bananas unfolding
+their great shining leaves, and spring blends her everlasting youth
+and promise with the fulfilment and maturity of summer.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Never comes the trader, never floats a European
+flag,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Slides the bird o&rsquo;er lustrous woodland,
+swings the trailer from the crag:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Droops the
+heavy-blossom&rsquo;d bower, hangs the heavy-fruited tree--<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Summer
+isles of Eden lying in dark purple spheres of sea.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>HUALALAI.&nbsp; <i>July</i> 28<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>I very soon left the languid life of Kona for this sheep station,
+6000 feet high on the desolate slope of the dead volcano of Hualalai,
+(&ldquo;offspring of the shining sun,&rdquo;) on the invitation of its
+hospitable owner, who said if I &ldquo;could eat his rough fare, and
+live his rough life, his house and horses were at my disposal.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He is married to a very attractive native woman who eats at his table,
+but does not know a word of English, but they are both away at a wool-shed
+eight miles off, shearing sheep.</p>
+<p>This house is in the great volcanic wilderness of which I wrote from
+Kalaieha, a desert of drouth and barrenness.&nbsp; There is no permanent
+track, and on the occasions when I have ridden up here alone, the directions
+given me have been to steer for an ox bone, and from that to a dwarf
+<i>ohia</i>.&nbsp; There is no coming or going; it is seventeen miles
+from the nearest settlement, and looks across a desert valley to Mauna
+Loa.&nbsp; Woody trailers, harsh hard grass in tufts, the Asplenium
+trichomanes in rifts, the Pellea ternifolia in sand, and some <i>ohia</i>
+and <i>maman&eacute;</i> scrub in hollow places sheltered from the wind,
+all hard, crisp, unlovely growths, contrast with the lavish greenery
+below.&nbsp; A brisk cool wind blows all day; every afternoon a dense
+fog brings the horizon within 200 feet, but it clears off with frost
+at dark, and the flames of the volcano light the whole southern sky.</p>
+<p>My companions are an amiable rheumatic native woman, and a crone
+who must have lived a century, much shrivelled and tattooed, and nearly
+childish.&nbsp; She talks to herself in weird tones, stretches her lean
+limbs by the fire most of the day, and in common with most of the old
+people has a prejudice against clothes, and prefers huddling herself
+up in a blanket to wearing the ordinary dress of her sex.&nbsp; There
+is also a dog, but he does not understand English, and for some time
+I have not spoken any but Hawaiian words.&nbsp; I have plenty to do,
+and find this a very satisfactory life.</p>
+<p>I came up to within eight miles of this house with a laughing, holiday-making
+rout of twelve natives, who rode madly along the narrow forest trail
+at full gallop, up and down the hills, through mire and over stones,
+leaping over the trunks of prostrate trees, and stooping under branches
+with loud laughter, challenging me to reckless races over difficult
+ground, and when they found that the <i>wahine haole</i> was not to
+be thrown from her horse they patted me approvingly, and crowned me
+with <i>leis</i> of <i>mail&eacute;</i>.&nbsp; I became acquainted with
+some of these at Kilauea in the winter, and since I came to Kona they
+have been very kind to me.</p>
+<p>I thoroughly like living among them, taking meals with them on their
+mats, and eating &ldquo;two fingered&rdquo; <i>poi</i> as if I had been
+used to it all my life.&nbsp; Their mirthfulness and kindliness are
+most winning; their horses, food, clothes, and time are all bestowed
+on one so freely, and one lives amongst them with a most restful sense
+of absolute security.&nbsp; They have many faults, but living alone
+among them in their houses as I have done so often on Hawaii, I have
+never seen or encountered a disagreeable thing.&nbsp; But the more I
+see of them the more impressed I am with their carelessness and love
+of pleasure, their lack of ambition and a sense of responsibility, and
+the time which they spend in doing nothing but talking and singing as
+they bask in the sun, though spasmodically and under excitement they
+are capable of tremendous exertions in canoeing, surf-riding, and lassoing
+cattle.</p>
+<p>While down below I joined three natives for the purpose of seeing
+this last sport.&nbsp; They all rode shod horses, and had lassoes of
+ox hide attached to the horns of their saddles.&nbsp; I sat for an hour
+on horseback on a rocky hill while they hunted the woods; then I heard
+the deep voices of bulls, and a great burst of cattle appeared, with
+hunters in pursuit, but the herd vanished over a dip of the hill side,
+and the natives joined me.&nbsp; By this time I wished myself safely
+at home, partly because my unshod horse was not fit for galloping over
+lava and rough ground, and I asked the men where I should stay to be
+out of danger.&nbsp; The leader replied, &ldquo;Oh, just keep close
+behind me!&rdquo;&nbsp; I had thought of some safe view-point, not of
+galloping on an unshod horse with a ruck of half maddened cattle, but
+it was the safest plan, and there was no time to be lost, for as we
+rode slowly down, we sighted the herd dodging across the open to regain
+the shelter of the wood, and much on the alert.</p>
+<p>Putting our horses into a gallop we dashed down the hill till we
+were close up with the chase; then another tremendous gallop, and a
+brief wild rush, the grass shaking with the surge of cattle and horses.&nbsp;
+There was much whirling of tails and tearing up of the earth--a lasso
+spun three or four times round the head of the native who rode in front
+of me, and almost simultaneously a fine red bullock lay prostrate on
+the earth, nearly strangled, with his foreleg noosed to his throat.&nbsp;
+The other natives dismounted, and put two lassoes round his horns, slipping
+the first into the same position, and vaulted into their saddles before
+he was on his legs.</p>
+<p>He got up, shook himself, put his head down, and made a mad blind
+rush, but his captors were too dexterous for him, and in that and each
+succeeding rush he was foiled.&nbsp; As he tore wildly from side to
+side, the natives dodged under the lasso, slipping it over their heads,
+and swung themselves over their saddles, hanging in one stirrup, to
+aid their trained horses to steady themselves as the bullock tugged
+violently against them.&nbsp; He was escorted thus for a mile, his strength
+failing with each useless effort, his tongue hanging out, blood and
+foam dropping from his mouth and nostrils, his flanks covered with foam
+and sweat, till blind and staggering, he was led to a tree, where he
+was at once stabbed, and two hours afterwards a part of him was served
+at table.&nbsp; The natives were surprised that I avoided seeing his
+death, as the native women greatly enjoy such a spectacle.&nbsp; This
+mode of killing an animal while heated and terrified, doubtless accounts
+for the dark colour and hardness of Hawaiian beef.</p>
+<p>Numbers of the natives are expert with the lasso, and besides capturing
+with it wild and half wild cattle, they catch horses with it, and since
+I came here my host caught a sheep with it, singling out the one he
+wished to kill, from the rest of the galloping flock with an unerring
+aim.&nbsp; It takes a whole ox hide cut into strips to make a good lasso.</p>
+<p>One of my native friends tells me that a native man who attended
+on me in one of my earlier expeditions has since been &ldquo;prayed
+to death.&rdquo;&nbsp; One often hears this phrase, and it appears that
+the superstition which it represents has by no means died out.&nbsp;
+There are persons who are believed to have the lives of others in their
+hands, and their services are procured by offerings of white fowls,
+brown hogs, and <i>awa</i>, as well as money, by any one who has a grudge
+against another.&nbsp; Several other instances have been told me of
+persons who have actually died under the influence of the terror and
+despair produced by being told that the <i>kahuna</i> was &ldquo;praying
+them to death.&rdquo;&nbsp; I cannot learn whether these over-efficacious
+prayers are supposed to be addressed to the true God, or to the ancient
+Hawaiian divinities.&nbsp; The natives are very superstitious, and the
+late king, who was both educated and intelligent, was much under the
+dominion of a sorceress.</p>
+<p>I have made the ascent of Hualalai twice from here, the first time
+guided by my host and hostess, and the second time rather adventurously
+alone.&nbsp; Forests of <i>koa</i>, sandal-wood, and <i>ohia</i>, with
+an undergrowth of raspberries and ferns clothe its base, the fragrant
+<i>mail&eacute;</i>, and the graceful sarsaparilla vine, with its clustered
+coral-coloured buds, nearly smother many of the trees, and in several
+places the heavy <i>i&eacute;</i> forms the semblance of triumphal arches
+over the track.&nbsp; This forest terminates abruptly on the great volcanic
+wilderness, with its starved growth of unsightly scrub.&nbsp; But Hualalai,
+though 10,000 feet in height, is covered with Pteris aquilina, <i>maman&eacute;</i>,
+coarse bunch grass, and <i>pukeav&eacute;</i> to its very summit, which
+is crowned by a small, solitary, blossoming <i>ohia</i>.</p>
+<p>For two hours before reaching the top, the way lies over countless
+flows and beds of lava, much disintegrated, and almost entirely of the
+kind called <i>pahoehoe</i>.&nbsp; Countless pit craters extend over
+the whole mountain, all of them covered outside, and a few inside, with
+scraggy vegetation.&nbsp; The edges are often very ragged and picturesque.&nbsp;
+The depth varies from 300 to 700 feet, and the diameter from 700 to
+1,200.&nbsp; The walls of some are of a smooth grey stone, the bottoms
+flat, and very deep in sand, but others resemble the tufa cones of Mauna
+Kea.&nbsp; They are so crowded together in some places as to be divided
+only by a ridge so narrow that two mules can scarcely walk abreast upon
+it.&nbsp; The mountain was split by an earthquake in 1868, and a great
+fissure, with much treacherous ground about it, extends for some distance
+across it.&nbsp; It is very striking from every point of view on this
+side, being a complete wilderness of craters, and over 150 lateral cones
+have been counted.</p>
+<p>The object of my second ascent was to visit one of the grandest of
+the summit craters, which we had not reached previously owing to fog.&nbsp;
+This crater is bordered by a narrow and very fantastic ridge of rock,
+in or on which there is a mound about 60 feet high, formed of fragments
+of black, orange, blue, red, and golden lava, with a cavity or blow-hole
+in the centre, estimated by Brigham as having a diameter of 25 feet,
+and a depth of 1800.&nbsp; The interior is dark brown, much grooved
+horizontally, and as smooth and regular as if turned.&nbsp; There are
+no steam cracks or signs of heat anywhere.&nbsp; Superb caves or lava-bubbles
+abound at a height of 6000 feet.&nbsp; These are moist with ferns, and
+the drip from their roofs is the water supply of this porous region.</p>
+<p>Hualalai, owing to the vegetation sparsely sprinkled over it, looks
+as if it had been quiet for ages, but it has only slept since 1801,
+when there was a tremendous eruption from it, which flooded several
+villages, destroyed many plantations and fishponds, filled up a deep
+bay 20 miles in extent, and formed the present coast.&nbsp; The terrified
+inhabitants threw living hogs into the stream, and tried to propitiate
+the anger of the gods by more costly offerings, but without effect,
+till King Kamehameha, attended by a large retinue of priests and chiefs,
+cut off some of his hair, which was considered sacred, and threw it
+into the torrent, which in two days ceased to run.&nbsp; This circumstance
+gave him a greatly increased ascendancy, from his supposed influence
+with the deities of the volcanoes.</p>
+<p>I have explored the country pretty thoroughly for many miles round,
+but have not seen anything striking, except the remains of an immense
+<i>heiau</i> in the centre of the desert tableland, said to have been
+built in a day by the compulsory labour of 25,000 people: a lonely white
+man who lives among the lava, and believes he has discovered the secret
+of perpetual motion: and the lava-flow from Mauna Loa, which reached
+the sea 40 miles from its exit from the mountain.</p>
+<p>I was riding through the brushwood with a native, and not able to
+see two yards in any direction, when emerging from the thick scrub,
+we came upon the torrent of 1859 within six feet of us, a huge, straggling,
+coal-black river, broken up into streams in our vicinity, but on the
+whole, presenting an iridescent uphill expanse a mile wide.&nbsp; We
+had reached one of the divergent streams to which it had been said after
+its downward course of 9000 feet, &ldquo;Hitherto shalt thou come and
+no further,&rdquo; while the main body had pursued its course to the
+ocean.&nbsp; Whatever force impelled it had ceased to act, and the last
+towering wave of fire had halted just there, and lies a black arrested
+surge 10 feet high, with tender ferns at its feet, and a scarcely singed
+<i>ohia</i> bending over it.&nbsp; The flow, so far as we scrambled
+up it, is heaped in great surges of a fierce black, fiercely reflecting
+the torrid sun, cracked, and stained yellow and white, and its broad
+glistening surface forms an awful pathway to the dome-like crest of
+Mauna Loa, now throbbing with internal fires, and crowned with a white
+smoke wreath, that betokens the action of the same forces which produced
+this gigantic inundation.&nbsp; Close to us the main river had parted
+above and united below a small <i>maman&eacute;</i> tree with bracken
+under its shadow, and there are several oases of the same kind.</p>
+<p>I have twice been down to the larger world of the wool-shed, when
+tired of strips of dried mutton and my own society.&nbsp; The hospitality
+there is as great as the accommodation is small.&nbsp; The first time,
+I slept on the floor of the shed with some native women who were up
+there, and was kept awake all night by the magnificence of the light
+on the volcano.&nbsp; The second time, several of us slept in a small,
+dark grass-wigwam, only intended as a temporary shelter, the lowliest
+dwelling in every sense of the word that I ever occupied.&nbsp; That
+evening was the finest I have seen on the islands; there was a less
+abrupt transition from day to night, and the three great mountains and
+the desert were etherealised and glorified by a lingering rose and violet
+light.&nbsp; When darkness came on, our great camp fire was hardly redder
+than the glare from the volcano, and its leaping flames illuminated
+as motley a group as you would wish to see; the native shearers, who,
+after shearing eighty sheep each in a day, washed, and changed their
+clothes before eating; a negro goatherd with a native wife and swarthy
+children, two native women, my host and myself, all engaged in the rough
+cooking befitting the region, toasting strips of jerked mutton on sticks,
+broiling wild bullock on the coals, baking <i>kalo</i> under ground,
+and rolls in a rough stone oven, and all speaking that base mixture
+of English and Hawaiian which is current coin here.&nbsp; The meal was
+not less rude than the cookery.&nbsp; We ate it on the floor of the
+wigwam, with an old tin, with some fat in it, for a lamp, and a bit
+of rope for a wick, which kept tumbling into the fat and leaving us
+in darkness.</p>
+<p>The next day I came up here alone, driving a pack-horse, and with
+a hind-quarter of sheep tied to my saddle.&nbsp; It is really difficult
+to find the way over this desert, though I have been several times across.&nbsp;
+When a breeze ripples the sand between the lava hummocks, the footprints
+are obliterated, and there are few landmarks except the &ldquo;ox bone&rdquo;
+and the &ldquo;small <i>ohia</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is a strange life
+up here on the mountain side, but I like it, and never yearn after civilization.&nbsp;
+The one drawback is my ignorance of the language, which not only places
+me sometimes in grotesque difficulties, but deprives me of much interest.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t know what day it is, or how long I have been here, and
+quite understand how possible it would be to fall into an indolent and
+aimless life, in which time is of no account.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>THE RECTORY, KONA.&nbsp; <i>August</i> 1<i>st</i>.</p>
+<p>I left Hualalai yesterday morning, and dined with my kind host and
+hostess in the wigwam.&nbsp; It was the last taste of the wild Hawaiian
+life I have learned to love so well, the last meal on a mat, the last
+exercise of skill in eating &ldquo;two-fingered&rdquo; <i>poi</i>.&nbsp;
+I took leave gratefully of those who had been so truly kind to me, and
+with the friendly <i>aloha</i> from kindly lips in my ears, regretfully
+left the purple desert in which I have lived so serenely, and plunged
+into the forest gloom.&nbsp; Half way down, I met a string of my native
+acquaintances, who, as the courteous custom is, threw over me <i>leis</i>
+of <i>mail&eacute;</i> and roses, and since I arrived here, others have
+called to wish me goodbye, bringing presents of figs, cocoa-nuts and
+bananas.</p>
+<p>This is one of the stations of the &ldquo;Honolulu Mission,&rdquo;
+and Mr. Davies, the clergyman, has, besides Sunday and daily services,
+a day-school for boys and girls.&nbsp; The Sunday attendance at church,
+so far as I have seen, consists of three adults, though the white population
+within four miles is considerable, and at another station on Maui, the
+congregation was composed solely of the family of a planter.&nbsp; Clerical
+reinforcements are expected from England shortly; but from what I have
+seen and heard everywhere, I do not think that the coming clergy, even
+if inspired by the same devotion and disinterestedness as Bishop Willis,
+will make any sensible progress among the people.</p>
+<p>In truth, I believe that the &ldquo;Honolulu <i>Mission</i>,&rdquo;
+from the first, has been a mistake.&nbsp; As such, strictly speaking,
+there is no room for it, for all the natives are nominal Christians,
+and are connected more or less with the Congregational denomination.&nbsp;
+To attempt to proselytize them to the English Church, or to unsettle
+their religious relations in any way, would, on the whole, be a hopeless,
+as well as an invidious task, and would not improbably result in driving
+some among them into the greater apparent unity of the Church of Rome.&nbsp;
+Those who believe in the oneness of the invisible church, and that all
+who hold &ldquo;one Lord, one faith, one baptism,&rdquo; are within
+the pale of salvation, may well hesitate before expending energy, men,
+money, and time on proselytizing efforts.</p>
+<p>Among the whites who have sunk into the mire of an indolent and godless,
+if not an openly immoral life, there is an undoubted field for Evangelistic
+effort; but it is very doubtful, I think, whether this class can be
+reached by services which appeal to higher culture and instincts than
+it possesses, and, indeed, generally, the island Episcopalians are not
+in sympathy with the &ldquo;symbolism&rdquo; and &ldquo;high ritual&rdquo;
+which from the first have been outstanding features of this &ldquo;mission.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The education of the young in the principles of the Prayer Book is aimed
+at by the Bishop and his coadjutors, but in spite of zeal and devotion,
+I doubt whether the English Church on these islands can ever be anything
+but a pining and sickly exotic.</p>
+<p>Kona looks supremely beautiful, a languid dream of all fair things.&nbsp;
+Yet truly my heart warms to nothing so much as to a row of fat English
+cabbages which grow in the rectory garden, with a complacent, self-asserting
+John Bullism about them.&nbsp; It is best to leave the islands now.&nbsp;
+I love them better every day, and dreams of Fatherland are growing fainter
+in this perfumed air and under this glittering sky.&nbsp; A little longer,
+and I too should say, like all who have made their homes here under
+the deep banana shade,--</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;We
+will return no more,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;. . . . our island
+home<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is far beyond the wave, we will no
+longer roam.&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>LETTER XXXI.</h3>
+<p>HAWAIIAN HOTEL, HONOLULU.&nbsp; <i>August</i> 6<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>My fate is lying at the wharf in the shape of the Pacific Mail Steamer
+<i>Costa Rica</i>, and soon to me Hawaii-nei will be but a dream.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Summer isles of Eden!&rdquo;&nbsp; My heart warms towards them
+as I leave them, for they have been more like home than any part of
+the world since I left England.&nbsp; The moonlight is trickling through
+misty algarobas, and feathery tamarinds and palms, and shines on glossy
+leaves of breadfruit and citron; a cool breeze brings in at my open
+doors the perfumed air and the soft murmur of the restful sea, and this
+beautiful Honolulu, whose lights are twinkling through the purple night,
+is at last, as it was at first, Paradise in the Pacific, a bright blossom
+of a summer sea.</p>
+<p>I shall be in the Rocky Mountains before you receive my hastily-written
+reply to your proposal to come out here for a year, but I will add a
+few reasons against it, in addition to the one which I gave regarding
+the benefit which I now hope to derive from a change to a more stimulating
+climate.&nbsp; The strongest of all is, that if we were to stay here
+for a year, we should just sit down &ldquo;between the sun and moon
+upon the shore,&rdquo; and forget &ldquo;our island home,&rdquo; and
+be content to fall &ldquo;asleep in a half dream,&rdquo; and &ldquo;return
+no more!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of course you will have gathered from my letters that there are very
+many advantages here.&nbsp; Indeed, the mosquitoes of the leeward coast,
+to whose attacks one becomes inured in a few months, are the only physical
+drawback.&nbsp; The open-air life is most conducive to health, and the
+climate is absolutely perfect, owing to its equability and purity.&nbsp;
+Whether the steady heat of Honolulu, the languid airs of Hilo, the balmy
+breezes of Onomea, the cool bluster of Waimea, or the odorous stillness
+of Kona, it is always the same.&nbsp; The grim gloom of our anomalous
+winters, the harsh malignant winds of our springs, and the dismal rains
+and overpowering heats of our summers, have no counterpart in the endless
+spring-time of Hawaii.</p>
+<p>Existence here is unclogged and easy, a small income goes a long
+way, and the simplicity, refinement, kindliness, and sociability of
+the foreign residents, render society very pleasant.&nbsp; The life
+here is truer, simpler, kinder, and happier than ours.&nbsp; The relation
+between the foreign and native population is a kindly and happy one,
+and the natives, in spite of their faults, are a most friendly and pleasant
+people to live among.&nbsp; With a knowledge of their easily-acquired
+language, they would be a ceaseless source of interest, and every white
+resident can have the satisfaction of helping them in their frequent
+distresses and illnesses.</p>
+<p>The sense of security is a very special charm, and one enjoys it
+as well in lonely native houses, and solitary days and nights of travelling,
+as in the foreign homes, which are never locked throughout the year.&nbsp;
+There are no burglarious instincts to dread, and there is no such thing
+as &ldquo;a broken sleep of fear beneath the stars.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+person and property of a white man are everywhere secure, and a white
+woman is sure of unvarying respect and kindness.</p>
+<p>There are no inevitable hardships.&nbsp; The necessaries, and even
+the luxuries of civilization can be obtained everywhere, and postal
+communication with America is now regular and rapid.</p>
+<p>When I began this letter, a long procession of counterbalancing disadvantages
+passed through my mind, but they become &ldquo;beautifully less&rdquo;
+as I set them down in black and white.&nbsp; If I put gossip first,
+it is because I seriously think that it is the canker of the foreign
+society on the islands.&nbsp; Its extent and universality are grotesque
+and amusing to a stranger, but to live in it, and share in it, and learn
+to enjoy it, would be both lowering and hurtful, and you can hardly
+be long here without being drawn into its vortex.&nbsp; By <i>gossip</i>
+I don&rsquo;t mean scandal or malignant misrepresentations, or reports
+of petty strifes, intrigues, and jealousies, such as are common in all
+cliques and communities, but <i>nuhou</i>, mere tattle, the perpetual
+talking about people, and the picking to tatters of every item of personal
+detail, whether gathered from fact or imagination.</p>
+<p>A great deal of this is certainly harmless, and in some measure arises
+from the intimate friendly relations which exist between the scattered
+families, but over-indulgence in it destroys the privacy of individual
+existence, and is deteriorating in more ways than one.&nbsp; From the
+north of Kauai to the south of Hawaii, everybody knows every other body&rsquo;s
+affairs, income, expenditure, sales, purchases, debts, furniture, clothing,
+comings, goings, borrowings, lendings, letters, correspondents, and
+every thing else: and when there is nothing new to relate on any one
+of these prolific subjects, supposed intentions afford abundant matter
+for speculation.&nbsp; All gossip is focussed here, being imported from
+every other district, and re-exported, with additions and embellishments,
+by every inter-island mail.&nbsp; The ingenuity with which <i>nuhou</i>
+is circulated is worthy of a better cause.</p>
+<p>Some disadvantages arise from the presence on the islands of heterogeneous
+and ill-assorted nationalities.&nbsp; The Americans, of course, predominate,
+and even those who are Hawaiian born, have, as elsewhere, a strongly
+national feeling.&nbsp; The far smaller English community hangs together
+in a somewhat cliquish fashion, and possibly cherishes a latent grudge
+against the Americans for their paramount influence in island affairs.&nbsp;
+The German residents, as everywhere, are cliquish too.&nbsp; Then, since
+the establishment of the Honolulu Mission, church feeling has run rather
+high, and here, as elsewhere, has a socially divisive tendency.&nbsp;
+Then there are drink and anti-drink, pro and anti-missionary, and pro
+and anti-reciprocity-treaty parties, and various other local naggings
+of no interest to you.</p>
+<p>The civilization is exotic, and owing to various circumstances, the
+government and constitution are too experimental and provisional in
+their nature, and possess too few elements of permanence to engross
+the profound interest of the foreign residents, although for reasons
+of policy they are well inclined to sustain a barbaric throne.&nbsp;
+In spite of a king and court, and titles and officials without number,
+and uniforms stiff with gold lace, and Royal dinner parties with <i>menus</i>
+printed on white silk, Americans, Republicans in feeling, really &ldquo;run&rdquo;
+the government, and in state affairs there is a taint of that combination
+of obsequious and flippant vulgarity, which none deplore more deeply
+than the best among the Americans themselves.</p>
+<p>It is a decided misfortune to a community to be divided in its national
+leanings, and to have no great fusing interests within or without itself,
+such as those which knit vigorous Victoria to the mother country, or
+distant Oregon to the heart of the Republic at Washington.&nbsp; Except
+sugar and dollars, one rarely hears any subject spoken about with general
+interest.&nbsp; The downfall of an administration in England, or any
+important piece of national legislation, arouses almost no interest
+in American society here, and the English are ostentatiously apathetic
+regarding any piece of intelligence specially absorbing to Americans.&nbsp;
+The papers pick up every piece of gossip which drifts about the islands,
+and snarl with much wordiness over local matters, but crowd into a small
+space the movements which affect the masses of mankind, and in the absence
+of a telegraph one hardly feels the beat of the pulses of the larger
+world.&nbsp; Those intellectual movements of the West which might provoke
+discussion and conversation are not cordially entered into, partly owing
+to the difference in theological beliefs, and partly from an indolence
+born of the climate, and the lack of mental stimulus.</p>
+<p>After all, the gossip and the absence of large interests shared in
+common, are the only specialities which can be alleged against Hawaii,
+and I have never seen people among whom I should so well like to live.&nbsp;
+The ladies are most charming; essentially womanly, and fulfil all domestic
+and social duties in a way worthy of imitation everywhere.&nbsp; The
+kindness and hospitality, too, are unbounded, and these cover &ldquo;a
+multitude of sins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There are very few strangers here now.&nbsp; It is the &ldquo;dead
+season.&rdquo;&nbsp; I have met with none except Mr. Nordhoff, who is
+writing on the islands for <i>Harper&rsquo;s Monthly</i>, and his charming
+wife and children.&nbsp; She is a most expert horsewoman, and has adopted
+the Mexican saddle even in Honolulu, where few foreign ladies ride &ldquo;cavalier
+fashion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My friends all urge me to write on Hawaii, on the ground that I have
+seen the islands and lived the island life so thoroughly; but possibly
+they expect more indiscriminate praise than I could conscientiously
+bestow!</p>
+<p>Honolulu is in the midst of the epidemic of letter writing which
+sets in on the arrival of the steamer from &ldquo;the coast,&rdquo;
+and people walk and drive as if they really had business on hand: and
+the farewell visits to be made and received, the pleasant presence of
+Mr. Thompson, and Mr. and Mrs. Severance, of Hilo, and the hasty doing
+of things which have been left to the last, make me a sharer in the
+spasmodic bustle, which, were it permanent, would metamorphose this
+dreamy, bowery, tropical capital.&nbsp; The undeserved and unexpected
+kindness shown me here, as everywhere on these islands, renders my last
+impressions even more delightful than any first.&nbsp; The people are
+as genial as their own sunny skies, and in more frigid regions I shall
+never sigh for the last without longing for the first. . . . .</p>
+<p>up to here<br />S.S. COSTA RICA.&nbsp; <i>August</i> 7<i>th</i>.</p>
+<p>We sailed for San Francisco early this afternoon.&nbsp; Everything
+looked the same as when I landed in January, except that many of the
+then strange faces among the radiant crowd are now the faces of friends,
+that I know nearly everyone by sight, and that the pathos of farewell
+blended with every look and word.&nbsp; The air still rang with laughter
+and <i>alohas</i>, and the rippling music of the Hawaiian tongue; bananas
+and pineapples were still piled in fragrant heaps; the drifts of surf
+rolled in, as then, over the barrier reef, canoes with outriggers still
+poised themselves on the blue water; the coral divers still plied their
+graceful trade, and the lazy ripples still flashed in light along the
+palm-fringed shore.&nbsp; The head-ropes were let go, we steamed through
+the violet channel into the broad Pacific, Lunalilo, who came out so
+far with Chief Justice Allen, returned to the shore, and when his kindly
+<i>aloha</i> was spoken, the last link with the islands was severed,
+and half an hour later Honolulu was out of sight. . . . .</p>
+<p>. . . . The breeze is freshening, and the <i>Costa Rica&rsquo;s</i>
+head lies nearly due north.&nbsp; The sun is sinking, and on the far
+horizon the summit peaks of Oahu gleam like amethysts on a golden sea.&nbsp;
+Farewell for ever, my bright tropic dream!&nbsp; <i>Aloha nui</i> to
+Hawaii-nei!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I.L.B.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>A CHAPTER ON HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS.</h3>
+<p>A few facts concerning the Hawaiian islands may serve to supplement
+the deficiencies of the foregoing letters.&nbsp; The group is an hereditary
+and constitutional monarchy.&nbsp; There is a house of nobles appointed
+by the Crown, which consists of twenty members.&nbsp; The House of Representatives
+consists of not less than twenty-four, or more than forty members elected
+biennially.&nbsp; The Legislature fixes the number, and apportions the
+same.&nbsp; The Houses sit together, and constitute the Legislative
+Assembly.&nbsp; The property qualification for a representative is,
+real estate worth $500, or an annual income of $250 from property, and
+that for an elector is an annual income of $75.&nbsp; The Legislators
+are paid, and the expense of a session is about $15,000.&nbsp; There
+are three cabinet ministers appointed by the Crown, of the Interior,
+Finance, and Foreign Affairs respectively, and an Attorney-General,
+who may be regarded as a minister of justice.&nbsp; There is a Supreme
+Court with a Chief Justice and two associate justices, and there are
+circuit and district judges on all the larger islands, as well as sheriffs,
+prisons, and police.&nbsp; There is a standing army of sixty men, mainly
+for the purposes of guard duty, and rendering assistance to the police.</p>
+<p>The question of &ldquo;how to make ends meet&rdquo; sorely exercises
+the little kingdom.&nbsp; All sorts of improvements involving a largely
+increased outlay are continually urged, while at the same time the burden
+of taxation presses increasingly heavily, and there is a constant clamour
+for the removal of some of the most lucrative imposts.&nbsp; Indeed,
+the Hawaiian dog, with his tax and his &ldquo;tag,&rdquo; is seldom
+out of the Legislative Assembly.</p>
+<p>What may be termed the <i>per capita</i> taxes are, an annual poll
+tax of one dollar levied on each male inhabitant between the ages of
+seventeen and sixty, an annual road tax of two dollars upon all persons
+between seventeen and fifty, and an annual school tax of two dollars
+upon all persons between twenty-one and sixty.&nbsp; There is a direct
+tax upon property of &frac12; per cent. upon its valuation, and specific
+taxes of a dollar on every horse above two years old, and a dollar and
+a half on each dog.&nbsp; Of the $206,000 raised by internal taxes during
+the last biennial period, the horses paid $50,000, the mules $6,000,
+and the dogs $19,000!</p>
+<p>The indirect taxation in the shape of customs&rsquo; duties amounted
+to $350,000 in the same period.&nbsp; The poor Hawaiian does not know
+the blessing of a &ldquo;Free Breakfast Table.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The islands are large importers.&nbsp; The value of imported goods
+paying duties was $1,437,000 in 1873, on which the Hawaiian Treasury
+received $198,000 as customs&rsquo; duties.&nbsp; Twenty-five thousand
+dollars&rsquo; worth of ale, porter, and light wines, and thirty thousand
+dollars&rsquo; worth of spirits, show that the foreign population of
+6,000 is more than sufficiently bibulous.&nbsp; The Chinamen, about
+2,000 in number, are, or ought to be, responsible for $13,000 worth
+of opium; and the $34,000 worth of tobacco and cigars is doubtless distributed
+pretty equally over all the nationalities.&nbsp; Twenty-one thousand
+gallons of spirits were imported in 1873.&nbsp; The licences to sell
+spirits brought $18,000 dollars into the treasury in the last biennial
+period, but those for the sale of <i>awa</i> and opium brought in $55,000
+during the same time.&nbsp; These licences are confined to Honolulu.</p>
+<p>There are two interesting items of customs receipts, a sum of $924,
+the proceeds of a <i>per capita</i> tax of two dollars levied on passengers
+landing on the islands, for the support of the Queen&rsquo;s Hospital,
+and a sum of $1,477, the proceeds of a tax levied on seamen for the
+support of the Marine Hospital.&nbsp; There is a sum of $700 for passports,
+as no Hawaiian or stranger can leave the kingdom without an official
+permit.</p>
+<p>There are 58 vessels registered under the Hawaiian flag, of which
+40 are coasters, and 18 engaged in foreign freighting and whaling.</p>
+<p>The value of domestic exports in 1873 was $1,725,507.&nbsp; Among
+these are bananas, pineapples, <i>pulu</i>, cocoanuts, oranges, limes,
+sandal-wood, tamarinds, betel leaves, shark&rsquo;s fins, <i>paiai</i>,
+whale oil, sperm oil, cocoanut oil, and whalebone.&nbsp; Among other
+commodities there was exported, of coffee 262,000 lbs., of fungus 57,000lbs.,
+of pea nuts 58,000 lbs., of cotton 8,000 lb., of rice 941,000 lbs.,
+of paddy 507,000 lbs., of hides 20,000 packages, of goat skins 66,000,
+of horns 13,000, and of tallow 609,000 lbs.</p>
+<p>The expense of &ldquo;keeping things going&rdquo; on the islands
+for the two years ending March 1st, 1874, amounted to $1,193,276, but
+this included the funeral expenses of two kings, as well as of two extra
+sessions of the Legislature, which amounted to $42,000.&nbsp; The decrease
+in the revenue for the same period amounted to $45,000.&nbsp; The items
+of Hawaiian expenditure were as follows:--</p>
+<pre>For Civil List.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; $47,689.73<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; Permanent Settlements, Queen Emma.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 12,000.00<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; Legislature and Privy Council.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 15,288.50<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; Extra Legislative Expenses.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 19,011.87<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; Department of the Judiciary.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 72,245.64<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; of Foreign Affairs and War.&nbsp; &nbsp; 78,145.85<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; of the Interior.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 389,009.08<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; of Finance.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 202,117.05<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; of the Attorney-General&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 97,097.00<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; Bureau of Public Instruction.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 89,432.40<br />&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; Miscellaneous Expenditures.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 170,474.67</pre>
+<pre>The balance on hand in the Treasury,<br />March 31st, 1874.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 764.57</pre>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-------------</pre>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;$1,193,276.36</pre>
+<p>That, under the head Finance, includes the interest on borrowed money.&nbsp;
+The funded national debt is $340,000.&nbsp; Of this sum a portion bears
+no stated interest, only such as may arise from the very dubious profits
+of the Hawaiian hotel.&nbsp; The interest charges are 12 per cent. on
+$25,000, and 9 per cent. on $272,000.&nbsp; The estimates for the present
+biennial period involve a large increase of debt.&nbsp; The present
+financial position of the kingdom is, an increasing expenditure and
+a decreasing revenue.</p>
+<p>The statistics of the Judiciary Department for the last two years
+present a few features of interest.&nbsp; There were 4,000 convictions
+out of 5,764 cases brought before the courts, equal to a fourteenth
+part of the population.&nbsp; The total number of offences in the category
+is 125.&nbsp; Of these some are decidedly local.&nbsp; Thus, for &ldquo;furnishing
+intoxicating liquors to Hawaiians&rdquo; 92 persons were punished; for
+&ldquo;exhibition of <i>Hula</i>,&rdquo; 10; for &ldquo;selling <i>awa</i>
+without licence,&rdquo; 12; for &ldquo;selling opium without licence,&rdquo;
+24.&nbsp; It is not surprising to those who know the habits of the people,
+that the convictions for violations of the marriage tie, though greatly
+diminished, should reach the number of 384, while under the head &ldquo;Deserting
+Husbands and Wives,&rdquo; 67 convictions are recorded.&nbsp; For &ldquo;practising
+medicine without a licence,&rdquo; 56 persons were punished; for &ldquo;furious
+riding,&rdquo; 197; for &ldquo;cruelty to animals,&rdquo; 37; for &ldquo;gaming,&rdquo;
+121; for &ldquo;gross cheating,&rdquo; 32; for &ldquo;violating the
+Sabbath,&rdquo; 61.&nbsp; We must remember that the returns include
+foreigners and Chinamen, or else the reputation for &ldquo;harmlessness&rdquo;
+which Hawaiians possess would suffer seriously when we read that within
+the last two years there were 178 convictions for &ldquo;assault,&rdquo;
+248 for &ldquo;assault and battery,&rdquo; 12 for &ldquo;assaults with
+dangerous weapons,&rdquo; 49 for &ldquo;affray,&rdquo; 674 for &ldquo;drunkenness,&rdquo;
+87 for &ldquo;disturbing quiet of the night,&rdquo; and 13 for &ldquo;murder.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Yet the number of criminal cases has largely diminished, and taking
+civil and criminal together, there has been a decrease of 656 for the
+last biennial period, as compared with that immediately preceding it.</p>
+<p>The administration of justice is confessedly one of the most efficient
+departments of Hawaiian affairs.&nbsp; Chief Justice Allen, both as
+a lawyer and a gentleman, is worthy to fill the highest position in
+his native country (America), and the Associate Justices, as well as
+the native and foreign judges throughout the islands, are highly esteemed
+for honour and uprightness.&nbsp; I never heard an uttered suspicion
+of venality or unfairness against anyone of them, and apparently the
+Judiciary Department of Hawaii deserves the same confidence which we
+repose in our own.</p>
+<p>The Educational System has been carefully modelled, and is carried
+out with tolerable efficiency.&nbsp; Eighty-seven per cent. of the whole
+school population are actually at school, and the inspector of schools
+states that a person who cannot read and write is rarely met with.&nbsp;
+Each common school is graded into two, three, or four classes, according
+to the intelligence and proficiency of the pupils, and the curriculum
+of study is as follows:--</p>
+<p>CLASS I.--Reading, mental and written arithmetic, geography, penmanship,
+and composition.</p>
+<p>CLASS II.--Reading, mental arithmetic, geography, penmanship.</p>
+<p>CLASS III.--Reading, first principles of arithmetic, penmanship.</p>
+<p>CLASS IV.--Primer, use of slate and pencil.</p>
+<p>The youngest children are not classified until they can put letters
+together in syllables.</p>
+<p>Vocal music is taught wherever competent teachers are found.</p>
+<p>The total sum expended on education, including the grants to &ldquo;family&rdquo;
+and other schools, is about $40,000 a year. <a name="citation453"></a><a href="#footnote453">{453}</a></p>
+<p>It has been remarked that the rising race of Hawaiians has an increased
+contempt for industry in the form of manual labour, and it is proposed
+by the Board of Education that such labour shall be made a part of common
+school education, so that on both girls and boys a desire to provide
+for their own wants in an honest way shall be officially inculcated.&nbsp;
+There is a Government Reformatory School, and industrial and family
+schools for both girls and boys are scattered over the islands.&nbsp;
+The supply of literature in the vernacular is meagre, and few of the
+natives have any intelligent comprehension of English.</p>
+<p>The group has an area of about 4,000,000 acres, of which about 200,000
+may be regarded as arable, and 150,000 as specially adapted for the
+culture of sugar-cane.&nbsp; Sugar, the great staple production, gives
+employment in its cultivation and manufacture to nearly 4,000 hands.&nbsp;
+Only a fifteenth part of the estimated arable area is under cultivation.&nbsp;
+Over 6,000 natives are returned as the possessors of <i>Kuleanas</i>
+or freeholds, but many of these are heavily mortgaged.&nbsp; Many of
+the larger lands are held on lease from the crown or chiefs, and there
+are difficulties attending the purchase of small properties.</p>
+<p>Almost all the roots and fruits of the torrid and temperate zones
+can be grown upon the islands, and the banana, <i>kalo</i>, yam, sweet
+potato, cocoanut, breadfruit, arrowroot, sugar-cane, strawberry, raspberry,
+whortleberry, and native apple, are said to be indigenous.</p>
+<p>The indigenous <i>fauna</i> is small, consisting only of hogs, dogs,
+rats, and an anomalous bat which flies by day: There are few insects,
+except such as have been imported, and these, which consist of centipedes,
+scorpions, cockroaches, mosquitoes, and fleas, are happily confined
+to certain localities, and the two first have left most of their venom
+behind them.&nbsp; A small lizard is abundant, but snakes, toads, and
+frogs have not yet effected a landing.</p>
+<p>The ornithology of the islands is scanty.&nbsp; Domestic fowls are
+supposed to be indigenous.&nbsp; Wild geese are numerous among the mountains
+of Hawaii, and plovers, snipe, and wild ducks, are found on all the
+islands.&nbsp; A handsome owl, called the owl-hawk, is common.&nbsp;
+There is a paroquet with purple feathers, another with scarlet, a woodpecker
+with variegated plumage of red, green, and yellow, and a small black
+bird with a single yellow feather under each wing.&nbsp; There are few
+singing birds, but one of the few has as sweet a note as that of the
+English thrush.&nbsp; There are very few varieties of moths and butterflies.</p>
+<p>The <i>flora</i> of the Hawaiian Islands is far scantier than that
+of the South Sea groups, and cannot compare with that of many other
+tropical as well as temperate regions.&nbsp; But all the islands are
+rich in cryptogamous plants, of which there is an almost infinite variety.</p>
+<p>Hawaii is still in process of construction, and is subject to volcanic
+eruptions, earthquakes, and tidal waves.&nbsp; Hurricanes are unknown,
+and thunderstorms are rare and light.</p>
+<p>Under favourable circumstances of moisture, the soil is most prolific,
+and &ldquo;patch cultivation&rdquo; in glens and ravines, as well as
+on mountain sides, produces astonishing results.&nbsp; A <i>Kalo</i>
+patch of forty square feet will support a man for a year.&nbsp; An acre
+of favourably situated land will grow a thousand stems of bananas, which
+will produce annually ten tons of fruit.&nbsp; The sweet potato flourishes
+on the most unpromising lava, where soil can hardly be said to exist,
+and in good localities produces 200 barrels to the acre.&nbsp; On dry
+light soils the Irish potato grows anyhow and anywhere, with no other
+trouble than that of planting the sets.&nbsp; Most vegetable dyes, drugs,
+and spices can be raised.&nbsp; Forty diverse fruits present an overflowing
+cornucopia.&nbsp; The esculents of the temperate zones flourish.&nbsp;
+The coffee bush produces from three to five pounds of berries the third
+year after planting.&nbsp; The average yield of sugar is two and a half
+tons to the acre.&nbsp; Pineapples grow like weeds in some districts,
+and water melons are almost a drug.&nbsp; The bamboo is known to grow
+sixteen inches in a day.&nbsp; Wherever there is a sufficient rainfall,
+the earth teems with plenty.</p>
+<p>Yet the Hawaiian Islands can hardly be regarded as a field for emigration,
+though nature is lavish, and the climate the most delicious and salubrious
+in the world.&nbsp; Farming, as we understand it, is unknown.&nbsp;
+The dearth of insectivorous birds seriously affects the cultivation
+of a soil naturally bounteous to excess.&nbsp; The narrow gorges in
+which terraced &ldquo;patch cultivation,&rdquo; is so successful, offer
+no temptations to a man with the world before him.&nbsp; The larger
+areas require labour, and labour is not to be had.&nbsp; Though wheat
+and other cereals mature, attacks of weevil prevent their storage, and
+all the grain and flour consumed are imported from California.</p>
+<p>Cacao, cinnamon, and allspice, are subject to an apparently ineradicable
+blight.&nbsp; The blight which has attacked the coffee shrub is so severe,
+that the larger plantations have been dug up, and coffee is now raised
+by patch culture, mainly among the guava scrub which fringes the forests.&nbsp;
+Oranges suffer from blight also, and some of the finest groves have
+been cut down.&nbsp; Cotton suffers from the ravages of a caterpillar.&nbsp;
+The mulberry tree, which, from its rapid growth, would be invaluable
+to silk growers, is covered with a black and white blight.&nbsp; Sheep
+are at present successful, but in some localities the spread of a pestilent
+&ldquo;oat-burr&rdquo; is depreciating the value of their wool.&nbsp;
+The forests, which are essential to the well-being of the islands, are
+disappearing in some quarters, owing to the attacks of a grub, as well
+as the ravages of cattle.</p>
+<p>Cocoanuts, bananas, yams, sweet potatoes, <i>kalo</i>, and breadfruit,
+the staple food of the native population, are free from blight, and
+so are potatoes and rice.&nbsp; Beef cattle can be raised for almost
+nothing, and in some districts beef can be bought for the cent or two
+per pound which pays for the cutting up of the carcase.&nbsp; Every
+one can live abundantly, and without the &ldquo;sweat of the brow,&rdquo;
+but few can make money, owing to the various forms of blight, the scarcity
+of labour, and the lack of a profitable market.</p>
+<p>There is little healthy activity in any department of business.&nbsp;
+The whaling fleet has deserted the islands.&nbsp; A general <i>pilikia</i>
+prevails.&nbsp; Settlements are disappearing, valley lands are falling
+out of cultivation, Hilo grass and guava scrub are burying the traces
+of a former population.&nbsp; The natives are rapidly diminishing, <a name="citation457"></a><a href="#footnote457">{457}</a>
+the old industries are abandoned, and the inherent immorality of the
+race, the great outstanding cause of its decay, still resists the influence
+of Christian teaching and example.</p>
+<p>An exotic civilization is having a fair trial on the Hawaiian Islands.&nbsp;
+With the exception of the serious maladies introduced by foreigners
+in the early days, and the disastrous moral influence exercised by worthless
+whites, they have suffered none of the wrongs usually inflicted on the
+feebler by the stronger race.&nbsp; The rights of the natives were in
+the first instance carefully secured to them, and have since been protected
+by equal laws, righteously administered.&nbsp; The Hawaiians have been
+aided towards independence in political matters, and the foreigners,
+who framed the laws and constitution, and have directed Hawaiian affairs,
+such as Richards, Lee, Judd, Allen, and Wyllie, were men above reproach;
+and missionary influence, of all others the most friendly to the natives,
+has predominated for fifty years.</p>
+<p>The effects of missionary labour have been scarcely touched upon
+in the foregoing letters, and here, in preference to giving any opinion
+of my own, I quote from Mr. R. H. Dana, an Episcopalian, and a barrister
+of the highest standing in America, well known in this country by his
+writings, who sums up his investigations on the Sandwich Islands in
+the following dispassionate words:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is no small thing to say of the missionaries of the American
+Board, that in less than forty years they have taught this whole people
+to read and to write, to cipher and to sew.&nbsp; They have given them
+an alphabet, grammar, and dictionary; preserved their language from
+extinction; given it a literature, and translated into it the Bible,
+and works of devotion, science, and entertainment, etc.&nbsp; They have
+established schools, reared up native teachers, and so pressed their
+work, that now the proportion of inhabitants who can read and write
+is greater than in New England.&nbsp; And whereas they found these islanders
+a nation of half-naked savages, living in the surf and on the sand,
+eating raw fish, fighting among themselves, tyrannized over by feudal
+chiefs, and abandoned to sensuality, they now see them decently clothed,
+recognizing the law of marriage, knowing something of accounts, going
+to school and public worship more regularly than the people do at home,
+and the more elevated of them taking part in conducting the affairs
+of the constitutional monarchy under which they live, holding seats
+on the judicial bench and in the legislative chambers, and filling posts
+in the local magistracies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If space permitted, the testimony of &ldquo;Mark Twain,&rdquo; given
+in &ldquo;Roughing It,&rdquo; might be added to the above, and the remaining
+missionaries may well point to the visible results of their labours,
+with the one word <i>Circumspice</i>!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h3>A CHAPTER ON HAWAIIAN HISTORY.</h3>
+<p>In the pre-historic days of Hawaii, for 500 years, as the bards sing,
+before Captain Cook landed, and indeed for some years afterwards, each
+island had its king, chiefs, and internal dissensions; and incessant
+wars, with a reckless waste of human life, kept the whole group in turmoil.&nbsp;
+Chaotic and legendary as early Hawaiian history is, there is enough
+to show that there must have been regularly organized communities on
+the islands for a very long period, with a civilization and polity which,
+though utterly unworthy of Christianity, were enlightened and advanced
+for Polynesian heathenism.</p>
+<p>The kingly office was hereditary, and the king&rsquo;s power absolute.&nbsp;
+On the different islands the kings and chiefs who together constituted
+a privileged class, admitted the priesthood to some portion of their
+privileges, probably with the view of enslaving the people more completely
+through the agency of religion, and held the lower classes in absolute
+subserviency by the most rigorous of feudal systems, which included
+<i>hana poalima</i>, or forced labour, and the <i>tabu</i>, well known
+throughout Polynesia.</p>
+<p>A very interesting history begins with Kamehameha the Great, the
+Conqueror, or the Terrible; the &ldquo;Napoleon of the Pacific,&rdquo;
+as he has been called.&nbsp; He united an overmastering ambition to
+a singular gift of ruling, and without education, training, or the help
+of a single political precedent to guide him, animated not only by the
+lust of conquest, but by the desire to create a nationality, he subjugated
+every thing that his canoes could reach, and fused a rabble of savages
+and chieftaincies into a united nation, every individual of which to
+this day inherits something of the patriotism of the Conqueror.</p>
+<p>His wars were by no means puny either in proportions or slaughter,
+as, for instance, when he meditated the conquest of Kauai, his expedition
+included seven thousand picked warriors, twenty-one schooners, forty
+swivels, six mortars, and an abundance of ammunition!&nbsp; His victories
+are celebrated in countless <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;s</i> or unwritten songs,
+which are said to be marked by real poetic feeling and simplicity, and
+to resemble the Ossianic poems in majesty and melancholy.&nbsp; He founded
+the dynasty which for seventy years has stood as firmly, and exercised
+its functions for the welfare of the people on the whole as efficiently,
+as any other government.</p>
+<p>The king was forty-five years old when, having &ldquo;no more worlds
+to conquer,&rdquo; he devoted himself to the consolidation of his kingdom.&nbsp;
+He placed governors on each island, directly responsible to himself,
+who nominated chiefs of districts, heads of villages, and all petty
+officers; and tax-gatherers, who, for lack of the art of writing, kept
+their accounts by a method in use in the English exchequer in ancient
+times.&nbsp; He appointed a council of chiefs, with whom he advised
+on important matters, and a council of &ldquo;wise men&rdquo; who assisted
+him in framing laws, and in regulating concerns of minor importance.&nbsp;
+In all matters of national importance, the governors and high chiefs
+of the islands met with the sovereign in consultations.&nbsp; These
+were conducted with great privacy, and the results were promulgated
+through the islands by heralds whose office was hereditary.</p>
+<p>Kamehameha enacted statutes against theft, murder, and oppression,
+and though he wielded oppressive and despotic authority himself, his
+people enjoyed a golden age as compared with those that were past.&nbsp;
+The king, governors, and chiefs constituted the magistracy, and there
+was an appeal from both chiefs and governors to the king.&nbsp; It was
+usual for both parties to be heard face to face in the enclosure in
+front of the house of the king or governor, no lawyers were employed,
+and every man advocated his own cause, sitting cross-legged before the
+judges.&nbsp; Swiftness and decision characterized the redress of grievances
+and the administration of justice.&nbsp; Kamehameha reduced the feudal
+tenure of land, which had heretofore been the theory, into absolute
+practice, claiming for the crown the sole ownership of the land, and
+dividing it among his followers on the conditions of tribute and military
+service.&nbsp; The common people were attached to the soil and transferred
+with it.&nbsp; A chief might nominate his wife, or son, or any other
+person to succeed him in his possessions, but at his death they reverted
+to the king, whose order was required before the testamentary wish became
+of any value.&nbsp; There were some wise regulations generally applicable,
+concerning the planting of cocoanut trees, and a law that the water
+should be conducted over every plantation twice a week in general, and
+once a week during the dry season.&nbsp; This king constructed immense
+fish-ponds on the sea coast, and devoted himself to commerce with such
+success that in one year he exported $400,000 of sandalwood (felled
+and shipped at the cost of much suffering to the common people), and
+on finding that a large proportion of the profit had been dissipated
+by harbour dues at Canton, he took up the idea and established harbour
+dues at Honolulu.</p>
+<p>From Vancouver Kamehameha learned of the grandeur and power of Christian
+nations; and in the idea that his people might grow great through Christianity,
+he asked him, in 1794, that Christian teachers might be sent from England.&nbsp;
+This request, if ever presented, was disregarded, as was another made
+by Captain Turnbull in 1803, and this exceptionally great Polynesian
+died the year before the light of the Gospel shone on Hawaiian shores.</p>
+<p>Some persons, it does not appear whether they were English or American,
+attempted his conversion; but the astute savage, after listening to
+their eloquent statements of the power of faith, pressed on them as
+a crucial test to throw themselves from the top of an adjacent precipice,
+making his reception of their religion contingent on their arrival unhurt
+at its base.&nbsp; He built large <i>heiaus</i>, amongst others the
+one at Kawaihae, at the dedication of which to his favourite war god
+eleven human sacrifices were offered.&nbsp; To the end he remained devoted
+to the state religion, and the last instances of capital punishment
+for breaking <i>tabu</i>, a thraldom deeply interwoven with the religious
+system, occurred in the last year of his reign, when one man was put
+to death for putting on a chief&rsquo;s girdle, another for eating of
+a tabooed dish, and a third for leaving a house under <i>tabu</i>, and
+entering one which was not so.</p>
+<p>His last prayers were to his great red-feathered god Kukailimoku,
+and priests bringing idols crowded round him in his dying agony.&nbsp;
+His last words were &ldquo;<i>Move on in my good way and</i>&rdquo;--&nbsp;
+In the death-room the high chiefs consulted, and one, to testify his
+great grief, proposed to eat the body raw, but was overruled by the
+majority.&nbsp; So the flesh was separated from the bones, and they
+were tied up in <i>tapa</i>, and concealed so effectually that they
+have never since been found.&nbsp; A holocaust of three hundred dogs
+gave splendour to his obsequies.&nbsp; &ldquo;These are our gods whom
+I worship,&rdquo; he had said to Kotzebue, while showing him one of
+the temples.&nbsp; &ldquo;Whether I do right or wrong I do not know,
+but I follow my faith, which cannot be wicked, as it commands me never
+to do wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kamehameha the Great died in 1819, and his son Liholiho, who loved
+whisky and pleasure, was peaceably crowned king in his room, and by
+his name.&nbsp; He, with the powerful aid of the Queen Dowager Kaahumanu,
+abolished <i>tabu</i>, and his subjects cast away their idols, and fell
+into indifferent scepticism, the high priest Hewahewa being the first
+to light the iconoclastic torch, having previously given his opinion
+that there was only one great <i>akua</i> or spirit in <i>lani</i>,
+the heavens.&nbsp; This Kamehameha II. was the king who with his queen,
+died of measles in London in 1824, after which the <i>Blonde</i> frigate
+was sent to restore their bodies with much ceremony to Hawaiian soil.</p>
+<p>Kamehameha III., a minor, another son of the Conqueror, succeeded,
+and reigned for thirty years, dividing the lands among the nobles and
+the people, and conferring upon his kingdom an equable constitution.&nbsp;
+The law officially abolishing idolatry was confirmed by him, and while
+complete religious toleration otherwise was granted, the Christian faith
+was established in these words:--&ldquo;The religion of the Lord Jesus
+Christ shall continue to be the established national religion of the
+Hawaiian Islands.&rdquo;&nbsp; His words on July 31st, 1843, when the
+English colours, wrongfully hoisted, were lowered in favour of the Hawaiian
+flag, are the national motto:--&ldquo;The life of the land is established
+in righteousness.&rdquo;&nbsp; In his reign Hawaiian independence was
+recognised by Great Britain, France, and America.&nbsp; His Premier
+for some time was Mr. Wyllie, who with a rare devotion and disinterestedness
+devoted his life and a large fortune to his adopted country.</p>
+<p>Kamehameha IV., a grandson of the Conqueror, succeeded him in 1854.&nbsp;
+He was a patriotic prince, and strove hard to advance the civilization
+of his people, and to arrest their decrease by reformatory and sanitary
+measures.&nbsp; He was the most accomplished prince of his line, and
+his death in 1863, soon after that of his only child, the Prince of
+Hawaii, was very deeply regretted.&nbsp; His widow, Queen Kaleleonalani,
+or Emma, visited England after his death.</p>
+<p>He was succeeded by his brother, a man of a very different stamp,
+who was buried on January 11, 1873, after a partial outbreak of the
+orgies wherewith the natives disgraced themselves after the death of
+a chief in the old heathen days.&nbsp; It is rare to meet with two people
+successively who hold the same opinion of Kamehameha V.&nbsp; He was
+evidently a man of some talent and strong will, intensely patriotic,
+and determined not to be a merely ornamental figure-head of a government
+administered by foreigners in his name.&nbsp; He ardently desired the
+encouragement of foreign immigration, and the opening of a free market
+in America for Hawaiian produce.&nbsp; He ruled, as well as reigned,
+and though he abrogated the constitution of 1852, and introduced several
+features of absolutism into the government, on the whole he seems to
+have done well by his people.&nbsp; He is said to have been regal and
+dignified, to have worked hard, to have written correct state papers,
+and to have been capable of the deportment of an educated Christian
+gentleman, but to have reimbursed himself for this subservience to conventionality
+by occasionally retiring to an undignified residence on the sea-shore,
+where he transformed himself into the likeness of one of his half-clad
+heathen ancestors, debased himself by whisky, and revelled in the <i>hula-hula</i>.&nbsp;
+He is said also to have been so far under the empire of the old superstitions,
+as to consult an ancient witch on affairs of importance.</p>
+<p>He died amidst the rejoicings incident to his birthday, and on the
+next day &ldquo;lay in state in the throne-room of the palace, while
+his ministers, his staff, and the chiefs of the realm kept watch over
+him, and sombre <i>kahilis</i> waving at his head, beat a rude and silent
+dead-march for the crowds of people, subjects and aliens, who continuously
+filed through the apartment, for a curious farewell glance at the last
+of the Kamehamehas.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His death closed the first era of Hawaiian history, and the orderly
+succession of one recognised dynasty.&nbsp; No successor to the throne
+had been proclaimed, and the king left no nearer kin than the Princess
+Keelikolani, his half-sister, a lady not in the line of regal descent.</p>
+<p>Under these novel circumstances, it devolved upon the Legislative
+Assembly to elect by ballot &ldquo;some native <i>Alii</i> of the kingdom
+as successor to the throne.&rdquo;&nbsp; The candidates were the High
+Chief Kalakaua, the present King, and Prince Lunalilo, the late King,
+but the &ldquo;Well-Beloved,&rdquo; as Lunalilo was called, was elected
+unanimously, amidst an outburst of popular enthusiasm.</p>
+<p>From his high resolves and generous instincts much was expected,
+and the unhappy failing, to which, after the most painful struggles,
+he succumbed, on the solicitation of some bad or thoughtless foreigners,
+if it lessened him aught in the public esteem, abated nothing of the
+wonderful love that was felt for him.</p>
+<p>He died, after a lingering illness, on February 3, 1874.&nbsp; Although
+the event had been expected for some time, its announcement was received
+with profound sorrow by the whole community, while the native subjects
+of the deceased sovereign, according to ancient custom, expressed their
+feelings in loud wailing, which echoed mournfully through the still,
+red air of early daylight.&nbsp; On the following evening the body was
+placed on a shrouded bier, and was escorted in solemn procession by
+the government officials and the late king&rsquo;s staff, to the Iolani
+Palace, there to lie in state.&nbsp; It was a cloudless moonlight; not
+a leaf stirred or bird sang, and the crowd, consisting of several thousands,
+opened to the right and left to let the dismal death-train pass, in
+a stillness which was only broken by the solemn tramp of the bearers.</p>
+<p>The next day the corpse lay in state, in all the splendour that the
+islands could bestow, dressed in the clothes the king wore when he took
+the oath of office, and resting on the royal robe of yellow feathers,
+a fathom square. <a name="citation468"></a><a href="#footnote468">{468}</a>&nbsp;
+Between eight and ten thousand persons passed through the palace during
+the morning, and foreigners as well as natives wept tears of genuine
+grief; while in the palace grounds the wailing knew no intermission,
+and many of the natives spent hours in reciting <i>kanakaus</i> in honour
+of the deceased.&nbsp; At midnight the king&rsquo;s remains were placed
+in a coffin, his aged father, His Highness Kanaina, who was broken-hearted
+for his loss, standing by.&nbsp; When the body was raised from the feather
+robe, he ordered that it should be wrapped in it, and thus be deposited
+in its resting place.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is the last of our race,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;it belongs to him.&rdquo;&nbsp; The natives in attendance
+turned pale at this command, for the robe was the property of Kekauluohi,
+the dead king&rsquo;s mother, and had descended to her from her kingly
+ancestors.</p>
+<p>Averse through his life to useless parade and display, Lunalilo left
+directions for a simple funeral, and that none of the old heathenish
+observances should ensue upon his death.&nbsp; So, amidst unbounded
+grief, he was carried to the grave with hymns and anthems, and the hopes
+of Hawaii were buried with him.</p>
+<p>He died without naming a successor, and thus for the second time
+within fourteen months, a king came to be elected by ballot.</p>
+<p>The proceedings at the election of Lunalilo were marked by an order,
+regularity, and peaceableness which reflected extreme credit on the
+civilization of the Hawaiians, but in the subsequent period the temper
+of the people had considerably changed, and they had been affected by
+influences to which some allusions were made in Letter XIX.</p>
+<p>In politics, Lunalilo&rsquo;s views were essentially democratic,
+and he showed an almost undue deference to the will of the people, giving
+them a year&rsquo;s practical experience of democracy which they will
+never forget.</p>
+<p>An antagonism to the foreign residents, or rather to their political
+influence, had grown rapidly.&nbsp; Some of the Americans had been unwise
+in their language, and the discussion on the proposed cession of Pearl
+River increased the popular discontent, and the jealousy of foreign
+interference in island affairs.&nbsp; &ldquo;America gave us the light,&rdquo;
+said a native pastor, in a sermon which was reported over the islands,
+&ldquo;but now that we have the light, we should be left to use it for
+ourselves.&rdquo;&nbsp; This sentence represented the bulk of the national
+feeling, which, if partially unenlightened, is intensely, passionately,
+almost fanatically patriotic.</p>
+<p>The biennial election of delegates to the Legislative Assembly occurred
+shortly before Lunalilo&rsquo;s death, and the rallying-cry, &ldquo;Hawaii
+for the Hawaiians,&rdquo; was used with such effect that the most respectable
+foreign candidates, even in the capital, had not a chance of success,
+and for the first time in Hawaiian constitutional history, a house was
+elected, consisting, with one exception, of natives.&nbsp; Immediately
+on the king&rsquo;s death, Kalakaua, who was understood to represent
+the foreign interest as well as the policy indicated by the popular
+rallying-cry, and Queen Emma, came forward as candidates; the walls
+were placarded with addresses, mass meetings were held, canvassers were
+busy night and day, promises impossible of fulfilment were made, and
+for eight days the Hawaiian capital presented those scenes of excitement,
+wrangling, and mutual misrepresentation which we associate with popular
+elections elsewhere, and everywhere.</p>
+<p>The day of election came, and thirty-nine votes were given for Kalakaua,
+and six for Emma.&nbsp; On the announcement of this result, a hoarse,
+indignant roar, mingled with cheers from the crowd without, was heard
+within the Assembly chamber, and on the committee appointed to convey
+to Kalakaua the news of his election, attempting to take their seats
+in a carriage, they were driven back, maimed and bleeding, into the
+Courthouse; the carriage was torn to pieces, and the spokes of the wheels
+were distributed as weapons among the rioters.&nbsp; The &ldquo;gentle
+children of the sun&rdquo; were seen under a new aspect; they became
+furious, the latent savagery came out, the doors of the Hall of Assembly
+were battered in, the windows were shattered with clubs and volleys
+of stones, nine of the representatives, who were known to have voted
+for Kalakaua, were severely injured; the chairs, tables, and furnishings
+of the rooms were broken up and thrown out of the windows, along with
+valuable public and private documents; kerosene was demanded to fire
+the buildings; the police remained neutral, and conflagration and murder
+would have followed, had not the ministers dispatched an urgent request
+for assistance to the United States&rsquo; ships of war, <i>Portsmouth</i>
+and <i>Tuscarora</i>, and H.B.M. ship <i>Tenedos</i>, which was promptly
+met by the landing of such a force of sailors and marines as dispersed
+the rioters.</p>
+<p>Seventy arrests were made, the foreign marines held possession of
+the Courthouse, Palace, and Government offices, Kalakaua took the oath
+of office in private; the Representatives, with bandaged heads, and
+arms in slings, limped, and in some instances were supported, to their
+desks, to be liberated from their duties by the king in person, and
+in ten days the joint protectorate was withdrawn.</p>
+<p>Those who know the natives best were taken by surprise, and are compelled
+to recognise that a restive, half-sullen, half-defiant spirit is abroad
+among them, and that the task of governing them may not be the easy
+thing which it has been since the days of Kamehameha the Great.&nbsp;
+Nor do the foreign residents, especially the Americans, feel so safe
+as formerly, without the presence of a man-of-war in the harbour, since
+the people of Oahu have so unexpectedly developed one of the prominent
+arts of civilized democracy, cruel, reckless, and unreasoning mobbing.</p>
+<p>Of King Kalakaua, who began his reign under such unfortunate auspices,
+little at present can be said.&nbsp; Island affairs have not settled
+down into their old quietude, and party spirit, arising out of the election,
+has not died out among the natives.&nbsp; The king chose his advisers
+wisely, and made a concession to native feeling by appointing a native
+named Nahaolelua to a seat in the cabinet as Minister of Finance, but
+his first arrangement was upset, and a good deal of confusion has subsequently
+prevailed.</p>
+<p>The Queen, Kapiolani, is a Hawaiian lady of high character and extreme
+amiability, and both King and Queen have been exemplary in their domestic
+relations.</p>
+<p>Kalakaua&rsquo;s first act was to proclaim his brother, Prince Leleiohoku,
+his successor, investing him at the same time with the title, &ldquo;His
+Royal Highness,&rdquo; and his second was to reorganize the military
+service, with the view of making it an efficient and well-disciplined
+force.</p>
+<p>There is something melancholy in the fact that this small Pacific
+kingdom has to fall back upon the old world resource of a standing army,
+as large, in proportion to its population, as that of the German Empire.</p>
+<p>Those readers who have become interested in the Sandwich Islands
+through the foregoing Letters, will join me in the earnest wish that
+this people, which has advanced from heathenism and barbarism to Christianity
+and civilization in the short space of a single generation, may enjoy
+peace and prosperity under King Kalakaua, that the extinction which
+threatens the nation may be averted, and that under a gracious Divine
+Providence, Hawaii may still remain the inheritance of the Hawaiians.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>NOTES.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><a name="footnote0"></a><a href="#citation0">{0}</a> A native word
+used to signify an old resident.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote14"></a><a href="#citation14">{14}</a> A Frugiferous
+bat.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote28"></a><a href="#citation28">{28}</a> The kahili
+is shaped like an enormous bottle brush.&nbsp; The fines are sometimes
+twenty feet high, with handles twelve or fifteen feet long, covered
+with tortoiseshell and whale tooth ivory. The upper part is formed of
+a cylinder of wicker work about a foot in diameter, on which red, black,
+and yellow feathers are fastened.&nbsp; These insignia are carried in
+procession instead of banners, and used to be fixed in the ground near
+the temporary residence of the king or chiefs.&nbsp; At the funeral
+of the late king seventy-six large and small kahilis were carried by
+the retainers of chief families.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote40"></a><a href="#citation40">{40}</a> A week after
+her sailing, this unlucky ship put back with some mysterious ailment,
+and on her final arrival at San Francisco, her condition was found to
+be such that it was a marvel that she had made the passage at all.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote44"></a><a href="#citation44">{44}</a> Dear old
+craft!&nbsp; I would not change her now for the finest palace which
+floats on the Hudson, or the trimmest of the Hutchesons&rsquo; beautiful
+West Highland fleet.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote47"></a><a href="#citation47">{47}</a> This temperature
+is, of course, in shallow water.&nbsp; The United States surveying vessel,
+<i>Tuscarora</i>, lately left San Diego, California, shaping a straight
+course for Honolulu, and found a nearly uniform temperature of from
+33&deg; to 34&deg; Fahrenheit at all depths below 1100 fathoms.&nbsp;
+The following table gives a good idea of the temperature of ocean water
+in this region of the Pacific:--</p>
+<pre>100&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 64&deg; 7<br />200&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 48&deg; 7<br />300&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 42&deg; 4<br />400&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 40&deg; 4<br />500&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 39&deg; 4<br />600&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 38&deg; 6<br />700&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 38&deg; 3<br />800&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 37&deg; 5<br />900&nbsp; .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 36&deg; 6<br />1000 .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 35&deg; 6<br />1200 .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 35&deg; 4<br />3054 .&nbsp; .&nbsp; 33&deg; 2</pre>
+<p>The <i>Tuscarora</i> found the extraordinary depth of 3023 fathoms
+at a distance of only 43 miles from Molokai.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote59a"></a><a href="#citation59a">{59a}</a> Metrosideros
+Polymorpha.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote59b"></a><a href="#citation59b">{59b}</a> Colocasia
+antiquorum (arum esculentum).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote59c"></a><a href="#citation59c">{59c}</a> Morinda
+Citrifolia.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote62"></a><a href="#citation62">{62}</a> I have since
+learned that it is the same as the Kaldera bush of Southern India, and
+that the powerful fragrance of its flowers is the subject of continual
+allusions in Sanskrit poetry under the name of Ketaka, and that oil
+impregnated with its odour is highly prized as a perfume in India.&nbsp;
+The Hawaiians also used it to give a delicious scent to the Tapa made
+for their chiefs from the inner bark of the paper mulberry.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote65"></a><a href="#citation65">{65}</a> See Brigham,
+on the &ldquo;Hawaiian Volcanoes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote66"></a><a href="#citation66">{66}</a> In explorations
+some months later, I found nearly similar phenomena, in two other of
+the streams on the windward side of Hawaii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote95"></a><a href="#citation95">{95}</a> &ldquo;Reef
+Rovings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote121"></a><a href="#citation121">{121}</a> In 1873
+the export of sugar reached a total of upwards of 23,000,000 lbs.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote128"></a><a href="#citation128">{128}</a> NOTE.--Throughout
+these letters the botanical names given are only those which are current
+on the Islands.&nbsp; Those specimens of ferns which survived the rough
+usage which befel them, are to be seen in the Herbarium of the Botanical
+Garden at Oxford, and have been named and classified by my cousin, Professor
+Lawson.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote138"></a><a href="#citation138">{138}</a> &ldquo;The
+road from Hilo to Laupahoehoe, a distance of thirty miles, runs somewhat
+inland, and is one of the most remarkable in the world.&nbsp; Ravines,
+1,800 or 2,000 feet deep, and less than a mile wide, extend far up the
+slopes of Mauna Kea.&nbsp; Streams, liable to sudden and tremendous
+freshets, must be traversed on a path of indescribable steepness, winding
+zig-zag up and down the beautifully-wooded slopes or precipices, which
+are ornamented with cascades of every conceivable form.&nbsp; Few strangers,
+when they come to the worst precipices, dare to ride down, but such
+is the nature of the rough steps, that a horse or mule will pass them
+with less difficulty than a man on foot who is unused to climbing.&nbsp;
+No less than sixty-five streams must be crossed in a distance of thirty
+miles.&rdquo;--Brigham &ldquo;<i>On the Hawaiian Volcanoes</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote148"></a><a href="#citation148">{148}</a> The Lord&rsquo;s
+Prayer in Hawaiian runs thus:--E ko mako Makua i-loko o ka Lani, e hoanoia
+Kou Inoa E hiki mai Kou auhuni e malamaia Kou Makemake ma ka-nei honua
+e like me ia i malamaia ma ka Lani e haawi mai i a makau i ai no keia
+la e kala mai i ko makou lawehalaana me makou e kala nei i ka poe i
+lawehala mai i a makou mai alakai i a makou i ka hoowalewaleia mai ata
+e hookapele i a makou mai ka ino no ka mea Nou ke Aupuni a me ka Mana
+a me ka hoonaniia a mau loa &lsquo;ku.&nbsp; Amene.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote165"></a><a href="#citation165">{165}</a> A small
+bird, Melithreptes Pacifica, inhabits the mountainous regions of Hawaii,
+and has under each wing a single feather, one inch long, of a bright
+canary yellow.&nbsp; The birds are caught by means of a viscid substance
+smeared on poles.&nbsp; Formerly they were strictly <i>tabu</i>.&nbsp;
+It is of these feathers that the <i>mamo</i> or war-cloak of Kamehameha
+I., now used on state occasions by the Hawaiian kings, is composed.&nbsp;
+This priceless mantle is four feet long, eleven and a half feet wide
+at the bottom, and its formation occupied nine successive reigns.&nbsp;
+It is one of the costliest of royal ornaments, if the labour spent upon
+it is estimated, and the feathers of which it is made have been valued
+at a dollar and a half for five.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote199"></a><a href="#citation199">{199}</a> Cynodon
+Dactylon (?)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote203"></a><a href="#citation203">{203}</a> Physalis
+Peruviana.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote215"></a><a href="#citation215">{215}</a> This was
+almost his last exploit.&nbsp; A few days later the sheriff had the
+painful duty of committing him as a leper to the leper settlement on
+Molokai.&nbsp; He was a leading spirit among the Hilo natives, and his
+joyous nature will be missed by everyone.&nbsp; He has left a wife and
+some beautiful children, who, it is feared, will eventually share his
+fate.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote223"></a><a href="#citation223">{223}</a> In 1873
+the export of wool had increased to 329,507 lbs.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote235"></a><a href="#citation235">{235}</a> The Inspector
+of Schools has since told me that there is a track as bad, if not worse,
+in the Hana district on Maui.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote256"></a><a href="#citation256">{256}</a> It gives
+me pleasure to add that the Sisters have lived down this very natural
+distrust, and that in a subsequent residence of five months on the islands,
+I never heard but one opinion, and that of the most favourable kind,
+regarding the Lahaina School, and the excellence and wisdom of the manner
+in which it is conducted.&nbsp; I have been told by many who on most
+points are quite out of sympathy with the Sisters, not only that their
+work is recognized as a most valuable agency, but that their influence
+has come to be regarded as among the chiefest of the blessings of Lahaina.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote270"></a><a href="#citation270">{270}</a> The <i>Nuhou</i>
+has since expired.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote276"></a><a href="#citation276">{276}</a> This monster
+is a cephalopod of the order <i>Dibranchiata</i>, and has eight flexible
+arms, each crowded with 120 pair of suckers, and two longer feelers
+about six feet in length, differing considerably from the others in
+form.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote295"></a><a href="#citation295">{295}</a> According
+to the revenue returns for the biennial period ending March 31, 1874,
+the revenue derived from <i>awa</i> was over $9000, and that from opium
+over $46,000.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote296"></a><a href="#citation296">{296}</a> The following
+paragraph from Dr. Rupert Anderson&rsquo;s sober-minded book on the
+Sandwich Islands fully bears out the king&rsquo;s remarks: &ldquo;The
+islands all lie within the range of the trade winds, which blow with
+great regularity nine months of the year, and on the leeward side, where
+their course is obstructed by mountains, there are regular land and
+sea breezes.&nbsp; The weather at all seasons is delightful, the sky
+usually cloudless, the atmosphere clear and bracing.&nbsp; Nothing can
+exceed the soft brilliancy of the moonlight nights.&nbsp; Thunderstorms
+are rare and light in their nature.&nbsp; Hurricanes are unknown.&nbsp;
+The general temperature is the nearest in the world to that point regarded
+by physiologists as most conducive to health and longevity.&nbsp; By
+ascending the mountains any desirable degree of temperature may be obtained.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote303"></a><a href="#citation303">{303}</a> These
+circumstances are well-known throughout the islands, and with the omission
+of some personal details, there is nothing which may not be known by
+a larger public.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote335"></a><a href="#citation335">{335}</a> According
+to Mr. Brigham, the products of the Hawaiian volcanoes are: native sulphur,
+pyrites, salt, sal ammoniac, hydrochloric acid, h&aelig;matite, sulphurous
+acid, sulphuric acid, quartz, crystals, palagonite, feldspar, chrysolite,
+Thompsonite, gypsum, solfatarite, copperas, nitre, arragonite, Labradorite,
+limonite.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote381"></a><a href="#citation381">{381}</a> I venture
+to present this journal letter just as it was written, trusting that
+the interest which attaches to volcanic regions, will carry the reader
+through the minuteness and multiplicity of the details.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote388"></a><a href="#citation388">{388}</a> Since
+then, the Austins of Onomea were standing on a similar ledge, when a
+sound as of a surge striking below, made them jump back hastily, and
+in another moment the projection split off, and was engulfed in the
+fiery lake.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote411"></a><a href="#citation411">{411}</a> Since
+white men have inhabited the islands, there have been ten recorded eruptions
+from the craters of Mauna Loa, and one from Hualalai.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote422"></a><a href="#citation422">{422}</a> Several
+letters are omitted here, as they contain repetitions of journeys and
+circumstances which have been amply detailed before.&nbsp; I went to
+the Kona district for a few days only, intending to return to friends
+on Kauai and Maui; but owing to an alteration in the sailings of the
+<i>Kilauea</i>, was detained there for a month, and afterwards, owing
+to uncertainties connected with the San Francisco steamers, was obliged
+to leave the Islands abruptly, after a residence of nearly seven months.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote453"></a><a href="#citation453">{453}</a> The schools
+of the kingdom are as follows:--</p>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Number<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Schools.&nbsp; Boys.&nbsp; Girls.&nbsp; Total.</pre>
+<pre>Common Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 196&nbsp; &nbsp; 3193&nbsp; &nbsp; 2329&nbsp; &nbsp; 5522<br />Government Boarding Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 3&nbsp; &nbsp; 185&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; -&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 185<br />Government Haw.-Eng. Day Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 5&nbsp; &nbsp; 415&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 246&nbsp; &nbsp; 661<br />Subsidized Boarding Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 10&nbsp; &nbsp; 168&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 191&nbsp; &nbsp; 359<br />Subsidized Day Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 9&nbsp; &nbsp; 201&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 210&nbsp; &nbsp; 411<br />Independent Boarding Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 3&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 14&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 62&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 76<br />Independent Day Schools&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 16&nbsp; &nbsp; 287&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 254&nbsp; &nbsp; 541<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--------------------------------<br />Total&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 242&nbsp; &nbsp; 4463&nbsp; &nbsp; 3292&nbsp; &nbsp; 7755</pre>
+<p><a name="footnote457"></a><a href="#citation457">{457}</a> The population
+by the last census, taken in 1872, is as follows:--</p>
+<pre>Total number of natives in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 49,O44<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; half-castes in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2,487<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; Chinese in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 1,938<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; Americans in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 889<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; Hawaiians born of foreign parents, 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 849<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; Britons in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 619<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; Portuguese in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 395<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; Germans in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 224<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; French in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 88<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; other foreigners in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 364<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;------<br />Total population in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 56,897</pre>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--------------------------</pre>
+<pre>Total number of natives, </pre>
+<pre><i>including half-castes</i></pre>
+<pre>, in 1866&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 58,765<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; in 1872&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 51,531<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;------<br />Decrease since 1866&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 7,234</pre>
+<p>The excess of males over females is 6,403 souls.</p>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;AREA AND POPULATION OF EACH ISLAND.</pre>
+<pre>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acres.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Height&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Population<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in feet.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; in 1872.</pre>
+<pre>Hawaii&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2,500,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 13,953&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 16,001<br />Maui&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 400,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 10,200&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 12,334<br />Oahu&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 350,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 3,800&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 20,671<br />Kauai&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 350,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 4,800&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 4,961<br />Molokai&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 200,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2,800&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2,349<br />Lanai&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 100,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2,400&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 348<br />Niihau&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 70,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 800&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 233<br />Kahoolawe&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 30,000&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 400&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; -<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-------<br />
+Total&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 56,897</pre>
+<p><a name="footnote468"></a><a href="#citation468">{468}</a> Only one
+robe like this remains, that which is spread over the throne at the
+opening of Parliament.&nbsp; The one buried with Lunalilo could not
+be reproduced for one hundred thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 6750 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+